| 1 |
package CGI::Carp; |
| 2 |
|
| 3 |
=head1 NAME |
| 4 |
|
| 5 |
B<CGI::Carp> - CGI routines for writing to the HTTPD (or other) error log |
| 6 |
|
| 7 |
=head1 SYNOPSIS |
| 8 |
|
| 9 |
use CGI::Carp; |
| 10 |
|
| 11 |
croak "We're outta here!"; |
| 12 |
confess "It was my fault: $!"; |
| 13 |
carp "It was your fault!"; |
| 14 |
warn "I'm confused"; |
| 15 |
die "I'm dying.\n"; |
| 16 |
|
| 17 |
use CGI::Carp qw(cluck); |
| 18 |
cluck "I wouldn't do that if I were you"; |
| 19 |
|
| 20 |
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser); |
| 21 |
die "Fatal error messages are now sent to browser"; |
| 22 |
|
| 23 |
=head1 DESCRIPTION |
| 24 |
|
| 25 |
CGI scripts have a nasty habit of leaving warning messages in the error |
| 26 |
logs that are neither time stamped nor fully identified. Tracking down |
| 27 |
the script that caused the error is a pain. This fixes that. Replace |
| 28 |
the usual |
| 29 |
|
| 30 |
use Carp; |
| 31 |
|
| 32 |
with |
| 33 |
|
| 34 |
use CGI::Carp |
| 35 |
|
| 36 |
And the standard warn(), die (), croak(), confess() and carp() calls |
| 37 |
will automagically be replaced with functions that write out nicely |
| 38 |
time-stamped messages to the HTTP server error log. |
| 39 |
|
| 40 |
For example: |
| 41 |
|
| 42 |
[Fri Nov 17 21:40:43 1995] test.pl: I'm confused at test.pl line 3. |
| 43 |
[Fri Nov 17 21:40:43 1995] test.pl: Got an error message: Permission denied. |
| 44 |
[Fri Nov 17 21:40:43 1995] test.pl: I'm dying. |
| 45 |
|
| 46 |
=head1 REDIRECTING ERROR MESSAGES |
| 47 |
|
| 48 |
By default, error messages are sent to STDERR. Most HTTPD servers |
| 49 |
direct STDERR to the server's error log. Some applications may wish |
| 50 |
to keep private error logs, distinct from the server's error log, or |
| 51 |
they may wish to direct error messages to STDOUT so that the browser |
| 52 |
will receive them. |
| 53 |
|
| 54 |
The C<carpout()> function is provided for this purpose. Since |
| 55 |
carpout() is not exported by default, you must import it explicitly by |
| 56 |
saying |
| 57 |
|
| 58 |
use CGI::Carp qw(carpout); |
| 59 |
|
| 60 |
The carpout() function requires one argument, which should be a |
| 61 |
reference to an open filehandle for writing errors. It should be |
| 62 |
called in a C<BEGIN> block at the top of the CGI application so that |
| 63 |
compiler errors will be caught. Example: |
| 64 |
|
| 65 |
BEGIN { |
| 66 |
use CGI::Carp qw(carpout); |
| 67 |
open(LOG, ">>/usr/local/cgi-logs/mycgi-log") or |
| 68 |
die("Unable to open mycgi-log: $!\n"); |
| 69 |
carpout(LOG); |
| 70 |
} |
| 71 |
|
| 72 |
carpout() does not handle file locking on the log for you at this point. |
| 73 |
|
| 74 |
The real STDERR is not closed -- it is moved to CGI::Carp::SAVEERR. Some |
| 75 |
servers, when dealing with CGI scripts, close their connection to the |
| 76 |
browser when the script closes STDOUT and STDERR. CGI::Carp::SAVEERR is there to |
| 77 |
prevent this from happening prematurely. |
| 78 |
|
| 79 |
You can pass filehandles to carpout() in a variety of ways. The "correct" |
| 80 |
way according to Tom Christiansen is to pass a reference to a filehandle |
| 81 |
GLOB: |
| 82 |
|
| 83 |
carpout(\*LOG); |
| 84 |
|
| 85 |
