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1# Devel::Peek - A data debugging tool for the XS programmer
2# The documentation is after the __END__
3
4package Devel::Peek;
5
b1e4fe07 6$VERSION = '1.08';
105cd853
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7$XS_VERSION = $VERSION;
8$VERSION = eval $VERSION;
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9
10require Exporter;
da4061d3 11require XSLoader;
3967c732 12
9426adcd 13@ISA = qw(Exporter);
d1424c31 14@EXPORT = qw(Dump mstat DeadCode DumpArray DumpWithOP DumpProg
bd16a5f0 15 fill_mstats mstats_fillhash mstats2hash runops_debug debug_flags);
83ee9e09 16@EXPORT_OK = qw(SvREFCNT SvREFCNT_inc SvREFCNT_dec CvGV);
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17%EXPORT_TAGS = ('ALL' => [@EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK]);
18
da4061d3 19XSLoader::load();
3967c732 20
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21sub import {
22 my $c = shift;
23 my $ops_rx = qr/^:opd(=[stP]*)?\b/;
24 my @db = grep m/$ops_rx/, @_;
25 @_ = grep !m/$ops_rx/, @_;
26 if (@db) {
27 die "Too many :opd options" if @db > 1;
28 runops_debug(1);
29 my $flags = ($db[0] =~ m/$ops_rx/ and $1);
30 $flags = 'st' unless defined $flags;
31 my $f = 0;
32 $f |= 2 if $flags =~ /s/;
33 $f |= 8 if $flags =~ /t/;
34 $f |= 64 if $flags =~ /P/;
35 $^D |= $f if $f;
36 }
37 unshift @_, $c;
38 goto &Exporter::import;
39}
40
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41sub DumpWithOP ($;$) {
42 local($Devel::Peek::dump_ops)=1;
43 my $depth = @_ > 1 ? $_[1] : 4 ;
44 Dump($_[0],$depth);
45}
46
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47$D_flags = 'psltocPmfrxuLHXDSTR';
48
49sub debug_flags (;$) {
50 my $out = "";
51 for my $i (0 .. length($D_flags)-1) {
52 $out .= substr $D_flags, $i, 1 if $^D & (1<<$i);
53 }
54 my $arg = shift;
55 my $num = $arg;
56 if (defined $arg and $arg =~ /\D/) {
57 die "unknown flags in debug_flags()" if $arg =~ /[^-$D_flags]/;
58 my ($on,$off) = split /-/, "$arg-";
59 $num = $^D;
60 $num |= (1<<index($D_flags, $_)) for split //, $on;
61 $num &= ~(1<<index($D_flags, $_)) for split //, $off;
62 }
63 $^D = $num if defined $arg;
64 $out
65}
66
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671;
68__END__
69
70=head1 NAME
71
72Devel::Peek - A data debugging tool for the XS programmer
73
74=head1 SYNOPSIS
75
76 use Devel::Peek;
77 Dump( $a );
78 Dump( $a, 5 );
79 DumpArray( 5, $a, $b, ... );
80 mstat "Point 5";
81
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82 use Devel::Peek ':opd=st';
83
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84=head1 DESCRIPTION
85
86Devel::Peek contains functions which allows raw Perl datatypes to be
87manipulated from a Perl script. This is used by those who do XS programming
88to check that the data they are sending from C to Perl looks as they think
89it should look. The trick, then, is to know what the raw datatype is
90supposed to look like when it gets to Perl. This document offers some tips
91and hints to describe good and bad raw data.
92
93It is very possible that this document will fall far short of being useful
94to the casual reader. The reader is expected to understand the material in
95the first few sections of L<perlguts>.
96
97Devel::Peek supplies a C<Dump()> function which can dump a raw Perl
98datatype, and C<mstat("marker")> function to report on memory usage
99(if perl is compiled with corresponding option). The function
100DeadCode() provides statistics on the data "frozen" into inactive
101C<CV>. Devel::Peek also supplies C<SvREFCNT()>, C<SvREFCNT_inc()>, and
102C<SvREFCNT_dec()> which can query, increment, and decrement reference
103counts on SVs. This document will take a passive, and safe, approach
104to data debugging and for that it will describe only the C<Dump()>
d1424c31 105function.
