Negative subscripts optionally passed to tied array methods
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / pod / perlrun.pod
CommitLineData
a0d0e21e 1=head1 NAME
2
3perlrun - how to execute the Perl interpreter
4
5=head1 SYNOPSIS
6
6537fe72 7B<perl> S<[ B<-CsTtuUWX> ]>
e0ebc809 8 S<[ B<-hv> ] [ B<-V>[:I<configvar>] ]>
9 S<[ B<-cw> ] [ B<-d>[:I<debugger>] ] [ B<-D>[I<number/list>] ]>
10 S<[ B<-pna> ] [ B<-F>I<pattern> ] [ B<-l>[I<octal>] ] [ B<-0>[I<octal>] ]>
11 S<[ B<-I>I<dir> ] [ B<-m>[B<->]I<module> ] [ B<-M>[B<->]I<'module...'> ]>
12 S<[ B<-P> ]>
13 S<[ B<-S> ]>
14 S<[ B<-x>[I<dir>] ]>
15 S<[ B<-i>[I<extension>] ]>
16 S<[ B<-e> I<'command'> ] [ B<--> ] [ I<programfile> ] [ I<argument> ]...>
a0d0e21e 17
18=head1 DESCRIPTION
19
19799a22 20The normal way to run a Perl program is by making it directly
21executable, or else by passing the name of the source file as an
22argument on the command line. (An interactive Perl environment
23is also possible--see L<perldebug> for details on how to do that.)
24Upon startup, Perl looks for your program in one of the following
a0d0e21e 25places:
26
27=over 4
28
29=item 1.
30
31Specified line by line via B<-e> switches on the command line.
32
33=item 2.
34
35Contained in the file specified by the first filename on the command line.
a3cb178b 36(Note that systems supporting the #! notation invoke interpreters this
37way. See L<Location of Perl>.)
a0d0e21e 38
39=item 3.
40
5f05dabc 41Passed in implicitly via standard input. This works only if there are
19799a22 42no filename arguments--to pass arguments to a STDIN-read program you
43must explicitly specify a "-" for the program name.
a0d0e21e 44
45=back
46
47With methods 2 and 3, Perl starts parsing the input file from the
48beginning, unless you've specified a B<-x> switch, in which case it
49scans for the first line starting with #! and containing the word
19799a22 50"perl", and starts there instead. This is useful for running a program
a0d0e21e 51embedded in a larger message. (In this case you would indicate the end
19799a22 52of the program using the C<__END__> token.)
a0d0e21e 53
5f05dabc 54The #! line is always examined for switches as the line is being
55parsed. Thus, if you're on a machine that allows only one argument
56with the #! line, or worse, doesn't even recognize the #! line, you
57still can get consistent switch behavior regardless of how Perl was
19799a22 58invoked, even if B<-x> was used to find the beginning of the program.
59
60Because historically some operating systems silently chopped off
61kernel interpretation of the #! line after 32 characters, some
62switches may be passed in on the command line, and some may not;
63you could even get a "-" without its letter, if you're not careful.
64You probably want to make sure that all your switches fall either
65before or after that 32-character boundary. Most switches don't
66actually care if they're processed redundantly, but getting a "-"
67instead of a complete switch could cause Perl to try to execute
68standard input instead of your program. And a partial B<-I> switch
a0d0e21e 69could also cause odd results.
70
19799a22 71Some switches do care if they are processed twice, for instance
72combinations of B<-l> and B<-0>. Either put all the switches after
73the 32-character boundary (if applicable), or replace the use of
74B<-0>I<digits> by C<BEGIN{ $/ = "\0digits"; }>.
fb73857a 75
a0d0e21e 76Parsing of the #! switches starts wherever "perl" is mentioned in the line.
77The sequences "-*" and "- " are specifically ignored so that you could,
78if you were so inclined, say
79
80 #!/bin/sh -- # -*- perl -*- -p
19799a22 81 eval 'exec perl -wS $0 ${1+"$@"}'
5f05dabc 82 if $running_under_some_shell;
a0d0e21e 83
44a4342c 84to let Perl see the B<-p> switch.
19799a22 85
86A similar trick involves the B<env> program, if you have it.
87
88 #!/usr/bin/env perl
89
90The examples above use a relative path to the perl interpreter,
91getting whatever version is first in the user's path. If you want
92a specific version of Perl, say, perl5.005_57, you should place
93that directly in the #! line's path.
a0d0e21e 94
95If the #! line does not contain the word "perl", the program named after
96the #! is executed instead of the Perl interpreter. This is slightly
97bizarre, but it helps people on machines that don't do #!, because they
19799a22 98can tell a program that their SHELL is F</usr/bin/perl>, and Perl will then
a0d0e21e 99dispatch the program to the correct interpreter for them.
100
19799a22 101After locating your program, Perl compiles the entire program to an
a0d0e21e 102internal form. If there are any compilation errors, execution of the
19799a22 103program is not attempted. (This is unlike the typical shell script,
54310121 104which might run part-way through before finding a syntax error.)
a0d0e21e 105
19799a22 106If the program is syntactically correct, it is executed. If the program
a0d0e21e 107runs off the end without hitting an exit() or die() operator, an implicit
108C<exit(0)> is provided to indicate successful completion.
109
68dc0745 110=head2 #! and quoting on non-Unix systems
111
112Unix's #! technique can be simulated on other systems:
113
114=over 4
115
116=item OS/2
117
118Put
119
120 extproc perl -S -your_switches
121
19799a22 122as the first line in C<*.cmd> file (B<-S> due to a bug in cmd.exe's
68dc0745 123`extproc' handling).
