1PERLREAPI(1)           Perl Programmers Reference Guide           PERLREAPI(1)
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3
4

NAME

6       perlreapi - perl regular expression plugin interface
7

DESCRIPTION

9       As of Perl 5.9.5 there is a new interface for plugging and using other
10       regular expression engines than the default one.
11
12       Each engine is supposed to provide access to a constant structure of
13       the following format:
14
15           typedef struct regexp_engine {
16               REGEXP* (*comp) (pTHX_ const SV * const pattern, const U32 flags);
17               I32     (*exec) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, char* stringarg, char* strend,
18                                char* strbeg, I32 minend, SV* screamer,
19                                void* data, U32 flags);
20               char*   (*intuit) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, SV *sv, char *strpos,
21                                  char *strend, U32 flags,
22                                  struct re_scream_pos_data_s *data);
23               SV*     (*checkstr) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx);
24               void    (*free) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx);
25               void    (*numbered_buff_FETCH) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const I32 paren,
26                                        SV * const sv);
27               void    (*numbered_buff_STORE) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const I32 paren,
28                                              SV const * const value);
29               I32     (*numbered_buff_LENGTH) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const SV * const sv,
30                                               const I32 paren);
31               SV*     (*named_buff) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, SV * const key,
32                                      SV * const value, U32 flags);
33               SV*     (*named_buff_iter) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const SV * const lastkey,
34                                           const U32 flags);
35               SV*     (*qr_package)(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx);
36           #ifdef USE_ITHREADS
37               void*   (*dupe) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, CLONE_PARAMS *param);
38           #endif
39
40       When a regexp is compiled, its "engine" field is then set to point at
41       the appropriate structure, so that when it needs to be used Perl can
42       find the right routines to do so.
43
44       In order to install a new regexp handler, $^H{regcomp} is set to an
45       integer which (when casted appropriately) resolves to one of these
46       structures. When compiling, the "comp" method is executed, and the
47       resulting regexp structure's engine field is expected to point back at
48       the same structure.
49
50       The pTHX_ symbol in the definition is a macro used by perl under
51       threading to provide an extra argument to the routine holding a pointer
52       back to the interpreter that is executing the regexp. So under
53       threading all routines get an extra argument.
54

