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* perl5.000 patch.0i: fix glaring mistakes in patches a-hAndy Dougherty1995-01-261-6/+12
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This patch does the following things: 1. Fix various bonehead errors I introduced in patches a-g. 2. Incorporate MakeMaker changes to bring it up to version 4.01 (mostly). 3. Stick in things I forgot in patches a-g (e.g. AIX). 4. Some minor additional cleanup in x2p/ for even pickier compilers. 5. More hints updates (hpux and next). 6. Include newest dl_hpux.xs. I didn't have time to 1. Fix the overlapping strcpy() in op.c 2. Restore h2xs to Larry's original design to process <>. 3. take out unnecessary "use Config" in installperl. 4. Add in vms patches. I forgot to [If I remembered what i forgot, I wouldn't have forgotten it. :] I deliberately decided *not* to 1. Touch pod/* 2. deal with overloading Specifically, here's what's included: Configure Regenerated to be sure it's up-to-date. Makefile.SH Build extension libraries right into lib/auto/whatever. Don't set CCCDLFLAGS since we don't use it anyway. Take care to avoid modifying lib/Config.pm without reason Visit DynaLoader for `make clean'. (Previously only did so for `make realclean'.) @echo "Note that make realclean does not delete config.sh" Include config.h dependency. U/i_db.U config_h.SH config.H Remove unwanted quotes around db_hashtype and db_prefixtype. configpm Allow specification of alternate name for lib/Config.pm, so the makefile mv-if-diff trick saves needless re-making. ext/DynaLoader/DynaLoader.pm Updated warning messages and comments. ext/DynaLoader/dl_hpux.xs Updated to version 2.1. Now uses bootstrap files. ext/util/make_ext Explicitly use #!/bin/sh to start it up. This is useful for testing make_ext. Improve & simplify Nested::Extension::Processing. More robust handling of `make clean'. hints/hpux_9.sh Support both the bundled and unbundled compilers. hints/next_3_2.sh Back to using -posix rather than POSIX_SOURCE. And that only for ext/POSIX/POSIX.xs. installperl Special ranlib treatment for NeXT, which gets confused about timestamps in libraries, even when you just copy the library. Supply missing '$' in samepath() function. lib/AutoSplit.pm New parameters. lib/ExtUtils/MakeMaker.pm Upgraded from 3.8 to 4.01. lib/ExtUtils/xsubpp Documentation changed from man to pod. lib/Getopt/Long.pm Avoid typo warning. Drop unused $optx. lib/Text/Tabs.pm Fix package name. makedepend.SH Explicitly start with $startsh. Catch cpp that prints # <stdin> instead of line numbers. perl.h Fix bonehead mistake that ended up calling my_fmod even if not needed. perl_exp.SH also add symbols from interp.sym proto.h Delete 2 redundant prototypes (newBINOP and newUNOP). util.c Add (char *) casts to unsigned char args to bcmp. x2p/a2p.h Rearrange order of <string?.h> and bcopy & bzero stuff. Change a few function prototypes to void, to reflect actual usage. x2p/a2py.c Change a few function types to void, to reflect actual usage. x2p/handy.h Make *alloc declarations match those in x2p/util.c. x2p/util.c Make *alloc declarations match those in x2p/handy.h. x2p/walk.c Add a (Size_t) cast for comparison of 1 to the result of strlen(). Thanks to all who's work is included here. Little of it is mine.
* perl5.000 patch.0g: [various portability fixes, and use latest metaconfig ↵Andy Dougherty1995-01-181-15/+58
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | for Configure] This patch incorporates various portability fixes and uses the latest metaconfig to generate Configure (and config_h.SH). It would take a long time to summarize all that I've changed. I haven't included many code changes because I'm trying *not* to duplicate bug fixes Larry may already have applied. Here's an older description I prepared that's still mostly accurate: I've also included a few portability fixes in the main source, but these are certainly not a complete set of everything that's been reported. Don't be put off by the size of the patch. Mostly, it's just rearrangement of the parts in Configure and some cosmetic changes. Since gcc often supports long long, I had started to add quad support to Configure. Since SunOS 4.1.3 defines a conflicting "quad" structure, I changed the name from 'quad' to Quad_t, consistent with other Configure "types." I also changed "QUAD" to "HAS_QUAD". However, it turns out it's pretty hard to actually *use* Quad_t. Neither system I have access to can sprintf() a "long long", nor can they carry one around in an IV, unless I make IV "long long", which I didn't want to force generally. Thus I wonder whether any but a precious few could actually use Quad_t, and dropped the tests from Configure. I left in the s/quad/Quad_t/ and s/QUAD/HAS_QUAD/ stuff in case someone else wants to pick it up, and also because I was too lazy to take it back out :-). Some highlights: Configure Several new options. Use Configure -h to learn more. Also, read the directions Configure prints. :-) Spaces now allowed in -D command line options. New -O option that overrides config.sh. You can start interactively and then change that to accepting all the defaults by specifying &-d at any Configure prompt. This is useful if you have to re-run Configure to only change a few settings. Signal type set correctly for the cast{i32,neg} tests. archname detection improved a bit guard against ksh users who have set -u Oldconfig.U cleaned up and regularized a bit more. Guard against hint files using (and over-writing) $tmp. Command line options now are processed after metaconfig INIT lines. Thus things like Configure -Uuseposix should work now. Various miscellaneous clean-ups. better use/detection of tr. i_db.U now checks for hash and prefix type (I think!) I can't test it here. i_?db*.U now all check for an associated function before deciding to include or not the header. MANIFEST MANIFEST.new Sorted & updated. Makefile.SH Some shells/makes bombed out on test -d lib/auto || mkdir lib/auto Use makedir instead. README Some additional notes that people won't read :-). cflags.SH Now calls $startsh. Weird things were happening on Intergraph, and this might be related. config.H Updated. config_h.SH Regenerated. deb.c Varargs dependencies on STANDARD_C replaced by I_STDARG. doop.c quad stuff. ext/DB_File/DB_File.xs Use the new DB_Hash_t and DB_Prefix_t symbols. ext/SDBM_File/sdbm/sdbm.h Fix #defines to be more robust. mg.c Replace VOIDSIG by metaconfig's Signal_t. opcode.h opcode.pl semop only takes 2 arguments, not 3. perl.c Better guard on getenv() prototype. A hint file can use this, if necessary. Me, I think some compilers are just too picky. perl.h The (very) beginnings of some Quad support. See above. Remove the very troublesome sprintf() prototype. Since we don't _use_ the return value anyway (since it's not portable) this should be o.k. The problem was that some systems CAN_PROTOTYPE but include char *sprintf(); in <stdio.h>. That's incompatible with the version we used to have in perl.h. Most people have a prototype for sprintf() in <stdio.h>. Those that don't probably can get by without it anyway. Protect the timesbuf by the specific HAS_TIMES test. Some older gcc-2.something/Solaris 2.something installations apparently don't have times. pp.c More quad stuff. pp_ctl.c s/STANDARD_C/I_STDARG/ for varargs stuff. pp_sys.c use Signal_t. proto.h Update to match new metaconfig names. util.c s/STANDARD_C/I_STDARG/ for varargs stuff. comment out <unistd.h>. A pause prototype was causing problems on some systems. vms/config.vms Changed to use Signal_t.
* MakeMaker 3.8Tim Bunce1995-01-171-3/+3
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* MakeMaker 3.7Tim Bunce1994-12-291-1/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This patch patches the following: - lib/ExtUtils/MakeMaker.pm Most, if not all, the MakeMaker support for no perl source is now included. Recent ld and mkbootstrap patches applied. -lX11_s suffix fix applied. - Makefile.SH Fix nested module problem which affected make_ext - ext/DynaLoader/DynaLoader.pm Change error message to "Can't load module $module, dynamic loading not available in this perl" - ext/util/make_ext A very minor tweak to allow for Deeply::Nested::Modules - h2xs Major reorganisation. Mainly aimed at simplifying for later enhancements. The constant() and AUTOLOAD functions can no longer be individually enabled or disabled - it never made any sense - they need each other. Header file parsing code has been simplified (may allow prototypes to be parsed later). The .pm file always inherits from AutoLoader. I hope not to issue another MakeMaker patch till after Perl5.001! If you want to play with the (as yet untested) no-perl-source mechanism you'll need to start by doing something like this: cp ext/xsubpp ext/typemap $(PERL_LIB)/ExtUtils cp *.h $(PERL_ARCHLIB)/CORE And then try executing Makefile.PL away from (not under) the perl source code. You should get a 'Unable to locate perl source' warning and the PERL_SRC macro will be undefined. Let me know how it goes but be aware that any problems/fixes are unlikely to turn up in an official MakeMaker patch till after Perl5.001. *Please* test this patch and report your findings back to the list so Larry knows that all is well (or not :-). Best wishes for a Happy New Year to you all. Tim Bunce.
* This is my patch patch.0a for perl5.000.Tim Bunce1994-12-191-14/+9
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [Actually, that's a lie. This is just MakeMaker 3.6. I've just usurped the letter 'a' to fit it into my patch sequence.] Andy Dougherty doughera@lafcol.lafayette.edu Dept. of Physics Lafayette College, Easton PA this patch includes: - My recently posted 'Very small patches to AutoSplit.pm and Cwd.pm' (with no changes). - A previous small patch to DynaLoader .bs handling with one addition: ! if (-f $bs) { ! if (-s $bs) { # only read file if it's not empty - A recently posted patch to hints/aix.sh (with cosmetic changes). Hopefully no further changes to MakeMaker will be needed before perl5.001. If any changes are required I intend that they will be release as patches to be applied over this one. This is the last MakeMaker jumbo patch for perl5.000. Patch and enjoy. Regards, Tim Bunce. p.s. I'll be around until about 4pm GMT tomorrow (Tuesday), after that I'm off for Christmas. This has been a great year for me. I have very much enjoyed working with the perl5-porters and I wish you all a wonderful and merry Christmas and a very happy New Year.
* perl 5.000perl-5.000Larry Wall1994-10-171-197/+177
| | | | | | | | | | | [editor's note: this commit combines approximate 4 months of furious releases of Andy Dougherty and Larry Wall - see pod/perlhist.pod for details. Andy notes that; Alas neither my "Irwin AccuTrack" nor my DC 600A quarter-inch cartridge backup tapes from that era seem to be readable anymore. I guess 13 years exceeds the shelf life for that backup technology :-(. ]
* perl 5.0 alpha 9perl-5a9Larry Wall1994-05-041-79/+137
| | | | [editor's note: the sparc executables have not been included, and emacs backup files have been removed]
* perl 5.0 alpha 8Andy Dougherty1994-04-041-0/+325
| | | | | [the last one taken from the September '94 InfoMagic CD; a similar style of cleanup as the previous commits was performed]
* perl 5.0 alpha 2perl-5a2Larry Wall1993-10-071-376/+0
| | | | [editor's note: from history.perl.org. The sparc executables originally included in the distribution are not in this commit.]
