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1=encoding utf8
2
3=head1 NAME
4
5perl5220delta - what is new for perl v5.22.0
6
7=head1 DESCRIPTION
8
9This document describes differences between the 5.20.0 release and the 5.22.0
10release.
11
12If you are upgrading from an earlier release such as 5.18.0, first read
13L<perl5200delta>, which describes differences between 5.18.0 and 5.20.0.
14
15=head1 Core Enhancements
16
17=head2 New bitwise operators
18
19A new experimental facility has been added that makes the four standard
20bitwise operators (C<& | ^ ~>) treat their operands consistently as
21numbers, and introduces four new dotted operators (C<&. |. ^. ~.>) that
22treat their operands consistently as strings. The same applies to the
23assignment variants (C<&= |= ^= &.= |.= ^.=>).
24
25To use this, enable the "bitwise" feature and disable the
26"experimental::bitwise" warnings category. See L<perlop/Bitwise String
27Operators> for details.
28L<[perl #123466]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123466>.
29
30=head2 New double-diamond operator
31
32C<<< <<>> >>> is like C<< <> >> but uses three-argument C<open> to open
33each file in C<@ARGV>. This means that each element of C<@ARGV> will be treated
34as an actual file name, and C<"|foo"> won't be treated as a pipe open.
35
36=head2 New C<\b> boundaries in regular expressions
37
38=head3 C<qr/\b{gcb}/>
39
40C<gcb> stands for Grapheme Cluster Boundary. It is a Unicode property
41that finds the boundary between sequences of characters that look like a
42single character to a native speaker of a language. Perl has long had
43the ability to deal with these through the C<\X> regular escape
44sequence. Now, there is an alternative way of handling these. See
45L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B> for details.
46
47=head3 C<qr/\b{wb}/>
48
49C<wb> stands for Word Boundary. It is a Unicode property
50that finds the boundary between words. This is similar to the plain
51C<\b> (without braces) but is more suitable for natural language
52processing. It knows, for example, that apostrophes can occur in the
53middle of words. See L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B> for details.
54
55=head3 C<qr/\b{sb}/>
56
57C<sb> stands for Sentence Boundary. It is a Unicode property
58to aid in parsing natural language sentences.
59See L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B> for details.
60
61=head2 Non-Capturing Regular Expression Flag
62
63Regular expressions now support a C</n> flag that disables capturing
64and filling in C<$1>, C<$2>, etc inside of groups:
65
66 "hello" =~ /(hi|hello)/n; # $1 is not set
67
68This is equivalent to putting C<?:> at the beginning of every capturing group.
69
70See L<perlre/"n"> for more information.
71
72=head2 C<use re 'strict'>
73
74This applies stricter syntax rules to regular expression patterns
75compiled within its scope. This will hopefully alert you to typos and
76other unintentional behavior that backwards-compatibility issues prevent
77us from reporting in normal regular expression compilations. Because the
78behavior of this is subject to change in future Perl releases as we gain
79experience, using this pragma will raise a warning of category
80C<experimental::re_strict>.
81See L<'strict' in re|re/'strict' mode>.
82
83=head2 Unicode 7.0 (with correction) is now supported
84
85For details on what is in this release, see
86L<http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode7.0.0/>.
87The version of Unicode 7.0 that comes with Perl includes
88a correction dealing with glyph shaping in Arabic
89(see L<http://www.unicode.org/errata/#current_errata>).
90
91
92=head2 S<C<use locale>> can restrict which locale categories are affected
93
94It is now possible to pass a parameter to S<C<use locale>> to specify
95a subset of locale categories to be locale-aware, with the remaining
96ones unaffected. See L<perllocale/The "use locale" pragma> for details.
97
98=head2 Perl now supports POSIX 2008 locale currency additions
99
100On platforms that are able to handle POSIX.1-2008, the
101hash returned by
102L<C<POSIX::localeconv()>|perllocale/The localeconv function>
103includes the international currency fields added by that version of the
104POSIX standard. These are
105C<int_n_cs_precedes>,
106C<int_n_sep_by_space>,
107C<int_n_sign_posn>,
108C<int_p_cs_precedes>,
109C<int_p_sep_by_space>,
110and
111C<int_p_sign_posn>.
112
113=head2 Better heuristics on older platforms for determining locale UTF-8ness
114
115On platforms that implement neither the C99 standard nor the POSIX 2001
116standard, determining if the current locale is UTF-8 or not depends on
117heuristics. These are improved in this release.
118
119=head2 Aliasing via reference
120
121Variables and subroutines can now be aliased by assigning to a reference:
122
123 \$c = \$d;
124 \&x = \&y;
125
126Aliasing can also be accomplished
127by using a backslash before a C<foreach> iterator variable; this is
128perhaps the most useful idiom this feature provides:
129
130 foreach \%hash (@array_of_hash_refs) { ... }
131
132This feature is experimental and must be enabled via S<C<use feature
133'refaliasing'>>. It will warn unless the C<experimental::refaliasing>
134warnings category is disabled.
135
136See L<perlref/Assigning to References>
137
138=head2 C<prototype> with no arguments
139
140C<prototype()> with no arguments now infers C<$_>.
141L<[perl #123514]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123514>.
142
143=head2 New C<:const> subroutine attribute
144
145The C<const> attribute can be applied to an anonymous subroutine. It
146causes the new sub to be executed immediately whenever one is created
147(I<i.e.> when the C<sub> expression is evaluated). Its value is captured
148and used to create a new constant subroutine that is returned. This
149feature is experimental. See L<perlsub/Constant Functions>.
150
151=head2 C<fileno> now works on directory handles
152
153When the relevant support is available in the operating system, the
154C<fileno> builtin now works on directory handles, yielding the
155underlying file descriptor in the same way as for filehandles. On
156operating systems without such support, C<fileno> on a directory handle
157continues to return the undefined value, as before, but also sets C<$!> to
158indicate that the operation is not supported.
159
160Currently, this uses either a C<dd_fd> member in the OS C<DIR>
161structure, or a C<dirfd(3)> function as specified by POSIX.1-2008.
162
163=head2 List form of pipe open implemented for Win32
164
165The list form of pipe:
166
167 open my $fh, "-|", "program", @arguments;
168
169is now implemented on Win32. It has the same limitations as C<system
170LIST> on Win32, since the Win32 API doesn't accept program arguments
171as a list.
172
173=head2 Assignment to list repetition
174
175C<(...) x ...> can now be used within a list that is assigned to, as long
176as the left-hand side is a valid lvalue. This allows S<C<(undef,undef,$foo)
177= that_function()>> to be written as S<C<((undef)x2, $foo) = that_function()>>.
178
179=head2 Infinity and NaN (not-a-number) handling improved
180
181Floating point values are able to hold the special values infinity, negative
182infinity, and NaN (not-a-number). Now we more robustly recognize and
183propagate the value in computations, and on output normalize them to the strings
184C<Inf>, C<-Inf>, and C<NaN>.
185
186See also the L<POSIX> enhancements.
187
188=head2 Floating point parsing has been improved
189
190Parsing and printing of floating point values has been improved.
191
192As a completely new feature, hexadecimal floating point literals
193(like C<0x1.23p-4>) are now supported, and they can be output with
194S<C<printf "%a">>. See L<perldata/Scalar value constructors> for more
195details.
196
197=head2 Packing infinity or not-a-number into a character is now fatal
198
199Before, when trying to pack infinity or not-a-number into a
200(signed) character, Perl would warn, and assumed you tried to
201pack C<< 0xFF >>; if you gave it as an argument to C<< chr >>,
202C<< U+FFFD >> was returned.
203
204But now, all such actions (C<< pack >>, C<< chr >>, and C<< print '%c' >>)
205result in a fatal error.
206
207=head2 Experimental C Backtrace API
208
209Perl now supports (via a C level API) retrieving
210the C level backtrace (similar to what symbolic debuggers like gdb do).
211
212The backtrace returns the stack trace of the C call frames,
213with the symbol names (function names), the object names (like "perl"),
214and if it can, also the source code locations (file:line).
215
216The supported platforms are Linux and OS X (some *BSD might work at
217least partly, but they have not yet been tested).
218
219The feature needs to be enabled with C<Configure -Dusecbacktrace>.
220
221See L<perlhacktips/"C backtrace"> for more information.
222
223=head1 Security
224
225=head2 Perl is now compiled with C<-fstack-protector-strong> if available
226
227Perl has been compiled with the anti-stack-smashing option
228C<-fstack-protector> since 5.10.1. Now Perl uses the newer variant
229called C<-fstack-protector-strong>, if available.
230
231=head2 The L<Safe> module could allow outside packages to be replaced
232
233Critical bugfix: outside packages could be replaced. L<Safe> has
234been patched to 2.38 to address this.
235
236=head2 Perl is now always compiled with C<-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2> if available
237
238The 'code hardening' option called C<_FORTIFY_SOURCE>, available in
239gcc 4.*, is now always used for compiling Perl, if available.
240
241Note that this isn't necessarily a huge step since in many platforms
242the step had already been taken several years ago: many Linux
243distributions (like Fedora) have been using this option for Perl,
244and OS X has enforced the same for many years.
245
246=head1 Incompatible Changes
247
248=head2 Subroutine signatures moved before attributes
249
250The experimental sub signatures feature, as introduced in 5.20, parsed
251signatures after attributes. In this release, following feedback from users
252of the experimental feature, the positioning has been moved such that
253signatures occur after the subroutine name (if any) and before the attribute
254list (if any).
255
256=head2 C<&> and C<\&> prototypes accepts only subs
257
258The C<&> prototype character now accepts only anonymous subs (C<sub
259{...}>), things beginning with C<\&>, or an explicit C<undef>. Formerly
260it erroneously also allowed references to arrays, hashes, and lists.
261L<[perl #4539]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=4539>.
262L<[perl #123062]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123062>.
263L<[perl #123062]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123475>.
264
265In addition, the C<\&> prototype was allowing subroutine calls, whereas
266now it only allows subroutines: C<&foo> is still permitted as an argument,
267while C<&foo()> and C<foo()> no longer are.
268L<[perl #77860]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=77860>.
269
270=head2 C<use encoding> is now lexical
271
272The L<encoding> pragma's effect is now limited to lexical scope. This
273pragma is deprecated, but in the meantime, it could adversely affect
274unrelated modules that are included in the same program; this change
275fixes that.
276
277=head2 List slices returning empty lists
278
279List slices now return an empty list only if the original list was empty
280(or if there are no indices). Formerly, a list slice would return an empty
281list if all indices fell outside the original list; now it returns a list
282of C<undef> values in that case.
283L<[perl #114498]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=114498>.
284
285=head2 C<\N{}> with a sequence of multiple spaces is now a fatal error
286
287E.g. S<C<\N{TOOE<nbsp>E<nbsp>MANY SPACES}>> or S<C<\N{TRAILING SPACE }>>.
288This has been deprecated since v5.18.
289
290=head2 S<C<use UNIVERSAL '...'>> is now a fatal error
291
292Importing functions from C<UNIVERSAL> has been deprecated since v5.12, and
293is now a fatal error. S<C<use UNIVERSAL>> without any arguments is still
294allowed.
295
296=head2 In double-quotish C<\cI<X>>, I<X> must now be a printable ASCII character
297
298In prior releases, failure to do this raised a deprecation warning.
299
300=head2 Splitting the tokens C<(?> and C<(*> in regular expressions is now a fatal compilation error.
301
302These had been deprecated since v5.18.
303
304=head2 C<qr/foo/x> now ignores all Unicode pattern white space
305
306The C</x> regular expression modifier allows the pattern to contain
307white space and comments (both of which are ignored) for improved
308readability. Until now, not all the white space characters that Unicode
309designates for this purpose were handled. The additional ones now
310recognized are:
311
312 U+0085 NEXT LINE
313 U+200E LEFT-TO-RIGHT MARK
314 U+200F RIGHT-TO-LEFT MARK
315 U+2028 LINE SEPARATOR
316 U+2029 PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR
317
318The use of these characters with C</x> outside bracketed character
319classes and when not preceded by a backslash has raised a deprecation
320warning since v5.18. Now they will be ignored.
321
322=head2 Comment lines within S<C<(?[ ])>> are now ended only by a C<\n>
323
324S<C<(?[ ])>> is an experimental feature, introduced in v5.18. It operates
325as if C</x> is always enabled. But there was a difference: comment
326lines (following a C<#> character) were terminated by anything matching
327C<\R> which includes all vertical whitespace, such as form feeds. For
328consistency, this is now changed to match what terminates comment lines
329outside S<C<(?[ ])>>, namely a C<\n> (even if escaped), which is the
330same as what terminates a heredoc string and formats.
331
332=head2 C<(?[...])> operators now follow standard Perl precedence
333
334This experimental feature allows set operations in regular expression patterns.
335Prior to this, the intersection operator had the same precedence as the other
336binary operators. Now it has higher precedence. This could lead to different
337outcomes than existing code expects (though the documentation has always noted
338that this change might happen, recommending fully parenthesizing the
339expressions). See L<perlrecharclass/Extended Bracketed Character Classes>.
340
341=head2 Omitting C<%> and C<@> on hash and array names is no longer permitted
342
343Really old Perl let you omit the C<@> on array names and the C<%> on hash
344names in some spots. This has issued a deprecation warning since Perl
3455.000, and is no longer permitted.
346
347=head2 C<"$!"> text is now in English outside the scope of C<use locale>
348
349Previously, the text, unlike almost everything else, always came out
350based on the current underlying locale of the program. (Also affected
351on some systems is C<"$^E">.) For programs that are unprepared to
352handle locale differences, this can cause garbage text to be displayed.
353It's better to display text that is translatable via some tool than
354garbage text which is much harder to figure out.
355
356=head2 C<"$!"> text will be returned in UTF-8 when appropriate
357
358The stringification of C<$!> and C<$^E> will have the UTF-8 flag set
359when the text is actually non-ASCII UTF-8. This will enable programs
360that are set up to be locale-aware to properly output messages in the
361user's native language. Code that needs to continue the 5.20 and
362earlier behavior can do the stringification within the scopes of both
363S<C<use bytes>> and S<C<use locale ":messages">>. Within these two
364scopes, no other Perl operations will
365be affected by locale; only C<$!> and C<$^E> stringification. The
366C<bytes> pragma causes the UTF-8 flag to not be set, just as in previous
367Perl releases. This resolves
368L<[perl #112208]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=112208>.
369
370=head2 Support for C<?PATTERN?> without explicit operator has been removed
371
372The C<m?PATTERN?> construct, which allows matching a regex only once,
373previously had an alternative form that was written directly with a question
374mark delimiter, omitting the explicit C<m> operator. This usage has produced
375a deprecation warning since 5.14.0. It is now a syntax error, so that the
376question mark can be available for use in new operators.
377
378=head2 C<defined(@array)> and C<defined(%hash)> are now fatal errors
379
380These have been deprecated since v5.6.1 and have raised deprecation
381warnings since v5.16.
382
383=head2 Using a hash or an array as a reference are now fatal errors
384
385For example, C<< %foo->{"bar"} >> now causes a fatal compilation
386error. These have been deprecated since before v5.8, and have raised
387deprecation warnings since then.
388
389=head2 Changes to the C<*> prototype
390
391The C<*> character in a subroutine's prototype used to allow barewords to take
392precedence over most, but not all, subroutine names. It was never
393consistent and exhibited buggy behavior.
394
395Now it has been changed, so subroutines always take precedence over barewords,
396which brings it into conformity with similarly prototyped built-in functions:
397
398 sub splat(*) { ... }
399 sub foo { ... }
400 splat(foo); # now always splat(foo())
401 splat(bar); # still splat('bar') as before
402 close(foo); # close(foo())
403 close(bar); # close('bar')
404
405=head1 Deprecations
406
407=head2 Setting C<${^ENCODING}> to anything but C<undef>
408
409This variable allows Perl scripts to be written in an encoding other than
410ASCII or UTF-8. However, it affects all modules globally, leading
411to wrong answers and segmentation faults. New scripts should be written
412in UTF-8; old scripts should be converted to UTF-8, which is easily done
413with the L<piconv> utility.
414
415=head2 Use of non-graphic characters in single-character variable names
416
417The syntax for single-character variable names is more lenient than
418for longer variable names, allowing the one-character name to be a
419punctuation character or even invisible (a non-graphic). Perl v5.20
420deprecated the ASCII-range controls as such a name. Now, all
421non-graphic characters that formerly were allowed are deprecated.
422The practical effect of this occurs only when not under C<S<use
423utf8>>, and affects just the C1 controls (code points 0x80 through
4240xFF), NO-BREAK SPACE, and SOFT HYPHEN.
425
426=head2 Inlining of C<sub () { $var }> with observable side-effects
427
428In many cases Perl makes S<C<sub () { $var }>> into an inlinable constant
429subroutine, capturing the value of C<$var> at the time the C<sub> expression
430is evaluated. This can break the closure behavior in those cases where
431C<$var> is subsequently modified, since the subroutine won't return the
432changed value. (Note that this all only applies to anonymous subroutines
433with an empty prototype (S<C<sub ()>>).)
