print "1..$last\n";
-use vars qw(&LC_ALL);
+sub LC_ALL ();
$a = 'abc %';
if (-x "/usr/bin/locale" && open(LOCALES, "/usr/bin/locale -a 2>/dev/null|")) {
while (<LOCALES>) {
+ # It seems that /usr/bin/locale steadfastly outputs 8 bit data, which
+ # ain't great when we're running this testPERL_UNICODE= so that utf8
+ # locales will cause all IO hadles to default to (assume) utf8
+ next unless utf8::valid($_);
chomp;
trylocale($_);
}
trylocale($_);
}
close(LOCALES);
+} elsif ($^O eq 'openbsd' && -e '/usr/share/locale') {
+
+ # OpenBSD doesn't have a locale executable, so reading /usr/share/locale
+ # is much easier and faster than the last resort method.
+
+ opendir(LOCALES, '/usr/share/locale');
+ while ($_ = readdir(LOCALES)) {
+ chomp;
+ trylocale($_);
+ }
+ close(LOCALES);
} else {
# This is going to be slow.
setlocale(LC_ALL, "C");
+if ($^O eq 'darwin') {
+ # Darwin 8/Mac OS X 10.4 has bad Basque locales: perl bug #35895,
+ # Apple bug ID# 4139653. It also has a problem in Byelorussian.
+ if ($Config{osvers} ge '8' and $Config{osvers} lt '9') {
+ debug "# Skipping eu_ES, be_BY locales -- buggy in Darwin\n";
+ @Locale = grep ! m/^(eu_ES|be_BY.CP1131$)/, @Locale;
+ }
+}
+
@Locale = sort @Locale;
debug "# Locales =\n";