* perl 4.0 patch 20: (combined patch)Larry Wall1992-06-081-8/+18
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ENHANCEMENTS Subject: relaxed requirement for semicolon at the end of a block Subject: scalar keys %array now counts keys for you Subject: added ... as variant on .. Subject: get*by* routines now return something useful in a scalar context Subject: form feed for formats is now specifiable via $^L Subject: PERLLIB now supports multiple directories Subject: paragraph mode now skips extra newlines automatically MANPAGE Subject: documented that numbers may contain underline Subject: clarified that DATA may only be read from main script Subject: documented need for 1; at the end of a required file Subject: extended bracket-style quotes to two-arg operators: s()() and tr()() Subject: documented PERLLIB and PERLDB Subject: documented limit on size of regexp CONFIGURATION Subject: bcopy() and memcpy() now tested for overlap safety Subject: isascii() may now be supplied by a library routine Subject: Configure now allows optional continuation with files missing Subject: many more hints files added Subject: many more hints added Subject: hints now auto selected on uname -s as well as uname -m Subject: OSF/1 support added Subject: Configure growing-library-list bug fixed Subject: seekdir(), telldir() and rewinddir() now checked for independently Subject: cray didn't give enough memory to /bin/sh Subject: perl -P now uses location of sed determined by Configure Subject: SH files didn't work well with symbolic links Subject: makefiles now display new shift/reduce expectations Subject: support added to installperl for cross-compilation Subject: a2p was installed unexecutable Subject: installperl didn't warn on failed manpage installation Subject: disabled cpp test if cppstdin not yet installed PORTABILITY Subject: O_PIPE conflicted with Atari Subject: config.H updated to reflect more recent config.h Subject: removed implicit int declarations on functions Subject: added Atari ST portability Subject: some machines don't define ENOTSOCK in errno.h Subject: added explicit time_t support Subject: alternate config.h files upgraded Subject: new OS/2 support COMPILER Subject: various error messages have been clarified Subject: the switch optimizer didn't do anything in subroutines Subject: clarified debugging output for literals and double-quoted strings Subject: new warning for use of x with non-numeric right operand Subject: illegal lvalue message could be followed by core dump Subject: new warning for ambiguous use of unary operators Subject: eval "1 #comment" didn't work Subject: semantic compilation errors didn't abort execution Subject: an expression may now start with a bareword Subject: if {block} {block} didn't work any more Subject: "$var{$foo'bar}" didn't scan subscript correctly Subject: an EXPR may now start with a bareword Subject: print $fh EXPR can now expect term rather than operator in EXPR Subject: new warning on spurious backslash Subject: new warning on missing $ for foreach variable Subject: "foo"x1024 now legal without space after x Subject: new warning on print accidentally used as function Subject: 2. now eats the dot Subject: <@ARGV> now notices @ARGV Subject: tr/// now lets you say \- RUNTIME Subject: an eval block containing a null block or statement could dump core Subject: modulus with highest bit in left operand set didn't always work Subject: join() now pre-extends target string to avoid excessive copying Subject: subroutines didn't localize $`, $&, $', $1 et al correctly Subject: usersub routines didn't reclaim temp values soon enough Subject: ($<,$>) = ... didn't work on some architectures Subject: fixed memory leak on system() for vfork() machines Subject: @ in unpack failed too often Subject: slice on null list in scalar context returned random value Subject: splice with negative offset didn't work with $[ = 1 Subject: fixed some memory leaks in splice Subject: dbmclose(%array) didn't work Subject: delete could cause %array to give too low a count of buckets filled Subject: hash tables now split only if the memory is available to do so Subject: realloc(0, size) now does malloc in case library routines call it Subject: running taintperl explicitly now does checks even if $< == $> Subject: fixed memory leak in doube-quote interpretation Subject: a splice on non-existent array elements could dump core Subject: tr/stuff// wasn't working right I/O Subject: new warnings for failed use of stat operators on filenames with \n Subject: wait failed when STDOUT or STDERR reopened to a pipe Subject: end of file latch not reset on reopen of STDIN Subject: seek(HANDLE, 0, 1) went to eof because of ancient Ultrix workaround Subject: h_errno now accessible via $? REGEXP Subject: pattern modifiers i and o didn't interact right Subject: g pattern modifer sometimes returned extra values Subject: m/$pattern/g didn't work Subject: /^stuff/ wrongly assumed an implicit $* == 1 Subject: /x{0}/ was wrongly interpreted as /x{0,}/ Subject: added \W, \S and \D inside /[...]/ Subject: pattern modifiers i and g didn't interact right Subject: in some cases $` and $' didn't get set by match Subject: made /\$$foo/ look for literal '$foo' LIBRARIES Subject: big*.pl library files upgraded Subject: better support in chat2 for multiple children Subject: &ctime didn't handle $[ != 0 Subject: find.pl got confused by unreadable directories Subject: new version of newgetopt.pl Subject: Tom's famous double-ended pipe opener, open2(), is now included Subject: support added to pwd.pl to strip automounter crud Subject: &shellwords looped on bad input, and used inefficient regular exprs Subject: termcap.pl didn't parse termcap terminal names right Subject: timelocal could loop on bad input Subject: timelocal now calculates DST itself Subject: &getcap eventually dumped core in bsdcurses DEBUGGER Subject: support for MSDOS folded into perldb.pl Subject: perldb couldn't debug file containing '-', such as STDIN designator Subject: the debugger now warns you on lines that can't set a breakpoint Subject: the debugger made perl forget the last pattern used by // Subject: fixed double debug break in foreach with implicit array assignment Subject: debugger sometimes displayed wrong source line INTERSTICES Subject: Perl now distinguishes overlapped copies from non-overlapped Subject: fixed confusion between a *var's real name and its effective name Subject: deleted some minor memory leaks Subject: couldn't require . files Subject: -e 'cmd' no longer fails silently if /tmp runs out of space Subject: function key support added to curses.mus TRANSLATORS Subject: find2perl assumed . in PATH Subject: find2perl didn't output portable startup code Subject: find2perl didn't always stat at the right time Subject: s2p didn't output portable startup code Subject: s2p didn't translate s/pat/\&/ or s/pat/\$/ or s/pat/\\1/ right Subject: in a2p, getline should allow variable to be array element Subject: in a2p, now warns about spurious backslashes Subject: in a2p, now allows [ to be backslashed in pattern Subject: in a2p, now allows numbers of the form 2. Subject: in a2p, simplified the filehandle model Subject: in a2p, made RS="" translate to $/ = "\n\n" Subject: in a2p, do {...} while ... was missing some reconstruction code
* perl 4.0 patch 11: (combined patch)Larry Wall1991-11-051-49/+74
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Subject: added eval {} Subject: eval 'stuff' now optimized to eval {stuff} This set of patches doesn't have many enhancements but this is one of them. The eval operator has two distinct semantic functions. First, it runs the parser on some random string and executes it. Second, it traps exceptions and returns them in $@. There are times when you'd like to get the second function without the first. In order to do that, you can now eval a block of code, which is parsed like ordinary code at compile time, but which traps any run-time errors and returns them in the $@ variable. For instance, to trap divide by zero errors: eval { $answer = $foo / $bar; }; warn $@ if $@; Since single-quoted strings don't ever change, they are optimized to the eval {} form the first time they are encountered at run-time. This doesn't happen too often, though some of you have written things like eval '&try_this;'. However, the righthand side of s///e is evaluated as a single-quoted string, so this construct should run somewhat faster now. Subject: added sort {} LIST Another enhancement that some of you have been hankering for. You can now inline the sort subroutine as a block where the subroutine name used to go: @articles = sort {$a <=> $b;} readdir(DIR); Subject: added some support for 64-bit integers For Convexen and Crayen, which have 64-bit integers, there's now pack, unpack and sprintf support for 64-bit integers. Subject: sprintf() now supports any length of s field You can now use formats like %2048s and %-8192.8192s. Perl will totally bypass your system's sprintf() function on these. No, you still probably can't say %2048d. No, I'm not going to change that any time soon. Subject: substr() and vec() weren't allowed in an lvalue list Subject: extra comma at end of list is now allowed in more places (Hi, Felix!) Subject: underscore is now allowed within literal octal and hex numbers Various syntactic relaxations. You can now get away with (substr($foo,0,3), substr($bar,0,3)) = ('abc', 'def'); (1,2,3,)[$x]; $addr = 0x1a20_ff0b; Subject: safe malloc code now integrated into Perl's malloc when possible To save a bunch of subroutine calls. If you use your system's malloc it still has to use wrappers. Subject: added support for dbz By saying "make dbzperl" you can make a copy of Perl that can access C news's dbz files. You still have to follow the dbz rules, though, if you're going to try to write a dbz file. Subject: there are now subroutines for calling back from C into Perl Subject: usub/curses.mus now supports SysV curses More C linkage support. I still haven't got Perl embeddable, but we're getting there. That's too big an enhancement for this update, in which I've been trying to stick to bug fixes, with some success. Subject: prepared for ctype implementations that don't define isascii() A larger percentage of this update consists of code to do consistent ctype processing whether or not <ctype.h> is 8-bit clean. Subject: /$foo/o optimizer could access deallocated data Subject: certain optimizations of //g in array context returned too many values Subject: regexp with no parens in array context returned wacky $`, $& and $' Subject: $' not set right on some //g Subject: grep of a split lost its values Subject: # fields could write outside allocated memory Subject: length($x) was sometimes wrong for numeric $x Recently added or modified stuff that you kind of expect to be a bit flaky still. Well, I do... Subject: passing non-existend array elements to subrouting caused core dump Subject: "foo" x -1 dumped core Subject: truncate on a closed filehandle could dump Subject: a last statement outside any block caused occasional core dumps Subject: missing arguments caused core dump in -D8 code Subject: cacheout.pl could dump core from invalid comparison operator Subject: *foo = undef coredumped Subject: warn '-' x 10000 dumped core Subject: index("little", "longer string") could visit faraway places A bunch of natty little bugs that you wouldn't generally run into unless you're trying to be coy. Subject: hex() didn't understand leading 0x It wasn't documented that it should work, but oct() understands 0x, so why not hex()? I dunno... Subject: "foo\0" eq "foo" was sometimes optimized to true Subject: eval confused by string containing null Yet more holdovers from the time before Perl was 8-bit clean. Subject: foreach on null list could spring memory leak Subject: local(*FILEHANDLE) had a memory leak Kind of slow leaks, as leaks go. Still... Subject: minimum match length calculation in regexp is now cumulative More substitutions can be done in place now because Perl knows that patterns like in s/foo\s+bar/1234567/ have to match a certain number of characters total. It used to be on that particular pattern that it only knew that it had to match at least 3 characters. Now it know it has to match at least 7. Subject: multiple reallocations now avoided in 1 .. 100000 You still don't want to say 1 .. 1000000, but at least it will refrain from allocating intermediate sized blocks while it's constructing the value, and won't do the extra copies implied by realloc. Subject: indirect subroutine calls through magic vars (e.g. &$1) didn't work Subject: defined(&$foo) and undef(&$foo) didn't work Subject: certain perl errors should set EBADF so that $! looks better Subject: stats of _ forgot whether prior stat was actually lstat Subject: -T returned true on NFS directory Subject: sysread() in socket was substituting recv() Subject: formats didn't fill their fields as well as they could Subject: ^ fields chopped hyphens on line break Subject: -P didn't allow use of #elif or #undef Subject: $0 was being truncated at times Subject: forked exec on non-existent program now issues a warning Various things you'd expect to work the way you expect, but didn't when you did, or I did, or something... Subject: perl mistook some streams for sockets because they return mode 0 too Subject: reopening STDIN, STDOUT and STDERR failed on some machines Problems opening files portably. So what's new? Subject: cppstdin now installed outside of source directory Subject: installperl now overrides installer's umask People who used cppstdin for the cpp filter or who had their umask set to 700 will now be happier. (And Configure will now prefer /lib/cpp over cppstdin like it used to. If this gives your machine heartburn because /lib/cpp doesn't set the symbols it should, write a hints file to poke them into ccflags.) Subject: initial .* in pattern had dependency on value of $* An initial .* was optimized to have a ^ on the front to avoid retrying when we know it won't match. Unfortunately this implicit ^ was paying attention to $*, which it shouldn't have been. Subject: certain patterns made use of garbage pointers from uncleared memory Many of you saw this as a failure in t/op/pat.t. Subject: perl now issues warning if $SIG{'ALARM'} is referenced Since the book mentions "SIGALARM", I thought we needed this. Subject: solitary subroutine references no longer trigger typo warnings You can now use -w (more) profitably on programs that require other files. I figured if you mistype a subroutine name you'll get a fatal error anyway, unlike a variable, which just defaults to being undefined. Subject: $foo .= <BAR> could overrun malloced memory Good old-fashioned bug. Subject: \$ didn't always make it through double-quoter to regexp routines Subject: \x and \c were subject to double interpretation in regexps Subject: nested list operators could miscount parens Subject: sort eval "whatever" didn't work Syntactic misfeatures of various sorts. Subject: find2perl produced incorrect code for -group Subject: find2perl could be confused by names containing whitespace Subject: in a2p, split on whitespace produced extra null field Translator stuff. Subject: new complete.pl from Wayne Thompson Subject: assert.pl and exceptions.pl from Tom Christiansen Subject: added Tom's c2ph stuff Subject: getcwd.pl from Brandon S. Allbery Subject: fastcwd.pl from John Basik Subject: chat2.pl from Randal L. Schwartz New contributed stuff. Thanks! (Not that a lot of the other stuff isn't contributed too...) Subject: debugger got confused over nested subroutine definitions Subject: once-thru blocks didn't display right in the debugger Subject: perldb.pl modified to run within emacs in perldb-mode Debugger stuff. The first two were caused by not saving line numbers at exactly the right moment. Subject: documented meaning of scalar(%foo) I also updated the Errata section of the man page. Subject: various portability fixes Subject: random cleanup Subject: saberized perl Type casts, saber warning message suppression, hints files and various metaconfig fiddlehoods.
