#!/usr/local/bin/perl use Config; use File::Basename qw(&basename &dirname); use Cwd; use File::Spec::Functions; # List explicitly here the variables you want Configure to # generate. Metaconfig only looks for shell variables, so you # have to mention them as if they were shell variables, not # %Config entries. Thus you write # $startperl # to ensure Configure will look for $Config{startperl}. # $perlpath # This forces PL files to create target in same directory as PL file. # This is so that make depend always knows where to find PL derivatives. $origdir = cwd; chdir dirname($0); $file = basename($0, '.PL'); $file .= '.com' if $^O eq 'VMS'; open OUT, ">$file" or die "Can't create $file: $!"; # get patchlevel.h timestamp -e catfile(updir, "patchlevel.h") or die "Can't find patchlevel.h: $!"; my $patchlevel_date = (stat _)[9]; # TO DO (perhaps): store/embed $Config::config_sh into perlbug. When perlbug is # used, compare $Config::config_sh with the stored version. If they differ then # append a list of individual differences to the bug report. print "Extracting $file (with variable substitutions)\n"; # In this section, perl variables will be expanded during extraction. # You can use $Config{...} to use Configure variables. my $extract_version = sprintf("%vd", $^V); print OUT <<"!GROK!THIS!"; $Config{startperl} eval 'exec $Config{perlpath} -S \$0 \${1+"\$@"}' if \$running_under_some_shell; my \$config_tag1 = '$extract_version - $Config{cf_time}'; my \$patchlevel_date = $patchlevel_date; !GROK!THIS! # In the following, perl variables are not expanded during extraction. print OUT <<'!NO!SUBS!'; my @patches = Config::local_patches(); my $patch_tags = join "", map /(\S+)/ ? "+$1 " : (), @patches; use warnings; use strict; use Config; use File::Spec; # keep perlbug Perl 5.005 compatible use Getopt::Std; use File::Basename 'basename'; sub paraprint; BEGIN { eval { require Mail::Send;}; $::HaveSend = ($@ eq ""); eval { require Mail::Util; } ; $::HaveUtil = ($@ eq ""); # use secure tempfiles wherever possible eval { require File::Temp; }; $::HaveTemp = ($@ eq ""); eval { require Module::CoreList; }; $::HaveCoreList = ($@ eq ""); }; my $Version = "1.40"; #TODO: # make sure failure (transmission-wise) of Mail::Send is accounted for. # (This may work now. Unsure of the original author's issue -JESSE 2008-06-08) # - Test -b option my( $file, $usefile, $cc, $address, $bugaddress, $testaddress, $thanksaddress, $filename, $messageid, $domain, $subject, $from, $verbose, $ed, $outfile, $fh, $me, $body, $andcc, %REP, $ok, $thanks, $progname, $Is_MSWin32, $Is_Linux, $Is_VMS, $Is_OpenBSD, $report_about_module, $category, $severity, %opt, $have_attachment, $attachments, $has_patch, $mime_boundary ); my $perl_version = $^V ? sprintf("%vd", $^V) : $]; my $config_tag2 = "$perl_version - $Config{cf_time}"; Init(); if ($opt{h}) { Help(); exit; } if ($opt{d}) { Dump(*STDOUT); exit; } if (!-t STDIN && !($ok and not $opt{n})) { paraprint <<"EOF"; Please use $progname interactively. If you want to include a file, you can use the -f switch. EOF die "\n"; } Query(); Edit() unless $usefile || ($ok and not $opt{n}); NowWhat(); if ($outfile) { save_message_to_disk($outfile); } else { Send(); if ($thanks) { print "\nThank you for taking the time to send a thank-you message!\n\n"; paraprint < { 'default' => 'core', 'ok' => 'install', # Inevitably some of these will end up in RT whatever we do: 'thanks' => 'thanks', 'opts' => [qw(core docs install library utilities)], # patch, notabug }, 'severity' => { 'default' => 'low', 'ok' => 'none', 'thanks' => 'none', 'opts' => [qw(critical high medium low wishlist none)], # zero }, ); die "Invalid alternative ($name) requested\n" unless grep(/^$name$/, keys %alts); my $alt = ""; my $what = $ok || $thanks; if ($what) { $alt = $alts{$name}{$what}; } else { my @alts = @{$alts{$name}{'opts'}}; print "\n\n"; paraprint < 5) { die "Invalid $name: aborting.\n"; } $alt = _prompt('', "\u$name", $alts{$name}{'default'}); $alt ||= $alts{$name}{'default'}; } while !