1PERL586DELTA(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide PERL586DELTA(1)
2
3
4
6 perl586delta - what is new for perl v5.8.6
7
9 This document describes differences between the 5.8.5 release and the
10 5.8.6 release.
11
13 There are no changes incompatible with 5.8.5.
14
16 The perl interpreter is now more tolerant of UTF-16-encoded scripts.
17
18 On Win32, Perl can now use non-IFS compatible LSPs, which allows Perl
19 to work in conjunction with firewalls such as McAfee Guardian. For full
20 details see the file README.win32, particularly if you're running
21 Win95.
22
24 • With the "base" pragma, an intermediate class with no fields used
25 to messes up private fields in the base class. This has been fixed.
26
27 • Cwd upgraded to version 3.01 (as part of the new PathTools
28 distribution)
29
30 • Devel::PPPort upgraded to version 3.03
31
32 • File::Spec upgraded to version 3.01 (as part of the new PathTools
33 distribution)
34
35 • Encode upgraded to version 2.08
36
37 • ExtUtils::MakeMaker remains at version 6.17, as later stable
38 releases currently available on CPAN have some issues with core
39 modules on some core platforms.
40
41 • I18N::LangTags upgraded to version 0.35
42
43 • Math::BigInt upgraded to version 1.73
44
45 • Math::BigRat upgraded to version 0.13
46
47 • MIME::Base64 upgraded to version 3.05
48
49 • POSIX::sigprocmask function can now retrieve the current signal
50 mask without also setting it.
51
52 • Time::HiRes upgraded to version 1.65
53
55 Perl has a new -dt command-line flag, which enables threads support in
56 the debugger.
57
59 "reverse sort ..." is now optimized to sort in reverse, avoiding the
60 generation of a temporary intermediate list.
61
62 "for (reverse @foo)" now iterates in reverse, avoiding the generation
63 of a temporary reversed list.
64
66 The regexp engine is now more robust when given invalid utf8 input, as
67 is sometimes generated by buggy XS modules.
68
69 "foreach" on threads::shared array used to be able to crash Perl. This
70 bug has now been fixed.
71
72 A regexp in "STDOUT"'s destructor used to coredump, because the regexp
73 pad was already freed. This has been fixed.
74
75 "goto &" is now more robust - bugs in deep recursion and chained "goto
76 &" have been fixed.
77
78 Using "delete" on an array no longer leaks memory. A "pop" of an item
79 from a shared array reference no longer causes a leak.
80
81 "eval_sv()" failing a taint test could corrupt the stack - this has
82 been fixed.
83
84 On platforms with 64 bit pointers numeric comparison operators used to
85 erroneously compare the addresses of references that are overloaded,
86 rather than using the overloaded values. This has been fixed.
87
88 "read" into a UTF8-encoded buffer with an offset off the end of the
89 buffer no longer mis-calculates buffer lengths.
90
91 Although Perl has promised since version 5.8 that "sort()" would be
92 stable, the two cases "sort {$b cmp $a}" and "sort {$b <=> $a}" could
93 produce non-stable sorts. This is corrected in perl5.8.6.
94
95 Localising $^D no longer generates a diagnostic message about valid -D
96 flags.
97
99 For -t and -T,
100 Too late for "-T" option has been changed to the more informative
101 "-T" is on the #! line, it must also be used on the command line
102
104 From now on all applications embedding perl will behave as if perl were
105 compiled with -DPERL_USE_SAFE_PUTENV. See "Environment access" in the
106 INSTALL file for details.
107
108 Most "C" source files now have comments at the top explaining their
109 purpose, which should help anyone wishing to get an overview of the
110 implementation.
111
113 There are significantly more tests for the "B" suite of modules.
114
116 If you find what you think is a bug, you might check the articles
117 recently posted to the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup and the perl bug
118 database at http://bugs.perl.org. There may also be information at
119 http://www.perl.org, the Perl Home Page.
120
121 If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the perlbug
122 program included with your release. Be sure to trim your bug down to a
123 tiny but sufficient test case. Your bug report, along with the output
124 of "perl -V", will be sent off to perlbug@perl.org to be analysed by
125 the Perl porting team. You can browse and search the Perl 5 bugs at
126 http://bugs.perl.org/
127
129 The Changes file for exhaustive details on what changed.
130
131 The INSTALL file for how to build Perl.
132
133 The README file for general stuff.
134
135 The Artistic and Copying files for copyright information.
136
137
138
139perl v5.34.0 2021-10-18 PERL586DELTA(1)