* perl 4.0 patch 4: (combined patch)Larry Wall1991-06-061-31/+37
| | | | | | Random patches, mostly bugs and portability stuff. //g is the only major new feature. Additionally, there is now an alternate license you can distribute Perl under.
* perl 4.0 patch 1: (combined patch)Larry Wall1991-04-111-24/+31
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Subject: Configure now handles defaults much better Subject: Configure now knows if config.sh was built on this machine Subject: Configure now checks file existence more efficiently Subject: Configure now handles stupid SCO csh Configure has been heavily revised. Many of the tests that used to simply force a decision now check that decision against the previous value of the variable, and offer to let you change it. The default now is to keep the old value, so that you don't lose information from your previous run. Because of this, it's now more important to know whether, in fact, config.sh was produced on this machine and on this version of the operating system. config.sh now contains a lastuname variable which contains the output of uname -a. If this matches the current output of uname -a, Configure defaults to including the old config.sh. Otherwise not. If there is no valid config.sh, then Configure looks defaults for the current architecture in the hints/ subdirectory instead. The guesswork I've done in this section of code is phenomenal, so you'll have to instruct me where I've misparsed the output of uname (a problem in portability all of its own). Subject: Configure now differentiates getgroups() type from getgid() type Subject: Configure now figures out malloc ptr type Subject: Configure now does better on sprintf() Configure was assuming that the array of values returned from getgroups was the same type as the gids returned by other system calls. Unfortunately, reality set in. Likewise for malloc() and sprintf(), which there is only one portable way to find out the return value of: try it one way or the other, and see if it blows up. Subject: C flags are now settable on a per-file basis Subject: reduced maximum branch distance in eval.c Certain compilers and/or optimizers get bozoed out by large compilation units, or by large structures within those units. Previously, you either had to change the compiler flags for all the files, or do hairy editing in Makefile.SH and remake the Makefile, necessitating a make depend. Now there is a script called cflags.SH whose duty it is to return the proper CFLAGS for any given C file. You can change the flags in just one spot now and they will be immediately reflected in the next make (or even in the current make, if one is running). Eventually I expect that any of the hints files could modify cflags.SH, but I haven't done that yet. The particular problem of long jump offsets in eval.c has been at least partially alleviated by locating some of the labels in the middle of the function instead of at the end. This still doesn't help the poor Vax when you compile with -g, since it puts a jump to the end of the function to allocate the stack frame and then jumps back to the beginning of the function to execute it. For now Vaxen will have to stick with -O or hand assemble eval.c and teval.c with a -J switch. Subject: fixed "Bad free" error Subject: fixed debugger coredump on subroutines Subject: regexec only allocated space for 9 subexpresssions These are problems that were reported on the net and had unofficial patches. Now they have official patches. Be sure to patch a copy of your files without the unofficial patches, or the patch program will get confused. Subject: you may now use "die" and "caller" in a signal handler Someone pointed out that using die to raise an exception out of a signal handler trashed the expression value stack if the exception was caught by eval. While fixing that, I also fixed the longstanding problem that signal handlers didn't have a normal call frame, which prevented the caller function from working. Subject: fixed undefined environ problem Subject: hopefully straightened out some of the Xenix mess Subject: random cleanup in cpp namespace Just keeping up with the current progress in non-standardization. Subject: fixed failed fork to return undef as documented The open function returns undef on failed implicit forks. The Book assumed that the same was true of an explicit fork. I've made the function behave like the Book says. It's a pity there's no way to have an undefined value that returns -1 in a numeric context but false in a boolean context... Subject: generalized the yaccpar fixer some Thanks to Andy Dougherty, perly.fixer now knows how to fix SVR3 2.2's yaccpar code to do dynamic parse stack allocation. He also made it easy for other people to insert their code there. Hooray! Subject: find2perl sometimes needs to stat on the 2nd leg of a -o Subject: find2perl didn't correctly handle switches with an argument of 0 In attempting to delay the lstat to the last moment, in case a filename could be rejected on the basis of its name, find2perl neglected to take into account the fact that control might pass to the 2nd half of a -o without executing all of the 1st half, in particular without executing the lstat. find2perl was wisely removing leading zeroes from numbers that would mistakenly be interpreted as octal numbers by Perl. Unfortunately, this caused it to delete the number 0 entirely. Subject: fixed dumpvar not to dump internal debugging info Subject: substr($ENV{"PATH"},0,0) = "/foo:" didn't modify environment Subject: $foo .= <BAR> could cause core dump for certain lengths of $foo Subject: perl -de "print" wouldn't stop at the first statement Random glitchy little things. Subject: I'm at NetLabs now I'm now working for NetLabs, Inc., and I hadn't changed my address everywhere.
* perl 4.0.00: (no release announcement available)perl-4.0.00Larry Wall1991-03-211-86/+42
| | | | So far, 4.0 is still a beta test version. For the last production version, look in pub/perl.3.0/kits@44.
* perl 3.0 patch #42 (combined patch)Larry Wall1991-01-111-40/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Most of these patches are pretty self-explanatory. Much of this is random cleanup in preparation for version 4.0, so I won't talk about it here. A couple of things should be noted, however. First, there's a new -0 option that allows you to specify (in octal) the initial value of $/, the record separator. It's primarily intended for use with versions of find that support -print0 to delimit filenames with nulls, but it's more general than that: null ^A default CR paragraph mode file slurp mode This feature is so new that it didn't even make it into the book. The other major item is that different patchlevels of perl can now coexist in your bin directory. The names "perl" and "taintperl" are just links to "perl3.044" and "tperl3.044". This has several benefits. The perl3.044 invokes the corresponding tperl3.044 rather than taintperl, so it always runs the correct version. Second, you can "freeze" a script by putting a #! line referring to a version that it is known to work with. Third, you can put a new version out there to try out before making it the default perl. Lastly, it sells more disk drives. :-) Barring catastrophe, this will likely be the last patch before version 4.0 comes out.
* perl 3.0 patch #38 (combined patch)Larry Wall1990-11-091-2/+5
| | | | Forget the description, it's too late at night...
* perl 3.0 patch #37 (combined patch)Larry Wall1990-10-191-2/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | I tried to take the strlen of an integer on systems without wait4() or waitpid(). For some reason this didn't work too well... In hash.c there was a call to dbm_nextkey() which needed to be ifdefed on old dbm systems. A pattern such as /foo.*bar$/ was wrongly optimized to do tail matching on "foo". This was a longstanding bug that was unmasked by patch 36. Some systems have some SYS V IPC but not all of it. Configure now figures this out. Patch 36 put the user's PATH in front of Configures, but to make it work right I needed to change all calls of loc to ./loc in Configure. $cryptlib needed to be mentioned in the Makefile. Apollo 10.3 and Sun 3.5 have some compilation problems, so I mentioned them in README. Cray has weird restrictions on setjmp locations--you can't say if (result = setjmp(...)) Random typos and cleanup.
