-#!./perl
+#!./perl -w
BEGIN {
chdir 't' if -d 't';
@INC = '../lib';
require "./test.pl";
-}
-plan 'no_plan';
+ plan ('no_plan');
+
+ use_ok('Config');
+}
-use_ok('Config');
+use strict;
# Some (safe?) bets.
my $out10 = $$out;
$out->clear;
+undef $out;
untie *STDOUT;
like($out1, qr/^cc='\Q$Config{cc}\E';/, "found config_var cc");
like($out2, qr/^d_bork='UNKNOWN';/, "config_var d_bork is UNKNOWN");
# test for leading, trailing colon effects
-is(scalar split(/;\n/, $out3), 3, "3 lines found");
-is(scalar split(/;\n/, $out6), 3, "3 lines found");
+# Split in scalar context it deprecated, and will warn.
+my @tmp;
+is(scalar (@tmp = split(/;\n/, $out3)), 3, "3 lines found");
+is(scalar (@tmp = split(/;\n/, $out6)), 3, "3 lines found");
is($out4 =~ /(;\n)/s, '', "trailing colon gives 1-line response: $out4");
is($out5 =~ /(;\n)/s, '', "trailing colon gives 1-line response: $out5");
-is(scalar split(/=/, $out3), 4, "found 'tag='");
-is(scalar split(/=/, $out4), 4, "found 'tag='");
+is(scalar (@tmp = split(/=/, $out3)), 4, "found 'tag='");
+is(scalar (@tmp = split(/=/, $out4)), 4, "found 'tag='");
my @api;
my @rev = @Config{qw(PERL_API_REVISION PERL_API_VERSION PERL_API_SUBVERSION)};
print ("# test tagged responses, multi-line and single-line\n");
-foreach $api ($out3, $out4) {
+foreach my $api ($out3, $out4) {
@api = $api =~ /PERL_API_(\w+)=(.*?)(?:;\n|\s)/mg;
is($api[0], "REVISION", "REVISION tag");
is($api[4], "VERSION", "VERSION tag");
}
print("# test non-tagged responses, multi-line and single-line\n");
-foreach $api ($out5, $out6) {
+foreach my $api ($out5, $out6) {
@api = split /(?: |;\n)/, $api;
is($api[0], "'$rev[0]'", "revision is $rev[0]");
is($api[2], "'$rev[1]'", "version is $rev[1]");
# Check that config entries appear correctly in @INC
# TestInit.pm has probably already messed with our @INC
# This little bit of evil is to avoid a @ in the program, in case it confuses
-# shell 1 liners. Perl 1 rules.
+# shell 1 liners. We used to use a perl 1-ism, until that was deprecated, so
+# now some octal in an eval.
my ($path, $ver, @orig_inc)
= split /\n/,
runperl (nolib=>1,
- prog=>'print qq{$^X\n$]\n}; print qq{$_\n} while $_ = shift INC');
+ prog=>'print qq{$_\n} foreach $^X, $], eval qq{\100INC}');
die "This perl is $] at $^X; other perl is $ver (at $path) "
. '- failed to find this perl' unless $] eq $ver;
@orig_inc{@orig_inc} = ();
my $failed;
-# This is the order that directories are pushed onto @INC in perl.c:
+# This [used to be] the order that directories are pushed onto @INC in perl.c:
foreach my $lib (qw(applibexp archlibexp privlibexp sitearchexp sitelibexp
- vendorarchexp vendorlibexp vendorlib_stem)) {
+ vendorarchexp vendorlibexp)) {
my $dir = $Config{$lib};
SKIP: {
skip "lib $lib not in \@INC on Win32" if $^O eq 'MSWin32';
skip "lib $lib not defined" unless defined $dir;
skip "lib $lib not set" unless length $dir;
+ # May be in @INC in either Unix or VMS format on VMS.
+ if ($^O eq 'VMS' && !exists($orig_inc{$dir})) {
+ $dir = VMS::Filespec::unixify($dir);
+ $dir =~ s|/$||;
+ }
# So we expect to find it in @INC
ok (exists $orig_inc{$dir}, "Expect $lib '$dir' to be in \@INC")