PERL5100DELTA(1) | Perl Programmers Reference Guide | PERL5100DELTA(1) |
perl5100delta - what is new for perl 5.10.0
This document describes the differences between the 5.8.8 release and the 5.10.0 release.
Many of the bug fixes in 5.10.0 were already seen in the 5.8.X maintenance releases; they are not duplicated here and are documented in the set of man pages named perl58[1-8]?delta.
The "feature" pragma is used to enable new syntax that would break Perl's backwards-compatibility with older releases of the language. It's a lexical pragma, like "strict" or "warnings".
Currently the following new features are available: "switch" (adds a switch statement), "say" (adds a "say" built-in function), and "state" (adds a "state" keyword for declaring "static" variables). Those features are described in their own sections of this document.
The "feature" pragma is also implicitly loaded when you require a minimal perl version (with the "use VERSION" construct) greater than, or equal to, 5.9.5. See feature for details.
-E is equivalent to -e, but it implicitly enables all optional features (like "use feature ":5.10"").
A new operator "//" (defined-or) has been implemented. The following expression:
$a // $b
is merely equivalent to
defined $a ? $a : $b
and the statement
$c //= $d;
can now be used instead of
$c = $d unless defined $c;
The "//" operator has the same precedence and associativity as "||". Special care has been taken to ensure that this operator Do What You Mean while not breaking old code, but some edge cases involving the empty regular expression may now parse differently. See perlop for details.
Perl 5 now has a switch statement. It's available when "use feature 'switch'" is in effect. This feature introduces three new keywords, "given", "when", and "default":
given ($foo) { when (/^abc/) { $abc = 1; } when (/^def/) { $def = 1; } when (/^xyz/) { $xyz = 1; } default { $nothing = 1; } }
A more complete description of how Perl matches the switch variable against the "when" conditions is given in "Switch statements" in perlsyn.
This kind of match is called smart match, and it's also possible to use it outside of switch statements, via the new "~~" operator. See "Smart matching in detail" in perlsyn.
This feature was contributed by Robin Houston.
Each capturing parenthesis can now be treated as an independent pattern that can be entered by using the "(?PARNO)" syntax ("PARNO" standing for "parenthesis number"). For example, the following pattern will match nested balanced angle brackets:
/ ^ # start of line ( # start capture buffer 1 < # match an opening angle bracket (?: # match one of: (?> # don't backtrack over the inside of this group [^<>]+ # one or more non angle brackets ) # end non backtracking group | # ... or ... (?1) # recurse to bracket 1 and try it again )* # 0 or more times. > # match a closing angle bracket ) # end capture buffer one $ # end of line /x
PCRE users should note that Perl's recursive regex feature allows backtracking into a recursed pattern, whereas in PCRE the recursion is atomic or "possessive" in nature. As in the example above, you can add (?>) to control this selectively. (Yves Orton)
Thus, to replace all doubled chars with a single copy, one could write
s/(?<letter>.)\k<letter>/$+{letter}/g
Only buffers with defined contents will be "visible" in the "%+" hash, so it's possible to do something like
foreach my $name (keys %+) { print "content of buffer '$name' is $+{$name}\n"; }
The "%-" hash is a bit more complete, since it will contain array refs holding values from all capture buffers similarly named, if there should be many of them.
"%+" and "%-" are implemented as tied hashes through the new module "Tie::Hash::NamedCapture".
Users exposed to the .NET regex engine will find that the perl implementation differs in that the numerical ordering of the buffers is sequential, and not "unnamed first, then named". Thus in the pattern
/(A)(?<B>B)(C)(?<D>D)/
$1 will be 'A', $2 will be 'B', $3 will be 'C' and $4 will be 'D' and not $1 is 'A', $2 is 'C' and $3 is 'B' and $4 is 'D' that a .NET programmer would expect. This is considered a feature. :-) (Yves Orton)
s/(foo)bar/$1/g
that can now be converted to
s/foo\Kbar//g
which is much more efficient. (Yves Orton)
"\R" matches a generic linebreak, that is, vertical whitespace, plus the multi-character sequence "\x0D\x0A".
Perl is still able to store these substrings to the special variables "$`", "$'", $&, but using these variables anywhere in the program adds a penalty to all regular expression matches, whereas if you use the "/p" flag and the new special variables instead, you pay only for the regular expressions where the flag is used.
