perlintern - autogenerated documentation of purely internal Perl functions
This file is the autogenerated documentation of functions in the Perl interpreter that are documented using Perl's internal documentation format but are not marked as part of the Perl API. In other words, they are not for use in extensions!
NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be removed without notice.
Return an entry from the BHK structure. which
is a preprocessor token
indicating which entry to return. If the appropriate flag is not set
this will return NULL
. The type of the return value depends on which
entry you ask for.
- void * BhkENTRY(BHK *hk, which)
NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be removed without notice.
Return the BHK's flags.
- U32 BhkFLAGS(BHK *hk)
NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be removed without notice.
Call all the registered block hooks for type which
. which
is a
preprocessing token; the type of arg
depends on which
.
- void CALL_BLOCK_HOOKS(which, arg)
This function assigns the prototype of the named core function to sv
, or
to a new mortal SV if sv
is NULL
. It returns the modified sv
, or
NULL
if the core function has no prototype. code
is a code as returned
by keyword()
. It must not be equal to 0.
Check for the cases 0 or 3 of cur_env.je_ret, only used inside an eval context.
0 is used as continue inside eval,
3 is used for a die caught by an inner eval - continue inner loop
See cop.h: je_mustcatch, when set at any runlevel to TRUE, means eval ops must establish a local jmpenv to handle exception traps.
- OP* docatch(OP *o)
Each CV has a pointer, CvOUTSIDE()
, to its lexically enclosing
CV (if any). Because pointers to anonymous sub prototypes are
stored in &
pad slots, it is a possible to get a circular reference,
with the parent pointing to the child and vice-versa. To avoid the
ensuing memory leak, we do not increment the reference count of the CV
pointed to by CvOUTSIDE
in the one specific instance that the parent
has a &
pad slot pointing back to us. In this case, we set the
CvWEAKOUTSIDE
flag in the child. This allows us to determine under what
circumstances we should decrement the refcount of the parent when freeing
the child.
There is a further complication with non-closure anonymous subs (i.e. those that do not refer to any lexicals outside that sub). In this case, the anonymous prototype is shared rather than being cloned. This has the consequence that the parent may be freed while there are still active children, e.g.,
In this case, the BEGIN is freed immediately after execution since there
are no active references to it: the anon sub prototype has
CvWEAKOUTSIDE
set since it's not a closure, and $a points to the same
CV, so it doesn't contribute to BEGIN's refcount either. When $a is
executed, the eval '$x'
causes the chain of CvOUTSIDE
s to be followed,
and the freed BEGIN is accessed.
To avoid this, whenever a CV and its associated pad is freed, any
&
entries in the pad are explicitly removed from the pad, and if the
refcount of the pointed-to anon sub is still positive, then that
child's CvOUTSIDE
is set to point to its grandparent. This will only
occur in the single specific case of a non-closure anon prototype
having one or more active references (such as $a
above).
One other thing to consider is that a CV may be merely undefined
rather than freed, eg undef &foo
. In this case, its refcount may
not have reached zero, but we still delete its pad and its CvROOT
etc.
Since various children may still have their CvOUTSIDE
pointing at this
undefined CV, we keep its own CvOUTSIDE
for the time being, so that
the chain of lexical scopes is unbroken. For example, the following
should print 123:
dump the contents of a CV
- void cv_dump(CV *cv, const char *title)
When a CV has a reference count on its slab (CvSLABBED
), it is responsible
for making sure it is freed. (Hence, no two CVs should ever have a
reference count on the same slab.) The CV only needs to reference the slab
during compilation. Once it is compiled and CvROOT
attached, it has
finished its job, so it can forget the slab.
- void cv_forget_slab(CV *cv)
Dump the contents of a padlist
- void do_dump_pad(I32 level, PerlIO *file,
- PADLIST *padlist, int full)
Allocates a place in the currently-compiling
pad (via pad_alloc in perlapi) and
then stores a name for that entry. name
is adopted and
becomes the name entry; it must already contain the name
string. typestash
and ourstash
and the padadd_STATE
flag get added to name
. None of the other
processing of pad_add_name_pvn in perlapi
is done. Returns the offset of the allocated pad slot.
