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Always turn off hyphenation; it makes.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents..if n .ad l.nh.SH "NAME"Devel::Peek \- A data debugging tool for the XS programmer.SH "SYNOPSIS".IX Header "SYNOPSIS".Vb 5\& use Devel::Peek;\& Dump( $a );\& Dump( $a, 5 );\& DumpArray( 5, $a, $b, ... );\& mstat "Point 5";\&\& use Devel::Peek \*(Aq:opd=st\*(Aq;.Ve.SH "DESCRIPTION".IX Header "DESCRIPTION"Devel::Peek contains functions which allows raw Perl datatypes to bemanipulated from a Perl script. This is used by those who do \s-1XS\s0 programmingto check that the data they are sending from C to Perl looks as they thinkit should look. The trick, then, is to know what the raw datatype issupposed to look like when it gets to Perl. This document offers some tipsand hints to describe good and bad raw data..PPIt is very possible that this document will fall far short of being usefulto the casual reader. The reader is expected to understand the material inthe first few sections of perlguts..PPDevel::Peek supplies a \f(CW\*(C`Dump()\*(C'\fR function which can dump a raw Perldatatype, and \f(CW\*(C`mstat("marker")\*(C'\fR function to report on memory usage(if perl is compiled with corresponding option). The function\&\fIDeadCode()\fR provides statistics on the data \*(L"frozen\*(R" into inactive\&\f(CW\*(C`CV\*(C'\fR. Devel::Peek also supplies \f(CW\*(C`SvREFCNT()\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`SvREFCNT_inc()\*(C'\fR, and\&\f(CW\*(C`SvREFCNT_dec()\*(C'\fR which can query, increment, and decrement referencecounts on SVs. This document will take a passive, and safe, approachto data debugging and for that it will describe only the \f(CW\*(C`Dump()\*(C'\fRfunction..PPFunction \f(CW\*(C`DumpArray()\*(C'\fR allows dumping of multiple values (useful when youneed to analyze returns of functions)..PPThe global variable \f(CW$Devel::Peek::pv_limit\fR can be set to limit thenumber of character printed in various string values. Setting it to 0means no limit..PPIf \f(CW\*(C`use Devel::Peek\*(C'\fR directive has a \f(CW\*(C`:opd=FLAGS\*(C'\fR argument,this switches on debugging of opcode dispatch. \f(CW\*(C`FLAGS\*(C'\fR should be acombination of \f(CW\*(C`s\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`t\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`P\*(C'\fR (see \fB\-D\fR flags in perlrun).\&\f(CW\*(C`:opd\*(C'\fR is a shortcut for \f(CW\*(C`:opd=st\*(C'\fR..Sh "Runtime debugging".IX Subsection "Runtime debugging"\&\f(CW\*(C`CvGV($cv)\*(C'\fR return one of the globs associated to a subroutine reference \f(CW$cv\fR..PP\&\fIdebug_flags()\fR returns a string representation of \f(CW$^D\fR (similar towhat is allowed for \fB\-D\fR flag). When called with a numeric argument,sets $^D to the corresponding value. When called with an argument ofthe form \f(CW"flags\-flags"\fR, set on/off bits of \f(CW$^D\fR corresponding toletters before/after \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR. (The returned value is for \f(CW$^D\fR beforethe modification.).PP\&\fIrunops_debug()\fR returns true if the current \fIopcode dispatcher\fR is thedebugging one. When called with an argument, switches to debugging ornon-debugging dispatcher depending on the argument (active fornewly-entered subs/etc only). (The returned value is for the dispatcher before the modification.).Sh "Memory footprint debugging".IX Subsection "Memory footprint debugging"When perl is compiled with support for memory footprint debugging(default with Perl's \fImalloc()\fR), Devel::Peek provides an access to this \s-1API\s0..PPUse \fImstat()\fR function to emit a memory state statistic to the terminal.For more information on the format of output of \fImstat()\fR see"Using \f(CW$ENV{PERL_DEBUG_MSTATS}\fR" in perldebguts..PPThree additional functions allow access to this statistic from Perl.First, use \f(CW\*(C`mstats_fillhash(%hash)\*(C'\fR to get the information containedin the output of \fImstat()\fR into \f(CW%hash\fR. The field of this hash are.PP.Vb 2\& minbucket nbuckets sbrk_good sbrk_slack