* perl 3.0 patch #29 (combined patch)Larry Wall1990-10-151-9/+13
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This set of patches pretty much brings you up to the functionality that version 4.0 will have. The Perl Book documents version 4.0. Perhaps these should be called release notes... :-) Enhancements: Many of the changes relate to making the debugger work better. It now runs your scripts at nearly full speed because it no longer calls a subroutine on every statement. The debugger now doesn't get confused about packages, evals and other filenames. More variables (though still not all) are available within the debugger. Related to this is the fact that every statement now knows which package and filename it was compiled in, so package semantics are now much more straightforward. Every variable also knows which package it was compiled in. So many places that used to print out just the variable name now prefix the variable name with the package name. Notably, if you print *foo it now gives *package'foo. Along with these, there is now a "caller" function which returns the context of the current subroutine call. See the man page for more details. Chip Salzenberg sent the patches for System V IPC (msg, sem and shm) so I dropped them in. There was no way to wait for a specific pid, which was silly, since Perl was already keeping track of the information. So I added the waitpid() call, which uses Unix's wait4() or waitpid() if available, and otherwise emulates them (at least as far as letting you wait for a particular pid--it doesn't emulate non-blocking wait). For use in sorting routines, there are now two new operators, cmp and <=>. These do string and numeric comparison, returning -1, 0 or 1 when the first argument is less than, equal to or greater than the second argument. Occasionally one finds that one wants to evaluate an operator in a scalar context, even though it's part of a LIST. For this purpose, there is now a scalar() operator. For instance, the approved fix for the novice error of using <> in assigning to a local is now: local($var) = scalar(<STDIN>); Perl's ordinary I/O is done using standard I/O routines. Every now and then this gets in your way. You may now access the system calls read() and write() via the Perl functions sysread() and syswrite(). They should not be intermixed with ordinary I/O calls unless you know what you're doing. Along with this, both the sysread() and read() functions allow you an optional 4th argument giving an offset into the string you're reading into, so for instance you can easily finish up partial reads. As a bit of syntactic sugar, you can now use the file tests -M, -A and -C to determine the age of a file in (possibly fractional) days as of the time the script started running. This makes it much easier to write midnight cleanup scripts with precision. The index() and rindex() functions now have an optional 3rd argument which tells it where to start looking, so you can now iterate through a string using these functions. The substr() function's 3rd argument is now optional, and if omitted, the function returns everything to the end of the string. The tr/// translation function now understands c, d and s options, just like the tr program. (Well, almost just like. The d option only deletes characters that aren't in the replacement string.) The c complementes the character class to match and the s option squishes out multiple occurrences of any replacement class characters. The reverse function, used in a scalar context, now reverses its scalar argument as a string. Dale Worley posted a patch to add @###.## type fields to formats. I said, "Neat!" and dropped it in, lock, stock and sinker. Kai Uwe Rommel sent a bunch of MSDOS and OS/2 updates, which I (mostly) incorporated. I can't vouch for them, but they look okay. Any data stored after the __END__ marker can be accesses now via the DATA filehandle, which is automatically opened onto the script at that point. (Well, actually, it's just kept open, since it was already open to read the script.) The taintperl program now checks for world writable PATH components, and complains if any are found (if PATH is used). Bug fixes: It used to be that you could get core dumps by such means as @$foo=(); @foo[42]; (1,2,3)[42]; $#foo = 50; foreach $elem (@foo) { $elem = 1; } This is no longer so. (For those who are up on Perl internals, the stack policy no longer allows Nullstr--all undefined values must be passed as &str_undef.) If you say something like local($foo,$bar); or local($initialized,$foo,$bar) = ('one value'); $foo and $bar are now initialized to the undefined value, rather than the defined null string. Array assignment to special arrays is now better supported. For instance, @ENV = () clears the environment, and %foo = () will now clear any dbm file bound to %foo. On the subject of dbm files, the highly visible bugs at patchlevel 28 have been fixed. You can now open dbm files readonly, and you don't have to do a dummy assignment to make the cache allocate itself. The modulus operator wasn't working right on negative values because of a misplaced cast. For instance, -5 % 5 was returning the value 5, which is clearly wrong. Certain operations coredumped if you didn't supply a value: close; eof; Previously, if the subroutine supplied for a sort operation didn't exist, it failed quietly. Now it produces a fatal error. The bitwise complement operator ~ didn't work on vec() strings longer than one byte because of failure to increment a loop variable. The oct and hex functions returned a negative result if the highest bit was set. They now return an unsigned result, which seems a little less confusing. Likewise, the token 0x80000000 also produces an unsigned value now. Some machines didn't like to see 0x87654321 in an #ifdef because they think of the symbols as signed. The tests have been changed to just look at the lower 4 nybbles of the value, which is sufficient to determine endianness, at least as far as the #ifdefs are concerned. The unshift operator did not return the documented value, which was the number of elements in the new array. Instead it returned the last unshifted argument, more or less by accident. -w sometimes printed spurious warnings about ARGV and ENV when referencing the arrays indirectly through shift or exec. This was because the typo test was misplaced before the code that exempts special variables from the typo test. If you said 'require "./foo.pl"', it would look in someplace like /usr/local/lib/perl/./foo.pl instead of the current directory. This works more like people expect now. The require error messages also referred to wrong file, if they worked at all. The h2ph program didn't translate includes right--it should have changed .h to .ph. Patterns with multiple short literal strings sometimes failed. This was a problem with the code that looks for a maximal literal string to feed to the Boyer-Moore searching routine. The code was gluing together literal strings that weren't continuous. The $* variable controls multi-line pattern matching. When it's 0, patterns are supposed to match as if the string contained a single line. Unfortunately, /^pat/ occasionally matched in middle of string under certain conditions. Recently the regular expression routines were upgraded to do {n,m} more efficiently. In doing this, however, I manufactured a couple of bugs: /.{n,m}$/ could match with fewer than n characters remaining on the line, and patterns like /\d{9}/ could match more than 9 characters. The undefined value has an actual physical location in Perl, and pointers to it are passed around. By certain circuitous routes it was possible to clobber the undefined value so that it was no longer undefined--kind of like making /dev/null into a real file. Hopefully this can't happen any more. op.stat could fail if /bin/0 existed, because of a while (<*>) {... This has been changed to a while (defined($_ = <*>)) {... The length of a search pattern was limited by the length of tokenbuf internally. This restriction has been removed. The null character gave the tokener indigestion when used as a delimiter for m// or s///. There was a bunch of other cleanupish things that are too trivial to mention here.
* perl 3.0 patch #28 (combined patch)Larry Wall1990-08-131-2/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Certain systems, notable Ultrix, set the close-on-exec flag by default on dup'ed file descriptors. This is anti-social when you're creating a new STDOUT. The flag is now forced off for STDIN, STDOUT and STDERR. Some yaccs report 29 shift/reduce conflicts and 59 reduce/reduce conflicts, while other yaccs and bison report 27 and 61. The Makefile now says to expect either thing. I'm not sure if there's a bug lurking there somewhere. The defined(@array) and defined(%array) ended up defining the arrays they were trying to determine the status of. Oops. Using the status of NSIG to determine whether <signal.h> had been included didn't work right on Xenix. A fix seems to be beyond Configure at the moment, so we've got some OS dependent #ifdefs in there. There were some syntax errors in the new code to determine whether it is safe to emulate rename() with unlink/link/unlink. Obviously heavily tested code... :-) Patch 27 introduced the possibility of using identifiers as unquoted strings, but the code to warn against the use of totally lowercase identifiers looped infinitely. I documented that you can't interpolate $) or $| in pattern. It was actually implied under s///, but it should have been more explicit. Patterns with {m} rather than {m,n} didn't work right. Tests io.fs and op.stat had difficulties under AFS. They now ignore the tests in question if they think they're running under /afs. The shift/reduce expectation message was off for a2p's Makefile.
* perl 3.0 patch #19 (combined patch)Larry Wall1990-08-081-11/+28
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | You now have the capability of linking C subroutines into a special version of perl. See the files in usub/ for an example. There is now an operator to include library modules with duplicate suppression and error checking, called "require". (makelib has been renamed to h2ph, and Tom Christiansen's h2pl stuff has been included too. Perl .h files are now called .ph files to avoid confusion.) It's now possible to truncate files if your machines supports any of ftruncate(fd, size), chsize(fd, size) or fcntl(fd, F_FREESP, size). Added -c switch to do compilation only, that is, to suppress execution. Useful in combination with -D1024. There's now a -x switch to extract a script from the input stream so you can pipe articles containing Perl scripts directly into perl. Previously, the only places you could use bare words in Perl were as filehandles or labels. You can now put bare words (identifiers) anywhere. If they have no interpretation as filehandles or labels, they will be treated as if they had single quotes around them. This works together nicely with the fact that you can use a symbol name indirectly as a filehandle or to assign to *name. It basically means you can write subroutines and pass filehandles without quoting or *-ing them. (It also means the grammar is even more ambiguous now--59 reduce/reduce conflicts!!! But it seems to do the Right Thing.) Added __LINE__ and __FILE__ tokens to let you interpolate the current line number or filename, such as in a call to an error routine, or to help you translate eval linenumbers to real linenumbers. Added __END__ token to let you mark the end of the program in the input stream. (^D and ^Z are allowed synonyms.) Program text and data can now both come from STDIN. `command` in array context now returns array of lines. Previously it would return a single element array holding all the lines. An empty %array now returns 0 in scalar context so that you can use it profitably in a conditional: &blurfl if %seen; The include search path (@INC) now includes . explicity at the end, so you can change it if you wish. Library routines now have precedence by default. Several pattern matching optimizations: I sped up /x+y/ patterns greatly by not retrying on every x, and disabled backoff on patterns anchored to the end like /\s+$/. This made /\s+$/ run 100 times faster on a string containing 70 spaces followed by an X. Actual improvements will generally be less than that. I also sped up {m,n} on simple items by making it a variant of *. And /.*whatever/ is now optimizaed to /^.*whatever/ to avoid retrying at every position in the event of failure. I fixed character classes to allow backslashing hyphen, by popular request. In the past, $ in a pattern would sometimes match in the middle of the string and sometimes not, if $* == 0. Now it will never match except at the end of the string, or just before a terminating newline. When $* == 1 behavior is as before. In the README file, I've expanded on just how I think the GNU General Public License applies to Perl and to things you might want to do with Perl. The interpreter used to set the global variable "line" to be the current line number. Instead, it now sets a global pointer to the current Perl statement, which is no more overhead, but now we will have access to the file name and package name associated with that statement, so that the debugger soon be upgraded to allow debugging of evals and packages. In the past, a conditional construct in an array context passed the array context on to the conditional expression, causing general consternation and confusion. Conditionals now always supply a scalar context to the expression, and if that expression turns out to be the one whose value is returned, the value is coerced to an array value of one element. The switch optimizer was confused by negative fractional values, and truncating them the wrong direction. Configure now checks for chsize, select and truncate functions, and now asks if you want to put scripts into some separate directory from your binaries. More and more people are establishing a common directory across architectures for scripts, so this is getting important. It used to be that a numeric literal ended up being stored both as a string and as a double. This could make for lots of wasted storage if you said things like "$seen{$key} = 1;". So now numeric literals are now stored only in floating point format, which saves space, and generates at most one extra conversion per literal over the life of the script. The % operator had an off-by-one error if the left argument was negative. The pack and unpack functions have been upgraded. You can now convert native float and double fields using f and d. You can specify negative relative positions with X<n>, and absolute positions in the record with @<n>. You can have a length of * on the final field to indicate that it is to gobble all the rest of the available fields. In unpack, if you precede a field spec with %<n>, it does an n-bit checksum on it instead of the value itself. (Thus "%16C*" will checksum just like the Sys V sum program.) One totally wacked out evening I hacked a u format in to pack and unpack uudecode-style strings. A couple bugs were fixed in unpack--it couldn't unpack an A or a format field in a scalar context, which is just supposed to return the first field. The c and C formats were also calling bcopy to copy each character. Yuck. Machines without the setreuid() system call couldn't manipulate $< and $> easily. Now, if you've got setuid(), you can say $< = $> or $> = $< or even ($<, $>) = ($uid, $uid), as long as it's something