A happy new year for Perl 5 porters and everybody. The holiday seemed to bring a lot of spare time for Perl 5 porters and they made good use of it. Hey, what those funny people are doing around in this mailing list?
In the last weeks, Rajarshi Das and others raised some interest for the Perl port to z/OS, an EBCDIC platform, and started some threads on related issues.
iso-2022-jp encoding
Rajarshi Das asked for help to understand why iso-2022-jp encoding
is unknown on z/OS. Sadahiro Tomoyuki showed some
evidence that Encode is not ready to support Encode::JP
(the module which supports iso-2002-jp and other Japanese
encodings) on EBCDIC. Nick Ing-Simmons also had some comments
about the weirdness of scripts starting with an EBCDIC dialect
and then switching to an ASCII-oid escape encoding like iso-2002-jp
is. Rajarshi Das tried some changes against Encode sources
and his doubts remained. Sadahiro Tomoyuki tried to help Rajarshi
understand the involved subtleties. This thread has not
reached a conclusion (unless I missed something)
and Rajarshi opened ticket #16663.
http://xrl.us/jgcu
Configuration Error for p59x26223
Rajarshi was having fun configuring and building p59x26223 (whatever that is)
on z/OS v1.7,
but some show-stopping errors were popping and he called for help.
Jarkko Hietaniemi analyzed the situation which is due to a silly warning
of a compiler who wants to know too much. Jarkko posted
something to Rajarshi to try, which worked,
until it hit an error in building Compress::Zlib.
Paul Marquess wondered about a fix of a couple of weeks ago, which
then made possible to Rajarshi to build Perl. (This fix is going to
be officially introduced to Compress::Zlib.)
Jarkko asked for more details on a failure around Time::HiRes,
which went unanswered.
http://xrl.us/jgcv
Fixing t/uni/class.t on EBCDIC Rajarshi Das brought a patch to t/uni/class.t on perl-5.8.7 which fixes the test on EBCDIC (z/OS 1.4). The test case changes worked fine with Sadahiro Tomoyuki's patch for utf8.c but, to Steve Peters, they seemed too heavy for a test. Sadahiro Tomoyuki followed up with a lighter change, untried yet on EBCDIC, until Rajarshi tried it successfully, but he had a few comments on why things were done that way in the first patch. Last week, Steve Peters pinged about what changes were needed and the current state of tests outcome.
http://xrl.us/jgcw
Expect, Anyone?
Robert Zielazinski wondered if someone had played with porting
the Expect module to z/OS. He tried once with no luck on
previous releases. No one answered, maybe because Expect,
which is not a core module, and z/OS are not in the current
agenda of porters.
http://xrl.us/jgcx
About ext/B/t/optree_specials.t Back in October 5, Mohammad Yaseen commented on the output of running the ext/B/t/optree_specials.t test on EBCDIC platform z/OS. At Christmas' eve, Nicholas Clark guessed it probably had to do with different representation of the same string on non-ASCII systems, leading to different numeric hash values.
http://xrl.us/jgcy
runperl and @INC Yitzchak Scott-Thoennes delved into a long-standing test failure he had
been seeing on Cygwin, and diagnosed two separate problems. One
about test data in the real lib directory (lib/charnames.t).
The second about runperl() using real @INC directories.
Yitzchak proposed a patch with runperl() using
TestInit.pm and saw only a failure at op/stash.t which
had to do with a yet unfixed bug.
With no immediate solution, Yitzchak opened for others to try it
out, before sweeping the problem to under the carpet as a paliative measure.
After a long silence, Rafael Garcia-Suarez saw op/stash.t
to succeed and t/run/switchd.t to fail.
Nicholas Clark noticed failures with threaded perls
which he tracked down and corrected with some changes.
http://xrl.us/jgcz
Andy Lester was one of the guys that spent a little more time with Perl at the end of the year.
Ho! Ho! Ho! consting and NULLing
http://xrl.us/jgc2
Faster Perl_sv_derived_from
http://xrl.us/jgc3
Andy speeds (rn|n)?instr
http://xrl.us/jgc4
Before LIKELY() stuff
http://xrl.us/jgc5
Getting SVREFCNT right
http://xrl.us/jgc6
More cleanup and tight prototypes with NN
http://xrl.us/jgc7
Constant pointer parms
http://xrl.us/jgc8
Making 0 pointers to NULLs
http://xrl.us/jgc9
Some of this work by Andy was inspired by analysis
of the coverage stats which Sébastien "maddingue" Aperghis-Tramoni
made available. Graham Barr pointed there might some catches for
the optimization of (rn|n)?instr with respect to modern CPUs.