- PADOFFSET pad_alloc_name(PADNAME *name, U32 flags,
- HV *typestash, HV *ourstash)
Update the pad compilation state variables on entry to a new block.
- void pad_block_start(int full)
Check for duplicate declarations: report any of:
- * a 'my' in the current scope with the same name;
- * an 'our' (anywhere in the pad) with the same name and the
- same stash as 'ourstash'
is_our
indicates that the name to check is an "our"
declaration.
- void pad_check_dup(PADNAME *name, U32 flags,
- const HV *ourstash)
Find a named lexical anywhere in a chain of nested pads. Add fake entries in the inner pads if it's found in an outer one.
Returns the offset in the bottom pad of the lex or the fake lex.
cv
is the CV in which to start the search, and seq is the current cop_seq
to match against. If warn
is true, print appropriate warnings. The out_
*
vars return values, and so are pointers to where the returned values
should be stored. out_capture
, if non-null, requests that the innermost
instance of the lexical is captured; out_name
is set to the innermost
matched pad name or fake pad name; out_flags
returns the flags normally
associated with the PARENT_FAKELEX_FLAGS
field of a fake pad name.
Note that pad_findlex()
is recursive; it recurses up the chain of CVs,
then comes back down, adding fake entries
as it goes. It has to be this way
because fake names in anon protoypes have to store in xpadn_low
the
index into the parent pad.
For any anon CVs in the pad, change CvOUTSIDE
of that CV from
old_cv
to new_cv
if necessary. Needed when a newly-compiled CV has to be
moved to a pre-existing CV struct.
- void pad_fixup_inner_anons(PADLIST *padlist,
- CV *old_cv, CV *new_cv)
Free the SV at offset po in the current pad.
- void pad_free(PADOFFSET po)
Cleanup at end of scope during compilation: set the max seq number for lexicals in this scope and warn of any lexicals that never got introduced.
- void pad_leavemy()
Duplicates a pad.
- PADLIST * padlist_dup(PADLIST *srcpad,
- CLONE_PARAMS *param)
Duplicates a pad name.
- PADNAME * padname_dup(PADNAME *src, CLONE_PARAMS *param)
Duplicates a pad name list.
- PADNAMELIST * padnamelist_dup(PADNAMELIST *srcpad,
- CLONE_PARAMS *param)
Push a new pad frame onto the padlist, unless there's already a pad at
this depth, in which case don't bother creating a new one. Then give
the new pad an @_
in slot zero.
- void pad_push(PADLIST *padlist, int depth)
Mark all the current temporaries for reuse
- void pad_reset()
Abandon the tmp in the current pad at offset po
and replace with a
new one.
- void pad_swipe(PADOFFSET po, bool refadjust)
NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be removed without notice.
If the typeglob gv
can be expressed more succinctly, by having
something other than a real GV in its place in the stash, replace it
with the optimised form. Basic requirements for this are that gv
is a real typeglob, is sufficiently ordinary, and is only referenced
from its package. This function is meant to be used when a GV has been
looked up in part to see what was there, causing upgrading, but based
on what was found it turns out that the real GV isn't required after all.
If gv
is a completely empty typeglob, it is deleted from the stash.
If gv
is a typeglob containing only a sufficiently-ordinary constant
sub, the typeglob is replaced with a scalar-reference placeholder that
more compactly represents the same thing.
- void gv_try_downgrade(GV* gv)
Adds a name to a stash's internal list of effective names. See
hv_ename_delete
.
This is called when a stash is assigned to a new location in the symbol table.
- void hv_ename_add(HV *hv, const char *name, U32 len,
- U32 flags)
Removes a name from a stash's internal list of effective names. If this is
the name returned by HvENAME
, then another name in the list will take
its place (HvENAME
will use it).
