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author | Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org> | 2015-06-01 14:23:04 -0400 |
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committer | Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org> | 2015-06-01 14:23:35 -0400 |
commit | 2cfe9b50392e70abf167750f24cfd67e17ba2b37 (patch) | |
tree | c68751655d30407e509160ab611b8463fd79bb70 /pod/perl5220delta.pod | |
parent | ba40ea5ba2e0ad87ed7510b4c3445ae1b09c19b0 (diff) | |
download | perl-2cfe9b50392e70abf167750f24cfd67e17ba2b37.tar.gz |
add perldelta for 5.23.0
Diffstat (limited to 'pod/perl5220delta.pod')
-rw-r--r-- | pod/perl5220delta.pod | 4038 |
1 files changed, 4038 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/pod/perl5220delta.pod b/pod/perl5220delta.pod new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..36f1bfc18f --- /dev/null +++ b/pod/perl5220delta.pod @@ -0,0 +1,4038 @@ +=encoding utf8 + +=head1 NAME + +perl5220delta - what is new for perl v5.22.0 + +=head1 DESCRIPTION + +This document describes differences between the 5.20.0 release and the 5.22.0 +release. + +If you are upgrading from an earlier release such as 5.18.0, first read +L<perl5200delta>, which describes differences between 5.18.0 and 5.20.0. + +=head1 Core Enhancements + +=head2 New bitwise operators + +A new experimental facility has been added that makes the four standard +bitwise operators (C<& | ^ ~>) treat their operands consistently as +numbers, and introduces four new dotted operators (C<&. |. ^. ~.>) that +treat their operands consistently as strings. The same applies to the +assignment variants (C<&= |= ^= &.= |.= ^.=>). + +To use this, enable the "bitwise" feature and disable the +"experimental::bitwise" warnings category. See L<perlop/Bitwise String +Operators> for details. +L<[perl #123466]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123466>. + +=head2 New double-diamond operator + +C<<< <<>> >>> is like C<< <> >> but uses three-argument C<open> to open +each file in C<@ARGV>. This means that each element of C<@ARGV> will be treated +as an actual file name, and C<"|foo"> won't be treated as a pipe open. + +=head2 New C<\b> boundaries in regular expressions + +=head3 C<qr/\b{gcb}/> + +C<gcb> stands for Grapheme Cluster Boundary. It is a Unicode property +that finds the boundary between sequences of characters that look like a +single character to a native speaker of a language. Perl has long had +the ability to deal with these through the C<\X> regular escape +sequence. Now, there is an alternative way of handling these. See +L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B> for details. + +=head3 C<qr/\b{wb}/> + +C<wb> stands for Word Boundary. It is a Unicode property +that finds the boundary between words. This is similar to the plain +C<\b> (without braces) but is more suitable for natural language +processing. It knows, for example, that apostrophes can occur in the +middle of words. See L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B> for details. + +=head3 C<qr/\b{sb}/> + +C<sb> stands for Sentence Boundary. It is a Unicode property +to aid in parsing natural language sentences. +See L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B> for details. + +=head2 Non-Capturing Regular Expression Flag + +Regular expressions now support a C</n> flag that disables capturing +and filling in C<$1>, C<$2>, etc inside of groups: + + "hello" =~ /(hi|hello)/n; # $1 is not set + +This is equivalent to putting C<?:> at the beginning of every capturing group. + +See L<perlre/"n"> for more information. + +=head2 C<use re 'strict'> + +This applies stricter syntax rules to regular expression patterns +compiled within its scope. This will hopefully alert you to typos and +other unintentional behavior that backwards-compatibility issues prevent +us from reporting in normal regular expression compilations. Because the +behavior of this is subject to change in future Perl releases as we gain +experience, using this pragma will raise a warning of category +C<experimental::re_strict>. +See L<'strict' in re|re/'strict' mode>. + +=head2 Unicode 7.0 (with correction) is now supported + +For details on what is in this release, see +L<http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode7.0.0/>. +The version of Unicode 7.0 that comes with Perl includes +a correction dealing with glyph shaping in Arabic +(see L<http://www.unicode.org/errata/#current_errata>). + + +=head2 S<C<use locale>> can restrict which locale categories are affected + +It is now possible to pass a parameter to S<C<use locale>> to specify +a subset of locale categories to be locale-aware, with the remaining +ones unaffected. See L<perllocale/The "use locale" pragma> for details. + +=head2 Perl now supports POSIX 2008 locale currency additions + +On platforms that are able to handle POSIX.1-2008, the +hash returned by +L<C<POSIX::localeconv()>|perllocale/The localeconv function> +includes the international currency fields added by that version of the +POSIX standard. These are +C<int_n_cs_precedes>, +C<int_n_sep_by_space>, +C<int_n_sign_posn>, +C<int_p_cs_precedes>, +C<int_p_sep_by_space>, +and +C<int_p_sign_posn>. + +=head2 Better heuristics on older platforms for determining locale UTF-8ness + +On platforms that implement neither the C99 standard nor the POSIX 2001 +standard, determining if the current locale is UTF-8 or not depends on +heuristics. These are improved in this release. + +=head2 Aliasing via reference + +Variables and subroutines can now be aliased by assigning to a reference: + + \$c = \$d; + \&x = \&y; + +Aliasing can also be accomplished +by using a backslash before a C<foreach> iterator variable; this is +perhaps the most useful idiom this feature provides: + + foreach \%hash (@array_of_hash_refs) { ... } + +This feature is experimental and must be enabled via S<C<use feature +'refaliasing'>>. It will warn unless the C<experimental::refaliasing> +warnings category is disabled. + +See L<perlref/Assigning to References> + +=head2 C<prototype> with no arguments + +C<prototype()> with no arguments now infers C<$_>. +L<[perl #123514]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123514>. + +=head2 New C<:const> subroutine attribute + +The C<const> attribute can be applied to an anonymous subroutine. It +causes the new sub to be executed immediately whenever one is created +(I<i.e.> when the C<sub> expression is evaluated). Its value is captured +and used to create a new constant subroutine that is returned. This +feature is experimental. See L<perlsub/Constant Functions>. + +=head2 C<fileno> now works on directory handles + +When the relevant support is available in the operating system, the +C<fileno> builtin now works on directory handles, yielding the +underlying file descriptor in the same way as for filehandles. On +operating systems without such support, C<fileno> on a directory handle +continues to return the undefined value, as before, but also sets C<$!> to +indicate that the operation is not supported. + +Currently, this uses either a C<dd_fd> member in the OS C<DIR> +structure, or a C<dirfd(3)> function as specified by POSIX.1-2008. + +=head2 List form of pipe open implemented for Win32 + +The list form of pipe: + + open my $fh, "-|", "program", @arguments; + +is now implemented on Win32. It has the same limitations as C<system +LIST> on Win32, since the Win32 API doesn't accept program arguments +as a list. + +=head2 Assignment to list repetition + +C<(...) x ...> can now be used within a list that is assigned to, as long +as the left-hand side is a valid lvalue. This allows S<C<(undef,undef,$foo) += that_function()>> to be written as S<C<((undef)x2, $foo) = that_function()>>. + +=head2 Infinity and NaN (not-a-number) handling improved + +Floating point values are able to hold the special values infinity, negative +infinity, and NaN (not-a-number). Now we more robustly recognize and +propagate the value in computations, and on output normalize them to the strings +C<Inf>, C<-Inf>, and C<NaN>. + +See also the L<POSIX> enhancements. + +=head2 Floating point parsing has been improved + +Parsing and printing of floating point values has been improved. + +As a completely new feature, hexadecimal floating point literals +(like C<0x1.23p-4>) are now supported, and they can be output with +S<C<printf "%a">>. See L<perldata/Scalar value constructors> for more +details. + +=head2 Packing infinity or not-a-number into a character is now fatal + +Before, when trying to pack infinity or not-a-number into a +(signed) character, Perl would warn, and assumed you tried to +pack C<< 0xFF >>; if you gave it as an argument to C<< chr >>, +C<< U+FFFD >> was returned. + +But now, all such actions (C<< pack >>, C<< chr >>, and C<< print '%c' >>) +result in a fatal error. + +=head2 Experimental C Backtrace API + +Perl now supports (via a C level API) retrieving +the C level backtrace (similar to what symbolic debuggers like gdb do). + +The backtrace returns the stack trace of the C call frames, +with the symbol names (function names), the object names (like "perl"), +and if it can, also the source code locations (file:line). + +The supported platforms are Linux and OS X (some *BSD might work at +least partly, but they have not yet been tested). + +The feature needs to be enabled with C<Configure -Dusecbacktrace>. + +See L<perlhacktips/"C backtrace"> for more information. + +=head1 Security + +=head2 Perl is now compiled with C<-fstack-protector-strong> if available + +Perl has been compiled with the anti-stack-smashing option +C<-fstack-protector> since 5.10.1. Now Perl uses the newer variant +called C<-fstack-protector-strong>, if available. + +=head2 The L<Safe> module could allow outside packages to be replaced + +Critical bugfix: outside packages could be replaced. L<Safe> has +been patched to 2.38 to address this. + +=head2 Perl is now always compiled with C<-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2> if available + +The 'code hardening' option called C<_FORTIFY_SOURCE>, available in +gcc 4.*, is now always used for compiling Perl, if available. + +Note that this isn't necessarily a huge step since in many platforms +the step had already been taken several years ago: many Linux +distributions (like Fedora) have been using this option for Perl, +and OS X has enforced the same for many years. + +=head1 Incompatible Changes + +=head2 Subroutine signatures moved before attributes + +The experimental sub signatures feature, as introduced in 5.20, parsed +signatures after attributes. In this release, following feedback from users +of the experimental feature, the positioning has been moved such that +signatures occur after the subroutine name (if any) and before the attribute +list (if any). + +=head2 C<&> and C<\&> prototypes accepts only subs + +The C<&> prototype character now accepts only anonymous subs (C<sub +{...}>), things beginning with C<\&>, or an explicit C<undef>. Formerly +it erroneously also allowed references to arrays, hashes, and lists. +L<[perl #4539]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=4539>. +L<[perl #123062]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123062>. +L<[perl #123062]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123475>. + +In addition, the C<\&> prototype was allowing subroutine calls, whereas +now it only allows subroutines: C<&foo> is still permitted as an argument, +while C<&foo()> and C<foo()> no longer are. +L<[perl #77860]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=77860>. + +=head2 C<use encoding> is now lexical + +The L<encoding> pragma's effect is now limited to lexical scope. This +pragma is deprecated, but in the meantime, it could adversely affect +unrelated modules that are included in the same program; this change +fixes that. + +=head2 List slices returning empty lists + +List slices now return an empty list only if the original list was empty +(or if there are no indices). Formerly, a list slice would return an empty +list if all indices fell outside the original list; now it returns a list +of C<undef> values in that case. +L<[perl #114498]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=114498>. + +=head2 C<\N{}> with a sequence of multiple spaces is now a fatal error + +E.g. S<C<\N{TOOE<nbsp>E<nbsp>MANY SPACES}>> or S<C<\N{TRAILING SPACE }>>. +This has been deprecated since v5.18. + +=head2 S<C<use UNIVERSAL '...'>> is now a fatal error + +Importing functions from C<UNIVERSAL> has been deprecated since v5.12, and +is now a fatal error. S<C<use UNIVERSAL>> without any arguments is still +allowed. + +=head2 In double-quotish C<\cI<X>>, I<X> must now be a printable ASCII character + +In prior releases, failure to do this raised a deprecation warning. + +=head2 Splitting the tokens C<(?> and C<(*> in regular expressions is now a fatal compilation error. + +These had been deprecated since v5.18. + +=head2 C<qr/foo/x> now ignores all Unicode pattern white space + +The C</x> regular expression modifier allows the pattern to contain +white space and comments (both of which are ignored) for improved +readability. Until now, not all the white space characters that Unicode +designates for this purpose were handled. The additional ones now +recognized are: + + U+0085 NEXT LINE + U+200E LEFT-TO-RIGHT MARK + U+200F RIGHT-TO-LEFT MARK + U+2028 LINE SEPARATOR + U+2029 PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR + +The use of these characters with C</x> outside bracketed character +classes and when not preceded by a backslash has raised a deprecation +warning since v5.18. Now they will be ignored. + +=head2 Comment lines within S<C<(?[ ])>> are now ended only by a C<\n> + +S<C<(?[ ])>> is an experimental feature, introduced in v5.18. It operates +as if C</x> is always enabled. But there was a difference: comment +lines (following a C<#> character) were terminated by anything matching +C<\R> which includes all vertical whitespace, such as form feeds. For +consistency, this is now changed to match what terminates comment lines +outside S<C<(?[ ])>>, namely a C<\n> (even if escaped), which is the +same as what terminates a heredoc string and formats. + +=head2 C<(?[...])> operators now follow standard Perl precedence + +This experimental feature allows set operations in regular expression patterns. +Prior to this, the intersection operator had the same precedence as the other +binary operators. Now it has higher precedence. This could lead to different +outcomes than existing code expects (though the documentation has always noted +that this change might happen, recommending fully parenthesizing the +expressions). See L<perlrecharclass/Extended Bracketed Character Classes>. + +=head2 Omitting C<%> and C<@> on hash and array names is no longer permitted + +Really old Perl let you omit the C<@> on array names and the C<%> on hash +names in some spots. This has issued a deprecation warning since Perl +5.000, and is no longer permitted. + +=head2 C<"$!"> text is now in English outside the scope of C<use locale> + +Previously, the text, unlike almost everything else, always came out +based on the current underlying locale of the program. (Also affected +on some systems is C<"$^E">.) For programs that are unprepared to +handle locale differences, this can cause garbage text to be displayed. +It's better to display text that is translatable via some tool than +garbage text which is much harder to figure out. + +=head2 C<"$!"> text will be returned in UTF-8 when appropriate + +The stringification of C<$!> and C<$^E> will have the UTF-8 flag set +when the text is actually non-ASCII UTF-8. This will enable programs +that are set up to be locale-aware to properly output messages in the +user's native language. Code that needs to continue the 5.20 and +earlier behavior can do the stringification within the scopes of both +S<C<use bytes>> and S<C<use locale ":messages">>. Within these two +scopes, no other Perl operations will +be affected by locale; only C<$!> and C<$^E> stringification. The +C<bytes> pragma causes the UTF-8 flag to not be set, just as in previous +Perl releases. This resolves +L<[perl #112208]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=112208>. + +=head2 Support for C<?PATTERN?> without explicit operator has been removed + +The C<m?PATTERN?