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106
107Function C<DumpArray()> allows dumping of multiple values (useful when you
076c2fc0 108need to analyze returns of functions).
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109
110The global variable $Devel::Peek::pv_limit can be set to limit the
111number of character printed in various string values. Setting it to 0
112means no limit.
113
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114If C<use Devel::Peek> directive has a C<:opd=FLAGS> argument,
115this switches on debugging of opcode dispatch. C<FLAGS> should be a
116combination of C<s>, C<t>, and C<P> (see B<-D> flags in L<perlrun>).
117C<:opd> is a shortcut for C<:opd=st>.
118
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119=head2 Runtime debugging
120
121C<CvGV($cv)> return one of the globs associated to a subroutine reference $cv.
122
123debug_flags() returns a string representation of C<$^D> (similar to
124what is allowed for B<-D> flag). When called with a numeric argument,
125sets $^D to the corresponding value. When called with an argument of
126the form C<"flags-flags">, set on/off bits of C<$^D> corresponding to
127letters before/after C<->. (The returned value is for C<$^D> before
128the modification.)
129
130runops_debug() returns true if the current I<opcode dispatcher> is the
131debugging one. When called with an argument, switches to debugging or
132non-debugging dispatcher depending on the argument (active for
133newly-entered subs/etc only). (The returned value is for the dispatcher before the modification.)
134
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135=head2 Memory footprint debugging
136
137When perl is compiled with support for memory footprint debugging
138(default with Perl's malloc()), Devel::Peek provides an access to this API.
139
140Use mstat() function to emit a memory state statistic to the terminal.
141For more information on the format of output of mstat() see
9704a6c6 142L<perldebguts/Using $ENV{PERL_DEBUG_MSTATS}>.
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143
144Three additional functions allow access to this statistic from Perl.
145First, use C<mstats_fillhash(%hash)> to get the information contained
146in the output of mstat() into %hash. The field of this hash are
147
148 minbucket nbuckets sbrk_good sbrk_slack sbrked_remains sbrks start_slack
149 topbucket topbucket_ev topbucket_odd total total_chain total_sbrk totfree
150
151Two additional fields C<free>, C<used> contain array references which
152provide per-bucket count of free and used chunks. Two other fields
153C<mem_size>, C<available_size> contain array references which provide
154the information about the allocated size and usable size of chunks in
9704a6c6 155each bucket. Again, see L<perldebguts/Using $ENV{PERL_DEBUG_MSTATS}>
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156for details.
157
b1e4fe07 158
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159Keep in mind that only the first several "odd-numbered" buckets are
160used, so the information on size of the "odd-numbered" buckets which are
161not used is probably meaningless.
162
163The information in
164
165 mem_size available_size minbucket nbuckets
166
167is the property of a particular build of perl, and does not depend on
168the current process. If you do not provide the optional argument to
169the functions mstats_fillhash(), fill_mstats(), mstats2hash(), then
170the information in fields C<mem_size>, C<available_size> is not
171updated.
172
173C<fill_mstats($buf)> is a much cheaper call (both speedwise and
174memory-wise) which collects the statistic into $buf in
175machine-readable form. At a later moment you may need to call
176C<mstats2hash($buf, %hash)> to use this information to fill %hash.
177
178All three APIs C<fill_mstats($buf)>, C<mstats_fillhash(%hash)>, and
179C<mstats2hash($buf, %hash)> are designed to allocate no memory if used
180I<the second time> on the same $buf and/or %hash.
181
182So, if you want to collect memory info in a cycle, you may call
183
184 $#buf = 999;
185 fill_mstats($_) for @buf;
186 mstats_fillhash(%report, 1); # Static info too
187
188 foreach (@buf) {
189 # Do something...
190 fill_mstats $_; # Collect statistic
191 }
192 foreach (@buf) {
193 mstats2hash($_, %report); # Preserve static info
194 # Do something with %report
195 }
196
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197=head1 EXAMPLES
198
199The following examples don't attempt to show everything as that would be a
200monumental task, and, frankly, we don't want this manpage to be an internals
201document for Perl. The examples do demonstrate some basics of the raw Perl
202datatypes, and should suffice to get most determined people on their way.
