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ba370e9b 1=head1 NAME
cc0fca54 2
f39f21d8 3perldelta - what is new for perl v5.8.0
cc0fca54 4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
44da0e71 7This document describes differences between the 5.6.0 release
8and the 5.8.0 release.
f39f21d8 9
44da0e71 10Many of the bug fixes in 5.8.0 were already seen in the 5.6.1
11maintenance release since the two releases were kept closely
12coordinated.
13
4f8e5944 14If you are upgrading from Perl 5.005_03, you might also want
15to read L<perl56delta>.
16
44da0e71 17=head1 Highlights In 5.8.0
76663d67 18
19=over 4
20
21=item *
22
23Better Unicode support
24
25=item *
26
27New Thread Implementation
28
29=item *
30
31Many New Modules
32
33=item *
34
35Better Numeric Accuracy
36
37=item *
38
39Safe Signals
40
41=item *
42
43More Extensive Regression Testing
44
45=back
46
f39f21d8 47=head1 Incompatible Changes
48
6cc60dfb 49=head2 Binary Incompatibility
50
764bd7e0 51B<Perl 5.8 is not binary compatible with earlier releases of Perl.>
52
53B<You have to recompile your XS modules.>
54
55(Pure Perl modules should continue to work.)
56
c5af7db2 57The major reason for the discontinuity is the new IO architecture
8cbf54fa 58called PerlIO. PerlIO is the default configuration because without
59it many new features of Perl 5.8 cannot be used. In other words:
60you just have to recompile your modules containing XS code, sorry
61about that.
6cc60dfb 62
365d6a78 63In future releases of Perl, non-PerlIO aware XS modules may become
6cc60dfb 64completely unsupported. This shouldn't be too difficult for module
65authors, however: PerlIO has been designed as a drop-in replacement
66(at the source code level) for the stdio interface.
67
764bd7e0 68Depending on your platform, there are also other reasons why
69we decided to break binary compatibility, please read on.
70
77c8cf41 71=head2 64-bit platforms and malloc
72
057b7f2b 73If your pointers are 64 bits wide, the Perl malloc is no longer being
c2e23569 74used because it does not work well with 8-byte pointers. Also,
61947107 75usually the system mallocs on such platforms are much better optimized
c2e23569 76for such large memory models than the Perl malloc. Some memory-hungry
77Perl applications like the PDL don't work well with Perl's malloc.
78Finally, other applications than Perl (like modperl) tend to prefer
79the system malloc. Such platforms include Alpha and 64-bit HPPA,
80MIPS, PPC, and Sparc.
77c8cf41 81
82=head2 AIX Dynaloading
83
84The AIX dynaloading now uses in AIX releases 4.3 and newer the native
85dlopen interface of AIX instead of the old emulated interface. This
86change will probably break backward compatibility with compiled
87modules. The change was made to make Perl more compliant with other
88applications like modperl which are using the AIX native interface.
89
95f0a2f1 90=head2 Attributes for C<my> variables now handled at run-time.
91
92The C<my EXPR : ATTRS> syntax now applies variable attributes at
93run-time. (Subroutine and C<our> variables still get attributes applied
94at compile-time.) See L<attributes> for additional details. In particular,
95however, this allows variable attributes to be useful for C<tie> interfaces,
c4f1ce08 96which was a deficiency of earlier releases. Note that the new semantics
97doesn't work with the Attribute::Handlers module (as of version 0.76).
95f0a2f1 98
77c8cf41 99=head2 Socket Extension Dynamic in VMS
100
101The Socket extension is now dynamically loaded instead of being
102statically built in. This may or may not be a problem with ancient
103TCP/IP stacks of VMS: we do not know since we weren't able to test
104Perl in such configurations.
105
00bb525a 106=head2 IEEE-format Floating Point Default on OpenVMS Alpha
107
108Perl now uses IEEE format (T_FLOAT) as the default internal floating
109point format on OpenVMS Alpha, potentially breaking binary compatibility
110with external libraries or existing data. G_FLOAT is still available as
111a configuration option. The default on VAX (D_FLOAT) has not changed.
112
eb0cc9e3 113=head2 New Unicode Properties
114
115Unicode I<scripts> are now supported. Scripts are similar to (and superior
116to) Unicode I<blocks>. The difference between scripts and blocks is that
117scripts are the glyphs used by a language or a group of languages, while
118the blocks are more artificial groupings of (mostly) 256 characters based
119on the Unicode numbering.
120
121In general, scripts are more inclusive, but not universally so. For
122example, while the script C<Latin> includes all the Latin characters and
123their various diacritic-adorned versions, it does not include the various
124punctuation or digits (since they are not solely C<Latin>).
125
126A number of other properties are now supported, including C<\p{L&}>,
127C<\p{Any}> C<\p{Assigned}>, C<\p{Unassigned}>, C<\p{Blank}> and
128C<\p{SpacePerl}> (along with their C<\P{...}> versions, of course).
129See L<perlunicode> for details, and more additions.
130
131The C<In> or C<Is> prefix to names used with the C<\p{...}> and C<\P{...}>
132are now almost always optional. The only exception is that a C<In> prefix
133is required to signify a Unicode block when a block name conflicts with a
134script name. For example, C<\p{Tibetan}> refers to the script, while
135C<\p{InTibetan}> refers to the block. When there is no name conflict, you
136can omit the C<In> from the block name (e.g. C<\p{BraillePatterns}>), but
137to be safe, it's probably best to always use the C<In>).
77c8cf41 138
c2e23569 139=head2 REF(...) Instead Of SCALAR(...)
77c8cf41 140
057b7f2b 141A reference to a reference now stringifies as "REF(0x81485ec)" instead
c2e23569 142of "SCALAR(0x81485ec)" in order to be more consistent with the return
143value of ref().
77c8cf41 144
79f69e33 145=head2 pack/unpack D/F recycled
146
66023b77 147The undocumented pack/unpack template letters D/F have been recycled
79f69e33 148for better use: now they stand for long double (if supported by the
149platform) and NV (Perl internal floating point type). (They used
6123004a 150to be aliases for d/f, but you never knew that.)
79f69e33 151
c2e23569 152=head2 Deprecations
77c8cf41 153
61947107 154=over 4
77c8cf41 155
61947107 156=item *
f39f21d8 157
61947107 158The semantics of bless(REF, REF) were unclear and until someone proves
159it to make some sense, it is forbidden.
f39f21d8 160
161=item *
162
c2e23569 163The obsolete chat2 library that should never have been allowed
164to escape the laboratory has been decommissioned.
f39f21d8 165
166=item *
167
58175c9b 168The builtin dump() function has probably outlived most of its
169usefulness. The core-dumping functionality will remain in future
170available as an explicit call to C<CORE::dump()>, but in future
171releases the behaviour of an unqualified C<dump()> call may change.
172
173=item *
174
61947107 175The very dusty examples in the eg/ directory have been removed.
176Suggestions for new shiny examples welcome but the main issue is that
177the examples need to be documented, tested and (most importantly)
178maintained.
f39f21d8 179
180=item *
181
c2e23569 182The (bogus) escape sequences \8 and \9 now give an optional warning
183("Unrecognized escape passed through"). There is no need to \-escape
184any C<\w> character.
f39f21d8 185
186=item *
187
c2e23569 188The list of filenames from glob() (or <...>) is now by default sorted
44da0e71 189alphabetically to be csh-compliant (which is what happened before
190in most UNIX platforms). (bsd_glob() does still sort platform
c2e23569 191natively, ASCII or EBCDIC, unless GLOB_ALPHASORT is specified.)
f39f21d8 192
193=item *
194
44da0e71 195Spurious syntax errors generated in certain situations, when glob()
196caused File::Glob to be loaded for the first time, have been fixed.
197
198=item *
199
c2e23569 200Although "you shouldn't do that", it was possible to write code that
201depends on Perl's hashed key order (Data::Dumper does this). The new
202algorithm "One-at-a-Time" produces a different hashed key order.
203More details are in L</"Performance Enhancements">.
f39f21d8 204
205=item *
206
61947107 207lstat(FILEHANDLE) now gives a warning because the operation makes no sense.
208In future releases this may become a fatal error.
f39f21d8 209
210=item *
211
057b7f2b 212The C<package;> syntax (C<package> without an argument) has been
c2e23569 213deprecated. Its semantics were never that clear and its
214implementation even less so. If you have used that feature to
215disallow all but fully qualified variables, C<use strict;> instead.
61947107 216
217=item *
218
c2e23569 219The unimplemented POSIX regex features [[.cc.]] and [[=c=]] are still
220recognised but now cause fatal errors. The previous behaviour of
221ignoring them by default and warning if requested was unacceptable
222since it, in a way, falsely promised that the features could be used.
61947107 223
224=item *
225
c2e23569 226The current user-visible implementation of pseudo-hashes (the weird
227use of the first array element) is deprecated starting from Perl 5.8.0
228and will be removed in Perl 5.10.0, and the feature will be
229implemented differently. Not only is the current interface rather
230ugly, but the current implementation slows down normal array and hash
231use quite noticeably. The C<fields> pragma interface will remain
a6d3fe4f 232available. The I<restricted hashes> interface is expected to
233be the replacement interface (see L<Hash::Util>).
61947107 234
235=item *
236
aecce728 237The syntaxes C<< @a->[...] >> and C<< %h->{...} >> have now been deprecated.
61947107 238
239=item *
240
c2e23569 241After years of trying the suidperl is considered to be too complex to
242ever be considered truly secure. The suidperl functionality is likely
243to be removed in a future release.
244
245=item *
246
6ba475fe 247The 5.005 threads model (module C<Thread>) is deprecated and expected
248to be removed in Perl 5.10. Multithreaded code should be migrated to
249the new ithreads model (see L<threads> and L<threads::shared>).
250
251=item *
252
c2e23569 253The long deprecated uppercase aliases for the string comparison
254operators (EQ, NE, LT, LE, GE, GT) have now been removed.
255
256=item *
257
258The tr///C and tr///U features have been removed and will not return;
259the interface was a mistake. Sorry about that. For similar
260functionality, see pack('U0', ...) and pack('C0', ...).
f39f21d8 261
420cdfc1 262=item *
263
264Earlier Perls treated "sub foo (@bar)" as equivalent to "sub foo (@)".
8cbf54fa 265The prototypes are now checked better at compile-time for invalid
266syntax. An optional warning is generated ("Illegal character in
267prototype...") but this may be upgraded to a fatal error in a future
268release.
420cdfc1 269
fd5a896a 270=item *
271
272The existing behaviour when localising tied arrays and hashes is wrong,
273and will be changed in a future release, so do not rely on the existing
274behaviour. See L<"Localising Tied Arrays and Hashes Is Broken">.
275
f39f21d8 276=back
277
61947107 278=head1 Core Enhancements
279
77c8cf41 280=head2 PerlIO is Now The Default
f39f21d8 281
282=over 4
283
284=item *
285
77c8cf41 286IO is now by default done via PerlIO rather than system's "stdio".
287PerlIO allows "layers" to be "pushed" onto a file handle to alter the
288handle's behaviour. Layers can be specified at open time via 3-arg
289form of open:
f39f21d8 290
77c8cf41 291 open($fh,'>:crlf :utf8', $path) || ...
f39f21d8 292
77c8cf41 293or on already opened handles via extended C<binmode>:
f39f21d8 294
77c8cf41 295 binmode($fh,':encoding(iso-8859-7)');
f39f21d8 296
77c8cf41 297The built-in layers are: unix (low level read/write), stdio (as in
298previous Perls), perlio (re-implementation of stdio buffering in a
299portable manner), crlf (does CRLF <=> "\n" translation as on Win32,
300but available on any platform). A mmap layer may be available if
301platform supports it (mostly UNIXes).
f39f21d8 302
77c8cf41 303Layers to be applied by default may be specified via the 'open' pragma.
304
305See L</"Installation and Configuration Improvements"> for the effects
306of PerlIO on your architecture name.
f39f21d8 307
308=item *
309
77c8cf41 310File handles can be marked as accepting Perl's internal encoding of Unicode
311(UTF-8 or UTF-EBCDIC depending on platform) by a pseudo layer ":utf8" :
f39f21d8 312
77c8cf41 313 open($fh,">:utf8","Uni.txt");
f39f21d8 314
77c8cf41 315Note for EBCDIC users: the pseudo layer ":utf8" is erroneously named
316for you since it's not UTF-8 what you will be getting but instead
317UTF-EBCDIC. See L<perlunicode>, L<utf8>, and
318http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr16/ for more information.
319In future releases this naming may change.
f39f21d8 320
321=item *
322
77c8cf41 323File handles can translate character encodings from/to Perl's internal
324Unicode form on read/write via the ":encoding()" layer.
f39f21d8 325
326=item *
327
77c8cf41 328File handles can be opened to "in memory" files held in Perl scalars via:
329
330 open($fh,'>', \$variable) || ...
f39f21d8 331
332=item *
333
77c8cf41 334Anonymous temporary files are available without need to
335'use FileHandle' or other module via
f39f21d8 336
77c8cf41 337 open($fh,"+>", undef) || ...
f39f21d8 338
77c8cf41 339That is a literal undef, not an undefined value.
f39f21d8 340
341=item *
342
77c8cf41 343The list form of C<open> is now implemented for pipes (at least on UNIX):
f39f21d8 344
77c8cf41 345 open($fh,"-|", 'cat', '/etc/motd')
f39f21d8 346
77c8cf41 347creates a pipe, and runs the equivalent of exec('cat', '/etc/motd') in
348the child process.
f39f21d8 349
b310b053 350=item *
351
352If your locale environment variables (LANGUAGE, LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LANG)
353contain the strings 'UTF-8' or 'UTF8' (case-insensitive matching),
354the default encoding of your STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR, and of
355B<any subsequent file open>, is UTF-8.
356
e1f170bd 357=back
f39f21d8 358
02e156f1 359=head2 Restricted Hashes
360
361A restricted hash is restricted to a certain set of keys, no keys
362outside the set can be added. Also individual keys can be restricted
363so that the key cannot be deleted and the value cannot be changed.
364No new syntax is involved: the Hash::Util module is the interface.
365
3e33716f 366=head2 Safe Signals
f39f21d8 367
e1f170bd 368Perl used to be fragile in that signals arriving at inopportune moments
369could corrupt Perl's internal state. Now Perl postpones handling of
3e33716f 370signals until it's safe (between opcodes).