124
54310121 125=item MS-DOS
68dc0745 126
19799a22 127Create a batch file to run your program, and codify it in
68dc0745 128C<ALTERNATIVE_SHEBANG> (see the F<dosish.h> file in the source
129distribution for more information).
130
131=item Win95/NT
132
6c6a61e2 133The Win95/NT installation, when using the ActiveState installer for Perl,
c8db1d39 134will modify the Registry to associate the F<.pl> extension with the perl
6c6a61e2 135interpreter. If you install Perl by other means (including building from
136the sources), you may have to modify the Registry yourself. Note that
137this means you can no longer tell the difference between an executable
138Perl program and a Perl library file.
68dc0745 139
140=item Macintosh
141
19799a22 142A Macintosh perl program will have the appropriate Creator and
68dc0745 143Type, so that double-clicking them will invoke the perl application.
144
bd3fa61c 145=item VMS
146
147Put
148
149 $ perl -mysw 'f$env("procedure")' 'p1' 'p2' 'p3' 'p4' 'p5' 'p6' 'p7' 'p8' !
150 $ exit++ + ++$status != 0 and $exit = $status = undef;
151
19799a22 152at the top of your program, where B<-mysw> are any command line switches you
153want to pass to Perl. You can now invoke the program directly, by saying
154C<perl program>, or as a DCL procedure, by saying C<@program> (or implicitly
155via F<DCL$PATH> by just using the name of the program).
bd3fa61c 156
157This incantation is a bit much to remember, but Perl will display it for
158you if you say C<perl "-V:startperl">.
159
68dc0745 160=back
161
162Command-interpreters on non-Unix systems have rather different ideas
163on quoting than Unix shells. You'll need to learn the special
164characters in your command-interpreter (C<*>, C<\> and C<"> are
165common) and how to protect whitespace and these characters to run
19799a22 166one-liners (see B<-e> below).
68dc0745 167
168On some systems, you may have to change single-quotes to double ones,
e6f03d26 169which you must I<not> do on Unix or Plan 9 systems. You might also
68dc0745 170have to change a single % to a %%.
171
172For example:
173
174 # Unix
175 perl -e 'print "Hello world\n"'
176
54310121 177 # MS-DOS, etc.
68dc0745 178 perl -e "print \"Hello world\n\""
179
54310121 180 # Macintosh
68dc0745 181 print "Hello world\n"
182 (then Run "Myscript" or Shift-Command-R)
183
184 # VMS
185 perl -e "print ""Hello world\n"""
186
19799a22 187The problem is that none of this is reliable: it depends on the
188command and it is entirely possible neither works. If B<4DOS> were
189the command shell, this would probably work better:
68dc0745 190
191 perl -e "print <Ctrl-x>"Hello world\n<Ctrl-x>""
192
19799a22 193B<CMD.EXE> in Windows NT slipped a lot of standard Unix functionality in
68dc0745 194when nobody was looking, but just try to find documentation for its
195quoting rules.
196
54310121 197Under the Macintosh, it depends which environment you are using. The MacPerl
68dc0745 198shell, or MPW, is much like Unix shells in its support for several
54310121 199quoting variants, except that it makes free use of the Macintosh's non-ASCII
68dc0745 200characters as control characters.
201
202There is no general solution to all of this. It's just a mess.
203
a3cb178b 204=head2 Location of Perl
205
206It may seem obvious to say, but Perl is useful only when users can
19799a22 207easily find it. When possible, it's good for both F</usr/bin/perl>
208and F</usr/local/bin/perl> to be symlinks to the actual binary. If
209that can't be done, system administrators are strongly encouraged
210to put (symlinks to) perl and its accompanying utilities into a
211directory typically found along a user's PATH, or in some other
212obvious and convenient place.
213
214In this documentation, C<#!/usr/bin/perl> on the first line of the program
215will stand in for whatever method works on your system. You are
216advised to use a specific path if you care about a specific version.
a3cb178b 217
19799a22 218 #!/usr/local/bin/perl5.00554
a3cb178b 219
19799a22 220or if you just want to be running at least version, place a statement
221like this at the top of your program:
a0d0e21e 222
19799a22 223 use 5.005_54;
a0d0e21e 224
19799a22 225=head2 Command Switches
226
227As with all standard commands, a single-character switch may be
228clustered with the following switch, if any.
229
230 #!/usr/bin/perl -spi.orig # same as -s -p -i.orig
a0d0e21e 231
232Switches include:
233
234=over 5
235
e0ebc809 236=item B<-0>[I<digits>]
a0d0e21e 237
55497cff 238specifies the input record separator (C<$/>) as an octal number. If there are
a0d0e21e 239no digits, the null character is the separator. Other switches may
240precede or follow the digits. For example, if you have a version of
241B<find> which can print filenames terminated by the null character, you
242can say this:
243
19799a22 244 find . -name '*.orig' -print0 | perl -n0e unlink
a0d0e21e 245
246The special value 00 will cause Perl to slurp files in paragraph mode.
5f05dabc 247The value 0777 will cause Perl to slurp files whole because there is no
a0d0e21e 248legal character with that value.
249
250=item B<-a>
251
252turns on autosplit mode when used with a B<-n> or B<-p>. An implicit
253split command to the @F array is done as the first thing inside the
254implicit while loop produced by the B<-n> or B<-p>.
255
256 perl -ane 'print pop(@F), "\n";'
257
258is equivalent to
259
260 while (<>) {
261 @F = split(' ');
262 print pop(@F), "\n";
263 }
264
265An alternate delimiter may be specified using B<-F>.
266
46487f74 267=item B<-C>
268
269enables Perl to use the native wide character APIs on the target system.
270The magic variable C<${^WIDE_SYSTEM_CALLS}> reflects the state of
271this switch. See L<perlvar/"${^WIDE_SYSTEM_CALLS}">.
