And, as you'll see soon enough, foo.pm reloads without any complaints, time and time again.
Not on my system it doesn't. The issue is that you effectively have:
{
# one scope
no warnings;
# but the eval generates an inner scope
{
# where this over-rides the outer scope no warnings
# or $^W = 0 - the inner scope reigns supreme.
use warnings;
}
}
This will remove the warnings from the reload.pm reloading itself but as noted this does not fix bar.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use reload;
do {
print "Hit Enter.\n";
reload::reload("foo");
foo::bar();
reload::reload("reload");
} while <STDIN>;
package reload;
use warnings;
use strict;
{
no warnings;
sub reload {
my ($PM) = @_;
delete $INC{"$PM.pm"};
eval "require $PM";
}
}
1;
package foo;
use strict;
use warnings;
sub bar { print "Works\n" }
1;
__DATA__
C:\>perl test.pl
Hit Enter.
Works
Hit Enter.
Subroutine bar redefined at foo.pm line 4, <STDIN> line 1.
Works
Hit Enter.
Subroutine bar redefined at foo.pm line 4, <STDIN> line 2.
Works
Hit Enter.
Subroutine bar redefined at foo.pm line 4, <STDIN> line 3.
Works
Hit Enter.
Subroutine bar redefined at foo.pm line 4, <STDIN> line 4.
Works
Hit Enter.
Subroutine bar redefined at foo.pm line 4, <STDIN> line 5.
Works
^C
C:\>