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e518068a 1=head1 NAME
2
3perlvms - VMS-specific documentation for Perl
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
a0d0e21e 6
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7Gathered below are notes describing details of Perl 5's
8behavior on VMS. They are a supplement to the regular Perl 5
9documentation, so we have focussed on the ways in which Perl
105 functions differently under VMS than it does under Unix,
11and on the interactions between Perl and the rest of the
a0d0e21e 12operating system. We haven't tried to duplicate complete
748a9306 13descriptions of Perl features from the main Perl
a0d0e21e 14documentation, which can be found in the F<[.pod]>
748a9306 15subdirectory of the Perl distribution.
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16
17We hope these notes will save you from confusion and lost
748a9306 18sleep when writing Perl scripts on VMS. If you find we've
a0d0e21e 19missed something you think should appear here, please don't
9bc98430 20hesitate to drop a line to vmsperl@perl.org.
a0d0e21e 21
4e592037 22=head1 Installation
23
24Directions for building and installing Perl 5 can be found in
25the file F<README.vms> in the main source directory of the
26Perl distribution..
27
e518068a 28=head1 Organization of Perl Images
748a9306 29
e518068a 30=head2 Core Images
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31
32During the installation process, three Perl images are produced.
33F<Miniperl.Exe> is an executable image which contains all of
34the basic functionality of Perl, but cannot take advantage of
35Perl extensions. It is used to generate several files needed
36to build the complete Perl and various extensions. Once you've
37finished installing Perl, you can delete this image.
38
39Most of the complete Perl resides in the shareable image
40F<PerlShr.Exe>, which provides a core to which the Perl executable
41image and all Perl extensions are linked. You should place this
42image in F<Sys$Share>, or define the logical name F<PerlShr> to
43translate to the full file specification of this image. It should
44be world readable. (Remember that if a user has execute only access
45to F<PerlShr>, VMS will treat it as if it were a privileged shareable
46image, and will therefore require all downstream shareable images to be
47INSTALLed, etc.)
48
49
50Finally, F<Perl.Exe> is an executable image containing the main
51entry point for Perl, as well as some initialization code. It
52should be placed in a public directory, and made world executable.
53In order to run Perl with command line arguments, you should
54define a foreign command to invoke this image.
55
56=head2 Perl Extensions
57
58Perl extensions are packages which provide both XS and Perl code
59to add new functionality to perl. (XS is a meta-language which
60simplifies writing C code which interacts with Perl, see
2ceaccd7 61L<perlxs> for more details.) The Perl code for an
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62extension is treated like any other library module - it's
63made available in your script through the appropriate
64C<use> or C<require> statement, and usually defines a Perl
65package containing the extension.
66
67The portion of the extension provided by the XS code may be
68connected to the rest of Perl in either of two ways. In the
69B<static> configuration, the object code for the extension is
70linked directly into F<PerlShr.Exe>, and is initialized whenever
71Perl is invoked. In the B<dynamic> configuration, the extension's
72machine code is placed into a separate shareable image, which is
73mapped by Perl's DynaLoader when the extension is C<use>d or
74C<require>d in your script. This allows you to maintain the
75extension as a separate entity, at the cost of keeping track of the
76additional shareable image. Most extensions can be set up as either
77static or dynamic.
78
79The source code for an extension usually resides in its own
80directory. At least three files are generally provided:
81I<Extshortname>F<.xs> (where I<Extshortname> is the portion of
82the extension's name following the last C<::>), containing
83the XS code, I<Extshortname>F<.pm>, the Perl library module
84for the extension, and F<Makefile.PL>, a Perl script which uses
85the C<MakeMaker> library modules supplied with Perl to generate
86a F<Descrip.MMS> file for the extension.
87
e518068a 88=head2 Installing static extensions
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89
90Since static extensions are incorporated directly into
91F<PerlShr.Exe>, you'll have to rebuild Perl to incorporate a
92new extension. You should edit the main F<Descrip.MMS> or F<Makefile>
93you use to build Perl, adding the extension's name to the C<ext>
94macro, and the extension's object file to the C<extobj> macro.
95You'll also need to build the extension's object file, either
96by adding dependencies to the main F<Descrip.MMS>, or using a
97separate F<Descrip.MMS> for the extension. Then, rebuild
98F<PerlShr.Exe> to incorporate the new code.
99
100Finally, you'll need to copy the extension's Perl library
101module to the F<[.>I<Extname>F<]> subdirectory under one
102of the directories in C<@INC>, where I<Extname> is the name
103of the extension, with all C<::> replaced by C<.> (e.g.
104the library module for extension Foo::Bar would be copied
105to a F<[.Foo.Bar]> subdirectory).
106
e518068a 107=head2 Installing dynamic extensions
108
109In general, the distributed kit for a Perl extension includes
110a file named Makefile.PL, which is a Perl program which is used
111to create a F<Descrip.MMS> file which can be used to build and
112install the files required by the extension. The kit should be
c07a80fd 113unpacked into a directory tree B<not> under the main Perl source
e518068a 114directory, and the procedure for building the extension is simply
115
e518068a 116 $ perl Makefile.PL ! Create Descrip.MMS
117 $ mmk ! Build necessary files
118 $ mmk test ! Run test code, if supplied
119 $ mmk install ! Install into public Perl tree
120
c07a80fd 121I<N.B.> The procedure by which extensions are built and
122tested creates several levels (at least 4) under the
123directory in which the extension's source files live.
d7f8936a 124For this reason if you are running a version of VMS prior
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125to V7.1 you shouldn't nest the source directory
126too deeply in your directory structure lest you exceed RMS'
c07a80fd 127maximum of 8 levels of subdirectory in a filespec. (You
128can use rooted logical names to get another 8 levels of
129nesting, if you can't place the files near the top of
130the physical directory structure.)
e518068a 131
132VMS support for this process in the current release of Perl
133is sufficient to handle most extensions. However, it does
134not yet recognize extra libraries required to build shareable
135images which are part of an extension, so these must be added
136to the linker options file for the extension by hand. For
137instance, if the F<PGPLOT> extension to Perl requires the
138F<PGPLOTSHR.EXE> shareable image in order to properly link
139the Perl extension, then the line C<PGPLOTSHR/Share> must
140be added to the linker options file F<PGPLOT.Opt> produced
141during the build process for the Perl extension.
142
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143By default, the shareable image for an extension is placed in
144the F<[.lib.site_perl.auto>I<Arch>.I<Extname>F<]> directory of the
e518068a 145installed Perl directory tree (where I<Arch> is F<VMS_VAX> or
bbce6d69 146F<VMS_AXP>, and I<Extname> is the name of the extension, with
147each C<::> translated to C<.>). (See the MakeMaker documentation
148for more details on installation options for extensions.)