434
435This usage is now deprecated in those cases where the variable could be
436modified elsewhere. Perl detects those cases and emits a deprecation
437warning. Such code will likely change in the future and stop producing a
438constant.
439
440If your variable is only modified in the place where it is declared, then
441Perl will continue to make the sub inlinable with no warnings.
442
443 sub make_constant {
444 my $var = shift;
445 return sub () { $var }; # fine
446 }
447
448 sub make_constant_deprecated {
449 my $var;
450 $var = shift;
451 return sub () { $var }; # deprecated
452 }
453
454 sub make_constant_deprecated2 {
455 my $var = shift;
456 log_that_value($var); # could modify $var
457 return sub () { $var }; # deprecated
458 }
459
460In the second example above, detecting that C<$var> is assigned to only once
461is too hard to detect. That it happens in a spot other than the C<my>
462declaration is enough for Perl to find it suspicious.
463
464This deprecation warning happens only for a simple variable for the body of
465the sub. (A C<BEGIN> block or C<use> statement inside the sub is ignored,
466because it does not become part of the sub's body.) For more complex
467cases, such as S<C<sub () { do_something() if 0; $var }>> the behavior has
468changed such that inlining does not happen if the variable is modifiable
469elsewhere. Such cases should be rare.
470
471=head2 Use of multiple C</x> regexp modifiers
472
473It is now deprecated to say something like any of the following:
474
475 qr/foo/xx;
476 /(?xax:foo)/;
477 use re qw(/amxx);
478
479That is, now C<x> should only occur once in any string of contiguous
480regular expression pattern modifiers. We do not believe there are any
481occurrences of this in all of CPAN. This is in preparation for a future
482Perl release having C</xx> permit white-space for readability in
483bracketed character classes (those enclosed in square brackets:
484C<[...]>).
485
486=head2 Using a NO-BREAK space in a character alias for C<\N{...}> is now deprecated
487
488This non-graphic character is essentially indistinguishable from a
489regular space, and so should not be allowed. See
490L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>.
491
492=head2 A literal C<"{"> should now be escaped in a pattern
493
494If you want a literal left curly bracket (also called a left brace) in a
495regular expression pattern, you should now escape it by either
496preceding it with a backslash (C<"\{">) or enclosing it within square
497brackets C<"[{]">, or by using C<\Q>; otherwise a deprecation warning
498will be raised. This was first announced as forthcoming in the v5.16
499release; it will allow future extensions to the language to happen.
500
501=head2 Making all warnings fatal is discouraged
502
503The documentation for L<fatal warnings|warnings/Fatal Warnings> notes that
504C<< use warnings FATAL => 'all' >> is discouraged, and provides stronger
505language about the risks of fatal warnings in general.
506
507=head1 Performance Enhancements
508
509=over 4
510
511=item *
512
513If a method or class name is known at compile time, a hash is precomputed
514to speed up run-time method lookup. Also, compound method names like
515C<SUPER::new> are parsed at compile time, to save having to parse them at
516run time.
517
518=item *
519
520Array and hash lookups (especially nested ones) that use only constants
521or simple variables as keys, are now considerably faster. See
522L</Internal Changes> for more details.
523
524=item *
525
526C<(...)x1>, C<("constant")x0> and C<($scalar)x0> are now optimised in list
527context. If the right-hand argument is a constant 1, the repetition
528operator disappears. If the right-hand argument is a constant 0, the whole
529expression is optimised to the empty list, so long as the left-hand
530argument is a simple scalar or constant. (That is, C<(foo())x0> is not
531subject to this optimisation.)
532
533=item *
534
535C<substr> assignment is now optimised into 4-argument C<substr> at the end
536of a subroutine (or as the argument to C<return>). Previously, this
537optimisation only happened in void context.
538
539=item *
540
541In C<"\L...">, C<"\Q...">, etc., the extra "stringify" op is now optimised
542away, making these just as fast as C<lcfirst>, C<quotemeta>, etc.
543
544=item *
545
546Assignment to an empty list is now sometimes faster. In particular, it
547never calls C<FETCH> on tied arguments on the right-hand side, whereas it
548used to sometimes.
549
550=item *
551
552There is a performance improvement of up to 20% when C<length> is applied to
553a non-magical, non-tied string, and either C<use bytes> is in scope or the
554string doesn't use UTF-8 internally.
555
556=item *
557
558On most perl builds with 64-bit integers, memory usage for non-magical,
559non-tied scalars containing only a floating point value has been reduced
560by between 8 and 32 bytes, depending on OS.
561
562=item *
563
564In C<@array = split>, the assignment can be optimized away, so that C<split>
565writes directly to the array. This optimisation was happening only for
566package arrays other than C<@_>, and only sometimes. Now this
567optimisation happens almost all the time.
568
569=item *
570
571C<join> is now subject to constant folding. So for example
572S<C<join "-", "a", "b">> is converted at compile-time to C<"a-b">.
573Moreover, C<join> with a scalar or constant for the separator and a
574single-item list to join is simplified to a stringification, and the
575separator doesn't even get evaluated.
576
577=item *
578
579C<qq(@array)> is implemented using two ops: a stringify op and a join op.
580If the C<qq> contains nothing but a single array, the stringification is
581optimized away.
582
583=item *
584
585S<C<our $var>> and S<C<our($s,@a,%h)>> in void context are no longer evaluated at
586run time. Even a whole sequence of S<C<our $foo;>> statements will simply be
587skipped over. The same applies to C<state> variables.
588
589=item *
590
591Many internal functions have been refactored to improve performance and reduce
592their memory footprints.
593L<[perl #121436]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121436>
594L<[perl #121906]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121906>
595L<[perl #121969]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121969>
596
597=item *
598
599C<-T> and C<-B> filetests will return sooner when an empty file is detected.
600L<[perl #121489]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121489>
601
602=item *
603
604Hash lookups where the key is a constant are faster.
605
606=item *
607
608Subroutines with an empty prototype and a body containing just C<undef> are now
609eligible for inlining.
610L<[perl #122728]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122728>
611
612=item *
613
614Subroutines in packages no longer need to be stored in typeglobs:
615declaring a subroutine will now put a simple sub reference directly in the
616stash if possible, saving memory. The typeglob still notionally exists,
617so accessing it will cause the stash entry to be upgraded to a typeglob
618(I<i.e.> this is just an internal implementation detail).
619This optimization does not currently apply to XSUBs or exported
620subroutines, and method calls will undo it, since they cache things in
621typeglobs.
622L<[perl #120441]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120441>
623
624=item *
625
626The functions C<utf8::native_to_unicode()> and C<utf8::unicode_to_native()>
627(see L<utf8>) are now optimized out on ASCII platforms. There is now not even
628a minimal performance hit in writing code portable between ASCII and EBCDIC
629platforms.
630
631=item *
632
633Win32 Perl uses 8 KB less of per-process memory than before for every perl
634process, because some data is now memory mapped from disk and shared
635between processes from the same perl binary.
636
637=back
638
639=head1 Modules and Pragmata
640
641=head2 Updated Modules and Pragmata
642
643Many of the libraries distributed with perl have been upgraded since v5.20.0.
644For a complete list of changes, run:
645
646 corelist --diff 5.20.0 5.22.0
647
648You can substitute your favorite version in place of 5.20.0, too.
649
650Some notable changes include:
651
652=over 4
653
654=item *
655
656L<Archive::Tar> has been upgraded to version 2.04.
657
658Tests can now be run in parallel.
659
660=item *
661
662L<attributes> has been upgraded to version 0.27.
663
664The usage of C<memEQs> in the XS has been corrected.
665L<[perl #122701]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122701>
666
667Avoid reading beyond the end of a buffer. [perl #122629]
668
669=item *
670
671L<B> has been upgraded to version 1.58.
672
673It provides a new C<B::safename> function, based on the existing
674C<< B::GV->SAFENAME >>, that converts C<\cOPEN> to C<^OPEN>.
675
676Nulled COPs are now of class C<B::COP>, rather than C<B::OP>.
677
678C<B::REGEXP> objects now provide a C<qr_anoncv> method for accessing the
679implicit CV associated with C<qr//> things containing code blocks, and a
680C<compflags> method that returns the pertinent flags originating from the
681C<qr//blahblah> op.
682
683C<B::PMOP> now provides a C<pmregexp> method returning a C<B::REGEXP> object.
684Two new classes, C<B::PADNAME> and C<B::PADNAMELIST>, have been introduced.
685
686A bug where, after an ithread creation or psuedofork, special/immortal SVs in
687the child ithread/psuedoprocess did not have the correct class of
688C<B::SPECIAL>, has been fixed.
689The C<id> and C<outid> PADLIST methods have been added.
690
691=item *
692
693L<B::Concise> has been upgraded to version 0.996.
694
695Null ops that are part of the execution chain are now given sequence
696numbers.
697
698Private flags for nulled ops are now dumped with mnemonics as they would be
699for the non-nulled counterparts.
700
701=item *
702
703L<B::Deparse> has been upgraded to version 1.35.
704
705It now deparses C<+sub : attr { ... }> correctly at the start of a
706statement. Without the initial C<+>, C<sub> would be a statement label.
707
708C<BEGIN> blocks are now emitted in the right place most of the time, but
709the change unfortunately introduced a regression, in that C<BEGIN> blocks
710occurring just before the end of the enclosing block may appear below it
711instead.
712
713C<B::Deparse> no longer puts erroneous C<local> here and there, such as for
714C<LIST = tr/a//d>. [perl #119815]
715
716Adjacent C<use> statements are no longer accidentally nested if one
717contains a C<do> block. [perl #115066]
718
719Parenthesised arrays in lists passed to C<\> are now correctly deparsed
720with parentheses (I<e.g.>, C<\(@a, (@b), @c)> now retains the parentheses
721around @b), thus preserving the flattening behavior of referenced
722parenthesised arrays. Formerly, it only worked for one array: C<\(@a)>.
723
724C<local our> is now deparsed correctly, with the C<our> included.
725
726C<for($foo; !$bar; $baz) {...}> was deparsed without the C<!> (or C<not>).
727This has been fixed.
728
729Core keywords that conflict with lexical subroutines are now deparsed with
730the C<CORE::> prefix.
731
732C<foreach state $x (...) {...}> now deparses correctly with C<state> and
733not C<my>.
734
735C<our @array = split(...)> now deparses correctly with C<our> in those
736cases where the assignment is optimized away.
737
738It now deparses C<our(I<LIST>)> and typed lexical (C<my Dog $spot>) correctly.
739
740Deparse C<$#_> as that instead of as C<$#{_}>.
741L<[perl #123947]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123947>
742
743BEGIN blocks at the end of the enclosing scope are now deparsed in the
744right place. [perl #77452]
745
746BEGIN blocks were sometimes deparsed as __ANON__, but are now always called
747BEGIN.
748
749Lexical subroutines are now fully deparsed. [perl #116553]
750
751C<Anything =~ y///r> with C</r> no longer omits the left-hand operand.
752
753The op trees that make up regexp code blocks are now deparsed for real.
754Formerly, the original string that made up the regular expression was used.
755That caused problems with C<qr/(?{E<lt>E<lt>heredoc})/> and multiline code blocks,
756which were deparsed incorrectly. [perl #123217] [perl #115256]
757
758C<$;> at the end of a statement no longer loses its semicolon.
759[perl #123357]
760
761Some cases of subroutine declarations stored in the stash in shorthand form
762were being omitted.
763
764Non-ASCII characters are now consistently escaped in strings, instead of
765some of the time. (There are still outstanding problems with regular
766expressions and identifiers that have not been fixed.)
767
768When prototype sub calls are deparsed with C<&> (I<e.g.>, under the B<-P>
769option), C<scalar> is now added where appropriate, to force the scalar
770context implied by the prototype.
771
772C<require(foo())>, C<do(foo())>, C<goto(foo())> and similar constructs with
773loop controls are now deparsed correctly. The outer parentheses are not
774optional.
775
776Whitespace is no longer escaped in regular expressions, because it was
777getting erroneously escaped within C<(?x:...)> sections.
778
779C<sub foo { foo() }> is now deparsed with those mandatory parentheses.
780
781C</@array/> is now deparsed as a regular expression, and not just
782C<@array>.
783
784C</@{-}/>, C</@{+}/> and C<$#{1}> are now deparsed with the braces, which
785are mandatory in these cases.
786
787In deparsing feature bundles, C<B::Deparse> was emitting C<no feature;> first
788instead of C<no feature ':all';>. This has been fixed.
789
790C<chdir FH> is now deparsed without quotation marks.
791
792C<\my @a> is now deparsed without parentheses. (Parenthese would flatten
793the array.)
794
795C<system> and C<exec> followed by a block are now deparsed correctly.
796Formerly there was an erroneous C<do> before the block.
797
798C<< use constant QR =E<gt> qr/.../flags >> followed by C<"" =~ QR> is no longer
799without the flags.
800
801Deparsing C<BEGIN { undef &foo }> with the B<-w> switch enabled started to
802emit 'uninitialized' warnings in Perl 5.14. This has been fixed.
803
804Deparsing calls to subs with a C<(;+)> prototype resulted in an infinite
805loop. The C<(;$>) C<(_)> and C<(;_)> prototypes were given the wrong
806precedence, causing C<foo($aE<lt>$b)> to be deparsed without the parentheses.
807
808Deparse now provides a defined state sub in inner subs.
809
810=item *
811
812L<B::Op_private> has been added.
813
814L<B::Op_private> provides detailed information about the flags used in the
815C<op_private> field of perl opcodes.
816
817=item *
818
819L<bigint>, L<bignum>, L<bigrat> have been upgraded to version 0.39.
820
821Document in CAVEATS that using strings as numbers won't always invoke
822the big number overloading, and how to invoke it. [rt.perl.org #123064]
823
824=item *
825
826L<Carp> has been upgraded to version 1.36.
827
828C<Carp::Heavy> now ignores version mismatches with Carp if Carp is newer
829than 1.12, since C<Carp::Heavy>'s guts were merged into Carp at that
830point.
831L<[perl #121574]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121574>
832
833Carp now handles non-ASCII platforms better.
834
835Off-by-one error fix for Perl E<lt> 5.14.
836
837=item *
838
839L<constant> has been upgraded to version 1.33.
840
841It now accepts fully-qualified constant names, allowing constants to be defined
842in packages other than the caller.
843
844=item *
845
846L<CPAN> has been upgraded to version 2.11.
847
848Add support for C<Cwd::getdcwd()> and introduce workaround for a misbehavior
849seen on Strawberry Perl 5.20.1.
850
851Fix C<chdir()> after building dependencies bug.
852
853Introduce experimental support for plugins/hooks.
854
855Integrate the C<App::Cpan> sources.
856
857Do not check recursion on optional dependencies.
858
859Sanity check F<META.yml> to contain a hash.
860L<[cpan #95271]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=95271>
861
862=item *
863
864L<CPAN::Meta::Requirements> has been upgraded to version 2.132.
865
866Works around limitations in C<version::vpp> detecting v-string magic and adds
867support for forthcoming L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> bootstrap F<version.pm> for
868Perls older than 5.10.0.
869
870=item *
871
872L<Data::Dumper> has been upgraded to version 2.158.
873
874Fixes CVE-2014-4330 by adding a configuration variable/option to limit
875recursion when dumping deep data structures.
876
877Changes to resolve Coverity issues.
878XS dumps incorrectly stored the name of code references stored in a
879GLOB.
880L<[perl #122070]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122070>
881
882=item *
883
884L<DynaLoader> has been upgraded to version 1.32.
885
886Remove C<dl_nonlazy> global if unused in Dynaloader. [perl #122926]
887
888=item *
889
890L<Encode> has been upgraded to version 2.72.
891
892C<piconv> now has better error handling when the encoding name is nonexistent,
893and a build breakage when upgrading L<Encode> in perl-5.8.2 and earlier has
894been fixed.
895
896Building in C++ mode on Windows now works.
897
898=item *
899
900L<Errno> has been upgraded to version 1.23.
901
902Add C<-P> to the preprocessor command-line on GCC 5. GCC added extra
903line directives, breaking parsing of error code definitions. [rt.perl.org
904#123784]
905
906=item *
907
908L<experimental> has been upgraded to version 0.013.
909
910Hardcodes features for Perls older than 5.15.7.
911
912=item *
913
914L<ExtUtils::CBuilder> has been upgraded to version 0.280221.
915
916Fixes a regression on Android.
917L<[perl #122675]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122675>
918
919=item *
920
921L<ExtUtils::Manifest> has been upgraded to version 1.70.
922
923Fixes a bug with C<maniread()>'s handling of quoted filenames and improves
924C<manifind()> to follow symlinks.
925L<[perl #122415]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122415>
926
927=item *
928
929L<ExtUtils::ParseXS> has been upgraded to version 3.28.
930
931Only declare C<file> unused if we actually define it.
932Improve generated C<RETVAL> code generation to avoid repeated
933references to C<ST(0)>. [perl #123278]
934Broaden and document the C</OBJ$/> to C</REF$/> typemap optimization
935for the C<DESTROY> method. [perl #123418]
936
937=item *
938
939L<Fcntl> has been upgraded to version 1.13.
940
941Add support for the Linux pipe buffer size C<fcntl()> commands.