Callbacks

56   comp
57           REGEXP* comp(pTHX_ const SV * const pattern, const U32 flags);
58
59       Compile the pattern stored in "pattern" using the given "flags" and
60       return a pointer to a prepared "REGEXP" structure that can perform the
61       match. See "The REGEXP structure" below for an explanation of the
62       individual fields in the REGEXP struct.
63
64       The "pattern" parameter is the scalar that was used as the pattern.
65       previous versions of perl would pass two "char*" indicating the start
66       and end of the stringified pattern, the following snippet can be used
67       to get the old parameters:
68
69           STRLEN plen;
70           char*  exp = SvPV(pattern, plen);
71           char* xend = exp + plen;
72
73       Since any scalar can be passed as a pattern it's possible to implement
74       an engine that does something with an array (""ook" =~ [ qw/ eek hlagh
75       / ]") or with the non-stringified form of a compiled regular expression
76       (""ook" =~ qr/eek/"). perl's own engine will always stringify
77       everything using the snippet above but that doesn't mean other engines
78       have to.
79
80       The "flags" parameter is a bitfield which indicates which of the
81       "msixp" flags the regex was compiled with. It also contains additional
82       info such as whether "use locale" is in effect.
83
84       The "eogc" flags are stripped out before being passed to the comp
85       routine. The regex engine does not need to know whether any of these
86       are set as those flags should only affect what perl does with the
87       pattern and its match variables, not how it gets compiled and executed.
88
89       By the time the comp callback is called, some of these flags have
90       already had effect (noted below where applicable). However most of
91       their effect occurs after the comp callback has run in routines that
92       read the "rx->extflags" field which it populates.
93
94       In general the flags should be preserved in "rx->extflags" after
95       compilation, although the regex engine might want to add or delete some
96       of them to invoke or disable some special behavior in perl. The flags
97       along with any special behavior they cause are documented below:
98
99       The pattern modifiers:
100
101       "/m" - RXf_PMf_MULTILINE
102           If this is in "rx->extflags" it will be passed to "Perl_fbm_instr"
103           by "pp_split" which will treat the subject string as a multi-line
104           string.
105
106       "/s" - RXf_PMf_SINGLELINE
107       "/i" - RXf_PMf_FOLD
108       "/x" - RXf_PMf_EXTENDED
109           If present on a regex "#" comments will be handled differently by
110           the tokenizer in some cases.
111
112           TODO: Document those cases.
113
114       "/p" - RXf_PMf_KEEPCOPY
115           TODO: Document this
116
117       Character set
118           The character set semantics are determined by an enum that is
119           contained in this field.  This is still experimental and subject to
120           change, but the current interface returns the rules by use of the
121           in-line function "get_regex_charset(const U32 flags)".  The only
122           currently documented value returned from it is
123           REGEX_LOCALE_CHARSET, which is set if "use locale" is in effect. If
124           present in "rx->extflags", "split" will use the locale dependent
125           definition of whitespace when RXf_SKIPWHITE or RXf_WHITE is in
126           effect. ASCII whitespace is defined as per isSPACE, and by the
127           internal macros "is_utf8_space" under UTF-8, and "isSPACE_LC" under
128           "use locale".
129
130       Additional flags:
131
132       RXf_UTF8
133           Set if the pattern is SvUTF8(), set by Perl_pmruntime.
134
135           A regex engine may want to set or disable this flag during
136           compilation. The perl engine for instance may upgrade non-UTF-8
137           strings to UTF-8 if the pattern includes constructs such as
138           "\x{...}" that can only match Unicode values.
139
140       RXf_SPLIT
141           If "split" is invoked as "split ' '" or with no arguments (which
142           really means "split(' ', $_)", see split), perl will set this flag.
143           The regex engine can then check for it and set the SKIPWHITE and
144           WHITE extflags. To do this the perl engine does:
145
146               if (flags & RXf_SPLIT && r->prelen == 1 && r->precomp[0] == ' ')
147                   r->extflags |= (RXf_SKIPWHITE|RXf_WHITE);
148
149       These flags can be set during compilation to enable optimizations in
150       the "split" operator.
151
152       RXf_SKIPWHITE
153           If the flag is present in "rx->extflags" "split" will delete
154           whitespace from the start of the subject string before it's
155           operated on. What is considered whitespace depends on whether the
156           subject is a UTF-8 string and whether the "RXf_PMf_LOCALE" flag is
157           set.
158
159           If RXf_WHITE is set in addition to this flag "split" will behave
160           like "split " "" under the perl engine.
161
162       RXf_START_ONLY
163           Tells the split operator to split the target string on newlines
164           ("\n") without invoking the regex engine.
165
166           Perl's engine sets this if the pattern is "/^/" ("plen == 1 && *exp
167           == '^'"), even under "/^/s", see split. Of course a different regex
168           engine might want to use the same optimizations with a different
169           syntax.
170
171       RXf_WHITE