For more detail on the new variables, see perlvar; for the use of the regular expression flag, see perlop and perlre.
say() is a new built-in, only available when "use feature 'say'" is in effect, that is similar to print(), but that implicitly appends a newline to the printed string. See "say" in perlfunc. (Robin Houston)
The default variable $_ can now be lexicalized, by declaring it like any other lexical variable, with a simple
my $_;
The operations that default on $_ will use the lexically-scoped version of $_ when it exists, instead of the global $_.
In a "map" or a "grep" block, if $_ was previously my'ed, then the $_ inside the block is lexical as well (and scoped to the block).
In a scope where $_ has been lexicalized, you can still have access to the global version of $_ by using $::_, or, more simply, by overriding the lexical declaration with "our $_". (Rafael Garcia-Suarez)
A new prototype character has been added. "_" is equivalent to "$" but defaults to $_ if the corresponding argument isn't supplied (both "$" and "_" denote a scalar). Due to the optional nature of the argument, you can only use it at the end of a prototype, or before a semicolon.
This has a small incompatible consequence: the prototype() function has been adjusted to return "_" for some built-ins in appropriate cases (for example, "prototype('CORE::rmdir')"). (Rafael Garcia-Suarez)
"UNITCHECK", a new special code block has been introduced, in addition to "BEGIN", "CHECK", "INIT" and "END".
"CHECK" and "INIT" blocks, while useful for some specialized purposes, are always executed at the transition between the compilation and the execution of the main program, and thus are useless whenever code is loaded at runtime. On the other hand, "UNITCHECK" blocks are executed just after the unit which defined them has been compiled. See perlmod for more information. (Alex Gough)
A new pragma, "mro" (for Method Resolution Order) has been added. It permits to switch, on a per-class basis, the algorithm that perl uses to find inherited methods in case of a multiple inheritance hierarchy. The default MRO hasn't changed (DFS, for Depth First Search). Another MRO is available: the C3 algorithm. See mro for more information. (Brandon Black)
Note that, due to changes in the implementation of class hierarchy search, code that used to undef the *ISA glob will most probably break. Anyway, undef'ing *ISA had the side-effect of removing the magic on the @ISA array and should not have been done in the first place. Also, the cache *::ISA::CACHE:: no longer exists; to force reset the @ISA cache, you now need to use the "mro" API, or more simply to assign to @ISA (e.g. with "@ISA = @ISA").
The readdir() function may return a "short filename" when the long filename contains characters outside the ANSI codepage. Similarly Cwd::cwd() may return a short directory name, and glob() may return short names as well. On the NTFS file system these short names can always be represented in the ANSI codepage. This will not be true for all other file system drivers; e.g. the FAT filesystem stores short filenames in the OEM codepage, so some files on FAT volumes remain unaccessible through the ANSI APIs.
Similarly, $^X, @INC, and $ENV{PATH} are preprocessed at startup to make sure all paths are valid in the ANSI codepage (if possible).
The Win32::GetLongPathName() function now returns the UTF-8 encoded correct long file name instead of using replacement characters to force the name into the ANSI codepage. The new Win32::GetANSIPathName() function can be used to turn a long pathname into a short one only if the long one cannot be represented in the ANSI codepage.
Many other functions in the "Win32" module have been improved to accept UTF-8 encoded arguments. Please see Win32 for details.
The built-in function readpipe() is now overridable. Overriding it permits also to override its operator counterpart, "qx//" (a.k.a. "``"). Moreover, it now defaults to $_ if no argument is provided. (Rafael Garcia-Suarez)
readline() now defaults to *ARGV if no argument is provided. (Rafael Garcia-Suarez)
A new class of variables has been introduced. State variables are similar to "my" variables, but are declared with the "state" keyword in place of "my". They're visible only in their lexical scope, but their value is persistent: unlike "my" variables, they're not undefined at scope entry, but retain their previous value. (Rafael Garcia-Suarez, Nicholas Clark)
To use state variables, one needs to enable them by using
use feature 'state';
or by using the "-E" command-line switch in one-liners. See "Persistent Private Variables" in perlsub.
As a new form of syntactic sugar, it's now possible to stack up filetest operators. You can now write "-f -w -x $file" in a row to mean "-x $file && -w _ && -f _". See "-X" in perlfunc.
The "UNIVERSAL" class has a new method, "DOES()". It has been added to solve semantic problems with the "isa()" method. "isa()" checks for inheritance, while "DOES()" has been designed to be overridden when module authors use other types of relations between classes (in addition to inheritance). (chromatic)
See "$obj->DOES( ROLE )" in UNIVERSAL.