942
943=item *
944
945L<File::Find> has been upgraded to version 1.29.
946
947C<find()> and C<finddepth()> will now warn if passed inappropriate or
948misspelled options.
949
950=item *
951
952L<File::Glob> has been upgraded to version 1.24.
953
954Avoid C<SvIV()> expanding to call C<get_sv()> three times in a few
955places. [perl #123606]
956
957=item *
958
959L<HTTP::Tiny> has been upgraded to version 0.054.
960
961C<keep_alive> is now fork-safe and thread-safe.
962
963=item *
964
965L<IO> has been upgraded to version 1.35.
966
967The XS implementation has been fixed for the sake of older Perls.
968
969=item *
970
971L<IO::Socket> has been upgraded to version 1.38.
972
973Document the limitations of the C<connected()> method. [perl #123096]
974
975=item *
976
977L<IO::Socket::IP> has been upgraded to version 0.37.
978
979A better fix for subclassing C<connect()>.
980L<[cpan #95983]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=95983>
981L<[cpan #97050]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=97050>
982
983Implements Timeout for C<connect()>.
984L<[cpan #92075]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=92075>
985
986=item *
987
988The libnet collection of modules has been upgraded to version 3.05.
989
990Support for IPv6 and SSL to C<Net::FTP>, C<Net::NNTP>, C<Net::POP3> and C<Net::SMTP>.
991Improvements in C<Net::SMTP> authentication.
992
993=item *
994
995L<Locale::Codes> has been upgraded to version 3.34.
996
997Fixed a bug in the scripts used to extract data from spreadsheets that
998prevented the SHP currency code from being found.
999L<[cpan #94229]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=94229>
1000
1001New codes have been added.
1002
1003=item *
1004
1005L<Math::BigInt> has been upgraded to version 1.9997.
1006
1007Synchronize POD changes from the CPAN release.
1008C<< Math::BigFloat->blog(x) >> would sometimes return C<blog(2*x)> when
1009the accuracy was greater than 70 digits.
1010The result of C<< Math::BigFloat->bdiv() >> in list context now
1011satisfies C<< x = quotient * divisor + remainder >>.
1012
1013Correct handling of subclasses.
1014L<[cpan #96254]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=96254>
1015L<[cpan #96329]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=96329>
1016
1017=item *
1018
1019L<Module::Metadata> has been upgraded to version 1.000026.
1020
1021Support installations on older perls with an L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> earlier
1022than 6.63_03
1023
1024=item *
1025
1026L<overload> has been upgraded to version 1.26.
1027
1028A redundant C<ref $sub> check has been removed.
1029
1030=item *
1031
1032The PathTools module collection has been upgraded to version 3.56.
1033
1034A warning from the B<gcc> compiler is now avoided when building the XS.
1035
1036Don't turn leading C<//> into C</> on Cygwin. [perl #122635]
1037
1038=item *
1039
1040L<perl5db.pl> has been upgraded to version 1.49.
1041
1042The debugger would cause an assertion failure.
1043L<[perl #124127]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124127>
1044
1045C<fork()> in the debugger under C<tmux> will now create a new window for
1046the forked process. L<[perl
1047#121333]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121333>
1048
1049The debugger now saves the current working directory on startup and
1050restores it when you restart your program with C<R> or C<rerun>. L<[perl
1051#121509]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121509>
1052
1053=item *
1054
1055L<PerlIO::scalar> has been upgraded to version 0.22.
1056
1057Reading from a position well past the end of the scalar now correctly
1058returns end of file. [perl #123443]
1059
1060Seeking to a negative position still fails, but no longer leaves the
1061file position set to a negation location.
1062
1063C<eof()> on a C<PerlIO::scalar> handle now properly returns true when
1064the file position is past the 2GB mark on 32-bit systems.
1065
1066Attempting to write at file positions impossible for the platform now
1067fail early rather than wrapping at 4GB.
1068
1069=item *
1070
1071L<Pod::Perldoc> has been upgraded to version 3.25.
1072
1073Filehandles opened for reading or writing now have C<:encoding(UTF-8)> set.
1074L<[cpan #98019]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=98019>
1075
1076=item *
1077
1078L<POSIX> has been upgraded to version 1.53.
1079
1080The C99 math functions and constants (for example C<acosh>, C<isinf>, C<isnan>, C<round>,
1081C<trunc>; C<M_E>, C<M_SQRT2>, C<M_PI>) have been added.
1082
1083C<POSIX::tmpnam()> now produces a deprecation warning. [perl #122005]
1084
1085=item *
1086
1087L<Safe> has been upgraded to version 2.39.
1088
1089C<reval> was not propagating void context properly.
1090
1091=item *
1092
1093Scalar-List-Utils has been upgraded to version 1.41.
1094
1095A new module, L<Sub::Util>, has been added, containing functions related to
1096CODE refs, including C<subname> (inspired by C<Sub::Identity>) and C<set_subname>
1097(copied and renamed from C<Sub::Name>).
1098The use of C<GetMagic> in C<List::Util::reduce()> has also been fixed.
1099L<[cpan #63211]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=63211>
1100
1101=item *
1102
1103L<SDBM_File> has been upgraded to version 1.13.
1104
1105Simplified the build process. [perl #123413]
1106
1107=item *
1108
1109L<Time::Piece> has been upgraded to version 1.29.
1110
1111When pretty printing negative C<Time::Seconds>, the "minus" is no longer lost.
1112
1113=item *
1114
1115L<Unicode::Collate> has been upgraded to version 1.12.
1116
1117Version 0.67's improved discontiguous contractions is invalidated by default
1118and is supported as a parameter C<long_contraction>.
1119
1120=item *
1121
1122L<Unicode::Normalize> has been upgraded to version 1.18.
1123
1124The XSUB implementation has been removed in favor of pure Perl.
1125
1126=item *
1127
1128L<Unicode::UCD> has been upgraded to version 0.61.
1129
1130A new function L<property_values()|Unicode::UCD/prop_values()>
1131has been added to return a given property's possible values.
1132
1133A new function L<charprop()|Unicode::UCD/charprop()>
1134has been added to return the value of a given property for a given code
1135point.
1136
1137A new function L<charprops_all()|Unicode::UCD/charprops_all()>
1138has been added to return the values of all Unicode properties for a
1139given code point.
1140
1141A bug has been fixed so that L<propaliases()|Unicode::UCD/prop_aliases()>
1142returns the correct short and long names for the Perl extensions where
1143it was incorrect.
1144
1145A bug has been fixed so that
1146L<prop_value_aliases()|Unicode::UCD/prop_value_aliases()>
1147returns C<undef> instead of a wrong result for properties that are Perl
1148extensions.
1149
1150This module now works on EBCDIC platforms.
1151
1152=item *
1153
1154L<utf8> has been upgraded to version 1.17
1155
1156A mismatch between the documentation and the code in C<utf8::downgrade()>
1157was fixed in favor of the documentation. The optional second argument
1158is now correctly treated as a perl boolean (true/false semantics) and
1159not as an integer.
1160
1161=item *
1162
1163L<version> has been upgraded to version 0.9909.
1164
1165Numerous changes. See the F<Changes> file in the CPAN distribution for
1166details.
1167
1168=item *
1169
1170L<Win32> has been upgraded to version 0.51.
1171
1172C<GetOSName()> now supports Windows 8.1, and building in C++ mode now works.
1173
1174=item *
1175
1176L<Win32API::File> has been upgraded to version 0.1202
1177
1178Building in C++ mode now works.
1179
1180=item *
1181
1182L<XSLoader> has been upgraded to version 0.20.
1183
1184Allow XSLoader to load modules from a different namespace.
1185[perl #122455]
1186
1187=back
1188
1189=head2 Removed Modules and Pragmata
1190
1191The following modules (and associated modules) have been removed from the core
1192perl distribution:
1193
1194=over 4
1195
1196=item *
1197
1198L<CGI>
1199
1200=item *
1201
1202L<Module::Build>
1203
1204=back
1205
1206=head1 Documentation
1207
1208=head2 New Documentation
1209
1210=head3 L<perlunicook>
1211
1212This document, by Tom Christiansen, provides examples of handling Unicode in
1213Perl.
1214
1215=head2 Changes to Existing Documentation
1216
1217=head3 L<perlaix>
1218
1219=over 4
1220
1221=item *
1222
1223A note on long doubles has been added.
1224
1225=back
1226
1227
1228=head3 L<perlapi>
1229
1230=over 4
1231
1232=item *
1233
1234Note that C<SvSetSV> doesn't do set magic.
1235
1236=item *
1237
1238C<sv_usepvn_flags> - fix documentation to mention the use of C<Newx> instead of
1239C<malloc>.
1240
1241L<[perl #121869]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121869>
1242
1243=item *
1244
1245Clarify where C<NUL> may be embedded or is required to terminate a string.
1246
1247=item *
1248
1249Some documentation that was previously missing due to formatting errors is
1250now included.
1251
1252=item *
1253
1254Entries are now organized into groups rather than by the file where they
1255are found.
1256
1257=item *
1258
1259Alphabetical sorting of entries is now done consistently (automatically
1260by the POD generator) to make entries easier to find when scanning.
1261
1262=back
1263
1264=head3 L<perldata>
1265
1266=over 4
1267
1268=item *
1269
1270The syntax of single-character variable names has been brought
1271up-to-date and more fully explained.
1272
1273=item *
1274
1275Hexadecimal floating point numbers are described, as are infinity and
1276NaN.
1277
1278=back
1279
1280=head3 L<perlebcdic>
1281
1282=over 4
1283
1284=item *
1285
1286This document has been significantly updated in the light of recent
1287improvements to EBCDIC support.
1288
1289=back
1290
1291=head3 L<perlfilter>
1292
1293=over 4
1294
1295=item *
1296
1297Added a L<LIMITATIONS|perlfilter/LIMITATIONS> section.
1298
1299=back
1300
1301
1302=head3 L<perlfunc>
1303
1304=over 4
1305
1306=item *
1307
1308Mention that C<study()> is currently a no-op.
1309
1310=item *
1311
1312Calling C<delete> or C<exists> on array values is now described as "strongly
1313discouraged" rather than "deprecated".
1314
1315=item *
1316
1317Improve documentation of C<< our >>.
1318
1319=item *
1320
1321C<-l> now notes that it will return false if symlinks aren't supported by the
1322file system.
1323L<[perl #121523]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121523>
1324
1325=item *
1326
1327Note that C<exec LIST> and C<system LIST> may fall back to the shell on
1328Win32. Only the indirect-object syntax C<exec PROGRAM LIST> and
1329C<system PROGRAM LIST> will reliably avoid using the shell.
1330
1331This has also been noted in L<perlport>.
1332
1333L<[perl #122046]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122046>
1334
1335=back
1336
1337=head3 L<perlguts>
1338
1339=over 4
1340
1341=item *
1342
1343The OOK example has been updated to account for COW changes and a change in the
1344storage of the offset.
1345
1346=item *
1347
1348Details on C level symbols and libperl.t added.
1349
1350=item *
1351
1352Information on Unicode handling has been added
1353
1354=item *
1355
1356Information on EBCDIC handling has been added
1357
1358=back
1359
1360=head3 L<perlhack>
1361
1362=over 4
1363
1364=item *
1365
1366A note has been added about running on platforms with non-ASCII
1367character sets
1368
1369=item *
1370
1371A note has been added about performance testing
1372
1373=back
1374
1375=head3 L<perlhacktips>
1376
1377=over 4
1378
1379=item *
1380
1381Documentation has been added illustrating the perils of assuming that
1382there is no change to the contents of static memory pointed to by the
1383return values of Perl's wrappers for C library functions.
1384
1385=item *
1386
1387Replacements for C<tmpfile>, C<atoi>, C<strtol>, and C<strtoul> are now
1388recommended.
1389
1390=item *
1391
1392Updated documentation for the C<test.valgrind> C<make> target.
1393L<[perl #121431]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121431>
1394
1395=item *
1396
1397Information is given about writing test files portably to non-ASCII
1398platforms.
1399
1400=item *
1401
1402A note has been added about how to get a C language stack backtrace.
1403
1404=back
1405
1406=head3 L<perlhpux>
1407
1408=over 4
1409
1410=item *
1411
1412Note that the message "Redeclaration of "sendpath" with a different
1413storage class specifier" is harmless.
1414
1415=back
1416
1417=head3 L<perllocale>
1418
1419=over 4
1420
1421=item *
1422
1423Updated for the enhancements in v5.22, along with some clarifications.
1424
1425=back
1426
1427=head3 L<perlmodstyle>
1428
1429=over 4
1430
1431=item *
1432
1433Instead of pointing to the module list, we are now pointing to
1434L<PrePAN|http://prepan.org/>.
1435
1436=back
1437
1438=head3 L<perlop>
1439
1440=over 4
1441
1442=item *
1443
1444Updated for the enhancements in v5.22, along with some clarifications.
1445
1446=back
1447
1448=head3 L<perlpodspec>
1449
1450=over 4
1451
1452=item *
1453
1454The specification of the pod language is changing so that the default
1455encoding of pods that aren't in UTF-8 (unless otherwise indicated) is
1456CP1252 instead of ISO 8859-1 (Latin1).
1457
1458=back
1459
1460=head3 L<perlpolicy>
1461
1462=over 4
1463
1464=item *
1465
1466We now have a code of conduct for the I<< p5p >> mailing list, as documented
1467in L<< perlpolicy/STANDARDS OF CONDUCT >>.
1468
1469=item *
1470
1471The conditions for marking an experimental feature as non-experimental are now
1472set out.
1473
1474=item *
1475
1476Clarification has been made as to what sorts of changes are permissible in
1477maintenance releases.
1478
1479=back
1480
1481=head3 L<perlport>
1482
1483=over 4
1484
1485=item *
1486
1487Out-of-date VMS-specific information has been fixed and/or simplified.
1488
1489=item *
1490
1491Notes about EBCDIC have been added.
1492
1493=back
1494
1495=head3 L<perlre>
1496
1497=over 4
1498
1499=item *
1500
1501The description of the C</x> modifier has been clarified to note that
1502comments cannot be continued onto the next line by escaping them; and
1503there is now a list of all the characters that are considered whitespace
1504by this modifier.
1505
1506=item *
1507
1508The new C</n> modifier is described.
1509
1510=item *
1511
1512A note has been added on how to make bracketed character class ranges
1513portable to non-ASCII machines.
1514
1515=back
1516
1517=head3 L<perlrebackslash>
1518
1519=over 4
1520
1521=item *
1522
1523Added documentation of C<\b{sb}>, C<\b{wb}>, C<\b{gcb}>, and C<\b{g}>.
1524
1525=back
1526
1527=head3 L<perlrecharclass>
1528
1529=over 4
1530
1531=item *
1532
1533Clarifications have been added to L<perlrecharclass/Character Ranges>
1534to the effect C<[A-Z]>, C<[a-z]>, C<[0-9]> and
1535any subranges thereof in regular expression bracketed character classes
1536are guaranteed to match exactly what a naive English speaker would
1537expect them to match, even on platforms (such as EBCDIC) where perl
1538has to do extra work to accomplish this.
1539
1540=item *
1541
1542The documentation of Bracketed Character Classes has been expanded to cover the
1543improvements in C<qr/[\N{named sequence}]/> (see under L</Selected Bug Fixes>).
1544
1545=back
1546
1547=head3 L<perlref>
1548
1549=over 4
1550
1551=item *
1552
1553A new section has been added
1554L<Assigning to References|perlref/Assigning to References>
1555
1556=back
1557
1558=head3 L<perlsec>
1559
1560=over 4
1561
1562=item *
1563
1564Comments added on algorithmic complexity and tied hashes.
1565
1566=back
1567
1568=head3 L<perlsyn>
1569
1570=over 4
1571
1572=item *
1573
1574An ambiguity in the documentation of the C<...> statement has been corrected.
1575L<[perl #122661]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122661>
1576
1577=item *
1578
1579The empty conditional in C<< for >> and C<< while >> is now documented
1580in L<< perlsyn >>.
1581
1582=back
1583
1584=head3 L<perlunicode>
1585
1586=over 4
1587
1588=item *
1589
1590This has had extensive revisions to bring it up-to-date with current
1591Unicode support and to make it more readable. Notable is that Unicode
15927.0 changed what it should do with non-characters. Perl retains the old
1593way of handling for reasons of backward compatibility. See
1594L<perlunicode/Noncharacter code points>.
1595
1596=back
1597
1598=head3 L<perluniintro>
1599
1600=over 4
1601
1602=item *
1603
1604Advice for how to make sure your strings and regular expression patterns are
1605interpreted as Unicode has been updated.
1606
1607=back
1608
1609=head3 L<perlvar>
1610
1611=over 4
1612
1613=item *
1614
1615C<$]> is no longer listed as being deprecated. Instead, discussion has
1616been added on the advantages and disadvantages of using it versus
1617C<$^V>.
1618
1619=item *
1620
1621C<${^ENCODING}> is now marked as deprecated.
1622
1623=item *
1624
1625The entry for C<%^H> has been clarified to indicate it can only handle
1626simple values.
