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68dc0745 1=head1 NAME
2
55e174a4 3perlfaq3 - Programming Tools ($Revision: 1.4 $, $Date: 2001/10/02 19:42:02 $)
68dc0745 4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7This section of the FAQ answers questions related to programmer tools
8and programming support.
9
10=head2 How do I do (anything)?
11
12Have you looked at CPAN (see L<perlfaq2>)? The chances are that
13someone has already written a module that can solve your problem.
3958b146 14Have you read the appropriate manpages? Here's a brief index:
68dc0745 15
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16 Basics perldata, perlvar, perlsyn, perlop, perlsub
17 Execution perlrun, perldebug
18 Functions perlfunc
68dc0745 19 Objects perlref, perlmod, perlobj, perltie
20 Data Structures perlref, perllol, perldsc
f102b883 21 Modules perlmod, perlmodlib, perlsub
d92eb7b0 22 Regexes perlre, perlfunc, perlop, perllocale
68dc0745 23 Moving to perl5 perltrap, perl
24 Linking w/C perlxstut, perlxs, perlcall, perlguts, perlembed
25 Various http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FMTEYEWTK/index.html
26 (not a man-page but still useful)
27
3958b146 28A crude table of contents for the Perl manpage set is found in L<perltoc>.
68dc0745 29
30=head2 How can I use Perl interactively?
31
32The typical approach uses the Perl debugger, described in the
3958b146 33perldebug(1) manpage, on an ``empty'' program, like this:
68dc0745 34
35 perl -de 42
36
37Now just type in any legal Perl code, and it will be immediately
38evaluated. You can also examine the symbol table, get stack
39backtraces, check variable values, set breakpoints, and other
92c2ed05 40operations typically found in symbolic debuggers.
68dc0745 41
42=head2 Is there a Perl shell?
43
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44In general, not yet. There is psh available at
45
46 http://www.focusresearch.com/gregor/psh
47
48Which includes the following description:
49
50 The Perl Shell is a shell that combines the interactive nature
51 of a Unix shell with the power of Perl. The goal is to eventually
52 have a full featured shell that behaves as expected for normal
53 shell activity. But, the Perl Shell will use Perl syntax and
54 functionality for for control-flow statements and other things.
55
56The Shell.pm module (distributed with Perl) makes Perl try commands
57which aren't part of the Perl language as shell commands. perlsh
58from the source distribution is simplistic and uninteresting, but
59may still be what you want.
68dc0745 60
61=head2 How do I debug my Perl programs?
62
9f1b1f2d 63Have you tried C<use warnings> or used C<-w>? They enable warnings
a6dd486b 64to detect dubious practices.
68dc0745 65
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66Have you tried C<use strict>? It prevents you from using symbolic
67references, makes you predeclare any subroutines that you call as bare
68words, and (probably most importantly) forces you to predeclare your
a6dd486b 69variables with C<my>, C<our>, or C<use vars>.
68dc0745 70
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71Did you check the return values of each and every system call? The operating
72system (and thus Perl) tells you whether they worked, and if not
92c2ed05 73why.
68dc0745 74
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75 open(FH, "> /etc/cantwrite")
76 or die "Couldn't write to /etc/cantwrite: $!\n";
68dc0745 77
92c2ed05 78Did you read L<perltrap>? It's full of gotchas for old and new Perl
a6dd486b 79programmers and even has sections for those of you who are upgrading
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80from languages like I<awk> and I<C>.
81
82Have you tried the Perl debugger, described in L<perldebug>? You can
83step through your program and see what it's doing and thus work out
84why what it's doing isn't what it should be doing.
68dc0745 85
86=head2 How do I profile my Perl programs?
87
e083a89c 88You should get the Devel::DProf module from the standard distribution
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89(or separately on CPAN) and also use Benchmark.pm from the standard
90distribution. The Benchmark module lets you time specific portions of
91your code, while Devel::DProf gives detailed breakdowns of where your
e083a89c 92code spends its time.
68dc0745 93
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94Here's a sample use of Benchmark:
95
96 use Benchmark;
97
98 @junk = `cat /etc/motd`;
99 $count = 10_000;
100
101 timethese($count, {
102 'map' => sub { my @a = @junk;
103 map { s/a/b/ } @a;
104 return @a
105 },
106 'for' => sub { my @a = @junk;
107 local $_;
108 for (@a) { s/a/b/ };
109 return @a },
110 });
111
112This is what it prints (on one machine--your results will be dependent
113on your hardware, operating system, and the load on your machine):
114
115 Benchmark: timing 10000 iterations of for, map...
116 for: 4 secs ( 3.97 usr 0.01 sys = 3.98 cpu)
117 map: 6 secs ( 4.97 usr 0.00 sys = 4.97 cpu)
118
65acb1b1 119Be aware that a good benchmark is very hard to write. It only tests the
a6dd486b 120data you give it and proves little about the differing complexities
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121of contrasting algorithms.