4e592037 149However, it can be manually placed in any of several locations:
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150
151=over 4
152
153=item *
154
155the F<[.Lib.Auto.>I<Arch>I<$PVers>I<Extname>F<]> subdirectory
156of one of the directories in C<@INC> (where I<PVers>
157is the version of Perl you're using, as supplied in C<$]>,
158with '.' converted to '_'), or
159
160=item *
161
162one of the directories in C<@INC>, or
163
164=item *
165
166a directory which the extensions Perl library module
167passes to the DynaLoader when asking it to map
168the shareable image, or
169
170=item *
171
172F<Sys$Share> or F<Sys$Library>.
173
174=back
175
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176If the shareable image isn't in any of these places, you'll need
177to define a logical name I<Extshortname>, where I<Extshortname>
178is the portion of the extension's name after the last C<::>, which
179translates to the full file specification of the shareable image.
180
4e592037 181=head1 File specifications
748a9306 182
4e592037 183=head2 Syntax
a0d0e21e 184
748a9306 185We have tried to make Perl aware of both VMS-style and Unix-
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186style file specifications wherever possible. You may use
187either style, or both, on the command line and in scripts,
39aca757 188but you may not combine the two styles within a single file
1c9f8daa 189specification. VMS Perl interprets Unix pathnames in much
190the same way as the CRTL (I<e.g.> the first component of
191an absolute path is read as the device name for the
192VMS file specification). There are a set of functions
193provided in the C<VMS::Filespec> package for explicit
194interconversion between VMS and Unix syntax; its
195documentation provides more details.
196
9296fdfa 197Perl is now in the process of evolving to follow the setting of
fb38d079 198the DECC$* feature logical names in the interpretation of UNIX pathnames.
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199This is still a work in progress.
200
201For handling extended characters, and case sensitivity, as long as
202DECC$POSIX_COMPLIANT_PATHNAMES, DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_REPORT, and
203DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_ONLY are not set, then the older Perl behavior
204for conversions of file specifications from UNIX to VMS is followed,
fb38d079 205except that VMS paths with concealed rooted logical names are now
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206translated correctly to UNIX paths.
207
208With those features set, then new routines may handle the translation,
209because some of the rules are different. The presence of ./.../
210in a UNIX path is no longer translated to the VMS [...]. It will
211translate to [.^.^.^.]. To be compatible with what MakeMaker expects,
212if a VMS path can not be translated to a UNIX path when unixify
213is called, it is passed through unchanged. So unixify("[...]") will
214return "[...]".
215
216The handling of extended characters will also be better with the
217newer translation routines. But more work is needed to fully support
218extended file syntax names. In particular, at this writing Pathtools
219can not deal with directories containing some extended characters.
220
221There are several ambiguous cases where a conversion routine can not
222determine if an input filename is in UNIX format or in VMS format,
223since now both VMS UNIX file specifications can have characters in
224them that could be mistaken for syntax delimiters of the other type.
225So some pathnames simply can not be used in a mode that allows either
226type of pathname to be present.
227
228Perl will tend to assume that an ambiguous filename is in UNIX format.
229
230Allowing "." as a version delimiter is simply incompatible with
231determining if a pathname is already VMS format or UNIX with the
232extended file syntax. There is no way to know if "perl-5.8.6" that
233TAR produces is a UNIX "perl-5.8.6" or a VMS "perl-5.8;6" when
234passing it to unixify() or vmsify().
235
236The DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_REPORT or the DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_ONLY logical
237names control how Perl interprets filenames.
238
239The DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_ONLY setting has not been tested at this time.
240Perl uses traditional OpenVMS file specifications internally and in
241the test harness, so this mode may have limited use, or require more
242changes to make usable.
243
244Everything about DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_REPORT should be assumed to apply
245to DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_ONLY mode. The DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_ONLY differs
246in that it expects all filenames passed to the C runtime to be already
247in UNIX format.
248
249Again, currently most of the core Perl modules have not yet been updated
250to understand that VMS is not as limited as it use to be. Fixing that
251is a work in progress.
252
253The logical name DECC$POSIX_COMPLIANT_PATHNAMES is new with the
254RMS Symbolic Link SDK. This version of Perl does not support it being set.
255
256
257Filenames are case-insensitive on VAX, and on ODS-2 formatted
258volumes on ALPHA and I64.
259
260On ODS-5 volumes filenames are case preserved and on newer
261versions of OpenVMS can be optionally case sensitive.
262
263On ALPHA and I64, Perl is in the process of being changed to follow the
264process case sensitivity setting to report if the file system is case
265sensitive.
266
267Perl programs should not assume that VMS is case blind, or that
268filenames will be in lowercase.
269
270Programs should use the File::Spec:case_tolerant setting to determine
271the state, and not the $^O setting.
272
273For consistency, when the above feature is clear and when not
fb38d079 274otherwise overridden by DECC feature logical names, most Perl routines
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275return file specifications using lower case letters only,
276regardless of the case used in the arguments passed to them.
277(This is true only when running under VMS; Perl respects the
278case-sensitivity of OSs like Unix.)
a0d0e21e 279
748a9306 280We've tried to minimize the dependence of Perl library
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281modules on Unix syntax, but you may find that some of these,
282as well as some scripts written for Unix systems, will
283require that you use Unix syntax, since they will assume that
4e592037 284'/' is the directory separator, I<etc.> If you find instances
748a9306 285of this in the Perl distribution itself, please let us know,
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286so we can try to work around them.
287
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288Also when working on Perl programs on VMS, if you need a syntax
289in a specific operating system format, then you need to either
290check the appropriate DECC$ feature logical, or call a conversion
291routine to force it to that format.
292
4e592037 293=head2 Wildcard expansion
294
295File specifications containing wildcards are allowed both on
07698885 296the command line and within Perl globs (e.g. C<E<lt>*.cE<gt>>). If
4e592037 297the wildcard filespec uses VMS syntax, the resultant
298filespecs will follow VMS syntax; if a Unix-style filespec is
299passed in, Unix-style filespecs will be returned.
