}) {
# the eval already installed everything, nothing to do
}
-# We need pure-perl and we are running under -c
-# None of the END-block trickery will work, use a global scope guard instead,
-# as it is more than adequate in this situation
-# The whole thing is in an eval to prevent perl from parsing it in the
-# first place where none of this is needed
-#
-elsif ($^C) {
- eval <<'PP_IGD' or die $@;
-
- my $in_global_destruction;
-
- sub in_global_destruction () { $in_global_destruction }
-
- {
- package Devel::GlobalDestgruction::_MinusC::ScopeGuard;
- sub DESTROY { shift->[0]->() };
- }
-
- no warnings 'once';
- $Devel::GlobalDestgruction::_MinusC::guard = bless [sub {
- $in_global_destruction = 1;
- }], 'Devel::GlobalDestgruction::_MinusC::ScopeGuard';
-
- 1; # keep eval happy
-
-PP_IGD
-}
-# Not core nor XS
-# The whole thing is in an eval to prevent perl from parsing it in the
-# first place under perls where none of this is needed
-#
else {
- eval <<'PP_IGD' or die $@;
-
-# SpeedyCGI runs END blocks every cycle but somehow keeps object instances
-# hence DIAF
-die("The pure-perl version of @{[__PACKAGE__]} can not function correctly under CGI::SpeedyCGI. "
- . "Please ensure you have a working compiler, and reinstall @{[__PACKAGE__]} to enable the XS "
- . "codepath.\n"
-) if $CGI::SpeedyCGI::i_am_speedy;
-
-my ($in_global_destruction, $before_is_installed);
-
-sub in_global_destruction () { $in_global_destruction }
-
-# end_av trick suggested by liz++
-require B;
-my $add_endblock = sub {
- push @{ B::end_av()->object_2svref }, sub { $in_global_destruction = 1 };
-};
-
-# This block will fire towards the end of the program execution
-# Use it to inject an END block which is guaranteed to run last
-# (as long as something else doesn't inject yet another block in
-# the same manner afterwards, at which point it hardly matters
-# anyway)
-#
-END { $add_endblock->() }
-
-# threads do not execute the global ENDs (it would be stupid). However
-# one can register a new thread-local END from within a thread, and
-# achieve the same result. A logical place to do this would be CLONE, which
-# is claimed to run in the context of the new thread. However this does
-# not really seem to be the case - any END inserted in a CLONE is ignored :(
-# Hence blatantly hooking threads::create
-#
-if ($INC{'threads.pm'}) {
- require Scalar::Util;
-
- my $orig_create = threads->can('create');
- no warnings 'redefine';
-
- *threads::create = sub {
- my $class = shift;
- my $target = shift;
-
- unless ( (Scalar::Util::reftype($target)||'') eq 'CODE' ) {
- no strict 'refs';
- $target = \&{ caller() . "::$target" };
- }
-
- @_ = (
- $class,
- sub {
- # Perls compiled with THREADS_HAVE_PIDS do not copy end_av properly
- # between threads, so B::end_av ends up returning a B::SPECIAL and it
- # goes downhill from there
- # Install a noop END just to be on the safe side
- { local $@; eval 'END {}' }
- $add_endblock->();
- goto $target
- },
- @_,
- );
-
- goto $orig_create;
- };
-
- $before_is_installed = 1;
-}
-
-# just in case threads got loaded after us (silly)
-sub CLONE {
- unless ($before_is_installed) {
- require Carp;
- Carp::croak("You must load the 'threads' module before @{[ __PACKAGE__ ]}");
- }
-}
-
-1; # keep eval happy
-
-PP_IGD
-
+ require B;
+ eval 'sub in_global_destruction () { B::main_start()->isa(q[B::NULL]) }; 1'
+ or die $@;
}
1; # keep require happy