((($alt) = grep(/^$alt/i, @alts))); } lc $alt; } sub Init { # -------- Setup -------- $Is_MSWin32 = $^O eq 'MSWin32'; $Is_VMS = $^O eq 'VMS'; $Is_Linux = lc($^O) eq 'linux'; $Is_OpenBSD = lc($^O) eq 'openbsd'; if (!getopts("Adhva:s:b:f:F:r:e:SCc:to:n:T:p:", \%opt)) { Help(); exit; }; # This comment is needed to notify metaconfig that we are # using the $perladmin, $cf_by, and $cf_time definitions. # -------- Configuration --------- # perlbug address $bugaddress = 'perlbug@perl.org'; # Test address $testaddress = 'perlbug-test@perl.org'; # Thanks address $thanksaddress = 'perl-thanks@perl.org'; if (basename ($0) =~ /^perlthanks/i) { # invoked as perlthanks $opt{T} = 1; $opt{C} = 1; # don't send a copy to the local admin } if ($opt{T}) { $thanks = 'thanks'; } $progname = $thanks ? 'perlthanks' : 'perlbug'; # Target address $address = $opt{a} || ($opt{t} ? $testaddress : $thanks ? $thanksaddress : $bugaddress); # Users address, used in message and in From and Reply-To headers $from = $opt{r} || ""; # Include verbose configuration information $verbose = $opt{v} || 0; # Subject of bug-report message $subject = $opt{s} || ""; # Send a file $usefile = ($opt{f} || 0); # File to send as report $file = $opt{f} || ""; # We have one or more attachments $have_attachment = ($opt{p} || 0); $mime_boundary = ('-' x 12) . "$Version.perlbug" if $have_attachment; # Comma-separated list of attachments $attachments = $opt{p} || ""; $has_patch = 0; # TBD based on file type for my $attachment (split /\s*,\s*/, $attachments) { unless (-f $attachment && -r $attachment) { die "The attachment $attachment is not a readable file: $!\n"; } $has_patch = 1 if $attachment =~ m/\.(patch|diff)$/; } # File to output to $outfile = $opt{F} || ""; # Body of report $body = $opt{b} || ""; # Editor $ed = $opt{e} || $ENV{VISUAL} || $ENV{EDITOR} || $ENV{EDIT} || ($Is_VMS && "edit/tpu") || ($Is_MSWin32 && "notepad") || "vi"; # Not OK - provide build failure template by finessing OK report if ($opt{n}) { if (substr($opt{n}, 0, 2) eq 'ok' ) { $opt{o} = substr($opt{n}, 1); } else { Help(); exit(); } } # OK - send "OK" report for build on this system $ok = ''; if ($opt{o}) { if ($opt{o} eq 'k' or $opt{o} eq 'kay') { my $age = time - $patchlevel_date; if ($opt{o} eq 'k' and $age > 60 * 24 * 60 * 60 ) { my $date = localtime $patchlevel_date; print <<"EOF"; "perlbug -ok" and "perlbug -nok" do not report on Perl versions which are more than 60 days old. This Perl version was constructed on $date. If you really want to report this, use "perlbug -okay" or "perlbug -nokay". EOF exit(); } # force these options unless ($opt{n}) { $opt{S} = 1; # don't prompt for send $opt{b} = 1; # we have a body $body = "Perl reported to build OK on this system.\n"; } $opt{C} = 1; # don't send a copy to the local admin $opt{s} = 1; # we have a subject line $subject = ($opt{n} ? 'Not ' : '') . "OK: perl $perl_version ${patch_tags}on" ." $::Config{'archname'} $::Config{'osvers'} $subject"; $ok = 'ok'; } else { Help(); exit(); } } # Possible administrator addresses, in order of confidence # (Note that cf_email is not mentioned to metaconfig, since # we don't really want it. We'll just take it if we have to.) # # This has to be after the $ok stuff above because of the way # that $opt{C} is forced. $cc = $opt{C} ? "" : ( $opt{c} || $::Config{'perladmin'} || $::Config{'cf_email'} || $::Config{'cf_by'} ); if ($::HaveUtil) { $domain = Mail::Util::maildomain(); } elsif ($Is_MSWin32) { $domain = $ENV{'USERDOMAIN'}; } else { require Sys::Hostname; $domain = Sys::Hostname::hostname(); } # Message-Id - rjsf $messageid = "<$::Config{'version'}_${$}_".time."\@$domain>"; # My username $me = $Is_MSWin32 ? $ENV{'USERNAME'} : $^O eq 'os2' ? $ENV{'USER'} || $ENV{'LOGNAME'} : eval { getpwuid($<) }; # May be missing $from = $::Config{'cf_email'} if !