This looks weird to mere mortals however, so the following syntaxes are |
| 86 |
accepted as well: |
| 87 |
|
| 88 |
carpout(LOG); |
| 89 |
carpout(main::LOG); |
| 90 |
carpout(main'LOG); |
| 91 |
carpout(\LOG); |
| 92 |
carpout(\'main::LOG'); |
| 93 |
|
| 94 |
... and so on |
| 95 |
|
| 96 |
FileHandle and other objects work as well. |
| 97 |
|
| 98 |
Use of carpout() is not great for performance, so it is recommended |
| 99 |
for debugging purposes or for moderate-use applications. A future |
| 100 |
version of this module may delay redirecting STDERR until one of the |
| 101 |
CGI::Carp methods is called to prevent the performance hit. |
| 102 |
|
| 103 |
=head1 MAKING PERL ERRORS APPEAR IN THE BROWSER WINDOW |
| 104 |
|
| 105 |
If you want to send fatal (die, confess) errors to the browser, ask to |
| 106 |
import the special "fatalsToBrowser" subroutine: |
| 107 |
|
| 108 |
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser); |
| 109 |
die "Bad error here"; |
| 110 |
|
| 111 |
Fatal errors will now be echoed to the browser as well as to the log. CGI::Carp |
| 112 |
arranges to send a minimal HTTP header to the browser so that even errors that |
| 113 |
occur in the early compile phase will be seen. |
| 114 |
Nonfatal errors will still be directed to the log file only (unless redirected |
| 115 |
with carpout). |
| 116 |
|
| 117 |
=head2 Changing the default message |
| 118 |
|
| 119 |
By default, the software error message is followed by a note to |
| 120 |
contact the Webmaster by e-mail with the time and date of the error. |
| 121 |
If this message is not to your liking, you can change it using the |
| 122 |
set_message() routine. This is not imported by default; you should |
| 123 |
import it on the use() line: |
| 124 |
|
| 125 |
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser set_message); |
| 126 |
set_message("It's not a bug, it's a feature!"); |
| 127 |
|
| 128 |
You may also pass in a code reference in order to create a custom |
| 129 |
error message. At run time, your code will be called with the text |
| 130 |
of the error message that caused the script to die. Example: |
| 131 |
|
| 132 |
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser set_message); |
| 133 |
BEGIN { |
| 134 |
sub handle_errors { |
| 135 |
my $msg = shift; |
| 136 |
print "<h1>Oh gosh</h1>"; |
| 137 |
print "<p>Got an error: $msg</p>"; |
| 138 |
} |
| 139 |
set_message(\&handle_errors); |
| 140 |
} |
| 141 |
|
| 142 |
In order to correctly intercept compile-time errors, you should call |
| 143 |
set_message() from within a BEGIN{} block. |
| 144 |
|
| 145 |
=head1 MAKING WARNINGS APPEAR AS HTML COMMENTS |
| 146 |
|
| 147 |
It is now also possible to make non-fatal errors appear as HTML |
| 148 |
comments embedded in the output of your program. To enable this |
| 149 |
feature, export the new "warningsToBrowser" subroutine. Since sending |
| 150 |
warnings to the browser before the HTTP headers have been sent would |
| 151 |
cause an error, any warnings are stored in an internal buffer until |
| 152 |
you call the warningsToBrowser() subroutine with a true argument: |
| 153 |
|
| 154 |
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser warningsToBrowser); |
| 155 |