1627
1628=back
1629
1630=head3 L<perlvms>
1631
1632=over 4
1633
1634=item *
1635
1636Out-of-date and/or incorrect material has been removed.
1637
1638=item *
1639
1640Updated documentation on environment and shell interaction in VMS.
1641
1642=back
1643
1644=head3 L<perlxs>
1645
1646=over 4
1647
1648=item *
1649
1650Added a discussion of locale issues in XS code.
1651
1652=back
1653
1654=head1 Diagnostics
1655
1656The following additions or changes have been made to diagnostic output,
1657including warnings and fatal error messages. For the complete list of
1658diagnostic messages, see L<perldiag>.
1659
1660=head2 New Diagnostics
1661
1662=head3 New Errors
1663
1664=over 4
1665
1666=item *
1667
1668L<Bad symbol for scalar|perldiag/"Bad symbol for scalar">
1669
1670(P) An internal request asked to add a scalar entry to something that
1671wasn't a symbol table entry.
1672
1673=item *
1674
1675L<Can't use a hash as a reference|perldiag/"Can't use a hash as a reference">
1676
1677(F) You tried to use a hash as a reference, as in
1678C<< %foo->{"bar"} >> or C<< %$ref->{"hello"} >>. Versions of perl E<lt>= 5.6.1
1679used to allow this syntax, but shouldn't have.
1680
1681=item *
1682
1683L<Can't use an array as a reference|perldiag/"Can't use an array as a reference">
1684
1685(F) You tried to use an array as a reference, as in
1686C<< @foo->[23] >> or C<< @$ref->[99] >>. Versions of perl E<lt>= 5.6.1 used to
1687allow this syntax, but shouldn't have.
1688
1689=item *
1690
1691L<Can't use 'defined(@array)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)|perldiag/"Can't use 'defined(@array)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)">
1692
1693(F) C<defined()> is not useful on arrays because it
1694checks for an undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the
1695array is empty, just use S<C<if (@array) { # not empty }>> for example.
1696
1697=item *
1698
1699L<Can't use 'defined(%hash)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)|perldiag/"Can't use 'defined(%hash)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)">
1700
1701(F) C<defined()> is not usually right on hashes.
1702
1703Although S<C<defined %hash>> is false on a plain not-yet-used hash, it
1704becomes true in several non-obvious circumstances, including iterators,
1705weak references, stash names, even remaining true after S<C<undef %hash>>.
1706These things make S<C<defined %hash>> fairly useless in practice, so it now
1707generates a fatal error.
1708
1709If a check for non-empty is what you wanted then just put it in boolean
1710context (see L<perldata/Scalar values>):
1711
1712 if (%hash) {
1713 # not empty
1714 }
1715
1716If you had S<C<defined %Foo::Bar::QUUX>> to check whether such a package
1717variable exists then that's never really been reliable, and isn't
1718a good way to enquire about the features of a package, or whether
1719it's loaded, etc.
1720
1721=item *
1722
1723L<Cannot chr %f|perldiag/"Cannot chr %f">
1724
1725(F) You passed an invalid number (like an infinity or not-a-number) to
1726C<chr>.
1727
1728=item *
1729
1730L<Cannot compress %f in pack|perldiag/"Cannot compress %f in pack">
1731
1732(F) You tried converting an infinity or not-a-number to an unsigned
1733character, which makes no sense.
1734
1735=item *
1736
1737L<Cannot pack %f with '%c'|perldiag/"Cannot pack %f with '%c'">
1738
1739(F) You tried converting an infinity or not-a-number to a character,
1740which makes no sense.
1741
1742=item *
1743
1744L<Cannot print %f with '%c'|perldiag/"Cannot printf %f with '%c'">
1745
1746(F) You tried printing an infinity or not-a-number as a character (C<%c>),
1747which makes no sense. Maybe you meant C<'%s'>, or just stringifying it?
1748
1749=item *
1750
1751L<charnames alias definitions may not contain a sequence of multiple spaces|perldiag/"charnames alias definitions may not contain a sequence of multiple spaces">
1752
1753(F) You defined a character name which had multiple space
1754characters in a row. Change them to single spaces. Usually these
1755names are defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but
1756they could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>.
1757See L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>.
1758
1759=item *
1760
1761L<charnames alias definitions may not contain trailing white-space|perldiag/"charnames alias definitions may not contain trailing white-space">
1762
1763(F) You defined a character name which ended in a space
1764character. Remove the trailing space(s). Usually these names are
1765defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but they
1766could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>.
1767See L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>.
1768
1769=item *
1770
1771L<:const is not permitted on named subroutines|perldiag/":const is not permitted on named subroutines">
1772
1773(F) The C<const> attribute causes an anonymous subroutine to be run and
1774its value captured at the time that it is cloned. Named subroutines are
1775not cloned like this, so the attribute does not make sense on them.
1776
1777=item *
1778
1779L<Hexadecimal float: internal error|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: internal error">
1780
1781(F) Something went horribly bad in hexadecimal float handling.
1782
1783=item *
1784
1785L<Hexadecimal float: unsupported long double format|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: unsupported long double format">
1786
1787(F) You have configured Perl to use long doubles but
1788the internals of the long double format are unknown,
1789therefore the hexadecimal float output is impossible.
1790
1791=item *
1792
1793L<Illegal suidscript|perldiag/"Illegal suidscript">
1794
1795(F) The script run under suidperl was somehow illegal.
1796
1797=item *
1798
1799L<In '(?...)', the '(' and '?' must be adjacent in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"In '(?...)', the '(' and '?' must be adjacent in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/">
1800
1801(F) The two-character sequence C<"(?"> in
1802this context in a regular expression pattern should be an
1803indivisible token, with nothing intervening between the C<"(">
1804and the C<"?">, but you separated them.
1805
1806=item *
1807
1808L<In '(*VERB...)', the '(' and '*' must be adjacent in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"In '(*VERB...)', the '(' and '*' must be adjacent in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/">
1809
1810(F) The two-character sequence C<"(*"> in
1811this context in a regular expression pattern should be an
1812indivisible token, with nothing intervening between the C<"(">
1813and the C<"*">, but you separated them.
1814
1815=item *
1816
1817L<Invalid quantifier in {,} in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Invalid quantifier in {,} in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/">
1818
1819(F) The pattern looks like a {min,max} quantifier, but the min or max could not
1820be parsed as a valid number: either it has leading zeroes, or it represents
1821too big a number to cope with. The S<<-- HERE> shows where in the regular
1822expression the problem was discovered. See L<perlre>.
1823
1824=item *
1825
1826L<'%s' is an unknown bound type in regex|perldiag/"'%s' is an unknown bound type in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/">
1827
1828(F) You used C<\b{...}> or C<\B{...}> and the C<...> is not known to
1829Perl. The current valid ones are given in
1830L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B>.
1831
1832=item *
1833
1834L<Missing or undefined argument to require|perldiag/Missing or undefined argument to require>
1835
1836(F) You tried to call C<require> with no argument or with an undefined
1837value as an argument. C<require> expects either a package name or a
1838file-specification as an argument. See L<perlfunc/require>.
1839
1840Formerly, C<require> with no argument or C<undef> warned about a Null filename.
1841
1842=back
1843
1844=head3 New Warnings
1845
1846=over 4
1847
1848=item *
1849
1850L<\C is deprecated in regex|perldiag/"\C is deprecated in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/">
1851
1852(D deprecated) The C<< /\C/ >> character class was deprecated in v5.20, and
1853now emits a warning. It is intended that it will become an error in v5.24.
1854This character class matches a single byte even if it appears within a
1855multi-byte character, breaks encapsulation, and can corrupt UTF-8
1856strings.
1857
1858=item *
1859
1860L<"%s" is more clearly written simply as "%s" in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"%s" is more clearly written simply as "%s" in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>>
1861
1862(W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>)
1863
1864You specified a character that has the given plainer way of writing it,
1865and which is also portable to platforms running with different character
1866sets.
1867
1868=item *
1869
1870L<Argument "%s" treated as 0 in increment (++)|perldiag/"Argument "%s" treated
1871as 0 in increment (++)">
1872
1873(W numeric) The indicated string was fed as an argument to the C<++> operator
1874which expects either a number or a string matching C</^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/>.
1875See L<perlop/Auto-increment and Auto-decrement> for details.
1876
1877=item *
1878
1879L<Both or neither range ends should be Unicode in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Both or neither range ends should be Unicode in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/">
1880
1881(W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>)
1882
1883In a bracketed character class in a regular expression pattern, you
1884had a range which has exactly one end of it specified using C<\N{}>, and
1885the other end is specified using a non-portable mechanism. Perl treats
1886the range as a Unicode range, that is, all the characters in it are
1887considered to be the Unicode characters, and which may be different code
1888points on some platforms Perl runs on. For example, C<[\N{U+06}-\x08]>
1889is treated as if you had instead said C<[\N{U+06}-\N{U+08}]>, that is it
1890matches the characters whose code points in Unicode are 6, 7, and 8.
1891But that C<\x08> might indicate that you meant something different, so
1892the warning gets raised.
1893
1894=item *
1895
1896L<Can't do %s("%s") on non-UTF-8 locale; resolved to "%s".|perldiag/Can't do %s("%s") on non-UTF-8 locale; resolved to "%s".>
1897
1898(W locale) You are 1) running under "C<use locale>"; 2) the current
1899locale is not a UTF-8 one; 3) you tried to do the designated case-change
1900operation on the specified Unicode character; and 4) the result of this
1901operation would mix Unicode and locale rules, which likely conflict.
1902
1903The warnings category C<locale> is new.
1904
1905=item *
1906
1907L<:const is experimental|perldiag/":const is experimental">
1908
1909(S experimental::const_attr) The C<const> attribute is experimental.
1910If you want to use the feature, disable the warning with C<no warnings
1911'experimental::const_attr'>, but know that in doing so you are taking
1912the risk that your code may break in a future Perl version.
1913
1914=item *
1915
1916L<gmtime(%f) failed|perldiag/"gmtime(%f) failed">
1917
1918(W overflow) You called C<gmtime> with a number that it could not handle:
1919too large, too small, or NaN. The returned value is C<undef>.
1920
1921=item *
1922
1923L<Hexadecimal float: exponent overflow|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: exponent overflow">
1924
1925(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point has larger exponent
1926than the floating point supports.
1927
1928=item *
1929
1930L<Hexadecimal float: exponent underflow|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: exponent underflow">
1931
1932(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point has smaller exponent
1933than the floating point supports.
1934
1935=item *
1936
1937L<Hexadecimal float: mantissa overflow|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: mantissa overflow">
1938
1939(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point literal had more bits in
1940the mantissa (the part between the C<0x> and the exponent, also known as
1941the fraction or the significand) than the floating point supports.
1942
1943=item *
1944
1945L<Hexadecimal float: precision loss|perldiag/"Hexadecimal float: precision loss">
1946
1947(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point had internally more
1948digits than could be output. This can be caused by unsupported
1949long double formats, or by 64-bit integers not being available
1950(needed to retrieve the digits under some configurations).
1951
1952=item *
1953
1954L<Locale '%s' may not work well.%s|perldiag/Locale '%s' may not work well.%s>
1955
1956(W locale) You are using the named locale, which is a non-UTF-8 one, and
1957which perl has determined is not fully compatible with what it can
1958handle. The second C<%s> gives a reason.
1959
1960The warnings category C<locale> is new.
1961
1962=item *
1963
1964L<localtime(%f) failed|perldiag/"localtime(%f) failed">
1965
1966(W overflow) You called C<localtime> with a number that it could not handle:
1967too large, too small, or NaN. The returned value is C<undef>.
1968
1969=item *
1970
1971L<Negative repeat count does nothing|perldiag/"Negative repeat count does nothing">
1972
1973(W numeric) You tried to execute the
1974L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> repetition operator fewer than 0
1975times, which doesn't make sense.
1976
1977=item *
1978
1979L<NO-BREAK SPACE in a charnames alias definition is deprecated|perldiag/"NO-BREAK SPACE in a charnames alias definition is deprecated">
1980
1981(D deprecated) You defined a character name which contained a no-break
1982space character. Change it to a regular space. Usually these names are
1983defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but they
1984could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>. See
1985L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>.
1986
1987=item *
1988
1989L<Non-finite repeat count does nothing|perldiag/"Non-finite repeat count does nothing">
1990
1991(W numeric) You tried to execute the
1992L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> repetition operator C<Inf> (or
1993C<-Inf>) or NaN times, which doesn't make sense.
1994
1995=item *
1996
1997L<PerlIO layer ':win32' is experimental|perldiag/"PerlIO layer ':win32' is experimental">
1998
1999(S experimental::win32_perlio) The C<:win32> PerlIO layer is
2000experimental. If you want to take the risk of using this layer,
2001simply disable this warning:
2002
2003 no warnings "experimental::win32_perlio";
2004
2005=item *
2006
2007L<Ranges of ASCII printables should be some subset of "0-9", "A-Z", or "a-z" in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Ranges of ASCII printables should be some subset of "0-9", "A-Z", or "a-z" in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>">
2008
2009(W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>)
2010
2011Stricter rules help to find typos and other errors. Perhaps you didn't
2012even intend a range here, if the C<"-"> was meant to be some other
2013character, or should have been escaped (like C<"\-">). If you did
2014intend a range, the one that was used is not portable between ASCII and
2015EBCDIC platforms, and doesn't have an obvious meaning to a casual
2016reader.
2017
2018 [3-7] # OK; Obvious and portable
2019 [d-g] # OK; Obvious and portable
2020 [A-Y] # OK; Obvious and portable
2021 [A-z] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant
2022 [a-Z] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant
2023 [%-.] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant
2024 [\x41-Z] # WRONG; Not portable; not obvious to non-geek
2025
2026(You can force portability by specifying a Unicode range, which means that
2027the endpoints are specified by
2028L<C<\N{...}>|perlrecharclass/Character Ranges>, but the meaning may
2029still not be obvious.)
2030The stricter rules require that ranges that start or stop with an ASCII
2031character that is not a control have all their endpoints be a literal
2032character, and not some escape sequence (like C<"\x41">), and the ranges
2033must be all digits, or all uppercase letters, or all lowercase letters.
2034
2035=item *
2036
2037L<Ranges of digits should be from the same group in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Ranges of digits should be from the same group in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/">
2038
2039(W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>)
2040
2041Stricter rules help to find typos and other errors. You included a
2042range, and at least one of the end points is a decimal digit. Under the
2043stricter rules, when this happens, both end points should be digits in
2044the same group of 10 consecutive digits.
2045
2046=item *
2047
2048L<Redundant argument in %s|perldiag/Redundant argument in %s>
2049
2050(W redundant) You called a function with more arguments than were
2051needed, as indicated by information within other arguments you supplied
2052(I<e.g>. a printf format). Currently only emitted when a printf-type format
2053required fewer arguments than were supplied, but might be used in the
2054future for I<e.g.> L<perlfunc/pack>.
2055
2056The warnings category C<< redundant >> is new. See also
2057L<[perl #121025]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121025>.
2058
2059=item *
2060
2061L<Replacement list is longer than search list|perldiag/Replacement list is longer than search list>
2062
2063This is not a new diagnostic, but in earlier releases was accidentally
2064not displayed if the transliteration contained wide characters. This is
2065now fixed, so that you may see this diagnostic in places where you
2066previously didn't (but should have).
2067
2068=item *
2069
2070L<Use of \b{} for non-UTF-8 locale is wrong. Assuming a UTF-8 locale|perldiag/"Use of \b{} for non-UTF-8 locale is wrong. Assuming a UTF-8 locale">
2071
2072(W locale) You are matching a regular expression using locale rules,
2073and a Unicode boundary is being matched, but the locale is not a Unicode
2074one. This doesn't make sense. Perl will continue, assuming a Unicode
2075(UTF-8) locale, but the results could well be wrong except if the locale
2076happens to be ISO-8859-1 (Latin1) where this message is spurious and can
2077be ignored.
2078
2079The warnings category C<locale> is new.
2080
2081=item *
2082
2083L<< Using E<sol>u for '%s' instead of E<sol>%s in regex; marked by E<lt>-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Using E<sol>u for '%s' instead of E<sol>%s in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>" >>
2084
2085(W regexp) You used a Unicode boundary (C<\b{...}> or C<\B{...}>) in a
2086portion of a regular expression where the character set modifiers C</a>
2087or C</aa> are in effect. These two modifiers indicate an ASCII
2088interpretation, and this doesn't make sense for a Unicode definition.
2089The generated regular expression will compile so that the boundary uses
2090all of Unicode. No other portion of the regular expression is affected.
2091
2092=item *
2093
2094L<The bitwise feature is experimental|perldiag/"The bitwise feature is experimental">
2095
2096(S experimental::bitwise) This warning is emitted if you use bitwise
2097operators (C<& | ^ ~ &. |. ^. ~.>) with the "bitwise" feature enabled.