371
56e5bb57 372This change may have surprising side effects because signals no longer
3e33716f 373interrupt Perl instantly. Perl will now first finish whatever it was
374doing, like finishing an internal operation (like sort()) or an
375external operation (like an I/O operation), and only then look at any
376arrived signals (and before starting the next operation). No more corrupt
377internal state since the current operation is always finished first,
6123004a 378but the signal may take more time to get heard. Note that breaking
379out from potentially blocking operations should still work, though.
f39f21d8 380
e1f170bd 381=head2 Unicode Overhaul
f39f21d8 382
e1f170bd 383Unicode in general should be now much more usable than in Perl 5.6.0
384(or even in 5.6.1). Unicode can be used in hash keys, Unicode in
385regular expressions should work now, Unicode in tr/// should work now,
b310b053 386Unicode in I/O should work now. See L<perluniintro> for introduction
387and L<perlunicode> for details.
f39f21d8 388
e1f170bd 389=over 4
f39f21d8 390
391=item *
392
e1f170bd 393The Unicode Character Database coming with Perl has been upgraded
822ebcc8 394to Unicode 3.2.0. For more information, see http://www.unicode.org/ .
f39f21d8 395
396=item *
397
77c8cf41 398For developers interested in enhancing Perl's Unicode capabilities:
399almost all the UCD files are included with the Perl distribution in
8cbf54fa 400the F<lib/unicore> subdirectory. The most notable omission, for space
77c8cf41 401considerations, is the Unihan database.
f39f21d8 402
403=item *
404
eb0cc9e3 405The properties \p{Blank} and \p{SpacePerl} have been added. "Blank" is like
406C isblank(), that is, it contains only "horizontal whitespace" (the space
407character is, the newline isn't), and the "SpacePerl" is the Unicode
408equivalent of C<\s> (\p{Space} isn't, since that includes the vertical
409tabulator character, whereas C<\s> doesn't.)
410
411See "New Unicode Properties" earlier in this document for additional
412information on changes with Unicode properties.
f39f21d8 413
414=back
415
77c8cf41 416=head2 Understanding of Numbers
417
418In general a lot of fixing has happened in the area of Perl's
419understanding of numbers, both integer and floating point. Since in
420many systems the standard number parsing functions like C<strtoul()>
421and C<atof()> seem to have bugs, Perl tries to work around their
422deficiencies. This results hopefully in more accurate numbers.
f39f21d8 423
e1f170bd 424Perl now tries internally to use integer values in numeric conversions
425and basic arithmetics (+ - * /) if the arguments are integers, and
426tries also to keep the results stored internally as integers.
057b7f2b 427This change leads to often slightly faster and always less lossy
e1f170bd 428arithmetics. (Previously Perl always preferred floating point numbers
429in its math.)
430
58175c9b 431=head2 Miscellaneous Changes
e1f170bd 432
f39f21d8 433=over 4
434
435=item *
436
e1f170bd 437AUTOLOAD is now lvaluable, meaning that you can add the :lvalue attribute
438to AUTOLOAD subroutines and you can assign to the AUTOLOAD return value.
439
440=item *
441
ee8706e3 442The $Config{byteorder} (and corresponding BYTEORDER in config.h) was
443previously wrong in platforms if sizeof(long) was 4, but sizeof(IV)
444was 8. The byteorder was only sizeof(long) bytes long (1234 or 4321),
445but now it is correctly sizeof(IV) bytes long, (12345678 or 87654321).
446(This problem didn't affect Windows platforms.)
447
448Also, $Config{byteorder} is now computed dynamically--this is more
449robust with "fat binaries" where an executable image contains binaries
450for more than one binary platform, and when cross-compiling.
451
452=item *
453
61947107 454C<perl -d:Module=arg,arg,arg> now works (previously one couldn't pass
455in multiple arguments.)
f39f21d8 456
457=item *
458
58175c9b 459The builtin dump() now gives an optional warning
66023b77 460C<dump() better written as CORE::dump()>,
58175c9b 461meaning that by default C<dump(...)> is resolved as the builtin
462dump() which dumps core and aborts, not as (possibly) user-defined
463C<sub dump>. To call the latter, qualify the call as C<&dump(...)>.
464(The whole dump() feature is to considered deprecated, and possibly
465removed/changed in future releases.)
466
467=item *
468
c2d0fb59 469chomp() and chop() are now overridable. Note, however, that their
470prototype (as given by C<prototype("CORE::chomp")> is undefined,
471because it cannot be expressed and therefore one cannot really write
58175c9b 472replacements to override these builtins.
473
474=item *
475
61947107 476END blocks are now run even if you exit/die in a BEGIN block.
477Internally, the execution of END blocks is now controlled by
478PL_exit_flags & PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END. This enables the new
479behaviour for Perl embedders. This will default in 5.10. See
480L<perlembed>.
f39f21d8 481
482=item *
483
e1f170bd 484Formats now support zero-padded decimal fields.
f39f21d8 485
486=item *
487
77c8cf41 488Lvalue subroutines can now return C<undef> in list context.
44da0e71 489However, the lvalue subroutine feature still remains experimental.
f39f21d8 490
491=item *
492
58175c9b 493A lost warning "Can't declare ... dereference in my" has been
494restored (Perl had it earlier but it became lost in later releases.)
495
496=item *
497
61947107 498A new special regular expression variable has been introduced:
499C<$^N>, which contains the most-recently closed group (submatch).
f39f21d8 500
501=item *
502
61947107 503C<no Module;> now works even if there is no "sub unimport" in the Module.
f39f21d8 504
505=item *
506
61947107 507The numerical comparison operators return C<undef> if either operand
508is a NaN. Previously the behaviour was unspecified.
f39f21d8 509
510=item *
511
e1f170bd 512The following builtin functions are now overridable: each(), keys(),
513pop(), push(), shift(), splice(), unshift().
514
515=item *
516
a7bac030 517C<pack() / unpack()> now can group template letters with C<()> and then
518apply repetition/count modifiers on the groups.
519
520=item *
521
522C<pack() / unpack()> can now process the Perl internal numeric types:
523IVs, UVs, NVs-- and also long doubles, if supported by the platform.
79f69e33 524The template letters are C<j>, C<J>, C<F>, and C<D>.
a7bac030 525
526=item *
527
61947107 528C<pack('U0a*', ...)> can now be used to force a string to UTF8.
f39f21d8 529
530=item *
531
61947107 532my __PACKAGE__ $obj now works.
f39f21d8 533
534=item *
535
2ab27a20 536POSIX::sleep() now returns the number of I<unslept> seconds
2bad225e 537(as the POSIX standard says), as opposed to CORE::sleep() which
2ab27a20 538returns the number of slept seconds.
539
540=item *
541
e1f170bd 542The printf() and sprintf() now support parameter reordering using the
543C<%\d+\$> and C<*\d+\$> syntaxes. For example
544
545 print "%2\$s %1\$s\n", "foo", "bar";
546
da6838c8 547will print "bar foo\n". This feature helps in writing
548internationalised software, and in general when the order
549of the parameters can vary.
f39f21d8 550
551=item *
552
e1f170bd 553prototype(\&) is now available.
61947107 554
555=item *
556
e1f170bd 557prototype(\[$@%&]) is now available to implicitly create references
558(useful for example if you want to emulate the tie() interface).
61947107 559
560=item *
561
58175c9b 562A new command-line option, C<-t> is available. It is the
b0c3fc92 563little brother of C<-T>: instead of dying on taint violations,
58175c9b 564lexical warnings are given. B<This is only meant as a temporary
565debugging aid while securing the code of old legacy applications.
566This is not a substitute for -T.>
567
568=item *
569
4956848f 570In other taint news, the C<exec LIST> and C<system LIST> have now been
571considered too risky (think C<exec @ARGV>: it can start any program
572with any arguments), and now the said forms cause a warning.
573You should carefully launder the arguments to guarantee their
574validity. In future releases of Perl the forms will become fatal
575errors so consider starting laundering now.
576
577=item *
578
159ad915 579Tied hash interfaces are now required to have the EXISTS and DELETE
580methods (either own or inherited).
0b2c215a 581
582=item *
583
58175c9b 584If tr/// is just counting characters, it doesn't attempt to
585modify its target.
586
587=item *
588
44da0e71 589untie() will now call an UNTIE() hook if it exists. See L<perltie>
590for details.
61947107 591
592=item *
593
594L<utime> now supports C<utime undef, undef, @files> to change the
595file timestamps to the current time.
596
597=item *
598
e1f170bd 599The rules for allowing underscores (underbars) in numeric constants
600have been relaxed and simplified: now you can have an underscore
601simply B<between digits>.
f39f21d8 602
ef985a5e 603=item *
604
605Rather than relying on C's argv[0] (which may not contain a full pathname)
606where possible $^X is now set by asking the operating system.
607(eg by reading F</proc/self/exe> on Linux, F</proc/curproc/file> on FreeBSD)
608
608dbdb1 609=item *
610
611A new variable, C<${^TAINT}>, indicates whether taint mode is enabled.
612
613=item *
614
615You can now override the readline() builtin, and this overrides also
616the <FILEHANDLE> angle bracket operator.
617
618=item *
619
620The command-line options -s and -F are now recognized on the shebang
621(#!) line.
622
4ac733c9 623=item *
624
625Use of the C</c> match modifier without an accompanying C</g> modifier
626elicits a new warning: C<Use of /c modifier is meaningless without /g>.
f34840d8 627
64e578a2 628Use of C</c> in substitutions, even with C</g>, elicits
f34840d8 629C<Use of /c modifier is meaningless in s///>.
630
476a4411 631Use of C</g> with C<split> elicits C<Use of /g modifier is meaningless
f34840d8 632in split>.
4ac733c9 633
f39f21d8 634=back
635
77c8cf41 636=head1 Modules and Pragmata
f39f21d8 637
1e13d81f 638=head2 New Modules and Pragmata
f39f21d8 639
640=over 4
641
642=item *
643
0e9b9e0c 644C<Attribute::Handlers> allows a class to define attribute handlers.
645
646 package MyPack;
647 use Attribute::Handlers;
648 sub Wolf :ATTR(SCALAR) { print "howl!\n" }
649
650 # later, in some package using or inheriting from MyPack...
651
652 my MyPack $Fluffy : Wolf; # the attribute handler Wolf will be called
653
654Both variables and routines can have attribute handlers. Handlers can
655be specific to type (SCALAR, ARRAY, HASH, or CODE), or specific to the
656exact compilation phase (BEGIN, CHECK, INIT, or END).
657
658=item *
659
61947107 660B<B::Concise> is a new compiler backend for walking the Perl syntax
661tree, printing concise info about ops, from Stephen McCamant. The
662output is highly customisable. See L<B::Concise>.
f39f21d8 663
664=item *
665
381874f1 666The new bignum, bigint, and bigrat pragmas implement transparent
667bignum support (using the Math::BigInt, Math::BigFloat, and
668Math::BigRat backends), by Tels.
669
670=item *
671
61947107 672C<Class::ISA> for reporting the search path for a class's ISA tree,
673by Sean Burke, has been added. See L<Class::ISA>.
f39f21d8 674
675=item *
676
61947107 677C<Cwd> has now a split personality: if possible, an XS extension is
678used, (this will hopefully be faster, more secure, and more robust)
679but if not possible, the familiar Perl implementation is used.
f39f21d8 680
681=item *
682
e1f170bd 683C<Devel::PPPort>, originally from Kenneth Albanowski and now
684maintained by Paul Marquess, has been added. It is primarily used
66023b77 685by C<h2xs> to enhance portability of XS modules between different
e1f170bd 686versions of Perl.
1e13d81f 687
688=item *
689
61947107 690C<Digest>, frontend module for calculating digests (checksums), from
691Gisle Aas, has been added. See L<Digest>.
f39f21d8 692
693=item *
694
61947107 695C<Digest::MD5> for calculating MD5 digests (checksums) as defined in
696RFC 1321, from Gisle Aas, has been added. See L<Digest::MD5>.
f39f21d8 697
698 use Digest::MD5 'md5_hex';
699
700 $digest = md5_hex("Thirsty Camel");
701
702 print $digest, "\n"; # 01d19d9d2045e005c3f1b80e8b164de1
703
61947107 704NOTE: the C<MD5> backward compatibility module is deliberately not
e1f170bd 705included since its further use is discouraged.
f39f21d8 706
f39f21d8 707=item *
708
f14caa53 709C<Encode>, orginally by Nick Ing-Simmons and now maintained by Dan
710Kogai, provides a mechanism to translate between different character
711encodings. Support for Unicode, ISO-8859-1, and ASCII are compiled in
712to the module. Several other encodings (like the rest of the
713ISO-8859, CP*/Win*, Mac, KOI8-R, three variants EBCDIC, Chinese,
714Japanese, and Korean encodings) are included and can be loaded at
715runtime. (For space considerations, the largest Chinese encodings
716have been separated into their own CPAN module, Encode::HanExtra,
717which Encode will use if available). See L<Encode>.
f39f21d8 718
719Any encoding supported by Encode module is also available to the
720":encoding()" layer if PerlIO is used.
721
61947107 722=item *
723
a6d3fe4f 724C<Hash::Util> is the interface to the new I<restricted hashes>
02e156f1 725feature. (Implemented by Jeffrey Friedl, Nick Ing-Simmons, and
a6d3fe4f 726Michael Schwern.)
727
728=item *
729
61947107 730C<I18N::Langinfo> can be use to query locale information.
731See L<I18N::Langinfo>.
f39f21d8 732
733=item *
734
61947107 735C<I18N::LangTags> has functions for dealing with RFC3066-style
bea4d472 736language tags, by Sean Burke. See L<I18N::LangTags>.
61947107 737
738=item *
739
740C<ExtUtils::Constant> is a new tool for extension writers for
741generating XS code to import C header constants, by Nicholas Clark.
742See L<ExtUtils::Constant>.
743
744=item *
745
746C<Filter::Simple> is an easy-to-use frontend to Filter::Util::Call,
747from Damian Conway. See L<Filter::Simple>.
f39f21d8 748
749 # in MyFilter.pm:
750
751 package MyFilter;
752
753 use Filter::Simple sub {
754 while (my ($from, $to) = splice @_, 0, 2) {
755 s/$from/$to/g;
756 }
757 };
758
759 1;
760
761 # in user's code:
762
763 use MyFilter qr/red/ => 'green';
764
765 print "red\n"; # this code is filtered, will print "green\n"
766 print "bored\n"; # this code is filtered, will print "bogreen\n"
767
768 no MyFilter;
769
770 print "red\n"; # this code is not filtered, will print "red\n"
771
61947107 772=item *
773
774C<File::Temp> allows one to create temporary files and directories in
775an easy, portable, and secure way, by Tim Jenness. See L<File::Temp>.
