=head1 NAME
perl5004delta - what's new
for
perl5.004
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This document describes differences between the 5.003 release (as
documented in I<Programming Perl>, second edition--the Camel Book) and
this one.
=head1 Supported Environments
Perl5.004 builds out of the box on Unix, Plan 9, LynxOS, VMS, OS/2,
QNX, AmigaOS, and Windows NT. Perl runs on Windows 95 as well, but it
cannot be built there,
for
lack of a reasonable command interpreter.
=head1 Core Changes
Most importantly, many bugs were fixed, including several security
problems. See the F<Changes> file in the distribution
for
details.
=head2 List assignment to
%ENV
works
C<
%ENV
= ()> and C<
%ENV
=
@list
> now work as expected (except on VMS
where it generates a fatal error).
=head2 Change to
"Can't locate Foo.pm in @INC"
error
The error
"Can't locate Foo.pm in @INC"
now lists the contents of
@INC
for
easier debugging.
=head2 Compilation option: Binary compatibility
with
5.003
There is a new Configure question that asks
if
you want to maintain
binary compatibility
with
Perl 5.003. If you choose binary
compatibility, you
do
not have to recompile your extensions, but you
might have symbol conflicts
if
you embed Perl in another application,
just as in the 5.003 release. By
default
, binary compatibility
is preserved at the expense of symbol table pollution.
=head2
$PERL5OPT
environment variable
You may now put Perl options in the
$PERL5OPT
environment variable.
Unless Perl is running
with
taint checks, it will interpret this
variable as
if
its contents had appeared on a
"#!perl"
line at the
beginning of your script, except that hyphens are optional. PERL5OPT
may only be used to set the following switches: B<-[DIMUdmw]>.
=head2 Limitations on B<-M>, B<-m>, and B<-T> options
The C<-M> and C<-m> options are
no
longer allowed on the C<
a script. If a script needs a module, it should invoke it
with
the
C<
use
> pragma.
The B<-T> option is also forbidden on the C<
unless
it was present on the Perl command line. Due to the way C<
works, this usually means that B<-T> must be in the first argument.
Thus:
will probably work
for
an executable script invoked as C<scriptname>,
while
:
will probably fail under the same conditions. (Non-Unix systems will
probably not follow this rule.) But C<perl scriptname> is guaranteed
to fail, since then there is
no
chance of B<-T> being found on the
command line
before
it is found on the C<
=head2 More precise warnings
If you removed the B<-w> option from your Perl 5.003 scripts because it
made Perl too verbose, we recommend that you
try
putting it back
when
you upgrade to Perl 5.004. Each new perl version tends to remove some
undesirable warnings,
while
adding new warnings that may
catch
bugs in
your scripts.
=head2 Deprecated: Inherited C<AUTOLOAD>
for
non-methods
Before Perl 5.004, C<AUTOLOAD> functions were looked up as methods
(using the C<
@ISA
> hierarchy), even
when
the function to be autoloaded
was called as a plain function (e.g. C<Foo::bar()>), not a method
(e.g. C<< Foo->bar() >> or C<<
$obj
->bar() >>).
Perl 5.005 will
use
method lookup only
for
methods' C<AUTOLOAD>s.
However, there is a significant base of existing code that may be using
the old behavior. So, as an interim step, Perl 5.004 issues an optional
warning
when
a non-method uses an inherited C<AUTOLOAD>.
The simple rule is: Inheritance will not work
when
autoloading
non-methods. The simple fix
for
old code is: In any module that used to
depend on inheriting C<AUTOLOAD>
for
non-methods from a base class named
C<BaseClass>, execute C<
*AUTOLOAD
= \
&BaseClass::AUTOLOAD
> during startup.
=head2 Previously deprecated
%OVERLOAD
is
no
longer usable
Using
%OVERLOAD
to define overloading was deprecated in 5.003.
Overloading is now
defined
using the overload pragma.
%OVERLOAD
is
still used internally but should not be used by Perl scripts. See
L<overload>
for
more details.
=head2 Subroutine arguments created only
when
they're modified
In Perl 5.004, nonexistent array and hash elements used as subroutine
parameters are brought into existence only
if
they are actually
assigned to (via C<
@_
>).
Earlier versions of Perl vary in their handling of such arguments.
Perl versions 5.002 and 5.003 always brought them into existence.
Perl versions 5.000 and 5.001 brought them into existence only
if
they were not the first argument (which was almost certainly a bug).
Earlier versions of Perl never brought them into existence.
For example,
given
this code:
undef
@a
;
undef
%a
;
sub
show {
print
$_
[0] };
sub
change {
$_
[0]++ };
show(
$a
[2]);
change(
$a
{b});
After this code executes in Perl 5.004,
$a
{b}
exists
but
$a
[2] does
not. In Perl 5.002 and 5.003, both
$a
{b} and
$a
[2] would have existed
(but
$a
[2]'s value would have been undefined).
=head2 Group vector changeable
with
C<$)>
The C<$)> special variable
has
always (well, in Perl 5, at least)
reflected not only the current effective group, but also the group list
as returned by the C<getgroups()> C function (
if
there is one).
However,
until
this release, there
has
not been a way to call the
C<setgroups()> C function from Perl.
In Perl 5.004, assigning to C<$)> is exactly symmetrical
with
examining
it: The first number in its string value is used as the effective gid;
if
there are any numbers
after
the first one, they are passed to the
C<setgroups()> C function (
if
there is one).
=head2 Fixed parsing of $$<digit>, &$<digit>, etc.
Perl versions
before
5.004 misinterpreted any type marker followed by
"$"
and a digit. For example,
"$$0"
was incorrectly taken to mean
"${$}0"
instead of
"${$0}"
. This bug is (mostly) fixed in Perl 5.004.
However, the developers of Perl 5.004 could not fix this bug completely,
because at least two widely-used modules depend on the old meaning of
"$$0"
in a string. So Perl 5.004 still interprets
"$$<digit>"
in the
old (broken) way inside strings; but it generates this message as a
warning. And in Perl 5.005, this special treatment will cease.
=head2 Fixed localization of $<digit>, $&, etc.
Perl versions
before
5.004 did not always properly localize the
regex-related special variables. Perl 5.004 does localize them, as
the documentation
has
always said it should. This may result in $1,
$2, etc.
no
longer being set where existing programs
use
them.
=head2 No resetting of $. on implicit
close
The documentation
for
Perl 5.0
has
always stated that C<$.> is I<not>
reset
when
an already-
open
file handle is reopened
with
no
intervening
call to C<
close
>. Due to a bug, perl versions 5.000 through 5.003
I<did>
reset
C<$.> under that circumstance; Perl 5.004 does not.