272
273This feature is currently only implemented on the Win32 platform.
274
a0d0e21e 275=item B<-c>
276
19799a22 277causes Perl to check the syntax of the program and then exit without
7d30b5c4 278executing it. Actually, it I<will> execute C<BEGIN>, C<CHECK>, and
4f25aa18 279C<use> blocks, because these are considered as occurring outside the
280execution of your program. C<INIT> and C<END> blocks, however, will
281be skipped.
a0d0e21e 282
283=item B<-d>
284
19799a22 285runs the program under the Perl debugger. See L<perldebug>.
a0d0e21e 286
70c94a19 287=item B<-d:>I<foo[=bar,baz]>
3c81428c 288
19799a22 289runs the program under the control of a debugging, profiling, or
290tracing module installed as Devel::foo. E.g., B<-d:DProf> executes
70c94a19 291the program using the Devel::DProf profiler. As with the B<-M>
292flag, options may be passed to the Devel::foo package where they
293will be received and interpreted by the Devel::foo::import routine.
294The comma-separated list of options must follow a C<=> character.
295See L<perldebug>.
3c81428c 296
db2ba183 297=item B<-D>I<letters>
a0d0e21e 298
db2ba183 299=item B<-D>I<number>
a0d0e21e 300
19799a22 301sets debugging flags. To watch how it executes your program, use
db2ba183 302B<-Dtls>. (This works only if debugging is compiled into your
303Perl.) Another nice value is B<-Dx>, which lists your compiled
4197b13f 304syntax tree. And B<-Dr> displays compiled regular expressions;
44a4342c 305the format of the output is explained in L<perldebguts>.
4197b13f 306
307As an alternative, specify a number instead of list of letters (e.g.,
308B<-D14> is equivalent to B<-Dtls>):
a0d0e21e 309
db2ba183 310 1 p Tokenizing and parsing
311 2 s Stack snapshots
d6721266 312 with v, displays all stacks
db2ba183 313 4 l Context (loop) stack processing
314 8 t Trace execution
315 16 o Method and overloading resolution
316 32 c String/numeric conversions
1045810a 317 64 P Print profiling info, preprocessor command for -P, source file input state
db2ba183 318 128 m Memory allocation
319 256 f Format processing
320 512 r Regular expression parsing and execution
321 1024 x Syntax tree dump
322 2048 u Tainting checks
19799a22 323 4096 L Memory leaks (needs -DLEAKTEST when compiling Perl)
db2ba183 324 8192 H Hash dump -- usurps values()
325 16384 X Scratchpad allocation
326 32768 D Cleaning up
8b73bbec 327 65536 S Thread synchronization
607df283 328 131072 T Tokenising
04932ac8 329 262144 R Include reference counts of dumped variables (eg when using -Ds)
1045810a 330 524288 J Do not s,t,P-debug (Jump over) opcodes within package DB
d6721266 331 1048576 v Verbose: use in conjunction with other flags
a0d0e21e 332
19799a22 333All these flags require B<-DDEBUGGING> when you compile the Perl
1045810a 334executable (but see L<Devel::Peek>, L<re> which may change this).
44a4342c 335See the F<INSTALL> file in the Perl source distribution
19799a22 336for how to do this. This flag is automatically set if you include B<-g>
8c52afec 337option when C<Configure> asks you about optimizer/debugger flags.
338
19799a22 339If you're just trying to get a print out of each line of Perl code
340as it executes, the way that C<sh -x> provides for shell scripts,
44a4342c 341you can't use Perl's B<-D> switch. Instead do this
19799a22 342
c406981e 343 # If you have "env" utility
344 env=PERLDB_OPTS="NonStop=1 AutoTrace=1 frame=2" perl -dS program
345
19799a22 346 # Bourne shell syntax
347 $ PERLDB_OPTS="NonStop=1 AutoTrace=1 frame=2" perl -dS program
348
349 # csh syntax
350 % (setenv PERLDB_OPTS "NonStop=1 AutoTrace=1 frame=2"; perl -dS program)
351
352See L<perldebug> for details and variations.
353
a0d0e21e 354=item B<-e> I<commandline>
355
19799a22 356may be used to enter one line of program. If B<-e> is given, Perl
357will not look for a filename in the argument list. Multiple B<-e>
358commands may be given to build up a multi-line script. Make sure
359to use semicolons where you would in a normal program.
a0d0e21e 360
e0ebc809 361=item B<-F>I<pattern>
a0d0e21e 362
e0ebc809 363specifies the pattern to split on if B<-a> is also in effect. The
5f05dabc 364pattern may be surrounded by C<//>, C<"">, or C<''>, otherwise it will be
e0ebc809 365put in single quotes.
a0d0e21e 366
e0ebc809 367=item B<-h>
368
369prints a summary of the options.
370
371=item B<-i>[I<extension>]
a0d0e21e 372
2d259d92 373specifies that files processed by the C<E<lt>E<gt>> construct are to be
374edited in-place. It does this by renaming the input file, opening the
375output file by the original name, and selecting that output file as the
376default for print() statements. The extension, if supplied, is used to
377modify the name of the old file to make a backup copy, following these
378rules:
379
380If no extension is supplied, no backup is made and the current file is
381overwritten.
