This is a live mirror of the Perl 5 development currently hosted at https://github.com/perl/perl5
Applied a patch from David Fifield to fix an error message in perlipc.pod
[perl5.git] / pod / perlhack.pod
CommitLineData
e8cd7eae
GS
1=head1 NAME
2
3perlhack - How to hack at the Perl internals
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7This document attempts to explain how Perl development takes place,
8and ends with some suggestions for people wanting to become bona fide
9porters.
10
11The perl5-porters mailing list is where the Perl standard distribution
12is maintained and developed. The list can get anywhere from 10 to 150
13messages a day, depending on the heatedness of the debate. Most days
14there are two or three patches, extensions, features, or bugs being
15discussed at a time.
16
f8e3975a 17A searchable archive of the list is at either:
e8cd7eae
GS
18
19 http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl5-porters/
20
f8e3975a
IP
21or
22
23 http://archive.develooper.com/perl5-porters@perl.org/
24
e8cd7eae
GS
25List subscribers (the porters themselves) come in several flavours.
26Some are quiet curious lurkers, who rarely pitch in and instead watch
27the ongoing development to ensure they're forewarned of new changes or
28features in Perl. Some are representatives of vendors, who are there
29to make sure that Perl continues to compile and work on their
30platforms. Some patch any reported bug that they know how to fix,
31some are actively patching their pet area (threads, Win32, the regexp
32engine), while others seem to do nothing but complain. In other
33words, it's your usual mix of technical people.
34
35Over this group of porters presides Larry Wall. He has the final word
f6c51b38 36in what does and does not change in the Perl language. Various
b432a672
AL
37releases of Perl are shepherded by a "pumpking", a porter
38responsible for gathering patches, deciding on a patch-by-patch,
f6c51b38 39feature-by-feature basis what will and will not go into the release.
caf100c0 40For instance, Gurusamy Sarathy was the pumpking for the 5.6 release of
961f29c6 41Perl, and Jarkko Hietaniemi was the pumpking for the 5.8 release, and
1a88dbf8 42Rafael Garcia-Suarez holds the pumpking crown for the 5.10 release.
e8cd7eae
GS
43
44In addition, various people are pumpkings for different things. For
961f29c6
MB
45instance, Andy Dougherty and Jarkko Hietaniemi did a grand job as the
46I<Configure> pumpkin up till the 5.8 release. For the 5.10 release
47H.Merijn Brand took over.
e8cd7eae
GS
48
49Larry sees Perl development along the lines of the US government:
50there's the Legislature (the porters), the Executive branch (the
51pumpkings), and the Supreme Court (Larry). The legislature can
52discuss and submit patches to the executive branch all they like, but
53the executive branch is free to veto them. Rarely, the Supreme Court
54will side with the executive branch over the legislature, or the
55legislature over the executive branch. Mostly, however, the
56legislature and the executive branch are supposed to get along and
57work out their differences without impeachment or court cases.
58
59You might sometimes see reference to Rule 1 and Rule 2. Larry's power
60as Supreme Court is expressed in The Rules:
61
62=over 4
63
64=item 1
65
66Larry is always by definition right about how Perl should behave.
67This means he has final veto power on the core functionality.
68
69=item 2
70
71Larry is allowed to change his mind about any matter at a later date,
72regardless of whether he previously invoked Rule 1.
73
74=back
75
76Got that? Larry is always right, even when he was wrong. It's rare
77to see either Rule exercised, but they are often alluded to.
78
79New features and extensions to the language are contentious, because
80the criteria used by the pumpkings, Larry, and other porters to decide
81which features should be implemented and incorporated are not codified
82in a few small design goals as with some other languages. Instead,
83the heuristics are flexible and often difficult to fathom. Here is
84one person's list, roughly in decreasing order of importance, of
85heuristics that new features have to be weighed against:
86
87=over 4
88
89=item Does concept match the general goals of Perl?
90
91These haven't been written anywhere in stone, but one approximation
92is:
93
94 1. Keep it fast, simple, and useful.
95 2. Keep features/concepts as orthogonal as possible.
96 3. No arbitrary limits (platforms, data sizes, cultures).
97 4. Keep it open and exciting to use/patch/advocate Perl everywhere.
98 5. Either assimilate new technologies, or build bridges to them.
99
100=item Where is the implementation?
101
102All the talk in the world is useless without an implementation. In
103almost every case, the person or people who argue for a new feature
104will be expected to be the ones who implement it. Porters capable
105of coding new features have their own agendas, and are not available
106to implement your (possibly good) idea.
107
108=item Backwards compatibility
109
110It's a cardinal sin to break existing Perl programs. New warnings are
111contentious--some say that a program that emits warnings is not
112broken, while others say it is. Adding keywords has the potential to
113break programs, changing the meaning of existing token sequences or
114functions might break programs.
115
116=item Could it be a module instead?
117
118Perl 5 has extension mechanisms, modules and XS, specifically to avoid
119the need to keep changing the Perl interpreter. You can write modules
120that export functions, you can give those functions prototypes so they
121can be called like built-in functions, you can even write XS code to
122mess with the runtime data structures of the Perl interpreter if you
123want to implement really complicated things. If it can be done in a
124module instead of in the core, it's highly unlikely to be added.
125
126=item Is the feature generic enough?
127
128Is this something that only the submitter wants added to the language,
129or would it be broadly useful? Sometimes, instead of adding a feature
130with a tight focus, the porters might decide to wait until someone
131implements the more generalized feature. For instance, instead of
b432a672 132implementing a "delayed evaluation" feature, the porters are waiting
e8cd7eae
GS
133for a macro system that would permit delayed evaluation and much more.
134
135=item Does it potentially introduce new bugs?
136
137Radical rewrites of large chunks of the Perl interpreter have the
138potential to introduce new bugs. The smaller and more localized the
139change, the better.
140
141=item Does it preclude other desirable features?
142
143A patch is likely to be rejected if it closes off future avenues of
144development. For instance, a patch that placed a true and final
145interpretation on prototypes is likely to be rejected because there
146are still options for the future of prototypes that haven't been
147addressed.
148
149=item Is the implementation robust?
150
151Good patches (tight code, complete, correct) stand more chance of
152going in. Sloppy or incorrect patches might be placed on the back
153burner until the pumpking has time to fix, or might be discarded
154altogether without further notice.
155
156=item Is the implementation generic enough to be portable?
157
158The worst patches make use of a system-specific features. It's highly
353c6505 159unlikely that non-portable additions to the Perl language will be
e8cd7eae
GS
160accepted.
161
a936dd3c
NC
162=item Is the implementation tested?
163
164Patches which change behaviour (fixing bugs or introducing new features)
165must include regression tests to verify that everything works as expected.
166Without tests provided by the original author, how can anyone else changing
167perl in the future be sure that they haven't unwittingly broken the behaviour
168the patch implements? And without tests, how can the patch's author be
9d077eaa 169confident that his/her hard work put into the patch won't be accidentally
a936dd3c
NC
170thrown away by someone in the future?
171
e8cd7eae
GS
172=item Is there enough documentation?
173
174Patches without documentation are probably ill-thought out or
175incomplete. Nothing can be added without documentation, so submitting
176a patch for the appropriate manpages as well as the source code is
a936dd3c 177always a good idea.
e8cd7eae
GS
178
179=item Is there another way to do it?
180
b432a672
AL
181Larry said "Although the Perl Slogan is I<There's More Than One Way
182to Do It>, I hesitate to make 10 ways to do something". This is a
e8cd7eae
GS
183tricky heuristic to navigate, though--one man's essential addition is
184another man's pointless cruft.
185
186=item Does it create too much work?
187
188Work for the pumpking, work for Perl programmers, work for module
189authors, ... Perl is supposed to be easy.
190
f6c51b38
GS
191=item Patches speak louder than words
192
193Working code is always preferred to pie-in-the-sky ideas. A patch to
194add a feature stands a much higher chance of making it to the language
195than does a random feature request, no matter how fervently argued the
b432a672 196request might be. This ties into "Will it be useful?", as the fact
f6c51b38
GS
197that someone took the time to make the patch demonstrates a strong
198desire for the feature.
199
e8cd7eae
GS
200=back
201
b432a672
AL
202If you're on the list, you might hear the word "core" bandied
203around. It refers to the standard distribution. "Hacking on the
204core" means you're changing the C source code to the Perl
205interpreter. "A core module" is one that ships with Perl.
e8cd7eae 206
a1f349fd
MB
207=head2 Keeping in sync
208
e8cd7eae 209The source code to the Perl interpreter, in its different versions, is
b16c2e4a
RGS
210kept in a repository managed by the git revision control system. The
211pumpkings and a few others have write access to the repository to check in
212changes.
2be4c08b 213
b16c2e4a 214How to clone and use the git perl repository is described in L<perlrepository>.
2be4c08b 215
b16c2e4a 216You can also choose to use rsync to get a copy of the current source tree
fe749c9a 217for the bleadperl branch and all maintenance branches :
0cfb3454 218
b16c2e4a
RGS
219 $ rsync -avz rsync://perl5.git.perl.org/APC/perl-current .
220 $ rsync -avz rsync://perl5.git.perl.org/APC/perl-5.10.x .
221 $ rsync -avz rsync://perl5.git.perl.org/APC/perl-5.8.x .
222 $ rsync -avz rsync://perl5.git.perl.org/APC/perl-5.6.x .
223 $ rsync -avz rsync://perl5.git.perl.org/APC/perl-5.005xx .
224
225(Add the C<--delete> option to remove leftover files)
0cfb3454
GS
226
227You may also want to subscribe to the perl5-changes mailing list to
228receive a copy of each patch that gets submitted to the maintenance
229and development "branches" of the perl repository. See
230http://lists.perl.org/ for subscription information.
231
a1f349fd
MB
232If you are a member of the perl5-porters mailing list, it is a good
233thing to keep in touch with the most recent changes. If not only to
234verify if what you would have posted as a bug report isn't already
235solved in the most recent available perl development branch, also
236known as perl-current, bleading edge perl, bleedperl or bleadperl.
2be4c08b
GS
237
238Needless to say, the source code in perl-current is usually in a perpetual
239state of evolution. You should expect it to be very buggy. Do B<not> use
240it for any purpose other than testing and development.
e8cd7eae 241
3fd28c4e 242=head2 Perlbug administration
52315700 243
902821cc
RGS
244There is a single remote administrative interface for modifying bug status,
245category, open issues etc. using the B<RT> bugtracker system, maintained
246by Robert Spier. Become an administrator, and close any bugs you can get
3fd28c4e 247your sticky mitts on:
52315700 248
39417508 249 http://bugs.perl.org/
52315700 250
3fd28c4e 251To email the bug system administrators:
52315700 252
3fd28c4e 253 "perlbug-admin" <perlbug-admin@perl.org>
52315700 254
a1f349fd
MB
255=head2 Submitting patches
256
f7e1e956
MS
257Always submit patches to I<perl5-porters@perl.org>. If you're
258patching a core module and there's an author listed, send the author a
259copy (see L<Patching a core module>). This lets other porters review
260your patch, which catches a surprising number of errors in patches.
b16c2e4a
RGS
261Please patch against the latest B<development> version. (e.g., even if
262you're fixing a bug in the 5.8 track, patch against the C<blead> branch in
263the git repository.)
824d470b
RGS
264
265If changes are accepted, they are applied to the development branch. Then
fe749c9a 266the maintenance pumpking decides which of those patches is to be
b16c2e4a
RGS
267backported to the maint branch. Only patches that survive the heat of the
268development branch get applied to maintenance versions.
f7e1e956 269
2c8694a7
JH
270Your patch should update the documentation and test suite. See
271L<Writing a test>. If you have added or removed files in the distribution,
272edit the MANIFEST file accordingly, sort the MANIFEST file using
273C<make manisort>, and include those changes as part of your patch.
e8cd7eae 274
824d470b
RGS
275Patching documentation also follows the same order: if accepted, a patch
276is first applied to B<development>, and if relevant then it's backported
277to B<maintenance>. (With an exception for some patches that document
278behaviour that only appears in the maintenance branch, but which has
279changed in the development version.)
280
e8cd7eae
GS
281To report a bug in Perl, use the program I<perlbug> which comes with
282Perl (if you can't get Perl to work, send mail to the address
f18956b7 283I<perlbug@perl.org> or I<perlbug@perl.com>). Reporting bugs through
e8cd7eae 284I<perlbug> feeds into the automated bug-tracking system, access to
902821cc 285which is provided through the web at http://rt.perl.org/rt3/ . It
e8cd7eae
GS
286often pays to check the archives of the perl5-porters mailing list to
287see whether the bug you're reporting has been reported before, and if
288so whether it was considered a bug. See above for the location of
289the searchable archives.
290
f224927c 291The CPAN testers ( http://testers.cpan.org/ ) are a group of
ba139f7d 292volunteers who test CPAN modules on a variety of platforms. Perl
d3e8af89
GS
293Smokers ( http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.daily-build and
294http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.daily-build.reports/ )
902821cc 295automatically test Perl source releases on platforms with various
d3e8af89
GS
296configurations. Both efforts welcome volunteers. In order to get
297involved in smoke testing of the perl itself visit
298L<http://search.cpan.org/dist/Test-Smoke>. In order to start smoke
68cbce50
CBW
299testing CPAN modules visit L<http://search.cpan.org/dist/CPANPLUS-YACSmoke/>
300or L<http://search.cpan.org/dist/minismokebox/> or
d3e8af89 301L<http://search.cpan.org/dist/CPAN-Reporter/>.
e8cd7eae 302
e8cd7eae
GS
303It's a good idea to read and lurk for a while before chipping in.
304That way you'll get to see the dynamic of the conversations, learn the
305personalities of the players, and hopefully be better prepared to make
306a useful contribution when do you speak up.
307
308If after all this you still think you want to join the perl5-porters
f6c51b38
GS
309mailing list, send mail to I<perl5-porters-subscribe@perl.org>. To
310unsubscribe, send mail to I<perl5-porters-unsubscribe@perl.org>.
e8cd7eae 311
a422fd2d
SC
312To hack on the Perl guts, you'll need to read the following things:
313
314=over 3
315
316=item L<perlguts>
317
318This is of paramount importance, since it's the documentation of what
319goes where in the Perl source. Read it over a couple of times and it
320might start to make sense - don't worry if it doesn't yet, because the
321best way to study it is to read it in conjunction with poking at Perl
322source, and we'll do that later on.
323
2e5b5004
RGS
324Gisle Aas's illustrated perlguts (also known as I<illguts>) is wonderful,
325although a little out of date with regard to some size details; the
326various SV structures have since been reworked for smaller memory footprint.
327The fundamentals are right however, and the pictures are very helpful.
de10be12 328
2e5b5004 329L<http://www.perl.org/tpc/1998/Perl_Language_and_Modules/Perl%20Illustrated/>
a422fd2d
SC
330
331=item L<perlxstut> and L<perlxs>
332
333A working knowledge of XSUB programming is incredibly useful for core
334hacking; XSUBs use techniques drawn from the PP code, the portion of the
335guts that actually executes a Perl program. It's a lot gentler to learn
336those techniques from simple examples and explanation than from the core
337itself.
338
339=item L<perlapi>
340
341The documentation for the Perl API explains what some of the internal
342functions do, as well as the many macros used in the source.
343
344=item F<Porting/pumpkin.pod>
345
346This is a collection of words of wisdom for a Perl porter; some of it is
347only useful to the pumpkin holder, but most of it applies to anyone
348wanting to go about Perl development.
349
350=item The perl5-porters FAQ
351
902821cc
RGS
352This should be available from http://dev.perl.org/perl5/docs/p5p-faq.html .
353It contains hints on reading perl5-porters, information on how
354perl5-porters works and how Perl development in general works.
a422fd2d
SC
355
356=back
357
358=head2 Finding Your Way Around
359
360Perl maintenance can be split into a number of areas, and certain people
361(pumpkins) will have responsibility for each area. These areas sometimes
362correspond to files or directories in the source kit. Among the areas are:
363
364=over 3
365
366=item Core modules
367
c53fdc5e
RF
368Modules shipped as part of the Perl core live in various subdirectories, where
369two are dedicated to core-only modules, and two are for the dual-life modules
370which live on CPAN and may be maintained separately with respect to the Perl
371core:
372
373 lib/ is for pure-Perl modules, which exist in the core only.
374
375 ext/ is for XS extensions, and modules with special Makefile.PL requirements, which exist in the core only.
376
377 cpan/ is for dual-life modules, where the CPAN module is canonical (should be patched first).
378
379 dist/ is for dual-life modules, where the blead source is canonical.
a422fd2d 380
f7e1e956
MS
381=item Tests
382
383There are tests for nearly all the modules, built-ins and major bits
384of functionality. Test files all have a .t suffix. Module tests live
385in the F<lib/> and F<ext/> directories next to the module being
386tested. Others live in F<t/>. See L<Writing a test>
387
a422fd2d
SC
388=item Documentation
389
390Documentation maintenance includes looking after everything in the
391F<pod/> directory, (as well as contributing new documentation) and
392the documentation to the modules in core.
393
394=item Configure
395
396The configure process is the way we make Perl portable across the
397myriad of operating systems it supports. Responsibility for the
398configure, build and installation process, as well as the overall
399portability of the core code rests with the configure pumpkin - others
400help out with individual operating systems.
