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NAME

       perlclib - Interacting with standard C library functions

DESCRIPTION

       The perl interpreter is written in C; XS code also expands to C.  Inevitably, this code will call some
       functions from the C library, "libc".  This document gives some guidance on interfacing with that
       library.

       One thing Perl porters should note is that perl doesn't tend to use that much of the C standard library
       internally; you'll see very little use of, for example, the ctype.h functions in there. This is because
       Perl tends to reimplement or abstract standard library functions, so that we know exactly how they're
       going to operate.

libc functions to avoid

       There are many many libc functions.  Most of them are fair game to use, but some are not.  Some of the
       possible reasons are:

       •   They  likely  will  interfere  with  the  perl interpreter's functioning, such as its bookkeeping, or
           signal handling, or memory allocation, or any number of harmful things.

       •   They aren't implemented on all platforms, but there is an alternative that is.

           Or they may be buggy or deprecated on some or all platforms.

       •   They aren't suitable for multi-threaded operation, but there is an alternative that is, and  is  just
           as easily usable.

           You  may  not  expect  your  code  to ever be used under threads, but code has a way of being adapted
           beyond our initial expectations.  If it is just as easy to use  something  that  can  be  used  under
           threads, it's better to use that now, just in case.

       •   In  functions  that  deal  with strings, complications may arise because the string may be encoded in
           different ways, for example in UTF-8.  For these, it is likely better to place the string in a SV and
           use the Perl SV string handling functions that contain extensive logic to deal with this.

       •   In functions that deal with numbers, complications may arise because  the  numbers  get  too  big  or
           small,  and  what  those limits are depends on the current platform.  Again, the Perl SV numeric data
           types have extensive logic to take care of these kinds of issues.

       •   They are locale-aware, and your caller may not want this.

       The following commentary and tables give some functions in the first column that shouldn't be used  in  C
       or XS code, with the preferred alternative (if any) in the second column.

   Conventions
       In the following tables:

       "~"
          marks the function as deprecated; it should not be used regardless.

       "t"
          is a type.

       "p"
          is a pointer.

       "n"
          is a number.

       "s"
          is a string.

       "sv", "av", "hv", etc. represent variables of their respective types.

   File Operations
       Instead  of  the  stdio.h functions, you should use the Perl abstraction layer. Instead of "FILE*" types,
       you need to be handling "PerlIO*" types.  Don't forget that with the new PerlIO layered  I/O  abstraction
       "FILE*" types may not even be available. See also the "perlapio" documentation for more information about
       the following functions:

         Instead Of:                 Use:

         stdin                       PerlIO_stdin()
         stdout                      PerlIO_stdout()
         stderr                      PerlIO_stderr()

         fopen(fn, mode)             PerlIO_open(fn, mode)
         freopen(fn, mode, stream)   PerlIO_reopen(fn, mode, perlio) (Dep-
                                       recated)
         fflush(stream)              PerlIO_flush(perlio)
         fclose(stream)              PerlIO_close(perlio)

   File Input and Output
         Instead Of:                 Use:

         fprintf(stream, fmt, ...)   PerlIO_printf(perlio, fmt, ...)

         [f]getc(stream)             PerlIO_getc(perlio)
         [f]putc(stream, n)          PerlIO_putc(perlio, n)
         ungetc(n, stream)           PerlIO_ungetc(perlio, n)

       Note  that  the  PerlIO  equivalents  of "fread" and "fwrite" are slightly different from their C library
       counterparts:

         fread(p, size, n, stream)   PerlIO_read(perlio, buf, numbytes)
         fwrite(p, size, n, stream)  PerlIO_write(perlio, buf, numbytes)

         fputs(s, stream)            PerlIO_puts(perlio, s)

       There is no equivalent to "fgets"; one should use "sv_gets" instead:

         fgets(s, n, stream)         sv_gets(sv, perlio, append)

   File Positioning
         Instead Of:                 Use:

         feof(stream)                PerlIO_eof(perlio)
         fseek(stream, n, whence)    PerlIO_seek(perlio, n, whence)
         rewind(stream)              PerlIO_rewind(perlio)

         fgetpos(stream, p)          PerlIO_getpos(perlio, sv)
         fsetpos(stream, p)          PerlIO_setpos(perlio, sv)

         ferror(stream)              PerlIO_error(perlio)
         clearerr(stream)            PerlIO_clearerr(perlio)

   Memory Management and String Handling
         Instead Of:                    Use:

         t* p = malloc(n)               Newx(p, n, t)
         t* p = calloc(n, s)            Newxz(p, n, t)
         p = realloc(p, n)              Renew(p, n, t)
         memcpy(dst, src, n)            Copy(src, dst, n, t)
         memmove(dst, src, n)           Move(src, dst, n, t)
         memcpy(dst, src, sizeof(t))    StructCopy(src, dst, t)
         memset(dst, 0, n * sizeof(t))  Zero(dst, n, t)
         memzero(dst, 0)                Zero(dst, n, char)
         free(p)                        Safefree(p)

         strdup(p)                      savepv(p)
         strndup(p, n)                  savepvn(p, n) (Hey, strndup doesn't
                                                       exist!)

         strstr(big, little)            instr(big, little)
         memmem(big, blen, little, len) ninstr(big, bigend, little, little_end)
         strcmp(s1, s2)                 strLE(s1, s2) / strEQ(s1, s2)
                                                      / strGT(s1,s2)
         strncmp(s1, s2, n)             strnNE(s1, s2, n) / strnEQ(s1, s2, n)

         memcmp(p1, p2, n)              memNE(p1, p2, n)
         !memcmp(p1, p2, n)             memEQ(p1, p2, n)

       Notice the different order of arguments to "Copy" and "Move" than used in "memcpy" and "memmove".

       Most of the time, though, you'll want to be dealing with SVs internally instead of raw "char *" strings:

         strlen(s)                   sv_len(sv)
         strcpy(dt, src)             sv_setpv(sv, s)
         strncpy(dt, src, n)         sv_setpvn(sv, s, n)
         strcat(dt, src)             sv_catpv(sv, s)
         strncat(dt, src)            sv_catpvn(sv, s)
         sprintf(s, fmt, ...)        sv_setpvf(sv, fmt, ...)

