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PERL5160DELTA(1) |
Perl Programmers Reference Guide |
PERL5160DELTA(1) |
perl5160delta - what is new for perl v5.16.0
This document describes differences between the 5.14.0 release and the 5.16.0
release.
If you are upgrading from an earlier release such as 5.12.0, first
read perl5140delta, which describes differences between 5.12.0 and
5.14.0.
Some bug fixes in this release have been backported to later
releases of 5.14.x. Those are indicated with the 5.14.x version in
parentheses.
With the release of Perl 5.16.0, the 5.12.x series of releases is now out of its
support period. There may be future 5.12.x releases, but only in the event of
a critical security issue. Users of Perl 5.12 or earlier should consider
upgrading to a more recent release of Perl.
This policy is described in greater detail in perlpolicy.
As of this release, version declarations like "use
v5.16" now disable all features before enabling the new feature
bundle. This means that the following holds true:
use 5.016;
# only 5.16 features enabled here
use 5.014;
# only 5.14 features enabled here (not 5.16)
"use v5.12" and higher continue
to enable strict, but explicit "use
strict" and "no
strict" now override the version declaration, even when they
come first:
no strict;
use 5.012;
# no strict here
There is a new ":default" feature bundle that represents
the set of features enabled before any version declaration or
"use feature" has been seen. Version
declarations below 5.10 now enable the ":default" feature set.
This does not actually change the behavior of
"use v5.8",
because features added to the ":default" set are those that were
traditionally enabled by default, before they could be turned off.
"no feature" now resets to the
default feature set. To disable all features (which is likely to be a pretty
special-purpose request, since it presumably won't match any named set of
semantics) you can now write "no feature
':all'".
$[ is now disabled under
"use v5.16". It is part of the default
feature set and can be turned on or off explicitly with
"use feature
'array_base'".
The new "__SUB__" token, available under the
"current_sub" feature (see feature) or
"use v5.16", returns a reference to the
current subroutine, making it easier to write recursive closures.
More consistent "eval"
The "eval" operator sometimes
treats a string argument as a sequence of characters and sometimes as a
sequence of bytes, depending on the internal encoding. The internal encoding
is not supposed to make any difference, but there is code that relies on
this inconsistency.
The new "unicode_eval" and
"evalbytes" features (enabled under
"use 5.16.0")
resolve this. The "unicode_eval" feature
causes "eval
$string" to treat the string always as Unicode.
The "evalbytes" features provides a
function, itself called "evalbytes", which
evaluates its argument always as a string of bytes.
These features also fix oddities with source filters leaking to
outer dynamic scopes.
See feature for more detail.
"substr" lvalue revamp
When "substr" is called in
lvalue or potential lvalue context with two or three arguments, a special
lvalue scalar is returned that modifies the original string (the first
argument) when assigned to.
Previously, the offsets (the second and third arguments) passed to
"substr" would be converted immediately to
match the string, negative offsets being translated to positive and offsets
beyond the end of the string being truncated.
Now, the offsets are recorded without modification in the special
lvalue scalar that is returned, and the original string is not even looked
at by "substr" itself, but only when the
returned lvalue is read or modified.
These changes result in an incompatible change:
If the original string changes length after the call to
"substr" but before assignment to its
return value, negative offsets will remember their position from the end of
the string, affecting code like this:
my $string = "string";
my $lvalue = \substr $string, -4, 2;
print $$lvalue, "\n"; # prints "ri"
$string = "bailing twine";
print $$lvalue, "\n"; # prints "wi"; used to print "il"
The same thing happens with an omitted third argument. The
returned lvalue will always extend to the end of the string, even if the
string becomes longer.
Since this change also allowed many bugs to be fixed (see
"The "substr" operator"), and
since the behavior of negative offsets has never been specified, the change
was deemed acceptable.
Return value of "tied"
The value returned by "tied" on
a tied variable is now the actual scalar that holds the object to which the
variable is tied. This lets ties be weakened with
"Scalar::Util::weaken(tied
$tied_variable)".
Supports (almost) Unicode 6.1
Besides the addition of whole new scripts, and new characters in
existing scripts, this new version of Unicode, as always, makes some changes
to existing characters. One change that may trip up some applications is
that the General Category of two characters in the Latin-1 range, PILCROW
SIGN and SECTION SIGN, has been changed from Other_Symbol to
Other_Punctuation. The same change has been made for a character in each of
Tibetan, Ethiopic, and Aegean. The code points U+3248..U+324F (CIRCLED
NUMBER TEN ON BLACK SQUARE through CIRCLED NUMBER EIGHTY ON BLACK SQUARE)
have had their General Category changed from Other_Symbol to Other_Numeric.
The Line Break property has changes for Hebrew and Japanese; and because of
other changes in 6.1, the Perl regular expression construct
"\X" now works differently for some
characters in Thai and Lao.
New aliases (synonyms) have been defined for many property values;
these, along with the previously existing ones, are all cross-indexed in
perluniprops.
The return value of
"charnames::viacode()" is affected by
other changes:
Code point Old Name New Name
U+000A LINE FEED (LF) LINE FEED
U+000C FORM FEED (FF) FORM FEED
U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) CARRIAGE RETURN
U+0085 NEXT LINE (NEL) NEXT LINE
U+008E SINGLE-SHIFT 2 SINGLE-SHIFT-2
U+008F SINGLE-SHIFT 3 SINGLE-SHIFT-3
U+0091 PRIVATE USE 1 PRIVATE USE-1
U+0092 PRIVATE USE 2 PRIVATE USE-2
U+2118 SCRIPT CAPITAL P WEIERSTRASS ELLIPTIC FUNCTION
Perl will accept any of these names as input, but
"charnames::viacode()" now returns the new
name of each pair. The change for U+2118 is considered by Unicode to be a
correction, that is the original name was a mistake (but again, it will
remain forever valid to use it to refer to U+2118). But most of these
changes are the fallout of the mistake Unicode 6.0 made in naming a
character used in Japanese cell phones to be "BELL", which
conflicts with the longstanding industry use of (and Unicode's
recommendation to use) that name to mean the ASCII control character at
U+0007. Therefore, that name has been deprecated in Perl since v5.14, and
any use of it will raise a warning message (unless turned off). The name
"ALERT" is now the preferred name for this code point, with
"BEL" an acceptable short form. The name for the new cell phone
character, at code point U+1F514, remains undefined in this version of Perl
(hence we don't implement quite all of Unicode 6.1), but starting in v5.18,
BELL will mean this character, and not U+0007.
Unicode has taken steps to make sure that this sort of mistake
does not happen again. The Standard now includes all generally accepted
names and abbreviations for control characters, whereas previously it didn't
(though there were recommended names for most of them, which Perl used).
This means that most of those recommended names are now officially in the
Standard. Unicode did not recommend names for the four code points listed
above between U+008E and U+008F, and in standardizing them Unicode subtly
changed the names that Perl had previously given them, by replacing the
final blank in each name by a hyphen. Unicode also officially accepts names
that Perl had deprecated, such as FILE SEPARATOR. Now the only deprecated
name is BELL. Finally, Perl now uses the new official names instead of the
old (now considered obsolete) names for the first four code points in the
list above (the ones which have the parentheses in them).
Now that the names have been placed in the Unicode standard, these
kinds of changes should not happen again, though corrections, such as to
U+2118, are still possible.
Unicode also added some name abbreviations, which Perl now
accepts: SP for SPACE; TAB for CHARACTER TABULATION; NEW LINE, END OF LINE,
NL, and EOL for LINE FEED; LOCKING-SHIFT ONE for SHIFT OUT; LOCKING-SHIFT
ZERO for SHIFT IN; and ZWNBSP for ZERO WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE.
More details on this version of Unicode are provided in
<http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.1.0/>.
"use charnames" is no longer needed for
"\N{name}"
When
"\N{name}"
is encountered, the "charnames" module is
now automatically loaded when needed as if the
":full" and
":short" options had been specified. See
charnames for more information.
"\N{...}" can now have Unicode loose
name matching
This is described in the
"charnames" item in "Updated Modules
and Pragmata" below.
Unicode Symbol Names
Perl now has proper support for Unicode in symbol names. It used
to be that "*{$foo}" would ignore the
internal UTF8 flag and use the bytes of the underlying representation to
look up the symbol. That meant that
"*{"\x{100}"}" and
"*{"\xc4\x80"}" would return the
same thing. All these parts of Perl have been fixed to account for
Unicode:
- Method names (including those passed to "use
overload")
- Typeglob names (including names of variables, subroutines, and
filehandles)
- Package names
- "goto"
- Symbolic dereferencing
- Second argument to "bless()" and
"tie()"
- Return value of "ref()"
- Subroutine prototypes
- Attributes
- Various warnings and error messages that mention variable names or values,
methods, etc.
In addition, a parsing bug has been fixed that prevented
"*{e}" from implicitly quoting the name,
but instead interpreted it as "*{+e}",
which would cause a strict violation.
"*{"*a::b"}"
automatically strips off the * if it is followed by an ASCII letter. That
has been extended to all Unicode identifier characters.
One-character non-ASCII non-punctuation variables (like
"$e") are now subject to "Used only
once" warnings. They used to be exempt, as they were treated as
punctuation variables.
Also, single-character Unicode punctuation variables (like
$X) are now supported [perl #69032].
Improved ability to mix locales and Unicode, including UTF-8
locales
An optional parameter has been added to "use
locale"
use locale ':not_characters';
which tells Perl to use all but the
"LC_CTYPE" and
"LC_COLLATE" portions of the current
locale. Instead, the character set is assumed to be Unicode. This lets
locales and Unicode be seamlessly mixed, including the increasingly frequent
UTF-8 locales. When using this hybrid form of locales, the
":locale" layer to the open pragma can be
used to interface with the file system, and there are CPAN modules available
for ARGV and environment variable conversions.
Full details are in perllocale.
New function "fc" and corresponding
escape sequence "\F" for Unicode foldcase
Unicode foldcase is an extension to lowercase that gives better
results when comparing two strings case-insensitively. It has long been used
internally in regular expression "/i"
matching. Now it is available explicitly through the new
"fc" function call (enabled by
"use feature 'fc'", or
"use v5.16", or explicitly callable via
"CORE::fc") or through the new
"\F" sequence in double-quotish
strings.
Full details are in "fc" in perlfunc.
The Unicode "Script_Extensions"
property is now supported.
New in Unicode 6.0, this is an improved
"Script" property. Details are in
"Scripts" in perlunicode.
Improved typemaps for Some Builtin Types
Most XS authors will know there is a longstanding bug in the
OUTPUT typemap for T_AVREF ("AV*"),
T_HVREF ("HV*"), T_CVREF
("CV*"), and T_SVREF
("SVREF" or
"\$foo") that requires manually
decrementing the reference count of the return value instead of the typemap
taking care of this. For backwards-compatibility, this cannot be changed in
the default typemaps. But we now provide additional typemaps
"T_AVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED", etc. that do not
exhibit this bug. Using them in your extension is as simple as having one
line in your "TYPEMAP" section:
HV* T_HVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED
"is_utf8_char()"
The XS-callable function
"is_utf8_char()", when presented with
malformed UTF-8 input, can read up to 12 bytes beyond the end of the string.
This cannot be fixed without changing its API, and so its use is now
deprecated. Use "is_utf8_char_buf()"
(described just below) instead.
Added "is_utf8_char_buf()"
This function is designed to replace the deprecated
"is_utf8_char()" function. It includes an extra parameter
to make sure it doesn't read past the end of the input buffer.
Other "is_utf8_foo()" functions, as
well as "utf8_to_foo()", etc.
Most other XS-callable functions that take UTF-8 encoded input
implicitly assume that the UTF-8 is valid (not malformed) with respect to
buffer length. Do not do things such as change a character's case or see if
it is alphanumeric without first being sure that it is valid UTF-8. This can
be safely done for a whole string by using one of the functions
"is_utf8_string()",
"is_utf8_string_loc()", and
"is_utf8_string_loclen()".
New Pad API
Many new functions have been added to the API for manipulating
lexical pads. See "Pad Data Structures" in perlapi for more
information.
$$ can be assigned to
$$ was made read-only in Perl 5.8.0. But
only sometimes: "local $$" would make it
writable again. Some CPAN modules were using "local
$$" or XS code to bypass the read-only check, so there is no
reason to keep $$ read-only. (This change also
allowed a bug to be fixed while maintaining backward compatibility.)
$^X converted to an absolute path on FreeBSD, OS
X and Solaris
$^X is now converted to an absolute path
on OS X, FreeBSD (without needing /proc mounted) and Solaris 10 and
11. This augments the previous approach of using /proc on Linux,
FreeBSD, and NetBSD (in all cases, where mounted).
This makes relocatable perl installations more useful on these
platforms. (See "Relocatable @INC" in
INSTALL)
Features inside the debugger
The current Perl's feature bundle is now enabled for commands
entered in the interactive debugger.
New option for the debugger's t
command
The t command in the debugger, which toggles tracing mode,
now accepts a numeric argument that determines how many levels of subroutine
calls to trace.
"enable" and
"disable"
The debugger now has "disable"
and "enable" commands for disabling
existing breakpoints and re-enabling them. See perldebug.