401
402The files involved are the operating system directories, (F<win32/>,
403F<os2/>, F<vms/> and so on) the shell scripts which generate F<config.h>
404and F<Makefile>, as well as the metaconfig files which generate
405F<Configure>. (metaconfig isn't included in the core distribution.)
406
407=item Interpreter
408
409And of course, there's the core of the Perl interpreter itself. Let's
410have a look at that in a little more detail.
411
412=back
413
414Before we leave looking at the layout, though, don't forget that
415F<MANIFEST> contains not only the file names in the Perl distribution,
416but short descriptions of what's in them, too. For an overview of the
417important files, try this:
418
419 perl -lne 'print if /^[^\/]+\.[ch]\s+/' MANIFEST
420
421=head2 Elements of the interpreter
422
423The work of the interpreter has two main stages: compiling the code
424into the internal representation, or bytecode, and then executing it.
425L<perlguts/Compiled code> explains exactly how the compilation stage
426happens.
427
428Here is a short breakdown of perl's operation:
429
430=over 3
431
432=item Startup
433
434The action begins in F<perlmain.c>. (or F<miniperlmain.c> for miniperl)
435This is very high-level code, enough to fit on a single screen, and it
436resembles the code found in L<perlembed>; most of the real action takes
437place in F<perl.c>
438
9df8f87f
LB
439F<perlmain.c> is generated by L<writemain> from F<miniperlmain.c> at
440make time, so you should make perl to follow this along.
441
a422fd2d 442First, F<perlmain.c> allocates some memory and constructs a Perl
9df8f87f 443interpreter, along these lines:
a422fd2d
SC
444
445 1 PERL_SYS_INIT3(&argc,&argv,&env);
446 2
447 3 if (!PL_do_undump) {
448 4 my_perl = perl_alloc();
449 5 if (!my_perl)
450 6 exit(1);
451 7 perl_construct(my_perl);
452 8 PL_perl_destruct_level = 0;
453 9 }
454
455Line 1 is a macro, and its definition is dependent on your operating
456system. Line 3 references C<PL_do_undump>, a global variable - all
457global variables in Perl start with C<PL_>. This tells you whether the
458current running program was created with the C<-u> flag to perl and then
459F<undump>, which means it's going to be false in any sane context.
460
461Line 4 calls a function in F<perl.c> to allocate memory for a Perl
462interpreter. It's quite a simple function, and the guts of it looks like
463this:
464
465 my_perl = (PerlInterpreter*)PerlMem_malloc(sizeof(PerlInterpreter));
466
467Here you see an example of Perl's system abstraction, which we'll see
468later: C<PerlMem_malloc> is either your system's C<malloc>, or Perl's
469own C<malloc> as defined in F<malloc.c> if you selected that option at
470configure time.
471
9df8f87f
LB
472Next, in line 7, we construct the interpreter using perl_construct,
473also in F<perl.c>; this sets up all the special variables that Perl
474needs, the stacks, and so on.
a422fd2d
SC
475
476Now we pass Perl the command line options, and tell it to go:
477
478 exitstatus = perl_parse(my_perl, xs_init, argc, argv, (char **)NULL);
9df8f87f
LB
479 if (!exitstatus)
480 perl_run(my_perl);
481
482 exitstatus = perl_destruct(my_perl);
a422fd2d 483
9df8f87f 484 perl_free(my_perl);
a422fd2d
SC
485
486C<perl_parse> is actually a wrapper around C<S_parse_body>, as defined
487in F<perl.c>, which processes the command line options, sets up any
488statically linked XS modules, opens the program and calls C<yyparse> to
489parse it.
490
491=item Parsing
492
493The aim of this stage is to take the Perl source, and turn it into an op
494tree. We'll see what one of those looks like later. Strictly speaking,
495there's three things going on here.
496
497C<yyparse>, the parser, lives in F<perly.c>, although you're better off
498reading the original YACC input in F<perly.y>. (Yes, Virginia, there
499B<is> a YACC grammar for Perl!) The job of the parser is to take your
b432a672 500code and "understand" it, splitting it into sentences, deciding which
a422fd2d
SC
501operands go with which operators and so on.
502
503The parser is nobly assisted by the lexer, which chunks up your input
504into tokens, and decides what type of thing each token is: a variable
505name, an operator, a bareword, a subroutine, a core function, and so on.
506The main point of entry to the lexer is C<yylex>, and that and its
507associated routines can be found in F<toke.c>. Perl isn't much like
508other computer languages; it's highly context sensitive at times, it can
509be tricky to work out what sort of token something is, or where a token
510ends. As such, there's a lot of interplay between the tokeniser and the
511parser, which can get pretty frightening if you're not used to it.
512
513As the parser understands a Perl program, it builds up a tree of
514operations for the interpreter to perform during execution. The routines
515which construct and link together the various operations are to be found
516in F<op.c>, and will be examined later.
517
518=item Optimization
519
520Now the parsing stage is complete, and the finished tree represents
521the operations that the Perl interpreter needs to perform to execute our
522program. Next, Perl does a dry run over the tree looking for
523optimisations: constant expressions such as C<3 + 4> will be computed
524now, and the optimizer will also see if any multiple operations can be
525replaced with a single one. For instance, to fetch the variable C<$foo>,
526instead of grabbing the glob C<*foo> and looking at the scalar
527component, the optimizer fiddles the op tree to use a function which
528directly looks up the scalar in question. The main optimizer is C<peep>
529in F<op.c>, and many ops have their own optimizing functions.
530
531=item Running
532
533Now we're finally ready to go: we have compiled Perl byte code, and all
534that's left to do is run it. The actual execution is done by the
535C<runops_standard> function in F<run.c>; more specifically, it's done by
536these three innocent looking lines:
537
538 while ((PL_op = CALL_FPTR(PL_op->op_ppaddr)(aTHX))) {
539 PERL_ASYNC_CHECK();
540 }
541
542You may be more comfortable with the Perl version of that:
543
544 PERL_ASYNC_CHECK() while $Perl::op = &{$Perl::op->{function}};
545
546Well, maybe not. Anyway, each op contains a function pointer, which
547stipulates the function which will actually carry out the operation.
548This function will return the next op in the sequence - this allows for
549things like C<if> which choose the next op dynamically at run time.
550The C<PERL_ASYNC_CHECK> makes sure that things like signals interrupt
551execution if required.
552
553The actual functions called are known as PP code, and they're spread
b432a672 554between four files: F<pp_hot.c> contains the "hot" code, which is most
a422fd2d
SC
555often used and highly optimized, F<pp_sys.c> contains all the
556system-specific functions, F<pp_ctl.c> contains the functions which
557implement control structures (C<if>, C<while> and the like) and F<pp.c>
558contains everything else. These are, if you like, the C code for Perl's
559built-in functions and operators.
560
dfc98234
DM
561Note that each C<pp_> function is expected to return a pointer to the next
562op. Calls to perl subs (and eval blocks) are handled within the same
563runops loop, and do not consume extra space on the C stack. For example,
564C<pp_entersub> and C<pp_entertry> just push a C<CxSUB> or C<CxEVAL> block
565struct onto the context stack which contain the address of the op
566following the sub call or eval. They then return the first op of that sub
567or eval block, and so execution continues of that sub or block. Later, a
568C<pp_leavesub> or C<pp_leavetry> op pops the C<CxSUB> or C<CxEVAL>,
569retrieves the return op from it, and returns it.
570
571=item Exception handing
572
0503309d 573Perl's exception handing (i.e. C<die> etc.) is built on top of the low-level
dfc98234 574C<setjmp()>/C<longjmp()> C-library functions. These basically provide a
28a5cf3b 575way to capture the current PC and SP registers and later restore them; i.e.
dfc98234
DM
576a C<longjmp()> continues at the point in code where a previous C<setjmp()>
577was done, with anything further up on the C stack being lost. This is why
578code should always save values using C<SAVE_FOO> rather than in auto
579variables.
580
581The perl core wraps C<setjmp()> etc in the macros C<JMPENV_PUSH> and
582C<JMPENV_JUMP>. The basic rule of perl exceptions is that C<exit>, and
583C<die> (in the absence of C<eval>) perform a C<JMPENV_JUMP(2)>, while
584C<die> within C<eval> does a C<JMPENV_JUMP(3)>.
585
586At entry points to perl, such as C<perl_parse()>, C<perl_run()> and
587C<call_sv(cv, G_EVAL)> each does a C<JMPENV_PUSH>, then enter a runops
588loop or whatever, and handle possible exception returns. For a 2 return,
589final cleanup is performed, such as popping stacks and calling C<CHECK> or
590C<END> blocks. Amongst other things, this is how scope cleanup still
591occurs during an C<exit>.
592
593If a C<die> can find a C<CxEVAL> block on the context stack, then the
594stack is popped to that level and the return op in that block is assigned
595to C<PL_restartop>; then a C<JMPENV_JUMP(3)> is performed. This normally
596passes control back to the guard. In the case of C<perl_run> and
597C<call_sv>, a non-null C<PL_restartop> triggers re-entry to the runops
598loop. The is the normal way that C<die> or C<croak> is handled within an
599C<eval>.
600
601Sometimes ops are executed within an inner runops loop, such as tie, sort
602or overload code. In this case, something like
603
604 sub FETCH { eval { die } }
605
606would cause a longjmp right back to the guard in C<perl_run>, popping both
607runops loops, which is clearly incorrect. One way to avoid this is for the
608tie code to do a C<JMPENV_PUSH> before executing C<FETCH> in the inner
609runops loop, but for efficiency reasons, perl in fact just sets a flag,
610using C<CATCH_SET(TRUE)>. The C<pp_require>, C<pp_entereval> and
611C<pp_entertry> ops check this flag, and if true, they call C<docatch>,
612which does a C<JMPENV_PUSH> and starts a new runops level to execute the
613code, rather than doing it on the current loop.
614
615As a further optimisation, on exit from the eval block in the C<FETCH>,
616execution of the code following the block is still carried on in the inner
617loop. When an exception is raised, C<docatch> compares the C<JMPENV>
618level of the C<CxEVAL> with C<PL_top_env> and if they differ, just
619re-throws the exception. In this way any inner loops get popped.
620
621Here's an example.
622
623 1: eval { tie @a, 'A' };
624 2: sub A::TIEARRAY {
625 3: eval { die };
626 4: die;
627 5: }
628
629To run this code, C<perl_run> is called, which does a C<JMPENV_PUSH> then
630enters a runops loop. This loop executes the eval and tie ops on line 1,
631with the eval pushing a C<CxEVAL> onto the context stack.
632
633The C<pp_tie> does a C<CATCH_SET(TRUE)>, then starts a second runops loop
634to execute the body of C<TIEARRAY>. When it executes the entertry op on
635line 3, C<CATCH_GET> is true, so C<pp_entertry> calls C<docatch> which
636does a C<JMPENV_PUSH> and starts a third runops loop, which then executes
637the die op. At this point the C call stack looks like this:
638
639 Perl_pp_die
640 Perl_runops # third loop
641 S_docatch_body
642 S_docatch
643 Perl_pp_entertry
644 Perl_runops # second loop
645 S_call_body
646 Perl_call_sv
647 Perl_pp_tie
648 Perl_runops # first loop
649 S_run_body
650 perl_run
651 main
652
653and the context and data stacks, as shown by C<-Dstv>, look like:
654
655 STACK 0: MAIN
656 CX 0: BLOCK =>
657 CX 1: EVAL => AV() PV("A"\0)
658 retop=leave
659 STACK 1: MAGIC
660 CX 0: SUB =>
661 retop=(null)
662 CX 1: EVAL => *
663 retop=nextstate
664
665The die pops the first C<CxEVAL> off the context stack, sets
666C<PL_restartop> from it, does a C<JMPENV_JUMP(3)>, and control returns to
667the top C<docatch>. This then starts another third-level runops level,
668which executes the nextstate, pushmark and die ops on line 4. At the point
669that the second C<pp_die> is called, the C call stack looks exactly like
670that above, even though we are no longer within an inner eval; this is
671because of the optimization mentioned earlier. However, the context stack
672now looks like this, ie with the top CxEVAL popped:
673
674 STACK 0: MAIN
675 CX 0: BLOCK =>
676 CX 1: EVAL => AV() PV("A"\0)
677 retop=leave
678 STACK 1: MAGIC
679 CX 0: SUB =>
680 retop=(null)
681
682The die on line 4 pops the context stack back down to the CxEVAL, leaving
683it as:
684
685 STACK 0: MAIN
686 CX 0: BLOCK =>
687
688As usual, C<PL_restartop> is extracted from the C<CxEVAL>, and a
689C<JMPENV_JUMP(3)> done, which pops the C stack back to the docatch:
690
691 S_docatch
692 Perl_pp_entertry
693 Perl_runops # second loop
694 S_call_body
695 Perl_call_sv
696 Perl_pp_tie
697 Perl_runops # first loop
698 S_run_body
699 perl_run
700 main
701
702In this case, because the C<JMPENV> level recorded in the C<CxEVAL>
703differs from the current one, C<docatch> just does a C<JMPENV_JUMP(3)>
704and the C stack unwinds to:
705
706 perl_run
707 main
708
709Because C<PL_restartop> is non-null, C<run_body> starts a new runops loop
710and execution continues.
711
a422fd2d
SC
712=back
713
714=head2 Internal Variable Types
715
716You should by now have had a look at L<perlguts>, which tells you about
717Perl's internal variable types: SVs, HVs, AVs and the rest. If not, do
718that now.
719
720These variables are used not only to represent Perl-space variables, but
721also any constants in the code, as well as some structures completely
722internal to Perl. The symbol table, for instance, is an ordinary Perl
723hash. Your code is represented by an SV as it's read into the parser;
724any program files you call are opened via ordinary Perl filehandles, and
725so on.
726
727The core L<Devel::Peek|Devel::Peek> module lets us examine SVs from a
728Perl program. Let's see, for instance, how Perl treats the constant
729C<"hello">.
730
731 % perl -MDevel::Peek -e 'Dump("hello")'
732 1 SV = PV(0xa041450) at 0xa04ecbc
733 2 REFCNT = 1
734 3 FLAGS = (POK,READONLY,pPOK)
735 4 PV = 0xa0484e0 "hello"\0
736 5 CUR = 5
737 6 LEN = 6
738
739Reading C<Devel::Peek> output takes a bit of practise, so let's go
740through it line by line.
741
742Line 1 tells us we're looking at an SV which lives at C<0xa04ecbc> in
743memory. SVs themselves are very simple structures, but they contain a
744pointer to a more complex structure. In this case, it's a PV, a
745structure which holds a string value, at location C<0xa041450>. Line 2
746is the reference count; there are no other references to this data, so
747it's 1.
748
749Line 3 are the flags for this SV - it's OK to use it as a PV, it's a
750read-only SV (because it's a constant) and the data is a PV internally.
751Next we've got the contents of the string, starting at location
752C<0xa0484e0>.
753
754Line 5 gives us the current length of the string - note that this does
755B<not> include the null terminator. Line 6 is not the length of the
756string, but the length of the currently allocated buffer; as the string
757grows, Perl automatically extends the available storage via a routine
758called C<SvGROW>.
759
760You can get at any of these quantities from C very easily; just add
761C<Sv> to the name of the field shown in the snippet, and you've got a
762macro which will return the value: C<SvCUR(sv)> returns the current
763length of the string, C<SvREFCOUNT(sv)> returns the reference count,
764C<SvPV(sv, len)> returns the string itself with its length, and so on.
765More macros to manipulate these properties can be found in L<perlguts>.
766
767Let's take an example of manipulating a PV, from C<sv_catpvn>, in F<sv.c>
768
769 1 void
770 2 Perl_sv_catpvn(pTHX_ register SV *sv, register const char *ptr, register STRLEN len)
771 3 {
772 4 STRLEN tlen;
773 5 char *junk;
774
775 6 junk = SvPV_force(sv, tlen);
776 7 SvGROW(sv, tlen + len + 1);
777 8 if (ptr == junk)
778 9 ptr = SvPVX(sv);
779 10 Move(ptr,SvPVX(sv)+tlen,len,char);
780 11 SvCUR(sv) += len;
781 12 *SvEND(sv) = '\0';
782 13 (void)SvPOK_only_UTF8(sv); /* validate pointer */
783 14 SvTAINT(sv);
784 15 }
785
786This is a function which adds a string, C<ptr>, of length C<len> onto
787the end of the PV stored in C<sv>. The first thing we do in line 6 is
788make sure that the SV B<has> a valid PV, by calling the C<SvPV_force>
789macro to force a PV. As a side effect, C<tlen> gets set to the current
790value of the PV, and the PV itself is returned to C<junk>.
791
b1866b2d 792In line 7, we make sure that the SV will have enough room to accommodate
a422fd2d
SC
793the old string, the new string and the null terminator. If C<LEN> isn't
794big enough, C<SvGROW> will reallocate space for us.
795
796Now, if C<junk> is the same as the string we're trying to add, we can
797grab the string directly from the SV; C<SvPVX> is the address of the PV
798in the SV.
799
800Line 10 does the actual catenation: the C<Move> macro moves a chunk of
801memory around: we move the string C<ptr> to the end of the PV - that's
802the start of the PV plus its current length. We're moving C<len> bytes
803of type C<char>. After doing so, we need to tell Perl we've extended the
804string, by altering C<CUR> to reflect the new length. C<SvEND> is a
805macro which gives us the end of the string, so that needs to be a
806C<"\0">.