       If you do need raw strings, some platforms have safer interfaces, and Perl makes sure a version of  these
       are available on all platforms:

         strlcat(dt, src, sizeof(dt)) my_strlcat(dt, src, sizeof(dt))
         strlcpy(dt, src, sizeof(dt)) my_strlcpy(dt, src, sizeof(dt))
         strnlen(s)                   my_strnlen(s, maxlen)

       Note also the existence of "sv_catpvf" and "sv_vcatpvfn", combining concatenation with formatting.

       Sometimes  instead  of  zeroing  the  allocated heap by using Newxz() you should consider "poisoning" the
       data.  This means writing a bit pattern into it that should be illegal as pointers  (and  floating  point
       numbers),  and  also hopefully surprising enough as integers, so that any code attempting to use the data
       without forethought will break sooner rather than later.   Poisoning  can  be  done  using  the  Poison()
       macros, which have similar arguments to Zero():

         PoisonWith(dst, n, t, b)    scribble memory with byte b
         PoisonNew(dst, n, t)        equal to PoisonWith(dst, n, t, 0xAB)
         PoisonFree(dst, n, t)       equal to PoisonWith(dst, n, t, 0xEF)
         Poison(dst, n, t)           equal to PoisonFree(dst, n, t)

   Character Class Tests
       There  are  several types of character class tests that Perl implements.  All are more fully described in
       "Character classification" in perlapi and "Character case changing" in perlapi.

       The C library routines listed in the table below return values based on  the  current  locale.   Use  the
       entries  in  the final column for that functionality.  The other two columns always assume a POSIX (or C)
       locale.  The entries in the ASCII column are only  meaningful  for  ASCII  inputs,  returning  FALSE  for
       anything  else.   Use  these  only when you know that is what you want.  The entries in the Latin1 column
       assume that the non-ASCII 8-bit characters are as Unicode defines them, the  same  as  ISO-8859-1,  often
       called Latin 1.

         Instead Of:  Use for ASCII:   Use for Latin1:      Use for locale:

         isalnum(c)  isALPHANUMERIC(c) isALPHANUMERIC_L1(c) isALPHANUMERIC_LC(c)
         isalpha(c)  isALPHA(c)        isALPHA_L1(c)        isALPHA_LC(u )
         isascii(c)  isASCII(c)                             isASCII_LC(c)
         isblank(c)  isBLANK(c)        isBLANK_L1(c)        isBLANK_LC(c)
         iscntrl(c)  isCNTRL(c)        isCNTRL_L1(c)        isCNTRL_LC(c)
         isdigit(c)  isDIGIT(c)        isDIGIT_L1(c)        isDIGIT_LC(c)
         isgraph(c)  isGRAPH(c)        isGRAPH_L1(c)        isGRAPH_LC(c)
         islower(c)  isLOWER(c)        isLOWER_L1(c)        isLOWER_LC(c)
         isprint(c)  isPRINT(c)        isPRINT_L1(c)        isPRINT_LC(c)
         ispunct(c)  isPUNCT(c)        isPUNCT_L1(c)        isPUNCT_LC(c)
         isspace(c)  isSPACE(c)        isSPACE_L1(c)        isSPACE_LC(c)
         isupper(c)  isUPPER(c)        isUPPER_L1(c)        isUPPER_LC(c)
         isxdigit(c) isXDIGIT(c)       isXDIGIT_L1(c)       isXDIGIT_LC(c)

         tolower(c)  toLOWER(c)        toLOWER_L1(c)
         toupper(c)  toUPPER(c)

       For   the  corresponding  functions  like  iswupper(),  etc.,  use  isUPPER_uvchr()  for  non-locale;  or
       isUPPER_LC_uvchr() for locale.  And use toLOWER_uvchr() instead of towlower(), etc..  There are no direct
       equivalents for locale; best to put the string into an SV.

       Don't use any of the functions like isalnum_l().  Those  are  non-portable,  and  interfere  with  Perl's
       internal handling.

       To  emphasize  that you are operating only on ASCII characters, you can append "_A" to each of the macros
       in the ASCII column: "isALPHA_A", "isDIGIT_A", and so on.

       (There is no entry in the Latin1 column for "isascii" even though there  is  an  "isASCII_L1",  which  is
       identical  to  "isASCII";   the  latter  name  is  clearer.   There  is no entry in the Latin1 column for
       "toupper" because the result can be non-Latin1.   You  have  to  use  "toUPPER_uvchr",  as  described  in
       "Character case changing" in perlapi.)

       Note that the libc caseless comparisons are crippled; Unicode provides a richer set, using the concept of
       folding.   If you need more than equality/non-equality, it's probably best to store your strings in an SV
       and use SV functions to do the comparision.  Similarly for collation.

   stdlib.h functions
         Instead Of:                 Use:

         atof(s)                     my_atof(s) or Atof(s)
         atoi(s)                     grok_atoUV(s, &uv, &e)
         atol(s)                     grok_atoUV(s, &uv, &e)
         strtod(s, &p)               Strtod(s, &p)
         strtol(s, &p, n)            Strtol(s, &p, b)
         strtoul(s, &p, n)           Strtoul(s, &p, b)

       But note that these are subject to locale; see "Dealing with locales".

       Typical use is to do range checks on "uv" before casting:

          int i; UV uv;
          char* end_ptr = input_end;
          if (grok_atoUV(input, &uv, &end_ptr)
              && uv <= INT_MAX)
            i = (int)uv;
            ... /* continue parsing from end_ptr */
          } else {
            ... /* parse error: not a decimal integer in range 0 .. MAX_IV */
          }

       Notice also the "grok_bin", "grok_hex", and "grok_oct" functions  in  numeric.c  for  converting  strings
       representing  numbers in the respective bases into "NV"s.  Note that grok_atoUV() doesn't handle negative
       inputs, or leading whitespace (being purposefully strict).

   Miscellaneous functions
       You should not even want to use setjmp.h functions, but if you think you do, use the  "JMPENV"  stack  in
       scope.h instead.

