Document the strerror_r / g++ / threads bug
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / pod / perlport.pod
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e41182b5 1=head1 NAME
2
3perlport - Writing portable Perl
4
e41182b5 5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
b7df3edc 7Perl runs on numerous operating systems. While most of them share
8much in common, they also have their own unique features.
e41182b5 9
10This document is meant to help you to find out what constitutes portable
b7df3edc 11Perl code. That way once you make a decision to write portably,
e41182b5 12you know where the lines are drawn, and you can stay within them.
13
b7df3edc 14There is a tradeoff between taking full advantage of one particular
15type of computer and taking advantage of a full range of them.
16Naturally, as you broaden your range and become more diverse, the
17common factors drop, and you are left with an increasingly smaller
18area of common ground in which you can operate to accomplish a
19particular task. Thus, when you begin attacking a problem, it is
20important to consider under which part of the tradeoff curve you
21want to operate. Specifically, you must decide whether it is
22important that the task that you are coding have the full generality
23of being portable, or whether to just get the job done right now.
24This is the hardest choice to be made. The rest is easy, because
25Perl provides many choices, whichever way you want to approach your
0a47030a 26problem.
27
28Looking at it another way, writing portable code is usually about
b7df3edc 29willfully limiting your available choices. Naturally, it takes
30discipline and sacrifice to do that. The product of portability
31and convenience may be a constant. You have been warned.
e41182b5 32
33Be aware of two important points:
34
35=over 4
36
37=item Not all Perl programs have to be portable
38
b7df3edc 39There is no reason you should not use Perl as a language to glue Unix
e41182b5 40tools together, or to prototype a Macintosh application, or to manage the
41Windows registry. If it makes no sense to aim for portability for one
42reason or another in a given program, then don't bother.
43
b7df3edc 44=item Nearly all of Perl already I<is> portable
e41182b5 45
46Don't be fooled into thinking that it is hard to create portable Perl
47code. It isn't. Perl tries its level-best to bridge the gaps between
48what's available on different platforms, and all the means available to
49use those features. Thus almost all Perl code runs on any machine
6ab3f9cb 50without modification. But there are some significant issues in
e41182b5 51writing portable code, and this document is entirely about those issues.
52
53=back
54
b7df3edc 55Here's the general rule: When you approach a task commonly done
56using a whole range of platforms, think about writing portable
e41182b5 57code. That way, you don't sacrifice much by way of the implementation
58choices you can avail yourself of, and at the same time you can give
59your users lots of platform choices. On the other hand, when you have to
60take advantage of some unique feature of a particular platform, as is
61often the case with systems programming (whether for Unix, Windows,
62S<Mac OS>, VMS, etc.), consider writing platform-specific code.
63
b7df3edc 64When the code will run on only two or three operating systems, you
65may need to consider only the differences of those particular systems.
66The important thing is to decide where the code will run and to be
0a47030a 67deliberate in your decision.
68
69The material below is separated into three main sections: main issues of
7ee27b7c 70portability (L<"ISSUES">), platform-specific issues (L<"PLATFORMS">), and
b7df3edc 71built-in perl functions that behave differently on various ports
7ee27b7c 72(L<"FUNCTION IMPLEMENTATIONS">).
e41182b5 73
74This information should not be considered complete; it includes possibly
b8099c3d 75transient information about idiosyncrasies of some of the ports, almost
b7df3edc 76all of which are in a state of constant evolution. Thus, this material
e41182b5 77should be considered a perpetual work in progress
cc07ed0b 78(C<< <IMG SRC="yellow_sign.gif" ALT="Under Construction"> >>).
e41182b5 79
e41182b5 80=head1 ISSUES
81
82=head2 Newlines
83
638bc118 84In most operating systems, lines in files are terminated by newlines.
e41182b5 85Just what is used as a newline may vary from OS to OS. Unix
b7df3edc 86traditionally uses C<\012>, one type of DOSish I/O uses C<\015\012>,
e41182b5 87and S<Mac OS> uses C<\015>.
88
b7df3edc 89Perl uses C<\n> to represent the "logical" newline, where what is
90logical may depend on the platform in use. In MacPerl, C<\n> always
91means C<\015>. In DOSish perls, C<\n> usually means C<\012>, but
92when accessing a file in "text" mode, STDIO translates it to (or
56d7751a 93from) C<\015\012>, depending on whether you're reading or writing.
b7df3edc 94Unix does the same thing on ttys in canonical mode. C<\015\012>
95is commonly referred to as CRLF.
96
31bb23b1 97To trim trailing newlines from text lines use chomp(). With default
98settings that function looks for a trailing C<\n> character and thus
99trims in a portable way.
5b3eff12 100
101When dealing with binary files (or text files in binary mode) be sure
102to explicitly set $/ to the appropriate value for your file format
103before using chomp().
104
b7df3edc 105Because of the "text" mode translation, DOSish perls have limitations
106in using C<seek> and C<tell> on a file accessed in "text" mode.
107Stick to C<seek>-ing to locations you got from C<tell> (and no
108others), and you are usually free to use C<seek> and C<tell> even
109in "text" mode. Using C<seek> or C<tell> or other file operations
110may be non-portable. If you use C<binmode> on a file, however, you
111can usually C<seek> and C<tell> with arbitrary values in safety.
e41182b5 112
113A common misconception in socket programming is that C<\n> eq C<\012>
0a47030a 114everywhere. When using protocols such as common Internet protocols,
e41182b5 115C<\012> and C<\015> are called for specifically, and the values of
116the logical C<\n> and C<\r> (carriage return) are not reliable.
117
118 print SOCKET "Hi there, client!\r\n"; # WRONG
119 print SOCKET "Hi there, client!\015\012"; # RIGHT
120
0a47030a 121However, using C<\015\012> (or C<\cM\cJ>, or C<\x0D\x0A>) can be tedious
122and unsightly, as well as confusing to those maintaining the code. As
6ab3f9cb 123such, the Socket module supplies the Right Thing for those who want it.
e41182b5 124
125 use Socket qw(:DEFAULT :crlf);
126 print SOCKET "Hi there, client!$CRLF" # RIGHT
127
6ab3f9cb 128When reading from a socket, remember that the default input record
b7df3edc 129separator C<$/> is C<\n>, but robust socket code will recognize as
130either C<\012> or C<\015\012> as end of line:
e41182b5 131
132 while (<SOCKET>) {
133 # ...
134 }
135
b7df3edc 136Because both CRLF and LF end in LF, the input record separator can
137be set to LF and any CR stripped later. Better to write:
e41182b5 138
139 use Socket qw(:DEFAULT :crlf);
140 local($/) = LF; # not needed if $/ is already \012
141
142 while (<SOCKET>) {
143 s/$CR?$LF/\n/; # not sure if socket uses LF or CRLF, OK
144 # s/\015?\012/\n/; # same thing
145 }
146
b7df3edc 147This example is preferred over the previous one--even for Unix
148platforms--because now any C<\015>'s (C<\cM>'s) are stripped out
e41182b5 149(and there was much rejoicing).
150
6ab3f9cb 151Similarly, functions that return text data--such as a function that
b7df3edc 152fetches a web page--should sometimes translate newlines before
153returning the data, if they've not yet been translated to the local
154newline representation. A single line of code will often suffice:
2ee0eb3c 155
b7df3edc 156 $data =~ s/\015?\012/\n/g;
157 return $data;
2ee0eb3c 158
6ab3f9cb 159Some of this may be confusing. Here's a handy reference to the ASCII CR
160and LF characters. You can print it out and stick it in your wallet.
161
74555b7a 162 LF eq \012 eq \x0A eq \cJ eq chr(10) eq ASCII 10
163 CR eq \015 eq \x0D eq \cM eq chr(13) eq ASCII 13
6ab3f9cb 164
165 | Unix | DOS | Mac |
166 ---------------------------
167 \n | LF | LF | CR |
168 \r | CR | CR | LF |
169 \n * | LF | CRLF | CR |
170 \r * | CR | CR | LF |
171 ---------------------------
172 * text-mode STDIO
173
b7df3edc 174The Unix column assumes that you are not accessing a serial line
175(like a tty) in canonical mode. If you are, then CR on input becomes
176"\n", and "\n" on output becomes CRLF.
177
6ab3f9cb 178These are just the most common definitions of C<\n> and C<\r> in Perl.
522b859a 179There may well be others. For example, on an EBCDIC implementation
180such as z/OS (OS/390) or OS/400 (using the ILE, the PASE is ASCII-based)
181the above material is similar to "Unix" but the code numbers change:
74555b7a 182
d770bc45 183 LF eq \025 eq \x15 eq \cU eq chr(21) eq CP-1047 21
184 LF eq \045 eq \x25 eq chr(37) eq CP-0037 37
74555b7a 185 CR eq \015 eq \x0D eq \cM eq chr(13) eq CP-1047 13
186 CR eq \015 eq \x0D eq \cM eq chr(13) eq CP-0037 13
187
188 | z/OS | OS/400 |
189 ----------------------
190 \n | LF | LF |
191 \r | CR | CR |
192 \n * | LF | LF |
193 \r * | CR | CR |
194 ----------------------
195 * text-mode STDIO
6ab3f9cb 196
322422de 197=head2 Numbers endianness and Width
198
199Different CPUs store integers and floating point numbers in different
200orders (called I<endianness>) and widths (32-bit and 64-bit being the
b7df3edc 201most common today). This affects your programs when they attempt to transfer
202numbers in binary format from one CPU architecture to another,
203usually either "live" via network connection, or by storing the
204numbers to secondary storage such as a disk file or tape.
322422de 205
b7df3edc 206Conflicting storage orders make utter mess out of the numbers. If a
d1e3b762 207little-endian host (Intel, VAX) stores 0x12345678 (305419896 in
b84d4f81 208decimal), a big-endian host (Motorola, Sparc, PA) reads it as
2090x78563412 (2018915346 in decimal). Alpha and MIPS can be either:
210Digital/Compaq used/uses them in little-endian mode; SGI/Cray uses
211them in big-endian mode. To avoid this problem in network (socket)
212connections use the C<pack> and C<unpack> formats C<n> and C<N>, the
213"network" orders. These are guaranteed to be portable.
322422de 214
7a4d2905 215As of perl 5.9.2, you can also use the C<E<gt>> and C<E<lt>> modifiers
1109a392 216to force big- or little-endian byte-order. This is useful if you want
217to store signed integers or 64-bit integers, for example.
218
d1e3b762 219You can explore the endianness of your platform by unpacking a
220data structure packed in native format such as:
221
222 print unpack("h*", pack("s2", 1, 2)), "\n";
223 # '10002000' on e.g. Intel x86 or Alpha 21064 in little-endian mode
224 # '00100020' on e.g. Motorola 68040
225
226If you need to distinguish between endian architectures you could use
227either of the variables set like so:
228
229 $is_big_endian = unpack("h*", pack("s", 1)) =~ /01/;
4375e838 230 $is_little_endian = unpack("h*", pack("s", 1)) =~ /^1/;
d1e3b762 231
b7df3edc 232Differing widths can cause truncation even between platforms of equal
233endianness. The platform of shorter width loses the upper parts of the
322422de 234number. There is no good solution for this problem except to avoid
235transferring or storing raw binary numbers.
236
b7df3edc 237One can circumnavigate both these problems in two ways. Either
322422de 238transfer and store numbers always in text format, instead of raw
b7df3edc 239binary, or else consider using modules like Data::Dumper (included in
83df6a1d 240the standard distribution as of Perl 5.005) and Storable (included as
241of perl 5.8). Keeping all data as text significantly simplifies matters.
322422de 242
979699d9 243The v-strings are portable only up to v2147483647 (0x7FFFFFFF), that's
244how far EBCDIC, or more precisely UTF-EBCDIC will go.
245
433acd8a 246=head2 Files and Filesystems
e41182b5 247
248Most platforms these days structure files in a hierarchical fashion.
b7df3edc 249So, it is reasonably safe to assume that all platforms support the
6ab3f9cb 250notion of a "path" to uniquely identify a file on the system. How
b7df3edc 251that path is really written, though, differs considerably.
e41182b5 252
4375e838 253Although similar, file path specifications differ between Unix,
b7df3edc 254Windows, S<Mac OS>, OS/2, VMS, VOS, S<RISC OS>, and probably others.
255Unix, for example, is one of the few OSes that has the elegant idea
256of a single root directory.
322422de 257
6ab3f9cb 258DOS, OS/2, VMS, VOS, and Windows can work similarly to Unix with C</>
259as path separator, or in their own idiosyncratic ways (such as having
260several root directories and various "unrooted" device files such NIL:
261and LPT:).
322422de 262
263S<Mac OS> uses C<:> as a path separator instead of C</>.
264
6ab3f9cb 265The filesystem may support neither hard links (C<link>) nor
266symbolic links (C<symlink>, C<readlink>, C<lstat>).
433acd8a 267
6ab3f9cb 268The filesystem may support neither access timestamp nor change
433acd8a 269timestamp (meaning that about the only portable timestamp is the
270modification timestamp), or one second granularity of any timestamps
271(e.g. the FAT filesystem limits the time granularity to two seconds).
