A space had a custom plugin that died during hook_checkout, which caused
the CHECKOUT lines to be logged without the corresponding BALANCE, and
indeed no account balances were updated. While the plugin had a bug, it
should not cause a half transaction in RevBank.
After some hesitation, I went with ON ERROR RESUME NEXT because if a
hook throws an exception, that should not interfere with other plugins
(the hook can return ABORT if this it was intentional), including the
calling plugin. An error message is printed (but not logged... TODO: add
hook_plugin_fail to plugins/log) but the show must go on.
During hook_checkout_prepare, however, nothing is set in stone yet, so
this could be used for something that might die, and this instance of
call_hooks() is now the one place where a failing hook should result in
the transaction getting aborted. For this, call_hooks() now returns a
success status boolean. Maybe it would make sense in more places, but I
didn't identify any such calls yet.
RevBank::Cart->checkout used to return a success status boolean, but it
could just as well just die (indirectly, to abort the transaction) since
it can't be called a second time within the same transaction anyway
(because ->set_user must be called exactly once), so continuing with the
same transaction can't result in anything useful anyway.
In some places, error messages were slightly improved to contain a bit
more information.
- Promote to public function since it's used in other plugins anyway
- Move resolving of addons to read_products (print errors immediately)
- Cache product list based on mtime; mostly to reduce the amount of spam
from errors as performance was never an issue.
- Cache product object in cart entry, so statiegeld_tokens plugin
doesn't have to do the lookup all over again.
Apparently nobody uses "return ABORT;" in a hook, because it emitted an
ugly warning. main::abort() takes a list, so destructuring the message
to a scalar was wrong.
The signatures feature has been "experimental" since Perl 5.20 (May 2014), but
expected to stay. After 8 years I'm ready to take the risk :)
Have added Perl v5.28 (June 2018) as the minimum requirement, even though the
current revbank should work with 5.20, to see if this bothers any users. Perl
v5.28 is in Debian "buster", which is now oldstable.