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  1. =head1 NAME
  2. perldelta - what's new for perl v5.6.x
  3. =head1 DESCRIPTION
  4. This document describes differences between the 5.005 release and the 5.6.1
  5. release.
  6. =head1 Summary of changes between 5.6.0 and 5.6.1
  7. This section contains a summary of the changes between the 5.6.0 release
  8. and the 5.6.1 release. More details about the changes mentioned here
  9. may be found in the F<Changes> files that accompany the Perl source
  10. distribution. See L<perlhack> for pointers to online resources where you
  11. can inspect the individual patches described by these changes.
  12. =head2 Security Issues
  13. suidperl will not run /bin/mail anymore, because some platforms have
  14. a /bin/mail that is vulnerable to buffer overflow attacks.
  15. Note that suidperl is neither built nor installed by default in
  16. any recent version of perl. Use of suidperl is highly discouraged.
  17. If you think you need it, try alternatives such as sudo first.
  18. See http://www.courtesan.com/sudo/.
  19. =head2 Core bug fixes
  20. This is not an exhaustive list. It is intended to cover only the
  21. significant user-visible changes.
  22. =over
  23. =item C<UNIVERSAL::isa()>
  24. A bug in the caching mechanism used by C<UNIVERSAL::isa()> that affected
  25. base.pm has been fixed. The bug has existed since the 5.005 releases,
  26. but wasn't tickled by base.pm in those releases.
  27. =item Memory leaks
  28. Various cases of memory leaks and attempts to access uninitialized memory
  29. have been cured. See L</"Known Problems"> below for further issues.
  30. =item Numeric conversions
  31. Numeric conversions did not recognize changes in the string value
  32. properly in certain circumstances.
  33. In other situations, large unsigned numbers (those above 2**31) could
  34. sometimes lose their unsignedness, causing bogus results in arithmetic
  35. operations.
  36. Integer modulus on large unsigned integers sometimes returned
  37. incorrect values.
  38. Perl 5.6.0 generated "not a number" warnings on certain conversions where
  39. previous versions didn't.
  40. These problems have all been rectified.
  41. Infinity is now recognized as a number.
  42. =item qw(a\\b)
  43. In Perl 5.6.0, qw(a\\b) produced a string with two backslashes instead
  44. of one, in a departure from the behavior in previous versions. The
  45. older behavior has been reinstated.
  46. =item caller()
  47. caller() could cause core dumps in certain situations. Carp was sometimes
  48. affected by this problem.
  49. =item Bugs in regular expressions
  50. Pattern matches on overloaded values are now handled correctly.
  51. Perl 5.6.0 parsed m/\x{ab}/ incorrectly, leading to spurious warnings.
  52. This has been corrected.
  53. The RE engine found in Perl 5.6.0 accidentally pessimised certain kinds
  54. of simple pattern matches. These are now handled better.
  55. Regular expression debug output (whether through C<use re 'debug'>
  56. or via C<-Dr>) now looks better.
  57. Multi-line matches like C<"a\nxb\n" =~ /(?!\A)x/m> were flawed. The
  58. bug has been fixed.
  59. Use of $& could trigger a core dump under some situations. This
  60. is now avoided.
  61. Match variables $1 et al., weren't being unset when a pattern match
  62. was backtracking, and the anomaly showed up inside C</...(?{ ... }).../>
  63. etc. These variables are now tracked correctly.
  64. pos() did not return the correct value within s///ge in earlier
  65. versions. This is now handled correctly.
  66. =item "slurp" mode
  67. readline() on files opened in "slurp" mode could return an extra "" at
  68. the end in certain situations. This has been corrected.
  69. =item Autovivification of symbolic references to special variables
  70. Autovivification of symbolic references of special variables described
  71. in L<perlvar> (as in C<${$num}>) was accidentally disabled. This works
  72. again now.
  73. =item Lexical warnings
  74. Lexical warnings now propagate correctly into C<eval "...">.
  75. C<use warnings qw(FATAL all)> did not work as intended. This has been
  76. corrected.
  77. Lexical warnings could leak into other scopes in some situations.
  78. This is now fixed.
  79. warnings::enabled() now reports the state of $^W correctly if the caller
  80. isn't using lexical warnings.
  81. =item Spurious warnings and errors
  82. Perl 5.6.0 could emit spurious warnings about redefinition of dl_error()
  83. when statically building extensions into perl. This has been corrected.
  84. "our" variables could result in bogus "Variable will not stay shared"
  85. warnings. This is now fixed.
  86. "our" variables of the same name declared in two sibling blocks
  87. resulted in bogus warnings about "redeclaration" of the variables.
  88. The problem has been corrected.
  89. =item glob()
  90. Compatibility of the builtin glob() with old csh-based glob has been
  91. improved with the addition of GLOB_ALPHASORT option. See C<File::Glob>.
  92. File::Glob::glob() has been renamed to File::Glob::bsd_glob()
  93. because the name clashes with the builtin glob(). The older
  94. name is still available for compatibility, but is deprecated.
  95. Spurious syntax errors generated in certain situations, when glob()
  96. caused File::Glob to be loaded for the first time, have been fixed.
  97. =item Tainting
  98. Some cases of inconsistent taint propagation (such as within hash
  99. values) have been fixed.
  100. The tainting behavior of sprintf() has been rationalized. It does
  101. not taint the result of floating point formats anymore, making the
  102. behavior consistent with that of string interpolation.
  103. =item sort()
  104. Arguments to sort() weren't being provided the right wantarray() context.
  105. The comparison block is now run in scalar context, and the arguments to
  106. be sorted are always provided list context.
  107. sort() is also fully reentrant, in the sense that the sort function
  108. can itself call sort(). This did not work reliably in previous releases.
  109. =item #line directives
  110. #line directives now work correctly when they appear at the very
  111. beginning of C<eval "...">.
  112. =item Subroutine prototypes
  113. The (\&) prototype now works properly.
  114. =item map()
  115. map() could get pathologically slow when the result list it generates
  116. is larger than the source list. The performance has been improved for
  117. common scenarios.
  118. =item Debugger
  119. Debugger exit code now reflects the script exit code.
  120. Condition C<"0"> in breakpoints is now treated correctly.
  121. The C<d> command now checks the line number.
  122. C<$.> is no longer corrupted by the debugger.
  123. All debugger output now correctly goes to the socket if RemotePort
  124. is set.
  125. =item PERL5OPT
  126. PERL5OPT can be set to more than one switch group. Previously,
  127. it used to be limited to one group of options only.
  128. =item chop()
  129. chop(@list) in list context returned the characters chopped in reverse
  130. order. This has been reversed to be in the right order.
  131. =item Unicode support
  132. Unicode support has seen a large number of incremental improvements,
  133. but continues to be highly experimental. It is not expected to be
  134. fully supported in the 5.6.x maintenance releases.
  135. substr(), join(), repeat(), reverse(), quotemeta() and string
  136. concatenation were all handling Unicode strings incorrectly in
  137. Perl 5.6.0. This has been corrected.
  138. Support for C<tr///CU> and C<tr///UC> etc., have been removed since
  139. we realized the interface is broken. For similar functionality,
  140. see L<perlfunc/pack>.
  141. The Unicode Character Database has been updated to version 3.0.1
  142. with additions made available to the public as of August 30, 2000.
  143. The Unicode character classes \p{Blank} and \p{SpacePerl} have been
  144. added. "Blank" is like C isblank(), that is, it contains only
  145. "horizontal whitespace" (the space character is, the newline isn't),
  146. and the "SpacePerl" is the Unicode equivalent of C<\s> (\p{Space}
  147. isn't, since that includes the vertical tabulator character, whereas
  148. C<\s> doesn't.)
  149. If you are experimenting with Unicode support in perl, the development
  150. versions of Perl may have more to offer. In particular, I/O layers
  151. are now available in the development track, but not in the maintenance
  152. track, primarily to do backward compatibility issues. Unicode support
  153. is also evolving rapidly on a daily basis in the development track--the
  154. maintenance track only reflects the most conservative of these changes.
  155. =item 64-bit support
  156. Support for 64-bit platforms has been improved, but continues to be
  157. experimental. The level of support varies greatly among platforms.
  158. =item Compiler
  159. The B Compiler and its various backends have had many incremental
  160. improvements, but they continue to remain highly experimental. Use in
  161. production environments is discouraged.
  162. The perlcc tool has been rewritten so that the user interface is much
  163. more like that of a C compiler.
  164. The perlbc tools has been removed. Use C<perlcc -B> instead.
  165. =item Lvalue subroutines
  166. There have been various bugfixes to support lvalue subroutines better.
  167. However, the feature still remains experimental.
  168. =item IO::Socket
  169. IO::Socket::INET failed to open the specified port if the service
  170. name was not known. It now correctly uses the supplied port number
  171. as is.
  172. =item File::Find
  173. File::Find now chdir()s correctly when chasing symbolic links.
  174. =item xsubpp
  175. xsubpp now tolerates embedded POD sections.
  176. =item C<no Module;>
  177. C<no Module;> does not produce an error even if Module does not have an
  178. unimport() method. This parallels the behavior of C<use> vis-a-vis
  179. C<import>.
  180. =item Tests
  181. A large number of tests have been added.
  182. =back
  183. =head2 Core features
  184. untie() will now call an UNTIE() hook if it exists. See L<perltie>
  185. for details.
  186. The C<-DT> command line switch outputs copious tokenizing information.
  187. See L<perlrun>.
  188. Arrays are now always interpolated in double-quotish strings. Previously,
  189. C<"[email protected]"> used to be a fatal error at compile time, if an array
  190. C<@bar> was not used or declared. This transitional behavior was
  191. intended to help migrate perl4 code, and is deemed to be no longer useful.
  192. See L</"Arrays now always interpolate into double-quoted strings">.
  193. keys(), each(), pop(), push(), shift(), splice() and unshift()
  194. can all be overridden now.
  195. C<my __PACKAGE__ $obj> now does the expected thing.
  196. =head2 Configuration issues
  197. On some systems (IRIX and Solaris among them) the system malloc is demonstrably
  198. better. While the defaults haven't been changed in order to retain binary
  199. compatibility with earlier releases, you may be better off building perl
  200. with C<Configure -Uusemymalloc ...> as discussed in the F<INSTALL> file.
  201. C<Configure> has been enhanced in various ways:
  202. =over
  203. =item *
  204. Minimizes use of temporary files.
  205. =item *
  206. By default, does not link perl with libraries not used by it, such as
  207. the various dbm libraries. SunOS 4.x hints preserve behavior on that
  208. platform.
  209. =item *
  210. Support for pdp11-style memory models has been removed due to obsolescence.
  211. =item *
  212. Building outside the source tree is supported on systems that have
  213. symbolic links. This is done by running
  214. sh /path/to/source/Configure -Dmksymlinks ...
  215. make all test install
  216. in a directory other than the perl source directory. See F<INSTALL>.
  217. =item *
  218. C<Configure -S> can be run non-interactively.
  219. =back
  220. =head2 Documentation
  221. README.aix, README.solaris and README.macos have been added. README.posix-bc
  222. has been renamed to README.bs2000. These are installed as L<perlaix>,
  223. L<perlsolaris>, L<perlmacos>, and L<perlbs2000> respectively.
  224. The following pod documents are brand new:
  225. perlclib Internal replacements for standard C library functions
  226. perldebtut Perl debugging tutorial
  227. perlebcdic Considerations for running Perl on EBCDIC platforms
  228. perlnewmod Perl modules: preparing a new module for distribution
  229. perlrequick Perl regular expressions quick start
  230. perlretut Perl regular expressions tutorial
  231. perlutil utilities packaged with the Perl distribution
  232. The F<INSTALL> file has been expanded to cover various issues, such as
  233. 64-bit support.
  234. A longer list of contributors has been added to the source distribution.
  235. See the file C<AUTHORS>.
  236. Numerous other changes have been made to the included documentation and FAQs.
  237. =head2 Bundled modules
  238. The following modules have been added.
  239. =over
  240. =item B::Concise
  241. Walks Perl syntax tree, printing concise info about ops. See L<B::Concise>.
  242. =item File::Temp
  243. Returns name and handle of a temporary file safely. See L<File::Temp>.
  244. =item Pod::LaTeX
  245. Converts Pod data to formatted LaTeX. See L<Pod::LaTeX>.
  246. =item Pod::Text::Overstrike
  247. Converts POD data to formatted overstrike text. See L<Pod::Text::Overstrike>.
  248. =back
  249. The following modules have been upgraded.
  250. =over
  251. =item CGI
  252. CGI v2.752 is now included.
  253. =item CPAN
  254. CPAN v1.59_54 is now included.
  255. =item Class::Struct
  256. Various bugfixes have been added.
  257. =item DB_File
  258. DB_File v1.75 supports newer Berkeley DB versions, among other
  259. improvements.
  260. =item Devel::Peek
  261. Devel::Peek has been enhanced to support dumping of memory statistics,
  262. when perl is built with the included malloc().
  263. =item File::Find
  264. File::Find now supports pre and post-processing of the files in order
  265. to sort() them, etc.
  266. =item Getopt::Long
  267. Getopt::Long v2.25 is included.
  268. =item IO::Poll
  269. Various bug fixes have been included.
  270. =item IPC::Open3
  271. IPC::Open3 allows use of numeric file descriptors.
  272. =item Math::BigFloat
  273. The fmod() function supports modulus operations. Various bug fixes
  274. have also been included.
  275. =item Math::Complex
  276. Math::Complex handles inf, NaN etc., better.
  277. =item Net::Ping
  278. ping() could fail on odd number of data bytes, and when the echo service
  279. isn't running. This has been corrected.
  280. =item Opcode
  281. A memory leak has been fixed.
  282. =item Pod::Parser
  283. Version 1.13 of the Pod::Parser suite is included.
  284. =item Pod::Text
  285. Pod::Text and related modules have been upgraded to the versions
  286. in podlators suite v2.08.
  287. =item SDBM_File
  288. On dosish platforms, some keys went missing because of lack of support for
  289. files with "holes". A workaround for the problem has been added.
  290. =item Sys::Syslog
  291. Various bug fixes have been included.
  292. =item Tie::RefHash
  293. Now supports Tie::RefHash::Nestable to automagically tie hashref values.
  294. =item Tie::SubstrHash
  295. Various bug fixes have been included.
  296. =back
  297. =head2 Platform-specific improvements
  298. The following new ports are now available.
  299. =over
  300. =item NCR MP-RAS
  301. =item NonStop-UX
  302. =back
  303. Perl now builds under Amdahl UTS.
  304. Perl has also been verified to build under Amiga OS.
  305. Support for EPOC has been much improved. See README.epoc.
  306. Building perl with -Duseithreads or -Duse5005threads now works
  307. under HP-UX 10.20 (previously it only worked under 10.30 or later).
  308. You will need a thread library package installed. See README.hpux.
  309. Long doubles should now work under Linux.
  310. MacOS Classic is now supported in the mainstream source package.
  311. See README.macos.
  312. Support for MPE/iX has been updated. See README.mpeix.
  313. Support for OS/2 has been improved. See C<os2/Changes> and README.os2.
  314. Dynamic loading on z/OS (formerly OS/390) has been improved. See
  315. README.os390.
  316. Support for VMS has seen many incremental improvements, including
  317. better support for operators like backticks and system(), and better
  318. %ENV handling. See C<README.vms> and L<perlvms>.
  319. Support for Stratus VOS has been improved. See C<vos/Changes> and README.vos.
  320. Support for Windows has been improved.
  321. =over
  322. =item *
  323. fork() emulation has been improved in various ways, but still continues
  324. to be experimental. See L<perlfork> for known bugs and caveats.
  325. =item *
  326. %SIG has been enabled under USE_ITHREADS, but its use is completely
  327. unsupported under all configurations.
  328. =item *
  329. Borland C++ v5.5 is now a supported compiler that can build Perl.
  330. However, the generated binaries continue to be incompatible with those
  331. generated by the other supported compilers (GCC and Visual C++).
  332. =item *
  333. Non-blocking waits for child processes (or pseudo-processes) are
  334. supported via C<waitpid($pid, &POSIX::WNOHANG)>.