272
74555b7a 273The "inode change timestamp" (the C<-C> filetest) may really be the
95a3fe12 274"creation timestamp" (which it is not in UNIX).
275
495c5fdc 276VOS perl can emulate Unix filenames with C</> as path separator. The
277native pathname characters greater-than, less-than, number-sign, and
278percent-sign are always accepted.
279
6ab3f9cb 280S<RISC OS> perl can emulate Unix filenames with C</> as path
322422de 281separator, or go native and use C<.> for path separator and C<:> to
6ab3f9cb 282signal filesystems and disk names.
e41182b5 283
a1667ba3 284Don't assume UNIX filesystem access semantics: that read, write,
285and execute are all the permissions there are, and even if they exist,
286that their semantics (for example what do r, w, and x mean on
287a directory) are the UNIX ones. The various UNIX/POSIX compatibility
288layers usually try to make interfaces like chmod() work, but sometimes
289there simply is no good mapping.
290
b7df3edc 291If all this is intimidating, have no (well, maybe only a little)
292fear. There are modules that can help. The File::Spec modules
293provide methods to do the Right Thing on whatever platform happens
294to be running the program.
e41182b5 295
6ab3f9cb 296 use File::Spec::Functions;
297 chdir(updir()); # go up one directory
298 $file = catfile(curdir(), 'temp', 'file.txt');
e41182b5 299 # on Unix and Win32, './temp/file.txt'
300 # on Mac OS, ':temp:file.txt'
d1e3b762 301 # on VMS, '[.temp]file.txt'
e41182b5 302
b7df3edc 303File::Spec is available in the standard distribution as of version
d1e3b762 3045.004_05. File::Spec::Functions is only in File::Spec 0.7 and later,
305and some versions of perl come with version 0.6. If File::Spec
306is not updated to 0.7 or later, you must use the object-oriented
307interface from File::Spec (or upgrade File::Spec).
e41182b5 308
b7df3edc 309In general, production code should not have file paths hardcoded.
310Making them user-supplied or read from a configuration file is
311better, keeping in mind that file path syntax varies on different
312machines.
e41182b5 313
314This is especially noticeable in scripts like Makefiles and test suites,
315which often assume C</> as a path separator for subdirectories.
316
b7df3edc 317Also of use is File::Basename from the standard distribution, which
e41182b5 318splits a pathname into pieces (base filename, full path to directory,
319and file suffix).
320
19799a22 321Even when on a single platform (if you can call Unix a single platform),
b7df3edc 322remember not to count on the existence or the contents of particular
3c075c7d 323system-specific files or directories, like F</etc/passwd>,
b7df3edc 324F</etc/sendmail.conf>, F</etc/resolv.conf>, or even F</tmp/>. For
325example, F</etc/passwd> may exist but not contain the encrypted
326passwords, because the system is using some form of enhanced security.
327Or it may not contain all the accounts, because the system is using NIS.
3c075c7d 328If code does need to rely on such a file, include a description of the
b7df3edc 329file and its format in the code's documentation, then make it easy for
3c075c7d 330the user to override the default location of the file.
331
b7df3edc 332Don't assume a text file will end with a newline. They should,
333but people forget.
e41182b5 334
ec481373 335Do not have two files or directories of the same name with different
336case, like F<test.pl> and F<Test.pl>, as many platforms have
337case-insensitive (or at least case-forgiving) filenames. Also, try
338not to have non-word characters (except for C<.>) in the names, and
339keep them to the 8.3 convention, for maximum portability, onerous a
340burden though this may appear.
dd9f0070 341
b7df3edc 342Likewise, when using the AutoSplit module, try to keep your functions to
3438.3 naming and case-insensitive conventions; or, at the least,
dd9f0070 344make it so the resulting files have a unique (case-insensitively)
345first 8 characters.
346
ec481373 347Whitespace in filenames is tolerated on most systems, but not all,
348and even on systems where it might be tolerated, some utilities
fe829689 349might become confused by such whitespace.
ec481373 350
016930a6 351Many systems (DOS, VMS ODS-2) cannot have more than one C<.> in their
352filenames.
433acd8a 353
c47ff5f1 354Don't assume C<< > >> won't be the first character of a filename.
fe829689 355Always use C<< < >> explicitly to open a file for reading, or even
356better, use the three-arg version of open, unless you want the user to
357be able to specify a pipe open.
0a47030a 358
fe829689 359 open(FILE, '<', $existing_file) or die $!;
0a47030a 360
6ab3f9cb 361If filenames might use strange characters, it is safest to open it
362with C<sysopen> instead of C<open>. C<open> is magic and can
c47ff5f1 363translate characters like C<< > >>, C<< < >>, and C<|>, which may
b7df3edc 364be the wrong thing to do. (Sometimes, though, it's the right thing.)
fe829689 365Three-arg open can also help protect against this translation in cases
366where it is undesirable.
e41182b5 367
ec481373 368Don't use C<:> as a part of a filename since many systems use that for
8939ba94 369their own semantics (Mac OS Classic for separating pathname components,
ec481373 370many networking schemes and utilities for separating the nodename and
08fef530 371the pathname, and so on). For the same reasons, avoid C<@>, C<;> and
372C<|>.
ec481373 373
e1516da7 374Don't assume that in pathnames you can collapse two leading slashes
375C<//> into one: some networking and clustering filesystems have special
376semantics for that. Let the operating system to sort it out.
377
ec481373 378The I<portable filename characters> as defined by ANSI C are
379
380 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r t u v w x y z
381 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R T U V W X Y Z
382 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
383 . _ -
384
08fef530 385and the "-" shouldn't be the first character. If you want to be
e1516da7 386hypercorrect, stay case-insensitive and within the 8.3 naming
387convention (all the files and directories have to be unique within one
388directory if their names are lowercased and truncated to eight
389characters before the C<.>, if any, and to three characters after the
390C<.>, if any). (And do not use C<.>s in directory names.)
ec481373 391
e41182b5 392=head2 System Interaction
393
b7df3edc 394Not all platforms provide a command line. These are usually platforms
395that rely primarily on a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for user
396interaction. A program requiring a command line interface might
397not work everywhere. This is probably for the user of the program
398to deal with, so don't stay up late worrying about it.
e41182b5 399
c87488a3 400Some platforms can't delete or rename files held open by the system,
401this limitation may also apply to changing filesystem metainformation
402like file permissions or owners. Remember to C<close> files when you
403are done with them. Don't C<unlink> or C<rename> an open file. Don't
404C<tie> or C<open> a file already tied or opened; C<untie> or C<close>
405it first.
e41182b5 406
0a47030a 407Don't open the same file more than once at a time for writing, as some
408operating systems put mandatory locks on such files.
409
73e9292c 410Don't assume that write/modify permission on a directory gives the
411right to add or delete files/directories in that directory. That is
412filesystem specific: in some filesystems you need write/modify
413permission also (or even just) in the file/directory itself. In some
414filesystems (AFS, DFS) the permission to add/delete directory entries
415is a completely separate permission.
416
417Don't assume that a single C<unlink> completely gets rid of the file:
418some filesystems (most notably the ones in VMS) have versioned
419filesystems, and unlink() removes only the most recent one (it doesn't
420remove all the versions because by default the native tools on those
421platforms remove just the most recent version, too). The portable
422idiom to remove all the versions of a file is
423
94bb614c 424 1 while unlink "file";
73e9292c 425
426This will terminate if the file is undeleteable for some reason
427(protected, not there, and so on).
428
e41182b5 429Don't count on a specific environment variable existing in C<%ENV>.
0a47030a 430Don't count on C<%ENV> entries being case-sensitive, or even
4a0d0822 431case-preserving. Don't try to clear %ENV by saying C<%ENV = ();>, or,
6be8f7a6 432if you really have to, make it conditional on C<$^O ne 'VMS'> since in
4a0d0822 433VMS the C<%ENV> table is much more than a per-process key-value string
434table.
e41182b5 435
c73b03b7 436On VMS, some entries in the %ENV hash are dynamically created when
437their key is used on a read if they did not previously exist. The
438values for C<$ENV{HOME}>, C<$ENV{TERM}>, C<$ENV{HOME}>, and C<$ENV{USER}>,
439are known to be dynamically generated. The specific names that are
440dynamically generated may vary with the version of the C library on VMS,
441and more may exist than is documented.
442
443On VMS by default, changes to the %ENV hash are persistent after the process
444exits. This can cause unintended issues.
445
d1e3b762 446Don't count on signals or C<%SIG> for anything.
e41182b5 447
448Don't count on filename globbing. Use C<opendir>, C<readdir>, and
449C<closedir> instead.
450
b8099c3d 451Don't count on per-program environment variables, or per-program current
dd9f0070 452directories.
b8099c3d 453
c87488a3 454Don't count on specific values of C<$!>, neither numeric nor
455especially the strings values-- users may switch their locales causing
456error messages to be translated into their languages. If you can
457trust a POSIXish environment, you can portably use the symbols defined
458by the Errno module, like ENOENT. And don't trust on the values of C<$!>
459at all except immediately after a failed system call.
3c075c7d 460
a10d74f3 461=head2 Command names versus file pathnames
462
463Don't assume that the name used to invoke a command or program with
464C<system> or C<exec> can also be used to test for the existence of the
465file that holds the executable code for that command or program.
68fb0eb7 466First, many systems have "internal" commands that are built-in to the
467shell or OS and while these commands can be invoked, there is no
468corresponding file. Second, some operating systems (e.g., Cygwin,
469DJGPP, OS/2, and VOS) have required suffixes for executable files;
470these suffixes are generally permitted on the command name but are not
a10d74f3 471required. Thus, a command like "perl" might exist in a file named
472"perl", "perl.exe", or "perl.pm", depending on the operating system.
473The variable "_exe" in the Config module holds the executable suffix,
68fb0eb7 474if any. Third, the VMS port carefully sets up $^X and
475$Config{perlpath} so that no further processing is required. This is
476just as well, because the matching regular expression used below would
477then have to deal with a possible trailing version number in the VMS
478file name.
a10d74f3 479
480To convert $^X to a file pathname, taking account of the requirements
481of the various operating system possibilities, say:
7ee27b7c 482
a10d74f3 483 use Config;
a10d74f3 484 $thisperl = $^X;
68fb0eb7 485 if ($^O ne 'VMS')
486 {$thisperl .= $Config{_exe} unless $thisperl =~ m/$Config{_exe}$/i;}
a10d74f3 487
488To convert $Config{perlpath} to a file pathname, say:
7ee27b7c 489
a10d74f3 490 use Config;
68fb0eb7 491 $thisperl = $Config{perlpath};
492 if ($^O ne 'VMS')
493 {$thisperl .= $Config{_exe} unless $thisperl =~ m/$Config{_exe}$/i;}
a10d74f3 494
7137b697 495=head2 Networking
496
497Don't assume that you can reach the public Internet.
498
499Don't assume that there is only one way to get through firewalls
500to the public Internet.
501
932f293e 502Don't assume that you can reach outside world through any other port
503than 80, or some web proxy. ftp is blocked by many firewalls.
504
dbc6a9ce 505Don't assume that you can send email by connecting to the local SMTP port.
506
7137b697 507Don't assume that you can reach yourself or any node by the name
dbc6a9ce 508'localhost'. The same goes for '127.0.0.1'. You will have to try both.
932f293e 509
86feb2c5 510Don't assume that the host has only one network card, or that it
511can't bind to many virtual IP addresses.
932f293e 512
513Don't assume a particular network device name.
7137b697 514
dbc6a9ce 515Don't assume a particular set of ioctl()s will work.
7137b697 516
517Don't assume that you can ping hosts and get replies.
518
dbc6a9ce 519Don't assume that any particular port (service) will respond.
520
7ee27b7c 521Don't assume that Sys::Hostname (or any other API or command)
dbc6a9ce 522returns either a fully qualified hostname or a non-qualified hostname:
523it all depends on how the system had been configured. Also remember
524things like DHCP and NAT-- the hostname you get back might not be very
525useful.
526
932f293e 527All the above "don't":s may look daunting, and they are -- but the key
528is to degrade gracefully if one cannot reach the particular network
529service one wants. Croaking or hanging do not look very professional.
530
e41182b5 531=head2 Interprocess Communication (IPC)
532
b7df3edc 533In general, don't directly access the system in code meant to be
534portable. That means, no C<system>, C<exec>, C<fork>, C<pipe>,
535C<``>, C<qx//>, C<open> with a C<|>, nor any of the other things
536that makes being a perl hacker worth being.
e41182b5 537
538Commands that launch external processes are generally supported on
b7df3edc 539most platforms (though many of them do not support any type of
540forking). The problem with using them arises from what you invoke
541them on. External tools are often named differently on different
4375e838 542platforms, may not be available in the same location, might accept
b7df3edc 543different arguments, can behave differently, and often present their
544results in a platform-dependent way. Thus, you should seldom depend
545on them to produce consistent results. (Then again, if you're calling
546I<netstat -a>, you probably don't expect it to run on both Unix and CP/M.)
e41182b5 547
b7df3edc 548One especially common bit of Perl code is opening a pipe to B<sendmail>:
e41182b5 549
b7df3edc 550 open(MAIL, '|/usr/lib/sendmail -t')
551 or die "cannot fork sendmail: $!";
e41182b5 552
553This is fine for systems programming when sendmail is known to be
554available. But it is not fine for many non-Unix systems, and even
555some Unix systems that may not have sendmail installed. If a portable
b7df3edc 556solution is needed, see the various distributions on CPAN that deal
557with it. Mail::Mailer and Mail::Send in the MailTools distribution are
558commonly used, and provide several mailing methods, including mail,
559sendmail, and direct SMTP (via Net::SMTP) if a mail transfer agent is
560not available. Mail::Sendmail is a standalone module that provides
561simple, platform-independent mailing.
