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NAME
    B - The Perl Compiler Backend

SYNOPSIS
            use B;

DESCRIPTION
    The "B" module supplies classes which allow a Perl program to delve into
    its own innards. It is the module used to implement the "backends" of
    the Perl compiler. Usage of the compiler does not require knowledge of
    this module: see the O module for the user-visible part. The "B" module
    is of use to those who want to write new compiler backends. This
    documentation assumes that the reader knows a fair amount about perl's
    internals including such things as SVs, OPs and the internal symbol
    table and syntax tree of a program.

OVERVIEW
    The "B" module contains a set of utility functions for querying the
    current state of the Perl interpreter; typically these functions return
    objects from the B::SV and B::OP classes, or their derived classes.
    These classes in turn define methods for querying the resulting objects
    about their own internal state.

Utility Functions
    The "B" module exports a variety of functions: some are simple utility
    functions, others provide a Perl program with a way to get an initial
    "handle" on an internal object.

  Functions Returning "B::SV", "B::AV", "B::HV", and "B::CV" objects
    For descriptions of the class hierarchy of these objects and the methods
    that can be called on them, see below, "OVERVIEW OF CLASSES" and
    "SV-RELATED CLASSES".

    sv_undef
        Returns the SV object corresponding to the C variable "sv_undef".

    sv_yes
        Returns the SV object corresponding to the C variable "sv_yes".

    sv_no
        Returns the SV object corresponding to the C variable "sv_no".

    svref_2object(SVREF)
        Takes a reference to any Perl value, and turns the referred-to value
        into an object in the appropriate B::OP-derived or B::SV-derived
        class. Apart from functions such as "main_root", this is the primary
        way to get an initial "handle" on an internal perl data structure
        which can then be followed with the other access methods.

        The returned object will only be valid as long as the underlying OPs
        and SVs continue to exist. Do not attempt to use the object after
        the underlying structures are freed.

    amagic_generation
        Returns the SV object corresponding to the C variable
        "amagic_generation". As of Perl 5.18, this is just an alias to
        "PL_na", so its value is meaningless.

    init_av
        Returns the AV object (i.e. in class B::AV) representing INIT
        blocks.

    check_av
        Returns the AV object (i.e. in class B::AV) representing CHECK
        blocks.

    unitcheck_av
        Returns the AV object (i.e. in class B::AV) representing UNITCHECK
        blocks.

    begin_av
        Returns the AV object (i.e. in class B::AV) representing BEGIN
        blocks.

    end_av
        Returns the AV object (i.e. in class B::AV) representing END blocks.

    comppadlist
        Returns the PADLIST object (i.e. in class B::PADLIST) of the global
        comppadlist. In Perl 5.16 and earlier it returns an AV object (class
        B::AV).

    regex_padav
        Only when perl was compiled with ithreads.

    main_cv
        Return the (faked) CV corresponding to the main part of the Perl
        program.

  Functions for Examining the Symbol Table
    walksymtable(SYMREF, METHOD, RECURSE, PREFIX)
        Walk the symbol table starting at SYMREF and call METHOD on each
        symbol (a B::GV object) visited. When the walk reaches package
        symbols (such as "Foo::") it invokes RECURSE, passing in the symbol
        name, and only recurses into the package if that sub returns true.

        PREFIX is the name of the SYMREF you're walking.

        For example:

          # Walk CGI's symbol table calling print_subs on each symbol.
          # Recurse only into CGI::Util::
          walksymtable(\%CGI::, 'print_subs',
                       sub { $_[0] eq 'CGI::Util::' }, 'CGI::');

        print_subs() is a B::GV method you have declared. Also see "B::GV
        Methods", below.

  Functions Returning "B::OP" objects or for walking op trees
    For descriptions of the class hierarchy of these objects and the methods
    that can be called on them, see below, "OVERVIEW OF CLASSES" and
    "OP-RELATED CLASSES".

    main_root
        Returns the root op (i.e. an object in the appropriate B::OP-derived
        class) of the main part of the Perl program.

    main_start
        Returns the starting op of the main part of the Perl program.

    walkoptree(OP, METHOD)
        Does a tree-walk of the syntax tree based at OP and calls METHOD on
        each op it visits. Each node is visited before its children. If
        "walkoptree_debug" (see below) has been called to turn debugging on
        then the method "walkoptree_debug" is called on each op before
        METHOD is called.

    walkoptree_debug(DEBUG)
        Returns the current debugging flag for "walkoptree". If the optional
        DEBUG argument is non-zero, it sets the debugging flag to that. See
        the description of "walkoptree" above for what the debugging flag
        does.

