PERL5240DELTA(1) | Perl Programmers Reference Guide | PERL5240DELTA(1) |
perl5240delta - what is new for perl v5.24.0
This document describes the differences between the 5.22.0 release and the 5.24.0 release.
Using the "postderef" and "postderef_qq" features no longer emits a warning. Existing code that disables the "experimental::postderef" warning category that they previously used will continue to work. The "postderef" feature has no effect; all Perl code can use postfix dereferencing, regardless of what feature declarations are in scope. The 5.24 feature bundle now includes the "postderef_qq" feature.
For details on what is in this release, see <http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode8.0.0/>.
Until now, failure to close the output file for an in-place edit was not detected, meaning that the input file could be clobbered without the edit being successfully completed. Now, when the output file cannot be closed successfully, an exception is raised.
"lb" stands for Line Break. It is a Unicode property that determines where a line of text is suitable to break (typically so that it can be output without overflowing the available horizontal space). This capability has long been furnished by the Unicode::LineBreak module, but now a light-weight, non-customizable version that is suitable for many purposes is in core Perl.
Extended Bracketed Character Classes now will successfully compile when "use locale" is in effect. The compiled pattern will use standard Unicode rules. If the runtime locale is not a UTF-8 one, a warning is raised and standard Unicode rules are used anyway. No tainting is done since the outcome does not actually depend on the locale.
Negative shifts are reverse shifts: left shift becomes right shift, and right shift becomes left shift.
Shifting by the number of bits in a native integer (or more) is zero, except when the "overshift" is right shifting a negative value under "use integer", in which case the result is -1 (arithmetic shift).
Until now negative shifting and overshifting have been undefined because they have relied on whatever the C implementation happens to do. For example, for the overshift a common C behavior is "modulo shift":
1 >> 64 == 1 >> (64 % 64) == 1 >> 0 == 1 # Common C behavior. # And the same for <<, while Perl now produces 0 for both.
Now these behaviors are well-defined under Perl, regardless of what the underlying C implementation does. Note, however, that you are still constrained by the native integer width: you need to know how far left you can go. You can use for example:
use Config; my $wordbits = $Config{uvsize} * 8; # Or $Config{uvsize} << 3.
If you need a more bits on the left shift, you can use for example the "bigint" pragma, or the "Bit::Vector" module from CPAN.
That is, "sprintf '|%.*2$d|', 2, 3" now returns "|002|". This extends the existing reordering mechanism (which allows reordering for arguments that are used as format fields, widths, and vector separators).
When passing the "SA_SIGINFO" flag to sigaction, the "errno", "status", "uid", "pid", "addr" and "band" fields are now included in the hash passed to the handler, if supported by the platform.
Previously perl would redirect to another interpreter if it found a hashbang path unless the path contains "perl" (see perlrun). To improve compatibility with Perl 6 this behavior has been extended to also redirect if "perl" is followed by "6".
In 5.22 perl started setting umask to 0600 before calling mkstemp(3) and restoring it afterwards. This wrongfully tells open(2) to strip the owner read and write bits from the given mode before applying it, rather than the intended negation of leaving only those bits in place.
Systems that use mode 0666 in mkstemp(3) (like old versions of glibc) create a file with permissions 0066, leaving world read and write permissions regardless of current umask.
This has been fixed by using umask 0177 instead. [perl #127322]
This is CVE-2015-8608. For more information see [GH #15067] <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/15067>
This is CVE-2015-8607. For more information see [GH #15084] <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/15084>
Added validation that will detect both a short salt and invalid characters in the salt. [GH #15091] <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/15091>
Previously, if an environment variable appeared more than once in "environ[]", %ENV would contain the last entry for that name, while a typical "getenv()" would return the first entry. We now make sure %ENV contains the same as what "getenv" returns.
Second, we remove duplicates from "environ[]", so if a setting with that name is set in %ENV, we won't pass an unsafe value to a child process.