776
777=item *
778
779C<Filter::Util::Call> provides you with the framework to write
780I<Source Filters> in Perl, from Paul Marquess. For most uses the
781frontend Filter::Simple is to be preferred. See L<Filter::Util::Call>.
782
783=item *
784
79f69e33 785C<if> is a new pragma for conditional inclusion of modules, from
786Ilya Zakharevich.
787
788=item *
789
61947107 790L<libnet> is a collection of perl5 modules related to network
791programming, from Graham Barr. See L<Net::FTP>, L<Net::NNTP>,
b929be1d 792L<Net::Ping> (not part of libnet, but related), L<Net::POP3>,
793L<Net::SMTP>, and L<Net::Time>.
61947107 794
795Perl installation leaves libnet unconfigured, use F<libnetcfg> to configure.
f39f21d8 796
797=item *
798
61947107 799C<List::Util> is a selection of general-utility list subroutines, like
bea4d472 800sum(), min(), first(), and shuffle(), by Graham Barr. See L<List::Util>.
f39f21d8 801
802=item *
803
f14caa53 804C<Locale::Constants>, C<Locale::Country>, C<Locale::Currency>
805C<Locale::Language>, and L<Locale::Script>, from Neil Bowers, have
806been added. They provide the codes for various locale standards, such
9d81ddc1 807as "fr" for France, "usd" for US Dollar, and "ja" for Japanese.
f39f21d8 808
809 use Locale::Country;
810
811 $country = code2country('jp'); # $country gets 'Japan'
812 $code = country2code('Norway'); # $code gets 'no'
813
814See L<Locale::Constants>, L<Locale::Country>, L<Locale::Currency>,
61947107 815and L<Locale::Language>.
816
817=item *
818
819C<Locale::Maketext> is localization framework from Sean Burke. See
820L<Locale::Maketext>, and L<Locale::Maketext::TPJ13>. The latter is an
821article about software localization, originally published in The Perl
822Journal #13, republished here with kind permission.
823
824=item *
825
f14caa53 826C<Math::BigRat> for big rational numbers, to accompany Math::BigInt and
381874f1 827Math::BigFloat, from Tels.
828
829=item *
830
61947107 831C<Memoize> can make your functions faster by trading space for time,
832from Mark-Jason Dominus. See L<Memoize>.
f39f21d8 833
834=item *
835
61947107 836C<MIME::Base64> allows you to encode data in base64, from Gisle Aas,
837as defined in RFC 2045 - I<MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail
838Extensions)>.
f39f21d8 839
840 use MIME::Base64;
841
842 $encoded = encode_base64('Aladdin:open sesame');
843 $decoded = decode_base64($encoded);
844
845 print $encoded, "\n"; # "QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ=="
846
61947107 847See L<MIME::Base64>.
f39f21d8 848
849=item *
850
61947107 851C<MIME::QuotedPrint> allows you to encode data in quoted-printable
852encoding, as defined in RFC 2045 - I<MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail
853Extensions)>, from Gisle Aas.
f39f21d8 854
855 use MIME::QuotedPrint;
856
857 $encoded = encode_qp("Smiley in Unicode: \x{263a}");
858 $decoded = decode_qp($encoded);
859
860 print $encoded, "\n"; # "Smiley in Unicode: =263A"
861
862MIME::QuotedPrint has been enhanced to provide the basic methods
863necessary to use it with PerlIO::Via as in :
864
865 use MIME::QuotedPrint;
057b7f2b 866 open($fh,">Via(MIME::QuotedPrint)",$path);
f39f21d8 867
61947107 868See L<MIME::QuotedPrint>.
f39f21d8 869
870=item *
871
61947107 872C<NEXT> is pseudo-class for method redispatch, from Damian Conway.
873See L<NEXT>.
f39f21d8 874
875=item *
876
1e13d81f 877C<open> is a new pragma for setting the default I/O disciplines
878for open().
879
880=item *
881
61947107 882C<PerlIO::Scalar> provides the implementation of IO to "in memory"
883Perl scalars as discussed above, from Nick Ing-Simmons. It also
884serves as an example of a loadable PerlIO layer. Other future
885possibilities include PerlIO::Array and PerlIO::Code.
886See L<PerlIO::Scalar>.
887
888=item *
889
890C<PerlIO::Via> acts as a PerlIO layer and wraps PerlIO layer
891functionality provided by a class (typically implemented in perl
892code), from Nick Ing-Simmons.
f39f21d8 893
894 use MIME::QuotedPrint;
057b7f2b 895 open($fh,">Via(MIME::QuotedPrint)",$path);
f39f21d8 896
897This will automatically convert everything output to C<$fh>
61947107 898to Quoted-Printable. See L<PerlIO::Via>.
f39f21d8 899
900=item *
901
1e13d81f 902C<Pod::ParseLink>, by Russ Allbery, has been added,
95f0a2f1 903to parse LZ<><> links in pods as described in the new
1e13d81f 904perlpodspec.
905
906=item *
907
61947107 908C<Pod::Text::Overstrike>, by Joe Smith, has been added.
f39f21d8 909It converts POD data to formatted overstrike text.
61947107 910See L<Pod::Text::Overstrike>.
f39f21d8 911
912=item *
913
61947107 914C<Scalar::Util> is a selection of general-utility scalar subroutines,
915like blessed(), reftype(), and tainted(). See L<Scalar::Util>.
916
917=item *
918
1e13d81f 919C<sort> is a new pragma for controlling the behaviour of sort().
920
921=item *
922
61947107 923C<Storable> gives persistence to Perl data structures by allowing the
924storage and retrieval of Perl data to and from files in a fast and
e27159c9 925compact binary format. Because in effect Storable does serialisation
926of Perl data structues, with it you can also clone deep, hierarchical
1108aaa7 927datastructures. Storable was originally created by Raphael Manfredi,
928but it is now maintained by Abhijit Menon-Sen. Storable has been
e27159c9 929enhanced to understand the two new hash features, Unicode keys and
930restricted hashes. See L<Storable>.
61947107 931
932=item *
933
934C<Switch>, from Damian Conway, has been added. Just by saying
f39f21d8 935
936 use Switch;
937
938you have C<switch> and C<case> available in Perl.
939
940 use Switch;
941
942 switch ($val) {
943
944 case 1 { print "number 1" }
945 case "a" { print "string a" }
946 case [1..10,42] { print "number in list" }
947 case (@array) { print "number in list" }
948 case /\w+/ { print "pattern" }
949 case qr/\w+/ { print "pattern" }
950 case (%hash) { print "entry in hash" }
951 case (\%hash) { print "entry in hash" }
952 case (\&sub) { print "arg to subroutine" }
953 else { print "previous case not true" }
954 }
955
61947107 956See L<Switch>.
957
958=item *
959
960C<Test::More> is yet another framework for writing test scripts,
961more extensive than Test::Simple, by Michael Schwern. See L<Test::More>.
962
963=item *
964
aecce728 965C<Test::Simple> has basic utilities for writing tests, by Michael
61947107 966Schwern. See L<Test::Simple>.
77c8cf41 967
968=item *
969
61947107 970C<Text::Balanced> has been added, for extracting delimited text
971sequences from strings, from Damian Conway.
77c8cf41 972
973 use Text::Balanced 'extract_delimited';
974
975 ($a, $b) = extract_delimited("'never say never', he never said", "'", '');
976
977$a will be "'never say never'", $b will be ', he never said'.
978
979In addition to extract_delimited() there are also extract_bracketed(),
980extract_quotelike(), extract_codeblock(), extract_variable(),
981extract_tagged(), extract_multiple(), gen_delimited_pat(), and
982gen_extract_tagged(). With these you can implement rather advanced
61947107 983parsing algorithms. See L<Text::Balanced>.
77c8cf41 984
985=item *
986
c2e23569 987C<threads> is an interface to interpreter threads, by Arthur Bergman.
61947107 988Interpreter threads (ithreads) is the new thread model introduced in
c2e23569 989Perl 5.6 but only available as an internal interface for extension
990writers (and for Win32 Perl for C<fork()> emulation). See L<threads>.
77c8cf41 991
992=item *
993
61947107 994C<threads::shared> allows data sharing for interpreter threads, from
995Arthur Bergman. In the ithreads model any data sharing between
996threads must be explicit, as opposed to the old 5.005 thread model
997where data sharing was implicit. See L<threads::shared>.
77c8cf41 998
999=item *
1000
1f089b22 1001C<Tie::File>, by Mark-Jason Dominus, associates a Perl array with the
1002lines of a file.
b3b08c80 1003
1004=item *
1005
79f69e33 1006C<Tie::Memoize>, by Ilya Zakharevich, provides on-demand loaded hashes.
1007
1008=item *
1009
61947107 1010C<Tie::RefHash::Nestable>, by Edward Avis, allows storing hash
ba370e9b 1011references (unlike the standard Tie::RefHash) The module is contained
1012within Tie::RefHash, see L<Tie::RefHash>.
77c8cf41 1013
1014=item *
1015
61947107 1016C<Time::HiRes> provides high resolution timing (ualarm, usleep,
1017and gettimeofday), from Douglas E. Wegscheid. See L<Time::HiRes>.
77c8cf41 1018
1019=item *
1020
61947107 1021C<Unicode::UCD> offers a querying interface to the Unicode Character
1022Database. See L<Unicode::UCD>.
77c8cf41 1023
1024=item *
1025
61947107 1026C<Unicode::Collate> implements the UCA (Unicode Collation Algorithm)
1027for sorting Unicode strings, by SADAHIRO Tomoyuki. See L<Unicode::Collate>.
77c8cf41 1028
1029=item *
1030
61947107 1031C<Unicode::Normalize> implements the various Unicode normalization
1032forms, by SADAHIRO Tomoyuki. See L<Unicode::Normalize>.
77c8cf41 1033
1034=item *
1035
61947107 1036C<XS::Typemap>, by Tim Jenness, is a test extension that exercises XS
1037typemaps. Nothing gets installed but for extension writers the code
1038is worth studying.
77c8cf41 1039
1040=back
1041
1042=head2 Updated And Improved Modules and Pragmata
1043
1044=over 4
1045
1046=item *
1047
61947107 1048The following independently supported modules have been updated to the
1049newest versions from CPAN: CGI, CPAN, DB_File, File::Spec, File::Temp,
1050Getopt::Long, Math::BigFloat, Math::BigInt, the podlators bundle
1051(Pod::Man, Pod::Text), Pod::LaTeX, Pod::Parser, Storable,
1052Term::ANSIColor, Test, Text-Tabs+Wrap.
77c8cf41 1053
1054=item *
1055
61947107 1056The attributes::reftype() now works on tied arguments.
77c8cf41 1057
1058=item *
1059
057b7f2b 1060AutoLoader can now be disabled with C<no AutoLoader;>.
77c8cf41 1061
1062=item *
1063
1e13d81f 1064B::Deparse has been significantly enhanced. It now can deparse almost
1065all of the standard test suite (so that the tests still succeed).
1066There is a make target "test.deparse" for trying this out.
77c8cf41 1067
1068=item *
1069
1e13d81f 1070Class::Struct can now define the classes in compile time.
77c8cf41 1071
1072=item *
1073
1e13d81f 1074Class::Struct now assigns the array/hash element if the accessor
1075is called with an array/hash element as the B<sole> argument.
77c8cf41 1076
1077=item *
1078
797ec949 1079The return value of Cwd::fastcwd() is now tainted.
1080
1081=item *
1082
1e13d81f 1083Data::Dumper has now an option to sort hashes.
77c8cf41 1084
1085=item *
1086
1e13d81f 1087Data::Dumper has now an option to dump code references
1088using B::Deparse.
77c8cf41 1089
1090=item *
1091
44da0e71 1092DB_File now supports newer Berkeley DB versions, among
1093other improvements.
1094
1095=item *
1096
797ec949 1097Devel::Peek now has an interface for the Perl memory statistics
1098(this works only if you are using perl's malloc, and if you have
1099compiled with debugging).
1100
1101=item *
1102
1e13d81f 1103The English module can now be used without the infamous performance
1104hit by saying
77c8cf41 1105
66023b77 1106 use English '-no_match_vars';
77c8cf41 1107
1e13d81f 1108(Assuming, of course, that one doesn't need the troublesome variables
1109C<$`>, C<$&>, or C<$'>.) Also, introduced C<@LAST_MATCH_START> and
1110C<@LAST_MATCH_END> English aliases for C<@-> and C<@+>.
77c8cf41 1111
1112=item *
1113
797ec949 1114ExtUtils::MakeMaker now uses File::Spec internally, which hopefully
1115leads into better portability.
1116
1117=item *
1118
1e13d81f 1119Fcntl, Socket, and Sys::Syslog have been rewritten to use the
1120new-style constant dispatch section (see L<ExtUtils::Constant>).
1121This means that they will be more robust and hopefully faster.
77c8cf41 1122
1123=item *
1124
44da0e71 1125File::Find now chdir()s correctly when chasing symbolic links.
1126
1127=item *
1128
1e13d81f 1129File::Find now has pre- and post-processing callbacks. It also
1130correctly changes directories when chasing symbolic links. Callbacks
1131(naughtily) exiting with "next;" instead of "return;" now work.
61947107 1132
1133=item *
1134
1e13d81f 1135File::Find is now (again) reentrant. It also has been made
1136more portable.
77c8cf41 1137
61947107 1138=item *
1139
608dbdb1 1140The warnings issued by File::Find now belong to their own category.
1141You can enable/disable them with C<use/no warnings 'File::Find';>.
1142
1143=item *
1144
1e13d81f 1145File::Glob::glob() renamed to File::Glob::bsd_glob() to avoid
1146prototype mismatch with CORE::glob().
61947107 1147
1148=item *
1149
1150File::Glob now supports C<GLOB_LIMIT> constant to limit the size of
1151the returned list of filenames.
77c8cf41 1152
1153=item *
1154
1e13d81f 1155IPC::Open3 now allows the use of numeric file descriptors.
1156
1157=item *
1158
77c8cf41 1159IO::Socket has now atmark() method, which returns true if the socket
1160is positioned at the out-of-band mark. The method is also exportable
1161as a sockatmark() function.
1162
1163=item *
1164
1165IO::Socket::INET has support for ReusePort option (if your platform
1166supports it). The Reuse option now has an alias, ReuseAddr. For clarity
1167you may want to prefer ReuseAddr.
1168
1169=item *
1170
61947107 1171IO::Socket::INET now supports C<LocalPort> of zero (usually meaning
1172that the operating system will make one up.)
77c8cf41 1173
1174=item *
1175
1e13d81f 1176use lib now works identically to @INC. Removing directories
1177with 'no lib' now works.