use CGI qw(:standard); |
| 156 |
print header(); |
| 157 |
warningsToBrowser(1); |
| 158 |
|
| 159 |
You may also give a false argument to warningsToBrowser() to prevent |
| 160 |
warnings from being sent to the browser while you are printing some |
| 161 |
content where HTML comments are not allowed: |
| 162 |
|
| 163 |
warningsToBrowser(0); # disable warnings |
| 164 |
print "<script type=\"text/javascript\"><!--\n"; |
| 165 |
print_some_javascript_code(); |
| 166 |
print "//--></script>\n"; |
| 167 |
warningsToBrowser(1); # re-enable warnings |
| 168 |
|
| 169 |
Note: In this respect warningsToBrowser() differs fundamentally from |
| 170 |
fatalsToBrowser(), which you should never call yourself! |
| 171 |
|
| 172 |
=head1 OVERRIDING THE NAME OF THE PROGRAM |
| 173 |
|
| 174 |
CGI::Carp includes the name of the program that generated the error or |
| 175 |
warning in the messages written to the log and the browser window. |
| 176 |
Sometimes, Perl can get confused about what the actual name of the |
| 177 |
executed program was. In these cases, you can override the program |
| 178 |
name that CGI::Carp will use for all messages. |
| 179 |
|
| 180 |
The quick way to do that is to tell CGI::Carp the name of the program |
| 181 |
in its use statement. You can do that by adding |
| 182 |
"name=cgi_carp_log_name" to your "use" statement. For example: |
| 183 |
|
| 184 |
use CGI::Carp qw(name=cgi_carp_log_name); |
| 185 |
|
| 186 |
. If you want to change the program name partway through the program, |
| 187 |
you can use the C<set_progname()> function instead. It is not |
| 188 |
exported by default, you must import it explicitly by saying |
| 189 |
|
| 190 |
use CGI::Carp qw(set_progname); |
| 191 |
|
| 192 |
Once you've done that, you can change the logged name of the program |
| 193 |
at any time by calling |
| 194 |
|
| 195 |
set_progname(new_program_name); |
| 196 |
|
| 197 |
You can set the program back to the default by calling |
| 198 |
|
| 199 |
set_progname(undef); |
| 200 |
|
| 201 |
Note that this override doesn't happen until after the program has |
| 202 |
compiled, so any compile-time errors will still show up with the |
| 203 |
non-overridden program name |
| 204 |
|
| 205 |
=head1 CHANGE LOG |
| 206 |
|
| 207 |
1.05 carpout() added and minor corrections by Marc Hedlund |
| 208 |
<hedlund@best.com> on 11/26/95. |
| 209 |
|
| 210 |
1.06 fatalsToBrowser() no longer aborts for fatal errors within |
| 211 |
eval() statements. |
| 212 |
|
| 213 |
1.08 set_message() added and carpout() expanded to allow for FileHandle |
| 214 |
objects. |
| 215 |
|
| 216 |
1.09 set_message() now allows users to pass a code REFERENCE for |
| 217 |
really custom error messages. croak and carp are now |
| 218 |
exported by default. Thanks to Gunther Birznieks for the |
| 219 |
patches. |
| 220 |
|
| 221 |
1.10 Patch from Chris Dean (ctdean@cogit.com) to allow |
| 222 |
module to run correctly under mod_perl. |
| 223 |
|
| 224 |
1.11 Changed order of > and < escapes. |
| 225 |
|
| 226 |
1.12 Changed die() on line 217 to CORE::die to avoid B<-w> warning. |
| 227 |
|
| 228 |
1.13 Added cluck() to make the module orthogonal with Carp. |
| 229 |
More mod_perl related fixes. |
| 230 |
|
| 231 |