[CVE-2016-2381]
The experimental "autoderef" feature (which allowed calling "push", "pop", "shift", "unshift", "splice", "keys", "values", and "each" on a scalar argument) has been deemed unsuccessful. It has now been removed; trying to use the feature (or to disable the "experimental::autoderef" warning it previously triggered) now yields an exception.
"my $_" was introduced in Perl 5.10, and subsequently caused much confusion with no obvious solution. In Perl 5.18.0, it was made experimental on the theory that it would either be removed or redesigned in a less confusing (but backward-incompatible) way. Over the following years, no alternatives were proposed. The feature has now been removed and will fail to compile.
This is now more suited to be a drop-in replacement for plain "\b", but giving better results for parsing natural language. Previously it strictly followed the current Unicode rules which calls for it to match between each white space character. Now it doesn't generally match within spans of white space, behaving like "\b" does. See "\b{wb}" in perlrebackslash
Some regular expression patterns that had runtime errors now don't compile at all.
Almost all Unicode properties using the "\p{}" and "\P{}" regular expression pattern constructs are now checked for validity at pattern compilation time, and invalid ones will cause the program to not compile. In earlier releases, this check was often deferred until run time. Whenever an error check is moved from run- to compile time, erroneous code is caught 100% of the time, whereas before it would only get caught if and when the offending portion actually gets executed, which for unreachable code might be never.
An empty "\N{}" makes no sense, but for backwards compatibility is accepted as doing nothing, though a deprecation warning is raised by default. But now this is a fatal error under the experimental feature "'strict' mode" in re.
A "my", "our", or "state" declaration is no longer allowed inside of another "my", "our", or "state" declaration.
For example, these are now fatal:
my ($x, my($y)); our (my $x);
[GH #14799] <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/14799>
[GH #13548] <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/13548>
This regular expression character class was deprecated in v5.20.0 and has produced a deprecation warning since v5.22.0. It is now a compile-time error. If you need to examine the individual bytes that make up a UTF8-encoded character, then use "utf8::encode()" on the string (or a copy) first.
Using "chdir('')" or "chdir(undef)" to chdir home has been deprecated since perl v5.8, and will now fail. Use "chdir()" instead.
It was legal until now on ASCII platforms for variable names to contain non-graphical ASCII control characters (ordinals 0 through 31, and 127, which are the C0 controls and "DELETE"). This usage has been deprecated since v5.20, and as of now causes a syntax error. The variables these names referred to are special, reserved by Perl for whatever use it may choose, now, or in the future. Each such variable has an alternative way of spelling it. Instead of the single non-graphic control character, a two character sequence beginning with a caret is used, like $^] and "${^GLOBAL_PHASE}". Details are at perlvar. It remains legal, though unwise and deprecated (raising a deprecation warning), to use certain non-graphic non-ASCII characters in variables names when not under "use utf8". No code should do this, as all such variables are reserved by Perl, and Perl doesn't currently define any of them (but could at any time, without notice).
$Carp::MaxArgNums is supposed to be the number of arguments to display. Prior to this version, it was instead showing $Carp::MaxArgNums + 1 arguments, contrary to the documentation.
The experimental Extended Bracketed Character Classes can contain regular bracketed character classes within them. These differ from regular ones in that white space is generally ignored, unless escaped by preceding it with a backslash. The white space that is ignored is now limited to just tab "\t" and SPACE characters. Previously, it was any white space. See "Extended Bracketed Character Classes" in perlrecharclass.
Unicode defines code points in the range "0..0x10FFFF". Some standards at one time defined them up to 2**31 - 1, but Perl has allowed them to be as high as anything that will fit in a word on the platform being used. However, use of those above the platform's "IV_MAX" is broken in some constructs, notably "tr///", regular expression patterns involving quantifiers, and in some arithmetic and comparison operations, such as being the upper limit of a loop. Now the use of such code points raises a deprecation warning, unless that warning category is turned off. "IV_MAX" is typically 2**31 -1 on 32-bit platforms, and 2**63-1 on 64-bit ones.