  Miscellaneous Utility Functions
    ppname(OPNUM)
        Return the PP function name (e.g. "pp_add") of op number OPNUM.

    hash(STR)
        Returns a string in the form "0x..." representing the value of the
        internal hash function used by perl on string STR.

    cast_I32(I)
        Casts I to the internal I32 type used by that perl.

    minus_c
        Does the equivalent of the "-c" command-line option. Obviously, this
        is only useful in a BEGIN block or else the flag is set too late.

    cstring(STR)
        Returns a double-quote-surrounded escaped version of STR which can
        be used as a string in C source code.

    perlstring(STR)
        Returns a double-quote-surrounded escaped version of STR which can
        be used as a string in Perl source code.

    safename(STR)
        This function returns the string with the first character modified
        if it is a control character. It converts it to ^X format first, so
        that "\cG" becomes "^G". This is used internally by B::GV::SAFENAME,
        but you can call it directly.

    class(OBJ)
        Returns the class of an object without the part of the classname
        preceding the first "::". This is used to turn "B::UNOP" into "UNOP"
        for example.

    threadsv_names
        This used to provide support for the old 5.005 threading module. It
        now does nothing.

  Exported utility variables
    @optype
          my $op_type = $optype[$op_type_num];

        A simple mapping of the op type number to its type (like 'COP' or
        'BINOP').

    @specialsv_name
          my $sv_name = $specialsv_name[$sv_index];

        Certain SV types are considered 'special'. They're represented by
        B::SPECIAL and are referred to by a number from the specialsv_list.
        This array maps that number back to the name of the SV (like
        'Nullsv' or '&PL_sv_undef').

OVERVIEW OF CLASSES
    The C structures used by Perl's internals to hold SV and OP information
    (PVIV, AV, HV, ..., OP, SVOP, UNOP, ...) are modelled on a class
    hierarchy and the "B" module gives access to them via a true object
    hierarchy. Structure fields which point to other objects (whether types
    of SV or types of OP) are represented by the "B" module as Perl objects
    of the appropriate class.

    The bulk of the "B" module is the methods for accessing fields of these
    structures.

    Note that all access is read-only. You cannot modify the internals by
    using this module. Also, note that the B::OP and B::SV objects created
    by this module are only valid for as long as the underlying objects
    exist; their creation doesn't increase the reference counts of the
    underlying objects. Trying to access the fields of a freed object will
    give incomprehensible results, or worse.

  SV-RELATED CLASSES
    B::IV, B::NV, B::PV, B::PVIV, B::PVNV, B::PVMG, B::PVLV, B::AV, B::HV,
    B::CV, B::GV, B::FM, B::IO. These classes correspond in the obvious way
    to the underlying C structures of similar names. The inheritance
    hierarchy mimics the underlying C "inheritance":

                               B::SV
                                 |
                    +------------+------------+
                    |            |            |
                  B::PV        B::IV        B::NV
                   /  \         /           /
                  /    \       /           /
            B::INVLIST  B::PVIV           /
                             \           /
                              \         /
                               \       /
                                B::PVNV
                                   |
                                   |
                                B::PVMG
                                   |
               +-------+-------+---+---+-------+-------+
               |       |       |       |       |       |
             B::AV   B::GV   B::HV   B::CV   B::IO B::REGEXP
                       |               |
                       |               |
                    B::PVLV          B::FM

    Access methods correspond to the underlying C macros for field access,
    usually with the leading "class indication" prefix removed (Sv, Av, Hv,
    ...). The leading prefix is only left in cases where its removal would
    cause a clash in method name. For example, "GvREFCNT" stays as-is since
    its abbreviation would clash with the "superclass" method "REFCNT"
    (corresponding to the C function "SvREFCNT").