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300Similar to the behavior of wildcard globbing for a Unix shell,
301one can escape command line wildcards with double quotation
302marks C<"> around a perl program command line argument. However,
303owing to the stripping of C<"> characters carried out by the C
304handling of argv you will need to escape a construct such as
305this one (in a directory containing the files F<PERL.C>, F<PERL.EXE>,
306F<PERL.H>, and F<PERL.OBJ>):
307
308 $ perl -e "print join(' ',@ARGV)" perl.*
309 perl.c perl.exe perl.h perl.obj
310
311in the following triple quoted manner:
312
313 $ perl -e "print join(' ',@ARGV)" """perl.*"""
314 perl.*
4e592037 315
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316In both the case of unquoted command line arguments or in calls
317to C<glob()> VMS wildcard expansion is performed. (csh-style
aa779de1 318wildcard expansion is available if you use C<File::Glob::glob>.)
4e592037 319If the wildcard filespec contains a device or directory
320specification, then the resultant filespecs will also contain
321a device and directory; otherwise, device and directory
322information are removed. VMS-style resultant filespecs will
323contain a full device and directory, while Unix-style
324resultant filespecs will contain only as much of a directory
325path as was present in the input filespec. For example, if
326your default directory is Perl_Root:[000000], the expansion
327of C<[.t]*.*> will yield filespecs like
328"perl_root:[t]base.dir", while the expansion of C<t/*/*> will
329yield filespecs like "t/base.dir". (This is done to match
330the behavior of glob expansion performed by Unix shells.)
331
332Similarly, the resultant filespec will contain the file version
333only if one was present in the input filespec.
334
9296fdfa 335
4e592037 336=head2 Pipes
337
338Input and output pipes to Perl filehandles are supported; the
339"file name" is passed to lib$spawn() for asynchronous
340execution. You should be careful to close any pipes you have
341opened in a Perl script, lest you leave any "orphaned"
342subprocesses around when Perl exits.
343
344You may also use backticks to invoke a DCL subprocess, whose
345output is used as the return value of the expression. The
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346string between the backticks is handled as if it were the
347argument to the C<system> operator (see below). In this case,
348Perl will wait for the subprocess to complete before continuing.
4e592037 349
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350The mailbox (MBX) that perl can create to communicate with a pipe
351defaults to a buffer size of 512. The default buffer size is
1506e54c 352adjustable via the logical name PERL_MBX_SIZE provided that the
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353value falls between 128 and the SYSGEN parameter MAXBUF inclusive.
354For example, to double the MBX size from the default within
1506e54c 355a Perl program, use C<$ENV{'PERL_MBX_SIZE'} = 1024;> and then
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356open and use pipe constructs. An alternative would be to issue
357the command:
358
359 $ Define PERL_MBX_SIZE 1024
360
361before running your wide record pipe program. A larger value may
362improve performance at the expense of the BYTLM UAF quota.
363
4e592037 364=head1 PERL5LIB and PERLLIB
365
39aca757 366The PERL5LIB and PERLLIB logical names work as documented in L<perl>,
4e592037 367except that the element separator is '|' instead of ':'. The
368directory specifications may use either VMS or Unix syntax.
369
370=head1 Command line
371
372=head2 I/O redirection and backgrounding
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373
374Perl for VMS supports redirection of input and output on the
375command line, using a subset of Bourne shell syntax:
55497cff 376
773da73d 377=over 4
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378
379=item *
380
381C<E<lt>file> reads stdin from C<file>,
382
383=item *
384
385C<E<gt>file> writes stdout to C<file>,
386
387=item *
388
389C<E<gt>E<gt>file> appends stdout to C<file>,
390
391=item *
392
2fde0ff0 393C<2E<gt>file> writes stderr to C<file>,
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394
395=item *
396
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397C<2E<gt>E<gt>file> appends stderr to C<file>, and
398
399=item *
400
401C<< 2>&1 >> redirects stderr to stdout.
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402
403=back
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404
405In addition, output may be piped to a subprocess, using the
406character '|'. Anything after this character on the command
407line is passed to a subprocess for execution; the subprocess
748a9306 408takes the output of Perl as its input.
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409
410Finally, if the command line ends with '&', the entire
411command is run in the background as an asynchronous
412subprocess.
413
4e592037 414=head2 Command line switches
a0d0e21e 415
4e592037 416The following command line switches behave differently under
417VMS than described in L<perlrun>. Note also that in order
418to pass uppercase switches to Perl, you need to enclose
419them in double-quotes on the command line, since the CRTL
420downcases all unquoted strings.
a0d0e21e 421
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422On newer 64 bit versions of OpenVMS, a process setting now
423controls if the quoting is needed to preserve the case of
424command line arguments.
425
55497cff 426=over 4
427
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428=item -i
429
430If the C<-i> switch is present but no extension for a backup
431copy is given, then inplace editing creates a new version of
432a file; the existing copy is not deleted. (Note that if
433an extension is given, an existing file is renamed to the backup
434file, as is the case under other operating systems, so it does
435not remain as a previous version under the original filename.)
436
4e592037 437=item -S
a0d0e21e 438
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439If the C<"-S"> or C<-"S"> switch is present I<and> the script
440name does not contain a directory, then Perl translates the
441logical name DCL$PATH as a searchlist, using each translation
442as a directory in which to look for the script. In addition,
4e592037 443if no file type is specified, Perl looks in each directory
444for a file matching the name specified, with a blank type,
445a type of F<.pl>, and a type of F<.com>, in that order.
a0d0e21e 446
4e592037 447=item -u
748a9306 448
4e592037 449The C<-u> switch causes the VMS debugger to be invoked
450after the Perl program is compiled, but before it has
451run. It does not create a core dump file.