562
563The Unix System V IPC (C<msg*(), sem*(), shm*()>) is not available
564even on all Unix platforms.
e41182b5 565
a81e5e2e 566Do not use either the bare result of C<pack("N", 10, 20, 30, 40)> or
567bare v-strings (such as C<v10.20.30.40>) to represent IPv4 addresses:
568both forms just pack the four bytes into network order. That this
569would be equal to the C language C<in_addr> struct (which is what the
570socket code internally uses) is not guaranteed. To be portable use
571the routines of the Socket extension, such as C<inet_aton()>,
572C<inet_ntoa()>, and C<sockaddr_in()>.
6b2463a0 573
e41182b5 574The rule of thumb for portable code is: Do it all in portable Perl, or
0a47030a 575use a module (that may internally implement it with platform-specific
576code, but expose a common interface).
e41182b5 577
e41182b5 578=head2 External Subroutines (XS)
579
b7df3edc 580XS code can usually be made to work with any platform, but dependent
e41182b5 581libraries, header files, etc., might not be readily available or
582portable, or the XS code itself might be platform-specific, just as Perl
583code might be. If the libraries and headers are portable, then it is
584normally reasonable to make sure the XS code is portable, too.
585
b7df3edc 586A different type of portability issue arises when writing XS code:
587availability of a C compiler on the end-user's system. C brings
588with it its own portability issues, and writing XS code will expose
589you to some of those. Writing purely in Perl is an easier way to
e41182b5 590achieve portability.
591
e41182b5 592=head2 Standard Modules
593
594In general, the standard modules work across platforms. Notable
6ab3f9cb 595exceptions are the CPAN module (which currently makes connections to external
e41182b5 596programs that may not be available), platform-specific modules (like
6ab3f9cb 597ExtUtils::MM_VMS), and DBM modules.
e41182b5 598
b7df3edc 599There is no one DBM module available on all platforms.
6ab3f9cb 600SDBM_File and the others are generally available on all Unix and DOSish
601ports, but not in MacPerl, where only NBDM_File and DB_File are
0a47030a 602available.
e41182b5 603
604The good news is that at least some DBM module should be available, and
6ab3f9cb 605AnyDBM_File will use whichever module it can find. Of course, then
b7df3edc 606the code needs to be fairly strict, dropping to the greatest common
607factor (e.g., not exceeding 1K for each record), so that it will
6ab3f9cb 608work with any DBM module. See L<AnyDBM_File> for more details.
e41182b5 609
e41182b5 610=head2 Time and Date
611
0a47030a 612The system's notion of time of day and calendar date is controlled in
b7df3edc 613widely different ways. Don't assume the timezone is stored in C<$ENV{TZ}>,
0a47030a 614and even if it is, don't assume that you can control the timezone through
c87488a3 615that variable. Don't assume anything about the three-letter timezone
616abbreviations (for example that MST would be the Mountain Standard Time,
617it's been known to stand for Moscow Standard Time). If you need to
618use timezones, express them in some unambiguous format like the
619exact number of minutes offset from UTC, or the POSIX timezone
620format.
e41182b5 621
322422de 622Don't assume that the epoch starts at 00:00:00, January 1, 1970,
c87488a3 623because that is OS- and implementation-specific. It is better to
624store a date in an unambiguous representation. The ISO 8601 standard
625defines YYYY-MM-DD as the date format, or YYYY-MM-DDTHH-MM-SS
626(that's a literal "T" separating the date from the time).
627Please do use the ISO 8601 instead of making us to guess what
628date 02/03/04 might be. ISO 8601 even sorts nicely as-is.
629A text representation (like "1987-12-18") can be easily converted
630into an OS-specific value using a module like Date::Parse.
631An array of values, such as those returned by C<localtime>, can be
632converted to an OS-specific representation using Time::Local.
322422de 633
19799a22 634When calculating specific times, such as for tests in time or date modules,
635it may be appropriate to calculate an offset for the epoch.
b7df3edc 636
19799a22 637 require Time::Local;
638 $offset = Time::Local::timegm(0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 70);
b7df3edc 639
19799a22 640The value for C<$offset> in Unix will be C<0>, but in Mac OS will be
641some large number. C<$offset> can then be added to a Unix time value
642to get what should be the proper value on any system.
322422de 643
bbac04ed 644On Windows (at least), you shouldn't pass a negative value to C<gmtime> or
645C<localtime>.
646
322422de 647=head2 Character sets and character encoding
648
ec481373 649Assume very little about character sets.
650
651Assume nothing about numerical values (C<ord>, C<chr>) of characters.
652Do not use explicit code point ranges (like \xHH-\xHH); use for
653example symbolic character classes like C<[:print:]>.
654
655Do not assume that the alphabetic characters are encoded contiguously
656(in the numeric sense). There may be gaps.
657
658Do not assume anything about the ordering of the characters.
659The lowercase letters may come before or after the uppercase letters;
b432a672 660the lowercase and uppercase may be interlaced so that both "a" and "A"
661come before "b"; the accented and other international characters may
662be interlaced so that E<auml> comes before "b".
322422de 663
664=head2 Internationalisation
665
b7df3edc 666If you may assume POSIX (a rather large assumption), you may read
667more about the POSIX locale system from L<perllocale>. The locale
668system at least attempts to make things a little bit more portable,
669or at least more convenient and native-friendly for non-English
670users. The system affects character sets and encoding, and date
671and time formatting--amongst other things.
e41182b5 672
c87488a3 673If you really want to be international, you should consider Unicode.
674See L<perluniintro> and L<perlunicode> for more information.
675
11264fdb 676If you want to use non-ASCII bytes (outside the bytes 0x00..0x7f) in
677the "source code" of your code, to be portable you have to be explicit
678about what bytes they are. Someone might for example be using your
679code under a UTF-8 locale, in which case random native bytes might be
680illegal ("Malformed UTF-8 ...") This means that for example embedding
681ISO 8859-1 bytes beyond 0x7f into your strings might cause trouble
682later. If the bytes are native 8-bit bytes, you can use the C<bytes>
683pragma. If the bytes are in a string (regular expression being a
684curious string), you can often also use the C<\xHH> notation instead
2575c402 685of embedding the bytes as-is. (If you want to write your code in UTF-8,
686you can use the C<utf8>.) The C<bytes> and C<utf8> pragmata are
687available since Perl 5.6.0.
11264fdb 688
e41182b5 689=head2 System Resources
690
0a47030a 691If your code is destined for systems with severely constrained (or
692missing!) virtual memory systems then you want to be I<especially> mindful
693of avoiding wasteful constructs such as:
e41182b5 694
695 # NOTE: this is no longer "bad" in perl5.005
696 for (0..10000000) {} # bad
697 for (my $x = 0; $x <= 10000000; ++$x) {} # good
698
699 @lines = <VERY_LARGE_FILE>; # bad
700
701 while (<FILE>) {$file .= $_} # sometimes bad
0a47030a 702 $file = join('', <FILE>); # better
e41182b5 703
b7df3edc 704The last two constructs may appear unintuitive to most people. The
705first repeatedly grows a string, whereas the second allocates a
706large chunk of memory in one go. On some systems, the second is
707more efficient that the first.
0a47030a 708
e41182b5 709=head2 Security
710
b7df3edc 711Most multi-user platforms provide basic levels of security, usually
712implemented at the filesystem level. Some, however, do
a1667ba3 713not-- unfortunately. Thus the notion of user id, or "home" directory,
b7df3edc 714or even the state of being logged-in, may be unrecognizable on many
715platforms. If you write programs that are security-conscious, it
716is usually best to know what type of system you will be running
717under so that you can write code explicitly for that platform (or
718class of platforms).
0a47030a 719
a1667ba3 720Don't assume the UNIX filesystem access semantics: the operating
721system or the filesystem may be using some ACL systems, which are
722richer languages than the usual rwx. Even if the rwx exist,
723their semantics might be different.
724
725(From security viewpoint testing for permissions before attempting to
726do something is silly anyway: if one tries this, there is potential
727for race conditions-- someone or something might change the
728permissions between the permissions check and the actual operation.
729Just try the operation.)
730
731Don't assume the UNIX user and group semantics: especially, don't
2edcc0d9 732expect the C<< $< >> and C<< $> >> (or the C<$(> and C<$)>) to work
a1667ba3 733for switching identities (or memberships).
734
735Don't assume set-uid and set-gid semantics. (And even if you do,
736think twice: set-uid and set-gid are a known can of security worms.)
737
e41182b5 738=head2 Style
739
740For those times when it is necessary to have platform-specific code,
741consider keeping the platform-specific code in one place, making porting
6ab3f9cb 742to other platforms easier. Use the Config module and the special
0a47030a 743variable C<$^O> to differentiate platforms, as described in
744L<"PLATFORMS">.
e41182b5 745
b7df3edc 746Be careful in the tests you supply with your module or programs.
747Module code may be fully portable, but its tests might not be. This
748often happens when tests spawn off other processes or call external
749programs to aid in the testing, or when (as noted above) the tests
c87488a3 750assume certain things about the filesystem and paths. Be careful not
751to depend on a specific output style for errors, such as when checking
752C<$!> after a failed system call. Using C<$!> for anything else than
753displaying it as output is doubtful (though see the Errno module for
754testing reasonably portably for error value). Some platforms expect
755a certain output format, and Perl on those platforms may have been
756adjusted accordingly. Most specifically, don't anchor a regex when
757testing an error value.
e41182b5 758
0a47030a 759=head1 CPAN Testers
e41182b5 760
0a47030a 761Modules uploaded to CPAN are tested by a variety of volunteers on
762different platforms. These CPAN testers are notified by mail of each
e41182b5 763new upload, and reply to the list with PASS, FAIL, NA (not applicable to
0a47030a 764this platform), or UNKNOWN (unknown), along with any relevant notations.
e41182b5 765
766The purpose of the testing is twofold: one, to help developers fix any
0a47030a 767problems in their code that crop up because of lack of testing on other
b7df3edc 768platforms; two, to provide users with information about whether
0a47030a 769a given module works on a given platform.
e41182b5 770
7ee27b7c 771Also see:
772
e41182b5 773=over 4
774
7ee27b7c 775=item *
776
777Mailing list: cpan-testers@perl.org
778
779=item *
e41182b5 780
7ee27b7c 781Testing results: http://testers.cpan.org/
e41182b5 782
783=back
784
e41182b5 785=head1 PLATFORMS
786
787As of version 5.002, Perl is built with a C<$^O> variable that
788indicates the operating system it was built on. This was implemented
b7df3edc 789to help speed up code that would otherwise have to C<use Config>
790and use the value of C<$Config{osname}>. Of course, to get more
e41182b5 791detailed information about the system, looking into C<%Config> is
792certainly recommended.
793
b7df3edc 794C<%Config> cannot always be trusted, however, because it was built
795at compile time. If perl was built in one place, then transferred
796elsewhere, some values may be wrong. The values may even have been
797edited after the fact.
6ab3f9cb 798
e41182b5 799=head2 Unix
800
801Perl works on a bewildering variety of Unix and Unix-like platforms (see
802e.g. most of the files in the F<hints/> directory in the source code kit).
803On most of these systems, the value of C<$^O> (hence C<$Config{'osname'}>,
d1e3b762 804too) is determined either by lowercasing and stripping punctuation from the
805first field of the string returned by typing C<uname -a> (or a similar command)
806at the shell prompt or by testing the file system for the presence of
807uniquely named files such as a kernel or header file. Here, for example,
808are a few of the more popular Unix flavors:
e41182b5 809
b7df3edc 810 uname $^O $Config{'archname'}
6ab3f9cb 811 --------------------------------------------
b7df3edc 812 AIX aix aix
6ab3f9cb 813 BSD/OS bsdos i386-bsdos
e1516da7 814 Darwin darwin darwin
6ab3f9cb 815 dgux dgux AViiON-dgux
816 DYNIX/ptx dynixptx i386-dynixptx
b7df3edc 817 FreeBSD freebsd freebsd-i386
d1e3b762 818 Linux linux arm-linux
b7df3edc 819 Linux linux i386-linux
6ab3f9cb 820 Linux linux i586-linux
821 Linux linux ppc-linux
b7df3edc 822 HP-UX hpux PA-RISC1.1
823 IRIX irix irix
b787fad4 824 Mac OS X darwin darwin
d1e3b762 825 MachTen PPC machten powerpc-machten
826 NeXT 3 next next-fat
827 NeXT 4 next OPENSTEP-Mach
6ab3f9cb 828 openbsd openbsd i386-openbsd
b7df3edc 829 OSF1 dec_osf alpha-dec_osf
6ab3f9cb 830 reliantunix-n svr4 RM400-svr4
831 SCO_SV sco_sv i386-sco_sv
832 SINIX-N svr4 RM400-svr4
833 sn4609 unicos CRAY_C90-unicos
834 sn6521 unicosmk t3e-unicosmk
835 sn9617 unicos CRAY_J90-unicos
b7df3edc 836 SunOS solaris sun4-solaris
837 SunOS solaris i86pc-solaris
838 SunOS4 sunos sun4-sunos
e41182b5 839
b7df3edc 840Because the value of C<$Config{archname}> may depend on the
841hardware architecture, it can vary more than the value of C<$^O>.