  335. =item *
  336. A memory leak in accept() has been fixed.
  337. =item *
  338. wait(), waitpid() and backticks now return the correct exit status under
  339. Windows 9x.
  340. =item *
  341. Trailing new %ENV entries weren't propagated to child processes. This
  342. is now fixed.
  343. =item *
  344. Current directory entries in %ENV are now correctly propagated to child
  345. processes.
  346. =item *
  347. Duping socket handles with open(F, ">&MYSOCK") now works under Windows 9x.
  348. =item *
  349. The makefiles now provide a single switch to bulk-enable all the features
  350. enabled in ActiveState ActivePerl (a popular binary distribution).
  351. =item *
  352. Win32::GetCwd() correctly returns C:\ instead of C: when at the drive root.
  353. Other bugs in chdir() and Cwd::cwd() have also been fixed.
  354. =item *
  355. fork() correctly returns undef and sets EAGAIN when it runs out of
  356. pseudo-process handles.
  357. =item *
  358. ExtUtils::MakeMaker now uses $ENV{LIB} to search for libraries.
  359. =item *
  360. UNC path handling is better when perl is built to support fork().
  361. =item *
  362. A handle leak in socket handling has been fixed.
  363. =item *
  364. send() works from within a pseudo-process.
  365. =back
  366. Unless specifically qualified otherwise, the remainder of this document
  367. covers changes between the 5.005 and 5.6.0 releases.
  368. =head1 Core Enhancements
  369. =head2 Interpreter cloning, threads, and concurrency
  370. Perl 5.6.0 introduces the beginnings of support for running multiple
  371. interpreters concurrently in different threads. In conjunction with
  372. the perl_clone() API call, which can be used to selectively duplicate
  373. the state of any given interpreter, it is possible to compile a
  374. piece of code once in an interpreter, clone that interpreter
  375. one or more times, and run all the resulting interpreters in distinct
  376. threads.
  377. On the Windows platform, this feature is used to emulate fork() at the
  378. interpreter level. See L<perlfork> for details about that.
  379. This feature is still in evolution. It is eventually meant to be used
  380. to selectively clone a subroutine and data reachable from that
  381. subroutine in a separate interpreter and run the cloned subroutine
  382. in a separate thread. Since there is no shared data between the
  383. interpreters, little or no locking will be needed (unless parts of
  384. the symbol table are explicitly shared). This is obviously intended
  385. to be an easy-to-use replacement for the existing threads support.
  386. Support for cloning interpreters and interpreter concurrency can be
  387. enabled using the -Dusethreads Configure option (see win32/Makefile for
  388. how to enable it on Windows.) The resulting perl executable will be
  389. functionally identical to one that was built with -Dmultiplicity, but
  390. the perl_clone() API call will only be available in the former.
  391. -Dusethreads enables the cpp macro USE_ITHREADS by default, which in turn
  392. enables Perl source code changes that provide a clear separation between
  393. the op tree and the data it operates with. The former is immutable, and
  394. can therefore be shared between an interpreter and all of its clones,
  395. while the latter is considered local to each interpreter, and is therefore
  396. copied for each clone.
  397. Note that building Perl with the -Dusemultiplicity Configure option
  398. is adequate if you wish to run multiple B<independent> interpreters
  399. concurrently in different threads. -Dusethreads only provides the
  400. additional functionality of the perl_clone() API call and other
  401. support for running B<cloned> interpreters concurrently.
  402. NOTE: This is an experimental feature. Implementation details are
  403. subject to change.
  404. =head2 Lexically scoped warning categories
  405. You can now control the granularity of warnings emitted by perl at a finer
  406. level using the C<use warnings> pragma. L<warnings> and L<perllexwarn>
  407. have copious documentation on this feature.
  408. =head2 Unicode and UTF-8 support
  409. Perl now uses UTF-8 as its internal representation for character
  410. strings. The C<utf8> and C<bytes> pragmas are used to control this support
  411. in the current lexical scope. See L<perlunicode>, L<utf8> and L<bytes> for
  412. more information.
  413. This feature is expected to evolve quickly to support some form of I/O
  414. disciplines that can be used to specify the kind of input and output data
  415. (bytes or characters). Until that happens, additional modules from CPAN
  416. will be needed to complete the toolkit for dealing with Unicode.
  417. NOTE: This should be considered an experimental feature. Implementation
  418. details are subject to change.
  419. =head2 Support for interpolating named characters
  420. The new C<\N> escape interpolates named characters within strings.
  421. For example, C<"Hi! \N{WHITE SMILING FACE}"> evaluates to a string
  422. with a Unicode smiley face at the end.
  423. =head2 "our" declarations
  424. An "our" declaration introduces a value that can be best understood
  425. as a lexically scoped symbolic alias to a global variable in the
  426. package that was current where the variable was declared. This is
  427. mostly useful as an alternative to the C<vars> pragma, but also provides
  428. the opportunity to introduce typing and other attributes for such
  429. variables. See L<perlfunc/our>.
  430. =head2 Support for strings represented as a vector of ordinals
  431. Literals of the form C<v1.2.3.4> are now parsed as a string composed
  432. of characters with the specified ordinals. This is an alternative, more
  433. readable way to construct (possibly Unicode) strings instead of
  434. interpolating characters, as in C<"\x{1}\x{2}\x{3}\x{4}">. The leading
  435. C<v> may be omitted if there are more than two ordinals, so C<1.2.3> is
  436. parsed the same as C<v1.2.3>.
  437. Strings written in this form are also useful to represent version "numbers".
  438. It is easy to compare such version "numbers" (which are really just plain
  439. strings) using any of the usual string comparison operators C<eq>, C<ne>,
  440. C<lt>, C<gt>, etc., or perform bitwise string operations on them using C<|>,
  441. C<&>, etc.
  442. In conjunction with the new C<$^V> magic variable (which contains
  443. the perl version as a string), such literals can be used as a readable way
  444. to check if you're running a particular version of Perl:
  445. # this will parse in older versions of Perl also
  446. if ($^V and $^V gt v5.6.0) {
  447. # new features supported
  448. }
  449. C<require> and C<use> also have some special magic to support such literals.
  450. They will be interpreted as a version rather than as a module name:
  451. require v5.6.0; # croak if $^V lt v5.6.0
  452. use v5.6.0; # same, but croaks at compile-time
  453. Alternatively, the C<v> may be omitted if there is more than one dot:
  454. require 5.6.0;
  455. use 5.6.0;
  456. Also, C<sprintf> and C<printf> support the Perl-specific format flag C<%v>
  457. to print ordinals of characters in arbitrary strings:
  458. printf "v%vd", $^V; # prints current version, such as "v5.5.650"
  459. printf "%*vX", ":", $addr; # formats IPv6 address
  460. printf "%*vb", " ", $bits; # displays bitstring
  461. See L<perldata/"Scalar value constructors"> for additional information.
  462. =head2 Improved Perl version numbering system
  463. Beginning with Perl version 5.6.0, the version number convention has been
  464. changed to a "dotted integer" scheme that is more commonly found in open
  465. source projects.
  466. Maintenance versions of v5.6.0 will be released as v5.6.1, v5.6.2 etc.
  467. The next development series following v5.6.0 will be numbered v5.7.x,
  468. beginning with v5.7.0, and the next major production release following
  469. v5.6.0 will be v5.8.0.
  470. The English module now sets $PERL_VERSION to $^V (a string value) rather
  471. than C<$]> (a numeric value). (This is a potential incompatibility.
  472. Send us a report via perlbug if you are affected by this.)
  473. The v1.2.3 syntax is also now legal in Perl.
  474. See L<Support for strings represented as a vector of ordinals> for more on that.
  475. To cope with the new versioning system's use of at least three significant
  476. digits for each version component, the method used for incrementing the
  477. subversion number has also changed slightly. We assume that versions older
  478. than v5.6.0 have been incrementing the subversion component in multiples of
  479. 10. Versions after v5.6.0 will increment them by 1. Thus, using the new
  480. notation, 5.005_03 is the "same" as v5.5.30, and the first maintenance
  481. version following v5.6.0 will be v5.6.1 (which should be read as being
  482. equivalent to a floating point value of 5.006_001 in the older format,
  483. stored in C<$]>).
  484. =head2 New syntax for declaring subroutine attributes
  485. Formerly, if you wanted to mark a subroutine as being a method call or
  486. as requiring an automatic lock() when it is entered, you had to declare
  487. that with a C<use attrs> pragma in the body of the subroutine.
  488. That can now be accomplished with declaration syntax, like this:
  489. sub mymethod : locked method ;
  490. ...
  491. sub mymethod : locked method {
  492. ...
  493. }
  494. sub othermethod :locked :method ;
  495. ...
  496. sub othermethod :locked :method {
  497. ...
  498. }
  499. (Note how only the first C<:> is mandatory, and whitespace surrounding
  500. the C<:> is optional.)
  501. F<AutoSplit.pm> and F<SelfLoader.pm> have been updated to keep the attributes
  502. with the stubs they provide. See L<attributes>.
  503. =head2 File and directory handles can be autovivified
  504. Similar to how constructs such as C<< $x->[0] >> autovivify a reference,
  505. handle constructors (open(), opendir(), pipe(), socketpair(), sysopen(),
  506. socket(), and accept()) now autovivify a file or directory handle
  507. if the handle passed to them is an uninitialized scalar variable. This
  508. allows the constructs such as C<open(my $fh, ...)> and C<open(local $fh,...)>
  509. to be used to create filehandles that will conveniently be closed
  510. automatically when the scope ends, provided there are no other references
  511. to them. This largely eliminates the need for typeglobs when opening
  512. filehandles that must be passed around, as in the following example:
  513. sub myopen {
  514. open my $fh, "@_"
  515. or die "Can't open '@_': $!";
  516. return $fh;
  517. }
  518. {
  519. my $f = myopen("</etc/motd");
  520. print <$f>;
  521. # $f implicitly closed here
  522. }
  523. =head2 open() with more than two arguments
  524. If open() is passed three arguments instead of two, the second argument
  525. is used as the mode and the third argument is taken to be the file name.
  526. This is primarily useful for protecting against unintended magic behavior
  527. of the traditional two-argument form. See L<perlfunc/open>.
  528. =head2 64-bit support
  529. Any platform that has 64-bit integers either
  530. (1) natively as longs or ints
  531. (2) via special compiler flags
  532. (3) using long long or int64_t
  533. is able to use "quads" (64-bit integers) as follows:
  534. =over 4
  535. =item *
  536. constants (decimal, hexadecimal, octal, binary) in the code
  537. =item *
  538. arguments to oct() and hex()
  539. =item *
  540. arguments to print(), printf() and sprintf() (flag prefixes ll, L, q)
  541. =item *
  542. printed as such
  543. =item *
  544. pack() and unpack() "q" and "Q" formats
  545. =item *
  546. in basic arithmetics: + - * / % (NOTE: operating close to the limits
  547. of the integer values may produce surprising results)
  548. =item *
  549. in bit arithmetics: & | ^ ~ << >> (NOTE: these used to be forced
  550. to be 32 bits wide but now operate on the full native width.)
  551. =item *
  552. vec()
  553. =back
  554. Note that unless you have the case (a) you will have to configure
  555. and compile Perl using the -Duse64bitint Configure flag.
  556. NOTE: The Configure flags -Duselonglong and -Duse64bits have been
  557. deprecated. Use -Duse64bitint instead.
  558. There are actually two modes of 64-bitness: the first one is achieved
  559. using Configure -Duse64bitint and the second one using Configure
  560. -Duse64bitall. The difference is that the first one is minimal and
  561. the second one maximal. The first works in more places than the second.
  562. The C<use64bitint> does only as much as is required to get 64-bit
  563. integers into Perl (this may mean, for example, using "long longs")
  564. while your memory may still be limited to 2 gigabytes (because your
  565. pointers could still be 32-bit). Note that the name C<64bitint> does
  566. not imply that your C compiler will be using 64-bit C<int>s (it might,
  567. but it doesn't have to): the C<use64bitint> means that you will be
  568. able to have 64 bits wide scalar values.
  569. The C<use64bitall> goes all the way by attempting to switch also
  570. integers (if it can), longs (and pointers) to being 64-bit. This may
  571. create an even more binary incompatible Perl than -Duse64bitint: the
  572. resulting executable may not run at all in a 32-bit box, or you may
  573. have to reboot/reconfigure/rebuild your operating system to be 64-bit
  574. aware.
  575. Natively 64-bit systems like Alpha and Cray need neither -Duse64bitint
  576. nor -Duse64bitall.
  577. Last but not least: note that due to Perl's habit of always using
  578. floating point numbers, the quads are still not true integers.
  579. When quads overflow their limits (0...18_446_744_073_709_551_615 unsigned,
  580. -9_223_372_036_854_775_808...9_223_372_036_854_775_807 signed), they
  581. are silently promoted to floating point numbers, after which they will
  582. start losing precision (in their lower digits).
  583. NOTE: 64-bit support is still experimental on most platforms.
  584. Existing support only covers the LP64 data model. In particular, the
  585. LLP64 data model is not yet supported. 64-bit libraries and system
  586. APIs on many platforms have not stabilized--your mileage may vary.
  587. =head2 Large file support
  588. If you have filesystems that support "large files" (files larger than
  589. 2 gigabytes), you may now also be able to create and access them from
  590. Perl.
  591. NOTE: The default action is to enable large file support, if
  592. available on the platform.
  593. If the large file support is on, and you have a Fcntl constant
  594. O_LARGEFILE, the O_LARGEFILE is automatically added to the flags
  595. of sysopen().
  596. Beware that unless your filesystem also supports "sparse files" seeking
  597. to umpteen petabytes may be inadvisable.
  598. Note that in addition to requiring a proper file system to do large
  599. files you may also need to adjust your per-process (or your
  600. per-system, or per-process-group, or per-user-group) maximum filesize
  601. limits before running Perl scripts that try to handle large files,
  602. especially if you intend to write such files.
  603. Finally, in addition to your process/process group maximum filesize
  604. limits, you may have quota limits on your filesystems that stop you
  605. (your user id or your user group id) from using large files.
  606. Adjusting your process/user/group/file system/operating system limits
  607. is outside the scope of Perl core language. For process limits, you
  608. may try increasing the limits using your shell's limits/limit/ulimit
  609. command before running Perl. The BSD::Resource extension (not
  610. included with the standard Perl distribution) may also be of use, it
  611. offers the getrlimit/setrlimit interface that can be used to adjust
  612. process resource usage limits, including the maximum filesize limit.
  613. =head2 Long doubles
  614. In some systems you may be able to use long doubles to enhance the
  615. range and precision of your double precision floating point numbers
  616. (that is, Perl's numbers). Use Configure -Duselongdouble to enable
  617. this support (if it is available).
  618. =head2 "more bits"
  619. You can "Configure -Dusemorebits" to turn on both the 64-bit support
  620. and the long double support.
  621. =head2 Enhanced support for sort() subroutines
  622. Perl subroutines with a prototype of C<($$)>, and XSUBs in general, can
  623. now be used as sort subroutines. In either case, the two elements to
  624. be compared are passed as normal parameters in @_. See L<perlfunc/sort>.
  625. For unprototyped sort subroutines, the historical behavior of passing
  626. the elements to be compared as the global variables $a and $b remains
  627. unchanged.
  628. =head2 C<sort $coderef @foo> allowed
  629. sort() did not accept a subroutine reference as the comparison
  630. function in earlier versions. This is now permitted.
  631. =head2 File globbing implemented internally
  632. Perl now uses the File::Glob implementation of the glob() operator
  633. automatically. This avoids using an external csh process and the
  634. problems associated with it.
  635. NOTE: This is currently an experimental feature. Interfaces and
  636. implementation are subject to change.
  637. =head2 Support for CHECK blocks
  638. In addition to C<BEGIN>, C<INIT>, C<END>, C<DESTROY> and C<AUTOLOAD>,
  639. subroutines named C<CHECK> are now special. These are queued up during
  640. compilation and behave similar to END blocks, except they are called at
  641. the end of compilation rather than at the end of execution. They cannot
  642. be called directly.