that can be done with setuid(). Similarly for setgid(). I've included various MSDOS and OS/2 patches that people have sent. There's still more in the hopper... An open on a pipe for output such as 'open(STDOUT,"|command")' left STDOUT attached to the wrong file descriptor. This didn't matter within Perl, but it made subprocesses expecting stdout to be on fd 1 rather irate. The print command could fail to detect errors such as running out room on the disk. Now it checks a little better. Saying "print @foo" might only print out some of the elements if there undefined elements in the middle of the array, due to a reversed bit of logic in the print routine. On machines with vfork the child process would allocate memory in the parent without the parent knowing about it, or having any way to free the memory so allocated. The parent now calls a cleanup routine that knows whether that's what happened. If the getsockname or getpeername functions returned a normal Unix error, perl -w would report that you tried I/O on an unopened socket, even though it was open. MACH doesn't have seekdir or telldir. Who ever uses them anyway? Under certain circumstances, an optimized pattern match could pass a hint into the standard pattern matching routine which the standard routine would then ignore. The next pattern match after that would then get a "panic: hint in do_match" because the hint didn't point into the current string of interest. The $' variable returned a short string if it contained an embedded null. Two common split cases are now special-cased to avoid the regular expression code. One is /\s+/ (and its cousin ' ', which also trims leading whitespace). The other is /^/, which is very useful for splitting a "here-is" quote into lines: @lines = split(/^/, <<END); Element 0 Element 1 Element 2 END You couldn't split on a single case-insensitive letter because the single character split optimization ignore the case folding flag. Sort now handles undefined strings right, and sorts lists a little more efficiently because it weeds them out before sorting so it doesn't have to check for them on every comparison. The each() and keys() functions were returning garbage on null keys in DBM files because the DBM iterator merely returns a pointer into the buffer to a string that's not necessarily null terminated. Internally, Perl keeps a null at the end of every string (though allowing embedded nulls) and some routines make use of this to avoid checking for the end of buffer on every comparison. So this just needed to be treated as a special case. The &, | and ^ operators will do bitwise operations on two strings, but for some reason I hadn't implemented ~ to do a complement. Using an associative array name with a % in dbmopen(%name...) didn't work right, not because it didn't parse, but because the dbm opening routine internally did the wrong thing with it. You can now say dbmopen(name, 'filename', undef) to prevent it from opening the dbm file if it doesn't exist. The die operator simply exited if you didn't give an argument, because that made sense before eval existed. But now it will be equivalent to "die 'Died';". Using the return function outside a subroutine returned a cryptic message about not being able to pop a magical label off the stack. It's now more informative. On systems without the rename() system call, it's emulated with unlink()/link()/unlink(), which could clobber a file if it happened to unlink it before it linked it. Perl now checks to make sure the source and destination filenames aren't in fact the same directory entry. The -s file test now returns size of file. Why not? If you tried to write a general subroutine to open files, passing in the filehandle as *filehandle, it didn't work because nobody took responsibility to allocate the filehandle structure internally. Now, passing *name to subroutine forces filehandle and array creation on that symbol if they're already not created. Reading input via <HANDLE> is now a little more efficient--it does one less string copy. The dumpvar.pl routine now fixes weird chars to be printable, and allows you to specify a list of varables to display. The debugger takes advantage of this. The debugger also now allows \ continuation lines, and has an = command to let you make aliases easily. Line numbers should now be correct even after lines containing only a semicolon. The action code for parsing split; with no arguments didn't pass correct a corrent value of bufend to the scanpat it was using to establish the /\s+/ pattern. The $] variable returned the rcsid string and patchlevel. It still returns that in a string context, but in a numeric context it returns the version number (as in 4.0) + patchlevel / 1000. So these patches are being applied to 3.018. The variables $0, %ENV, @ARGV were retaining incorrect information from the previous incarnation in dumped/undumped scripts. The %ENV array is suppose to be global even inside packages, but and off-by-one error kept it from being so. The $| variable couldn't be set on a filehandle before the file was opened. Now you can. If errno == 0, the $! variable returned "Error 0" in a string context, which is, unfortunately, a true string. It now returns "" in string context if errno == 0, so you can use it reasonable in a conditional without comparing it to 0: &cleanup if $!; On some machines, conversion of a number to a string caused a malloc string to be overrun by 1 character. More memory is now allocated for such a string. The tainting mechanism didn't work right on scripts that were setgid but not setuid. If you had reference to an array such as @name in a program, but didn't invoke any of the usual array operations, the array never got initialized. The FPS compiler doesn't do default in a switch very well if the value can be interpreted as a signed character. There's now a #ifdef BADSWITCH for such machines. Certain combinations of backslashed backslashes weren't correctly parsed inside double-quoted strings. "Here" strings caused warnings about uninitialized variables because the string used internally to accumulate the lines wasn't initialized according to the standards of the -w switch. The a2p translator couldn't parse {foo = (bar == 123)} due to a hangover from the old awk syntax. It also needed to put a chop into a program if the program referenced NF so that the field count would come out right when the split was done. There was a missing semicolon when local($_) was emitted. I also didn't realize that an explicity awk split on ' ' trims leading whitespace just like the implicit split at the beginning of the loop. The awk for..in loop has to be translated in one of two ways in a2p, depending on whether the array was produced by a split or by subscripting. If the array was a normal array, a2p put out code that iterated over the array values rather than the numeric indexes, which was wrong. The s2p didn't translate \n correctly, stripping the backslash.
* perl 3.0 patch #16 (combined patch)Larry Wall1990-03-271-3/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | There is now support for compiling perl under the Microsoft C compiler on MSDOS. Special thanks go to Diomidis Spinellis <dds@cc.ic.ac.uk> for this. To compile under MSDOS, look at the readme file in the msdos subdirectory. As a part of this, six files will be renamed when you run Configure. These are config.h.SH, perl.man.[1-4] and t/op.subst. Suns (and perhaps other machines) can't cast negative floating point numbers to unsigned ints reasonably. Configure now detects this and takes appropriate action. Configure looked for optional libraries but then didn't ever use them, even if there was no config.sh value to override. System V Release 4 provides us with yet another nm format for Configure to parse. No doubt it's "better". Sigh. MIPS CPUs running under Ultrix were getting configured for volatile support, but they don't like volatile when applied to a type generated by a typedef. Configure now tests for this. I've added two new perl library routines: ctime.pl from Waldemar Kebsch and Marion Hakanson, and syslog.pl from Tom Christiansen and me. In subroutines, non-terminal blocks should never have arrays requested of them, even if the subroutine call's context is looking for an array. Formats didn't work inside eval. Now they do. Any $foo++ that doesn't return a value is now optimized to ++$foo since the latter doesn't require generation of a temporary to hold the old value. A self-referential printf pattern such as sprintf($s,...,$s,...) would end up with a null as the first character of the next field. On machines that don't support executing scripts in the kernel, perl has to emulate that when an exec fails. In this case, the do_exec() routine can lose arguments passed to the script. A memory leakage in pattern matching triggered by use of $`, $& or $' has been fixed. A splice that pulls up the front of an array such as splice(@array,0,$n) can cause a duplicate free error. The grep operator blew up on undefined array values. It now handles them reasonably, setting $_ to undef. The .. operator in an array context is used to generate number ranges. This has been generalized to allow any string ranges that can be generated with the magical increment code of ++. So you can say 'a' .. 'f', '000'..'999', etc. The ioctl function didn't return non-zero values correctly. Associative array slices from dbm files like @dbmvalues{'foo','bar'} could use the same cache entry for multiple values, causing loss of some of the values of the slice. Cache values are now not flushed until the end of a statement. The do FILE operator blew up when used inside an eval, due to trying to free the eval code it was still executing. If you did s/^prefix// on a string, and subsequently assigned a value that didn't contain a string value to the string, you could get a bad free error. One of the taint checks blew up on undefined array elements, which showed up only when taintperl was run. The final semicolon in program is supposed to be optional now. Unfortunately this wasn't true when -p or -n added extra code around your code. Now it's true all the time. A tail anchored pattern such as /foo$/ could cause grief if you searched a string that was shorter than that.
* perl 3.0 patch #13 (combined patch)Larry Wall1990-03-121-5/+15
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | I added the list slice operator: (LIST)[LIST] $hexdigit = (0..9,'a','b','c','d','e','f')[$fourbits] There was no way to cut stuff out of the middle of an array or to insert stuff without copying the head and tail of the array, which is gross. I added the splice operator to do this: @oldelems = splice(@array,$offset,$len,LIST) Equivalencies: splice(@array,0,1) splice(@array,0,0,$x,$y) splice(@array,-1,1) splice(@array,$#array+1,0,$x,$y) splice(@array,$x,1,$y) Having -lPW as one of the libraries that Configure looks for was causing lots of people grief. It was only there for people using bison who otherwise don't have alloca(), so I zapped it. Some of the questions that supported the ~name syntax didn't say so, and some that should have supported it didn't. Now they do. If you selected the manp directory for your man pages, the manext variable was left set to 'n'. When Configure sees that the optional libraries have previously been determined in config.sh, it now believes it rather than using the list it generates. In the test for byteorder, some compilers get indigestion on the constant 0x0807060504030201. It's now split into two parts. Some compilers don't like it if you put CCFLAGS after the .c file on the command line. Some of the Configure tests did this. On some systems, the test for vprintf() needs to have stdio.h included in order to give valid results. Some machines don't support the volatile declaration as applied to a pointer. The Configure test now checks for this. Also, cmd.c had some VOLATILE declarations on pointed-to items rather than the pointers themselves, causing MIPS heartburn. In Makefile.SH, some of the t*.c files needed to have dependencies on perly.h. Additionally, some parallel makes can't handle a dependency line with two targets, so the perly.h and perl.c lines have been separated. Also, when perly.h is generated, it will now have a declaration added to it for yylval--bison wasn't supplying this. The construct "while (s/x//) {}" was partially fixed in patch 9, but there were still some weirdnesses about it. Hopefully these are ironed out now. If you did a switch structure based on numeric value, and there was some action attached to when the variable is greater than the maximum specified value, that action would not happen. Instead, any action for values under the minimum value happened. The debugger had some difficulties after patch 9, due to changes in the meaning of @array in a scalar context, and because of an pointer error in patch 9. Because of the fix in patch 9 to let return () work right, the construct "return (@array)" did counter-intuitive things. It now returns an array value. "return @array" and "return (@array)" now mean the same thing. A pack of ascii strings could call str_ncat() with negative length when the length of the string was greater than the length specified for the field. Patch 9 fixed *name values so that the wouldn't collide with ordinary string values, but there were two places I missed, one in perldb, and one in the sprintf code. Perl looks at commands it is going to execute to see if it can bypass /bin/sh and execute them directly. Ordinarily = is not a shell metacharacter, but in a command like "system 'FOO=bar command'"i it indicates that /bin/sh should be used, since it's setting an environment variable. It now does that (other than that construct, the = character is still not a shell metacharacter). If a runtime pattern to split happens to be null, it was being interpreted as if it were a space, that is, as the awk-emulating split. It now splits all characters apart, since that's more in line with what people expect, and the other behavior wasn't documented. Patch 9 added the reserved word "pipe". The scripts eg/g/gsh and /eg/scan/scanner used pipe as filehandle since they were written before the recommendation of upper-case filehandles was devised. They now use PIPE. The undef $/ command was supposed to let you slurp in an entire binary file with one <>, but it didn't work as advertised. Xenix systems have been having problems with Configure setting up ndir right. Hopefully this will work better now, but it's possible the changes will blow someone else up. Such is life... The construct (LIST,) is now legal, so that you can say @foo = ( 1, 2, 3, ); Various changes were made to the documentation. In double quoted strings, you could say \0 to mean the null character. In pattern matches, only \000 was allowed since \0 was taken to be a \<digit> backreference. Since it doesn't make sense to refer to the whole matched string before it's done, there's no reason \0 can't mean null in a pattern too. So now it does. You could modify a numeric variable by using substr as an lvalue, and if you then reference the variable numerically, you'd get the old number out rather than one derived from the new string. Now the old number is invalidated on lvalued substr. The test t/op.mkdir should create directories 0777 rather than 0666. As Randal requested, the last semicolon of a program is now optional. Actually, he just asked for -e 'prog' to have that behaviour, but it seemed reasonable to generalize it slightly. It's been that way with eval for some time.