6ab3f9cb 842
e41182b5 843=head2 DOS and Derivatives
844
b7df3edc 845Perl has long been ported to Intel-style microcomputers running under
e41182b5 846systems like PC-DOS, MS-DOS, OS/2, and most Windows platforms you can
847bring yourself to mention (except for Windows CE, if you count that).
b7df3edc 848Users familiar with I<COMMAND.COM> or I<CMD.EXE> style shells should
e41182b5 849be aware that each of these file specifications may have subtle
850differences:
851
852 $filespec0 = "c:/foo/bar/file.txt";
853 $filespec1 = "c:\\foo\\bar\\file.txt";
854 $filespec2 = 'c:\foo\bar\file.txt';
855 $filespec3 = 'c:\\foo\\bar\\file.txt';
856
b7df3edc 857System calls accept either C</> or C<\> as the path separator.
858However, many command-line utilities of DOS vintage treat C</> as
859the option prefix, so may get confused by filenames containing C</>.
860Aside from calling any external programs, C</> will work just fine,
861and probably better, as it is more consistent with popular usage,
862and avoids the problem of remembering what to backwhack and what
863not to.
e41182b5 864
b7df3edc 865The DOS FAT filesystem can accommodate only "8.3" style filenames. Under
866the "case-insensitive, but case-preserving" HPFS (OS/2) and NTFS (NT)
0a47030a 867filesystems you may have to be careful about case returned with functions
e41182b5 868like C<readdir> or used with functions like C<open> or C<opendir>.
869
b7df3edc 870DOS also treats several filenames as special, such as AUX, PRN,
871NUL, CON, COM1, LPT1, LPT2, etc. Unfortunately, sometimes these
872filenames won't even work if you include an explicit directory
873prefix. It is best to avoid such filenames, if you want your code
874to be portable to DOS and its derivatives. It's hard to know what
875these all are, unfortunately.
e41182b5 876
877Users of these operating systems may also wish to make use of
b7df3edc 878scripts such as I<pl2bat.bat> or I<pl2cmd> to
e41182b5 879put wrappers around your scripts.
880
881Newline (C<\n>) is translated as C<\015\012> by STDIO when reading from
6ab3f9cb 882and writing to files (see L<"Newlines">). C<binmode(FILEHANDLE)>
883will keep C<\n> translated as C<\012> for that filehandle. Since it is a
884no-op on other systems, C<binmode> should be used for cross-platform code
b7df3edc 885that deals with binary data. That's assuming you realize in advance
886that your data is in binary. General-purpose programs should
887often assume nothing about their data.
e41182b5 888
b7df3edc 889The C<$^O> variable and the C<$Config{archname}> values for various
e41182b5 890DOSish perls are as follows:
891
67ac489e 892 OS $^O $Config{archname} ID Version
893 --------------------------------------------------------
894 MS-DOS dos ?
895 PC-DOS dos ?
896 OS/2 os2 ?
897 Windows 3.1 ? ? 0 3 01
898 Windows 95 MSWin32 MSWin32-x86 1 4 00
899 Windows 98 MSWin32 MSWin32-x86 1 4 10
900 Windows ME MSWin32 MSWin32-x86 1 ?
901 Windows NT MSWin32 MSWin32-x86 2 4 xx
902 Windows NT MSWin32 MSWin32-ALPHA 2 4 xx
903 Windows NT MSWin32 MSWin32-ppc 2 4 xx
7ee27b7c 904 Windows 2000 MSWin32 MSWin32-x86 2 5 00
905 Windows XP MSWin32 MSWin32-x86 2 5 01
906 Windows 2003 MSWin32 MSWin32-x86 2 5 02
67ac489e 907 Windows CE MSWin32 ? 3
7ee27b7c 908 Cygwin cygwin cygwin
e41182b5 909
34aaaa84 910The various MSWin32 Perl's can distinguish the OS they are running on
911via the value of the fifth element of the list returned from
912Win32::GetOSVersion(). For example:
913
914 if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') {
915 my @os_version_info = Win32::GetOSVersion();
916 print +('3.1','95','NT')[$os_version_info[4]],"\n";
917 }
918
7939d86b 919There are also Win32::IsWinNT() and Win32::IsWin95(), try C<perldoc Win32>,
920and as of libwin32 0.19 (not part of the core Perl distribution)
921Win32::GetOSName(). The very portable POSIX::uname() will work too:
1d65be3a 922
923 c:\> perl -MPOSIX -we "print join '|', uname"
924 Windows NT|moonru|5.0|Build 2195 (Service Pack 2)|x86
d99f392e 925
e41182b5 926Also see:
927
928=over 4
929
c997b287 930=item *
e41182b5 931
c997b287 932The djgpp environment for DOS, http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/
933and L<perldos>.
e41182b5 934
c997b287 935=item *
e41182b5 936
c997b287 937The EMX environment for DOS, OS/2, etc. emx@iaehv.nl,
938http://www.leo.org/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/gnu/emx+gcc/index.html or
f224927c 939ftp://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/dev/emx/ Also L<perlos2>.
e41182b5 940
c997b287 941=item *
d1e3b762 942
c997b287 943Build instructions for Win32 in L<perlwin32>, or under the Cygnus environment
944in L<perlcygwin>.
945
946=item *
947
948The C<Win32::*> modules in L<Win32>.
949
950=item *
951
952The ActiveState Pages, http://www.activestate.com/
953
954=item *
955
956The Cygwin environment for Win32; F<README.cygwin> (installed
47dafe4d 957as L<perlcygwin>), http://www.cygwin.com/
c997b287 958
959=item *
960
961The U/WIN environment for Win32,
cea6626f 962http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/uwin/
c997b287 963
cea6626f 964=item *
d1e3b762 965
cea6626f 966Build instructions for OS/2, L<perlos2>
d1e3b762 967
e41182b5 968=back
969
dd9f0070 970=head2 S<Mac OS>
e41182b5 971
972Any module requiring XS compilation is right out for most people, because
973MacPerl is built using non-free (and non-cheap!) compilers. Some XS
974modules that can work with MacPerl are built and distributed in binary
6ab3f9cb 975form on CPAN.
e41182b5 976
977Directories are specified as:
978
979 volume:folder:file for absolute pathnames
980 volume:folder: for absolute pathnames
981 :folder:file for relative pathnames
982 :folder: for relative pathnames
983 :file for relative pathnames
984 file for relative pathnames
985
b7df3edc 986Files are stored in the directory in alphabetical order. Filenames are
6ab3f9cb 987limited to 31 characters, and may include any character except for
b7df3edc 988null and C<:>, which is reserved as the path separator.
e41182b5 989
0a47030a 990Instead of C<flock>, see C<FSpSetFLock> and C<FSpRstFLock> in the
6ab3f9cb 991Mac::Files module, or C<chmod(0444, ...)> and C<chmod(0666, ...)>.
e41182b5 992
993In the MacPerl application, you can't run a program from the command line;
994programs that expect C<@ARGV> to be populated can be edited with something
995like the following, which brings up a dialog box asking for the command
996line arguments.
997
998 if (!@ARGV) {
999 @ARGV = split /\s+/, MacPerl::Ask('Arguments?');
1000 }
1001
b7df3edc 1002A MacPerl script saved as a "droplet" will populate C<@ARGV> with the full
e41182b5 1003pathnames of the files dropped onto the script.
1004
b7df3edc 1005Mac users can run programs under a type of command line interface
1006under MPW (Macintosh Programmer's Workshop, a free development
1007environment from Apple). MacPerl was first introduced as an MPW
1008tool, and MPW can be used like a shell:
e41182b5 1009
1010 perl myscript.plx some arguments
1011
1012ToolServer is another app from Apple that provides access to MPW tools
0a47030a 1013from MPW and the MacPerl app, which allows MacPerl programs to use
e41182b5 1014C<system>, backticks, and piped C<open>.
1015
1016"S<Mac OS>" is the proper name for the operating system, but the value
1017in C<$^O> is "MacOS". To determine architecture, version, or whether
1018the application or MPW tool version is running, check:
1019
1020 $is_app = $MacPerl::Version =~ /App/;
1021 $is_tool = $MacPerl::Version =~ /MPW/;
1022 ($version) = $MacPerl::Version =~ /^(\S+)/;
1023 $is_ppc = $MacPerl::Architecture eq 'MacPPC';
1024 $is_68k = $MacPerl::Architecture eq 'Mac68K';
1025
b787fad4 1026S<Mac OS X>, based on NeXT's OpenStep OS, runs MacPerl natively, under the
1027"Classic" environment. There is no "Carbon" version of MacPerl to run
1028under the primary Mac OS X environment. S<Mac OS X> and its Open Source
1029version, Darwin, both run Unix perl natively.
6ab3f9cb 1030
e41182b5 1031Also see:
1032
1033=over 4
1034
c997b287 1035=item *
1036
862b5365 1037MacPerl Development, http://dev.macperl.org/ .
c997b287 1038
1039=item *
1040
862b5365 1041The MacPerl Pages, http://www.macperl.com/ .
e41182b5 1042
c997b287 1043=item *
6ab3f9cb 1044
862b5365 1045The MacPerl mailing lists, http://lists.perl.org/ .
e41182b5 1046
7ee27b7c 1047=item *
1048
1049MPW, ftp://ftp.apple.com/developer/Tool_Chest/Core_Mac_OS_Tools/
1050
e41182b5 1051=back
1052
e41182b5 1053=head2 VMS
1054
c997b287 1055Perl on VMS is discussed in L<perlvms> in the perl distribution.
016930a6 1056
1057The official name of VMS as of this writing is OpenVMS.
1058
b7df3edc 1059Perl on VMS can accept either VMS- or Unix-style file
e41182b5 1060specifications as in either of the following:
1061
1062 $ perl -ne "print if /perl_setup/i" SYS$LOGIN:LOGIN.COM
1063 $ perl -ne "print if /perl_setup/i" /sys$login/login.com
1064
1065but not a mixture of both as in:
1066
1067 $ perl -ne "print if /perl_setup/i" sys$login:/login.com
1068 Can't open sys$login:/login.com: file specification syntax error
1069
1070Interacting with Perl from the Digital Command Language (DCL) shell
1071often requires a different set of quotation marks than Unix shells do.
1072For example:
1073
1074 $ perl -e "print ""Hello, world.\n"""
1075 Hello, world.
1076
b7df3edc 1077There are several ways to wrap your perl scripts in DCL F<.COM> files, if
e41182b5 1078you are so inclined. For example:
1079
1080 $ write sys$output "Hello from DCL!"
1081 $ if p1 .eqs. ""
1082 $ then perl -x 'f$environment("PROCEDURE")
1083 $ else perl -x - 'p1 'p2 'p3 'p4 'p5 'p6 'p7 'p8
1084 $ deck/dollars="__END__"
1085 #!/usr/bin/perl
1086
1087 print "Hello from Perl!\n";
1088
1089 __END__
1090 $ endif
1091
1092Do take care with C<$ ASSIGN/nolog/user SYS$COMMAND: SYS$INPUT> if your
c47ff5f1 1093perl-in-DCL script expects to do things like C<< $read = <STDIN>; >>.
e41182b5 1094
016930a6 1095The VMS operating system has two filesystems, known as ODS-2 and ODS-5.
1096
1097For ODS-2, filenames are in the format "name.extension;version". The
1098maximum length for filenames is 39 characters, and the maximum length for
e41182b5 1099extensions is also 39 characters. Version is a number from 1 to
110032767. Valid characters are C</[A-Z0-9$_-]/>.
1101
016930a6 1102The ODS-2 filesystem is case-insensitive and does not preserve case.
1103Perl simulates this by converting all filenames to lowercase internally.
1104
1105For ODS-5, filenames may have almost any character in them and can include
1106Unicode characters. Characters that could be misinterpreted by the DCL
1107shell or file parsing utilities need to be prefixed with the C<^>
1108character, or replaced with hexadecimal characters prefixed with the
1109C<^> character. Such prefixing is only needed with the pathnames are
1110in VMS format in applications. Programs that can accept the UNIX format
1111of pathnames do not need the escape characters. The maximum length for
1112filenames is 255 characters. The ODS-5 file system can handle both
1113a case preserved and a case sensitive mode.
1114
1115ODS-5 is only available on the OpenVMS for 64 bit platforms.
