1# 2# Copyright (c) 1995-2001, Raphael Manfredi 3# Copyright (c) 2002-2014 by the Perl 5 Porters 4# Copyright (c) 2015-2016 cPanel Inc 5# Copyright (c) 2017 Reini Urban 6# 7# You may redistribute only under the same terms as Perl 5, as specified 8# in the README file that comes with the distribution. 9# 10 11BEGIN { require XSLoader } 12require Exporter; 13package Storable; 14 15our @ISA = qw(Exporter); 16our @EXPORT = qw(store retrieve); 17our @EXPORT_OK = qw( 18 nstore store_fd nstore_fd fd_retrieve 19 freeze nfreeze thaw 20 dclone 21 retrieve_fd 22 lock_store lock_nstore lock_retrieve 23 file_magic read_magic 24 BLESS_OK TIE_OK FLAGS_COMPAT 25 stack_depth stack_depth_hash 26); 27 28our ($canonical, $forgive_me); 29 30BEGIN { 31 our $VERSION = '3.32'; 32} 33 34our $recursion_limit; 35our $recursion_limit_hash; 36 37$recursion_limit = 512 38 unless defined $recursion_limit; 39$recursion_limit_hash = 256 40 unless defined $recursion_limit_hash; 41 42use Carp; 43 44BEGIN { 45 if (eval { 46 local $SIG{__DIE__}; 47 local @INC = @INC; 48 pop @INC if $INC[-1] eq '.'; 49 require Log::Agent; 50 1; 51 }) { 52 Log::Agent->import; 53 } 54 # 55 # Use of Log::Agent is optional. If it hasn't imported these subs then 56 # provide a fallback implementation. 57 # 58 unless ($Storable::{logcroak} && *{$Storable::{logcroak}}{CODE}) { 59 *logcroak = \&Carp::croak; 60 } 61 else { 62 # Log::Agent's logcroak always adds a newline to the error it is 63 # given. This breaks refs getting thrown. We can just discard what 64 # it throws (but keep whatever logging it does) and throw the original 65 # args. 66 no warnings 'redefine'; 67 my $logcroak = \&logcroak; 68 *logcroak = sub { 69 my @args = @_; 70 eval { &$logcroak }; 71 Carp::croak(@args); 72 }; 73 } 74 unless ($Storable::{logcarp} && *{$Storable::{logcarp}}{CODE}) { 75 *logcarp = \&Carp::carp; 76 } 77} 78 79# 80# They might miss :flock in Fcntl 81# 82 83BEGIN { 84 if (eval { require Fcntl; 1 } && exists $Fcntl::EXPORT_TAGS{'flock'}) { 85 Fcntl->import(':flock'); 86 } else { 87 eval q{ 88 sub LOCK_SH () { 1 } 89 sub LOCK_EX () { 2 } 90 }; 91 } 92} 93 94sub CLONE { 95 # clone context under threads 96 Storable::init_perinterp(); 97} 98 99sub BLESS_OK () { 2 } 100sub TIE_OK () { 4 } 101sub FLAGS_COMPAT () { BLESS_OK | TIE_OK } 102 103# By default restricted hashes are downgraded on earlier perls. 104 105$Storable::flags = FLAGS_COMPAT; 106$Storable::downgrade_restricted = 1; 107$Storable::accept_future_minor = 1; 108 109BEGIN { XSLoader::load('Storable') }; 110 111# 112# Determine whether locking is possible, but only when needed. 113# 114 115sub show_file_magic { 116 print <<EOM; 117# 118# To recognize the data files of the Perl module Storable, 119# the following lines need to be added to the local magic(5) file, 120# usually either /usr/share/misc/magic or /etc/magic. 121# 1220 string perl-store perl Storable(v0.6) data 123>4 byte >0 (net-order %d) 124>>4 byte &01 (network-ordered) 125>>4 byte =3 (major 1) 126>>4 byte =2 (major 1) 127 1280 string pst0 perl Storable(v0.7) data 129>4 byte >0 130>>4 byte &01 (network-ordered) 131>>4 byte =5 (major 2) 132>>4 byte =4 (major 2) 133>>5 byte >0 (minor %d) 134EOM 135} 136 137sub file_magic { 138 require IO::File; 139 140 my $file = shift; 141 my $fh = IO::File->new; 142 open($fh, "<", $file) || die "Can't open '$file': $!"; 143 binmode($fh); 144 defined(sysread($fh, my $buf, 32)) || die "Can't read from '$file': $!"; 145 close($fh); 146 147 $file = "./$file" unless $file; # ensure TRUE value 148 149 return read_magic($buf, $file); 150} 151 152sub read_magic { 153 my($buf, $file) = @_; 154 my %info; 155 156 my $buflen = length($buf); 157 my $magic; 158 if ($buf =~ s/^(pst0|perl-store)//) { 159 $magic = $1; 160 $info{file} = $file || 1; 161 } 162 else { 163 return undef if $file; 164 $magic = ""; 165 } 166 167 return undef unless length($buf); 168 169 my $net_order; 170 if ($magic eq "perl-store" && ord(substr($buf, 0, 1)) > 1) { 171 $info{version} = -1; 172 $net_order = 0; 173 } 174 else { 175 $buf =~ s/(.)