This is called when a stash is deleted from the symbol table.
- void hv_ename_delete(HV *hv, const char *name,
- U32 len, U32 flags)
Generates and returns a HV *
representing the content of a
refcounted_he
chain.
flags
is currently unused and must be zero.
- HV * refcounted_he_chain_2hv(
- const struct refcounted_he *c, U32 flags
- )
Like refcounted_he_fetch_pvn, but takes a nul-terminated string instead of a string/length pair.
- SV * refcounted_he_fetch_pv(
- const struct refcounted_he *chain,
- const char *key, U32 hash, U32 flags
- )
Search along a refcounted_he
chain for an entry with the key specified
by keypv
and keylen
. If flags
has the REFCOUNTED_HE_KEY_UTF8
bit set, the key octets are interpreted as UTF-8, otherwise they
are interpreted as Latin-1. hash
is a precomputed hash of the key
string, or zero if it has not been precomputed. Returns a mortal scalar
representing the value associated with the key, or &PL_sv_placeholder
if there is no value associated with the key.
- SV * refcounted_he_fetch_pvn(
- const struct refcounted_he *chain,
- const char *keypv, STRLEN keylen, U32 hash,
- U32 flags
- )
Like refcounted_he_fetch_pvn, but takes a NUL
-terminated literal string
instead of a string/length pair, and no precomputed hash.
- SV * refcounted_he_fetch_pvs(
- const struct refcounted_he *chain,
- const char *key, U32 flags
- )
Like refcounted_he_fetch_pvn, but takes a Perl scalar instead of a string/length pair.
- SV * refcounted_he_fetch_sv(
- const struct refcounted_he *chain, SV *key,
- U32 hash, U32 flags
- )
Decrements the reference count of a refcounted_he
by one. If the
reference count reaches zero the structure's memory is freed, which
(recursively) causes a reduction of its parent refcounted_he
's
reference count. It is safe to pass a null pointer to this function:
no action occurs in this case.
- void refcounted_he_free(struct refcounted_he *he)
Increment the reference count of a refcounted_he
. The pointer to the
refcounted_he
is also returned. It is safe to pass a null pointer
to this function: no action occurs and a null pointer is returned.
- struct refcounted_he * refcounted_he_inc(
- struct refcounted_he *he
- )
Like refcounted_he_new_pvn, but takes a nul-terminated string instead of a string/length pair.
- struct refcounted_he * refcounted_he_new_pv(
- struct refcounted_he *parent,
- const char *key, U32 hash,
- SV *value, U32 flags
- )
Creates a new refcounted_he
. This consists of a single key/value
pair and a reference to an existing refcounted_he
chain (which may
be empty), and thus forms a longer chain. When using the longer chain,
the new key/value pair takes precedence over any entry for the same key
further along the chain.
The new key is specified by keypv
and keylen
. If flags
has
the REFCOUNTED_HE_KEY_UTF8
bit set, the key octets are interpreted
as UTF-8, otherwise they are interpreted as Latin-1. hash
is
a precomputed hash of the key string, or zero if it has not been
precomputed.
value
is the scalar value to store for this key. value
is copied
by this function, which thus does not take ownership of any reference
to it, and later changes to the scalar will not be reflected in the
value visible in the refcounted_he
. Complex types of scalar will not
be stored with referential integrity, but will be coerced to strings.
value
may be either null or &PL_sv_placeholder
to indicate that no
value is to be associated with the key; this, as with any non-null value,
takes precedence over the existence of a value for the key further along
the chain.
parent
points to the rest of the refcounted_he
chain to be
attached to the new refcounted_he
. This function takes ownership
of one reference to parent
, and returns one reference to the new
refcounted_he
.
- struct refcounted_he * refcounted_he_new_pvn(
- struct refcounted_he *parent,
- const char *keypv,
- STRLEN keylen, U32 hash,
- SV *value, U32 flags
- )
Like refcounted_he_new_pvn, but takes a NUL
-terminated literal string
instead of a string/length pair, and no precomputed hash.