748a9306 452
55497cff 453=back
454
748a9306 455=head1 Perl functions
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456
457As of the time this document was last revised, the following
748a9306 458Perl functions were implemented in the VMS port of Perl
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459(functions marked with * are discussed in more detail below):
460
4fdae800 461 file tests*, abs, alarm, atan, backticks*, binmode*, bless,
a0d0e21e 462 caller, chdir, chmod, chown, chomp, chop, chr,
c07a80fd 463 close, closedir, cos, crypt*, defined, delete,
4e592037 464 die, do, dump*, each, endpwent, eof, eval, exec*,
41cbbefa 465 exists, exit, exp, fileno, getc, getlogin, getppid,
4e592037 466 getpwent*, getpwnam*, getpwuid*, glob, gmtime*, goto,
467 grep, hex, import, index, int, join, keys, kill*,
468 last, lc, lcfirst, length, local, localtime, log, m//,
469 map, mkdir, my, next, no, oct, open, opendir, ord, pack,
c07a80fd 470 pipe, pop, pos, print, printf, push, q//, qq//, qw//,
4fdae800 471 qx//*, quotemeta, rand, read, readdir, redo, ref, rename,
a0d0e21e 472 require, reset, return, reverse, rewinddir, rindex,
e518068a 473 rmdir, s///, scalar, seek, seekdir, select(internal),
474 select (system call)*, setpwent, shift, sin, sleep,
475 sort, splice, split, sprintf, sqrt, srand, stat,
476 study, substr, sysread, system*, syswrite, tell,
477 telldir, tie, time, times*, tr///, uc, ucfirst, umask,
478 undef, unlink*, unpack, untie, unshift, use, utime*,
479 values, vec, wait, waitpid*, wantarray, warn, write, y///
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480
481The following functions were not implemented in the VMS port,
482and calling them produces a fatal error (usually) or
483undefined behavior (rarely, we hope):
484
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485 chroot, dbmclose, dbmopen, flock, fork*,
486 getpgrp, getpriority, getgrent, getgrgid,
c07a80fd 487 getgrnam, setgrent, endgrent, ioctl, link, lstat,
488 msgctl, msgget, msgsend, msgrcv, readlink, semctl,
489 semget, semop, setpgrp, setpriority, shmctl, shmget,
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490 shmread, shmwrite, socketpair, symlink, syscall
491
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492The following functions are available on Perls compiled with Dec C
4935.2 or greater and running VMS 7.0 or greater:
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494
495 truncate
a0d0e21e 496
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497The following functions are available on Perls built on VMS 7.2 or
498greater:
499
500 fcntl (without locking)
501
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502The following functions may or may not be implemented,
503depending on what type of socket support you've built into
748a9306 504your copy of Perl:
4e592037 505
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506 accept, bind, connect, getpeername,
507 gethostbyname, getnetbyname, getprotobyname,
508 getservbyname, gethostbyaddr, getnetbyaddr,
509 getprotobynumber, getservbyport, gethostent,
510 getnetent, getprotoent, getservent, sethostent,
511 setnetent, setprotoent, setservent, endhostent,
512 endnetent, endprotoent, endservent, getsockname,
c07a80fd 513 getsockopt, listen, recv, select(system call)*,
514 send, setsockopt, shutdown, socket
a0d0e21e 515
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516The following function is available on Perls built on 64 bit OpenVMS 8.2
517with hard links enabled on an ODS-5 formatted build disk. If someone with
518an OpenVMS 7.3-1 system were to modify configure.com and test the results,
519this feature can be brought back to OpenVMS 7.3-1 and later. Hardlinks
520must be enabled on the build disk because if the build procedure sees
521this feature enabled, it uses it.
522
523 link
524
525The following functions are available on Perls built on 64 bit OpenVMS
5268.2 and can be implemented on OpenVMS 7.3-2 if someone were to modify
527configure.com and test the results. (While in the build, at the time
528of this writing, they have not been specifically tested.)
529
530 getgrgid, getgrnam, getpwnam, getpwuid,
531 setgrent, ttyname
532
533The following functions are available on Perls built on 64 bit OpenVMS 8.2
534and later. (While in the build, at the time of this writing, they have
535not been specifically tested.)
536
537 statvfs, socketpair
538
539The following functions are expected to soon be available on Perls built
540on 64 bit OpenVMS 8.2 or later with the RMS Symbolic link package. Use
541of symbolic links at this time effectively requires the
542DECC$POSIX_COMPLIANT_PATHNAMES to defined as 3, and operating in a
543DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_REPORT mode.
544
545 lchown, link, lstat, readlink, symlink
52e64fc8 546
55497cff 547=over 4
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548
549=item File tests
550
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551The tests C<-b>, C<-B>, C<-c>, C<-C>, C<-d>, C<-e>, C<-f>,
552C<-o>, C<-M>, C<-s>, C<-S>, C<-t>, C<-T>, and C<-z> work as
553advertised. The return values for C<-r>, C<-w>, and C<-x>
554tell you whether you can actually access the file; this may
555not reflect the UIC-based file protections. Since real and
556effective UIC don't differ under VMS, C<-O>, C<-R>, C<-W>,
557and C<-X> are equivalent to C<-o>, C<-r>, C<-w>, and C<-x>.
558Similarly, several other tests, including C<-A>, C<-g>, C<-k>,
559C<-l>, C<-p>, and C<-u>, aren't particularly meaningful under
560VMS, and the values returned by these tests reflect whatever
561your CRTL C<stat()> routine does to the equivalent bits in the
562st_mode field. Finally, C<-d> returns true if passed a device
563specification without an explicit directory (e.g. C<DUA1:>), as
564well as if passed a directory.
565
fb38d079 566There are DECC feature logical names AND ODS-5 volume attributes that
9296fdfa
JM
567also control what values are returned for the date fields.
568
4e592037 569Note: Some sites have reported problems when using the file-access
570tests (C<-r>, C<-w>, and C<-x>) on files accessed via DEC's DFS.
571Specifically, since DFS does not currently provide access to the
572extended file header of files on remote volumes, attempts to
573examine the ACL fail, and the file tests will return false,
574with C<$!> indicating that the file does not exist. You can
575use C<stat> on these files, since that checks UIC-based protection
576only, and then manually check the appropriate bits, as defined by
577your C compiler's F<stat.h>, in the mode value it returns, if you
578need an approximation of the file's protections.
579
4fdae800 580=item backticks
581
582Backticks create a subprocess, and pass the enclosed string
583to it for execution as a DCL command. Since the subprocess is
584created directly via C<lib$spawn()>, any valid DCL command string
585may be specified.
586
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587=item binmode FILEHANDLE
588
1c9f8daa 589The C<binmode> operator will attempt to insure that no translation
590of carriage control occurs on input from or output to this filehandle.
591Since this involves reopening the file and then restoring its
592file position indicator, if this function returns FALSE, the
593underlying filehandle may no longer point to an open file, or may
594point to a different position in the file than before C<binmode>
595was called.
596
597Note that C<binmode> is generally not necessary when using normal
598filehandles; it is provided so that you can control I/O to existing
599record-structured files when necessary. You can also use the
600C<vmsfopen> function in the VMS::Stdio extension to gain finer
601control of I/O to files and devices with different record structures.
a0d0e21e 602
c07a80fd 603=item crypt PLAINTEXT, USER
604
605The C<crypt> operator uses the C<sys$hash_password> system
606service to generate the hashed representation of PLAINTEXT.
607If USER is a valid username, the algorithm and salt values
608are taken from that user's UAF record. If it is not, then
609the preferred algorithm and a salt of 0 are used. The
610quadword encrypted value is returned as an 8-character string.
