NAME
perlbug - how to submit bug reports on Perl
SYNOPSIS
perlbug
[ -v ] [ -a address ]
[ -s subject ]
[ -b body | -f inputfile ]
[ -F outputfile ]
[ -r returnaddress ]
[ -e editor ]
[ -c adminaddress | -C ]
[ -S ] [ -t ]
[ -d ] [ -A ]
[ -h ]
perlbug [ -v ]
[ -r returnaddress ]
[ -A ] [ -ok |
-okay | -nok | -nokay ]
DESCRIPTION
A program to help generate
bug reports about perl or the modules that come with it, and mail
them.
If you have found a bug with a non-standard port (one that was
not part of the standard distribution), a binary
distribution, or a non-standard module (such as Tk, CGI, etc), then please see the documentation that came
with that distribution to determine the correct place to report
bugs.
"perlbug" is designed to be used interactively.
Normally no arguments will be needed. Simply run it, and follow the
prompts.
If you are unable to run perlbug (most likely because you
don't have a working setup to send mail that perlbug recognizes),
you may have to compose your own report, and email it to
. You
might find the -d option useful to get summary information
in that case.
In any case, when reporting a bug, please make sure you have run
through this checklist:
- What version of Perl you are running?
- Type "perl -v" at the command
line to find out.
- Are you running the latest released version of perl?
- Look at http://www.perl.com/ to find out. If it
is not the latest released version, get that one and see whether
your bug has been fixed. Note that bug reports about old versions
of Perl, especially those prior to the 5.0 release, are likely to
fall upon deaf ears. You are on your own if you continue to use
perl1 .. perl4.
- Are you sure what you have is a bug?
- A significant number of the bug reports we
get turn out to be documented features in Perl. Make sure the
behavior you are witnessing doesn't fall under that category, by
glancing through the documentation that comes with Perl (we'll
admit this is no mean task, given the sheer volume of it all, but
at least have a look at the sections that seem relevant).
Be aware of the familiar traps that perl programmers of various
hues fall into. See perltrap.
Check in perldiag to see what any Perl error message(s) mean. If
message isn't in perldiag, it probably isn't generated by Perl.
Consult your operating system documentation instead.
If you are on a non-UNIX platform check also perlport, as some
features may be unimplemented or work differently.
Try to study the problem under the Perl debugger, if necessary.
See perldebug.
- Do you have a proper test case?
- The easier it is to reproduce your bug,
the more likely it will be fixed, because if no one can duplicate
the problem, no one can fix it. A good test case has most of these
attributes: fewest possible number of lines; few dependencies on
external commands, modules, or libraries; runs on most platforms
unimpeded; and is self-documenting.
A good test case is almost always a good candidate to be on the
perl test suite. If you have the time, consider making your test
case so that it will readily fit into the standard test suite.
Remember also to include the exact error messages, if
any. ``Perl complained something'' is not an exact error message.
If you get a core dump (or equivalent), you may use a debugger
(dbx, gdb, etc) to produce a stack trace to include
in the bug report. NOTE: unless your Perl
has been compiled with debug info (often -g), the stack
trace is likely to be somewhat hard to use because it will most
probably contain only the function names and not their arguments.
If possible, recompile your Perl with debug info and reproduce the
dump and the stack trace.
- Can you describe the bug in plain English?
- The easier it is to understand a
reproducible bug, the more likely it will be fixed. Anything you
can provide by way of insight into the problem helps a great deal.
In other words, try to analyze the problem (to the extent you can)
and report your discoveries.
- Can you fix the bug yourself?
- A bug report which includes a patch to
fix it will almost definitely be fixed. Use the "diff"
program to generate your patches ("diff" is being
maintained by the GNU folks as part of the
diffutils package, so you should be able to get it from any
of the GNU software repositories). If you do
submit a patch, the cool-dude counter at perlbug@perl.org will register you as
a savior of the world. Your patch may be returned with requests for
changes, or requests for more detailed explanations about your fix.
Here are some clues for creating quality patches: Use the
-c or -u switches to the diff program (to create a
so-called context or unified diff). Make sure the patch is not
reversed (the first argument to diff is typically the original
file, the second argument your changed file). Make sure you test
your patch by applying it with the "patch" program before
you send it on its way. Try to follow the same style as the code
you are trying to patch. Make sure your patch really does work
("make test", if the thing you're patching supports it).