=head2 C<
wantarray
> may
return
undef
The C<
wantarray
> operator returns true
if
a subroutine is expected to
return
a list, and false otherwise. In Perl 5.004, C<
wantarray
> can
also
return
the undefined value
if
a subroutine's
return
value will
not be used at all, which allows subroutines to avoid a
time
-consuming
calculation of a
return
value
if
it isn't going to be used.
=head2 C<
eval
EXPR> determines value of EXPR in
scalar
context
Perl (version 5) used to determine the value of EXPR inconsistently,
sometimes incorrectly using the surrounding context
for
the determination.
Now, the value of EXPR (
before
being parsed by
eval
) is always determined in
a
scalar
context. Once parsed, it is executed as
before
, by providing
the context that the scope surrounding the
eval
provided. This change
makes the behavior Perl4 compatible, besides fixing bugs resulting from
the inconsistent behavior. This program:
@a
=
qw(time now is time)
;
print
eval
@a
;
print
'|'
,
scalar
eval
@a
;
used to
print
something like
"timenowis881399109|4"
, but now (and in perl4)
prints
"4|4"
.
=head2 Changes to tainting checks
A bug in previous versions may have failed to detect some insecure
conditions
when
taint checks are turned on. (Taint checks are used
in setuid or setgid scripts, or
when
explicitly turned on
with
the
C<-T> invocation option.) Although it's unlikely, this may cause a
previously-working script to now fail, which should be construed
as a blessing since that indicates a potentially-serious security
hole was just plugged.
The new restrictions
when
tainting include:
=over 4
=item No
glob
() or <*>
These operators may spawn the C shell (csh), which cannot be made
safe. This restriction will be lifted in a future version of Perl
when
globbing is implemented without the
use
of an external program.
=item No spawning
if
tainted
$CDPATH
,
$ENV
,
$BASH_ENV
These environment variables may alter the behavior of spawned programs
(especially shells) in ways that subvert security. So now they are
treated as dangerous, in the manner of
$IFS
and
$PATH
.
=item No spawning
if
tainted
$TERM
doesn't look like a terminal name
Some termcap libraries
do
unsafe things
with
$TERM
. However, it would be
unnecessarily harsh to treat all
$TERM
values
as unsafe, since only shell
metacharacters can cause trouble in
$TERM
. So a tainted
$TERM
is
considered to be safe
if
it contains only alphanumerics, underscores,
dashes, and colons, and unsafe
if
it contains other characters (including
whitespace).
=back
=head2 New Opcode module and revised Safe module
A new Opcode module supports the creation, manipulation and
application of opcode masks. The revised Safe module
has
a new API
and is implemented using the new Opcode module. Please
read
the new
Opcode and Safe documentation.
=head2 Embedding improvements
In older versions of Perl it was not possible to create more than one
Perl interpreter instance inside a single process without leaking like a
sieve and/or crashing. The bugs that caused this behavior have all been
fixed. However, you still must take care
when
embedding Perl in a C
program. See the updated perlembed manpage
for
tips on how to manage
your interpreters.
=head2 Internal change: FileHandle class based on IO::* classes
File handles are now stored internally as type IO::Handle. The
FileHandle module is still supported
for
backwards compatibility, but
it is now merely a front end to the IO::* modules, specifically
IO::Handle, IO::Seekable, and IO::File. We suggest, but
do
not
require
, that you
use
the IO::* modules in new code.
In harmony
with
this change, C<
*GLOB
{FILEHANDLE}> is now just a
backward-compatible synonym
for
C<
*GLOB
{IO}>.
=head2 Internal change: PerlIO abstraction interface
It is now possible to build Perl
with
AT
&T
's sfio IO
package
instead of stdio. See L<perlapio>
for
more details, and
the F<INSTALL> file
for
how to
use
it.
=head2 New and changed syntax
=over 4
=item
$coderef
->(PARAMS)
A subroutine reference may now be suffixed
with
an arrow and a
(possibly empty) parameter list. This syntax denotes a call of the
referenced subroutine,
with
the
given
parameters (
if
any).
This new syntax follows the pattern of S<C<<
$hashref
->{FOO} >>> and
S<C<<
$aryref
->[
$foo
] >>>: You may now
write
S<C<
&$subref
(
$foo
)>> as
S<C<<
$subref
->(
$foo
) >>>. All these arrow terms may be chained;
thus, S<C<< &{
$table
->{FOO}}(
$bar
) >>> may now be written
S<C<<
$table
->{FOO}->(
$bar
) >>>.
=back
=head2 New and changed builtin constants
=over 4
=item __PACKAGE__
The current
package
name at compile
time
, or the undefined value
if
there is
no
current
package
(due to a C<
package
;> directive). Like
C<__FILE__> and C<__LINE__>, C<__PACKAGE__> does I<not> interpolate
into strings.
=back
=head2 New and changed builtin variables
=over 4
=item $^E
Extended error message on some platforms. (Also known as
$EXTENDED_OS_ERROR
if
you C<
use
English>).
=item $^H
The current set of syntax checks enabled by C<
use
strict>. See the
documentation of C<strict>
for
more details. Not actually new, but
newly documented.
Because it is intended
for
internal
use
by Perl core components,
there is
no
C<
use
English> long name
for
this variable.
=item $^M
By
default
, running out of memory it is not trappable. However,
if
compiled
for
this, Perl may
use
the contents of C<$^M> as an emergency
pool
after
die
()ing
with
this message. Suppose that your Perl were
compiled
with
-DPERL_EMERGENCY_SBRK and used Perl's malloc. Then
$^M =
'a'
x (1<<16);
would allocate a 64K buffer
for
use
when
in emergency.
See the F<INSTALL> file
for
information on how to enable this option.
As a disincentive to casual
use
of this advanced feature,
there is
no
C<
use
English> long name
for
this variable.
=back
=head2 New and changed builtin functions
=over 4
=item
delete
on slices
This now works. (e.g. C<
delete
@ENV
{
'PATH'
,
'MANPATH'
}>)
=item
flock
is now supported on more platforms, prefers
fcntl
to lockf
when
emulating, and always flushes
before
(un)locking.
=item
printf
and
sprintf
Perl now implements these functions itself; it doesn't
use
the C
library function
sprintf
() any more, except
for
floating-point
numbers, and even then only known flags are allowed. As a result, it
is now possible to know which conversions and flags will work, and
what they will
do
.
The new conversions in Perl's
sprintf
() are:
%i
a synonym
for
%d
%p
a pointer (the address of the Perl value, in hexadecimal)
%n
special:
*stores
* the number of characters output so far
into the
next
variable in the parameter list
The new flags that go between the C<%> and the conversion are:
h interpret integer as C type
"short"
or
"unsigned short"
V interpret integer as Perl's standard integer type
Also, where a number would appear in the flags, an asterisk (
"*"
) may
be used instead, in which case Perl uses the
next
item in the
parameter list as the
given
number (that is, as the field width or
precision). If a field width obtained through
"*"
is negative, it
has
the same effect as the
'-'
flag: left-justification.