2098Simply suppress the warning if you want to use the feature, but know
2099that in doing so you are taking the risk of using an experimental
2100feature which may change or be removed in a future Perl version:
2101
2102 no warnings "experimental::bitwise";
2103 use feature "bitwise";
2104 $x |.= $y;
2105
2106=item *
2107
2108L<Unescaped left brace in regex is deprecated, passed through in regex; marked by <-- HERE in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Unescaped left brace in regex is deprecated, passed through in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/">
2109
2110(D deprecated, regexp) You used a literal C<"{"> character in a regular
2111expression pattern. You should change to use C<"\{"> instead, because a future
2112version of Perl (tentatively v5.26) will consider this to be a syntax error. If
2113the pattern delimiters are also braces, any matching right brace
2114(C<"}">) should also be escaped to avoid confusing the parser, for
2115example,
2116
2117 qr{abc\{def\}ghi}
2118
2119=item *
2120
2121L<Use of literal non-graphic characters in variable names is deprecated|perldiag/"Use of literal non-graphic characters in variable names is deprecated">
2122
2123(D deprecated) Using literal non-graphic (including control)
2124characters in the source to refer to the I<^FOO> variables, like C<$^X> and
2125C<${^GLOBAL_PHASE}> is now deprecated.
2126
2127=item *
2128
2129L<Useless use of attribute "const"|perldiag/Useless use of attribute "const">
2130
2131(W misc) The C<const> attribute has no effect except
2132on anonymous closure prototypes. You applied it to
2133a subroutine via L<attributes.pm|attributes>. This is only useful
2134inside an attribute handler for an anonymous subroutine.
2135
2136=item *
2137
2138L<Useless use of E<sol>d modifier in transliteration operator|perldiag/"Useless use of /d modifier in transliteration operator">
2139
2140This is not a new diagnostic, but in earlier releases was accidentally
2141not displayed if the transliteration contained wide characters. This is
2142now fixed, so that you may see this diagnostic in places where you
2143previously didn't (but should have).
2144
2145=item *
2146
2147L<E<quot>use re 'strict'E<quot> is experimental|perldiag/"use re 'strict'" is experimental>
2148
2149(S experimental::re_strict) The things that are different when a regular
2150expression pattern is compiled under C<'strict'> are subject to change
2151in future Perl releases in incompatible ways; there are also proposals
2152to change how to enable strict checking instead of using this subpragma.
2153This means that a pattern that compiles today may not in a future Perl
2154release. This warning is to alert you to that risk.
2155
2156=item *
2157
2158L<Warning: unable to close filehandle properly: %s|perldiag/"Warning: unable to close filehandle properly: %s">
2159
2160L<Warning: unable to close filehandle %s properly: %s|perldiag/"Warning: unable to close filehandle %s properly: %s">
2161
2162(S io) Previously, perl silently ignored any errors when doing an implicit
2163close of a filehandle, I<i.e.> where the reference count of the filehandle
2164reached zero and the user's code hadn't already called C<close()>; I<e.g.>
2165
2166 {
2167 open my $fh, '>', $file or die "open: '$file': $!\n";
2168 print $fh, $data or die;
2169 } # implicit close here
2170
2171In a situation such as disk full, due to buffering, the error may only be
2172detected during the final close, so not checking the result of the close is
2173dangerous.
2174
2175So perl now warns in such situations.
2176
2177=item *
2178
2179L<Wide character (U+%X) in %s|perldiag/"Wide character (U+%X) in %s">
2180
2181(W locale) While in a single-byte locale (I<i.e.>, a non-UTF-8
2182one), a multi-byte character was encountered. Perl considers this
2183character to be the specified Unicode code point. Combining non-UTF-8
2184locales and Unicode is dangerous. Almost certainly some characters
2185will have two different representations. For example, in the ISO 8859-7
2186(Greek) locale, the code point 0xC3 represents a Capital Gamma. But so
2187also does 0x393. This will make string comparisons unreliable.
2188
2189You likely need to figure out how this multi-byte character got mixed up
2190with your single-byte locale (or perhaps you thought you had a UTF-8
2191locale, but Perl disagrees).
2192
2193The warnings category C<locale> is new.
2194
2195=back
2196
2197=head2 Changes to Existing Diagnostics
2198
2199=over 4
2200
2201=item *
2202
2203<> should be quotes
2204
2205This warning has been changed to
2206L<< <> at require-statement should be quotes|perldiag/"<> at require-statement should be quotes" >>
2207to make the issue more identifiable.
2208
2209=item *
2210
2211L<Argument "%s" isn't numeric%s|perldiag/"Argument "%s" isn't numeric%s">
2212
2213The L<perldiag> entry for this warning has added this clarifying note:
2214
2215 Note that for the Inf and NaN (infinity and not-a-number) the
2216 definition of "numeric" is somewhat unusual: the strings themselves
2217 (like "Inf") are considered numeric, and anything following them is
2218 considered non-numeric.
2219
2220=item *
2221
2222L<Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name|perldiag/"Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name (did you forget to declare "my %s"?)">
2223
2224This message has had '(did you forget to declare "my %s"?)' appended to it, to
2225make it more helpful to new Perl programmers.
2226L<[perl #121638]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121638>
2227
2228=item *
2229
2230'"my" variable &foo::bar can't be in a package' has been reworded to say
2231'subroutine' instead of 'variable'.
2232
2233=item *
2234
2235L<<< \N{} in character class restricted to one character in regex; marked by
2236S<< <-- HERE >> in mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"\N{} in inverted character
2237class or as a range end-point is restricted to one character in regex;
2238marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/" >>>
2239
2240This message has had I<character class> changed to I<inverted character
2241class or as a range end-point is> to reflect improvements in
2242C<qr/[\N{named sequence}]/> (see under L</Selected Bug Fixes>).
2243
2244=item *
2245
2246L<panic: frexp|perldiag/"panic: frexp: %f">
2247
2248This message has had ': C<%f>' appended to it, to show what the offending
2249floating point number is.
2250
2251=item *
2252
2253I<Possible precedence problem on bitwise %c operator> reworded as
2254L<Possible precedence problem on bitwise %s operator|perldiag/"Possible precedence problem on bitwise %s operator">.
2255
2256=item *
2257
2258L<Unsuccessful %s on filename containing newline|perldiag/"Unsuccessful %s on filename containing newline">
2259
2260This warning is now only produced when the newline is at the end of
2261the filename.
2262
2263=item *
2264
2265"Variable C<%s> will not stay shared" has been changed to say "Subroutine"
2266when it is actually a lexical sub that will not stay shared.
2267
2268=item *
2269
2270L<Variable length lookbehind not implemented in regex mE<sol>%sE<sol>|perldiag/"Variable length lookbehind not implemented in regex m/%s/">
2271
2272The L<perldiag> entry for this warning has had information about Unicode
2273behavior added.
2274
2275=back
2276
2277=head2 Diagnostic Removals
2278
2279=over
2280
2281=item *
2282
2283"Ambiguous use of -foo resolved as -&foo()"
2284
2285There is actually no ambiguity here, and this impedes the use of negated
2286constants; I<e.g.>, C<-Inf>.
2287
2288=item *
2289
2290"Constant is not a FOO reference"
2291
2292Compile-time checking of constant dereferencing (I<e.g.>, C<< my_constant->() >>)
2293has been removed, since it was not taking overloading into account.
2294L<[perl #69456]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=69456>
2295L<[perl #122607]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122607>
2296
2297=back
2298
2299=head1 Utility Changes
2300
2301=head2 F<find2perl>, F<s2p> and F<a2p> removal
2302
2303=over 4
2304
2305=item *
2306
2307The F<x2p/> directory has been removed from the Perl core.
2308
2309This removes find2perl, s2p and a2p. They have all been released to CPAN as
2310separate distributions (C<App::find2perl>, C<App::s2p>, C<App::a2p>).
2311
2312=back
2313
2314=head2 L<h2ph>
2315
2316=over 4
2317
2318=item *
2319
2320F<h2ph> now handles hexadecimal constants in the compiler's predefined
2321macro definitions, as visible in C<$Config{cppsymbols}>.
2322L<[perl #123784]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123784>.
2323
2324=back
2325
2326=head2 L<encguess>
2327
2328=over 4
2329
2330=item *
2331
2332No longer depends on non-core modules.
2333
2334=back
2335
2336=head1 Configuration and Compilation
2337
2338=over 4
2339
2340=item *
2341
2342F<Configure> now checks for C<lrintl()>, C<lroundl()>, C<llrintl()>, and
2343C<llroundl()>.
2344
2345=item *
2346
2347F<Configure> with C<-Dmksymlinks> should now be faster.
2348L<[perl #122002]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122002>.
2349
2350=item *
2351
2352The C<pthreads> and C<cl> libraries will be linked by default if present.
2353This allows XS modules that require threading to work on non-threaded
2354perls. Note that you must still pass C<-Dusethreads> if you want a
2355threaded perl.
2356
2357=item *
2358
2359For long doubles (to get more precision and range for floating point numbers)
2360one can now use the GCC quadmath library which implements the quadruple
2361precision floating point numbers on x86 and IA-64 platforms. See
2362F<INSTALL> for details.
2363
2364=item *
2365
2366MurmurHash64A and MurmurHash64B can now be configured as the internal hash
2367function.
2368
2369=item *
2370
2371C<make test.valgrind> now supports parallel testing.
2372
2373For example:
2374
2375 TEST_JOBS=9 make test.valgrind
2376
2377See L<perlhacktips/valgrind> for more information.
2378
2379L<[perl #121431]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121431>
2380
2381=item *
2382
2383The MAD (Misc Attribute Decoration) build option has been removed
2384
2385This was an unmaintained attempt at preserving
2386the Perl parse tree more faithfully so that automatic conversion of
2387Perl 5 to Perl 6 would have been easier.
2388
2389This build-time configuration option had been unmaintained for years,
2390and had probably seriously diverged on both Perl 5 and Perl 6 sides.
2391
2392=item *
2393
2394A new compilation flag, C<< -DPERL_OP_PARENT >> is available. For details,
2395see the discussion below at L<< /Internal Changes >>.
2396
2397=item *
2398
2399Pathtools no longer tries to load XS on miniperl. This speeds up building perl
2400slightly.
2401
2402=back
2403
2404=head1 Testing
2405
2406=over 4
2407
2408=item *
2409
2410F<t/porting/re_context.t> has been added to test that L<utf8> and its
2411dependencies only use the subset of the C<$1..$n> capture vars that
2412C<Perl_save_re_context()> is hard-coded to localize, because that function
2413has no efficient way of determining at runtime what vars to localize.
2414
2415=item *
2416
2417Tests for performance issues have been added in the file F<t/perf/taint.t>.
2418
2419=item *
2420
2421Some regular expression tests are written in such a way that they will
2422run very slowly if certain optimizations break. These tests have been
2423moved into new files, F<< t/re/speed.t >> and F<< t/re/speed_thr.t >>,
2424and are run with a C<< watchdog() >>.
2425
2426=item *
2427
2428C<< test.pl >> now allows C<< plan skip_all => $reason >>, to make it
2429more compatible with C<< Test::More >>.
2430
2431=item *
2432
2433A new test script, F<op/infnan.t>, has been added to test if infinity and NaN are
2434working correctly. See L</Infinity and NaN (not-a-number) handling improved>.
2435
2436=back
2437
2438=head1 Platform Support
2439
2440=head2 Regained Platforms
2441
2442=over 4
2443
2444=item IRIX and Tru64 platforms are working again.
2445
2446Some C<make test> failures remain:
2447L<[perl #123977]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123977>
2448and L<[perl #125298]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=125298>
2449for IRIX; L<[perl #124212]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124212>,
2450L<[cpan #99605]|https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=99605>, and
2451L<[cpan #104836|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=104836> for Tru64.
2452
2453=item z/OS running EBCDIC Code Page 1047
2454
2455Core perl now works on this EBCDIC platform. Earlier perls also worked, but,
2456even though support wasn't officially withdrawn, recent perls would not compile
2457and run well. Perl 5.20 would work, but had many bugs which have now been
2458fixed. Many CPAN modules that ship with Perl still fail tests, including
2459C<Pod::Simple>. However the version of C<Pod::Simple> currently on CPAN should work;
2460it was fixed too late to include in Perl 5.22. Work is under way to fix many
2461of the still-broken CPAN modules, which likely will be installed on CPAN when
2462completed, so that you may not have to wait until Perl 5.24 to get a working
2463version.
2464
2465=back
2466
2467=head2 Discontinued Platforms
2468
2469=over 4
2470
2471=item NeXTSTEP/OPENSTEP
2472
2473NeXTSTEP was a proprietary operating system bundled with NeXT's
2474workstations in the early to mid 90s; OPENSTEP was an API specification
2475that provided a NeXTSTEP-like environment on a non-NeXTSTEP system. Both
2476are now long dead, so support for building Perl on them has been removed.
2477
2478=back
2479
2480=head2 Platform-Specific Notes
2481
2482=over 4
2483
2484=item EBCDIC
2485
2486Special handling is required of the perl interpreter on EBCDIC platforms
2487to get C<qr/[i-j]/> to match only C<"i"> and C<"j">, since there are 7
2488characters between the
2489code points for C<"i"> and C<"j">. This special handling had only been
2490invoked when both ends of the range are literals. Now it is also
2491invoked if any of the C<\N{...}> forms for specifying a character by
2492name or Unicode code point is used instead of a literal. See
2493L<perlrecharclass/Character Ranges>.
2494
2495=item HP-UX
2496
2497The archname now distinguishes use64bitint from use64bitall.
2498
2499=item Android
2500
2501Build support has been improved for cross-compiling in general and for
2502Android in particular.
2503
2504=item VMS
2505
2506=over 4
2507
2508=item *
2509
2510When spawning a subprocess without waiting, the return value is now
2511the correct PID.
2512
2513=item *
2514
2515Fix a prototype so linking doesn't fail under the VMS C++ compiler.
2516
2517=item *
2518
2519C<finite>, C<finitel>, and C<isfinite> detection has been added to
2520C<configure.com>, environment handling has had some minor changes, and
2521a fix for legacy feature checking status.
2522
2523=back
2524
2525=item Win32
2526
2527=over 4
2528
2529=item *
2530
2531F<miniperl.exe> is now built with C<-fno-strict-aliasing>, allowing 64-bit
2532builds to complete on GCC 4.8.
2533L<[perl #123976]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123976>
2534
2535=item *
2536
2537C<nmake minitest> now works on Win32. Due to dependency issues you
2538need to build C<nmake test-prep> first, and a small number of the
2539tests fail.
2540L<[perl #123394]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123394>
2541
2542=item *
2543
2544Perl can now be built in C++ mode on Windows by setting the makefile macro
2545C<USE_CPLUSPLUS> to the value "define".
2546
2547=item *
2548
2549The list form of piped open has been implemented for Win32. Note: unlike
2550C<system LIST> this does not fall back to the shell.
2551L<[perl #121159]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121159>
2552
2553=item *
2554
2555New C<DebugSymbols> and C<DebugFull> configuration options added to
2556Windows makefiles.
2557
2558=item *
2559
2560Previously, compiling XS modules (including CPAN ones) using Visual C++ for
2561Win64 resulted in around a dozen warnings per file from F<hv_func.h>. These
2562warnings have been silenced.
2563
2564=item *
2565
2566Support for building without PerlIO has been removed from the Windows
2567makefiles. Non-PerlIO builds were all but deprecated in Perl 5.18.0 and are
2568already not supported by F<Configure> on POSIX systems.
2569
2570=item *
2571
2572Between 2 and 6 milliseconds and seven I/O calls have been saved per attempt
2573to open a perl module for each path in C<@INC>.
2574
2575=item *
2576
2577Intel C builds are now always built with C99 mode on.
2578
2579=item *
2580
2581C<%I64d> is now being used instead of C<%lld> for MinGW.
2582
2583=item *
2584
2585In the experimental C<:win32> layer, a crash in C<open> was fixed. Also
2586opening F</dev/null> (which works under Win32 Perl's default C<:unix>
2587layer) was implemented for C<:win32>.
2588L<[perl #122224]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122224>
2589
2590=item *
2591
2592A new makefile option, C<USE_LONG_DOUBLE>, has been added to the Windows
2593dmake makefile for gcc builds only. Set this to "define" if you want perl to
2594use long doubles to give more accuracy and range for floating point numbers.
2595
2596=back
2597
2598=item OpenBSD
2599
2600On OpenBSD, Perl will now default to using the system C<malloc> due to the
2601security features it provides. Perl's own malloc wrapper has been in use
2602since v5.14 due to performance reasons, but the OpenBSD project believes
2603the tradeoff is worth it and would prefer that users who need the speed
2604specifically ask for it.
2605
2606L<[perl #122000]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122000>.
2607
2608=item Solaris
2609
2610=over 4
2611
2612=item *
2613
2614We now look for the Sun Studio compiler in both F</opt/solstudio*> and
2615F</opt/solarisstudio*>.
2616
2617=item *
2618
2619Builds on Solaris 10 with C<-Dusedtrace> would fail early since make
2620didn't follow implied dependencies to build C<perldtrace.h>. Added an
2621explicit dependency to C<depend>.
2622L<[perl #120120]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120120>
2623
2624=item *
2625
2626C99 options have been cleaned up; hints look for C<solstudio>
2627as well as C<SUNWspro>; and support for native C<setenv> has been added.