  B::SV Methods
    REFCNT
    FLAGS
    object_2svref
        Returns a reference to the regular scalar corresponding to this
        B::SV object. In other words, this method is the inverse operation
        to the svref_2object() subroutine. This scalar and other data it
        points at should be considered read-only: modifying them is neither
        safe nor guaranteed to have a sensible effect.

  B::IV Methods
    IV  Returns the value of the IV, *interpreted as a signed integer*. This
        will be misleading if "FLAGS & SVf_IVisUV". Perhaps you want the
        "int_value" method instead?

    IVX
    UVX
    int_value
        This method returns the value of the IV as an integer. It differs
        from "IV" in that it returns the correct value regardless of whether
        it's stored signed or unsigned.

    needs64bits
    packiv

  B::NV Methods
    NV
    NVX
    COP_SEQ_RANGE_LOW
    COP_SEQ_RANGE_HIGH
        These last two are only valid for pad name SVs. They only existed in
        the B::NV class before Perl 5.22. In 5.22 they were moved to the
        B::PADNAME class.

  B::RV Methods
    RV

  B::PV Methods
    PV  This method is the one you usually want. It constructs a string
        using the length and offset information in the struct: for ordinary
        scalars it will return the string that you'd see from Perl, even if
        it contains null characters.

    RV  Same as B::RV::RV, except that it will die() if the PV isn't a
        reference.

    PVX This method is less often useful. It assumes that the string stored
        in the struct is null-terminated, and disregards the length
        information.

        It is the appropriate method to use if you need to get the name of a
        lexical variable from a padname array. Lexical variable names are
        always stored with a null terminator, and the length field (CUR) is
        overloaded for other purposes and can't be relied on here.

    CUR This method returns the internal length field, which consists of the
        number of internal bytes, not necessarily the number of logical
        characters.

    LEN This method returns the number of bytes allocated (via malloc) for
        storing the string. This is 0 if the scalar does not "own" the
        string.

  B::PVMG Methods
    MAGIC
    SvSTASH

  B::MAGIC Methods
    MOREMAGIC
    precomp
        Only valid on r-magic, returns the string that generated the regexp.

    PRIVATE
    TYPE
    FLAGS
    OBJ Will die() if called on r-magic.

    PTR
    REGEX
        Only valid on r-magic, returns the integer value of the REGEX stored
        in the MAGIC.

  B::INVLIST Methods
    prev_index
        Returns the cache result of previous invlist_search() (internal
        usage)

    is_offset
        Returns a boolean value (0 or 1) to know if the invlist is using an
        offset. When false the list begins with the code point U+0000. When
        true the list begins with the following elements.

    array_len
        Returns an integer with the size of the array used to define the
        invlist.

    get_invlist_array
        This method returns a list of integers representing the array used
        by the invlist. Note: this cannot be used while in middle of
        iterating on an invlist and croaks.

  B::PVLV Methods
    TARGOFF
    TARGLEN
    TYPE
    TARG

  B::BM Methods
    USEFUL
    PREVIOUS
    RARE
    TABLE

  B::REGEXP Methods
    REGEX
    precomp
    qr_anoncv
    compflags
        The last two were added in Perl 5.22.

  B::GV Methods
    is_empty
        This method returns TRUE if the GP field of the GV is NULL.

    NAME
    SAFENAME
        This method returns the name of the glob, but if the first character
        of the name is a control character, then it converts it to ^X first,
        so that *^G would return "^G" rather than "\cG".

        It's useful if you want to print out the name of a variable. If you
        restrict yourself to globs which exist at compile-time then the
        result ought to be unambiguous, because code like "${"^G"} = 1" is
        compiled as two ops - a constant string and a dereference (rv2gv) -
        so that the glob is created at runtime.

        If you're working with globs at runtime, and need to disambiguate
        *^G from *{"^G"}, then you should use the raw NAME method.

    STASH
    SV
    IO
    FORM
    AV
    HV
    EGV
    CV
    CVGEN
    LINE
    FILE
    FILEGV
    GvREFCNT
    FLAGS
    GPFLAGS
        This last one is present only in perl 5.22.0 and higher.