1178
1179=item *
1180
1181Math::BigFloat and Math::BigInt have undergone a full rewrite.
1182They are now magnitudes faster, and they support various
61947107 1183bignum libraries such as GMP and PARI as their backends.
f39f21d8 1184
1185=item *
1186
44da0e71 1187Math::Complex handles inf, NaN etc., better.
1188
1189=item *
1190
b929be1d 1191Net::Ping has been muchly enhanced: multihoming is now supported,
1192Win32 functionality is better, there is now time measuring
1193functionality (optionally high-resolution using Time::HiRes),
1194and there is now "external" protocol which uses Net::Ping::External
1195module which runs your external ping utility and parses the output.
1196A version of Net::Ping::External is available in CPAN.
1197
1198Note that some of the Net::Ping tests are disabled when running
1199under the Perl distribution since one cannot assume one or more
1200of the following: enabled echo port at localhost, full Internet
1201connectivity, or sympathetic firewalls. You can set the environment
1202variable PERL_TEST_Net_Ping to "1" (one) before running the Perl test
1203suite to enable all the Net::Ping tests.
f39f21d8 1204
77c8cf41 1205=item *
f39f21d8 1206
da6838c8 1207POSIX::sigaction() is now much more flexible and robust.
61947107 1208You can now install coderef handlers, 'DEFAULT', and 'IGNORE'
1209handlers, installing new handlers was not atomic.
f39f21d8 1210
1211=item *
1212
da6838c8 1213In Safe the C<%INC> now localised in a Safe compartment so that
76663d67 1214use/require work.
1215
1216=item *
1217
44da0e71 1218In SDBM_File on dosish platforms, some keys went missing because of
1219lack of support for files with "holes". A workaround for the problem
1220has been added.
1221
1222=item *
1223
da6838c8 1224In Search::Dict one can now have a pre-processing hook for the
76663d67 1225lines being searched.
1e13d81f 1226
1227=item *
1228
1229The Shell module now has an OO interface.
1230
1231=item *
1232
903fdac2 1233In Sys::Syslog there is now a failover mechanism that will go
1234through alternative connection mechanisms until the message
1235is successfully logged.
1236
1237=item *
1238
61947107 1239The Test module has been significantly enhanced.
f39f21d8 1240
1241=item *
1242
1cfd00ad 1243Time::Local::timelocal() does not handle fractional seconds anymore.
1244The rationale is that neither does localtime(), and timelocal() and
1245localtime() are supposed to be inverses of each other.
1246
1247=item *
1248
da6838c8 1249The vars pragma now supports declaring fully qualified variables.
77c8cf41 1250(Something that C<our()> does not and will not support.)
f39f21d8 1251
888aee59 1252=item *
1253
58175c9b 1254The C<utf8::> name space (as in the pragma) provides various
61947107 1255Perl-callable functions to provide low level access to Perl's
1256internal Unicode representation. At the moment only length()
1257has been implemented.
888aee59 1258
f39f21d8 1259=back
1260
77c8cf41 1261=head1 Utility Changes
f39f21d8 1262
1263=over 4
1264
1265=item *
1266
61947107 1267Emacs perl mode (emacs/cperl-mode.el) has been updated to version
77c8cf41 12684.31.
f39f21d8 1269
1270=item *
1271
61947107 1272F<emacs/e2ctags.pl> is now much faster.
f39f21d8 1273
1274=item *
1275
54ba6336 1276C<enc2xs> is a tool for people adding their own encodings to the
1277Encode module.
1278
1279=item *
1280
1e13d81f 1281C<h2ph> now supports C trigraphs.
1282
1283=item *
1284
1285C<h2xs> now produces a template README.
f39f21d8 1286
77c8cf41 1287=item *
1288
1e13d81f 1289C<h2xs> now uses C<Devel::PPort> for better portability between
1290different versions of Perl.
f39f21d8 1291
1292=item *
1293
1e13d81f 1294C<h2xs> uses the new L<ExtUtils::Constant> module which will affect
61947107 1295newly created extensions that define constants. Since the new code is
1296more correct (if you have two constants where the first one is a
1297prefix of the second one, the first constant B<never> gets defined),
1298less lossy (it uses integers for integer constant, as opposed to the
1299old code that used floating point numbers even for integer constants),
1300and slightly faster, you might want to consider regenerating your
1301extension code (the new scheme makes regenerating easy).
1302L<h2xs> now also supports C trigraphs.
f39f21d8 1303
1304=item *
1305
1e13d81f 1306C<libnetcfg> has been added to configure the libnet.
f39f21d8 1307
1308=item *
1309
1e13d81f 1310C<perlbug> is now much more robust. It also sends the bug report to
61947107 1311perl.org, not perl.com.
f39f21d8 1312
1313=item *
1314
1e13d81f 1315C<perlcc> has been rewritten and its user interface (that is,
61947107 1316command line) is much more like that of the UNIX C compiler, cc.
44da0e71 1317(The perlbc tools has been removed. Use C<perlcc -B> instead.)
8cbf54fa 1318B<Note that perlcc is still considered very experimental and
1319unsupported.>
f39f21d8 1320
1321=item *
1322
aecce728 1323C<perlivp> is a new Installation Verification Procedure utility
1324for running any time after installing Perl.
f39f21d8 1325
1326=item *
1327
54ba6336 1328C<piconv> is an implementation of the character conversion utility
1329C<iconv>, demonstrating the new Encode module.
1330
1331=item *
1332
1e13d81f 1333C<pod2html> now allows specifying a cache directory.
f39f21d8 1334
1335=item *
1336
bbed45f6 1337C<pod2html> now produces XHTML 1.0.
1338
1339=item *
1340
9b856ef5 1341C<pod2html> now understands POD written using different line endings
bbed45f6 1342(PC-like CRLF versus UNIX-like LF versus MacClassic-like CR).
1343
1344=item *
1345
1e13d81f 1346C<s2p> has been completely rewritten in Perl. (It is in fact a full
1347implementation of sed in Perl: you can use the sed functionality by
1348using the C<psed> utility.)
61947107 1349
1350=item *
1351
1e13d81f 1352C<xsubpp> now understands POD documentation embedded in the *.xs files.
f39f21d8 1353
1354=item *
1355
1e13d81f 1356C<xsubpp> now supports OUT keyword.
f39f21d8 1357
1358=back
1359
77c8cf41 1360=head1 New Documentation
f39f21d8 1361
1362=over 4
1363
1364=item *
1365
77c8cf41 1366perl56delta details the changes between the 5.005 release and the
13675.6.0 release.
f39f21d8 1368
1369=item *
1370
61947107 1371perlclib documents the internal replacements for standard C library
1372functions. (Interesting only for extension writers and Perl core
1373hackers.)
1374
1375=item *
1376
77c8cf41 1377perldebtut is a Perl debugging tutorial.
f39f21d8 1378
77c8cf41 1379=item *
f39f21d8 1380
77c8cf41 1381perlebcdic contains considerations for running Perl on EBCDIC platforms.
f39f21d8 1382
77c8cf41 1383=item *
1384
888aee59 1385perlintro is a gentle introduction to Perl.
1386
1387=item *
1388
61947107 1389perliol documents the internals of PerlIO with layers.
1390
1391=item *
1392
888aee59 1393perlmodstyle is a style guide for writing modules.
1394
1395=item *
1396
77c8cf41 1397perlnewmod tells about writing and submitting a new module.
f39f21d8 1398
1399=item *
1400
34babc16 1401perlpacktut is a pack() tutorial.
1402
1403=item *
1404
888aee59 1405perlpod has been rewritten to be clearer and to record the best
1406practices gathered over the years.
1407
1408=item *
1409
057b7f2b 1410perlpodspec is a more formal specification of the pod format,
888aee59 1411mainly of interest for writers of pod applications, not to
1412people writing in pod.
1413
1414=item *
1415
77c8cf41 1416perlretut is a regular expression tutorial.
f39f21d8 1417
1418=item *
1419
77c8cf41 1420perlrequick is a regular expressions quick-start guide.
1421Yes, much quicker than perlretut.
f39f21d8 1422
77c8cf41 1423=item *
f39f21d8 1424
61947107 1425perltodo has been updated.
1426
1427=item *
1428
888aee59 1429perltootc has been renamed as perltooc (to not to conflict
61947107 1430with perltoot in filesystems restricted to "8.3" names)
888aee59 1431
1432=item *
1433
58175c9b 1434perluniintro is an introduction to using Unicode in Perl.
1435(perlunicode is more of a detailed reference and background
1436information)
888aee59 1437
1438=item *
1439
77c8cf41 1440perlutil explains the command line utilities packaged with the Perl
1441distribution.
1442
1443=back
f39f21d8 1444
61947107 1445The following platform-specific documents are available before
1446the installation as README.I<platform>, and after the installation
1447as perlI<platform>:
f39f21d8 1448
61947107 1449 perlaix perlamiga perlapollo perlbeos perlbs2000
1450 perlce perlcygwin perldgux perldos perlepoc perlhpux
1451 perlhurd perlmachten perlmacos perlmint perlmpeix
1452 perlnetware perlos2 perlos390 perlplan9 perlqnx perlsolaris
1453 perltru64 perluts perlvmesa perlvms perlvos perlwin32
77c8cf41 1454
1455=over 4
1456
1457=item *
1458
61947107 1459The documentation for the POSIX-BC platform is called "BS2000", to avoid
1460confusion with the Perl POSIX module.
77c8cf41 1461
1462=item *
1463
6cd7d6d6 1464The documentation for the WinCE platform is called perlce (README.ce
1465in the source code kit), to avoid confusion with the perlwin32
1466documentation on 8.3-restricted filesystems.
77c8cf41 1467
1468=back
1469
1470=head1 Performance Enhancements
1471
1472=over 4
1473
1474=item *
1475
44da0e71 1476map() could get pathologically slow when the result list it generates
1477is larger than the source list. The performance has been improved for
1478common scenarios.
77c8cf41 1479
1480=item *
1481
e1f170bd 1482sort() has been changed to use primarily mergesort internally as
1483opposed to the earlier quicksort. For very small lists this may
1484result in slightly slower sorting times, but in general the speedup
1485should be at least 20%. Additional bonuses are that the worst case
1486behaviour of sort() is now better (in computer science terms it now
1487runs in time O(N log N), as opposed to quicksort's Theta(N**2)
1488worst-case run time behaviour), and that sort() is now stable
1489(meaning that elements with identical keys will stay ordered as they
1490were before the sort). See the C<sort> pragma for information.
77c8cf41 1491
05e25c75 1492The story in more detail: suppose you want to serve yourself a little
1493slice of Pi.
1494
1495 @digits = ( 3,1,4,1,5,9 );
1496
1497A numerical sort of the digits will yield (1,1,3,4,5,9), as expected.
1498Which C<1> comes first is hard to know, since one C<1> looks pretty
1499much like any other. You can regard this as totally trivial,
1500or somewhat profound. However, if you just want to sort the even
1501digits ahead of the odd ones, then what will
1502
1503 sort { ($a % 2) <=> ($b % 2) } @digits;
1504
1505yield? The only even digit, C<4>, will come first. But how about
1506the odd numbers, which all compare equal? With the quicksort algorithm
1507used to implement Perl 5.6 and earlier, the order of ties is left up
1508to the sort. So, as you add more and more digits of Pi, the order
1509in which the sorted even and odd digits appear will change.
1510and, for sufficiently large slices of Pi, the quicksort algorithm
1511in Perl 5.8 won't return the same results even if reinvoked with the
1512same input. The justification for this rests with quicksort's
1513worst case behavior. If you run
1514
1515 sort { $a <=> $b } ( 1 .. $N , 1 .. $N );
1516
1517(something you might approximate if you wanted to merge two sorted
1518arrays using sort), doubling $N doesn't just double the quicksort time,
1519it I<quadruples> it. Quicksort has a worst case run time that can
1520grow like N**2, so-called I<quadratic> behaviour, and it can happen
1521on patterns that may well arise in normal use. You won't notice this
1522for small arrays, but you I<will> notice it with larger arrays,
1523and you may not live long enough for the sort to complete on arrays
1524of a million elements. So the 5.8 quicksort scrambles large arrays
1525before sorting them, as a statistical defence against quadratic behaviour.
1526But that means if you sort the same large array twice, ties may be
1527broken in different ways.
1528
1529Because of the unpredictability of tie-breaking order, and the quadratic
1530worst-case behaviour, quicksort was I<almost> replaced completely with
1531a stable mergesort. I<Stable> means that ties are broken to preserve
1532the original order of appearance in the input array. So
1533
1534 sort { ($a % 2) <=> ($b % 2) } (3,1,4,1,5,9);
1535
1536will yield (4,3,1,1,5,9), guaranteed. The even and odd numbers
1537appear in the output in the same order they appeared in the input.
1538Mergesort has worst case O(NlogN) behaviour, the best value
1539attainable. And, ironically, this mergesort does particularly
1540well where quicksort goes quadratic: mergesort sorts (1..$N, 1..$N)
1541in O(N) time. But quicksort was rescued at the last moment because
1542it is faster than mergesort on certain inputs and platforms.
1543For example, if you really I<don't> care about the order of even
1544and odd digits, quicksort will run in O(N) time; it's very good
1545at sorting many repetitions of a small number of distinct elements.
1546The quicksort divide and conquer strategy works well on platforms
1547with relatively small, very fast, caches. Eventually, the problem gets
1548whittled down to one that fits in the cache, from which point it
1549benefits from the increased memory speed.
1550
1551Quicksort was rescued by implementing a sort pragma to control aspects
1552of the sort. The B<stable> subpragma forces stable behaviour,
1553regardless of algorithm. The B<_quicksort> and B<_mergesort>
1554subpragmas are heavy-handed ways to select the underlying implementation.
1555The leading C<_> is a reminder that these subpragmas may not survive
1556beyond 5.8. More appropriate mechanisms for selecting the implementation
1557exist, but they wouldn't have arrived in time to save quicksort.
1558
77c8cf41 1559=item *
1560
1561Hashes now use Bob Jenkins "One-at-a-Time" hashing key algorithm
f224927c 1562( http://burtleburtle.net/bob/hash/doobs.html ). This algorithm is
77c8cf41 1563reasonably fast while producing a much better spread of values than
1564the old hashing algorithm (originally by Chris Torek, later tweaked by
1565Ilya Zakharevich). Hash values output from the algorithm on a hash of
1566all 3-char printable ASCII keys comes much closer to passing the
1567DIEHARD random number generation tests. According to perlbench, this
1568change has not affected the overall speed of Perl.