//s; 176 my $major = (ord $1) >> 1; 177 return undef if $major > 4; # sanity (assuming we never go that high) 178 $info{major} = $major; 179 $net_order = (ord $1) & 0x01; 180 if ($major > 1) { 181 return undef unless $buf =~ s/(.)//s; 182 my $minor = ord $1; 183 $info{minor} = $minor; 184 $info{version} = "$major.$minor"; 185 $info{version_nv} = sprintf "%d.%03d", $major, $minor; 186 } 187 else { 188 $info{version} = $major; 189 } 190 } 191 $info{version_nv} ||= $info{version}; 192 $info{netorder} = $net_order; 193 194 unless ($net_order) { 195 return undef unless $buf =~ s/(.)//s; 196 my $len = ord $1; 197 return undef unless length($buf) >= $len; 198 return undef unless $len == 4 || $len == 8; # sanity 199 @info{qw(byteorder intsize longsize ptrsize)} 200 = unpack "a${len}CCC", $buf; 201 (substr $buf, 0, $len + 3) = ''; 202 if ($info{version_nv} >= 2.002) { 203 return undef unless $buf =~ s/(.)//s; 204 $info{nvsize} = ord $1; 205 } 206 } 207 $info{hdrsize} = $buflen - length($buf); 208 209 return \%info; 210} 211 212sub BIN_VERSION_NV { 213 sprintf "%d.%03d", BIN_MAJOR(), BIN_MINOR(); 214} 215 216sub BIN_WRITE_VERSION_NV { 217 sprintf "%d.%03d", BIN_MAJOR(), BIN_WRITE_MINOR(); 218} 219 220# 221# store 222# 223# Store target object hierarchy, identified by a reference to its root. 224# The stored object tree may later be retrieved to memory via retrieve. 225# Returns undef if an I/O error occurred, in which case the file is 226# removed. 227# 228sub store { 229 return _store(\&pstore, @_, 0); 230} 231 232# 233# nstore 234# 235# Same as store, but in network order. 236# 237sub nstore { 238 return _store(\&net_pstore, @_, 0); 239} 240 241# 242# lock_store 243# 244# Same as store, but flock the file first (advisory locking). 245# 246sub lock_store { 247 return _store(\&pstore, @_, 1); 248} 249 250# 251# lock_nstore 252# 253# Same as nstore, but flock the file first (advisory locking). 254# 255sub lock_nstore { 256 return _store(\&net_pstore, @_, 1); 257} 258 259# Internal store to file routine 260sub _store { 261 my $xsptr = shift; 262 my $self = shift; 263 my ($file, $use_locking) = @_; 264 logcroak "not a reference" unless ref($self); 265 logcroak "wrong argument number" unless @_ == 2; # No @foo in arglist 266 local *FILE; 267 if ($use_locking) { 268 open(FILE, ">>", $file) || logcroak "can't write into $file: $!"; 269 unless (CAN_FLOCK) { 270 logcarp 271 "Storable::lock_store: fcntl/flock emulation broken on $^O"; 272 return undef; 273 } 274 flock(FILE, LOCK_EX) || 275 logcroak "can't get exclusive lock on $file: $!"; 276 truncate FILE, 0; 277 # Unlocking will happen when FILE is closed 278 } else { 279 open(FILE, ">", $file) || logcroak "can't create $file: $!"; 280 } 281 binmode FILE; # Archaic systems... 282 my $da = $@; # Don't mess if called from exception handler 283 my $ret; 284 # Call C routine nstore or pstore, depending on network order 285 eval { $ret = &$xsptr(*FILE, $self) }; 286 # close will return true on success, so the or short-circuits, the () 287 # expression is true, and for that case the block will only be entered 288 # if $@ is true (ie eval failed) 289 # if close fails, it returns false, $ret is altered, *that* is (also) 290 # false, so the () expression is false, !