807
808Line 13 manipulates the flags; since we've changed the PV, any IV or NV
809values will no longer be valid: if we have C<$a=10; $a.="6";> we don't
1e54db1a 810want to use the old IV of 10. C<SvPOK_only_utf8> is a special UTF-8-aware
a422fd2d
SC
811version of C<SvPOK_only>, a macro which turns off the IOK and NOK flags
812and turns on POK. The final C<SvTAINT> is a macro which launders tainted
813data if taint mode is turned on.
814
815AVs and HVs are more complicated, but SVs are by far the most common
816variable type being thrown around. Having seen something of how we
817manipulate these, let's go on and look at how the op tree is
818constructed.
819
820=head2 Op Trees
821
822First, what is the op tree, anyway? The op tree is the parsed
823representation of your program, as we saw in our section on parsing, and
824it's the sequence of operations that Perl goes through to execute your
825program, as we saw in L</Running>.
826
827An op is a fundamental operation that Perl can perform: all the built-in
828functions and operators are ops, and there are a series of ops which
829deal with concepts the interpreter needs internally - entering and
830leaving a block, ending a statement, fetching a variable, and so on.
831
832The op tree is connected in two ways: you can imagine that there are two
833"routes" through it, two orders in which you can traverse the tree.
834First, parse order reflects how the parser understood the code, and
835secondly, execution order tells perl what order to perform the
836operations in.
837
838The easiest way to examine the op tree is to stop Perl after it has
839finished parsing, and get it to dump out the tree. This is exactly what
7d7d5695
RGS
840the compiler backends L<B::Terse|B::Terse>, L<B::Concise|B::Concise>
841and L<B::Debug|B::Debug> do.
a422fd2d
SC
842
843Let's have a look at how Perl sees C<$a = $b + $c>:
844
845 % perl -MO=Terse -e '$a=$b+$c'
846 1 LISTOP (0x8179888) leave
847 2 OP (0x81798b0) enter
848 3 COP (0x8179850) nextstate
849 4 BINOP (0x8179828) sassign
850 5 BINOP (0x8179800) add [1]
851 6 UNOP (0x81796e0) null [15]
852 7 SVOP (0x80fafe0) gvsv GV (0x80fa4cc) *b
853 8 UNOP (0x81797e0) null [15]
854 9 SVOP (0x8179700) gvsv GV (0x80efeb0) *c
855 10 UNOP (0x816b4f0) null [15]
856 11 SVOP (0x816dcf0) gvsv GV (0x80fa460) *a
857
858Let's start in the middle, at line 4. This is a BINOP, a binary
859operator, which is at location C<0x8179828>. The specific operator in
860question is C<sassign> - scalar assignment - and you can find the code
861which implements it in the function C<pp_sassign> in F<pp_hot.c>. As a
862binary operator, it has two children: the add operator, providing the
863result of C<$b+$c>, is uppermost on line 5, and the left hand side is on
864line 10.
865
866Line 10 is the null op: this does exactly nothing. What is that doing
867there? If you see the null op, it's a sign that something has been
868optimized away after parsing. As we mentioned in L</Optimization>,
869the optimization stage sometimes converts two operations into one, for
870example when fetching a scalar variable. When this happens, instead of
871rewriting the op tree and cleaning up the dangling pointers, it's easier
872just to replace the redundant operation with the null op. Originally,
873the tree would have looked like this:
874
875 10 SVOP (0x816b4f0) rv2sv [15]
876 11 SVOP (0x816dcf0) gv GV (0x80fa460) *a
877
878That is, fetch the C<a> entry from the main symbol table, and then look
879at the scalar component of it: C<gvsv> (C<pp_gvsv> into F<pp_hot.c>)
880happens to do both these things.
881
882The right hand side, starting at line 5 is similar to what we've just
883seen: we have the C<add> op (C<pp_add> also in F<pp_hot.c>) add together
884two C<gvsv>s.
885
886Now, what's this about?
887
888 1 LISTOP (0x8179888) leave
889 2 OP (0x81798b0) enter
890 3 COP (0x8179850) nextstate
891
892C<enter> and C<leave> are scoping ops, and their job is to perform any
893housekeeping every time you enter and leave a block: lexical variables
894are tidied up, unreferenced variables are destroyed, and so on. Every
895program will have those first three lines: C<leave> is a list, and its
896children are all the statements in the block. Statements are delimited
897by C<nextstate>, so a block is a collection of C<nextstate> ops, with
898the ops to be performed for each statement being the children of
899C<nextstate>. C<enter> is a single op which functions as a marker.
900
901That's how Perl parsed the program, from top to bottom:
902
903 Program
904 |
905 Statement
906 |
907 =
908 / \
909 / \
910 $a +
911 / \
912 $b $c
913
914However, it's impossible to B<perform> the operations in this order:
915you have to find the values of C<$b> and C<$c> before you add them
916together, for instance. So, the other thread that runs through the op
917tree is the execution order: each op has a field C<op_next> which points
918to the next op to be run, so following these pointers tells us how perl
919executes the code. We can traverse the tree in this order using
920the C<exec> option to C<B::Terse>:
921
922 % perl -MO=Terse,exec -e '$a=$b+$c'
923 1 OP (0x8179928) enter
924 2 COP (0x81798c8) nextstate
925 3 SVOP (0x81796c8) gvsv GV (0x80fa4d4) *b
926 4 SVOP (0x8179798) gvsv GV (0x80efeb0) *c
927 5 BINOP (0x8179878) add [1]
928 6 SVOP (0x816dd38) gvsv GV (0x80fa468) *a
929 7 BINOP (0x81798a0) sassign
930 8 LISTOP (0x8179900) leave
931
932This probably makes more sense for a human: enter a block, start a
933statement. Get the values of C<$b> and C<$c>, and add them together.
934Find C<$a>, and assign one to the other. Then leave.
935
936The way Perl builds up these op trees in the parsing process can be
937unravelled by examining F<perly.y>, the YACC grammar. Let's take the
938piece we need to construct the tree for C<$a = $b + $c>
939
940 1 term : term ASSIGNOP term
941 2 { $$ = newASSIGNOP(OPf_STACKED, $1, $2, $3); }
942 3 | term ADDOP term
943 4 { $$ = newBINOP($2, 0, scalar($1), scalar($3)); }
944
945If you're not used to reading BNF grammars, this is how it works: You're
946fed certain things by the tokeniser, which generally end up in upper
947case. Here, C<ADDOP>, is provided when the tokeniser sees C<+> in your
948code. C<ASSIGNOP> is provided when C<=> is used for assigning. These are
b432a672 949"terminal symbols", because you can't get any simpler than them.
a422fd2d
SC
950
951The grammar, lines one and three of the snippet above, tells you how to
b432a672 952build up more complex forms. These complex forms, "non-terminal symbols"
a422fd2d
SC
953are generally placed in lower case. C<term> here is a non-terminal
954symbol, representing a single expression.
955
956The grammar gives you the following rule: you can make the thing on the
957left of the colon if you see all the things on the right in sequence.
958This is called a "reduction", and the aim of parsing is to completely
959reduce the input. There are several different ways you can perform a
960reduction, separated by vertical bars: so, C<term> followed by C<=>
961followed by C<term> makes a C<term>, and C<term> followed by C<+>
962followed by C<term> can also make a C<term>.
963
964So, if you see two terms with an C<=> or C<+>, between them, you can
965turn them into a single expression. When you do this, you execute the
966code in the block on the next line: if you see C<=>, you'll do the code
967in line 2. If you see C<+>, you'll do the code in line 4. It's this code
968which contributes to the op tree.
969
970 | term ADDOP term
971 { $$ = newBINOP($2, 0, scalar($1), scalar($3)); }
972
973What this does is creates a new binary op, and feeds it a number of
974variables. The variables refer to the tokens: C<$1> is the first token in
975the input, C<$2> the second, and so on - think regular expression
976backreferences. C<$$> is the op returned from this reduction. So, we
977call C<newBINOP> to create a new binary operator. The first parameter to
978C<newBINOP>, a function in F<op.c>, is the op type. It's an addition
979operator, so we want the type to be C<ADDOP>. We could specify this
980directly, but it's right there as the second token in the input, so we
b432a672
AL
981use C<$2>. The second parameter is the op's flags: 0 means "nothing
982special". Then the things to add: the left and right hand side of our
a422fd2d
SC
983expression, in scalar context.
984
985=head2 Stacks
986
987When perl executes something like C<addop>, how does it pass on its
988results to the next op? The answer is, through the use of stacks. Perl
989has a number of stacks to store things it's currently working on, and
990we'll look at the three most important ones here.
991
992=over 3
993
994=item Argument stack
995
996Arguments are passed to PP code and returned from PP code using the
997argument stack, C<ST>. The typical way to handle arguments is to pop
998them off the stack, deal with them how you wish, and then push the result
999back onto the stack. This is how, for instance, the cosine operator
1000works:
1001
1002 NV value;
1003 value = POPn;
1004 value = Perl_cos(value);
1005 XPUSHn(value);
1006
1007We'll see a more tricky example of this when we consider Perl's macros
1008below. C<POPn> gives you the NV (floating point value) of the top SV on
1009the stack: the C<$x> in C<cos($x)>. Then we compute the cosine, and push
1010the result back as an NV. The C<X> in C<XPUSHn> means that the stack
1011should be extended if necessary - it can't be necessary here, because we
1012know there's room for one more item on the stack, since we've just
1013removed one! The C<XPUSH*> macros at least guarantee safety.
1014
1015Alternatively, you can fiddle with the stack directly: C<SP> gives you
1016the first element in your portion of the stack, and C<TOP*> gives you
1017the top SV/IV/NV/etc. on the stack. So, for instance, to do unary
1018negation of an integer:
1019
1020 SETi(-TOPi);
1021
1022Just set the integer value of the top stack entry to its negation.
1023
1024Argument stack manipulation in the core is exactly the same as it is in
1025XSUBs - see L<perlxstut>, L<perlxs> and L<perlguts> for a longer
1026description of the macros used in stack manipulation.
1027
1028=item Mark stack
1029
b432a672 1030I say "your portion of the stack" above because PP code doesn't
a422fd2d
SC
1031necessarily get the whole stack to itself: if your function calls
1032another function, you'll only want to expose the arguments aimed for the
1033called function, and not (necessarily) let it get at your own data. The
b432a672 1034way we do this is to have a "virtual" bottom-of-stack, exposed to each
a422fd2d
SC
1035function. The mark stack keeps bookmarks to locations in the argument
1036stack usable by each function. For instance, when dealing with a tied
b432a672 1037variable, (internally, something with "P" magic) Perl has to call
a422fd2d
SC
1038methods for accesses to the tied variables. However, we need to separate
1039the arguments exposed to the method to the argument exposed to the
ed233832
DM
1040original function - the store or fetch or whatever it may be. Here's
1041roughly how the tied C<push> is implemented; see C<av_push> in F<av.c>:
a422fd2d
SC
1042
1043 1 PUSHMARK(SP);
1044 2 EXTEND(SP,2);
1045 3 PUSHs(SvTIED_obj((SV*)av, mg));
1046 4 PUSHs(val);
1047 5 PUTBACK;
1048 6 ENTER;
1049 7 call_method("PUSH", G_SCALAR|G_DISCARD);
1050 8 LEAVE;
13a2d996 1051
a422fd2d
SC
1052Let's examine the whole implementation, for practice:
1053
1054 1 PUSHMARK(SP);
1055
1056Push the current state of the stack pointer onto the mark stack. This is
1057so that when we've finished adding items to the argument stack, Perl
1058knows how many things we've added recently.
1059
1060 2 EXTEND(SP,2);
1061 3 PUSHs(SvTIED_obj((SV*)av, mg));
1062 4 PUSHs(val);
1063
1064We're going to add two more items onto the argument stack: when you have
1065a tied array, the C<PUSH> subroutine receives the object and the value
1066to be pushed, and that's exactly what we have here - the tied object,
1067retrieved with C<SvTIED_obj>, and the value, the SV C<val>.
1068
1069 5 PUTBACK;
1070
e89a6d4e
JD
1071Next we tell Perl to update the global stack pointer from our internal
1072variable: C<dSP> only gave us a local copy, not a reference to the global.
a422fd2d
SC
1073
1074 6 ENTER;
1075 7 call_method("PUSH", G_SCALAR|G_DISCARD);
1076 8 LEAVE;
1077
1078C<ENTER> and C<LEAVE> localise a block of code - they make sure that all
1079variables are tidied up, everything that has been localised gets
1080its previous value returned, and so on. Think of them as the C<{> and
1081C<}> of a Perl block.
1082
1083To actually do the magic method call, we have to call a subroutine in
1084Perl space: C<call_method> takes care of that, and it's described in
1085L<perlcall>. We call the C<PUSH> method in scalar context, and we're
e89a6d4e
JD
1086going to discard its return value. The call_method() function
1087removes the top element of the mark stack, so there is nothing for
1088the caller to clean up.
a422fd2d 1089
a422fd2d
SC
1090=item Save stack
1091
1092C doesn't have a concept of local scope, so perl provides one. We've
1093seen that C<ENTER> and C<LEAVE> are used as scoping braces; the save
1094stack implements the C equivalent of, for example:
1095
1096 {
1097 local $foo = 42;
1098 ...
1099 }
1100
1101See L<perlguts/Localising Changes> for how to use the save stack.
1102
1103=back
1104
1105=head2 Millions of Macros
1106
1107One thing you'll notice about the Perl source is that it's full of
1108macros. Some have called the pervasive use of macros the hardest thing
1109to understand, others find it adds to clarity. Let's take an example,
1110the code which implements the addition operator:
1111
1112 1 PP(pp_add)
1113 2 {
39644a26 1114 3 dSP; dATARGET; tryAMAGICbin(add,opASSIGN);
a422fd2d
SC
1115 4 {
1116 5 dPOPTOPnnrl_ul;
1117 6 SETn( left + right );
1118 7 RETURN;
1119 8 }
1120 9 }
1121
1122Every line here (apart from the braces, of course) contains a macro. The
1123first line sets up the function declaration as Perl expects for PP code;
1124line 3 sets up variable declarations for the argument stack and the
1125target, the return value of the operation. Finally, it tries to see if
1126the addition operation is overloaded; if so, the appropriate subroutine
1127is called.
1128
1129Line 5 is another variable declaration - all variable declarations start
1130with C<d> - which pops from the top of the argument stack two NVs (hence
1131C<nn>) and puts them into the variables C<right> and C<left>, hence the
1132C<rl>. These are the two operands to the addition operator. Next, we
1133call C<SETn> to set the NV of the return value to the result of adding
1134the two values. This done, we return - the C<RETURN> macro makes sure
1135that our return value is properly handled, and we pass the next operator
1136to run back to the main run loop.
1137
1138Most of these macros are explained in L<perlapi>, and some of the more
1139important ones are explained in L<perlxs> as well. Pay special attention
1140to L<perlguts/Background and PERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT> for information on
1141the C<[pad]THX_?> macros.
1142
52d59bef
JH
1143=head2 The .i Targets
1144
1145You can expand the macros in a F<foo.c> file by saying
1146
1147 make foo.i
1148
1149which will expand the macros using cpp. Don't be scared by the results.
1150
955fec6b
JH
1151=head1 SOURCE CODE STATIC ANALYSIS
1152
1153Various tools exist for analysing C source code B<statically>, as
1154opposed to B<dynamically>, that is, without executing the code.
1155It is possible to detect resource leaks, undefined behaviour, type
1156mismatches, portability problems, code paths that would cause illegal
1157memory accesses, and other similar problems by just parsing the C code
1158and looking at the resulting graph, what does it tell about the
1159execution and data flows. As a matter of fact, this is exactly
1160how C compilers know to give warnings about dubious code.
1161
1162=head2 lint, splint
1163
1164The good old C code quality inspector, C<lint>, is available in
1165several platforms, but please be aware that there are several
1166different implementations of it by different vendors, which means that
1167the flags are not identical across different platforms.
1168
1169There is a lint variant called C<splint> (Secure Programming Lint)
1170available from http://www.splint.org/ that should compile on any
1171Unix-like platform.
1172
1173There are C<lint> and <splint> targets in Makefile, but you may have
1174to diddle with the flags (see above).
1175
1176=head2 Coverity
1177
1178Coverity (http://www.coverity.com/) is a product similar to lint and
1179as a testbed for their product they periodically check several open
1180source projects, and they give out accounts to open source developers
1181to the defect databases.
1182
1183=head2 cpd (cut-and-paste detector)
1184
1185The cpd tool detects cut-and-paste coding. If one instance of the
1186cut-and-pasted code changes, all the other spots should probably be
1187changed, too. Therefore such code should probably be turned into a
1188subroutine or a macro.
1189
1190cpd (http://pmd.sourceforge.net/cpd.html) is part of the pmd project
1191(http://pmd.sourceforge.net/). pmd was originally written for static
1192analysis of Java code, but later the cpd part of it was extended to
1193parse also C and C++.
1194
a52aaefa
RGS
1195Download the pmd-bin-X.Y.zip () from the SourceForge site, extract the
1196pmd-X.Y.jar from it, and then run that on source code thusly:
955fec6b
JH
1197
1198 java -cp pmd-X.Y.jar net.sourceforge.pmd.cpd.CPD --minimum-tokens 100 --files /some/where/src --language c > cpd.txt
1199
1200You may run into memory limits, in which case you should use the -Xmx option:
1201
1202 java -Xmx512M ...