        ~asctime()              Perl_sv_strftime_tm()
        ~asctime_r()            Perl_sv_strftime_tm()
         chsize()               my_chsize()
        ~ctime()                Perl_sv_strftime_tm()
        ~ctime_r()              Perl_sv_strftime_tm()
        ~cuserid()              DO NOT USE; see its man page
         dirfd()                my_dirfd()
         duplocale()            Perl_setlocale()
        ~ecvt()                 my_snprintf()
        ~endgrent_r()           endgrent()
        ~endhostent_r()         endhostent()
        ~endnetent_r()          endnetent()
        ~endprotoent_r()        endprotoent()
        ~endpwent_r()           endpwent()
        ~endservent_r()         endservent()
        ~endutent()             endutxent()
         exit(n)                my_exit(n)
        ~fcvt()                 my_snprintf()
         freelocale()           Perl_setlocale()
        ~ftw()                  nftw()
         getenv(s)              PerlEnv_getenv(s)
        ~gethostbyaddr()        getaddrinfo()
        ~gethostbyname()        getnameinfo()
        ~getpass()              DO NOT USE; see its man page
        ~getpw()                getpwuid()
        ~getutent()             getutxent()
        ~getutid()              getutxid()
        ~getutline()            getutxline()
        ~gsignal()              DO NOT USE; see its man page
         localeconv()           Perl_localeconv()
         mblen()                mbrlen()
         mbtowc()               mbrtowc()
         newlocale()            Perl_setlocale()
         pclose()               my_pclose()
         popen()                my_popen()
        ~pututline()            pututxline()
        ~qecvt()                my_snprintf()
        ~qfcvt()                my_snprintf()
         querylocale()          Perl_setlocale()
         int rand()             double Drand01()
         srand(n)               { seedDrand01((Rand_seed_t)n);
                                  PL_srand_called = TRUE; }
        ~readdir_r()            readdir()
         realloc()              saferealloc(), Renew() or Renewc()
        ~re_comp()              regcomp()
        ~re_exec()              regexec()
        ~rexec()                rcmd()
        ~rexec_af()             rcmd()
         setenv(s, val)         my_setenv(s, val)
        ~setgrent_r()           setgrent()
        ~sethostent_r()         sethostent()
         setlocale()            Perl_setlocale()
         setlocale_r()          Perl_setlocale()
        ~setnetent_r()          setnetent()
        ~setprotoent_r()        setprotoent()
        ~setpwent_r()           setpwent()
        ~setservent_r()         setservent()
        ~setutent()             setutxent()
         sigaction()            rsignal(signo, handler)
        ~siginterrupt()         rsignal() with the SA_RESTART flag instead
         signal(signo, handler) rsignal(signo, handler)
        ~ssignal()              DO NOT USE; see its man page
         strcasecmp()           a Perl foldEQ-family function
         strerror()             sv_string_from_errnum()
         strerror_l()           sv_string_from_errnum()
         strerror_r()           sv_string_from_errnum()
         strftime()             Perl_sv_strftime_tm()
         strtod()               my_strtod() or Strtod()
         system(s)              Don't. Look at pp_system or use my_popen.
        ~tempnam()              mkstemp() or tmpfile()
        ~tmpnam()               mkstemp() or tmpfile()
         tmpnam_r()             mkstemp() or tmpfile()
         uselocale()            Perl_setlocale()
         vsnprintf()            my_vsnprintf()
         wctob()                wcrtomb()
         wctomb()               wcrtomb()
         wsetlocale()           Perl_setlocale()

       The Perl-furnished alternatives are documented in perlapi, which you should peruse anyway to see what all
       is available to you.

       The  lists  are  incomplete.   Think when using an unlisted function if it seems likely to interfere with
       Perl.

Dealing with locales

       Like it or not, your code will be executed in the context of a locale, as are all  C  language  programs.
       See perllocale.  Most libc calls are not affected by the locale, but a surprising number are:

        addmntent()           getspent_r()        sethostent()
        alphasort()           getspnam()          sethostent_r()
        asctime()             getspnam_r()        setnetent()
        asctime_r()           getwc()             setnetent_r()
        asprintf()            getwchar()          setnetgrent()
        atof()                glob()              setprotoent()
        atoi()                gmtime()            setprotoent_r()
        atol()                gmtime_r()          setpwent()
        atoll()               grantpt()           setpwent_r()
        btowc()               iconv_open()        setrpcent()
        catopen()             inet_addr()         setservent()
        ctime()               inet_aton()         setservent_r()
        ctime_r()             inet_network()      setspent()
        cuserid()             inet_ntoa()         sgetspent_r()
        daylight              inet_ntop()         shm_open()
        dirname()             inet_pton()         shm_unlink()
        dprintf()             initgroups()        snprintf()
        endaliasent()         innetgr()           sprintf()
        endgrent()            iruserok()          sscanf()
        endgrent_r()          iruserok_af()       strcasecmp()
        endhostent()          isalnum()           strcasestr()
        endhostent_r()        isalnum_l()         strcoll()
        endnetent()           isalpha()           strerror()
        endnetent_r()         isalpha_l()         strerror_l()
        endprotoent()         isascii()           strerror_r()
        endprotoent_r()       isascii_l()         strfmon()
        endpwent()            isblank()           strfmon_l()
        endpwent_r()          isblank_l()         strfromd()
        endrpcent()           iscntrl()           strfromf()
        endservent()          iscntrl_l()         strfroml()
        endservent_r()        isdigit()           strftime()
        endspent()            isdigit_l()         strftime_l()
        err()                 isgraph()           strncasecmp()
        error()               isgraph_l()         strptime()
        error_at_line()       islower()           strsignal()
        errx()                islower_l()         strtod()
        fgetwc()              isprint()           strtof()
        fgetwc_unlocked()     isprint_l()         strtoimax()
        fgetws()              ispunct()           strtol()
        fgetws_unlocked()     ispunct_l()         strtold()
        fnmatch()             isspace()           strtoll()
        forkpty()             isspace_l()         strtoq()
        fprintf()             isupper()           strtoul()
        fputwc()              isupper_l()         strtoull()
        fputwc_unlocked()     iswalnum()          strtoumax()
        fputws()              iswalnum_l()        strtouq()
        fputws_unlocked()     iswalpha()          strverscmp()
        fscanf()              iswalpha_l()        strxfrm()
        fwprintf()            iswblank()          swprintf()
        fwscanf()             iswblank_l()        swscanf()
        getaddrinfo()         iswcntrl()          syslog()
        getaliasbyname_r()    iswcntrl_l()        timegm()
        getaliasent_r()       iswdigit()          timelocal()
        getdate()             iswdigit_l()        timezone
        getdate_r()           iswgraph()          tolower()
        getfsent()            iswgraph_l()        tolower_l()
        getfsfile()           iswlower()          toupper()
        getfsspec()           iswlower_l()        toupper_l()
        getgrent()            iswprint()          towctrans()
        getgrent_r()          iswprint_l()        towlower()
        getgrgid()            iswpunct()          towlower_l()
        getgrgid_r()          iswpunct_l()        towupper()
        getgrnam()            iswspace()          towupper_l()
        getgrnam_r()          iswspace_l()        tzname
        getgrouplist()        iswupper()          tzset()
        gethostbyaddr()       iswupper_l()        ungetwc()
        gethostbyaddr_r()     iswxdigit()         vasprintf()
        gethostbyname()       iswxdigit_l()       vdprintf()
        gethostbyname2()      isxdigit()          verr()
        gethostbyname2_r()    isxdigit_l()        verrx()
        gethostbyname_r()     localeconv()        versionsort()
        gethostent()          localtime()         vfprintf()
        gethostent_r()        localtime_r()       vfscanf()
        gethostid()           MB_CUR_MAX          vfwprintf()
        getlogin()            mblen()             vprintf()
        getlogin_r()          mbrlen()            vscanf()
        getmntent()           mbrtowc()           vsnprintf()
        getmntent_r()         mbsinit()           vsprintf()
        getnameinfo()         mbsnrtowcs()        vsscanf()
        getnetbyaddr()        mbsrtowcs()         vswprintf()
        getnetbyaddr_r()      mbstowcs()          vsyslog()
        getnetbyname()        mbtowc()            vwarn()
        getnetbyname_r()      mktime()            vwarnx()
        getnetent()           nan()               vwprintf()
        getnetent_r()         nanf()              warn()
        getnetgrent()         nanl()              warnx()
        getnetgrent_r()       nl_langinfo()       wcrtomb()
        getprotobyname()      openpty()           wcscasecmp()
        getprotobyname_r()    printf()            wcschr()
        getprotobynumber()    psiginfo()          wcscoll()
        getprotobynumber_r()  psignal()           wcsftime()
        getprotoent()         putpwent()          wcsncasecmp()
        getprotoent_r()       putspent()          wcsnrtombs()
        getpw()               putwc()             wcsrchr()
        getpwent()            putwchar()          wcsrtombs()
        getpwent_r()          regcomp()           wcstod()
        getpwnam()            regexec()           wcstof()
        getpwnam_r()          res_nclose()        wcstoimax()
        getpwuid()            res_ninit()         wcstold()
        getpwuid_r()          res_nquery()        wcstombs()
        getrpcbyname_r()      res_nquerydomain()  wcstoumax()
        getrpcbynumber_r()    res_nsearch()       wcswidth()
        getrpcent_r()         res_nsend()         wcsxfrm()
        getrpcport()          rpmatch()           wctob()
        getservbyname()       ruserok()           wctomb()
        getservbyname_r()     ruserok_af()        wctrans()
        getservbyport()       scandir()           wctype()
        getservbyport_r()     scanf()             wcwidth()
        getservent()          setaliasent()       wordexp()
        getservent_r()        setgrent()          wprintf()
        getspent()            setgrent_r()        wscanf()