1116
1117Support for the extended file specifications is being done as optional
1118settings to preserve backward compatibility with Perl scripts that
1119assume the previous VMS limitations.
1120
1121In general routines on VMS that get a UNIX format file specification
1122should return it in a UNIX format, and when they get a VMS format
1123specification they should return a VMS format unless they are documented
1124to do a conversion.
1125
1126For routines that generate return a file specification, VMS allows setting
1127if the C library which Perl is built on if it will be returned in VMS
1128format or in UNIX format.
1129
1130With the ODS-2 file system, there is not much difference in syntax of
1131filenames without paths for VMS or UNIX. With the extended character
1132set available with ODS-5 there can be a significant difference.
1133
1134Because of this, existing Perl scripts written for VMS were sometimes
1135treating VMS and UNIX filenames interchangeably. Without the extended
1136character set enabled, this behavior will mostly be maintained for
1137backwards compatibility.
1138
1139When extended characters are enabled with ODS-5, the handling of
1140UNIX formatted file specifications is to that of a UNIX system.
1141
1142VMS file specifications without extensions have a trailing dot. An
1143equivalent UNIX file specification should not show the trailing dot.
1144
1145The result of all of this, is that for VMS, for portable scripts, you
1146can not depend on Perl to present the filenames in lowercase, to be
1147case sensitive, and that the filenames could be returned in either
1148UNIX or VMS format.
1149
1150And if a routine returns a file specification, unless it is intended to
1151convert it, it should return it in the same format as it found it.
1152
1153C<readdir> by default has traditionally returned lowercased filenames.
1154When the ODS-5 support is enabled, it will return the exact case of the
1155filename on the disk.
1156
1157Files without extensions have a trailing period on them, so doing a
1158C<readdir> in the default mode with a file named F<A.;5> will
1159return F<a.> when VMS is (though that file could be opened with
0a47030a 1160C<open(FH, 'A')>).
e41182b5 1161
016930a6 1162With support for extended file specifications and if C<opendir> was
1163given a UNIX format directory, a file named F<A.;5> will return F<a>
1164and optionally in the exact case on the disk. When C<opendir> is given
1165a VMS format directory, then C<readdir> should return F<a.>, and
1166again with the optionally the exact case.
1167
f34d0673 1168RMS had an eight level limit on directory depths from any rooted logical
1089a9e3 1169(allowing 16 levels overall) prior to VMS 7.2, and even with versions of
1170VMS on VAX up through 7.3. Hence C<PERL_ROOT:[LIB.2.3.4.5.6.7.8]> is a
1171valid directory specification but C<PERL_ROOT:[LIB.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9]> is
1172not. F<Makefile.PL> authors might have to take this into account, but at
1173least they can refer to the former as C</PERL_ROOT/lib/2/3/4/5/6/7/8/>.
1174
1175Pumpkings and module integrators can easily see whether files with too many
1176directory levels have snuck into the core by running the following in the
1177top-level source directory:
1178
1179 $ perl -ne "$_=~s/\s+.*//; print if scalar(split /\//) > 8;" < MANIFEST
1180
e41182b5 1181
6ab3f9cb 1182The VMS::Filespec module, which gets installed as part of the build
0a47030a 1183process on VMS, is a pure Perl module that can easily be installed on
1184non-VMS platforms and can be helpful for conversions to and from RMS
016930a6 1185native formats. It is also now the only way that you should check to
1186see if VMS is in a case sensitive mode.
e41182b5 1187
5e12dbfa 1188What C<\n> represents depends on the type of file opened. It usually
1189represents C<\012> but it could also be C<\015>, C<\012>, C<\015\012>,
fa11829f 1190C<\000>, C<\040>, or nothing depending on the file organization and
5e12dbfa 1191record format. The VMS::Stdio module provides access to the
1192special fopen() requirements of files with unusual attributes on VMS.
e41182b5 1193
1194TCP/IP stacks are optional on VMS, so socket routines might not be
1195implemented. UDP sockets may not be supported.
1196
016930a6 1197The TCP/IP library support for all current versions of VMS is dynamically
1198loaded if present, so even if the routines are configured, they may
1199return a status indicating that they are not implemented.
1200
e41182b5 1201The value of C<$^O> on OpenVMS is "VMS". To determine the architecture
1202that you are running on without resorting to loading all of C<%Config>
1203you can examine the content of the C<@INC> array like so:
1204
1205 if (grep(/VMS_AXP/, @INC)) {
1206 print "I'm on Alpha!\n";
6ab3f9cb 1207
e41182b5 1208 } elsif (grep(/VMS_VAX/, @INC)) {
1209 print "I'm on VAX!\n";
6ab3f9cb 1210
016930a6 1211 } elsif (grep(/VMS_IA64/, @INC)) {
1212 print "I'm on IA64!\n";
1213
e41182b5 1214 } else {
1215 print "I'm not so sure about where $^O is...\n";
1216 }
1217
016930a6 1218In general, the significant differences should only be if Perl is running
1219on VMS_VAX or one of the 64 bit OpenVMS platforms.
1220
b7df3edc 1221On VMS, perl determines the UTC offset from the C<SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL>
1222logical name. Although the VMS epoch began at 17-NOV-1858 00:00:00.00,
6ab3f9cb 1223calls to C<localtime> are adjusted to count offsets from
b7df3edc 122401-JAN-1970 00:00:00.00, just like Unix.
6ab3f9cb 1225
e41182b5 1226Also see:
1227
1228=over 4
1229
c997b287 1230=item *
1231
1232F<README.vms> (installed as L<README_vms>), L<perlvms>
1233
1234=item *
1235
1089a9e3 1236vmsperl list, vmsperl-subscribe@perl.org
e41182b5 1237
c997b287 1238=item *
e41182b5 1239
c997b287 1240vmsperl on the web, http://www.sidhe.org/vmsperl/index.html
e41182b5 1241
1242=back
1243
495c5fdc 1244=head2 VOS
1245
9a997319 1246Perl on VOS is discussed in F<README.vos> in the perl distribution
1247(installed as L<perlvos>). Perl on VOS can accept either VOS- or
1248Unix-style file specifications as in either of the following:
495c5fdc 1249
cc07ed0b 1250 C<< $ perl -ne "print if /perl_setup/i" >system>notices >>
1251 C<< $ perl -ne "print if /perl_setup/i" /system/notices >>
495c5fdc 1252
1253or even a mixture of both as in:
1254
cc07ed0b 1255 C<< $ perl -ne "print if /perl_setup/i" >system/notices >>
495c5fdc 1256
b7df3edc 1257Even though VOS allows the slash character to appear in object
495c5fdc 1258names, because the VOS port of Perl interprets it as a pathname
1259delimiting character, VOS files, directories, or links whose names
1260contain a slash character cannot be processed. Such files must be
a3dfe201 1261renamed before they can be processed by Perl. Note that VOS limits
1262file names to 32 or fewer characters.
495c5fdc 1263
495c5fdc 1264The value of C<$^O> on VOS is "VOS". To determine the architecture that
1265you are running on without resorting to loading all of C<%Config> you
c997b287 1266can examine the content of the @INC array like so:
495c5fdc 1267
24e8e380 1268 if ($^O =~ /VOS/) {
495c5fdc 1269 print "I'm on a Stratus box!\n";
1270 } else {
1271 print "I'm not on a Stratus box!\n";
1272 die;
1273 }
1274
495c5fdc 1275Also see:
1276
1277=over 4
1278
c997b287 1279=item *
495c5fdc 1280
cc07ed0b 1281F<README.vos> (installed as L<perlvos>)
c997b287 1282
1283=item *
1284
1285The VOS mailing list.
495c5fdc 1286
1287There is no specific mailing list for Perl on VOS. You can post
1288comments to the comp.sys.stratus newsgroup, or subscribe to the general
cc07ed0b 1289Stratus mailing list. Send a letter with "subscribe Info-Stratus" in
495c5fdc 1290the message body to majordomo@list.stratagy.com.
1291
c997b287 1292=item *
1293
cc07ed0b 1294VOS Perl on the web at http://ftp.stratus.com/pub/vos/posix/posix.html
495c5fdc 1295
1296=back
1297
e41182b5 1298=head2 EBCDIC Platforms
1299
1300Recent versions of Perl have been ported to platforms such as OS/400 on
d1e3b762 1301AS/400 minicomputers as well as OS/390, VM/ESA, and BS2000 for S/390
1302Mainframes. Such computers use EBCDIC character sets internally (usually
0cc436d0 1303Character Code Set ID 0037 for OS/400 and either 1047 or POSIX-BC for S/390
1304systems). On the mainframe perl currently works under the "Unix system
1305services for OS/390" (formerly known as OpenEdition), VM/ESA OpenEdition, or
1306the BS200 POSIX-BC system (BS2000 is supported in perl 5.6 and greater).
522b859a 1307See L<perlos390> for details. Note that for OS/400 there is also a port of
1308Perl 5.8.1/5.9.0 or later to the PASE which is ASCII-based (as opposed to
1309ILE which is EBCDIC-based), see L<perlos400>.
e41182b5 1310
7c5ffed3 1311As of R2.5 of USS for OS/390 and Version 2.3 of VM/ESA these Unix
1312sub-systems do not support the C<#!> shebang trick for script invocation.
1313Hence, on OS/390 and VM/ESA perl scripts can be executed with a header
1314similar to the following simple script:
e41182b5 1315
1316 : # use perl
1317 eval 'exec /usr/local/bin/perl -S $0 ${1+"$@"}'
1318 if 0;
1319 #!/usr/local/bin/perl # just a comment really
1320
1321 print "Hello from perl!\n";
1322
d1e3b762 1323OS/390 will support the C<#!> shebang trick in release 2.8 and beyond.
1324Calls to C<system> and backticks can use POSIX shell syntax on all
1325S/390 systems.
1326
b7df3edc 1327On the AS/400, if PERL5 is in your library list, you may need
6ab3f9cb 1328to wrap your perl scripts in a CL procedure to invoke them like so:
1329
1330 BEGIN
1331 CALL PGM(PERL5/PERL) PARM('/QOpenSys/hello.pl')
1332 ENDPGM
1333
1334This will invoke the perl script F<hello.pl> in the root of the
1335QOpenSys file system. On the AS/400 calls to C<system> or backticks
1336must use CL syntax.
1337
e41182b5 1338On these platforms, bear in mind that the EBCDIC character set may have
0a47030a 1339an effect on what happens with some perl functions (such as C<chr>,
1340C<pack>, C<print>, C<printf>, C<ord>, C<sort>, C<sprintf>, C<unpack>), as
1341well as bit-fiddling with ASCII constants using operators like C<^>, C<&>
1342and C<|>, not to mention dealing with socket interfaces to ASCII computers
6ab3f9cb 1343(see L<"Newlines">).
e41182b5 1344
b7df3edc 1345Fortunately, most web servers for the mainframe will correctly
1346translate the C<\n> in the following statement to its ASCII equivalent
1347(C<\r> is the same under both Unix and OS/390 & VM/ESA):
e41182b5 1348
1349 print "Content-type: text/html\r\n\r\n";
1350
d1e3b762 1351The values of C<$^O> on some of these platforms includes:
e41182b5 1352
d1e3b762 1353 uname $^O $Config{'archname'}
1354 --------------------------------------------
1355 OS/390 os390 os390
1356 OS400 os400 os400
1357 POSIX-BC posix-bc BS2000-posix-bc
1358 VM/ESA vmesa vmesa
3c075c7d 1359
e41182b5 1360Some simple tricks for determining if you are running on an EBCDIC
1361platform could include any of the following (perhaps all):
1362
1363 if ("\t" eq "\05") { print "EBCDIC may be spoken here!\n"; }
1364
1365 if (ord('A') == 193) { print "EBCDIC may be spoken here!\n"; }
1366
1367 if (chr(169) eq 'z') { print "EBCDIC may be spoken here!\n"; }
1368
b7df3edc 1369One thing you may not want to rely on is the EBCDIC encoding
0a47030a 1370of punctuation characters since these may differ from code page to code
1371page (and once your module or script is rumoured to work with EBCDIC,
1372folks will want it to work with all EBCDIC character sets).
e41182b5 1373
1374Also see:
1375
1376=over 4
1377
c997b287 1378=item *
1379
dc5c060f 1380L<perlos390>, F<README.os390>, F<perlbs2000>, F<README.vmesa>,
bb462878 1381L<perlebcdic>.
c997b287 1382
1383=item *
e41182b5 1384
1385The perl-mvs@perl.org list is for discussion of porting issues as well as
1386general usage issues for all EBCDIC Perls. Send a message body of
1387"subscribe perl-mvs" to majordomo@perl.org.