1203
1204=head2 gcc warnings
1205
1206Though much can be written about the inconsistency and coverage
1207problems of gcc warnings (like C<-Wall> not meaning "all the
1208warnings", or some common portability problems not being covered by
1209C<-Wall>, or C<-ansi> and C<-pedantic> both being a poorly defined
1210collection of warnings, and so forth), gcc is still a useful tool in
1211keeping our coding nose clean.
1212
1213The C<-Wall> is by default on.
1214
a8e98a71
JH
1215The C<-ansi> (and its sidekick, C<-pedantic>) would be nice to be on
1216always, but unfortunately they are not safe on all platforms, they can
1217for example cause fatal conflicts with the system headers (Solaris
1218being a prime example). If Configure C<-Dgccansipedantic> is used,
1219the C<cflags> frontend selects C<-ansi -pedantic> for the platforms
1220where they are known to be safe.
955fec6b
JH
1221
1222Starting from Perl 5.9.4 the following extra flags are added:
1223
1224=over 4
1225
1226=item *
1227
1228C<-Wendif-labels>
1229
1230=item *
1231
1232C<-Wextra>
1233
1234=item *
1235
1236C<-Wdeclaration-after-statement>
1237
1238=back
1239
1240The following flags would be nice to have but they would first need
0503309d 1241their own Augean stablemaster:
955fec6b
JH
1242
1243=over 4
1244
1245=item *
1246
1247C<-Wpointer-arith>
1248
1249=item *
1250
1251C<-Wshadow>
1252
1253=item *
1254
1255C<-Wstrict-prototypes>
1256
955fec6b
JH
1257=back
1258
1259The C<-Wtraditional> is another example of the annoying tendency of
1260gcc to bundle a lot of warnings under one switch -- it would be
1261impossible to deploy in practice because it would complain a lot -- but
1262it does contain some warnings that would be beneficial to have available
1263on their own, such as the warning about string constants inside macros
1264containing the macro arguments: this behaved differently pre-ANSI
1265than it does in ANSI, and some C compilers are still in transition,
1266AIX being an example.
1267
1268=head2 Warnings of other C compilers
1269
1270Other C compilers (yes, there B<are> other C compilers than gcc) often
1271have their "strict ANSI" or "strict ANSI with some portability extensions"
1272modes on, like for example the Sun Workshop has its C<-Xa> mode on
1273(though implicitly), or the DEC (these days, HP...) has its C<-std1>
1274mode on.
1275
1276=head2 DEBUGGING
1277
1278You can compile a special debugging version of Perl, which allows you
1279to use the C<-D> option of Perl to tell more about what Perl is doing.
1280But sometimes there is no alternative than to dive in with a debugger,
1281either to see the stack trace of a core dump (very useful in a bug
1282report), or trying to figure out what went wrong before the core dump
1283happened, or how did we end up having wrong or unexpected results.
1284
a422fd2d
SC
1285=head2 Poking at Perl
1286
1287To really poke around with Perl, you'll probably want to build Perl for
1288debugging, like this:
1289
1290 ./Configure -d -D optimize=-g
1291 make
1292
1293C<-g> is a flag to the C compiler to have it produce debugging
955fec6b
JH
1294information which will allow us to step through a running program,
1295and to see in which C function we are at (without the debugging
1296information we might see only the numerical addresses of the functions,
1297which is not very helpful).
1298
a422fd2d
SC
1299F<Configure> will also turn on the C<DEBUGGING> compilation symbol which
1300enables all the internal debugging code in Perl. There are a whole bunch
1301of things you can debug with this: L<perlrun> lists them all, and the
1302best way to find out about them is to play about with them. The most
1303useful options are probably
1304
1305 l Context (loop) stack processing
1306 t Trace execution
1307 o Method and overloading resolution
1308 c String/numeric conversions
1309
1310Some of the functionality of the debugging code can be achieved using XS
1311modules.
13a2d996 1312
a422fd2d
SC
1313 -Dr => use re 'debug'
1314 -Dx => use O 'Debug'
1315
1316=head2 Using a source-level debugger
1317
1318If the debugging output of C<-D> doesn't help you, it's time to step
1319through perl's execution with a source-level debugger.
1320
1321=over 3
1322
1323=item *
1324
955fec6b
JH
1325We'll use C<gdb> for our examples here; the principles will apply to
1326any debugger (many vendors call their debugger C<dbx>), but check the
1327manual of the one you're using.
a422fd2d
SC
1328
1329=back
1330
1331To fire up the debugger, type
1332
1333 gdb ./perl
1334
955fec6b
JH
1335Or if you have a core dump:
1336
1337 gdb ./perl core
1338
a422fd2d
SC
1339You'll want to do that in your Perl source tree so the debugger can read
1340the source code. You should see the copyright message, followed by the
1341prompt.
1342
1343 (gdb)
1344
1345C<help> will get you into the documentation, but here are the most
1346useful commands:
1347
1348=over 3
1349
1350=item run [args]
1351
1352Run the program with the given arguments.
1353
1354=item break function_name
1355
1356=item break source.c:xxx
1357
1358Tells the debugger that we'll want to pause execution when we reach
cea6626f 1359either the named function (but see L<perlguts/Internal Functions>!) or the given
a422fd2d
SC
1360line in the named source file.
1361
1362=item step
1363
1364Steps through the program a line at a time.
1365
1366=item next
1367
1368Steps through the program a line at a time, without descending into
1369functions.
1370
1371=item continue
1372
1373Run until the next breakpoint.
1374
1375=item finish
1376
1377Run until the end of the current function, then stop again.
1378
13a2d996 1379=item 'enter'
a422fd2d
SC
1380
1381Just pressing Enter will do the most recent operation again - it's a
1382blessing when stepping through miles of source code.
1383
1384=item print
1385
1386Execute the given C code and print its results. B<WARNING>: Perl makes
52d59bef
JH
1387heavy use of macros, and F<gdb> does not necessarily support macros
1388(see later L</"gdb macro support">). You'll have to substitute them
1389yourself, or to invoke cpp on the source code files
1390(see L</"The .i Targets">)
1391So, for instance, you can't say
a422fd2d
SC
1392
1393 print SvPV_nolen(sv)
1394
1395but you have to say
1396
1397 print Perl_sv_2pv_nolen(sv)
1398
ffc145e8
RK
1399=back
1400
a422fd2d
SC
1401You may find it helpful to have a "macro dictionary", which you can
1402produce by saying C<cpp -dM perl.c | sort>. Even then, F<cpp> won't
07aa3531 1403recursively apply those macros for you.
52d59bef
JH
1404
1405=head2 gdb macro support
a422fd2d 1406
52d59bef 1407Recent versions of F<gdb> have fairly good macro support, but
ea031e66
RGS
1408in order to use it you'll need to compile perl with macro definitions
1409included in the debugging information. Using F<gcc> version 3.1, this
1410means configuring with C<-Doptimize=-g3>. Other compilers might use a
1411different switch (if they support debugging macros at all).
1412
a422fd2d
SC
1413=head2 Dumping Perl Data Structures
1414
1415One way to get around this macro hell is to use the dumping functions in
1416F<dump.c>; these work a little like an internal
1417L<Devel::Peek|Devel::Peek>, but they also cover OPs and other structures
1418that you can't get at from Perl. Let's take an example. We'll use the
07aa3531 1419C<$a = $b + $c> we used before, but give it a bit of context:
a422fd2d
SC
1420C<$b = "6XXXX"; $c = 2.3;>. Where's a good place to stop and poke around?
1421
1422What about C<pp_add>, the function we examined earlier to implement the
1423C<+> operator:
1424
1425 (gdb) break Perl_pp_add
1426 Breakpoint 1 at 0x46249f: file pp_hot.c, line 309.
1427
cea6626f 1428Notice we use C<Perl_pp_add> and not C<pp_add> - see L<perlguts/Internal Functions>.
a422fd2d
SC
1429With the breakpoint in place, we can run our program:
1430
1431 (gdb) run -e '$b = "6XXXX"; $c = 2.3; $a = $b + $c'
1432
1433Lots of junk will go past as gdb reads in the relevant source files and
1434libraries, and then:
1435
1436 Breakpoint 1, Perl_pp_add () at pp_hot.c:309
39644a26 1437 309 dSP; dATARGET; tryAMAGICbin(add,opASSIGN);
a422fd2d
SC
1438 (gdb) step
1439 311 dPOPTOPnnrl_ul;
1440 (gdb)
1441
1442We looked at this bit of code before, and we said that C<dPOPTOPnnrl_ul>
1443arranges for two C<NV>s to be placed into C<left> and C<right> - let's
1444slightly expand it:
1445
1446 #define dPOPTOPnnrl_ul NV right = POPn; \
1447 SV *leftsv = TOPs; \
1448 NV left = USE_LEFT(leftsv) ? SvNV(leftsv) : 0.0
1449
1450C<POPn> takes the SV from the top of the stack and obtains its NV either
1451directly (if C<SvNOK> is set) or by calling the C<sv_2nv> function.
1452C<TOPs> takes the next SV from the top of the stack - yes, C<POPn> uses
1453C<TOPs> - but doesn't remove it. We then use C<SvNV> to get the NV from
07aa3531 1454C<leftsv> in the same way as before - yes, C<POPn> uses C<SvNV>.
a422fd2d
SC
1455
1456Since we don't have an NV for C<$b>, we'll have to use C<sv_2nv> to
1457convert it. If we step again, we'll find ourselves there:
1458
1459 Perl_sv_2nv (sv=0xa0675d0) at sv.c:1669
1460 1669 if (!sv)
1461 (gdb)
1462
1463We can now use C<Perl_sv_dump> to investigate the SV:
1464
1465 SV = PV(0xa057cc0) at 0xa0675d0
1466 REFCNT = 1
1467 FLAGS = (POK,pPOK)
1468 PV = 0xa06a510 "6XXXX"\0
1469 CUR = 5
1470 LEN = 6
1471 $1 = void
1472
1473We know we're going to get C<6> from this, so let's finish the
1474subroutine:
1475
1476 (gdb) finish
1477 Run till exit from #0 Perl_sv_2nv (sv=0xa0675d0) at sv.c:1671
1478 0x462669 in Perl_pp_add () at pp_hot.c:311
1479 311 dPOPTOPnnrl_ul;
1480
1481We can also dump out this op: the current op is always stored in
1482C<PL_op>, and we can dump it with C<Perl_op_dump>. This'll give us
1483similar output to L<B::Debug|B::Debug>.
1484
1485 {
1486 13 TYPE = add ===> 14
1487 TARG = 1
1488 FLAGS = (SCALAR,KIDS)
1489 {
1490 TYPE = null ===> (12)
1491 (was rv2sv)
1492 FLAGS = (SCALAR,KIDS)
1493 {
1494 11 TYPE = gvsv ===> 12
1495 FLAGS = (SCALAR)
1496 GV = main::b
1497 }
1498 }
1499
10f58044 1500# finish this later #
a422fd2d
SC
1501
1502=head2 Patching
1503
1504All right, we've now had a look at how to navigate the Perl sources and
1505some things you'll need to know when fiddling with them. Let's now get
1506on and create a simple patch. Here's something Larry suggested: if a
07aa3531 1507C<U> is the first active format during a C<pack>, (for example,
a422fd2d 1508C<pack "U3C8", @stuff>) then the resulting string should be treated as
1e54db1a 1509UTF-8 encoded.
a422fd2d
SC
1510
1511How do we prepare to fix this up? First we locate the code in question -
1512the C<pack> happens at runtime, so it's going to be in one of the F<pp>
1513files. Sure enough, C<pp_pack> is in F<pp.c>. Since we're going to be
1514altering this file, let's copy it to F<pp.c~>.
1515
a6ec74c1
JH
1516[Well, it was in F<pp.c> when this tutorial was written. It has now been
1517split off with C<pp_unpack> to its own file, F<pp_pack.c>]
1518
a422fd2d
SC
1519Now let's look over C<pp_pack>: we take a pattern into C<pat>, and then
1520loop over the pattern, taking each format character in turn into
1521C<datum_type>. Then for each possible format character, we swallow up
1522the other arguments in the pattern (a field width, an asterisk, and so
1523on) and convert the next chunk input into the specified format, adding
1524it onto the output SV C<cat>.
1525
1526How do we know if the C<U> is the first format in the C<pat>? Well, if
1527we have a pointer to the start of C<pat> then, if we see a C<U> we can
1528test whether we're still at the start of the string. So, here's where
1529C<pat> is set up:
1530
1531 STRLEN fromlen;
1532 register char *pat = SvPVx(*++MARK, fromlen);
1533 register char *patend = pat + fromlen;
1534 register I32 len;
1535 I32 datumtype;
1536 SV *fromstr;
1537
1538We'll have another string pointer in there:
1539
1540 STRLEN fromlen;
1541 register char *pat = SvPVx(*++MARK, fromlen);
1542 register char *patend = pat + fromlen;
1543 + char *patcopy;
1544 register I32 len;
1545 I32 datumtype;
1546 SV *fromstr;
1547
1548And just before we start the loop, we'll set C<patcopy> to be the start
1549of C<pat>:
1550
1551 items = SP - MARK;
1552 MARK++;
1553 sv_setpvn(cat, "", 0);
1554 + patcopy = pat;
1555 while (pat < patend) {
1556
1557Now if we see a C<U> which was at the start of the string, we turn on
1e54db1a 1558the C<UTF8> flag for the output SV, C<cat>:
a422fd2d
SC
1559
1560 + if (datumtype == 'U' && pat==patcopy+1)
1561 + SvUTF8_on(cat);
1562 if (datumtype == '#') {
1563 while (pat < patend && *pat != '\n')
1564 pat++;
1565
1566Remember that it has to be C<patcopy+1> because the first character of
1567the string is the C<U> which has been swallowed into C<datumtype!>
1568
1569Oops, we forgot one thing: what if there are spaces at the start of the
1570pattern? C<pack(" U*", @stuff)> will have C<U> as the first active
1571character, even though it's not the first thing in the pattern. In this
1572case, we have to advance C<patcopy> along with C<pat> when we see spaces:
1573
1574 if (isSPACE(datumtype))
1575 continue;
1576
1577needs to become
1578
1579 if (isSPACE(datumtype)) {
1580 patcopy++;
1581 continue;
1582 }
1583
1584OK. That's the C part done. Now we must do two additional things before
1585this patch is ready to go: we've changed the behaviour of Perl, and so
1586we must document that change. We must also provide some more regression
1587tests to make sure our patch works and doesn't create a bug somewhere
1588else along the line.
1589
b23b8711
MS
1590The regression tests for each operator live in F<t/op/>, and so we
1591make a copy of F<t/op/pack.t> to F<t/op/pack.t~>. Now we can add our
1592tests to the end. First, we'll test that the C<U> does indeed create
07aa3531 1593Unicode strings.
b23b8711
MS
1594
1595t/op/pack.t has a sensible ok() function, but if it didn't we could
35c336e6 1596use the one from t/test.pl.
b23b8711 1597
35c336e6
MS
1598 require './test.pl';
1599 plan( tests => 159 );
b23b8711
MS
1600
1601so instead of this:
a422fd2d
SC
1602
1603 print 'not ' unless "1.20.300.4000" eq sprintf "%vd", pack("U*",1,20,300,4000);
1604 print "ok $test\n"; $test++;
1605
35c336e6
MS
1606we can write the more sensible (see L<Test::More> for a full
1607explanation of is() and other testing functions).
b23b8711 1608
07aa3531 1609 is( "1.20.300.4000", sprintf "%vd", pack("U*",1,20,300,4000),
38a44b82 1610 "U* produces Unicode" );
b23b8711 1611
a422fd2d
SC
1612Now we'll test that we got that space-at-the-beginning business right:
1613
35c336e6 1614 is( "1.20.300.4000", sprintf "%vd", pack(" U*",1,20,300,4000),
812f5127 1615 " with spaces at the beginning" );
a422fd2d
SC
1616
1617And finally we'll test that we don't make Unicode strings if C<U> is B<not>
1618the first active format:
1619
35c336e6 1620 isnt( v1.20.300.4000, sprintf "%vd", pack("C0U*",1,20,300,4000),
38a44b82 1621 "U* not first isn't Unicode" );
a422fd2d 1622
35c336e6
MS
1623Mustn't forget to change the number of tests which appears at the top,
1624or else the automated tester will get confused. This will either look
1625like this:
a422fd2d 1626
35c336e6
MS
1627 print "1..156\n";
1628
1629or this:
1630
1631 plan( tests => 156 );
a422fd2d
SC
1632
1633We now compile up Perl, and run it through the test suite. Our new
1634tests pass, hooray!
1635
1636Finally, the documentation. The job is never done until the paperwork is
1637over, so let's describe the change we've just made. The relevant place
1638is F<pod/perlfunc.pod>; again, we make a copy, and then we'll insert
1639this text in the description of C<pack>:
1640
1641 =item *
1642
1643 If the pattern begins with a C<U>, the resulting string will be treated
1e54db1a
JH
1644 as UTF-8-encoded Unicode. You can force UTF-8 encoding on in a string
1645 with an initial C<U0>, and the bytes that follow will be interpreted as
1646 Unicode characters. If you don't want this to happen, you can begin your
1647 pattern with C<C0> (or anything else) to force Perl not to UTF-8 encode your
a422fd2d
SC
1648 string, and then follow this with a C<U*> somewhere in your pattern.