See L<perlfunc/
sprintf
>
for
a complete list of conversion and flags.
=item
keys
as an lvalue
As an lvalue, C<
keys
> allows you to increase the number of hash buckets
allocated
for
the
given
hash. This can gain you a measure of efficiency
if
you know the hash is going to get big. (This is similar to pre-extending
an array by assigning a larger number to
$#array
.) If you
say
keys
%hash
= 200;
then C<
%hash
> will have at least 200 buckets allocated
for
it. These
buckets will be retained even
if
you
do
C<
%hash
= ()>;
use
C<
undef
%hash
>
if
you want to free the storage
while
C<
%hash
> is still in scope.
You can't shrink the number of buckets allocated
for
the hash using
C<
keys
> in this way (but you needn't worry about doing this by accident,
as trying
has
no
effect).
=item
my
() in Control Structures
You can now
use
my
() (
with
or without the parentheses) in the control
expressions of control structures such as:
while
(
defined
(
my
$line
= <>)) {
$line
=
lc
$line
;
}
continue
{
print
$line
;
}
if
((
my
$answer
= <STDIN>) =~ /^y(es)?$/i) {
user_agrees();
}
elsif
(
$answer
=~ /^n(o)?$/i) {
user_disagrees();
}
else
{
chomp
$answer
;
die
"`$answer' is neither `yes' nor `no'"
;
}
Also, you can declare a
foreach
loop control variable as lexical by
preceding it
with
the word
"my"
. For example, in:
foreach
my
$i
(1, 2, 3) {
some_function();
}
$i
is a lexical variable, and the scope of
$i
extends
to the end of
the loop, but not beyond it.
Note that you still cannot
use
my
() on global punctuation variables
such as
$_
and the like.
=item
pack
() and
unpack
()
A new
format
'w'
represents a BER compressed integer (as
defined
in
ASN.1). Its
format
is a sequence of one or more bytes,
each
of which
provides seven bits of the total value,
with
the most significant
first. Bit eight of
each
byte is set, except
for
the
last
byte, in
which bit eight is clear.
If
'p'
or
'P'
are
given
undef
as
values
, they now generate a NULL
pointer.
Both
pack
() and
unpack
() now fail
when
their templates contain invalid
types. (Invalid types used to be ignored.)
=item
sysseek
()
The new
sysseek
() operator is a variant of
seek
() that sets and gets the
file's
system
read
/
write
position, using the lseek(2)
system
call. It is
the only reliable way to
seek
before
using
sysread
() or
syswrite
(). Its
return
value is the new position, or the undefined value on failure.
If the first argument to C<
use
> is a number, it is treated as a version
number instead of a module name. If the version of the Perl interpreter
is less than VERSION, then an error message is printed and Perl exits
immediately. Because C<
use
> occurs at compile
time
, this check happens
immediately during the compilation process, unlike C<
require
VERSION>,
which waits
until
runtime
for
the check. This is often useful
if
you
need to check the current Perl version
before
C<
use
>ing library modules
which have changed in incompatible ways from older versions of Perl.
(We
try
not to
do
this more than we have to.)
If the VERSION argument is present between Module and LIST, then the
C<
use
> will call the VERSION method in class Module
with
the
given
version as an argument. The
default
VERSION method, inherited from
the UNIVERSAL class, croaks
if
the
given
version is larger than the
value of the variable
$Module::VERSION
. (Note that there is not a
comma
after
VERSION!)
This version-checking mechanism is similar to the one currently used
in the Exporter module, but it is faster and can be used
with
modules
that don't
use
the Exporter. It is the recommended method
for
new
code.
=item
prototype
(FUNCTION)
Returns the
prototype
of a function as a string (or C<
undef
>
if
the
function
has
no
prototype
). FUNCTION is a reference to or the name of the
function whose
prototype
you want to retrieve.
(Not actually new; just never documented
before
.)
=item
srand
The
default
seed
for
C<
srand
>, which used to be C<
time
>,
has
been changed.
Now it's a heady mix of difficult-to-predict
system
-dependent
values
,
which should be sufficient
for
most everyday purposes.
Previous to version 5.004, calling C<
rand
> without first calling C<
srand
>
would yield the same sequence of random numbers on most or all machines.
Now,
when
perl sees that you
're calling C<rand> and haven'
t yet called
C<
srand
>, it calls C<
srand
>
with
the
default
seed. You should still call
C<
srand
> manually
if
your code might ever be run on a pre-5.004
system
,
of course, or
if
you want a seed other than the
default
.
=item
$_
as Default
Functions documented in the Camel to
default
to
$_
now in
fact
do
, and all those that
do
are so documented in L<perlfunc>.
=item C<m//gc> does not
reset
search position on failure
The C<m//g> match iteration construct
has
always
reset
its target
string's search position (which is visible through the C<
pos
> operator)
when
a match fails; as a result, the
next
C<m//g> match
after
a failure
starts again at the beginning of the string. With Perl 5.004, this
reset
may be disabled by adding the
"c"
(
for
"continue"
) modifier,
i.e. C<m//gc>. This feature, in conjunction
with
the C<\G> zero-width
assertion, makes it possible to chain matches together. See L<perlop>
and L<perlre>.
=item C<m//x> ignores whitespace
before
?*+{}
The C<m//x> construct
has
always been intended to ignore all unescaped
whitespace. However,
before
Perl 5.004, whitespace had the effect of
escaping repeat modifiers like
"*"
or
"?"
;
for
example, C</a
*b
/x> was
(mis)interpreted as C</a\
*b
/x>. This bug
has
been fixed in 5.004.
=item nested C<
sub
{}> closures work now
Prior to the 5.004 release, nested anonymous functions didn't work
right. They
do
now.
=item formats work right on changing lexicals
Just like anonymous functions that contain lexical variables
that change (like a lexical
index
variable
for
a C<
foreach
> loop),
formats now work properly. For example, this silently failed
before
(printed only zeros), but is fine now:
my
$i
;
foreach
$i
( 1 .. 10 ) {
write
;
}
format
=
my
i is @
$i
.
However, it still fails (without a warning)
if
the
foreach
is within a
subroutine:
my
$i
;
sub
foo {
foreach
$i
( 1 .. 10 ) {
write
;
}
}
foo;
format
=
my
i is @
$i
.
=back
=head2 New builtin methods
The C<UNIVERSAL>
package
automatically contains the following methods that
are inherited by all other classes:
=over 4
=item isa(CLASS)
C<isa> returns I<true>
if
its object is blessed into a subclass of C<CLASS>
C<isa> is also exportable and can be called as a
sub
with
two arguments. This
allows the ability to check what a reference points to. Example:
if
(isa(
$ref
,
'ARRAY'
)) {
...