203There are no guidewires or safety nets, nor blazed trails, so be prepared to
204travel alone from this point and on and, if at all possible, don't fall into
205the quicksand (it's bad for business).
206
207Oh, one final bit of advice: take L<perlguts> with you. When you return we
208expect to see it well-thumbed.
209
210=head2 A simple scalar string
211
212Let's begin by looking a simple scalar which is holding a string.
213
a423dfdd 214 use Devel::Peek;
f64eb7e3 215 $a = 42; $a = "hello";
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216 Dump $a;
217
218The output:
219
f64eb7e3 220 SV = PVIV(0xbc288) at 0xbe9a8
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221 REFCNT = 1
222 FLAGS = (POK,pPOK)
f64eb7e3 223 IV = 42
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224 PV = 0xb2048 "hello"\0
225 CUR = 5
f64eb7e3 226 LEN = 8
3967c732 227
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228This says C<$a> is an SV, a scalar. The scalar type is a PVIV, which is
229capable of holding an integer (IV) and/or a string (PV) value. The scalar's
230head is allocated at address 0xbe9a8, while the body is at 0xbc288.
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231Its reference count is 1. It has the C<POK> flag set, meaning its
232current PV field is valid. Because POK is set we look at the PV item
233to see what is in the scalar. The \0 at the end indicate that this
234PV is properly NUL-terminated.
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235Note that the IV field still contains its old numeric value, but because
236FLAGS doesn't have IOK set, we must ignore the IV item.
237CUR indicates the number of characters in the PV. LEN indicates the
238number of bytes allocated for the PV (at least one more than CUR, because
239LEN includes an extra byte for the end-of-string marker, then usually
240rounded up to some efficient allocation unit).
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241
242=head2 A simple scalar number
243
244If the scalar contains a number the raw SV will be leaner.
245
a423dfdd 246 use Devel::Peek;
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247 $a = 42;
248 Dump $a;
249
250The output:
251
f64eb7e3 252 SV = IV(0xbc818) at 0xbe9a8
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253 REFCNT = 1
254 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
255 IV = 42
256
257This says C<$a> is an SV, a scalar. The scalar is an IV, a number. Its
258reference count is 1. It has the C<IOK> flag set, meaning it is currently
259being evaluated as a number. Because IOK is set we look at the IV item to
260see what is in the scalar.
261
262=head2 A simple scalar with an extra reference
263
264If the scalar from the previous example had an extra reference:
265
a423dfdd 266 use Devel::Peek;
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267 $a = 42;
268 $b = \$a;
269 Dump $a;
270
271The output:
272
f64eb7e3 273 SV = IV(0xbe860) at 0xbe9a8
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274 REFCNT = 2
275 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
276 IV = 42
277
278Notice that this example differs from the previous example only in its
279reference count. Compare this to the next example, where we dump C<$b>
280instead of C<$a>.
281
282=head2 A reference to a simple scalar
283
284This shows what a reference looks like when it references a simple scalar.
285
a423dfdd 286 use Devel::Peek;
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287 $a = 42;
288 $b = \$a;
289 Dump $b;
290
291The output:
292
f64eb7e3 293 SV = IV(0xf041c) at 0xbe9a0
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294 REFCNT = 1
295 FLAGS = (ROK)
296 RV = 0xbab08
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297 SV = IV(0xbe860) at 0xbe9a8
298 REFCNT = 2
299 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
300 IV = 42
301
302Starting from the top, this says C<$b> is an SV. The scalar is an IV,
303which is capable of holding an integer or reference value.
304It has the C<ROK> flag set, meaning it is a reference (rather than an
305integer or string). Notice that Dump
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306follows the reference and shows us what C<$b> was referencing. We see the
307same C<$a> that we found in the previous example.
308
309Note that the value of C<RV> coincides with the numbers we see when we
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310stringify $b. The addresses inside IV() are addresses of
311C<X***> structures which hold the current state of an C<SV>. This
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312address may change during lifetime of an SV.
313
314=head2 A reference to an array
315
316This shows what a reference to an array looks like.