1.20 Patch from Ilmari Karonen (perl@itz.pp.sci.fi): Added |
| 232 |
warningsToBrowser(). Replaced <CODE> tags with <PRE> in |
| 233 |
fatalsToBrowser() output. |
| 234 |
|
| 235 |
1.23 ineval() now checks both $^S and inspects the message for the "eval" pattern |
| 236 |
(hack alert!) in order to accomodate various combinations of Perl and |
| 237 |
mod_perl. |
| 238 |
|
| 239 |
1.24 Patch from Scott Gifford (sgifford@suspectclass.com): Add support |
| 240 |
for overriding program name. |
| 241 |
|
| 242 |
1.26 Replaced CORE::GLOBAL::die with the evil $SIG{__DIE__} because the |
| 243 |
former isn't working in some people's hands. There is no such thing |
| 244 |
as reliable exception handling in Perl. |
| 245 |
|
| 246 |
1.27 Replaced tell STDOUT with bytes=tell STDOUT. |
| 247 |
|
| 248 |
=head1 AUTHORS |
| 249 |
|
| 250 |
Copyright 1995-2002, Lincoln D. Stein. All rights reserved. |
| 251 |
|
| 252 |
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| 253 |
it under the same terms as Perl itself. |
| 254 |
|
| 255 |
Address bug reports and comments to: lstein@cshl.org |
| 256 |
|
| 257 |
=head1 SEE ALSO |
| 258 |
|
| 259 |
Carp, CGI::Base, CGI::BasePlus, CGI::Request, CGI::MiniSvr, CGI::Form, |
| 260 |
CGI::Response |
| 261 |
if (defined($CGI::Carp::PROGNAME)) |
| 262 |
{ |
| 263 |
$file = $CGI::Carp::PROGNAME; |
| 264 |
} |
| 265 |
|
| 266 |
=cut |
| 267 |
|
| 268 |
require 5.000; |
| 269 |
use Exporter; |
| 270 |
#use Carp; |
| 271 |
BEGIN { |
| 272 |
require Carp; |
| 273 |
*CORE::GLOBAL::die = \&CGI::Carp::die; |
| 274 |
} |
| 275 |
|
| 276 |
use File::Spec; |
| 277 |
|
| 278 |
@ISA = qw(Exporter); |
| 279 |
@EXPORT = qw(confess croak carp); |
| 280 |
@EXPORT_OK = qw(carpout fatalsToBrowser warningsToBrowser wrap set_message set_progname cluck ^name= die); |
| 281 |
|
| 282 |
$main::SIG{__WARN__}=\&CGI::Carp::warn; |
| 283 |
|
| 284 |
$CGI::Carp::VERSION = '1.27'; |
| 285 |
$CGI::Carp::CUSTOM_MSG = undef; |
| 286 |
|
| 287 |
|
| 288 |
# fancy import routine detects and handles 'errorWrap' specially. |
| 289 |
sub import { |
| 290 |
my $pkg = shift; |
| 291 |
my(%routines); |
| 292 |
my(@name); |
| 293 |
|
| 294 |
if (@name=grep(/^name=/,@_)) |
| 295 |
{ |
| 296 |
my($n) = (split(/=/,$name[0]))[1]; |
| 297 |
set_progname($n); |
| 298 |
@_=grep(!/^name=/,@_); |
| 299 |
} |
| 300 |
|
| 301 |
grep($routines{$_}++,@_,@EXPORT); |
| 302 |
$WRAP++ if $routines{'fatalsToBrowser'} || $routines{'wrap'}; |
| 303 |
$WARN++ if $routines{'warningsToBrowser'}; |
| 304 |
my($oldlevel) = $Exporter::ExportLevel; |
| 305 |
$Exporter::ExportLevel = 1; |
| 306 |
Exporter::import($pkg,keys %routines); |
| 307 |
$Exporter::ExportLevel = $oldlevel; |
| 308 |
$main::SIG{__DIE__} =\&CGI::Carp::die if $routines{'fatalsToBrowser'}; |
| 309 |
# $pkg->export('CORE::GLOBAL','die'); |
| 310 |
} |
| 311 |
|
| 312 |
# These are the originals |
| 313 |
sub realwarn { CORE::warn(@_); } |
| 314 |
sub realdie { CORE::die(@_); } |
| 315 |
|
| 316 |
sub id { |
| 317 |
my $level = shift; |
| 318 |
my($pack,$file,$line,$sub) = caller($level); |
| 319 |
my($dev,$dirs,$id) = File::Spec->splitpath($file); |
| 320 |
return ($file,$line,$id); |
| 321 |
} |
| 322 |
|
| 323 |
sub stamp { |
| 324 |
my $time = scalar(localtime); |
