The B::C, B::CC, B::Bytecode Perl Compiler Kit
Copyright (c) 1996-1997 Malcolm Beattie
Copyright (c) 2008-2011, 2017-2019 Reini Urban
Copyright (c) 2012-2017 cPanel Inc
Releases: http://search.cpan.org/dist/B-C/
Code+Issues: http://github.com/rurban/perl-compiler/
(was until 2016 at http://code.google.com/p/perl-compiler/)
OVERVIEW
Malcom Beattie's perl compiler ("perlcc") updated to 5.10 - 5.24 and cperl,
with most bugs fixed (also for 5.6. and 5.8) and new features
added. It compiles to C or platform-compatible Bytecode.
Development is in the master branch at https://github.com/rurban/perl-compiler,
the stable branch is called 'release', the newest perl releases usually don't work
immediately. I typically need 6 months to catch up for perl5. With cperl B-C is
included in CORE, so this is supported to work there.
Known issues:
See https://github.com/rurban/perl-compiler/issues/
* run-time attributes (e.g. use open attributes, Attribute::Handlers, ...),
but ok at compile-time.
* some compile-time side-effects can not be reproduced when running a compiled
binary, such as BEGIN { chdir $dir }, i.e. most system and IO calls. use
INIT {} instead.
* p5p Carp >= 1.42 is broken. 5.26++, rather use cperl.
* Certain XS module using compile-time pointers need special workarounds:
* DBI patched by the compiler (#359)
* Encode > 2.58 (#71, #305, RT 94221), patched by the compiler
* Net::DNS > 0.67 (#305, RT 94069)
* IO::Socket::SSL > 1.995 (#317, RT 95452)
* DBD::mysql > 4.027 (RT 97625)
* Todo: FCGI, Coro, Moose with meta->make_immutable
* Class::XSAccessor see t/testc.sh 400 for 2 of 3 possibilities how to use it
Mailinglist:
http://groups.google.com/group/perl-compiler perl-compiler@googlegroups.com
INSTALL
cpan B::C
On strawberry I needed
perl Makefile.PL FIXIN="perl -S pl2bat.bat"
On Windows and AIX for 5.12 and 5.14 you need to patch and rebuild CORE perl:
ramblings/Export-store_cop_label-for-the-perl-compiler.patch
For 5.14 and 5.15 I recommend also the following patches:
ramblings/revert-B-load-BEGIN.patch (The 5.14.1 version)
ramblings/Carp-wo-B.patch
We generally discourage the use of perl since 5.16 unhandled and
unacknowledged security problems with the implementation of "unicode"
symbols and packagenames, where they really implemented binary names
for all symbols without any checks and further support of such binary
names. Identifiers are not identifiable anymore.
See the warning at perl Makefile.PL.
5.20 improved support for binary names for most syscalls, dumpers and
APIs, but TR39 and strict names are still not handled, the problems
are not understood and reactions are generally hostile.
5.18 made it 20% bigger with the implementation of COW strings.
Most strings cannot be stored statically anymore since then.
The best perl versions for the compiler are 5.14.4, 5.22.1 and cperl,
since these are the most tested versions, where the coretest suite passes.
USAGE
The Bytecode, C and CC backends are now all functional
enough to compile almost the whole of the main perl test
suite and 99-100% of the top100 modules.
Bytecode was broken upstream with 5.22
CC added a lot of new failures with 5.24
cperl is far superior over perl5, esp. with its advanced compiler
support and less breakage.
In the case of the CC backend, any failures are all
due to differences and/or known bugs documented below.
See the file TESTS.
(1) To compile perl program foo.pl with the C backend, do
perl -MO=C,-ofoo.c foo.pl
Then use the cc_harness perl program to compile the
resulting C source:
perl cc_harness -O2 -o foo foo.c
If you are using a non-ANSI pre-Standard C compiler that
can't handle pre-declaring static arrays, then add
-DBROKEN_STATIC_REDECL to the options you use:
perl cc_harness -O2 -o foo -DBROKEN_STATIC_REDECL foo.c
If you are using a non-ANSI pre-Standard C compiler that
can't handle static initialisation of structures with union
members then add -DBROKEN_UNION_INIT to the options you
use. If you want command line arguments passed to your
executable to be interpreted by perl (e.g. -Dx) then compile
foo.c with -DALLOW_PERL_OPTIONS. Otherwise, all command line
arguments passed to foo will appear directly in @ARGV. The
resulting executable foo is the compiled version of
foo.pl. See the file NOTES for extra options you can pass to
-MO=C.