$from && $::Config{'cf_email'} && $::Config{'cf_by'} && $me && ($me eq $::Config{'cf_by'}); } # sub Init sub Query { # Explain what perlbug is unless ($ok) { if ($thanks) { paraprint <<'EOF'; This program provides an easy way to send a thank-you message back to the authors and maintainers of perl. If you wish to submit a bug report, please run it without the -T flag (or run the program perlbug rather than perlthanks) EOF } else { paraprint <<"EOF"; This program provides an easy way to create a message reporting a bug in the core perl distribution (along with tests or patches) to the volunteers who maintain perl at $address. To send a thank-you note to $thanksaddress instead of a bug report, please run 'perlthanks'. Please do not use $0 to send test messages, test whether perl works, or to report bugs in perl modules from CPAN. Suggestions for how to find help using Perl can be found at http://perldoc.perl.org/perlcommunity.html EOF } } # Prompt for subject of message, if needed if ($subject && TrivialSubject($subject)) { $subject = ''; } unless ($subject) { print "First of all, please provide a subject for the message.\n"; if ( not $thanks) { paraprint <first_release($entry); if ($entry and not $first_release) { paraprint <:raw', $filename) or die "Unable to create report file '$filename': $!\n"; my $reptype = !$ok ? ($thanks ? 'thank-you' : 'bug') : $opt{n} ? "build failure" : "success"; print REP <) { print REP $_ } close(F) or die "Error closing '$file': $!"; } else { if ($thanks) { print REP <<'EOF'; ----------------------------------------------------------------- [Please enter your thank-you message here] [You're welcome to delete anything below this line] ----------------------------------------------------------------- EOF } else { print REP <<'EOF'; ----------------------------------------------------------------- [Please describe your issue here] [Please do not change anything below this line] ----------------------------------------------------------------- EOF } } Dump(*REP); close(REP) or die "Error closing report file: $!"; # Set up an initial report fingerprint so we can compare it later _fingerprint_lines_in_report(); } # sub Query sub Dump { local(*OUT) = @_; # these won't have been set if run with -d $category ||= 'core'; $severity ||= 'low'; print OUT <etry dit next; } elsif ( $action =~ /^[cq]/i ) { # ancel, uit Cancel(); # cancel exits } } # Ok. the user did what they needed to; return; } } sub Cancel { 1 while unlink($filename); # remove all versions under VMS print "\nQuitting without sending your message.\n"; exit(0); } sub NowWhat { # Report is done, prompt for further action if( !$opt{S} ) { while(1) { my $menu = <ile/ve if ( SaveMessage() ) { exit } } elsif ($action =~ /^(d|l|sh)/i ) { # isplay, ist, ow # Display the message open(REP, '<:raw', $filename) or die "Couldn't open file '$filename': $!\n"; while () { print $_ } close(REP) or die "Error closing report file '$filename': $!"; if ($have_attachment) { print "\n\n---\nAttachment(s):\n"; for my $att (split /\s*,\s*/, $attachments) { print " $att\n"; } } } elsif ($action =~ /^su/i) { # bject my $reply = _prompt( "Subject: $subject", "If the above subject is fine, press Enter. Otherwise, type a replacement now\nSubject"); if ($reply ne '') { unless (TrivialSubject($reply)) { $subject = $reply; print "Subject: $subject\n"; } } } elsif ($action =~ /^se/i) { # end # Send the message my $reply = _prompt( "Are you certain you want to send this message?", 'Please type "yes" if you are','no'); if ($reply =~ /^yes$/) { last; } else { paraprint <dit, e-edit # edit the message Edit(); } elsif ($action =~ /^[qc]/i) { # ancel, uit Cancel(); } elsif ($action =~ /^s/i) { paraprint < 1); close($fh); return $filename; } else { # Bah. Fall back to doing things less securely. my $dir = File::Spec->tmpdir(); $filename = "bugrep0$$"; $filename++ while -e File::Spec->catfile($dir, $filename); $filename = File::Spec->catfile($dir, $filename); } } sub paraprint { my @paragraphs = split /\n{2,}/, "@_"; for (@paragraphs) { # implicit local $_ s/(\S)\s*\n/$1 /g; write; print "\n"; } } sub _prompt { my ($explanation, $prompt, $default) = (@_); if ($explanation) { print "\n\n"; paraprint $explanation; } print $prompt. ($default ? " [$default]" :''). ": "; my $result = scalar(<>); chomp($result); $result =~ s/^\s*(.*?)