Formats were improved in several ways. A new field, "^*", can be used for variable-width, one-line-at-a-time text. Null characters are now handled correctly in picture lines. Using "@#" and "~~" together will now produce a compile-time error, as those format fields are incompatible. perlform has been improved, and miscellaneous bugs fixed.
There are two new byte-order modifiers, ">" (big-endian) and "<" (little-endian), that can be appended to most pack() and unpack() template characters and groups to force a certain byte-order for that type or group. See "pack" in perlfunc and perlpacktut for details.
You can now use "no" followed by a version number to specify that you want to use a version of perl older than the specified one.
"chdir", "chmod" and "chown" can now work on filehandles as well as filenames, if the system supports respectively "fchdir", "fchmod" and "fchown", thanks to a patch provided by Gisle Aas.
$( and $) now return groups in the order where the OS returns them, thanks to Gisle Aas. This wasn't previously the case.
You can now use recursive subroutines with sort(), thanks to Robin Houston.
The constant folding routine is now wrapped in an exception handler, and if folding throws an exception (such as attempting to evaluate 0/0), perl now retains the current optree, rather than aborting the whole program. Without this change, programs would not compile if they had expressions that happened to generate exceptions, even though those expressions were in code that could never be reached at runtime. (Nicholas Clark, Dave Mitchell)
It's possible to enhance the mechanism of subroutine hooks in @INC by adding a source filter on top of the filehandle opened and returned by the hook. This feature was planned a long time ago, but wasn't quite working until now. See "require" in perlfunc for details. (Nicholas Clark)
"unpack()" now defaults to unpacking the $_ variable.
"mkdir()" without arguments now defaults to $_.
The internal dump output has been improved, so that non-printable characters such as newline and backspace are output in "\x" notation, rather than octal.
The -C option can no longer be used on the "#!" line. It wasn't working there anyway, since the standard streams are already set up at this point in the execution of the perl interpreter. You can use binmode() instead to get the desired behaviour.
The copy of the Unicode Character Database included in Perl 5 has been updated to version 5.0.0.
MAD, which stands for Miscellaneous Attribute Decoration, is a still-in-development work leading to a Perl 5 to Perl 6 converter. To enable it, it's necessary to pass the argument "-Dmad" to Configure. The obtained perl isn't binary compatible with a regular perl 5.10, and has space and speed penalties; moreover not all regression tests still pass with it. (Larry Wall, Nicholas Clark)
On Windows platforms, "kill(-9, $pid)" now kills a process tree. (On Unix, this delivers the signal to all processes in the same process group.)
The semantics of pack() and unpack() regarding UTF-8-encoded data has been changed. Processing is now by default character per character instead of byte per byte on the underlying encoding. Notably, code that used things like "pack("a*", $string)" to see through the encoding of string will now simply get back the original $string. Packed strings can also get upgraded during processing when you store upgraded characters. You can get the old behaviour by using "use bytes".
To be consistent with pack(), the "C0" in unpack() templates indicates that the data is to be processed in character mode, i.e. character by character; on the contrary, "U0" in unpack() indicates UTF-8 mode, where the packed string is processed in its UTF-8-encoded Unicode form on a byte by byte basis. This is reversed with regard to perl 5.8.X, but now consistent between pack() and unpack().
Moreover, "C0" and "U0" can also be used in pack() templates to specify respectively character and byte modes.
"C0" and "U0" in the middle of a pack or unpack format now switch to the specified encoding mode, honoring parens grouping. Previously, parens were ignored.
Also, there is a new pack() character format, "W", which is intended to replace the old "C". "C" is kept for unsigned chars coded as bytes in the strings internal representation. "W" represents unsigned (logical) character values, which can be greater than 255. It is therefore more robust when dealing with potentially UTF-8-encoded data (as "C" will wrap values outside the range 0..255, and not respect the string encoding).
In practice, that means that pack formats are now encoding-neutral, except "C".
For consistency, "A" in unpack() format now trims all Unicode whitespace from the end of the string. Before perl 5.9.2, it used to strip only the classical ASCII space characters.
A new unpack() template character, ".", returns the number of bytes or characters (depending on the selected encoding mode, see above) read so far.
$*, which was deprecated in favor of the "/s" and "/m" regexp modifiers, has been removed.
The deprecated $# variable (output format for numbers) has been removed.
Two new severe warnings, "$#/$* is no longer supported", have been added.
The lvalues returned by the three argument form of substr() used to be a "fixed length window" on the original string. In some cases this could cause surprising action at distance or other undefined behaviour. Now the length of the window adjusts itself to the length of the string assigned to it.