382
19799a22 383If the extension doesn't contain a C<*>, then it is appended to the
384end of the current filename as a suffix. If the extension does
385contain one or more C<*> characters, then each C<*> is replaced
386with the current filename. In Perl terms, you could think of this
387as:
2d259d92 388
66606d78 389 ($backup = $extension) =~ s/\*/$file_name/g;
2d259d92 390
391This allows you to add a prefix to the backup file, instead of (or in
392addition to) a suffix:
393
19799a22 394 $ perl -pi 'orig_*' -e 's/bar/baz/' fileA # backup to 'orig_fileA'
2d259d92 395
396Or even to place backup copies of the original files into another
397directory (provided the directory already exists):
398
19799a22 399 $ perl -pi 'old/*.orig' -e 's/bar/baz/' fileA # backup to 'old/fileA.orig'
2d259d92 400
66606d78 401These sets of one-liners are equivalent:
402
403 $ perl -pi -e 's/bar/baz/' fileA # overwrite current file
19799a22 404 $ perl -pi '*' -e 's/bar/baz/' fileA # overwrite current file
66606d78 405
19799a22 406 $ perl -pi '.orig' -e 's/bar/baz/' fileA # backup to 'fileA.orig'
407 $ perl -pi '*.orig' -e 's/bar/baz/' fileA # backup to 'fileA.orig'
66606d78 408
2d259d92 409From the shell, saying
a0d0e21e 410
19799a22 411 $ perl -p -i.orig -e "s/foo/bar/; ... "
a0d0e21e 412
19799a22 413is the same as using the program:
a0d0e21e 414
19799a22 415 #!/usr/bin/perl -pi.orig
a0d0e21e 416 s/foo/bar/;
417
418which is equivalent to
419
420 #!/usr/bin/perl
19799a22 421 $extension = '.orig';
422 LINE: while (<>) {
a0d0e21e 423 if ($ARGV ne $oldargv) {
66606d78 424 if ($extension !~ /\*/) {
425 $backup = $ARGV . $extension;
426 }
427 else {
428 ($backup = $extension) =~ s/\*/$ARGV/g;
429 }
430 rename($ARGV, $backup);
a0d0e21e 431 open(ARGVOUT, ">$ARGV");
432 select(ARGVOUT);
433 $oldargv = $ARGV;
434 }
435 s/foo/bar/;
436 }
437 continue {
438 print; # this prints to original filename
439 }
440 select(STDOUT);
441
442except that the B<-i> form doesn't need to compare $ARGV to $oldargv to
443know when the filename has changed. It does, however, use ARGVOUT for
66606d78 444the selected filehandle. Note that STDOUT is restored as the default
445output filehandle after the loop.
446
447As shown above, Perl creates the backup file whether or not any output
448is actually changed. So this is just a fancy way to copy files:
449
19799a22 450 $ perl -p -i '/some/file/path/*' -e 1 file1 file2 file3...
451or
452 $ perl -p -i '.orig' -e 1 file1 file2 file3...
66606d78 453
454You can use C<eof> without parentheses to locate the end of each input
455file, in case you want to append to each file, or reset line numbering
456(see example in L<perlfunc/eof>).
457
458If, for a given file, Perl is unable to create the backup file as
459specified in the extension then it will skip that file and continue on
460with the next one (if it exists).
461
19799a22 462For a discussion of issues surrounding file permissions and B<-i>,
cea6626f 463see L<perlfaq5/Why does Perl let me delete read-only files? Why does -i clobber protected files? Isn't this a bug in Perl?>.
66606d78 464
465You cannot use B<-i> to create directories or to strip extensions from
466files.
a0d0e21e 467
19799a22 468Perl does not expand C<~> in filenames, which is good, since some
469folks use it for their backup files:
a0d0e21e 470
19799a22 471 $ perl -pi~ -e 's/foo/bar/' file1 file2 file3...
472
473Finally, the B<-i> switch does not impede execution when no
a2008d6d 474files are given on the command line. In this case, no backup is made
475(the original file cannot, of course, be determined) and processing
476proceeds from STDIN to STDOUT as might be expected.
477
a0d0e21e 478=item B<-I>I<directory>
479
e0ebc809 480Directories specified by B<-I> are prepended to the search path for
1fef88e7 481modules (C<@INC>), and also tells the C preprocessor where to search for
e0ebc809 482include files. The C preprocessor is invoked with B<-P>; by default it
483searches /usr/include and /usr/lib/perl.
a0d0e21e 484
e0ebc809 485=item B<-l>[I<octnum>]
a0d0e21e 486
19799a22 487enables automatic line-ending processing. It has two separate
488effects. First, it automatically chomps C<$/> (the input record
489separator) when used with B<-n> or B<-p>. Second, it assigns C<$\>
490(the output record separator) to have the value of I<octnum> so
491that any print statements will have that separator added back on.
492If I<octnum> is omitted, sets C<$\> to the current value of
493C<$/>. For instance, to trim lines to 80 columns:
a0d0e21e 494
495 perl -lpe 'substr($_, 80) = ""'
496
497Note that the assignment C<$\ = $/> is done when the switch is processed,
498so the input record separator can be different than the output record
499separator if the B<-l> switch is followed by a B<-0> switch:
500
501 gnufind / -print0 | perl -ln0e 'print "found $_" if -p'
502
1fef88e7 503This sets C<$\> to newline and then sets C<$/> to the null character.
a0d0e21e 504
e0ebc809 505=item B<-m>[B<->]I<module>
506
507=item B<-M>[B<->]I<module>
c07a80fd 508
e0ebc809 509=item B<-M>[B<->]I<'module ...'>
510
511=item B<-[mM]>[B<->]I<module=arg[,arg]...>
3c81428c 512
19799a22 513B<-m>I<module> executes C<use> I<module> C<();> before executing your
514program.
3c81428c 515
19799a22 516B<-M>I<module> executes C<use> I<module> C<;> before executing your
517program. You can use quotes to add extra code after the module name,
518e.g., C<'-Mmodule qw(foo bar)'>.
3c81428c 519
19799a22 520If the first character after the B<-M> or B<-m> is a dash (C<->)
a5f75d66 521then the 'use' is replaced with 'no'.