> construct, which allows matching a regex only once, +previously had an alternative form that was written directly with a question +mark delimiter, omitting the explicit C<m> operator. This usage has produced +a deprecation warning since 5.14.0. It is now a syntax error, so that the +question mark can be available for use in new operators. + +=head2 C<defined(@array)> and C<defined(%hash)> are now fatal errors + +These have been deprecated since v5.6.1 and have raised deprecation +warnings since v5.16. + +=head2 Using a hash or an array as a reference are now fatal errors + +For example, C<< %foo->{"bar"} >> now causes a fatal compilation +error. These have been deprecated since before v5.8, and have raised +deprecation warnings since then. + +=head2 Changes to the C<*> prototype + +The C<*> character in a subroutine's prototype used to allow barewords to take +precedence over most, but not all, subroutine names. It was never +consistent and exhibited buggy behavior. + +Now it has been changed, so subroutines always take precedence over barewords, +which brings it into conformity with similarly prototyped built-in functions: + + sub splat(*) { ... } + sub foo { ... } + splat(foo); # now always splat(foo()) + splat(bar); # still splat('bar') as before + close(foo); # close(foo()) + close(bar); # close('bar') + +=head1 Deprecations + +=head2 Setting C<${^ENCODING}> to anything but C<undef> + +This variable allows Perl scripts to be written in an encoding other than +ASCII or UTF-8. However, it affects all modules globally, leading +to wrong answers and segmentation faults. New scripts should be written +in UTF-8; old scripts should be converted to UTF-8, which is easily done +with the L<piconv> utility. + +=head2 Use of non-graphic characters in single-character variable names + +The syntax for single-character variable names is more lenient than +for longer variable names, allowing the one-character name to be a +punctuation character or even invisible (a non-graphic). Perl v5.20 +deprecated the ASCII-range controls as such a name. Now, all +non-graphic characters that formerly were allowed are deprecated. +The practical effect of this occurs only when not under C<S<use +utf8>>, and affects just the C1 controls (code points 0x80 through +0xFF), NO-BREAK SPACE, and SOFT HYPHEN. + +=head2 Inlining of C<sub () { $var }> with observable side-effects + +In many cases Perl makes S<C<sub () { $var }>> into an inlinable constant +subroutine, capturing the value of C<$var> at the time the C<sub> expression +is evaluated. This can break the closure behavior in those cases where +C<$var> is subsequently modified, since the subroutine won't return the +changed value. (Note that this all only applies to anonymous subroutines +with an empty prototype (S<C<sub ()>>).) + +This usage is now deprecated in those cases where the variable could be +modified elsewhere. Perl detects those cases and emits a deprecation +warning. Such code will likely change in the future and stop producing a +constant. + +If your variable is only modified in the place where it is declared, then +Perl will continue to make the sub inlinable with no warnings. + + sub make_constant { + my $var = shift; + return sub () { $var }; # fine + } + + sub make_constant_deprecated { + my $var; + $var = shift; + return sub () { $var }; # deprecated + } + + sub make_constant_deprecated2 { + my $var = shift; + log_that_value($var); # could modify $var + return sub () { $var }; # deprecated + } + +In the second example above, detecting that C<$var> is assigned to only once +is too hard to detect. That it happens in a spot other than the C<my> +declaration is enough for Perl to find it suspicious. + +This deprecation warning happens only for a simple variable for the body of +the sub. (A C<BEGIN> block or C<use> statement inside the sub is ignored, +because it does not become part of the sub's body.) For more complex +cases, such as S<C<sub () { do_something() if 0; $var }>> the behavior has +changed such that inlining does not happen if the variable is modifiable +elsewhere. Such cases should be rare. + +=head2 Use of multiple C</x> regexp modifiers + +It is now deprecated to say something like any of the following: + + qr/foo/xx; + /(?xax:foo)/; + use re qw(/amxx); + +That is, now C<x> should only occur once in any string of contiguous +regular expression pattern modifiers. We do not believe there are any +occurrences of this in all of CPAN. This is in preparation for a future +Perl release having C</xx> permit white-space for readability in +bracketed character classes (those enclosed in square brackets: +C<[...]>). + +=head2 Using a NO-BREAK space in a character alias for C<\N{...}> is now deprecated + +This non-graphic character is essentially indistinguishable from a +regular space, and so should not be allowed. See +L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>. + +=head2 A literal C<"{"> should now be escaped in a pattern + +If you want a literal left curly bracket (also called a left brace) in a +regular expression pattern, you should now escape it by either +preceding it with a backslash (C<"\{">) or enclosing it within square +brackets C<"[{]">, or by using C<\Q>; otherwise a deprecation warning +will be raised. This was first announced as forthcoming in the v5.16 +release; it will allow future extensions to the language to happen. + +=head2 Making all warnings fatal is discouraged + +The documentation for L<fatal warnings|warnings/Fatal Warnings> notes that +C<< use warnings FATAL => 'all' >> is discouraged, and provides stronger +language about the risks of fatal warnings in general. + +=head1 Performance Enhancements + +=over 4 + +=item * + +If a method or class name is known at compile time, a hash is precomputed +to speed up run-time method lookup. Also, compound method names like +C<SUPER::new> are parsed at compile time, to save having to parse them at +run time. + +=item * + +Array and hash lookups (especially nested ones) that use only constants +or simple variables as keys, are now considerably faster. See +L</Internal Changes> for more details. + +=item * + +C<(...)x1>, C<("constant")x0> and C<($scalar)x0> are now optimised in list +context. If the right-hand argument is a constant 1, the repetition +operator disappears. If the right-hand argument is a constant 0, the whole +expression is optimised to the empty list, so long as the left-hand +argument is a simple scalar or constant. (That is, C<(foo())x0> is not +subject to this optimisation.) + +=item * + +C<substr> assignment is now optimised into 4-argument C<substr> at the end +of a subroutine (or as the argument to C<return>). Previously, this +optimisation only happened in void context. + +=item * + +In C<"\L...">, C<"\Q...">, etc., the extra "stringify" op is now optimised +away, making these just as fast as C<lcfirst>, C<quotemeta>, etc. + +=item * + +Assignment to an empty list is now sometimes faster. In particular, it +never calls C<FETCH> on tied arguments on the right-hand side, whereas it +used to sometimes. + +=item * + +There is a performance improvement of up to 20% when C<length> is applied to +a non-magical, non-tied string, and either C<use bytes> is in scope or the +string doesn't use UTF-8 internally. + +=item * + +On most perl builds with 64-bit integers, memory usage for non-magical, +non-tied scalars containing only a floating point value has been reduced +by between 8 and 32 bytes, depending on OS. + +=item * + +In C<@array = split>, the assignment can be optimized away, so that C<split> +writes directly to the array. This optimisation was happening only for +package arrays other than C<@_>, and only sometimes. Now this +optimisation happens almost all the time. + +=item * + +C<join> is now subject to constant folding. So for example +S<C<join "-", "a", "b">> is converted at compile-time to C<"a-b">. +Moreover, C<join> with a scalar or constant for the separator and a +single-item list to join is simplified to a stringification, and the +separator doesn't even get evaluated. + +=item * + +C<qq(@array)> is implemented using two ops: a stringify op and a join op. +If the C<qq> contains nothing but a single array, the stringification is +optimized away. + +=item * + +S<C<our $var>> and S<C<our($s,@a,%h)>> in void context are no longer evaluated at +run time. Even a whole sequence of S<C<our $foo;>> statements will simply be +skipped over. The same applies to C<state> variables. + +=item * + +Many internal functions have been refactored to improve performance and reduce +their memory footprints. +L<[perl #121436]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121436> +L<[perl #121906]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121906> +L<[perl #121969]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121969> + +=item * + +C<-T> and C<-B> filetests will return sooner when an empty file is detected. +L<[perl #121489]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121489> + +=item * + +Hash lookups where the key is a constant are faster. + +=item * + +Subroutines with an empty prototype and a body containing just C<undef> are now +eligible for inlining. +L<[perl #122728]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122728> + +=item * + +Subroutines in packages no longer need to be stored in typeglobs: +declaring a subroutine will now put a simple sub reference directly in the +stash if possible, saving memory. The typeglob still notionally exists, +so accessing it will cause the stash entry to be upgraded to a typeglob +(I<i.e.> this is just an internal implementation detail). +This optimization does not currently apply to XSUBs or exported +subroutines, and method calls will undo it, since they cache things in +typeglobs. +L<[perl #120441]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120441> + +=item * + +The functions C<utf8::native_to_unicode()> and C<utf8::unicode_to_native()> +(see L<utf8>) are now optimized out on ASCII platforms. There is now not even +a minimal performance hit in writing code portable between ASCII and EBCDIC +platforms. + +=item * + +Win32 Perl uses 8 KB less of per-process memory than before for every perl +process, because some data is now memory mapped from disk and shared +between processes from the same perl binary. + +=back + +=head1 Modules and Pragmata + +=head2 Updated Modules and Pragmata + +Many of the libraries distributed with perl have been upgraded since v5.20.0. +For a complete list of changes, run: + + corelist --diff 5.20.0 5.22.0 + +You can substitute your favorite version in place of 5.20.0, too. + +Some notable changes include: + +=over 4 + +=item * + +L<Archive::Tar> has been upgraded to version 2.04. + +Tests can now be run in parallel. + +=item * + +L<attributes> has been upgraded to version 0.27. + +The usage of C<memEQs> in the XS has been corrected. +L<[perl #122701]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122701> + +Avoid reading beyond the end of a buffer. [perl #122629] + +=item * + +L<B> has been upgraded to version 1.58. + +It provides a new C<B::safename> function, based on the existing +C<< B::GV->SAFENAME >>, that converts C<\cOPEN> to C<^OPEN>. + +Nulled COPs are now of class C<B::COP>, rather than C<B::OP>. + +C<B::REGEXP> objects now provide a C<qr_anoncv> method for accessing the +implicit CV associated with C<qr//> things containing code blocks, and a +C<compflags> method that returns the pertinent flags originating from the +C<qr//blahblah> op. + +C<B::PMOP> now provides a C<pmregexp> method returning a C<B::REGEXP> object. +Two new classes, C<B::PADNAME> and C<B::PADNAMELIST>, have been introduced. + +A bug where, after an ithread creation or psuedofork, special/immortal SVs in +the child ithread/psuedoprocess did not have the correct class of +C<B::SPECIAL>, has been fixed. +The C<id> and C<outid> PADLIST methods have been added. + +=item * + +L<B::Concise> has been upgraded to version 0.996. + +Null ops that are part of the execution chain are now given sequence +numbers. + +Private flags for nulled ops are now dumped with mnemonics as they would be +for the non-nulled counterparts. + +=item * + +L<B::Deparse> has been upgraded to version 1.35. + +It now deparses C<+sub : attr { ... }> correctly at the start of a +statement. Without the initial C<+>, C<sub> would be a statement label. + +C<BEGIN> blocks are now emitted in the right place most of the time, but +the change unfortunately introduced a regression, in that C<BEGIN> blocks +occurring just before the end of the enclosing block may appear below it +instead. + +C<B::Deparse> no longer puts erroneous C<local> here and there, such as for +C<LIST = tr/a//d>. [perl #119815] + +Adjacent C<use> statements are no longer accidentally nested if one +contains a C<do> block. [perl #115066] + +Parenthesised arrays in lists passed to C<\> are now correctly deparsed +with parentheses (I<e.g.>, C<\(@a, (@b), @c)> now retains the parentheses +around @b), thus preserving the flattening behavior of referenced +parenthesised arrays. Formerly, it only worked for one array: C<\(@a)>. + +C<local our> is now deparsed correctly, with the C<our> included. + +C<for($foo; !$bar; $baz) {...}> was deparsed without the C<!> (or C<not>). +This has been fixed. + +Core keywords that conflict with lexical subroutines are now deparsed with +the C<CORE::> prefix. + +C<foreach state $x (...) {...}> now deparses correctly with C<state> and +not C<my>. + +C<our @array = split(...)> now deparses correctly with C<our> in those +cases where the assignment is optimized away. + +It now deparses C<our(I<LIST>)> and typed lexical (C<my Dog $spot>) correctly. + +Deparse C<$#_> as that instead of as C<$#{_}>. +L<[perl #123947]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123947> + +BEGIN blocks at the end of the enclosing scope are now deparsed in the +right place. [perl #77452] + +BEGIN blocks were sometimes deparsed as __ANON__, but are now always called +BEGIN. + +Lexical subroutines are now fully deparsed. [perl #116553] + +C<Anything =~ y///r> with C</r> no longer omits the left-hand operand. + +The op trees that make up regexp code blocks are now deparsed for real. +Formerly, the original string that made up the regular expression was used. +That caused problems with C<qr/(?{E<lt>E<lt>heredoc})/> and multiline code blocks, +which were deparsed incorrectly. [perl #123217] [perl #115256] + +C<$;> at the end of a statement no longer loses its semicolon. +[perl #123357] + +Some cases of subroutine declarations stored in the stash in shorthand form +were being omitted. + +Non-ASCII characters are now consistently escaped in strings, instead of +some of the time. (There are still outstanding problems with regular +expressions and identifiers that have not been fixed.) + +When prototype sub calls are deparsed with C<&> (I<e.g.>, under the B<-P> +option), C<scalar> is now added where appropriate, to force the scalar +context implied by the prototype. + +C<require(foo())>, C<do(foo())>, C<goto(foo())> and similar constructs with +loop controls are now deparsed correctly. The outer parentheses are not +optional. + +Whitespace is no longer escaped in regular expressions, because it was +getting erroneously escaped within C<(?x:...)> sections. + +C<sub foo { foo() }> is now deparsed with those mandatory parentheses. + +C</@array/> is now deparsed as a regular expression, and not just +C<@array>. + +C</@{-}/>, C</@{+}/> and C<$#{1}> are now deparsed with the braces, which +are mandatory in these cases. + +In deparsing feature bundles, C<B::Deparse> was emitting C<no feature;> first +instead of C<no feature ':all';>. This has been fixed. + +C<chdir FH> is now deparsed without quotation marks. + +C<\my @a> is now deparsed without parentheses. (Parenthese would flatten +the array.) + +C<system> and C<exec> followed by a block are now deparsed correctly. +Formerly there was an erroneous C<do> before the block. + +C<< use constant QR =E<gt> qr/.../flags >> followed by C<"" =~ QR> is no longer +without the flags. + +Deparsing C<BEGIN { undef &foo }> with the B<-w> switch enabled started to +emit 'uninitialized' warnings in Perl 5.14. This has been fixed. + +Deparsing calls to subs with a C<(;+)> prototype resulted in an infinite +loop. The C<(;$>) C<(_)> and C<(;_)> prototypes were given the wrong +precedence, causing C<foo($aE<lt>$b)> to be deparsed without the parentheses. + +Deparse now provides a defined state sub in inner subs. + +=item * + +L<B::Op_private> has been added. + +L<B::Op_private> provides detailed information about the flags used in the +C<op_private> field of perl opcodes. + +=item * + +L<bigint>, L<bignum>, L<bigrat> have been upgraded to version 0.39. + +Document in CAVEATS that using strings as numbers won't always invoke +the big number overloading, and how to invoke it. [rt.perl.org #123064] + +=item * + +L<Carp> has been upgraded to version 1.36. + +C<Carp::Heavy> now ignores version mismatches with Carp if Carp is newer +than 1.12, since C<Carp::Heavy>'s guts were merged into Carp at that +point. +L<[perl #121574]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121574> + +Carp now handles non-ASCII platforms better. + +Off-by-one error fix for Perl E<lt> 5.14. + +=item * + +L<constant> has been upgraded to version 1.33. + +It now accepts fully-qualified constant names, allowing constants to be defined +in packages other than the caller. + +=item * + +L<CPAN> has been upgraded to version 2.11. + +Add support for C<Cwd::getdcwd()> and introduce workaround for a misbehavior +seen on Strawberry Perl 5.20.1. + +Fix C<chdir()> after building dependencies bug. + +Introduce experimental support for plugins/hooks. + +Integrate the C<App::Cpan> sources. + +Do not check recursion on optional dependencies. + +Sanity check F<META.yml> to contain a hash. +L<[cpan #95271]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=95271> + +=item * + +L<CPAN::Meta::Requirements> has been upgraded to version 2.132. + +Works around limitations in C<version::vpp> detecting v-string magic and adds +support for forthcoming L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> bootstrap F<version.pm> for +Perls older than 5.10.0. + +=item * + +L<Data::Dumper> has been upgraded to version 2.158. + +Fixes CVE-2014-4330 by adding a configuration variable/option to limit +recursion when dumping deep data structures. + +Changes to resolve Coverity issues. +XS dumps incorrectly stored the name of code references stored in a +GLOB. +L<[perl #122070]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122070> + +=item * + +L<DynaLoader> has been upgraded to version 1.32. + +Remove C<dl_nonlazy> global if unused in Dynaloader. [perl #122926] + +=item * + +L<Encode> has been upgraded to version 2.72. + +C<piconv> now has better error handling when the encoding name is nonexistent, +and a build breakage when upgrading L<Encode> in perl-5.8.2 and earlier has +been fixed. + +Building in C++ mode on Windows now works. + +=item * + +L<Errno> has been upgraded to version 1.23. + +Add C<-P> to the preprocessor command-line on GCC 5. GCC added extra +line directives, breaking parsing of error code definitions. [rt.perl.org +#123784] + +=item * + +L<experimental> has been upgraded to version 0.013. + +Hardcodes features for Perls older than 5.15.7. + +=item * + +L<ExtUtils::CBuilder> has been upgraded to version 0.280221. + +Fixes a regression on Android. +L<[perl #122675]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122675> + +=item * + +L<ExtUtils::Manifest> has been upgraded to version 1.70. + +Fixes a bug with C<maniread()>'s handling of quoted filenames and improves +C<manifind()> to follow symlinks. +L<[perl #122415]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122415> + +=item * + +L<ExtUtils::ParseXS> has been upgraded to version 3.28. + +Only declare C<file> unused if we actually define it. +Improve generated C<RETVAL> code generation to avoid repeated +references to C<ST(0)>. [perl #123278] +Broaden and document the C</OBJ$/> to C</REF$/> typemap optimization +for the C<DESTROY> method. [perl #123418] + +=item * + +L<Fcntl> has been upgraded to version 1.13. + +Add support for the Linux pipe buffer size C<fcntl()> commands. + +=item * + +L<File::Find> has been upgraded to version 1.29. + +C<find()> and C<finddepth()> will now warn if passed inappropriate or +misspelled options. + +=item * + +L<File::Glob> has been upgraded to version 1.24. + +Avoid C<SvIV()> expanding to call C<get_sv()> three times in a few +places. [perl #123606] + +=item * + +L<HTTP::Tiny> has been upgraded to version 0.054. + +C<keep_alive> is now fork-safe and thread-safe. + +=item * + +L<IO> has been upgraded to version 1.35. + +The XS implementation has been fixed for the sake of older Perls. + +=item * + +L<IO::Socket> has been upgraded to version 1.38. + +Document the limitations of the C<connected()> method. [perl #123096] + +=item * + +L<IO::Socket::IP> has been upgraded to version 0.37. + +A better fix for subclassing C<connect()>. +L<[cpan #95983]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=95983> +L<[cpan #97050]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=97050> + +Implements Timeout for C<connect()>. +L<[cpan #92075]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=92075> + +=item * + +The libnet collection of modules has been upgraded to version 3.05. + +Support for IPv6 and SSL to C<Net::FTP>, C<Net::NNTP>, C<Net::POP3> and C<Net::SMTP>. +Improvements in C<Net::SMTP> authentication. + +=item * + +L<Locale::Codes> has been upgraded to version 3.34. + +Fixed a bug in the scripts used to extract data from spreadsheets that +prevented the SHP currency code from being found. +L<[cpan #94229]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=94229> + +New codes have been added. + +=item * + +L<Math::BigInt> has been upgraded to version 1.9997. + +Synchronize POD changes from the CPAN release. +C<< Math::BigFloat->blog(x) >> would sometimes return C<blog(2*x)> when +the accuracy was greater than 70 digits. +The result of C<< Math::BigFloat->bdiv() >> in list context now +satisfies C<< x = quotient * divisor + remainder >>. + +Correct handling of subclasses. +L<[cpan #96254]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=96254> +L<[cpan #96329]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=96329> + +=item * + +L<Module::Metadata> has been upgraded to version 1.000026. + +Support installations on older perls with an L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> earlier +than 6.63_03 + +=item * + +L<overload> has been upgraded to version 1.26. + +A redundant C<ref $sub> check has been removed. + +=item * + +The PathTools module collection has been upgraded to version 3.56. + +A warning from the B<gcc> compiler is now avoided when building the XS. + +Don't turn leading C<//> into C</> on Cygwin. [perl #122635] + +=item * + +L<perl5db.pl> has been upgraded to version 1.49. + +The debugger would cause an assertion failure. +L<[perl #124127]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124127> + +C<fork()> in the debugger under C<tmux> will now create a new window for +the forked process. L<[perl +#121333]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121333> + +The debugger now saves the current working directory on startup and +restores it when you restart your program with C<R> or C<rerun>. L<[perl +#121509]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121509> + +=item * + +L<PerlIO::scalar> has been upgraded to version 0.22. + +Reading from a position well past the end of the scalar now correctly +returns end of file. [perl #123443] + +Seeking to a negative position still fails, but no longer leaves the +file position set to a negation location. + +C<eof()> on a C<PerlIO::scalar> handle now properly returns true when +the file position is past the 2GB mark on 32-bit systems. + +Attempting to write at file positions impossible for the platform now +fail early rather than wrapping at 4GB. + +=item * + +L<Pod::Perldoc> has been upgraded to version 3.25. + +Filehandles opened for reading or writing now have C<:encoding(UTF-8)> set. +L<[cpan #98019]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=98019> + +=item * + +L<POSIX> has been upgraded to version 1.53. + +The C99 math functions and constants (for example C<acosh>, C<isinf>, C<isnan>, C<round>, +C<trunc>; C<M_E>, C<M_SQRT2>, C<M_PI>) have been added. + +C<POSIX::tmpnam()> now produces a deprecation warning. [perl #122005] + +=item * + +L<Safe> has been upgraded to version 2.39. + +C<reval> was not propagating void context properly. + +=item * + +Scalar-List-Utils has been upgraded to version 1.41. + +A new module, L<Sub::Util>, has been added, containing functions related to +CODE refs, including C<subname> (inspired by C<Sub::Identity>) and C<set_subname> +(copied and renamed from C<Sub::Name>). +The use of C<GetMagic> in C<List::Util::reduce()> has also been fixed. +L<[cpan #63211]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=63211> + +=item * + +L<SDBM_File> has been upgraded to version 1.13. + +Simplified the build process. [perl #123413] + +=item * + +L<Time::Piece> has been upgraded to version 1.29. + +When pretty printing negative C<Time::Seconds>, the "minus" is no longer lost. + +=item * + +L<Unicode::Collate> has been upgraded to version 1.12. + +Version 0.67's improved discontiguous contractions is invalidated by default +and is supported as a parameter C<long_contraction>. + +=item * + +L<Unicode::Normalize> has been upgraded to version 1.18. + +The XSUB implementation has been removed in favor of pure Perl. + +=item * + +L<Unicode::UCD> has been upgraded to version 0.61. + +A new function L<property_values()|Unicode::UCD/prop_values()> +has been added to return a given property's possible values. + +A new function L<charprop()|Unicode::UCD/charprop()> +has been added to return the value of a given property for a given code +point. + +A new function L<charprops_all()|Unicode::UCD/charprops_all()> +has been added to return the values of all Unicode properties for a +given code point. + +A bug has been fixed so that L<propaliases()|Unicode::UCD/prop_aliases()> +returns the correct short and long names for the Perl extensions where +it was incorrect. + +A bug has been fixed so that +L<prop_value_aliases()|Unicode::UCD/prop_value_aliases()> +returns C<undef> instead of a wrong result for properties that are Perl +extensions. + +This module now works on EBCDIC platforms. + +=item * + +L<utf8> has been upgraded to version 1.17 + +A mismatch between the documentation and the code in C<utf8::downgrade()> +was fixed in favor of the documentation. The optional second argument +is now correctly treated as a perl boolean (true/false semantics) and +not as an integer. + +=item * + +L<version> has been upgraded to version 0.9909. + +Numerous changes. See the F<Changes> file in the CPAN distribution for +details. + +=item * + +L<Win32> has been upgraded to version 0.51. + +C<GetOSName()> now supports Windows 8.1, and building in C++ mode now works. + +=item * + +L<Win32API::File> has been upgraded to version 0.1202 + +Building in C++ mode now works. + +=item * + +L<XSLoader> has been upgraded to version 0.20. + +Allow XSLoader to load modules from a different namespace. +[perl #122455] + +=back + +=head2 Removed Modules and Pragmata + +The following modules (and associated modules) have been removed from the core +perl distribution: + +=over 4 + +=item * + +L<CGI> + +=item * + +L<Module::Build> + +=back + +=head1 Documentation + +=head2 New Documentation + +=head3 L<perlunicook> + +This document, by Tom Christiansen, provides examples of handling Unicode in +Perl. + +=head2 Changes to Existing Documentation + +=head3 L<perlaix> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +A note on long doubles has been added. + +=back + + +=head3 L<perlapi> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Note that C<SvSetSV> doesn't do set magic. + +=item * + +C<sv_usepvn_flags> - fix documentation to mention the use of C<Newx> instead of +C<malloc>. + +L<[perl #121869]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121869> + +=item * + +Clarify where C<NUL> may be embedded or is required to terminate a string. + +=item * + +Some documentation that was previously missing due to formatting errors is +now included. + +=item * + +Entries are now organized into groups rather than by the file where they +are found. + +=item * + +Alphabetical sorting of entries is now done consistently (automatically +by the POD generator) to make entries easier to find when scanning. + +=back + +=head3 L<perldata> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +The syntax of single-character variable names has been brought +up-to-date and more fully explained. + +=item * + +Hexadecimal floating point numbers are described, as are infinity and +NaN. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlebcdic> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +This document has been significantly updated in the light of recent +improvements to EBCDIC support. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlfilter> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Added a L<LIMITATIONS|perlfilter/LIMITATIONS> section. + +=back + + +=head3 L<perlfunc> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Mention that C<study()> is currently a no-op. + +=item * + +Calling C<delete> or C<exists> on array values is now described as "strongly +discouraged" rather than "deprecated". + +=item * + +Improve documentation of C<< our >>. + +=item * + +C<-l> now notes that it will return false if symlinks aren't supported by the +file system. +L<[perl #121523]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121523> + +=item * + +Note that C<exec LIST> and C<system LIST> may fall back to the shell on +Win32. Only the indirect-object syntax C<exec PROGRAM LIST> and +C<system PROGRAM LIST> will reliably avoid using the shell. + +This has also been noted in L<perlport>. + +L<[perl #122046]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122046> + +=back + +=head3 L<perlguts> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +The OOK example has been updated to account for COW changes and a change in the +storage of the offset. + +=item * + +Details on C level symbols and libperl.t added. + +=item * + +Information on Unicode handling has been added + +=item * + +Information on EBCDIC handling has been added + +=back + +=head3 L<perlhack> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +A note has been added about running on platforms with non-ASCII +character sets + +=item * + +A note has been added about performance testing + +=back + +=head3 L<perlhacktips> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Documentation has been added illustrating the perils of assuming that +there is no change to the contents of static memory pointed to by the +return values of Perl's wrappers for C library functions. + +=item * + +Replacements for C<tmpfile>, C<atoi>, C<strtol>, and C<strtoul> are now +recommended. + +=item * + +Updated documentation for the C<test.valgrind> C<make> target. +L<[perl #121431]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121431> + +=item * + +Information is given about writing test files portably to non-ASCII +platforms. + +=item * + +A note has been added about how to get a C language stack backtrace. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlhpux> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Note that the message "Redeclaration of "sendpath" with a different +storage class specifier" is harmless. + +=back + +=head3 L<perllocale> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Updated for the enhancements in v5.22, along with some clarifications. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlmodstyle> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Instead of pointing to the module list, we are now pointing to +L<PrePAN|http://prepan.org/>. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlop> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Updated for the enhancements in v5.22, along with some clarifications. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlpodspec> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +The specification of the pod language is changing so that the default +encoding of pods that aren't in UTF-8 (unless otherwise indicated) is +CP1252 instead of ISO 8859-1 (Latin1). + +=back + +=head3 L<perlpolicy> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +We now have a code of conduct for the I<< p5p >> mailing list, as documented +in L<< perlpolicy/STANDARDS OF CONDUCT >>. + +=item * + +The conditions for marking an experimental feature as non-experimental are now +set out. + +=item * + +Clarification has been made as to what sorts of changes are permissible in +maintenance releases. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlport> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Out-of-date VMS-specific information has been fixed and/or simplified. + +=item * + +Notes about EBCDIC have been added. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlre> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +The description of the C</x> modifier has been clarified to note that +comments cannot be continued onto the next line by escaping them; and +there is now a list of all the characters that are considered whitespace +by this modifier. + +=item * + +The new C</n> modifier is described. + +=item * + +A note has been added on how to make bracketed character class ranges +portable to non-ASCII machines. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlrebackslash> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Added documentation of C<\b{sb}>, C<\b{wb}>, C<\b{gcb}>, and C<\b{g}>. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlrecharclass> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Clarifications have been added to L<perlrecharclass/Character Ranges> +to the effect C<[A-Z]>, C<[a-z]>, C<[0-9]> and +any subranges thereof in regular expression bracketed character classes +are guaranteed to match exactly what a naive English speaker would +expect them to match, even on platforms (such as EBCDIC) where perl +has to do extra work to accomplish this. + +=item * + +The documentation of Bracketed Character Classes has been expanded to cover the +improvements in C<qr/[\N{named sequence}]/> (see under L</Selected Bug Fixes>). + +=back + +=head3 L<perlref> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +A new section has been added +L<Assigning to References|perlref/Assigning to References> + +=back + +=head3 L<perlsec> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Comments added on algorithmic complexity and tied hashes. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlsyn> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +An ambiguity in the documentation of the C<...