1388
7ee27b7c 1389=item *
c997b287 1390
1391AS/400 Perl information at
b1866b2d 1392http://as400.rochester.ibm.com/
d1e3b762 1393as well as on CPAN in the F<ports/> directory.
e41182b5 1394
1395=back
1396
b8099c3d 1397=head2 Acorn RISC OS
1398
b7df3edc 1399Because Acorns use ASCII with newlines (C<\n>) in text files as C<\012> like
1400Unix, and because Unix filename emulation is turned on by default,
1401most simple scripts will probably work "out of the box". The native
6ab3f9cb 1402filesystem is modular, and individual filesystems are free to be
0a47030a 1403case-sensitive or insensitive, and are usually case-preserving. Some
b7df3edc 1404native filesystems have name length limits, which file and directory
6ab3f9cb 1405names are silently truncated to fit. Scripts should be aware that the
1406standard filesystem currently has a name length limit of B<10>
1407characters, with up to 77 items in a directory, but other filesystems
0a47030a 1408may not impose such limitations.
b8099c3d 1409
1410Native filenames are of the form
1411
6ab3f9cb 1412 Filesystem#Special_Field::DiskName.$.Directory.Directory.File
dd9f0070 1413
b8099c3d 1414where
1415
1416 Special_Field is not usually present, but may contain . and $ .
1417 Filesystem =~ m|[A-Za-z0-9_]|
1418 DsicName =~ m|[A-Za-z0-9_/]|
1419 $ represents the root directory
1420 . is the path separator
1421 @ is the current directory (per filesystem but machine global)
1422 ^ is the parent directory
1423 Directory and File =~ m|[^\0- "\.\$\%\&:\@\\^\|\177]+|
1424
1425The default filename translation is roughly C<tr|/.|./|;>
1426
6ab3f9cb 1427Note that C<"ADFS::HardDisk.$.File" ne 'ADFS::HardDisk.$.File'> and that
0a47030a 1428the second stage of C<$> interpolation in regular expressions will fall
1429foul of the C<$.> if scripts are not careful.
1430
1431Logical paths specified by system variables containing comma-separated
b7df3edc 1432search lists are also allowed; hence C<System:Modules> is a valid
0a47030a 1433filename, and the filesystem will prefix C<Modules> with each section of
6ab3f9cb 1434C<System$Path> until a name is made that points to an object on disk.
b7df3edc 1435Writing to a new file C<System:Modules> would be allowed only if
0a47030a 1436C<System$Path> contains a single item list. The filesystem will also
1437expand system variables in filenames if enclosed in angle brackets, so
c47ff5f1 1438C<< <System$Dir>.Modules >> would look for the file
0a47030a 1439S<C<$ENV{'System$Dir'} . 'Modules'>>. The obvious implication of this is
c47ff5f1 1440that B<fully qualified filenames can start with C<< <> >>> and should
0a47030a 1441be protected when C<open> is used for input.
b8099c3d 1442
1443Because C<.> was in use as a directory separator and filenames could not
1444be assumed to be unique after 10 characters, Acorn implemented the C
1445compiler to strip the trailing C<.c> C<.h> C<.s> and C<.o> suffix from
1446filenames specified in source code and store the respective files in
b7df3edc 1447subdirectories named after the suffix. Hence files are translated:
b8099c3d 1448
1449 foo.h h.foo
1450 C:foo.h C:h.foo (logical path variable)
1451 sys/os.h sys.h.os (C compiler groks Unix-speak)
1452 10charname.c c.10charname
1453 10charname.o o.10charname
1454 11charname_.c c.11charname (assuming filesystem truncates at 10)
1455
1456The Unix emulation library's translation of filenames to native assumes
b7df3edc 1457that this sort of translation is required, and it allows a user-defined list
1458of known suffixes that it will transpose in this fashion. This may
1459seem transparent, but consider that with these rules C<foo/bar/baz.h>
0a47030a 1460and C<foo/bar/h/baz> both map to C<foo.bar.h.baz>, and that C<readdir> and
1461C<glob> cannot and do not attempt to emulate the reverse mapping. Other
6ab3f9cb 1462C<.>'s in filenames are translated to C</>.
0a47030a 1463
b7df3edc 1464As implied above, the environment accessed through C<%ENV> is global, and
0a47030a 1465the convention is that program specific environment variables are of the
6ab3f9cb 1466form C<Program$Name>. Each filesystem maintains a current directory,
1467and the current filesystem's current directory is the B<global> current
b7df3edc 1468directory. Consequently, sociable programs don't change the current
1469directory but rely on full pathnames, and programs (and Makefiles) cannot
0a47030a 1470assume that they can spawn a child process which can change the current
1471directory without affecting its parent (and everyone else for that
1472matter).
1473
b7df3edc 1474Because native operating system filehandles are global and are currently
1475allocated down from 255, with 0 being a reserved value, the Unix emulation
0a47030a 1476library emulates Unix filehandles. Consequently, you can't rely on
1477passing C<STDIN>, C<STDOUT>, or C<STDERR> to your children.
1478
1479The desire of users to express filenames of the form
c47ff5f1 1480C<< <Foo$Dir>.Bar >> on the command line unquoted causes problems,
0a47030a 1481too: C<``> command output capture has to perform a guessing game. It
c47ff5f1 1482assumes that a string C<< <[^<>]+\$[^<>]> >> is a
0a47030a 1483reference to an environment variable, whereas anything else involving
c47ff5f1 1484C<< < >> or C<< > >> is redirection, and generally manages to be 99%
0a47030a 1485right. Of course, the problem remains that scripts cannot rely on any
1486Unix tools being available, or that any tools found have Unix-like command
1487line arguments.
1488
b7df3edc 1489Extensions and XS are, in theory, buildable by anyone using free
1490tools. In practice, many don't, as users of the Acorn platform are
1491used to binary distributions. MakeMaker does run, but no available
1492make currently copes with MakeMaker's makefiles; even if and when
1493this should be fixed, the lack of a Unix-like shell will cause
1494problems with makefile rules, especially lines of the form C<cd
1495sdbm && make all>, and anything using quoting.
b8099c3d 1496
1497"S<RISC OS>" is the proper name for the operating system, but the value
1498in C<$^O> is "riscos" (because we don't like shouting).
1499
e41182b5 1500=head2 Other perls
1501
b7df3edc 1502Perl has been ported to many platforms that do not fit into any of
1503the categories listed above. Some, such as AmigaOS, Atari MiNT,
1504BeOS, HP MPE/iX, QNX, Plan 9, and VOS, have been well-integrated
1505into the standard Perl source code kit. You may need to see the
1506F<ports/> directory on CPAN for information, and possibly binaries,
1507for the likes of: aos, Atari ST, lynxos, riscos, Novell Netware,
1508Tandem Guardian, I<etc.> (Yes, we know that some of these OSes may
1509fall under the Unix category, but we are not a standards body.)
e41182b5 1510
d1e3b762 1511Some approximate operating system names and their C<$^O> values
1512in the "OTHER" category include:
1513
1514 OS $^O $Config{'archname'}
1515 ------------------------------------------
1516 Amiga DOS amigaos m68k-amigos
cec2c193 1517 BeOS beos
d1e3b762 1518 MPE/iX mpeix PA-RISC1.1
1519
e41182b5 1520See also:
1521
1522=over 4
1523
c997b287 1524=item *
1525
1526Amiga, F<README.amiga> (installed as L<perlamiga>).
1527
1528=item *
d1e3b762 1529
c997b287 1530Atari, F<README.mint> and Guido Flohr's web page
1531http://stud.uni-sb.de/~gufl0000/
e41182b5 1532
c997b287 1533=item *
d1e3b762 1534
c997b287 1535Be OS, F<README.beos>
e41182b5 1536
c997b287 1537=item *
1538
1539HP 300 MPE/iX, F<README.mpeix> and Mark Bixby's web page
34aaaa84 1540http://www.bixby.org/mark/perlix.html
c997b287 1541
1542=item *
e41182b5 1543
6ab3f9cb 1544A free perl5-based PERL.NLM for Novell Netware is available in
c997b287 1545precompiled binary and source code form from http://www.novell.com/
6ab3f9cb 1546as well as from CPAN.
e41182b5 1547
13a2d996 1548=item *
c997b287 1549
e6f03d26 1550S<Plan 9>, F<README.plan9>
d1e3b762 1551
e41182b5 1552=back
1553
e41182b5 1554=head1 FUNCTION IMPLEMENTATIONS
1555
b7df3edc 1556Listed below are functions that are either completely unimplemented
1557or else have been implemented differently on various platforms.
1558Following each description will be, in parentheses, a list of
1559platforms that the description applies to.
e41182b5 1560
b7df3edc 1561The list may well be incomplete, or even wrong in some places. When
1562in doubt, consult the platform-specific README files in the Perl
1563source distribution, and any other documentation resources accompanying
1564a given port.
e41182b5 1565
0a47030a 1566Be aware, moreover, that even among Unix-ish systems there are variations.
e41182b5 1567
b7df3edc 1568For many functions, you can also query C<%Config>, exported by
1569default from the Config module. For example, to check whether the
1570platform has the C<lstat> call, check C<$Config{d_lstat}>. See
1571L<Config> for a full description of available variables.
e41182b5 1572
1573=head2 Alphabetical Listing of Perl Functions
1574
1575=over 8
1576
e41182b5 1577=item -X
1578
b7df3edc 1579C<-r>, C<-w>, and C<-x> have a limited meaning only; directories
e41182b5 1580and applications are executable, and there are no uid/gid
b7df3edc 1581considerations. C<-o> is not supported. (S<Mac OS>)
e41182b5 1582
b7df3edc 1583C<-r>, C<-w>, C<-x>, and C<-o> tell whether the file is accessible,
1584which may not reflect UIC-based file protections. (VMS)
e41182b5 1585
b8099c3d 1586C<-s> returns the size of the data fork, not the total size of data fork
1587plus resource fork. (S<Mac OS>).
1588
1589C<-s> by name on an open file will return the space reserved on disk,
1590rather than the current extent. C<-s> on an open filehandle returns the
b7df3edc 1591current size. (S<RISC OS>)
b8099c3d 1592
e41182b5 1593C<-R>, C<-W>, C<-X>, C<-O> are indistinguishable from C<-r>, C<-w>,
b8099c3d 1594C<-x>, C<-o>. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1595
1596C<-b>, C<-c>, C<-k>, C<-g>, C<-p>, C<-u>, C<-A> are not implemented.
1597(S<Mac OS>)
1598
1599C<-g>, C<-k>, C<-l>, C<-p>, C<-u>, C<-A> are not particularly meaningful.
b8099c3d 1600(Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1601
1602C<-d> is true if passed a device spec without an explicit directory.
1603(VMS)
1604
1605C<-T> and C<-B> are implemented, but might misclassify Mac text files
0a47030a 1606with foreign characters; this is the case will all platforms, but may
b7df3edc 1607affect S<Mac OS> often. (S<Mac OS>)
e41182b5 1608
1609C<-x> (or C<-X>) determine if a file ends in one of the executable
b7df3edc 1610suffixes. C<-S> is meaningless. (Win32)
e41182b5 1611
b8099c3d 1612C<-x> (or C<-X>) determine if a file has an executable file type.
1613(S<RISC OS>)
1614
47cd99a4 1615=item atan2
519bc777 1616
1617Due to issues with various CPUs, math libraries, compilers, and standards,
1618results for C<atan2()> may vary depending on any combination of the above.
1619Perl attempts to conform to the Open Group/IEEE standards for the results
1620returned from C<atan2()>, but cannot force the issue if the system Perl is
1621run on does not allow it. (Tru64, HP-UX 10.20)
1622
1623The current version of the standards for C<atan2()> is available at
1624L<http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/atan2.html>.
1625
47cd99a4 1626=item binmode
e41182b5 1627
b7df3edc 1628Meaningless. (S<Mac OS>, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1629
1630Reopens file and restores pointer; if function fails, underlying
1631filehandle may be closed, or pointer may be in a different position.
1632(VMS)
1633
1634The value returned by C<tell> may be affected after the call, and
1635the filehandle may be flushed. (Win32)
1636
47cd99a4 1637=item chmod
e41182b5 1638
b7df3edc 1639Only limited meaning. Disabling/enabling write permission is mapped to
e41182b5 1640locking/unlocking the file. (S<Mac OS>)
1641
1642Only good for changing "owner" read-write access, "group", and "other"
1643bits are meaningless. (Win32)
1644
b8099c3d 1645Only good for changing "owner" and "other" read-write access. (S<RISC OS>)
1646
495c5fdc 1647Access permissions are mapped onto VOS access-control list changes. (VOS)
1648
4e51f8e4 1649The actual permissions set depend on the value of the C<CYGWIN>
789f0d36 1650in the SYSTEM environment settings. (Cygwin)
4e51f8e4 1651
47cd99a4 1652=item chown
e41182b5 1653
3fd80bd6 1654Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1655
1656Does nothing, but won't fail. (Win32)
1657
3fd80bd6 1658A little funky, because VOS's notion of ownership is a little funky (VOS).