611
612The value returned by C<crypt> may be compared against
613the encrypted password from the UAF returned by the C<getpw*>
614functions, in order to authenticate users. If you're
615going to do this, remember that the encrypted password in
616the UAF was generated using uppercase username and
617password strings; you'll have to upcase the arguments to
618C<crypt> to insure that you'll get the proper value:
619
376ae1f1
PP
620 sub validate_passwd {
621 my($user,$passwd) = @_;
622 my($pwdhash);
623 if ( !($pwdhash = (getpwnam($user))[1]) ||
624 $pwdhash ne crypt("\U$passwd","\U$name") ) {
625 intruder_alert($name);
626 }
627 return 1;
c07a80fd 628 }
c07a80fd 629
6ac6a52b
JM
630
631=item die
632
633C<die> will force the native VMS exit status to be an SS$_ABORT code
634if neither of the $! or $? status values are ones that would cause
635the native status to be interpreted as being what VMS classifies as
636SEVERE_ERROR severity for DCL error handling.
637
52e64fc8
JM
638When the future POSIX_EXIT mode is active, C<die>, the native VMS exit
639status value will have either one of the C<$!> or C<$?> or C<$^E> or
640the UNIX value 255 encoded into it in a way that the effective original
641value can be decoded by other programs written in C, including Perl
642and the GNV package. As per the normal non-VMS behavior of C<die> if
643either C<$!> or C<$?> are non-zero, one of those values will be
644encoded into a native VMS status value. If both of the UNIX status
645values are 0, and the C<$^E> value is set one of ERROR or SEVERE_ERROR
646severity, then the C<$^E> value will be used as the exit code as is.
647If none of the above apply, the UNIX value of 255 will be encoded into
648a native VMS exit status value.
649
650Please note a significant difference in the behavior of C<die> in
651the future POSIX_EXIT mode is that it does not force a VMS
652SEVERE_ERROR status on exit. The UNIX exit values of 2 through
653255 will be encoded in VMS status values with severity levels of
654SUCCESS. The UNIX exit value of 1 will be encoded in a VMS status
655value with a severity level of ERROR. This is to be compatible with
656how the VMS C library encodes these values.
657
658The minimum severity level set by C<die> in a future POSIX_EXIT mode
659may be changed to be ERROR or higher before that mode becomes fully active
660depending on the results of testing and further review. If this is
661done, the behavior of c<DIE> in the future POSIX_EXIT will close enough
662to the default mode that most DCL shell scripts will probably not notice
663a difference.
664
665See C<$?> for a description of the encoding of the UNIX value to
666produce a native VMS status containing it.
667
6ac6a52b 668
4e592037 669=item dump
670
671Rather than causing Perl to abort and dump core, the C<dump>
672operator invokes the VMS debugger. If you continue to
673execute the Perl program under the debugger, control will
674be transferred to the label specified as the argument to
675C<dump>, or, if no label was specified, back to the
676beginning of the program. All other state of the program
677(I<e.g.> values of variables, open file handles) are not
678affected by calling C<dump>.
679
748a9306 680=item exec LIST
a0d0e21e 681
41cbbefa
CB
682A call to C<exec> will cause Perl to exit, and to invoke the command
683given as an argument to C<exec> via C<lib$do_command>. If the
684argument begins with '@' or '$' (other than as part of a filespec),
685then it is executed as a DCL command. Otherwise, the first token on
686the command line is treated as the filespec of an image to run, and
687an attempt is made to invoke it (using F<.Exe> and the process
688defaults to expand the filespec) and pass the rest of C<exec>'s
689argument to it as parameters. If the token has no file type, and
690matches a file with null type, then an attempt is made to determine
691whether the file is an executable image which should be invoked
692using C<MCR> or a text file which should be passed to DCL as a
693command procedure.
a0d0e21e
LW
694
695=item fork
696
41cbbefa
CB
697While in principle the C<fork> operator could be implemented via
698(and with the same rather severe limitations as) the CRTL C<vfork()>
699routine, and while some internal support to do just that is in
700place, the implementation has never been completed, making C<fork>
701currently unavailable. A true kernel C<fork()> is expected in a
702future version of VMS, and the pseudo-fork based on interpreter
703threads may be available in a future version of Perl on VMS (see
704L<perlfork>). In the meantime, use C<system>, backticks, or piped
705filehandles to create subprocesses.
748a9306
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706
707=item getpwent
c07a80fd 708
748a9306 709=item getpwnam
c07a80fd 710
748a9306
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711=item getpwuid
712
713These operators obtain the information described in L<perlfunc>,
714if you have the privileges necessary to retrieve the named user's
715UAF information via C<sys$getuai>. If not, then only the C<$name>,
716C<$uid>, and C<$gid> items are returned. The C<$dir> item contains
717the login directory in VMS syntax, while the C<$comment> item
718contains the login directory in Unix syntax. The C<$gcos> item
719contains the owner field from the UAF record. The C<$quota>
720item is not used.
a0d0e21e 721
e518068a 722=item gmtime
723
724The C<gmtime> operator will function properly if you have a
725working CRTL C<gmtime()> routine, or if the logical name
726SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL is defined as the number of seconds
727which must be added to UTC to yield local time. (This logical
728name is defined automatically if you are running a version of
729VMS with built-in UTC support.) If neither of these cases is
730true, a warning message is printed, and C<undef> is returned.
731
732=item kill
733
39aca757 734In most cases, C<kill> is implemented via the CRTL's C<kill()>
e518068a 735function, so it will behave according to that function's
736documentation. If you send a SIGKILL, however, the $DELPRC system
10a676f8 737service is called directly. This insures that the target
e518068a 738process is actually deleted, if at all possible. (The CRTL's C<kill()>
739function is presently implemented via $FORCEX, which is ignored by
740supervisor-mode images like DCL.)
741
742Also, negative signal values don't do anything special under
743VMS; they're just converted to the corresponding positive value.
744
4fdae800 745=item qx//
746
747See the entry on C<backticks> above.
748
e518068a 749=item select (system call)
750
751If Perl was not built with socket support, the system call
752version of C<select> is not available at all. If socket
753support is present, then the system call version of
754C<select> functions only for file descriptors attached
755to sockets. It will not provide information about regular
756files or pipes, since the CRTL C<select()> routine does not
757provide this functionality.
758
748a9306 759=item stat EXPR
a0d0e21e 760
748a9306
LW
761Since VMS keeps track of files according to a different scheme
762than Unix, it's not really possible to represent the file's ID
763in the C<st_dev> and C<st_ino> fields of a C<struct stat>. Perl
764tries its best, though, and the values it uses are pretty unlikely
765to be the same for two different files. We can't guarantee this,
766though, so caveat scriptor.