}
=item can(METHOD)
C<can> checks to see
if
its object
has
a method called C<METHOD>,
if
it does then a reference to the
sub
is returned;
if
it does not then
I<
undef
> is returned.
=item VERSION( [NEED] )
C<VERSION> returns the version number of the class (
package
). If the
NEED argument is
given
then it will check that the current version (as
defined
by the
$VERSION
variable in the
given
package
) not less than
NEED; it will
die
if
this is not the case. This method is normally
called as a class method. This method is called automatically by the
C<VERSION> form of C<
use
>.
use
A 1.2
qw(some imported subs)
;
A->VERSION(1.2);
=back
B<NOTE:> C<can> directly uses Perl's internal code
for
method lookup, and
C<isa> uses a very similar method and caching strategy. This may cause
strange effects
if
the Perl code dynamically changes
@ISA
in any
package
.
You may add other methods to the UNIVERSAL class via Perl or XS code.
You
do
not need to C<
use
UNIVERSAL> in order to make these methods
available to your program. This is necessary only
if
you wish to
have C<isa> available as a plain subroutine in the current
package
.
=head2 TIEHANDLE now supported
See L<perltie>
for
other kinds of
tie
()s.
=over 4
=item TIEHANDLE classname, LIST
This is the constructor
for
the class. That means it is expected to
return
an object of some
sort
. The reference can be used to
hold some internal information.
sub
TIEHANDLE {
print
"<shout>\n"
;
my
$i
;
return
bless
\
$i
,
shift
;
}
=item PRINT this, LIST
This method will be triggered every
time
the
tied
handle is printed to.
Beyond its self reference it also expects the list that was passed to
the
print
function.
sub
PRINT {
$r
=
shift
;
$$r
++;
return
print
join
( $, =>
map
{
uc
}
@_
), $\;
}
=item PRINTF this, LIST
This method will be triggered every
time
the
tied
handle is printed to
with
the C<
printf
()> function.
Beyond its self reference it also expects the
format
and list that was
passed to the
printf
function.
sub
PRINTF {
shift
;
my
$fmt
=
shift
;
print
sprintf
(
$fmt
,
@_
).
"\n"
;
}
=item READ this LIST
This method will be called
when
the handle is
read
from via the C<
read
>
or C<
sysread
> functions.
sub
READ {
$r
=
shift
;
my
(
$buf
,
$len
,
$offset
) =
@_
;
print
"READ called, \$buf=$buf, \$len=$len, \$offset=$offset"
;
}
=item READLINE this
This method will be called
when
the handle is
read
from. The method
should
return
undef
when
there is
no
more data.
sub
READLINE {
$r
=
shift
;
return
"PRINT called $$r times\n"
}
=item GETC this
This method will be called
when
the C<
getc
> function is called.
sub
GETC {
print
"Don't GETC, Get Perl"
;
return
"a"
; }
=item DESTROY this
As
with
the other types of ties, this method will be called
when
the
tied
handle is about to be destroyed. This is useful
for
debugging and
possibly
for
cleaning up.
sub
DESTROY {
print
"</shout>\n"
;
}
=back
=head2 Malloc enhancements
If perl is compiled
with
the malloc included
with
the perl distribution
(that is,
if
C<perl -V:d_mymalloc> is
'define'
) then you can
print
memory statistics at runtime by running Perl thusly:
env PERL_DEBUG_MSTATS=2 perl your_script_here
The value of 2 means to
print
statistics
after
compilation and on
exit
;
with
a value of 1, the statistics are printed only on
exit
.
(If you want the statistics at an arbitrary
time
, you'll need to
install the optional module Devel::Peek.)
Three new compilation flags are recognized by malloc.c. (They have
no
effect
if
perl is compiled
with
system
malloc().)
=over 4
=item -DPERL_EMERGENCY_SBRK
If this macro is
defined
, running out of memory need not be a fatal
error: a memory pool can allocated by assigning to the special
variable C<$^M>. See L</
"$^M"
>.
=item -DPACK_MALLOC
Perl memory allocation is by bucket
with
sizes
close
to powers of two.
Because of these malloc overhead may be big, especially
for
data of
size exactly a power of two. If C<PACK_MALLOC> is
defined
, perl uses
a slightly different algorithm
for
small allocations (up to 64 bytes
long), which makes it possible to have overhead down to 1 byte
for
allocations which are powers of two (and appear quite often).
Expected memory savings (
with
8-byte alignment in C<alignbytes>) is
about 20%
for
typical Perl usage. Expected slowdown due to additional
malloc overhead is in fractions of a percent (hard to measure, because
of the effect of saved memory on speed).
=item -DTWO_POT_OPTIMIZE
Similarly to C<PACK_MALLOC>, this macro improves allocations of data
with
size
close
to a power of two; but this works
for
big allocations
(starting
with
16K by
default
). Such allocations are typical
for
big
hashes and special-purpose scripts, especially image processing.
On recent systems, the fact that perl requires 2M from
system
for
1M
allocation will not affect speed of execution, since the tail of such
a chunk is not going to be touched (and thus will not
require
real
memory). However, it may result in a premature out-of-memory error.
So
if
you will be manipulating very large blocks
with
sizes
close
to
powers of two, it would be wise to define this macro.
Expected saving of memory is 0-100% (100% in applications which
require
most memory in such 2*
*n
chunks); expected slowdown is
negligible.
=back
=head2 Miscellaneous efficiency enhancements
Functions that have an empty
prototype
and that
do
nothing but
return
a fixed value are now inlined (e.g. C<
sub
PI () { 3.14159 }>).
Each unique hash key is only allocated once,
no
matter how many hashes
have an entry
with
that key. So even
if
you have 100 copies of the
same hash, the hash
keys
never have to be reallocated.
=head1 Support
for
More Operating Systems
Support
for
the following operating systems is new in Perl 5.004.
=head2 Win32
Perl 5.004 now includes support
for
building a
"native"
perl under
Windows NT, using the Microsoft Visual C++ compiler (versions 2.0
and above) or the Borland C++ compiler (versions 5.02 and above).
The resulting perl can be used under Windows 95 (
if
it
is installed in the same directory locations as it got installed
in Windows NT). This port includes support
for
perl extension
building tools like L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> and L<h2xs>, so that many extensions
available on the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN) can now be
information on CPAN and F<README.win32> in the perl distribution
for
more
details on how to get started
with
building this port.
There is also support
for
building perl under the Cygwin32 environment.
Cygwin32 is a set of GNU tools that make it possible to compile and run
many Unix programs under Windows NT by providing a mostly Unix-like
interface
for
compilation and execution. See F<README.cygwin32> in the
perl distribution
for
more details on this port and how to obtain the
Cygwin32 toolkit.