| 325 |
my $frame = 0; |
| 326 |
my ($id,$pack,$file,$dev,$dirs); |
| 327 |
if (defined($CGI::Carp::PROGNAME)) { |
| 328 |
$id = $CGI::Carp::PROGNAME; |
| 329 |
} else { |
| 330 |
do { |
| 331 |
$id = $file; |
| 332 |
($pack,$file) = caller($frame++); |
| 333 |
} until !$file; |
| 334 |
} |
| 335 |
($dev,$dirs,$id) = File::Spec->splitpath($id); |
| 336 |
return "[$time] $id: "; |
| 337 |
} |
| 338 |
|
| 339 |
sub set_progname { |
| 340 |
$CGI::Carp::PROGNAME = shift; |
| 341 |
return $CGI::Carp::PROGNAME; |
| 342 |
} |
| 343 |
|
| 344 |
|
| 345 |
sub warn { |
| 346 |
my $message = shift; |
| 347 |
my($file,$line,$id) = id(1); |
| 348 |
$message .= " at $file line $line.\n" unless $message=~/\n$/; |
| 349 |
_warn($message) if $WARN; |
| 350 |
my $stamp = stamp; |
| 351 |
$message=~s/^/$stamp/gm; |
| 352 |
realwarn $message; |
| 353 |
} |
| 354 |
|
| 355 |
sub _warn { |
| 356 |
my $msg = shift; |
| 357 |
if ($EMIT_WARNINGS) { |
| 358 |
# We need to mangle the message a bit to make it a valid HTML |
| 359 |
# comment. This is done by substituting similar-looking ISO |
| 360 |
# 8859-1 characters for <, > and -. This is a hack. |
| 361 |
$msg =~ tr/<>-/\253\273\255/; |
| 362 |
chomp $msg; |
| 363 |
print STDOUT "<!-- warning: $msg -->\n"; |
| 364 |
} else { |
| 365 |
push @WARNINGS, $msg; |
| 366 |
} |
| 367 |
} |
| 368 |
|
| 369 |
|
| 370 |
# The mod_perl package Apache::Registry loads CGI programs by calling |
| 371 |
# eval. These evals don't count when looking at the stack backtrace. |
| 372 |
sub _longmess { |
| 373 |
my $message = Carp::longmess(); |
| 374 |
$message =~ s,eval[^\n]+(ModPerl|Apache)/Registry\w*\.pm.*,,s |
| 375 |
if exists $ENV{MOD_PERL}; |
| 376 |
return $message; |
| 377 |
} |
| 378 |
|
| 379 |
sub ineval { |
| 380 |
(exists $ENV{MOD_PERL} ? 0 : $^S) || _longmess() =~ /eval [\{\']/m |
| 381 |
} |
| 382 |
|
| 383 |
sub die { |
| 384 |
my ($arg) = @_; |
| 385 |
realdie @_ if ineval; |
| 386 |
if (!ref($arg)) { |
| 387 |
$arg = join("", @_); |
| 388 |
my($file,$line,$id) = id(1); |
| 389 |
$arg .= " at $file line $line." unless $arg=~/\n$/; |
| 390 |
&fatalsToBrowser($arg) if $WRAP; |
| 391 |
if (($arg =~ /\n$/) || !exists($ENV{MOD_PERL})) { |
| 392 |
my $stamp = stamp; |
| 393 |
$arg=~s/^/$stamp/gm; |
| 394 |
} |
| 395 |
if ($arg !~ /\n$/) { |
| 396 |
$arg .= "\n"; |
| 397 |
} |
| 398 |
} |
| 399 |
realdie $arg; |
| 400 |
} |
| 401 |
|
| 402 |
sub set_message { |
| 403 |
$CGI::Carp::CUSTOM_MSG = shift; |
| 404 |
return $CGI::Carp::CUSTOM_MSG; |
| 405 |
} |
| 406 |
|
| 407 |
sub confess { CGI::Carp::die Carp::longmess @_; } |
| 408 |
sub croak { CGI::Carp::die Carp::shortmess @_; } |
| 409 |
sub carp { CGI::Carp::warn Carp::shortmess @_; } |
| 410 |
sub cluck { CGI::Carp::warn Carp::longmess @_; } |
| 411 |
|
| 412 |
# We have to be ready to accept a filehandle as a reference |
| 413 |
# or a string. |
| 414 |
sub carpout { |
| 415 |
my($in) = @_; |
| 416 |
my($no) = fileno(to_filehandle($in)); |
| 417 |
realdie("Invalid filehandle $in\n") unless defined $no; |
| 418 |
|
| 419 |
open(SAVEERR, ">&STDERR"); |
| 420 |
open(STDERR, ">&$no") or |
| 421 |
( print SAVEERR "Unable to redirect STDERR: $!\n" and exit(1) ); |
| 422 |
} |
| 423 |
|
| 424 |
sub warningsToBrowser { |