522
54310121 523A little builtin syntactic sugar means you can also say
19799a22 524B<-mmodule=foo,bar> or B<-Mmodule=foo,bar> as a shortcut for
525C<'-Mmodule qw(foo bar)'>. This avoids the need to use quotes when
526importing symbols. The actual code generated by B<-Mmodule=foo,bar> is
e0ebc809 527C<use module split(/,/,q{foo,bar})>. Note that the C<=> form
19799a22 528removes the distinction between B<-m> and B<-M>.
3c81428c 529
a0d0e21e 530=item B<-n>
531
19799a22 532causes Perl to assume the following loop around your program, which
a0d0e21e 533makes it iterate over filename arguments somewhat like B<sed -n> or
534B<awk>:
535
19799a22 536 LINE:
a0d0e21e 537 while (<>) {
19799a22 538 ... # your program goes here
a0d0e21e 539 }
540
541Note that the lines are not printed by default. See B<-p> to have
08e9d68e 542lines printed. If a file named by an argument cannot be opened for
19799a22 543some reason, Perl warns you about it and moves on to the next file.
08e9d68e 544
545Here is an efficient way to delete all files older than a week:
a0d0e21e 546
19799a22 547 find . -mtime +7 -print | perl -nle unlink
a0d0e21e 548
19799a22 549This is faster than using the B<-exec> switch of B<find> because you don't
550have to start a process on every filename found. It does suffer from
551the bug of mishandling newlines in pathnames, which you can fix if
44a4342c 552you follow the example under B<-0>.
a0d0e21e 553
554C<BEGIN> and C<END> blocks may be used to capture control before or after
19799a22 555the implicit program loop, just as in B<awk>.
a0d0e21e 556
557=item B<-p>
558
19799a22 559causes Perl to assume the following loop around your program, which
a0d0e21e 560makes it iterate over filename arguments somewhat like B<sed>:
561
562
19799a22 563 LINE:
a0d0e21e 564 while (<>) {
19799a22 565 ... # your program goes here
a0d0e21e 566 } continue {
08e9d68e 567 print or die "-p destination: $!\n";
a0d0e21e 568 }
569
08e9d68e 570If a file named by an argument cannot be opened for some reason, Perl
571warns you about it, and moves on to the next file. Note that the
c2611fb3 572lines are printed automatically. An error occurring during printing is
08e9d68e 573treated as fatal. To suppress printing use the B<-n> switch. A B<-p>
574overrides a B<-n> switch.
a0d0e21e 575
576C<BEGIN> and C<END> blocks may be used to capture control before or after
19799a22 577the implicit loop, just as in B<awk>.
a0d0e21e 578
579=item B<-P>
580
079a94c4 581B<NOTE: Use of -P is strongly discouraged because of its inherent
582problems, including poor portability.>
583
584This option causes your program to be run through the C preprocessor before
efdf3af0 585compilation by Perl. Because both comments and B<cpp> directives begin
a0d0e21e 586with the # character, you should avoid starting comments with any words
efdf3af0 587recognized by the C preprocessor such as C<"if">, C<"else">, or C<"define">.
079a94c4 588
589If you're considering using C<-P>, you might also want to look at the
590Filter::cpp module from CPAN.
591
592The problems of -P include, but are not limited to:
593
594=over 10
595
596=item *
597
598The C<#!> line is stripped, so any switches there don't apply.
599
600=item *
601
602A C<-P> on a C<#!> line doesn't work.
603
604=item *
605
606B<All> lines that begin with (whitespace and) a C<#> but
607do not look like cpp commands, are stripped, including anything
44a4342c 608inside Perl strings, regular expressions, and here-docs .
079a94c4 609
610=item *
611
612In some platforms the C preprocessor knows too much: it knows about
613the C++ -style until-end-of-line comments starting with C<"//">.
efdf3af0 614This will cause problems with common Perl constructs like
615
616 s/foo//;
617
618because after -P this will became illegal code
619
620 s/foo
621
622The workaround is to use some other quoting separator than C<"/">,
623like for example C<"!">:
624
625 s!foo!!;
a0d0e21e 626
079a94c4 627
628
629=item *
630
631It requires not only a working C preprocessor but also a working
632F<sed>. If not on UNIX, you are probably out of luck on this.
633
634=item *
635
636Script line numbers are not preserved.
637
638=item *
639
640The C<-x> does not work with C<-P>.
641
642=back
9a1f07e7 643
a0d0e21e 644=item B<-s>
645
19799a22 646enables rudimentary switch parsing for switches on the command
647line after the program name but before any filename arguments (or before
3bbcc830 648an argument of B<-->). This means you can have switches with two leading
649dashes (B<--help>). Any switch found there is removed from @ARGV and sets the
19799a22 650corresponding variable in the Perl program. The following program
3c0facb2 651prints "1" if the program is invoked with a B<-xyz> switch, and "abc"
652if it is invoked with B<-xyz=abc>.
a0d0e21e 653
654 #!/usr/bin/perl -s
3c0facb2 655 if ($xyz) { print "$xyz\n" }
a0d0e21e 656
3bbcc830 657Do note that B<--help> creates the variable ${-help}, which is not compliant
658with C<strict refs>.
659
a0d0e21e 660=item B<-S>
661
662makes Perl use the PATH environment variable to search for the
19799a22 663program (unless the name of the program contains directory separators).
664
2a92aaa0 665On some platforms, this also makes Perl append suffixes to the
666filename while searching for it. For example, on Win32 platforms,
667the ".bat" and ".cmd" suffixes are appended if a lookup for the
668original name fails, and if the name does not already end in one
669of those suffixes. If your Perl was compiled with DEBUGGING turned
670on, using the -Dp switch to Perl shows how the search progresses.