172           Tells the split operator to split the target string on whitespace
173           without invoking the regex engine. The definition of whitespace
174           varies depending on whether the target string is a UTF-8 string and
175           on whether RXf_PMf_LOCALE is set.
176
177           Perl's engine sets this flag if the pattern is "\s+".
178
179       RXf_NULL
180           Tells the split operator to split the target string on characters.
181           The definition of character varies depending on whether the target
182           string is a UTF-8 string.
183
184           Perl's engine sets this flag on empty patterns, this optimization
185           makes "split //" much faster than it would otherwise be. It's even
186           faster than "unpack".
187
188   exec
189           I32 exec(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx,
190                    char *stringarg, char* strend, char* strbeg,
191                    I32 minend, SV* screamer,
192                    void* data, U32 flags);
193
194       Execute a regexp.
195
196   intuit
197           char* intuit(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx,
198                         SV *sv, char *strpos, char *strend,
199                         const U32 flags, struct re_scream_pos_data_s *data);
200
201       Find the start position where a regex match should be attempted, or
202       possibly whether the regex engine should not be run because the pattern
203       can't match. This is called as appropriate by the core depending on the
204       values of the extflags member of the regexp structure.
205
206   checkstr
207           SV* checkstr(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx);
208
209       Return a SV containing a string that must appear in the pattern. Used
210       by "split" for optimising matches.
211
212   free
213           void free(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx);
214
215       Called by perl when it is freeing a regexp pattern so that the engine
216       can release any resources pointed to by the "pprivate" member of the
217       regexp structure. This is only responsible for freeing private data;
218       perl will handle releasing anything else contained in the regexp
219       structure.
220
221   Numbered capture callbacks
222       Called to get/set the value of "$`", "$'", $& and their named
223       equivalents, ${^PREMATCH}, ${^POSTMATCH} and $^{MATCH}, as well as the
224       numbered capture groups ($1, $2, ...).
225
226       The "paren" parameter will be "-2" for "$`", "-1" for "$'", 0 for $&, 1
227       for $1 and so forth.
228
229       The names have been chosen by analogy with Tie::Scalar methods names
230       with an additional LENGTH callback for efficiency. However named
231       capture variables are currently not tied internally but implemented via
232       magic.
233
234       numbered_buff_FETCH
235
236           void numbered_buff_FETCH(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const I32 paren,
237                                    SV * const sv);
238
239       Fetch a specified numbered capture. "sv" should be set to the scalar to
240       return, the scalar is passed as an argument rather than being returned
241       from the function because when it's called perl already has a scalar to
242       store the value, creating another one would be redundant. The scalar
243       can be set with "sv_setsv", "sv_setpvn" and friends, see perlapi.
244
245       This callback is where perl untaints its own capture variables under
246       taint mode (see perlsec). See the "Perl_reg_numbered_buff_fetch"
247       function in regcomp.c for how to untaint capture variables if that's
248       something you'd like your engine to do as well.
249
250       numbered_buff_STORE
251
252           void    (*numbered_buff_STORE) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const I32 paren,
253                                           SV const * const value);
254
255       Set the value of a numbered capture variable. "value" is the scalar
256       that is to be used as the new value. It's up to the engine to make sure
257       this is used as the new value (or reject it).
258
259       Example:
260
261           if ("ook" =~ /(o*)/) {
262               # 'paren' will be '1' and 'value' will be 'ee'
263               $1 =~ tr/o/e/;
264           }
265
266       Perl's own engine will croak on any attempt to modify the capture
267       variables, to do this in another engine use the following callback
268       (copied from "Perl_reg_numbered_buff_store"):
269
270           void
271           Example_reg_numbered_buff_store(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const I32 paren,
272                                                                   SV const * const value)
273           {
274               PERL_UNUSED_ARG(rx);
275               PERL_UNUSED_ARG(paren);
276               PERL_UNUSED_ARG(value);
277
278               if (!PL_localizing)
279                   Perl_croak(aTHX_ PL_no_modify);
280           }
281
282       Actually perl will not always croak in a statement that looks like it
283       would modify a numbered capture variable. This is because the STORE
284       callback will not be called if perl can determine that it doesn't have
285       to modify the value. This is exactly how tied variables behave in the
286       same situation:
287
288           package CaptureVar;
289           use base 'Tie::Scalar';
290
291           sub TIESCALAR { bless [] }
292           sub FETCH { undef }
293           sub STORE { die "This doesn't get called" }
294
295           package main;
296
297           tie my $sv => "CaptureVar";