122
68dc0745 123=head2 How do I cross-reference my Perl programs?
124
125The B::Xref module, shipped with the new, alpha-release Perl compiler
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126(not the general distribution prior to the 5.005 release), can be used
127to generate cross-reference reports for Perl programs.
68dc0745 128
c8db1d39 129 perl -MO=Xref[,OPTIONS] scriptname.plx
68dc0745 130
131=head2 Is there a pretty-printer (formatter) for Perl?
132
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133Perltidy is a Perl script which indents and reformats Perl scripts
134to make them easier to read by trying to follow the rules of the
135L<perlstyle>. If you write Perl scripts, or spend much time reading
136them, you will probably find it useful. It is available at
137http://perltidy.sourceforge.net
138
139Of course, if you simply follow the guidelines in L<perlstyle>,
140you shouldn't need to reformat. The habit of formatting your code
141as you write it will help prevent bugs. Your editor can and should
142help you with this. The perl-mode or newer cperl-mode for emacs
143can provide remarkable amounts of help with most (but not all)
144code, and even less programmable editors can provide significant
145assistance. Tom Christiansen and many other VI users swear by
146the following settings in vi and its clones:
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147
148 set ai sw=4
d92eb7b0 149 map! ^O {^M}^[O^T
65acb1b1 150
55e174a4 151Put that in your F<.exrc> file (replacing the caret characters
65acb1b1 152with control characters) and away you go. In insert mode, ^T is
a6dd486b 153for indenting, ^D is for undenting, and ^O is for blockdenting--
55e174a4 154as it were. A more complete example, with comments, can be found at
65acb1b1 155http://www.perl.com/CPAN-local/authors/id/TOMC/scripts/toms.exrc.gz
92c2ed05 156
65acb1b1 157If you are used to using the I<vgrind> program for printing out nice code
92c2ed05 158to a laser printer, you can take a stab at this using
68dc0745 159http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/misc/tips/working.vgrind.entry, but the
160results are not particularly satisfying for sophisticated code.
161
87275199 162The a2ps at http://www.infres.enst.fr/%7Edemaille/a2ps/ does lots of things
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163related to generating nicely printed output of documents.
164
d92eb7b0 165=head2 Is there a ctags for Perl?
68dc0745 166
d92eb7b0 167There's a simple one at
68dc0745 168http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/id/TOMC/scripts/ptags.gz which may do
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169the trick. And if not, it's easy to hack into what you want.
170
171=head2 Is there an IDE or Windows Perl Editor?
172
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173Perl programs are just plain text, so any editor will do.
174
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175If you're on Unix, you already have an IDE--Unix itself. The UNIX
176philosophy is the philosophy of several small tools that each do one
177thing and do it well. It's like a carpenter's toolbox.
178
5ca69f12 179If you want an IDE, check the following:
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180
181=over 4
182
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183=item Komodo
184
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185ActiveState's cross-platform (as of April 2001 Windows and Linux),
186multi-language IDE has Perl support, including a regular expression
187debugger and remote debugging
188(http://www.ActiveState.com/Products/Komodo/index.html). (Visual
189Perl, a Visual Studio.NET plug-in is currently (early 2001) in beta
190(http://www.ActiveState.com/Products/VisualPerl/index.html)).
68fbfbd7 191
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192=item The Object System
193
194(http://www.castlelink.co.uk/object_system/) is a Perl web
195applications development IDE, apparently for any platform
196that runs Perl.
197
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198=item Open Perl IDE
199
200( http://open-perl-ide.sourceforge.net/ )
201Open Perl IDE is an integrated development environment for writing
202and debugging Perl scripts with ActiveState's ActivePerl distribution
203under Windows 95/98/NT/2000.
204
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205=item PerlBuilder
206
207(http://www.solutionsoft.com/perl.htm) is an integrated development
208environment for Windows that supports Perl development.
8782d048 209
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210=item visiPerl+
211
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212( http://helpconsulting.net/visiperl/ )
213From Help Consulting, for Windows.
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214
215=back
216
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217For Windows there's also the
218
219=over 4
220
221=item CodeMagicCD
222
223( http://www.codemagiccd.com/ ) Collection of various programming
224tools for Windows: Perl (5.005_03), TclTk, Python, GNU programming
225tools, REBOL, wxWindows toolkit, the MinGW GNU C/C++ compiler, DJGPP
226GNU C/C++ compiler, Cint C interpreter, YaBasic.