Breakpoints with file names
The debugger's "b" command for setting breakpoints now
lets a line number be prefixed with a file name. See "b [file]:[line]
[condition]" in perldebug.
The "CORE::" prefix
The "CORE::" prefix can now be
used on keywords enabled by feature.pm, even outside the scope of
"use feature".
Subroutines in the "CORE"
namespace
Many Perl keywords are now available as subroutines in the CORE
namespace. This lets them be aliased:
BEGIN { *entangle = \&CORE::tie }
entangle $variable, $package, @args;
And for prototypes to be bypassed:
sub mytie(\[%$*@]$@) {
my ($ref, $pack, @args) = @_;
... do something ...
goto &CORE::tie;
}
Some of these cannot be called through references or via
&foo syntax, but must be called as
barewords.
See CORE for details.
Anonymous handles
Automatically generated file handles are now named __ANONIO__ when
the variable name cannot be determined, rather than
$__ANONIO__.
Autoloaded sort Subroutines
Custom sort subroutines can now be autoloaded [perl #30661]:
sub AUTOLOAD { ... }
@sorted = sort foo @list; # uses AUTOLOAD
"continue" no longer requires the
"switch" feature
The "continue" keyword has two
meanings. It can introduce a "continue"
block after a loop, or it can exit the current
"when" block. Up to now, the latter
meaning was valid only with the "switch" feature enabled, and was
a syntax error otherwise. Since the main purpose of feature.pm is to avoid
conflicts with user-defined subroutines, there is no reason for
"continue" to depend on it.
DTrace probes for interpreter phase change
The "phase-change" probes will
fire when the interpreter's phase changes, which tracks the
"${^GLOBAL_PHASE}" variable.
"arg0" is the new phase name;
"arg1" is the old one. This is useful for
limiting your instrumentation to one or more of: compile time, run time, or
destruct time.
"__FILE__()" Syntax
The "__FILE__",
"__LINE__" and
"__PACKAGE__" tokens can now be written
with an empty pair of parentheses after them. This makes them parse the same
way as "time",
"fork" and other built-in functions.
The "\$" prototype accepts any scalar
lvalue
The "\$" and
"\[$]" subroutine prototypes now accept
any scalar lvalue argument. Previously they accepted only scalars beginning
with "$" and hash and array elements. This
change makes them consistent with the way the built-in
"read" and
"recv" functions (among others) parse
their arguments. This means that one can override the built-in functions
with custom subroutines that parse their arguments the same way.
"_" in subroutine prototypes
The "_" character in subroutine
prototypes is now allowed before "@" or
"%".
The latter function is now deprecated because its API is insufficient to
guarantee that it doesn't read (up to 12 bytes in the worst case) beyond the
end of its input string. See is_utf8_char_buf().
Two new XS-accessible functions,
"utf8_to_uvchr_buf()" and
"utf8_to_uvuni_buf()" are now available to
prevent this, and the Perl core has been converted to use them. See
"Internal Changes".
Calling "File::Glob::bsd_glob" with the
unsupported flag GLOB_ALTDIRFUNC would cause an access violation / segfault. A
Perl program that accepts a flags value from an external source could expose
itself to denial of service or arbitrary code execution attacks. There are no
known exploits in the wild. The problem has been corrected by explicitly
disabling all unsupported flags and setting unused function pointers to null.
Bug reported by Clement Lecigne. (5.14.2)
A hypothetical bug (probably unexploitable in practice) because the incorrect
setting of the effective group ID while setting $( has
been fixed. The bug would have affected only systems that have
"setresgid()" but not
"setregid()", but no such systems are known
to exist.
It is now deprecated to directly read the Unicode data base files. These are
stored in the lib/unicore directory. Instead, you should use the new
functions in Unicode::UCD. These provide a stable API, and give complete
information.
Perl may at some point in the future change or remove these files.
The file which applications were most likely to have used is
lib/unicore/ToDigit.pl. "prop_invmap()" in
Unicode::UCD can be used to get at its data instead.
This function is deprecated because it could read beyond the end of the input
string. Use the new is_utf8_char_buf(),
"utf8_to_uvchr_buf()" and
"utf8_to_uvuni_buf()" instead.
This section serves as a notice of features that are likely to be removed
or deprecated in the next release of perl (5.18.0). If your code depends on
these features, you should contact the Perl 5 Porters via the mailing list
<http://lists.perl.org/list/perl5-porters.html> or perlbug to explain
your use case and inform the deprecation process.
These modules may be marked as deprecated from the core. This only means
that they will no longer be installed by default with the core distribution,
but will remain available on the CPAN.
- CPANPLUS
- Filter::Simple
- PerlIO::mmap
- Pod::LaTeX
- Pod::Parser
- SelfLoader
- Text::Soundex
- Thread.pm
These platforms will probably have their special build support removed during
the 5.17.0 development series.
- BeOS
- djgpp
- dgux
- EPOC
- MPE/iX
- Rhapsody
- UTS
- VM/ESA
- Swapping of $< and $>
For more information about this future deprecation, see the
relevant RT ticket
<https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/11547>.
- sfio, stdio
Perl supports being built without PerlIO proper, using a stdio
or sfio wrapper instead. A perl build like this will not support IO
layers and thus Unicode IO, making it rather handicapped.
PerlIO supports a "stdio"
layer if stdio use is desired, and similarly a sfio layer could be
produced.
- Unescaped literal "{" in regular
expressions.
Starting with v5.20, it is planned to require a literal
"{" to be escaped, for example by
preceding it with a backslash. In v5.18, a deprecated warning message
will be emitted for all such uses. This affects only patterns that are
to match a literal "{". Other uses of
this character, such as part of a quantifier or sequence as in those
below, are completely unaffected:
/foo{3,5}/
/\p{Alphabetic}/
/\N{DIGIT ZERO}
Removing this will permit extensions to Perl's pattern syntax
and better error checking for existing syntax. See
"Quantifiers" in perlre for an example.
- Revamping "\Q" semantics in
double-quotish strings when combined with other escapes.
There are several bugs and inconsistencies involving
combinations of "\Q" and escapes like
"\x",
"\L", etc., within a
"\Q...\E" pair. These need to be
fixed, and doing so will necessarily change current behavior. The
changes have not yet been settled.
Special blocks ("BEGIN",
"CHECK",
"INIT",
"UNITCHECK",
"END") are now called in void context. This
avoids wasteful copying of the result of the last statement [perl #108794].
With "no overloading", regular expression
objects returned by "qr//" are now
stringified as "Regexp=REGEXP(0xbe600d)" instead of the regular
expression itself [perl #108780].
Two presumably unused XS typemap entries have been removed from the core
typemap: T_DATAUNIT and T_CALLBACK. If you are, against all odds, a user of
these, please see the instructions on how to restore them in perlxstypemap.
These are detailed in "Supports (almost) Unicode 6.1" above. You can
compile this version of Perl to use Unicode 6.0. See "Hacking Perl to
work on earlier Unicode versions (for very serious hackers only)" in
perlunicode.
All support for the Borland compiler has been dropped. The code had not worked
for a long time anyway.
Perl should never have exposed certain Unicode properties that are used by
Unicode internally and not meant to be publicly available. Use of these has
generated deprecated warning messages since Perl 5.12. The removed properties
are Other_Alphabetic, Other_Default_Ignorable_Code_Point,
Other_Grapheme_Extend, Other_ID_Continue, Other_ID_Start, Other_Lowercase,
Other_Math, and Other_Uppercase.
Perl may be recompiled to include any or all of them; instructions
are given in "Unicode character properties that are NOT accepted by
Perl" in perluniprops.
The "*{...}" operator, when passed a reference
to an IO thingy (as in "*{*STDIN{IO}}"),
creates a new typeglob containing just that IO object. Previously, it would
stringify as an empty string, but some operators would treat it as undefined,
producing an "uninitialized" warning. Now it stringifies as
__ANONIO__ [perl #96326].
This feature was deprecated in Perl 5.14, and has now been removed. The CPAN
module Unicode::Casing provides better functionality without the drawbacks
that this feature had, as are detailed in the 5.14 documentation:
<http://perldoc.perl.org/5.14.0/perlunicode.html#User-Defined-Case-Mappings-%28for-serious-hackers-only%29>
XSUB C functions are now 'static', that is, they are not visible from outside
the compilation unit. Users can use the new
"XS_EXTERNAL(name)" and
"XS_INTERNAL(name)" macros to pick the
desired linking behavior. The ordinary
"XS(name)" declaration for XSUBs will
continue to declare non-'static' XSUBs for compatibility, but the XS compiler,
ExtUtils::ParseXS ("xsubpp") will emit
'static' XSUBs by default. ExtUtils::ParseXS's behavior can be reconfigured
from XS using the "EXPORT_XSUB_SYMBOLS"
keyword. See perlxs for details.
Weakening read-only references is no longer permitted. It should never have
worked anyway, and could sometimes result in crashes.
Attempting to tie a scalar after a typeglob was assigned to it would instead tie
the handle in the typeglob's IO slot. This meant that it was impossible to tie
the scalar itself. Similar problems affected
"tied" and
"untie": "tied
$scalar" would return false on a tied scalar if the last thing
returned was a typeglob, and "untie $scalar"
on such a tied scalar would do nothing.
We fixed this problem before Perl 5.14.0, but it caused problems
with some CPAN modules, so we put in a deprecation cycle instead.
Now the deprecation has been removed and this bug has been fixed.
So "tie $scalar" will always tie the
scalar, not the handle it holds. To tie the handle, use
"tie *$scalar" (with an explicit
asterisk). The same applies to "tied
*$scalar" and "untie
*$scalar".
All three functions were private, undocumented, and unexported. They do not
appear to be used by any code on CPAN. Two have been inlined and one deleted
entirely.
Previously, if one called fork(3) from C, Perl's notion of
$$ could go out of sync with what getpid()
returns. By always fetching the value of $$ via
getpid(), this potential bug is eliminated. Code that depends on the
caching behavior will break. As described in Core Enhancements,
$$ is now writable, but it will be reset during a
fork.
The POSIX emulation of $$ and
"getppid()" under the obsolete LinuxThreads
implementation has been removed. This only impacts users of Linux 2.4 and
users of Debian GNU/kFreeBSD up to and including 6.0, not the vast majority of
Linux installations that use NPTL threads.
This means that "getppid()",
like $$, is now always guaranteed to return the OS's
idea of the current state of the process, not perl's cached version of
it.
See the documentation for $$ for details.
Similarly to the changes to $$ and
"getppid()", the internal caching of
$<, $>,
$( and $) has been removed.
When we cached these values our idea of what they were would drift
out of sync with reality if someone (e.g., someone embedding perl) called
"sete?[ug]id()" without updating
"PL_e?[ug]id". Having to deal with this
complexity wasn't worth it given how cheap the
"gete?[ug]id()" system call is.
This change will break a handful of CPAN modules that use the
XS-level "PL_uid",
"PL_gid",
"PL_euid" or
"PL_egid" variables.
The fix for those breakages is to use
"PerlProc_gete?[ug]id()" to retrieve them
(e.g., "PerlProc_getuid()"), and not to
assign to "PL_e?[ug]id" if you change the
UID/GID/EUID/EGID. There is no longer any need to do so since perl will
always retrieve the up-to-date version of those values from the OS.
This is unlikely to result in a real problem, as Perl does not attach special
meaning to any non-ASCII character, so it is currently irrelevant which are
quoted or not. This change fixes bug [perl #77654] and brings Perl's behavior
more into line with Unicode's recommendations. See "quotemeta" in
perlfunc.
- Improved performance for Unicode properties in regular expressions
Matching a code point against a Unicode property is now done
via a binary search instead of linear. This means for example that the
worst case for a 1000 item property is 10 probes instead of 1000. This
inefficiency has been compensated for in the past by permanently storing
in a hash the results of a given probe plus the results for the adjacent
64 code points, under the theory that near-by code points are likely to
be searched for. A separate hash was used for each mention of a Unicode
property in each regular expression. Thus,
"qr/\p{foo}abc\p{foo}/" would generate
two hashes. Any probes in one instance would be unknown to the other,
and the hashes could expand separately to be quite large if the regular
expression were used on many different widely-separated code points.
Now, however, there is just one hash shared by all instances of a given
property. This means that if "\p{foo}"
is matched against "A" in one regular expression in a thread,
the result will be known immediately to all regular expressions, and the
relentless march of using up memory is slowed considerably.
- Version declarations with the "use"
keyword (e.g., "use 5.012") are now
faster, as they enable features without loading feature.pm.
- "local $_" is faster now, as it no
longer iterates through magic that it is not going to copy anyway.
- Perl 5.12.0 sped up the destruction of objects whose classes define empty
"DESTROY" methods (to prevent
autoloading), by simply not calling such empty methods. This release takes
this optimization a step further, by not calling any
"DESTROY" method that begins with a
"return" statement. This can be useful
for destructors that are only used for debugging:
use constant DEBUG => 1;
sub DESTROY { return unless DEBUG; ... }
Constant-folding will reduce the first statement to
"return;" if DEBUG is set to 0,
triggering this optimization.
- Assigning to a variable that holds a typeglob or copy-on-write scalar is
now much faster. Previously the typeglob would be stringified or the
copy-on-write scalar would be copied before being clobbered.