       (The list doesn't include functions that manipulate the locale, such as setlocale().)

       If  any  of  these  functions  are  called directly or indirectly from your code, you are affected by the
       current locale.

       The first thing to know about this list is that there are better alternatives to many of  the  functions,
       which  it's  highly  likely that you should be using instead.  See "libc functions to avoid" above.  This
       includes using Perl IO perlapio.

       The second thing to know is that Perl is documented to not pay attention to the current locale except for
       code executed within the scope of a "use locale" statement.  If you violate that,  you  may  be  creating
       bugs, depending on the application.

       The  next  thing  to know is that many of these functions depend only on the locale in regards to numeric
       values.  Your code is likely to have been written expecting that the decimal point (radix) character is a
       dot (U+002E: FULL STOP), and that strings of integer numbers are not separated into groups (1,000,000  in
       an American locale means a million; your code is likely not expecting the commas.)  The good news is that
       normally (as of Perl v5.22), your code will get called with the locale set so those expectations are met.
       Explicit  action has to be taken to change this (described a little ways below).  This is accomplished by
       Perl not actually switching into a locale  that  doesn't  conform  to  these  expectations,  except  when
       explicitly  told  to  do  so.   The  Perl  input/output and formatting routines do this switching for you
       automatically, if appropriate, and then switch back.  If, for some reason, you need to  do  it  yourself,
       the easiest way from C and XS code is to use the macro ""WITH_LC_NUMERIC_SET_TO_NEEDED"" in perlapi.  You
       can  wrap  this  macro  around  an  entire  block  of  code  that  you want to be executed in the correct
       environment.  The bottom line is that your code is likely to work as expected in this regard without  you
       having to take any action.

       This  leaves the remaining functions.  Your code will get called with all but the numeric locale portions
       set to the underlying locale.  Often, the locale is of not much import to your code, and you  also  won't
       have to take any action; things will just work out.  But you should examine the man pages of the ones you
       use to verify this.  Often, Perl has better ways of doing the same functionality.  Consider using SVs and
       their  access routines rather than calling the low level functions that, for example, find how many bytes
       are in a UTF-8 encoded character.

       You can determine if you have been called from within the scope of a "use locale"  by  using  the  boolen
       macro ""IN_LOCALE"" in perlapi.

       If  you  need to not be in the underlying locale, you can call ""Perl_setlocale"" in perlapi to change it
       temporarily to the one you need (likely the "C" locale), and then change it back before returning.   This
       can  be  very  problematic  on  threaded  perls  on  some platforms. See "Dealing with embedded perls and
       threads".

       A problem with changing the locale of a single category is that mojibake can arise on some  platforms  if
       the "LC_CTYPE" category and the changed one are not the same.  On the platforms that that isn't an issue,
       the  preprocessor  directive "LIBC_HANDLES_MISMATCHED_CTYPE" will be defined.  Otherwise, you may have to
       change more than one category to correctly  accomplish  your  task.   And,  there  will  be  many  locale
       combinations  where the mojibake likely won't happen, so you won't be confronted with this until the code
       gets executed in the field by someone who doesn't speak your language very well.