  643. =head2 POSIX character class syntax [: :] supported
  644. For example to match alphabetic characters use /[[:alpha:]]/.
  645. See L<perlre> for details.
  646. =head2 Better pseudo-random number generator
  647. In 5.005_0x and earlier, perl's rand() function used the C library
  648. rand(3) function. As of 5.005_52, Configure tests for drand48(),
  649. random(), and rand() (in that order) and picks the first one it finds.
  650. These changes should result in better random numbers from rand().
  651. =head2 Improved C<qw//> operator
  652. The C<qw//> operator is now evaluated at compile time into a true list
  653. instead of being replaced with a run time call to C<split()>. This
  654. removes the confusing misbehaviour of C<qw//> in scalar context, which
  655. had inherited that behaviour from split().
  656. Thus:
  657. $foo = ($bar) = qw(a b c); print "$foo|$bar\n";
  658. now correctly prints "3|a", instead of "2|a".
  659. =head2 Better worst-case behavior of hashes
  660. Small changes in the hashing algorithm have been implemented in
  661. order to improve the distribution of lower order bits in the
  662. hashed value. This is expected to yield better performance on
  663. keys that are repeated sequences.
  664. =head2 pack() format 'Z' supported
  665. The new format type 'Z' is useful for packing and unpacking null-terminated
  666. strings. See L<perlfunc/"pack">.
  667. =head2 pack() format modifier '!' supported
  668. The new format type modifier '!' is useful for packing and unpacking
  669. native shorts, ints, and longs. See L<perlfunc/"pack">.
  670. =head2 pack() and unpack() support counted strings
  671. The template character '/' can be used to specify a counted string
  672. type to be packed or unpacked. See L<perlfunc/"pack">.
  673. =head2 Comments in pack() templates
  674. The '#' character in a template introduces a comment up to
  675. end of the line. This facilitates documentation of pack()
  676. templates.
  677. =head2 Weak references
  678. In previous versions of Perl, you couldn't cache objects so as
  679. to allow them to be deleted if the last reference from outside
  680. the cache is deleted. The reference in the cache would hold a
  681. reference count on the object and the objects would never be
  682. destroyed.
  683. Another familiar problem is with circular references. When an
  684. object references itself, its reference count would never go
  685. down to zero, and it would not get destroyed until the program
  686. is about to exit.
  687. Weak references solve this by allowing you to "weaken" any
  688. reference, that is, make it not count towards the reference count.
  689. When the last non-weak reference to an object is deleted, the object
  690. is destroyed and all the weak references to the object are
  691. automatically undef-ed.
  692. To use this feature, you need the WeakRef package from CPAN, which
  693. contains additional documentation.
  694. NOTE: This is an experimental feature. Details are subject to change.
  695. =head2 Binary numbers supported
  696. Binary numbers are now supported as literals, in s?printf formats, and
  697. C<oct()>:
  698. $answer = 0b101010;
  699. printf "The answer is: %b\n", oct("0b101010");
  700. =head2 Lvalue subroutines
  701. Subroutines can now return modifiable lvalues.
  702. See L<perlsub/"Lvalue subroutines">.
  703. NOTE: This is an experimental feature. Details are subject to change.
  704. =head2 Some arrows may be omitted in calls through references
  705. Perl now allows the arrow to be omitted in many constructs
  706. involving subroutine calls through references. For example,
  707. C<< $foo[10]->('foo') >> may now be written C<$foo[10]('foo')>.
  708. This is rather similar to how the arrow may be omitted from
  709. C<< $foo[10]->{'foo'} >>. Note however, that the arrow is still
  710. required for C<< foo(10)->('bar') >>.
  711. =head2 Boolean assignment operators are legal lvalues
  712. Constructs such as C<($a ||= 2) += 1> are now allowed.
  713. =head2 exists() is supported on subroutine names
  714. The exists() builtin now works on subroutine names. A subroutine
  715. is considered to exist if it has been declared (even if implicitly).
  716. See L<perlfunc/exists> for examples.
  717. =head2 exists() and delete() are supported on array elements
  718. The exists() and delete() builtins now work on simple arrays as well.
  719. The behavior is similar to that on hash elements.
  720. exists() can be used to check whether an array element has been
  721. initialized. This avoids autovivifying array elements that don't exist.
  722. If the array is tied, the EXISTS() method in the corresponding tied
  723. package will be invoked.
  724. delete() may be used to remove an element from the array and return
  725. it. The array element at that position returns to its uninitialized
  726. state, so that testing for the same element with exists() will return
  727. false. If the element happens to be the one at the end, the size of
  728. the array also shrinks up to the highest element that tests true for
  729. exists(), or 0 if none such is found. If the array is tied, the DELETE()
  730. method in the corresponding tied package will be invoked.
  731. See L<perlfunc/exists> and L<perlfunc/delete> for examples.
  732. =head2 Pseudo-hashes work better
  733. Dereferencing some types of reference values in a pseudo-hash,
  734. such as C<< $ph->{foo}[1] >>, was accidentally disallowed. This has
  735. been corrected.
  736. When applied to a pseudo-hash element, exists() now reports whether
  737. the specified value exists, not merely if the key is valid.
  738. delete() now works on pseudo-hashes. When given a pseudo-hash element
  739. or slice it deletes the values corresponding to the keys (but not the keys
  740. themselves). See L<perlref/"Pseudo-hashes: Using an array as a hash">.
  741. Pseudo-hash slices with constant keys are now optimized to array lookups
  742. at compile-time.
  743. List assignments to pseudo-hash slices are now supported.
  744. The C<fields> pragma now provides ways to create pseudo-hashes, via
  745. fields::new() and fields::phash(). See L<fields>.
  746. NOTE: The pseudo-hash data type continues to be experimental.
  747. Limiting oneself to the interface elements provided by the
  748. fields pragma will provide protection from any future changes.
  749. =head2 Automatic flushing of output buffers
  750. fork(), exec(), system(), qx//, and pipe open()s now flush buffers
  751. of all files opened for output when the operation was attempted. This
  752. mostly eliminates confusing buffering mishaps suffered by users unaware
  753. of how Perl internally handles I/O.
  754. This is not supported on some platforms like Solaris where a suitably
  755. correct implementation of fflush(NULL) isn't available.
  756. =head2 Better diagnostics on meaningless filehandle operations
  757. Constructs such as C<< open(<FH>) >> and C<< close(<FH>) >>
  758. are compile time errors. Attempting to read from filehandles that
  759. were opened only for writing will now produce warnings (just as
  760. writing to read-only filehandles does).
  761. =head2 Where possible, buffered data discarded from duped input filehandle
  762. C<< open(NEW, "<&OLD") >> now attempts to discard any data that
  763. was previously read and buffered in C<OLD> before duping the handle.
  764. On platforms where doing this is allowed, the next read operation
  765. on C<NEW> will return the same data as the corresponding operation
  766. on C<OLD>. Formerly, it would have returned the data from the start
  767. of the following disk block instead.
  768. =head2 eof() has the same old magic as <>
  769. C<eof()> would return true if no attempt to read from C<< <> >> had
  770. yet been made. C<eof()> has been changed to have a little magic of its
  771. own, it now opens the C<< <> >> files.
  772. =head2 binmode() can be used to set :crlf and :raw modes
  773. binmode() now accepts a second argument that specifies a discipline
  774. for the handle in question. The two pseudo-disciplines ":raw" and
  775. ":crlf" are currently supported on DOS-derivative platforms.
  776. See L<perlfunc/"binmode"> and L<open>.
  777. =head2 C<-T> filetest recognizes UTF-8 encoded files as "text"
  778. The algorithm used for the C<-T> filetest has been enhanced to
  779. correctly identify UTF-8 content as "text".
  780. =head2 system(), backticks and pipe open now reflect exec() failure
  781. On Unix and similar platforms, system(), qx() and open(FOO, "cmd |")
  782. etc., are implemented via fork() and exec(). When the underlying
  783. exec() fails, earlier versions did not report the error properly,
  784. since the exec() happened to be in a different process.
  785. The child process now communicates with the parent about the
  786. error in launching the external command, which allows these
  787. constructs to return with their usual error value and set $!.
  788. =head2 Improved diagnostics
  789. Line numbers are no longer suppressed (under most likely circumstances)
  790. during the global destruction phase.
  791. Diagnostics emitted from code running in threads other than the main
  792. thread are now accompanied by the thread ID.
  793. Embedded null characters in diagnostics now actually show up. They
  794. used to truncate the message in prior versions.
  795. $foo::a and $foo::b are now exempt from "possible typo" warnings only
  796. if sort() is encountered in package C<foo>.
  797. Unrecognized alphabetic escapes encountered when parsing quote
  798. constructs now generate a warning, since they may take on new
  799. semantics in later versions of Perl.
  800. Many diagnostics now report the internal operation in which the warning
  801. was provoked, like so:
  802. Use of uninitialized value in concatenation (.) at (eval 1) line 1.
  803. Use of uninitialized value in print at (eval 1) line 1.
  804. Diagnostics that occur within eval may also report the file and line
  805. number where the eval is located, in addition to the eval sequence
  806. number and the line number within the evaluated text itself. For
  807. example:
  808. Not enough arguments for scalar at (eval 4)[newlib/perl5db.pl:1411] line 2, at EOF
  809. =head2 Diagnostics follow STDERR
  810. Diagnostic output now goes to whichever file the C<STDERR> handle
  811. is pointing at, instead of always going to the underlying C runtime
  812. library's C<stderr>.
  813. =head2 More consistent close-on-exec behavior
  814. On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on filehandles, the
  815. flag is now set for any handles created by pipe(), socketpair(),
  816. socket(), and accept(), if that is warranted by the value of $^F
  817. that may be in effect. Earlier versions neglected to set the flag
  818. for handles created with these operators. See L<perlfunc/pipe>,
  819. L<perlfunc/socketpair>, L<perlfunc/socket>, L<perlfunc/accept>,
  820. and L<perlvar/$^F>.
  821. =head2 syswrite() ease-of-use
  822. The length argument of C<syswrite()> has become optional.
  823. =head2 Better syntax checks on parenthesized unary operators
  824. Expressions such as:
  825. print defined(&foo,&bar,&baz);
  826. print uc("foo","bar","baz");
  827. undef($foo,&bar);
  828. used to be accidentally allowed in earlier versions, and produced
  829. unpredictable behaviour. Some produced ancillary warnings
  830. when used in this way; others silently did the wrong thing.
  831. The parenthesized forms of most unary operators that expect a single
  832. argument now ensure that they are not called with more than one
  833. argument, making the cases shown above syntax errors. The usual
  834. behaviour of:
  835. print defined &foo, &bar, &baz;
  836. print uc "foo", "bar", "baz";
  837. undef $foo, &bar;
  838. remains unchanged. See L<perlop>.
  839. =head2 Bit operators support full native integer width
  840. The bit operators (& | ^ ~ << >>) now operate on the full native
  841. integral width (the exact size of which is available in $Config{ivsize}).
  842. For example, if your platform is either natively 64-bit or if Perl
  843. has been configured to use 64-bit integers, these operations apply
  844. to 8 bytes (as opposed to 4 bytes on 32-bit platforms).
  845. For portability, be sure to mask off the excess bits in the result of
  846. unary C<~>, e.g., C<~$x & 0xffffffff>.
  847. =head2 Improved security features
  848. More potentially unsafe operations taint their results for improved
  849. security.
  850. The C<passwd> and C<shell> fields returned by the getpwent(), getpwnam(),
  851. and getpwuid() are now tainted, because the user can affect their own
  852. encrypted password and login shell.
  853. The variable modified by shmread(), and messages returned by msgrcv()
  854. (and its object-oriented interface IPC::SysV::Msg::rcv) are also tainted,
  855. because other untrusted processes can modify messages and shared memory
  856. segments for their own nefarious purposes.
  857. =head2 More functional bareword prototype (*)
  858. Bareword prototypes have been rationalized to enable them to be used
  859. to override builtins that accept barewords and interpret them in
  860. a special way, such as C<require> or C<do>.
  861. Arguments prototyped as C<*> will now be visible within the subroutine
  862. as either a simple scalar or as a reference to a typeglob.
  863. See L<perlsub/Prototypes>.
  864. =head2 C<require> and C<do> may be overridden
  865. C<require> and C<do 'file'> operations may be overridden locally
  866. by importing subroutines of the same name into the current package
  867. (or globally by importing them into the CORE::GLOBAL:: namespace).
  868. Overriding C<require> will also affect C<use>, provided the override
  869. is visible at compile-time.
  870. See L<perlsub/"Overriding Built-in Functions">.
  871. =head2 $^X variables may now have names longer than one character
  872. Formerly, $^X was synonymous with ${"\cX"}, but $^XY was a syntax
  873. error. Now variable names that begin with a control character may be
  874. arbitrarily long. However, for compatibility reasons, these variables
  875. I<must> be written with explicit braces, as C<${^XY}> for example.
  876. C<${^XYZ}> is synonymous with ${"\cXYZ"}. Variable names with more
  877. than one control character, such as C<${^XY^Z}>, are illegal.
  878. The old syntax has not changed. As before, `^X' may be either a
  879. literal control-X character or the two-character sequence `caret' plus
  880. `X'. When braces are omitted, the variable name stops after the
  881. control character. Thus C<"$^XYZ"> continues to be synonymous with
  882. C<$^X . "YZ"> as before.
  883. As before, lexical variables may not have names beginning with control
  884. characters. As before, variables whose names begin with a control
  885. character are always forced to be in package `main'. All such variables
  886. are reserved for future extensions, except those that begin with
  887. C<^_>, which may be used by user programs and are guaranteed not to
  888. acquire special meaning in any future version of Perl.
  889. =head2 New variable $^C reflects C<-c> switch
  890. C<$^C> has a boolean value that reflects whether perl is being run
  891. in compile-only mode (i.e. via the C<-c> switch). Since
  892. BEGIN blocks are executed under such conditions, this variable
  893. enables perl code to determine whether actions that make sense
  894. only during normal running are warranted. See L<perlvar>.
  895. =head2 New variable $^V contains Perl version as a string
  896. C<$^V> contains the Perl version number as a string composed of
  897. characters whose ordinals match the version numbers, i.e. v5.6.0.
  898. This may be used in string comparisons.
  899. See C<Support for strings represented as a vector of ordinals> for an
  900. example.
  901. =head2 Optional Y2K warnings
  902. If Perl is built with the cpp macro C<PERL_Y2KWARN> defined,
  903. it emits optional warnings when concatenating the number 19
  904. with another number.
  905. This behavior must be specifically enabled when running Configure.
  906. See F<INSTALL> and F<README.Y2K>.
  907. =head2 Arrays now always interpolate into double-quoted strings
  908. In double-quoted strings, arrays now interpolate, no matter what. The
  909. behavior in earlier versions of perl 5 was that arrays would interpolate
  910. into strings if the array had been mentioned before the string was
  911. compiled, and otherwise Perl would raise a fatal compile-time error.
  912. In versions 5.000 through 5.003, the error was
  913. Literal @example now requires backslash
  914. In versions 5.004_01 through 5.6.0, the error was
  915. In string, @example now must be written as \@example
  916. The idea here was to get people into the habit of writing
  917. C<"fred\@example.com"> when they wanted a literal C<@> sign, just as
  918. they have always written C<"Give me back my \$5"> when they wanted a
  919. literal C<$> sign.
  920. Starting with 5.6.1, when Perl now sees an C<@> sign in a
  921. double-quoted string, it I<always> attempts to interpolate an array,
  922. regardless of whether or not the array has been used or declared
  923. already. The fatal error has been downgraded to an optional warning:
  924. Possible unintended interpolation of @example in string
  925. This warns you that C<"[email protected]"> is going to turn into
  926. C<fred.com> if you don't backslash the C<@>.
  927. See http://www.plover.com/~mjd/perl/at-error.html for more details
  928. about the history here.
  929. =head1 Modules and Pragmata
  930. =head2 Modules
  931. =over 4
  932. =item attributes
  933. While used internally by Perl as a pragma, this module also
  934. provides a way to fetch subroutine and variable attributes.