298           $sv =~ y/a/b/;
299
300       Because $sv is "undef" when the "y///" operator is applied to it the
301       transliteration won't actually execute and the program won't "die".
302       This is different to how 5.8 and earlier versions behaved since the
303       capture variables were READONLY variables then, now they'll just die
304       when assigned to in the default engine.
305
306       numbered_buff_LENGTH
307
308           I32 numbered_buff_LENGTH (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const SV * const sv,
309                                     const I32 paren);
310
311       Get the "length" of a capture variable. There's a special callback for
312       this so that perl doesn't have to do a FETCH and run "length" on the
313       result, since the length is (in perl's case) known from an offset
314       stored in "rx->offs" this is much more efficient:
315
316           I32 s1  = rx->offs[paren].start;
317           I32 s2  = rx->offs[paren].end;
318           I32 len = t1 - s1;
319
320       This is a little bit more complex in the case of UTF-8, see what
321       "Perl_reg_numbered_buff_length" does with is_utf8_string_loclen.
322
323   Named capture callbacks
324       Called to get/set the value of "%+" and "%-" as well as by some utility
325       functions in re.
326
327       There are two callbacks, "named_buff" is called in all the cases the
328       FETCH, STORE, DELETE, CLEAR, EXISTS and SCALAR Tie::Hash callbacks
329       would be on changes to "%+" and "%-" and "named_buff_iter" in the same
330       cases as FIRSTKEY and NEXTKEY.
331
332       The "flags" parameter can be used to determine which of these
333       operations the callbacks should respond to, the following flags are
334       currently defined:
335
336       Which Tie::Hash operation is being performed from the Perl level on
337       "%+" or "%+", if any:
338
339           RXapif_FETCH
340           RXapif_STORE
341           RXapif_DELETE
342           RXapif_CLEAR
343           RXapif_EXISTS
344           RXapif_SCALAR
345           RXapif_FIRSTKEY
346           RXapif_NEXTKEY
347
348       Whether "%+" or "%-" is being operated on, if any.
349
350           RXapif_ONE /* %+ */
351           RXapif_ALL /* %- */
352
353       Whether this is being called as "re::regname", "re::regnames" or
354       "re::regnames_count", if any. The first two will be combined with
355       "RXapif_ONE" or "RXapif_ALL".
356
357           RXapif_REGNAME
358           RXapif_REGNAMES
359           RXapif_REGNAMES_COUNT
360
361       Internally "%+" and "%-" are implemented with a real tied interface via
362       Tie::Hash::NamedCapture. The methods in that package will call back
363       into these functions. However the usage of Tie::Hash::NamedCapture for
364       this purpose might change in future releases. For instance this might
365       be implemented by magic instead (would need an extension to mgvtbl).
366
367       named_buff
368
369           SV*     (*named_buff) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, SV * const key,
370                                  SV * const value, U32 flags);
371
372       named_buff_iter
373
374           SV*     (*named_buff_iter) (pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, const SV * const lastkey,
375                                       const U32 flags);
376
377   qr_package
378           SV* qr_package(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx);
379
380       The package the qr// magic object is blessed into (as seen by "ref
381       qr//"). It is recommended that engines change this to their package
382       name for identification regardless of whether they implement methods on
383       the object.
384
385       The package this method returns should also have the internal "Regexp"
386       package in its @ISA. "qr//->isa("Regexp")" should always be true
387       regardless of what engine is being used.
388
389       Example implementation might be:
390
391           SV*
392           Example_qr_package(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx)
393           {
394               PERL_UNUSED_ARG(rx);
395               return newSVpvs("re::engine::Example");
396           }
397
398       Any method calls on an object created with "qr//" will be dispatched to
399       the package as a normal object.
400
401           use re::engine::Example;
402           my $re = qr//;
403           $re->meth; # dispatched to re::engine::Example::meth()
404
405       To retrieve the "REGEXP" object from the scalar in an XS function use
406       the "SvRX" macro, see "REGEXP Functions" in perlapi.
407
408           void meth(SV * rv)
409           PPCODE:
410               REGEXP * re = SvRX(sv);
411
412   dupe
413           void* dupe(pTHX_ REGEXP * const rx, CLONE_PARAMS *param);
414
415       On threaded builds a regexp may need to be duplicated so that the
416       pattern can be used by multiple threads. This routine is expected to
417       handle the duplication of any private data pointed to by the "pprivate"
418       member of the regexp structure.  It will be called with the
419       preconstructed new regexp structure as an argument, the "pprivate"
420       member will point at the old private structure, and it is this
421       routine's responsibility to construct a copy and return a pointer to it
422       (which perl will then use to overwrite the field as passed to this
423       routine.)
424
425       This allows the engine to dupe its private data but also if necessary
426       modify the final structure if it really must.
427
428       On unthreaded builds this field doesn't exist.
429