=head2 Plan 9
See F<README.plan9> in the perl distribution.
=head2 QNX
See F<README.qnx> in the perl distribution.
=head2 AmigaOS
See F<README.amigaos> in the perl distribution.
=head1 Pragmata
Six new pragmatic modules exist:
=over 4
=item
use
autouse
MODULE
=>
qw(sub1 sub2 sub3)
Defers C<
require
MODULE>
until
someone calls one of the specified
subroutines (which must be exported by MODULE). This pragma should be
used
with
caution, and only
when
necessary.
Looks
for
MakeMaker-like I<
'blib'
> directory structure starting in
I<dir> (or current directory) and working back up to five levels of
parent directories.
Intended
for
use
on command line
with
B<-M> option as a way of testing
arbitrary scripts against an uninstalled version of a
package
.
Provides a convenient interface
for
creating compile-
time
constants,
See L<perlsub/
"Constant Functions"
>.
Tells the compiler to enable (or disable) the
use
of POSIX locales
for
builtin operations.
When C<
use
locale> is in effect, the current LC_CTYPE locale is used
for
regular expressions and case mapping; LC_COLLATE
for
string
ordering; and LC_NUMERIC
for
numeric formatting in
printf
and
sprintf
(but B<not> in
print
). LC_NUMERIC is always used in
write
, since
lexical scoping of formats is problematic at best.
Each C<
use
locale> or C<
no
locale> affects statements to the end of
the enclosing BLOCK or,
if
not inside a BLOCK, to the end of the
current file. Locales can be switched and queried
with
POSIX::setlocale().
See L<perllocale>
for
more information.
Disable unsafe opcodes, or any named opcodes,
when
compiling Perl code.
Enable VMS-specific language features. Currently, there are three
VMS-specific features available:
'status'
, which makes C<$?> and
C<
system
>
return
genuine VMS status
values
instead of emulating POSIX;
'exit'
, which makes C<
exit
> take a genuine VMS status value instead of
assuming that C<
exit
1> is an error; and
'time'
, which makes all
times
relative to the
local
time
zone, in the VMS tradition.
=back
=head1 Modules
=head2 Required Updates
Though Perl 5.004 is compatible
with
almost all modules that work
with
Perl 5.003, there are a few exceptions:
Module Required Version
for
Perl 5.004
------ -------------------------------
Filter Filter-1.12
LWP libwww-perl-5.08
Tk Tk400.202 (-w makes noise)
Also, the majordomo mailing list program, version 1.94.1, doesn't work
with
Perl 5.004 (nor
with
perl 4), because it executes an invalid
regular expression. This bug is fixed in majordomo version 1.94.2.
=head2 Installation directories
The I<installperl> script now places the Perl source files
for
extensions in the architecture-specific library directory, which is
where the shared libraries
for
extensions have always been. This
change is intended to allow administrators to keep the Perl 5.004
library directory unchanged from a previous version, without running
the risk of binary incompatibility between extensions' Perl source and
shared libraries.
=head2 Module information summary
Brand new modules, arranged by topic rather than strictly
alphabetically:
CGI.pm Web server interface (
"Common Gateway Interface"
)
CGI/Apache.pm Support
for
Apache's Perl module
CGI/Carp.pm Log server errors
with
helpful context
CGI/Fast.pm Support
for
FastCGI (persistent server process)
CGI/Push.pm Support
for
server
push
CGI/Switch.pm Simple interface
for
multiple server types
CPAN Interface to Comprehensive Perl Archive Network
CPAN::FirstTime Utility
for
creating CPAN configuration file
CPAN::Nox Runs CPAN
while
avoiding compiled extensions
IO.pm Top-level interface to IO::* classes
IO/File.pm IO::File extension Perl module
IO/Handle.pm IO::Handle extension Perl module
IO/Pipe.pm IO::Pipe extension Perl module
IO/Seekable.pm IO::Seekable extension Perl module
IO/Select.pm IO::Select extension Perl module
IO/Socket.pm IO::Socket extension Perl module
Opcode.pm Disable named opcodes
when
compiling Perl code
ExtUtils/Embed.pm Utilities
for
embedding Perl in C programs
ExtUtils/testlib.pm Fixes up
@INC
to
use
just-built extension
FindBin.pm Find path of currently executing program
Class/Struct.pm Declare struct-like datatypes as Perl classes
File/
stat
.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin
stat
Net/hostent.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin gethost*
Net/netent.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin getnet*
Net/protoent.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin getproto*
Net/servent.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin getserv*
Time/
gmtime
.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin
gmtime
Time/
localtime
.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin
localtime
Time/tm.pm Internal object
for
Time::{gm,
local
}
time
User/grent.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin getgr*
User/pwent.pm By-name interface to Perl's builtin getpw*
Tie/RefHash.pm Base class
for
tied
hashes
with
references as
keys
UNIVERSAL.pm Base class
for
*ALL
* classes
=head2 Fcntl
New constants in the existing Fcntl modules are now supported,
provided that your operating
system
happens to support them:
F_GETOWN F_SETOWN
O_ASYNC O_DEFER O_DSYNC O_FSYNC O_SYNC
O_EXLOCK O_SHLOCK
These constants are intended
for
use
with
the Perl operators
sysopen
()
and
fcntl
() and the basic database modules like SDBM_File. For the
exact meaning of these and other Fcntl constants please refer to your
operating
system
's documentation
for
fcntl
() and
open
().
In addition, the Fcntl module now provides these constants
for
use
with
the Perl operator
flock
():
LOCK_SH LOCK_EX LOCK_NB LOCK_UN
These constants are
defined
in all environments (because where there is
no
flock
()
system
call, Perl emulates it). However,
for
historical
reasons, these constants are not exported
unless
they are explicitly
requested
with
the
":flock"
tag (e.g. C<
use
Fcntl
':flock'
>).
=head2 IO
The IO module provides a simple mechanism to load all the IO modules at one
go. Currently this includes:
IO::Handle
IO::Seekable
IO::File
IO::Pipe
IO::Socket
For more information on any of these modules, please see its
respective documentation.
=head2 Math::Complex
The Math::Complex module
has
been totally rewritten, and now supports
more operations. These are overloaded:
+ - * / ** <=> neg ~
abs
sqrt
exp
log
sin
cos
atan2
""
(stringify)
And these functions are now exported:
pi i Re Im arg
log10 logn ln cbrt root
tan
csc sec cot
asin acos atan
acsc asec acot
sinh cosh tanh
csch sech coth
asinh acosh atanh
acsch asech acoth
cplx cplxe
=head2 Math::Trig
This new module provides a simpler interface to parts of Math::Complex
for
those who need trigonometric functions only
for
real numbers.