671
2a92aaa0 672Typically this is used to emulate #! startup on platforms that
673don't support #!. This example works on many platforms that
674have a shell compatible with Bourne shell:
a0d0e21e 675
676 #!/usr/bin/perl
a3cb178b 677 eval 'exec /usr/bin/perl -wS $0 ${1+"$@"}'
a0d0e21e 678 if $running_under_some_shell;
679
19799a22 680The system ignores the first line and feeds the program to F</bin/sh>,
681which proceeds to try to execute the Perl program as a shell script.
a0d0e21e 682The shell executes the second line as a normal shell command, and thus
683starts up the Perl interpreter. On some systems $0 doesn't always
684contain the full pathname, so the B<-S> tells Perl to search for the
19799a22 685program if necessary. After Perl locates the program, it parses the
a0d0e21e 686lines and ignores them because the variable $running_under_some_shell
19799a22 687is never true. If the program will be interpreted by csh, you will need
a3cb178b 688to replace C<${1+"$@"}> with C<$*>, even though that doesn't understand
689embedded spaces (and such) in the argument list. To start up sh rather
a0d0e21e 690than csh, some systems may have to replace the #! line with a line
691containing just a colon, which will be politely ignored by Perl. Other
692systems can't control that, and need a totally devious construct that
19799a22 693will work under any of B<csh>, B<sh>, or Perl, such as the following:
a0d0e21e 694
19799a22 695 eval '(exit $?0)' && eval 'exec perl -wS $0 ${1+"$@"}'
a3cb178b 696 & eval 'exec /usr/bin/perl -wS $0 $argv:q'
5f05dabc 697 if $running_under_some_shell;
a0d0e21e 698
19799a22 699If the filename supplied contains directory separators (i.e., is an
700absolute or relative pathname), and if that file is not found,
701platforms that append file extensions will do so and try to look
702for the file with those extensions added, one by one.
703
704On DOS-like platforms, if the program does not contain directory
705separators, it will first be searched for in the current directory
706before being searched for on the PATH. On Unix platforms, the
707program will be searched for strictly on the PATH.
708
6537fe72 709=item B<-t>
710
711Like B<-T>, but taint checks will issue warnings rather than fatal
317ea90d 712errors. These warnings can be controlled normally with C<no warnings
713qw(taint)>.
1dbad523 714
715B<NOTE: this is not a substitute for -T.> This is meant only to be
716used as a temporary development aid while securing legacy code:
717for real production code and for new secure code written from scratch
718always use the real B<-T>.
6537fe72 719
a0d0e21e 720=item B<-T>
721
a3cb178b 722forces "taint" checks to be turned on so you can test them. Ordinarily
19799a22 723these checks are done only when running setuid or setgid. It's a
724good idea to turn them on explicitly for programs that run on behalf
725of someone else whom you might not necessarily trust, such as CGI
726programs or any internet servers you might write in Perl. See
727L<perlsec> for details. For security reasons, this option must be
728seen by Perl quite early; usually this means it must appear early
729on the command line or in the #! line for systems which support
730that construct.
a0d0e21e 731
732=item B<-u>
733
19799a22 734This obsolete switch causes Perl to dump core after compiling your
735program. You can then in theory take this core dump and turn it
736into an executable file by using the B<undump> program (not supplied).
737This speeds startup at the expense of some disk space (which you
738can minimize by stripping the executable). (Still, a "hello world"
739executable comes out to about 200K on my machine.) If you want to
740execute a portion of your program before dumping, use the dump()
741operator instead. Note: availability of B<undump> is platform
742specific and may not be available for a specific port of Perl.
743
744This switch has been superseded in favor of the new Perl code
745generator backends to the compiler. See L<B> and L<B::Bytecode>
746for details.
a0d0e21e 747
748=item B<-U>
749
750allows Perl to do unsafe operations. Currently the only "unsafe"
751operations are the unlinking of directories while running as superuser,
752and running setuid programs with fatal taint checks turned into
19799a22 753warnings. Note that the B<-w> switch (or the C<$^W> variable) must
754be used along with this option to actually I<generate> the
fb73857a 755taint-check warnings.
a0d0e21e 756
757=item B<-v>
758
19799a22 759prints the version and patchlevel of your perl executable.
a0d0e21e 760
3c81428c 761=item B<-V>
762
763prints summary of the major perl configuration values and the current
19799a22 764values of @INC.
3c81428c 765
e0ebc809 766=item B<-V:>I<name>
3c81428c 767
768Prints to STDOUT the value of the named configuration variable.
44a4342c 769For example,
3c81428c 770
19799a22 771 $ perl -V:man.dir
772
773will provide strong clues about what your MANPATH variable should
774be set to in order to access the Perl documentation.
a0d0e21e 775
19799a22 776=item B<-w>
774d564b 777
19799a22 778prints warnings about dubious constructs, such as variable names
779that are mentioned only once and scalar variables that are used
780before being set, redefined subroutines, references to undefined
781filehandles or filehandles opened read-only that you are attempting
782to write on, values used as a number that doesn't look like numbers,
783using an array as though it were a scalar, if your subroutines
784recurse more than 100 deep, and innumerable other things.
785
786This switch really just enables the internal C<^$W> variable. You
787can disable or promote into fatal errors specific warnings using
788C<__WARN__> hooks, as described in L<perlvar> and L<perlfunc/warn>.
789See also L<perldiag> and L<perltrap>. A new, fine-grained warning
790facility is also available if you want to manipulate entire classes
9f1b1f2d 791of warnings; see L<warnings> or L<perllexwarn>.
a0d0e21e 792
0453d815 793=item B<-W>
794
3c0facb2 795Enables all warnings regardless of C<no warnings> or C<$^W>.