227
228=back
229
5a13f98a 230For editors: if you're on Unix you probably have vi or a vi clone already,
6641ed39 231and possibly an emacs too, so you may not need to download anything.
5a13f98a 232In any emacs the cperl-mode (M-x cperl-mode) gives you perhaps the
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233best available Perl editing mode in any editor.
234
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235For Windows editors: you can download an Emacs
236
237=over 4
238
239=item GNU Emacs
240
241http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/windows/ntemacs.html
242
243=item MicroEMACS
244
245http://members.nbci.com/uemacs/
246
247=item XEmacs
248
249http://www.xemacs.org/Download/index.html
250
251=back
252
253or a vi clone such as
254
255=over 4
256
257=item Elvis
258
259ftp://ftp.cs.pdx.edu/pub/elvis/ http://www.fh-wedel.de/elvis/
260
261=item Vile
262
263http://vile.cx/
264
265=item Vim
266
267http://www.vim.org/
268
269win32: http://www.cs.vu.nl/%7Etmgil/vi.html
270
271=back
272
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273For vi lovers in general, Windows or elsewhere:
274http://www.thomer.com/thomer/vi/vi.html.
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275
276nvi (http://www.bostic.com/vi/, available from CPAN in src/misc/) is
5a13f98a 277yet another vi clone, unfortunately not available for Windows, but in
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278UNIX platforms you might be interested in trying it out, firstly because
279strictly speaking it is not a vi clone, it is the real vi, or the new
280incarnation of it, and secondly because you can embed Perl inside it
281to use Perl as the scripting language. nvi is not alone in this,
7c82de66 282though: at least also vim and vile offer an embedded Perl.
614a1598 283
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284The following are Win32 multilanguage editor/IDESs that support Perl:
285
286=over 4
287
288=item Codewright
289
290http://www.starbase.com/
291
292=item MultiEdit
293
294http://www.MultiEdit.com/
295
296=item SlickEdit
297
298http://www.slickedit.com/
299
300=back
8782d048 301
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302There is also a toyedit Text widget based editor written in Perl
303that is distributed with the Tk module on CPAN. The ptkdb
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304(http://world.std.com/~aep/ptkdb/) is a Perl/tk based debugger that
305acts as a development environment of sorts. Perl Composer
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306(http://perlcomposer.sourceforge.net/vperl.html) is an IDE for Perl/Tk
307GUI creation.
308
8782d048 309In addition to an editor/IDE you might be interested in a more
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310powerful shell environment for Win32. Your options include
311
312=over 4
313
314=item Bash
315
316from the Cygwin package (http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin/)
317
318=item Ksh
319
320from the MKS Toolkit (http://www.mks.com/), or the Bourne shell of
321the U/WIN environment (http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/uwin/)
322
323=item Tcsh
324
325ftp://ftp.astron.com/pub/tcsh/, see also
326http://www.primate.wisc.edu/software/csh-tcsh-book/
327
328=item Zsh
329
330ftp://ftp.blarg.net/users/amol/zsh/, see also http://www.zsh.org/
331
332=back
333
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334MKS and U/WIN are commercial (U/WIN is free for educational and
335research purposes), Cygwin is covered by the GNU Public License (but
336that shouldn't matter for Perl use). The Cygwin, MKS, and U/WIN all
337contain (in addition to the shells) a comprehensive set of standard
338UNIX toolkit utilities.
8782d048 339
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340If you're transferring text files between Unix and Windows using FTP
341be sure to transfer them in ASCII mode so the ends of lines are
342appropriately converted.
343
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344On Mac OS the MacPerl Application comes with a simple 32k text editor
345that behaves like a rudimentary IDE. In contrast to the MacPerl Application
733271b5 346the MPW Perl tool can make use of the MPW Shell itself as an editor (with
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347no 32k limit).
348
349=over 4
350
351=item BBEdit and BBEdit Lite
352
353are text editors for Mac OS that have a Perl sensitivity mode
354(http://web.barebones.com/).
355
356=item Alpha
357
358is an editor, written and extensible in Tcl, that nonetheless has
733271b5 359built in support for several popular markup and programming languages
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360including Perl and HTML (http://alpha.olm.net/).
361
362=back
363
364Pepper and Pe are programming language sensitive text editors for Mac
365OS X and BeOS respectively (http://www.hekkelman.com/).
68dc0745 366
367=head2 Where can I get Perl macros for vi?
368
369For a complete version of Tom Christiansen's vi configuration file,
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370see http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/Tom_Christiansen/scripts/toms.exrc.gz ,
371the standard benchmark file for vi emulators. The file runs best with nvi,
5a964f20 372the current version of vi out of Berkeley, which incidentally can be built
a6dd486b 373with an embedded Perl interpreter--see http://www.perl.com/CPAN/src/misc.