1649
1650All done. Now let's create the patch. F<Porting/patching.pod> tells us
1651that if we're making major changes, we should copy the entire directory
1652to somewhere safe before we begin fiddling, and then do
13a2d996 1653
a422fd2d
SC
1654 diff -ruN old new > patch
1655
1656However, we know which files we've changed, and we can simply do this:
1657
1658 diff -u pp.c~ pp.c > patch
1659 diff -u t/op/pack.t~ t/op/pack.t >> patch
1660 diff -u pod/perlfunc.pod~ pod/perlfunc.pod >> patch
1661
1662We end up with a patch looking a little like this:
1663
1664 --- pp.c~ Fri Jun 02 04:34:10 2000
1665 +++ pp.c Fri Jun 16 11:37:25 2000
1666 @@ -4375,6 +4375,7 @@
1667 register I32 items;
1668 STRLEN fromlen;
1669 register char *pat = SvPVx(*++MARK, fromlen);
1670 + char *patcopy;
1671 register char *patend = pat + fromlen;
1672 register I32 len;
1673 I32 datumtype;
1674 @@ -4405,6 +4406,7 @@
1675 ...
1676
1677And finally, we submit it, with our rationale, to perl5-porters. Job
1678done!
1679
f7e1e956
MS
1680=head2 Patching a core module
1681
1682This works just like patching anything else, with an extra
1683consideration. Many core modules also live on CPAN. If this is so,
1684patch the CPAN version instead of the core and send the patch off to
1685the module maintainer (with a copy to p5p). This will help the module
1686maintainer keep the CPAN version in sync with the core version without
1687constantly scanning p5p.
1688
db300100
RGS
1689The list of maintainers of core modules is usefully documented in
1690F<Porting/Maintainers.pl>.
1691
acbe17fc
JP
1692=head2 Adding a new function to the core
1693
1694If, as part of a patch to fix a bug, or just because you have an
1695especially good idea, you decide to add a new function to the core,
1696discuss your ideas on p5p well before you start work. It may be that
1697someone else has already attempted to do what you are considering and
1698can give lots of good advice or even provide you with bits of code
1699that they already started (but never finished).
1700
1701You have to follow all of the advice given above for patching. It is
1702extremely important to test any addition thoroughly and add new tests
1703to explore all boundary conditions that your new function is expected
1704to handle. If your new function is used only by one module (e.g. toke),
1705then it should probably be named S_your_function (for static); on the
210b36aa 1706other hand, if you expect it to accessible from other functions in
acbe17fc
JP
1707Perl, you should name it Perl_your_function. See L<perlguts/Internal Functions>
1708for more details.
1709
1710The location of any new code is also an important consideration. Don't
1711just create a new top level .c file and put your code there; you would
1712have to make changes to Configure (so the Makefile is created properly),
1713as well as possibly lots of include files. This is strictly pumpking
1714business.
1715
1716It is better to add your function to one of the existing top level
1717source code files, but your choice is complicated by the nature of
1718the Perl distribution. Only the files that are marked as compiled
1719static are located in the perl executable. Everything else is located
1720in the shared library (or DLL if you are running under WIN32). So,
1721for example, if a function was only used by functions located in
1722toke.c, then your code can go in toke.c. If, however, you want to call
1723the function from universal.c, then you should put your code in another
1724location, for example util.c.
1725
1726In addition to writing your c-code, you will need to create an
1727appropriate entry in embed.pl describing your function, then run
1728'make regen_headers' to create the entries in the numerous header
1729files that perl needs to compile correctly. See L<perlguts/Internal Functions>
1730for information on the various options that you can set in embed.pl.
1731You will forget to do this a few (or many) times and you will get
1732warnings during the compilation phase. Make sure that you mention
1733this when you post your patch to P5P; the pumpking needs to know this.
1734
1735When you write your new code, please be conscious of existing code
884bad00 1736conventions used in the perl source files. See L<perlstyle> for
acbe17fc
JP
1737details. Although most of the guidelines discussed seem to focus on
1738Perl code, rather than c, they all apply (except when they don't ;).
1739See also I<Porting/patching.pod> file in the Perl source distribution
1740for lots of details about both formatting and submitting patches of
1741your changes.
1742
1743Lastly, TEST TEST TEST TEST TEST any code before posting to p5p.
1744Test on as many platforms as you can find. Test as many perl
1745Configure options as you can (e.g. MULTIPLICITY). If you have
1746profiling or memory tools, see L<EXTERNAL TOOLS FOR DEBUGGING PERL>
210b36aa 1747below for how to use them to further test your code. Remember that
acbe17fc
JP
1748most of the people on P5P are doing this on their own time and
1749don't have the time to debug your code.
f7e1e956
MS
1750
1751=head2 Writing a test
1752
1753Every module and built-in function has an associated test file (or
1754should...). If you add or change functionality, you have to write a
1755test. If you fix a bug, you have to write a test so that bug never
1756comes back. If you alter the docs, it would be nice to test what the
1757new documentation says.
1758
1759In short, if you submit a patch you probably also have to patch the
1760tests.
1761
1762For modules, the test file is right next to the module itself.
1763F<lib/strict.t> tests F<lib/strict.pm>. This is a recent innovation,
1764so there are some snags (and it would be wonderful for you to brush
1765them out), but it basically works that way. Everything else lives in
1766F<t/>.
1767
d5f28025
JV
1768If you add a new test directory under F<t/>, it is imperative that you
1769add that directory to F<t/HARNESS> and F<t/TEST>.
1770
f7e1e956
MS
1771=over 3
1772
1773=item F<t/base/>
1774
1775Testing of the absolute basic functionality of Perl. Things like
1776C<if>, basic file reads and writes, simple regexes, etc. These are
1777run first in the test suite and if any of them fail, something is
1778I<really> broken.
1779
1780=item F<t/cmd/>
1781
1782These test the basic control structures, C<if/else>, C<while>,
35c336e6 1783subroutines, etc.
f7e1e956
MS
1784
1785=item F<t/comp/>
1786
1787Tests basic issues of how Perl parses and compiles itself.
1788
1789=item F<t/io/>
1790
1791Tests for built-in IO functions, including command line arguments.
1792
1793=item F<t/lib/>
1794
1795The old home for the module tests, you shouldn't put anything new in
1796here. There are still some bits and pieces hanging around in here
1797that need to be moved. Perhaps you could move them? Thanks!
1798
3c295041
RGS
1799=item F<t/mro/>
1800
0503309d 1801Tests for perl's method resolution order implementations
3c295041
RGS
1802(see L<mro>).
1803
f7e1e956
MS
1804=item F<t/op/>
1805
1806Tests for perl's built in functions that don't fit into any of the
1807other directories.
1808
a4499558
YO
1809=item F<t/re/>
1810
1811Tests for regex related functions or behaviour. (These used to live
1812in t/op).
1813
f7e1e956
MS
1814=item F<t/run/>
1815
1816Testing features of how perl actually runs, including exit codes and
1817handling of PERL* environment variables.
1818
244d9cb7
RGS
1819=item F<t/uni/>
1820
1821Tests for the core support of Unicode.
1822
1823=item F<t/win32/>
1824
1825Windows-specific tests.
1826
1827=item F<t/x2p>
1828
1829A test suite for the s2p converter.
1830
f7e1e956
MS
1831=back
1832
1833The core uses the same testing style as the rest of Perl, a simple
1834"ok/not ok" run through Test::Harness, but there are a few special
1835considerations.
1836
35c336e6
MS
1837There are three ways to write a test in the core. Test::More,
1838t/test.pl and ad hoc C<print $test ? "ok 42\n" : "not ok 42\n">. The
1839decision of which to use depends on what part of the test suite you're
1840working on. This is a measure to prevent a high-level failure (such
1841as Config.pm breaking) from causing basic functionality tests to fail.
1842
07aa3531 1843=over 4
35c336e6
MS
1844
1845=item t/base t/comp
1846
1847Since we don't know if require works, or even subroutines, use ad hoc
1848tests for these two. Step carefully to avoid using the feature being
1849tested.
1850
1851=item t/cmd t/run t/io t/op
1852
1853Now that basic require() and subroutines are tested, you can use the
1854t/test.pl library which emulates the important features of Test::More
1855while using a minimum of core features.
1856
1857You can also conditionally use certain libraries like Config, but be
1858sure to skip the test gracefully if it's not there.
1859
1860=item t/lib ext lib
1861
1862Now that the core of Perl is tested, Test::More can be used. You can
1863also use the full suite of core modules in the tests.
1864
1865=back
f7e1e956
MS
1866
1867When you say "make test" Perl uses the F<t/TEST> program to run the
07aa3531
JC
1868test suite (except under Win32 where it uses F<t/harness> instead.)
1869All tests are run from the F<t/> directory, B<not> the directory
1870which contains the test. This causes some problems with the tests
7205a85d 1871in F<lib/>, so here's some opportunity for some patching.
f7e1e956
MS
1872
1873You must be triply conscious of cross-platform concerns. This usually
1874boils down to using File::Spec and avoiding things like C<fork()> and
1875C<system()> unless absolutely necessary.
1876
e018f8be
JH
1877=head2 Special Make Test Targets
1878
1879There are various special make targets that can be used to test Perl
1880slightly differently than the standard "test" target. Not all them
1881are expected to give a 100% success rate. Many of them have several
7205a85d
YO
1882aliases, and many of them are not available on certain operating
1883systems.
e018f8be
JH
1884
1885=over 4
1886
1887=item coretest
1888
7d7d5695 1889Run F<perl> on all core tests (F<t/*> and F<lib/[a-z]*> pragma tests).
e018f8be 1890
7205a85d
YO
1891(Not available on Win32)
1892
e018f8be
JH
1893=item test.deparse
1894
b26492ee
RGS
1895Run all the tests through B::Deparse. Not all tests will succeed.
1896
7205a85d
YO
1897(Not available on Win32)
1898
b26492ee
RGS
1899=item test.taintwarn
1900
1901Run all tests with the B<-t> command-line switch. Not all tests
1902are expected to succeed (until they're specifically fixed, of course).
e018f8be 1903
7205a85d
YO
1904(Not available on Win32)
1905
e018f8be
JH
1906=item minitest
1907
1908Run F<miniperl> on F<t/base>, F<t/comp>, F<t/cmd>, F<t/run>, F<t/io>,
8cebccf4 1909F<t/op>, F<t/uni> and F<t/mro> tests.
e018f8be 1910
7a834142
JH
1911=item test.valgrind check.valgrind utest.valgrind ucheck.valgrind
1912
1913(Only in Linux) Run all the tests using the memory leak + naughty
1914memory access tool "valgrind". The log files will be named
1915F<testname.valgrind>.
1916
e018f8be
JH
1917=item test.third check.third utest.third ucheck.third
1918
1919(Only in Tru64) Run all the tests using the memory leak + naughty
1920memory access tool "Third Degree". The log files will be named
60a57c1c 1921F<perl.3log.testname>.
e018f8be
JH
1922
1923=item test.torture torturetest
1924
1925Run all the usual tests and some extra tests. As of Perl 5.8.0 the
244d9cb7 1926only extra tests are Abigail's JAPHs, F<t/japh/abigail.t>.
e018f8be
JH
1927
1928You can also run the torture test with F<t/harness> by giving
1929C<-torture> argument to F<t/harness>.
1930
1931=item utest ucheck test.utf8 check.utf8
1932
1933Run all the tests with -Mutf8. Not all tests will succeed.
1934
7205a85d
YO
1935(Not available on Win32)
1936
cc0710ff
RGS
1937=item minitest.utf16 test.utf16
1938
1939Runs the tests with UTF-16 encoded scripts, encoded with different
1940versions of this encoding.
1941
1942C<make utest.utf16> runs the test suite with a combination of C<-utf8> and
1943C<-utf16> arguments to F<t/TEST>.
1944
7205a85d
YO
1945(Not available on Win32)
1946
244d9cb7
RGS
1947=item test_harness
1948
1949Run the test suite with the F<t/harness> controlling program, instead of
1950F<t/TEST>. F<t/harness> is more sophisticated, and uses the
1951L<Test::Harness> module, thus using this test target supposes that perl
1952mostly works. The main advantage for our purposes is that it prints a
00bf5cd9
RGS
1953detailed summary of failed tests at the end. Also, unlike F<t/TEST>, it
1954doesn't redirect stderr to stdout.
244d9cb7 1955
7205a85d
YO
1956Note that under Win32 F<t/harness> is always used instead of F<t/TEST>, so
1957there is no special "test_harness" target.
1958
1959Under Win32's "test" target you may use the TEST_SWITCHES and TEST_FILES
1960environment variables to control the behaviour of F<t/harness>. This means
1961you can say
1962
1963 nmake test TEST_FILES="op/*.t"
1964 nmake test TEST_SWITCHES="-torture" TEST_FILES="op/*.t"
1965
a75f557c
JV
1966=item Parallel tests
1967
1968The core distribution can now run its regression tests in parallel on
1969Unix-like platforms. Instead of running C<make test>, set C<TEST_JOBS> in
1970your environment to the number of tests to run in parallel, and run
1971C<make test_harness>. On a Bourne-like shell, this can be done as
1972
1973 TEST_JOBS=3 make test_harness # Run 3 tests in parallel
1974
1975An environment variable is used, rather than parallel make itself, because
1976L<TAP::Harness> needs to be able to schedule individual non-conflicting test
1977scripts itself, and there is no standard interface to C<make> utilities to
1978interact with their job schedulers.
1979
1980Note that currently some test scripts may fail when run in parallel (most
1981notably C<ext/IO/t/io_dir.t>). If necessary run just the failing scripts
1982again sequentially and see if the failures go away.
7205a85d
YO
1983=item test-notty test_notty
1984
1985Sets PERL_SKIP_TTY_TEST to true before running normal test.
1986
244d9cb7
RGS
1987=back
1988
1989=head2 Running tests by hand
1990
1991You can run part of the test suite by hand by using one the following
1992commands from the F<t/> directory :
1993
1994 ./perl -I../lib TEST list-of-.t-files
1995
1996or
1997
1998 ./perl -I../lib harness list-of-.t-files
1999
2000(if you don't specify test scripts, the whole test suite will be run.)
2001
7205a85d
YO
2002=head3 Using t/harness for testing
2003
2004If you use C<harness> for testing you have several command line options
2005available to you. The arguments are as follows, and are in the order
2006that they must appear if used together.
2007
2008 harness -v -torture -re=pattern LIST OF FILES TO TEST
2009 harness -v -torture -re LIST OF PATTERNS TO MATCH
2010
2011If C<LIST OF FILES TO TEST> is omitted the file list is obtained from
07aa3531 2012the manifest. The file list may include shell wildcards which will be
7205a85d
YO
2013expanded out.
2014
2015=over 4
2016
2017=item -v
2018
07aa3531 2019Run the tests under verbose mode so you can see what tests were run,
8550bf48 2020and debug output.
7205a85d
YO
2021
2022=item -torture
2023
2024Run the torture tests as well as the normal set.
2025
2026=item -re=PATTERN
2027
2028Filter the file list so that all the test files run match PATTERN.
2029Note that this form is distinct from the B<-re LIST OF PATTERNS> form below
2030in that it allows the file list to be provided as well.
2031
2032=item -re LIST OF PATTERNS
2033
07aa3531 2034Filter the file list so that all the test files run match
7205a85d
YO
2035/(LIST|OF|PATTERNS)/. Note that with this form the patterns
2036are joined by '|' and you cannot supply a list of files, instead
2037the test files are obtained from the MANIFEST.
2038
2039=back
2040
244d9cb7
RGS
2041You can run an individual test by a command similar to
2042
2043 ./perl -I../lib patho/to/foo.t
2044
2045except that the harnesses set up some environment variables that may
2046affect the execution of the test :
2047
07aa3531 2048=over 4
244d9cb7
RGS
2049
2050=item PERL_CORE=1
2051
2052indicates that we're running this test part of the perl core test suite.
2053This is useful for modules that have a dual life on CPAN.
2054
2055=item PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL=2
2056
2057is set to 2 if it isn't set already (see L</PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL>)
2058
2059=item PERL
2060
2061(used only by F<t/TEST>) if set, overrides the path to the perl executable
2062that should be used to run the tests (the default being F<./perl>).
2063
2064=item PERL_SKIP_TTY_TEST
2065
2066if set, tells to skip the tests that need a terminal. It's actually set
2067automatically by the Makefile, but can also be forced artificially by
2068running 'make test_notty'.
2069
e018f8be 2070=back
f7e1e956 2071
7cd58830
RGS
2072=head3 Other environment variables that may influence tests
2073
2074=over 4
2075
2076=item PERL_TEST_Net_Ping
2077
2078Setting this variable runs all the Net::Ping modules tests,
2079otherwise some tests that interact with the outside world are skipped.
2080See L<perl58delta>.
2081
2082=item PERL_TEST_NOVREXX
2083
2084Setting this variable skips the vrexx.t tests for OS2::REXX.
2085
2086=item PERL_TEST_NUMCONVERTS
2087
2088This sets a variable in op/numconvert.t.
2089
2090=back
2091
2092See also the documentation for the Test and Test::Harness modules,
2093for more environment variables that affect testing.