1659
e41182b5 1660=item chroot
1661
e6f03d26 1662Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<Plan 9>, S<RISC OS>, VOS, VM/ESA)
e41182b5 1663
47cd99a4 1664=item crypt
e41182b5 1665
1666May not be available if library or source was not provided when building
b8099c3d 1667perl. (Win32)
e41182b5 1668
47cd99a4 1669=item dbmclose
e41182b5 1670
e6f03d26 1671Not implemented. (VMS, S<Plan 9>, VOS)
e41182b5 1672
47cd99a4 1673=item dbmopen
e41182b5 1674
e6f03d26 1675Not implemented. (VMS, S<Plan 9>, VOS)
e41182b5 1676
47cd99a4 1677=item dump
e41182b5 1678
b8099c3d 1679Not useful. (S<Mac OS>, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1680
84d78eb7 1681Not supported. (Cygwin, Win32)
e41182b5 1682
b8099c3d 1683Invokes VMS debugger. (VMS)
e41182b5 1684
47cd99a4 1685=item exec
e41182b5 1686
1687Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>)
1688
7c5ffed3 1689Implemented via Spawn. (VM/ESA)
3c075c7d 1690
0f897271 1691Does not automatically flush output handles on some platforms.
1692(SunOS, Solaris, HP-UX)
1693
fe12c0e8 1694=item exit
1695
1696Emulates UNIX exit() (which considers C<exit 1> to indicate an error) by
1697mapping the C<1> to SS$_ABORT (C<44>). This behavior may be overridden
1698with the pragma C<use vmsish 'exit'>. As with the CRTL's exit()
1699function, C<exit 0> is also mapped to an exit status of SS$_NORMAL
1700(C<1>); this mapping cannot be overridden. Any other argument to exit()
016930a6 1701is used directly as Perl's exit status. On VMS, unless the future
1702POSIX_EXIT mode is enabled, the exit code should always be a valid
1703VMS exit code and not a generic number. When the POSIX_EXIT mode is
1704enabled, a generic number will be encoded in a method compatible with
1705the C library _POSIX_EXIT macro so that it can be decoded by other
1706programs, particularly ones written in C, like the GNV package. (VMS)
fe12c0e8 1707
47cd99a4 1708=item fcntl
e41182b5 1709
016930a6 1710Not implemented. (Win32)
1711Some functions available based on the version of VMS. (VMS)
e41182b5 1712
47cd99a4 1713=item flock
e41182b5 1714
495c5fdc 1715Not implemented (S<Mac OS>, VMS, S<RISC OS>, VOS).
e41182b5 1716
1717Available only on Windows NT (not on Windows 95). (Win32)
1718
1719=item fork
1720
3fd80bd6 1721Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, AmigaOS, S<RISC OS>, VM/ESA, VMS)
0f897271 1722
1723Emulated using multiple interpreters. See L<perlfork>. (Win32)
1724
1725Does not automatically flush output handles on some platforms.
1726(SunOS, Solaris, HP-UX)
e41182b5 1727
1728=item getlogin
1729
b8099c3d 1730Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1731
47cd99a4 1732=item getpgrp
e41182b5 1733
3fd80bd6 1734Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1735
1736=item getppid
1737
41cbbefa 1738Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1739
47cd99a4 1740=item getpriority
e41182b5 1741
7c5ffed3 1742Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>, VOS, VM/ESA)
e41182b5 1743
47cd99a4 1744=item getpwnam
e41182b5 1745
1746Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32)
1747
b8099c3d 1748Not useful. (S<RISC OS>)
1749
47cd99a4 1750=item getgrnam
e41182b5 1751
b8099c3d 1752Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1753
47cd99a4 1754=item getnetbyname
e41182b5 1755
e6f03d26 1756Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1757
47cd99a4 1758=item getpwuid
e41182b5 1759
1760Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32)
1761
b8099c3d 1762Not useful. (S<RISC OS>)
1763
47cd99a4 1764=item getgrgid
e41182b5 1765
b8099c3d 1766Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1767
47cd99a4 1768=item getnetbyaddr
e41182b5 1769
e6f03d26 1770Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1771
47cd99a4 1772=item getprotobynumber
e41182b5 1773
1774Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>)
1775
47cd99a4 1776=item getservbyport
e41182b5 1777
1778Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>)
1779
1780=item getpwent
1781
7c5ffed3 1782Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VM/ESA)
e41182b5 1783
1784=item getgrent
1785
7c5ffed3 1786Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, VM/ESA)
e41182b5 1787
ef5a6dd7 1788=item gethostbyname
1789
1790C<gethostbyname('localhost')> does not work everywhere: you may have
1791to use C<gethostbyname('127.0.0.1')>. (S<Mac OS>, S<Irix 5>)
1792
e41182b5 1793=item gethostent
1794
1795Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32)
1796
1797=item getnetent
1798
e6f03d26 1799Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1800
1801=item getprotoent
1802
e6f03d26 1803Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1804
1805=item getservent
1806
e6f03d26 1807Not implemented. (Win32, S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1808
47cd99a4 1809=item sethostent
e41182b5 1810
e6f03d26 1811Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1812
47cd99a4 1813=item setnetent
e41182b5 1814
e6f03d26 1815Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1816
47cd99a4 1817=item setprotoent
e41182b5 1818
e6f03d26 1819Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1820
47cd99a4 1821=item setservent
e41182b5 1822
e6f03d26 1823Not implemented. (S<Plan 9>, Win32, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1824
1825=item endpwent
1826
a3dfe201 1827Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, MPE/iX, VM/ESA, Win32)
e41182b5 1828
1829=item endgrent
1830
a3dfe201 1831Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, MPE/iX, S<RISC OS>, VM/ESA, VMS, Win32)
e41182b5 1832
1833=item endhostent
1834
1835Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32)
1836
1837=item endnetent
1838
e6f03d26 1839Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1840
1841=item endprotoent
1842
e6f03d26 1843Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1844
1845=item endservent
1846
e6f03d26 1847Not implemented. (S<Plan 9>, Win32)
e41182b5 1848
1849=item getsockopt SOCKET,LEVEL,OPTNAME
1850
e6f03d26 1851Not implemented. (S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1852
e41182b5 1853=item glob
1854
63f87e49 1855This operator is implemented via the File::Glob extension on most
1856platforms. See L<File::Glob> for portability information.
b8099c3d 1857
62aa5637 1858=item gmtime
1859
1860Same portability caveats as L<localtime>.
1861
e41182b5 1862=item ioctl FILEHANDLE,FUNCTION,SCALAR
1863
1864Not implemented. (VMS)
1865
1866Available only for socket handles, and it does what the ioctlsocket() call
1867in the Winsock API does. (Win32)
1868
b8099c3d 1869Available only for socket handles. (S<RISC OS>)
1870
47cd99a4 1871=item kill
e41182b5 1872
862b5365 1873C<kill(0, LIST)> is implemented for the sake of taint checking;
1874use with other signals is unimplemented. (S<Mac OS>)
1875
1876Not implemented, hence not useful for taint checking. (S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1877
63f87e49 1878C<kill()> doesn't have the semantics of C<raise()>, i.e. it doesn't send
1879a signal to the identified process like it does on Unix platforms.
1880Instead C<kill($sig, $pid)> terminates the process identified by $pid,
1881and makes it exit immediately with exit status $sig. As in Unix, if
1882$sig is 0 and the specified process exists, it returns true without
1883actually terminating it. (Win32)
e41182b5 1884
d0302514 1885C<kill(-9, $pid)> will terminate the process specified by $pid and
1886recursively all child processes owned by it. This is different from
1887the Unix semantics, where the signal will be delivered to all
1888processes in the same process group as the process specified by
1889$pid. (Win32)
1890
016930a6 1891Is not supported for process identification number of 0 or negative
1892numbers. (VMS)
1893
47cd99a4 1894=item link
e41182b5 1895
016930a6 1896Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, MPE/iX, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1897
433acd8a 1898Link count not updated because hard links are not quite that hard
1899(They are sort of half-way between hard and soft links). (AmigaOS)
1900
63d6c08b 1901Hard links are implemented on Win32 under NTFS only. They are
1902natively supported on Windows 2000 and later. On Windows NT they
1903are implemented using the Windows POSIX subsystem support and the
1904Perl process will need Administrator or Backup Operator privileges
1905to create hard links.
a3dfe201 1906
016930a6 1907Available on 64 bit OpenVMS 8.2 and later. (VMS)
1908
62aa5637 1909=item localtime
1910
1911Because Perl currently relies on the native standard C localtime()
1912function, it is only safe to use times between 0 and (2**31)-1. Times
1913outside this range may result in unexpected behavior depending on your
1914operating system's implementation of localtime().
1915
e41182b5 1916=item lstat
1917
016930a6 1918Not implemented. (S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1919
63f87e49 1920Return values (especially for device and inode) may be bogus. (Win32)
e41182b5 1921
47cd99a4 1922=item msgctl
e41182b5 1923
47cd99a4 1924=item msgget
e41182b5 1925
47cd99a4 1926=item msgsnd
e41182b5 1927
47cd99a4 1928=item msgrcv
e41182b5 1929
e6f03d26 1930Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<Plan 9>, S<RISC OS>, VOS)
e41182b5 1931
47cd99a4 1932=item open
e41182b5 1933
b7df3edc 1934The C<|> variants are supported only if ToolServer is installed.
e41182b5 1935(S<Mac OS>)
1936
c47ff5f1 1937open to C<|-> and C<-|> are unsupported. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1938
0f897271 1939Opening a process does not automatically flush output handles on some
1940platforms. (SunOS, Solaris, HP-UX)
1941
47cd99a4 1942=item pipe
e41182b5 1943
433acd8a 1944Very limited functionality. (MiNT)
1945
e41182b5 1946=item readlink
1947
b8099c3d 1948Not implemented. (Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 1949
47cd99a4 1950=item rename
c9b2b9d4 1951
1952Can't move directories between directories on different logical volumes. (Win32)
1953
47cd99a4 1954=item select
e41182b5 1955
689c5c24 1956Only implemented on sockets. (Win32, VMS)
e41182b5 1957
b8099c3d 1958Only reliable on sockets. (S<RISC OS>)
1959
76e05f0b 1960Note that the C<select FILEHANDLE> form is generally portable.
63f87e49 1961
47cd99a4 1962=item semctl
e41182b5 1963
47cd99a4 1964=item semget
e41182b5 1965
47cd99a4 1966=item semop
e41182b5 1967
495c5fdc 1968Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>, VOS)
e41182b5 1969
a3dfe201 1970=item setgrent
1971
3fd80bd6 1972Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, MPE/iX, VMS, Win32, S<RISC OS>, VOS)
a3dfe201 1973
47cd99a4 1974=item setpgrp
e41182b5 1975
495c5fdc 1976Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>, VOS)
e41182b5 1977
47cd99a4 1978=item setpriority
e41182b5 1979
495c5fdc 1980Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>, VOS)
e41182b5 1981
a3dfe201 1982=item setpwent
1983
3fd80bd6 1984Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, MPE/iX, Win32, S<RISC OS>, VOS)
a3dfe201 1985
47cd99a4 1986=item setsockopt
e41182b5 1987
e6f03d26 1988Not implemented. (S<Plan 9>)
e41182b5 1989
47cd99a4 1990=item shmctl
e41182b5 1991
47cd99a4 1992=item shmget
e41182b5 1993
47cd99a4 1994=item shmread
e41182b5 1995
47cd99a4 1996=item shmwrite
e41182b5 1997
495c5fdc 1998Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>, VOS)
e41182b5 1999
47cd99a4 2000=item sockatmark
80cbd5ad 2001
2002A relatively recent addition to socket functions, may not
2003be implemented even in UNIX platforms.
2004
47cd99a4 2005=item socketpair
e41182b5 2006
016930a6 2007Not implemented. (Win32, S<RISC OS>, VOS, VM/ESA)
2008
2009Available on 64 bit OpenVMS 8.2 and later. (VMS)
e41182b5 2010
e41182b5 2011=item stat
2012
d62e1b7f 2013Platforms that do not have rdev, blksize, or blocks will return these
2014as '', so numeric comparison or manipulation of these fields may cause
2015'not numeric' warnings.
2016
e41182b5 2017mtime and atime are the same thing, and ctime is creation time instead of
3f1f789b 2018inode change time. (S<Mac OS>).
2019
2020ctime not supported on UFS (S<Mac OS X>).
e41182b5 2021
95a3fe12 2022ctime is creation time instead of inode change time (Win32).
2023
e41182b5 2024device and inode are not meaningful. (Win32)
2025
2026device and inode are not necessarily reliable. (VMS)
2027
b8099c3d 2028mtime, atime and ctime all return the last modification time. Device and
2029inode are not necessarily reliable. (S<RISC OS>)
2030
d62e1b7f 2031dev, rdev, blksize, and blocks are not available. inode is not
2032meaningful and will differ between stat calls on the same file. (os2)
2033
73e9292c 2034some versions of cygwin when doing a stat("foo") and if not finding it
2035may then attempt to stat("foo.exe") (Cygwin)
2036
1fafdf34 2037On Win32 stat() needs to open the file to determine the link count
2038and update attributes that may have been changed through hard links.