317
a423dfdd 318 use Devel::Peek;
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319 $a = [42];
320 Dump $a;
321
322The output:
323
f64eb7e3 324 SV = IV(0xc85998) at 0xc859a8
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325 REFCNT = 1
326 FLAGS = (ROK)
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327 RV = 0xc70de8
328 SV = PVAV(0xc71e10) at 0xc70de8
329 REFCNT = 1
330 FLAGS = ()
331 ARRAY = 0xc7e820
332 FILL = 0
333 MAX = 0
334 ARYLEN = 0x0
335 FLAGS = (REAL)
336 Elt No. 0
337 SV = IV(0xc70f88) at 0xc70f98
338 REFCNT = 1
339 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
340 IV = 42
341
342This says C<$a> is a reference (ROK), which points to
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343another SV which is a PVAV, an array. The array has one element,
344element zero, which is another SV. The field C<FILL> above indicates
345the last element in the array, similar to C<$#$a>.
346
347If C<$a> pointed to an array of two elements then we would see the
348following.
349
350 use Devel::Peek 'Dump';
351 $a = [42,24];
352 Dump $a;
353
354The output:
355
f64eb7e3 356 SV = IV(0x158c998) at 0x158c9a8
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357 REFCNT = 1
358 FLAGS = (ROK)
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359 RV = 0x1577de8
360 SV = PVAV(0x1578e10) at 0x1577de8
361 REFCNT = 1
362 FLAGS = ()
363 ARRAY = 0x1585820
364 FILL = 1
365 MAX = 1
366 ARYLEN = 0x0
367 FLAGS = (REAL)
368 Elt No. 0
369 SV = IV(0x1577f88) at 0x1577f98
370 REFCNT = 1
371 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
372 IV = 42
373 Elt No. 1
374 SV = IV(0x158be88) at 0x158be98
375 REFCNT = 1
376 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
377 IV = 24
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378
379Note that C<Dump> will not report I<all> the elements in the array,
380only several first (depending on how deep it already went into the
381report tree).
382
383=head2 A reference to a hash
384
385The following shows the raw form of a reference to a hash.
386
a423dfdd 387 use Devel::Peek;
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388 $a = {hello=>42};
389 Dump $a;
390
391The output:
392
f64eb7e3 393 SV = IV(0x8177858) at 0x816a618
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394 REFCNT = 1
395 FLAGS = (ROK)
396 RV = 0x814fc10
397 SV = PVHV(0x8167768) at 0x814fc10
398 REFCNT = 1
399 FLAGS = (SHAREKEYS)
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400 ARRAY = 0x816c5b8 (0:7, 1:1)
401 hash quality = 100.0%
402 KEYS = 1
403 FILL = 1
404 MAX = 7
405 RITER = -1
406 EITER = 0x0
407 Elt "hello" HASH = 0xc8fd181b
408 SV = IV(0x816c030) at 0x814fcf4
409 REFCNT = 1
410 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
411 IV = 42
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412
413This shows C<$a> is a reference pointing to an SV. That SV is a PVHV, a
b1e4fe07 414hash. Fields RITER and EITER are used by C<L<perlfunc/each>>.
3967c732 415
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416The "quality" of a hash is defined as the total number of comparisons needed
417to access every element once, relative to the expected number needed for a
418random hash. The value can go over 100%.
419
420The total number of comparisons is equal to the sum of the squares of the
421number of entries in each bucket. For a random hash of C<<n>> keys into
422C<<k>> buckets, the expected value is:
423
424 n + n(n-1)/2k
425
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426=head2 Dumping a large array or hash
427
428The C<Dump()> function, by default, dumps up to 4 elements from a
429toplevel array or hash. This number can be increased by supplying a
430second argument to the function.
431
a423dfdd 432 use Devel::Peek;
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433 $a = [10,11,12,13,14];
434 Dump $a;
435
436Notice that C<Dump()> prints only elements 10 through 13 in the above code.
437The following code will print all of the elements.