  935. See L<attributes>.
  936. =item B
  937. The Perl Compiler suite has been extensively reworked for this
  938. release. More of the standard Perl testsuite passes when run
  939. under the Compiler, but there is still a significant way to
  940. go to achieve production quality compiled executables.
  941. NOTE: The Compiler suite remains highly experimental. The
  942. generated code may not be correct, even when it manages to execute
  943. without errors.
  944. =item Benchmark
  945. Overall, Benchmark results exhibit lower average error and better timing
  946. accuracy.
  947. You can now run tests for I<n> seconds instead of guessing the right
  948. number of tests to run: e.g., timethese(-5, ...) will run each
  949. code for at least 5 CPU seconds. Zero as the "number of repetitions"
  950. means "for at least 3 CPU seconds". The output format has also
  951. changed. For example:
  952. use Benchmark;$x=3;timethese(-5,{a=>sub{$x*$x},b=>sub{$x**2}})
  953. will now output something like this:
  954. Benchmark: running a, b, each for at least 5 CPU seconds...
  955. a: 5 wallclock secs ( 5.77 usr + 0.00 sys = 5.77 CPU) @ 200551.91/s (n=1156516)
  956. b: 4 wallclock secs ( 5.00 usr + 0.02 sys = 5.02 CPU) @ 159605.18/s (n=800686)
  957. New features: "each for at least N CPU seconds...", "wallclock secs",
  958. and the "@ operations/CPU second (n=operations)".
  959. timethese() now returns a reference to a hash of Benchmark objects containing
  960. the test results, keyed on the names of the tests.
  961. timethis() now returns the iterations field in the Benchmark result object
  962. instead of 0.
  963. timethese(), timethis(), and the new cmpthese() (see below) can also take
  964. a format specifier of 'none' to suppress output.
  965. A new function countit() is just like timeit() except that it takes a
  966. TIME instead of a COUNT.
  967. A new function cmpthese() prints a chart comparing the results of each test
  968. returned from a timethese() call. For each possible pair of tests, the
  969. percentage speed difference (iters/sec or seconds/iter) is shown.
  970. For other details, see L<Benchmark>.
  971. =item ByteLoader
  972. The ByteLoader is a dedicated extension to generate and run
  973. Perl bytecode. See L<ByteLoader>.
  974. =item constant
  975. References can now be used.
  976. The new version also allows a leading underscore in constant names, but
  977. disallows a double leading underscore (as in "__LINE__"). Some other names
  978. are disallowed or warned against, including BEGIN, END, etc. Some names
  979. which were forced into main:: used to fail silently in some cases; now they're
  980. fatal (outside of main::) and an optional warning (inside of main::).
  981. The ability to detect whether a constant had been set with a given name has
  982. been added.
  983. See L<constant>.
  984. =item charnames
  985. This pragma implements the C<\N> string escape. See L<charnames>.
  986. =item Data::Dumper
  987. A C<Maxdepth> setting can be specified to avoid venturing
  988. too deeply into deep data structures. See L<Data::Dumper>.
  989. The XSUB implementation of Dump() is now automatically called if the
  990. C<Useqq> setting is not in use.
  991. Dumping C<qr//> objects works correctly.
  992. =item DB
  993. C<DB> is an experimental module that exposes a clean abstraction
  994. to Perl's debugging API.
  995. =item DB_File
  996. DB_File can now be built with Berkeley DB versions 1, 2 or 3.
  997. See C<ext/DB_File/Changes>.
  998. =item Devel::DProf
  999. Devel::DProf, a Perl source code profiler has been added. See
  1000. L<Devel::DProf> and L<dprofpp>.
  1001. =item Devel::Peek
  1002. The Devel::Peek module provides access to the internal representation
  1003. of Perl variables and data. It is a data debugging tool for the XS programmer.
  1004. =item Dumpvalue
  1005. The Dumpvalue module provides screen dumps of Perl data.
  1006. =item DynaLoader
  1007. DynaLoader now supports a dl_unload_file() function on platforms that
  1008. support unloading shared objects using dlclose().
  1009. Perl can also optionally arrange to unload all extension shared objects
  1010. loaded by Perl. To enable this, build Perl with the Configure option
  1011. C<-Accflags=-DDL_UNLOAD_ALL_AT_EXIT>. (This maybe useful if you are
  1012. using Apache with mod_perl.)
  1013. =item English
  1014. $PERL_VERSION now stands for C<$^V> (a string value) rather than for C<$]>
  1015. (a numeric value).
  1016. =item Env
  1017. Env now supports accessing environment variables like PATH as array
  1018. variables.
  1019. =item Fcntl
  1020. More Fcntl constants added: F_SETLK64, F_SETLKW64, O_LARGEFILE for
  1021. large file (more than 4GB) access (NOTE: the O_LARGEFILE is
  1022. automatically added to sysopen() flags if large file support has been
  1023. configured, as is the default), Free/Net/OpenBSD locking behaviour
  1024. flags F_FLOCK, F_POSIX, Linux F_SHLCK, and O_ACCMODE: the combined
  1025. mask of O_RDONLY, O_WRONLY, and O_RDWR. The seek()/sysseek()
  1026. constants SEEK_SET, SEEK_CUR, and SEEK_END are available via the
  1027. C<:seek> tag. The chmod()/stat() S_IF* constants and S_IS* functions
  1028. are available via the C<:mode> tag.
  1029. =item File::Compare
  1030. A compare_text() function has been added, which allows custom
  1031. comparison functions. See L<File::Compare>.
  1032. =item File::Find
  1033. File::Find now works correctly when the wanted() function is either
  1034. autoloaded or is a symbolic reference.
  1035. A bug that caused File::Find to lose track of the working directory
  1036. when pruning top-level directories has been fixed.
  1037. File::Find now also supports several other options to control its
  1038. behavior. It can follow symbolic links if the C<follow> option is
  1039. specified. Enabling the C<no_chdir> option will make File::Find skip
  1040. changing the current directory when walking directories. The C<untaint>
  1041. flag can be useful when running with taint checks enabled.
  1042. See L<File::Find>.
  1043. =item File::Glob
  1044. This extension implements BSD-style file globbing. By default,
  1045. it will also be used for the internal implementation of the glob()
  1046. operator. See L<File::Glob>.
  1047. =item File::Spec
  1048. New methods have been added to the File::Spec module: devnull() returns
  1049. the name of the null device (/dev/null on Unix) and tmpdir() the name of
  1050. the temp directory (normally /tmp on Unix). There are now also methods
  1051. to convert between absolute and relative filenames: abs2rel() and
  1052. rel2abs(). For compatibility with operating systems that specify volume
  1053. names in file paths, the splitpath(), splitdir(), and catdir() methods
  1054. have been added.
  1055. =item File::Spec::Functions
  1056. The new File::Spec::Functions modules provides a function interface
  1057. to the File::Spec module. Allows shorthand
  1058. $fullname = catfile($dir1, $dir2, $file);
  1059. instead of
  1060. $fullname = File::Spec->catfile($dir1, $dir2, $file);
  1061. =item Getopt::Long
  1062. Getopt::Long licensing has changed to allow the Perl Artistic License
  1063. as well as the GPL. It used to be GPL only, which got in the way of
  1064. non-GPL applications that wanted to use Getopt::Long.
  1065. Getopt::Long encourages the use of Pod::Usage to produce help
  1066. messages. For example:
  1067. use Getopt::Long;
  1068. use Pod::Usage;
  1069. my $man = 0;
  1070. my $help = 0;
  1071. GetOptions('help|?' => \$help, man => \$man) or pod2usage(2);
  1072. pod2usage(1) if $help;
  1073. pod2usage(-exitstatus => 0, -verbose => 2) if $man;
  1074. __END__
  1075. =head1 NAME
  1076. sample - Using GetOpt::Long and Pod::Usage
  1077. =head1 SYNOPSIS
  1078. sample [options] [file ...]
  1079. Options:
  1080. -help brief help message
  1081. -man full documentation
  1082. =head1 OPTIONS
  1083. =over 8
  1084. =item B<-help>
  1085. Print a brief help message and exits.
  1086. =item B<-man>
  1087. Prints the manual page and exits.
  1088. =back
  1089. =head1 DESCRIPTION
  1090. B<This program> will read the given input file(s) and do something
  1091. useful with the contents thereof.
  1092. =cut
  1093. See L<Pod::Usage> for details.
  1094. A bug that prevented the non-option call-back <> from being
  1095. specified as the first argument has been fixed.
  1096. To specify the characters < and > as option starters, use ><. Note,
  1097. however, that changing option starters is strongly deprecated.
  1098. =item IO
  1099. write() and syswrite() will now accept a single-argument
  1100. form of the call, for consistency with Perl's syswrite().
  1101. You can now create a TCP-based IO::Socket::INET without forcing
  1102. a connect attempt. This allows you to configure its options
  1103. (like making it non-blocking) and then call connect() manually.
  1104. A bug that prevented the IO::Socket::protocol() accessor
  1105. from ever returning the correct value has been corrected.
  1106. IO::Socket::connect now uses non-blocking IO instead of alarm()
  1107. to do connect timeouts.
  1108. IO::Socket::accept now uses select() instead of alarm() for doing
  1109. timeouts.
  1110. IO::Socket::INET->new now sets $! correctly on failure. $@ is
  1111. still set for backwards compatibility.
  1112. =item JPL
  1113. Java Perl Lingo is now distributed with Perl. See jpl/README
  1114. for more information.
  1115. =item lib
  1116. C<use lib> now weeds out any trailing duplicate entries.
  1117. C<no lib> removes all named entries.
  1118. =item Math::BigInt
  1119. The bitwise operations C<<< << >>>, C<<< >> >>>, C<&>, C<|>,
  1120. and C<~> are now supported on bigints.
  1121. =item Math::Complex
  1122. The accessor methods Re, Im, arg, abs, rho, and theta can now also
  1123. act as mutators (accessor $z->Re(), mutator $z->Re(3)).
  1124. The class method C<display_format> and the corresponding object method
  1125. C<display_format>, in addition to accepting just one argument, now can
  1126. also accept a parameter hash. Recognized keys of a parameter hash are
  1127. C<"style">, which corresponds to the old one parameter case, and two
  1128. new parameters: C<"format">, which is a printf()-style format string
  1129. (defaults usually to C<"%.15g">, you can revert to the default by
  1130. setting the format string to C<undef>) used for both parts of a
  1131. complex number, and C<"polar_pretty_print"> (defaults to true),
  1132. which controls whether an attempt is made to try to recognize small
  1133. multiples and rationals of pi (2pi, pi/2) at the argument (angle) of a
  1134. polar complex number.
  1135. The potentially disruptive change is that in list context both methods
  1136. now I<return the parameter hash>, instead of only the value of the
  1137. C<"style"> parameter.
  1138. =item Math::Trig
  1139. A little bit of radial trigonometry (cylindrical and spherical),
  1140. radial coordinate conversions, and the great circle distance were added.
  1141. =item Pod::Parser, Pod::InputObjects
  1142. Pod::Parser is a base class for parsing and selecting sections of
  1143. pod documentation from an input stream. This module takes care of
  1144. identifying pod paragraphs and commands in the input and hands off the
  1145. parsed paragraphs and commands to user-defined methods which are free
  1146. to interpret or translate them as they see fit.
  1147. Pod::InputObjects defines some input objects needed by Pod::Parser, and
  1148. for advanced users of Pod::Parser that need more about a command besides
  1149. its name and text.
  1150. As of release 5.6.0 of Perl, Pod::Parser is now the officially sanctioned
  1151. "base parser code" recommended for use by all pod2xxx translators.
  1152. Pod::Text (pod2text) and Pod::Man (pod2man) have already been converted
  1153. to use Pod::Parser and efforts to convert Pod::HTML (pod2html) are already
  1154. underway. For any questions or comments about pod parsing and translating
  1155. issues and utilities, please use the [email protected] mailing list.
  1156. For further information, please see L<Pod::Parser> and L<Pod::InputObjects>.
  1157. =item Pod::Checker, podchecker
  1158. This utility checks pod files for correct syntax, according to
  1159. L<perlpod>. Obvious errors are flagged as such, while warnings are
  1160. printed for mistakes that can be handled gracefully. The checklist is
  1161. not complete yet. See L<Pod::Checker>.
  1162. =item Pod::ParseUtils, Pod::Find
  1163. These modules provide a set of gizmos that are useful mainly for pod
  1164. translators. L<Pod::Find|Pod::Find> traverses directory structures and
  1165. returns found pod files, along with their canonical names (like
  1166. C<File::Spec::Unix>). L<Pod::ParseUtils|Pod::ParseUtils> contains
  1167. B<Pod::List> (useful for storing pod list information), B<Pod::Hyperlink>
  1168. (for parsing the contents of C<LE<lt>E<gt>> sequences) and B<Pod::Cache>
  1169. (for caching information about pod files, e.g., link nodes).
  1170. =item Pod::Select, podselect
  1171. Pod::Select is a subclass of Pod::Parser which provides a function
  1172. named "podselect()" to filter out user-specified sections of raw pod
  1173. documentation from an input stream. podselect is a script that provides
  1174. access to Pod::Select from other scripts to be used as a filter.
  1175. See L<Pod::Select>.
  1176. =item Pod::Usage, pod2usage
  1177. Pod::Usage provides the function "pod2usage()" to print usage messages for
  1178. a Perl script based on its embedded pod documentation. The pod2usage()
  1179. function is generally useful to all script authors since it lets them
  1180. write and maintain a single source (the pods) for documentation, thus
  1181. removing the need to create and maintain redundant usage message text
  1182. consisting of information already in the pods.
  1183. There is also a pod2usage script which can be used from other kinds of
  1184. scripts to print usage messages from pods (even for non-Perl scripts
  1185. with pods embedded in comments).
  1186. For details and examples, please see L<Pod::Usage>.
  1187. =item Pod::Text and Pod::Man
  1188. Pod::Text has been rewritten to use Pod::Parser. While pod2text() is
  1189. still available for backwards compatibility, the module now has a new
  1190. preferred interface. See L<Pod::Text> for the details. The new Pod::Text
  1191. module is easily subclassed for tweaks to the output, and two such
  1192. subclasses (Pod::Text::Termcap for man-page-style bold and underlining
  1193. using termcap information, and Pod::Text::Color for markup with ANSI color
  1194. sequences) are now standard.
  1195. pod2man has been turned into a module, Pod::Man, which also uses
  1196. Pod::Parser. In the process, several outstanding bugs related to quotes
  1197. in section headers, quoting of code escapes, and nested lists have been
  1198. fixed. pod2man is now a wrapper script around this module.
  1199. =item SDBM_File
  1200. An EXISTS method has been added to this module (and sdbm_exists() has
  1201. been added to the underlying sdbm library), so one can now call exists
  1202. on an SDBM_File tied hash and get the correct result, rather than a
  1203. runtime error.
  1204. A bug that may have caused data loss when more than one disk block
  1205. happens to be read from the database in a single FETCH() has been
  1206. fixed.
  1207. =item Sys::Syslog
  1208. Sys::Syslog now uses XSUBs to access facilities from syslog.h so it
  1209. no longer requires syslog.ph to exist.
  1210. =item Sys::Hostname
  1211. Sys::Hostname now uses XSUBs to call the C library's gethostname() or
  1212. uname() if they exist.
  1213. =item Term::ANSIColor
  1214. Term::ANSIColor is a very simple module to provide easy and readable
  1215. access to the ANSI color and highlighting escape sequences, supported by
  1216. most ANSI terminal emulators. It is now included standard.
  1217. =item Time::Local
  1218. The timelocal() and timegm() functions used to silently return bogus
  1219. results when the date fell outside the machine's integer range. They
  1220. now consistently croak() if the date falls in an unsupported range.
  1221. =item Win32
  1222. The error return value in list context has been changed for all functions
  1223. that return a list of values. Previously these functions returned a list
  1224. with a single element C<undef> if an error occurred. Now these functions
  1225. return the empty list in these situations. This applies to the following
  1226. functions:
  1227. Win32::FsType
  1228. Win32::GetOSVersion
  1229. The remaining functions are unchanged and continue to return C<undef> on
  1230. error even in list context.
  1231. The Win32::SetLastError(ERROR) function has been added as a complement
  1232. to the Win32::GetLastError() function.