2094
d7889f52
JH
2095=head2 Common problems when patching Perl source code
2096
2097Perl source plays by ANSI C89 rules: no C99 (or C++) extensions. In
2098some cases we have to take pre-ANSI requirements into consideration.
2099You don't care about some particular platform having broken Perl?
2100I hear there is still a strong demand for J2EE programmers.
2101
2102=head2 Perl environment problems
2103
2104=over 4
2105
2106=item *
2107
2108Not compiling with threading
2109
2110Compiling with threading (-Duseithreads) completely rewrites
2111the function prototypes of Perl. You better try your changes
0bec6c03 2112with that. Related to this is the difference between "Perl_-less"
d7889f52
JH
2113and "Perl_-ly" APIs, for example:
2114
2115 Perl_sv_setiv(aTHX_ ...);
2116 sv_setiv(...);
2117
ee9468a2
RGS
2118The first one explicitly passes in the context, which is needed for e.g.
2119threaded builds. The second one does that implicitly; do not get them
def4ed7d
JH
2120mixed. If you are not passing in a aTHX_, you will need to do a dTHX
2121(or a dVAR) as the first thing in the function.
d7889f52
JH
2122
2123See L<perlguts/"How multiple interpreters and concurrency are supported">
2124for further discussion about context.
2125
2126=item *
2127
2128Not compiling with -DDEBUGGING
2129
2130The DEBUGGING define exposes more code to the compiler,
0bec6c03 2131therefore more ways for things to go wrong. You should try it.
d7889f52
JH
2132
2133=item *
2134
ee9468a2
RGS
2135Introducing (non-read-only) globals
2136
2137Do not introduce any modifiable globals, truly global or file static.
bc028b6b
JH
2138They are bad form and complicate multithreading and other forms of
2139concurrency. The right way is to introduce them as new interpreter
2140variables, see F<intrpvar.h> (at the very end for binary compatibility).
ee9468a2
RGS
2141
2142Introducing read-only (const) globals is okay, as long as you verify
2143with e.g. C<nm libperl.a|egrep -v ' [TURtr] '> (if your C<nm> has
2144BSD-style output) that the data you added really is read-only.
2145(If it is, it shouldn't show up in the output of that command.)
2146
2147If you want to have static strings, make them constant:
2148
2149 static const char etc[] = "...";
2150
bc028b6b 2151If you want to have arrays of constant strings, note carefully
ee9468a2
RGS
2152the right combination of C<const>s:
2153
2154 static const char * const yippee[] =
2155 {"hi", "ho", "silver"};
2156
bc028b6b
JH
2157There is a way to completely hide any modifiable globals (they are all
2158moved to heap), the compilation setting C<-DPERL_GLOBAL_STRUCT_PRIVATE>.
2159It is not normally used, but can be used for testing, read more
def4ed7d 2160about it in L<perlguts/"Background and PERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT">.
bc028b6b 2161
ee9468a2
RGS
2162=item *
2163
d7889f52
JH
2164Not exporting your new function
2165
2166Some platforms (Win32, AIX, VMS, OS/2, to name a few) require any
2167function that is part of the public API (the shared Perl library)
2168to be explicitly marked as exported. See the discussion about
2169F<embed.pl> in L<perlguts>.
2170
2171=item *
2172
2173Exporting your new function
2174
2175The new shiny result of either genuine new functionality or your
2176arduous refactoring is now ready and correctly exported. So what
def4ed7d 2177could possibly go wrong?
d7889f52
JH
2178
2179Maybe simply that your function did not need to be exported in the
2180first place. Perl has a long and not so glorious history of exporting
2181functions that it should not have.
2182
2183If the function is used only inside one source code file, make it
2184static. See the discussion about F<embed.pl> in L<perlguts>.
2185
2186If the function is used across several files, but intended only for
2187Perl's internal use (and this should be the common case), do not
2188export it to the public API. See the discussion about F<embed.pl>
2189in L<perlguts>.
2190
2191=back
2192
5b38b9cd 2193=head2 Portability problems
d7889f52
JH
2194
2195The following are common causes of compilation and/or execution
2196failures, not common to Perl as such. The C FAQ is good bedtime
0bec6c03
JH
2197reading. Please test your changes with as many C compilers and
2198platforms as possible -- we will, anyway, and it's nice to save
2199oneself from public embarrassment.
2200
9aaf14db
RGS
2201If using gcc, you can add the C<-std=c89> option which will hopefully
2202catch most of these unportabilities. (However it might also catch
2203incompatibilities in your system's header files.)
d1307786 2204
a8e98a71
JH
2205Use the Configure C<-Dgccansipedantic> flag to enable the gcc
2206C<-ansi -pedantic> flags which enforce stricter ANSI rules.
2207
def4ed7d
JH
2208If using the C<gcc -Wall> note that not all the possible warnings
2209(like C<-Wunitialized>) are given unless you also compile with C<-O>.
2210
2211Note that if using gcc, starting from Perl 5.9.5 the Perl core source
2212code files (the ones at the top level of the source code distribution,
2213but not e.g. the extensions under ext/) are automatically compiled
2214with as many as possible of the C<-std=c89>, C<-ansi>, C<-pedantic>,
2215and a selection of C<-W> flags (see cflags.SH).
27565cb6 2216
0bec6c03 2217Also study L<perlport> carefully to avoid any bad assumptions
def4ed7d 2218about the operating system, filesystems, and so forth.
0bec6c03 2219
606fd33d 2220You may once in a while try a "make microperl" to see whether we
63796a85 2221can still compile Perl with just the bare minimum of interfaces.
606fd33d 2222(See README.micro.)
ee9468a2 2223
0bec6c03 2224Do not assume an operating system indicates a certain compiler.
d7889f52
JH
2225
2226=over 4
2227
2228=item *
2229
2230Casting pointers to integers or casting integers to pointers
2231
2232 void castaway(U8* p)
2233 {
2234 IV i = p;
2235
2236or
2237
2238 void castaway(U8* p)
2239 {
2240 IV i = (IV)p;
2241
ee9468a2 2242Both are bad, and broken, and unportable. Use the PTR2IV()
d7889f52
JH
2243macro that does it right. (Likewise, there are PTR2UV(), PTR2NV(),
2244INT2PTR(), and NUM2PTR().)
2245
2246=item *
2247
0bec6c03
JH
2248Casting between data function pointers and data pointers
2249
d7889f52
JH
2250Technically speaking casting between function pointers and data
2251pointers is unportable and undefined, but practically speaking
2252it seems to work, but you should use the FPTR2DPTR() and DPTR2FPTR()
0bec6c03 2253macros. Sometimes you can also play games with unions.
d7889f52
JH
2254
2255=item *
2256
2257Assuming sizeof(int) == sizeof(long)
2258
2259There are platforms where longs are 64 bits, and platforms where ints
2260are 64 bits, and while we are out to shock you, even platforms where
2261shorts are 64 bits. This is all legal according to the C standard.
2262(In other words, "long long" is not a portable way to specify 64 bits,
2263and "long long" is not even guaranteed to be any wider than "long".)
63796a85
JH
2264
2265Instead, use the definitions IV, UV, IVSIZE, I32SIZE, and so forth.
2266Avoid things like I32 because they are B<not> guaranteed to be
2267I<exactly> 32 bits, they are I<at least> 32 bits, nor are they
2268guaranteed to be B<int> or B<long>. If you really explicitly need
226964-bit variables, use I64 and U64, but only if guarded by HAS_QUAD.
d7889f52
JH
2270
2271=item *
2272
2273Assuming one can dereference any type of pointer for any type of data
2274
2275 char *p = ...;
def4ed7d 2276 long pony = *p; /* BAD */
d7889f52
JH
2277
2278Many platforms, quite rightly so, will give you a core dump instead
2279of a pony if the p happens not be correctly aligned.
2280
2281=item *
2282
2283Lvalue casts
2284
def4ed7d 2285 (int)*p = ...; /* BAD */
d7889f52
JH
2286
2287Simply not portable. Get your lvalue to be of the right type,
27565cb6
JH
2288or maybe use temporary variables, or dirty tricks with unions.
2289
2290=item *
2291
606fd33d
JH
2292Assume B<anything> about structs (especially the ones you
2293don't control, like the ones coming from the system headers)
27565cb6
JH
2294
2295=over 8
2296
2297=item *
2298
2299That a certain field exists in a struct
2300
2301=item *
2302
902821cc 2303That no other fields exist besides the ones you know of
27565cb6
JH
2304
2305=item *
2306
606fd33d 2307That a field is of certain signedness, sizeof, or type
27565cb6
JH
2308
2309=item *
2310
2311That the fields are in a certain order
2312
606fd33d
JH
2313=over 8
2314
27565cb6
JH
2315=item *
2316
606fd33d
JH
2317While C guarantees the ordering specified in the struct definition,
2318between different platforms the definitions might differ
2319
2320=back
27565cb6
JH
2321
2322=item *
2323
606fd33d
JH
2324That the sizeof(struct) or the alignments are the same everywhere
2325
2326=over 8
27565cb6
JH
2327
2328=item *
2329
606fd33d
JH
2330There might be padding bytes between the fields to align the fields -
2331the bytes can be anything
2332
2333=item *
2334
2335Structs are required to be aligned to the maximum alignment required
2336by the fields - which for native types is for usually equivalent to
2337sizeof() of the field
2338
2339=back
27565cb6
JH
2340
2341=back
d7889f52
JH
2342
2343=item *
2344
2bbc8d55
SP
2345Assuming the character set is ASCIIish
2346
2347Perl can compile and run under EBCDIC platforms. See L<perlebcdic>.
2348This is transparent for the most part, but because the character sets
2349differ, you shouldn't use numeric (decimal, octal, nor hex) constants
2350to refer to characters. You can safely say 'A', but not 0x41.
2351You can safely say '\n', but not \012.
2352If a character doesn't have a trivial input form, you can
2353create a #define for it in both C<utfebcdic.h> and C<utf8.h>, so that
2354it resolves to different values depending on the character set being used.
2355(There are three different EBCDIC character sets defined in C<utfebcdic.h>,
2356so it might be best to insert the #define three times in that file.)
2357
2358Also, the range 'A' - 'Z' in ASCII is an unbroken sequence of 26 upper case
2359alphabetic characters. That is not true in EBCDIC. Nor for 'a' to 'z'.
2360But '0' - '9' is an unbroken range in both systems. Don't assume anything
2361about other ranges.
2362
2363Many of the comments in the existing code ignore the possibility of EBCDIC,
2364and may be wrong therefore, even if the code works.
2365This is actually a tribute to the successful transparent insertion of being
fe749c9a 2366able to handle EBCDIC without having to change pre-existing code.
2bbc8d55
SP
2367
2368UTF-8 and UTF-EBCDIC are two different encodings used to represent Unicode
2369code points as sequences of bytes. Macros
2370with the same names (but different definitions)
2371in C<utf8.h> and C<utfebcdic.h>
fe749c9a
KW
2372are used to allow the calling code to think that there is only one such
2373encoding.
2374This is almost always referred to as C<utf8>, but it means the EBCDIC version
2375as well. Again, comments in the code may well be wrong even if the code itself
2376is right.
2bbc8d55
SP
2377For example, the concept of C<invariant characters> differs between ASCII and
2378EBCDIC.
2379On ASCII platforms, only characters that do not have the high-order
2380bit set (i.e. whose ordinals are strict ASCII, 0 - 127)
2381are invariant, and the documentation and comments in the code
2382may assume that,
2383often referring to something like, say, C<hibit>.
2384The situation differs and is not so simple on EBCDIC machines, but as long as
2385the code itself uses the C<NATIVE_IS_INVARIANT()> macro appropriately, it
2386works, even if the comments are wrong.
2387
2388=item *
2389
2390Assuming the character set is just ASCII
2391
2392ASCII is a 7 bit encoding, but bytes have 8 bits in them. The 128 extra
2393characters have different meanings depending on the locale. Absent a locale,
2394currently these extra characters are generally considered to be unassigned,
2395and this has presented some problems.
2396This is scheduled to be changed in 5.12 so that these characters will
2397be considered to be Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1).
2398
2399=item *
2400
0bec6c03
JH
2401Mixing #define and #ifdef
2402
2403 #define BURGLE(x) ... \
def4ed7d 2404 #ifdef BURGLE_OLD_STYLE /* BAD */
0bec6c03
JH
2405 ... do it the old way ... \
2406 #else
2407 ... do it the new way ... \
2408 #endif
2409
ee9468a2
RGS
2410You cannot portably "stack" cpp directives. For example in the above
2411you need two separate BURGLE() #defines, one for each #ifdef branch.
2412
2413=item *
2414
2bbc8d55 2415Adding non-comment stuff after #endif or #else
ee9468a2
RGS
2416
2417 #ifdef SNOSH
2418 ...
def4ed7d 2419 #else !SNOSH /* BAD */
ee9468a2 2420 ...
def4ed7d 2421 #endif SNOSH /* BAD */
ee9468a2 2422
def4ed7d
JH
2423The #endif and #else cannot portably have anything non-comment after
2424them. If you want to document what is going (which is a good idea
2425especially if the branches are long), use (C) comments:
ee9468a2
RGS
2426
2427 #ifdef SNOSH
2428 ...
2429 #else /* !SNOSH */
2430 ...
2431 #endif /* SNOSH */
2432
2433The gcc option C<-Wendif-labels> warns about the bad variant
2434(by default on starting from Perl 5.9.4).
0bec6c03
JH
2435
2436=item *
2437
27565cb6
JH
2438Having a comma after the last element of an enum list
2439
2440 enum color {
2441 CERULEAN,
2442 CHARTREUSE,
def4ed7d 2443 CINNABAR, /* BAD */
27565cb6
JH
2444 };
2445
2446is not portable. Leave out the last comma.
2447
2448Also note that whether enums are implicitly morphable to ints
2449varies between compilers, you might need to (int).
2450
2451=item *
2452
d7889f52
JH
2453Using //-comments
2454
def4ed7d 2455 // This function bamfoodles the zorklator. /* BAD */
d7889f52
JH
2456
2457That is C99 or C++. Perl is C89. Using the //-comments is silently
0bec6c03
JH
2458allowed by many C compilers but cranking up the ANSI C89 strictness
2459(which we like to do) causes the compilation to fail.
d7889f52
JH
2460
2461=item *
2462
2463Mixing declarations and code
2464
2465 void zorklator()
2466 {
2467 int n = 3;
def4ed7d 2468 set_zorkmids(n); /* BAD */
d7889f52
JH
2469 int q = 4;
2470
0bec6c03
JH
2471That is C99 or C++. Some C compilers allow that, but you shouldn't.
2472
63796a85
JH
2473The gcc option C<-Wdeclaration-after-statements> scans for such problems
2474(by default on starting from Perl 5.9.4).
2475
0bec6c03
JH
2476=item *
2477
2478Introducing variables inside for()
2479
def4ed7d 2480 for(int i = ...; ...; ...) { /* BAD */
0bec6c03
JH
2481
2482That is C99 or C++. While it would indeed be awfully nice to have that
2483also in C89, to limit the scope of the loop variable, alas, we cannot.
d7889f52
JH
2484
2485=item *
2486
2487Mixing signed char pointers with unsigned char pointers
2488
2489 int foo(char *s) { ... }
2490 ...
2491 unsigned char *t = ...; /* Or U8* t = ... */
def4ed7d 2492 foo(t); /* BAD */
d7889f52
JH
2493
2494While this is legal practice, it is certainly dubious, and downright
2495fatal in at least one platform: for example VMS cc considers this a
def4ed7d
JH
2496fatal error. One cause for people often making this mistake is that a
2497"naked char" and therefore dereferencing a "naked char pointer" have
2498an undefined signedness: it depends on the compiler and the flags of
2499the compiler and the underlying platform whether the result is signed
2500or unsigned. For this very same reason using a 'char' as an array
2501index is bad.
d7889f52
JH
2502
2503=item *
2504
2505Macros that have string constants and their arguments as substrings of
2506the string constants
2507
def4ed7d 2508 #define FOO(n) printf("number = %d\n", n) /* BAD */
d7889f52
JH
2509 FOO(10);
2510
2511Pre-ANSI semantics for that was equivalent to
2512
2513 printf("10umber = %d\10");
2514
0bec6c03
JH
2515which is probably not what you were expecting. Unfortunately at least
2516one reasonably common and modern C compiler does "real backward
63796a85 2517compatibility" here, in AIX that is what still happens even though the
0bec6c03
JH
2518rest of the AIX compiler is very happily C89.
2519
2520=item *
2521
ee9468a2
RGS
2522Using printf formats for non-basic C types
2523
2524 IV i = ...;
def4ed7d 2525 printf("i = %d\n", i); /* BAD */
ee9468a2
RGS
2526
2527While this might by accident work in some platform (where IV happens
2528to be an C<int>), in general it cannot. IV might be something larger.
2529Even worse the situation is with more specific types (defined by Perl's
2530configuration step in F<config.h>):
2531
2532 Uid_t who = ...;
def4ed7d 2533 printf("who = %d\n", who); /* BAD */
ee9468a2
RGS
2534
2535The problem here is that Uid_t might be not only not C<int>-wide
2536but it might also be unsigned, in which case large uids would be
2537printed as negative values.