=head2 DB_File
There have been quite a few changes made to DB_File. Here are a few of
the highlights:
=over 4
=item *
Fixed a handful of bugs.
=item *
By public demand, added support
for
the standard hash function
exists
().
=item *
Made it compatible
with
Berkeley DB 1.86.
=item *
Made negative subscripts work
with
RECNO interface.
=item *
Changed the
default
flags from O_RDWR to O_CREAT|O_RDWR and the
default
mode from 0640 to 0666.
=item *
Made DB_File automatically
import
the
open
() constants (O_RDWR,
O_CREAT etc.) from Fcntl,
if
available.
=item *
Updated documentation.
=back
Refer to the HISTORY section in DB_File.pm
for
a complete list of
changes. Everything
after
DB_File 1.01
has
been added since 5.003.
=head2 Net::Ping
Major rewrite - support added
for
both udp echo and real icmp pings.
=head2 Object-oriented overrides
for
builtin operators
Many of the Perl builtins returning lists now have
object-oriented overrides. These are:
File::
stat
Net::hostent
Net::netent
Net::protoent
Net::servent
Time::
gmtime
Time::
localtime
User::grent
User::pwent
For example, you can now
say
$his
= (
stat
(
$filename
)->st_uid == pwent(
$whoever
)->pw_uid);
=head1 Utility Changes
=head2 pod2html
=over 4
=item Sends converted HTML to standard output
The I<pod2html> utility included
with
Perl 5.004 is entirely new.
By
default
, it sends the converted HTML to its standard output,
instead of writing it to a file like Perl 5.003's I<pod2html> did.
Use the B<--outfile=FILENAME> option to
write
to a file.
=back
=head2 xsubpp
=over 4
=item C<void> XSUBs now
default
to returning nothing
Due to a documentation/implementation bug in previous versions of
Perl, XSUBs
with
a
return
type of C<void> have actually been
returning one value. Usually that value was the GV
for
the XSUB,
but sometimes it was some already freed or reused value, which would
sometimes lead to program failure.
In Perl 5.004,
if
an XSUB is declared as returning C<void>, it
actually returns
no
value, i.e. an empty list (though there is a
backward-compatibility exception; see below). If your XSUB really
does
return
an SV, you should give it a
return
type of C<SV *>.
For backward compatibility, I<xsubpp> tries to guess whether a
C<void> XSUB is really C<void> or
if
it wants to
return
an C<SV *>.
It does so by examining the text of the XSUB:
if
I<xsubpp> finds
what looks like an assignment to C<ST(0)>, it assumes that the
XSUB's
return
type is really C<SV *>.
=back
=head1 C Language API Changes
=over 4
=item C<gv_fetchmethod> and C<perl_call_sv>
The C<gv_fetchmethod> function finds a method
for
an object, just like
in Perl 5.003. The GV it returns may be a method cache entry.
However, in Perl 5.004, method cache entries are not visible to users;
therefore, they can
no
longer be passed directly to C<perl_call_sv>.
Instead, you should
use
the C<GvCV> macro on the GV to extract its CV,
and pass the CV to C<perl_call_sv>.
The most likely symptom of passing the result of C<gv_fetchmethod> to
C<perl_call_sv> is Perl's producing an
"Undefined subroutine called"
error on the I<second> call to a
given
method (since there is
no
cache
on the first call).
=item C<perl_eval_pv>
A new function handy
for
eval
'ing strings of Perl code inside C code.
This function returns the value from the
eval
statement, which can
be used instead of fetching globals from the symbol table. See
L<perlguts>, L<perlembed> and L<perlcall>
for
details and examples.
=item Extended API
for
manipulating hashes
Internal handling of hash
keys
has
changed. The old hashtable API is
still fully supported, and will likely remain so. The additions to the
API allow passing
keys
as C<SV*>s, so that C<
tied
> hashes can be
given
real scalars as
keys
rather than plain strings (nontied hashes still
can only
use
strings as
keys
). New extensions must
use
the new hash
access functions and macros
if
they wish to
use
C<SV*>
keys
. These
additions also make it feasible to manipulate C<HE*>s (hash entries),
which can be more efficient. See L<perlguts>
for
details.
=back
=head1 Documentation Changes
Many of the base and library pods were updated. These
new pods are included in section 1:
=over 4
=item L<perldelta>
This document.
=item L<perlfaq>
Frequently asked questions.
=item L<perllocale>
Locale support (internationalization and localization).
=item L<perltoot>
Tutorial on Perl OO programming.
=item L<perlapio>
Perl internal IO abstraction interface.
=item L<perlmodlib>
Perl module library and recommended practice
for
module creation.
Extracted from L<perlmod> (which is much smaller as a result).
=item L<perldebug>
Although not new, this
has
been massively updated.
=item L<perlsec>
Although not new, this
has
been massively updated.
=back
=head1 New Diagnostics
Several new conditions will trigger warnings that were
silent
before
. Some only affect certain platforms.
The following new warnings and errors outline these.
These messages are classified as follows (listed in
increasing order of desperation):
(W) A warning (optional).
(D) A deprecation (optional).
(S) A severe warning (mandatory).
(F) A fatal error (trappable).
(P) An internal error you should never see (trappable).
(X) A very fatal error (nontrappable).
(A) An alien error message (not generated by Perl).
=over 4
=item
"my"
variable
%s
masks earlier declaration in same scope
(W) A lexical variable
has
been redeclared in the same scope, effectively
eliminating all access to the previous instance. This is almost always
a typographical error. Note that the earlier variable will still exist
until
the end of the scope or
until
all closure referents to it are
destroyed.
=item
%s
argument is not a HASH element or slice
(F) The argument to
delete
() must be either a hash element, such as
$foo
{
$bar
}
$ref
->[12]->{
"susie"
}
or a hash slice, such as
@foo
{
$bar
,
$baz
,
$xyzzy
}
@{
$ref
->[12]}{
"susie"
,
"queue"
}
=item Allocation too large:
%lx
(X) You can't allocate more than 64K on an MS-DOS machine.
=item Allocation too large
(F) You can't allocate more than 2^31+
"small amount"
bytes.
=item Applying
%s
to
%s
will act on
scalar
(
%s
)
(W) The pattern match (//), substitution (s///), and transliteration (
tr
///)
operators work on
scalar
values
. If you apply one of them to an array
or a hash, it will convert the array or hash to a
scalar
value (the
length
of an array or the population info of a hash) and then work on
that
scalar
value. This is probably not what you meant to
do
. See
L<perlfunc/
grep
> and L<perlfunc/
map
>
for
alternatives.
=item Attempt to free nonexistent shared string
(P) Perl maintains a reference counted internal table of strings to
optimize the storage and access of hash
keys
and other strings. This
indicates someone tried to decrement the reference count of a string
that can
no
longer be found in the table.
