use Config;
require './test.pl'; # for runperl()
-print "1..187\n";
+print "1..188\n";
my $test = 1;
sub test (&) {
}
} else {
# No fork(). Do it the hard way.
- my $cmdfile = "tcmd$$"; $cmdfile++ while -e $cmdfile;
- my $errfile = "terr$$"; $errfile++ while -e $errfile;
- my @tmpfiles = ($cmdfile, $errfile);
+ my $cmdfile = tempfile();
+ my $errfile = tempfile();
open CMD, ">$cmdfile"; print CMD $code; close CMD;
my $cmd = which_perl();
$cmd .= " -w $cmdfile 2>$errfile";
{ local $/; $output = join '', <PERL> }
close PERL;
} else {
- my $outfile = "tout$$"; $outfile++ while -e $outfile;
- push @tmpfiles, $outfile;
+ my $outfile = tempfile();
system "$cmd >$outfile";
{ local $/; open IN, $outfile; $output = <IN>; close IN }
}
if ($?) {
printf "not ok: exited with error code %04X\n", $?;
- $debugging or do { 1 while unlink @tmpfiles };
exit;
}
{ local $/; open IN, $errfile; $errors = <IN>; close IN }
- 1 while unlink @tmpfiles;
}
print $output;
print STDERR $errors;
test { $flag == 1 };
}
+# don't copy a stale lexical; crate a fresh undef one instead
+sub f {
+ my $x if $_[0];
+ sub { \$x }
+}
+
+{
+ f(1);
+ my $c1= f(0);
+ my $c2= f(0);
+
+ my $r1 = $c1->();
+ my $r2 = $c2->();
+ test { $r1 != $r2 };
+}