The REGEXP structure

431       The REGEXP struct is defined in regexp.h. All regex engines must be
432       able to correctly build such a structure in their "comp" routine.
433
434       The REGEXP structure contains all the data that perl needs to be aware
435       of to properly work with the regular expression. It includes data about
436       optimisations that perl can use to determine if the regex engine should
437       really be used, and various other control info that is needed to
438       properly execute patterns in various contexts such as is the pattern
439       anchored in some way, or what flags were used during the compile, or
440       whether the program contains special constructs that perl needs to be
441       aware of.
442
443       In addition it contains two fields that are intended for the private
444       use of the regex engine that compiled the pattern. These are the
445       "intflags" and "pprivate" members. "pprivate" is a void pointer to an
446       arbitrary structure whose use and management is the responsibility of
447       the compiling engine. perl will never modify either of these values.
448
449           typedef struct regexp {
450               /* what engine created this regexp? */
451               const struct regexp_engine* engine;
452
453               /* what re is this a lightweight copy of? */
454               struct regexp* mother_re;
455
456               /* Information about the match that the perl core uses to manage things */
457               U32 extflags;   /* Flags used both externally and internally */
458               I32 minlen;     /* mininum possible length of string to match */
459               I32 minlenret;  /* mininum possible length of $& */
460               U32 gofs;       /* chars left of pos that we search from */
461
462               /* substring data about strings that must appear
463                  in the final match, used for optimisations */
464               struct reg_substr_data *substrs;
465
466               U32 nparens;  /* number of capture groups */
467
468               /* private engine specific data */
469               U32 intflags;   /* Engine Specific Internal flags */
470               void *pprivate; /* Data private to the regex engine which
471                                  created this object. */
472
473               /* Data about the last/current match. These are modified during matching*/
474               U32 lastparen;            /* last open paren matched */
475               U32 lastcloseparen;       /* last close paren matched */
476               regexp_paren_pair *swap;  /* Swap copy of *offs */
477               regexp_paren_pair *offs;  /* Array of offsets for (@-) and (@+) */
478
479               char *subbeg;  /* saved or original string so \digit works forever. */
480               SV_SAVED_COPY  /* If non-NULL, SV which is COW from original */
481               I32 sublen;    /* Length of string pointed by subbeg */
482
483               /* Information about the match that isn't often used */
484               I32 prelen;           /* length of precomp */
485               const char *precomp;  /* pre-compilation regular expression */
486
487               char *wrapped;  /* wrapped version of the pattern */
488               I32 wraplen;    /* length of wrapped */
489
490               I32 seen_evals;   /* number of eval groups in the pattern - for security checks */
491               HV *paren_names;  /* Optional hash of paren names */
492
493               /* Refcount of this regexp */
494               I32 refcnt;             /* Refcount of this regexp */
495           } regexp;
496
497       The fields are discussed in more detail below:
498
499   "engine"
500       This field points at a regexp_engine structure which contains pointers
501       to the subroutines that are to be used for performing a match. It is
502       the compiling routine's responsibility to populate this field before
503       returning the regexp object.
504
505       Internally this is set to "NULL" unless a custom engine is specified in
506       $^H{regcomp}, perl's own set of callbacks can be accessed in the struct
507       pointed to by "RE_ENGINE_PTR".
508
509   "mother_re"
510       TODO, see
511       http://www.mail-archive.com/perl5-changes@perl.org/msg17328.html
512       <http://www.mail-archive.com/perl5-changes@perl.org/msg17328.html>
513
514   "extflags"
515       This will be used by perl to see what flags the regexp was compiled
516       with, this will normally be set to the value of the flags parameter by
517       the comp callback. See the comp documentation for valid flags.
518
519   "minlen" "minlenret"
520       The minimum string length required for the pattern to match.  This is
521       used to prune the search space by not bothering to match any closer to
522       the end of a string than would allow a match. For instance there is no
523       point in even starting the regex engine if the minlen is 10 but the
524       string is only 5 characters long. There is no way that the pattern can
525       match.
526
527       "minlenret" is the minimum length of the string that would be found in
528       $& after a match.
529
530       The difference between "minlen" and "minlenret" can be seen in the
531       following pattern:
532
533           /ns(?=\d)/
534