767
768=item system LIST
769
770The C<system> operator creates a subprocess, and passes its
a0d0e21e 771arguments to the subprocess for execution as a DCL command.
e518068a 772Since the subprocess is created directly via C<lib$spawn()>, any
aa779de1
CB
773valid DCL command string may be specified. If the string begins with
774'@', it is treated as a DCL command unconditionally. Otherwise, if
775the first token contains a character used as a delimiter in file
776specification (e.g. C<:> or C<]>), an attempt is made to expand it
777using a default type of F<.Exe> and the process defaults, and if
778successful, the resulting file is invoked via C<MCR>. This allows you
779to invoke an image directly simply by passing the file specification
c93fa817
GS
780to C<system>, a common Unixish idiom. If the token has no file type,
781and matches a file with null type, then an attempt is made to
782determine whether the file is an executable image which should be
783invoked using C<MCR> or a text file which should be passed to DCL
784as a command procedure.
785
786If LIST consists of the empty string, C<system> spawns an
a2293a43 787interactive DCL subprocess, in the same fashion as typing
c93fa817
GS
788B<SPAWN> at the DCL prompt.
789
748a9306 790Perl waits for the subprocess to complete before continuing
4fdae800 791execution in the current process. As described in L<perlfunc>,
792the return value of C<system> is a fake "status" which follows
c6966fea 793POSIX semantics unless the pragma C<use vmsish 'status'> is in
1b0c4952
CB
794effect; see the description of C<$?> in this document for more
795detail.
a0d0e21e 796
1c9f8daa 797=item time
798
799The value returned by C<time> is the offset in seconds from
80001-JAN-1970 00:00:00 (just like the CRTL's times() routine), in order
801to make life easier for code coming in from the POSIX/Unix world.
802
a0d0e21e
LW
803=item times
804
748a9306
LW
805The array returned by the C<times> operator is divided up
806according to the same rules the CRTL C<times()> routine.
a0d0e21e
LW
807Therefore, the "system time" elements will always be 0, since
808there is no difference between "user time" and "system" time
39aca757 809under VMS, and the time accumulated by a subprocess may or may
a0d0e21e 810not appear separately in the "child time" field, depending on
748a9306
LW
811whether L<times> keeps track of subprocesses separately. Note
812especially that the VAXCRTL (at least) keeps track only of
813subprocesses spawned using L<fork> and L<exec>; it will not
a2293a43 814accumulate the times of subprocesses spawned via pipes, L<system>,
748a9306
LW
815or backticks.
816
16d20bd9
AD
817=item unlink LIST
818
819C<unlink> will delete the highest version of a file only; in
820order to delete all versions, you need to say
39aca757 821
35b2760a 822 1 while unlink LIST;
39aca757 823
16d20bd9
AD
824You may need to make this change to scripts written for a
825Unix system which expect that after a call to C<unlink>,
826no files with the names passed to C<unlink> will exist.
4633a7c4
LW
827(Note: This can be changed at compile time; if you
828C<use Config> and C<$Config{'d_unlink_all_versions'}> is
829C<define>, then C<unlink> will delete all versions of a
830file on the first call.)
16d20bd9
AD
831
832C<unlink> will delete a file if at all possible, even if it
833requires changing file protection (though it won't try to
834change the protection of the parent directory). You can tell
835whether you've got explicit delete access to a file by using the
836C<VMS::Filespec::candelete> operator. For instance, in order
837to delete only files to which you have delete access, you could
838say something like
4e592037 839
16d20bd9
AD
840 sub safe_unlink {
841 my($file,$num);
842 foreach $file (@_) {
843 next unless VMS::Filespec::candelete($file);
844 $num += unlink $file;
845 }
846 $num;
847 }
4e592037 848
849(or you could just use C<VMS::Stdio::remove>, if you've installed
850the VMS::Stdio extension distributed with Perl). If C<unlink> has to
851change the file protection to delete the file, and you interrupt it
852in midstream, the file may be left intact, but with a changed ACL
853allowing you delete access.
16d20bd9 854
fb38d079
JM
855This behavior of C<unlink> is to be compatible with POSIX behavior
856and not traditional VMS behavior.
857
748a9306
LW
858=item utime LIST
859
860Since ODS-2, the VMS file structure for disk files, does not keep
861track of access times, this operator changes only the modification
862time of the file (VMS revision date).
863
864=item waitpid PID,FLAGS
865
39aca757 866If PID is a subprocess started by a piped C<open()> (see L<open>),
376ae1f1
PP
867C<waitpid> will wait for that subprocess, and return its final status
868value in C<$?>. If PID is a subprocess created in some other way (e.g.
869SPAWNed before Perl was invoked), C<waitpid> will simply check once per
870second whether the process has completed, and return when it has. (If
871PID specifies a process that isn't a subprocess of the current process,
872and you invoked Perl with the C<-w> switch, a warning will be issued.)
35b2760a
CB
873
874Returns PID on success, -1 on error. The FLAGS argument is ignored
875in all cases.
a0d0e21e 876
55497cff 877=back
878
a5f75d66
AD
879=head1 Perl variables
880
55497cff 881The following VMS-specific information applies to the indicated
882"special" Perl variables, in addition to the general information
a2293a43 883in L<perlvar>. Where there is a conflict, this information
55497cff 884takes precedence.
885
886=over 4
887
a5f75d66
AD
888=item %ENV
889
f675dbe5
CB
890The operation of the C<%ENV> array depends on the translation
891of the logical name F<PERL_ENV_TABLES>. If defined, it should
892be a search list, each element of which specifies a location
893for C<%ENV> elements. If you tell Perl to read or set the
894element C<$ENV{>I<name>C<}>, then Perl uses the translations of
895F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> as follows:
896
897=over 4
898
899=item CRTL_ENV
900
901This string tells Perl to consult the CRTL's internal C<environ>
902array of key-value pairs, using I<name> as the key. In most cases,
903this contains only a few keys, but if Perl was invoked via the C
904C<exec[lv]e()> function, as is the case for CGI processing by some
905HTTP servers, then the C<environ> array may have been populated by
906the calling program.
907
908=item CLISYM_[LOCAL]
909
910A string beginning with C<CLISYM_>tells Perl to consult the CLI's
911symbol tables, using I<name> as the name of the symbol. When reading
912an element of C<%ENV>, the local symbol table is scanned first, followed
913by the global symbol table.. The characters following C<CLISYM_> are
914significant when an element of C<%ENV> is set or deleted: if the
915complete string is C<CLISYM_LOCAL>, the change is made in the local
39aca757 916symbol table; otherwise the global symbol table is changed.
f675dbe5
CB
917
918=item Any other string
919
920If an element of F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> translates to any other string,
921that string is used as the name of a logical name table, which is
922consulted using I<name> as the logical name. The normal search
923order of access modes is used.