The identifier "_" is now forced to be a bareword after a filetest operator. This solves a number of misparsing issues when a global "_" subroutine is defined.
The ":unique" attribute has been made a no-op, since its current implementation was fundamentally flawed and not threadsafe.
The compile-time value of the "%^H" hint variable can now propagate into eval("")uated code. This makes it more useful to implement lexical pragmas.
As a side-effect of this, the overloaded-ness of constants now propagates into eval("").
A bareword argument to chdir() is now recognized as a file handle. Earlier releases interpreted the bareword as a directory name. (Gisle Aas)
An old feature of perl was that before "require" or "use" look for a file with a .pm extension, they will first look for a similar filename with a .pmc extension. If this file is found, it will be loaded in place of any potentially existing file ending in a .pm extension.
Previously, .pmc files were loaded only if more recent than the matching .pm file. Starting with 5.9.4, they'll be always loaded if they exist.
$^V can still be used with the %vd format in printf, but any character-level operations will now access the string representation of the "version" object and not the ordinals of a v-string. Expressions like "substr($^V, 0, 2)" or "split //, $^V" no longer work and must be rewritten.
The special arrays "@-" and "@+" are no longer interpolated in regular expressions. (Sadahiro Tomoyuki)
If you call a subroutine by a tainted name, and if it defers to an AUTOLOAD function, then $AUTOLOAD will be (correctly) tainted. (Rick Delaney)
When perl is run under taint mode, "printf()" and "sprintf()" will now reject any tainted format argument. (Rafael Garcia-Suarez)
Undefining or deleting a signal handler via "undef $SIG{FOO}" is now equivalent to setting it to 'DEFAULT'. (Rafael Garcia-Suarez)
"use strict 'refs'" was ignoring taking a hard reference in an argument to defined(), as in :
use strict 'refs'; my $x = 'foo'; if (defined $$x) {...}
This now correctly produces the run-time error "Can't use string as a SCALAR ref while "strict refs" in use".
"defined @$foo" and "defined %$bar" are now also subject to "strict 'refs'" (that is, $foo and $bar shall be proper references there.) ("defined(@foo)" and "defined(%bar)" are discouraged constructs anyway.) (Nicholas Clark)
The regular expression construct "(?p{})", which was deprecated in perl 5.8, has been removed. Use "(??{})" instead. (Rafael Garcia-Suarez)
Support for pseudo-hashes has been removed from Perl 5.9. (The "fields" pragma remains here, but uses an alternate implementation.)
"perlcc", the byteloader and the supporting modules (B::C, B::CC, B::Bytecode, etc.) are no longer distributed with the perl sources. Those experimental tools have never worked reliably, and, due to the lack of volunteers to keep them in line with the perl interpreter developments, it was decided to remove them instead of shipping a broken version of those. The last version of those modules can be found with perl 5.9.4.
However the B compiler framework stays supported in the perl core, as with the more useful modules it has permitted (among others, B::Deparse and B::Concise).
The JPL (Java-Perl Lingo) has been removed from the perl sources tarball.
Perl will now immediately throw an exception if you modify any package's @ISA in such a way that it would cause recursive inheritance.
Previously, the exception would not occur until Perl attempted to make use of the recursive inheritance while resolving a method or doing a "$foo->isa($bar)" lookup.
The behaviour in 5.10.x favors the person using the module; The behaviour in 5.8.x favors the module writer;
Assume the following code:
main calls Foo::Bar::baz() Foo::Bar inherits from Foo::Base Foo::Bar::baz() calls Foo::Base::_bazbaz() Foo::Base::_bazbaz() calls: warnings::warnif('substr', 'some warning message');
On 5.8.x, the code warns when Foo::Bar contains "use warnings;" It does not matter if Foo::Base or main have warnings enabled to disable the warning one has to modify Foo::Bar.
On 5.10.0 and newer, the code warns when main contains "use warnings;" It does not matter if Foo::Base or Foo::Bar have warnings enabled to disable the warning one has to modify main.
Even more core modules are now also available separately through the CPAN. If you wish to update one of these modules, you don't need to wait for a new perl release. From within the cpan shell, running the 'r' command will report on modules with upgrades available. See "perldoc CPAN" for more information.
use warnings; require Carp; Carp::confess 'argh';
All interpreted attributes are now passed as array references. (Damian Conway)
It can also display the parent inheritance tree of a given class, with the "i" command.
"h2xs" implements a new option "--use-xsloader" to force use of "XSLoader" even in backwards compatible modules.