The string bitwise operators treat their operands as strings of bytes, and values beyond 0xFF are nonsensical in this context. To operate on encoded bytes, first encode the strings. To operate on code points' numeric values, use "split" and "map ord". In the future, this warning will be replaced by an exception.
The "sysread()", "recv()", "syswrite()" and "send()" operators are deprecated on handles that have the ":utf8" layer, either explicitly, or implicitly, eg., with the ":encoding(UTF-16LE)" layer.
Both "sysread()" and "recv()" currently use only the ":utf8" flag for the stream, ignoring the actual layers. Since "sysread()" and "recv()" do no UTF-8 validation they can end up creating invalidly encoded scalars.
Similarly, "syswrite()" and "send()" use only the ":utf8" flag, otherwise ignoring any layers. If the flag is set, both write the value UTF-8 encoded, even if the layer is some different encoding, such as the example above.
Ideally, all of these operators would completely ignore the ":utf8" state, working only with bytes, but this would result in silently breaking existing code. To avoid this a future version of perl will throw an exception when any of "sysread()", "recv()", "syswrite()" or "send()" are called on handle with the ":utf8" layer.
sub f{} f();
On platforms with a libc "memchr()" implementation which makes good use of underlying hardware support, patterns which include fixed substrings will now often be much faster; for example with glibc on a recent x86_64 CPU, this:
$s = "a" x 1000 . "wxyz"; $s =~ /wxyz/ for 1..30000
is now about 7 times faster. On systems with slow "memchr()", e.g. 32-bit ARM Raspberry Pi, there will be a small or little speedup. Conversely, some pathological cases, such as ""ab" x 1000 =~ /aa/" will be slower now; up to 3 times slower on the rPi, 1.5x slower on x86_64.
Since 5.8.0, arithmetic became slower due to the need to support 64-bit integers. To deal with 64-bit integers, a lot more corner cases need to be checked, which adds time. We now detect common cases where there is no need to check for those corner cases, and special-case them.
($x) = (...); (...) = ($x);
perlapi
perlcall
perlfunc
perlguts
perllocale
perlmodlib
perlop
perlpolicy
While civility is required, kindness is encouraged; if you have any doubt about whether you are being civil, simply ask yourself, "Am I being kind?" and aspire to that.
perlreftut
perlrebackslash
perlsub
perlsyn
perltie
perlunicode
perlvar
perlxs
The following additions or changes have been made to diagnostic output, including warnings and fatal error messages. For the complete list of diagnostic messages, see perldiag.
New Errors
New Warnings
This error now reports the name of the non-lvalue subroutine you attempted to use as an lvalue.
There were also some problems with these operations under "use utf8", which are now fixed
Perl now uses "setenv()"/"unsetenv()" to update the environment on OS X. [GH #14955] <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/14955>
Solaris and variants like OpenIndiana now always build with the shared Perl library (Configure -Duseshrplib). This was required for the OpenIndiana builds, but this has also been the setting for Oracle/Sun Perl builds for several years.
kill SIGKILL, -$pid;
to signal all processes in the same group as $pid.
The previous behavior of putting the errors (converted to POSIX-style "E*" error codes since Perl 5.20.0) into $! was buggy due to the non-equivalence of like-named Winsock and POSIX error constants, a relationship between which has unfortunately been established in one way or another since Perl 5.8.0.
The new behavior provides a much more robust solution for checking Winsock errors in portable software without accidentally matching POSIX tests that were intended for other OSes and may have different meanings for Winsock.
The old behavior is currently retained, warts and all, for backwards compatibility, but users are encouraged to change any code that tests $! against "E*" constants for Winsock errors to instead test $^E against "WSAE*" constants. After a suitable deprecation period, the old behavior may be removed, leaving $! unchanged after Winsock function calls, to avoid any possible confusion over which error variable to check.
