perlplan9 - Plan 9-specific documentation for Perl
These are a few notes describing features peculiar to Plan 9 Perl. As such, it is not intended to be a replacement for the rest of the Perl 5 documentation (which is both copious and excellent). If you have any questions to which you cant find answers in these man pages, contact Luther Huffman at lutherh@stratcom.com and well try to answer them.
Perl is invoked from the command line as described in perl. Most perl scripts, however, do have a first line such as #!/usr/local/bin/perl. This is known as a shebang (shell-bang) statement and tells the OS shell where to find the perl interpreter. In Plan 9 Perl this statement should be #!/bin/perl if you wish to be able to directly invoke the script by its name.
Alternatively, you may invoke perl with the command Perl instead of perl. This will produce Acme-friendly error messages of the form filename:18.Some scripts, usually identified with a *.PL extension, are self-configuring and are able to correctly create their own shebang path from config information located in Plan 9 Perl. These you wont need to be worried about.
Although Plan 9 Perl currently only provides static loading, it is built with a number of useful extensions. These include Opcode, FileHandle, Fcntl, and POSIX. Expect to see others (and DynaLoading!) in the future.
As mentioned previously, dynamic loading isnt currently available nor is MakeMaker. Both are high-priority items.
Some, such as chown and umask arent provided because the concept does not exist within Plan 9. Others, such as some of the socket-related functions, simply havent been written yet. Many in the latter category may be supported in the future.The functions not currently implemented include:
chown, chroot, dbmclose, dbmopen, getsockopt, setsockopt, recvmsg, sendmsg, getnetbyname, getnetbyaddr, getnetent, getprotoent, getservent, sethostent, setnetent, setprotoent, setservent, endservent, endnetent, endprotoent, umaskThere may be several other functions that have undefined behavior so this list shouldnt be considered complete.
For compatibility with perl scripts written for the Unix environment, Plan 9 Perl uses the POSIX signal emulation provided in Plan 9s ANSI POSIX Environment (APE). Signal stacking isnt supported. The signals provided are:
SIGHUP, SIGINT, SIGQUIT, SIGILL, SIGABRT, SIGFPE, SIGKILL, SIGSEGV, SIGPIPE, SIGPIPE, SIGALRM, SIGTERM, SIGUSR1, SIGUSR2, SIGCHLD, SIGCONT, SIGSTOP, SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN, SIGTTOU
WELCOME to Plan 9 Perl, brave soul!
This is a preliminary alpha version of Plan 9 Perl. Still to be implemented are MakeMaker and DynaLoader. Many perl commands are missing or currently behave in an inscrutable manner. These gaps will, with perseverance and a modicum of luck, be remedied in the near future.To install this software:1. Create the source directories and libraries for perl by running the plan9/setup.rc command (i.e., located in the plan9 subdirectory). Note: the setup routine assumes that you havent dearchived these files into /sys/src/cmd/perl. After running setup.rc you may delete the copy of the source you originally detarred, as source code has now been installed in /sys/src/cmd/perl. If you plan on installing perl binaries for all architectures, run setup.rc -a.
2. After making sure that you have adequate privileges to build system software, from /sys/src/cmd/perl/5.00301 (adjust version appropriately) run:
mk installIf you wish to install perl versions for all architectures (68020, mips, sparc and 386) run:
mk installall3. Wait. The build process will take a *long* time because perl bootstraps itself. A 75MHz Pentium, 16MB RAM machine takes roughly 30 minutes to build the distribution from scratch.
This perl distribution comes with a tremendous amount of documentation. To add these to the built-in manuals that come with Plan 9, from /sys/src/cmd/perl/5.00301 (adjust version appropriately) run:
mk manTo begin your reading, start with:
man perlThis is a good introduction and will direct you towards other man pages that may interest you.
(Note: mk man may produce some extraneous noise. Fear not.)
As many as there are grains of sand on all the beaches of the world . . . - Carl Sagan
This document was revised 09-October-1996 for Perl 5.003_7.
Direct questions, comments, and the unlikely bug report (ahem) direct comments toward:Luther Huffman, lutherh@stratcom.com, Strategic Computer Solutions, Inc.
| perl v5.8.5 | PERLPLAN9 (1) | 2004-04-23 |