> statement has been corrected. +L<[perl #122661]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122661> + +=item * + +The empty conditional in C<< for >> and C<< while >> is now documented +in L<< perlsyn >>. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlunicode> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +This has had extensive revisions to bring it up-to-date with current +Unicode support and to make it more readable. Notable is that Unicode +7.0 changed what it should do with non-characters. Perl retains the old +way of handling for reasons of backward compatibility. See +L<perlunicode/Noncharacter code points>. + +=back + +=head3 L<perluniintro> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Advice for how to make sure your strings and regular expression patterns are +interpreted as Unicode has been updated. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlvar> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +C<$]> is no longer listed as being deprecated. Instead, discussion has +been added on the advantages and disadvantages of using it versus +C<$^V>. + +=item * + +C<${^ENCODING}> is now marked as deprecated. + +=item * + +The entry for C<%^H> has been clarified to indicate it can only handle +simple values. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlvms> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Out-of-date and/or incorrect material has been removed. + +=item * + +Updated documentation on environment and shell interaction in VMS. + +=back + +=head3 L<perlxs> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Added a discussion of locale issues in XS code. + +=back + +=head1 Diagnostics + +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 L<perldiag>. + +=head2 New Diagnostics + +=head3 New Errors + +=over 4 + +=item * + +L<Bad symbol for scalar|perldiag/"Bad symbol for scalar"> + +(P) An internal request asked to add a scalar entry to something that +wasn't a symbol table entry. + +=item * + +L<Can't use a hash as a reference|perldiag/"Can't use a hash as a reference"> + +(F) You tried to use a hash as a reference, as in +C<< %foo->{"bar"} >> or C<< %$ref->{"hello"} >>. Versions of perl E<lt>= 5.6.1 +used to allow this syntax, but shouldn't have. + +=item * + +L<Can't use an array as a reference|perldiag/"Can't use an array as a reference"> + +(F) You tried to use an array as a reference, as in +C<< @foo->[23] >> or C<< @$ref->[99] >>. Versions of perl E<lt>= 5.6.1 used to +allow this syntax, but shouldn't have. + +=item * + +L<Can't use 'defined(@array)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)|perldiag/"Can't use 'defined(@array)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)"> + +(F) C<defined()> is not useful on arrays because it +checks for an undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the +array is empty, just use S<C<if (@array) { # not empty }>> for example. + +=item * + +L<Can't use 'defined(%hash)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)|perldiag/"Can't use 'defined(%hash)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)"> + +(F) C<defined()> is not usually right on hashes. + +Although S<C<defined %hash>> is false on a plain not-yet-used hash, it +becomes true in several non-obvious circumstances, including iterators, +weak references, stash names, even remaining true after S<C<undef %hash>>. +These things make S<C<defined %hash>> fairly useless in practice, so it now +generates a fatal error. + +If a check for non-empty is what you wanted then just put it in boolean +context (see L<perldata/Scalar values>): + + if (%hash) { + # not empty + } + +If you had S<C<defined %Foo::Bar::QUUX>> to check whether such a package +variable exists then that's never really been reliable, and isn't +a good way to enquire about the features of a package, or whether +it's loaded, etc. + +=item * + +L<Cannot chr %f|perldiag/"Cannot chr %f"> + +(F) You passed an invalid number (like an infinity or not-a-number) to +C<chr>. + +=item * + +L<Cannot compress %f in pack|perldiag/"Cannot compress %f in pack"> + +(F) You tried converting an infinity or not-a-number to an unsigned +character, which makes no sense. + +=item * + +L<Cannot pack %f with '%c'|perldiag/"Cannot pack %f with '%c'"> + +(F) You tried converting an infinity or not-a-number to a character, +which makes no sense. + +=item * + +L<Cannot print %f with '%c'|perldiag/"Cannot printf %f with '%c'"> + +(F) You tried printing an infinity or not-a-number as a character (C<%c>), +which makes no sense. Maybe you meant C<'%s'>, or just stringifying it? + +=item * + +L<charnames alias definitions may not contain a sequence of multiple spaces|perldiag/"charnames alias definitions may not contain a sequence of multiple spaces"> + +(F) You defined a character name which had multiple space +characters in a row. Change them to single spaces. Usually these +names are defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but +they could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>. +See L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>. + +=item * + +L<charnames alias definitions may not contain trailing white-space|perldiag/"charnames alias definitions may not contain trailing white-space"> + +(F) You defined a character name which ended in a space +character. Remove the trailing space(s). Usually these names are +defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but they +could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>. +See L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>. + +=item * + +L<:const is not permitted on named subroutines|perldiag/":const is not permitted on named subroutines"> + +(F) The C<const> attribute causes an anonymous subroutine to be run and +its value captured at the time that it is cloned. Named subroutines are +not cloned like this, so the attribute does not make sense on them. + +=item * + +L<Hexadecimal float: internal error|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: internal error"> + +(F) Something went horribly bad in hexadecimal float handling. + +=item * + +L<Hexadecimal float: unsupported long double format|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: unsupported long double format"> + +(F) You have configured Perl to use long doubles but +the internals of the long double format are unknown, +therefore the hexadecimal float output is impossible. + +=item * + +L<Illegal suidscript|perldiag/"Illegal suidscript"> + +(F) The script run under suidperl was somehow illegal. + +=item * + +L<In '(?...)', the '(' and '?' must be adjacent in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"In '(?...)', the '(' and '?' must be adjacent in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/"> + +(F) The two-character sequence C<"(?"> in +this context in a regular expression pattern should be an +indivisible token, with nothing intervening between the C<"("> +and the C<"?">, but you separated them. + +=item * + +L<In '(*VERB...)', the '(' and '*' must be adjacent in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"In '(*VERB...)', the '(' and '*' must be adjacent in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/"> + +(F) The two-character sequence C<"(*"> in +this context in a regular expression pattern should be an +indivisible token, with nothing intervening between the C<"("> +and the C<"*">, but you separated them. + +=item * + +L<Invalid quantifier in {,} in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Invalid quantifier in {,} in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/"> + +(F) The pattern looks like a {min,max} quantifier, but the min or max could not +be parsed as a valid number: either it has leading zeroes, or it represents +too big a number to cope with. The S<<-- HERE> shows where in the regular +expression the problem was discovered. See L<perlre>. + +=item * + +L<'%s' is an unknown bound type in regex|perldiag/"'%s' is an unknown bound type in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/"> + +(F) You used C<\b{...}> or C<\B{...}> and the C<...> is not known to +Perl. The current valid ones are given in +L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B>. + +=item * + +L<Missing or undefined argument to require|perldiag/Missing or undefined argument to require> + +(F) You tried to call C<require> with no argument or with an undefined +value as an argument. C<require> expects either a package name or a +file-specification as an argument. See L<perlfunc/require>. + +Formerly, C<require> with no argument or C<undef> warned about a Null filename. + +=back + +=head3 New Warnings + +=over 4 + +=item * + +L<\C is deprecated in regex|perldiag/"\C is deprecated in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/"> + +(D deprecated) The C<< /\C/ >> character class was deprecated in v5.20, and +now emits a warning. It is intended that it will become an error in v5.24. +This character class matches a single byte even if it appears within a +multi-byte character, breaks encapsulation, and can corrupt UTF-8 +strings. + +=item * + +L<"%s" is more clearly written simply as "%s" in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"%s" is more clearly written simply as "%s" in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>> + +(W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>) + +You specified a character that has the given plainer way of writing it, +and which is also portable to platforms running with different character +sets. + +=item * + +L<Argument "%s" treated as 0 in increment (++)|perldiag/"Argument "%s" treated +as 0 in increment (++)"> + +(W numeric) The indicated string was fed as an argument to the C<++> operator +which expects either a number or a string matching C</^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/>. +See L<perlop/Auto-increment and Auto-decrement> for details. + +=item * + +L<Both or neither range ends should be Unicode in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Both or neither range ends should be Unicode in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/"> + +(W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>) + +In a bracketed character class in a regular expression pattern, you +had a range which has exactly one end of it specified using C<\N{}>, and +the other end is specified using a non-portable mechanism. Perl treats +the range as a Unicode range, that is, all the characters in it are +considered to be the Unicode characters, and which may be different code +points on some platforms Perl runs on. For example, C<[\N{U+06}-\x08]> +is treated as if you had instead said C<[\N{U+06}-\N{U+08}]>, that is it +matches the characters whose code points in Unicode are 6, 7, and 8. +But that C<\x08> might indicate that you meant something different, so +the warning gets raised. + +=item * + +L<Can't do %s("%s") on non-UTF-8 locale; resolved to "%s".|perldiag/Can't do %s("%s") on non-UTF-8 locale; resolved to "%s".> + +(W locale) You are 1) running under "C<use locale>"; 2) the current +locale is not a UTF-8 one; 3) you tried to do the designated case-change +operation on the specified Unicode character; and 4) the result of this +operation would mix Unicode and locale rules, which likely conflict. + +The warnings category C<locale> is new. + +=item * + +L<:const is experimental|perldiag/":const is experimental"> + +(S experimental::const_attr) The C<const> attribute is experimental. +If you want to use the feature, disable the warning with C<no warnings +'experimental::const_attr'>, but know that in doing so you are taking +the risk that your code may break in a future Perl version. + +=item * + +L<gmtime(%f) failed|perldiag/"gmtime(%f) failed"> + +(W overflow) You called C<gmtime> with a number that it could not handle: +too large, too small, or NaN. The returned value is C<undef>. + +=item * + +L<Hexadecimal float: exponent overflow|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: exponent overflow"> + +(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point has larger exponent +than the floating point supports. + +=item * + +L<Hexadecimal float: exponent underflow|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: exponent underflow"> + +(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point has smaller exponent +than the floating point supports. + +=item * + +L<Hexadecimal float: mantissa overflow|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: mantissa overflow"> + +(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point literal had more bits in +the mantissa (the part between the C<0x> and the exponent, also known as +the fraction or the significand) than the floating point supports. + +=item * + +L<Hexadecimal float: precision loss|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: precision loss"> + +(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point had internally more +digits than could be output. This can be caused by unsupported +long double formats, or by 64-bit integers not being available +(needed to retrieve the digits under some configurations). + +=item * + +L<Locale '%s' may not work well.%s|perldiag/Locale '%s' may not work well.%s> + +(W locale) You are using the named locale, which is a non-UTF-8 one, and +which perl has determined is not fully compatible with what it can +handle. The second C<%s> gives a reason. + +The warnings category C<locale> is new. + +=item * + +L<localtime(%f) failed|perldiag/"localtime(%f) failed"> + +(W overflow) You called C<localtime> with a number that it could not handle: +too large, too small, or NaN. The returned value is C<undef>. + +=item * + +L<Negative repeat count does nothing|perldiag/"Negative repeat count does nothing"> + +(W numeric) You tried to execute the +L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> repetition operator fewer than 0 +times, which doesn't make sense. + +=item * + +L<NO-BREAK SPACE in a charnames alias definition is deprecated|perldiag/"NO-BREAK SPACE in a charnames alias definition is deprecated"> + +(D deprecated) You defined a character name which contained a no-break +space character. Change it to a regular space. Usually these names are +defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but they +could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>. See +L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>. + +=item * + +L<Non-finite repeat count does nothing|perldiag/"Non-finite repeat count does nothing"> + +(W numeric) You tried to execute the +L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> repetition operator C<Inf> (or +C<-Inf>) or NaN times, which doesn't make sense. + +=item * + +L<PerlIO layer ':win32' is experimental|perldiag/"PerlIO layer ':win32' is experimental"> + +(S experimental::win32_perlio) The C<:win32> PerlIO layer is +experimental. If you want to take the risk of using this layer, +simply disable this warning: + + no warnings "experimental::win32_perlio"; + +=item * + +L<Ranges of ASCII printables should be some subset of "0-9", "A-Z", or "a-z" in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Ranges of ASCII printables should be some subset of "0-9", "A-Z", or "a-z" in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>"> + +(W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>) + +Stricter rules help to find typos and other errors. Perhaps you didn't +even intend a range here, if the C<"-"> was meant to be some other +character, or should have been escaped (like C<"\-">). If you did +intend a range, the one that was used is not portable between ASCII and +EBCDIC platforms, and doesn't have an obvious meaning to a casual +reader. + + [3-7] # OK; Obvious and portable + [d-g] # OK; Obvious and portable + [A-Y] # OK; Obvious and portable + [A-z] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant + [a-Z] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant + [%-.] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant + [\x41-Z] # WRONG; Not portable; not obvious to non-geek + +(You can force portability by specifying a Unicode range, which means that +the endpoints are specified by +L<C<\N{...}>|perlrecharclass/Character Ranges>, but the meaning may +still not be obvious.) +The stricter rules require that ranges that start or stop with an ASCII +character that is not a control have all their endpoints be a literal +character, and not some escape sequence (like C<"\x41">), and the ranges +must be all digits, or all uppercase letters, or all lowercase letters. + +=item * + +L<Ranges of digits should be from the same group in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Ranges of digits should be from the same group in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/"> + +(W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>) + +Stricter rules help to find typos and other errors. You included a +range, and at least one of the end points is a decimal digit. Under the +stricter rules, when this happens, both end points should be digits in +the same group of 10 consecutive digits. + +=item * + +L<Redundant argument in %s|perldiag/Redundant argument in %s> + +(W redundant) You called a function with more arguments than were +needed, as indicated by information within other arguments you supplied +(I<e.g>. a printf format). Currently only emitted when a printf-type format +required fewer arguments than were supplied, but might be used in the +future for I<e.g.