       Earlier we mentioned that explicit action is required to have your  code  get  called  with  the  numeric
       portions  of  the locale not meeting the the typical expectations of having a dot for the radix character
       and  no  punctuation  separating  groups  of   digits.    That   action   is   to   call   the   function
       ""switch_to_global_locale"" in perlapi.

       switch_to_global_locale()  was written initially to cope with the "Tk" library, but is general enough for
       other similar situations.  "Tk" changes the global locale to match its expectations (later versions of it
       allow this to be turned off).  This presents a conflict with Perl thinking it also controls  the  locale.
       Calling this function tells Perl to yield control.  Calling ""sync_locale"" in perlapi tells Perl to take
       control  again, accepting whatever the locale has been changed to in the interim.  If your code is called
       during that interim, all portions of the locale will be the raw underlying values.  Should  you  need  to
       manipulate  numbers,  you  are  on your own with regard to the radix character and grouping.  If you find
       yourself in this situation, it is generally best to make the interval between  the  calls  to  these  two
       functions as short as possible, and avoid calculations until after perl has control again.

       It  is  important for perl to know about all the possible locale categories on the platform, even if they
       aren't apparently used in your program.  Perl knows all of the Linux ones.  If your platform has  others,
       you  can  submit  an  issue  at  <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues>  for  inclusion of it in the next
       release.  In the meantime, it is possible to edit the Perl source to teach it  about  the  category,  and
       then  recompile.   Search  for instances of, say, "LC_PAPER" in the source, and use that as a template to
       add the omitted one.

       There are further complications under multi-threaded operation.  Keep on reading.

Dealing with embedded perls and threads

       It is possible to embed a Perl interpreter within a larger program.  See perlembed.

       MULTIPLICITY is the way this is accomplished internally; it is described in  "How  multiple  interpreters
       and concurrency are supported" in perlguts.  Multiple Perl interpreters may be embedded.

       It  is  also  possible  to  compile perl to support threading.  See perlthrtut.  Perl's implementation of
       threading requires MULTIPLICITY, but not the other way around.

       MULTIPLICITY without threading means that only one thing runs at a time,  so  there  are  no  concurrency
       issues,  but  each  component  or  instance can affect the global state, potentially interfering with the
       execution of other instance.  This can happen if one instance:

       •   changes the current working directory

       •   changes the process's environment

       •   changes the global locale the process is operating under

       •   writes to shared memory or to a shared file

       •   uses a shared file descriptor (including a database iterator)

       •   raises a signal that functions in other instances are sensitive to

       If your code doesn't do any of these things, nor depends on any of their values, then  Congratulations!!,
       you don't have to worry about MULTIPLICITY or threading.  But wait, a surprising number of libc functions
       do  depend  on  data global to the process in some way that may not be immediately obvious.  For example,
       calling strtok(3) changes the global state of a process, and thus needs special attention.

       The section 3 libc uses that we know about that have MULTIPLICITY and/or multi-thread issues are:

        addmntent()             getrpcent_r()        re_exec()
        alphasort()             getrpcport()         regcomp()
        asctime()               getservbyname()      regerror()
        asctime_r()             getservbyname_r()    regexec()
        asprintf()              getservbyport()      res_nclose()
        atof()                  getservbyport_r()    res_ninit()
        atoi()                  getservent()         res_nquery()
        atol()                  getservent_r()       res_nquerydomain()
        atoll()                 getspent()           res_nsearch()
        basename()              getspent_r()         res_nsend()
        btowc()                 getspnam()           rexec()
        catgets()               getspnam_r()         rexec_af()
        catopen()               getttyent()          rpmatch()
        clearenv()              getttynam()          ruserok()
        clearerr_unlocked()     getusershell()       ruserok_af()
        crypt()                 getutent()           scandir()
        crypt_gensalt()         getutid()            scanf()
        crypt_r()               getutline()          secure_getenv()
        ctermid()               getutxent()          seed48()
        ctermid_r()             getutxid()           seed48_r()
        ctime()                 getutxline()         setaliasent()
        ctime_r()               getwc()              setcontext()
        cuserid()               getwchar()           setenv()
        daylight                getwchar_unlocked()  setfsent()
        dbm_clearerr()          getwc_unlocked()     setgrent()
        dbm_close()             glob()               setgrent_r()
        dbm_delete()            gmtime()             sethostent()
        dbm_error()             gmtime_r()           sethostent_r()
        dbm_fetch()             grantpt()            sethostid()
        dbm_firstkey()          hcreate()            setkey()
        dbm_nextkey()           hcreate_r()          setlocale()
        dbm_open()              hdestroy()           setlocale_r()
        dbm_store()             hdestroy_r()         setlogmask()
        dirname()               hsearch()            setnetent()
        dlerror()               hsearch_r()          setnetent_r()
        dprintf()               iconv()              setnetgrent()
        drand48()               iconv_open()         setprotoent()
        drand48_r()             inet_addr()          setprotoent_r()
        ecvt()                  inet_aton()          setpwent()
        encrypt()               inet_network()       setpwent_r()
        endaliasent()           inet_ntoa()          setrpcent()
        endfsent()              inet_ntop()          setservent()
        endgrent()              inet_pton()          setservent_r()
        endgrent_r()            initgroups()         setspent()
        endhostent()            initstate_r()        setstate_r()
        endhostent_r()          innetgr()            setttyent()
        endnetent()             iruserok()           setusershell()
        endnetent_r()           iruserok_af()        setutent()
        endnetgrent()           isalnum()            setutxent()
        endprotoent()           isalnum_l()          sgetspent()
        endprotoent_r()         isalpha()            sgetspent_r()
        endpwent()              isalpha_l()          shm_open()
        endpwent_r()            isascii()            shm_unlink()
        endrpcent()             isascii_l()          siginterrupt()
        endservent()            isblank()            sleep()
        endservent_r()          isblank_l()          snprintf()
        endspent()              iscntrl()            sprintf()
        endttyent()             iscntrl_l()          srand48()
        endusershell()          isdigit()            srand48_r()
        endutent()              isdigit_l()          srandom_r()
        endutxent()             isgraph()            sscanf()
        erand48()               isgraph_l()          ssignal()
        erand48_r()             islower()            strcasecmp()
        err()                   islower_l()          strcasestr()
        error()                 isprint()            strcoll()
        error_at_line()         isprint_l()          strerror()
        errx()                  ispunct()            strerror_l()
        ether_aton()            ispunct_l()          strerror_r()
        ether_ntoa()            isspace()            strfmon()
        execlp()                isspace_l()          strfmon_l()
        execvp()                isupper()            strfromd()
        execvpe()               isupper_l()          strfromf()
        exit()                  iswalnum()           strfroml()
        __fbufsize()            iswalnum_l()         strftime()
        fcloseall()             iswalpha()           strftime_l()
        fcvt()                  iswalpha_l()         strncasecmp()
        fflush_unlocked()       iswblank()           strptime()
        fgetc_unlocked()        iswblank_l()         strsignal()
        fgetgrent()             iswcntrl()           strtod()
        fgetpwent()             iswcntrl_l()         strtof()
        fgetspent()             iswdigit()           strtoimax()
        fgets_unlocked()        iswdigit_l()         strtok()
        fgetwc()                iswgraph()           strtol()
        fgetwc_unlocked()       iswgraph_l()         strtold()
        fgetws()                iswlower()           strtoll()
        fgetws_unlocked()       iswlower_l()         strtoq()
        fnmatch()               iswprint()           strtoul()
        forkpty()               iswprint_l()         strtoull()
        __fpending()            iswpunct()           strtoumax()
        fprintf()               iswpunct_l()         strtouq()
        __fpurge()              iswspace()           strverscmp()
        fputc_unlocked()        iswspace_l()         strxfrm()
        fputs_unlocked()        iswupper()           swapcontext()
        fputwc()                iswupper_l()         swprintf()
        fputwc_unlocked()       iswxdigit()          swscanf()
        fputws()                iswxdigit_l()        sysconf()
        fputws_unlocked()       isxdigit()           syslog()
        fread_unlocked()        isxdigit_l()         system()
        fscanf()                jrand48()            tdelete()
        __fsetlocking()         jrand48_r()          tempnam()
        fts_children()          l64a()               tfind()
        fts_read()              lcong48()            timegm()
        ftw()                   lcong48_r()          timelocal()
        fwprintf()              lgamma()             timezone
        fwrite_unlocked()       lgammaf()            tmpnam()
        fwscanf()               lgammal()            tmpnam_r()
        gamma()                 localeconv()         tolower()
        gammaf()                localtime()          tolower_l()
        gammal()                localtime_r()        toupper()
        getaddrinfo()           login()              toupper_l()
        getaliasbyname()        login_tty()          towctrans()
        getaliasbyname_r()      logout()             towlower()
        getaliasent()           logwtmp()            towlower_l()
        getaliasent_r()         lrand48()            towupper()
        getchar_unlocked()      lrand48_r()          towupper_l()
        getcontext()            makecontext()        tsearch()
        getc_unlocked()         mallinfo()           ttyname()
        get_current_dir_name()  MB_CUR_MAX           ttyname_r()
        getdate()               mblen()              ttyslot()
        getdate_r()             mbrlen()             twalk()
        getenv()                mbrtowc()            twalk_r()
        getfsent()              mbsinit()            tzname
        getfsfile()             mbsnrtowcs()         tzset()
        getfsspec()             mbsrtowcs()          ungetwc()
        getgrent()              mbstowcs()           unsetenv()
        getgrent_r()            mbtowc()             updwtmp()
        getgrgid()              mcheck()             utmpname()
        getgrgid_r()            mcheck_check_all()   va_arg()
        getgrnam()              mcheck_pedantic()    valloc()
        getgrnam_r()            mktime()             vasprintf()
        getgrouplist()          mprobe()             vdprintf()
        gethostbyaddr()         mrand48()            verr()
        gethostbyaddr_r()       mrand48_r()          verrx()
        gethostbyname()         mtrace()             versionsort()
        gethostbyname2()        muntrace()           vfprintf()
        gethostbyname2_r()      nan()                vfscanf()
        gethostbyname_r()       nanf()               vfwprintf()
        gethostent()            nanl()               vprintf()
        gethostent_r()          newlocale()          vscanf()
        gethostid()             nftw()               vsnprintf()
        getlogin()              nl_langinfo()        vsprintf()
        getlogin_r()            nrand48()            vsscanf()
        getmntent()             nrand48_r()          vswprintf()
        getmntent_r()           openpty()            vsyslog()
        getnameinfo()           perror()             vwarn()
        getnetbyaddr()          posix_fallocate()    vwarnx()
        getnetbyaddr_r()        printf()             vwprintf()
        getnetbyname()          profil()             warn()
        getnetbyname_r()        psiginfo()           warnx()
        getnetent()             psignal()            wcrtomb()
        getnetent_r()           ptsname()            wcscasecmp()
        getnetgrent()           putchar_unlocked()   wcschr()
        getnetgrent_r()         putc_unlocked()      wcscoll()
        getopt()                putenv()             wcsftime()
        getopt_long()           putpwent()           wcsncasecmp()
        getopt_long_only()      putspent()           wcsnrtombs()
        getpass()               pututline()          wcsrchr()
        getprotobyname()        pututxline()         wcsrtombs()
        getprotobyname_r()      putwc()              wcstod()
        getprotobynumber()      putwchar()           wcstof()
        getprotobynumber_r()    putwchar_unlocked()  wcstoimax()
        getprotoent()           putwc_unlocked()     wcstold()
        getprotoent_r()         pvalloc()            wcstombs()
        getpw()                 qecvt()              wcstoumax()
        getpwent()              qfcvt()              wcswidth()
        getpwent_r()            querylocale()        wcsxfrm()
        getpwnam()              rand()               wctob()
        getpwnam_r()            random_r()           wctomb()
        getpwuid()              rcmd()               wctrans()
        getpwuid_r()            rcmd_af()            wctype()
        getrpcbyname()          readdir()            wcwidth()
        getrpcbyname_r()        readdir64()          wordexp()
        getrpcbynumber()        readdir64_r()        wprintf()
        getrpcbynumber_r()      readdir_r()          wscanf()
        getrpcent()             re_comp()            wsetlocale()

       (If you know of additional functions that are unsafe on some platform or another, notify us via filing  a
       bug report at <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues>.)

       Some  of these are safe under MULTIPLICITY, problematic only under threading.  If a use doesn't appear in
       the above list, we think it is MULTIPLICITY and thread-safe on all platforms.

       All the uses listed above are function calls, except for these:

        daylight  MB_CUR_MAX  timezone  tzname

       There are three main approaches to coping with issues  involving  these  constructs,  each  suitable  for
       different circumstances:

       •   Don't  use them.  Some of them have preferred alternatives.  Use the list above in "libc functions to
           avoid" to replace your uses with ones that are thread-friendly.  For example I/O, should be done  via
           perlapio.

           If  you  must  use  them, many, but not all, of them will be ok as long as their use is confined to a
           single thread that has no interaction with conflicting uses in  other  threads.   You  will  need  to
           closely examine their man pages for this, and be aware that vendor documentation is often imprecise.