68dc0745 374
375=head2 Where can I get perl-mode for emacs?
376
377Since Emacs version 19 patchlevel 22 or so, there have been both a
87275199 378perl-mode.el and support for the Perl debugger built in. These should
68dc0745 379come with the standard Emacs 19 distribution.
380
87275199 381In the Perl source directory, you'll find a directory called "emacs",
68dc0745 382which contains a cperl-mode that color-codes keywords, provides
383context-sensitive help, and other nifty things.
384
92c2ed05 385Note that the perl-mode of emacs will have fits with C<"main'foo">
d92eb7b0 386(single quote), and mess up the indentation and highlighting. You
65acb1b1 387are probably using C<"main::foo"> in new Perl code anyway, so this
92c2ed05 388shouldn't be an issue.
68dc0745 389
390=head2 How can I use curses with Perl?
391
392The Curses module from CPAN provides a dynamically loadable object
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393module interface to a curses library. A small demo can be found at the
394directory http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/Tom_Christiansen/scripts/rep;
395this program repeats a command and updates the screen as needed, rendering
396B<rep ps axu> similar to B<top>.
68dc0745 397
398=head2 How can I use X or Tk with Perl?
399
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400Tk is a completely Perl-based, object-oriented interface to the Tk toolkit
401that doesn't force you to use Tcl just to get at Tk. Sx is an interface
402to the Athena Widget set. Both are available from CPAN. See the
403directory http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/by-category/08_User_Interfaces/
68dc0745 404
a6dd486b 405Invaluable for Perl/Tk programming are the Perl/Tk FAQ at
87275199 406http://w4.lns.cornell.edu/%7Epvhp/ptk/ptkTOC.html , the Perl/Tk Reference
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407Guide available at
408http://www.perl.com/CPAN-local/authors/Stephen_O_Lidie/ , and the
409online manpages at
87275199 410http://www-users.cs.umn.edu/%7Eamundson/perl/perltk/toc.html .
92c2ed05 411
68dc0745 412=head2 How can I generate simple menus without using CGI or Tk?
413
414The http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/id/SKUNZ/perlmenu.v4.0.tar.gz
415module, which is curses-based, can help with this.
416
68dc0745 417=head2 What is undump?
418
a6dd486b 419See the next question on ``How can I make my Perl program run faster?''
68dc0745 420
421=head2 How can I make my Perl program run faster?
422
92c2ed05 423The best way to do this is to come up with a better algorithm. This
b73a15ae 424can often make a dramatic difference. Jon Bentley's book
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425``Programming Pearls'' (that's not a misspelling!) has some good tips
426on optimization, too. Advice on benchmarking boils down to: benchmark
427and profile to make sure you're optimizing the right part, look for
428better algorithms instead of microtuning your code, and when all else
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429fails consider just buying faster hardware. You will probably want to
430read the answer to the earlier question ``How do I profile my Perl programs?''
431if you haven't done so already.
68dc0745 432
92c2ed05 433A different approach is to autoload seldom-used Perl code. See the
68dc0745 434AutoSplit and AutoLoader modules in the standard distribution for
435that. Or you could locate the bottleneck and think about writing just
436that part in C, the way we used to take bottlenecks in C code and
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437write them in assembler. Similar to rewriting in C,
438modules that have critical sections can be written in C (for instance, the
68dc0745 439PDL module from CPAN).
440
441In some cases, it may be worth it to use the backend compiler to
442produce byte code (saving compilation time) or compile into C, which
443will certainly save compilation time and sometimes a small amount (but
444not much) execution time. See the question about compiling your Perl
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445programs for more on the compiler--the wins aren't as obvious as you'd
446hope.
68dc0745 447
92c2ed05 448If you're currently linking your perl executable to a shared I<libc.so>,
68dc0745 449you can often gain a 10-25% performance benefit by rebuilding it to
450link with a static libc.a instead. This will make a bigger perl
451executable, but your Perl programs (and programmers) may thank you for
452it. See the F<INSTALL> file in the source distribution for more
453information.
454
455Unsubstantiated reports allege that Perl interpreters that use sfio
87275199 456outperform those that don't (for I/O intensive applications). To try
68dc0745 457this, see the F<INSTALL> file in the source distribution, especially
87275199 458the ``Selecting File I/O mechanisms'' section.
68dc0745 459
460The undump program was an old attempt to speed up your Perl program
461by storing the already-compiled form to disk. This is no longer
462a viable option, as it only worked on a few architectures, and
463wasn't a good solution anyway.
464
465=head2 How can I make my Perl program take less memory?