924
925=back
926
927F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> is translated once when Perl starts up; any changes
928you make while Perl is running do not affect the behavior of C<%ENV>.
929If F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> is not defined, then Perl defaults to consulting
930first the logical name tables specified by F<LNM$FILE_DEV>, and then
931the CRTL C<environ> array.
932
933In all operations on %ENV, the key string is treated as if it
934were entirely uppercase, regardless of the case actually
935specified in the Perl expression.
936
937When an element of C<%ENV> is read, the locations to which
938F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> points are checked in order, and the value
939obtained from the first successful lookup is returned. If the
940name of the C<%ENV> element contains a semi-colon, it and
941any characters after it are removed. These are ignored when
942the CRTL C<environ> array or a CLI symbol table is consulted.
943However, the name is looked up in a logical name table, the
944suffix after the semi-colon is treated as the translation index
945to be used for the lookup. This lets you look up successive values
946for search list logical names. For instance, if you say
a5f75d66
AD
947
948 $ Define STORY once,upon,a,time,there,was
949 $ perl -e "for ($i = 0; $i <= 6; $i++) " -
740ce14c 950 _$ -e "{ print $ENV{'story;'.$i},' '}"
a5f75d66 951
f675dbe5
CB
952Perl will print C<ONCE UPON A TIME THERE WAS>, assuming, of course,
953that F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> is set up so that the logical name C<story>
954is found, rather than a CLI symbol or CRTL C<environ> element with
955the same name.
956
3eeba6fb 957When an element of C<%ENV> is set to a defined string, the
f675dbe5
CB
958corresponding definition is made in the location to which the
959first translation of F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> points. If this causes a
960logical name to be created, it is defined in supervisor mode.
3eeba6fb
CB
961(The same is done if an existing logical name was defined in
962executive or kernel mode; an existing user or supervisor mode
963logical name is reset to the new value.) If the value is an empty
964string, the logical name's translation is defined as a single NUL
965(ASCII 00) character, since a logical name cannot translate to a
966zero-length string. (This restriction does not apply to CLI symbols
967or CRTL C<environ> values; they are set to the empty string.)
f675dbe5
CB
968An element of the CRTL C<environ> array can be set only if your
969copy of Perl knows about the CRTL's C<setenv()> function. (This is
970present only in some versions of the DECCRTL; check C<$Config{d_setenv}>
971to see whether your copy of Perl was built with a CRTL that has this
972function.)
39aca757 973
3eeba6fb 974When an element of C<%ENV> is set to C<undef>,
f675dbe5
CB
975the element is looked up as if it were being read, and if it is
976found, it is deleted. (An item "deleted" from the CRTL C<environ>
977array is set to the empty string; this can only be done if your
978copy of Perl knows about the CRTL C<setenv()> function.) Using
979C<delete> to remove an element from C<%ENV> has a similar effect,
980but after the element is deleted, another attempt is made to
981look up the element, so an inner-mode logical name or a name in
982another location will replace the logical name just deleted.
3eeba6fb
CB
983In either case, only the first value found searching PERL_ENV_TABLES
984is altered. It is not possible at present to define a search list
985logical name via %ENV.
f675dbe5
CB
986
987The element C<$ENV{DEFAULT}> is special: when read, it returns
988Perl's current default device and directory, and when set, it
989resets them, regardless of the definition of F<PERL_ENV_TABLES>.
990It cannot be cleared or deleted; attempts to do so are silently
991ignored.
b7b1864f
CB
992
993Note that if you want to pass on any elements of the
994C-local environ array to a subprocess which isn't
995started by fork/exec, or isn't running a C program, you
996can "promote" them to logical names in the current
997process, which will then be inherited by all subprocesses,
998by saying
999
1000 foreach my $key (qw[C-local keys you want promoted]) {
376ae1f1
PP
1001 my $temp = $ENV{$key}; # read from C-local array
1002 $ENV{$key} = $temp; # and define as logical name
b7b1864f
CB
1003 }
1004
1005(You can't just say C<$ENV{$key} = $ENV{$key}>, since the
1006Perl optimizer is smart enough to elide the expression.)
a5f75d66 1007
6be8f7a6
JH
1008Don't try to clear C<%ENV> by saying C<%ENV = ();>, it will throw
1009a fatal error. This is equivalent to doing the following from DCL:
1010
1011 DELETE/LOGICAL *
1012
1013You can imagine how bad things would be if, for example, the SYS$MANAGER
fb38d079 1014or SYS$SYSTEM logical names were deleted.
4a0d0822 1015
740ce14c 1016At present, the first time you iterate over %ENV using
edc7bc49
CB
1017C<keys>, or C<values>, you will incur a time penalty as all
1018logical names are read, in order to fully populate %ENV.
1019Subsequent iterations will not reread logical names, so they
1020won't be as slow, but they also won't reflect any changes
f675dbe5
CB
1021to logical name tables caused by other programs.
1022
fb38d079
JM
1023You do need to be careful with the logical names representing
1024process-permanent files, such as C<SYS$INPUT> and C<SYS$OUTPUT>.
1025The translations for these logical names are prepended with a
1026two-byte binary value (0x1B 0x00) that needs to be stripped off
1027if you wantto use it. (In previous versions of Perl it wasn't
1028possible to get the values of these logical names, as the null
1029byte acted as an end-of-string marker)
a5f75d66 1030
a5f75d66
AD
1031=item $!
1032
1033The string value of C<$!> is that returned by the CRTL's
1034strerror() function, so it will include the VMS message for
1035VMS-specific errors. The numeric value of C<$!> is the
1036value of C<errno>, except if errno is EVMSERR, in which
1037case C<$!> contains the value of vaxc$errno. Setting C<$!>
4e592037 1038always sets errno to the value specified. If this value is
1039EVMSERR, it also sets vaxc$errno to 4 (NONAME-F-NOMSG), so
1040that the string value of C<$!> won't reflect the VMS error
1041message from before C<$!> was set.
1042
1043=item $^E
1044
1045This variable provides direct access to VMS status values
1046in vaxc$errno, which are often more specific than the
1047generic Unix-style error messages in C<$!>. Its numeric value
1048is the value of vaxc$errno, and its string value is the
1049corresponding VMS message string, as retrieved by sys$getmsg().