1569
1570=item *
1571
1572unshift() should now be noticeably faster.
1573
1574=back
1575
1576=head1 Installation and Configuration Improvements
1577
1578=head2 Generic Improvements
1579
1580=over 4
1581
1582=item *
1583
1584INSTALL now explains how you can configure Perl to use 64-bit
1585integers even on non-64-bit platforms.
1586
1587=item *
1588
1589Policy.sh policy change: if you are reusing a Policy.sh file
1590(see INSTALL) and you use Configure -Dprefix=/foo/bar and in the old
1591Policy $prefix eq $siteprefix and $prefix eq $vendorprefix, all of
1592them will now be changed to the new prefix, /foo/bar. (Previously
1593only $prefix changed.) If you do not like this new behaviour,
1594specify prefix, siteprefix, and vendorprefix explicitly.
1595
1596=item *
1597
1598A new optional location for Perl libraries, otherlibdirs, is available.
1599It can be used for example for vendor add-ons without disturbing Perl's
1600own library directories.
1601
1602=item *
1603
1604In many platforms the vendor-supplied 'cc' is too stripped-down to
1605build Perl (basically, 'cc' doesn't do ANSI C). If this seems
1606to be the case and 'cc' does not seem to be the GNU C compiler
1607'gcc', an automatic attempt is made to find and use 'gcc' instead.
1608
1609=item *
1610
1611gcc needs to closely track the operating system release to avoid
1612build problems. If Configure finds that gcc was built for a different
1613operating system release than is running, it now gives a clearly visible
1614warning that there may be trouble ahead.
1615
1616=item *
1617
11d33b1d 1618Since Perl 5.8 is not binary-compatible with previous releases
1619of Perl, Configure no longer suggests including the 5.005
1620modules in @INC.
77c8cf41 1621
1622=item *
1623
1624Configure C<-S> can now run non-interactively.
1625
1626=item *
1627
44da0e71 1628Configure support for pdp11-style memory models has been removed due
1629to obsolescence.
1630
1631=item *
1632
77c8cf41 1633configure.gnu now works with options with whitespace in them.
f39f21d8 1634
77c8cf41 1635=item *
f39f21d8 1636
77c8cf41 1637installperl now outputs everything to STDERR.
f39f21d8 1638
77c8cf41 1639=item *
1640
f39f21d8 1641Because PerlIO is now the default on most platforms, "-perlio" doesn't
1642get appended to the $Config{archname} (also known as $^O) anymore.
1643Instead, if you explicitly choose not to use perlio (Configure command
1644line option -Uuseperlio), you will get "-stdio" appended.
1645
1646=item *
1647
1648Another change related to the architecture name is that "-64all"
1649(-Duse64bitall, or "maximally 64-bit") is appended only if your
1650pointers are 64 bits wide. (To be exact, the use64bitall is ignored.)
1651
1652=item *
1653
77c8cf41 1654In AFS installations one can configure the root of the AFS to be
1655somewhere else than the default F</afs> by using the Configure
1656parameter C<-Dafsroot=/some/where/else>.
1657
1658=item *
1659
61947107 1660APPLLIB_EXP, a less-know configuration-time definition, has been
1661documented. It can be used to prepend site-specific directories
1662to Perl's default search path (@INC), see INSTALL for information.
1663
1664=item *
1665
77c8cf41 1666The version of Berkeley DB used when the Perl (and, presumably, the
1667DB_File extension) was built is now available as
1668C<@Config{qw(db_version_major db_version_minor db_version_patch)}>
1669from Perl and as C<DB_VERSION_MAJOR_CFG DB_VERSION_MINOR_CFG
1670DB_VERSION_PATCH_CFG> from C.
1671
1672=item *
1673
61947107 1674Building Berkeley DB3 for compatibility modes for DB, NDBM, and ODBM
1675has been documented in INSTALL.
77c8cf41 1676
1677=item *
1678
61947107 1679If you have CPAN access (either network or a local copy such as a
1680CD-ROM) you can during specify extra modules to Configure to build and
1681install with Perl using the -Dextras=... option. See INSTALL for
1682more details.
f39f21d8 1683
61947107 1684=item *
f39f21d8 1685
61947107 1686In addition to config.over a new override file, config.arch, is
1687available. That is supposed to be used by hints file writers for
1688architecture-wide changes (as opposed to config.over which is for
1689site-wide changes).
f39f21d8 1690
1691=item *
1692
e1f170bd 1693If your file system supports symbolic links you can build Perl outside
1694of the source directory by
1695
1696 mkdir /tmp/perl/build/directory
1697 cd /tmp/perl/build/directory
1698 sh /path/to/perl/source/Configure -Dmksymlinks ...
1699
1700This will create in /tmp/perl/build/directory a tree of symbolic links
1701pointing to files in /path/to/perl/source. The original files are left
1702unaffected. After Configure has finished you can just say
1703
1704 make all test
1705
1706and Perl will be built and tested, all in /tmp/perl/build/directory.
1707
1708=item *
1709
61947107 1710For Perl developers several new make targets for profiling
1711and debugging have been added, see L<perlhack>.
1712
1713=over 8
f39f21d8 1714
1715=item *
1716
61947107 1717Use of the F<gprof> tool to profile Perl has been documented in
1718L<perlhack>. There is a make target called "perl.gprof" for
1719generating a gprofiled Perl executable.
f39f21d8 1720
1721=item *
1722
61947107 1723If you have GCC 3, there is a make target called "perl.gcov" for
1724creating a gcoved Perl executable for coverage analysis. See
1725L<perlhack>.
f39f21d8 1726
1727=item *
1728
61947107 1729If you are on IRIX or Tru64 platforms, new profiling/debugging options
1730have been added, see L<perlhack> for more information about pixie and
1731Third Degree.
1732
1733=back
f39f21d8 1734
1735=item *
1736
61947107 1737Guidelines of how to construct minimal Perl installations have
1738been added to INSTALL.
f39f21d8 1739
1740=item *
1741
61947107 1742The Thread extension is now not built at all under ithreads
1743(C<Configure -Duseithreads>) because it wouldn't work anyway (the
1744Thread extension requires being Configured with C<-Duse5005threads>).
f39f21d8 1745
61947107 1746But note that the Thread.pm interface is now shared by both
1747thread models.
f39f21d8 1748
d1eb8299 1749=item *
1750
1751The Gconvert macro ($Config{d_Gconvert}) used by perl for stringifying
1752floating-point numbers is now more picky about using sprintf %.*g
1753rules for the conversion. Some platforms that used to use gcvt may
1754now resort to the slower sprintf.
1755
11d33b1d 1756=item *
1757
1758The obsolete method of making a special (e.g., debugging) flavor
1759of perl by saying
1760
1761 make LIBPERL=libperld.a
1762
1763has been removed. Use -DDEBUGGING instead.
1764
61947107 1765=back
f39f21d8 1766
61947107 1767=head2 New Or Improved Platforms
f39f21d8 1768
61947107 1769For the list of platforms known to support Perl,
1770see L<perlport/"Supported Platforms">.
1771
1772=over 4
f39f21d8 1773
1774=item *
1775
61947107 1776AIX dynamic loading should be now better supported.
f39f21d8 1777
f39f21d8 1778=item *
1779
77c8cf41 1780AIX should now work better with gcc, threads, and 64-bitness. Also the
1781long doubles support in AIX should be better now. See L<perlaix>.
f39f21d8 1782
1783=item *
1784
f224927c 1785AtheOS ( http://www.atheos.cx/ ) is a new platform.
f39f21d8 1786
77c8cf41 1787=item *
f39f21d8 1788
58175c9b 1789BeOS has been reclaimed.
1790
1791=item *
1792
77c8cf41 1793DG/UX platform now supports the 5.005-style threads. See L<perldgux>.
f39f21d8 1794
1795=item *
1796
77c8cf41 1797DYNIX/ptx platform (a.k.a. dynixptx) is supported at or near osvers 4.5.2.
f39f21d8 1798
1799=item *
1800
61947107 1801EBCDIC platforms (z/OS, also known as OS/390, POSIX-BC, and VM/ESA)
1802have been regained. Many test suite tests still fail and the
1803co-existence of Unicode and EBCDIC isn't quite settled, but the
1804situation is much better than with Perl 5.6. See L<perlos390>,
1805L<perlbs2000> (for POSIX-BC), and L<perlvmesa> for more information.
f39f21d8 1806
1807=item *
1808
61947107 1809Building perl with -Duseithreads or -Duse5005threads now works under
1810HP-UX 10.20 (previously it only worked under 10.30 or later). You will
1811need a thread library package installed. See README.hpux.
f39f21d8 1812
77c8cf41 1813=item *
f39f21d8 1814
61947107 1815MacOS Classic (MacPerl has of course been available since
1816perl 5.004 but now the source code bases of standard Perl
1817and MacPerl have been synchronised)
f39f21d8 1818
77c8cf41 1819=item *
f39f21d8 1820
61947107 1821MacOS X (or Darwin) should now be able to build Perl even on HFS+
1822filesystems. (The case-insensitivity confused the Perl build process.)
f39f21d8 1823
888aee59 1824=item *
1825
61947107 1826NCR MP-RAS is now supported.
888aee59 1827
1828=item *
1829
58175c9b 1830All the NetBSD specific patches (except for the installation
1831specific ones) have been merged back to the main distribution.
1832
1833=item *
1834
61947107 1835NetWare from Novell is now supported. See L<perlnetware>.
888aee59 1836
1837=item *
1838
61947107 1839NonStop-UX is now supported.
888aee59 1840
1841=item *
1842
44da0e71 1843NEC SUPER-UX is now supported.
1844
1845=item *
1846
58175c9b 1847All the OpenBSD specific patches (except for the installation
1848specific ones) have been merged back to the main distribution.
1849
1850=item *
1851
1852Perl has been tested with the GNU pth userlevel thread package
1853( http://www.gnu.org/software/pth/pth.html ) . All but one thread
1854test worked, and that one failure was because of test results arriving
1855in unexpected order.
1856
1857=item *
1858
11d33b1d 1859Stratus VOS is now supported using Perl's native build method
1860(Configure). This is the recommended method to build Perl on
1861VOS. The older methods, which build miniperl, are still
1862available. See L<perlvos>.
1863
1864=item *
1865
61947107 1866Amdahl UTS UNIX mainframe platform is now supported.
888aee59 1867
1868=item *
1869
61947107 1870WinCE is now supported. See L<perlce>.
1871
1872=item *
1873
1874z/OS (formerly known as OS/390, formerly known as MVS OE) has now
1875support for dynamic loading. This is not selected by default,
1876however, you must specify -Dusedl in the arguments of Configure.
888aee59 1877
f39f21d8 1878=back
1879
1880=head1 Selected Bug Fixes
1881
e1f170bd 1882Numerous memory leaks and uninitialized memory accesses have been
1883hunted down. Most importantly anonymous subs used to leak quite
1884a bit.
ba370e9b 1885
f39f21d8 1886=over 4
1887
1888=item *
1889
e1f170bd 1890The autouse pragma didn't work for Multi::Part::Function::Names.
f39f21d8 1891
1892=item *
1893
44da0e71 1894caller() could cause core dumps in certain situations. Carp was sometimes
0fc9dec4 1895affected by this problem. In particular, caller() now returns a
1896subroutine name of C<(unknown)> for subroutines that have been removed
1897from the symbol table.
44da0e71 1898
1899=item *
1900
e1f170bd 1901chop(@list) in list context returned the characters chopped in
1902reverse order. This has been reversed to be in the right order.
f39f21d8 1903
1904=item *
1905
e1f170bd 1906Configure no longer includes the DBM libraries (dbm, gdbm, db, ndbm)
1907when building the Perl binary. The only exception to this is SunOS 4.x,
1908which needs them.
f39f21d8 1909
1910=item *
1911
e1f170bd 1912The behaviour of non-decimal but numeric string constants such as
1913"0x23" was platform-dependent: in some platforms that was seen as 35,
1914in some as 0, in some as a floating point number (don't ask). This
1915was caused by Perl using the operating system libraries in a situation
1916where the result of the string to number conversion is undefined: now
1917Perl consistently handles such strings as zero in numeric contexts.
f39f21d8 1918
1919=item *
1920
e1f170bd 1921The order of DESTROYs has been made more predictable.
f39f21d8 1922
1923=item *
1924
e1f170bd 1925Several debugger fixes: exit code now reflects the script exit code,
1926condition C<"0"> now treated correctly, the C<d> command now checks
44da0e71 1927line number, the C<$.> no longer gets corrupted, all debugger output
1928now goes correctly to the socket if RemotePort is set.
1929
1930=item *
1931
1932Perl 5.6.0 could emit spurious warnings about redefinition of dl_error()
1933when statically building extensions into perl. This has been corrected.
f39f21d8 1934
1935=item *
1936
e1f170bd 1937L<dprofpp> -R didn't work.
f39f21d8 1938
1939=item *
1940
e1f170bd 1941C<*foo{FORMAT}> now works.
5746cacd 1942
44da0e71 1943=item *
1944
1945Infinity is now recognized as a number.
f39f21d8 1946
1947=item *
1948
e1f170bd 1949UNIVERSAL::isa no longer caches methods incorrectly. (This broke
1950the Tk extension with 5.6.0.)
f39f21d8 1951
1952=item *
1953
e1f170bd 1954Lexicals I: lexicals outside an eval "" weren't resolved
1955correctly inside a subroutine definition inside the eval "" if they
1956were not already referenced in the top level of the eval""ed code.
f39f21d8 1957
1958=item *
1959
e1f170bd 1960Lexicals II: lexicals leaked at file scope into subroutines that
1961were declared before the lexicals.
f39f21d8 1962
1963=item *
1964
44da0e71 1965Lexical warnings now propagating correctly between scopes
1966and into C<eval "...">.
1967
1968=item *
1969
1970C<use warnings qw(FATAL all)> did not work as intended. This has been
1971corrected.
1972
1973=item *
1974
1975warnings::enabled() now reports the state of $^W correctly if the caller
1976isn't using lexical warnings.
f39f21d8 1977
1978=item *
1979
e1f170bd 1980Line renumbering with eval and C<#line> now works.
f39f21d8 1981
1982=item *
1983
e1f170bd 1984Fixed numerous memory leaks, especially in eval "".
f39f21d8 1985
1986=item *
1987
0b2c215a 1988Localised tied variables no more leak memory
1989
1990 use Tie::Hash;
1991 tie my %tied_hash => 'Tie::StdHash';
1992
1993 ...
1994
1995 # Used to leak memory every time local() was called,
1996 # in a loop this added up.