466
467When it comes to time-space tradeoffs, Perl nearly always prefers to
468throw memory at a problem. Scalars in Perl use more memory than
65acb1b1 469strings in C, arrays take more than that, and hashes use even more. While
68dc0745 470there's still a lot to be done, recent releases have been addressing
471these issues. For example, as of 5.004, duplicate hash keys are
472shared amongst all hashes using them, so require no reallocation.
473
474In some cases, using substr() or vec() to simulate arrays can be
475highly beneficial. For example, an array of a thousand booleans will
476take at least 20,000 bytes of space, but it can be turned into one
a6dd486b 477125-byte bit vector--a considerable memory savings. The standard
68dc0745 478Tie::SubstrHash module can also help for certain types of data
479structure. If you're working with specialist data structures
480(matrices, for instance) modules that implement these in C may use
481less memory than equivalent Perl modules.
482
483Another thing to try is learning whether your Perl was compiled with
54310121 484the system malloc or with Perl's builtin malloc. Whichever one it
68dc0745 485is, try using the other one and see whether this makes a difference.
486Information about malloc is in the F<INSTALL> file in the source
487distribution. You can find out whether you are using perl's malloc by
488typing C<perl -V:usemymalloc>.
489
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490Of course, the best way to save memory is to not do anything to waste
491it in the first place. Good programming practices can go a long way
492toward this:
493
494=over 4
495
496=item * Don't slurp!
497
498Don't read an entire file into memory if you can process it line
499by line. Or more concretely, use a loop like this:
500
501 #
502 # Good Idea
503 #
504 while (<FILE>) {
505 # ...
506 }
507
508instead of this:
509
510 #
511 # Bad Idea
512 #
513 @data = <FILE>;
514 foreach (@data) {
515 # ...
516 }
517
518When the files you're processing are small, it doesn't much matter which
519way you do it, but it makes a huge difference when they start getting
520larger.
521
522=item * Pass by reference
523
524Pass arrays and hashes by reference, not by value. For one thing, it's
525the only way to pass multiple lists or hashes (or both) in a single
526call/return. It also avoids creating a copy of all the contents. This
527requires some judgment, however, because any changes will be propagated
528back to the original data. If you really want to mangle (er, modify) a
529copy, you'll have to sacrifice the memory needed to make one.
530
531=item * Tie large variables to disk.
532
533For "big" data stores (i.e. ones that exceed available memory) consider
534using one of the DB modules to store it on disk instead of in RAM. This
535will incur a penalty in access time, but that's probably better that
536causing your hard disk to thrash due to massive swapping.
537
538=back
539
68dc0745 540=head2 Is it unsafe to return a pointer to local data?
541
542No, Perl's garbage collection system takes care of this.
543
544 sub makeone {
545 my @a = ( 1 .. 10 );
546 return \@a;
547 }
548
549 for $i ( 1 .. 10 ) {
550 push @many, makeone();
551 }
552
553 print $many[4][5], "\n";
554
555 print "@many\n";
556
557=head2 How can I free an array or hash so my program shrinks?
558
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559You can't. On most operating systems, memory allocated to a program
560can never be returned to the system. That's why long-running programs
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561sometimes re-exec themselves. Some operating systems (notably,
562FreeBSD and Linux) allegedly reclaim large chunks of memory that is no
563longer used, but it doesn't appear to happen with Perl (yet). The Mac
564appears to be the only platform that will reliably (albeit, slowly)
565return memory to the OS.
566
567We've had reports that on Linux (Redhat 5.1) on Intel, C<undef
568$scalar> will return memory to the system, while on Solaris 2.6 it
569won't. In general, try it yourself and see.
68dc0745 570
571However, judicious use of my() on your variables will help make sure
a6dd486b 572that they go out of scope so that Perl can free up that space for
92c2ed05 573use in other parts of your program. A global variable, of course, never
68dc0745 574goes out of scope, so you can't get its space automatically reclaimed,
575although undef()ing and/or delete()ing it will achieve the same effect.
46fc3d4c 576In general, memory allocation and de-allocation isn't something you can
68dc0745 577or should be worrying about much in Perl, but even this capability
578(preallocation of data types) is in the works.
579
580=head2 How can I make my CGI script more efficient?
581
582Beyond the normal measures described to make general Perl programs
583faster or smaller, a CGI program has additional issues. It may be run
584several times per second. Given that each time it runs it will need
46fc3d4c 585to be re-compiled and will often allocate a megabyte or more of system
68dc0745 586memory, this can be a killer. Compiling into C B<isn't going to help
46fc3d4c 587you> because the process start-up overhead is where the bottleneck is.