* perl 3.0 patch #9 (combined patch)Larry Wall1990-02-281-2/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Well, I didn't quite fix 100 things--only 94. There are still some other things to do, so don't think if I didn't fix your favorite bug that your bug report is in the bit bucket. (It may be, but don't think it. :-) There are very few enhancements here. One is the new pipe() function. There was just no way to emulate this using the current operations, unless you happened to have socketpair() on your system. Not even syscall() was useful in this respect. Configure now determines whether volatile is supported, since some compilers implement volatile but don't define __STDC__. Some compilers can put structure members and global variables into registers, so more variables had to be declared volatile to avoid clobbering during longjmp(). Some systems have wanted routines stashed away in libBSD.a and libPW.a. Configure can now find them. A number of Configure tests create a file called "try" and then execute it. Unfortunately, if there was a "try" elsewhere in PATH it got that one instead. All references are now to "./try". On Ultrix machines running the Mips cpu, some header files define things differently for assembly language than for the C language. To differentiate these, cc passes a -DLANGUAGE_C to the C preprocessor. Unfortunately, Configure, makedepend and perl want to use the preprocessor independently of cc. Configure now defaults to adding -DLANGUAGE_C on machines containing that symbol in signal.h. In Configure, some libraries were getting into the list more than once, causing extra extraction overhead. The names are now uniquified. Someone has invented yet another output format for nm. Sigh. Why do people assume that only people read the output of programs? Due to commentary between a declaration and its semicolon, some standard versions of stdio weren't being considered standard, and the type of char used by stdio was being misidentified. People trying to use bison instead of yacc ran into two problems. One, lack of alloca(), is solved on some machines by finding libPW.a. The other is that you have to supply a -y switch to bison to get it to emulate yacc naming conventions. Configure now prompts correctly for bison -y. The make clean had a rm -f $suidperl where it just wanted a rm -f suidperl In the README, documented more weirdities on various machines, including a pointer to the JMPCLOBBER symbol. In the construct OUTER: foreach (1,2,3) { INNER: foreach (4,5) { ... next OUTER; } } the inner loop was not getting reset to the first element. This was one of those bugs that arise because longjmp() doesn't execute exit handlers as it unwinds the stack. Perl reallocs many things as they grow, including the stack (its stack, not the C program's stack). This means that routines have to be careful to retreive the new stack when they call subroutines that can do such a realloc. In cmd.c there was such code but it was hidden inside an #ifdef JMPCLOBBER that it should have been outside of, so you could get bad return values of JMPCLOBBER wasn't defined. If you defined JMPCLOBBER to work around this problem, you should consider undefining it if your compiler guarantees that register variables get the value they had either at setjmp() or longjmp() time. Perl runs slightly faster without JMPCLOBBER defined. The longjmp()s that perl does return known values, but as a paranoid programming measure, it now checks that the values are one of the expected ones. If you say something like while (s/ /_/) {} the substitution almost always succeeds (on normal text). There is an optimization that quickly discovers and bypasses operations that are going to fail, but does nothing to help generally successful ones such as the one above. So there's a heuristic that disables the optimization if it isn't buying us anything. Unfortunately, in the above case, it's in the conditional of a while loop, which is duplicated by another optimization to be a last unless s/ /_/; at the end of the loop, to avoid unnecessary subroutine calls. Because the conditional was duplicated (not the expression itself, just the structure pointing to it), the heuristic mentioned above tried to disable the first optimization twice, resulting in the label stack getting corrupted. Some subroutines which mix both return mechanisms like this: sub foo { local($foo); return $foo if $whatever; $foo; } This clobbered the return value of $foo when the end of the scope of the local($foo) was reached. This was because such a routine turns into something like this internally: sub foo { _SUB_: { local($foo); if ($whatever) { $foo; last _SUB_; } $foo; } } Because the outer _SUB_ block was manufactured by non-standard means, it wasn't getting marked as an expression that could return a value, ie a terminal expression. So the return value wasn't getting properly saved off to the side before the local() exited. The internal label on subroutine blocks used to be SUB, but I changed it to _SUB_ to avoid possible confusion. Evals now have labels too, so they are labelled with _EVAL_. The reason evals now have a label is that nested evals need separate longjmp environments, or fatal errors end up getting a longjmp() botch. So eval now uses the same label stack as loops and subroutines. The eval routine used to always return undef on failure. In an array context, however, this makes a non-null array, which when assigned is TRUE, which is counter-intuitive. It now returns a null array upon failure in an array context. When a foreach operator works on a non-array, the compiler translates foreach (1,2,3) { into something like @_GEN_0 = (1,2,3); foreach (@_GEN_0) { Unfortunately, the line number was not correctly propagated to both command structures, so huge line numbers could appear in error messages and while debugging. The x operator was stupidly written, just calling the internal routine str_scat() multiple times, and not preextending the string to the known new length. It now preextends the string and calls a special routine to replicate the string quickly. On long strings like '\0' x 1024, the operator is more than 10 times faster. The split operator is supposed to split into @_ if called in a scalar context. Unfortunately, it was also splitting into @_ in an array context that wasn't a real array, such as assignment to a list: ($foo,$bar) = split; This has now been fixed. The split and substitute operators have a check to make sure that it isn't looping endlessly. Unfortunate, they had a hardwired limit of 10000 iterations. There are applications conceivable where you could work on longer values than that, so they now calculate a reasonable limit based on the length of the arguments. Pack and unpack called atoi all the time on the template fields. Since there are usually at most one or two digits of number, this wasted a lot of time on machines with slow subroutine calls. It now picks up the number itself. There were several places that casts could blow up. In particular, it appears that a sun3 can't cast a negative float to an unsigned integer. Appropriate measure have been taken--hopefully this won't blow someone else up. A local($.) didn't work right because the actual value of the current line number is derived from the last input filehandle. This has been fixed by causing the last input filehandle to be restored after the scope of a local($.) to what it was when the local was executed. Assignment is supposed to return the final value of the left hand side. In the case of array assignment (in an array context), it was actually returning the right hand side. This showed up in things that referred to the actual elements of an array value, such as grep(s/foo/bar/, @abc = @xyz), which modified @xyz rather than @abc. The syscall() function was returning a garbage value (the index of the top of the stack, actually) rather than value of system call. There was some discussion about how to open files with arbitrary characters in the filename. In particular, the open function strips trailing spaces. There was no way to suppress this. Now you can put an explicit null at the end of the string open(FOO,"$filename\0") and this will hide any spaces on the end of the filename. The Unix open() function will of course treat the null as the trailing delimiter. As a hangover from when Perl was not useful on binary files, there was a check to make sure that the file being opened was a normal file or character special file or socket. Now that Perl can handle binary data, this is useless, and has been removed. Some versions of utime.h have microseconds specified as acusec and modusec. Perl was referring to these in order to zero out the fields. But not everyone has these. Perl now just bzero's out the structure and refers only to fields that everyone has. You used to have to say ($foo) = unpack("L",$bar); Now you can say $foo = unpack("L",$bar); and it will just unpack the first thing specified by the template; The subscripts for slices were ignoring the value of $[. (This never made any difference for people who leave $[ set to 0.) It seems reasonable that grep in a scalar context should return the number of items matched so that it can be used in, say, a conditional. Formerly it returned an undef. Another problem with grep was that if you said something like grep(/$1/, @foo) then each iteration of grep was executing in the context of the previous iteration's regexp, so $1 might be wiped out after the first iteration. All iterations of grep now operate in the regexp context of the grep operator itself. The eg/README file now explicity states that the examples in the eg directory are to be considered in the Public Domain, and thus do not have the same restrictions as the Perl source. In a previous patch the shift operator was made to shift @_ inside of subroutines. This made some of the getopt code wrong. The sample rename command (and the new relink command) can either take a list of filenames from stdin, or if stdin is a terminal, default to a * in the current directory. A sample travesty program is now included. If you want to know what it does, feed it about 10 Usenet articles, or the perl manual, and see what it prints out. If a return operator was embedded in an expression that supplied a scalar context, but the subroutine containing the return was called in an array context, an array was not returned correctly. Now it is. The !~ operator used to ignore the negation in an array context and do the same thing as =~. It now always returns scalar even in array context, so if you say ($foo) = ($bar !~ /(pat)/) $foo will get a value of either 1 or ''. Opens on pipes were defined to return the child's pid in the parent, and FALSE in the child. Unfortunately, what the child actually got was an undef, making it indistinguishable from a failure to open the pipe successfully. The child now gets a 0, and undef means a failure to fork a child. Formerly, @array in a scalar context returned the last value of the array, by analogy to the comma operator. This makes for counter-intuitive results when you say if (@array) if 0 or '' is a legal array value. @array now returns the length of the array (not the subscript of the last element, which is @#array). To get the last element of the array you must either pop(@array) or refer to $array[$#array]. The chdir operator with no argument was supposed to change directory to your home directory, but it core dumped instead. The wait operator was ignoring SIGINT and SIGQUIT, by analogy to the system and pipe operations. But wait is a lower level operation, and it gives you more freedom if those signals aren't automatically ignored. If you want them ignored, you now have to explicitly ignore them by setting the proper %SIG entry. Different versions of /bin/mkdir and /bin/rmdir return different messages upon failure. Perl now knows about more of them. -l FILEHANDLE now disallowed The use of the -l file test makes no sense on a filehandle, since you can't open symbolic links. So -l FILEHANDLE now is a fatal error. This also means you can't say -l _, which is also a useless operation. The heavy wizardry involved in saying $#foo -= 2 didn't work quite right. In formats, you can say ... in a ^ field to have ... output when there is more for that field that is getting truncated. The next field was getting shifted over by three characters, however. The perl library routines abbrev.pl, complete.pl, getopt.pl and getopts.pl were assuming $[ == 0. The Getopt routine wasn't returning an error on unrecognized switches. The look.pl routine had never been tested, and didn't work at all. Now it does. There were several difficulties in termcap.pl. Togoto was documented backwards for $rows and $cols. The Tgetent routine could loop endlessly if there was a tc entry. And it didn't interpret the ^x form of specifying control characters right because of base treachery (031 instead of 31). There were also problems with using @_ as a temporary array. In perl.h, the unused VREG symbol was deleted because it conflicted with somebody's header files. If perl detects a #! line that specifies some other interpreter than perl, it will now start up that interpreter for you. This let's you specify a SHELL of perl to some programs. The $/ variable specifies the input record separator. It was possible to set it to a non-text character and read in an entire text file as one input, but it wasn't possible to do that for a binary file. Now you can undef $/, and there will be no record separator, so you are guaranteed to get the entire file with one <>. The example in the manual of an open() inside a ?: had the branches of the ?: backwards. I documented the fact that grep can modify arrays in place (with caveats about modifying literal values). I also put in how to deal with filenames that might have arbitrary characters, and mentioned about the problem of unflushed buffers on opens that cause forks. It's now documented how to force top of page before the next write. Formerly, $0 was guaranteed to contain the name of the perl script only till the first regular expression was executed. It now keeps that value