There are some constraints on the contents on foo.pl if you
want to be able to compile it successfully. Some problems
can be fixed fairly easily by altering foo.pl; some problems
with the compiler are known to be straightforward to solve
and I'll do so soon. The file Todo lists a number of known
problems. See the XSUB section lower down for information
about compiling programs which use XSUBs.
(2) To compile foo.pl with the CC backend (which generates
actual optimised C code for the execution path of your perl
program), use
perl -MO=CC,-ofoo.c foo.pl
and proceed just as with the C backend. You should almost
certainly use an option such as -O2 with the subsequent
cc_harness invocation so that your C compiler uses
optimisation. The C code generated by the Perl compiler's CC
backend looks ugly to humans but is easily optimised by C
compilers.
To make the most of this optimizing compiler backend, you need to tell
the compiler when you're using int or double variables so that it can
optimise appropriately. The old deprecated way do that was by naming
lexical variables ending in "_i" for ints, "_d" for doubles, "_ir" for
int "register" variables or "_dr" for double "register"
variables. Here "register" is a promise that you won't pass a
reference to the variable into a sub which then modifies the variable.
The new way is to declare those lexicals with "my int" and "my
double". The compiler ought to catch attempts to use "\$i" just as C
compilers catch attempts to do "&i" for a register int i, but it
doesn't at the moment. Bugs in the CC backend may make your program
fail in mysterious ways and give wrong answers rather than just crash
in boring ways. CC is still on the experimental level. Please use your
test suite.
If your program uses classes which define methods (or other subs which
are not exported and not apparently used until runtime) then you'll
need to use -u compile-time options (see the NOTES file) to force the
subs to be compiled. Future releases will probably default the other
way, do more auto-detection and provide more fine-grained control.
Since compiled executables need linking with libperl, you
may want to turn libperl.a into a shared library if your
platform supports it, -Duseshrplib.
You'll probably also want to link your main perl executable
against libperl.so; it's nice having an 11K perl executable.
(3) To compile foo.pl into bytecode do
perl -MO=Bytecode,-ofoo.plc foo.pl
To run the resulting bytecode file foo.plc, you use the
ByteLoader module which should have been built along with
the extensions.
perl -MByteLoader foo.plc
Previous Perl releases had ByteLoader in CORE, so you can omit
-MByteLoader there.
You can also do -H to automatically use ByteLoader
perl -MO=Bytecode,-H,-ofoo.plc foo.pl
perl foo.plc
Any extra arguments are passed in as @ARGV; they are not interpreted
as perl options.
See the NOTES file for details of these and other options (including
optimisation options and ways of getting at the intermediate "assembler"
code that the Bytecode backend uses).
(3) There are little Bourne shell scripts and perl programs to aid with
some common operations:
perlcc, assemble, disassemble, cc_harness
XSUBS
The C and CC backends can successfully compile some perl programs which
make use of XSUB extensions. [I'll add more detail to this section in a
later release.] As a prerequisite, such extensions must not need to do
anything in their BOOT: section which needs to be done at runtime rather
than compile time. Normally, the only code in the boot_Foo() function is
a list of newXS() calls which xsubpp puts there and the compiler handles
saving those XS subs itself. For each XSUB used, the C and CC compiler
will generate an initialiser in their C output which refers to the name
of the relevant C function (XS_Foo_somesub). What is not yet automated
is the necessary commands and cc command-line options (e.g. via
"perl cc_harness") which link against the extension libraries. For now,
you need the XSUB extension to have installed files in the right format
for using as C libraries (e.g. Foo.a or Foo.so). As the Foo.so files (or
your platform's version) aren't suitable for linking against, you will
have to reget the extension source and rebuild it as a static extension
to force the generation of a suitable Foo.a file. Then you need to make
a symlink (or copy or rename) of that file into a libFoo.a suitable for
cc linking. Then add the appropriate -L and -l options to your
"perl cc_harness" command line to find and link against those libraries.
You may also need to fix up some platform-dependent environment variable
to ensure that linked-against .so files are found at runtime too.