- struct refcounted_he * refcounted_he_new_pvs(
- struct refcounted_he *parent,
- const char *key, SV *value,
- U32 flags
- )
Like refcounted_he_new_pvn, but takes a Perl scalar instead of a string/length pair.
- struct refcounted_he * refcounted_he_new_sv(
- struct refcounted_he *parent,
- SV *key, U32 hash, SV *value,
- U32 flags
- )
NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be removed without notice.
Function called by do_readline
to spawn a glob (or do the glob inside
perl on VMS). This code used to be inline, but now perl uses File::Glob
this glob starter is only used by miniperl during the build process,
or when PERL_EXTERNAL_GLOB is defined.
Moving it away shrinks pp_hot.c; shrinking pp_hot.c helps speed perl up.
- PerlIO* start_glob(SV *tmpglob, IO *io)
NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be removed without notice.
This function performs syntax checking on a prototype, proto
.
If warn
is true, any illegal characters or mismatched brackets
will trigger illegalproto warnings, declaring that they were
detected in the prototype for name
.
The return value is true
if this is a valid prototype, and
false
if it is not, regardless of whether warn
was true
or
false
.
Note that NULL
is a valid proto
and will always return true
.
NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
- bool validate_proto(SV *name, SV *proto, bool warn)
Triggered by a delete from %^H
, records the key to
PL_compiling.cop_hints_hash
.
- int magic_clearhint(SV* sv, MAGIC* mg)
Triggered by clearing %^H
, resets PL_compiling.cop_hints_hash
.
- int magic_clearhints(SV* sv, MAGIC* mg)
Invoke a magic method (like FETCH).
sv
and mg
are the tied thingy and the tie magic.
meth
is the name of the method to call.
argc
is the number of args (in addition to $self) to pass to the method.
The flags
can be:
The arguments themselves are any values following the flags
argument.
Returns the SV (if any) returned by the method, or NULL
on failure.
- SV* magic_methcall(SV *sv, const MAGIC *mg,
- SV *meth, U32 flags, U32 argc,
- ...)
Triggered by a store to %^H
, records the key/value pair to
PL_compiling.cop_hints_hash
. It is assumed that hints aren't storing
anything that would need a deep copy. Maybe we should warn if we find a
reference.
- int magic_sethint(SV* sv, MAGIC* mg)
Copy some of the magic from an existing SV to new localized version of that
SV. Container magic (e.g., %ENV
, $1
, tie
)
gets copied, value magic doesn't (e.g.,
taint
, pos
).
If setmagic
is false then no set magic will be called on the new (empty) SV.
This typically means that assignment will soon follow (e.g. 'local $x = $y'
),
and that will handle the magic.
- void mg_localize(SV* sv, SV* nsv, bool setmagic)
Deallocates a backtrace received from get_c_bracktrace.
- void free_c_backtrace(Perl_c_backtrace* bt)
Collects the backtrace (aka "stacktrace") into a single linear
malloced buffer, which the caller must Perl_free_c_backtrace()
.
Scans the frames back by depth + skip
, then drops the skip
innermost,
returning at most depth
frames.
Returns the Depth-First Search linearization of @ISA
the given stash. The return value is a read-only AV*.
level
should be 0 (it is used internally in this
function's recursion).
You are responsible for SvREFCNT_inc()
on the
return value if you plan to store it anywhere
semi-permanently (otherwise it might be deleted
out from under you the next time the cache is
invalidated).
- AV* mro_get_linear_isa_dfs(HV* stash, U32 level)
Takes the necessary steps (cache invalidations, mostly)
when the @ISA
of the given package has changed. Invoked
by the setisa
magic, should not need to invoke directly.
- void mro_isa_changed_in(HV* stash)
Call this function to signal to a stash that it has been assigned to
another spot in the stash hierarchy. stash
is the stash that has been
assigned. oldstash
is the stash it replaces, if any. gv
is the glob
that is actually being assigned to.
