NAME¶
perlsource - A guide to the Perl source tree
DESCRIPTION¶
This document describes the layout of the Perl source tree. If you're hacking on
the Perl core, this will help you find what you're looking for.
FINDING YOUR WAY AROUND¶
The Perl source tree is big. Here's some of the thing you'll find in it:
C code¶
The C source code and header files mostly live in the root of the source tree.
There are a few platform-specific directories which contain C code. In
addition, some of the modules shipped with Perl include C or XS code.
See perlinterp for more details on the files that make up the Perl interpreter,
as well as details on how it works.
Core modules¶
Modules shipped as part of the Perl core live in four subdirectories. Two of
these directories contain modules that live in the core, and two contain
modules that can also be released separately on CPAN. Modules which can be
released on cpan are known as "dual-life" modules.
- •
- lib/
This directory contains pure-Perl modules which are only released as part of
the core. This directory contains all of the modules and their
tests, unlike other core modules.
- •
- ext/
This directory contains XS-using modules which are only released as part of
the core. These modules generally have their Makefile.PL and are
laid out more like a typical CPAN module.
- •
- dist/
This directory is for dual-life modules where the blead source is canonical.
Note that some modules in this directory may not yet have been released
separately on CPAN.
- •
- cpan/
This directory contains dual-life modules where the CPAN module is
canonical. Do not patch these modules directly! Changes to these modules
should be submitted to the maintainer of the CPAN module. Once those
changes are applied and released, the new version of the module will be
incorporated into the core.
For some dual-life modules, it has not yet been determined if the CPAN version
or the blead source is canonical. Until that is done, those modules should be
in
cpan/.
Tests¶
The Perl core has an extensive test suite. If you add new tests (or new modules
with tests), you may need to update the
t/TEST file so that the tests
are run.
- •
- Module tests
Tests for core modules in the lib/ directory are right next to the
module itself. For example, we have lib/strict.pm and
lib/strict.t.
Tests for modules in ext/ and the dual-life modules are in t/
subdirectories for each module, like a standard CPAN distribution.
- •
- t/base/
Tests for the absolute basic functionality of Perl. This includes
"if", basic file reads and writes, simple regexes, etc. These
are run first in the test suite and if any of them fail, something is
really broken.
- •
- t/cmd/
Tests for basic control structures, "if/else", "while",
subroutines, etc.
- •
- t/comp/
Tests for basic issues of how Perl parses and compiles itself.
- •
- t/io/
Tests for built-in IO functions, including command line arguments.
- •
- t/mro/
Tests for perl's method resolution order implementations (see mro).
- •
- t/op/
Tests for perl's built in functions that don't fit into any of the other
directories.
- •
- t/re/
Tests for regex related functions or behaviour. (These used to live in
t/op).
- •
- t/run/
Tests for features of how perl actually runs, including exit codes and
handling of PERL* environment variables.
- •
- t/uni/
Tests for the core support of Unicode.
- •
- t/win32/
Windows-specific tests.
- •
- t/porting/
Tests the state of the source tree for various common errors. For example,
it tests that everyone who is listed in the git log has a corresponding
entry in the AUTHORS file.
- •
- t/lib/
The old home for the module tests, you shouldn't put anything new in here.
There are still some bits and pieces hanging around in here that need to
be moved. Perhaps you could move them? Thanks!
- •
- t/x2p
A test suite for the s2p converter.
Documentation¶
All of the core documentation intended for end users lives in
pod/.
Individual modules in
lib/,
ext/,
dist/, and
cpan/
usually have their own documentation, either in the
Module.pm file or
an accompanying
Module.pod file.
Finally, documentation intended for core Perl developers lives in the
Porting/ directory.
The
Porting directory contains a grab bag of code and documentation
intended to help porters work on Perl. Some of the highlights include:
- •
- check*
These are scripts which will check the source things like ANSI C violations,
POD encoding issues, etc.
- •
- Maintainers, Maintainers.pl, and
Maintainers.pm
These files contain information on who maintains which modules. Run
"perl Porting/Maintainers -M Module::Name" to find out more
information about a dual-life module.
- •
- podtidy
Tidies a pod file. It's a good idea to run this on a pod file you've
patched.
Build system¶
The Perl build system starts with the
Configure script in the root
directory.
Platform-specific pieces of the build system also live in platform-specific
directories like
win32/,
vms/, etc.
The
Configure script is ultimately responsible for generating a
Makefile.
The build system that Perl uses is called metaconfig. This system is maintained
separately from the Perl core.
The metaconfig system has its own git repository. Please see its README file in
<
http://perl5.git.perl.org/metaconfig.git/> for more details.
The
Cross directory contains various files related to cross-compiling
Perl. See
Cross/README for more details.
AUTHORS¶
This file everyone who's contributed to Perl. If you submit a patch, you should
add your name to this file as part of the patch.
MANIFEST¶
The
MANIFEST file in the root of the source tree contains a list of every
file in the Perl core, as well as a brief description of each file.
You can get an overview of all the files with this command:
% perl -lne 'print if /^[^\/]+\.[ch]\s+/' MANIFEST