The handling of authors' names that had apostrophes has been fixed.
Any enums with negative values are now skipped.
Several bugs have been fixed in "find2perl", regarding "-exec" and "-eval". Also the options "-path", "-ipath" and "-iname" have been added.
The perlpragma manpage documents how to write one's own lexical pragmas in pure Perl (something that is possible starting with 5.9.4).
The new perlglossary manpage is a glossary of terms used in the Perl documentation, technical and otherwise, kindly provided by O'Reilly Media, Inc.
The perlreguts manpage, courtesy of Yves Orton, describes internals of the Perl regular expression engine.
The perlreapi manpage describes the interface to the perl interpreter used to write pluggable regular expression engines (by Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason).
The perlunitut manpage is a tutorial for programming with Unicode and string encodings in Perl, courtesy of Juerd Waalboer.
A new manual page, perlunifaq (the Perl Unicode FAQ), has been added (Juerd Waalboer).
The perlcommunity manpage gives a description of the Perl community on the Internet and in real life. (Edgar "Trizor" Bering)
The CORE manual page documents the "CORE::" namespace. (Tels)
The long-existing feature of "/(?{...})/" regexps setting $_ and pos() is now documented.
Sorting arrays in place ("@a = sort @a") is now optimized to avoid making a temporary copy of the array.
Likewise, "reverse sort ..." is now optimized to sort in reverse, avoiding the generation of a temporary intermediate list.
Access to elements of lexical arrays via a numeric constant between 0 and 255 is now faster. (This used to be only the case for global arrays.)
Some pure-perl code that perl was using to retrieve Unicode properties and transliteration mappings has been reimplemented in XS.
The interpreter internals now support a far more memory efficient form of inlineable constants. Storing a reference to a constant value in a symbol table is equivalent to a full typeglob referencing a constant subroutine, but using about 400 bytes less memory. This proxy constant subroutine is automatically upgraded to a real typeglob with subroutine if necessary. The approach taken is analogous to the existing space optimisation for subroutine stub declarations, which are stored as plain scalars in place of the full typeglob.
Several of the core modules have been converted to use this feature for their system dependent constants - as a result "use POSIX;" now takes about 200K less memory.
The new compilation flag "PERL_DONT_CREATE_GVSV", introduced as an option in perl 5.8.8, is turned on by default in perl 5.9.3. It prevents perl from creating an empty scalar with every new typeglob. See perl589delta for details.
Weak reference creation is now O(1) rather than O(n), courtesy of Nicholas Clark. Weak reference deletion remains O(n), but if deletion only happens at program exit, it may be skipped completely.
Salvador Fandiño provided improvements to reduce the memory usage of "sort" and to speed up some cases.
Several internal data structures (typeglobs, GVs, CVs, formats) have been restructured to use less memory. (Nicholas Clark)
The UTF-8 caching code is now more efficient, and used more often. (Nicholas Clark)
On Windows, perl's stat() function normally opens the file to determine the link count and update attributes that may have been changed through hard links. Setting ${^WIN32_SLOPPY_STAT} to a true value speeds up stat() by not performing this operation. (Jan Dubois)
Note: Much code exists that works around perl's historic poor performance on alternations. Often the tricks used to do so will disable the new optimisations. Hopefully the utility modules used for this purpose will be educated about these new optimisations.
That means that, if the string ".../" is found at the start of any path, it's substituted with the directory of $^X. So, the relocation can be configured on a per-directory basis, although the default with "-Duserelocatableinc" is that everything is relocated. The initial install is done to the original configured prefix.
A new configuration variable, "d_printf_format_null", has been added, to see if printf-like formats are allowed to be NULL.
Also, it's now possible to build a "perl-static.exe" that doesn't depend on the Perl DLL on Win32. See the Win32 makefiles for details. (Vadim Konovalov)
Perl has been reported to work on Symbian OS. See perlsymbian for more information.
Many improvements have been made towards making Perl work correctly on z/OS.
Perl has been reported to work on DragonFlyBSD and MidnightBSD.
Perl has also been reported to work on NexentaOS ( http://www.gnusolaris.org/ ).
The VMS port has been improved. See perlvms.
Support for Cray XT4 Catamount/Qk has been added. See hints/catamount.sh in the source code distribution for more information.
Vendor patches have been merged for RedHat and Gentoo.
DynaLoader::dl_unload_file() now works on Windows.
({foo => "bar"})[0]{foo}
This used to be a syntax error; a "->" was required.