2628
2629=back
2630
2631=back
2632
2633=head1 Internal Changes
2634
2635=over 4
2636
2637=item *
2638
2639Experimental support has been added to allow ops in the optree to locate
2640their parent, if any. This is enabled by the non-default build option
2641C<-DPERL_OP_PARENT>. It is envisaged that this will eventually become
2642enabled by default, so XS code which directly accesses the C<op_sibling>
2643field of ops should be updated to be future-proofed.
2644
2645On C<PERL_OP_PARENT> builds, the C<op_sibling> field has been renamed
2646C<op_sibparent> and a new flag, C<op_moresib>, added. On the last op in a
2647sibling chain, C<op_moresib> is false and C<op_sibparent> points to the
2648parent (if any) rather than being C<NULL>.
2649
2650To make existing code work transparently whether using C<PERL_OP_PARENT>
2651or not, a number of new macros and functions have been added that should
2652be used, rather than directly manipulating C<op_sibling>.
2653
2654For the case of just reading C<op_sibling> to determine the next sibling,
2655two new macros have been added. A simple scan through a sibling chain
2656like this:
2657
2658 for (; kid->op_sibling; kid = kid->op_sibling) { ... }
2659
2660should now be written as:
2661
2662 for (; OpHAS_SIBLING(kid); kid = OpSIBLING(kid)) { ... }
2663
2664For altering optrees, a general-purpose function C<op_sibling_splice()>
2665has been added, which allows for manipulation of a chain of sibling ops.
2666By analogy with the Perl function C<splice()>, it allows you to cut out
2667zero or more ops from a sibling chain and replace them with zero or more
2668new ops. It transparently handles all the updating of sibling, parent,
2669op_last pointers etc.
2670
2671If you need to manipulate ops at a lower level, then three new macros,
2672C<OpMORESIB_set>, C<OpLASTSIB_set> and C<OpMAYBESIB_set> are intended to
2673be a low-level portable way to set C<op_sibling> / C<op_sibparent> while
2674also updating C<op_moresib>. The first sets the sibling pointer to a new
2675sibling, the second makes the op the last sibling, and the third
2676conditionally does the first or second action. Note that unlike
2677C<op_sibling_splice()> these macros won't maintain consistency in the
2678parent at the same time (I<e.g.> by updating C<op_first> and C<op_last> where
2679appropriate).
2680
2681A C-level C<Perl_op_parent()> function and a Perl-level C<B::OP::parent()>
2682method have been added. The C function only exists under
2683C<PERL_OP_PARENT> builds (using it is build-time error on vanilla
2684perls). C<B::OP::parent()> exists always, but on a vanilla build it
2685always returns C<NULL>. Under C<PERL_OP_PARENT>, they return the parent
2686of the current op, if any. The variable C<$B::OP::does_parent> allows you
2687to determine whether C<B> supports retrieving an op's parent.
2688
2689C<PERL_OP_PARENT> was introduced in 5.21.2, but the interface was
2690changed considerably in 5.21.11. If you updated your code before the
26915.21.11 changes, it may require further revision. The main changes after
26925.21.2 were:
2693
2694=over 4
2695
2696=item *
2697
2698The C<OP_SIBLING> and C<OP_HAS_SIBLING> macros have been renamed
2699C<OpSIBLING> and C<OpHAS_SIBLING> for consistency with other
2700op-manipulating macros.
2701
2702=item *
2703
2704The C<op_lastsib> field has been renamed C<op_moresib>, and its meaning
2705inverted.
2706
2707=item *
2708
2709The macro C<OpSIBLING_set> has been removed, and has been superseded by
2710C<OpMORESIB_set> I<et al>.
2711
2712=item *
2713
2714The C<op_sibling_splice()> function now accepts a null C<parent> argument
2715where the splicing doesn't affect the first or last ops in the sibling
2716chain
2717
2718=back
2719
2720=item *
2721
2722Macros have been created to allow XS code to better manipulate the POSIX locale
2723category C<LC_NUMERIC>. See L<perlapi/Locale-related functions and macros>.
2724
2725=item *
2726
2727The previous C<atoi> I<et al> replacement function, C<grok_atou>, has now been
2728superseded by C<grok_atoUV>. See L<perlclib> for details.
2729
2730=item *
2731
2732A new function, C<Perl_sv_get_backrefs()>, has been added which allows you
2733retrieve the weak references, if any, which point at an SV.
2734
2735=item *
2736
2737The C<screaminstr()> function has been removed. Although marked as
2738public API, it was undocumented and had no usage in CPAN modules. Calling
2739it has been fatal since 5.17.0.
2740
2741=item *
2742
2743The C<newDEFSVOP()>, C<block_start()>, C<block_end()> and C<intro_my()>
2744functions have been added to the API.
2745
2746=item *
2747
2748The internal C<convert> function in F<op.c> has been renamed
2749C<op_convert_list> and added to the API.
2750
2751=item *
2752
2753The C<sv_magic()> function no longer forbids "ext" magic on read-only
2754values. After all, perl can't know whether the custom magic will modify
2755the SV or not.
2756L<[perl #123103]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123103>.
2757
2758=item *
2759
2760Accessing L<perlapi/CvPADLIST> on an XSUB is now forbidden.
2761
2762The C<CvPADLIST> field has been reused for a different internal purpose
2763for XSUBs. So in particular, you can no longer rely on it being NULL as a
2764test of whether a CV is an XSUB. Use C<CvISXSUB()> instead.
2765
2766=item *
2767
2768SVs of type C<SVt_NV> are now sometimes bodiless when the build
2769configuration and platform allow it: specifically, when C<< sizeof(NV) <=
2770sizeof(IV) >>. "Bodiless" means that the NV value is stored directly in
2771the head of an SV, without requiring a separate body to be allocated. This
2772trick has already been used for IVs since 5.9.2 (though in the case of
2773IVs, it is always used, regardless of platform and build configuration).
2774
2775=item *
2776
2777The C<$DB::single>, C<$DB::signal> and C<$DB::trace> variables now have set- and
2778get-magic that stores their values as IVs, and those IVs are used when
2779testing their values in C<pp_dbstate()>. This prevents perl from
2780recursing infinitely if an overloaded object is assigned to any of those
2781variables.
2782L<[perl #122445]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122445>.
2783
2784=item *
2785
2786C<Perl_tmps_grow()>, which is marked as public API but is undocumented, has
2787been removed from the public API. This change does not affect XS code that
2788uses the C<EXTEND_MORTAL> macro to pre-extend the mortal stack.
2789
2790=item *
2791
2792Perl's internals no longer sets or uses the C<SVs_PADMY> flag.
2793C<SvPADMY()> now returns a true value for anything not marked C<PADTMP>
2794and C<SVs_PADMY> is now defined as 0.
2795
2796=item *
2797
2798The macros C<SETsv> and C<SETsvUN> have been removed. They were no longer used
2799in the core since commit 6f1401dc2a five years ago, and have not been
2800found present on CPAN.
2801
2802=item *
2803
2804The C<< SvFAKE >> bit (unused on HVs) got informally reserved by
2805David Mitchell for future work on vtables.
2806
2807=item *
2808
2809The C<sv_catpvn_flags()> function accepts C<SV_CATBYTES> and C<SV_CATUTF8>
2810flags, which specify whether the appended string is bytes or UTF-8,
2811respectively. (These flags have in fact been present since 5.16.0, but
2812were formerly not regarded as part of the API.)
2813
2814=item *
2815
2816A new opcode class, C<< METHOP >>, has been introduced. It holds
2817information used at runtime to improve the performance
2818of class/object method calls.
2819
2820C<< OP_METHOD >> and C<< OP_METHOD_NAMED >> have changed from being
2821C<< UNOP/SVOP >> to being C<< METHOP >>.
2822
2823=item *
2824
2825C<cv_name()> is a new API function that can be passed a CV or GV. It
2826returns an SV containing the name of the subroutine, for use in
2827diagnostics.
2828
2829L<[perl #116735]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=116735>
2830L<[perl #120441]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120441>
2831
2832=item *
2833
2834C<cv_set_call_checker_flags()> is a new API function that works like
2835C<cv_set_call_checker()>, except that it allows the caller to specify
2836whether the call checker requires a full GV for reporting the subroutine's
2837name, or whether it could be passed a CV instead. Whatever value is
2838passed will be acceptable to C<cv_name()>. C<cv_set_call_checker()>
2839guarantees there will be a GV, but it may have to create one on the fly,
2840which is inefficient.
2841L<[perl #116735]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=116735>
2842
2843=item *
2844
2845C<CvGV> (which is not part of the API) is now a more complex macro, which may
2846call a function and reify a GV. For those cases where it has been used as a
2847boolean, C<CvHASGV> has been added, which will return true for CVs that
2848notionally have GVs, but without reifying the GV. C<CvGV> also returns a GV
2849now for lexical subs.
2850L<[perl #120441]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120441>
2851
2852=item *
2853
2854The L<perlapi/sync_locale> function has been added to the public API.
2855Changing the program's locale should be avoided by XS code. Nevertheless,
2856certain non-Perl libraries called from XS need to do so, such as C<Gtk>.
2857When this happens, Perl needs to be told that the locale has
2858changed. Use this function to do so, before returning to Perl.
2859
2860=item *
2861
2862The defines and labels for the flags in the C<op_private> field of OPs are now
2863auto-generated from data in F<regen/op_private>. The noticeable effect of this
2864is that some of the flag output of C<Concise> might differ slightly, and the
2865flag output of S<C<perl -Dx>> may differ considerably (they both use the same set
2866of labels now). Also, debugging builds now have a new assertion in
2867C<op_free()> to ensure that the op doesn't have any unrecognized flags set in
2868C<op_private>.
2869
2870=item *
2871
2872The deprecated variable C<PL_sv_objcount> has been removed.
2873
2874=item *
2875
2876Perl now tries to keep the locale category C<LC_NUMERIC> set to "C"
2877except around operations that need it to be set to the program's
2878underlying locale. This protects the many XS modules that cannot cope
2879with the decimal radix character not being a dot. Prior to this
2880release, Perl initialized this category to "C", but a call to
2881C<POSIX::setlocale()> would change it. Now such a call will change the
2882underlying locale of the C<LC_NUMERIC> category for the program, but the
2883locale exposed to XS code will remain "C". There are new macros
2884to manipulate the LC_NUMERIC locale, including
2885C<STORE_LC_NUMERIC_SET_TO_NEEDED> and
2886C<STORE_LC_NUMERIC_FORCE_TO_UNDERLYING>.
2887See L<perlapi/Locale-related functions and macros>.
2888
2889=item *
2890
2891A new macro L<C<isUTF8_CHAR>|perlapi/isUTF8_CHAR> has been written which
2892efficiently determines if the string given by its parameters begins
2893with a well-formed UTF-8 encoded character.
2894
2895=item *
2896
2897The following private API functions had their context parameter removed:
2898C<Perl_cast_ulong>, C<Perl_cast_i32>, C<Perl_cast_iv>, C<Perl_cast_uv>,
2899C<Perl_cv_const_sv>, C<Perl_mg_find>, C<Perl_mg_findext>, C<Perl_mg_magical>,
2900C<Perl_mini_mktime>, C<Perl_my_dirfd>, C<Perl_sv_backoff>, C<Perl_utf8_hop>.
2901
2902Note that the prefix-less versions of those functions that are part of the
2903public API, such as C<cast_i32()>, remain unaffected.
2904
2905=item *
2906
2907The C<PADNAME> and C<PADNAMELIST> types are now separate types, and no
2908longer simply aliases for SV and AV.
2909L<[perl #123223]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123223>.
2910
2911=item *
2912
2913Pad names are now always UTF-8. The C<PadnameUTF8> macro always returns
2914true. Previously, this was effectively the case already, but any support
2915for two different internal representations of pad names has now been
2916removed.
2917
2918=item *
2919
2920A new op class, C<UNOP_AUX>, has been added. This is a subclass of
2921C<UNOP> with an C<op_aux> field added, which points to an array of unions
2922of UV, SV* etc. It is intended for where an op needs to store more data
2923than a simple C<op_sv> or whatever. Currently the only op of this type is
2924C<OP_MULTIDEREF> (see next item).
2925
2926=item *
2927
2928A new op has been added, C<OP_MULTIDEREF>, which performs one or more
2929nested array and hash lookups where the key is a constant or simple
2930variable. For example the expression C<$a[0]{$k}[$i]>, which previously
2931involved ten C<rv2Xv>, C<Xelem>, C<gvsv> and C<const> ops is now performed
2932by a single C<multideref> op. It can also handle C<local>, C<exists> and
2933C<delete>. A non-simple index expression, such as C<[$i+1]> is still done
2934using C<aelem>/C<helem>, and single-level array lookup with a small constant
2935index is still done using C<aelemfast>.
2936
2937=back
2938
2939=head1 Selected Bug Fixes
2940
2941=over 4
2942
2943=item *
2944
2945C<close> now sets C<$!>
2946
2947When an I/O error occurs, the fact that there has been an error is recorded
2948in the handle. C<close> returns false for such a handle. Previously, the
2949value of C<$!> would be untouched by C<close>, so the common convention of
2950writing S<C<close $fh or die $!>> did not work reliably. Now the handle
2951records the value of C<$!>, too, and C<close> restores it.
2952
2953=item *
2954
2955C<no re> now can turn off everything that C<use re> enables
2956
2957Previously, running C<no re> would turn off only a few things. Now it
2958can turn off all the enabled things. For example, the only way to
2959stop debugging, once enabled, was to exit the enclosing block; that is
2960now fixed.
2961
2962=item *
2963
2964C<pack("D", $x)> and C<pack("F", $x)> now zero the padding on x86 long
2965double builds. Under some build options on GCC 4.8 and later, they used
2966to either overwrite the zero-initialized padding, or bypass the
2967initialized buffer entirely. This caused F<op/pack.t> to fail.
2968L<[perl #123971]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123971>
2969
2970=item *
2971
2972Extending an array cloned from a parent thread could result in "Modification of
2973a read-only value attempted" errors when attempting to modify the new elements.
2974L<[perl #124127]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124127>
2975
2976=item *
2977
2978An assertion failure and subsequent crash with C<< *x=<y> >> has been fixed.
2979L<[perl #123790]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123790>
2980
2981=item *
2982
2983A possible crashing/looping bug related to compiling lexical subs has been
2984fixed.
2985L<[perl #124099]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124099>
2986
2987=item *
2988
2989UTF-8 now works correctly in function names, in unquoted HERE-document
2990terminators, and in variable names used as array indexes.
2991L<[perl #124113]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124113>
2992
2993=item *
2994
2995Repeated global pattern matches in scalar context on large tainted strings were
2996exponentially slow depending on the current match position in the string.
2997L<[perl #123202]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123202>
2998
2999=item *
3000
3001Various crashes due to the parser getting confused by syntax errors have been
3002fixed.
3003L<[perl #123801]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123801>
3004L<[perl #123802]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123802>
3005L<[perl #123955]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123955>
3006L<[perl #123995]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123995>
3007
3008=item *
3009
3010C<split> in the scope of lexical C<$_> has been fixed not to fail assertions.
3011L<[perl #123763]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123763>
3012
3013=item *
3014
3015C<my $x : attr> syntax inside various list operators no longer fails
3016assertions.
3017L<[perl #123817]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123817>
3018
3019=item *
3020
3021An C<@> sign in quotes followed by a non-ASCII digit (which is not a valid
3022identifier) would cause the parser to crash, instead of simply trying the
3023C<@> as literal. This has been fixed.
3024L<[perl #123963]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123963>
3025
3026=item *
3027
3028C<*bar::=*foo::=*glob_with_hash> has been crashing since Perl 5.14, but no
3029longer does.
3030L<[perl #123847]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123847>
3031
3032=item *
3033
3034C<foreach> in scalar context was not pushing an item on to the stack, resulting
3035in bugs. (S<C<print 4, scalar do { foreach(@x){} } + 1>> would print 5.)
3036It has been fixed to return C<undef>.
3037L<[perl #124004]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=124004>
3038
3039=item *
3040
3041Several cases of data used to store environment variable contents in core C
3042code being potentially overwritten before being used have been fixed.
3043L<[perl #123748]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123748>
3044
3045=item *
3046
3047Some patterns starting with C</.*..../> matched against long strings have
3048been slow since v5.8, and some of the form C</.*..../i> have been slow
3049since v5.18. They are now all fast again.
3050L<[perl #123743]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123743>.
3051
3052=item *
3053
3054The original visible value of C<$/> is now preserved when it is set to
3055an invalid value. Previously if you set C<$/> to a reference to an
3056array, for example, perl would produce a runtime error and not set
3057C<PL_rs>, but Perl code that checked C<$/> would see the array
3058reference.
3059L<[perl #123218]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123218>.
3060
3061=item *
3062
3063In a regular expression pattern, a POSIX class, like C<[:ascii:]>, must
3064be inside a bracketed character class, like C<qr/[[:ascii:]]/>. A
3065warning is issued when something looking like a POSIX class is not
3066inside a bracketed class. That warning wasn't getting generated when
3067the POSIX class was negated: C<[:^ascii:]>. This is now fixed.
3068
3069=item *
3070
3071Perl 5.14.0 introduced a bug whereby S<C<eval { LABEL: }>> would crash. This
3072has been fixed.