\s*$/$1/s; if ($default && $result eq '') { return $default; } else { return $result; } } sub _build_header { my %attr = (@_); my $head = ''; for my $header (keys %attr) { $head .= "$header: ".$attr{$header}."\n"; } return $head; } sub _message_headers { my %headers = ( To => $address, Subject => $subject ); $headers{'Cc'} = $cc if ($cc); $headers{'Message-Id'} = $messageid if ($messageid); $headers{'Reply-To'} = $from if ($from); $headers{'From'} = $from if ($from); if ($have_attachment) { $headers{'MIME-Version'} = '1.0'; $headers{'Content-Type'} = qq{multipart/mixed; boundary=\"$mime_boundary\"}; } return \%headers; } sub _add_body_start { my $body_start = <<"BODY_START"; This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --$mime_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; format=fixed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit BODY_START return $body_start; } sub _add_attachments { my $attach = ''; for my $attachment (split /\s*,\s*/, $attachments) { my $attach_file = basename($attachment); $attach .= <<"ATTACHMENT"; --$mime_boundary Content-Type: text/x-patch; name="$attach_file" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="$attach_file" ATTACHMENT open my $attach_fh, '<:raw', $attachment or die "Couldn't open attachment '$attachment': $!\n"; while (<$attach_fh>) { $attach .= $_; } close($attach_fh) or die "Error closing attachment '$attachment': $!"; } $attach .= "\n--$mime_boundary--\n"; return $attach; } sub build_complete_message { my $content = _build_header(%{_message_headers()}) . "\n\n"; $content .= _add_body_start() if $have_attachment; open( REP, "<:raw", $filename ) or die "Couldn't open file '$filename': $!\n"; while () { $content .= $_; } close(REP) or die "Error closing report file '$filename': $!"; $content .= _add_attachments() if $have_attachment; return $content; } sub save_message_to_disk { my $file = shift; open OUTFILE, '>:raw', $file or do { warn "Couldn't open '$file': $!\n"; return undef}; print OUTFILE build_complete_message(); close(OUTFILE) or do { warn "Error closing $file: $!"; return undef }; print "\nMessage saved.\n"; return 1; } sub _send_message_vms { my $mail_from = $from; my $rcpt_to_to = $address; my $rcpt_to_cc = $cc; map { $_ =~ s/^[^<]*[^>]*//; } ($mail_from, $rcpt_to_to, $rcpt_to_cc); if ( open my $sff_fh, '|-:raw', 'MCR TCPIP$SYSTEM:TCPIP$SMTP_SFF.EXE SYS$INPUT:' ) { print $sff_fh "MAIL FROM:<$mail_from>\n"; print $sff_fh "RCPT TO:<$rcpt_to_to>\n"; print $sff_fh "RCPT TO:<$rcpt_to_cc>\n" if $rcpt_to_cc; print $sff_fh "DATA\n"; print $sff_fh build_complete_message(); my $success = close $sff_fh; if ($success ) { print "\nMessage sent\n"; return; } } die "Mail transport failed (leaving bug report in $filename): $^E\n"; } sub _send_message_mailsend { my $msg = Mail::Send->new(); my %headers = %{_message_headers()}; for my $key ( keys %headers) { $msg->add($key => $headers{$key}); } $fh = $msg->open; binmode($fh, ':raw'); print $fh _add_body_start() if $have_attachment; open(REP, "<:raw", $filename) or die "Couldn't open '$filename': $!\n"; while () { print $fh $_ } close(REP) or die "Error closing $filename: $!"; print $fh _add_attachments() if $have_attachment; $fh->close or die "Error sending mail: $!"; print "\nMessage sent.\n"; } sub _probe_for_sendmail { my $sendmail = ""; for (qw(/usr/lib/sendmail /usr/sbin/sendmail /usr/ucblib/sendmail)) { $sendmail = $_, last if -e $_; } if ( $^O eq 'os2' and $sendmail eq "" ) { my $path = $ENV{PATH}; $path =~ s:\\:/:; my @path = split /$Config{'path_sep'}/, $path; for (@path) { $sendmail = "$_/sendmail", last if -e "$_/sendmail"; $sendmail = "$_/sendmail.exe", last if -e "$_/sendmail.exe"; } } return $sendmail; } sub _send_message_sendmail { my $sendmail = _probe_for_sendmail(); unless ($sendmail) { my $message_start = !$Is_Linux && !