2039Setting ${^WIN32_SLOPPY_STAT} to a true value speeds up stat() by
2040not performing this operation. (Win32)
2041
47cd99a4 2042=item symlink
e41182b5 2043
c73b03b7 2044Not implemented. (Win32, S<RISC OS>)
2045
2046Implemented on 64 bit VMS 8.3. VMS requires the symbolic link to be in Unix
2047syntax if it is intended to resolve to a valid path.
e41182b5 2048
47cd99a4 2049=item syscall
e41182b5 2050
7c5ffed3 2051Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>, Win32, VMS, S<RISC OS>, VOS, VM/ESA)
e41182b5 2052
47cd99a4 2053=item sysopen
f34d0673 2054
dd9f0070 2055The traditional "0", "1", and "2" MODEs are implemented with different
322422de 2056numeric values on some systems. The flags exported by C<Fcntl>
2057(O_RDONLY, O_WRONLY, O_RDWR) should work everywhere though. (S<Mac
7c5ffed3 2058OS>, OS/390, VM/ESA)
f34d0673 2059
47cd99a4 2060=item system
e41182b5 2061
2062Only implemented if ToolServer is installed. (S<Mac OS>)
2063
2064As an optimization, may not call the command shell specified in
b7df3edc 2065C<$ENV{PERL5SHELL}>. C<system(1, @args)> spawns an external
e41182b5 2066process and immediately returns its process designator, without
2067waiting for it to terminate. Return value may be used subsequently
63f87e49 2068in C<wait> or C<waitpid>. Failure to spawn() a subprocess is indicated
2069by setting $? to "255 << 8". C<$?> is set in a way compatible with
2070Unix (i.e. the exitstatus of the subprocess is obtained by "$? >> 8",
2071as described in the documentation). (Win32)
e41182b5 2072
b8099c3d 2073There is no shell to process metacharacters, and the native standard is
2074to pass a command line terminated by "\n" "\r" or "\0" to the spawned
c47ff5f1 2075program. Redirection such as C<< > foo >> is performed (if at all) by
b8099c3d 2076the run time library of the spawned program. C<system> I<list> will call
2077the Unix emulation library's C<exec> emulation, which attempts to provide
2078emulation of the stdin, stdout, stderr in force in the parent, providing
2079the child program uses a compatible version of the emulation library.
2080I<scalar> will call the native command line direct and no such emulation
2081of a child Unix program will exists. Mileage B<will> vary. (S<RISC OS>)
2082
433acd8a 2083Far from being POSIX compliant. Because there may be no underlying
2084/bin/sh tries to work around the problem by forking and execing the
9b63e9ec 2085first token in its argument string. Handles basic redirection
c47ff5f1 2086("<" or ">") on its own behalf. (MiNT)
433acd8a 2087
0f897271 2088Does not automatically flush output handles on some platforms.
2089(SunOS, Solaris, HP-UX)
2090
9bc98430 2091The return value is POSIX-like (shifted up by 8 bits), which only allows
2092room for a made-up value derived from the severity bits of the native
209332-bit condition code (unless overridden by C<use vmsish 'status'>).
016930a6 2094If the native condition code is one that has a POSIX value encoded, the
2095POSIX value will be decoded to extract the expected exit value.
9bc98430 2096For more details see L<perlvms/$?>. (VMS)
2097
e41182b5 2098=item times
2099
2100Only the first entry returned is nonzero. (S<Mac OS>)
2101
63f87e49 2102"cumulative" times will be bogus. On anything other than Windows NT
2103or Windows 2000, "system" time will be bogus, and "user" time is
2104actually the time returned by the clock() function in the C runtime
2105library. (Win32)
e41182b5 2106
b8099c3d 2107Not useful. (S<RISC OS>)
2108
47cd99a4 2109=item truncate
e41182b5 2110
6d738113 2111Not implemented. (Older versions of VMS)
e41182b5 2112
3fd80bd6 2113Truncation to same-or-shorter lengths only. (VOS)
495c5fdc 2114
4cfdb94f 2115If a FILEHANDLE is supplied, it must be writable and opened in append
e71a7dc8 2116mode (i.e., use C<<< open(FH, '>>filename') >>>
4cfdb94f 2117or C<sysopen(FH,...,O_APPEND|O_RDWR)>. If a filename is supplied, it
2118should not be held open elsewhere. (Win32)
2119
e41182b5 2120=item umask
2121
2122Returns undef where unavailable, as of version 5.005.
2123
b7df3edc 2124C<umask> works but the correct permissions are set only when the file
2125is finally closed. (AmigaOS)
433acd8a 2126
47cd99a4 2127=item utime
e41182b5 2128
15c65113 2129Only the modification time is updated. (S<BeOS>, S<Mac OS>, VMS, S<RISC OS>)
e41182b5 2130
322422de 2131May not behave as expected. Behavior depends on the C runtime
2132library's implementation of utime(), and the filesystem being
2133used. The FAT filesystem typically does not support an "access
2134time" field, and it may limit timestamps to a granularity of
2135two seconds. (Win32)
e41182b5 2136
2137=item wait
2138
47cd99a4 2139=item waitpid
e41182b5 2140
3fd80bd6 2141Not implemented. (S<Mac OS>)
e41182b5 2142
2143Can only be applied to process handles returned for processes spawned
a6f858fb 2144using C<system(1, ...)> or pseudo processes created with C<fork()>. (Win32)
e41182b5 2145
b8099c3d 2146Not useful. (S<RISC OS>)
2147
e41182b5 2148=back
2149
2150
ba58ab26 2151=head1 Supported Platforms
2152
522b859a 2153As of July 2002 (the Perl release 5.8.0), the following platforms are
cec2c193 2154able to build Perl from the standard source code distribution
2155available at http://www.cpan.org/src/index.html
2156
2157 AIX
2158 BeOS
6f683aa2 2159 BSD/OS (BSDi)
cec2c193 2160 Cygwin
2161 DG/UX
811b48f2 2162 DOS DJGPP 1)
cec2c193 2163 DYNIX/ptx
2164 EPOC R5
2165 FreeBSD
6f683aa2 2166 HI-UXMPP (Hitachi) (5.8.0 worked but we didn't know it)
cec2c193 2167 HP-UX
2168 IRIX
2169 Linux
8939ba94 2170 Mac OS Classic
6f683aa2 2171 Mac OS X (Darwin)
cec2c193 2172 MPE/iX
2173 NetBSD
2174 NetWare
2175 NonStop-UX
6f683aa2 2176 ReliantUNIX (formerly SINIX)
cec2c193 2177 OpenBSD
6f683aa2 2178 OpenVMS (formerly VMS)
3ebac25b 2179 Open UNIX (Unixware) (since Perl 5.8.1/5.9.0)
cec2c193 2180 OS/2
522b859a 2181 OS/400 (using the PASE) (since Perl 5.8.1/5.9.0)
70de81db 2182 PowerUX
6f683aa2 2183 POSIX-BC (formerly BS2000)
cec2c193 2184 QNX
2185 Solaris
70de81db 2186 SunOS 4
6f683aa2 2187 SUPER-UX (NEC)
2188 Tru64 UNIX (formerly DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX)
cec2c193 2189 UNICOS
2190 UNICOS/mk
2191 UTS
2192 VOS
811b48f2 2193 Win95/98/ME/2K/XP 2)
c40b5d1d 2194 WinCE
6f683aa2 2195 z/OS (formerly OS/390)
cec2c193 2196 VM/ESA
ba58ab26 2197
811b48f2 2198 1) in DOS mode either the DOS or OS/2 ports can be used
2199 2) compilers: Borland, MinGW (GCC), VC6
cec2c193 2200
c40b5d1d 2201The following platforms worked with the previous releases (5.6 and
cec2c193 22025.7), but we did not manage either to fix or to test these in time
2203for the 5.8.0 release. There is a very good chance that many of these
70de81db 2204will work fine with the 5.8.0.
cec2c193 2205
8da2b1be 2206 BSD/OS
cec2c193 2207 DomainOS
2208 Hurd
2209 LynxOS
2210 MachTen
2211 PowerMAX
2212 SCO SV
cec2c193 2213 SVR4
2214 Unixware
2215 Windows 3.1
ba58ab26 2216
70de81db 2217Known to be broken for 5.8.0 (but 5.6.1 and 5.7.2 can be used):
2218
2219 AmigaOS
2220
ba58ab26 2221The following platforms have been known to build Perl from source in
fd46a41b 2222the past (5.005_03 and earlier), but we haven't been able to verify
2223their status for the current release, either because the
2224hardware/software platforms are rare or because we don't have an
2225active champion on these platforms--or both. They used to work,
2226though, so go ahead and try compiling them, and let perlbug@perl.org
2227of any trouble.
ba58ab26 2228
cec2c193 2229 3b1
2230 A/UX
cec2c193 2231 ConvexOS
2232 CX/UX
2233 DC/OSx
2234 DDE SMES
2235 DOS EMX
2236 Dynix
2237 EP/IX
2238 ESIX
2239 FPS
2240 GENIX
2241 Greenhills
2242 ISC
2243 MachTen 68k
2244 MiNT
2245 MPC
2246 NEWS-OS
2247 NextSTEP
2248 OpenSTEP
2249 Opus
2250 Plan 9
cec2c193 2251 RISC/os
8da2b1be 2252 SCO ODT/OSR
cec2c193 2253 Stellar
2254 SVR2
2255 TI1500
2256 TitanOS
2257 Ultrix
2258 Unisys Dynix
ba58ab26 2259
2260The following platforms have their own source code distributions and
1577cd80 2261binaries available via http://www.cpan.org/ports/
ba58ab26 2262
cec2c193 2263 Perl release
ba58ab26 2264
522b859a 2265 OS/400 (ILE) 5.005_02
cec2c193 2266 Tandem Guardian 5.004
ba58ab26 2267
2268The following platforms have only binaries available via
a93751fa 2269http://www.cpan.org/ports/index.html :
ba58ab26 2270
cec2c193 2271 Perl release
ba58ab26 2272
cec2c193 2273 Acorn RISCOS 5.005_02
2274 AOS 5.002
2275 LynxOS 5.004_02
ba58ab26 2276
2277Although we do suggest that you always build your own Perl from
2278the source code, both for maximal configurability and for security,
2279in case you are in a hurry you can check
a93751fa 2280http://www.cpan.org/ports/index.html for binary distributions.
ba58ab26 2281
c997b287 2282=head1 SEE ALSO
2283
cec2c193 2284L<perlaix>, L<perlamiga>, L<perlapollo>, L<perlbeos>, L<perlbs2000>,
18a271bd 2285L<perlce>, L<perlcygwin>, L<perldgux>, L<perldos>, L<perlepoc>,
469e7be4 2286L<perlebcdic>, L<perlfreebsd>, L<perlhurd>, L<perlhpux>, L<perlirix>,
0d53b15f 2287L<perlmachten>, L<perlmacos>, L<perlmacosx>, L<perlmint>, L<perlmpeix>,
522b859a 2288L<perlnetware>, L<perlos2>, L<perlos390>, L<perlos400>,
2289L<perlplan9>, L<perlqnx>, L<perlsolaris>, L<perltru64>,
2290L<perlunicode>, L<perlvmesa>, L<perlvms>, L<perlvos>,
2291L<perlwin32>, and L<Win32>.
c997b287 2292
e41182b5 2293=head1 AUTHORS / CONTRIBUTORS
2294
06e9666b 2295Abigail <abigail@foad.org>,
c47ff5f1 2296Charles Bailey <bailey@newman.upenn.edu>,
2297Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com>,
2298Tom Christiansen <tchrist@perl.com>,
06e9666b 2299Nicholas Clark <nick@ccl4.org>,
c47ff5f1 2300Thomas Dorner <Thomas.Dorner@start.de>,
06e9666b 2301Andy Dougherty <doughera@lafayette.edu>,
2302Dominic Dunlop <domo@computer.org>,
2303Neale Ferguson <neale@vma.tabnsw.com.au>,
c47ff5f1 2304David J. Fiander <davidf@mks.com>,
3fd80bd6 2305Paul Green <Paul.Green@stratus.com>,
06e9666b 2306M.J.T. Guy <mjtg@cam.ac.uk>,
61f30a5e 2307Jarkko Hietaniemi <jhi@iki.fi>,
c47ff5f1 2308Luther Huffman <lutherh@stratcom.com>,
06e9666b 2309Nick Ing-Simmons <nick@ing-simmons.net>,
2310Andreas J. KE<ouml>nig <a.koenig@mind.de>,
c47ff5f1 2311Markus Laker <mlaker@contax.co.uk>,
2312Andrew M. Langmead <aml@world.std.com>,
2313Larry Moore <ljmoore@freespace.net>,
2314Paul Moore <Paul.Moore@uk.origin-it.com>,
2315Chris Nandor <pudge@pobox.com>,
1afc07ec 2316Matthias Neeracher <neeracher@mac.com>,
e71a7dc8 2317Philip Newton <pne@cpan.org>,
c47ff5f1 2318Gary Ng <71564.1743@CompuServe.COM>,
2319Tom Phoenix <rootbeer@teleport.com>,
2320AndrE<eacute> Pirard <A.Pirard@ulg.ac.be>,
2321Peter Prymmer <pvhp@forte.com>,
2322Hugo van der Sanden <hv@crypt0.demon.co.uk>,
2323Gurusamy Sarathy <gsar@activestate.com>,
2324Paul J. Schinder <schinder@pobox.com>,
2325Michael G Schwern <schwern@pobox.com>,
06e9666b 2326Dan Sugalski <dan@sidhe.org>,
c47ff5f1 2327Nathan Torkington <gnat@frii.com>.
016930a6 2328John Malmberg <wb8tyw@qsl.net>