> L<perlfunc/pack>. + +The warnings category C<< redundant >> is new. See also +L<[perl #121025]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121025>. + +=item * + +L<Replacement list is longer than search list|perldiag/Replacement list is longer than search list> + +This is not a new diagnostic, but in earlier releases was accidentally +not displayed if the transliteration contained wide characters. This is +now fixed, so that you may see this diagnostic in places where you +previously didn't (but should have). + +=item * + +L<Use of \b{} for non-UTF-8 locale is wrong. Assuming a UTF-8 locale|perldiag/"Use of \b{} for non-UTF-8 locale is wrong. Assuming a UTF-8 locale"> + +(W locale) You are matching a regular expression using locale rules, +and a Unicode boundary is being matched, but the locale is not a Unicode +one. This doesn't make sense. Perl will continue, assuming a Unicode +(UTF-8) locale, but the results could well be wrong except if the locale +happens to be ISO-8859-1 (Latin1) where this message is spurious and can +be ignored. + +The warnings category C<locale> is new. + +=item * + +L<< Using E<sol>u for '%s' instead of E<sol>%s in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Using E<sol>u for '%s' instead of E<sol>%s in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>" >> + +(W regexp) You used a Unicode boundary (C<\b{...}> or C<\B{...}>) in a +portion of a regular expression where the character set modifiers C</a> +or C</aa> are in effect. These two modifiers indicate an ASCII +interpretation, and this doesn't make sense for a Unicode definition. +The generated regular expression will compile so that the boundary uses +all of Unicode. No other portion of the regular expression is affected. + +=item * + +L<The bitwise feature is experimental|perldiag/"The bitwise feature is experimental"> + +(S experimental::bitwise) This warning is emitted if you use bitwise +operators (C<& | ^ ~ &. |. ^. ~.>) with the "bitwise" feature enabled. +Simply suppress the warning if you want to use the feature, but know +that in doing so you are taking the risk of using an experimental +feature which may change or be removed in a future Perl version: + + no warnings "experimental::bitwise"; + use feature "bitwise"; + $x |.= $y; + +=item * + +L<Unescaped left brace in regex is deprecated, passed through in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Unescaped left brace in regex is deprecated, passed through in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/"> + +(D deprecated, regexp) You used a literal C<"{"> character in a regular +expression pattern. You should change to use C<"\{"> instead, because a future +version of Perl (tentatively v5.26) will consider this to be a syntax error. If +the pattern delimiters are also braces, any matching right brace +(C<"}">) should also be escaped to avoid confusing the parser, for +example, + + qr{abc\{def\}ghi} + +=item * + +L<Use of literal non-graphic characters in variable names is deprecated|perldiag/"Use of literal non-graphic characters in variable names is deprecated"> + +(D deprecated) Using literal non-graphic (including control) +characters in the source to refer to the I<^FOO> variables, like C<$^X> and +C<${^GLOBAL_PHASE}> is now deprecated. + +=item * + +L<Useless use of attribute "const"|perldiag/Useless use of attribute "const"> + +(W misc) The C<const> attribute has no effect except +on anonymous closure prototypes. You applied it to +a subroutine via L<attributes.pm|attributes>. This is only useful +inside an attribute handler for an anonymous subroutine. + +=item * + +L<Useless use of E<sol>d modifier in transliteration operator|perldiag/"Useless use of /d modifier in transliteration operator"> + +This is not a new diagnostic, but in earlier releases was accidentally +not displayed if the transliteration contained wide characters. This is +now fixed, so that you may see this diagnostic in places where you +previously didn't (but should have). + +=item * + +L<E<quot>use re 'strict'E<quot> is experimental|perldiag/"use re 'strict'" is experimental> + +(S experimental::re_strict) The things that are different when a regular +expression pattern is compiled under C<'strict'> are subject to change +in future Perl releases in incompatible ways; there are also proposals +to change how to enable strict checking instead of using this subpragma. +This means that a pattern that compiles today may not in a future Perl +release. This warning is to alert you to that risk. + +=item * + +L<Warning: unable to close filehandle properly: %s|perldiag/"Warning: unable to close filehandle properly: %s"> + +L<Warning: unable to close filehandle %s properly: %s|perldiag/"Warning: unable to close filehandle %s properly: %s"> + +(S io) Previously, perl silently ignored any errors when doing an implicit +close of a filehandle, I<i.e.> where the reference count of the filehandle +reached zero and the user's code hadn't already called C<close()>; I<e.g.> + + { + open my $fh, '>', $file or die "open: '$file': $!\n"; + print $fh, $data or die; + } # implicit close here + +In a situation such as disk full, due to buffering, the error may only be +detected during the final close, so not checking the result of the close is +dangerous. + +So perl now warns in such situations. + +=item * + +L<Wide character (U+%X) in %s|perldiag/"Wide character (U+%X) in %s"> + +(W locale) While in a single-byte locale (I<i.e.>, a non-UTF-8 +one), a multi-byte character was encountered. Perl considers this +character to be the specified Unicode code point. Combining non-UTF-8 +locales and Unicode is dangerous. Almost certainly some characters +will have two different representations. For example, in the ISO 8859-7 +(Greek) locale, the code point 0xC3 represents a Capital Gamma. But so +also does 0x393. This will make string comparisons unreliable. + +You likely need to figure out how this multi-byte character got mixed up +with your single-byte locale (or perhaps you thought you had a UTF-8 +locale, but Perl disagrees). + +The warnings category C<locale> is new. + +=back + +=head2 Changes to Existing Diagnostics + +=over 4 + +=item * + +<> should be quotes + +This warning has been changed to +L<< <> at require-statement should be quotes|perldiag/"<> at require-statement should be quotes" >> +to make the issue more identifiable. + +=item * + +L<Argument "%s" isn't numeric%s|perldiag/"Argument "%s" isn't numeric%s"> + +The L<perldiag> entry for this warning has added this clarifying note: + + Note that for the Inf and NaN (infinity and not-a-number) the + definition of "numeric" is somewhat unusual: the strings themselves + (like "Inf") are considered numeric, and anything following them is + considered non-numeric. + +=item * + +L<Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name|perldiag/"Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name (did you forget to declare "my %s"?)"> + +This message has had '(did you forget to declare "my %s"?)' appended to it, to +make it more helpful to new Perl programmers. +L<[perl #121638]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121638> + +=item * + +'"my" variable &foo::bar can't be in a package' has been reworded to say +'subroutine' instead of 'variable'. + +=item * + +L<<< \N{} in character class restricted to one character in regex; marked by +S<< <-- HERE >> in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"\N{} in inverted character +class or as a range end-point is restricted to one character in regex; +marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/" >>> + +This message has had I<character class> changed to I<inverted character +class or as a range end-point is> to reflect improvements in +C<qr/[\N{named sequence}]/> (see under L</Selected Bug Fixes>). + +=item * + +L<panic: frexp|perldiag/"panic: frexp: %f"> + +This message has had ': C<%f>' appended to it, to show what the offending +floating point number is. + +=item * + +I<Possible precedence problem on bitwise %c operator> reworded as +L<Possible precedence problem on bitwise %s operator|perldiag/"Possible precedence problem on bitwise %s operator">. + +=item * + +L<Unsuccessful %s on filename containing newline|perldiag/"Unsuccessful %s on filename containing newline"> + +This warning is now only produced when the newline is at the end of +the filename. + +=item * + +"Variable C<%s> will not stay shared" has been changed to say "Subroutine" +when it is actually a lexical sub that will not stay shared. + +=item * + +L<Variable length lookbehind not implemented in regex mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Variable length lookbehind not implemented in regex m/%s/"> + +The L<perldiag> entry for this warning has had information about Unicode +behavior added. + +=back + +=head2 Diagnostic Removals + +=over + +=item * + +"Ambiguous use of -foo resolved as -&foo()" + +There is actually no ambiguity here, and this impedes the use of negated +constants; I<e.g.>, C<-Inf>. + +=item * + +"Constant is not a FOO reference" + +Compile-time checking of constant dereferencing (I<e.g.>, C<< my_constant->() >>) +has been removed, since it was not taking overloading into account. +L<[perl #69456]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=69456> +L<[perl #122607]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122607> + +=back + +=head1 Utility Changes + +=head2 F<find2perl>, F<s2p> and F<a2p> removal + +=over 4 + +=item * + +The F<x2p/> directory has been removed from the Perl core. + +This removes find2perl, s2p and a2p. They have all been released to CPAN as +separate distributions (C<App::find2perl>, C<App::s2p>, C<App::a2p>). + +=back + +=head2 L<h2ph> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +F<h2ph> now handles hexadecimal constants in the compiler's predefined +macro definitions, as visible in C<$Config{cppsymbols}>. +L<[perl #123784]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123784>. + +=back + +=head2 L<encguess> + +=over 4 + +=item * + +No longer depends on non-core modules. + +=back + +=head1 Configuration and Compilation + +=over 4 + +=item * + +F<Configure> now checks for C<lrintl()>, C<lroundl()>, C<llrintl()>, and +C<llroundl()>. + +=item * + +F<Configure> with C<-Dmksymlinks> should now be faster. +L<[perl #122002]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122002>. + +=item * + +The C<pthreads> and C<cl> libraries will be linked by default if present. +This allows XS modules that require threading to work on non-threaded +perls. Note that you must still pass C<-Dusethreads> if you want a +threaded perl. + +=item * + +For long doubles (to get more precision and range for floating point numbers) +one can now use the GCC quadmath library which implements the quadruple +precision floating point numbers on x86 and IA-64 platforms. See +F<INSTALL> for details. + +=item * + +MurmurHash64A and MurmurHash64B can now be configured as the internal hash +function. + +=item * + +C<make test.valgrind> now supports parallel testing. + +For example: + + TEST_JOBS=9 make test.valgrind + +See L<perlhacktips/valgrind> for more information. + +L<[perl #121431]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121431> + +=item * + +The MAD (Misc Attribute Decoration) build option has been removed + +This was an unmaintained attempt at preserving +the Perl parse tree more faithfully so that automatic conversion of +Perl 5 to Perl 6 would have been easier. + +This build-time configuration option had been unmaintained for years, +and had probably seriously diverged on both Perl 5 and Perl 6 sides. + +=item * + +A new compilation flag, C<< -DPERL_OP_PARENT >> is available. For details, +see the discussion below at L<< /Internal Changes >>. + +=item * + +Pathtools no longer tries to load XS on miniperl. This speeds up building perl +slightly. + +=back + +=head1 Testing + +=over 4 + +=item * + +F<t/porting/re_context.t> has been added to test that L<utf8> and its +dependencies only use the subset of the C<$1..$n> capture vars that +C<Perl_save_re_context()> is hard-coded to localize, because that function +has no efficient way of determining at runtime what vars to localize. + +=item * + +Tests for performance issues have been added in the file F<t/perf/taint.t>. + +=item * + +Some regular expression tests are written in such a way that they will +run very slowly if certain optimizations break. These tests have been +moved into new files, F<< t/re/speed.t >> and F<< t/re/speed_thr.t >>, +and are run with a C<< watchdog() >>. + +=item * + +C<< test.pl >> now allows C<< plan skip_all => $reason >>, to make it +more compatible with C<< Test::More >>. + +=item * + +A new test script, F<op/infnan.t>, has been added to test if infinity and NaN are +working correctly. See L</Infinity and NaN (not-a-number) handling improved>. + +=back + +=head1 Platform Support + +=head2 Regained Platforms + +=over 4 + +=item IRIX and Tru64 platforms are working again. + +Some C<make test> failures remain: +L<[perl #123977]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123977> +and L<[perl #125298]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=125298> +for IRIX; L<[perl #124212]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124212>, +L<[cpan #99605]|https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=99605>, and +L<[cpan #104836|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=104836> for Tru64. + +=item z/OS running EBCDIC Code Page 1047 + +Core perl now works on this EBCDIC platform. Earlier perls also worked, but, +even though support wasn't officially withdrawn, recent perls would not compile +and run well. Perl 5.20 would work, but had many bugs which have now been +fixed. Many CPAN modules that ship with Perl still fail tests, including +C<Pod::Simple>. However the version of C<Pod::Simple> currently on CPAN should work; +it was fixed too late to include in Perl 5.22. Work is under way to fix many +of the still-broken CPAN modules, which likely will be installed on CPAN when +completed, so that you may not have to wait until Perl 5.24 to get a working +version. + +=back + +=head2 Discontinued Platforms + +=over 4 + +=item NeXTSTEP/OPENSTEP + +NeXTSTEP was a proprietary operating system bundled with NeXT's +workstations in the early to mid 90s; OPENSTEP was an API specification +that provided a NeXTSTEP-like environment on a non-NeXTSTEP system. Both +are now long dead, so support for building Perl on them has been removed. + +=back + +=head2 Platform-Specific Notes + +=over 4 + +=item EBCDIC + +Special handling is required of the perl interpreter on EBCDIC platforms +to get C<qr/[i-j]/> to match only C<"i"> and C<"j">, since there are 7 +characters between the +code points for C<"i"> and C<"j">. This special handling had only been +invoked when both ends of the range are literals. Now it is also +invoked if any of the C<\N{...