This can also be called with a null first argument to
indicate that oldstash
has been deleted.
This function invalidates isa caches on the old stash, on all subpackages
nested inside it, and on the subclasses of all those, including
non-existent packages that have corresponding entries in stash
.
It also sets the effective names (HvENAME
) on all the stashes as
appropriate.
If the gv
is present and is not in the symbol table, then this function
simply returns. This checked will be skipped if flags & 1
.
- void mro_package_moved(HV * const stash,
- HV * const oldstash,
- const GV * const gv,
- U32 flags)
This function finalizes the optree. Should be called directly after
the complete optree is built. It does some additional
checking which can't be done in the normal ck_
xxx functions and makes
the tree thread-safe.
- void finalize_optree(OP* o)
Save the current pad in the given context block structure.
- void CX_CURPAD_SAVE(struct context)
Access the SV at offset po
in the saved current pad in the given
context block structure (can be used as an lvalue).
- SV * CX_CURPAD_SV(struct context, PADOFFSET po)
Get the value from slot po
in the base (DEPTH=1) pad of a padlist
- SV * PAD_BASE_SV(PADLIST padlist, PADOFFSET po)
Clone the state variables associated with running and compiling pads.
- void PAD_CLONE_VARS(PerlInterpreter *proto_perl,
- CLONE_PARAMS* param)
Return the flags for the current compiling pad name
at offset po
. Assumes a valid slot entry.
- U32 PAD_COMPNAME_FLAGS(PADOFFSET po)
The generation number of the name at offset po
in the current
compiling pad (lvalue).
- STRLEN PAD_COMPNAME_GEN(PADOFFSET po)
Sets the generation number of the name at offset po
in the current
ling pad (lvalue) to gen
.
STRLEN PAD_COMPNAME_GEN_set(PADOFFSET po, int gen)
Return the stash associated with an our
variable.
Assumes the slot entry is a valid our
lexical.
- HV * PAD_COMPNAME_OURSTASH(PADOFFSET po)
Return the name of the current compiling pad name
at offset po
. Assumes a valid slot entry.
- char * PAD_COMPNAME_PV(PADOFFSET po)
Return the type (stash) of the current compiling pad name at offset
po
. Must be a valid name. Returns null if not typed.
- HV * PAD_COMPNAME_TYPE(PADOFFSET po)
Whether this is an "our" variable.
- bool PadnameIsOUR(PADNAME pn)
Whether this is a "state" variable.
- bool PadnameIsSTATE(PADNAME pn)
The stash in which this "our" variable was declared.
- HV * PadnameOURSTASH()
Whether this entry belongs to an outer pad. Entries for which this is true are often referred to as 'fake'.
- bool PadnameOUTER(PADNAME pn)
The stash associated with a typed lexical. This returns the %Foo::
hash
for my Foo $bar
.
- HV * PadnameTYPE(PADNAME pn)
Restore the old pad saved into the local variable opad
by PAD_SAVE_LOCAL()
- void PAD_RESTORE_LOCAL(PAD *opad)
Save the current pad to the local variable opad
, then make the
current pad equal to npad
- void PAD_SAVE_LOCAL(PAD *opad, PAD *npad)
Save the current pad then set it to null.
- void PAD_SAVE_SETNULLPAD()
Set the slot at offset po
in the current pad to sv
- SV * PAD_SETSV(PADOFFSET po, SV* sv)
Set the current pad to be pad n
in the padlist, saving
the previous current pad. NB currently this macro expands to a string too
long for some compilers, so it's best to replace it with
- SAVECOMPPAD();
- PAD_SET_CUR_NOSAVE(padlist,n);
- void PAD_SET_CUR(PADLIST padlist, I32 n)
like PAD_SET_CUR, but without the save
- void PAD_SET_CUR_NOSAVE(PADLIST padlist, I32 n)
Get the value at offset po
in the current pad
- SV * PAD_SV(PADOFFSET po)
Lightweight and lvalue version of PAD_SV
.