CX_CUR(), CX_LEAVE_SCOPE(), CX_POP()
or renamed:
CX_POP_SAVEARRAY(), CX_DEBUG(), CX_PUSHSUBST(), CX_POPSUBST()
ENTER; SAVETMPS; ....; LEAVE
"dounwind()" now also does a "cx_popblock()" on the last popped frame (formerly it only did the "cx_popsub()" etc. actions on each frame).
qr/\p{mypkg1::IsMyProperty}/i
with "/i" caseless matching, an explicit package name, and IsMyProperty not defined at the time of the pattern compilation.
@a = (1) x $big_number
Formerly perl may have crashed, depending on the exact value of $big_number; now it will typically raise an exception. [GH #14880] <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/14880>
"perl_clone_using()" was missing Zero init of PL_op_exec_cnt[]. This caused sub-threads in threaded -DPERL_TRACE_OPS builds to spew exceedingly large op-counts at destruct. These counts would print %x as "ABABABAB", clearly a mem-poison value.
Perl 5.24.0 represents approximately 11 months of development since Perl 5.24.0 and contains approximately 360,000 lines of changes across 1,800 files from 75 authors.
Excluding auto-generated files, documentation and release tools, there were approximately 250,000 lines of changes to 1,200 .pm, .t, .c and .h files.
Perl continues to flourish into its third decade thanks to a vibrant community of users and developers. The following people are known to have contributed the improvements that became Perl 5.24.0:
Aaron Crane, Aaron Priven, Abigail, Achim Gratz, Alexander D'Archangel, Alex Vandiver, Andreas Koenig, Andy Broad, Andy Dougherty, Aristotle Pagaltzis, Chase Whitener, Chas. Owens, Chris 'BinGOs' Williams, Craig A. Berry, Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsaaker, Dan Collins, Daniel Dragan, David Golden, David Mitchell, Doug Bell, Dr.Ruud, Ed Avis, Ed J, Father Chrysostomos, Herbert Breunung, H.Merijn Brand, Hugo van der Sanden, Ivan Pozdeev, James E Keenan, Jan Dubois, Jarkko Hietaniemi, Jerry D. Hedden, Jim Cromie, John Peacock, John SJ Anderson, Karen Etheridge, Karl Williamson, kmx, Leon Timmermans, Ludovic E. R. Tolhurst-Cleaver, Lukas Mai, Martijn Lievaart, Matthew Horsfall, Mattia Barbon, Max Maischein, Mohammed El-Afifi, Nicholas Clark, Nicolas R., Niko Tyni, Peter John Acklam, Peter Martini, Peter Rabbitson, Pip Cet, Rafael Garcia-Suarez, Reini Urban, Ricardo Signes, Sawyer X, Shlomi Fish, Sisyphus, Stanislaw Pusep, Steffen Mueller, Stevan Little, Steve Hay, Sullivan Beck, Thomas Sibley, Todd Rinaldo, Tom Hukins, Tony Cook, Unicode Consortium, Victor Adam, Vincent Pit, Vladimir Timofeev, Yves Orton, Zachary Storer, Zefram.
The list above is almost certainly incomplete as it is automatically generated from version control history. In particular, it does not include the names of the (very much appreciated) contributors who reported issues to the Perl bug tracker.
Many of the changes included in this version originated in the CPAN modules included in Perl's core. We're grateful to the entire CPAN community for helping Perl to flourish.
For a more complete list of all of Perl's historical contributors, please see the AUTHORS file in the Perl source distribution.
If you find what you think is a bug, you might check the articles recently posted to the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup and the perl bug database at https://rt.perl.org/ . There may also be information at http://www.perl.org/ , the Perl Home Page.
If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the perlbug program included with your release. Be sure to trim your bug down to a tiny but sufficient test case. Your bug report, along with the output of "perl -V", will be sent off to perlbug@perl.org to be analysed by the Perl porting team.
If the bug you are reporting has security implications which make it inappropriate to send to a publicly archived mailing list, then see "SECURITY VULNERABILITY CONTACT INFORMATION" in perlsec for details of how to report the issue.
The Changes file for an explanation of how to view exhaustive details on what changed.
The INSTALL file for how to build Perl.
The README file for general stuff.
The Artistic and Copying files for copyright information.
2019-10-21 | perl v5.30.3 |