- Assignment to "substr" in void context
is now more than twice its previous speed. Instead of creating and
returning a special lvalue scalar that is then assigned to,
"substr" modifies the original string
itself.
- "substr" no longer calculates a value to
return when called in void context.
- Due to changes in File::Glob, Perl's
"glob" function and its
"<...>" equivalent are now much
faster. The splitting of the pattern into words has been rewritten in C,
resulting in speed-ups of 20% for some cases.
This does not affect "glob"
on VMS, as it does not use File::Glob.
- The short-circuiting operators
"&&",
"||", and
"//", when chained (such as
"$a || $b || $c"), are now considerably
faster to short-circuit, due to reduced optree traversal.
- The implementation of "s///r" makes one
fewer copy of the scalar's value.
- Recursive calls to lvalue subroutines in lvalue scalar context use less
memory.
- Version::Requirements
- Version::Requirements is now DEPRECATED, use CPAN::Meta::Requirements,
which is a drop-in replacement. It will be deleted from perl.git blead in
v5.17.0.
This is only an overview of selected module updates. For a complete list of
updates, run:
$ corelist --diff 5.14.0 5.16.0
You can substitute your favorite version in place of 5.14.0,
too.
- Archive::Extract has been upgraded from version 0.48 to 0.58.
Includes a fix for FreeBSD to only use
"unzip" if it is located in
"/usr/local/bin", as FreeBSD 9.0 will
ship with a limited "unzip" in
"/usr/bin".
- Archive::Tar has been upgraded from version 1.76 to 1.82.
Adjustments to handle files >8gb (>0777777777777 octal)
and a feature to return the MD5SUM of files in the archive.
- base has been upgraded from version 2.16 to 2.18.
"base" no longer sets a
module's $VERSION to "-1" when a
module it loads does not define a $VERSION. This
change has been made because "-1" is not a valid version
number under the new "lax" criteria used internally by
"UNIVERSAL::VERSION". (See version for
more on "lax" version criteria.)
"base" no longer internally
skips loading modules it has already loaded and instead relies on
"require" to inspect
%INC. This fixes a bug when
"base" is used with code that clear
%INC to force a module to be reloaded.
- Carp has been upgraded from version 1.20 to 1.26.
It now includes last read filehandle info and puts a dot after
the file and line number, just like errors from
"die" [perl #106538].
- charnames has been updated from version 1.18 to 1.30.
"charnames" can now be
invoked with a new option, ":loose",
which is like the existing ":full"
option, but enables Unicode loose name matching. Details are in
"LOOSE MATCHES" in charnames.
- B::Deparse has been upgraded from version 1.03 to 1.14. This fixes
numerous deparsing bugs.
- CGI has been upgraded from version 3.52 to 3.59.
It uses the public and documented FCGI.pm API in CGI::Fast.
CGI::Fast was using an FCGI API that was deprecated and removed from
documentation more than ten years ago. Usage of this deprecated API with
FCGI >= 0.70 or FCGI <= 0.73 introduces a security issue.
<https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=68380>
<http://web.nvd.nist.gov/view/vuln/detail?vulnId=CVE-2011-2766>
Things that may break your code:
"url()" was fixed to return
"PATH_INFO" when it is explicitly
requested with either the "path=>1"
or "path_info=>1" flag.
If your code is running under mod_rewrite (or compatible) and
you are calling "self_url()" or you
are calling "url()" and passing
"path_info=>1", these methods will
actually be returning "PATH_INFO" now,
as you have explicitly requested or
"self_url()" has requested on your
behalf.
The "PATH_INFO" has been
omitted in such URLs since the issue was introduced in the 3.12 release
in December, 2005.
This bug is so old your application may have come to depend on
it or workaround it. Check for application before upgrading to this
release.
Examples of affected method calls:
$q->url(-absolute => 1, -query => 1, -path_info => 1);
$q->url(-path=>1);
$q->url(-full=>1,-path=>1);
$q->url(-rewrite=>1,-path=>1);
$q->self_url();
We no longer read from STDIN when the Content-Length is not
set, preventing requests with no Content-Length from sometimes freezing.
This is consistent with the CGI RFC 3875, and is also consistent with
CGI::Simple. However, the old behavior may have been expected by some
command-line uses of CGI.pm.
In addition, the DELETE HTTP verb is now supported.
- Compress::Zlib has been upgraded from version 2.035 to 2.048.
IO::Compress::Zip and IO::Uncompress::Unzip now have support
for LZMA (method 14). There is a fix for a CRC issue in
IO::Compress::Unzip and it supports Streamed Stored context now. And
fixed a Zip64 issue in IO::Compress::Zip when the content size was
exactly 0xFFFFFFFF.
- Digest::SHA has been upgraded from version 5.61 to 5.71.
Added BITS mode to the addfile method and shasum. This makes
partial-byte inputs possible via files/STDIN and lets shasum check all
8074 NIST Msg vectors, where previously special programming was required
to do this.
- Encode has been upgraded from version 2.42 to 2.44.
Missing aliases added, a deep recursion error fixed and
various documentation updates.
Addressed 'decode_xs n-byte heap-overflow' security bug in
Unicode.xs (CVE-2011-2939). (5.14.2)
- ExtUtils::CBuilder updated from version 0.280203 to 0.280206.
The new version appends CFLAGS and LDFLAGS to their Config.pm
counterparts.
- ExtUtils::ParseXS has been upgraded from version 2.2210 to 3.16.
Much of ExtUtils::ParseXS, the module behind the XS compiler
"xsubpp", was rewritten and cleaned
up. It has been made somewhat more extensible and now finally uses
strictures.
The typemap logic has been moved into a separate module,
ExtUtils::Typemaps. See "New Modules and Pragmata", above.
For a complete set of changes, please see the
ExtUtils::ParseXS changelog, available on the CPAN.
- File::Glob has been upgraded from version 1.12 to 1.17.
On Windows, tilde (~) expansion now checks the
"USERPROFILE" environment variable,
after checking "HOME".
It has a new ":bsd_glob"
export tag, intended to replace
":glob". Like
":glob" it overrides
"glob" with a function that does not
split the glob pattern into words, but, unlike
":glob", it iterates properly in
scalar context, instead of returning the last file.
There are other changes affecting Perl's own
"glob" operator (which uses File::Glob
internally, except on VMS). See "Performance Enhancements" and
"Selected Bug Fixes".
- FindBin updated from version 1.50 to 1.51.
It no longer returns a wrong result if a script of the same
name as the current one exists in the path and is executable.
- HTTP::Tiny has been upgraded from version 0.012 to 0.017.
Added support for using
$ENV{http_proxy} to set the default proxy
host.
Adds additional shorthand methods for all common HTTP verbs, a
"post_form()" method for POST-ing
x-www-form-urlencoded data and a
"www_form_urlencode()" utility
method.
- IO has been upgraded from version 1.25_04 to 1.25_06, and IO::Handle from
version 1.31 to 1.33.
Together, these upgrades fix a problem with IO::Handle's
"getline" and
"getlines" methods. When these methods
are called on the special ARGV handle, the next file is automatically
opened, as happens with the built-in
"<>" and
"readline" functions. But, unlike the
built-ins, these methods were not respecting the caller's use of the
open pragma and applying the appropriate I/O layers to the newly-opened
file [rt.cpan.org #66474].
- IPC::Cmd has been upgraded from version 0.70 to 0.76.
Capturing of command output (both
"STDOUT" and
"STDERR") is now supported using
IPC::Open3 on MSWin32 without requiring IPC::Run.
- IPC::Open3 has been upgraded from version 1.09 to 1.12.
Fixes a bug which prevented use of
"open3" on Windows when
*STDIN, *STDOUT or
*STDERR had been localized.
Fixes a bug which prevented duplicating numeric file
descriptors on Windows.
"open3" with "-"
for the program name works once more. This was broken in version 1.06
(and hence in Perl 5.14.0) [perl #95748].
- Locale::Codes has been upgraded from version 3.16 to 3.21.
Added Language Extension codes (langext) and Language
Variation codes (langvar) as defined in the IANA language registry.
Added language codes from ISO 639-5
Added language/script codes from the IANA language subtag
registry
Fixed an uninitialized value warning [rt.cpan.org #67438].
Fixed the return value for the all_XXX_codes and all_XXX_names
functions [rt.cpan.org #69100].
Reorganized modules to move Locale::MODULE to
Locale::Codes::MODULE to allow for cleaner future additions. The
original four modules (Locale::Language, Locale::Currency,
Locale::Country, Locale::Script) will continue to work, but all new sets
of codes will be added in the Locale::Codes namespace.
The code2XXX, XXX2code, all_XXX_codes, and all_XXX_names
functions now support retired codes. All codesets may be specified by a
constant or by their name now. Previously, they were specified only by a
constant.
The alias_code function exists for backward compatibility. It
has been replaced by rename_country_code. The alias_code function will
be removed some time after September, 2013.
All work is now done in the central module (Locale::Codes).
Previously, some was still done in the wrapper modules
(Locale::Codes::*). Added Language Family codes (langfam) as defined in
ISO 639-5.
- Math::BigFloat has been upgraded from version 1.993 to 1.997.
The "numify" method has been
corrected to return a normalized Perl number (the result of
"0 + $thing"), instead of a string
[rt.cpan.org #66732].
- Math::BigInt has been upgraded from version 1.994 to 1.998.
It provides a new "bsgn"
method that complements the "babs"
method.
It fixes the internal
"objectify" function's handling of
"foreign objects" so they are converted to the appropriate
class (Math::BigInt or Math::BigFloat).
- Math::BigRat has been upgraded from version 0.2602 to 0.2603.
"int()" on a Math::BigRat
object containing -1/2 now creates a Math::BigInt containing 0, rather
than -0. Math::BigInt does not even support negative zero, so the
resulting object was actually malformed [perl #95530].
- Math::Complex has been upgraded from version 1.56 to 1.59 and Math::Trig
from version 1.2 to 1.22.
Fixes include: correct copy constructor usage; fix polarwise
formatting with numeric format specifier; and more stable
"great_circle_direction"
algorithm.
- Module::CoreList has been upgraded from version 2.51 to 2.66.
The "corelist" utility now
understands the "-r" option for
displaying Perl release dates and the
"--diff" option to print the set of
modlib changes between two perl distributions.
- Module::Metadata has been upgraded from version 1.000004 to 1.000009.
Adds "provides" method to
generate a CPAN META provides data structure correctly; use of
"package_versions_from_directory" is
discouraged.
- ODBM_File has been upgraded from version 1.10 to 1.12.
The XS code is now compiled with
"PERL_NO_GET_CONTEXT", which will aid
performance under ithreads.
- open has been upgraded from version 1.08 to 1.10.
It no longer turns off layers on standard handles when invoked
without the ":std" directive. Similarly, when invoked
with the ":std" directive, it now clears layers on
STDERR before applying the new ones, and not just on STDIN and STDOUT
[perl #92728].
- overload has been upgraded from version 1.13 to 1.18.
"overload::Overloaded" no
longer calls "can" on the class, but
uses another means to determine whether the object has overloading. It
was never correct for it to call
"can", as overloading does not respect
AUTOLOAD. So classes that autoload methods and implement
"can" no longer have to account for
overloading [perl #40333].
A warning is now produced for invalid arguments. See "New
Diagnostics".
- PerlIO::scalar has been upgraded from version 0.11 to 0.14.
(This is the module that implements
"open $fh, '>', \$scalar".)
It fixes a problem with "open my $fh,
">", \$scalar" not working if
$scalar is a copy-on-write scalar. (5.14.2)
It also fixes a hang that occurs with
"readline" or
"<$fh>" if a typeglob has been
assigned to $scalar [perl #92258].
It no longer assumes during
"seek" that
$scalar is a string internally. If it didn't
crash, it was close to doing so [perl #92706]. Also, the internal print
routine no longer assumes that the position set by
"seek" is valid, but extends the
string to that position, filling the intervening bytes (between the old
length and the seek position) with nulls [perl #78980].
Printing to an in-memory handle now works if the
$scalar holds a reference, stringifying the
reference before modifying it. References used to be treated as empty
strings.
Printing to an in-memory handle no longer crashes if the
$scalar happens to hold a number internally, but
no string buffer.
Printing to an in-memory handle no longer creates scalars that
confuse the regular expression engine [perl #108398].
- Pod::Functions has been upgraded from version 1.04 to 1.05.
Functions.pm is now generated at perl build time from
annotations in perlfunc.pod. This will ensure that Pod::Functions
and perlfunc remain in synchronisation.
- Pod::Html has been upgraded from version 1.11 to 1.1502.
This is an extensive rewrite of Pod::Html to use Pod::Simple
under the hood. The output has changed significantly.
- Pod::Perldoc has been upgraded from version 3.15_03 to 3.17.
It corrects the search paths on VMS [perl #90640].
(5.14.1)
The -v option now fetches the right section for
$0.
This upgrade has numerous significant fixes. Consult its
changelog on the CPAN for more information.
- POSIX has been upgraded from version 1.24 to 1.30.