1997 local($tied_hash{Foo}) = 1;
1998
1999=item *
2000
159ad915 2001Localised hash elements (and %ENV) are correctly unlocalised to not to
136430a4 2002exist, if that's what they were.
0b2c215a 2003
2004
2005 use Tie::Hash;
2006 tie my %tied_hash => 'Tie::StdHash';
2007
2008 ...
2009
2010 # Nothing has set the FOO element so far
2011
2012 { local $tied_hash{FOO} = 'Bar' }
2013
fd5a896a 2014 # This used to print, but not now.
2015 print "exists!\n" if exists $tied_hash{FOO};
0b2c215a 2016
2017As a side effect of this fix, tied hash interfaces B<must> define
159ad915 2018the EXISTS and DELETE methods.
0b2c215a 2019
2020=item *
2021
e1f170bd 2022mkdir() now ignores trailing slashes in the directory name,
2023as mandated by POSIX.
f39f21d8 2024
2025=item *
2026
e1f170bd 2027Some versions of glibc have a broken modfl(). This affects builds
2028with C<-Duselongdouble>. This version of Perl detects this brokenness
2029and has a workaround for it. The glibc release 2.2.2 is known to have
2030fixed the modfl() bug.
f39f21d8 2031
2032=item *
2033
e1f170bd 2034Modulus of unsigned numbers now works (4063328477 % 65535 used to
2035return 27406, instead of 27047).
f39f21d8 2036
2037=item *
2038
e1f170bd 2039Some "not a number" warnings introduced in 5.6.0 eliminated to be
2040more compatible with 5.005. Infinity is now recognised as a number.
f39f21d8 2041
77c8cf41 2042=item *
f39f21d8 2043
44da0e71 2044Numeric conversions did not recognize changes in the string value
2045properly in certain circumstances.
2046
2047=item *
2048
e1f170bd 2049Attributes (like :shared) didn't work with our().
f39f21d8 2050
2051=item *
2052
e1f170bd 2053our() variables will not cause "will not stay shared" warnings.
f39f21d8 2054
2055=item *
2056
44da0e71 2057"our" variables of the same name declared in two sibling blocks
2058resulted in bogus warnings about "redeclaration" of the variables.
2059The problem has been corrected.
2060
2061=item *
2062
e1f170bd 2063pack "Z" now correctly terminates the string with "\0".
f39f21d8 2064
2065=item *
2066
e1f170bd 2067Fix password routines which in some shadow password platforms
2068(e.g. HP-UX) caused getpwent() to return every other entry.
f39f21d8 2069
77c8cf41 2070=item *
f39f21d8 2071
e1f170bd 2072The PERL5OPT environment variable (for passing command line arguments
2073to Perl) didn't work for more than a single group of options.
f39f21d8 2074
77c8cf41 2075=item *
f39f21d8 2076
e1f170bd 2077PERL5OPT with embedded spaces didn't work.
f39f21d8 2078
77c8cf41 2079=item *
f39f21d8 2080
e1f170bd 2081printf() no longer resets the numeric locale to "C".
f39f21d8 2082
77c8cf41 2083=item *
f39f21d8 2084
44da0e71 2085C<qw(a\\b)> now parses correctly as C<'a\\b'>.
2086
2087=item *
2088
2089pos() did not return the correct value within s///ge in earlier
2090versions. This is now handled correctly.
f39f21d8 2091
77c8cf41 2092=item *
f39f21d8 2093
e1f170bd 2094Printing quads (64-bit integers) with printf/sprintf now works
2095without the q L ll prefixes (assuming you are on a quad-capable platform).
f39f21d8 2096
77c8cf41 2097=item *
f39f21d8 2098
e1f170bd 2099Regular expressions on references and overloaded scalars now work.
f39f21d8 2100
ba370e9b 2101=item *
2102
e1f170bd 2103Right-hand side magic (GMAGIC) could in many cases such as string
2104concatenation be invoked too many times.
ba370e9b 2105
2106=item *
2107
e1f170bd 2108scalar() now forces scalar context even when used in void context.
ba370e9b 2109
2110=item *
2111
e1f170bd 2112SOCKS support is now much more robust.
ba370e9b 2113
2114=item *
2115
e1f170bd 2116sort() arguments are now compiled in the right wantarray context
2117(they were accidentally using the context of the sort() itself).
44da0e71 2118The comparison block is now run in scalar context, and the arguments
2119to be sorted are always provided list context.
ba370e9b 2120
2121=item *
2122
e1f170bd 2123Changed the POSIX character class C<[[:space:]]> to include the (very
c2e23569 2124rarely used) vertical tab character. Added a new POSIX-ish character
2125class C<[[:blank:]]> which stands for horizontal whitespace
2126(currently, the space and the tab).
ba370e9b 2127
2128=item *
2129
2130The tainting behaviour of sprintf() has been rationalized. It does
2131not taint the result of floating point formats anymore, making the
2132behaviour consistent with that of string interpolation.
2133
2134=item *
2135
44da0e71 2136Some cases of inconsistent taint propagation (such as within hash
2137values) have been fixed.
2138
2139=item *
2140
2141The RE engine found in Perl 5.6.0 accidentally pessimised certain kinds
2142of simple pattern matches. These are now handled better.
2143
2144=item *
2145
2146Regular expression debug output (whether through C<use re 'debug'>
2147or via C<-Dr>) now looks better.
2148
2149=item *
2150
2151Multi-line matches like C<"a\nxb\n" =~ /(?!\A)x/m> were flawed. The
2152bug has been fixed.
2153
2154=item *
2155
2156Use of $& could trigger a core dump under some situations. This
2157is now avoided.
2158
2159=item *
2160
c2e23569 2161The regular expression captured submatches ($1, $2, ...) are now
2162more consistently unset if the match fails, instead of leaving false
2163data lying around in them.
2164
2165=item *
2166
44da0e71 2167readline() on files opened in "slurp" mode could return an extra "" at
2168the end in certain situations. This has been corrected.
2169
2170=item *
2171
2172Autovivification of symbolic references of special variables described
2173in L<perlvar> (as in C<${$num}>) was accidentally disabled. This works
2174again now.
2175
2176=item *
2177
da6838c8 2178Sys::Syslog ignored the C<LOG_AUTH> constant.
ba370e9b 2179
2180=item *
2181
e1f170bd 2182All but the first argument of the IO syswrite() method are now optional.
ba370e9b 2183
2184=item *
2185
e1f170bd 2186$AUTOLOAD, sort(), lock(), and spawning subprocesses
2187in multiple threads simultaneously are now thread-safe.
ba370e9b 2188
2189=item *
2190
e1f170bd 2191Tie::ARRAY SPLICE method was broken.
ba370e9b 2192
2193=item *
2194
e1f170bd 2195Allow read-only string on left hand side of non-modifying tr///.
ba370e9b 2196
2197=item *
2198
ed788108 2199If C<STDERR> is tied, warnings caused by C<warn> and C<die> now
2200correctly pass to it.
2201
2202=item *
2203
e1f170bd 2204Several Unicode fixes.
ba370e9b 2205
2206=over 8
2207
2208=item *
2209
e1f170bd 2210BOMs (byte order marks) in the beginning of Perl files
2211(scripts, modules) should now be transparently skipped.
2212UTF-16 (UCS-2) encoded Perl files should now be read correctly.
ba370e9b 2213
2214=item *
2215
26f08e12 2216The character tables have been updated to Unicode 3.2.0.
ba370e9b 2217
2218=item *
2219
e1f170bd 2220Comparing with utf8 data does not magically upgrade non-utf8 data
58175c9b 2221into utf8. (This was a problem for example if you were mixing data
2222from I/O and Unicode data: your output might have got magically encoded
2223as UTF-8.)
2224
2225=item *
2226
2227Generating illegal Unicode code points like U+FFFE, or the UTF-16
2228surrogates, now also generates an optional warning.
ba370e9b 2229
2230=item *
2231
e1f170bd 2232C<IsAlnum>, C<IsAlpha>, and C<IsWord> now match titlecase.
f39f21d8 2233
77c8cf41 2234=item *
f39f21d8 2235
e1f170bd 2236Concatenation with the C<.> operator or via variable interpolation,
2237C<eq>, C<substr>, C<reverse>, C<quotemeta>, the C<x> operator,
2238substitution with C<s///>, single-quoted UTF8, should now work.
f39f21d8 2239
77c8cf41 2240=item *
f39f21d8 2241
e1f170bd 2242The C<tr///> operator now works. Note that the C<tr///CU>
2243functionality has been removed (but see pack('U0', ...)).
f39f21d8 2244
77c8cf41 2245=item *
f39f21d8 2246
e1f170bd 2247C<eval "v200"> now works.
f39f21d8 2248
77c8cf41 2249=item *
f39f21d8 2250
44da0e71 2251Perl 5.6.0 parsed m/\x{ab}/ incorrectly, leading to spurious warnings.
2252This has been corrected.
2253
2254=item *
2255
e1f170bd 2256Zero entries were missing from the Unicode classes like C<IsDigit>.
f39f21d8 2257
e1f170bd 2258=back
f39f21d8 2259
44da0e71 2260=item *
2261
2262Large unsigned numbers (those above 2**31) could sometimes lose their
2263unsignedness, causing bogus results in arithmetic operations.
2264
77c8cf41 2265=back
f39f21d8 2266
77c8cf41 2267=head2 Platform Specific Changes and Fixes
f39f21d8 2268
2269=over 4
2270
2271=item *
2272
77c8cf41 2273BSDI 4.*
f39f21d8 2274
77c8cf41 2275Perl now works on post-4.0 BSD/OSes.
f39f21d8 2276
2277=item *
2278
77c8cf41 2279All BSDs
f39f21d8 2280
057b7f2b 2281Setting C<$0> now works (as much as possible; see L<perlvar> for details).
f39f21d8 2282
2283=item *
2284
77c8cf41 2285Cygwin
f39f21d8 2286
439f2f5c 2287Numerous updates; currently synchronised with Cygwin 1.3.10.
f39f21d8 2288
2289=item *
2290
e1f170bd 2291Previously DYNIX/ptx had problems in its Configure probe for non-blocking I/O.
2292
2293=item *
2294
77c8cf41 2295EPOC
f39f21d8 2296
77c8cf41 2297EPOC update after Perl 5.6.0. See README.epoc.
f39f21d8 2298
2299=item *
2300
77c8cf41 2301FreeBSD 3.*
f39f21d8 2302
77c8cf41 2303Perl now works on post-3.0 FreeBSDs.
f39f21d8 2304
2305=item *
2306
77c8cf41 2307HP-UX
2308
8cbf54fa 2309README.hpux updated; C<Configure -Duse64bitall> now works;
2310now uses HP-UX malloc instead of Perl malloc.
f39f21d8 2311
2312=item *
2313
77c8cf41 2314IRIX
f39f21d8 2315
77c8cf41 2316Numerous compilation flag and hint enhancements; accidental mixing
2317of 32-bit and 64-bit libraries (a doomed attempt) made much harder.
f39f21d8 2318
77c8cf41 2319=item *
f39f21d8 2320
77c8cf41 2321Linux
f39f21d8 2322
e1f170bd 2323=over 8
2324
2325=item *
2326
77c8cf41 2327Long doubles should now work (see INSTALL).
f39f21d8 2328
2329=item *
2330
e1f170bd 2331Linux previously had problems related to sockaddrlen when using
2332accept(), revcfrom() (in Perl: recv()), getpeername(), and getsockname().
2333
2334=back
2335
2336=item *
2337
77c8cf41 2338MacOS Classic
f39f21d8 2339
77c8cf41 2340Compilation of the standard Perl distribution in MacOS Classic should
2341now work if you have the Metrowerks development environment and
2342the missing Mac-specific toolkit bits. Contact the macperl mailing
2343list for details.
f39f21d8 2344
2345=item *
2346
77c8cf41 2347MPE/iX
f39f21d8 2348
77c8cf41 2349MPE/iX update after Perl 5.6.0. See README.mpeix.
f39f21d8 2350
2351=item *
2352
27cc4b77 2353NetBSD/threads: try installing the GNU pth (should be in the
2354packages collection, or http://www.gnu.org/software/pth/),
2355and Configure with -Duseithreads.
2356
2357=item *
2358
77c8cf41 2359NetBSD/sparc
f39f21d8 2360
77c8cf41 2361Perl now works on NetBSD/sparc.
f39f21d8 2362
2363=item *
2364
77c8cf41 2365OS/2
f39f21d8 2366
77c8cf41 2367Now works with usethreads (see INSTALL).
f39f21d8 2368
2369=item *
2370
77c8cf41 2371Solaris
f39f21d8 2372
77c8cf41 237364-bitness using the Sun Workshop compiler now works.
f39f21d8 2374
2375=item *
2376
11d33b1d 2377Stratus VOS
2378
2379The native build method requires at least VOS Release 14.5.0
2380and GNU C++/GNU Tools 2.0.1 or later. The Perl pack function
2381now maps overflowed values to +infinity and underflowed values
2382to -infinity.
2383
2384=item *
2385
77c8cf41 2386Tru64 (aka Digital UNIX, aka DEC OSF/1)
f39f21d8 2387
77c8cf41 2388The operating system version letter now recorded in $Config{osvers}.
2389Allow compiling with gcc (previously explicitly forbidden). Compiling
2390with gcc still not recommended because buggy code results, even with
2391gcc 2.95.2.
f39f21d8 2392
2393=item *
2394
77c8cf41 2395Unicos
2396
2397Fixed various alignment problems that lead into core dumps either
2398during build or later; no longer dies on math errors at runtime;
2399now using full quad integers (64 bits), previously was using
2400only 46 bit integers for speed.
f39f21d8 2401
2402=item *
2403
77c8cf41 2404VMS
2405
2406chdir() now works better despite a CRT bug; now works with MULTIPLICITY
2407(see INSTALL); now works with Perl's malloc.
f39f21d8 2408
00bb525a 2409The tainting of C<%ENV> elements via C<keys> or C<values> was previously
2410unimplemented. It now works as documented.
2411
2412The C<waitpid> emulation has been improved. The worst bug (now fixed)
2413was that a pid of -1 would cause a wildcard search of all processes on
2d9f3838 2414the system.
00bb525a 2415
2416POSIX-style signals are now emulated much better on VMS versions prior
2417to 7.0.
2418
2419The C<system> function and backticks operator have improved
2420functionality and better error handling.
2421
161720b2 2422File access tests now use current process privileges rather than the
2423user's default privileges, which could sometimes result in a mismatch
2424between reported access and actual access.