2538
2539There is no simple solution to this because of printf()'s limited
2540intelligence, but for many types the right format is available as
2541with either 'f' or '_f' suffix, for example:
2542
2543 IVdf /* IV in decimal */
2544 UVxf /* UV is hexadecimal */
2545
2546 printf("i = %"IVdf"\n", i); /* The IVdf is a string constant. */
2547
2548 Uid_t_f /* Uid_t in decimal */
2549
2550 printf("who = %"Uid_t_f"\n", who);
2551
63796a85
JH
2552Or you can try casting to a "wide enough" type:
2553
2554 printf("i = %"IVdf"\n", (IV)something_very_small_and_signed);
2555
2556Also remember that the C<%p> format really does require a void pointer:
2557
2558 U8* p = ...;
2559 printf("p = %p\n", (void*)p);
2560
ee9468a2
RGS
2561The gcc option C<-Wformat> scans for such problems.
2562
2563=item *
2564
0bec6c03
JH
2565Blindly using variadic macros
2566
63796a85
JH
2567gcc has had them for a while with its own syntax, and C99 brought
2568them with a standardized syntax. Don't use the former, and use
2569the latter only if the HAS_C99_VARIADIC_MACROS is defined.
0bec6c03
JH
2570
2571=item *
2572
2573Blindly passing va_list
2574
2575Not all platforms support passing va_list to further varargs (stdarg)
2576functions. The right thing to do is to copy the va_list using the
2577Perl_va_copy() if the NEED_VA_COPY is defined.
d7889f52 2578
ee9468a2
RGS
2579=item *
2580
e5afc1ae 2581Using gcc statement expressions
63796a85 2582
def4ed7d 2583 val = ({...;...;...}); /* BAD */
63796a85 2584
def4ed7d
JH
2585While a nice extension, it's not portable. The Perl code does
2586admittedly use them if available to gain some extra speed
2587(essentially as a funky form of inlining), but you shouldn't.
63796a85
JH
2588
2589=item *
2590
2bbc8d55 2591Binding together several statements in a macro
63796a85
JH
2592
2593Use the macros STMT_START and STMT_END.
2594
2595 STMT_START {
2596 ...
2597 } STMT_END
2598
2599=item *
2600
ee9468a2
RGS
2601Testing for operating systems or versions when should be testing for features
2602
def4ed7d 2603 #ifdef __FOONIX__ /* BAD */
ee9468a2
RGS
2604 foo = quux();
2605 #endif
2606
2607Unless you know with 100% certainty that quux() is only ever available
2608for the "Foonix" operating system B<and> that is available B<and>
2609correctly working for B<all> past, present, B<and> future versions of
2610"Foonix", the above is very wrong. This is more correct (though still
2611not perfect, because the below is a compile-time check):
2612
2613 #ifdef HAS_QUUX
2614 foo = quux();
2615 #endif
2616
def4ed7d 2617How does the HAS_QUUX become defined where it needs to be? Well, if
353c6505 2618Foonix happens to be UNIXy enough to be able to run the Configure
ee9468a2
RGS
2619script, and Configure has been taught about detecting and testing
2620quux(), the HAS_QUUX will be correctly defined. In other platforms,
2621the corresponding configuration step will hopefully do the same.
2622
2623In a pinch, if you cannot wait for Configure to be educated,
2624or if you have a good hunch of where quux() might be available,
2625you can temporarily try the following:
2626
2627 #if (defined(__FOONIX__) || defined(__BARNIX__))
2628 # define HAS_QUUX
2629 #endif
2630
2631 ...
2632
2633 #ifdef HAS_QUUX
2634 foo = quux();
2635 #endif
2636
2637But in any case, try to keep the features and operating systems separate.
2638
d7889f52
JH
2639=back
2640
ad7244db
JH
2641=head2 Problematic System Interfaces
2642
2643=over 4
2644
2645=item *
2646
353c6505 2647malloc(0), realloc(0), calloc(0, 0) are non-portable. To be portable
ad7244db
JH
2648allocate at least one byte. (In general you should rarely need to
2649work at this low level, but instead use the various malloc wrappers.)
2650
2651=item *
2652
2653snprintf() - the return type is unportable. Use my_snprintf() instead.
2654
2655=back
2656
d7889f52
JH
2657=head2 Security problems
2658
2659Last but not least, here are various tips for safer coding.
2660
2661=over 4
2662
2663=item *
2664
2665Do not use gets()
2666
2667Or we will publicly ridicule you. Seriously.
2668
2669=item *
2670
d1307786 2671Do not use strcpy() or strcat() or strncpy() or strncat()
d7889f52 2672
d1307786
JH
2673Use my_strlcpy() and my_strlcat() instead: they either use the native
2674implementation, or Perl's own implementation (borrowed from the public
2675domain implementation of INN).
d7889f52
JH
2676
2677=item *
2678
2679Do not use sprintf() or vsprintf()
2680
0bec6c03 2681If you really want just plain byte strings, use my_snprintf()
64d9b66b 2682and my_vsnprintf() instead, which will try to use snprintf() and
0bec6c03
JH
2683vsnprintf() if those safer APIs are available. If you want something
2684fancier than a plain byte string, use SVs and Perl_sv_catpvf().
d7889f52
JH
2685
2686=back
2687
902b9dbf
MLF
2688=head1 EXTERNAL TOOLS FOR DEBUGGING PERL
2689
2690Sometimes it helps to use external tools while debugging and
2691testing Perl. This section tries to guide you through using
2692some common testing and debugging tools with Perl. This is
2693meant as a guide to interfacing these tools with Perl, not
2694as any kind of guide to the use of the tools themselves.
2695
a958818a
JH
2696B<NOTE 1>: Running under memory debuggers such as Purify, valgrind, or
2697Third Degree greatly slows down the execution: seconds become minutes,
2698minutes become hours. For example as of Perl 5.8.1, the
2699ext/Encode/t/Unicode.t takes extraordinarily long to complete under
2700e.g. Purify, Third Degree, and valgrind. Under valgrind it takes more
2701than six hours, even on a snappy computer-- the said test must be
2702doing something that is quite unfriendly for memory debuggers. If you
2703don't feel like waiting, that you can simply kill away the perl
2704process.
2705
2706B<NOTE 2>: To minimize the number of memory leak false alarms (see
2707L</PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL> for more information), you have to have
2708environment variable PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL set to 2. The F<TEST>
2709and harness scripts do that automatically. But if you are running
2710some of the tests manually-- for csh-like shells:
2711
2712 setenv PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL 2
2713
2714and for Bourne-type shells:
2715
2716 PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL=2
2717 export PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL
2718
2719or in UNIXy environments you can also use the C<env> command:
2720
2721 env PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL=2 valgrind ./perl -Ilib ...
a1b65709 2722
37c0adeb
JH
2723B<NOTE 3>: There are known memory leaks when there are compile-time
2724errors within eval or require, seeing C<S_doeval> in the call stack
2725is a good sign of these. Fixing these leaks is non-trivial,
2726unfortunately, but they must be fixed eventually.
2727
f50e5b73
MH
2728B<NOTE 4>: L<DynaLoader> will not clean up after itself completely
2729unless Perl is built with the Configure option
2730C<-Accflags=-DDL_UNLOAD_ALL_AT_EXIT>.
2731
902b9dbf
MLF
2732=head2 Rational Software's Purify
2733
2734Purify is a commercial tool that is helpful in identifying
2735memory overruns, wild pointers, memory leaks and other such
2736badness. Perl must be compiled in a specific way for
2737optimal testing with Purify. Purify is available under
2738Windows NT, Solaris, HP-UX, SGI, and Siemens Unix.
2739
902b9dbf
MLF
2740=head2 Purify on Unix
2741
2742On Unix, Purify creates a new Perl binary. To get the most
2743benefit out of Purify, you should create the perl to Purify
2744using:
2745
2746 sh Configure -Accflags=-DPURIFY -Doptimize='-g' \
2747 -Uusemymalloc -Dusemultiplicity
2748
2749where these arguments mean:
2750
2751=over 4
2752
2753=item -Accflags=-DPURIFY
2754
2755Disables Perl's arena memory allocation functions, as well as
2756forcing use of memory allocation functions derived from the
2757system malloc.
2758
2759=item -Doptimize='-g'
2760
2761Adds debugging information so that you see the exact source
2762statements where the problem occurs. Without this flag, all
2763you will see is the source filename of where the error occurred.
2764
2765=item -Uusemymalloc
2766
2767Disable Perl's malloc so that Purify can more closely monitor
2768allocations and leaks. Using Perl's malloc will make Purify
2769report most leaks in the "potential" leaks category.
2770
2771=item -Dusemultiplicity
2772
2773Enabling the multiplicity option allows perl to clean up
2774thoroughly when the interpreter shuts down, which reduces the
2775number of bogus leak reports from Purify.
2776
2777=back
2778
2779Once you've compiled a perl suitable for Purify'ing, then you
2780can just:
2781
07aa3531 2782 make pureperl
902b9dbf
MLF
2783
2784which creates a binary named 'pureperl' that has been Purify'ed.
2785This binary is used in place of the standard 'perl' binary
2786when you want to debug Perl memory problems.
2787
2788As an example, to show any memory leaks produced during the
2789standard Perl testset you would create and run the Purify'ed
2790perl as:
2791
2792 make pureperl
2793 cd t
07aa3531 2794 ../pureperl -I../lib harness
902b9dbf
MLF
2795
2796which would run Perl on test.pl and report any memory problems.
2797
2798Purify outputs messages in "Viewer" windows by default. If
2799you don't have a windowing environment or if you simply
2800want the Purify output to unobtrusively go to a log file
2801instead of to the interactive window, use these following
2802options to output to the log file "perl.log":
2803
2804 setenv PURIFYOPTIONS "-chain-length=25 -windows=no \
2805 -log-file=perl.log -append-logfile=yes"
2806
2807If you plan to use the "Viewer" windows, then you only need this option:
2808
2809 setenv PURIFYOPTIONS "-chain-length=25"
2810
c406981e
JH
2811In Bourne-type shells:
2812
98631ff8
JL
2813 PURIFYOPTIONS="..."
2814 export PURIFYOPTIONS
c406981e
JH
2815
2816or if you have the "env" utility:
2817
98631ff8 2818 env PURIFYOPTIONS="..." ../pureperl ...
c406981e 2819
902b9dbf
MLF
2820=head2 Purify on NT
2821
2822Purify on Windows NT instruments the Perl binary 'perl.exe'
2823on the fly. There are several options in the makefile you
2824should change to get the most use out of Purify:
2825
2826=over 4
2827
2828=item DEFINES
2829
2830You should add -DPURIFY to the DEFINES line so the DEFINES
2831line looks something like:
2832
07aa3531 2833 DEFINES = -DWIN32 -D_CONSOLE -DNO_STRICT $(CRYPT_FLAG) -DPURIFY=1
902b9dbf
MLF
2834
2835to disable Perl's arena memory allocation functions, as
2836well as to force use of memory allocation functions derived
2837from the system malloc.
2838
2839=item USE_MULTI = define
2840
2841Enabling the multiplicity option allows perl to clean up
2842thoroughly when the interpreter shuts down, which reduces the
2843number of bogus leak reports from Purify.
2844
2845=item #PERL_MALLOC = define
2846
2847Disable Perl's malloc so that Purify can more closely monitor
2848allocations and leaks. Using Perl's malloc will make Purify
2849report most leaks in the "potential" leaks category.
2850
2851=item CFG = Debug
2852
2853Adds debugging information so that you see the exact source
2854statements where the problem occurs. Without this flag, all
2855you will see is the source filename of where the error occurred.
2856
2857=back
2858
2859As an example, to show any memory leaks produced during the
2860standard Perl testset you would create and run Purify as:
2861
2862 cd win32
2863 make
2864 cd ../t
07aa3531 2865 purify ../perl -I../lib harness
902b9dbf
MLF
2866
2867which would instrument Perl in memory, run Perl on test.pl,
2868then finally report any memory problems.
2869
7a834142
JH
2870=head2 valgrind
2871
2872The excellent valgrind tool can be used to find out both memory leaks
9df8f87f
LB
2873and illegal memory accesses. As of version 3.3.0, Valgrind only
2874supports Linux on x86, x86-64 and PowerPC. The special "test.valgrind"
2875target can be used to run the tests under valgrind. Found errors
2876and memory leaks are logged in files named F<testfile.valgrind>.
07aa3531
JC
2877
2878Valgrind also provides a cachegrind tool, invoked on perl as:
2879
038c294a 2880 VG_OPTS=--tool=cachegrind make test.valgrind
d44161bf
MHM
2881
2882As system libraries (most notably glibc) are also triggering errors,
2883valgrind allows to suppress such errors using suppression files. The
2884default suppression file that comes with valgrind already catches a lot
2885of them. Some additional suppressions are defined in F<t/perl.supp>.
7a834142
JH
2886
2887To get valgrind and for more information see
2888
2889 http://developer.kde.org/~sewardj/
2890
f134cc4e 2891=head2 Compaq's/Digital's/HP's Third Degree
09187cb1
JH
2892
2893Third Degree is a tool for memory leak detection and memory access checks.
2894It is one of the many tools in the ATOM toolkit. The toolkit is only
2895available on Tru64 (formerly known as Digital UNIX formerly known as
2896DEC OSF/1).
2897
2898When building Perl, you must first run Configure with -Doptimize=-g
2899and -Uusemymalloc flags, after that you can use the make targets
51a35ef1
JH
2900"perl.third" and "test.third". (What is required is that Perl must be
2901compiled using the C<-g> flag, you may need to re-Configure.)
09187cb1 2902
64cea5fd 2903The short story is that with "atom" you can instrument the Perl
83f0ef60 2904executable to create a new executable called F<perl.third>. When the
4ae3d70a 2905instrumented executable is run, it creates a log of dubious memory
83f0ef60 2906traffic in file called F<perl.3log>. See the manual pages of atom and
4ae3d70a
JH
2907third for more information. The most extensive Third Degree
2908documentation is available in the Compaq "Tru64 UNIX Programmer's
2909Guide", chapter "Debugging Programs with Third Degree".
64cea5fd 2910
9c54ecba 2911The "test.third" leaves a lot of files named F<foo_bar.3log> in the t/
64cea5fd
JH
2912subdirectory. There is a problem with these files: Third Degree is so
2913effective that it finds problems also in the system libraries.
9c54ecba
JH
2914Therefore you should used the Porting/thirdclean script to cleanup
2915the F<*.3log> files.
64cea5fd
JH
2916
2917There are also leaks that for given certain definition of a leak,
2918aren't. See L</PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL> for more information.
2919
2920=head2 PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL
2921
a958818a
JH
2922If you want to run any of the tests yourself manually using e.g.
2923valgrind, or the pureperl or perl.third executables, please note that
2924by default perl B<does not> explicitly cleanup all the memory it has
2925allocated (such as global memory arenas) but instead lets the exit()
2926of the whole program "take care" of such allocations, also known as
2927"global destruction of objects".
64cea5fd
JH
2928
2929There is a way to tell perl to do complete cleanup: set the
2930environment variable PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL to a non-zero value.
2931The t/TEST wrapper does set this to 2, and this is what you
2932need to do too, if you don't want to see the "global leaks":
1f56d61a 2933For example, for "third-degreed" Perl:
64cea5fd 2934
1f56d61a 2935 env PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL=2 ./perl.third -Ilib t/foo/bar.t
09187cb1 2936
414f2397
RGS
2937(Note: the mod_perl apache module uses also this environment variable
2938for its own purposes and extended its semantics. Refer to the mod_perl
287a822c
RGS
2939documentation for more information. Also, spawned threads do the
2940equivalent of setting this variable to the value 1.)
5a6c59ef
DM
2941
2942If, at the end of a run you get the message I<N scalars leaked>, you can
fd0854ff
DM
2943recompile with C<-DDEBUG_LEAKING_SCALARS>, which will cause the addresses
2944of all those leaked SVs to be dumped along with details as to where each
2945SV was originally allocated. This information is also displayed by
2946Devel::Peek. Note that the extra details recorded with each SV increases
2947memory usage, so it shouldn't be used in production environments. It also
2948converts C<new_SV()> from a macro into a real function, so you can use
2949your favourite debugger to discover where those pesky SVs were allocated.
414f2397 2950
d7a2c63c
MHM
2951If you see that you're leaking memory at runtime, but neither valgrind
2952nor C<-DDEBUG_LEAKING_SCALARS> will find anything, you're probably
2953leaking SVs that are still reachable and will be properly cleaned up
2954during destruction of the interpreter. In such cases, using the C<-Dm>
2955switch can point you to the source of the leak. If the executable was
2956built with C<-DDEBUG_LEAKING_SCALARS>, C<-Dm> will output SV allocations
2957in addition to memory allocations. Each SV allocation has a distinct
2958serial number that will be written on creation and destruction of the SV.
2959So if you're executing the leaking code in a loop, you need to look for
2960SVs that are created, but never destroyed between each cycle. If such an
2961SV is found, set a conditional breakpoint within C<new_SV()> and make it
2962break only when C<PL_sv_serial> is equal to the serial number of the
2963leaking SV. Then you will catch the interpreter in exactly the state
2964where the leaking SV is allocated, which is sufficient in many cases to
2965find the source of the leak.
2966
2967As C<-Dm> is using the PerlIO layer for output, it will by itself
2968allocate quite a bunch of SVs, which are hidden to avoid recursion.
2969You can bypass the PerlIO layer if you use the SV logging provided
2970by C<-DPERL_MEM_LOG> instead.