       •   Do  all  your  business  before  any  other code can change things.  If you make changes, change back
           before returning.

       •   Save the result of a query of global information to  a  per-instance  area  before  allowing  another
           instance to execute.  Then you can work on it at your leisure.  This might be an automatic C variable
           for non-pointers, or something as described above in ""Safely Storing Static Data in XS" in perlxs".

       Without  threading,  you  don't  have  to  worry  about being interrupted by the system giving control to
       another thread.  With threading, you will have to uses mutexes, and be concerned with the possibility  of
       deadlock.

   Functions always unsuitable for use under multi-threads
       A  few  functions  are  considered totally unsuited for use in a multi-thread environment.  These must be
       called only during single-thread operation.

         endusershell()    @getaliasent()      muntrace()   rexec()
         ether_aton()      @getrpcbyname()     profil()     rexec_af()
         ether_ntoa()      @getrpcbynumber()   rcmd()       setusershell()
         fts_children()    @getrpcent()        rcmd_af()    ttyslot()
         fts_read()         getusershell()     re_comp()
        @getaliasbyname()   mtrace()           re_exec()

       "@" above marks the functions for which there are preferred alternatives available on some platforms, and
       those alternatives may be suitable for multi-thread use.

   Functions which must be called at least once before starting threads
       Some functions perform initialization on their first call that must be done  while  still  in  a  single-
       thread environment, but subsequent calls are thread-safe when executed in a critical section.  Therefore,
       they must be called at least once before switching to multi-threads:

        getutent()  getutline()  getutxid()    mallinfo()  valloc()
        getutid()   getutxent()  getutxline()  pvalloc()

   Functions that are thread-safe when called with appropriate arguments
       Some  of  the  functions  are  thread-safe if called with arguments that comply with certain (easily met)
       restrictions.  These are:

        ctermid()        mbrlen()      mbsrtowcs()  wcrtomb()
        cuserid()        mbrtowc()     tmpnam()     wcsnrtombs()
        error_at_line()  mbsnrtowcs()  va_arg()     wcsrtombs()

       See the man pages of each for details.  (For completeness, the list includes functions that you shouldn't
       be using anyway because of other reasons.)

   Functions vulnerable to signals
       Some functions are vulnerable to asynchronous signals.  These are:

        getlogin()    getutid()    getutxid()    login()   pututline()  updwtmp()
        getlogin_r()  getutline()  getutxline()  logout()  pututxline() wordexp()
        getutent()    getutxent()  glob()        logwtmp() sleep()

       Some libc's implement 'system()' thread-safely.  But in others, it also has signal issues.

   General issues with thread-safety
       Some libc functions use and/or modify a global state, such as a database.   The  libc  functions  presume
       that  there  is  only  one instance at a time operating on that database.  Unpredictable results occur if
       more than one does, even if the database is not changed.   For  example,  typically  there  is  a  global
       iterator  for  such  a  data base and that iterator is maintained by libc, so that each new read from any
       instance advances it, meaning that no instance will see all the entries.  The  only  way  to  make  these
       thread-safe  is  to  have  an  exclusive  lock  on a mutex from the open call through the close.  You are
       advised to not use such databases from more than one instance at a time.

       Other examples of functions that use a global state include pseudo-random number generators.   Some  libc
       implementations  of  'rand()',  for  example, may share the data across threads; and others may have per-
       thread data.  The shared ones will have unreproducible results, as the threads will vary in their timings
       and interactions.  This may be what you want; or it may not be.  (This particular function is a candidate
       to be removed from the POSIX Standard because of these issues.)

       Functions that output to a stream also are considered thread-unsafe when locking is not  done.   But  the
       typical  consequences  are  just  that  the data is output in an unpredictable order; that outcome may be
       totally acceptable to you.

       Since the current working directory is global to a process, all instances depend  on  it.   One  instance
       doing  a  chdir(2)  affects all the other instances.  In a multi-threaded environment, any libc call that
       expects the directory to not change for the duration of its execution  will  have  undefined  results  if
       another  thread  interrupts it at just the wrong time and changes the directory.  The man pages only list
       one such call, nftw().  But there may be other issues lurking.

   Reentrant equivalent functions
       Some functions that are problematic with regard to MULTIPLICITY have reentrant versions (on some  or  all
       platforms) that are better suited, with fewer (perhaps no) races when run under threads.

       Some  of these reentrant functions that are available on all platforms should always be used anyway; they
       are in the lists directly under "libc functions to avoid".

       Others may not be available on some platforms, or have issues that makes them  undesirable  to  use  even
       when  they  are  available.  Or it may just be more complicated and tedious to use the reentrant version.
       For these, perl has a mechanism for automatically substituting that reentrant version when available  and
       desirable, while hiding the complications from your code.  This feature is enabled by default for code in
       the Perl core and its extensions.  To enable it in other XS modules,

          #define PERL_REENTRANT

       It  is  simpler  for  you to use the unpreferred version in your code, and rely on this feature to do the
       better thing, in part because no substitution is done if the alternative is not available or desirable on
       the platform, nor if threads aren't enabled.  You just write as if there weren't threads, and you get the
       better behavior without having to think about it.

       On some platforms the safer library functions may fail if the result buffer is too small (for example the
       user group databases may be rather large, and the reentrant functions may have to  carry  around  a  full
       snapshot  of  those  databases).   Perl will start with a small buffer, but keep retrying and growing the
       result buffer until the result fits.  If this  limitless  growing  sounds  bad  for  security  or  memory
       consumption  reasons  you can recompile Perl with "PERL_REENTRANT_MAXSIZE" #defined to the maximum number
       of bytes you will allow.

       Below is a list of the non-reentrant functions and their reentrant alternatives.   This  substitution  is
       done  even  on functions that you shouldn't be using in the first place.  These are marked by a "*".  You
       should instead use the alternate given in the lists directly under "libc functions to avoid".

       Even so, some of the preferred alternatives are considered obsolete or otherwise unwise to  use  on  some
       platforms.   These  are  marked  with  a  '?'.  Also, some alternatives aren't Perl-defined functions and
       aren't in in the POSIX Standard, so won't be widely available.  These are  marked  with  '~'.   (Remember
       that  the  automatic substitution only happens when they are available and desirable, so you can just use
       the unpreferred alternative.)