$Is_OpenBSD ? <<'EOT' : <<'EOT'; It appears that there is no program which looks like "sendmail" on your system and that the Mail::Send library from CPAN isn't available. EOT It appears that there is no program which looks like "sendmail" on your system. EOT paraprint(<<"EOF"), die "\n"; $message_start Because of this, there's no easy way to automatically send your message. A copy of your message has been saved in '$filename' for you to send to '$address' with your normal mail client. EOF } open( SENDMAIL, "|-:raw", $sendmail, "-t", "-oi", "-f", $from ) || die "'|$sendmail -t -oi -f $from' failed: $!"; print SENDMAIL build_complete_message(); if ( close(SENDMAIL) ) { print "\nMessage sent\n"; } else { warn "\nSendmail returned status '", $? >> 8, "'\n"; } } # a strange way to check whether any significant editing # has been done: check whether any new non-empty lines # have been added. sub _fingerprint_lines_in_report { my $new_lines = 0; # read in the report template once so that # we can track whether the user does any editing. # yes, *all* whitespace is ignored. open(REP, '<:raw', $filename) or die "Unable to open report file '$filename': $!\n"; while (my $line = ) { $line =~ s/\s+//g; $new_lines++ if (!$REP{$line}); } close(REP) or die "Error closing report file '$filename': $!"; # returns the number of lines with content that wasn't there when last we looked return $new_lines; } format STDOUT = ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ~~ $_ . __END__ =head1 NAME perlbug - how to submit bug reports on Perl =head1 SYNOPSIS B B S<[ B<-v> ]> S<[ B<-a> I
]> S<[ B<-s> I ]> S<[ B<-b> I | B<-f> I ]> S<[ B<-F> I ]> S<[ B<-r> I ]> S<[ B<-e> I ]> S<[ B<-c> I | B<-C> ]> S<[ B<-S> ]> S<[ B<-t> ]> S<[ B<-d> ]> S<[ B<-A> ]> S<[ B<-h> ]> S<[ B<-T> ]> B S<[ B<-v> ]> S<[ B<-r> I ]> S<[ B<-A> ]> S<[ B<-ok> | B<-okay> | B<-nok> | B<-nokay> ]> B =head1 DESCRIPTION This program is designed to help you generate and send bug reports (and thank-you notes) about perl5 and the modules which ship with it. In most cases, you can just run it interactively from a command line without any special arguments and follow the prompts. If you have found a bug with a non-standard port (one that was not part of the I), a binary distribution, or a non-core module (such as Tk, DBI, etc), then please see the documentation that came with that distribution to determine the correct place to report bugs. If you are unable to send your report using B (most likely because your system doesn't have a way to send mail that perlbug recognizes), you may be able to use this tool to compose your report and save it to a file which you can then send to B using your regular mail client. In extreme cases, B may not work well enough on your system to guide you through composing a bug report. In those cases, you may be able to use B to get system configuration information to include in a manually composed bug report to B. When reporting a bug, please run through this checklist: =over 4 =item What version of Perl you are running? Type C at the command line to find out. =item Are you running the latest released version of perl? Look at http://www.perl.org/ to find out. If you are not using the latest released version, please try to replicate your bug on the latest stable release. Note that reports about bugs in old versions of Perl, especially those which indicate you haven't also tested the current stable release of Perl, are likely to receive less attention from the volunteers who build and maintain Perl than reports about bugs in the current release. This tool isn't appropriate for reporting bugs in any version prior to Perl 5.0. =item Are you sure what you have is a bug? A significant number of the bug reports we get turn out to be documented features in Perl. Make sure the issue you've run into isn't intentional by glancing through the documentation that comes with the Perl distribution. Given the sheer volume of Perl documentation, this isn't a trivial undertaking, but if you can point to documentation that suggests the behaviour you're seeing is I, your issue is likely to receive more attention. You may want to start with B L for pointers to common traps that new (and experienced) Perl programmers run into. If you're unsure of the meaning of an error message you've run across, B L for an explanation. If the message isn't in perldiag, it probably isn't generated by Perl. You may