And Rafael Garcia-Suarez supposed the SVREFCNT fix comes
with no impact on performance. At last, Andy launched
the support for GCC builtins __builtin_expect and
__builtin_choose_expr in source code, which later may
be applied to hot spots detected in maddingue's reports.
Rafael Garcia-Suarez preferred to defer the introduction of
these features and the corresponding Configure patch after 5.9.3
and H. Merijn Brand will have everything ready by this time.
Coverages stats by maddingue
http://www.maddingue.net/perlcover/
Support for two GCC builtins
http://xrl.us/jgda
H.Merijn Brand perceived some 'M' failures in smokes with longdoubles on Linux 2.6.12 and up with gcc-4.0.2 and up. Merijn wondered if others were having similar issues. Rafael Garcia-Suarez reported on successful builds with similar settings. Later, Merijn found the problem to be the gcc he had been using, a prerelease 4.0.2, and confirmed perl configures and builds fine with 4.0.2 release and 4.0.3 prerelease. There remained some problems Jim Cromie had seen which cast some doubts on the use of long doubles in current Perl sources.
http://xrl.us/jgdb
B::Lint with Plugins Yves Orton pinched a sneaky issue on Win32 on
ext/b/t/lint.t. And, while we're on B::Lint,
let me remind the comments of Joshua ben Jore on the last
summary. With respect to B::Lint plugins,
Joshua made clear that (1) benchmarking is needed to establish
the cost of plugins against the embedded existing checks,
(2) he doesn't see the value of fussing around just to
make examples for people, as he'll be publishing more plugins
that may serve this end, (3) he may as well make available some material
(presentation slides) on doing lint-like checks after some updating.
Yves' deed on Win32's sake
http://xrl.us/jgdc
Joshua explains stuff
http://xrl.us/jgdd
CPANPLUS in Core? Yitzchak Scott-Thoennes remembered that, in June, Rafael
announced the addition of Archive::Tar to the core,
as the last addition before CPANPLUS and asked what next.
A long discusssion ensued, with lots of pros and cons.
To make it short, among the drawbacks, there are: core is
big enough; CPAN.pm is stable and CPANPLUS caused much
pain so far; CPANPLUS is a little too generous
with memory requirements; some say it is too Linux centric;
some issues on requisites may remain, like IPC::Run.
Andreas Koenig also reminded us of the new goodness added to
the last versions of CPAN. On the side of the advantages,
CPANPLUS provides an API which "is a real pleasure";
CPAN is not really light, but according to Jos "kane" Bouman,
CPANPLUS by design trades memory for speed.
Believe me, many things have been said. If you want real details,
follow the thread.
http://xrl.us/jgde
Nicholas noticed
a parallel make of the disttest target (make -j2 disttest)
was failing.
Steve Peters came to the rescue: the problem was apparently
related solely to BSD-based makes and not GNU make.
make -j2 -B disttest works for BSD make -
the man page says -j turns compatibility off, and -B restores it.
The issue: cd's in GNU make works for the current command
and returns to the start directory after completed.
http://xrl.us/jgdf
Module::Build 0.27_04 The candidate for core, Module::Build, reached release
0.27_04, announced by Ken Williams.
http://xrl.us/jgdg
CPAN 1.80_58 Andreas Koenig brought CPAN in blead to 1.80_58.
Who said programmers don't like to write documentation? If that's true, they at least enjoy fixing POD.
UNIVERSAL: Don't Use Methods as Functions
chromatic proposed a patch
against lib/UNIVERSAL.pm to remove the recommendation to use
isa(), can(), and VERSION() as functions,
responsible for too much damage in his view.
The suggestion might seem a natural followup
of chromatic's contribution as one of the authors
of the controversial UNIVERSAL::can and the not
so rebellious UNIVERSAL::isa.
Yves Orton proposed instead a fix with basically
the same rationale of the the mentioned modules, which Rafael
thought to be a pretty big change, making UNIVERSAL::isa
inaccessible to those which override isa. In such grounds,
Rafael declined the patch
as it undocumented existing functionality and asked for a
perspective change.