        *asctime()             ?asctime_r()
         crypt()               ~crypt_r()
         ctermid()             ~ctermid_r()
        *ctime()               ?ctime_r()
         endgrent()           ?~endgrent_r()
         endhostent()         ?~endhostent_r()
         endnetent()          ?~endnetent_r()
         endprotoent()        ?~endprotoent_r()
         endpwent()           ?~endpwent_r()
         endservent()         ?~endservent_r()
         getgrent()            ~getgrent_r()
         getgrgid()             getgrgid_r()
         getgrnam()             getgrnam_r()
         gethostbyaddr()       ~gethostbyaddr_r()
         gethostbyname()       ~gethostbyname_r()
         gethostent()          ~gethostent_r()
         getlogin()             getlogin_r()
         getnetbyaddr()        ~getnetbyaddr_r()
         getnetbyname()        ~getnetbyname_r()
         getnetent()           ~getnetent_r()
         getprotobyname()      ~getprotobyname_r()
         getprotobynumber()    ~getprotobynumber_r()
         getprotoent()         ~getprotoent_r()
         getpwent()            ~getpwent_r()
         getpwnam()             getpwnam_r()
         getpwuid()             getpwuid_r()
         getservbyname()       ~getservbyname_r()
         getservbyport()       ~getservbyport_r()
         getservent()          ~getservent_r()
         getspnam()            ~getspnam_r()
         gmtime()               gmtime_r()
         localtime()            localtime_r()
         readdir()             ?readdir_r()
         readdir64()           ~readdir64_r()
         setgrent()           ?~setgrent_r()
         sethostent()         ?~sethostent_r()
        *setlocale()          ?~setlocale_r()
         setnetent()          ?~setnetent_r()
         setprotoent()        ?~setprotoent_r()
         setpwent()           ?~setpwent_r()
         setservent()         ?~setservent_r()
        *strerror()             strerror_r()
        *tmpnam()              ~tmpnam_r()
         ttyname()              ttyname_r()

       The Perl-furnished items are documented in perlapi.

       The bottom line is:

       For items marked "*"
           Replace all uses of these with the preferred alternative given in  the  lists  directly  under  "libc
           functions to avoid".

       For the remaining items
           If you really need to use these functions, you have two choices:

           If you #define PERL_REENTRANT
               Use the function in the first column as-is, and let perl do the work of substituting the function
               in the right column if available on the platform, and it is deemed suitable for use.

               You should look at the man pages for both versions to find any other gotchas.

           If you don't enable automatic substitution
               You  should  examine the application's code to determine if the column 1 function presents a real
               problem under threads given the circumstances it is used in.  You can go directly to the column 2
               replacement, but beware of the ones that are marked.  Some of those may be nonexistent  or  flaky
               on some platforms.

   Functions that need the environment to be constant
       Since  the  environment  is  global  to a process, all instances depend on it.  One instance changing the
       environment affects all the other instances.  Under threads, any libc call that expects  the  environment
       to  not change for the duration of its execution will have undefined results if another thread interrupts
       it at just the wrong time and changes it.  These are the functions that  the  man  pages  list  as  being
       sensitive to that.

        catopen()               gethostbyname2()    newlocale()
        ctime()                 gethostbyname2_r()  regerror()
        ctime_r()               gethostbyname_r()   secure_getenv()
        endhostent()            gethostent()        sethostent()
        endhostent_r()          gethostent_r()      sethostent_r()
        endnetent()             gethostid()         setlocale()
        endnetent_r()           getnameinfo()       setlocale_r()
        execlp()                getnetbyname()      setnetent()
        execvp()                getnetent()         setnetent_r()
        execvpe()               getopt()            strftime()
        fnmatch()               getopt_long()       strptime()
        getaddrinfo()           getopt_long_only()  sysconf()
        get_current_dir_name()  getrpcport()        syslog()
        getdate()               glob()              tempnam()
        getdate_r()             gmtime()            timegm()
        getenv()                gmtime_r()          timelocal()
        gethostbyaddr()         localtime()         tzset()
        gethostbyaddr_r()       localtime_r()       vsyslog()
        gethostbyname()         mktime()

       Many  of  these functions are problematic under threads for other reasons as well.  See the man pages for
       any you use.

       Perl defines mutexes "ENV_READ_LOCK" and "ENV_READ_UNLOCK" with which to wrap calls to  these  functions.
       You  need  to consider the possibility of deadlock.  It is expected that a different mechanism will be in
       place and preferred for Perl v5.42.

   Locale-specific issues
       C language programs originally had a single locale global to the entire process.  This was later found to
       be inadequate for many purposes, so later extensions changed that, first with  Windows,  and  then  POSIX
       2008.   In  Windows, you can change any thread at any time to operate either with a per-thread locale, or
       with the global one, using a special new libc function.  In POSIX, the original API operates only on  the
       global  locale,  but  there  is an entirely new API to manipulate either per-thread locales or the global
       one.  As with Windows (but using the new API), a thread can be switched at any time  to  operate  on  the
       global locale, or a per-thread one.

       When  one  instance  changes the global locale, all other instances using the global locale are affected.
       Almost all the locale-related functions in the list directly  under  "Dealing  with  embedded  perls  and
       threads"  have  undefined  behavior  if another thread interrupts their execution and changes the locale.
       Under threads, another thread could do exactly that.

       But, on  systems  that  have  per-thread  locales,  starting  with  Perl  v5.28,  perl  uses  them  after
       initialization;  the  global  locale  is not used except if XS code has called switch_to_global_locale().
       Doing so affects only the thread that called it.  If a maximum  of  one  instance  is  using  the  global
       locale,  no other instances are affected, the locale of concurrently executing functions in other threads
       is not changed, and this becomes a non-issue.  The C preprocessor symbol "USE_THREAD_SAFE_LOCALE" will be
       defined if per-thread locales are available and perl has been compiled to use them.   The  implementation
       of per-thread locales on some platforms, like most *BSD-based ones, is so buggy that the perl hints files
       for them deliberately turn off the possibility of using them.

       The  converse  is  that  on  systems  with only a global locale, having different threads using different
       locales is not likely to work well; and changing the locale is dangerous, often leading to crashes.

       Perl has extensive code to work as well as possible on both types of  systems.   You  should  always  use
       Perl_setlocale() to change and query the locale, as it portably works across the range of possibilities.

SEE ALSO

       perlapi, perlapio, perlguts, perlxs

perl v5.40.1                                       2025-04-14                                        PERLCLIB(1)