  1233. The new Win32::GetFullPathName(FILENAME) returns the full absolute
  1234. pathname for FILENAME in scalar context. In list context it returns
  1235. a two-element list containing the fully qualified directory name and
  1236. the filename. See L<Win32>.
  1237. =item XSLoader
  1238. The XSLoader extension is a simpler alternative to DynaLoader.
  1239. See L<XSLoader>.
  1240. =item DBM Filters
  1241. A new feature called "DBM Filters" has been added to all the
  1242. DBM modules--DB_File, GDBM_File, NDBM_File, ODBM_File, and SDBM_File.
  1243. DBM Filters add four new methods to each DBM module:
  1244. filter_store_key
  1245. filter_store_value
  1246. filter_fetch_key
  1247. filter_fetch_value
  1248. These can be used to filter key-value pairs before the pairs are
  1249. written to the database or just after they are read from the database.
  1250. See L<perldbmfilter> for further information.
  1251. =back
  1252. =head2 Pragmata
  1253. C<use attrs> is now obsolete, and is only provided for
  1254. backward-compatibility. It's been replaced by the C<sub : attributes>
  1255. syntax. See L<perlsub/"Subroutine Attributes"> and L<attributes>.
  1256. Lexical warnings pragma, C<use warnings;>, to control optional warnings.
  1257. See L<perllexwarn>.
  1258. C<use filetest> to control the behaviour of filetests (C<-r> C<-w>
  1259. ...). Currently only one subpragma implemented, "use filetest
  1260. 'access';", that uses access(2) or equivalent to check permissions
  1261. instead of using stat(2) as usual. This matters in filesystems
  1262. where there are ACLs (access control lists): the stat(2) might lie,
  1263. but access(2) knows better.
  1264. The C<open> pragma can be used to specify default disciplines for
  1265. handle constructors (e.g. open()) and for qx//. The two
  1266. pseudo-disciplines C<:raw> and C<:crlf> are currently supported on
  1267. DOS-derivative platforms (i.e. where binmode is not a no-op).
  1268. See also L</"binmode() can be used to set :crlf and :raw modes">.
  1269. =head1 Utility Changes
  1270. =head2 dprofpp
  1271. C<dprofpp> is used to display profile data generated using C<Devel::DProf>.
  1272. See L<dprofpp>.
  1273. =head2 find2perl
  1274. The C<find2perl> utility now uses the enhanced features of the File::Find
  1275. module. The -depth and -follow options are supported. Pod documentation
  1276. is also included in the script.
  1277. =head2 h2xs
  1278. The C<h2xs> tool can now work in conjunction with C<C::Scan> (available
  1279. from CPAN) to automatically parse real-life header files. The C<-M>,
  1280. C<-a>, C<-k>, and C<-o> options are new.
  1281. =head2 perlcc
  1282. C<perlcc> now supports the C and Bytecode backends. By default,
  1283. it generates output from the simple C backend rather than the
  1284. optimized C backend.
  1285. Support for non-Unix platforms has been improved.
  1286. =head2 perldoc
  1287. C<perldoc> has been reworked to avoid possible security holes.
  1288. It will not by default let itself be run as the superuser, but you
  1289. may still use the B<-U> switch to try to make it drop privileges
  1290. first.
  1291. =head2 The Perl Debugger
  1292. Many bug fixes and enhancements were added to F<perl5db.pl>, the
  1293. Perl debugger. The help documentation was rearranged. New commands
  1294. include C<< < ? >>, C<< > ? >>, and C<< { ? >> to list out current
  1295. actions, C<man I<docpage>> to run your doc viewer on some perl
  1296. docset, and support for quoted options. The help information was
  1297. rearranged, and should be viewable once again if you're using B<less>
  1298. as your pager. A serious security hole was plugged--you should
  1299. immediately remove all older versions of the Perl debugger as
  1300. installed in previous releases, all the way back to perl3, from
  1301. your system to avoid being bitten by this.
  1302. =head1 Improved Documentation
  1303. Many of the platform-specific README files are now part of the perl
  1304. installation. See L<perl> for the complete list.
  1305. =over 4
  1306. =item perlapi.pod
  1307. The official list of public Perl API functions.
  1308. =item perlboot.pod
  1309. A tutorial for beginners on object-oriented Perl.
  1310. =item perlcompile.pod
  1311. An introduction to using the Perl Compiler suite.
  1312. =item perldbmfilter.pod
  1313. A howto document on using the DBM filter facility.
  1314. =item perldebug.pod
  1315. All material unrelated to running the Perl debugger, plus all
  1316. low-level guts-like details that risked crushing the casual user
  1317. of the debugger, have been relocated from the old manpage to the
  1318. next entry below.
  1319. =item perldebguts.pod
  1320. This new manpage contains excessively low-level material not related
  1321. to the Perl debugger, but slightly related to debugging Perl itself.
  1322. It also contains some arcane internal details of how the debugging
  1323. process works that may only be of interest to developers of Perl
  1324. debuggers.
  1325. =item perlfork.pod
  1326. Notes on the fork() emulation currently available for the Windows platform.
  1327. =item perlfilter.pod
  1328. An introduction to writing Perl source filters.
  1329. =item perlhack.pod
  1330. Some guidelines for hacking the Perl source code.
  1331. =item perlintern.pod
  1332. A list of internal functions in the Perl source code.
  1333. (List is currently empty.)
  1334. =item perllexwarn.pod
  1335. Introduction and reference information about lexically scoped
  1336. warning categories.
  1337. =item perlnumber.pod
  1338. Detailed information about numbers as they are represented in Perl.
  1339. =item perlopentut.pod
  1340. A tutorial on using open() effectively.
  1341. =item perlreftut.pod
  1342. A tutorial that introduces the essentials of references.
  1343. =item perltootc.pod
  1344. A tutorial on managing class data for object modules.
  1345. =item perltodo.pod
  1346. Discussion of the most often wanted features that may someday be
  1347. supported in Perl.
  1348. =item perlunicode.pod
  1349. An introduction to Unicode support features in Perl.
  1350. =back
  1351. =head1 Performance enhancements
  1352. =head2 Simple sort() using { $a <=> $b } and the like are optimized
  1353. Many common sort() operations using a simple inlined block are now
  1354. optimized for faster performance.
  1355. =head2 Optimized assignments to lexical variables
  1356. Certain operations in the RHS of assignment statements have been
  1357. optimized to directly set the lexical variable on the LHS,
  1358. eliminating redundant copying overheads.
  1359. =head2 Faster subroutine calls
  1360. Minor changes in how subroutine calls are handled internally
  1361. provide marginal improvements in performance.
  1362. =head2 delete(), each(), values() and hash iteration are faster
  1363. The hash values returned by delete(), each(), values() and hashes in a
  1364. list context are the actual values in the hash, instead of copies.
  1365. This results in significantly better performance, because it eliminates
  1366. needless copying in most situations.
  1367. =head1 Installation and Configuration Improvements
  1368. =head2 -Dusethreads means something different
  1369. The -Dusethreads flag now enables the experimental interpreter-based thread
  1370. support by default. To get the flavor of experimental threads that was in
  1371. 5.005 instead, you need to run Configure with "-Dusethreads -Duse5005threads".
  1372. As of v5.6.0, interpreter-threads support is still lacking a way to
  1373. create new threads from Perl (i.e., C<use Thread;> will not work with
  1374. interpreter threads). C<use Thread;> continues to be available when you
  1375. specify the -Duse5005threads option to Configure, bugs and all.
  1376. NOTE: Support for threads continues to be an experimental feature.
  1377. Interfaces and implementation are subject to sudden and drastic changes.
  1378. =head2 New Configure flags
  1379. The following new flags may be enabled on the Configure command line
  1380. by running Configure with C<-Dflag>.
  1381. usemultiplicity
  1382. usethreads useithreads (new interpreter threads: no Perl API yet)
  1383. usethreads use5005threads (threads as they were in 5.005)
  1384. use64bitint (equal to now deprecated 'use64bits')
  1385. use64bitall
  1386. uselongdouble
  1387. usemorebits
  1388. uselargefiles
  1389. usesocks (only SOCKS v5 supported)
  1390. =head2 Threadedness and 64-bitness now more daring
  1391. The Configure options enabling the use of threads and the use of
  1392. 64-bitness are now more daring in the sense that they no more have an
  1393. explicit list of operating systems of known threads/64-bit
  1394. capabilities. In other words: if your operating system has the
  1395. necessary APIs and datatypes, you should be able just to go ahead and
  1396. use them, for threads by Configure -Dusethreads, and for 64 bits
  1397. either explicitly by Configure -Duse64bitint or implicitly if your
  1398. system has 64-bit wide datatypes. See also L<"64-bit support">.
  1399. =head2 Long Doubles
  1400. Some platforms have "long doubles", floating point numbers of even
  1401. larger range than ordinary "doubles". To enable using long doubles for
  1402. Perl's scalars, use -Duselongdouble.
  1403. =head2 -Dusemorebits
  1404. You can enable both -Duse64bitint and -Duselongdouble with -Dusemorebits.
  1405. See also L<"64-bit support">.
  1406. =head2 -Duselargefiles
  1407. Some platforms support system APIs that are capable of handling large files
  1408. (typically, files larger than two gigabytes). Perl will try to use these
  1409. APIs if you ask for -Duselargefiles.
  1410. See L<"Large file support"> for more information.
  1411. =head2 installusrbinperl
  1412. You can use "Configure -Uinstallusrbinperl" which causes installperl
  1413. to skip installing perl also as /usr/bin/perl. This is useful if you
  1414. prefer not to modify /usr/bin for some reason or another but harmful
  1415. because many scripts assume to find Perl in /usr/bin/perl.
  1416. =head2 SOCKS support
  1417. You can use "Configure -Dusesocks" which causes Perl to probe
  1418. for the SOCKS proxy protocol library (v5, not v4). For more information
  1419. on SOCKS, see:
  1420. http://www.socks.nec.com/
  1421. =head2 C<-A> flag
  1422. You can "post-edit" the Configure variables using the Configure C<-A>
  1423. switch. The editing happens immediately after the platform specific
  1424. hints files have been processed but before the actual configuration
  1425. process starts. Run C<Configure -h> to find out the full C<-A> syntax.
  1426. =head2 Enhanced Installation Directories
  1427. The installation structure has been enriched to improve the support
  1428. for maintaining multiple versions of perl, to provide locations for
  1429. vendor-supplied modules, scripts, and manpages, and to ease maintenance
  1430. of locally-added modules, scripts, and manpages. See the section on
  1431. Installation Directories in the INSTALL file for complete details.
  1432. For most users building and installing from source, the defaults should
  1433. be fine.
  1434. If you previously used C<Configure -Dsitelib> or C<-Dsitearch> to set
  1435. special values for library directories, you might wish to consider using
  1436. the new C<-Dsiteprefix> setting instead. Also, if you wish to re-use a
  1437. config.sh file from an earlier version of perl, you should be sure to
  1438. check that Configure makes sensible choices for the new directories.
  1439. See INSTALL for complete details.
  1440. =head2 gcc automatically tried if 'cc' does not seem to be working
  1441. In many platforms the vendor-supplied 'cc' is too stripped-down to
  1442. build Perl (basically, the 'cc' doesn't do ANSI C). If this seems
  1443. to be the case and the 'cc' does not seem to be the GNU C compiler
  1444. 'gcc', an automatic attempt is made to find and use 'gcc' instead.
  1445. =head1 Platform specific changes
  1446. =head2 Supported platforms
  1447. =over 4
  1448. =item *
  1449. The Mach CThreads (NEXTSTEP, OPENSTEP) are now supported by the Thread
  1450. extension.
  1451. =item *
  1452. GNU/Hurd is now supported.
  1453. =item *
  1454. Rhapsody/Darwin is now supported.
  1455. =item *
  1456. EPOC is now supported (on Psion 5).
  1457. =item *
  1458. The cygwin port (formerly cygwin32) has been greatly improved.
  1459. =back
  1460. =head2 DOS
  1461. =over 4
  1462. =item *
  1463. Perl now works with djgpp 2.02 (and 2.03 alpha).
  1464. =item *
  1465. Environment variable names are not converted to uppercase any more.
  1466. =item *
  1467. Incorrect exit codes from backticks have been fixed.
  1468. =item *
  1469. This port continues to use its own builtin globbing (not File::Glob).
  1470. =back
  1471. =head2 OS390 (OpenEdition MVS)
  1472. Support for this EBCDIC platform has not been renewed in this release.
  1473. There are difficulties in reconciling Perl's standardization on UTF-8
  1474. as its internal representation for characters with the EBCDIC character
  1475. set, because the two are incompatible.
  1476. It is unclear whether future versions will renew support for this
  1477. platform, but the possibility exists.
  1478. =head2 VMS
  1479. Numerous revisions and extensions to configuration, build, testing, and
  1480. installation process to accommodate core changes and VMS-specific options.
  1481. Expand %ENV-handling code to allow runtime mapping to logical names,
  1482. CLI symbols, and CRTL environ array.
  1483. Extension of subprocess invocation code to accept filespecs as command
  1484. "verbs".
  1485. Add to Perl command line processing the ability to use default file types and
  1486. to recognize Unix-style C<2E<gt>&1>.
  1487. Expansion of File::Spec::VMS routines, and integration into ExtUtils::MM_VMS.
  1488. Extension of ExtUtils::MM_VMS to handle complex extensions more flexibly.
  1489. Barewords at start of Unix-syntax paths may be treated as text rather than
  1490. only as logical names.
  1491. Optional secure translation of several logical names used internally by Perl.
  1492. Miscellaneous bugfixing and porting of new core code to VMS.
  1493. Thanks are gladly extended to the many people who have contributed VMS
  1494. patches, testing, and ideas.
  1495. =head2 Win32
  1496. Perl can now emulate fork() internally, using multiple interpreters running
  1497. in different concurrent threads. This support must be enabled at build
  1498. time. See L<perlfork> for detailed information.
  1499. When given a pathname that consists only of a drivename, such as C<A:>,
  1500. opendir() and stat() now use the current working directory for the drive
  1501. rather than the drive root.
  1502. The builtin XSUB functions in the Win32:: namespace are documented. See
  1503. L<Win32>.
  1504. $^X now contains the full path name of the running executable.
  1505. A Win32::GetLongPathName() function is provided to complement
  1506. Win32::GetFullPathName() and Win32::GetShortPathName(). See L<Win32>.
  1507. POSIX::uname() is supported.
  1508. system(1,...) now returns true process IDs rather than process
  1509. handles. kill() accepts any real process id, rather than strictly
  1510. return values from system(1,...).
  1511. For better compatibility with Unix, C<kill(0, $pid)> can now be used to
  1512. test whether a process exists.
  1513. The C<Shell> module is supported.
  1514. Better support for building Perl under command.com in Windows 95
  1515. has been added.
  1516. Scripts are read in binary mode by default to allow ByteLoader (and
  1517. the filter mechanism in general) to work properly. For compatibility,
  1518. the DATA filehandle will be set to text mode if a carriage return is
  1519. detected at the end of the line containing the __END__ or __DATA__
  1520. token; if not, the DATA filehandle will be left open in binary mode.
  1521. Earlier versions always opened the DATA filehandle in text mode.
  1522. The glob() operator is implemented via the C<File::Glob> extension,
  1523. which supports glob syntax of the C shell. This increases the flexibility
  1524. of the glob() operator, but there may be compatibility issues for
  1525. programs that relied on the older globbing syntax. If you want to
  1526. preserve compatibility with the older syntax, you might want to run
  1527. perl with C<-MFile::DosGlob>. For details and compatibility information,
  1528. see L<File::Glob>.
  1529. =head1 Significant bug fixes
  1530. =head2 <HANDLE> on empty files
  1531. With C<$/> set to C<undef>, "slurping" an empty file returns a string of
  1532. zero length (instead of C<undef>, as it used to) the first time the
  1533. HANDLE is read after C<$/> is set to C<undef>. Further reads yield
  1534. C<undef>.
  1535. This means that the following will append "foo" to an empty file (it used
  1536. to do nothing):
  1537. perl -0777 -pi -e 's/^/foo/' empty_file
  1538. The behaviour of:
  1539. perl -pi -e 's/^/foo/' empty_file
  1540. is unchanged (it continues to leave the file empty).