0453d815 796See L<perllexwarn>.
797
798=item B<-X>
799
3c0facb2 800Disables all warnings regardless of C<use warnings> or C<$^W>.
0453d815 801See L<perllexwarn>.
802
a0d0e21e 803=item B<-x> I<directory>
804
19799a22 805tells Perl that the program is embedded in a larger chunk of unrelated
806ASCII text, such as in a mail message. Leading garbage will be
807discarded until the first line that starts with #! and contains the
808string "perl". Any meaningful switches on that line will be applied.
809If a directory name is specified, Perl will switch to that directory
810before running the program. The B<-x> switch controls only the
811disposal of leading garbage. The program must be terminated with
812C<__END__> if there is trailing garbage to be ignored (the program
813can process any or all of the trailing garbage via the DATA filehandle
814if desired).
a0d0e21e 815
1e422769 816=back
817
818=head1 ENVIRONMENT
819
820=over 12
821
822=item HOME
823
824Used if chdir has no argument.
825
826=item LOGDIR
827
828Used if chdir has no argument and HOME is not set.
829
830=item PATH
831
19799a22 832Used in executing subprocesses, and in finding the program if B<-S> is
1e422769 833used.
834
835=item PERL5LIB
836
837A colon-separated list of directories in which to look for Perl library
838files before looking in the standard library and the current
951ba7fe 839directory. Any architecture-specific directories under the specified
840locations are automatically included if they exist. If PERL5LIB is not
841defined, PERLLIB is used.
842
843When running taint checks (either because the program was running setuid
844or setgid, or the B<-T> switch was used), neither variable is used.
845The program should instead say:
1e422769 846
847 use lib "/my/directory";
848
54310121 849=item PERL5OPT
850
851Command-line options (switches). Switches in this variable are taken
1c4db469 852as if they were on every Perl command line. Only the B<-[DIMUdmtw]>
19799a22 853switches are allowed. When running taint checks (because the program
54310121 854was running setuid or setgid, or the B<-T> switch was used), this
74288ac8 855variable is ignored. If PERL5OPT begins with B<-T>, tainting will be
856enabled, and any subsequent options ignored.
54310121 857
16537909 858=item PERLIO
859
44a4342c 860A space (or colon) separated list of PerlIO layers. If perl is built
235e0aa9 861to use PerlIO system for IO (the default) these layers affect perl's IO.
44a4342c 862
863It is conventional to start layer names with a colon e.g. C<:perlio> to
864emphasise their similarity to variable "attributes". But the code that parses
865layer specification strings (which is also used to decode the PERLIO
866environment variable) treats the colon as a separator.
867
868The list becomes the default for I<all> perl's IO. Consequently only built-in
869layers can appear in this list, as external layers (such as :encoding()) need
870IO in order to load them!. See L<"open pragma"|open> for how to add external
871encodings as defaults.
872
873The layers that it makes sense to include in the PERLIO environment
874variable are summarised below. For more details see L<PerlIO>.
16537909 875
876=over 8
877
878=item :bytes
879
44a4342c 880Turns I<off> the C<:utf8> flag for the layer below.
99366417 881Unlikely to be useful in global PERLIO environment variable.
16537909 882
883=item :crlf
884
44a4342c 885A layer that implements DOS/Windows like CRLF line endings.
886On read converts pairs of CR,LF to a single "\n" newline character.
887On write converts each "\n" to a CR,LF pair.
888Based on the C<:perlio> layer.
889
890=item :mmap
891
892A layer which implements "reading" of files by using C<mmap()> to
893make (whole) file appear in the process's address space, and then
894using that as PerlIO's "buffer". This I<may> be faster in certain
895circumstances for large files, and may result in less physical memory
896use when multiple processes are reading the same file.
16537909 897
44a4342c 898Files which are not C<mmap()>-able revert to behaving like the C<:perlio>
899layer. Writes also behave like C<:perlio> layer as C<mmap()> for write
900needs extra house-keeping (to extend the file) which negates any advantage.
16537909 901
44a4342c 902The C<:mmap> layer will not exist if platform does not support C<mmap()>.
16537909 903
44a4342c 904=item :perlio
16537909 905
44a4342c 906A from scratch implementation of buffering for PerlIO. Provides fast
907access to the buffer for C<sv_gets> which implements perl's readline/E<lt>E<gt>
908and in general attempts to minimize data copying.
16537909 909
44a4342c 910C<:perlio> will insert a C<:unix> layer below itself to do low level IO.
16537909 911
44a4342c 912=item :raw
16537909 913
0226bbdb 914Applying the <:raw> layer is equivalent to calling C<binmode($fh)>.
915It makes the stream pass each byte as-is without any translation.
916In particular CRLF translation, and/or :utf8 inuited from locale
917are disabled.
1cbfc93d 918
0226bbdb 919Arranges for all accesses go straight to the lowest buffered layer provided
44a4342c 920by the configration. That is it strips off any layers above that layer.
16537909 921
fae2c0fb 922In Perl 5.6 and some books the C<:raw> layer (previously sometimes also
923referred to as a "discipline") is documented as the inverse of the
924C<:crlf> layer. That is no longer the case - other layers which would
925alter binary nature of the stream are also disabled. If you want UNIX
926line endings on a platform that normally does CRLF translation, but still
927want UTF-8 or encoding defaults the appropriate thing to do is to add
928C<:perlio> to PERLIO environment variable.
16537909 929
44a4342c 930=item :stdio
931
932This layer provides PerlIO interface by wrapping system's ANSI C "stdio"
933library calls. The layer provides both buffering and IO.