- Can you use perlbug to submit the report?
- perlbug will, amongst other things,
ensure your report includes crucial information about your version
of perl. If "perlbug" is unable to mail your report after
you have typed it in, you may have to compose the message yourself,
add the output produced by "perlbug -d" and email it to
. If,
for some reason, you cannot run "perlbug" at all on your
system, be sure to include the entire output produced by running
"perl -V" (note the uppercase V).
Whether you use "perlbug" or send the email manually,
please make your Subject line informative. ``a bug'' not
informative. Neither is ``perl crashes'' nor ``HELP!!!''. These don't help. A compact description of
what's wrong is fine.
Having done your bit, please be prepared to wait, to be told the
bug is in your code, or even to get no reply at all. The Perl
maintainers are busy folks, so if your problem is a small one or if
it is difficult to understand or already known, they may not
respond with a personal reply. If it is important to you that your
bug be fixed, do monitor the "Changes" file in any
development releases since the time you submitted the bug, and
encourage the maintainers with kind words (but never any flames!).
Feel free to resend your bug report if the next released version of
perl comes out and your bug is still present.
OPTIONS
- -a
- Address to send the report to. Defaults to
.
- -A
- Don't send a bug received acknowledgement
to the reply address. Generally it is only a sensible to use this
option if you are a perl maintainer actively watching perl porters
for your message to arrive.
- -b
- Body of the report. If not included on the
command line, or in a file with -f, you will get a chance to
edit the message.
- -C
- Don't send copy to administrator.
- -c
- Address to send copy of report to.
Defaults to the address of the local perl administrator (recorded
when perl was built).
- -d
- Data mode (the default if you redirect or
pipe output). This prints out your configuration data, without
mailing anything. You can use this with -v to get more
complete data.
- -e
- Editor to use.
- -f
- File containing the body of the report.
Use this to quickly send a prepared message.
- -F
- File to output the results to instead of
sending as an email. Useful particularly when running perlbug on a
machine with no direct internet connection.
- -h
- Prints a brief summary of the options.
- -ok
- Report successful build on this system to
perl porters. Forces -S and -C. Forces and supplies
values for -s and -b. Only prompts for a return
address if it cannot guess it (for use with make). Honors
return address specified with -r. You can use this with
-v to get more complete data. Only makes a report if this
system is less than 60 days old.
- -okay
- As -ok except it will report on
older systems.
- -nok
- Report unsuccessful build on this system.
Forces -C. Forces and supplies a value for -s, then
requires you to edit the report and say what went wrong.
Alternatively, a prepared report may be supplied using -f.
Only prompts for a return address if it cannot guess it (for use
with make). Honors return address specified with -r.
You can use this with -v to get more complete data. Only
makes a report if this system is less than 60 days old.
- -nokay
- As -nok except it will report on
older systems.
- -r
- Your return address. The program will ask
you to confirm its default if you don't use this option.
- -S
- Send without asking for confirmation.
- -s
- Subject to include with the message. You
will be prompted if you don't supply one on the command line.
- -t
- Test mode. The target address defaults to
.
- -v
- Include verbose configuration data in the
report.
AUTHORS
Kenneth Albanowski
(<kjahds@kjahds.com>),
subsequently doctored by Gurusamy Sarathy (<gsar@activestate.com>), Tom
Christiansen (<tchrist@perl.com>), Nathan
Torkington (<gnat@frii.com>), Charles F. Randall
(<cfr@pobox.com>), Mike
Guy (<mjtg@cam.a.uk>),
Dominic Dunlop (<domo@computer.org>), Hugo van der
Sanden (<hv@crypt.org<gt>), Jarkko
Hietaniemi (<jhi@iki.fi>),
Chris Nandor (<pudge@pobox.com>), Jon Orwant
(<orwant@media.mit.edu>, and
Richard Foley (<richard@rfi.net>).
SEE ALSO
perl(1),
perldebug(1),
perldiag(1),
perlport(1),
perltrap(1),
diff(1),
patch(1),
dbx(1),
gdb(1)
BUGS
None known (guess what must have
been used to report them?)