POSIX no longer uses AutoLoader. Any code which was relying on
this implementation detail was buggy, and may fail because of this
change. The module's Perl code has been considerably simplified, roughly
halving the number of lines, with no change in functionality. The XS
code has been refactored to reduce the size of the shared object by
about 12%, with no change in functionality. More POSIX functions now
have tests.
"sigsuspend" and
"pause" now run signal handlers before
returning, as the whole point of these two functions is to wait until a
signal has arrived, and then return after it has been triggered.
Delayed, or "safe", signals were preventing that from
happening, possibly resulting in race conditions [perl #107216].
"POSIX::sleep" is now a
direct call into the underlying OS
"sleep" function, instead of being a
Perl wrapper on "CORE::sleep".
"POSIX::dup2" now returns the correct
value on Win32 (i.e., the file descriptor).
"POSIX::SigSet"
"sigsuspend" and
"sigpending" and
"POSIX::pause" now dispatch safe
signals immediately before returning to their caller.
"POSIX::Termios::setattr"
now defaults the third argument to
"TCSANOW", instead of 0. On most
platforms "TCSANOW" is defined to be
0, but on some 0 is not a valid parameter, which caused a call with
defaults to fail.
- Socket has been upgraded from version 1.94 to 2.001.
It has new functions and constants for handling IPv6
sockets:
pack_ipv6_mreq
unpack_ipv6_mreq
IPV6_ADD_MEMBERSHIP
IPV6_DROP_MEMBERSHIP
IPV6_MTU
IPV6_MTU_DISCOVER
IPV6_MULTICAST_HOPS
IPV6_MULTICAST_IF
IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP
IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS
IPV6_V6ONLY
- Storable has been upgraded from version 2.27 to 2.34.
It no longer turns copy-on-write scalars into read-only
scalars when freezing and thawing.
- Sys::Syslog has been upgraded from version 0.27 to 0.29.
This upgrade closes many outstanding bugs.
- Term::ANSIColor has been upgraded from version 3.00 to 3.01.
Only interpret an initial array reference as a list of colors,
not any initial reference, allowing the colored function to work
properly on objects with stringification defined.
- Term::ReadLine has been upgraded from version 1.07 to 1.09.
Term::ReadLine now supports any event loop, including
unpublished ones and simple IO::Select, loops without the need to
rewrite existing code for any particular framework [perl #108470].
- threads::shared has been upgraded from version 1.37 to 1.40.
Destructors on shared objects used to be ignored sometimes if
the objects were referenced only by shared data structures. This has
been mostly fixed, but destructors may still be ignored if the objects
still exist at global destruction time [perl #98204].
- Unicode::Collate has been upgraded from version 0.73 to 0.89.
Updated to CLDR 1.9.1
Locales updated to CLDR 2.0: mk, mt, nb, nn, ro, ru, sk, sr,
sv, uk, zh__pinyin, zh__stroke
Newly supported locales: bn, fa, ml, mr, or, pa, sa, si,
si__dictionary, sr_Latn, sv__reformed, ta, te, th, ur, wae.
Tailored compatibility ideographs as well as unified
ideographs for the locales: ja, ko, zh__big5han, zh__gb2312han,
zh__pinyin, zh__stroke.
Locale/*.pl files are now searched for in
@INC.
- Unicode::Normalize has been upgraded from version 1.10 to 1.14.
Fixes for the removal of
unicore/CompositionExclusions.txt from core.
- Unicode::UCD has been upgraded from version 0.32 to 0.43.
This adds four new functions:
"prop_aliases()" and
"prop_value_aliases()", which are used
to find all Unicode-approved synonyms for property names, or to convert
from one name to another;
"prop_invlist" which returns all code
points matching a given Unicode binary property; and
"prop_invmap" which returns the
complete specification of a given Unicode property.
- Win32API::File has been upgraded from version 0.1101 to 0.1200.
Added SetStdHandle and GetStdHandle functions
As promised in Perl 5.14.0's release notes, the following modules have been
removed from the core distribution, and if needed should be installed from
CPAN instead.
- Devel::DProf has been removed from the Perl core. Prior version was
20110228.00.
- Shell has been removed from the Perl core. Prior version was 0.72_01.
- Several old perl4-style libraries which have been deprecated with 5.14 are
now removed:
abbrev.pl assert.pl bigfloat.pl bigint.pl bigrat.pl cacheout.pl
complete.pl ctime.pl dotsh.pl exceptions.pl fastcwd.pl flush.pl
getcwd.pl getopt.pl getopts.pl hostname.pl importenv.pl
lib/find{,depth}.pl look.pl newgetopt.pl open2.pl open3.pl
pwd.pl shellwords.pl stat.pl tainted.pl termcap.pl timelocal.pl
They can be found on CPAN as Perl4::CoreLibs.
perldtrace
perldtrace describes Perl's DTrace support, listing the provided
probes and gives examples of their use.
perlexperiment
This document is intended to provide a list of experimental
features in Perl. It is still a work in progress.
perlootut
This a new OO tutorial. It focuses on basic OO concepts, and then
recommends that readers choose an OO framework from CPAN.
perlxstypemap
The new manual describes the XS typemapping mechanism in
unprecedented detail and combines new documentation with information
extracted from perlxs and the previously unofficial list of all core
typemaps.
perlapi
- The HV API has long accepted negative lengths to show that the key is in
UTF8. This is now documented.
- The "boolSV()" macro is now
documented.
perlfunc
- "dbmopen" treats a 0 mode as a special
case, that prevents a nonexistent file from being created. This has been
the case since Perl 5.000, but was never documented anywhere. Now the
perlfunc entry mentions it [perl #90064].
- As an accident of history, "open $fh, '<:',
..." applies the default layers for the platform
(":raw" on Unix,
":crlf" on Windows), ignoring whatever
is declared by open.pm. This seems such a useful feature it has been
documented in perlfunc and open.
- The entry for "split" has been
rewritten. It is now far clearer than before.
perlguts
- A new section, Autoloading with XSUBs, has been added, which explains the
two APIs for accessing the name of the autoloaded sub.
- Some function descriptions in perlguts were confusing, as it was not clear
whether they referred to the function above or below the description. This
has been clarified [perl #91790].
perlobj
- •
- This document has been rewritten from scratch, and its coverage of various
OO concepts has been expanded.
perlop
perlpragma
- •
- There is now a standard convention for naming keys in the
"%^H", documented under Key naming.
"Laundering and Detecting Tainted Data" in
perlsec
- •
- The example function for checking for taintedness contained a subtle
error. $@ needs to be localized to prevent its
changing this global's value outside the function. The preferred method to
check for this remains "tainted" in Scalar::Util.
perllol
- •
- perllol has been expanded with examples using the new
"push $scalar" syntax introduced in Perl
5.14.0 (5.14.1).
perlmod
- •
- perlmod now states explicitly that some types of explicit symbol table
manipulation are not supported. This codifies what was effectively already
the case [perl #78074].
perlpodstyle
- The tips on which formatting codes to use have been corrected and greatly
expanded.
- There are now a couple of example one-liners for previewing POD files
after they have been edited.
perlre
- •
- The "(*COMMIT)" directive is now listed
in the right section (Verbs without an argument).
perlrun
- •
- perlrun has undergone a significant clean-up. Most notably, the
-0x... form of the -0 flag has been clarified, and the final
section on environment variables has been corrected and expanded
(5.14.1).
perlsub
- •
- The ($;) prototype syntax, which has existed for rather a long time, is
now documented in perlsub. It lets a unary function have the same
precedence as a list operator.
perltie
- •
- The required syntax for tying handles has been documented.
perlvar
- The documentation for $! has been corrected and clarified. It used to
state that $! could be "undef", which is
not the case. It was also unclear whether system calls set C's
"errno" or Perl's
$! [perl #91614].
- Documentation for $$ has been amended with additional cautions regarding
changing the process ID.
Other Changes
- perlxs was extended with documentation on inline typemaps.
- perlref has a new Circular References section explaining how circularities
may not be freed and how to solve that with weak references.
- Parts of perlapi were clarified, and Perl equivalents of some C functions
have been added as an additional mode of exposition.
- A few parts of perlre and perlrecharclass were clarified.
Old OO Documentation
The old OO tutorials, perltoot, perltooc, and perlboot, have been
removed. The perlbot (bag of object tricks) document has been removed as
well.
Development Deltas
The perldelta files for development releases are no longer
packaged with perl. These can still be found in the perl source code
repository.
The following additions or changes have been made to diagnostic output,
including warnings and fatal error messages. For the complete list of
diagnostic messages, see perldiag.
New Errors
- Cannot set tied @DB::args
This error occurs when
"caller" tries to set
@DB::args but finds it tied. Before this error
was added, it used to crash instead.
- Cannot tie unreifiable array
This error is part of a safety check that the
"tie" operator does before tying a
special array like @_. You should never see this
message.
- &CORE::%s cannot be called directly
This occurs when a subroutine in the
"CORE::" namespace is called with
&foo syntax or through a reference. Some
subroutines in this package cannot yet be called that way, but must be
called as barewords. See "Subroutines in the
"CORE" namespace", above.
- Source filters apply only to byte streams
This new error occurs when you try to activate a source filter
(usually by loading a source filter module) within a string passed to
"eval" under the
"unicode_eval" feature.
New Warnings
- defined(@array) is deprecated
The long-deprecated
"defined(@array)" now also warns for
package variables. Previously it issued a warning for lexical variables
only.
- length() used on %s
This new warning occurs when
"length" is used on an array or hash,
instead of "scalar(@array)" or
"scalar(keys %hash)".
- lvalue attribute %s already-defined subroutine
attributes.pm now emits this warning when the :lvalue
attribute is applied to a Perl subroutine that has already been defined,
as doing so can have unexpected side-effects.
- overload arg '%s' is invalid
This warning, in the "overload" category, is
produced when the overload pragma is given an argument it doesn't
recognize, presumably a mistyped operator.
- $[ used in %s (did you mean $] ?)
This new warning exists to catch the mistaken use of
$[ in version checks.
$], not $[, contains the
version number.
- Useless assignment to a temporary
Assigning to a temporary scalar returned from an lvalue
subroutine now produces this warning [perl #31946].
- Useless use of \E
"\E" does nothing unless
preceded by "\Q",
"\L" or
"\U".
- •
- "sort is now a reserved word"
This error used to occur when
"sort" was called without arguments,
followed by ";" or
")". (E.g.,
"sort;" would die, but
"{sort}" was OK.) This error message
was added in Perl 3 to catch code like
"close(sort)" which would no longer
work. More than two decades later, this message is no longer
appropriate. Now "sort" without
arguments is always allowed, and returns an empty list, as it did in
those cases where it was already allowed [perl #90030].
- The "Applying pattern match..." or similar warning produced when
an array or hash is on the left-hand side of the
"=~" operator now mentions the name of
the variable.
- The "Attempt to free non-existent shared string" has had the
spelling of "non-existent" corrected to "nonexistent".
It was already listed with the correct spelling in perldiag.
- The error messages for using "default"
and "when" outside a topicalizer have
been standardized to match the messages for
"continue" and loop controls. They now
read 'Can't "default" outside a topicalizer' and 'Can't
"when" outside a topicalizer'. They both used to be 'Can't use
when() outside a topicalizer' [perl #91514].
- The message, "Code point 0x%X is not Unicode, no properties match it;
all inverse properties do" has been changed to "Code point 0x%X
is not Unicode, all \p{} matches fail; all \P{} matches
succeed".
- Redefinition warnings for constant subroutines used to be mandatory, even
occurring under "no warnings". Now they
respect the warnings pragma.
- The "glob failed" warning message is now suppressible via
"no warnings" [perl #111656].
- The Invalid version format error message now says "negative version
number" within the parentheses, rather than "non-numeric
data", for negative numbers.
- The two warnings Possible attempt to put comments in qw() list and
Possible attempt to separate words with commas are no longer mutually
exclusive: the same "qw" construct may
produce both.
- The uninitialized warning for "y///r"
when $_ is implicit and undefined now mentions the
variable name, just like the non-/r variation of the operator.
- The 'Use of "foo" without parentheses is ambiguous' warning has
been extended to apply also to user-defined subroutines with a (;$)
prototype, and not just to built-in functions.
- Warnings that mention the names of lexical
("my") variables with Unicode characters
in them now respect the presence or absence of the
":utf8" layer on the output handle,
instead of outputting UTF8 regardless. Also, the correct names are
included in the strings passed to $SIG{__WARN__}
handlers, rather than the raw UTF8 bytes.
h2ph
- •
- h2ph used to generate code of the form
unless(defined(&FOO)) {
sub FOO () {42;}
}
But the subroutine is a compile-time declaration, and is hence
unaffected by the condition. It has now been corrected to emit a string
"eval" around the subroutine [perl
#99368].
splain
- splain no longer emits backtraces with the first line number
repeated.
This:
Uncaught exception from user code:
Cannot fwiddle the fwuddle at -e line 1.
at -e line 1
main::baz() called at -e line 1
main::bar() called at -e line 1
main::foo() called at -e line 1
has become this:
Uncaught exception from user code:
Cannot fwiddle the fwuddle at -e line 1.
main::baz() called at -e line 1
main::bar() called at -e line 1
main::foo() called at -e line 1
- Some error messages consist of multiple lines that are listed as separate
entries in perldiag. splain has been taught to find the separate entries
in these cases, instead of simply failing to find the message.
zipdetails
- •
- This is a new utility, included as part of an IO::Compress::Base upgrade.
zipdetails displays information about the internal record
structure of the zip file. It is not concerned with displaying any
details of the compressed data stored in the zip file.