| 425 |
$EMIT_WARNINGS = @_ ? shift : 1; |
| 426 |
_warn(shift @WARNINGS) while $EMIT_WARNINGS and @WARNINGS; |
| 427 |
} |
| 428 |
|
| 429 |
# headers |
| 430 |
sub fatalsToBrowser { |
| 431 |
my($msg) = @_; |
| 432 |
$msg=~s/&/&/g; |
| 433 |
$msg=~s/>/>/g; |
| 434 |
$msg=~s/</</g; |
| 435 |
$msg=~s/\"/"/g; |
| 436 |
my($wm) = $ENV{SERVER_ADMIN} ? |
| 437 |
qq[the webmaster (<a href="mailto:$ENV{SERVER_ADMIN}">$ENV{SERVER_ADMIN}</a>)] : |
| 438 |
"this site's webmaster"; |
| 439 |
my ($outer_message) = <<END; |
| 440 |
For help, please send mail to $wm, giving this error message |
| 441 |
and the time and date of the error. |
| 442 |
END |
| 443 |
; |
| 444 |
my $mod_perl = exists $ENV{MOD_PERL}; |
| 445 |
|
| 446 |
warningsToBrowser(1); # emit warnings before dying |
| 447 |
|
| 448 |
if ($CUSTOM_MSG) { |
| 449 |
if (ref($CUSTOM_MSG) eq 'CODE') { |
| 450 |
print STDOUT "Content-type: text/html\n\n" |
| 451 |
unless $mod_perl; |
| 452 |
&$CUSTOM_MSG($msg); # nicer to perl 5.003 users |
| 453 |
return; |
| 454 |
} else { |
| 455 |
$outer_message = $CUSTOM_MSG; |
| 456 |
} |
| 457 |
} |
| 458 |
|
| 459 |
my $mess = <<END; |
| 460 |
<h1>Software error:</h1> |
| 461 |
<pre>$msg</pre> |
| 462 |
<p> |
| 463 |
$outer_message |
| 464 |
</p> |
| 465 |
END |
| 466 |
; |
| 467 |
|
| 468 |
if ($mod_perl) { |
| 469 |
require mod_perl; |
| 470 |
if ($mod_perl::VERSION >= 1.99) { |
| 471 |
$mod_perl = 2; |
| 472 |
require Apache::RequestRec; |
| 473 |
require Apache::RequestIO; |
| 474 |
require Apache::RequestUtil; |
| 475 |
require APR::Pool; |
| 476 |
require ModPerl::Util; |
| 477 |
require Apache::Response; |
| 478 |
} |
| 479 |
my $r = Apache->request; |
| 480 |
# If bytes have already been sent, then |
| 481 |
# we print the message out directly. |
| 482 |
# Otherwise we make a custom error |
| 483 |
# handler to produce the doc for us. |
| 484 |
if ($r->bytes_sent) { |
| 485 |
$r->print($mess); |
| 486 |
$mod_perl == 2 ? ModPerl::Util::exit(0) : $r->exit; |
| 487 |
} else { |
| 488 |
# MSIE won't display a custom 500 response unless it is >512 bytes! |
| 489 |
if ($ENV{HTTP_USER_AGENT} =~ /MSIE/) { |
| 490 |
$mess = "<!-- " . (' ' x 513) . " -->\n$mess"; |
| 491 |
} |
| 492 |
$r->custom_response(500,$mess); |
| 493 |
} |
| 494 |
} else { |
| 495 |
my $bytes_written = eval{tell STDOUT}; |
| 496 |
if (defined $bytes_written && $bytes_written > 0) { |
| 497 |
print STDOUT $mess; |
| 498 |
} |
| 499 |
else { |
| 500 |
print STDOUT "Content-type: text/html\n\n"; |
| 501 |
print STDOUT $mess; |
| 502 |
} |
| 503 |
} |
| 504 |
} |
| 505 |
|
| 506 |
# Cut and paste from CGI.pm so that we don't have the overhead of |
| 507 |
# always loading the entire CGI module. |
| 508 |
sub to_filehandle { |
| 509 |
my $thingy = shift; |
| 510 |
return undef unless $thingy; |
| 511 |
return $thingy if UNIVERSAL::isa($thingy,'GLOB'); |
| 512 |
return $thingy if UNIVERSAL::isa($thingy,'FileHandle'); |
| 513 |
if (!ref($thingy)) { |
| 514 |
my $caller = 1; |
| 515 |
while (my $package = caller($caller++)) { |
| 516 |
my($tmp) = $thingy=~/[\':]/ ? $thingy : "$package\:\:$thingy"; |
| 517 |
return $tmp if defined(fileno($tmp)); |
| 518 |
} |
| 519 |
} |
| 520 |
return undef; |
| 521 |
} |
| 522 |
|
| 523 |
1; |