}> forms for specifying a character by +name or Unicode code point is used instead of a literal. See +L<perlrecharclass/Character Ranges>. + +=item HP-UX + +The archname now distinguishes use64bitint from use64bitall. + +=item Android + +Build support has been improved for cross-compiling in general and for +Android in particular. + +=item VMS + +=over 4 + +=item * + +When spawning a subprocess without waiting, the return value is now +the correct PID. + +=item * + +Fix a prototype so linking doesn't fail under the VMS C++ compiler. + +=item * + +C<finite>, C<finitel>, and C<isfinite> detection has been added to +C<configure.com>, environment handling has had some minor changes, and +a fix for legacy feature checking status. + +=back + +=item Win32 + +=over 4 + +=item * + +F<miniperl.exe> is now built with C<-fno-strict-aliasing>, allowing 64-bit +builds to complete on GCC 4.8. +L<[perl #123976]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123976> + +=item * + +C<nmake minitest> now works on Win32. Due to dependency issues you +need to build C<nmake test-prep> first, and a small number of the +tests fail. +L<[perl #123394]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123394> + +=item * + +Perl can now be built in C++ mode on Windows by setting the makefile macro +C<USE_CPLUSPLUS> to the value "define". + +=item * + +The list form of piped open has been implemented for Win32. Note: unlike +C<system LIST> this does not fall back to the shell. +L<[perl #121159]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121159> + +=item * + +New C<DebugSymbols> and C<DebugFull> configuration options added to +Windows makefiles. + +=item * + +Previously, compiling XS modules (including CPAN ones) using Visual C++ for +Win64 resulted in around a dozen warnings per file from F<hv_func.h>. These +warnings have been silenced. + +=item * + +Support for building without PerlIO has been removed from the Windows +makefiles. Non-PerlIO builds were all but deprecated in Perl 5.18.0 and are +already not supported by F<Configure> on POSIX systems. + +=item * + +Between 2 and 6 milliseconds and seven I/O calls have been saved per attempt +to open a perl module for each path in C<@INC>. + +=item * + +Intel C builds are now always built with C99 mode on. + +=item * + +C<%I64d> is now being used instead of C<%lld> for MinGW. + +=item * + +In the experimental C<:win32> layer, a crash in C<open> was fixed. Also +opening F</dev/null> (which works under Win32 Perl's default C<:unix> +layer) was implemented for C<:win32>. +L<[perl #122224]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122224> + +=item * + +A new makefile option, C<USE_LONG_DOUBLE>, has been added to the Windows +dmake makefile for gcc builds only. Set this to "define" if you want perl to +use long doubles to give more accuracy and range for floating point numbers. + +=back + +=item OpenBSD + +On OpenBSD, Perl will now default to using the system C<malloc> due to the +security features it provides. Perl's own malloc wrapper has been in use +since v5.14 due to performance reasons, but the OpenBSD project believes +the tradeoff is worth it and would prefer that users who need the speed +specifically ask for it. + +L<[perl #122000]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122000>. + +=item Solaris + +=over 4 + +=item * + +We now look for the Sun Studio compiler in both F</opt/solstudio*> and +F</opt/solarisstudio*>. + +=item * + +Builds on Solaris 10 with C<-Dusedtrace> would fail early since make +didn't follow implied dependencies to build C<perldtrace.h>. Added an +explicit dependency to C<depend>. +L<[perl #120120]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120120> + +=item * + +C99 options have been cleaned up; hints look for C<solstudio> +as well as C<SUNWspro>; and support for native C<setenv> has been added. + +=back + +=back + +=head1 Internal Changes + +=over 4 + +=item * + +Experimental support has been added to allow ops in the optree to locate +their parent, if any. This is enabled by the non-default build option +C<-DPERL_OP_PARENT>. It is envisaged that this will eventually become +enabled by default, so XS code which directly accesses the C<op_sibling> +field of ops should be updated to be future-proofed. + +On C<PERL_OP_PARENT> builds, the C<op_sibling> field has been renamed +C<op_sibparent> and a new flag, C<op_moresib>, added. On the last op in a +sibling chain, C<op_moresib> is false and C<op_sibparent> points to the +parent (if any) rather than being C<NULL>. + +To make existing code work transparently whether using C<PERL_OP_PARENT> +or not, a number of new macros and functions have been added that should +be used, rather than directly manipulating C<op_sibling>. + +For the case of just reading C<op_sibling> to determine the next sibling, +two new macros have been added. A simple scan through a sibling chain +like this: + + for (; kid->op_sibling; kid = kid->op_sibling) { ... } + +should now be written as: + + for (; OpHAS_SIBLING(kid); kid = OpSIBLING(kid)) { ... } + +For altering optrees, a general-purpose function C<op_sibling_splice()> +has been added, which allows for manipulation of a chain of sibling ops. +By analogy with the Perl function C<splice()>, it allows you to cut out +zero or more ops from a sibling chain and replace them with zero or more +new ops. It transparently handles all the updating of sibling, parent, +op_last pointers etc. + +If you need to manipulate ops at a lower level, then three new macros, +C<OpMORESIB_set>, C<OpLASTSIB_set> and C<OpMAYBESIB_set> are intended to +be a low-level portable way to set C<op_sibling> / C<op_sibparent> while +also updating C<op_moresib>. The first sets the sibling pointer to a new +sibling, the second makes the op the last sibling, and the third +conditionally does the first or second action. Note that unlike +C<op_sibling_splice()> these macros won't maintain consistency in the +parent at the same time (I<e.g.> by updating C<op_first> and C<op_last> where +appropriate). + +A C-level C<Perl_op_parent()> function and a Perl-level C<B::OP::parent()> +method have been added. The C function only exists under +C<PERL_OP_PARENT> builds (using it is build-time error on vanilla +perls). C<B::OP::parent()> exists always, but on a vanilla build it +always returns C<NULL>. Under C<PERL_OP_PARENT>, they return the parent +of the current op, if any. The variable C<$B::OP::does_parent> allows you +to determine whether C<B> supports retrieving an op's parent. + +C<PERL_OP_PARENT> was introduced in 5.21.2, but the interface was +changed considerably in 5.21.11. If you updated your code before the +5.21.11 changes, it may require further revision. The main changes after +5.21.2 were: + +=over 4 + +=item * + +The C<OP_SIBLING> and C<OP_HAS_SIBLING> macros have been renamed +C<OpSIBLING> and C<OpHAS_SIBLING> for consistency with other +op-manipulating macros. + +=item * + +The C<op_lastsib> field has been renamed C<op_moresib>, and its meaning +inverted. + +=item * + +The macro C<OpSIBLING_set> has been removed, and has been superseded by +C<OpMORESIB_set> I<et al>. + +=item * + +The C<op_sibling_splice()> function now accepts a null C<parent> argument +where the splicing doesn't affect the first or last ops in the sibling +chain + +=back + +=item * + +Macros have been created to allow XS code to better manipulate the POSIX locale +category C<LC_NUMERIC>. See L<perlapi/Locale-related functions and macros>. + +=item * + +The previous C<atoi> I<et al> replacement function, C<grok_atou>, has now been +superseded by C<grok_atoUV>. See L<perlclib> for details. + +=item * + +A new function, C<Perl_sv_get_backrefs()>, has been added which allows you +retrieve the weak references, if any, which point at an SV. + +=item * + +The C<screaminstr()> function has been removed. Although marked as +public API, it was undocumented and had no usage in CPAN modules. Calling +it has been fatal since 5.17.0. + +=item * + +The C<newDEFSVOP()>, C<block_start()>, C<block_end()> and C<intro_my()> +functions have been added to the API. + +=item * + +The internal C<convert> function in F<op.c> has been renamed +C<op_convert_list> and added to the API. + +=item * + +The C<sv_magic()> function no longer forbids "ext" magic on read-only +values. After all, perl can't know whether the custom magic will modify +the SV or not. +L<[perl #123103]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123103>. + +=item * + +Accessing L<perlapi/CvPADLIST> on an XSUB is now forbidden. + +The C<CvPADLIST> field has been reused for a different internal purpose +for XSUBs. So in particular, you can no longer rely on it being NULL as a +test of whether a CV is an XSUB. Use C<CvISXSUB()> instead. + +=item * + +SVs of type C<SVt_NV> are now sometimes bodiless when the build +configuration and platform allow it: specifically, when C<< sizeof(NV) <= +sizeof(IV) >>. "Bodiless" means that the NV value is stored directly in +the head of an SV, without requiring a separate body to be allocated. This +trick has already been used for IVs since 5.9.2 (though in the case of +IVs, it is always used, regardless of platform and build configuration). + +=item * + +The C<$DB::single>, C<$DB::signal> and C<$DB::trace> variables now have set- and +get-magic that stores their values as IVs, and those IVs are used when +testing their values in C<pp_dbstate()>. This prevents perl from +recursing infinitely if an overloaded object is assigned to any of those +variables. +L<[perl #122445]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122445>. + +=item * + +C<Perl_tmps_grow()>, which is marked as public API but is undocumented, has +been removed from the public API. This change does not affect XS code that +uses the C<EXTEND_MORTAL> macro to pre-extend the mortal stack. + +=item * + +Perl's internals no longer sets or uses the C<SVs_PADMY> flag. +C<SvPADMY()> now returns a true value for anything not marked C<PADTMP> +and C<SVs_PADMY> is now defined as 0. + +=item * + +The macros C<SETsv> and C<SETsvUN> have been removed. They were no longer used +in the core since commit 6f1401dc2a five years ago, and have not been +found present on CPAN. + +=item * + +The C<< SvFAKE >> bit (unused on HVs) got informally reserved by +David Mitchell for future work on vtables. + +=item * + +The C<sv_catpvn_flags()> function accepts C<SV_CATBYTES> and C<SV_CATUTF8> +flags, which specify whether the appended string is bytes or UTF-8, +respectively. (These flags have in fact been present since 5.16.0, but +were formerly not regarded as part of the API.) + +=item * + +A new opcode class, C<< METHOP >>, has been introduced. It holds +information used at runtime to improve the performance +of class/object method calls. + +C<< OP_METHOD >> and C<< OP_METHOD_NAMED >> have changed from being +C<< UNOP/SVOP >> to being C<< METHOP >>. + +=item * + +C<cv_name()> is a new API function that can be passed a CV or GV. It +returns an SV containing the name of the subroutine, for use in +diagnostics. + +L<[perl #116735]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=116735> +L<[perl #120441]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120441> + +=item * + +C<cv_set_call_checker_flags()> is a new API function that works like +C<cv_set_call_checker()>, except that it allows the caller to specify +whether the call checker requires a full GV for reporting the subroutine's +name, or whether it could be passed a CV instead. Whatever value is +passed will be acceptable to C<cv_name()>. C<cv_set_call_checker()> +guarantees there will be a GV, but it may have to create one on the fly, +which is inefficient. +L<[perl #116735]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=116735> + +=item * + +C<CvGV> (which is not part of the API) is now a more complex macro, which may +call a function and reify a GV. For those cases where it has been used as a +boolean, C<CvHASGV> has been added, which will return true for CVs that +notionally have GVs, but without reifying the GV. C<CvGV> also returns a GV +now for lexical subs. +L<[perl #120441]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120441> + +=item * + +The L<perlapi/sync_locale> function has been added to the public API. +Changing the program's locale should be avoided by XS code. Nevertheless, +certain non-Perl libraries called from XS need to do so, such as C<Gtk>. +When this happens, Perl needs to be told that the locale has +changed. Use this function to do so, before returning to Perl. + +=item * + +The defines and labels for the flags in the C<op_private> field of OPs are now +auto-generated from data in F<regen/op_private>. The noticeable effect of this +is that some of the flag output of C<Concise> might differ slightly, and the +flag output of S<C<perl -Dx>> may differ considerably (they both use the same set +of labels now). Also, debugging builds now have a new assertion in +C<op_free()> to ensure that the op doesn't have any unrecognized flags set in +C<op_private>. + +=item * + +The deprecated variable C<PL_sv_objcount> has been removed. + +=item * + +Perl now tries to keep the locale category C<LC_NUMERIC> set to "C" +except around operations that need it to be set to the program's +underlying locale. This protects the many XS modules that cannot cope +with the decimal radix character not being a dot. Prior to this +release, Perl initialized this category to "C", but a call to +C<POSIX::setlocale()> would change it. Now such a call will change the +underlying locale of the C<LC_NUMERIC> category for the program, but the +locale exposed to XS code will remain "C". There are new macros +to manipulate the LC_NUMERIC locale, including +C<STORE_LC_NUMERIC_SET_TO_NEEDED> and +C<STORE_LC_NUMERIC_FORCE_TO_UNDERLYING>. +See L<perlapi/Locale-related functions and macros>. + +=item * + +A new macro L<C<isUTF8_CHAR>|perlapi/isUTF8_CHAR> has been written which +efficiently determines if the string given by its parameters begins +with a well-formed UTF-8 encoded character. + +=item * + +The following private API functions had their context parameter removed: +C<Perl_cast_ulong>, C<Perl_cast_i32>, C<Perl_cast_iv>, C<Perl_cast_uv>, +C<Perl_cv_const_sv>, C<Perl_mg_find>, C<Perl_mg_findext>, C<Perl_mg_magical>, +C<Perl_mini_mktime>, C<Perl_my_dirfd>, C<Perl_sv_backoff>, C<Perl_utf8_hop>. + +Note that the prefix-less versions of those functions that are part of the +public API, such as C<cast_i32()>, remain unaffected. + +=item * + +The C<PADNAME> and C<PADNAMELIST> types are now separate types, and no +longer simply aliases for SV and AV. +L<[perl #123223]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123223>. + +=item * + +Pad names are now always UTF-8. The C<PadnameUTF8> macro always returns +true. Previously, this was effectively the case already, but any support +for two different internal representations of pad names has now been +removed. + +=item * + +A new op class, C<UNOP_AUX>, has been added. This is a subclass of +C<UNOP> with an C<op_aux> field added, which points to an array of unions +of UV, SV* etc. It is intended for where an op needs to store more data +than a simple C<op_sv> or whatever. Currently the only op of this type is +C<OP_MULTIDEREF> (see next item). + +=item * + +A new op has been added, C<OP_MULTIDEREF>, which performs one or more +nested array and hash lookups where the key is a constant or simple +variable. For example the expression C<$a[0]{$k}[$i]>, which previously +involved ten C<rv2Xv>, C<Xelem>, C<gvsv> and C<const> ops is now performed +by a single C<multideref> op. It can also handle C<local>, C<exists> and +C<delete>. A non-simple index expression, such as C<[$i+1]> is still done +using C<aelem>/C<helem>, and single-level array lookup with a small constant +index is still done using C<aelemfast>. + +=back + +=head1 Selected Bug Fixes + +=over 4 + +=item * + +C<close> now sets C<$!> + +When an I/O error occurs, the fact that there has been an error is recorded +in the handle. C<close> returns false for such a handle. Previously, the +value of C<$!> would be untouched by C<close>, so the common convention of +writing S<C<close $fh or die $!>> did not work reliably. Now the handle +records the value of C<$!>, too, and C<close> restores it. + +=item * + +C<no re> now can turn off everything that C<use re> enables + +Previously, running C<no re> would turn off only a few things. Now it +can turn off all the enabled things. For example, the only way to +stop debugging, once enabled, was to exit the enclosing block; that is +now fixed. + +=item * + +C<pack("D", $x)> and C<pack("F", $x)> now zero the padding on x86 long +double builds. Under some build options on GCC 4.8 and later, they used +to either overwrite the zero-initialized padding, or bypass the +initialized buffer entirely. This caused F<op/pack.t> to fail. +L<[perl #123971]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123971> + +=item * + +Extending an array cloned from a parent thread could result in "Modification of +a read-only value attempted" errors when attempting to modify the new elements. +L<[perl #124127]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124127> + +=item * + +An assertion failure and subsequent crash with C<< *x=<y> >> has been fixed. +L<[perl #123790]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123790> + +=item * + +A possible crashing/looping bug related to compiling lexical subs has been +fixed. +L<[perl #124099]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124099> + +=item * + +UTF-8 now works correctly in function names, in unquoted HERE-document +terminators, and in variable names used as array indexes. +L<[perl #124113]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124113> + +=item * + +Repeated global pattern matches in scalar context on large tainted strings were +exponentially slow depending on the current match position in the string. +L<[perl #123202]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123202> + +=item * + +Various crashes due to the parser getting confused by syntax errors have been +fixed. +L<[perl #123801]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123801> +L<[perl #123802]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123802> +L<[perl #123955]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123955> +L<[perl #123995]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123995> + +=item * + +C<split> in the scope of lexical C<$_> has been fixed not to fail assertions. +L<[perl #123763]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123763> + +=item * + +C<my $x : attr> syntax inside various list operators no longer fails +assertions. +L<[perl #123817]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123817> + +=item * + +An C<@> sign in quotes followed by a non-ASCII digit (which is not a valid +identifier) would cause the parser to crash, instead of simply trying the +C<@> as literal. This has been fixed. +L<[perl #123963]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123963> + +=item * + +C<*bar::=*foo::=*glob_with_hash> has been crashing since Perl 5.14, but no +longer does. +L<[perl #123847]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123847> + +=item * + +C<foreach> in scalar context was not pushing an item on to the stack, resulting +in bugs. (S<C<print 4, scalar do { foreach(@x){} } + 1>> would print 5.) +It has been fixed to return C<undef>. +L<[perl #124004]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124004> + +=item * + +Several cases of data used to store environment variable contents in core C +code being potentially overwritten before being used have been fixed. +L<[perl #123748]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123748> + +=item * + +Some patterns starting with C</.