Cygwin
- Since version 1.7, Cygwin supports native UTF-8 paths. If Perl is built
under that environment, directory and filenames will be UTF-8
encoded.
- Cygwin does not initialize all original Win32 environment variables. See
README.cygwin for a discussion of the newly-added
"Cygwin::sync_winenv()" function [perl
#110190] and for further links.
HP-UX
- •
- HP-UX PA-RISC/64 now supports gcc-4.x
A fix to correct the socketsize now makes the test suite pass
on HP-UX PA-RISC for 64bitall builds. (5.14.2)
VMS
- Remove unnecessary includes, fix miscellaneous compiler warnings and close
some unclosed comments on vms/vms.c.
- Remove sockadapt layer from the VMS build.
- Explicit support for VMS versions before v7.0 and DEC C versions before
v6.0 has been removed.
- Since Perl 5.10.1, the home-grown "stat"
wrapper has been unable to distinguish between a directory name containing
an underscore and an otherwise-identical filename containing a dot in the
same position (e.g., t/test_pl as a directory and t/test.pl as a file).
This problem has been corrected.
- The build on VMS now permits names of the resulting symbols in C code for
Perl longer than 31 characters. Symbols like
"Perl__it_was_the_best_of_times_it_was_the_worst_of_times"
can now be created freely without causing the VMS linker to seize up.
GNU/Hurd
- •
- Numerous build and test failures on GNU/Hurd have been resolved with hints
for building DBM modules, detection of the library search path, and
enabling of large file support.
OpenVOS
- •
- Perl is now built with dynamic linking on OpenVOS, the minimum supported
version of which is now Release 17.1.0.
SunOS
The CC workshop C++ compiler is now detected and used on systems
that ship without cc.
- The compiled representation of formats is now stored via the
"mg_ptr" of their
"PERL_MAGIC_fm". Previously it was
stored in the string buffer, beyond
"SvLEN()", the regular end of the
string. "SvCOMPILED()" and
"SvCOMPILED_{on,off}()" now exist solely
for compatibility for XS code. The first is always 0, the other two now
no-ops. (5.14.1)
- Some global variables have been marked
"const", members in the interpreter
structure have been re-ordered, and the opcodes have been re-ordered. The
op "OP_AELEMFAST" has been split into
"OP_AELEMFAST" and
"OP_AELEMFAST_LEX".
- When empting a hash of its elements (e.g., via undef(%h), or
%h=()), HvARRAY field is no longer temporarily
zeroed. Any destructors called on the freed elements see the remaining
elements. Thus, %h=() becomes more like
"delete $h{$_} for keys %h".
- Boyer-Moore compiled scalars are now PVMGs, and the Boyer-Moore tables are
now stored via the mg_ptr of their
"PERL_MAGIC_bm". Previously they were
PVGVs, with the tables stored in the string buffer, beyond
"SvLEN()". This eliminates the last
place where the core stores data beyond
"SvLEN()".
- Simplified logic in "Perl_sv_magic()"
introduces a small change of behavior for error cases involving unknown
magic types. Previously, if
"Perl_sv_magic()" was passed a magic
type unknown to it, it would
- 1.
- Croak "Modification of a read-only value attempted" if read
only
- 2.
- Return without error if the SV happened to already have this magic
- 3.
- otherwise croak "Don't know how to handle magic of type
\\%o"
Now it will always croak "Don't know how to handle magic of
type \\%o", even on read-only values, or SVs which already have the
unknown magic type.
- The experimental "fetch_cop_label"
function has been renamed to
"cop_fetch_label".
- The "cop_store_label" function has been
added to the API, but is experimental.
- embedvar.h has been simplified, and one level of macro indirection
for PL_* variables has been removed for the default (non-multiplicity)
configuration. PERLVAR*() macros now directly expand their arguments to
tokens such as "PL_defgv", instead of
expanding to "PL_Idefgv", with
embedvar.h defining a macro to map
"PL_Idefgv" to
"PL_defgv". XS code which has
unwarranted chumminess with the implementation may need updating.
- An API has been added to explicitly choose whether to export XSUB symbols.
More detail can be found in the comments for commit e64345f8.
- The "is_gv_magical_sv" function has been
eliminated and merged with
"gv_fetchpvn_flags". It used to be
called to determine whether a GV should be autovivified in rvalue context.
Now it has been replaced with a new
"GV_ADDMG" flag (not part of the
API).
- The returned code point from the function
"utf8n_to_uvuni()" when the input is
malformed UTF-8, malformations are allowed, and
"utf8" warnings are off is now the
Unicode REPLACEMENT CHARACTER whenever the malformation is such that no
well-defined code point can be computed. Previously the returned value was
essentially garbage. The only malformations that have well-defined values
are a zero-length string (0 is the return), and overlong UTF-8
sequences.
- Padlists are now marked "AvREAL"; i.e.,
reference-counted. They have always been reference-counted, but were not
marked real, because pad.c did its own clean-up, instead of using
the usual clean-up code in sv.c. That caused problems in thread
cloning, so now the "AvREAL" flag is on,
but is turned off in pad.c right before the padlist is freed (after
pad.c has done its custom freeing of the pads).
- All C files that make up the Perl core have been converted to UTF-8.
- These new functions have been added as part of the work on Unicode
symbols:
HvNAMELEN
HvNAMEUTF8
HvENAMELEN
HvENAMEUTF8
gv_init_pv
gv_init_pvn
gv_init_pvsv
gv_fetchmeth_pv
gv_fetchmeth_pvn
gv_fetchmeth_sv
gv_fetchmeth_pv_autoload
gv_fetchmeth_pvn_autoload
gv_fetchmeth_sv_autoload
gv_fetchmethod_pv_flags
gv_fetchmethod_pvn_flags
gv_fetchmethod_sv_flags
gv_autoload_pv
gv_autoload_pvn
gv_autoload_sv
newGVgen_flags
sv_derived_from_pv
sv_derived_from_pvn
sv_derived_from_sv
sv_does_pv
sv_does_pvn
sv_does_sv
whichsig_pv
whichsig_pvn
whichsig_sv
newCONSTSUB_flags
The gv_fetchmethod_*_flags functions, like
gv_fetchmethod_flags, are experimental and may change in a future
release.
- The following functions were added. These are not part of the API:
GvNAMEUTF8
GvENAMELEN
GvENAME_HEK
CopSTASH_flags
CopSTASH_flags_set
PmopSTASH_flags
PmopSTASH_flags_set
sv_sethek
HEKfARG
There is also a "HEKf" macro
corresponding to "SVf", for
interpolating HEKs in formatted strings.
- "sv_catpvn_flags" takes a couple of new
internal-only flags, "SV_CATBYTES" and
"SV_CATUTF8", which tell it whether the
char array to be concatenated is UTF8. This allows for more efficient
concatenation than creating temporary SVs to pass to
"sv_catsv".
- For XS AUTOLOAD subs, $AUTOLOAD is set once more,
as it was in 5.6.0. This is in addition to setting
"SvPVX(cv)", for compatibility with 5.8
to 5.14. See "Autoloading with XSUBs" in perlguts.
- Perl now checks whether the array (the linearized isa) returned by a MRO
plugin begins with the name of the class itself, for which the array was
created, instead of assuming that it does. This prevents the first element
from being skipped during method lookup. It also means that
"mro::get_linear_isa" may return an
array with one more element than the MRO plugin provided [perl
#94306].
- "PL_curstash" is now
reference-counted.
- There are now feature bundle hints in
"PL_hints" ($^H)
that version declarations use, to avoid having to load feature.pm.
One setting of the hint bits indicates a "custom" feature
bundle, which means that the entries in
"%^H" still apply. feature.pm
uses that.
The "HINT_FEATURE_MASK"
macro is defined in perl.h along with other hints. Other macros
for setting and testing features and bundles are in the new
feature.h. "FEATURE_IS_ENABLED"
(which has moved to feature.h) is no longer used throughout the
codebase, but more specific macros, e.g.,
"FEATURE_SAY_IS_ENABLED", that are
defined in feature.h.
- lib/feature.pm is now a generated file, created by the new
regen/feature.pl script, which also generates
feature.h.
- Tied arrays are now always "AvREAL". If
@_ or "DB::args"
is tied, it is reified first, to make sure this is always the case.
- Two new functions "utf8_to_uvchr_buf()"
and "utf8_to_uvuni_buf()" have been
added. These are the same as
"utf8_to_uvchr" and
"utf8_to_uvuni" (which are now
deprecated), but take an extra parameter that is used to guard against
reading beyond the end of the input string. See
"utf8_to_uvchr_buf" in perlapi and "utf8_to_uvuni_buf"
in perlapi.
- The regular expression engine now does TRIE case insensitive matches under
Unicode. This may change the output of "use re
'debug';", and will speed up various things.
- There is a new "wrap_op_checker()"
function, which provides a thread-safe alternative to writing to
"PL_check" directly.
- A bug has been fixed that would cause a "Use of freed value in
iteration" error if the next two hash elements that would be iterated
over are deleted [perl #85026]. (5.14.1)
- Deleting the current hash iterator (the hash element that would be
returned by the next call to "each") in
void context used not to free it [perl #85026].
- Deletion of methods via "delete
$Class::{method}" syntax used to update method caches if
called in void context, but not scalar or list context.
- When hash elements are deleted in void context, the internal hash entry is
now freed before the value is freed, to prevent destructors called by that
latter freeing from seeing the hash in an inconsistent state. It was
possible to cause double-frees if the destructor freed the hash itself
[perl #100340].
- A "keys" optimization in Perl 5.12.0 to
make it faster on empty hashes caused
"each" not to reset the iterator if
called after the last element was deleted.
- Freeing deeply nested hashes no longer crashes [perl #44225].
- It is possible from XS code to create hashes with elements that have no
values. The hash element and slice operators used to crash when handling
these in lvalue context. They now produce a "Modification of
non-creatable hash value attempted" error message.
- If list assignment to a hash or array triggered destructors that freed the
hash or array itself, a crash would ensue. This is no longer the case
[perl #107440].
- It used to be possible to free the typeglob of a localized array or hash
(e.g., "local @{"x"}; delete
$::{x}"), resulting in a crash on scope exit.
- Some core bugs affecting Hash::Util have been fixed: locking a hash
element that is a glob copy no longer causes the next assignment to it to
corrupt the glob (5.14.2), and unlocking a hash element that holds a
copy-on-write scalar no longer causes modifications to that scalar to
modify other scalars that were sharing the same string buffer.
- Tying "%^H" no longer causes perl to
crash or ignore the contents of "%^H"
when entering a compilation scope [perl #106282].
- "eval $string" and
"require" used not to localize
"%^H" during compilation if it was empty
at the time the "eval" call itself was
compiled. This could lead to scary side effects, like
"use re "/m"" enabling other
flags that the surrounding code was trying to enable for its caller [perl
#68750].
- "eval $string" and
"require" no longer localize hints
($^H and "%^H")
at run time, but only during compilation of the
$string or required file. This makes
"BEGIN { $^H{foo}=7 }" equivalent to
"BEGIN { eval '$^H{foo}=7' }" [perl
#70151].
- Creating a BEGIN block from XS code (via
"newXS" or
"newATTRSUB") would, on completion, make
the hints of the current compiling code the current hints. This could
cause warnings to occur in a non-warning scope.
Copy-on-write or shared hash key scalars were introduced in 5.8.0, but most Perl
code did not encounter them (they were used mostly internally). Perl 5.10.0
extended them, such that assigning
"__PACKAGE__" or a hash key to a scalar
would make it copy-on-write. Several parts of Perl were not updated to account
for them, but have now been fixed.
- "utf8::decode" had a nasty bug that
would modify copy-on-write scalars' string buffers in place (i.e.,
skipping the copy). This could result in hashes having two elements with
the same key [perl #91834]. (5.14.2)
- Lvalue subroutines were not allowing COW scalars to be returned. This was
fixed for lvalue scalar context in Perl 5.12.3 and 5.14.0, but list
context was not fixed until this release.
- Elements of restricted hashes (see the fields pragma) containing
copy-on-write values couldn't be deleted, nor could such hashes be cleared
("%hash = ()"). (5.14.2)
- Localizing a tied variable used to make it read-only if it contained a
copy-on-write string. (5.14.2)
- Assigning a copy-on-write string to a stash element no longer causes a
double free. Regardless of this change, the results of such assignments
are still undefined.
- Assigning a copy-on-write string to a tied variable no longer stops that
variable from being tied if it happens to be a PVMG or PVLV
internally.
- Doing a substitution on a tied variable returning a copy-on-write scalar
used to cause an assertion failure or an "Attempt to free nonexistent
shared string" warning.
- This one is a regression from 5.12: In 5.14.0, the bitwise assignment
operators "|=",
"^=" and
"&=" started leaving the left-hand
side undefined if it happened to be a copy-on-write string [perl
#108480].
