NAME
    CodeGen::Protection - Safely rewrite parts of generated code

VERSION
    version 0.01

SYNOPSIS
        use CodeGen::Protection qw(:all);

        # Creating a new document:

        my $perl = create_protected_code(
            type           => 'Perl',
            protected_code => $sample,
        );

        # Or rewriting:

        my $rewritten = rewrite_code(
            type           => 'Perl',
            existing_code  => $perl,
            protected_code => $rewritten_code,
        );

DESCRIPTION
    Code that writes code can be a powerful tool, especially when you need
    to generate lots of boilerplate. However, when a developer takes the
    generated code, they can easily rewrite that code in a way that no
    longer works, or make good changes that get wiped out if the code is
    regenerated. <https://metacpan.org/pod/DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader>
    protects against this by marking blocks of code with start and end
    comments and an MD5 checksum. If you change any of the code between
    those comments, regenerating your schema will fail.

    This module takes this idea and generalizes it. It allows you to do a
    safe partial rewrite of documents. At the present time, we support Perl
    and HTML.

    In short, we wrap your "protected" ("protected_code") code in start and
    end comments, with checksums for the code:

        #<<< CodeGen::Protection::Perl 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the end comment. Checksum: fa97a021bd70bf3b9fa3e52f203f2660
    
        # protected code goes here

        #>>> CodeGen::Protection::Perl 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the start comment. Checksum: fa97a021bd70bf3b9fa3e52f203f2660

    Or:

        <!-- CodeGen::Protection::Format::HTML 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the end comment. Checksum: c286b9b2577e085df857227eae996c40 -->
    
            <ol>
              <li>This is a list</li>
              <li>This is the second entry.</li>
            </ol>
    
        <!-- CodeGen::Protection::Format::HTML 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the start comment. Checksum: c286b9b2577e085df857227eae996c40 -->

    If calling the "rewrite_code" function, this module removes the code
    between the "existing_code"'s start and end markers and replaces it with
    the "protected_code". If the code between the start and end markers has
    been altered, it will no longer match the checksums and rewriting the
    code will fail.

TYPES
    As of this writing, we can protect Perl and HTML:

        my $rewritten = rewrite_code(
            type           => 'Perl',
            existing_code  => $perl,
            protected_code => $protected_code,
        );

        my $rewritten = rewrite_code(
            type           => 'HTML',
            existing_code  => $HTML,
            protected_code => $protected_code,
        );

    See CodeGen::Protection::Role to learn how to create your own types to
    protect.

FUNCTIONS
    Functions are exportable on-demand, or both can be exported via ":all".

        use CodeGen::Protection qw(rewrite_code);
        use CodeGen::Protection qw(:all);

  "create_protected_code"
        my $protected_code = create_protected_code(
            type           => 'Perl',
            protected_code => $text_of_code,
        );

   ARGUMENTS
    Both "create_protected_code" and "rewrite_code" take the same arguments,
    except that "rewrite_code" does not allow the "protected_code" argument.

    *   "protected_code"

        This is a required string containing any new Perl code to be built
        with this tool.

    *   "existing_code"

        This is an optional string containing Perl code already built with
        this tool. If provided, this code *must* have the start and end
        markers generated by this tool so that the rewriter knows the
        section of code to replace with the injected code.

    *   "name"

        Optional name for the code. This is only used in error messages if
        you're generating a lot of code and an error occurs and you'd like
        to see the name in the error.

    *   "tidy"

        If true, will attempt to tidy the "protected_code" block (the rest
        of the code is ignored). For Perl, if the value of perltidy is the
        number 1 (one), then a generic pass of Perl::Tidy will be done on
        the code. If the value is true and anything *other* than one, this
        is assumed to be the path to a .perltidyrc file and that will be
        used to tidy the code (or "croak()" if the .perltidyrc file cannot
        be found).

    *   "overwrite"

        Optional boolean, default false. In "Rewrite mode", if the checksum
        in the start and end markers doesn't match the code within them,
        someone has manually altered that code and we do not automatically
        overwrite it (in fact, we "croak()"). Setting "overwrite" to true
        will cause it to be overwritten.

MODES
    There are two modes: "Creation" and "Rewrite."