=item Attempt to
use
reference as lvalue in
substr
(W) You supplied a reference as the first argument to
substr
() used
as an lvalue, which is pretty strange. Perhaps you forgot to
dereference it first. See L<perlfunc/
substr
>.
=item Bareword
"%s"
refers to nonexistent
package
(W) You used a qualified bareword of the form C<Foo::>, but
the compiler saw
no
other uses of that namespace
before
that point.
Perhaps you need to predeclare a
package
?
=item Can't redefine active
sort
subroutine
%s
(F) Perl optimizes the internal handling of
sort
subroutines and keeps
pointers into them. You tried to redefine one such
sort
subroutine
when
it
was currently active, which is not allowed. If you really want to
do
this, you should
write
C<
sort
{
&func
}
@x
> instead of C<
sort
func
@x
>.
=item Can't
use
bareword (
"%s"
) as
%s
ref
while
"strict refs"
in
use
(F) Only hard references are allowed by
"strict refs"
. Symbolic references
are disallowed. See L<perlref>.
=item Cannot resolve method `
%s
' overloading `%s'
in
package
`
%s
'
(P) Internal error trying to resolve overloading specified by a method
name (as opposed to a subroutine reference).
=item Constant subroutine
%s
redefined
(S) You redefined a subroutine which had previously been eligible
for
inlining. See L<perlsub/
"Constant Functions"
>
for
commentary and
workarounds.
=item Constant subroutine
%s
undefined
(S) You undefined a subroutine which had previously been eligible
for
inlining. See L<perlsub/
"Constant Functions"
>
for
commentary and
workarounds.
=item Copy method did not
return
a reference
(F) The method which overloads
"="
is buggy. See L<overload/Copy Constructor>.
=item Died
(F) You passed
die
() an empty string (the equivalent of C<
die
""
>) or
you called it
with
no
args and both C<$@> and C<
$_
> were empty.
=item Exiting pseudo-block via
%s
(W) You are exiting a rather special block construct (like a
sort
block or
subroutine) by unconventional means, such as a
goto
, or a loop control
statement. See L<perlfunc/
sort
>.
=item Identifier too long
(F) Perl limits identifiers (names
for
variables, functions, etc.) to
252 characters
for
simple names, somewhat more
for
compound names (like
C<
$A::B
>). You
've exceeded Perl'
s limits. Future versions of Perl are
likely to eliminate these arbitrary limitations.
=item Illegal character
%s
(carriage
return
)
(F) A carriage
return
character was found in the input. This is an
error, and not a warning, because carriage
return
characters can break
multi-line strings, including here documents (e.g., C<
print
<<EOF;>).
=item Illegal switch in PERL5OPT:
%s
(X) The PERL5OPT environment variable may only be used to set the
following switches: B<-[DIMUdmw]>.
=item Integer overflow in
hex
number
(S) The literal
hex
number you have specified is too big
for
your
architecture. On a 32-bit architecture the largest
hex
literal is
0xFFFFFFFF.
=item Integer overflow in octal number
(S) The literal octal number you have specified is too big
for
your
architecture. On a 32-bit architecture the largest octal literal is
037777777777.
=item internal error:
glob
failed
(P) Something went wrong
with
the external program(s) used
for
C<
glob
>
and C<< <*.c> >>. This may mean that your csh (C shell) is
broken. If so, you should change all of the csh-related variables in
config.sh: If you have tcsh, make the variables refer to it as
if
it
were csh (e.g. C<full_csh=
'/usr/bin/tcsh'
>); otherwise, make them all
empty (except that C<d_csh> should be C<
'undef'
>) so that Perl will
think csh is missing. In either case,
after
editing config.sh, run
C<./Configure -S> and rebuild Perl.
=item Invalid conversion in
%s
:
"%s"
(W) Perl does not understand the
given
format
conversion.
See L<perlfunc/
sprintf
>.
=item Invalid type in
pack
:
'%s'
(F) The
given
character is not a valid
pack
type. See L<perlfunc/
pack
>.
=item Invalid type in
unpack
:
'%s'
(F) The
given
character is not a valid
unpack
type. See L<perlfunc/
unpack
>.
=item Name
"%s::%s"
used only once: possible typo
(W) Typographical errors often show up as unique variable names.
If you had a good reason
for
having a unique name, then just mention
it again somehow to suppress the message (the C<
use
vars> pragma is
provided
for
just this purpose).
=item Null picture in
formline
(F) The first argument to
formline
must be a valid
format
picture
specification. It was found to be empty, which probably means you
supplied it an uninitialized value. See L<perlform>.
=item Offset outside string
(F) You tried to
do
a
read
/
write
/
send
/
recv
operation
with
an offset
pointing outside the buffer. This is difficult to imagine.
The sole exception to this is that C<
sysread
()>ing past the buffer
will extend the buffer and zero pad the new area.
=item Out of memory!
(X|F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was insufficient
remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the request.
The request was judged to be small, so the possibility to trap it
depends on the way Perl was compiled. By
default
it is not trappable.
However,
if
compiled
for
this, Perl may
use
the contents of C<$^M> as
an emergency pool
after
die
()ing
with
this message. In this case the
error is trappable I<once>.
=item Out of memory during request
for
%s
(F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was insufficient
remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the request. However,
the request was judged large enough (compile-
time
default
is 64K), so
a possibility to shut down by trapping this error is granted.
=item panic: frexp
(P) The library function frexp() failed, making
printf
(
"%f"
) impossible.
=item Possible attempt to put comments in
qw()
list
(W)
qw()
lists contain items separated by whitespace; as
with
literal
strings, comment characters are not ignored, but are instead treated
as literal data. (You may have used different delimiters than the
parentheses shown here; braces are also frequently used.)
You probably wrote something like this:
@list
=
qw(
a # a comment
b # another comment
)
;
when
you should have written this:
@list
=
qw(
a
b
)
;
If you really want comments, build your list the
old-fashioned way,
with
quotes and commas:
@list
= (
'a'
,
'b'
,
);
=item Possible attempt to separate words
with
commas
(W)
qw()
lists contain items separated by whitespace; therefore commas
aren't needed to separate the items. (You may have used different
delimiters than the parentheses shown here; braces are also frequently
used.)
You probably wrote something like this:
qw! a, b, c !
;
which puts literal commas into some of the list items. Write it without
commas
if
you don't want them to appear in your data:
qw! a b c !
;
=item Scalar value @
%s
{
%s
} better written as $
%s
{
%s
}
(W) You've used a hash slice (indicated by @) to
select
a single element of
a hash. Generally it's better to ask
for
a
scalar
value (indicated by $).