  1541. =head2 C<eval '...'> improvements
  1542. Line numbers (as reflected by caller() and most diagnostics) within
  1543. C<eval '...'> were often incorrect where here documents were involved.
  1544. This has been corrected.
  1545. Lexical lookups for variables appearing in C<eval '...'> within
  1546. functions that were themselves called within an C<eval '...'> were
  1547. searching the wrong place for lexicals. The lexical search now
  1548. correctly ends at the subroutine's block boundary.
  1549. The use of C<return> within C<eval {...}> caused $@ not to be reset
  1550. correctly when no exception occurred within the eval. This has
  1551. been fixed.
  1552. Parsing of here documents used to be flawed when they appeared as
  1553. the replacement expression in C<eval 's/.../.../e'>. This has
  1554. been fixed.
  1555. =head2 All compilation errors are true errors
  1556. Some "errors" encountered at compile time were by necessity
  1557. generated as warnings followed by eventual termination of the
  1558. program. This enabled more such errors to be reported in a
  1559. single run, rather than causing a hard stop at the first error
  1560. that was encountered.
  1561. The mechanism for reporting such errors has been reimplemented
  1562. to queue compile-time errors and report them at the end of the
  1563. compilation as true errors rather than as warnings. This fixes
  1564. cases where error messages leaked through in the form of warnings
  1565. when code was compiled at run time using C<eval STRING>, and
  1566. also allows such errors to be reliably trapped using C<eval "...">.
  1567. =head2 Implicitly closed filehandles are safer
  1568. Sometimes implicitly closed filehandles (as when they are localized,
  1569. and Perl automatically closes them on exiting the scope) could
  1570. inadvertently set $? or $!. This has been corrected.
  1571. =head2 Behavior of list slices is more consistent
  1572. When taking a slice of a literal list (as opposed to a slice of
  1573. an array or hash), Perl used to return an empty list if the
  1574. result happened to be composed of all undef values.
  1575. The new behavior is to produce an empty list if (and only if)
  1576. the original list was empty. Consider the following example:
  1577. @a = (1,undef,undef,2)[2,1,2];
  1578. The old behavior would have resulted in @a having no elements.
  1579. The new behavior ensures it has three undefined elements.
  1580. Note in particular that the behavior of slices of the following
  1581. cases remains unchanged:
  1582. @a = ()[1,2];
  1583. @a = (getpwent)[7,0];
  1584. @a = (anything_returning_empty_list())[2,1,2];
  1585. @a = @b[2,1,2];
  1586. @a = @c{'a','b','c'};
  1587. See L<perldata>.
  1588. =head2 C<(\$)> prototype and C<$foo{a}>
  1589. A scalar reference prototype now correctly allows a hash or
  1590. array element in that slot.
  1591. =head2 C<goto &sub> and AUTOLOAD
  1592. The C<goto &sub> construct works correctly when C<&sub> happens
  1593. to be autoloaded.
  1594. =head2 C<-bareword> allowed under C<use integer>
  1595. The autoquoting of barewords preceded by C<-> did not work
  1596. in prior versions when the C<integer> pragma was enabled.
  1597. This has been fixed.
  1598. =head2 Failures in DESTROY()
  1599. When code in a destructor threw an exception, it went unnoticed
  1600. in earlier versions of Perl, unless someone happened to be
  1601. looking in $@ just after the point the destructor happened to
  1602. run. Such failures are now visible as warnings when warnings are
  1603. enabled.
  1604. =head2 Locale bugs fixed
  1605. printf() and sprintf() previously reset the numeric locale
  1606. back to the default "C" locale. This has been fixed.
  1607. Numbers formatted according to the local numeric locale
  1608. (such as using a decimal comma instead of a decimal dot) caused
  1609. "isn't numeric" warnings, even while the operations accessing
  1610. those numbers produced correct results. These warnings have been
  1611. discontinued.
  1612. =head2 Memory leaks
  1613. The C<eval 'return sub {...}'> construct could sometimes leak
  1614. memory. This has been fixed.
  1615. Operations that aren't filehandle constructors used to leak memory
  1616. when used on invalid filehandles. This has been fixed.
  1617. Constructs that modified C<@_> could fail to deallocate values
  1618. in C<@_> and thus leak memory. This has been corrected.
  1619. =head2 Spurious subroutine stubs after failed subroutine calls
  1620. Perl could sometimes create empty subroutine stubs when a
  1621. subroutine was not found in the package. Such cases stopped
  1622. later method lookups from progressing into base packages.
  1623. This has been corrected.
  1624. =head2 Taint failures under C<-U>
  1625. When running in unsafe mode, taint violations could sometimes
  1626. cause silent failures. This has been fixed.
  1627. =head2 END blocks and the C<-c> switch
  1628. Prior versions used to run BEGIN B<and> END blocks when Perl was
  1629. run in compile-only mode. Since this is typically not the expected
  1630. behavior, END blocks are not executed anymore when the C<-c> switch
  1631. is used, or if compilation fails.
  1632. See L</"Support for CHECK blocks"> for how to run things when the compile
  1633. phase ends.
  1634. =head2 Potential to leak DATA filehandles
  1635. Using the C<__DATA__> token creates an implicit filehandle to
  1636. the file that contains the token. It is the program's
  1637. responsibility to close it when it is done reading from it.
  1638. This caveat is now better explained in the documentation.
  1639. See L<perldata>.
  1640. =head1 New or Changed Diagnostics
  1641. =over 4
  1642. =item "%s" variable %s masks earlier declaration in same %s
  1643. (W misc) A "my" or "our" variable has been redeclared in the current scope or statement,
  1644. effectively eliminating all access to the previous instance. This is almost
  1645. always a typographical error. Note that the earlier variable will still exist
  1646. until the end of the scope or until all closure referents to it are
  1647. destroyed.
  1648. =item "my sub" not yet implemented
  1649. (F) Lexically scoped subroutines are not yet implemented. Don't try that
  1650. yet.
  1651. =item "our" variable %s redeclared
  1652. (W misc) You seem to have already declared the same global once before in the
  1653. current lexical scope.
  1654. =item '!' allowed only after types %s
  1655. (F) The '!' is allowed in pack() and unpack() only after certain types.
  1656. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
  1657. =item / cannot take a count
  1658. (F) You had an unpack template indicating a counted-length string,
  1659. but you have also specified an explicit size for the string.
  1660. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
  1661. =item / must be followed by a, A or Z
  1662. (F) You had an unpack template indicating a counted-length string,
  1663. which must be followed by one of the letters a, A or Z
  1664. to indicate what sort of string is to be unpacked.
  1665. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
  1666. =item / must be followed by a*, A* or Z*
  1667. (F) You had a pack template indicating a counted-length string,
  1668. Currently the only things that can have their length counted are a*, A* or Z*.
  1669. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
  1670. =item / must follow a numeric type
  1671. (F) You had an unpack template that contained a '#',
  1672. but this did not follow some numeric unpack specification.
  1673. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
  1674. =item /%s/: Unrecognized escape \\%c passed through
  1675. (W regexp) You used a backslash-character combination which is not recognized
  1676. by Perl. This combination appears in an interpolated variable or a
  1677. C<'>-delimited regular expression. The character was understood literally.
  1678. =item /%s/: Unrecognized escape \\%c in character class passed through
  1679. (W regexp) You used a backslash-character combination which is not recognized
  1680. by Perl inside character classes. The character was understood literally.
  1681. =item /%s/ should probably be written as "%s"
  1682. (W syntax) You have used a pattern where Perl expected to find a string,
  1683. as in the first argument to C<join>. Perl will treat the true
  1684. or false result of matching the pattern against $_ as the string,
  1685. which is probably not what you had in mind.
  1686. =item %s() called too early to check prototype
  1687. (W prototype) You've called a function that has a prototype before the parser saw a
  1688. definition or declaration for it, and Perl could not check that the call
  1689. conforms to the prototype. You need to either add an early prototype
  1690. declaration for the subroutine in question, or move the subroutine
  1691. definition ahead of the call to get proper prototype checking. Alternatively,
  1692. if you are certain that you're calling the function correctly, you may put
  1693. an ampersand before the name to avoid the warning. See L<perlsub>.
  1694. =item %s argument is not a HASH or ARRAY element
  1695. (F) The argument to exists() must be a hash or array element, such as:
  1696. $foo{$bar}
  1697. $ref->{"susie"}[12]
  1698. =item %s argument is not a HASH or ARRAY element or slice
  1699. (F) The argument to delete() must be either a hash or array element, such as:
  1700. $foo{$bar}
  1701. $ref->{"susie"}[12]
  1702. or a hash or array slice, such as:
  1703. @foo[$bar, $baz, $xyzzy]
  1704. @{$ref->[12]}{"susie", "queue"}
  1705. =item %s argument is not a subroutine name
  1706. (F) The argument to exists() for C<exists &sub> must be a subroutine
  1707. name, and not a subroutine call. C<exists &sub()> will generate this error.
  1708. =item %s package attribute may clash with future reserved word: %s
  1709. (W reserved) A lowercase attribute name was used that had a package-specific handler.
  1710. That name might have a meaning to Perl itself some day, even though it
  1711. doesn't yet. Perhaps you should use a mixed-case attribute name, instead.
  1712. See L<attributes>.
  1713. =item (in cleanup) %s
  1714. (W misc) This prefix usually indicates that a DESTROY() method raised
  1715. the indicated exception. Since destructors are usually called by
  1716. the system at arbitrary points during execution, and often a vast
  1717. number of times, the warning is issued only once for any number
  1718. of failures that would otherwise result in the same message being
  1719. repeated.
  1720. Failure of user callbacks dispatched using the C<G_KEEPERR> flag
  1721. could also result in this warning. See L<perlcall/G_KEEPERR>.
  1722. =item <> should be quotes
  1723. (F) You wrote C<< require <file> >> when you should have written
  1724. C<require 'file'>.
  1725. =item Attempt to join self
  1726. (F) You tried to join a thread from within itself, which is an
  1727. impossible task. You may be joining the wrong thread, or you may
  1728. need to move the join() to some other thread.
  1729. =item Bad evalled substitution pattern
  1730. (F) You've used the /e switch to evaluate the replacement for a
  1731. substitution, but perl found a syntax error in the code to evaluate,
  1732. most likely an unexpected right brace '}'.
  1733. =item Bad realloc() ignored
  1734. (S) An internal routine called realloc() on something that had never been
  1735. malloc()ed in the first place. Mandatory, but can be disabled by
  1736. setting environment variable C<PERL_BADFREE> to 1.
  1737. =item Bareword found in conditional
  1738. (W bareword) The compiler found a bareword where it expected a conditional,
  1739. which often indicates that an || or && was parsed as part of the
  1740. last argument of the previous construct, for example:
  1741. open FOO || die;
  1742. It may also indicate a misspelled constant that has been interpreted
  1743. as a bareword:
  1744. use constant TYPO => 1;
  1745. if (TYOP) { print "foo" }
  1746. The C<strict> pragma is useful in avoiding such errors.
  1747. =item Binary number > 0b11111111111111111111111111111111 non-portable
  1748. (W portable) The binary number you specified is larger than 2**32-1
  1749. (4294967295) and therefore non-portable between systems. See
  1750. L<perlport> for more on portability concerns.
  1751. =item Bit vector size > 32 non-portable
  1752. (W portable) Using bit vector sizes larger than 32 is non-portable.
  1753. =item Buffer overflow in prime_env_iter: %s
  1754. (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. While Perl was preparing to iterate over
  1755. %ENV, it encountered a logical name or symbol definition which was too long,
  1756. so it was truncated to the string shown.
  1757. =item Can't check filesystem of script "%s"
  1758. (P) For some reason you can't check the filesystem of the script for nosuid.
  1759. =item Can't declare class for non-scalar %s in "%s"
  1760. (S) Currently, only scalar variables can declared with a specific class
  1761. qualifier in a "my" or "our" declaration. The semantics may be extended
  1762. for other types of variables in future.
  1763. =item Can't declare %s in "%s"
  1764. (F) Only scalar, array, and hash variables may be declared as "my" or
  1765. "our" variables. They must have ordinary identifiers as names.
  1766. =item Can't ignore signal CHLD, forcing to default
  1767. (W signal) Perl has detected that it is being run with the SIGCHLD signal
  1768. (sometimes known as SIGCLD) disabled. Since disabling this signal
  1769. will interfere with proper determination of exit status of child
  1770. processes, Perl has reset the signal to its default value.
  1771. This situation typically indicates that the parent program under
  1772. which Perl may be running (e.g., cron) is being very careless.
  1773. =item Can't modify non-lvalue subroutine call
  1774. (F) Subroutines meant to be used in lvalue context should be declared as
  1775. such, see L<perlsub/"Lvalue subroutines">.
  1776. =item Can't read CRTL environ
  1777. (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read an element of %ENV
  1778. from the CRTL's internal environment array and discovered the array was
  1779. missing. You need to figure out where your CRTL misplaced its environ
  1780. or define F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> (see L<perlvms>) so that environ is not searched.
  1781. =item Can't remove %s: %s, skipping file
  1782. (S) You requested an inplace edit without creating a backup file. Perl
  1783. was unable to remove the original file to replace it with the modified
  1784. file. The file was left unmodified.
  1785. =item Can't return %s from lvalue subroutine
  1786. (F) Perl detected an attempt to return illegal lvalues (such
  1787. as temporary or readonly values) from a subroutine used as an lvalue.
  1788. This is not allowed.
  1789. =item Can't weaken a nonreference
  1790. (F) You attempted to weaken something that was not a reference. Only
  1791. references can be weakened.
  1792. =item Character class [:%s:] unknown
  1793. (F) The class in the character class [: :] syntax is unknown.
  1794. See L<perlre>.
  1795. =item Character class syntax [%s] belongs inside character classes
  1796. (W unsafe) The character class constructs [: :], [= =], and [. .] go
  1797. I<inside> character classes, the [] are part of the construct,
  1798. for example: /[012[:alpha:]345]/. Note that [= =] and [. .]
  1799. are not currently implemented; they are simply placeholders for
  1800. future extensions.
  1801. =item Constant is not %s reference
  1802. (F) A constant value (perhaps declared using the C<use constant> pragma)
  1803. is being dereferenced, but it amounts to the wrong type of reference. The
  1804. message indicates the type of reference that was expected. This usually
  1805. indicates a syntax error in dereferencing the constant value.
  1806. See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions"> and L<constant>.
  1807. =item constant(%s): %s
  1808. (F) The parser found inconsistencies either while attempting to define an
  1809. overloaded constant, or when trying to find the character name specified
  1810. in the C<\N{...}> escape. Perhaps you forgot to load the corresponding
  1811. C<overload> or C<charnames> pragma? See L<charnames> and L<overload>.
  1812. =item CORE::%s is not a keyword
  1813. (F) The CORE:: namespace is reserved for Perl keywords.
  1814. =item defined(@array) is deprecated
  1815. (D) defined() is not usually useful on arrays because it checks for an
  1816. undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the array is empty,
  1817. just use C<if (@array) { # not empty }> for example.
  1818. =item defined(%hash) is deprecated
  1819. (D) defined() is not usually useful on hashes because it checks for an
  1820. undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the hash is empty,
  1821. just use C<if (%hash) { # not empty }> for example.
  1822. =item Did not produce a valid header
  1823. See Server error.
  1824. =item (Did you mean "local" instead of "our"?)
  1825. (W misc) Remember that "our" does not localize the declared global variable.
  1826. You have declared it again in the same lexical scope, which seems superfluous.
  1827. =item Document contains no data
  1828. See Server error.
  1829. =item entering effective %s failed
  1830. (F) While under the C<use filetest> pragma, switching the real and
  1831. effective uids or gids failed.
  1832. =item false [] range "%s" in regexp
  1833. (W regexp) A character class range must start and end at a literal character, not
  1834. another character class like C<\d> or C<[:alpha:]>. The "-" in your false
  1835. range is interpreted as a literal "-". Consider quoting the "-", "\-".