934Note that C<:stdio> layer does I<not> do CRLF translation even if that
935is platforms normal behaviour. You will need a C<:crlf> layer above it
936to do that.
937
938=item :unix
939
940Lowest level layer which provides basic PerlIO operations in terms of
941UNIX/POSIX numeric file descriptor calls
942C<open(), read(), write(), lseek(), close()>
16537909 943
944=item :utf8
945
44a4342c 946Turns on a flag on the layer below to tell perl that data sent to the
947stream should be converted to perl internal "utf8" form and that data from the
948stream should be considered as so encoded. On ASCII based platforms the
949encoding is UTF-8 and on EBCDIC platforms UTF-EBCDIC.
950May be useful in PERLIO environment variable to make UTF-8 the
951default. (To turn off that behaviour use C<:bytes> layer.)
952
953=item :win32
954
ab4f7683 955On Win32 platforms this I<experimental> layer uses native "handle" IO
44a4342c 956rather than unix-like numeric file descriptor layer. Known to be
957buggy in this release.
16537909 958
959=back
960
44a4342c 961On all platforms the default set of layers should give acceptable results.
962
ab4f7683 963For UNIX platforms that will equivalent of "unix perlio" or "stdio".
44a4342c 964Configure is setup to prefer "stdio" implementation if system's library
965provides for fast access to the buffer, otherwise it uses the "unix perlio"
966implementation.
967
968On Win32 the default in this release is "unix crlf". Win32's "stdio"
969has a number of bugs/mis-features for perl IO which are somewhat
99366417 970C compiler vendor/version dependent. Using our own C<crlf> layer as
44a4342c 971the buffer avoids those issues and makes things more uniform.
972The C<crlf> layer provides CRLF to/from "\n" conversion as well as
973buffering.
974
975This release uses C<unix> as the bottom layer on Win32 and so still uses C
976compiler's numeric file descriptor routines. There is an experimental native
977C<win32> layer which is expected to be enhanced and should eventually replace
978the C<unix> layer.
979
980=item PERLIO_DEBUG
981
982If set to the name of a file or device then certain operations of PerlIO
983sub-system will be logged to that file (opened as append). Typical uses
984are UNIX:
985
986 PERLIO_DEBUG=/dev/tty perl script ...
987
988and Win32 approximate equivalent:
989
990 set PERLIO_DEBUG=CON
991 perl script ...
992
16537909 993
1e422769 994=item PERLLIB
995
996A colon-separated list of directories in which to look for Perl library
997files before looking in the standard library and the current directory.
998If PERL5LIB is defined, PERLLIB is not used.
999
1000=item PERL5DB
1001
1002The command used to load the debugger code. The default is:
1003
1004 BEGIN { require 'perl5db.pl' }
1005
19799a22 1006=item PERL5SHELL (specific to the Win32 port)
174c211a 1007
1008May be set to an alternative shell that perl must use internally for
ce1da67e 1009executing "backtick" commands or system(). Default is C<cmd.exe /x/c>
1010on WindowsNT and C<command.com /c> on Windows95. The value is considered
19799a22 1011to be space-separated. Precede any character that needs to be protected
ce1da67e 1012(like a space or backslash) with a backslash.
1013
1014Note that Perl doesn't use COMSPEC for this purpose because
1015COMSPEC has a high degree of variability among users, leading to
1016portability concerns. Besides, perl can use a shell that may not be
1017fit for interactive use, and setting COMSPEC to such a shell may
1018interfere with the proper functioning of other programs (which usually
1019look in COMSPEC to find a shell fit for interactive use).
174c211a 1020
1e422769 1021=item PERL_DEBUG_MSTATS
1022
67ce8856 1023Relevant only if perl is compiled with the malloc included with the perl
a3cb178b 1024distribution (that is, if C<perl -V:d_mymalloc> is 'define').
1025If set, this causes memory statistics to be dumped after execution. If set
1e422769 1026to an integer greater than one, also causes memory statistics to be dumped
1027after compilation.
1028
1029=item PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL
1030
1031Relevant only if your perl executable was built with B<-DDEBUGGING>,
1032this controls the behavior of global destruction of objects and other
64cea5fd 1033references. See L<perlhack/PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL> for more information.
a0d0e21e 1034
5d170f3a 1035=item PERL_ENCODING
1036
1037If using the C<encoding> pragma without an explicit encoding name, the
1038PERL_ENCODING environment variable is consulted for an encoding name.
1039
3d0ae7ba 1040=item PERL_ROOT (specific to the VMS port)
1041
1042A translation concealed rooted logical name that contains perl and the
1043logical device for the @INC path on VMS only. Other logical names that
44a4342c 1044affect perl on VMS include PERLSHR, PERL_ENV_TABLES, and
1045SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL but are optional and discussed further in
3d0ae7ba 1046L<perlvms> and in F<README.vms> in the Perl source distribution.
1047
1048=item SYS$LOGIN (specific to the VMS port)
1049
1050Used if chdir has no argument and HOME and LOGDIR are not set.
1051
a0d0e21e 1052=back
1e422769 1053
1054Perl also has environment variables that control how Perl handles data
1055specific to particular natural languages. See L<perllocale>.
1056
1057Apart from these, Perl uses no other environment variables, except
19799a22 1058to make them available to the program being executed, and to child
1059processes. However, programs running setuid would do well to execute
1e422769 1060the following lines before doing anything else, just to keep people
1061honest:
1062
19799a22 1063 $ENV{PATH} = '/bin:/usr/bin'; # or whatever you need
7bac28a0 1064 $ENV{SHELL} = '/bin/sh' if exists $ENV{SHELL};
c90c0ff4 1065 delete @ENV{qw(IFS CDPATH ENV BASH_ENV)};