2971
46c6c7e2
JH
2972=head2 PERL_MEM_LOG
2973
10a879f5
JC
2974If compiled with C<-DPERL_MEM_LOG>, both memory and SV allocations go
2975through logging functions, which is handy for breakpoint setting.
2976
2977Unless C<-DPERL_MEM_LOG_NOIMPL> is also compiled, the logging
2e5b5004 2978functions read $ENV{PERL_MEM_LOG} to determine whether to log the
10a879f5
JC
2979event, and if so how:
2980
2e5b5004
RGS
2981 $ENV{PERL_MEM_LOG} =~ /m/ Log all memory ops
2982 $ENV{PERL_MEM_LOG} =~ /s/ Log all SV ops
2983 $ENV{PERL_MEM_LOG} =~ /t/ include timestamp in Log
2984 $ENV{PERL_MEM_LOG} =~ /^(\d+)/ write to FD given (default is 2)
10a879f5
JC
2985
2986Memory logging is somewhat similar to C<-Dm> but is independent of
2987C<-DDEBUGGING>, and at a higher level; all uses of Newx(), Renew(),
2e5b5004 2988and Safefree() are logged with the caller's source code file and line
10a879f5
JC
2989number (and C function name, if supported by the C compiler). In
2990contrast, C<-Dm> is directly at the point of C<malloc()>. SV logging
2991is similar.
2992
2993Since the logging doesn't use PerlIO, all SV allocations are logged
2994and no extra SV allocations are introduced by enabling the logging.
2995If compiled with C<-DDEBUG_LEAKING_SCALARS>, the serial number for
2996each SV allocation is also logged.
d7a2c63c 2997
51a35ef1
JH
2998=head2 Profiling
2999
3000Depending on your platform there are various of profiling Perl.
3001
3002There are two commonly used techniques of profiling executables:
10f58044 3003I<statistical time-sampling> and I<basic-block counting>.
51a35ef1
JH
3004
3005The first method takes periodically samples of the CPU program
3006counter, and since the program counter can be correlated with the code
3007generated for functions, we get a statistical view of in which
3008functions the program is spending its time. The caveats are that very
3009small/fast functions have lower probability of showing up in the
3010profile, and that periodically interrupting the program (this is
3011usually done rather frequently, in the scale of milliseconds) imposes
3012an additional overhead that may skew the results. The first problem
3013can be alleviated by running the code for longer (in general this is a
3014good idea for profiling), the second problem is usually kept in guard
3015by the profiling tools themselves.
3016
10f58044 3017The second method divides up the generated code into I<basic blocks>.
51a35ef1
JH
3018Basic blocks are sections of code that are entered only in the
3019beginning and exited only at the end. For example, a conditional jump
3020starts a basic block. Basic block profiling usually works by
10f58044 3021I<instrumenting> the code by adding I<enter basic block #nnnn>
51a35ef1
JH
3022book-keeping code to the generated code. During the execution of the
3023code the basic block counters are then updated appropriately. The
3024caveat is that the added extra code can skew the results: again, the
3025profiling tools usually try to factor their own effects out of the
3026results.
3027
83f0ef60
JH
3028=head2 Gprof Profiling
3029
51a35ef1
JH
3030gprof is a profiling tool available in many UNIX platforms,
3031it uses F<statistical time-sampling>.
83f0ef60
JH
3032
3033You can build a profiled version of perl called "perl.gprof" by
51a35ef1
JH
3034invoking the make target "perl.gprof" (What is required is that Perl
3035must be compiled using the C<-pg> flag, you may need to re-Configure).
3036Running the profiled version of Perl will create an output file called
3037F<gmon.out> is created which contains the profiling data collected
3038during the execution.
83f0ef60
JH
3039
3040The gprof tool can then display the collected data in various ways.
3041Usually gprof understands the following options:
3042
3043=over 4
3044
3045=item -a
3046
3047Suppress statically defined functions from the profile.
3048
3049=item -b
3050
3051Suppress the verbose descriptions in the profile.
3052
3053=item -e routine
3054
3055Exclude the given routine and its descendants from the profile.
3056
3057=item -f routine
3058
3059Display only the given routine and its descendants in the profile.
3060
3061=item -s
3062
3063Generate a summary file called F<gmon.sum> which then may be given
3064to subsequent gprof runs to accumulate data over several runs.
3065
3066=item -z
3067
3068Display routines that have zero usage.
3069
3070=back
3071
3072For more detailed explanation of the available commands and output
3073formats, see your own local documentation of gprof.
3074
038c294a 3075quick hint:
07aa3531 3076
289d61c2
JL
3077 $ sh Configure -des -Dusedevel -Doptimize='-pg' && make perl.gprof
3078 $ ./perl.gprof someprog # creates gmon.out in current directory
3079 $ gprof ./perl.gprof > out
07aa3531
JC
3080 $ view out
3081
51a35ef1
JH
3082=head2 GCC gcov Profiling
3083
10f58044 3084Starting from GCC 3.0 I<basic block profiling> is officially available
51a35ef1
JH
3085for the GNU CC.
3086
3087You can build a profiled version of perl called F<perl.gcov> by
3088invoking the make target "perl.gcov" (what is required that Perl must
3089be compiled using gcc with the flags C<-fprofile-arcs
3090-ftest-coverage>, you may need to re-Configure).
3091
3092Running the profiled version of Perl will cause profile output to be
3093generated. For each source file an accompanying ".da" file will be
3094created.
3095
3096To display the results you use the "gcov" utility (which should
3097be installed if you have gcc 3.0 or newer installed). F<gcov> is
3098run on source code files, like this
3099
3100 gcov sv.c
3101
3102which will cause F<sv.c.gcov> to be created. The F<.gcov> files
3103contain the source code annotated with relative frequencies of
3104execution indicated by "#" markers.
3105
3106Useful options of F<gcov> include C<-b> which will summarise the
3107basic block, branch, and function call coverage, and C<-c> which
3108instead of relative frequencies will use the actual counts. For
3109more information on the use of F<gcov> and basic block profiling
3110with gcc, see the latest GNU CC manual, as of GCC 3.0 see
3111
3112 http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-3.0/gcc.html
3113
3114and its section titled "8. gcov: a Test Coverage Program"
3115
3116 http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-3.0/gcc_8.html#SEC132
3117
07aa3531
JC
3118quick hint:
3119
3120 $ sh Configure -des -Doptimize='-g' -Accflags='-fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage' \
3121 -Aldflags='-fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage' && make perl.gcov
3122 $ rm -f regexec.c.gcov regexec.gcda
3123 $ ./perl.gcov
3124 $ gcov regexec.c
3125 $ view regexec.c.gcov
3126
4ae3d70a
JH
3127=head2 Pixie Profiling
3128
51a35ef1
JH
3129Pixie is a profiling tool available on IRIX and Tru64 (aka Digital
3130UNIX aka DEC OSF/1) platforms. Pixie does its profiling using
10f58044 3131I<basic-block counting>.
4ae3d70a 3132
83f0ef60 3133You can build a profiled version of perl called F<perl.pixie> by
51a35ef1
JH
3134invoking the make target "perl.pixie" (what is required is that Perl
3135must be compiled using the C<-g> flag, you may need to re-Configure).
3136
3137In Tru64 a file called F<perl.Addrs> will also be silently created,
3138this file contains the addresses of the basic blocks. Running the
3139profiled version of Perl will create a new file called "perl.Counts"
3140which contains the counts for the basic block for that particular
3141program execution.
4ae3d70a 3142
51a35ef1 3143To display the results you use the F<prof> utility. The exact
4ae3d70a
JH
3144incantation depends on your operating system, "prof perl.Counts" in
3145IRIX, and "prof -pixie -all -L. perl" in Tru64.
3146
6c41479b
JH
3147In IRIX the following prof options are available:
3148
3149=over 4
3150
3151=item -h
3152
3153Reports the most heavily used lines in descending order of use.
6e36760b 3154Useful for finding the hotspot lines.
6c41479b
JH
3155
3156=item -l
3157
3158Groups lines by procedure, with procedures sorted in descending order of use.
3159Within a procedure, lines are listed in source order.
6e36760b 3160Useful for finding the hotspots of procedures.
6c41479b
JH
3161
3162=back
3163
3164In Tru64 the following options are available:
3165
3166=over 4
3167
3958b146 3168=item -p[rocedures]
6c41479b 3169
3958b146 3170Procedures sorted in descending order by the number of cycles executed
6e36760b 3171in each procedure. Useful for finding the hotspot procedures.
6c41479b
JH
3172(This is the default option.)
3173
24000d2f 3174=item -h[eavy]
6c41479b 3175
6e36760b
JH
3176Lines sorted in descending order by the number of cycles executed in
3177each line. Useful for finding the hotspot lines.
6c41479b 3178
24000d2f 3179=item -i[nvocations]
6c41479b 3180
6e36760b
JH
3181The called procedures are sorted in descending order by number of calls
3182made to the procedures. Useful for finding the most used procedures.
6c41479b 3183
24000d2f 3184=item -l[ines]
6c41479b
JH
3185
3186Grouped by procedure, sorted by cycles executed per procedure.
6e36760b 3187Useful for finding the hotspots of procedures.
6c41479b
JH
3188
3189=item -testcoverage
3190
3191The compiler emitted code for these lines, but the code was unexecuted.
3192
24000d2f 3193=item -z[ero]
6c41479b
JH
3194
3195Unexecuted procedures.
3196
aa500c9e 3197=back
6c41479b
JH
3198
3199For further information, see your system's manual pages for pixie and prof.
4ae3d70a 3200
b8ddf6b3
SB
3201=head2 Miscellaneous tricks
3202
3203=over 4
3204
3205=item *
3206
cc177e1a 3207Those debugging perl with the DDD frontend over gdb may find the
b8ddf6b3
SB
3208following useful:
3209
3210You can extend the data conversion shortcuts menu, so for example you
3211can display an SV's IV value with one click, without doing any typing.
3212To do that simply edit ~/.ddd/init file and add after:
3213
3214 ! Display shortcuts.
3215 Ddd*gdbDisplayShortcuts: \
3216 /t () // Convert to Bin\n\
3217 /d () // Convert to Dec\n\
3218 /x () // Convert to Hex\n\
3219 /o () // Convert to Oct(\n\
3220
3221the following two lines:
3222
3223 ((XPV*) (())->sv_any )->xpv_pv // 2pvx\n\
3224 ((XPVIV*) (())->sv_any )->xiv_iv // 2ivx
3225
3226so now you can do ivx and pvx lookups or you can plug there the
3227sv_peek "conversion":
3228
3229 Perl_sv_peek(my_perl, (SV*)()) // sv_peek
3230
3231(The my_perl is for threaded builds.)
3232Just remember that every line, but the last one, should end with \n\
3233
3234Alternatively edit the init file interactively via:
32353rd mouse button -> New Display -> Edit Menu
3236
3237Note: you can define up to 20 conversion shortcuts in the gdb
3238section.
3239
9965345d
JH
3240=item *
3241
7e337ee0
JH
3242If you see in a debugger a memory area mysteriously full of 0xABABABAB
3243or 0xEFEFEFEF, you may be seeing the effect of the Poison() macros,
3244see L<perlclib>.
9965345d 3245
f1fac472
NC
3246=item *
3247
3248Under ithreads the optree is read only. If you want to enforce this, to check
3249for write accesses from buggy code, compile with C<-DPL_OP_SLAB_ALLOC> to
3250enable the OP slab allocator and C<-DPERL_DEBUG_READONLY_OPS> to enable code
3251that allocates op memory via C<mmap>, and sets it read-only at run time.
3252Any write access to an op results in a C<SIGBUS> and abort.
3253
3254This code is intended for development only, and may not be portable even to
3255all Unix variants. Also, it is an 80% solution, in that it isn't able to make
3256all ops read only. Specifically it
3257
3258=over
3259
3260=item 1
3261
3262Only sets read-only on all slabs of ops at C<CHECK> time, hence ops allocated
3263later via C<require> or C<eval> will be re-write
3264
3265=item 2
3266
3267Turns an entire slab of ops read-write if the refcount of any op in the slab
3268needs to be decreased.
3269
3270=item 3
3271
3272Turns an entire slab of ops read-write if any op from the slab is freed.
3273
b8ddf6b3
SB
3274=back
3275
f1fac472
NC
3276It's not possible to turn the slabs to read-only after an action requiring
3277read-write access, as either can happen during op tree building time, so
3278there may still be legitimate write access.
3279
3280However, as an 80% solution it is still effective, as currently it catches
3281a write access during the generation of F<Config.pm>, which means that we
3282can't yet build F<perl> with this enabled.
3283
3284=back
3285
3286
955fec6b 3287=head1 CONCLUSION
a422fd2d 3288
955fec6b
JH
3289We've had a brief look around the Perl source, how to maintain quality
3290of the source code, an overview of the stages F<perl> goes through
3291when it's running your code, how to use debuggers to poke at the Perl
3292guts, and finally how to analyse the execution of Perl. We took a very
3293simple problem and demonstrated how to solve it fully - with
3294documentation, regression tests, and finally a patch for submission to
3295p5p. Finally, we talked about how to use external tools to debug and
3296test Perl.
a422fd2d
SC
3297
3298I'd now suggest you read over those references again, and then, as soon
3299as possible, get your hands dirty. The best way to learn is by doing,
07aa3531 3300so:
a422fd2d
SC
3301
3302=over 3
3303
3304=item *
3305
3306Subscribe to perl5-porters, follow the patches and try and understand
3307them; don't be afraid to ask if there's a portion you're not clear on -
3308who knows, you may unearth a bug in the patch...
3309
3310=item *
3311
3312Keep up to date with the bleeding edge Perl distributions and get
3313familiar with the changes. Try and get an idea of what areas people are
3314working on and the changes they're making.
3315
3316=item *
3317
3e148164 3318Do read the README associated with your operating system, e.g. README.aix
a1f349fd
MB
3319on the IBM AIX OS. Don't hesitate to supply patches to that README if
3320you find anything missing or changed over a new OS release.
3321
3322=item *
3323
a422fd2d
SC
3324Find an area of Perl that seems interesting to you, and see if you can
3325work out how it works. Scan through the source, and step over it in the
3326debugger. Play, poke, investigate, fiddle! You'll probably get to
3327understand not just your chosen area but a much wider range of F<perl>'s
3328activity as well, and probably sooner than you'd think.
3329
3330=back
3331
3332=over 3
3333
3334=item I<The Road goes ever on and on, down from the door where it began.>
3335
3336=back
3337
64d9b66b 3338If you can do these things, you've started on the long road to Perl porting.
a422fd2d
SC
3339Thanks for wanting to help make Perl better - and happy hacking!
3340
4ac71550
TC
3341=head2 Metaphoric Quotations
3342
3343If you recognized the quote about the Road above, you're in luck.
3344
3345Most software projects begin each file with a literal description of each
3346file's purpose. Perl instead begins each with a literary allusion to that
3347file's purpose.
3348
3349Like chapters in many books, all top-level Perl source files (along with a
3350few others here and there) begin with an epigramic inscription that alludes,
3351indirectly and metaphorically, to the material you're about to read.
3352
3353Quotations are taken from writings of J.R.R Tolkien pertaining to his
3354Legendarium, almost always from I<The Lord of the Rings>. Chapters and
3355page numbers are given using the following editions:
3356
3357=over 4
3358
3359=item *
3360
3361I<The Hobbit>, by J.R.R. Tolkien. The hardcover, 70th-anniversary
3362edition of 2007 was used, published in the UK by Harper Collins Publishers
3363and in the US by the Houghton Mifflin Company.
3364
3365=item *
3366
3367I<The Lord of the Rings>, by J.R.R. Tolkien. The hardcover,
336850th-anniversary edition of 2004 was used, published in the UK by Harper
3369Collins Publishers and in the US by the Houghton Mifflin Company.
3370
3371=item *
3372
3373I<The Lays of Beleriand>, by J.R.R. Tolkien and published posthumously by his
3374son and literary executor, C.J.R. Tolkien, being the 3rd of the 12 volumes
3375in Christopher's mammoth I<History of Middle Earth>. Page numbers derive
3376from the hardcover edition, first published in 1983 by George Allen &
3377Unwin; no page numbers changed for the special 3-volume omnibus edition of
33782002 or the various trade-paper editions, all again now by Harper Collins
3379or Houghton Mifflin.
3380
3381=back
3382
3383Other JRRT books fair game for quotes would thus include I<The Adventures of
3384Tom Bombadil>, I<The Silmarillion>, I<Unfinished Tales>, and I<The Tale of
3385the Children of Hurin>, all but the first posthumously assembled by CJRT.
3386But I<The Lord of the Rings> itself is perfectly fine and probably best to
3387quote from, provided you can find a suitable quote there.
3388
3389So if you were to supply a new, complete, top-level source file to add to
3390Perl, you should conform to this peculiar practice by yourself selecting an
3391appropriate quotation from Tolkien, retaining the original spelling and
3392punctuation and using the same format the rest of the quotes are in.
3393Indirect and oblique is just fine; remember, it's a metaphor, so being meta
3394is, after all, what it's for.
3395
e8cd7eae
GS
3396=head1 AUTHOR
3397
3398This document was written by Nathan Torkington, and is maintained by
3399the perl5-porters mailing list.
4ac71550 3400
b16c2e4a
RGS
3401=head1 SEE ALSO
3402
3403L<perlrepository>