  B::IO Methods
    B::IO objects derive from IO objects and you will get more information
    from the IO object itself.

    For example:

      $gvio = B::svref_2object(\*main::stdin)->IO;
      $IO = $gvio->object_2svref();
      $fd = $IO->fileno();

    LINES
    PAGE
    PAGE_LEN
    LINES_LEFT
    TOP_NAME
    TOP_GV
    FMT_NAME
    FMT_GV
    BOTTOM_NAME
    BOTTOM_GV
    SUBPROCESS
    IoTYPE
        A character symbolizing the type of IO Handle.

          -     STDIN/OUT
          I     STDIN/OUT/ERR
          <     read-only
          >     write-only
          a     append
          +     read and write
          s     socket
          |     pipe
          I     IMPLICIT
          #     NUMERIC
          space closed handle
          \0    closed internal handle

    IoFLAGS
    IsSTD
        Takes one argument ( 'stdin' | 'stdout' | 'stderr' ) and returns
        true if the IoIFP of the object is equal to the handle whose name
        was passed as argument; i.e., $io->IsSTD('stderr') is true if
        IoIFP($io) == PerlIO_stderr().

  B::AV Methods
    FILL
    MAX
    ARRAY
    ARRAYelt
        Like "ARRAY", but takes an index as an argument to get only one
        element, rather than a list of all of them.

  B::CV Methods
    STASH
    START
    ROOT
    GV
    FILE
    DEPTH
    PADLIST
        Returns a B::PADLIST object.

    OUTSIDE
    OUTSIDE_SEQ
    XSUB
    XSUBANY
        For constant subroutines, returns the constant SV returned by the
        subroutine.

    CvFLAGS
    const_sv
    NAME_HEK
        Returns the name of a lexical sub, otherwise "undef".

  B::HV Methods
    FILL
    MAX
    KEYS
    RITER
    NAME
    ARRAY

  OP-RELATED CLASSES
    "B::OP", "B::UNOP", "B::UNOP_AUX", "B::BINOP", "B::LOGOP", "B::LISTOP",
    "B::PMOP", "B::SVOP", "B::PADOP", "B::PVOP", "B::LOOP", "B::COP",
    "B::METHOP".

    These classes correspond in the obvious way to the underlying C
    structures of similar names. The inheritance hierarchy mimics the
    underlying C "inheritance":

                                     B::OP
                                       |
                       +----------+---------+--------+-------+---------+
                       |          |         |        |       |         |
                    B::UNOP    B::SVOP  B::PADOP  B::COP  B::PVOP  B::METHOP
                       |
                   +---+---+---------+
                   |       |         |
               B::BINOP  B::LOGOP  B::UNOP_AUX
                   |
                   |
               B::LISTOP
                   |
               +---+---+
               |       |
            B::LOOP   B::PMOP

    Access methods correspond to the underlying C structure field names,
    with the leading "class indication" prefix ("op_") removed.

  B::OP Methods
    These methods get the values of similarly named fields within the OP
    data structure. See top of "op.h" for more info.

    next
    sibling
    parent
        Returns the OP's parent. If it has no parent, or if your perl wasn't
        built with "-DPERL_OP_PARENT", returns NULL.

        Note that the global variable $B::OP::does_parent is undefined on
        older perls that don't support the "parent" method, is defined but
        false on perls that support the method but were built without
        "-DPERL_OP_PARENT", and is true otherwise.

    name
        This returns the op name as a string (e.g. "add", "rv2av").

    ppaddr
        This returns the function name as a string (e.g.
        "PL_ppaddr[OP_ADD]", "PL_ppaddr[OP_RV2AV]").

    desc
        This returns the op description from the global C PL_op_desc array
        (e.g. "addition" "array deref").

    targ
    type
    opt
    flags
    private
    spare

  B::UNOP Method
    first

  B::UNOP_AUX Methods (since 5.22)
    aux_list(cv)
        This returns a list of the elements of the op's aux data structure,
        or a null list if there is no aux. What will be returned depends on
        the object's type, but will typically be a collection of "B::IV",
        "B::GV", etc. objects. "cv" is the "B::CV" object representing the
        sub that the op is contained within.

    string(cv)
        This returns a textual representation of the object (likely to b
        useful for deparsing and debugging), or an empty string if the op
        type doesn't support this. "cv" is the "B::CV" object representing
        the sub that the op is contained within.