535       where the "minlen" would be 3 but "minlenret" would only be 2 as the \d
536       is required to match but is not actually included in the matched
537       content. This distinction is particularly important as the substitution
538       logic uses the "minlenret" to tell whether it can do in-place
539       substitution which can result in considerable speedup.
540
541   "gofs"
542       Left offset from pos() to start match at.
543
544   "substrs"
545       Substring data about strings that must appear in the final match. This
546       is currently only used internally by perl's engine for but might be
547       used in the future for all engines for optimisations.
548
549   "nparens", "lastparen", and "lastcloseparen"
550       These fields are used to keep track of how many paren groups could be
551       matched in the pattern, which was the last open paren to be entered,
552       and which was the last close paren to be entered.
553
554   "intflags"
555       The engine's private copy of the flags the pattern was compiled with.
556       Usually this is the same as "extflags" unless the engine chose to
557       modify one of them.
558
559   "pprivate"
560       A void* pointing to an engine-defined data structure. The perl engine
561       uses the "regexp_internal" structure (see "Base Structures" in
562       perlreguts) but a custom engine should use something else.
563
564   "swap"
565       Unused. Left in for compatibility with perl 5.10.0.
566
567   "offs"
568       A "regexp_paren_pair" structure which defines offsets into the string
569       being matched which correspond to the $& and $1, $2 etc. captures, the
570       "regexp_paren_pair" struct is defined as follows:
571
572           typedef struct regexp_paren_pair {
573               I32 start;
574               I32 end;
575           } regexp_paren_pair;
576
577       If "->offs[num].start" or "->offs[num].end" is "-1" then that capture
578       group did not match. "->offs[0].start/end" represents $& (or "${^MATCH"
579       under "//p") and "->offs[paren].end" matches $$paren where $paren = 1>.
580
581   "precomp" "prelen"
582       Used for optimisations. "precomp" holds a copy of the pattern that was
583       compiled and "prelen" its length. When a new pattern is to be compiled
584       (such as inside a loop) the internal "regcomp" operator checks whether
585       the last compiled "REGEXP"'s "precomp" and "prelen" are equivalent to
586       the new one, and if so uses the old pattern instead of compiling a new
587       one.
588
589       The relevant snippet from "Perl_pp_regcomp":
590
591               if (!re || !re->precomp || re->prelen != (I32)len ||
592                   memNE(re->precomp, t, len))
593               /* Compile a new pattern */
594
595   "paren_names"
596       This is a hash used internally to track named capture groups and their
597       offsets. The keys are the names of the buffers the values are dualvars,
598       with the IV slot holding the number of buffers with the given name and
599       the pv being an embedded array of I32.  The values may also be
600       contained independently in the data array in cases where named
601       backreferences are used.
602
603   "substrs"
604       Holds information on the longest string that must occur at a fixed
605       offset from the start of the pattern, and the longest string that must
606       occur at a floating offset from the start of the pattern. Used to do
607       Fast-Boyer-Moore searches on the string to find out if its worth using
608       the regex engine at all, and if so where in the string to search.
609
610   "subbeg" "sublen" "saved_copy"
611       Used during execution phase for managing search and replace patterns.
612
613   "wrapped" "wraplen"
614       Stores the string "qr//" stringifies to. The perl engine for example
615       stores "(?^:eek)" in the case of "qr/eek/".
616
617       When using a custom engine that doesn't support the "(?:)" construct
618       for inline modifiers, it's probably best to have "qr//" stringify to
619       the supplied pattern, note that this will create undesired patterns in
620       cases such as:
621
622           my $x = qr/a|b/;  # "a|b"
623           my $y = qr/c/i;   # "c"
624           my $z = qr/$x$y/; # "a|bc"
625
626       There's no solution for this problem other than making the custom
627       engine understand a construct like "(?:)".
628
629   "seen_evals"
630       This stores the number of eval groups in the pattern. This is used for
631       security purposes when embedding compiled regexes into larger patterns
632       with "qr//".
633
634   "refcnt"
635       The number of times the structure is referenced. When this falls to 0
636       the regexp is automatically freed by a call to pregfree. This should be
637       set to 1 in each engine's "comp" routine.
638

HISTORY

640       Originally part of perlreguts.
641

AUTHORS

643       Originally written by Yves Orton, expanded by var Arnfjoerd` Bjarmason.
644

LICENSE

646       Copyright 2006 Yves Orton and 2007 var Arnfjoerd` Bjarmason.
647
648       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
649       under the same terms as Perl itself.
650
651
652
653perl v5.16.3                      2013-03-04                      PERLREAPI(1)
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