68dc0745 588
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589There are two popular ways to avoid this overhead. One solution
590involves running the Apache HTTP server (available from
68dc0745 591http://www.apache.org/) with either of the mod_perl or mod_fastcgi
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592plugin modules.
593
594With mod_perl and the Apache::Registry module (distributed with
595mod_perl), httpd will run with an embedded Perl interpreter which
596pre-compiles your script and then executes it within the same address
597space without forking. The Apache extension also gives Perl access to
598the internal server API, so modules written in Perl can do just about
599anything a module written in C can. For more on mod_perl, see
600http://perl.apache.org/
601
65acb1b1 602With the FCGI module (from CPAN) and the mod_fastcgi
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603module (available from http://www.fastcgi.com/) each of your Perl
604programs becomes a permanent CGI daemon process.
68dc0745 605
606Both of these solutions can have far-reaching effects on your system
87275199 607and on the way you write your CGI programs, so investigate them with
68dc0745 608care.
609
92c2ed05 610See http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/by-category/15_World_Wide_Web_HTML_HTTP_CGI/ .
5a964f20 611
65acb1b1 612A non-free, commercial product, ``The Velocity Engine for Perl'',
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613(http://www.binevolve.com/ or http://www.binevolve.com/velocigen/ )
614might also be worth looking at. It will allow you to increase the
615performance of your Perl programs, running programs up to 25 times
616faster than normal CGI Perl when running in persistent Perl mode or 4
617to 5 times faster without any modification to your existing CGI
618programs. Fully functional evaluation copies are available from the
619web site.
c8db1d39 620
68dc0745 621=head2 How can I hide the source for my Perl program?
622
623Delete it. :-) Seriously, there are a number of (mostly
92c2ed05 624unsatisfactory) solutions with varying levels of ``security''.
68dc0745 625
626First of all, however, you I<can't> take away read permission, because
627the source code has to be readable in order to be compiled and
628interpreted. (That doesn't mean that a CGI script's source is
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629readable by people on the web, though--only by people with access to
630the filesystem.) So you have to leave the permissions at the socially
92c2ed05 631friendly 0755 level.
68dc0745 632
633Some people regard this as a security problem. If your program does
a6dd486b 634insecure things and relies on people not knowing how to exploit those
68dc0745 635insecurities, it is not secure. It is often possible for someone to
636determine the insecure things and exploit them without viewing the
637source. Security through obscurity, the name for hiding your bugs
638instead of fixing them, is little security indeed.
639
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640You can try using encryption via source filters (Starting from Perl
6415.8 the Filter::Simple and Filter::Util::Call modules are included in
642the standard distribution), but any decent programmer will be able to
643decrypt it. You can try using the byte code compiler and interpreter
644described below, but the curious might still be able to de-compile it.
645You can try using the native-code compiler described below, but
646crackers might be able to disassemble it. These pose varying degrees
647of difficulty to people wanting to get at your code, but none can
648definitively conceal it (true of every language, not just Perl).
68dc0745 649
650If you're concerned about people profiting from your code, then the
d92eb7b0 651bottom line is that nothing but a restrictive license will give you
68dc0745 652legal security. License your software and pepper it with threatening
92c2ed05 653statements like ``This is unpublished proprietary software of XYZ Corp.
68dc0745 654Your access to it does not give you permission to use it blah blah
92c2ed05 655blah.'' We are not lawyers, of course, so you should see a lawyer if
d92eb7b0 656you want to be sure your license's wording will stand up in court.
68dc0745 657
54310121 658=head2 How can I compile my Perl program into byte code or C?
68dc0745 659
660Malcolm Beattie has written a multifunction backend compiler,
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661available from CPAN, that can do both these things. It is included
662in the perl5.005 release, but is still considered experimental.
663This means it's fun to play with if you're a programmer but not
664really for people looking for turn-key solutions.
68dc0745 665
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666Merely compiling into C does not in and of itself guarantee that your
667code will run very much faster. That's because except for lucky cases
668where a lot of native type inferencing is possible, the normal Perl
a6dd486b 669run-time system is still present and so your program will take just as
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670long to run and be just as big. Most programs save little more than
671compilation time, leaving execution no more than 10-30% faster. A few
a6dd486b 672rare programs actually benefit significantly (even running several times
92c2ed05 673faster), but this takes some tweaking of your code.
68dc0745 674
68dc0745 675You'll probably be astonished to learn that the current version of the
676compiler generates a compiled form of your script whose executable is
677just as big as the original perl executable, and then some. That's
678because as currently written, all programs are prepared for a full
679eval() statement. You can tremendously reduce this cost by building a
92c2ed05 680shared I<libperl.so> library and linking against that. See the
87275199 681F<INSTALL> podfile in the Perl source distribution for details. If
d92eb7b0 682you link your main perl binary with this, it will make it minuscule.