permanently. $0 can no longer be used as a synonym for $&. The regular expression evaluator didn't handle character classes with the 8th bit set. None of /[\200-\377]/, \d, \w or \s worked right--the character class because signed characters were not interpreted right, and the builtins because the isdigit(), isalpha() and isspace() macros are only defined if isascii() is true. Patterns of the form /\bfoo/i didn't work right because the \b wants to compare the preceding character with the next one to look for word boundaries, and the i modifier forced a move of the string to a place where it couldn't do that without examining malloc garbage. The type glob syntax *foo produces the symbol table entry for all the various foo variables. Perl has to do certain bookkeeping when moving such values around. The symbol table entry was not adequately differentiated from normal data to prevent occasion confusion, however. On MICROPORTs, the CRIPPLED_CC option made the stab_array() and stab_hash() macros into function calls, but neglected to supply the function definitions. The string length allocated to turn a number into a string internally turned out to be too short on a Sun 4. Several constructs were not recognized properly inside double-quoted strings: underline in name required @foo to be defined rather than %foo threw off bracket matcher not identified with $1 The base.term test gives misleading results if /dev/null happens not to be a character special file. So it now checks for that. The op.stat could exceed the shell's maximum argument length when evaluating </usr/bin/*>. It now chdirs to /usr/bin and does <*>. return grandfathered to never be function call The construct return (1,2,3); did not do what was expected, since return was swallowing the parens in order to consider itself a function. The solution, since return never wants any trailing expression such as return (1,2,3) + 2; is to simply make return an exception to the paren-makes-a-function rule, and treat it the way it always was, so that it doesn't strip the parens. If perldb.pl doesn't exist, there was no reasonable error message given when you invoke perl -d. It now does a do-or-die internally. null hereis core dumped The hereis construct dumped core on a null string: print <<'FOO'; FOO Certain pattern matches weren't working on patterns with embedded nulls because the fbminstr() routine, when it decided it couldn't do a fancy search, degenerated to using instr(), rather than ninstr(), which is better about embedded nulls. The s2p sed-to-perl translator didn't translate \< and \> to \b. Now it does. The a2p awk-to-perl translator didn't put a $ on ExitValue when translating the awk exit construct. It also didn't allow logical expressions inside normal expressions: i = ($1 == 2 || $2 ~ /bar/) a2p.h had definition of a bzero() macro inside an ifdef of BCOPY. The two don't always go together, and since Configure is already looking for both separately...
* perl 3.0 patch #7 (combined patch)Larry Wall1989-12-211-8/+10
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The select operator didn't interpret bit vectors correctly on non-little-endian machines such as Suns. Rather than bollux up the rather straightforward interpretation of bit vectors, I made the select operator rearrange the bytes as necessary. So it is still true that vec($foo,0,1) refers to the first bit of the first byte of string $foo, even on big-endian machines. The send() socket operator didn't correctly allow you to specify a TO argument even though this was documented. (The TO argument is desirable for sending datagram packets.) In ANSI standard C, they decided that longjmp() didn't have to guarantee anything about registers. Several people sent me some patches that declared certain variables as volatile rather than register for such compilers. Rather than go that route, however, I wanted to keep some of these variables in registers, so I just made sure that the important ones are restored from non-register locations after longjmp(). I think "volatile" encourages people to punt too easily. The foreach construct still had some difficulty with two nested foreach loops referring to the same array, and to a single foreach that called its enclosing subroutine recursively. I think I've got this straight now. You wouldn't think a little iterator would give some much trouble. A pattern like /b*/ wouldn't match a null string before the first character. And certain patterns didn't match correctly at end of string. The upshot was that $_ = 'aaa'; s/b*/x/g; produced 'axaxa' rather than the expected 'xaxaxax'. This has been fixed. Note however that the split operator will still not match a null string before the first character, so that split(/b*/,'aaa') produces ('a','a','a'), not ('','a','a','a',''). The saga continues, and hopefully concludes. I realized I was fighting a losing battle trying to grep out all the includes from <time.h> and <sys/time.h>. There are just too many funny includes, symbols, links and such on too many kinds of machines. Configure now compiles a test program several different ways to figure out which way to define the various symbols. Configure now lets you pick between yacc or bison for your compiler compiler. If you pick bison, be sure you have alloca somewhere on your system. The ANSI function strerror() is now supported where available. In addition, errno may now be a macro with an lvalue, so errno isn't declared extern if it's defined as a macro in <errno.h>. The memcpy() and memset() are now allowed to return void. There is now support for sys/ndir.h for systems such as Xenix. It's now also easier to cross compile on a 386 for a 286. DG/UX has functions setpgrp2() and getpgrp2() to keep the BSD sematics separate from the SystemV semantics. So now we have yet another wonderful non-standard way of doing things. There is also a utime.h file which lets them put time stamps on files to microsecond resolutions, though perl doesn't take advantage of this. The list of optional libraries to be searched for now includes -lnet_s, -lnsl_s, -lsocket and -lx. We can now find .h files down in /usr/include/lan. Microport systems have problems. I've added some CRIPPLED_CC support for them, but you still need to read the README.uport file for some extra rigamarole. In the README file, there are now hints for what to do if your compile doesn't work right, and specific hints for machines known to require certain switches. The grep operator with a simple first argument, such as grep(1,@array), didn't work right. That one seems silly, but grep($_,@array) didn't work either. Now it does. A /$pat/ followed by a // wrongly freed the runtime pattern twice, causing ill-will on the part of all concerned. The ord() function now always returns positive even on signed-char machines. This seems to be less surprising to people. If you still want a signed value on such machines, you can always use unpack. The lib/complete.pl file misused the @_ array. The array has been renamed. In the man page, I clarified that s`pat`repl` does command substitution on the replacement string, that $timeleft from select() is likely not implemented in many places, and that the qualified form package'filehandle works as well as $package'variable. It is also explicitly stated that certain identifiers (non-alpha, STDIN, etc.) are always resolved in package main's symbol table. Perl didn't grok setuid scripts that had a space on the first line between the shebang and the interpreter name. In stab.c, sighandler() may now return either void or int, depending on the value of VOIDSIG. You couldn't debug a script that used -p or -n because they would try to slap an extra } on the end of the perldb.pl file. This upset the parser. The interpration of strings like " ''$foo'' " caused problems because the tokener didn't realize that neither single quote following the variable was indicating a package qualifier. (It knew the last one wasn't, but was confused about the first one.) Merely changing an if to a while fixed it. Well, two if's. Another place we don't want ' to be interpreted as a package qualifier is if it's the delimiter for an m'pat' or s'pat'repl'. These have been grandfathered to look like a match and a substitution. There were a couple of problems in a2p. First, the ops array was dimensioned too big on 286's. Second, there was a problem involving passing a union where I should've passed a member of the union, which meant user-defined functions didn't work right on some machines.
* perl 3.0 patch #2 (combined patch)Larry Wall1989-11-101-3/+7
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The metaconfig problem with pw_* fields has been fixed. When you specify extra libraries to link in, Configure now uses those libraries as well as libc to look for the functions that are available. From the ccflags you give it now derives the corresponding flags for the C preprocessor. And it has better support for the Gnu C preprocessor. Configure now detects USGness by the behavior of the tr program. If USGness isn't found, then SIGTSTP determines BSDness. The define of DEBUGGING has been taken out of perl.h and a2p.h. If you want debugging you have to add -DDEBUGGING in a cc flag. If you give an optimizer flag of -g, you get DEBUGGING as a default. Machines like the Cray have longs longer than 4 bytes. There is now support for that. Some machines have csh in other places than /bin. Configure now figures out where it is. Configure now supports Wollongong sockets and knows about /usr/netinclude and /usr/lib/libnet.a. Configure now gets sig names directly from signal.h if possible, and only if that fails does it try to use kill -l. The $sockethdr variable has been incorporated into $ccflags Non-BSD machines required two ^D's to exit while (<>) { ... } This has been fixed, I believe, though I can't test it here. It's now possible to compile perl without the DEBUGGING code. It runs about 10% faster when you take the code out. Configure now discovers if <sys/time.h> includes <time.h>, or whether perl must include it itself. Configure now finds the wait4() routine if available. '-' x 26 made warnings about undefined value because of a bug in evalstatic(). (Non-static 'x' didn't have the problem.) A local list consisting of nothing but an array didn't work right. Now it does. A printf %c omitted the format string between the preceeding % field and the %c. Code to printf %D, %X and %O was misplaced. Some machines complain about printing signed values with unsigned format specifiers like %x. The unsigned specifiers now have a separate cast from the signed specifiers like %d. The various file modes were not orthogonal. Now you can use any of: < > >> +< +> +>> <& >& >>& +<& +>& +>>& Perl can now detect when a parent process passes in a socket so that you can write reasonable inetd servers. File descriptors above 2 are now closed on exec, either by using the fcntl(), or if unavailable, brute force closing in a loop. The return values of getsockopt(), getsockname() and getpeername() were always undefined. There were several places where a warn("shutdown") had to be changed to some other function name. The C routine gethostbyname() was misdeclared as gethostbynam(). telldir() is sometimes a macro, so we can't declare its return value if it's defined. Components of a slice corresponding to non-existent index elements are now undefined rather than just null. The mkdir and rmdir function will call the mkdir and rmdir programs if the corresponding system calls aren't available. The name of the directory was not quoted properly however. Also, some attempt is now made to translate the odd messages that some mkdirs and rmdir return into reasonable error codes. As a final check for mkdir programs that return NO useful status, a stat is done following the mkdir or rmdir to make sure the directory is really there or gone. The fileno, seekdir, rewinddir and closedir functions now specifically disallow defaults and return undef. Previously they would just crash perl. CX/UX needs to set the key each time when iterating over associative arrays due to a non-standard dbm_nextkey() function. The lib/getopts.pl routine needed to shift @ARGV explicitly in several spots. The malloc pointer corruption check was made more portable by just checking for alignment errors. It also is removed if DEBUGGING is not enabled. The include of <netinet/in.h> needed to be moved down below the include of <sys/types.h> for some machines. Not all machines declare the yydebug variable as the same type. The reference to yydebug was moved to perl.y where it doesn't care. I documented that a space must separate any word and a subsequent single-quoted string because of package name prefixes. Some long lines were broken for nroff, but not for troff. One example of unshift in the manual had its arguments backwards. I clarified that operation of ^ and $ on multiline strings when $* is false is somewhat inconsistent. People were forced to say !($foo++) when !$foo++ should be legal. None of the unary operators correctly handled their default arguments because of a screw-up in the parser actions. /[\000]/ never matched a null due to some left over non-binary-ness of perl 2.0. /\b$foo/ gave up too early in trying to match at the end of a string. sys_nerr was being used as the maximum error message number, when in fact it's the maximum+1. The identifier "uchar" is a typedef on Crays, so the variable of that name was changed to "unchar". The TEST program tried to run patch reject files. The reject files are now rejected by TEST. One test failed on picky systems because it referred to a filename longer than 14 chars. The op.split test assumed that the perl -D switch was available, when in fact it's only available if perl was compiled with DEBUGGING. Some header file somewhere defined macro CLINE, which conflicted with toke.c's CLINE macro. In s2p, + within patterns needed backslashing because + isn't a metacharacter for sed. s2p was also printing out some debugging info to the output file. In a2p, an awk script with no line actions didn't make a main loop, but it needs one to keep the awk semantics.