Rafael also reminded that Scalar::Util::reftype can be used
in place of UNIVERSAL::isa.
And chromatic brought a new patch
"that moves the broken code to the end, where people will
hopefully not see it." The patch pleased Yves and Rafael
and got applied as change #26466.
chromatic's first attack
http://xrl.us/jgdh
chromatic's coup de grâce
http://xrl.us/jgdi
Bad Example in perlop
Ben Okopnik, in ticket #38008, pointed the misleading example
on the flipflop operator in pod/perlop.pod,
which included a label called 'line'. Rafael Garcia-Suarez
made it right with change #26468.
next line if (1 .. /^$/); # skip header lines
http://xrl.us/jgdj
rindex clarification
Yitzchak Scott-Thoennes posted a mini-patch to make
clear the rindex description at pod/perlfunc.pod.
http://xrl.us/jgdk
Differences from Perl6
Robin Houston posted a doc patch against pod/perlsyn.pod
explaining the differences between the recently
introduced given/when and the corresponding Perl 6
constructs. Applied as change #26537.
http://xrl.us/jgdm
Bug in File::Temp Docs
In RT ticket #38127, pm noticed an imprecision in File::Temp
documentation, namely, when using the object interface one
must use new File::Temp(TEMPLATE => $template) to constrain
the generated filenames. Rafael Garcia-Suarez agreed and
applied a corresponding patch as change 26753.
http://xrl.us/jgdn
perlmodlib missing Pod::Perldoc?
Yitzchak Scott-Thoennes missed Pod::Perldoc not being listed
in perlmodlib, even though most Pod::Perldoc::* were there.
Rafael Garcia-Suarez noted it was because Perldoc.pm had no POD.
How ironic, repeating Yitzchak's words.
http://xrl.us/jgdo
Pod::Simple::Search Pod::Simple::Search assumed that
case-preserved package and pod names could be constructed from filenames,
which is not always true, on OSes with non-case-preserving filesystems
like VMS. To remedy this situation, Craig A. Berry wrote a patch
to make it work.
http://xrl.us/jgdp
gv_* Issues Tels had been quite busy this end of year and started some
long threads. You have to read them if gv_* issues are
your plate.
What's up with C<$a = \$a>?
http://xrl.us/jgdq
Stack usage
http://xrl.us/jgdr
Perl_gv_fetchpv vs. gv_fetchpvn
http://xrl.us/jgds
gv_stashpvn() vs gv_stashpv()
http://xrl.us/jgdt
Configure Patches H.Merijn Brand applied a patch by Jarkko Hietaniemi for making
Configure smarter with respect to char (un)signedness in Tru64.
While on this, Jarkko made a wish for Configure in 5.9.3:
scan for snprintf() and vsnprintf() in behalf of people doing
XS work, and for who sv_*pvf*() may be an overkill.
Steve Peters implemented it minus the necessary changes
to Porting/Glossary.
Merijn notes Jarkko's patch
http://xrl.us/jgdu
Jarkko's tiny wish
http://xrl.us/jgdv
B::Concise Last week, Nicholas Clark slimmed down constants, and
taught Devel::Peek to understand the new representation,
giving sensible information to the user. This week, Jim
Cromie taught the new trick to B::Concise. In the meantime,
Nicholas remembered how missing constants are now
prototyped with () so that the parsing of
programs doesn't change platform by platform
based on what macros are present locally.
Summary of the thread on optimized constants
http://xrl.us/jgdw
Jim tames B::Concise
http://xrl.us/jgdx
Perl RT had a count of 1510 open tickets at the last Monday of 2005 and the year started with 1514 bugs waiting to be squashed.
Robert Spier's summaries
http://xrl.us/jgdy
http://xrl.us/jgdz
Perl RT just now
http://rt.perl.org/rt3/NoAuth/perl5/Overview.html
The Year in Perl 2005 chromatic wrote a very nice summary of the activity in Perl during 2005. It didn't go through the p5p mailing list, but it was too good not to be mentioned.
http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/wlg/8894
timelocal not reverse of localtime
Rafael Garcia-Suarez found some time to take a look at
the fix applied by Dave Rolsky to assure the behavior
of timelocal as reverse of localtime: but it fails now.
I believe this went unnoticed.