"threads" is now a dual-life module, also available on CPAN. It has been expanded in many ways. A kill() method is available for thread signalling. One can get thread status, or the list of running or joinable threads.
A new "threads->exit()" method is used to exit from the application (this is the default for the main thread) or from the current thread only (this is the default for all other threads). On the other hand, the exit() built-in now always causes the whole application to terminate. (Jerry D. Hedden)
Moreover, with a thread-enabled perl, using "PERLIO_DEBUG" could lead to an internal buffer overflow. This has been fixed.
my $x if 0;
See perldiag. Use "state" variables instead.
my $x; my $x; # warns my $x; our $x; # warns our $x; my $x; # warns
On the other hand, the following:
our $x; our $x;
now gives a ""our" variable %s redeclared" warning.
Opening dirhandle %s also as a file Opening filehandle %s also as a directory
In general, the source code of perl has been refactored, tidied up, and optimized in many places. Also, memory management and allocation has been improved in several points.
When compiling the perl core with gcc, as many gcc warning flags are turned on as is possible on the platform. (This quest for cleanliness doesn't extend to XS code because we cannot guarantee the tidiness of code we didn't write.) Similar strictness flags have been added or tightened for various other C compilers.
The relative ordering of constants that define the various types of "SV" have changed; in particular, "SVt_PVGV" has been moved before "SVt_PVLV", "SVt_PVAV", "SVt_PVHV" and "SVt_PVCV". This is unlikely to make any difference unless you have code that explicitly makes assumptions about that ordering. (The inheritance hierarchy of "B::*" objects has been changed to reflect this.)
Related to this, the internal type "SVt_PVBM" has been removed. This dedicated type of "SV" was used by the "index" operator and parts of the regexp engine to facilitate fast Boyer-Moore matches. Its use internally has been replaced by "SV"s of type "SVt_PVGV".
A new type "SVt_BIND" has been added, in readiness for the project to implement Perl 6 on 5. There deliberately is no implementation yet, and they cannot yet be created or destroyed.
The C preprocessor symbols "PERL_PM_APIVERSION" and "PERL_XS_APIVERSION", which were supposed to give the version number of the oldest perl binary-compatible (resp. source-compatible) with the present one, were not used, and sometimes had misleading values. They have been removed.
The "BASEOP" structure now uses less space. The "op_seq" field has been removed and replaced by a single bit bit-field "op_opt". "op_type" is now 9 bits long. (Consequently, the "B::OP" class doesn't provide an "seq" method anymore.)
perl's parser is now generated by bison (it used to be generated by byacc.) As a result, it seems to be a bit more robust.
Also, Dave Mitchell improved the lexer debugging output under "-DT".
Andy Lester supplied many improvements to determine which function parameters and local variables could actually be declared "const" to the C compiler. Steve Peters provided new *_set macros and reworked the core to use these rather than assigning to macros in LVALUE context.
A new file, mathoms.c, has been added. It contains functions that are no longer used in the perl core, but that remain available for binary or source compatibility reasons. However, those functions will not be compiled in if you add "-DNO_MATHOMS" in the compiler flags.
The "AvFLAGS" macro has been removed.
The "av_*()" functions, used to manipulate arrays, no longer accept null "AV*" parameters.
The implementation of the special variables $^H and %^H has changed, to allow implementing lexical pragmas in pure Perl.
The inheritance hierarchy of "B::" modules has changed; "B::NV" now inherits from "B::SV" (it used to inherit from "B::IV").
The anonymous hash and array constructors now take 1 op in the optree instead of 3, now that pp_anonhash and pp_anonlist return a reference to a hash/array when the op is flagged with OPf_SPECIAL. (Nicholas Clark)
There's still a remaining problem in the implementation of the lexical $_: it doesn't work inside "/(?{...})/" blocks. (See the TODO test in t/op/mydef.t.)
Stacked filetest operators won't work when the "filetest" pragma is in effect, because they rely on the stat() buffer "_" being populated, and filetest bypasses stat().
The handling of Unicode still is unclean in several places, where it's dependent on whether a string is internally flagged as UTF-8. This will be made more consistent in perl 5.12, but that won't be possible without a certain amount of backwards incompatibility.
When compiled with g++ and thread support on Linux, it's reported that the $! stops working correctly. This is related to the fact that the glibc provides two strerror_r(3) implementation, and perl selects the wrong one.
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 http://rt.perl.org/rt3/ . 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.
The Changes file and the perl590delta to perl595delta man pages for 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.
2020-07-21 | perl v5.28.1 |