The difference is that C<
$foo
{
&bar
}> always behaves like a
scalar
, both
when
assigning to it and
when
evaluating its argument,
while
C<
@foo
{
&bar
}> behaves
like a list
when
you assign to it, and provides a list context to its
subscript, which can
do
weird things
if
you're expecting only one subscript.
=item Stub found
while
resolving method `
%s
' overloading `%s'
in
%s
(P) Overloading resolution over
@ISA
tree may be broken by importing stubs.
Stubs should never be implicitly created, but explicit calls to C<can>
may break this.
=item Too late
for
"B<-T>"
option
(X) The
B<-T> option, but Perl was not invoked
with
B<-T> in its argument
list. This is an error because, by the
time
Perl discovers a B<-T> in
a script, it's too late to properly taint everything from the
environment. So Perl gives up.
=item
untie
attempted
while
%d
inner references still exist
(W) A copy of the object returned from C<
tie
> (or C<
tied
>) was still
valid
when
C<
untie
> was called.
=item Unrecognized character
%s
(F) The Perl parser
has
no
idea what to
do
with
the specified character
in your Perl script (or
eval
). Perhaps you tried to run a compressed
script, a binary program, or a directory as a Perl program.
=item Unsupported function
fork
(F) Your version of executable does not support forking.
Note that under some systems, like OS/2, there may be different flavors of
Perl executables, some of which may support
fork
, some not. Try changing
the name you call Perl by to C<perl_>, C<perl__>, and so on.
=item Use of
"$$<digit>"
to mean
"${$}<digit>"
is deprecated
(D) Perl versions
before
5.004 misinterpreted any type marker followed
by
"$"
and a digit. For example,
"$$0"
was incorrectly taken to mean
"${$}0"
instead of
"${$0}"
. This bug is (mostly) fixed in Perl 5.004.
However, the developers of Perl 5.004 could not fix this bug completely,
because at least two widely-used modules depend on the old meaning of
"$$0"
in a string. So Perl 5.004 still interprets
"$$<digit>"
in the
old (broken) way inside strings; but it generates this message as a
warning. And in Perl 5.005, this special treatment will cease.
=item Value of
%s
can be
"0"
; test
with
defined
()
(W) In a conditional expression, you used <HANDLE>, <*> (
glob
), C<
each
()>,
or C<
readdir
()> as a boolean value. Each of these constructs can
return
a
value of
"0"
; that would make the conditional expression false, which is
probably not what you intended. When using these constructs in conditional
expressions, test their
values
with
the C<
defined
> operator.
=item Variable
"%s"
may be unavailable
(W) An inner (nested) I<anonymous> subroutine is inside a I<named>
subroutine, and outside that is another subroutine; and the anonymous
(innermost) subroutine is referencing a lexical variable
defined
in
the outermost subroutine. For example:
sub
outermost {
my
$a
;
sub
middle {
sub
{
$a
} } }
If the anonymous subroutine is called or referenced (directly or
indirectly) from the outermost subroutine, it will share the variable
as you would expect. But
if
the anonymous subroutine is called or
referenced
when
the outermost subroutine is not active, it will see
the value of the shared variable as it was
before
and during the
*first
* call to the outermost subroutine, which is probably not what
you want.
In these circumstances, it is usually best to make the middle
subroutine anonymous, using the C<
sub
{}> syntax. Perl
has
specific
support
for
shared variables in nested anonymous subroutines; a named
subroutine in between interferes
with
this feature.
=item Variable
"%s"
will not stay shared
(W) An inner (nested) I<named> subroutine is referencing a lexical
variable
defined
in an outer subroutine.
When the inner subroutine is called, it will probably see the value of
the outer subroutine's variable as it was
before
and during the
*first
* call to the outer subroutine; in this case,
after
the first
call to the outer subroutine is complete, the inner and outer
subroutines will
no
longer share a common value
for
the variable. In
other words, the variable will
no
longer be shared.
Furthermore,
if
the outer subroutine is anonymous and references a
lexical variable outside itself, then the outer and inner subroutines
will I<never> share the
given
variable.
This problem can usually be solved by making the inner subroutine
anonymous, using the C<
sub
{}> syntax. When inner anonymous subs that
reference variables in outer subroutines are called or referenced,
they are automatically rebound to the current
values
of such
variables.
=item Warning: something's wrong
(W) You passed
warn
() an empty string (the equivalent of C<
warn
""
>) or
you called it
with
no
args and C<
$_
> was empty.
=item Ill-formed logical name |
%s
| in prime_env_iter
(W) A warning peculiar to VMS. A logical name was encountered
when
preparing
to iterate over
%ENV
which violates the syntactic rules governing logical
names. Since it cannot be translated normally, it is skipped, and will not
appear in
%ENV
. This may be a benign occurrence, as some software packages
might directly modify logical name tables and introduce nonstandard names,
or it may indicate that a logical name table
has
been corrupted.
=item Got an error from DosAllocMem
(P) An error peculiar to OS/2. Most probably you're using an obsolete
version of Perl, and this should not happen anyway.
=item Malformed PERLLIB_PREFIX
(F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERLLIB_PREFIX should be of the form
prefix1;prefix2
or
prefix1 prefix2
with
nonempty prefix1 and prefix2. If C<prefix1> is indeed a prefix
of a builtin library search path, prefix2 is substituted. The error
may appear
if
components are not found, or are too long. See
"PERLLIB_PREFIX"
in F<README.os2>.
=item PERL_SH_DIR too long
(F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERL_SH_DIR is the directory to find the
C<sh>-shell in. See
"PERL_SH_DIR"
in F<README.os2>.
=item Process terminated by SIG
%s
(W) This is a standard message issued by OS/2 applications,
while
*nix
applications
die
in silence. It is considered a feature of the OS/2
port. One can easily disable this by appropriate sighandlers, see
L<perlipc/
"Signals"
>. See also
"Process terminated by SIGTERM/SIGINT"
in F<README.os2>.
=back
=head1 BUGS
If you find what you think is a bug, you might check the headers of
recently posted articles in the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup.
Home Page.
If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the B<perlbug>
program included
with
your release. Make sure you trim your bug down
to a tiny but sufficient test case. Your bug report, along
with
the
output of C<perl -V>, will be sent off to <F<perlbug
@perl
.com>> to be
analysed by the Perl porting team.
=head1 SEE ALSO
The F<Changes> file
for
exhaustive details on what changed.
The F<INSTALL> file
for
how to build Perl. This file
has
been
significantly updated
for
5.004, so even veteran users should
look through it.
The F<README> file
for
general stuff.
The F<Copying> file
for
copyright information.
=head1 HISTORY
Constructed by Tom Christiansen, grabbing material
with
permission
from innumerable contributors,
with
kibitzing by more than a few Perl
porters.
Last update: Wed May 14 11:14:09 EDT 1997