3073L<[perl #123652]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123652>.
3074
3075=item *
3076
3077Various crashes due to the parser getting confused by syntax errors have
3078been fixed.
3079L<[perl #123617]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123617>.
3080L<[perl #123737]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123737>.
3081L<[perl #123753]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123753>.
3082L<[perl #123677]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123677>.
3083
3084=item *
3085
3086Code like C</$a[/> used to read the next line of input and treat it as
3087though it came immediately after the opening bracket. Some invalid code
3088consequently would parse and run, but some code caused crashes, so this is
3089now disallowed.
3090L<[perl #123712]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123712>.
3091
3092=item *
3093
3094Fix argument underflow for C<pack>.
3095L<[perl #123874]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123874>.
3096
3097=item *
3098
3099Fix handling of non-strict C<\x{}>. Now C<\x{}> is equivalent to C<\x{0}>
3100instead of faulting.
3101
3102=item *
3103
3104C<stat -t> is now no longer treated as stackable, just like C<-t stat>.
3105L<[perl #123816]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123816>.
3106
3107=item *
3108
3109The following no longer causes a SEGV: C<qr{x+(y(?0))*}>.
3110
3111=item *
3112
3113Fixed infinite loop in parsing backrefs in regexp patterns.
3114
3115=item *
3116
3117Several minor bug fixes in behavior of Infinity and NaN, including
3118warnings when stringifying Infinity-like or NaN-like strings. For example,
3119"NaNcy" doesn't numify to NaN anymore.
3120
3121=item *
3122
3123A bug in regular expression patterns that could lead to segfaults and
3124other crashes has been fixed. This occurred only in patterns compiled
3125with C</i> while taking into account the current POSIX locale (which usually
3126means they have to be compiled within the scope of C<S<use locale>>),
3127and there must be a string of at least 128 consecutive bytes to match.
3128L<[perl #123539]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123539>.
3129
3130=item *
3131
3132C<s///g> now works on very long strings (where there are more than 2
3133billion iterations) instead of dying with 'Substitution loop'.
3134L<[perl #103260]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=103260>.
3135L<[perl #123071]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123071>.
3136
3137=item *
3138
3139C<gmtime> no longer crashes with not-a-number values.
3140L<[perl #123495]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123495>.
3141
3142=item *
3143
3144C<\()> (a reference to an empty list), and C<y///> with lexical C<$_> in
3145scope, could both do a bad write past the end of the stack. They have
3146both been fixed to extend the stack first.
3147
3148=item *
3149
3150C<prototype()> with no arguments used to read the previous item on the
3151stack, so S<C<print "foo", prototype()>> would print foo's prototype.
3152It has been fixed to infer C<$_> instead.
3153L<[perl #123514]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123514>.
3154
3155=item *
3156
3157Some cases of lexical state subs declared inside predeclared subs could
3158crash, for example when evalling a string including the name of an outer
3159variable, but no longer do.
3160
3161=item *
3162
3163Some cases of nested lexical state subs inside anonymous subs could cause
3164'Bizarre copy' errors or possibly even crashes.
3165
3166=item *
3167
3168When trying to emit warnings, perl's default debugger (F<perl5db.pl>) was
3169sometimes giving 'Undefined subroutine &DB::db_warn called' instead. This
3170bug, which started to occur in Perl 5.18, has been fixed.
3171L<[perl #123553]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123553>.
3172
3173=item *
3174
3175Certain syntax errors in substitutions, such as C<< s/${<>{})// >>, would
3176crash, and had done so since Perl 5.10. (In some cases the crash did not
3177start happening till 5.16.) The crash has, of course, been fixed.
3178L<[perl #123542]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123542>.
3179
3180=item *
3181
3182Fix a couple of string grow size calculation overflows; in particular,
3183a repeat expression like S<C<33 x ~3>> could cause a large buffer
3184overflow since the new output buffer size was not correctly handled by
3185C<SvGROW()>. An expression like this now properly produces a memory wrap
3186panic.
3187L<[perl #123554]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123554>.
3188
3189=item *
3190
3191C<< formline("@...", "a"); >> would crash. The C<FF_CHECKNL> case in
3192C<pp_formline()> didn't set the pointer used to mark the chop position,
3193which led to the C<FF_MORE> case crashing with a segmentation fault.
3194This has been fixed.
3195L<[perl #123538]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123538>.
3196
3197=item *
3198
3199A possible buffer overrun and crash when parsing a literal pattern during
3200regular expression compilation has been fixed.
3201L<[perl #123604]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123604>.
3202
3203=item *
3204
3205C<fchmod()> and C<futimes()> now set C<$!> when they fail due to being
3206passed a closed file handle.
3207L<[perl #122703]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122703>.
3208
3209=item *
3210
3211C<op_free()> and C<scalarvoid()> no longer crash due to a stack overflow
3212when freeing a deeply recursive op tree.
3213L<[perl #108276]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=108276>.
3214
3215=item *
3216
3217In Perl 5.20.0, C<$^N> accidentally had the internal UTF-8 flag turned off
3218if accessed from a code block within a regular expression, effectively
3219UTF-8-encoding the value. This has been fixed.
3220L<[perl #123135]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123135>.
3221
3222=item *
3223
3224A failed C<semctl> call no longer overwrites existing items on the stack,
3225which means that C<(semctl(-1,0,0,0))[0]> no longer gives an
3226"uninitialized" warning.
3227
3228=item *
3229
3230C<else{foo()}> with no space before C<foo> is now better at assigning the
3231right line number to that statement.
3232L<[perl #122695]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122695>.
3233
3234=item *
3235
3236Sometimes the assignment in C<@array = split> gets optimised so that C<split>
3237itself writes directly to the array. This caused a bug, preventing this
3238assignment from being used in lvalue context. So
3239C<(@a=split//,"foo")=bar()> was an error. (This bug probably goes back to
3240Perl 3, when the optimisation was added.) It has now been fixed.
3241L<[perl #123057]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123057>.
3242
3243=item *
3244
3245When an argument list fails the checks specified by a subroutine
3246signature (which is still an experimental feature), the resulting error
3247messages now give the file and line number of the caller, not of the
3248called subroutine.
3249L<[perl #121374]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121374>.
3250
3251=item *
3252
3253The flip-flop operators (C<..> and C<...> in scalar context) used to maintain
3254a separate state for each recursion level (the number of times the
3255enclosing sub was called recursively), contrary to the documentation. Now
3256each closure has one internal state for each flip-flop.
3257L<[perl #122829]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122829>.
3258
3259=item *
3260
3261The flip-flop operator (C<..> in scalar context) would return the same
3262scalar each time, unless the containing subroutine was called recursively.
3263Now it always returns a new scalar.
3264L<[perl #122829]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122829>.
3265
3266=item *
3267
3268C<use>, C<no>, statement labels, special blocks (C<BEGIN>) and pod are now
3269permitted as the first thing in a C<map> or C<grep> block, the block after
3270C<print> or C<say> (or other functions) returning a handle, and within
3271C<${...}>, C<@{...}>, etc.
3272L<[perl #122782]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122782>.
3273
3274=item *
3275
3276The repetition operator C<x> now propagates lvalue context to its left-hand
3277argument when used in contexts like C<foreach>. That allows
3278S<C<for(($#that_array)x2) { ... }>> to work as expected if the loop modifies
3279C<$_>.
3280
3281=item *
3282
3283C<(...) x ...> in scalar context used to corrupt the stack if one operand
3284was an object with "x" overloading, causing erratic behavior.
3285L<[perl #121827]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121827>.
3286
3287=item *
3288
3289Assignment to a lexical scalar is often optimised away; for example in
3290C<my $x; $x = $y + $z>, the assign operator is optimised away and the add
3291operator writes its result directly to C<$x>. Various bugs related to
3292this optimisation have been fixed. Certain operators on the right-hand
3293side would sometimes fail to assign the value at all or assign the wrong
3294value, or would call STORE twice or not at all on tied variables. The
3295operators affected were C<$foo++>, C<$foo-->, and C<-$foo> under C<use
3296integer>, C<chomp>, C<chr> and C<setpgrp>.
3297
3298=item *
3299
3300List assignments were sometimes buggy if the same scalar ended up on both
3301sides of the assignment due to use of C<tied>, C<values> or C<each>. The
3302result would be the wrong value getting assigned.
3303
3304=item *
3305
3306C<setpgrp($nonzero)> (with one argument) was accidentally changed in 5.16
3307to mean C<setpgrp(0)>. This has been fixed.
3308
3309=item *
3310
3311C<__SUB__> could return the wrong value or even corrupt memory under the
3312debugger (the C<-d> switch) and in subs containing C<eval $string>.
3313
3314=item *
3315
3316When S<C<sub () { $var }>> becomes inlinable, it now returns a different
3317scalar each time, just as a non-inlinable sub would, though Perl still
3318optimises the copy away in cases where it would make no observable
3319difference.
3320
3321=item *
3322
3323S<C<my sub f () { $var }>> and S<C<sub () : attr { $var }>> are no longer
3324eligible for inlining. The former would crash; the latter would just
3325throw the attributes away. An exception is made for the little-known
3326C<:method> attribute, which does nothing much.
3327
3328=item *
3329
3330Inlining of subs with an empty prototype is now more consistent than
3331before. Previously, a sub with multiple statements, of which all but the last
3332were optimised away, would be inlinable only if it were an anonymous sub
3333containing a string C<eval> or C<state> declaration or closing over an
3334outer lexical variable (or any anonymous sub under the debugger). Now any
3335sub that gets folded to a single constant after statements have been
3336optimised away is eligible for inlining. This applies to things like C<sub
3337() { jabber() if DEBUG; 42 }>.
3338
3339Some subroutines with an explicit C<return> were being made inlinable,
3340contrary to the documentation, Now C<return> always prevents inlining.
3341
3342=item *
3343
3344On some systems, such as VMS, C<crypt> can return a non-ASCII string. If a
3345scalar assigned to had contained a UTF-8 string previously, then C<crypt>
3346would not turn off the UTF-8 flag, thus corrupting the return value. This
3347would happen with S<C<$lexical = crypt ...>>.
3348
3349=item *
3350
3351C<crypt> no longer calls C<FETCH> twice on a tied first argument.
3352
3353=item *
3354
3355An unterminated here-doc on the last line of a quote-like operator
3356(C<qq[${ <<END }]>, C</(?{ <<END })/>) no longer causes a double free. It
3357started doing so in 5.18.
3358
3359=item *
3360
3361C<index()> and C<rindex()> no longer crash when used on strings over 2GB in
3362size.
3363L<[perl #121562]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121562>.
3364
3365=item *
3366
3367A small, previously intentional, memory leak in
3368C<PERL_SYS_INIT>/C<PERL_SYS_INIT3> on Win32 builds was fixed. This might
3369affect embedders who repeatedly create and destroy perl engines within
3370the same process.
3371
3372=item *
3373
3374C<POSIX::localeconv()> now returns the data for the program's underlying
3375locale even when called from outside the scope of S<C<use locale>>.
3376
3377=item *
3378
3379C<POSIX::localeconv()> now works properly on platforms which don't have
3380C<LC_NUMERIC> and/or C<LC_MONETARY>, or for which Perl has been compiled
3381to disregard either or both of these locale categories. In such
3382circumstances, there are now no entries for the corresponding values in
3383the hash returned by C<localeconv()>.
3384
3385=item *
3386
3387C<POSIX::localeconv()> now marks appropriately the values it returns as
3388UTF-8 or not. Previously they were always returned as bytes, even if
3389they were supposed to be encoded as UTF-8.
3390
3391=item *
3392
3393On Microsoft Windows, within the scope of C<S<use locale>>, the following
3394POSIX character classes gave results for many locales that did not
3395conform to the POSIX standard:
3396C<[[:alnum:]]>,
3397C<[[:alpha:]]>,
3398C<[[:blank:]]>,
3399C<[[:digit:]]>,
3400C<[[:graph:]]>,
3401C<[[:lower:]]>,
3402C<[[:print:]]>,
3403C<[[:punct:]]>,
3404C<[[:upper:]]>,
3405C<[[:word:]]>,
3406and
3407C<[[:xdigit:]]>.
3408This was because the underlying Microsoft implementation does not
3409follow the standard. Perl now takes special precautions to correct for
3410this.
3411
3412=item *
3413
3414Many issues have been detected by L<Coverity|http://www.coverity.com/> and
3415fixed.
3416
3417=item *
3418
3419C<system()> and friends should now work properly on more Android builds.
3420
3421Due to an oversight, the value specified through C<-Dtargetsh> to F<Configure>
3422would end up being ignored by some of the build process. This caused perls
3423cross-compiled for Android to end up with defective versions of C<system()>,
3424C<exec()> and backticks: the commands would end up looking for C</bin/sh>
3425instead of C</system/bin/sh>, and so would fail for the vast majority
3426of devices, leaving C<$!> as C<ENOENT>.
3427
3428=item *
3429
3430C<qr(...\(...\)...)>,
3431C<qr[...\[...\]...]>,
3432and
3433C<qr{...\{...\}...}>
3434now work. Previously it was impossible to escape these three
3435left-characters with a backslash within a regular expression pattern
3436where otherwise they would be considered metacharacters, and the pattern
3437opening delimiter was the character, and the closing delimiter was its
3438mirror character.
3439
3440=item *
3441
3442C<< s///e >> on tainted UTF-8 strings corrupted C<< pos() >>. This bug,
3443introduced in 5.20, is now fixed.
3444L<[perl #122148]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122148>.
3445
3446=item *
3447
3448A non-word boundary in a regular expression (C<< \B >>) did not always
3449match the end of the string; in particular C<< q{} =~ /\B/ >> did not
3450match. This bug, introduced in perl 5.14, is now fixed.
3451L<[perl #122090]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122090>.
3452
3453=item *
3454
3455C<< " P" =~ /(?=.*P)P/ >> should match, but did not. This is now fixed.
3456L<[perl #122171]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122171>.
3457
3458=item *
3459
3460Failing to compile C<use Foo> in an C<eval> could leave a spurious
3461C<BEGIN> subroutine definition, which would produce a "Subroutine
3462BEGIN redefined" warning on the next use of C<use>, or other C<BEGIN>
3463block.
3464L<[perl #122107]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122107>.
3465
3466=item *
3467
3468C<method { BLOCK } ARGS> syntax now correctly parses the arguments if they
3469begin with an opening brace.
3470L<[perl #46947]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=46947>.
3471
3472=item *
3473
3474External libraries and Perl may have different ideas of what the locale is.
3475This is problematic when parsing version strings if the locale's numeric
3476separator has been changed. Version parsing has been patched to ensure
3477it handles the locales correctly.
3478L<[perl #121930]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121930>.
3479
3480=item *
3481
3482A bug has been fixed where zero-length assertions and code blocks inside of a
3483regex could cause C<pos> to see an incorrect value.
3484L<[perl #122460]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122460>.
3485
3486=item *
3487
3488Dereferencing of constants now works correctly for typeglob constants. Previously
3489the glob was stringified and its name looked up. Now the glob itself is used.
3490L<[perl #69456]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=69456>
3491
3492=item *
3493
3494When parsing a sigil (C<$> C<@> C<%> C<&)> followed by braces,
3495the parser no
3496longer tries to guess whether it is a block or a hash constructor (causing a
3497syntax error when it guesses the latter), since it can only be a block.
3498
3499=item *
3500
3501S<C<undef $reference>> now frees the referent immediately, instead of hanging on
3502to it until the next statement.
3503L<[perl #122556]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122556>
3504
3505=item *
3506
3507Various cases where the name of a sub is used (autoload, overloading, error
3508messages) used to crash for lexical subs, but have been fixed.
3509
3510=item *
3511
3512Bareword lookup now tries to avoid vivifying packages if it turns out the
3513bareword is not going to be a subroutine name.
3514
3515=item *
3516
3517Compilation of anonymous constants (I<e.g.>, C<sub () { 3 }>) no longer deletes
3518any subroutine named C<__ANON__> in the current package. Not only was
3519C<*__ANON__{CODE}> cleared, but there was a memory leak, too. This bug goes
3520back to Perl 5.8.0.
3521
3522=item *
3523
3524Stub declarations like C<sub f;> and C<sub f ();> no longer wipe out constants
3525of the same name declared by C<use constant>. This bug was introduced in Perl
35265.10.0.
3527
3528=item *
3529
3530C<qr/[\N{named sequence}]/> now works properly in many instances.
3531
3532Some names
3533known to C<\N{...}> refer to a sequence of multiple characters, instead of the
3534usual single character. Bracketed character classes generally only match
3535single characters, but now special handling has been added so that they can
3536match named sequences, but not if the class is inverted or the sequence is
3537specified as the beginning or end of a range. In these cases, the only
3538behavior change from before is a slight rewording of the fatal error message
3539given when this class is part of a C<?[...])> construct. When the C<[...]>
3540stands alone, the same non-fatal warning as before is raised, and only the
3541first character in the sequence is used, again just as before.
3542
3543=item *
3544
3545Tainted constants evaluated at compile time no longer cause unrelated
3546statements to become tainted.