*..../> matched against long strings have +been slow since v5.8, and some of the form C</.*..../i> have been slow +since v5.18. They are now all fast again. +L<[perl #123743]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123743>. + +=item * + +The original visible value of C<$/> is now preserved when it is set to +an invalid value. Previously if you set C<$/> to a reference to an +array, for example, perl would produce a runtime error and not set +C<PL_rs>, but Perl code that checked C<$/> would see the array +reference. +L<[perl #123218]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123218>. + +=item * + +In a regular expression pattern, a POSIX class, like C<[:ascii:]>, must +be inside a bracketed character class, like C<qr/[[:ascii:]]/>. A +warning is issued when something looking like a POSIX class is not +inside a bracketed class. That warning wasn't getting generated when +the POSIX class was negated: C<[:^ascii:]>. This is now fixed. + +=item * + +Perl 5.14.0 introduced a bug whereby S<C<eval { LABEL: }>> would crash. This +has been fixed. +L<[perl #123652]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123652>. + +=item * + +Various crashes due to the parser getting confused by syntax errors have +been fixed. +L<[perl #123617]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123617>. +L<[perl #123737]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123737>. +L<[perl #123753]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123753>. +L<[perl #123677]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123677>. + +=item * + +Code like C</$a[/> used to read the next line of input and treat it as +though it came immediately after the opening bracket. Some invalid code +consequently would parse and run, but some code caused crashes, so this is +now disallowed. +L<[perl #123712]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123712>. + +=item * + +Fix argument underflow for C<pack>. +L<[perl #123874]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123874>. + +=item * + +Fix handling of non-strict C<\x{}>. Now C<\x{}> is equivalent to C<\x{0}> +instead of faulting. + +=item * + +C<stat -t> is now no longer treated as stackable, just like C<-t stat>. +L<[perl #123816]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123816>. + +=item * + +The following no longer causes a SEGV: C<qr{x+(y(?0))*}>. + +=item * + +Fixed infinite loop in parsing backrefs in regexp patterns. + +=item * + +Several minor bug fixes in behavior of Infinity and NaN, including +warnings when stringifying Infinity-like or NaN-like strings. For example, +"NaNcy" doesn't numify to NaN anymore. + +=item * + +A bug in regular expression patterns that could lead to segfaults and +other crashes has been fixed. This occurred only in patterns compiled +with C</i> while taking into account the current POSIX locale (which usually +means they have to be compiled within the scope of C<S<use locale>>), +and there must be a string of at least 128 consecutive bytes to match. +L<[perl #123539]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123539>. + +=item * + +C<s///g> now works on very long strings (where there are more than 2 +billion iterations) instead of dying with 'Substitution loop'. +L<[perl #103260]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=103260>. +L<[perl #123071]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123071>. + +=item * + +C<gmtime> no longer crashes with not-a-number values. +L<[perl #123495]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123495>. + +=item * + +C<\()> (a reference to an empty list), and C<y///> with lexical C<$_> in +scope, could both do a bad write past the end of the stack. They have +both been fixed to extend the stack first. + +=item * + +C<prototype()> with no arguments used to read the previous item on the +stack, so S<C<print "foo", prototype()>> would print foo's prototype. +It has been fixed to infer C<$_> instead. +L<[perl #123514]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123514>. + +=item * + +Some cases of lexical state subs declared inside predeclared subs could +crash, for example when evalling a string including the name of an outer +variable, but no longer do. + +=item * + +Some cases of nested lexical state subs inside anonymous subs could cause +'Bizarre copy' errors or possibly even crashes. + +=item * + +When trying to emit warnings, perl's default debugger (F<perl5db.pl>) was +sometimes giving 'Undefined subroutine &DB::db_warn called' instead. This +bug, which started to occur in Perl 5.18, has been fixed. +L<[perl #123553]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123553>. + +=item * + +Certain syntax errors in substitutions, such as C<< s/${<>{})// >>, would +crash, and had done so since Perl 5.10. (In some cases the crash did not +start happening till 5.16.) The crash has, of course, been fixed. +L<[perl #123542]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123542>. + +=item * + +Fix a couple of string grow size calculation overflows; in particular, +a repeat expression like S<C<33 x ~3>> could cause a large buffer +overflow since the new output buffer size was not correctly handled by +C<SvGROW()>. An expression like this now properly produces a memory wrap +panic. +L<[perl #123554]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123554>. + +=item * + +C<< formline("@...", "a"); >> would crash. The C<FF_CHECKNL> case in +C<pp_formline()> didn't set the pointer used to mark the chop position, +which led to the C<FF_MORE> case crashing with a segmentation fault. +This has been fixed. +L<[perl #123538]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123538>. + +=item * + +A possible buffer overrun and crash when parsing a literal pattern during +regular expression compilation has been fixed. +L<[perl #123604]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123604>. + +=item * + +C<fchmod()> and C<futimes()> now set C<$!> when they fail due to being +passed a closed file handle. +L<[perl #122703]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122703>. + +=item * + +C<op_free()> and C<scalarvoid()> no longer crash due to a stack overflow +when freeing a deeply recursive op tree. +L<[perl #108276]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=108276>. + +=item * + +In Perl 5.20.0, C<$^N> accidentally had the internal UTF-8 flag turned off +if accessed from a code block within a regular expression, effectively +UTF-8-encoding the value. This has been fixed. +L<[perl #123135]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123135>. + +=item * + +A failed C<semctl> call no longer overwrites existing items on the stack, +which means that C<(semctl(-1,0,0,0))[0]> no longer gives an +"uninitialized" warning. + +=item * + +C<else{foo()}> with no space before C<foo> is now better at assigning the +right line number to that statement. +L<[perl #122695]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122695>. + +=item * + +Sometimes the assignment in C<@array = split> gets optimised so that C<split> +itself writes directly to the array. This caused a bug, preventing this +assignment from being used in lvalue context. So +C<(@a=split//,"foo")=bar()> was an error. (This bug probably goes back to +Perl 3, when the optimisation was added.) It has now been fixed. +L<[perl #123057]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123057>. + +=item * + +When an argument list fails the checks specified by a subroutine +signature (which is still an experimental feature), the resulting error +messages now give the file and line number of the caller, not of the +called subroutine. +L<[perl #121374]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121374>. + +=item * + +The flip-flop operators (C<..> and C<...> in scalar context) used to maintain +a separate state for each recursion level (the number of times the +enclosing sub was called recursively), contrary to the documentation. Now +each closure has one internal state for each flip-flop. +L<[perl #122829]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122829>. + +=item * + +The flip-flop operator (C<..> in scalar context) would return the same +scalar each time, unless the containing subroutine was called recursively. +Now it always returns a new scalar. +L<[perl #122829]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122829>. + +=item * + +C<use>, C<no>, statement labels, special blocks (C<BEGIN>) and pod are now +permitted as the first thing in a C<map> or C<grep> block, the block after +C<print> or C<say> (or other functions) returning a handle, and within +C<${...}>, C<@{...}>, etc. +L<[perl #122782]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122782>. + +=item * + +The repetition operator C<x> now propagates lvalue context to its left-hand +argument when used in contexts like C<foreach>. That allows +S<C<for(($#that_array)x2) { ... }>> to work as expected if the loop modifies +C<$_>. + +=item * + +C<(...) x ...> in scalar context used to corrupt the stack if one operand +was an object with "x" overloading, causing erratic behavior. +L<[perl #121827]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121827>. + +=item * + +Assignment to a lexical scalar is often optimised away; for example in +C<my $x; $x = $y + $z>, the assign operator is optimised away and the add +operator writes its result directly to C<$x>. Various bugs related to +this optimisation have been fixed. Certain operators on the right-hand +side would sometimes fail to assign the value at all or assign the wrong +value, or would call STORE twice or not at all on tied variables. The +operators affected were C<$foo++>, C<$foo-->, and C<-$foo> under C<use +integer>, C<chomp>, C<chr> and C<setpgrp>. + +=item * + +List assignments were sometimes buggy if the same scalar ended up on both +sides of the assignment due to use of C<tied>, C<values> or C<each>. The +result would be the wrong value getting assigned. + +=item * + +C<setpgrp($nonzero)> (with one argument) was accidentally changed in 5.16 +to mean C<setpgrp(0)>. This has been fixed. + +=item * + +C<__SUB__> could return the wrong value or even corrupt memory under the +debugger (the C<-d> switch) and in subs containing C<eval $string>. + +=item * + +When S<C<sub () { $var }>> becomes inlinable, it now returns a different +scalar each time, just as a non-inlinable sub would, though Perl still +optimises the copy away in cases where it would make no observable +difference. + +=item * + +S<C<my sub f () { $var }>> and S<C<sub () : attr { $var }>> are no longer +eligible for inlining. The former would crash; the latter would just +throw the attributes away. An exception is made for the little-known +C<:method> attribute, which does nothing much. + +=item * + +Inlining of subs with an empty prototype is now more consistent than +before. Previously, a sub with multiple statements, of which all but the last +were optimised away, would be inlinable only if it were an anonymous sub +containing a string C<eval> or C<state> declaration or closing over an +outer lexical variable (or any anonymous sub under the debugger). Now any +sub that gets folded to a single constant after statements have been +optimised away is eligible for inlining. This applies to things like C<sub +() { jabber() if DEBUG; 42 }>. + +Some subroutines with an explicit C<return> were being made inlinable, +contrary to the documentation, Now C<return> always prevents inlining. + +=item * + +On some systems, such as VMS, C<crypt> can return a non-ASCII string. If a +scalar assigned to had contained a UTF-8 string previously, then C<crypt> +would not turn off the UTF-8 flag, thus corrupting the return value. This +would happen with S<C<$lexical = crypt ...>>. + +=item * + +C<crypt> no longer calls C<FETCH> twice on a tied first argument. + +=item * + +An unterminated here-doc on the last line of a quote-like operator +(C<qq[${ <<END }]>, C</(?{ <<END })/>) no longer causes a double free. It +started doing so in 5.18. + +=item * + +C<index()> and C<rindex()> no longer crash when used on strings over 2GB in +size. +L<[perl #121562]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121562>. + +=item * + +A small, previously intentional, memory leak in +C<PERL_SYS_INIT>/C<PERL_SYS_INIT3> on Win32 builds was fixed. This might +affect embedders who repeatedly create and destroy perl engines within +the same process. + +=item * + +C<POSIX::localeconv()> now returns the data for the program's underlying +locale even when called from outside the scope of S<C<use locale>>. + +=item * + +C<POSIX::localeconv()> now works properly on platforms which don't have +C<LC_NUMERIC> and/or C<LC_MONETARY>, or for which Perl has been compiled +to disregard either or both of these locale categories. In such +circumstances, there are now no entries for the corresponding values in +the hash returned by C<localeconv()>. + +=item * + +C<POSIX::localeconv()> now marks appropriately the values it returns as +UTF-8 or not. Previously they were always returned as bytes, even if +they were supposed to be encoded as UTF-8. + +=item * + +On Microsoft Windows, within the scope of C<S<use locale>>, the following +POSIX character classes gave results for many locales that did not +conform to the POSIX standard: +C<[[:alnum:]]>, +C<[[:alpha:]]>, +C<[[:blank:]]>, +C<[[:digit:]]>, +C<[[:graph:]]>, +C<[[:lower:]]>, +C<[[:print:]]>, +C<[[:punct:]]>, +C<[[:upper:]]>, +C<[[:word:]]>, +and +C<[[:xdigit:]]>. +This was because the underlying Microsoft implementation does not +follow the standard. Perl now takes special precautions to correct for +this. + +=item * + +Many issues have been detected by L<Coverity|http://www.coverity.com/> and +fixed. + +=item * + +C<system()> and friends should now work properly on more Android builds. + +Due to an oversight, the value specified through C<-Dtargetsh> to F<Configure> +would end up being ignored by some of the build process. This caused perls +cross-compiled for Android to end up with defective versions of C<system()>, +C<exec()> and backticks: the commands would end up looking for C</bin/sh> +instead of C</system/bin/sh>, and so would fail for the vast majority +of devices, leaving C<$!> as C<ENOENT>. + +=item * + +C<qr(...\(...\)...)>, +C<qr[...\[...\]...]>, +and +C<qr{...\{...\}...}> +now work. Previously it was impossible to escape these three +left-characters with a backslash within a regular expression pattern +where otherwise they would be considered metacharacters, and the pattern +opening delimiter was the character, and the closing delimiter was its +mirror character. + +=item * + +C<< s///e >> on tainted UTF-8 strings corrupted C<< pos() >>. This bug, +introduced in 5.20, is now fixed. +L<[perl #122148]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122148>. + +=item * + +A non-word boundary in a regular expression (C<< \B >>) did not always +match the end of the string; in particular C<< q{} =~ /\B/ >> did not +match. This bug, introduced in perl 5.14, is now fixed. +L<[perl #122090]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122090>. + +=item * + +C<< " P" =~ /(?=.*P)P/ >> should match, but did not. This is now fixed. +L<[perl #122171]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122171>. + +=item * + +Failing to compile C<use Foo> in an C<eval> could leave a spurious +C<BEGIN> subroutine definition, which would produce a "Subroutine +BEGIN redefined" warning on the next use of C<use>, or other C<BEGIN> +block. +L<[perl #122107]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122107>. + +=item * + +C<method { BLOCK } ARGS> syntax now correctly parses the arguments if they +begin with an opening brace. +L<[perl #46947]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=46947>. + +=item * + +External libraries and Perl may have different ideas of what the locale is. +This is problematic when parsing version strings if the locale's numeric +separator has been changed. Version parsing has been patched to ensure +it handles the locales correctly. +L<[perl #121930]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121930>. + +=item * + +A bug has been fixed where zero-length assertions and code blocks inside of a +regex could cause C<pos> to see an incorrect value. +L<[perl #122460]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122460>. + +=item * + +Dereferencing of constants now works correctly for typeglob constants. Previously +the glob was stringified and its name looked up. Now the glob itself is used. +L<[perl #69456]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=69456> + +=item * + +When parsing a sigil (C<$> C<@> C<%> C<&)> followed by braces, +the parser no +longer tries to guess whether it is a block or a hash constructor (causing a +syntax error when it guesses the latter), since it can only be a block. + +=item * + +S<C<undef $reference>> now frees the referent immediately, instead of hanging on +to it until the next statement. +L<[perl #122556]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122556> + +=item * + +Various cases where the name of a sub is used (autoload, overloading, error +messages) used to crash for lexical subs, but have been fixed. + +=item * + +Bareword lookup now tries to avoid vivifying packages if it turns out the +bareword is not going to be a subroutine name. + +=item * + +Compilation of anonymous constants (I<e.g.