92c2ed05 683For example, on one author's system, F</usr/bin/perl> is only 11k in
68dc0745 684size!
685
5a964f20 686In general, the compiler will do nothing to make a Perl program smaller,
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687faster, more portable, or more secure. In fact, it can make your
688situation worse. The executable will be bigger, your VM system may take
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689longer to load the whole thing, the binary is fragile and hard to fix,
690and compilation never stopped software piracy in the form of crackers,
691viruses, or bootleggers. The real advantage of the compiler is merely
692packaging, and once you see the size of what it makes (well, unless
693you use a shared I<libperl.so>), you'll probably want a complete
5e3006a4 694Perl install anyway.
5a964f20 695
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696=head2 How can I compile Perl into Java?
697
a6dd486b 698You can also integrate Java and Perl with the
65acb1b1 699Perl Resource Kit from O'Reilly and Associates. See
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700http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/prkunix/ .
701
702Perl 5.6 comes with Java Perl Lingo, or JPL. JPL, still in
703development, allows Perl code to be called from Java. See jpl/README
704in the Perl source tree.
65acb1b1 705
92c2ed05 706=head2 How can I get C<#!perl> to work on [MS-DOS,NT,...]?
68dc0745 707
708For OS/2 just use
709
710 extproc perl -S -your_switches
711
712as the first line in C<*.cmd> file (C<-S> due to a bug in cmd.exe's
46fc3d4c 713`extproc' handling). For DOS one should first invent a corresponding
a6dd486b 714batch file and codify it in C<ALTERNATIVE_SHEBANG> (see the
68dc0745 715F<INSTALL> file in the source distribution for more information).
716
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717The Win95/NT installation, when using the ActiveState port of Perl,
718will modify the Registry to associate the C<.pl> extension with the
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719perl interpreter. If you install another port, perhaps even building
720your own Win95/NT Perl from the standard sources by using a Windows port
d702ae42 721of gcc (e.g., with cygwin or mingw32), then you'll have to modify
d92eb7b0
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722the Registry yourself. In addition to associating C<.pl> with the
723interpreter, NT people can use: C<SET PATHEXT=%PATHEXT%;.PL> to let them
724run the program C<install-linux.pl> merely by typing C<install-linux>.
68dc0745 725
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726Macintosh Perl programs will have the appropriate Creator and
727Type, so that double-clicking them will invoke the Perl application.
68dc0745 728
729I<IMPORTANT!>: Whatever you do, PLEASE don't get frustrated, and just
730throw the perl interpreter into your cgi-bin directory, in order to
87275199 731get your programs working for a web server. This is an EXTREMELY big
68dc0745 732security risk. Take the time to figure out how to do it correctly.
733
87275199 734=head2 Can I write useful Perl programs on the command line?
68dc0745 735
736Yes. Read L<perlrun> for more information. Some examples follow.
737(These assume standard Unix shell quoting rules.)
738
739 # sum first and last fields
5a964f20 740 perl -lane 'print $F[0] + $F[-1]' *
68dc0745 741
742 # identify text files
743 perl -le 'for(@ARGV) {print if -f && -T _}' *
744
5a964f20 745 # remove (most) comments from C program
68dc0745 746 perl -0777 -pe 's{/\*.*?\*/}{}gs' foo.c
747
748 # make file a month younger than today, defeating reaper daemons
749 perl -e '$X=24*60*60; utime(time(),time() + 30 * $X,@ARGV)' *
750
751 # find first unused uid
752 perl -le '$i++ while getpwuid($i); print $i'
753
754 # display reasonable manpath
755 echo $PATH | perl -nl -072 -e '
756 s![^/+]*$!man!&&-d&&!$s{$_}++&&push@m,$_;END{print"@m"}'
757
87275199 758OK, the last one was actually an Obfuscated Perl Contest entry. :-)
68dc0745 759
87275199 760=head2 Why don't Perl one-liners work on my DOS/Mac/VMS system?
68dc0745 761
762The problem is usually that the command interpreters on those systems
763have rather different ideas about quoting than the Unix shells under
764which the one-liners were created. On some systems, you may have to
765change single-quotes to double ones, which you must I<NOT> do on Unix
766or Plan9 systems. You might also have to change a single % to a %%.
767
768For example:
769
770 # Unix
771 perl -e 'print "Hello world\n"'
772
46fc3d4c 773 # DOS, etc.