* perl 3.0 patch #1 (combined patch)Larry Wall1989-10-261-24/+25
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Configure had difficulties if the user's path had weird components. Now Configure appends the user's path to its own. Some machines need <netinet/in.h> included in order to define certain macros for packing or unpacking network order data. On Suns, the shared library is used by default. If it doesn't contain something contained in /lib/libc.a, then Configure was getting things wrong (such as gethostent()). Now Configure uses the shared library if it's there in preference to libc.a. When gcc was selected as the compiler, the cc flags defaulted to -fpcc_struct_return. Unfortunately, the underlines should be hyphens. Configure figures out if BSD shadow passwords are installed and the getpw* routines now return slightly different data in the affected fields. Some of the prompts in Configure with regard to gid and uid types were unclear as to their intended use. They are now a little clearer. Sometimes you could change a .h file and taintperl and suidperl didn't get remade correctly because of missing dependencies in the Makefile. The README file was misleading about the fact that you have to say "make test" before you can "cd t; TEST" The reverse operator was busted in two different ways. Should work better now. There are now regression tests for it. Some of the optimizations that perl does are disabled after period of time if perl decides they aren't doing any good. One of these caused a string to be freed that was later referenced via another pointer, causing core dumps. The free turned out to be unnecessary, so it was removed. The unless modifier was broken when run under the debugger, due to the invert() routine in perl.y inverting the logic on the DB subroutine call instead of the command the unless was modifying. Configure vfork test was backwards. It now works like other defines. The numeric switch optimization was broken, and caused code to be bypassed. This has been fixed. A split in a subroutine that has no target splits into @_. Unfortunately, this wrongly freed any referenced arguments passed in through @_, causing confusing behavior later in the program. File globbing (<foo.*>) left one orphaned string each time it called the shell to do the glob. RCS expanded an unintended $Header in lib/perldb.pl. This has been fixed simply by replacing the $ with a . Some forward declarations of static functions were missing from malloc.c. There's a strut in malloc for mips machines to extend the overhead union to the size of a double. This was also enabled for sparc machines. DEC risc machines are reported to have a buggy memcmp. I've put some conditional code into perl.h which I think will undef MEMCMP appropriately. In perl.man.4, I documented the desirability of using parens even where they aren't strictly necessary. I've grandfathered "format stdout" to be the same as "format STDOUT". Unary operators can be called with no argument. The corresponding function call form using empty parens () didn't work right, though it did for certain functions in 2.0. It now works in 3.0. The string ordering tests were wrong for pairs of strings in which one string was a prefix of the other. This affected lt, le, gt, ge, and the sort operator when used with no subroutine. $/ didn't work with the stupid code used when STDSTDIO was undefined. The stupid code has been replaced with smarter code that can do it right. Special thanks to Piet van Oostrum for the code. Goulds work better if the union in STR is at an 8 byte boundary. The fields were rearranged somewhat to provide this. "sort keys %a" should now work right (though parens are still desirable for readability). bcopy() needed a forward declaration on some machines. In x2p/Makefile.SH, added dependency on ../config.sh so that it gets linked down from above if it got removed for some reason.
* perl 3.0: (no announcement message available)perl-3.000Larry Wall1989-10-181-54/+190
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | A few of the new features: (18 Oct) * Perl can now handle binary data correctly and has functions to pack and unpack binary structures into arrays or lists. You can now do arbitrary ioctl functions. * You can now pass things to subroutines by reference. * Debugger enhancements. * An array or associative array may now appear in a local() list. * Array values may now be interpolated into strings. * Subroutine names are now distinguished by prefixing with &. You can call subroutines without using do, and without passing any argument list at all. * You can use the new -u switch to cause perl to dump core so that you can run undump and produce a binary executable image. Alternately you can use the "dump" operator after initializing any variables and such. * You can now chop lists. * Perl now uses /bin/csh to do filename globbing, if available. This means that filenames with spaces or other strangenesses work right. * New functions: mkdir and rmdir, getppid, getpgrp and setpgrp, getpriority and setpriority, chroot, ioctl and fcntl, flock, readlink, lstat, rindex, pack and unpack, read, warn, dbmopen and dbmclose, dump, reverse, defined, undef.
* perl 2.0 patch 1: removed redundant debugging code in regexp.cLarry Wall1988-06-281-10/+50
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | If you used ++ on a variable that had the value '' (as opposed to being undefined) it would increment the numeric part but not invalidate the string part, which could then give false results. Berkeley recently sent out a patch that disables setuid #! scripts because of an inherent problem in the semantics as they are currently defined. If you have installed that patch, your setuid and setgid bits are useless on scripts. I've added a means for perl to examine those bits and emulate setuid/setgid scripts itself in what I believe is a secure manner. If normal perl detects such a script, it passes it off to another version of perl that runs setuid root, and can run the script under the desired uid/gid. This feature is optional, and Configure will ask if you want to do it. Some machines didn't like config.h when it said #/*undef SYMBOL. Config.h.SH now is smart enough to tuck the # inside the comment. There were several small problems in Configure: the return code from ar was hidden by a piped call to sed, so if ar failed it went undetected. The Cray uses a program called bld instead of ar. Let's hear it for compatibilty. At least one version of gnucpp adds a space after symbol interpolation, which was giving the C preprocessor detector fits. There was a call to grep '-i' that needed to have the -i protected by a backslash. Also, Configure should remove the UU subdirectory that it makes while running. "make realclean" now knows about the alternate patch extension ~. In the manual page, I fixed some quotes that were ugly in troff, and did some clarification of LIST, study, tr and unlink. regexp.c had some redundant debugging code. tr/x/y/ could dump core if y is shorter than x. I found this out when I tried translating a bunch of characters to space by saying something like y/a-z/ /.
* perl 2.0 (no announcement message available)perl-2.0Larry Wall1988-06-051-43/+32
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Some of the enhancements from Perl1 included: * New regexp routines derived from Henry Spencer's. o Support for /(foo|bar)/. o Support for /(foo)*/ and /(foo)+/. o \s for whitespace, \S for non-, \d for digit, \D nondigit * Local variables in blocks, subroutines and evals. * Recursive subroutine calls are now supported. * Array values may now be interpolated into lists: unlink 'foo', 'bar', @trashcan, 'tmp'; * File globbing. * Use of <> in array contexts returns the whole file or glob list. * New iterator for normal arrays, foreach, that allows both read and write. * Ability to open pipe to a forked off script for secure pipes in setuid scripts. * File inclusion via do 'foo.pl'; * More file tests, including -t to see if, for instance, stdin is a terminal. File tests now behave in a more correct manner. You can do file tests on filehandles as well as filenames. The special filetests -T and -B test a file to see if it's text or binary. * An eof can now be used on each file of the <> input for such purposes as resetting the line numbers or appending to each file of an inplace edit. * Assignments can now function as lvalues, so you can say things like ($HOST = $host) =~ tr/a-z/A-Z/; ($obj = $src) =~ s/\.c$/.o/; * You can now do certain file operations with a variable which holds the name of a filehandle, e.g. open(++$incl,$includefilename); $foo = <$incl>; * Warnings are now available (with -w) on use of uninitialized variables and on identifiers that are mentioned only once, and on reference to various undefined things. * There is now a wait operator. * There is now a sort operator. * The manual is now not lying when it says that perl is generally faster than sed. I hope.
* perl 1.0 patch 13: fix for faulty patch 12, plus random portability glitchesKriton Kyrimis1988-02-011-2/+12
| | | | | | | | | | I botched patch #12, so that split(' ') only works on the first line of input due to unintended interference by the optimization that was added at the same time. Yes, I tested it, but only on one line of input. *Sigh* Some glitches have turned up on some of the rusty pig iron out there, so here are some unglitchifications.
* perl 1.0 patch 8: perl needed an eval operator and a symbolic debuggerLarry Wall1988-01-271-3/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | I didn't add an eval operator to the original perl because I hadn't thought of any good uses for it. Recently I thought of some. Along with creating the eval operator, this patch introduces a symbolic debugger for perl scripts, which makes use of eval to interpret some debugging commands. Having eval also lets me emulate awk's FOO=bar command line behavior with a line such as the one a2p now inserts at the beginning of translated scripts.
* perl 1.0 patch 7: use of included malloc.c should be optionalArnold D. Robbins1988-01-261-3/+8
| | | | | | | The version of malloc.c that comes with perl was not really intended to be used everywhere--it was included mostly for debugging purposes. It's a nice little package, however, so I'm making it optional (via Configure) as to whether you want it or not.
* perl 1.0 patch 4: make depend doesn't work if . isn't in your PATHPaul Eggert1988-01-251-2/+5
| | | | make depend doesn't work if . isn't in your PATH.
* perl 1.0 patch 2: Various portability fixes.Andrew Burt1988-01-231-5/+4
| | | | Some things didn't work right on System V and Pyramids.
* a "replacement" for awk and sedperl-1.0Larry Wall1987-12-181-0/+168
[ Perl is kind of designed to make awk and sed semi-obsolete. This posting will include the first 10 patches after the main source. The following description is lifted from Larry's manpage. --r$ ] Perl is a interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text files, extracting information from those text files, and printing reports based on that information. It's also a good language for many system management tasks. The language is intended to be practical (easy to use, efficient, complete) rather than beautiful (tiny, elegant, minimal). It combines (in the author's opinion, anyway) some of the best features of C, sed, awk, and sh, so people familiar with those languages should have little difficulty with it. (Language historians will also note some vestiges of csh, Pascal, and even BASIC-PLUS.) Expression syntax corresponds quite closely to C expression syntax. If you have a problem that would ordinarily use sed or awk or sh, but it exceeds their capabilities or must run a little faster, and you don't want to write the silly thing in C, then perl may be for you. There are also translators to turn your sed and awk scripts into perl scripts.