2425
2d9f3838 2426There is a new C<kill> implementation based on C<sys$sigprc> that allows
2427older VMS systems (pre-7.0) to use C<kill> to send signals rather than
2428simply force exit. This implementation also allows later systems to
2429call C<kill> from within a signal handler.
2430
2431Iterative logical name translations are now limited to 10 iterations in
2432imitation of SHOW LOGICAL and other OpenVMS facilities.
2433
f39f21d8 2434=item *
2435
77c8cf41 2436Windows
f39f21d8 2437
77c8cf41 2438=over 8
f39f21d8 2439
2440=item *
2441
77c8cf41 2442accept() no longer leaks memory.
f39f21d8 2443
2444=item *
2445
e1f170bd 2446Borland C++ v5.5 is now a supported compiler that can build Perl.
2447However, the generated binaries continue to be incompatible with those
2448generated by the other supported compilers (GCC and Visual C++).
2449
2450=item *
2451
77c8cf41 2452Better chdir() return value for a non-existent directory.
f39f21d8 2453
77c8cf41 2454=item *
f39f21d8 2455
e1f170bd 2456Duping socket handles with open(F, ">&MYSOCK") now works under Windows 9x.
2457
2458=item *
2459
77c8cf41 2460New %ENV entries now propagate to subprocesses.
f39f21d8 2461
2462=item *
2463
44da0e71 2464Current directory entries in %ENV are now correctly propagated to child
2465processes.
2466
2467=item *
2468
77c8cf41 2469$ENV{LIB} now used to search for libs under Visual C.
2470
2471=item *
2472
44da0e71 2473fork() emulation has been improved in various ways, but still continues
2474to be experimental. See L<perlfork> for known bugs and caveats.
e1f170bd 2475
2476=item *
2477
77c8cf41 2478A failed (pseudo)fork now returns undef and sets errno to EAGAIN.
f39f21d8 2479
2480=item *
2481
44da0e71 2482Win32::GetCwd() correctly returns C:\ instead of C: when at the drive root.
2483Other bugs in chdir() and Cwd::cwd() have also been fixed.
2484
2485=item *
2486
e1f170bd 2487HTML files will be installed in c:\perl\html instead of c:\perl\lib\pod\html
2488
2489=item *
2490
2491The makefiles now provide a single switch to bulk-enable all the features
2492enabled in ActiveState ActivePerl (a popular Win32 binary distribution).
2493
2494=item *
2495
77c8cf41 2496Allow REG_EXPAND_SZ keys in the registry.
f39f21d8 2497
2498=item *
2499
77c8cf41 2500Can now send() from all threads, not just the first one.
f39f21d8 2501
2502=item *
2503
77c8cf41 2504Fake signal handling reenabled, bugs and all.
f39f21d8 2505
2506=item *
2507
44da0e71 2508%SIG has been enabled under USE_ITHREADS, but its use is completely
2509unsupported under all configurations.
2510
2511=item *
2512
77c8cf41 2513Less stack reserved per thread so that more threads can run
2514concurrently. (Still 16M per thread.)
f39f21d8 2515
2516=item *
2517
8cbf54fa 2518C<< File::Spec->tmpdir() >> now prefers C:/temp over /tmp
77c8cf41 2519(works better when perl is running as service).
f39f21d8 2520
2521=item *
2522
77c8cf41 2523Better UNC path handling under ithreads.
f39f21d8 2524
2525=item *
2526
44da0e71 2527wait(), waitpid() and backticks now return the correct exit status under
2528Windows 9x.
f39f21d8 2529
2530=item *
2531
fa1a788e 2532Win64 compilation is now supported.
2533
2534=item *
2535
77c8cf41 2536winsock handle leak fixed.
f39f21d8 2537
d1eb8299 2538=item *
2539
2540The Perl parser has been stress tested using both random input and
2541Markov chain input and the few found crashes and lockups have been
2542fixed.
2543
f39f21d8 2544=back
2545
77c8cf41 2546=back
f39f21d8 2547
77c8cf41 2548=head1 New or Changed Diagnostics
f39f21d8 2549
ba370e9b 2550=over 4
2551
2552=item *
2553
12bcd1a6 2554The lexical warnings category "deprecated" is no longer a sub-category
2555of the "syntax" category. It is now a top-level category in its own
2556right.
2557
2558=item *
2559
77c8cf41 2560All regular expression compilation error messages are now hopefully
2561easier to understand both because the error message now comes before
2562the failed regex and because the point of failure is now clearly
ba370e9b 2563marked by a C<E<lt>-- HERE> marker.
2564
2565=item *
f39f21d8 2566
77c8cf41 2567The various "opened only for", "on closed", "never opened" warnings
2568drop the C<main::> prefix for filehandles in the C<main> package,
bea4d472 2569for example C<STDIN> instead of C<main::STDIN>.
f39f21d8 2570
ba370e9b 2571=item *
2572
77c8cf41 2573The "Unrecognized escape" warning has been extended to include C<\8>,
2574C<\9>, and C<\_>. There is no need to escape any of the C<\w> characters.
f39f21d8 2575
ba370e9b 2576=item *
f39f21d8 2577
77c8cf41 2578Two new debugging options have been added: if you have compiled your
2579Perl with debugging, you can use the -DT and -DR options to trace
2580tokenising and to add reference counts to displaying variables,
2581respectively.
f39f21d8 2582
2583=item *
2584
2bcb0b45 2585The debugger (perl5db.pl) has been modified to present a more
2586consistent commands interface, via (CommandSet=580). perl5db.t was
2587also added to test the changes, and as a placeholder for further tests.
492652be 2588
2bcb0b45 2589See L<perldebug>.
492652be 2590
2591=item *
2592
9000bd02 2593The debugger has a new C<dumpDepth> option to control the maximum
2594depth to which nested structures are dumped. The C<x> command has
2595been extended so that C<x N EXPR> dumps out the value of I<EXPR> to a
2596depth of at most I<N> levels.
2597
2598=item *
2599
2bcb0b45 2600The debugger can now show lexical variables if you have the CPAN
2601module PadWalker installed.
2602
2603=item *
2604
77c8cf41 2605If an attempt to use a (non-blessed) reference as an array index
2606is made, a warning is given.
f39f21d8 2607
2608=item *
2609
77c8cf41 2610C<push @a;> and C<unshift @a;> (with no values to push or unshift)
6e6372ba 2611now give a warning. This may be a problem for generated and evaled
77c8cf41 2612code.
f39f21d8 2613
ba370e9b 2614=item *
2615
2616If you try to L<perlfunc/pack> a number less than 0 or larger than 255
2617using the C<"C"> format you will get an optional warning. Similarly
2618for the C<"c"> format and a number less than -128 or more than 127.
2619
2620=item *
2621
2622Certain regex modifiers such as C<(?o)> make sense only if applied to
0d4213c3 2623the entire regex. You will get an optional warning if you try to do
2624otherwise.
ba370e9b 2625
2626=item *
2627
0d4213c3 2628Using arrays or hashes as references (e.g. C<< %foo->{bar} >>
c2e23569 2629has been deprecated for a while. Now you will get an optional warning.
ba370e9b 2630
608dbdb1 2631=item *
2632
2633Using C<sort> in scalar context now issues an optional warning.
2634This didn't do anything useful, as the sort was not performed.
2635
f39f21d8 2636=back
2637
77c8cf41 2638=head1 Changed Internals
f39f21d8 2639
2640=over 4
2641
2642=item *
2643
77c8cf41 2644perlapi.pod (a companion to perlguts) now attempts to document the
2645internal API.
f39f21d8 2646
2647=item *
2648
77c8cf41 2649You can now build a really minimal perl called microperl.
2650Building microperl does not require even running Configure;
2651C<make -f Makefile.micro> should be enough. Beware: microperl makes
2652many assumptions, some of which may be too bold; the resulting
2653executable may crash or otherwise misbehave in wondrous ways.
2654For careful hackers only.
f39f21d8 2655
2656=item *
2657
c2e23569 2658Added rsignal(), whichsig(), do_join(), op_clear, op_null,
2659ptr_table_clear(), ptr_table_free(), sv_setref_uv(), and several UTF-8
2660interfaces to the publicised API. For the full list of the available
2661APIs see L<perlapi>.
f39f21d8 2662
2663=item *
2664
77c8cf41 2665Made possible to propagate customised exceptions via croak()ing.
f39f21d8 2666
77c8cf41 2667=item *
f39f21d8 2668
95f0a2f1 2669Now xsubs can have attributes just like subs. (Well, at least the
2670built-in attributes.)
f39f21d8 2671
2672=item *
2673
77c8cf41 2674dTHR and djSP have been obsoleted; the former removed (because it's
2675a no-op) and the latter replaced with dSP.
f39f21d8 2676
2677=item *
2678
61947107 2679PERL_OBJECT has been completely removed.
2680
2681=item *
2682
ba370e9b 2683The MAGIC constants (e.g. C<'P'>) have been macrofied
2684(e.g. C<PERL_MAGIC_TIED>) for better source code readability
2685and maintainability.
2686
2687=item *
2688
2689The regex compiler now maintains a structure that identifies nodes in
2690the compiled bytecode with the corresponding syntactic features of the
2691original regex expression. The information is attached to the new
2692C<offsets> member of the C<struct regexp>. See L<perldebguts> for more
2693complete information.
2694
2695=item *
2696
2697The C code has been made much more C<gcc -Wall> clean. Some warning
2698messages still remain in some platforms, so if you are compiling with
2699gcc you may see some warnings about dubious practices. The warnings
2700are being worked on.
2701
2702=item *
2703
2704F<perly.c>, F<sv.c>, and F<sv.h> have now been extensively commented.
2705
2706=item *
2707
61947107 2708Documentation on how to use the Perl source repository has been added
2709to F<Porting/repository.pod>.
f39f21d8 2710
888aee59 2711=item *
2712
c2e23569 2713There are now several profiling make targets.
888aee59 2714
77c8cf41 2715=back
f39f21d8 2716
77c8cf41 2717=head1 Security Vulnerability Closed
f39f21d8 2718
77c8cf41 2719(This change was already made in 5.7.0 but bears repeating here.)
f39f21d8 2720
77c8cf41 2721A potential security vulnerability in the optional suidperl component
2722of Perl was identified in August 2000. suidperl is neither built nor
2723installed by default. As of November 2001 the only known vulnerable
2724platform is Linux, most likely all Linux distributions. CERT and
2725various vendors and distributors have been alerted about the vulnerability.
2726See http://www.cpan.org/src/5.0/sperl-2000-08-05/sperl-2000-08-05.txt
2727for more information.
f39f21d8 2728
77c8cf41 2729The problem was caused by Perl trying to report a suspected security
2730exploit attempt using an external program, /bin/mail. On Linux
2731platforms the /bin/mail program had an undocumented feature which
2732when combined with suidperl gave access to a root shell, resulting in
2733a serious compromise instead of reporting the exploit attempt. If you
2734don't have /bin/mail, or if you have 'safe setuid scripts', or if
2735suidperl is not installed, you are safe.
f39f21d8 2736
77c8cf41 2737The exploit attempt reporting feature has been completely removed from
2738Perl 5.8.0 (and the maintenance release 5.6.1, and it was removed also
2739from all the Perl 5.7 releases), so that particular vulnerability
2740isn't there anymore. However, further security vulnerabilities are,
ba370e9b 2741unfortunately, always possible. The suidperl functionality is most
2742probably going to be removed in Perl 5.10. In any case, suidperl
2743should only be used by security experts who know exactly what they are
2744doing and why they are using suidperl instead of some other solution
1577cd80 2745such as sudo ( see http://www.courtesan.com/sudo/ ).
77c8cf41 2746
2747=head1 New Tests
2748
5fb8b090 2749Several new tests have been added, especially for the F<lib> and F<ext>
2750subsections. There are now about 65 000 individual tests (spread over
2751about 700 test scripts), in the regression suite (5.6.1 has about
275211700 tests, in 258 test scripts) Many of the new tests are of course
2753introduced by the new modules, but still in general Perl is now more
2754thoroughly tested.
76663d67 2755
2756Because of the large number of tests, running the regression suite
2757will take considerably longer time than it used to: expect the suite
2758to take up to 4-5 times longer to run than in perl 5.6. In a really
d1eb8299 2759fast machine you can hope to finish the suite in about 6-8 minutes
76663d67 2760(wallclock time).
77c8cf41 2761
2762The tests are now reported in a different order than in earlier Perls.
2763(This happens because the test scripts from under t/lib have been moved
2764to be closer to the library/extension they are testing.)
2765
f39f21d8 2766=head1 Known Problems
2767
f39f21d8 2768=head2 AIX
2769
2770=over 4
2771
2772=item *
2773
2774In AIX 4.2 Perl extensions that use C++ functions that use statics
2775may have problems in that the statics are not getting initialized.
2776In newer AIX releases this has been solved by linking Perl with
2777the libC_r library, but unfortunately in AIX 4.2 the said library
2778has an obscure bug where the various functions related to time
2779(such as time() and gettimeofday()) return broken values, and
2780therefore in AIX 4.2 Perl is not linked against the libC_r.
2781
2782=item *
2783
2784vac 5.0.0.0 May Produce Buggy Code For Perl
2785
2786The AIX C compiler vac version 5.0.0.0 may produce buggy code,
2787resulting in few random tests failing, but when the failing tests
2788are run by hand, they succeed. We suggest upgrading to at least
2789vac version 5.0.1.0, that has been known to compile Perl correctly.
439f2f5c 2790"lslpp -L|grep vac.C" will tell you the vac version. See README.aix.
f39f21d8 2791
0ea5284e 2792=item *
2793
2794If building threaded Perl, you may get compilation warning from pp_sys.c:
2795
2796 "pp_sys.c", line 4651.39: 1506-280 (W) Function argument assignment between types "unsigned char*" and "const void*" is not allowed.
2797
2798This is harmless; it is caused by the getnetbyaddr() and getnetbyaddr_r()
2799having slightly different types for their first argument.
2800
f39f21d8 2801=back
2802
8c1bea16 2803=head2 BeOS
2804
2805The following tests fail on 5.8.0 Perl in BeOS Personal 5.03:
2806
2807 t/op/lfs............................FAILED at test 17
2808 t/op/magic..........................FAILED at test 24
2809 ext/Fcntl/t/syslfs..................FAILED at test 17
2810 ext/File/Glob/t/basic...............FAILED at test 3
2811 ext/POSIX/t/sigaction...............FAILED at test 13
2812 ext/POSIX/t/waitpid.................FAILED at test 1
2813 lib/Tie/File/t/16_handle............FAILED at test 39
2814
2815See L<perlbeos> (README.beos) for more details.
