This week in PSC (194) | 2025-06-06

All three of us attended.

  • Release blocker triage continues. Several more blockers have been resolved. We identified no blockers among new tickets but did consider #23346 and may ship it even if we do not consider it a blocker.
  • We discussed some feedback regarding the fix for CVE-2025-40909 and requested that the patch be amended. A perldelta entry is also missing before we can ship the security releases.
  • We discussed who will do then stable release and when. RC1 will be published by Philippe Bruhat on June 20th.
  • We went over the scalar-context pair constructor proposal. Changing the fat arrow in general is out of the question and we don’t think any other proposal is likely to work.
  • We went over the 2-arg open proposal. It seems mostly trivial to do and worthwhile as well, but the real complexity is in the implicit open done by readline. We will outline our thoughts on the thread.

[P5P posting of this summary]

Learning XS - C data types

Over the past year, I’ve been self-studying XS and have now decided to share my learning journey through a series of blog posts. This ninth post introduces you to C data types and how to expose them in perl.

AWS Customer Key Encryption


Here is the final post about AWS S3 Server Side Encryption where I demo encryption using Customer Key.Please check out the link for more information: https://theweeklychallenge.org/blog/aws-customer-key-encryption

Call for Papers! - Perl Community Conference, Summer 2025

This is a hybrid (in-person and virtual) conference being held in Austin, TX on July 3rd-4th.

Did you miss your chance to speak or have wish to speak at the only available Perl Science Track (and get published in the Science Perl Journal)? Or maybe you just can't get enough Perl this summer??? Submit here ... or get more information on the PCC, including registration, special event registration, and donation links click here. For questions you may email us at science@perlcommunity.org or find us in the Perl Applications & Algorithms discord server.

The following lengths will be accepted for publication and presentation:

  • Science Perl Track: Full length paper (10-36 pages, 50 minute speaker slot)
  • Science Perl Track: Short paper (2-9 pages, 20 minute speaker slot)
  • Science Perl Track: Extended Abstract (1 page, 5 minute lightning talk slot)
  • Normal Perl Track (45 minute speaker slot, no paper required)

You may ask, where is the Winter SPJ or videos? We are working on them, promise! (it's a lot of work as some of you know. See also on Perlmonks and r/perlcommunity.

Perl makes it to Futility Closet as a poem...

A Futility Closet post references a Perl "poem" over two decades old. I remember chuckling at it when it first appeared. Although it was published "anonymously", I'm pretty sure I know who wrote it. :)

Learning XS - Regular Expressions

Over the past year, I’ve been self-studying XS and have now decided to share my learning journey through a series of blog posts. This eighth post introduces you to Perl regular expressions in XS.

The Perl Toolchain Summit 2025

This weekend I was once again privileged to attend the Perl Toolchain Summit (PTS). This year it was held in the lovely city of Leipzig.

The PTS continues to be my favourite technical event of the year. In part this is because I get to meet old friends and make new ones, but it's also because the summit really serves its purpose and I am able to make so much progress on the projects I have which belong in Perl's toolchain ecosystem.

PTS isn't a conference - it's a four-day working meeting. It brings together people working on toolchain projects to solve common problems and push the work forward. I did get a lot of work done, but that's not the main focus, for me anyway. I see it as a time to solve problems and plan the way forward, and for me PTS facilitates that in the most wonderful fashion.

The sculpture shapes the sculptor.

Parenting aint easy. Certainly it is often something your kids teach you. Even worse, it often starts with ”<INSERT_KIDS_FRIENDS_NAME>’s dad lets him do <INSERT_CURRENTLY_PROHIBITED_ACTIVITY>”. In this constant battle to shape your offspring into a model citizen, with the values you value, and turning him/her into a self-sustaining organism, one applies tools that enhance particular features, remove the superfluous or the undesirable.

Announce: Perl Wiki V 1.26

Here we go: Download me

Learning XS - Exporting

Over the past year, I’ve been self-studying XS and have now decided to share my learning journey through a series of blog posts. This seventh post introduces you to exporting XSUBS.