Get or set the value at offset po
in the current pad.
Unlike PAD_SV
, does not print diagnostics with -DX.
For internal use only.
- SV * PAD_SVl(PADOFFSET po)
Clear the pointed to pad value on scope exit. (i.e. the runtime action of
my
)
- void SAVECLEARSV(SV **svp)
save PL_comppad
and PL_curpad
- void SAVECOMPPAD()
Save a pad slot (used to restore after an iteration)
XXX DAPM it would make more sense to make the arg a PADOFFSET void SAVEPADSV(PADOFFSET po)
When Perl is run in debugging mode, with the -d switch, this SV is a
boolean which indicates whether subs are being single-stepped.
Single-stepping is automatically turned on after every step. This is the C
variable which corresponds to Perl's $DB::single variable. See
PL_DBsub
.
- SV * PL_DBsingle
When Perl is run in debugging mode, with the -d switch, this GV contains
the SV which holds the name of the sub being debugged. This is the C
variable which corresponds to Perl's $DB::sub variable. See
PL_DBsingle
.
- GV * PL_DBsub
Trace variable used when Perl is run in debugging mode, with the -d
switch. This is the C variable which corresponds to Perl's $DB::trace
variable. See PL_DBsingle
.
- SV * PL_DBtrace
The C variable that roughly corresponds to Perl's $^W
warning variable.
However, $^W
is treated as a boolean, whereas PL_dowarn
is a
collection of flag bits.
- U8 PL_dowarn
The GV which was last used for a filehandle input operation. (<FH>
)
- GV* PL_last_in_gv
The glob containing the output field separator - *,
in Perl space.
- GV* PL_ofsgv
The input record separator - $/
in Perl space.
- SV* PL_rs
Declare Just SP
. This is actually identical to dSP
, and declares
a local copy of perl's stack pointer, available via the SP
macro.
See SP in perlapi
. (Available for backward source code compatibility with
the old (Perl 5.005) thread model.)
- djSP;
True if this op will be the return value of an lvalue subroutine
NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be removed without notice.
Return an SV with the numeric value of the source SV, doing any necessary reference or overload conversion. The caller is expected to have handled get-magic already.
- SV* sv_2num(SV *const sv)
An SV (or AV, HV, etc.) is allocated in two parts: the head (struct sv, av, hv...) contains type and reference count information, and for many types, a pointer to the body (struct xrv, xpv, xpviv...), which contains fields specific to each type. Some types store all they need in the head, so don't have a body.
In all but the most memory-paranoid configurations (ex: PURIFY), heads and bodies are allocated out of arenas, which by default are approximately 4K chunks of memory parcelled up into N heads or bodies. Sv-bodies are allocated by their sv-type, guaranteeing size consistency needed to allocate safely from arrays.
For SV-heads, the first slot in each arena is reserved, and holds a link to the next arena, some flags, and a note of the number of slots. Snaked through each arena chain is a linked list of free items; when this becomes empty, an extra arena is allocated and divided up into N items which are threaded into the free list.
SV-bodies are similar, but they use arena-sets by default, which separate the link and info from the arena itself, and reclaim the 1st slot in the arena. SV-bodies are further described later.
The following global variables are associated with arenas:
- PL_sv_arenaroot pointer to list of SV arenas
- PL_sv_root pointer to list of free SV structures
- PL_body_arenas head of linked-list of body arenas
- PL_body_roots[] array of pointers to list of free bodies of svtype
- arrays are indexed by the svtype needed
A few special SV heads are not allocated from an arena, but are instead directly created in the interpreter structure, eg PL_sv_undef. The size of arenas can be changed from the default by setting PERL_ARENA_SIZE appropriately at compile time.
The SV arena serves the secondary purpose of allowing still-live SVs to be located and destroyed during final cleanup.