  1836. See L<perlre>.
  1837. =item Filehandle %s opened only for output
  1838. (W io) You tried to read from a filehandle opened only for writing. If you
  1839. intended it to be a read/write filehandle, you needed to open it with
  1840. "+<" or "+>" or "+>>" instead of with "<" or nothing. If
  1841. you intended only to read from the file, use "<". See
  1842. L<perlfunc/open>.
  1843. =item flock() on closed filehandle %s
  1844. (W closed) The filehandle you're attempting to flock() got itself closed some
  1845. time before now. Check your logic flow. flock() operates on filehandles.
  1846. Are you attempting to call flock() on a dirhandle by the same name?
  1847. =item Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name
  1848. (F) You've said "use strict vars", which indicates that all variables
  1849. must either be lexically scoped (using "my"), declared beforehand using
  1850. "our", or explicitly qualified to say which package the global variable
  1851. is in (using "::").
  1852. =item Hexadecimal number > 0xffffffff non-portable
  1853. (W portable) The hexadecimal number you specified is larger than 2**32-1
  1854. (4294967295) and therefore non-portable between systems. See
  1855. L<perlport> for more on portability concerns.
  1856. =item Ill-formed CRTL environ value "%s"
  1857. (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read the CRTL's internal
  1858. environ array, and encountered an element without the C<=> delimiter
  1859. used to separate keys from values. The element is ignored.
  1860. =item Ill-formed message in prime_env_iter: |%s|
  1861. (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read a logical name
  1862. or CLI symbol definition when preparing to iterate over %ENV, and
  1863. didn't see the expected delimiter between key and value, so the
  1864. line was ignored.
  1865. =item Illegal binary digit %s
  1866. (F) You used a digit other than 0 or 1 in a binary number.
  1867. =item Illegal binary digit %s ignored
  1868. (W digit) You may have tried to use a digit other than 0 or 1 in a binary number.
  1869. Interpretation of the binary number stopped before the offending digit.
  1870. =item Illegal number of bits in vec
  1871. (F) The number of bits in vec() (the third argument) must be a power of
  1872. two from 1 to 32 (or 64, if your platform supports that).
  1873. =item Integer overflow in %s number
  1874. (W overflow) The hexadecimal, octal or binary number you have specified either
  1875. as a literal or as an argument to hex() or oct() is too big for your
  1876. architecture, and has been converted to a floating point number. On a
  1877. 32-bit architecture the largest hexadecimal, octal or binary number
  1878. representable without overflow is 0xFFFFFFFF, 037777777777, or
  1879. 0b11111111111111111111111111111111 respectively. Note that Perl
  1880. transparently promotes all numbers to a floating point representation
  1881. internally--subject to loss of precision errors in subsequent
  1882. operations.
  1883. =item Invalid %s attribute: %s
  1884. The indicated attribute for a subroutine or variable was not recognized
  1885. by Perl or by a user-supplied handler. See L<attributes>.
  1886. =item Invalid %s attributes: %s
  1887. The indicated attributes for a subroutine or variable were not recognized
  1888. by Perl or by a user-supplied handler. See L<attributes>.
  1889. =item invalid [] range "%s" in regexp
  1890. The offending range is now explicitly displayed.
  1891. =item Invalid separator character %s in attribute list
  1892. (F) Something other than a colon or whitespace was seen between the
  1893. elements of an attribute list. If the previous attribute
  1894. had a parenthesised parameter list, perhaps that list was terminated
  1895. too soon. See L<attributes>.
  1896. =item Invalid separator character %s in subroutine attribute list
  1897. (F) Something other than a colon or whitespace was seen between the
  1898. elements of a subroutine attribute list. If the previous attribute
  1899. had a parenthesised parameter list, perhaps that list was terminated
  1900. too soon.
  1901. =item leaving effective %s failed
  1902. (F) While under the C<use filetest> pragma, switching the real and
  1903. effective uids or gids failed.
  1904. =item Lvalue subs returning %s not implemented yet
  1905. (F) Due to limitations in the current implementation, array and hash
  1906. values cannot be returned in subroutines used in lvalue context.
  1907. See L<perlsub/"Lvalue subroutines">.
  1908. =item Method %s not permitted
  1909. See Server error.
  1910. =item Missing %sbrace%s on \N{}
  1911. (F) Wrong syntax of character name literal C<\N{charname}> within
  1912. double-quotish context.
  1913. =item Missing command in piped open
  1914. (W pipe) You used the C<open(FH, "| command")> or C<open(FH, "command |")>
  1915. construction, but the command was missing or blank.
  1916. =item Missing name in "my sub"
  1917. (F) The reserved syntax for lexically scoped subroutines requires that they
  1918. have a name with which they can be found.
  1919. =item No %s specified for -%c
  1920. (F) The indicated command line switch needs a mandatory argument, but
  1921. you haven't specified one.
  1922. =item No package name allowed for variable %s in "our"
  1923. (F) Fully qualified variable names are not allowed in "our" declarations,
  1924. because that doesn't make much sense under existing semantics. Such
  1925. syntax is reserved for future extensions.
  1926. =item No space allowed after -%c
  1927. (F) The argument to the indicated command line switch must follow immediately
  1928. after the switch, without intervening spaces.
  1929. =item no UTC offset information; assuming local time is UTC
  1930. (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl was unable to find the local
  1931. timezone offset, so it's assuming that local system time is equivalent
  1932. to UTC. If it's not, define the logical name F<SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL>
  1933. to translate to the number of seconds which need to be added to UTC to
  1934. get local time.
  1935. =item Octal number > 037777777777 non-portable
  1936. (W portable) The octal number you specified is larger than 2**32-1 (4294967295)
  1937. and therefore non-portable between systems. See L<perlport> for more
  1938. on portability concerns.
  1939. See also L<perlport> for writing portable code.
  1940. =item panic: del_backref
  1941. (P) Failed an internal consistency check while trying to reset a weak
  1942. reference.
  1943. =item panic: kid popen errno read
  1944. (F) forked child returned an incomprehensible message about its errno.
  1945. =item panic: magic_killbackrefs
  1946. (P) Failed an internal consistency check while trying to reset all weak
  1947. references to an object.
  1948. =item Parentheses missing around "%s" list
  1949. (W parenthesis) You said something like
  1950. my $foo, $bar = @_;
  1951. when you meant
  1952. my ($foo, $bar) = @_;
  1953. Remember that "my", "our", and "local" bind tighter than comma.
  1954. =item Possible unintended interpolation of %s in string
  1955. (W ambiguous) It used to be that Perl would try to guess whether you
  1956. wanted an array interpolated or a literal @. It no longer does this;
  1957. arrays are now I<always> interpolated into strings. This means that
  1958. if you try something like:
  1959. print "[email protected]";
  1960. and the array C<@example> doesn't exist, Perl is going to print
  1961. C<fred.com>, which is probably not what you wanted. To get a literal
  1962. C<@> sign in a string, put a backslash before it, just as you would
  1963. to get a literal C<$> sign.
  1964. =item Possible Y2K bug: %s
  1965. (W y2k) You are concatenating the number 19 with another number, which
  1966. could be a potential Year 2000 problem.
  1967. =item pragma "attrs" is deprecated, use "sub NAME : ATTRS" instead
  1968. (W deprecated) You have written something like this:
  1969. sub doit
  1970. {
  1971. use attrs qw(locked);
  1972. }
  1973. You should use the new declaration syntax instead.
  1974. sub doit : locked
  1975. {
  1976. ...
  1977. The C<use attrs> pragma is now obsolete, and is only provided for
  1978. backward-compatibility. See L<perlsub/"Subroutine Attributes">.
  1979. =item Premature end of script headers
  1980. See Server error.
  1981. =item Repeat count in pack overflows
  1982. (F) You can't specify a repeat count so large that it overflows
  1983. your signed integers. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
  1984. =item Repeat count in unpack overflows
  1985. (F) You can't specify a repeat count so large that it overflows
  1986. your signed integers. See L<perlfunc/unpack>.
  1987. =item realloc() of freed memory ignored
  1988. (S) An internal routine called realloc() on something that had already
  1989. been freed.
  1990. =item Reference is already weak
  1991. (W misc) You have attempted to weaken a reference that is already weak.
  1992. Doing so has no effect.
  1993. =item setpgrp can't take arguments
  1994. (F) Your system has the setpgrp() from BSD 4.2, which takes no arguments,
  1995. unlike POSIX setpgid(), which takes a process ID and process group ID.
  1996. =item Strange *+?{} on zero-length expression
  1997. (W regexp) You applied a regular expression quantifier in a place where it
  1998. makes no sense, such as on a zero-width assertion.
  1999. Try putting the quantifier inside the assertion instead. For example,
  2000. the way to match "abc" provided that it is followed by three
  2001. repetitions of "xyz" is C</abc(?=(?:xyz){3})/>, not C</abc(?=xyz){3}/>.
  2002. =item switching effective %s is not implemented
  2003. (F) While under the C<use filetest> pragma, we cannot switch the
  2004. real and effective uids or gids.
  2005. =item This Perl can't reset CRTL environ elements (%s)
  2006. =item This Perl can't set CRTL environ elements (%s=%s)
  2007. (W internal) Warnings peculiar to VMS. You tried to change or delete an element
  2008. of the CRTL's internal environ array, but your copy of Perl wasn't
  2009. built with a CRTL that contained the setenv() function. You'll need to
  2010. rebuild Perl with a CRTL that does, or redefine F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> (see
  2011. L<perlvms>) so that the environ array isn't the target of the change to
  2012. %ENV which produced the warning.
  2013. =item Too late to run %s block
  2014. (W void) A CHECK or INIT block is being defined during run time proper,
  2015. when the opportunity to run them has already passed. Perhaps you are
  2016. loading a file with C<require> or C<do> when you should be using
  2017. C<use> instead. Or perhaps you should put the C<require> or C<do>
  2018. inside a BEGIN block.
  2019. =item Unknown open() mode '%s'
  2020. (F) The second argument of 3-argument open() is not among the list
  2021. of valid modes: C<< < >>, C<< > >>, C<<< >> >>>, C<< +< >>,
  2022. C<< +> >>, C<<< +>> >>>, C<-|>, C<|->.
  2023. =item Unknown process %x sent message to prime_env_iter: %s
  2024. (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl was reading values for %ENV before
  2025. iterating over it, and someone else stuck a message in the stream of
  2026. data Perl expected. Someone's very confused, or perhaps trying to
  2027. subvert Perl's population of %ENV for nefarious purposes.
  2028. =item Unrecognized escape \\%c passed through
  2029. (W misc) You used a backslash-character combination which is not recognized
  2030. by Perl. The character was understood literally.
  2031. =item Unterminated attribute parameter in attribute list
  2032. (F) The lexer saw an opening (left) parenthesis character while parsing an
  2033. attribute list, but the matching closing (right) parenthesis
  2034. character was not found. You may need to add (or remove) a backslash
  2035. character to get your parentheses to balance. See L<attributes>.
  2036. =item Unterminated attribute list
  2037. (F) The lexer found something other than a simple identifier at the start
  2038. of an attribute, and it wasn't a semicolon or the start of a
  2039. block. Perhaps you terminated the parameter list of the previous attribute
  2040. too soon. See L<attributes>.
  2041. =item Unterminated attribute parameter in subroutine attribute list
  2042. (F) The lexer saw an opening (left) parenthesis character while parsing a
  2043. subroutine attribute list, but the matching closing (right) parenthesis
  2044. character was not found. You may need to add (or remove) a backslash
  2045. character to get your parentheses to balance.
  2046. =item Unterminated subroutine attribute list
  2047. (F) The lexer found something other than a simple identifier at the start
  2048. of a subroutine attribute, and it wasn't a semicolon or the start of a
  2049. block. Perhaps you terminated the parameter list of the previous attribute
  2050. too soon.
  2051. =item Value of CLI symbol "%s" too long
  2052. (W misc) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read the value of an %ENV
  2053. element from a CLI symbol table, and found a resultant string longer
  2054. than 1024 characters. The return value has been truncated to 1024
  2055. characters.
  2056. =item Version number must be a constant number
  2057. (P) The attempt to translate a C<use Module n.n LIST> statement into
  2058. its equivalent C<BEGIN> block found an internal inconsistency with
  2059. the version number.
  2060. =back
  2061. =head1 New tests
  2062. =over 4
  2063. =item lib/attrs
  2064. Compatibility tests for C<sub : attrs> vs the older C<use attrs>.
  2065. =item lib/env
  2066. Tests for new environment scalar capability (e.g., C<use Env qw($BAR);>).
  2067. =item lib/env-array
  2068. Tests for new environment array capability (e.g., C<use Env qw(@PATH);>).
  2069. =item lib/io_const
  2070. IO constants (SEEK_*, _IO*).
  2071. =item lib/io_dir
  2072. Directory-related IO methods (new, read, close, rewind, tied delete).
  2073. =item lib/io_multihomed
  2074. INET sockets with multi-homed hosts.
  2075. =item lib/io_poll
  2076. IO poll().
  2077. =item lib/io_unix
  2078. UNIX sockets.
  2079. =item op/attrs
  2080. Regression tests for C<my ($x,@y,%z) : attrs> and <sub : attrs>.
  2081. =item op/filetest
  2082. File test operators.
  2083. =item op/lex_assign
  2084. Verify operations that access pad objects (lexicals and temporaries).
  2085. =item op/exists_sub
  2086. Verify C<exists &sub> operations.
  2087. =back
  2088. =head1 Incompatible Changes
  2089. =head2 Perl Source Incompatibilities
  2090. Beware that any new warnings that have been added or old ones
  2091. that have been enhanced are B<not> considered incompatible changes.
  2092. Since all new warnings must be explicitly requested via the C<-w>
  2093. switch or the C<warnings> pragma, it is ultimately the programmer's
  2094. responsibility to ensure that warnings are enabled judiciously.
  2095. =over 4
  2096. =item CHECK is a new keyword
  2097. All subroutine definitions named CHECK are now special. See
  2098. C</"Support for CHECK blocks"> for more information.
  2099. =item Treatment of list slices of undef has changed
  2100. There is a potential incompatibility in the behavior of list slices
  2101. that are comprised entirely of undefined values.
  2102. See L</"Behavior of list slices is more consistent">.
  2103. =item Format of $English::PERL_VERSION is different
  2104. The English module now sets $PERL_VERSION to $^V (a string value) rather
  2105. than C<$]> (a numeric value). This is a potential incompatibility.
  2106. Send us a report via perlbug if you are affected by this.
  2107. See L</"Improved Perl version numbering system"> for the reasons for
  2108. this change.
  2109. =item Literals of the form C<1.2.3> parse differently
  2110. Previously, numeric literals with more than one dot in them were
  2111. interpreted as a floating point number concatenated with one or more
  2112. numbers. Such "numbers" are now parsed as strings composed of the
  2113. specified ordinals.
  2114. For example, C<print 97.98.99> used to output C<97.9899> in earlier
  2115. versions, but now prints C<abc>.
  2116. See L</"Support for strings represented as a vector of ordinals">.
  2117. =item Possibly changed pseudo-random number generator
  2118. Perl programs that depend on reproducing a specific set of pseudo-random
  2119. numbers may now produce different output due to improvements made to the
  2120. rand() builtin. You can use C<sh Configure -Drandfunc=rand> to obtain
  2121. the old behavior.
  2122. See L</"Better pseudo-random number generator">.
  2123. =item Hashing function for hash keys has changed
  2124. Even though Perl hashes are not order preserving, the apparently
  2125. random order encountered when iterating on the contents of a hash
  2126. is actually determined by the hashing algorithm used. Improvements
  2127. in the algorithm may yield a random order that is B<different> from
  2128. that of previous versions, especially when iterating on hashes.
  2129. See L</"Better worst-case behavior of hashes"> for additional
  2130. information.
  2131. =item C<undef> fails on read only values
  2132. Using the C<undef> operator on a readonly value (such as $1) has
  2133. the same effect as assigning C<undef> to the readonly value--it
  2134. throws an exception.
  2135. =item Close-on-exec bit may be set on pipe and socket handles
  2136. Pipe and socket handles are also now subject to the close-on-exec
  2137. behavior determined by the special variable $^F.