have luck consulting your operating system documentation instead. If you are on a non-UNIX platform B L, as some features may be unimplemented or work differently. You may be able to figure out what's going wrong using the Perl debugger. For information about how to use the debugger B L. =item Do you have a proper test case? The easier it is to reproduce your bug, the more likely it will be fixed -- if nobody can duplicate your problem, it probably won't be addressed. A good test case has most of these attributes: short, simple code; few dependencies on external commands, modules, or libraries; no platform-dependent code (unless it's a platform-specific bug); clear, simple documentation. A good test case is almost always a good candidate to be included in Perl's test suite. If you have the time, consider writing your test case so that it can be easily included into the standard test suite. =item Have you included all relevant information? Be sure to include the B error messages, if any. "Perl gave an error" is not an exact error message. If you get a core dump (or equivalent), you may use a debugger (B, B, etc) to produce a stack trace to include in the bug report. NOTE: unless your Perl has been compiled with debug info (often B<-g>), the stack trace is likely to be somewhat hard to use because it will most probably contain only the function names and not their arguments. If possible, recompile your Perl with debug info and reproduce the crash and the stack trace. =item Can you describe the bug in plain English? The easier it is to understand a reproducible bug, the more likely it will be fixed. Any insight you can provide into the problem will help a great deal. In other words, try to analyze the problem (to the extent you can) and report your discoveries. =item Can you fix the bug yourself? If so, that's great news; bug reports with patches are likely to receive significantly more attention and interest than those without patches. Please attach your patch to the report using the C<-p> option. When sending a patch, create it using C if possible, though a unified diff created with C will do nearly as well. Your patch may be returned with requests for changes, or requests for more detailed explanations about your fix. Here are a few hints for creating high-quality patches: Make sure the patch is not reversed (the first argument to diff is typically the original file, the second argument your changed file). Make sure you test your patch by applying it with C or the C program before you send it on its way. Try to follow the same style as the code you are trying to patch. Make sure your patch really does work (C, if the thing you're patching is covered by Perl's test suite). =item Can you use C to submit the report? B will, amongst other things, ensure your report includes crucial information about your version of perl. If C is unable to mail your report after you have typed it in, you may have to compose the message yourself, add the output produced by C and email it to B. If, for some reason, you cannot run C at all on your system, be sure to include the entire output produced by running C (note the uppercase V). Whether you use C or send the email manually, please make your Subject line informative. "a bug" is not informative. Neither is "perl crashes" nor is "HELP!!!". These don't help. A compact description of what's wrong is fine. =item Can you use C to submit a thank-you note? Yes, you can do this by either using the C<-T> option, or by invoking the program as C. Thank-you notes are good. It makes people smile. =back Having done your bit, please be prepared to wait, to be told the bug is in your code, or possibly to get no reply at all. The volunteers who maintain Perl are busy folks, so if your problem is an obvious bug in your own code, is difficult to understand or is a duplicate of an existing report, you may not receive a personal reply. If it is important to you that your bug be fixed, do monitor the perl5-porters@perl.org mailing list (mailing lists are moderated, your message may take a while to show