1050Setting C<$^E> sets vaxc$errno to the value specified.
1051
9296fdfa
JM
1052While Perl attempts to keep the vaxc$errno value to be current, if
1053errno is not EVMSERR, it may not be from the current operation.
1054
4fdae800 1055=item $?
1056
1057The "status value" returned in C<$?> is synthesized from the
1058actual exit status of the subprocess in a way that approximates
1059POSIX wait(5) semantics, in order to allow Perl programs to
1060portably test for successful completion of subprocesses. The
1061low order 8 bits of C<$?> are always 0 under VMS, since the
1062termination status of a process may or may not have been
9296fdfa
JM
1063generated by an exception.
1064
1065The next 8 bits contain the termination status of the program.
1066
1067If the child process follows the convention of C programs
1068compiled with the _POSIX_EXIT macro set, the status value will
1069contain the actual value of 0 to 255 returned by that program
1070on a normal exit.
1071
52e64fc8
JM
1072With the _POSIX_EXIT macro set, the UNIX exit value of zero is
1073represented as a VMS native status of 1, and the UNIX values
1074from 2 to 255 are encoded by the equation:
1075
1076 VMS_status = 0x35a000 + (unix_value * 8) + 1.
1077
1078And in the special case of unix value 1 the encoding is:
1079
1080 VMS_status = 0x35a000 + 8 + 2 + 0x10000000.
9296fdfa
JM
1081
1082For other termination statuses, the severity portion of the
52e64fc8 1083subprocess' exit status is used: if the severity was success or
9296fdfa
JM
1084informational, these bits are all 0; if the severity was
1085warning, they contain a value of 1; if the severity was
1086error or fatal error, they contain the actual severity bits,
52e64fc8
JM
1087which turns out to be a value of 2 for error and 4 for severe_error.
1088Fatal is another term for the severe_error status.
9bc98430 1089
4fdae800 1090As a result, C<$?> will always be zero if the subprocess' exit
1091status indicated successful completion, and non-zero if a
9296fdfa
JM
1092warning or error occurred or a program compliant with encoding
1093_POSIX_EXIT values was run and set a status.
1094
52e64fc8
JM
1095How can you tell the difference between a non-zero status that is
1096the result of a VMS native error status or an encoded UNIX status?
1097You can not unless you look at the ${^CHILD_ERROR_NATIVE} value.
1098The ${^CHILD_ERROR_NATIVE} value returns the actual VMS status value
1099and check the severity bits. If the severity bits are equal to 1,
1100then if the numeric value for C<$?> is between 2 and 255 or 0, then
1101C<$?> accurately reflects a value passed back from a UNIX application.
1102If C<$?> is 1, and the severity bits indicate a VMS error (2), then
1103C<$?> is from a UNIX application exit value.
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JM
1104
1105In practice, Perl scripts that call programs that return _POSIX_EXIT
52e64fc8
JM
1106type status values will be expecting those values, and programs that
1107call traditional VMS programs will either be expecting the previous
1108behavior or just checking for a non-zero status.
9296fdfa 1109
52e64fc8 1110And success is always the value 0 in all behaviors.
9296fdfa 1111
fb38d079 1112When the actual VMS termination status of the child is an error,
52e64fc8
JM
1113internally the C<$!> value will be set to the closest UNIX errno
1114value to that error so that Perl scripts that test for error
1115messages will see the expected UNIX style error message instead
1116of a VMS message.
fb38d079 1117
9296fdfa
JM
1118Conversely, when setting C<$?> in an END block, an attempt is made
1119to convert the POSIX value into a native status intelligible to
1120the operating system upon exiting Perl. What this boils down to
1121is that setting C<$?> to zero results in the generic success value
1122SS$_NORMAL, and setting C<$?> to a non-zero value results in the
1123generic failure status SS$_ABORT. See also L<perlport/exit>.
4fdae800 1124
6ac6a52b 1125With the future POSIX_EXIT mode set, setting C<$?> will cause the
52e64fc8
JM
1126new value to also be encoded into C<$^E> so that the either the
1127original parent or child exit status values of 0 to 255
1128can be automatically recovered by C programs expecting _POSIX_EXIT
1129behavior. If both a parent and a child exit value are non-zero, then it
1130will be assumed that this is actually a VMS native status value to
1131be passed through. The special value of 0xFFFF is almost a NOOP as
1132it will cause the current native VMS status in the C library to
1133become the current native Perl VMS status, and is handled this way
1134as consequence of it known to not be a valid native VMS status value.
1135It is recommend that only values in range of normal UNIX parent or
1136child status numbers, 0 to 255 are used.
6ac6a52b 1137
1b0c4952 1138The pragma C<use vmsish 'status'> makes C<$?> reflect the actual
9bc98430
CB
1139VMS exit status instead of the default emulation of POSIX status
1140described above. This pragma also disables the conversion of
1141non-zero values to SS$_ABORT when setting C<$?> in an END
1142block (but zero will still be converted to SS$_NORMAL).
4fdae800 1143
6ac6a52b 1144Do not use the pragma C<use vmsish 'status'> with the future
52e64fc8
JM
1145POSIX_EXIT mode, as they are at times requesting conflicting
1146actions and the consequence of ignoring this advice will be
1147undefined to allow future improvements in the POSIX exit handling.
6ac6a52b 1148
4e592037 1149=item $|
1150
1151Setting C<$|> for an I/O stream causes data to be flushed
1152all the way to disk on each write (I<i.e.> not just to
1153the underlying RMS buffers for a file). In other words,
1154it's equivalent to calling fflush() and fsync() from C.
a5f75d66 1155
55497cff 1156=back
1157
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HM
1158=head1 Standard modules with VMS-specific differences
1159
1160=head2 SDBM_File
1161
270c2ced 1162SDBM_File works properly on VMS. It has, however, one minor
4a4eefd0
GS
1163difference. The database directory file created has a F<.sdbm_dir>
1164extension rather than a F<.dir> extension. F<.dir> files are VMS filesystem
bf99883d
HM
1165directory files, and using them for other purposes could cause unacceptable
1166problems.
1167
748a9306 1168=head1 Revision date
a0d0e21e 1169
9296fdfa 1170This document was last updated on 14-Oct-2005, for Perl 5,
9bc98430 1171patchlevel 8.
e518068a 1172
1173=head1 AUTHOR
1174
376ae1f1
PP
1175Charles Bailey bailey@cor.newman.upenn.edu
1176Craig Berry craigberry@mac.com
1177Dan Sugalski dan@sidhe.org
9296fdfa 1178John Malmberg wb8tyw@qsl.net