>, C<sub () { 3 }>) no longer deletes +any subroutine named C<__ANON__> in the current package. Not only was +C<*__ANON__{CODE}> cleared, but there was a memory leak, too. This bug goes +back to Perl 5.8.0. + +=item * + +Stub declarations like C<sub f;> and C<sub f ();> no longer wipe out constants +of the same name declared by C<use constant>. This bug was introduced in Perl +5.10.0. + +=item * + +C<qr/[\N{named sequence}]/> now works properly in many instances. + +Some names +known to C<\N{...}> refer to a sequence of multiple characters, instead of the +usual single character. Bracketed character classes generally only match +single characters, but now special handling has been added so that they can +match named sequences, but not if the class is inverted or the sequence is +specified as the beginning or end of a range. In these cases, the only +behavior change from before is a slight rewording of the fatal error message +given when this class is part of a C<?[...])> construct. When the C<[...]> +stands alone, the same non-fatal warning as before is raised, and only the +first character in the sequence is used, again just as before. + +=item * + +Tainted constants evaluated at compile time no longer cause unrelated +statements to become tainted. +L<[perl #122669]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122669> + +=item * + +S<C<open $$fh, ...>>, which vivifies a handle with a name like +C<"main::_GEN_0">, was not giving the handle the right reference count, so +a double free could happen. + +=item * + +When deciding that a bareword was a method name, the parser would get confused +if an C<our> sub with the same name existed, and look up the method in the +package of the C<our> sub, instead of the package of the invocant. + +=item * + +The parser no longer gets confused by C<\U=> within a double-quoted string. It +used to produce a syntax error, but now compiles it correctly. +L<[perl #80368]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=80368> + +=item * + +It has always been the intention for the C<-B> and C<-T> file test operators to +treat UTF-8 encoded files as text. (L<perlfunc|perlfunc/-X FILEHANDLE> has +been updated to say this.) Previously, it was possible for some files to be +considered UTF-8 that actually weren't valid UTF-8. This is now fixed. The +operators now work on EBCDIC platforms as well. + +=item * + +Under some conditions warning messages raised during regular expression pattern +compilation were being output more than once. This has now been fixed. + +=item * + +Perl 5.20.0 introduced a regression in which a UTF-8 encoded regular +expression pattern that contains a single ASCII lowercase letter did not +match its uppercase counterpart. That has been fixed in both 5.20.1 and +5.22.0. +L<[perl #122655]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122655> + +=item * + +Constant folding could incorrectly suppress warnings if lexical warnings +(C<use warnings> or C<no warnings>) were not in effect and C<$^W> were +false at compile time and true at run time. + +=item * + +Loading Unicode tables during a regular expression match could cause assertion +failures under debugging builds if the previous match used the very same +regular expression. +L<[perl #122747]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122747> + +=item * + +Thread cloning used to work incorrectly for lexical subs, possibly causing +crashes or double frees on exit. + +=item * + +Since Perl 5.14.0, deleting C<$SomePackage::{__ANON__}> and then undefining an +anonymous subroutine could corrupt things internally, resulting in +L<Devel::Peek> crashing or L<B.pm|B> giving nonsensical data. This has been +fixed. + +=item * + +S<C<(caller $n)[3]>> now reports names of lexical subs, instead of +treating them as C<"(unknown)">. + +=item * + +C<sort subname LIST> now supports using a lexical sub as the comparison +routine. + +=item * + +Aliasing (I<e.g.>, via S<C<*x = *y>>) could confuse list assignments that mention the +two names for the same variable on either side, causing wrong values to be +assigned. +L<[perl #15667]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=15667> + +=item * + +Long here-doc terminators could cause a bad read on short lines of input. This +has been fixed. It is doubtful that any crash could have occurred. This bug +goes back to when here-docs were introduced in Perl 3.000 twenty-five years +ago. + +=item * + +An optimization in C<split> to treat S<C<split /^/>> like S<C<split /^/m>> had the +unfortunate side-effect of also treating S<C<split /\A/>> like S<C<split /^/m>>, +which it should not. This has been fixed. (Note, however, that S<C<split /^x/>> +does not behave like S<C<split /^x/m>>, which is also considered to be a bug and +will be fixed in a future version.) +L<[perl #122761]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122761> + +=item * + +The little-known S<C<my Class $var>> syntax (see L<fields> and L<attributes>) +could get confused in the scope of C<use utf8> if C<Class> were a constant +whose value contained Latin-1 characters. + +=item * + +Locking and unlocking values via L<Hash::Util> or C<Internals::SvREADONLY> +no longer has any effect on values that were read-only to begin with. +Previously, unlocking such values could result in crashes, hangs or +other erratic behavior. + +=item * + +Some unterminated C<(?(...)...)> constructs in regular expressions would +either crash or give erroneous error messages. C</(?(1)/> is one such +example. + +=item * + +S<C<pack "w", $tied>> no longer calls FETCH twice. + +=item * + +List assignments like S<C<($x, $z) = (1, $y)>> now work correctly if C<$x> and +C<$y> have been aliased by C<foreach>. + +=item * + +Some patterns including code blocks with syntax errors, such as +S<C</ (?{(^{})/>>, would hang or fail assertions on debugging builds. Now +they produce errors. + +=item * + +An assertion failure when parsing C<sort> with debugging enabled has been +fixed. +L<[perl #122771]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122771>. + +=item * + +S<C<*a = *b; @a = split //, $b[1]>> could do a bad read and produce junk +results. + +=item * + +In S<C<() = @array = split>>, the S<C<() =>> at the beginning no longer confuses +the optimizer into assuming a limit of 1. + +=item * + +Fatal warnings no longer prevent the output of syntax errors. +L<[perl #122966]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122966>. + +=item * + +Fixed a NaN double-to-long-double conversion error on VMS. For quiet NaNs +(and only on Itanium, not Alpha) negative infinity instead of NaN was +produced. + +=item * + +Fixed the issue that caused C<< make distclean >> to incorrectly leave some +files behind. +L<[perl #122820]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122820>. + +=item * + +AIX now sets the length in C<< getsockopt >> correctly. +L<[perl #120835]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120835>. +L<[cpan #91183]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=91183>. +L<[cpan #85570]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=85570>. + +=item * + +The optimization phase of a regexp compilation could run "forever" and +exhaust all memory under certain circumstances; now fixed. +L<[perl #122283]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122283>. + +=item * + +The test script F<< t/op/crypt.t >> now uses the SHA-256 algorithm if the +default one is disabled, rather than giving failures. +L<[perl #121591]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121591>. + +=item * + +Fixed an off-by-one error when setting the size of a shared array. +L<[perl #122950]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122950>. + +=item * + +Fixed a bug that could cause perl to enter an infinite loop during +compilation. In particular, a C<while(1)> within a sublist, I<e.g.> + + sub foo { () = ($a, my $b, ($c, do { while(1) {} })) } + +The bug was introduced in 5.20.0 +L<[perl #122995]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122995>. + +=item * + +On Win32, if a variable was C<local>-ized in a pseudo-process that later +forked, restoring the original value in the child pseudo-process caused +memory corruption and a crash in the child pseudo-process (and therefore the +OS process). +L<[perl #40565]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=40565>. + +=item * + +Calling C<write> on a format with a C<^**> field could produce a panic +in C<sv_chop()> if there were insufficient arguments or if the variable +used to fill the field was empty. +L<[perl #123245]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123245>. + +=item * + +Non-ASCII lexical sub names now appear without trailing junk when they +appear in error messages. + +=item * + +The C<\@> subroutine prototype no longer flattens parenthesized arrays +(taking a reference to each element), but takes a reference to the array +itself. +L<[perl #47363]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=47363>. + +=item * + +A block containing nothing except a C-style C<for> loop could corrupt the +stack, causing lists outside the block to lose elements or have elements +overwritten. This could happen with C<map { for(...){...} } ...> and with +lists containing C<do { for(...){...} }>. +L<[perl #123286]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123286>. + +=item * + +C<scalar()> now propagates lvalue context, so that +S<C<for(scalar($#foo)) { ... }>> can modify C<$#foo> through C<$_>. + +=item * + +C<qr/@array(?{block})/> no longer dies with "Bizarre copy of ARRAY". +L<[perl #123344]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123344>. + +=item * + +S<C<eval '$variable'>> in nested named subroutines would sometimes look up a +global variable even with a lexical variable in scope. + +=item * + +In perl 5.20.0, C<sort CORE::fake> where 'fake' is anything other than a +keyword, started chopping off the last 6 characters and treating the result +as a sort sub name. The previous behavior of treating C<CORE::fake> as a +sort sub name has been restored. +L<[perl #123410]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123410>. + +=item * + +Outside of C<use utf8>, a single-character Latin-1 lexical variable is +disallowed. The error message for it, "Can't use global C<$foo>...", was +giving garbage instead of the variable name. + +=item * + +C<readline> on a nonexistent handle was causing C<${^LAST_FH}> to produce a +reference to an undefined scalar (or fail an assertion). Now +C<${^LAST_FH}> ends up undefined. + +=item * + +C<(...) x ...> in void context now applies scalar context to the left-hand +argument, instead of the context the current sub was called in. +L<[perl #123020]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123020>. + +=back + +=head1 Known Problems + +=over 4 + +=item * + +C<pack>-ing a NaN on a perl compiled with Visual C 6 does not behave properly, +leading to a test failure in F<t/op/infnan.t>. +L<[perl 125203]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=125203> + +=item * + +A goal is for Perl to be able to be recompiled to work reasonably well on any +Unicode version. In Perl 5.22, though, the earliest such version is Unicode +5.1 (current is 7.0). + +=item * + +EBCDIC platforms + +=over 4 + +=item * + +The C<cmp> (and hence C<sort>) operators do not necessarily give the +correct results when both operands are UTF-EBCDIC encoded strings and +there is a mixture of ASCII and/or control characters, along with other +characters. + +=item * + +Ranges containing C<\N{...}> in the C<tr///> (and C<y///>) +transliteration operators are treated differently than the equivalent +ranges in regular expression patterns. They should, but don't, cause +the values in the ranges to all be treated as Unicode code points, and +not native ones. (L<perlre/Version 8 Regular Expressions> gives +details as to how it should work.) + +=item * + +Encode and encoding are mostly broken. + +=item * + +Many CPAN modules that are shipped with core show failing tests. + +=item * + +C<pack>/C<unpack> with C<"U0"> format may not work properly. + +=back + +=item * + +The following modules are known to have test failures with this version of +Perl. In many cases, patches have been submitted, so there will hopefully be +new releases soon: + +=over + +=item * + +L<B::Generate> version 1.50 + +=item * + +L<B::Utils> version 0.25 + +=item * + +L<Coro> version 6.42 + +=item * + +L<Dancer> version 1.3130 + +=item * + +L<Data::Alias> version 1.18 + +=item * + +L<Data::Dump::Streamer> version 2.38 + +=item * + +L<Data::Util> version 0.63 + +=item * + +L<Devel::Spy> version 0.07 + +=item * + +L<invoker> version 0.34 + +=item * + +L<Lexical::Var> version 0.009 + +=item * + +L<LWP::ConsoleLogger> version 0.000018 + +=item * + +L<Mason> version 2.22 + +=item * + +L<NgxQueue> version 0.02 + +=item * + +L<Padre> version 1.00 + +=item * + +L<Parse::Keyword> 0.08 + +=back + +=back + +=head1 Obituary + +Brian McCauley died on May 8, 2015. He was a frequent poster to Usenet, Perl +Monks, and other Perl forums, and made several CPAN contributions under the +nick NOBULL, including to the Perl FAQ. He attended almost every +YAPC::Europe, and indeed, helped organise YAPC::Europe 2006 and the QA +Hackathon 2009. His wit and his delight in intricate systems were +particularly apparent in his love of board games; many Perl mongers will +have fond memories of playing Fluxx and other games with Brian. He will be +missed. + +=head1 Acknowledgements + +Perl 5.22.0 represents approximately 12 months of development since Perl 5.20.0 +and contains approximately 590,000 lines of changes across 2,400 files from 94 +authors. + +Excluding auto-generated files, documentation and release tools, there were +approximately 370,000 lines of changes to 1,500 .pm, .t, .c and .h files. + +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 5.22.0: + +Aaron Crane, Abhijit Menon-Sen, Abigail, Alberto Simões, Alex Solovey, Alex +Vandiver, Alexandr Ciornii, Alexandre (Midnite) Jousset, Andreas König, +Andreas Voegele, Andrew Fresh, Andy Dougherty, Anthony Heading, Aristotle +Pagaltzis, brian d foy, Brian Fraser, Chad Granum, Chris 'BinGOs' Williams, +Craig A. Berry, Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker, Daniel Dragan, Darin McBride, Dave +Rolsky, David Golden, David Mitchell, David Wheeler, Dmitri Tikhonov, Doug +Bell, E. Choroba, Ed J, Eric Herman, Father Chrysostomos, George Greer, Glenn +D. Golden, Graham Knop, H.Merijn Brand, Herbert Breunung, Hugo van der Sanden, +James E Keenan, James McCoy, James Raspass, Jan Dubois, Jarkko Hietaniemi, +Jasmine Ngan, Jerry D. Hedden, Jim Cromie, John Goodyear, kafka, Karen +Etheridge, Karl Williamson, Kent Fredric, kmx, Lajos Veres, Leon Timmermans, +Lukas Mai, Mathieu Arnold, Matthew Horsfall, Max Maischein, Michael Bunk, +Nicholas Clark, Niels Thykier, Niko Tyni, Norman Koch, Olivier Mengué, Peter +John Acklam, Peter Martini, Petr Písař, Philippe Bruhat (BooK), Pierre +Bogossian, Rafael Garcia-Suarez, Randy Stauner, Reini Urban, Ricardo Signes, +Rob Hoelz, Rostislav Skudnov, Sawyer X, Shirakata Kentaro, Shlomi Fish, +Sisyphus, Slaven Rezic, Smylers, Steffen Müller, Steve Hay, Sullivan Beck, +syber, Tadeusz Sośnierz, Thomas Sibley, Todd Rinaldo, Tony Cook, Vincent Pit, +Vladimir Marek, Yaroslav Kuzmin, Yves Orton, Ævar Arnfjörð 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 F<AUTHORS> file in the Perl source distribution. + +=head1 Reporting Bugs + +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 +L<https://rt.perl.org/>. There may also be information at +L<http://www.perl.org/>, the Perl Home Page. + +If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the L<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 C<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 the 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 only use this address for +security issues in the Perl core, not for modules independently distributed on +CPAN. + +=head1 SEE ALSO + +The F<Changes> file for an explanation of how to view exhaustive details on +what changed. + +The F<INSTALL> file for how to build Perl. + +The F<README> file for general stuff. + +The F<Artistic> and F<Copying> files for copyright information. + +=cut |