3547L<[perl #122669]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122669>
3548
3549=item *
3550
3551S<C<open $$fh, ...>>, which vivifies a handle with a name like
3552C<"main::_GEN_0">, was not giving the handle the right reference count, so
3553a double free could happen.
3554
3555=item *
3556
3557When deciding that a bareword was a method name, the parser would get confused
3558if an C<our> sub with the same name existed, and look up the method in the
3559package of the C<our> sub, instead of the package of the invocant.
3560
3561=item *
3562
3563The parser no longer gets confused by C<\U=> within a double-quoted string. It
3564used to produce a syntax error, but now compiles it correctly.
3565L<[perl #80368]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=80368>
3566
3567=item *
3568
3569It has always been the intention for the C<-B> and C<-T> file test operators to
3570treat UTF-8 encoded files as text. (L<perlfunc|perlfunc/-X FILEHANDLE> has
3571been updated to say this.) Previously, it was possible for some files to be
3572considered UTF-8 that actually weren't valid UTF-8. This is now fixed. The
3573operators now work on EBCDIC platforms as well.
3574
3575=item *
3576
3577Under some conditions warning messages raised during regular expression pattern
3578compilation were being output more than once. This has now been fixed.
3579
3580=item *
3581
3582Perl 5.20.0 introduced a regression in which a UTF-8 encoded regular
3583expression pattern that contains a single ASCII lowercase letter did not
3584match its uppercase counterpart. That has been fixed in both 5.20.1 and
35855.22.0.
3586L<[perl #122655]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122655>
3587
3588=item *
3589
3590Constant folding could incorrectly suppress warnings if lexical warnings
3591(C<use warnings> or C<no warnings>) were not in effect and C<$^W> were
3592false at compile time and true at run time.
3593
3594=item *
3595
3596Loading Unicode tables during a regular expression match could cause assertion
3597failures under debugging builds if the previous match used the very same
3598regular expression.
3599L<[perl #122747]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122747>
3600
3601=item *
3602
3603Thread cloning used to work incorrectly for lexical subs, possibly causing
3604crashes or double frees on exit.
3605
3606=item *
3607
3608Since Perl 5.14.0, deleting C<$SomePackage::{__ANON__}> and then undefining an
3609anonymous subroutine could corrupt things internally, resulting in
3610L<Devel::Peek> crashing or L<B.pm|B> giving nonsensical data. This has been
3611fixed.
3612
3613=item *
3614
3615S<C<(caller $n)[3]>> now reports names of lexical subs, instead of
3616treating them as C<"(unknown)">.
3617
3618=item *
3619
3620C<sort subname LIST> now supports using a lexical sub as the comparison
3621routine.
3622
3623=item *
3624
3625Aliasing (I<e.g.>, via S<C<*x = *y>>) could confuse list assignments that mention the
3626two names for the same variable on either side, causing wrong values to be
3627assigned.
3628L<[perl #15667]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=15667>
3629
3630=item *
3631
3632Long here-doc terminators could cause a bad read on short lines of input. This
3633has been fixed. It is doubtful that any crash could have occurred. This bug
3634goes back to when here-docs were introduced in Perl 3.000 twenty-five years
3635ago.
3636
3637=item *
3638
3639An optimization in C<split> to treat S<C<split /^/>> like S<C<split /^/m>> had the
3640unfortunate side-effect of also treating S<C<split /\A/>> like S<C<split /^/m>>,
3641which it should not. This has been fixed. (Note, however, that S<C<split /^x/>>
3642does not behave like S<C<split /^x/m>>, which is also considered to be a bug and
3643will be fixed in a future version.)
3644L<[perl #122761]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122761>
3645
3646=item *
3647
3648The little-known S<C<my Class $var>> syntax (see L<fields> and L<attributes>)
3649could get confused in the scope of C<use utf8> if C<Class> were a constant
3650whose value contained Latin-1 characters.
3651
3652=item *
3653
3654Locking and unlocking values via L<Hash::Util> or C<Internals::SvREADONLY>
3655no longer has any effect on values that were read-only to begin with.
3656Previously, unlocking such values could result in crashes, hangs or
3657other erratic behavior.
3658
3659=item *
3660
3661Some unterminated C<(?(...)...)> constructs in regular expressions would
3662either crash or give erroneous error messages. C</(?(1)/> is one such
3663example.
3664
3665=item *
3666
3667S<C<pack "w", $tied>> no longer calls FETCH twice.
3668
3669=item *
3670
3671List assignments like S<C<($x, $z) = (1, $y)>> now work correctly if C<$x> and
3672C<$y> have been aliased by C<foreach>.
3673
3674=item *
3675
3676Some patterns including code blocks with syntax errors, such as
3677S<C</ (?{(^{})/>>, would hang or fail assertions on debugging builds. Now
3678they produce errors.
3679
3680=item *
3681
3682An assertion failure when parsing C<sort> with debugging enabled has been
3683fixed.
3684L<[perl #122771]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122771>.
3685
3686=item *
3687
3688S<C<*a = *b; @a = split //, $b[1]>> could do a bad read and produce junk
3689results.
3690
3691=item *
3692
3693In S<C<() = @array = split>>, the S<C<() =>> at the beginning no longer confuses
3694the optimizer into assuming a limit of 1.
3695
3696=item *
3697
3698Fatal warnings no longer prevent the output of syntax errors.
3699L<[perl #122966]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122966>.
3700
3701=item *
3702
3703Fixed a NaN double-to-long-double conversion error on VMS. For quiet NaNs
3704(and only on Itanium, not Alpha) negative infinity instead of NaN was
3705produced.
3706
3707=item *
3708
3709Fixed the issue that caused C<< make distclean >> to incorrectly leave some
3710files behind.
3711L<[perl #122820]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122820>.
3712
3713=item *
3714
3715AIX now sets the length in C<< getsockopt >> correctly.
3716L<[perl #120835]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=120835>.
3717L<[cpan #91183]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=91183>.
3718L<[cpan #85570]|https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=85570>.
3719
3720=item *
3721
3722The optimization phase of a regexp compilation could run "forever" and
3723exhaust all memory under certain circumstances; now fixed.
3724L<[perl #122283]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122283>.
3725
3726=item *
3727
3728The test script F<< t/op/crypt.t >> now uses the SHA-256 algorithm if the
3729default one is disabled, rather than giving failures.
3730L<[perl #121591]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=121591>.
3731
3732=item *
3733
3734Fixed an off-by-one error when setting the size of a shared array.
3735L<[perl #122950]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122950>.
3736
3737=item *
3738
3739Fixed a bug that could cause perl to enter an infinite loop during
3740compilation. In particular, a C<while(1)> within a sublist, I<e.g.>
3741
3742 sub foo { () = ($a, my $b, ($c, do { while(1) {} })) }
3743
3744The bug was introduced in 5.20.0
3745L<[perl #122995]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=122995>.
3746
3747=item *
3748
3749On Win32, if a variable was C<local>-ized in a pseudo-process that later
3750forked, restoring the original value in the child pseudo-process caused
3751memory corruption and a crash in the child pseudo-process (and therefore the
3752OS process).
3753L<[perl #40565]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=40565>.
3754
3755=item *
3756
3757Calling C<write> on a format with a C<^**> field could produce a panic
3758in C<sv_chop()> if there were insufficient arguments or if the variable
3759used to fill the field was empty.
3760L<[perl #123245]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123245>.
3761
3762=item *
3763
3764Non-ASCII lexical sub names now appear without trailing junk when they
3765appear in error messages.
3766
3767=item *
3768
3769The C<\@> subroutine prototype no longer flattens parenthesized arrays
3770(taking a reference to each element), but takes a reference to the array
3771itself.
3772L<[perl #47363]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=47363>.
3773
3774=item *
3775
3776A block containing nothing except a C-style C<for> loop could corrupt the
3777stack, causing lists outside the block to lose elements or have elements
3778overwritten. This could happen with C<map { for(...){...} } ...> and with
3779lists containing C<do { for(...){...} }>.
3780L<[perl #123286]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123286>.
3781
3782=item *
3783
3784C<scalar()> now propagates lvalue context, so that
3785S<C<for(scalar($#foo)) { ... }>> can modify C<$#foo> through C<$_>.
3786
3787=item *
3788
3789C<qr/@array(?{block})/> no longer dies with "Bizarre copy of ARRAY".
3790L<[perl #123344]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123344>.
3791
3792=item *
3793
3794S<C<eval '$variable'>> in nested named subroutines would sometimes look up a
3795global variable even with a lexical variable in scope.
3796
3797=item *
3798
3799In perl 5.20.0, C<sort CORE::fake> where 'fake' is anything other than a
3800keyword, started chopping off the last 6 characters and treating the result
3801as a sort sub name. The previous behavior of treating C<CORE::fake> as a
3802sort sub name has been restored.
3803L<[perl #123410]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123410>.
3804
3805=item *
3806
3807Outside of C<use utf8>, a single-character Latin-1 lexical variable is
3808disallowed. The error message for it, "Can't use global C<$foo>...", was
3809giving garbage instead of the variable name.
3810
3811=item *
3812
3813C<readline> on a nonexistent handle was causing C<${^LAST_FH}> to produce a
3814reference to an undefined scalar (or fail an assertion). Now
3815C<${^LAST_FH}> ends up undefined.
3816
3817=item *
3818
3819C<(...) x ...> in void context now applies scalar context to the left-hand
3820argument, instead of the context the current sub was called in.
3821L<[perl #123020]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=123020>.
3822
3823=back
3824
3825=head1 Known Problems
3826
3827=over 4
3828
3829=item *
3830
3831C<pack>-ing a NaN on a perl compiled with Visual C 6 does not behave properly,
3832leading to a test failure in F<t/op/infnan.t>.
3833L<[perl 125203]|https://rt.perl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=125203>
3834
3835=item *
3836
3837A goal is for Perl to be able to be recompiled to work reasonably well on any
3838Unicode version. In Perl 5.22, though, the earliest such version is Unicode
38395.1 (current is 7.0).
3840
3841=item *
3842
3843EBCDIC platforms
3844
3845=over 4
3846
3847=item *
3848
3849The C<cmp> (and hence C<sort>) operators do not necessarily give the
3850correct results when both operands are UTF-EBCDIC encoded strings and
3851there is a mixture of ASCII and/or control characters, along with other
3852characters.
3853
3854=item *
3855
3856Ranges containing C<\N{...}> in the C<tr///> (and C<y///>)
3857transliteration operators are treated differently than the equivalent
3858ranges in regular expression patterns. They should, but don't, cause
3859the values in the ranges to all be treated as Unicode code points, and
3860not native ones. (L<perlre/Version 8 Regular Expressions> gives
3861details as to how it should work.)
3862
3863=item *
3864
3865Encode and encoding are mostly broken.
3866
3867=item *
3868
3869Many CPAN modules that are shipped with core show failing tests.
3870
3871=item *
3872
3873C<pack>/C<unpack> with C<"U0"> format may not work properly.
3874
3875=back
3876
3877=item *
3878
3879The following modules are known to have test failures with this version of
3880Perl. In many cases, patches have been submitted, so there will hopefully be
3881new releases soon:
3882
3883=over
3884
3885=item *
3886
3887L<B::Generate> version 1.50
3888
3889=item *
3890
3891L<B::Utils> version 0.25
3892
3893=item *
3894
3895L<Coro> version 6.42
3896
3897=item *
3898
3899L<Dancer> version 1.3130
3900
3901=item *
3902
3903L<Data::Alias> version 1.18
3904
3905=item *
3906
3907L<Data::Dump::Streamer> version 2.38
3908
3909=item *
3910
3911L<Data::Util> version 0.63
3912
3913=item *
3914
3915L<Devel::Spy> version 0.07
3916
3917=item *
3918
3919L<invoker> version 0.34
3920
3921=item *
3922
3923L<Lexical::Var> version 0.009
3924
3925=item *
3926
3927L<LWP::ConsoleLogger> version 0.000018
3928
3929=item *
3930
3931L<Mason> version 2.22
3932
3933=item *
3934
3935L<NgxQueue> version 0.02
3936
3937=item *
3938
3939L<Padre> version 1.00
3940
3941=item *
3942
3943L<Parse::Keyword> 0.08
3944
3945=back
3946
3947=back
3948
3949=head1 Obituary
3950
3951Brian McCauley died on May 8, 2015. He was a frequent poster to Usenet, Perl
3952Monks, and other Perl forums, and made several CPAN contributions under the
3953nick NOBULL, including to the Perl FAQ. He attended almost every
3954YAPC::Europe, and indeed, helped organise YAPC::Europe 2006 and the QA
3955Hackathon 2009. His wit and his delight in intricate systems were
3956particularly apparent in his love of board games; many Perl mongers will
3957have fond memories of playing Fluxx and other games with Brian. He will be
3958missed.
3959
3960=head1 Acknowledgements
3961
3962Perl 5.22.0 represents approximately 12 months of development since Perl 5.20.0
3963and contains approximately 590,000 lines of changes across 2,400 files from 94
3964authors.
3965
3966Excluding auto-generated files, documentation and release tools, there were
3967approximately 370,000 lines of changes to 1,500 .pm, .t, .c and .h files.
3968
3969Perl continues to flourish into its third decade thanks to a vibrant community
3970of users and developers. The following people are known to have contributed the
3971improvements that became Perl 5.22.0:
3972
3973Aaron Crane, Abhijit Menon-Sen, Abigail, Alberto Simões, Alex Solovey, Alex
3974Vandiver, Alexandr Ciornii, Alexandre (Midnite) Jousset, Andreas König,
3975Andreas Voegele, Andrew Fresh, Andy Dougherty, Anthony Heading, Aristotle
3976Pagaltzis, brian d foy, Brian Fraser, Chad Granum, Chris 'BinGOs' Williams,
3977Craig A. Berry, Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker, Daniel Dragan, Darin McBride, Dave
3978Rolsky, David Golden, David Mitchell, David Wheeler, Dmitri Tikhonov, Doug
3979Bell, E. Choroba, Ed J, Eric Herman, Father Chrysostomos, George Greer, Glenn
3980D. Golden, Graham Knop, H.Merijn Brand, Herbert Breunung, Hugo van der Sanden,
3981James E Keenan, James McCoy, James Raspass, Jan Dubois, Jarkko Hietaniemi,
3982Jasmine Ngan, Jerry D. Hedden, Jim Cromie, John Goodyear, kafka, Karen
3983Etheridge, Karl Williamson, Kent Fredric, kmx, Lajos Veres, Leon Timmermans,
3984Lukas Mai, Mathieu Arnold, Matthew Horsfall, Max Maischein, Michael Bunk,
3985Nicholas Clark, Niels Thykier, Niko Tyni, Norman Koch, Olivier Mengué, Peter
3986John Acklam, Peter Martini, Petr Písař, Philippe Bruhat (BooK), Pierre
3987Bogossian, Rafael Garcia-Suarez, Randy Stauner, Reini Urban, Ricardo Signes,
3988Rob Hoelz, Rostislav Skudnov, Sawyer X, Shirakata Kentaro, Shlomi Fish,
3989Sisyphus, Slaven Rezic, Smylers, Steffen Müller, Steve Hay, Sullivan Beck,
3990syber, Tadeusz Sośnierz, Thomas Sibley, Todd Rinaldo, Tony Cook, Vincent Pit,
3991Vladimir Marek, Yaroslav Kuzmin, Yves Orton, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason.
3992
3993The list above is almost certainly incomplete as it is automatically generated
3994from version control history. In particular, it does not include the names of
3995the (very much appreciated) contributors who reported issues to the Perl bug
3996tracker.
3997
3998Many of the changes included in this version originated in the CPAN modules
3999included in Perl's core. We're grateful to the entire CPAN community for
4000helping Perl to flourish.
4001
4002For a more complete list of all of Perl's historical contributors, please see
4003the F<AUTHORS> file in the Perl source distribution.
4004
4005=head1 Reporting Bugs
4006
4007If you find what you think is a bug, you might check the articles recently
4008posted to the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup and the perl bug database at
4009L<https://rt.perl.org/>. There may also be information at
4010L<http://www.perl.org/>, the Perl Home Page.
4011
4012If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the L<perlbug> program
4013included with your release. Be sure to trim your bug down to a tiny but
4014sufficient test case. Your bug report, along with the output of C<perl -V>,
4015will be sent off to perlbug@perl.org to be analysed by the Perl porting team.
4016
4017If the bug you are reporting has security implications, which make it
4018inappropriate to send to a publicly archived mailing list, then please send it
4019to perl5-security-report@perl.org. This points to a closed subscription
4020unarchived mailing list, which includes all the core committers, who will be
4021able to help assess the impact of issues, figure out a resolution, and help
4022co-ordinate the release of patches to mitigate or fix the problem across all
4023platforms on which Perl is supported. Please only use this address for
4024security issues in the Perl core, not for modules independently distributed on
4025CPAN.
4026
4027=head1 SEE ALSO
4028
4029The F<Changes> file for an explanation of how to view exhaustive details on
4030what changed.
4031
4032The F<INSTALL> file for how to build Perl.
4033
4034The F<README> file for general stuff.
4035
4036The F<Artistic> and F<Copying> files for copyright information.
4037
4038=cut