  Creation Mode
        my $rewrite = CodeGen::Protection::Perl->new(
            protected_code => $text,
        );
        say $rewrite->rewritten;

    If you create an instance with "protected_code" but not old text, this
    will wrap the new text in start and end tags that "protect" the document
    if you rewrite it:

        my $perl = <<'END';
        sub sum {
            my $total = 0;
            $total += $_ foreach @_;
            return $total;
        }
        END
        my $rewrite = CodeGen::Protection::Perl->new( protected_code => $perl );
        say $rewrite->rewritten;

    Output:

        #<<< CodeGen::Protection::Perl 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the end comment. Checksum: fa97a021bd70bf3b9fa3e52f203f2660

        sub sum {
            my $total = 0;
            $total += $_ foreach @_;
            return $total;
        }

        #>>> CodeGen::Protection::Perl 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the start comment. Checksum: fa97a021bd70bf3b9fa3e52f203f2660

    You can then take the marked up document and insert it into another Perl
    document and use the rewrite mode to safely rewrite the code between the
    start and end markers. The rest of the document will be ignored.

    Note that leading and trailing comments start with "#<<<" and "#>>>"
    respectively. Those are special comments which tell Perl::Tidy to ignore
    what ever is between them. Thus, you can safely tidy code written with
    this.

    The start and end checksums are the same and are the checksum of the
    text between the comments. Leading and trailing lines which are all
    whitespace are removed and one leading and one trailing newline will be
    added.

  Rewrite Mode
    Given a document created with the "Creating" mode, you can then take the
    marked up document and insert it into another Perl document and use the
    rewrite mode to safely rewrite the code between the start and end
    markers. The rest of the document will be ignored.

        my $rewrite = CodeGen::Protection::Perl->new(
            existing_code => $existing_code,
            protected_code => $protected_code,
        );
        say $rewrite->rewritten;

    In the above, assuming that $existing_code is a rewritable document, the
    $protected_code will replace the rewritable section of the
    $existing_code, leaving the rest unchanged.

    However, if $protected_code is *also* a rewritable document, then the
    rewritable portion of the $protected_code will be extract and used to
    replace the rewritable portion of the $existing_code.

    So for the code shown in the "Creation mode" section, you could add more
    code like this:

        package My::Package;

        use strict;
        use warnings;

        sub average {
            return sum(@_)/@_;
        }

        #<<< CodeGen::Protection::Perl 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the end comment. Checksum: fa97a021bd70bf3b9fa3e52f203f2660

        sub sum {
            my $total = 0;
            $total += $_ foreach @_;
            return $total;
        }

        #>>> CodeGen::Protection::Perl 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the start comment. Checksum: fa97a021bd70bf3b9fa3e52f203f2660
    
        1;

    However, later on I might realize that the "sum" function will happily
    try to sum things which are not numbers, so I want to fix that. I'll
    slurp the "My::Package" code into the $existing_code variable and then:

        my $perl = <<'END';
        use Scalar::Util 'looks_like_number';

        sub sum {
            my $total = 0;
            foreach my $number (@_) {
                unless (looks_like_number($number)) {
                    die "'$number' doesn't look like a numbeer!";
                }
                $total += $number;
            }
            return $total;
        }
        END
        my $rewrite = CodeGen::Protection::Perl->new( existing_code => $existing_code, protected_code => $perl );
        say $rewrite->rewritten;

    And that will print out:

        package My::Package;
    
        use strict;
        use warnings;
    
        sub average {
            return sum(@_)/@_;
        }
    
        #<<< CodeGen::Protection::Perl 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the end comment. Checksum: d135a051f158ee19fbd68af5466fb1ae
    
        use Scalar::Util 'looks_like_number';
    
        sub sum {
            my $total = 0;
            foreach my $number (@_) {
                unless (looks_like_number($number)) {
                    die "'$number' doesn't look like a numbeer!";
                }
                $total += $number;
            }
            return $total;
        }
    
        #>>> CodeGen::Protection::Perl 0.01. Do not touch any code between this and the start comment. Checksum: d135a051f158ee19fbd68af5466fb1ae
    
        1;

    You can see that the code between the start and end checksum comments
    and been rewritten, while the rest of the code remains unchanged.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    We would like to thank All Around the World
    <https://allaroundtheworld.fr/> for sponsoring this work.

AUTHOR
    Curtis "Ovid" Poe <ovid@allaroundtheworld.fr>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is copyright (c) 2021 by Curtis "Ovid" Poe.

    This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
    the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.