up) and the commit logs to development versions of Perl, and encourage the maintainers with kind words or offers of frosty beverages. (Please do be kind to the maintainers. Harassing or flaming them is likely to have the opposite effect of the one you want.) Feel free to update the ticket about your bug on http://rt.perl.org if a new version of Perl is released and your bug is still present. =head1 OPTIONS =over 8 =item B<-a> Address to send the report to. Defaults to B. =item B<-A> Don't send a bug received acknowledgement to the reply address. Generally it is only a sensible to use this option if you are a perl maintainer actively watching perl porters for your message to arrive. =item B<-b> Body of the report. If not included on the command line, or in a file with B<-f>, you will get a chance to edit the message. =item B<-C> Don't send copy to administrator. =item B<-c> Address to send copy of report to. Defaults to the address of the local perl administrator (recorded when perl was built). =item B<-d> Data mode (the default if you redirect or pipe output). This prints out your configuration data, without mailing anything. You can use this with B<-v> to get more complete data. =item B<-e> Editor to use. =item B<-f> File containing the body of the report. Use this to quickly send a prepared message. =item B<-F> File to output the results to instead of sending as an email. Useful particularly when running perlbug on a machine with no direct internet connection. =item B<-h> Prints a brief summary of the options. =item B<-ok> Report successful build on this system to perl porters. Forces B<-S> and B<-C>. Forces and supplies values for B<-s> and B<-b>. Only prompts for a return address if it cannot guess it (for use with B). Honors return address specified with B<-r>. You can use this with B<-v> to get more complete data. Only makes a report if this system is less than 60 days old. =item B<-okay> As B<-ok> except it will report on older systems. =item B<-nok> Report unsuccessful build on this system. Forces B<-C>. Forces and supplies a value for B<-s>, then requires you to edit the report and say what went wrong. Alternatively, a prepared report may be supplied using B<-f>. Only prompts for a return address if it cannot guess it (for use with B). Honors return address specified with B<-r>. You can use this with B<-v> to get more complete data. Only makes a report if this system is less than 60 days old. =item B<-nokay> As B<-nok> except it will report on older systems. =item B<-p> The names of one or more patch files or other text attachments to be included with the report. Multiple files must be separated with commas. =item B<-r> Your return address. The program will ask you to confirm its default if you don't use this option. =item B<-S> Send without asking for confirmation. =item B<-s> Subject to include with the message. You will be prompted if you don't supply one on the command line. =item B<-t> Test mode. The target address defaults to B. =item B<-T> Send a thank-you note instead of a bug report. =item B<-v> Include verbose configuration data in the report. =back =head1 AUTHORS Kenneth Albanowski (Ekjahds@kjahds.comE), subsequently Itored by Gurusamy Sarathy (Egsar@activestate.comE), Tom Christiansen (Etchrist@perl.comE), Nathan Torkington (Egnat@frii.comE), Charles F. Randall (Ecfr@pobox.comE), Mike Guy (Emjtg@cam.ac.ukE), Dominic Dunlop (Edomo@computer.orgE), Hugo van der Sanden (Ehv@crypt.orgE), Jarkko Hietaniemi (Ejhi@iki.fiE), Chris Nandor (Epudge@pobox.comE), Jon Orwant (Eorwant@media.mit.eduE, Richard Foley (Erichard.foley@rfi.netE), Jesse Vincent (Ejesse@bestpractical.comE), and Craig A. Berry (Ecraigberry@mac.comE). =head1 SEE ALSO perl(1), perldebug(1), perldiag(1), perlport(1), perltrap(1), diff(1), patch(1), dbx(1), gdb(1) =head1 BUGS None known (guess what must have been used to report them?) =cut !NO!SUBS! close OUT or die "Can't close $file: $!"; chmod 0755, $file or die "Can't reset permissions for $file: $!\n"; exec("$Config{'eunicefix'} $file") if $Config{'eunicefix'} ne ':'; chdir $origdir;