68dc0745 774 perl -e "print \"Hello world\n\""
775
46fc3d4c 776 # Mac
68dc0745 777 print "Hello world\n"
778 (then Run "Myscript" or Shift-Command-R)
779
780 # VMS
781 perl -e "print ""Hello world\n"""
782
a6dd486b 783The problem is that none of these examples are reliable: they depend on the
92c2ed05 784command interpreter. Under Unix, the first two often work. Under DOS,
a6dd486b 785it's entirely possible that neither works. If 4DOS was the command shell,
92c2ed05 786you'd probably have better luck like this:
68dc0745 787
788 perl -e "print <Ctrl-x>"Hello world\n<Ctrl-x>""
789
46fc3d4c 790Under the Mac, it depends which environment you are using. The MacPerl
68dc0745 791shell, or MPW, is much like Unix shells in its support for several
46fc3d4c 792quoting variants, except that it makes free use of the Mac's non-ASCII
68dc0745 793characters as control characters.
794
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795Using qq(), q(), and qx(), instead of "double quotes", 'single
796quotes', and `backticks`, may make one-liners easier to write.
797
92c2ed05
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798There is no general solution to all of this. It is a mess, pure and
799simple. Sucks to be away from Unix, huh? :-)
68dc0745 800
801[Some of this answer was contributed by Kenneth Albanowski.]
802
803=head2 Where can I learn about CGI or Web programming in Perl?
804
805For modules, get the CGI or LWP modules from CPAN. For textbooks,
806see the two especially dedicated to web stuff in the question on
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807books. For problems and questions related to the web, like ``Why
808do I get 500 Errors'' or ``Why doesn't it run from the browser right
809when it runs fine on the command line'', see these sources:
68dc0745 810
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811 WWW Security FAQ
812 http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/
68dc0745 813
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814 Web FAQ
815 http://www.boutell.com/faq/
68dc0745 816
5a964f20 817 CGI FAQ
6cecdcac 818 http://www.webthing.com/tutorials/cgifaq.html
68dc0745 819
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820 HTTP Spec
821 http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Protocols/HTTP/
822
823 HTML Spec
824 http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/
825 http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/MarkUp/
826
827 CGI Spec
828 http://www.w3.org/CGI/
829
830 CGI Security FAQ
831 http://www.go2net.com/people/paulp/cgi-security/safe-cgi.txt
68dc0745 832
68dc0745 833=head2 Where can I learn about object-oriented Perl programming?
834
a6dd486b
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835A good place to start is L<perltoot>, and you can use L<perlobj>,
836L<perlboot>, and L<perlbot> for reference. Perltoot didn't come out
837until the 5.004 release; you can get a copy (in pod, html, or
838postscript) from http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FMTEYEWTK/ .
68dc0745 839
840=head2 Where can I learn about linking C with Perl? [h2xs, xsubpp]
841
842If you want to call C from Perl, start with L<perlxstut>,
843moving on to L<perlxs>, L<xsubpp>, and L<perlguts>. If you want to
844call Perl from C, then read L<perlembed>, L<perlcall>, and
845L<perlguts>. Don't forget that you can learn a lot from looking at
846how the authors of existing extension modules wrote their code and
847solved their problems.
848
849=head2 I've read perlembed, perlguts, etc., but I can't embed perl in
a6dd486b 850my C program; what am I doing wrong?
68dc0745 851
852Download the ExtUtils::Embed kit from CPAN and run `make test'. If
853the tests pass, read the pods again and again and again. If they
87275199 854fail, see L<perlbug> and send a bug report with the output of
68dc0745 855C<make test TEST_VERBOSE=1> along with C<perl -V>.
856
857=head2 When I tried to run my script, I got this message. What does it
858mean?
859
87275199
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860A complete list of Perl's error messages and warnings with explanatory
861text can be found in L<perldiag>. You can also use the splain program
862(distributed with Perl) to explain the error messages:
68dc0745 863
864 perl program 2>diag.out
865 splain [-v] [-p] diag.out
866
867or change your program to explain the messages for you:
868
869 use diagnostics;
870
871or
872
873 use diagnostics -verbose;
874
875=head2 What's MakeMaker?
876
87275199 877This module (part of the standard Perl distribution) is designed to
68dc0745 878write a Makefile for an extension module from a Makefile.PL. For more
879information, see L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker>.
880
881=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
882
65acb1b1 883Copyright (c) 1997-1999 Tom Christiansen and Nathan Torkington.
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884All rights reserved.
885
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886This documentation is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
887under the same terms as Perl itself.
c8db1d39 888
87275199 889Irrespective of its distribution, all code examples here are in the public
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890domain. You are permitted and encouraged to use this code and any
891derivatives thereof in your own programs for fun or for profit as you
892see fit. A simple comment in the code giving credit to the FAQ would
893be courteous but is not required.