438
439 use Devel::Peek 'Dump';
440 $a = [10,11,12,13,14];
441 Dump $a, 5;
442
443=head2 A reference to an SV which holds a C pointer
444
445This is what you really need to know as an XS programmer, of course. When
446an XSUB returns a pointer to a C structure that pointer is stored in an SV
447and a reference to that SV is placed on the XSUB stack. So the output from
448an XSUB which uses something like the T_PTROBJ map might look something like
449this:
450
f64eb7e3 451 SV = IV(0xf381c) at 0xc859a8
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452 REFCNT = 1
453 FLAGS = (ROK)
454 RV = 0xb8ad8
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455 SV = PVMG(0xbb3c8) at 0xc859a0
456 REFCNT = 1
457 FLAGS = (OBJECT,IOK,pIOK)
458 IV = 729160
459 NV = 0
460 PV = 0
461 STASH = 0xc1d10 "CookBookB::Opaque"
462
463This shows that we have an SV which is a reference, which points at another
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464SV. In this case that second SV is a PVMG, a blessed scalar. Because it is
465blessed it has the C<OBJECT> flag set. Note that an SV which holds a C
466pointer also has the C<IOK> flag set. The C<STASH> is set to the package
467name which this SV was blessed into.
468
469The output from an XSUB which uses something like the T_PTRREF map, which
470doesn't bless the object, might look something like this:
471
f64eb7e3 472 SV = IV(0xf381c) at 0xc859a8
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473 REFCNT = 1
474 FLAGS = (ROK)
475 RV = 0xb8ad8
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476 SV = PVMG(0xbb3c8) at 0xc859a0
477 REFCNT = 1
478 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
479 IV = 729160
480 NV = 0
481 PV = 0
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482
483=head2 A reference to a subroutine
484
485Looks like this:
486
f64eb7e3 487 SV = IV(0x24d2dd8) at 0x24d2de8
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488 REFCNT = 1
489 FLAGS = (TEMP,ROK)
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490 RV = 0x24e79d8
491 SV = PVCV(0x24e5798) at 0x24e79d8
492 REFCNT = 2
493 FLAGS = ()
494 COMP_STASH = 0x22c9c50 "main"
495 START = 0x22eed60 ===> 0
496 ROOT = 0x22ee490
497 GVGV::GV = 0x22de9d8 "MY" :: "top_targets"
498 FILE = "(eval 5)"
499 DEPTH = 0
500 FLAGS = 0x0
501 OUTSIDE_SEQ = 93
502 PADLIST = 0x22e9ed8
503 PADNAME = 0x22e9ec0(0x22eed00) PAD = 0x22e9ea8(0x22eecd0)
504 OUTSIDE = 0x22c9fb0 (MAIN)
505
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506
507This shows that
508
bbc7dcd2 509=over 4
3967c732 510
a45bd81d 511=item *
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512
513the subroutine is not an XSUB (since C<START> and C<ROOT> are
f64eb7e3 514non-zero, and C<XSUB> is not listed, and is thus null);
3967c732 515
a45bd81d 516=item *
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517
518that it was compiled in the package C<main>;
519
a45bd81d 520=item *
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521
522under the name C<MY::top_targets>;
523
a45bd81d 524=item *
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525
526inside a 5th eval in the program;
527
a45bd81d 528=item *
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529
530it is not currently executed (see C<DEPTH>);
531
a45bd81d 532=item *
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533
534it has no prototype (C<PROTOTYPE> field is missing).
535
a45bd81d 536=back
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537
538=head1 EXPORTS
539
540C<Dump>, C<mstat>, C<DeadCode>, C<DumpArray>, C<DumpWithOP> and
7c6ca602 541C<DumpProg>, C<fill_mstats>, C<mstats_fillhash>, C<mstats2hash> by
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542default. Additionally available C<SvREFCNT>, C<SvREFCNT_inc> and
543C<SvREFCNT_dec>.
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544
545=head1 BUGS
546
547Readers have been known to skip important parts of L<perlguts>, causing much
548frustration for all.
549
550=head1 AUTHOR
551
552Ilya Zakharevich ilya@math.ohio-state.edu
553
554Copyright (c) 1995-98 Ilya Zakharevich. All rights reserved.
555This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
556modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
557
558Author of this software makes no claim whatsoever about suitability,
559reliability, edability, editability or usability of this product, and
560should not be kept liable for any damage resulting from the use of
561it. If you can use it, you are in luck, if not, I should not be kept
562responsible. Keep a handy copy of your backup tape at hand.
563
564=head1 SEE ALSO
565
566L<perlguts>, and L<perlguts>, again.
567
568=cut