- Storable, Devel::Peek and PerlIO::scalar had similar problems. See
"Updated Modules and Pragmata", above.
- dumpvar.pl, and therefore the "x"
command in the debugger, have been fixed to handle objects blessed into
classes whose names contain "=". The contents of such objects
used not to be dumped [perl #101814].
- The "R" command for restarting a debugger session has been fixed
to work on Windows, or any other system lacking a
"POSIX::_SC_OPEN_MAX" constant [perl
#87740].
- The "#line 42 foo" directive used not to
update the arrays of lines used by the debugger if it occurred in a string
eval. This was partially fixed in 5.14, but it worked only for a single
"#line 42 foo" in each eval. Now it
works for multiple.
- When subroutine calls are intercepted by the debugger, the name of the
subroutine or a reference to it is stored in
$DB::sub, for the debugger to access. Sometimes
(such as "$foo = *bar; undef *bar;
&$foo") $DB::sub would be set to a
name that could not be used to find the subroutine, and so the debugger's
attempt to call it would fail. Now the check to see whether a reference is
needed is more robust, so those problems should not happen anymore
[rt.cpan.org #69862].
- Every subroutine has a filename associated with it that the debugger uses.
The one associated with constant subroutines used to be misallocated when
cloned under threads. Consequently, debugging threaded applications could
result in memory corruption [perl #96126].
- "defined(${"..."})",
"defined(*{"..."})", etc.,
used to return true for most, but not all built-in variables, if they had
not been used yet. This bug affected
"${^GLOBAL_PHASE}" and
"${^UTF8CACHE}", among others. It also
used to return false if the package name was given as well
("${"::!"}") [perl #97978,
#97492].
- Perl 5.10.0 introduced a similar bug:
"defined(*{"foo"})" where
"foo" represents the name of a built-in global variable used to
return false if the variable had never been used before, but only on the
first call. This, too, has been fixed.
- Since 5.6.0, "*{ ... }" has been
inconsistent in how it treats undefined values. It would die in strict
mode or lvalue context for most undefined values, but would be treated as
the empty string (with a warning) for the specific scalar return by
"undef()"
(&PL_sv_undef internally). This has been
corrected. "undef()" is now treated like
other undefined scalars, as in Perl 5.005.
Perl has an internal variable that stores the last filehandle to be accessed. It
is used by $. and by
"tell" and
"eof" without arguments.
- It used to be possible to set this internal variable to a glob copy and
then modify that glob copy to be something other than a glob, and still
have the last-accessed filehandle associated with the variable after
assigning a glob to it again:
my $foo = *STDOUT; # $foo is a glob copy
<$foo>; # $foo is now the last-accessed handle
$foo = 3; # no longer a glob
$foo = *STDERR; # still the last-accessed handle
Now the "$foo = 3"
assignment unsets that internal variable, so there is no last-accessed
filehandle, just as if "<$foo>"
had never happened.
This also prevents some unrelated handle from becoming the
last-accessed handle if $foo falls out of scope
and the same internal SV gets used for another handle [perl #97988].
- A regression in 5.14 caused these statements not to set that internal
variable:
my $fh = *STDOUT;
tell $fh;
eof $fh;
seek $fh, 0,0;
tell *$fh;
eof *$fh;
seek *$fh, 0,0;
readline *$fh;
This is now fixed, but "tell *{ *$fh
}" still has the problem, and it is not clear how to fix it
[perl #106536].
The term "filetests" refers to the operators that consist of a hyphen
followed by a single letter: "-r",
"-x",
"-M", etc. The term "stacked" when
applied to filetests means followed by another filetest operator sharing the
same operand, as in "-r -x -w $fooo".
- "-T
HANDLE", even though it does a
"stat", was not resetting the last stat
type, so an "lstat _" following it would
merrily return the wrong results. Also, it was not setting the success
status.
- Freeing the handle last used by "stat"
or a filetest could result in
"-T _" using an unrelated
handle.
- "stat" with an IO reference would not
reset the stat type or record the filehandle for
"-T _" to use.
- Fatal warnings could cause the stat buffer not to be reset for a filetest
operator on an unopened filehandle or
"-l" on any handle. Fatal warnings also
stopped "-T" from setting
$!.
- When the last stat was on an unreadable file, "-T
_" is supposed to return
"undef", leaving the last stat buffer
unchanged. But it was setting the stat type, causing
"lstat _" to stop working.
- "-T
FILENAME" was not resetting the
internal stat buffers for unreadable files.
These have all been fixed.
- Several edge cases have been fixed with formats and
"formline"; in particular, where the
format itself is potentially variable (such as with ties and overloading),
and where the format and data differ in their encoding. In both these
cases, it used to possible for the output to be corrupted [perl
#91032].
- "formline" no longer converts its
argument into a string in-place. So passing a reference to
"formline" no longer destroys the
reference [perl #79532].
- Assignment to $^A (the format output accumulator)
now recalculates the number of lines output.
- "given" was not scoping its implicit
$_ properly, resulting in memory leaks or
"Variable is not available" warnings [perl #94682].
- "given" was not calling set-magic on the
implicit lexical $_ that it uses. This meant, for
example, that "pos" would be remembered
from one execution of the same "given"
block to the next, even if the input were a different variable [perl
#84526].
- "when" blocks are now capable of
returning variables declared inside the enclosing
"given" block [perl #93548].
- On OSes other than VMS, Perl's "glob"
operator (and the "<...>" form)
use File::Glob underneath. File::Glob splits the pattern into words,
before feeding each word to its
"bsd_glob" function.
There were several inconsistencies in the way the split was
done. Now quotation marks (' and ") are always treated as
shell-style word delimiters (that allow whitespace as part of a word)
and backslashes are always preserved, unless they exist to escape
quotation marks. Before, those would only sometimes be the case,
depending on whether the pattern contained whitespace. Also, escaped
whitespace at the end of the pattern is no longer stripped [perl
#40470].
- "CORE::glob" now works as a way to call
the default globbing function. It used to respect overrides, despite the
"CORE::" prefix.
- Under miniperl (used to configure modules when perl itself is built),
"glob" now clears
%ENV before calling csh, since the latter croaks
on some systems if it does not like the contents of the LS_COLORS
environment variable [perl #98662].
- Explicit return now returns the actual argument passed to return, instead
of copying it [perl #72724, #72706].
- Lvalue subroutines used to enforce lvalue syntax (i.e., whatever can go on
the left-hand side of "=") for the last
statement and the arguments to return. Since lvalue subroutines are not
always called in lvalue context, this restriction has been lifted.
- Lvalue subroutines are less restrictive about what values can be returned.
It used to croak on values returned by
"shift" and
"delete" and from other subroutines, but
no longer does so [perl #71172].
- Empty lvalue subroutines ("sub :lvalue
{}") used to return @_ in list
context. All subroutines used to do this, but regular subs were fixed in
Perl 5.8.2. Now lvalue subroutines have been likewise fixed.
- Autovivification now works on values returned from lvalue subroutines
[perl #7946], as does returning "keys"
in lvalue context.
- Lvalue subroutines used to copy their return values in rvalue context. Not
only was this a waste of CPU cycles, but it also caused bugs. A
"($)" prototype would cause an lvalue
sub to copy its return value [perl #51408], and
"while(lvalue_sub() =~ m/.../g) { ... }"
would loop endlessly [perl #78680].
- When called in potential lvalue context (e.g., subroutine arguments or a
list passed to "for"), lvalue
subroutines used to copy any read-only value that was returned. E.g.,
" sub :lvalue { $] } " would not return
$], but a copy of it.
- When called in potential lvalue context, an lvalue subroutine returning
arrays or hashes used to bind the arrays or hashes to scalar variables,
resulting in bugs. This was fixed in 5.14.0 if an array were the first
thing returned from the subroutine (but not for
"$scalar, @array" or hashes being
returned). Now a more general fix has been applied [perl #23790].
- Method calls whose arguments were all surrounded with
"my()" or
"our()" (as in
"$object->method(my($a,$b))") used to
force lvalue context on the subroutine. This would prevent lvalue methods
from returning certain values.
- Lvalue sub calls that are not determined to be such at compile time
(&$name or &{"name"}) are no
longer exempt from strict refs if they occur in the last statement of an
lvalue subroutine [perl #102486].
- Sub calls whose subs are not visible at compile time, if they occurred in
the last statement of an lvalue subroutine, would reject non-lvalue
subroutines and die with "Can't modify non-lvalue subroutine
call" [perl #102486].
Non-lvalue sub calls whose subs are visible at compile
time exhibited the opposite bug. If the call occurred in the last
statement of an lvalue subroutine, there would be no error when the
lvalue sub was called in lvalue context. Perl would blindly assign to
the temporary value returned by the non-lvalue subroutine.
- "AUTOLOAD" routines used to take
precedence over the actual sub being called (i.e., when autoloading wasn't
needed), for sub calls in lvalue or potential lvalue context, if the
subroutine was not visible at compile time.
- Applying the ":lvalue" attribute to an
XSUB or to an aliased subroutine stub with "sub foo
:lvalue;" syntax stopped working in Perl 5.12. This has been
fixed.
- Applying the :lvalue attribute to subroutine that is already defined does
not work properly, as the attribute changes the way the sub is compiled.
Hence, Perl 5.12 began warning when an attempt is made to apply the
attribute to an already defined sub. In such cases, the attribute is
discarded.
But the change in 5.12 missed the case where custom attributes
are also present: that case still silently and ineffectively applied the
attribute. That omission has now been corrected.
"sub foo :lvalue :Whatever" (when
"foo" is already defined) now warns
about the :lvalue attribute, and does not apply it.
- A bug affecting lvalue context propagation through nested lvalue
subroutine calls has been fixed. Previously, returning a value in nested
rvalue context would be treated as lvalue context by the inner subroutine
call, resulting in some values (such as read-only values) being
rejected.
- Arithmetic assignment ("$left +=
$right") involving overloaded objects that rely on the
'nomethod' override no longer segfault when the left operand is not
overloaded.
- Errors that occur when methods cannot be found during overloading now
mention the correct package name, as they did in 5.8.x, instead of
erroneously mentioning the "overload" package, as they have
since 5.10.0.
- Undefining %overload:: no longer causes a
crash.
- The "prototype" function no longer dies
for the "__FILE__",
"__LINE__" and
"__PACKAGE__" directives. It now returns
an empty-string prototype for them, because they are syntactically
indistinguishable from nullary functions like
"time".
- "prototype" now returns
"undef" for all overridable infix
operators, such as "eq", which are not
callable in any way resembling functions. It used to return incorrect
prototypes for some and die for others [perl #94984].
- The prototypes of several built-in
functions--"getprotobynumber",
"lock",
"not" and
"select"--have been corrected, or at
least are now closer to reality than before.
- "/[[:ascii:]]/" and
"/[[:blank:]]/" now use locale rules
under "use locale" when the platform
supports that. Previously, they used the platform's native character
set.
- "m/[[:ascii:]]/i" and
"/\p{ASCII}/i" now match identically
(when not under a differing locale). This fixes a regression introduced in
5.14 in which the first expression could match characters outside of
ASCII, such as the KELVIN SIGN.
- "/.*/g" would sometimes refuse to match
at the end of a string that ends with "\n". This has been fixed
[perl #109206].
- Starting with 5.12.0, Perl used to get its internal bookkeeping muddled up
after assigning "${ qr// }" to a hash
element and locking it with Hash::Util. This could result in double frees,
crashes, or erratic behavior.
- The new (in 5.14.0) regular expression modifier
"/a" when repeated like
"/aa" forbids the characters outside the
ASCII range that match characters inside that range from matching under
"/i". This did not work under some
circumstances, all involving alternation, such as:
"\N{KELVIN SIGN}" =~ /k|foo/iaa;
succeeded inappropriately. This is now fixed.
- 5.14.0 introduced some memory leaks in regular expression character
classes such as "[\w\s]", which have now
been fixed. (5.14.1)
- An edge case in regular expression matching could potentially loop. This
happened only under "/i" in bracketed
character classes that have characters with multi-character folds, and the
target string to match against includes the first portion of the fold,
followed by another character that has a multi-character fold that begins
with the remaining portion of the fold, plus some more.
"s\N{U+DF}" =~ /[\x{DF}foo]/i
is one such case. "\xDF"
folds to "ss". (5.14.1)
- A few characters in regular expression pattern matches did not match
correctly in some circumstances, all involving
"/i". The affected characters are:
COMBINING GREEK YPOGEGRAMMENI, GREEK CAPITAL LETTER IOTA, GREEK CAPITAL
LETTER UPSILON, GREEK PROSGEGRAMMENI, GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH
DIALYTIKA AND OXIA, GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH DIALYTIKA AND TONOS,
GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DIALYTIKA AND OXIA, GREEK SMALL LETTER
UPSILON WITH DIALYTIKA AND TONOS, LATIN SMALL LETTER LONG S, LATIN SMALL
LIGATURE LONG S T, and LATIN SMALL LIGATURE ST.
- A memory leak regression in regular expression compilation under threading
has been fixed.
- A regression introduced in 5.14.0 has been fixed. This involved an
inverted bracketed character class in a regular expression that consisted
solely of a Unicode property. That property wasn't getting inverted
outside the Latin1 range.