  B::BINOP Method
    last

  B::LOGOP Method
    other

  B::LISTOP Method
    children

  B::PMOP Methods
    pmreplroot
    pmreplstart
    pmflags
    precomp
    pmoffset
        Only when perl was compiled with ithreads.

    code_list
        Since perl 5.17.1

    pmregexp
        Added in perl 5.22, this method returns the B::REGEXP associated
        with the op. While PMOPs do not actually have "pmregexp" fields
        under threaded builds, this method returns the regexp under threads
        nonetheless, for convenience.

  B::SVOP Methods
    sv
    gv

  B::PADOP Method
    padix

  B::PVOP Method
    pv

  B::LOOP Methods
    redoop
    nextop
    lastop

  B::COP Methods
    The "B::COP" class is used for "nextstate" and "dbstate" ops. As of Perl
    5.22, it is also used for "null" ops that started out as COPs.

    label
    stash
    stashpv
    stashoff (threaded only)
    file
    cop_seq
    line
    warnings
    io
    hints
    hints_hash

  B::METHOP Methods (Since Perl 5.22)
    first
    meth_sv

  PAD-RELATED CLASSES
    Perl 5.18 introduced a new class, B::PADLIST, returned by B::CV's
    "PADLIST" method.

    Perl 5.22 introduced the B::PADNAMELIST and B::PADNAME classes.

  B::PADLIST Methods
    MAX
    ARRAY
        A list of pads. The first one is a B::PADNAMELIST containing the
        names. The rest are currently B::AV objects, but that could change
        in future versions.

    ARRAYelt
        Like "ARRAY", but takes an index as an argument to get only one
        element, rather than a list of all of them.

    NAMES
        This method, introduced in 5.22, returns the B::PADNAMELIST. It is
        equivalent to "ARRAYelt" with a 0 argument.

    REFCNT
    id  This method, introduced in 5.22, returns an ID shared by clones of
        the same padlist.

    outid
        This method, also added in 5.22, returns the ID of the outer
        padlist.

  B::PADNAMELIST Methods
    MAX
    ARRAY
    ARRAYelt
        These two methods return the pad names, using B::SPECIAL objects for
        null pointers and B::PADNAME objects otherwise.

    REFCNT

  B::PADNAME Methods
    PV
    PVX
    LEN
    REFCNT
    FLAGS
        For backward-compatibility, if the PADNAMEt_OUTER flag is set, the
        FLAGS method adds the SVf_FAKE flag, too.

    TYPE
        A B::HV object representing the stash for a typed lexical.

    SvSTASH
        A backward-compatibility alias for TYPE.

    OURSTASH
        A B::HV object representing the stash for 'our' variables.

    PROTOCV
        The prototype CV for a 'my' sub.

    COP_SEQ_RANGE_LOW
    COP_SEQ_RANGE_HIGH
        Sequence numbers representing the scope within which a lexical is
        visible. Meaningless if PADNAMEt_OUTER is set.

    PARENT_PAD_INDEX
        Only meaningful if PADNAMEt_OUTER is set.

    PARENT_FAKELEX_FLAGS
        Only meaningful if PADNAMEt_OUTER is set.

  $B::overlay
    Although the optree is read-only, there is an overlay facility that
    allows you to override what values the various B::*OP methods return for
    a particular op. $B::overlay should be set to reference a two-deep hash:
    indexed by OP address, then method name. Whenever a an op method is
    called, the value in the hash is returned if it exists. This facility is
    used by B::Deparse to "undo" some optimisations. For example:

        local $B::overlay = {};
        ...
        if ($op->name eq "foo") {
            $B::overlay->{$$op} = {
                    name => 'bar',
                    next => $op->next->next,
            };
        }
        ...
        $op->name # returns "bar"
        $op->next # returns the next op but one

AUTHOR
    Malcolm Beattie, "mbeattie AT sable.uk"


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