  2138. See L</"More consistent close-on-exec behavior">.
  2139. =item Writing C<"$$1"> to mean C<"${$}1"> is unsupported
  2140. Perl 5.004 deprecated the interpretation of C<$$1> and
  2141. similar within interpolated strings to mean C<$$ . "1">,
  2142. but still allowed it.
  2143. In Perl 5.6.0 and later, C<"$$1"> always means C<"${$1}">.
  2144. =item delete(), each(), values() and C<\(%h)>
  2145. operate on aliases to values, not copies
  2146. delete(), each(), values() and hashes (e.g. C<\(%h)>)
  2147. in a list context return the actual
  2148. values in the hash, instead of copies (as they used to in earlier
  2149. versions). Typical idioms for using these constructs copy the
  2150. returned values, but this can make a significant difference when
  2151. creating references to the returned values. Keys in the hash are still
  2152. returned as copies when iterating on a hash.
  2153. See also L</"delete(), each(), values() and hash iteration are faster">.
  2154. =item vec(EXPR,OFFSET,BITS) enforces powers-of-two BITS
  2155. vec() generates a run-time error if the BITS argument is not
  2156. a valid power-of-two integer.
  2157. =item Text of some diagnostic output has changed
  2158. Most references to internal Perl operations in diagnostics
  2159. have been changed to be more descriptive. This may be an
  2160. issue for programs that may incorrectly rely on the exact
  2161. text of diagnostics for proper functioning.
  2162. =item C<%@> has been removed
  2163. The undocumented special variable C<%@> that used to accumulate
  2164. "background" errors (such as those that happen in DESTROY())
  2165. has been removed, because it could potentially result in memory
  2166. leaks.
  2167. =item Parenthesized not() behaves like a list operator
  2168. The C<not> operator now falls under the "if it looks like a function,
  2169. it behaves like a function" rule.
  2170. As a result, the parenthesized form can be used with C<grep> and C<map>.
  2171. The following construct used to be a syntax error before, but it works
  2172. as expected now:
  2173. grep not($_), @things;
  2174. On the other hand, using C<not> with a literal list slice may not
  2175. work. The following previously allowed construct:
  2176. print not (1,2,3)[0];
  2177. needs to be written with additional parentheses now:
  2178. print not((1,2,3)[0]);
  2179. The behavior remains unaffected when C<not> is not followed by parentheses.
  2180. =item Semantics of bareword prototype C<(*)> have changed
  2181. The semantics of the bareword prototype C<*> have changed. Perl 5.005
  2182. always coerced simple scalar arguments to a typeglob, which wasn't useful
  2183. in situations where the subroutine must distinguish between a simple
  2184. scalar and a typeglob. The new behavior is to not coerce bareword
  2185. arguments to a typeglob. The value will always be visible as either
  2186. a simple scalar or as a reference to a typeglob.
  2187. See L</"More functional bareword prototype (*)">.
  2188. =item Semantics of bit operators may have changed on 64-bit platforms
  2189. If your platform is either natively 64-bit or if Perl has been
  2190. configured to used 64-bit integers, i.e., $Config{ivsize} is 8,
  2191. there may be a potential incompatibility in the behavior of bitwise
  2192. numeric operators (& | ^ ~ << >>). These operators used to strictly
  2193. operate on the lower 32 bits of integers in previous versions, but now
  2194. operate over the entire native integral width. In particular, note
  2195. that unary C<~> will produce different results on platforms that have
  2196. different $Config{ivsize}. For portability, be sure to mask off
  2197. the excess bits in the result of unary C<~>, e.g., C<~$x & 0xffffffff>.
  2198. See L</"Bit operators support full native integer width">.
  2199. =item More builtins taint their results
  2200. As described in L</"Improved security features">, there may be more
  2201. sources of taint in a Perl program.
  2202. To avoid these new tainting behaviors, you can build Perl with the
  2203. Configure option C<-Accflags=-DINCOMPLETE_TAINTS>. Beware that the
  2204. ensuing perl binary may be insecure.
  2205. =back
  2206. =head2 C Source Incompatibilities
  2207. =over 4
  2208. =item C<PERL_POLLUTE>
  2209. Release 5.005 grandfathered old global symbol names by providing preprocessor
  2210. macros for extension source compatibility. As of release 5.6.0, these
  2211. preprocessor definitions are not available by default. You need to explicitly
  2212. compile perl with C<-DPERL_POLLUTE> to get these definitions. For
  2213. extensions still using the old symbols, this option can be
  2214. specified via MakeMaker:
  2215. perl Makefile.PL POLLUTE=1
  2216. =item C<PERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT>
  2217. This new build option provides a set of macros for all API functions
  2218. such that an implicit interpreter/thread context argument is passed to
  2219. every API function. As a result of this, something like C<sv_setsv(foo,bar)>
  2220. amounts to a macro invocation that actually translates to something like
  2221. C<Perl_sv_setsv(my_perl,foo,bar)>. While this is generally expected
  2222. to not have any significant source compatibility issues, the difference
  2223. between a macro and a real function call will need to be considered.
  2224. This means that there B<is> a source compatibility issue as a result of
  2225. this if your extensions attempt to use pointers to any of the Perl API
  2226. functions.
  2227. Note that the above issue is not relevant to the default build of
  2228. Perl, whose interfaces continue to match those of prior versions
  2229. (but subject to the other options described here).
  2230. See L<perlguts/"The Perl API"> for detailed information on the
  2231. ramifications of building Perl with this option.
  2232. NOTE: PERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT is automatically enabled whenever Perl is built
  2233. with one of -Dusethreads, -Dusemultiplicity, or both. It is not
  2234. intended to be enabled by users at this time.
  2235. =item C<PERL_POLLUTE_MALLOC>
  2236. Enabling Perl's malloc in release 5.005 and earlier caused the namespace of
  2237. the system's malloc family of functions to be usurped by the Perl versions,
  2238. since by default they used the same names. Besides causing problems on
  2239. platforms that do not allow these functions to be cleanly replaced, this
  2240. also meant that the system versions could not be called in programs that
  2241. used Perl's malloc. Previous versions of Perl have allowed this behaviour
  2242. to be suppressed with the HIDEMYMALLOC and EMBEDMYMALLOC preprocessor
  2243. definitions.
  2244. As of release 5.6.0, Perl's malloc family of functions have default names
  2245. distinct from the system versions. You need to explicitly compile perl with
  2246. C<-DPERL_POLLUTE_MALLOC> to get the older behaviour. HIDEMYMALLOC
  2247. and EMBEDMYMALLOC have no effect, since the behaviour they enabled is now
  2248. the default.
  2249. Note that these functions do B<not> constitute Perl's memory allocation API.
  2250. See L<perlguts/"Memory Allocation"> for further information about that.
  2251. =back
  2252. =head2 Compatible C Source API Changes
  2253. =over 4
  2254. =item C<PATCHLEVEL> is now C<PERL_VERSION>
  2255. The cpp macros C<PERL_REVISION>, C<PERL_VERSION>, and C<PERL_SUBVERSION>
  2256. are now available by default from perl.h, and reflect the base revision,
  2257. patchlevel, and subversion respectively. C<PERL_REVISION> had no
  2258. prior equivalent, while C<PERL_VERSION> and C<PERL_SUBVERSION> were
  2259. previously available as C<PATCHLEVEL> and C<SUBVERSION>.
  2260. The new names cause less pollution of the B<cpp> namespace and reflect what
  2261. the numbers have come to stand for in common practice. For compatibility,
  2262. the old names are still supported when F<patchlevel.h> is explicitly
  2263. included (as required before), so there is no source incompatibility
  2264. from the change.
  2265. =back
  2266. =head2 Binary Incompatibilities
  2267. In general, the default build of this release is expected to be binary
  2268. compatible for extensions built with the 5.005 release or its maintenance
  2269. versions. However, specific platforms may have broken binary compatibility
  2270. due to changes in the defaults used in hints files. Therefore, please be
  2271. sure to always check the platform-specific README files for any notes to
  2272. the contrary.
  2273. The usethreads or usemultiplicity builds are B<not> binary compatible
  2274. with the corresponding builds in 5.005.
  2275. On platforms that require an explicit list of exports (AIX, OS/2 and Windows,
  2276. among others), purely internal symbols such as parser functions and the
  2277. run time opcodes are not exported by default. Perl 5.005 used to export
  2278. all functions irrespective of whether they were considered part of the
  2279. public API or not.
  2280. For the full list of public API functions, see L<perlapi>.
  2281. =head1 Known Problems
  2282. =head2 Localizing a tied hash element may leak memory
  2283. As of the 5.6.1 release, there is a known leak when code such as this
  2284. is executed:
  2285. use Tie::Hash;
  2286. tie my %tie_hash => 'Tie::StdHash';
  2287. ...
  2288. local($tie_hash{Foo}) = 1; # leaks
  2289. =head2 Known test failures
  2290. =over
  2291. =item 64-bit builds
  2292. Subtest #15 of lib/b.t may fail under 64-bit builds on platforms such
  2293. as HP-UX PA64 and Linux IA64. The issue is still being investigated.
  2294. The lib/io_multihomed test may hang in HP-UX if Perl has been
  2295. configured to be 64-bit. Because other 64-bit platforms do not
  2296. hang in this test, HP-UX is suspect. All other tests pass
  2297. in 64-bit HP-UX. The test attempts to create and connect to
  2298. "multihomed" sockets (sockets which have multiple IP addresses).
  2299. Note that 64-bit support is still experimental.
  2300. =item Failure of Thread tests
  2301. The subtests 19 and 20 of lib/thr5005.t test are known to fail due to
  2302. fundamental problems in the 5.005 threading implementation. These are
  2303. not new failures--Perl 5.005_0x has the same bugs, but didn't have these
  2304. tests. (Note that support for 5.005-style threading remains experimental.)
  2305. =item NEXTSTEP 3.3 POSIX test failure
  2306. In NEXTSTEP 3.3p2 the implementation of the strftime(3) in the
  2307. operating system libraries is buggy: the %j format numbers the days of
  2308. a month starting from zero, which, while being logical to programmers,
  2309. will cause the subtests 19 to 27 of the lib/posix test may fail.
  2310. =item Tru64 (aka Digital UNIX, aka DEC OSF/1) lib/sdbm test failure with gcc
  2311. If compiled with gcc 2.95 the lib/sdbm test will fail (dump core).
  2312. The cure is to use the vendor cc, it comes with the operating system
  2313. and produces good code.
  2314. =back
  2315. =head2 EBCDIC platforms not fully supported
  2316. In earlier releases of Perl, EBCDIC environments like OS390 (also
  2317. known as Open Edition MVS) and VM-ESA were supported. Due to changes
  2318. required by the UTF-8 (Unicode) support, the EBCDIC platforms are not
  2319. supported in Perl 5.6.0.
  2320. The 5.6.1 release improves support for EBCDIC platforms, but they
  2321. are not fully supported yet.
  2322. =head2 UNICOS/mk CC failures during Configure run
  2323. In UNICOS/mk the following errors may appear during the Configure run:
  2324. Guessing which symbols your C compiler and preprocessor define...
  2325. CC-20 cc: ERROR File = try.c, Line = 3
  2326. ...
  2327. bad switch yylook 79bad switch yylook 79bad switch yylook 79bad switch yylook 79#ifdef A29K
  2328. ...
  2329. 4 errors detected in the compilation of "try.c".
  2330. The culprit is the broken awk of UNICOS/mk. The effect is fortunately
  2331. rather mild: Perl itself is not adversely affected by the error, only
  2332. the h2ph utility coming with Perl, and that is rather rarely needed
  2333. these days.
  2334. =head2 Arrow operator and arrays
  2335. When the left argument to the arrow operator C<< -> >> is an array, or
  2336. the C<scalar> operator operating on an array, the result of the
  2337. operation must be considered erroneous. For example:
  2338. @x->[2]
  2339. scalar(@x)->[2]
  2340. These expressions will get run-time errors in some future release of
  2341. Perl.
  2342. =head2 Experimental features
  2343. As discussed above, many features are still experimental. Interfaces and
  2344. implementation of these features are subject to change, and in extreme cases,
  2345. even subject to removal in some future release of Perl. These features
  2346. include the following:
  2347. =over 4
  2348. =item Threads
  2349. =item Unicode
  2350. =item 64-bit support
  2351. =item Lvalue subroutines
  2352. =item Weak references
  2353. =item The pseudo-hash data type
  2354. =item The Compiler suite
  2355. =item Internal implementation of file globbing
  2356. =item The DB module
  2357. =item The regular expression code constructs:
  2358. C<(?{ code })> and C<(??{ code })>
  2359. =back
  2360. =head1 Obsolete Diagnostics
  2361. =over 4
  2362. =item Character class syntax [: :] is reserved for future extensions
  2363. (W) Within regular expression character classes ([]) the syntax beginning
  2364. with "[:" and ending with ":]" is reserved for future extensions.
  2365. If you need to represent those character sequences inside a regular
  2366. expression character class, just quote the square brackets with the
  2367. backslash: "\[:" and ":\]".
  2368. =item Ill-formed logical name |%s| in prime_env_iter
  2369. (W) A warning peculiar to VMS. A logical name was encountered when preparing
  2370. to iterate over %ENV which violates the syntactic rules governing logical
  2371. names. Because it cannot be translated normally, it is skipped, and will not
  2372. appear in %ENV. This may be a benign occurrence, as some software packages
  2373. might directly modify logical name tables and introduce nonstandard names,
  2374. or it may indicate that a logical name table has been corrupted.
  2375. =item In string, @%s now must be written as \@%s
  2376. The description of this error used to say:
  2377. (Someday it will simply assume that an unbackslashed @
  2378. interpolates an array.)
  2379. That day has come, and this fatal error has been removed. It has been
  2380. replaced by a non-fatal warning instead.
  2381. See L</Arrays now always interpolate into double-quoted strings> for
  2382. details.
  2383. =item Probable precedence problem on %s
  2384. (W) The compiler found a bareword where it expected a conditional,
  2385. which often indicates that an || or && was parsed as part of the
  2386. last argument of the previous construct, for example:
  2387. open FOO || die;
  2388. =item regexp too big
  2389. (F) The current implementation of regular expressions uses shorts as
  2390. address offsets within a string. Unfortunately this means that if
  2391. the regular expression compiles to longer than 32767, it'll blow up.
  2392. Usually when you want a regular expression this big, there is a better
  2393. way to do it with multiple statements. See L<perlre>.
  2394. =item Use of "$$<digit>" to mean "${$}<digit>" is deprecated
  2395. (D) Perl versions before 5.004 misinterpreted any type marker followed
  2396. by "$" and a digit. For example, "$$0" was incorrectly taken to mean
  2397. "${$}0" instead of "${$0}". This bug is (mostly) fixed in Perl 5.004.
  2398. However, the developers of Perl 5.004 could not fix this bug completely,
  2399. because at least two widely-used modules depend on the old meaning of
  2400. "$$0" in a string. So Perl 5.004 still interprets "$$<digit>" in the
  2401. old (broken) way inside strings; but it generates this message as a
  2402. warning. And in Perl 5.005, this special treatment will cease.
  2403. =back
  2404. =head1 Reporting Bugs
  2405. If you find what you think is a bug, you might check the
  2406. articles recently posted to the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup.
  2407. There may also be information at http://www.perl.com/, the Perl
  2408. Home Page.
  2409. If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the B<perlbug>
  2410. program included with your release. Be sure to trim your bug down
  2411. to a tiny but sufficient test case. Your bug report, along with the
  2412. output of C<perl -V>, will be sent off to [email protected] to be
  2413. analysed by the Perl porting team.
  2414. =head1 SEE ALSO
  2415. The F<Changes> file for exhaustive details on what changed.
  2416. The F<INSTALL> file for how to build Perl.
  2417. The F<README> file for general stuff.
  2418. The F<Artistic> and F<Copying> files for copyright information.
  2419. =head1 HISTORY
  2420. Written by Gurusamy Sarathy <F<[email protected]>>, with many
  2421. contributions from The Perl Porters.
  2422. Send omissions or corrections to <F<[email protected]>>.
  2423. =cut