Previous thread summary
http://xrl.us/jgd2
Rafael says oops!
http://xrl.us/jgd3
lc() Failures with Latin-1 Chars
Daniel Richard G., in ticket #37999,
reported how certain accented letters in a word (using Latin-1 chars)
were not being lowercased by lc(), with some curiosities
involving chop and chomp. Rafael Garcia-Suarez fixed
it by harmonizing code of do_chomp() and do_chop()
(change #26431). Daniel noticed that, if the string isn't modified via
chomp/chop/etc.,
the accented letters stay as-is. To Rafael, it's just the documented
behavior if you don't use locale.
http://xrl.us/jgd4
Perl on Win64 Jan Dubois brought a patch to fix a bogus setting in win32/config.vc64 which allowed (together other previous changes) to get 100% success running the regression tests on Windows 2003 Server 64bit on AMD64. Hurray for Jan!
http://xrl.us/jgd5
spare flag bits on rv2cv
Nicholas Clark wonders: any spare flag bits left on the op rv2cv?
And he answers himself: here is the lowest bit of op_private.
http://xrl.us/jgd6
Compress::Zlib on VMS
Paul Marquess brought a patch to sort out building on MVS,
applied as change #26468.
http://xrl.us/jgd7
Goodness propagated into eval
I know this has been mentioned in the last summary,
but Robin's work to guarantee propagation of compile-hints
(%^H) and constant overloading into eval is awesome,
to steal Rafael's words. Try the following in perls pre-Robin
and blead to see the difference:
$ perl -Mbigint -e 'print eval "1+2"'
http://xrl.us/jgd8
A Dependency Loop
Tom Horsley has a rite to install all the latest stable perl stuff
when year begins. Good habit! While doing this, he found
libwww-perl-5.805 depends on HTML-Parser-3.48 which turned
out to depend on HTTP::Headers which lives in libwww-perl.
As far as I know, these are not core modules, but Gisle Aas,
the author of both, is always around. (This is RT ticket #38097.)
http://xrl.us/jgd9
How not to Report a Problem namit opened ticket #38122 to say he was having problems with local settings. Yitzchak Scott-Thoennes guessed the messages namit was seeing and pointed to LOCALE PROBLEMS in perllocale manpage. Show us the code, said Steve Peters.
http://xrl.us/jgea
False Matches with Bad utf-8 Sadahiro Tomoyuki announced the RT ticket #37836 had been resolved by the change 26258 and generously offered a further investigation.
http://xrl.us/jgeb
Effects of Patch 26370
Andreas Koenig was biten by the weird state of things
after change 26370 where there can be files
that one can use but that perl cannot compile.
Andreas mentioned as examples the Acme::Meta distro
and Devel-Symdump-2.04 based on the former. Rafael
Garcia-Suarez reduced the problem to a shorter test case
and fixed the issue with change 26574, which made
Andreas very happy, releasing Devel::Symdump 2.05
out to the world.
http://xrl.us/jgec
Beware Floating Point stassats opened ticket #38120 to say about oddities of perl printing numbers like '2.23999999999999' instead of the prettier '2.24' equivalents. chromatic remembered floating point math is subject to rounding error, in Perl and every other programming language, and Ronald J. Kimball found the answer to be a FAQ which can be found with perldoc -q 9999.
http://xrl.us/jged
Parser Bug with '; sub f'
Lukas Mai, in RT ticket #38121, found what he thinks to be a
parser bug. Yet to be commented.
$ perl -c -e '; sub f'
syntax error at -e line 1, at EOF
-e had compilation errors.
http://xrl.us/jgee
At last, after untying my Gordian knot, here's the first p5p summary of 2006, written by Adriano Rodrigues Ferreira. When you least expect it, the next one by David will be here as well for your enjoyment.
Information concerning bugs referenced in this summary (as #nnnnn)
may be viewed at http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Ticket/Display.html?id=nnnnn
Information concerning patches to maint or blead referenced in
this summary (as #nnnnn) may be viewed at
http://public.activestate.com/cgi-bin/perlbrowse?patch=nnnnn
Weekly summaries are published on http://use.perl.org/ and posted on a mailing list, (subscription: perl5-summary-subscribe@perl.org ). The archive is at http://dev.perl.org/perl5/list-summaries/ . Corrections and comments are welcome.
If you found this summary useful or enjoyable, please consider contributing to the Perl Foundation to help support the development of Perl.