At the lowest level, the macros new_SV() and del_SV() grab and free an SV head. (If debugging with -DD, del_SV() calls the function S_del_sv() to return the SV to the free list with error checking.) new_SV() calls more_sv() / sv_add_arena() to add an extra arena if the free list is empty. SVs in the free list have their SvTYPE field set to all ones.
At the time of very final cleanup, sv_free_arenas() is called from perl_destruct() to physically free all the arenas allocated since the start of the interpreter.
The function visit() scans the SV arenas list, and calls a specified function for each SV it finds which is still live - ie which has an SvTYPE other than all 1's, and a non-zero SvREFCNT. visit() is used by the following functions (specified as [function that calls visit()] / [function called by visit() for each SV]):
- sv_report_used() / do_report_used()
- dump all remaining SVs (debugging aid)
- sv_clean_objs() / do_clean_objs(),do_clean_named_objs(),
- do_clean_named_io_objs(),do_curse()
- Attempt to free all objects pointed to by RVs,
- try to do the same for all objects indir-
- ectly referenced by typeglobs too, and
- then do a final sweep, cursing any
- objects that remain. Called once from
- perl_destruct(), prior to calling sv_clean_all()
- below.
- sv_clean_all() / do_clean_all()
- SvREFCNT_dec(sv) each remaining SV, possibly
- triggering an sv_free(). It also sets the
- SVf_BREAK flag on the SV to indicate that the
- refcnt has been artificially lowered, and thus
- stopping sv_free() from giving spurious warnings
- about SVs which unexpectedly have a refcnt
- of zero. called repeatedly from perl_destruct()
- until there are no SVs left.
Given a chunk of memory, link it to the head of the list of arenas, and split it into a list of free SVs.
- void sv_add_arena(char *const ptr, const U32 size,
- const U32 flags)
Decrement the refcnt of each remaining SV, possibly triggering a cleanup. This function may have to be called multiple times to free SVs which are in complex self-referential hierarchies.
- I32 sv_clean_all()
Attempt to destroy all objects not yet freed.
- void sv_clean_objs()
Deallocate the memory used by all arenas. Note that all the individual SV heads and bodies within the arenas must already have been freed.
- void sv_free_arenas()
A quick flag check to see whether an sv
should be passed to sv_force_normal
to be "downgraded" before SvIVX
or SvPVX
can be modified directly.
For example, if your scalar is a reference and you want to modify the SvIVX
slot, you can't just do SvROK_off
, as that will leak the referent.
This is used internally by various sv-modifying functions, such as
sv_setsv
, sv_setiv
and sv_pvn_force
.
One case that this does not handle is a gv without SvFAKE set. After
- if (SvTHINKFIRST(gv)) sv_force_normal(gv);
it will still be a gv.
SvTHINKFIRST
sometimes produces false positives. In those cases
sv_force_normal
does nothing.
- U32 SvTHINKFIRST(SV *sv)
NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be removed without notice.
Find the name of the undefined variable (if any) that caused the operator
to issue a "Use of uninitialized value" warning.
If match is true, only return a name if its value matches uninit_sv
.
So roughly speaking, if a unary operator (such as OP_COS
) generates a
warning, then following the direct child of the op may yield an
OP_PADSV
or OP_GV
that gives the name of the undefined variable. On the
other hand, with OP_ADD
there are two branches to follow, so we only print
the variable name if we get an exact match.
desc_p
points to a string pointer holding the description of the op.
This may be updated if needed.
The name is returned as a mortal SV.
Assumes that PL_op
is the OP that originally triggered the error, and that
PL_comppad
/PL_curpad
points to the currently executing pad.
- SV* find_uninit_var(const OP *const obase,
- const SV *const uninit_sv,
- bool match, const char **desc_p)
Print appropriate "Use of uninitialized variable" warning.
- void report_uninit(const SV *uninit_sv)
The following functions are currently undocumented. If you use one of them, you may wish to consider creating and submitting documentation for it.
The autodocumentation system was originally added to the Perl core by Benjamin Stuhl. Documentation is by whoever was kind enough to document their functions.