This week in PSC (188) | 2025-04-24

All of us showed up for a long meeting of identifying release blockers. First we went over the issues and PRs submitted since last week, none of which turned out to be new potential blockers. Then we examined all of the issues and PRs of interest we had previously identified. We applied the “Release Blocker” label where necessary, left comments, and merged a few of the PRs. Out of 20 issues and 11 PRs on our list, we identified 5 issues and 1 PR as blockers, of which the PR and several of the issues all pertain to the same problem with retention of errors on filehandles across I/O operations. This issue needs an informed decision, which we did not have the time for in this meeting, but will pursue next.

Our next meeting will be in person at the PTS.

[P5P posting of this summary]

Map::Tube Unicode


Map::Tube now supports Unicode character in station names.
Please check out the link below for more information.
https://theweeklychallenge.org/blog/map-tube-unicode

Julia in cruiser mode

threeheads.png

Yes, this is a Mandelbrot fractal with three heads. No cloning needed, just multiply z to the power of four and proceed as usual. Well all this and so much more contains the latest release of Juliagraph 0.7. Intro here. All I wrote about the Cellgraph and Harmonograph applies again, more features, better controls and ... you can cruise the fractal by mouse.

Learning XS - Invocation

Over the past year, I’ve been self-studying XS and have now decided to share my learning journey through a series of blog posts. This sixth post introduces you to subroutine invocation in XS.

This week in PSC (187) | 2025-04-17

We were all present.

  • CVE-2024-56406 is published and has been addressed by new point releases. Please upgrade or patch your perl promptly if affected. We thank Steve Hay, Andreas König and Stig Palmquist for doing the heavy lifting, as well as Nathan Mills for discovering the problem, and Karl Williams for providing the fix. We re-/learned a number of old and new lessons about the handling of security issues, which we will write up as new process for the PSC, the Perl Security Team, and the CPANSec group, to be jointly reviewed and agreed at the looming PTS.

  • We started winnowing this release cycle’s pull requests for potential release blockers. We briefly reviewed all 72 pull requests and identified 11 of interest for a closer look.

  • We reviewed the 2 new issues filed since last week for release blocker potential and put one of them on our list for closer review. We then started a closer examination of the 20 issues we identified as candidate blockers. We got through 5 issues, none of which we considered blockers.

[P5P posting of this summary]

Map::Tube - experimental


Couple of experimental features added to Map::Tube.
Please check out the link below for more information.
https://theweeklychallenge.org/blog/map-tube-experimental

Writing a 1GB file in perl

One of my pleasures in perl is learning the C language again. Something about the perl language makes it easier to write C, but while sharing the same space in my brain.

So how can I write a trivial program to write exactly one GB (2^30) of data to disk?

first in perl- (Of course you prototype in perl!)

But since my c program is cleaner, here’s the C program

Learning XS - Prototyping

Over the past year, I’ve been self-studying XS and have now decided to share my learning journey through a series of blog posts. This fifth post introduces you to subroutine(method/function) prototypes in XS.

This week in PSC (192) | 2025-05-22

All three of us attended.

  • We discussed the situation with readline and the filehandle error flag once again, starting over by revisiting the basic premise of the error flag. We think we now have a better understanding the overall situation, and this led us to a different approach about how to correct the overall situation, which we will outline as a proposal soon.
  • We have been wanting to revert #22465 but wanted to include a testcase that demonstrates why, which we hadn’t gotten to. In order to get this into the looming final dev release, we talked through what the testcase needs to look like, and will submit a pull request ASAP.
  • We caught up on new issues and pull requests for release blocker triage. We then reviewed the state of our current release blockers, some of which have been resolved, and one of which (#23026) we demoted based on our new understanding about the readline situation.

[P5P posting of this summary]

CVE in Perl


Find out all about CVE and how we deal with it in Perl.
Please checkout the post for more information:
https://theweeklychallenge.org/blog/cve-in-perl

About blogs.perl.org

blogs.perl.org is a common blogging platform for the Perl community. Written in Perl with a graphic design donated by Six Apart, Ltd.