- Three problematic Unicode characters now work better in regex pattern
matching under "/i".
In the past, three Unicode characters: LATIN SMALL LETTER
SHARP S, GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH DIALYTIKA AND TONOS, and GREEK
SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DIALYTIKA AND TONOS, along with the sequences
that they fold to (including "ss" for LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP
S), did not properly match under "/i".
5.14.0 fixed some of these cases, but introduced others, including a
panic when one of the characters or sequences was used in the
"(?(DEFINE)" regular expression
predicate. The known bugs that were introduced in 5.14 have now been
fixed; as well as some other edge cases that have never worked until
now. These all involve using the characters and sequences outside
bracketed character classes under
"/i". This closes [perl #98546].
There remain known problems when using certain characters with
multi-character folds inside bracketed character classes, including such
constructs as "qr/[\N{LATIN SMALL LETTER
SHARP}a-z]/i". These remaining bugs are addressed in [perl
#89774].
- RT #78266: The regex engine has been leaking memory when accessing named
captures that weren't matched as part of a regex ever since 5.10 when they
were introduced; e.g., this would consume over a hundred MB of memory:
for (1..10_000_000) {
if ("foo" =~ /(foo|(?<capture>bar))?/) {
my $capture = $+{capture}
}
}
system "ps -o rss $$"'
- In 5.14, "/[[:lower:]]/i" and
"/[[:upper:]]/i" no longer matched the
opposite case. This has been fixed [perl #101970].
- A regular expression match with an overloaded object on the right-hand
side would sometimes stringify the object too many times.
- A regression has been fixed that was introduced in 5.14, in
"/i" regular expression matching, in
which a match improperly fails if the pattern is in UTF-8, the target
string is not, and a Latin-1 character precedes a character in the string
that should match the pattern. [perl #101710]
- In case-insensitive regular expression pattern matching, no longer on
UTF-8 encoded strings does the scan for the start of match look only at
the first possible position. This caused matches such as
""f\x{FB00}" =~ /ff/i" to
fail.
- The regexp optimizer no longer crashes on debugging builds when merging
fixed-string nodes with inconvenient contents.
- A panic involving the combination of the regular expression modifiers
"/aa" and the
"\b" escape sequence introduced in
5.14.0 has been fixed [perl #95964]. (5.14.2)
- The combination of the regular expression modifiers
"/aa" and the
"\b" and
"\B" escape sequences did not work
properly on UTF-8 encoded strings. All non-ASCII characters under
"/aa" should be treated as non-word
characters, but what was happening was that Unicode rules were used to
determine wordness/non-wordness for non-ASCII characters. This is now
fixed [perl #95968].
- "(?foo: ...)" no longer loses passed in
character set.
- The trie optimization used to have problems with alternations containing
an empty "(?:)", causing
""x" =~
/\A(?>(?:(?:)A|B|C?x))\z/" not to match, whereas it should
[perl #111842].
- Use of lexical ("my") variables in code
blocks embedded in regular expressions will no longer result in memory
corruption or crashes.
Nevertheless, these code blocks are still experimental, as
there are still problems with the wrong variables being closed over (in
loops for instance) and with abnormal exiting (e.g.,
"die") causing memory corruption.
- The "\h",
"\H",
"\v" and
"\V" regular expression metacharacters
used to cause a panic error message when trying to match at the end of the
string [perl #96354].
- The abbreviations for four C1 control characters
"MW"
"PM",
"RI", and
"ST" were previously unrecognized by
"\N{}", vianame(), and
string_vianame().
- Mentioning a variable named "&" other than
$& (i.e.,
"@&" or
"%&") no longer stops
$& from working. The same applies to variables
named "'" and "`" [perl #24237].
- Creating a "UNIVERSAL::AUTOLOAD" sub no
longer stops "%+",
"%-" and
"%!" from working some of the time [perl
#105024].
- "~~" now correctly handles the
precedence of Any~~Object, and is not tricked by an overloaded object on
the left-hand side.
- In Perl 5.14.0, "$tainted ~~ @array"
stopped working properly. Sometimes it would erroneously fail (when
$tainted contained a string that occurs in the
array after the first element) or erroneously succeed (when
"undef" occurred after the first
element) [perl #93590].
- "sort" was not treating
"sub {}" and "sub
{()}" as equivalent when such a sub was provided as the
comparison routine. It used to croak on "sub
{()}".
- "sort" now works once more with custom
sort routines that are XSUBs. It stopped working in 5.10.0.
- "sort" with a constant for a custom sort
routine, although it produces unsorted results, no longer crashes. It
started crashing in 5.10.0.
- Warnings emitted by "sort" when a custom
comparison routine returns a non-numeric value now contain "in
sort" and show the line number of the
"sort" operator, rather than the last
line of the comparison routine. The warnings also now occur only if
warnings are enabled in the scope where
"sort" occurs. Previously the warnings
would occur if enabled in the comparison routine's scope.
- "sort { $a <=> $b }", which is
optimized internally, now produces "uninitialized" warnings for
NaNs (not-a-number values), since
"<=>" returns
"undef" for those. This brings it in
line with
"sort { 1; $a <=> $b }"
and other more complex cases, which are not optimized [perl #94390].
- Tied (and otherwise magical) variables are no longer exempt from the
"Attempt to use reference as lvalue in substr" warning.
- That warning now occurs when the returned lvalue is assigned to, not when
"substr" itself is called. This makes a
difference only if the return value of
"substr" is referenced and later
assigned to.
- Passing a substring of a read-only value or a typeglob to a function
(potential lvalue context) no longer causes an immediate "Can't
coerce" or "Modification of a read-only value" error. That
error occurs only if the passed value is assigned to.
The same thing happens with the "substr outside of
string" error. If the lvalue is only read from, not written to, it
is now just a warning, as with rvalue
"substr".
- "substr" assignments no longer call
FETCH twice if the first argument is a tied variable, just once.
Some parts of Perl did not work correctly with nulls ("chr
0") embedded in strings. That meant that, for instance,
"$m = "a\0b"; foo->$m" would
call the "a" method, instead of the actual method name contained in
$m. These parts of perl have been fixed to support
nulls:
- Method names
- Typeglob names (including filehandle and subroutine names)
- Package names, including the return value of
"ref()"
- Typeglob elements
(*foo{"THING\0stuff"})
- Signal names
- Various warnings and error messages that mention variable names or values,
methods, etc.
One side effect of these changes is that blessing into
"\0" no longer causes "ref()" to
return false.
- •
- Various cases in which FETCH was being ignored or called too many times
have been fixed:
- "PerlIO::get_layers" [perl #97956]
- "$tied =~ y/a/b/",
"chop $tied" and
"chomp $tied" when
$tied holds a reference.
- When calling "local $_" [perl
#105912]
- Four-argument "select"
- A tied buffer passed to "sysread"
- "$tied .= <>"
- Three-argument "open", the third being a
tied file handle (as in "open $fh,
">&", $tied")
- "sort" with a reference to a tied glob
for the comparison routine.
- ".." and
"..." in list context [perl
#53554].
- "${$tied}",
"@{$tied}",
"%{$tied}" and
"*{$tied}" where the tied variable
returns a string ("&{}" was
unaffected)
- "defined ${ $tied_variable }"
- Various functions that take a filehandle argument in rvalue context
("close",
"readline", etc.) [perl #97482]
- Some cases of dereferencing a complex expression, such as
"${ (), $tied } = 1", used to call
"FETCH" multiple times, but now call it
once.
- "$tied->method" where
$tied returns a package name--even resulting in a
failure to call the method, due to memory corruption
- Assignments like "*$tied =
\&{"..."}" and "*glob =
$tied"
- "chdir",
"chmod",
"chown",
"utime",
"truncate",
"stat",
"lstat" and the filetest ops
("-r",
"-x", etc.)
- "caller" sets
@DB::args to the subroutine arguments when called
from the DB package. It used to crash when doing so if
@DB::args happened to be tied. Now it croaks
instead.
- Tying an element of %ENV or
"%^H" and then deleting that element
would result in a call to the tie object's DELETE method, even though
tying the element itself is supposed to be equivalent to tying a scalar
(the element is, of course, a scalar) [perl #67490].
- When Perl autovivifies an element of a tied array or hash (which entails
calling STORE with a new reference), it now calls FETCH immediately after
the STORE, instead of assuming that FETCH would have returned the same
reference. This can make it easier to implement tied objects [perl #35865,
#43011].
- Four-argument "select" no longer
produces its "Non-string passed as bitmask" warning on tied or
tainted variables that are strings.
- Localizing a tied scalar that returns a typeglob no longer stops it from
being tied till the end of the scope.
- Attempting to "goto" out of a tied
handle method used to cause memory corruption or crashes. Now it produces
an error message instead [perl #8611].
- A bug has been fixed that occurs when a tied variable is used as a
subroutine reference: if the last thing assigned to or returned from the
variable was a reference or typeglob, the
"\&$tied" could either crash or
return the wrong subroutine. The reference case is a regression introduced
in Perl 5.10.0. For typeglobs, it has probably never worked till now.
- The bitwise complement operator (and possibly other operators, too) when
passed a vstring would leave vstring magic attached to the return value,
even though the string had changed. This meant that
"version->new(~v1.2.3)" would create
a version looking like "v1.2.3" even though the string passed to
"version->new" was actually
"\376\375\374". This also caused B::Deparse to deparse
"~v1.2.3" incorrectly, without the
"~" [perl #29070].
- Assigning a vstring to a magic (e.g., tied, $!)
variable and then assigning something else used to blow away all magic.
This meant that tied variables would come undone,
$! would stop getting updated on failed system
calls, $| would stop setting autoflush, and other
mischief would take place. This has been fixed.
- "version->new("version")"
and "printf "%vd",
"version"" no longer crash [perl #102586].
- Version comparisons, such as those that happen implicitly with
"use v5.43", no
longer cause locale settings to change [perl #105784].
- Version objects no longer cause memory leaks in boolean context [perl
#109762].
- Subroutines from the "autouse" namespace
are once more exempt from redefinition warnings. This used to work in
5.005, but was broken in 5.6 for most subroutines. For subs created via XS
that redefine subroutines from the
"autouse" package, this stopped working
in 5.10.
- New XSUBs now produce redefinition warnings if they overwrite existing
subs, as they did in 5.8.x. (The
"autouse" logic was reversed in 5.10-14.
Only subroutines from the "autouse"
namespace would warn when clobbered.)
- "newCONSTSUB" used to use compile-time
warning hints, instead of run-time hints. The following code should never
produce a redefinition warning, but it used to, if
"newCONSTSUB" redefined an existing
subroutine:
use warnings;
BEGIN {
no warnings;
some_XS_function_that_calls_new_CONSTSUB();
}
- Redefinition warnings for constant subroutines are on by default (what are
known as severe warnings in perldiag). This occurred only when it was a
glob assignment or declaration of a Perl subroutine that caused the
warning. If the creation of XSUBs triggered the warning, it was not a
default warning. This has been corrected.
- The internal check to see whether a redefinition warning should occur used
to emit "uninitialized" warnings in cases like this:
use warnings "uninitialized";
use constant {u => undef, v => undef};
sub foo(){u}
sub foo(){v}
- Various functions that take a filehandle argument in rvalue context
("close",
"readline", etc.) used to warn twice for
an undefined handle [perl #97482].
- "dbmopen" now only warns once, rather
than three times, if the mode argument is
"undef" [perl #90064].
- The "+=" operator does not usually warn
when the left-hand side is "undef", but
it was doing so for tied variables. This has been fixed [perl
#44895].
- A bug fix in Perl 5.14 introduced a new bug, causing
"uninitialized" warnings to report the wrong variable if the
operator in question had two operands and one was
"%{...}" or
"@{...}". This has been fixed [perl
#103766].
- ".." and
"..." in list context now mention the
name of the variable in "uninitialized" warnings for string (as
opposed to numeric) ranges.
- Weakening the first argument to an automatically-invoked
"DESTROY" method could result in
erroneous "DESTROY created new reference" errors or crashes. Now
it is an error to weaken a read-only reference.
- Weak references to lexical hashes going out of scope were not going stale
(becoming undefined), but continued to point to the hash.
- Weak references to lexical variables going out of scope are now broken
before any magical methods (e.g., DESTROY on a tie object) are called.
This prevents such methods from modifying the variable that will be seen
the next time the scope is entered.
- Creating a weak reference to an @ISA array or
accessing the array index ($#ISA) could result in
confused internal bookkeeping for elements later added to the
@ISA array. For instance, creating a weak
reference to the element itself could push that weak reference on to
@ISA; and elements added after use of
$#ISA would be ignored by method lookup [perl
#85670].
- "quotemeta" now quotes consistently the
same non-ASCII characters under "use feature
'unicode_strings'", regardless of whether the string is
encoded in UTF-8 or not, hence fixing the last vestiges (we hope) of the
notorious "The "Unicode Bug"" in perlunicode. [perl
#77654].
Which of these code points is quoted has changed, based on
Unicode's recommendations. See "quotemeta" in perlfunc for
details.
- "study" is now a no-op, presumably
fixing all outstanding bugs related to study causing regex matches to
behave incorrectly!