sbrked_remains sbrks start_slack\& topbucket topbucket_ev topbucket_odd total total_chain total_sbrk totfree.Ve.PPTwo additional fields \f(CW\*(C`free\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`used\*(C'\fR contain array references whichprovide per-bucket count of free and used chunks. Two other fields\&\f(CW\*(C`mem_size\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`available_size\*(C'\fR contain array references which providethe information about the allocated size and usable size of chunks ineach bucket. Again, see "Using \f(CW$ENV{PERL_DEBUG_MSTATS}\fR" in perldebgutsfor details..PPKeep in mind that only the first several \*(L"odd-numbered\*(R" buckets areused, so the information on size of the \*(L"odd-numbered\*(R" buckets which arenot used is probably meaningless..PPThe information in.PP.Vb 1\& mem_size available_size minbucket nbuckets.Ve.PPis the property of a particular build of perl, and does not depend onthe current process. If you do not provide the optional argument tothe functions \fImstats_fillhash()\fR, \fIfill_mstats()\fR, \fImstats2hash()\fR, thenthe information in fields \f(CW\*(C`mem_size\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`available_size\*(C'\fR is notupdated..PP\&\f(CW\*(C`fill_mstats($buf)\*(C'\fR is a much cheaper call (both speedwise andmemory-wise) which collects the statistic into \f(CW$buf\fR inmachine-readable form. At a later moment you may need to call\&\f(CW\*(C`mstats2hash($buf, %hash)\*(C'\fR to use this information to fill \f(CW%hash\fR..PPAll three APIs \f(CW\*(C`fill_mstats($buf)\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`mstats_fillhash(%hash)\*(C'\fR, and\&\f(CW\*(C`mstats2hash($buf, %hash)\*(C'\fR are designed to allocate no memory if used\&\fIthe second time\fR on the same \f(CW$buf\fR and/or \f(CW%hash\fR..PPSo, if you want to collect memory info in a cycle, you may call.PP.Vb 3\& $#buf = 999;\& fill_mstats($_) for @buf;\& mstats_fillhash(%report, 1); # Static info too\&\& foreach (@buf) {\& # Do something...\& fill_mstats $_; # Collect statistic\& }\& foreach (@buf) {\& mstats2hash($_, %report); # Preserve static info\& # Do something with %report\& }.Ve.SH "EXAMPLES".IX Header "EXAMPLES"The following examples don't attempt to show everything as that would be amonumental task, and, frankly, we don't want this manpage to be an internalsdocument for Perl. The examples do demonstrate some basics of the raw Perldatatypes, and should suffice to get most determined people on their way.There are no guidewires or safety nets, nor blazed trails, so be prepared totravel alone from this point and on and, if at all possible, don't fall intothe quicksand (it's bad for business)..PPOh, one final bit of advice: take perlguts with you. When you return weexpect to see it well-thumbed..Sh "A simple scalar string".IX Subsection "A simple scalar string"Let's begin by looking a simple scalar which is holding a string..PP.Vb 3\& use Devel::Peek;\& $a = "hello";\& Dump $a;.Ve.PPThe output:.PP.Vb 7\& SV = PVIV(0xbc288)\& REFCNT = 1\& FLAGS = (POK,pPOK)\& IV = 0\& PV = 0xb2048 "hello"\e0\& CUR = 5\& LEN = 6.Ve.PPThis says \f(CW$a\fR is an \s-1SV\s0, a scalar. The scalar is a \s-1PVIV\s0, a string.Its reference count is 1. It has the \f(CW\*(C`POK\*(C'\fR flag set, meaning itscurrent \s-1PV\s0 field is valid. Because \s-1POK\s0 is set we look at the \s-1PV\s0 itemto see what is in the scalar. The \e0 at the end indicate that this\&\s-1PV\s0 is properly NUL-terminated.If the \s-1FLAGS\s0 had been \s-1IOK\s0 we would lookat the \s-1IV\s0 item. \s-1CUR\s0 indicates the number of characters in the \s-1PV\s0.\&\s-1LEN\s0 indicates the number of bytes requested for the \s-1PV\s0 (one more than\&\s-1CUR\s0, in this case, because \s-1LEN\s0 includes an extra byte for theend-of-string marker)..Sh "A simple scalar number".IX Subsection "A simple scalar number"If the scalar contains a number the raw \s-1SV\s0 will be leaner..PP.Vb 3\& use Devel::Peek;\& $a = 42;\& Dump $a;.Ve.PPThe output:.PP.Vb 4\& SV = IV(0xbc818)\& REFCNT = 1
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