Read about perlcc --staticxs
CROSS COMPILATION
Small devices often do not have enough memory or not even an installed
compiler to compile to a compiled perl executable. In this case you
need the target config.sh on your filesystem, and pass it as
-cross=pathto/config.sh option to the compiler. Several host config
values will then be replaced by its target values, so that it can be
run on the target system with the target configuration. Esp. for the
target specific @INC, which must find run-time modules in its path.
Note that the basic architecture must still match, i.e. the perl
version and the settings for usemultiplicity and useithreads must be
the same as on the host. It's is strongly recommended to also have
the same byteorder, ivsize and nvsize settings on the native host.
DIFFERENCES
The result of running a CC compiled Perl program can sometimes be different
from running the same program with standard perl. Think of the compiler
as having a slightly different implementation of the language Perl.
Unfortunately, since Perl has had a single implementation until now,
there are no formal standards or documents defining what behaviour is
guaranteed of Perl the language and what just "happens to work".
Some of the differences below are almost impossible to change because of
the way the compiler works. Others can be changed to produce "standard"
perl behaviour if it's deemed proper and the resulting performance hit
is accepted. I'll use "standard perl" to mean the result of running a
Perl program using the perl executable from the perl distribution.
I'll use "compiled Perl program" to mean running an executable produced
by this compiler kit ("the compiler") with the CC backend.
Loops
Standard perl calculates the target of "next", "last", and "redo"
at run-time. The compiler calculates the targets at compile-time.
For example, the program
sub skip_on_odd { next NUMBER if $_[0] % 2 }
NUMBER: for ($i = 0; $i < 5; $i++) {
skip_on_odd($i);
print $i;
}
produces the output
024
with standard perl but gives a compile-time error with the compiler.
See test 21.
Context of ".."
The context (scalar or array) of the ".." operator determines whether
it behaves as a range or a flip/flop. Standard perl delays until
runtime the decision of which context it is in but the compiler needs
to know the context at compile-time. For example,
@a = (4,6,1,0,0,1);
sub range { (shift @a)..(shift @a) }
print range();
while (@a) { print scalar(range()) }
generates the output
456123E0
with standard Perl but gives a compile-time error with compiled Perl.
See test 30.
Arithmetic
Optimized compiled Perl programs use native C arithmetic
much more frequently than standard perl. So operations on
large numbers or on boundary cases may produce different behaviour.
Deprecated features
Features of standard perl such as $[ which have been deprecated
in standard perl since version 5 was released have not been
implemented in the compiler.
STATUS
C is stable, CC is unstable.
Bytecode stable until 5.16
The Bytecode compiler is disabled for 5.6.2, use the default instead.
See STATUS for details.
BUGS
Here are some things which may cause the compiler problems.
The following render the compiler useless (without serious hacking):
* The following operators are not yet implemented for CC
goto
continue/next/last to a outer LABEL
* You can't use "last" to exit from a non-loop block.
* use Attribute::Handlers, or run-time usage of attributes. Usage of
Attribute::Handlers is discouraged generally for security reasons, as it
evals all attributes. (#169)
* Accessing @- values from compiled regular expressions are currently broken (#281)
The following may give significant problems:
* BEGIN blocks containing complex initialisation code,
esp. sideeffects. All the BEGIN code is evaluated once at compile-time,
and NOT executed at run-time.
* Code which is only ever referred to at runtime (e.g. via eval "..." or
via method calls): see the -u option for the C and CC backends.
* compile-time perlio layers. Use them at run-time instead.
i.e. use open qw(:std :utf8) does not work yet on STDIN.
* run-time loading of DynaLoader packages which use AutoLoad (i.e. BSD::Resource).
Compile them in, e.g. with use package. (#308)
* format STDOUT or STDERR (#285)
The following may cause problems (not thoroughly tested):
* For the C and CC backends: compile-time strings which are longer than
your C compiler can cope with in a single line or definition.
Use perlcc to workaround MSVC problems.
* Reliance on intimate details of global destruction. Implemented only with 1.46
There is a terser but more complete list in the Todo file.
LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of either:
a) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any
later version, or
b) the "Artistic License" which comes with this kit.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See either
the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the Artistic License with this kit,
in the file named "Artistic". If not, you can get one from the Perl
distribution. You should also have received a copy of the GNU General
Public License, in the file named "Copying". If not, you can get one
from the Perl distribution or else write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
Reini Urban
2019-05-06
Malcolm Beattie
2 September 1996