- When one writes "open foo || die", which
used to work in Perl 4, a "Precedence problem" warning is
produced. This warning used erroneously to apply to fully-qualified
bareword handle names not followed by
"||". This has been corrected.
- After package aliasing ("*foo:: =
*bar::"), "select" with 0 or
1 argument would sometimes return a name that could not be used to refer
to the filehandle, or sometimes it would return
"undef" even when a filehandle was
selected. Now it returns a typeglob reference in such cases.
- "PerlIO::get_layers" no longer ignores
some arguments that it thinks are numeric, while treating others as
filehandle names. It is now consistent for flat scalars (i.e., not
references).
- Unrecognized switches on "#!" line
If a switch, such as -x, that cannot occur on the
"#!" line is used there, perl dies
with "Can't emulate...".
It used to produce the same message for switches that perl did
not recognize at all, whether on the command line or the
"#!" line.
Now it produces the "Unrecognized switch" error
message [perl #104288].
- "system" now temporarily blocks the
SIGCHLD signal handler, to prevent the signal handler from stealing the
exit status [perl #105700].
- The %n formatting code for
"printf" and
"sprintf", which causes the number of
characters to be assigned to the next argument, now actually assigns the
number of characters, instead of the number of bytes.
It also works now with special lvalue functions like
"substr" and with nonexistent hash and
array elements [perl #3471, #103492].
- Perl skips copying values returned from a subroutine, for the sake of
speed, if doing so would make no observable difference. Because of faulty
logic, this would happen with the result of
"delete",
"shift" or
"splice", even if the result was
referenced elsewhere. It also did so with tied variables about to be freed
[perl #91844, #95548].
- "utf8::decode" now refuses to modify
read-only scalars [perl #91850].
- Freeing $_ inside a
"grep" or
"map" block, a code block embedded in a
regular expression, or an @INC filter (a
subroutine returned by a subroutine in @INC) used
to result in double frees or crashes [perl #91880, #92254, #92256].
- "eval" returns
"undef" in scalar context or an empty
list in list context when there is a run-time error. When
"eval" was passed a string in list
context and a syntax error occurred, it used to return a list containing a
single undefined element. Now it returns an empty list in list context for
all errors [perl #80630].
- "goto &func" no longer crashes, but
produces an error message, when the unwinding of the current subroutine's
scope fires a destructor that undefines the subroutine being
"goneto" [perl #99850].
- Perl now holds an extra reference count on the package that code is
currently compiling in. This means that the following code no longer
crashes [perl #101486]:
package Foo;
BEGIN {*Foo:: = *Bar::}
sub foo;
- The "x" repetition operator no longer
crashes on 64-bit builds with large repeat counts [perl #94560].
- Calling "require" on an implicit
$_ when
*CORE::GLOBAL::require has been overridden does
not segfault anymore, and $_ is now passed to the
overriding subroutine [perl #78260].
- "use" and
"require" are no longer affected by the
I/O layers active in the caller's scope (enabled by open.pm) [perl
#96008].
- "our $::e; $e" (which is invalid) no
longer produces the "Compilation error at lib/utf8_heavy.pl..."
error message, which it started emitting in 5.10.0 [perl #99984].
- On 64-bit systems, "read()" now
understands large string offsets beyond the 32-bit range.
- Errors that occur when processing subroutine attributes no longer cause
the subroutine's op tree to leak.
- Passing the same constant subroutine to both
"index" and
"formline" no longer causes one or the
other to fail [perl #89218]. (5.14.1)
- List assignment to lexical variables declared with attributes in the same
statement ("my ($x,@y) : blimp =
(72,94)") stopped working in Perl 5.8.0. It has now been
fixed.
- Perl 5.10.0 introduced some faulty logic that made "U*" in the
middle of a pack template equivalent to "U0" if the input string
was empty. This has been fixed [perl #90160]. (5.14.2)
- Destructors on objects were not called during global destruction on
objects that were not referenced by any scalars. This could happen if an
array element were blessed (e.g., "bless
\$a[0]") or if a closure referenced a blessed variable
("bless \my @a; sub foo { @a }").
Now there is an extra pass during global destruction to fire
destructors on any objects that might be left after the usual passes
that check for objects referenced by scalars [perl #36347].
- Fixed a case where it was possible that a freed buffer may have been read
from when parsing a here document [perl #90128]. (5.14.1)
- "each(ARRAY)"
is now wrapped in "defined(...)", like
"each(HASH)",
inside a "while" condition [perl
#90888].
- A problem with context propagation when a
"do" block is an argument to
"return" has been fixed. It used to
cause "undef" to be returned in certain
cases of a "return" inside an
"if" block which itself is followed by
another "return".
- Calling "index" with a tainted constant
no longer causes constants in subsequently compiled code to become tainted
[perl #64804].
- Infinite loops like "1 while 1" used to
stop "strict 'subs'" mode from working
for the rest of the block.
- For list assignments like "($a,$b) =
($b,$a)", Perl has to make a copy of the items on the
right-hand side before assignment them to the left. For efficiency's sake,
it assigns the values on the right straight to the items on the left if no
one variable is mentioned on both sides, as in
"($a,$b) =
($c,$d)". The logic for determining when it
can cheat was faulty, in that
"&&" and
"||" on the right-hand side could fool
it. So "($a,$b) =
$some_true_value && ($b,$a)" would
end up assigning the value of $b to both
scalars.
- Perl no longer tries to apply lvalue context to the string in
"("string", $variable) ||= 1"
(which used to be an error). Since the left-hand side of
"||=" is evaluated in scalar context,
that's a scalar comma operator, which gives all but the last item void
context. There is no such thing as void lvalue context, so it was a
mistake for Perl to try to force it [perl #96942].
- "caller" no longer leaks memory when
called from the DB package if @DB::args was
assigned to after the first call to
"caller". Carp was triggering this bug
[perl #97010]. (5.14.2)
- "close" and similar filehandle
functions, when called on built-in global variables (like
$+), used to die if the variable happened to hold
the undefined value, instead of producing the usual "Use of
uninitialized value" warning.
- When autovivified file handles were introduced in Perl 5.6.0,
"readline" was inadvertently made to
autovivify when called as
"readline($foo)" (but not as
"<$foo>"). It has now been fixed
never to autovivify.
- Calling an undefined anonymous subroutine (e.g., what
$x holds after "undef
&{$x = sub{}}") used to cause a "Not a CODE
reference" error, which has been corrected to "Undefined
subroutine called" [perl #71154].
- Causing @DB::args to be freed between uses of
"caller" no longer results in a crash
[perl #93320].
- "setpgrp($foo)" used to be equivalent to
"($foo, setpgrp)", because
"setpgrp" was ignoring its argument if
there was just one. Now it is equivalent to
"setpgrp($foo,0)".
- "shmread" was not setting the scalar
flags correctly when reading from shared memory, causing the existing
cached numeric representation in the scalar to persist [perl #98480].
- "++" and
"--" now work on copies of globs,
instead of dying.
- "splice()" doesn't warn when truncating
You can now limit the size of an array using
"splice(@a,MAX_LEN)" without worrying
about warnings.
- $$ is no longer tainted. Since this value comes
directly from "getpid()", it is always
safe.
- The parser no longer leaks a filehandle if STDIN was closed before parsing
started [perl #37033].
- "die;" with a non-reference, non-string,
or magical (e.g., tainted) value in $@ now properly propagates that value
[perl #111654].
- On Solaris, we have two kinds of failure.
If make is Sun's make, we get an error about a
badly formed macro assignment in the Makefile. That happens when
./Configure tries to make depends. Configure then exits 0,
but further make-ing fails.
If make is gmake, Configure completes,
then we get errors related to /usr/include/stdbool.h
- On Win32, a number of tests hang unless STDERR is redirected. The cause of
this is still under investigation.
- When building as root with a umask that prevents files from being
other-readable, t/op/filetest.t will fail. This is a test bug, not
a bug in perl's behavior.
- Configuring with a recent gcc and link-time-optimization, such as
"Configure -Doptimize='-O2 -flto'" fails
because the optimizer optimizes away some of Configure's tests. A
workaround is to omit the "-flto" flag
when running Configure, but add it back in while actually building,
something like
sh Configure -Doptimize=-O2
make OPTIMIZE='-O2 -flto'
- The following CPAN modules have test failures with perl 5.16. Patches have
been submitted for all of these, so hopefully there will be new releases
soon:
Perl 5.16.0 represents approximately 12 months of development since Perl 5.14.0
and contains approximately 590,000 lines of changes across 2,500 files from
139 authors.
Perl continues to flourish into its third decade thanks to a
vibrant community of users and developers. The following people are known to
have contributed the improvements that became Perl 5.16.0:
Aaron Crane, Abhijit Menon-Sen, Abigail, Alan Haggai Alavi,
Alberto Simo~es, Alexandr Ciornii, Andreas Koenig, Andy Dougherty, Aristotle
Pagaltzis, Bo Johansson, Bo Lindbergh, Breno G. de Oliveira, brian d foy,
Brian Fraser, Brian Greenfield, Carl Hayter, Chas. Owens, Chia-liang Kao,
Chip Salzenberg, Chris 'BinGOs' Williams, Christian Hansen, Christopher J.
Madsen, chromatic, Claes Jacobsson, Claudio Ramirez, Craig A. Berry, Damian
Conway, Daniel Kahn Gillmor, Darin McBride, Dave Rolsky, David Cantrell,
David Golden, David Leadbeater, David Mitchell, Dee Newcum, Dennis
Kaarsemaker, Dominic Hargreaves, Douglas Christopher Wilson, Eric Brine,
Father Chrysostomos, Florian Ragwitz, Frederic Briere, George Greer, Gerard
Goossen, Gisle Aas, H.Merijn Brand, Hojung Youn, Ian Goodacre, James E
Keenan, Jan Dubois, Jerry D. Hedden, Jesse Luehrs, Jesse Vincent, Jilles
Tjoelker, Jim Cromie, Jim Meyering, Joel Berger, Johan Vromans, Johannes
Plunien, John Hawkinson, John P. Linderman, John Peacock, Joshua ben Jore,
Juerd Waalboer, Karl Williamson, Karthik Rajagopalan, Keith Thompson, Kevin
J. Woolley, Kevin Ryde, Laurent Dami, Leo Lapworth, Leon Brocard, Leon
Timmermans, Louis Strous, Lukas Mai, Marc Green, Marcel Gruenauer, Mark A.
Stratman, Mark Dootson, Mark Jason Dominus, Martin Hasch, Matthew Horsfall,
Max Maischein, Michael G Schwern, Michael Witten, Mike Sheldrake, Moritz
Lenz, Nicholas Clark, Niko Tyni, Nuno Carvalho, Pau Amma, Paul Evans, Paul
Green, Paul Johnson, Perlover, Peter John Acklam, Peter Martini, Peter
Scott, Phil Monsen, Pino Toscano, Rafael Garcia-Suarez, Rainer Tammer, Reini
Urban, Ricardo Signes, Robin Barker, Rodolfo Carvalho, Salvador Fandin~o,
Sam Kimbrel, Samuel Thibault, Shawn M Moore, Shigeya Suzuki, Shirakata
Kentaro, Shlomi Fish, Sisyphus, Slaven Rezic, Spiros Denaxas, Steffen
Mueller, Steffen Schwigon, Stephen Bennett, Stephen Oberholtzer, Stevan
Little, Steve Hay, Steve Peters, Thomas Sibley, Thorsten Glaser, Timothe
Litt, Todd Rinaldo, Tom Christiansen, Tom Hukins, Tony Cook, Vadim
Konovalov, Vincent Pit, Vladimir Timofeev, Walt Mankowski, Yves Orton,
Zefram, Zsban Ambrus, AEvar Arnfjoerd` Bjarmason.
The list above is almost certainly incomplete as it is
automatically generated from version control history. In particular, it does
not include the names of the (very much appreciated) contributors who
reported issues to the Perl bug tracker.
Many of the changes included in this version originated in the
CPAN modules included in Perl's core. We're grateful to the entire CPAN
community for helping Perl to flourish.
For a more complete list of all of Perl's historical contributors,
please see the AUTHORS file in the Perl source distribution.
If you find what you think is a bug, you might check the articles recently
posted to the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup and the perl bug database at
<http://rt.perl.org/perlbug/>. There may also be information at
<http://www.perl.org/>, the Perl Home Page.
If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the perlbug
program included with your release. Be sure to trim your bug down to a tiny
but sufficient test case. Your bug report, along with the output of
"perl -V", will be sent off to
perlbug@perl.org to be analysed by the Perl porting team.
If the bug you are reporting has security implications, which make
it inappropriate to send to a publicly archived mailing list, then please
send it to perl5-security-report@perl.org. This points to a closed
subscription unarchived mailing list, which includes all core committers,
who will be able to help assess the impact of issues, figure out a
resolution, and help co-ordinate the release of patches to mitigate or fix
the problem across all platforms on which Perl is supported. Please use this
address only for security issues in the Perl core, not for modules
independently distributed on CPAN.
The Changes file for an explanation of how to view exhaustive details on
what changed.
The INSTALL file for how to build Perl.
The README file for general stuff.
The Artistic and Copying files for copyright
information.
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