2816
bdcfa4c7 2817=head2 ext/threads/t/libc
2818
2819If this test fails, it indicates that your libc (C library) is not
2820threadsafe. This particular test stress tests the localtime() call to
2821find out whether it is threadsafe. See L<perlthrtut> for more information.
2822
9ffc0d0c 2823=head2 FreeBSD Failing locale Test 117 For ISO8859-15 Locales
2824
2825The ISO8859-15 locales may fail the locale test 117 in FreeBSD.
2826This is caused by the characters \xFF (y with diaeresis) and \xBE
2827(Y with diaeresis) not behaving correctly when being matched
2828case-insensitively.
2829
be61827f 2830=head2 Modifying $_ Inside for(..)
2831
2832 for (1..5) { $_++ }
2833
2834works without complaint. It shouldn't. (You should be able to
2835modify only lvalue elements inside the loops.) You can see the
2836correct behaviour by replacing the 1..5 with 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
2837
696235b6 2838=head2 mod_perl 1.26 Doesn't Build With Threaded Perl
2839
2840Use mod_perl 1.27 or higher.
a08f42e9 2841
f39f21d8 2842=head2 lib/ftmp-security tests warn 'system possibly insecure'
2843
2844Don't panic. Read INSTALL 'make test' section instead.
2845
be61827f 2846=head2 HP-UX lib/posix Subtest 9 Fails When LP64-Configured
f39f21d8 2847
2848If perl is configured with -Duse64bitall, the successful result of the
2849subtest 10 of lib/posix may arrive before the successful result of the
2850subtest 9, which confuses the test harness so much that it thinks the
2851subtest 9 failed.
2852
2853=head2 Linux With Sfio Fails op/misc Test 48
2854
2855No known fix.
2856
a0aae13b 2857=head2 Mac OS X
2858
6aaad45d 2859Please remember to set your environment variable LC_ALL to "C"
2860(setenv LC_ALL C) before running "make test" to avoid a lot of
2861warnings about the broken locales of Mac OS X.
2862
a0aae13b 2863The following tests are known to fail:
2864
2865 Failed Test Stat Wstat Total Fail Failed List of Failed
2866 -------------------------------------------------------------------------
2867 ../ext/DB_File/t/db-btree.t 0 11 ?? ?? % ??
2868 ../ext/DB_File/t/db-recno.t 149 3 2.01% 61 63 65
a0aae13b 2869
3f1f789b 2870If you are building on a UFS partition, you will also probably see
f5dcdc4e 2871t/op/stat.t subtest #9 fail. This is caused by Darwin's UFS not
2872supporting inode change time.
3f1f789b 2873
7830a95b 2874Also the ext/POSIX/t/posix.t subtest #10 fails but it is skipped for
2875now because the failure is Apple's fault, not Perl's (blocked signals
2876are lost).
2877
2878If you Configure with ithreads, ext/threads/t/libc.t will fail, again
2879not Perl's fault-- the libc of Mac OS X is not threadsafe (in this
2880particular test the localtime() call is found to be threadunsafe.)
2881
7fc79a86 2882=head2 op/sprintf tests 91, 129, and 130
f39f21d8 2883
7fc79a86 2884The op/sprintf tests 91, 129, and 130 are known to fail on some platforms.
2885Examples include any platform using sfio, and Compaq/Tandem's NonStop-UX.
f39f21d8 2886
7fc79a86 2887The test 91 is known to fail at QNX6 (nto), because C<sprintf '%e',0>
2888incorrectly produces C<0.000000e+0> instead of C<0.000000e+00>.
f39f21d8 2889
7fc79a86 2890For the tests 129 and 130 the failing platforms do not comply with
2891the ANSI C Standard, line 19ff on page 134 of ANSI X3.159 1989 to
2892be exact. (They produce something other than "1" and "-1" when
2893formatting 0.6 and -0.6 using the printf format "%.0f", most often
2894they produce "0" and "-0".)
f39f21d8 2895
0646842f 2896=head2 Solaris 2.5
2897
2898In case you are still using Solaris 2.5 (aka SunOS 5.5), you may
2899experience failures (the test core dumping) in lib/locale.t.
2900The suggested cure is to upgrade your Solaris.
2901
11d33b1d 2902=head2 Stratus VOS
2903
2904When Perl is built using the native build process on VOS Release
290514.5.0 and GNU C++/GNU Tools 2.0.1, all attempted tests either
2906pass or result in TODO (ignored) failures.
2907
8cbf54fa 2908=head2 Term::ReadKey not working on Win32
19d05054 2909
2910Use Term::ReadKey 2.20 or later.
2911
7fc79a86 2912=head2 Failure of Thread (5.005-style) tests
f39f21d8 2913
6ba475fe 2914B<Note that support for 5.005-style threading is deprecated,
2915experimental and practically unsupported. In 5.10 it is expected
2916to be removed.>
f39f21d8 2917
2918The following tests are known to fail due to fundamental problems in
2919the 5.005 threading implementation. These are not new failures--Perl
29205.005_0x has the same bugs, but didn't have these tests.
2921
6123004a 2922 ../ext/List/Util/t/first.t 255 65280 7 4 57.14% 2 5-7
2923 ../lib/English.t 2 512 54 2 3.70% 2-3
2924 ../lib/Filter/Simple/t/data.t 6 3 50.00% 1-3
2925 ../lib/Filter/Simple/t/filter_onl 9 3 33.33% 1-2 5
2926 ../lib/autouse.t 10 1 10.00% 4
2927 op/flip.t 15 1 6.67% 15
fedd8cf1 2928
9972c7af 2929These failures are unlikely to get fixed as the 5.005-style threads
2930are considered fundamentally broken. (Basically what happens is that
2931competing threads can corrupt shared global state.)
f39f21d8 2932
2933=head2 UNICOS
2934
d334a774 2935 ../lib/Math/Trig.t 26 1 3.85% 25
2936 ../lib/warnings.t 470 1 0.21% 429
f39f21d8 2937
8939dedc 2938The Trig.t failure is caused by the slighly differing (from IEEE)
2939floating point implementation of UNICOS. The warnings.t failure is
2940also related: the test assumes a certain floating point output format,
2941this assumption fails in UNICOS.
9972c7af 2942
cb3f5972 2943=head2 UNICOS/mk
2944
3d7e8424 2945=over 4
2946
2947=item *
2948
cb3f5972 2949During Configure the test
2950
2951 Guessing which symbols your C compiler and preprocessor define...
2952
2953will probably fail with error messages like
2954
2955 CC-20 cc: ERROR File = try.c, Line = 3
2956 The identifier "bad" is undefined.
2957
2958 bad switch yylook 79bad switch yylook 79bad switch yylook 79bad switch yylook 79#ifdef A29K
2959 ^
2960
2961 CC-65 cc: ERROR File = try.c, Line = 3
2962 A semicolon is expected at this point.
2963
2964This is caused by a bug in awk utility of UNICOS/mk. You can ignore
2965the error, but it does cause a slight problem: you cannot fully
2966benefit from the h2ph utility (see L<h2ph>) that can be used to
2967convert C headers to Perl libraries, mainly used to be able to access
2968from Perl the constants defined using C preprocessor, cpp. Because of
2969the above error parts of the converted headers will be invisible.
2970Luckily, these days the need for h2ph is rare.
2971
3d7e8424 2972=item *
2973
2974If building Perl with the interpreter threads (ithreads), the
2975getgrent(), getgrnam(), and getgrgid() functions cannot return the
2976list of the group members due to a bug in the multithreaded support of
2977UNICOS/mk. What this means that in list context the functions will
2978return only three values, not four.
2979
2980=back
2981
f39f21d8 2982=head2 UTS
2983
2984There are a few known test failures, see L<perluts>.
2985
2986=head2 VMS
2987
161720b2 2988There should be no reported test failures with a default configuration,
2989though there are a number of tests marked TODO that point to areas
2990needing further debugging and/or porting work.
7207e29d 2991
f39f21d8 2992=head2 Win32
2993
2994In multi-CPU boxes there are some problems with the I/O buffering:
cd34865e 2995some output may appear twice.
f39f21d8 2996
d34c32a4 2997=head2 XML::Parser not working
2998
2999Use XML::Parser 2.31 or later.
3000
7fc79a86 3001=head2 z/OS (OS/390)
3002
3003z/OS has rather many test failures but the situation is actually
3004better than it was in 5.6.0, it's just that so many new modules and
3005tests have been added.
3006
dad95037 3007 Failed Test Stat Wstat Total Fail Failed List of Failed
c151f1b7 3008 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3009 ../ext/Data/Dumper/t/dumper.t 357 8 2.24% 311 314 325 327
84fad863 3010 331 333 337 339
7fc79a86 3011 ../ext/IO/lib/IO/t/io_unix.t 5 4 80.00% 2-5
e363f566 3012 ../ext/Storable/t/downgrade.t 12 3072 169 12 7.10% 14-15 46-47 78-79
60d6f83c 3013 110-111 150 161
84fad863 3014 ../lib/ExtUtils/t/Constant.t 121 30976 48 48 100.00% 1-48
7fc79a86 3015 ../lib/ExtUtils/t/Embed.t 9 9 100.00% 1-9
e363f566 3016 op/pat.t 910 7 0.77% 665 776 785 832-
3017 834 845
7fc79a86 3018 op/sprintf.t 224 3 1.34% 98 100 136
3019 op/tr.t 97 5 5.15% 63 71-74
dcdcee7d 3020 uni/fold.t 780 6 0.77% 61 169 196 661
3021 710-711
7fc79a86 3022
9972c7af 3023The dumper.t and downgrade.t are problems in the tests, the io_unix
3024and sprintf are problems in the USS (UDP sockets and printf formats).
3025The pat, tr, and fold are genuine Perl problems caused by EBCDIC (and
3026in the pat and fold cases, combining that with Unicode). The Constant
3027and Embed are probably problems in the tests (since they test Perl's
3028ability to build extensions, and that seems to be working reasonably well.)
3029
aecce728 3030=head2 Localising Tied Arrays and Hashes Is Broken
3031
3032 local %tied_array;
3033
fd5a896a 3034doesn't work as one would expect: the old value is restored incorrectly.
3035This will be fixed in a future release, but note that doing so will break
3036existing code that relies on the broken semantics. It is important
3037that you check and alter any such code now. In the future release,
3038localising a tied array or hash will convert that variable into a new,
3039empty, and B<untied> array or hash. At the end of the block, the variable
37e23fd6 3040will be repointed at the original tied thingy. Note that no tied methods
fd5a896a 3041will be called at any point during this process. (With the existing
3042behaviour, the variable remains tied while localised.)
aecce728 3043
f39f21d8 3044=head2 Self-tying of Arrays and Hashes Is Forbidden
3045
3046Self-tying of arrays and hashes is broken in rather deep and
3047hard-to-fix ways. As a stop-gap measure to avoid people from getting
3048frustrated at the mysterious results (core dumps, most often) it is
3049for now forbidden (you will get a fatal error even from an attempt).
3050
f39f21d8 3051=head2 Building Extensions Can Fail Because Of Largefiles
3052
3053Some extensions like mod_perl are known to have issues with
3054`largefiles', a change brought by Perl 5.6.0 in which file offsets
3055default to 64 bits wide, where supported. Modules may fail to compile
3056at all or compile and work incorrectly. Currently there is no good
3057solution for the problem, but Configure now provides appropriate
3058non-largefile ccflags, ldflags, libswanted, and libs in the %Config
3059hash (e.g., $Config{ccflags_nolargefiles}) so the extensions that are
3060having problems can try configuring themselves without the
3061largefileness. This is admittedly not a clean solution, and the
3062solution may not even work at all. One potential failure is whether
3063one can (or, if one can, whether it's a good idea) link together at
3064all binaries with different ideas about file offsets, all this is
3065platform-dependent.
3066
aecce728 3067=head2 Unicode Support on EBCDIC Still Spotty
3068
3069Though mostly working, Unicode support still has problem spots on
3070EBCDIC platforms. One such known spot are the C<\p{}> and C<\P{}>
3071regular expression constructs for code points less than 256: the
c5af7db2 3072C<pP> are testing for Unicode code points, not knowing about EBCDIC.
aecce728 3073
c5af7db2 3074=head2 The Compiler Suite Is Still Very Experimental
f39f21d8 3075
44da0e71 3076The compiler suite is slowly getting better but it continues to be
3077highly experimental. Use in production environments is discouraged.
f39f21d8 3078
c4f1ce08 3079=head2 The Long Double Support Is Still Experimental
f39f21d8 3080
3081The ability to configure Perl's numbers to use "long doubles",
3082floating point numbers of hopefully better accuracy, is still
3083experimental. The implementations of long doubles are not yet
3084widespread and the existing implementations are not quite mature
3085or standardised, therefore trying to support them is a rare
3086and moving target. The gain of more precision may also be offset
3087by slowdown in computations (more bits to move around, and the
3088operations are more likely to be executed by less optimised
3089libraries).
33a87e58 3090
c4f1ce08 3091=head2 Seen In Perl 5.7 But Gone Now
3092
c4f1ce08 3093C<Time::Piece> (previously known as C<Time::Object>) was removed
3094because it was felt that it didn't have enough value in it to be a
3095core module. It is still a useful module, though, and is available
3096from the CPAN.
3097
e5f9105d 3098Perl 5.8 unfortunately does not build anymore on AmigaOS,
c5af7db2 3099this broke at some point accidentally. Since there are not that many
3100Amiga developers available, we could not get this fixed and tested in
3101time for 5.8.0.
3102
cc0fca54 3103=head1 Reporting Bugs
3104
d4ad863d 3105If you find what you think is a bug, you might check the articles
3106recently posted to the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup and the perl
f224927c 3107bug database at http://bugs.perl.org/ There may also be
3108information at http://www.perl.com/ , the Perl Home Page.
cc0fca54 3109
3110If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the B<perlbug>
3111program included with your release. Be sure to trim your bug down
3112to a tiny but sufficient test case. Your bug report, along with the
d4ad863d 3113output of C<perl -V>, will be sent off to perlbug@perl.org to be
cc0fca54 3114analysed by the Perl porting team.
3115
3116=head1 SEE ALSO
3117
3118The F<Changes> file for exhaustive details on what changed.
3119
3120The F<INSTALL> file for how to build Perl.
3121
3122The F<README> file for general stuff.
3123
3124The F<Artistic> and F<Copying> files for copyright information.
3125
3126=head1 HISTORY
3127
d468ca04 3128Written by Jarkko Hietaniemi <F<jhi@iki.fi>>.
cc0fca54 3129
3130=cut