() is true, and the block is 291 # entered. 292 if (!(close(FILE) or undef $ret) || $@) { 293 unlink($file) or warn "Can't unlink $file: $!\n"; 294 } 295 if ($@) { 296 $@ =~ s/\.?\n$/,/ unless ref $@; 297 logcroak $@; 298 } 299 $@ = $da; 300 return $ret; 301} 302 303# 304# store_fd 305# 306# Same as store, but perform on an already opened file descriptor instead. 307# Returns undef if an I/O error occurred. 308# 309sub store_fd { 310 return _store_fd(\&pstore, @_); 311} 312 313# 314# nstore_fd 315# 316# Same as store_fd, but in network order. 317# 318sub nstore_fd { 319 my ($self, $file) = @_; 320 return _store_fd(\&net_pstore, @_); 321} 322 323# Internal store routine on opened file descriptor 324sub _store_fd { 325 my $xsptr = shift; 326 my $self = shift; 327 my ($file) = @_; 328 logcroak "not a reference" unless ref($self); 329 logcroak "too many arguments" unless @_ == 1; # No @foo in arglist 330 my $fd = fileno($file); 331 logcroak "not a valid file descriptor" unless defined $fd; 332 my $da = $@; # Don't mess if called from exception handler 333 my $ret; 334 # Call C routine nstore or pstore, depending on network order 335 eval { $ret = &$xsptr($file, $self) }; 336 logcroak $@ if $@ =~ s/\.?\n$/,/; 337 local $\; print $file ''; # Autoflush the file if wanted 338 $@ = $da; 339 return $ret; 340} 341 342# 343# freeze 344# 345# Store object and its hierarchy in memory and return a scalar 346# containing the result. 347# 348sub freeze { 349 _freeze(\&mstore, @_); 350} 351 352# 353# nfreeze 354# 355# Same as freeze but in network order. 356# 357sub nfreeze { 358 _freeze(\&net_mstore, @_); 359} 360 361# Internal freeze routine 362sub _freeze { 363 my $xsptr = shift; 364 my $self = shift; 365 logcroak "not a reference" unless ref($self); 366 logcroak "too many arguments" unless @_ == 0; # No @foo in arglist 367 my $da = $@; # Don't mess if called from exception handler 368 my $ret; 369 # Call C routine mstore or net_mstore, depending on network order 370 eval { $ret = &$xsptr($self) }; 371 if ($@) { 372 $@ =~ s/\.?\n$/,/ unless ref $@; 373 logcroak $@; 374 } 375 $@ = $da; 376 return $ret ? $ret : undef; 377} 378 379# 380# retrieve 381# 382# Retrieve object hierarchy from disk, returning a reference to the root 383# object of that tree. 384# 385# retrieve(file, flags) 386# flags include by default BLESS_OK=2 | TIE_OK=4 387# with flags=0 or the global $Storable::flags set to 0, no resulting object 388# will be blessed nor tied. 389# 390sub retrieve { 391 _retrieve(shift, 0, @_); 392} 393 394# 395# lock_retrieve 396# 397# Same as retrieve, but with advisory locking. 398# 399sub lock_retrieve { 400 _retrieve(shift, 1, @_); 401} 402 403# Internal retrieve routine 404sub _retrieve { 405 my ($file, $use_locking, $flags) = @_; 406 $flags = $Storable::flags unless defined $flags; 407 my $FILE; 408 open($FILE, "<", $file) || logcroak "can't open $file: $!"; 409 binmode $FILE; # Archaic systems... 410 my $self; 411 my $da = $@; # Could be from exception handler 412 if ($use_locking) { 413 unless (CAN_FLOCK) { 414 logcarp 415 "Storable::lock_store: fcntl/flock emulation broken on $^O"; 416 return undef; 417 } 418 flock($FILE, LOCK_SH) || logcroak "can't get shared lock on $file: $!"; 419 # Unlocking will happen when FILE is closed 420 } 421 eval { $self = pretrieve($FILE, $flags) }; # Call C routine 422 close($FILE); 423 if ($@) { 424 $@ =~ s/\.?\n$/,/ unless ref $@; 425 logcroak $@; 426 } 427 $@ = $da; 428 return $self; 429} 430 431# 432# fd_retrieve 433# 434# Same as retrieve, but perform from an already opened file descriptor instead. 435# 436sub fd_retrieve { 437 my ($file, $flags) = @_; 438 $flags = $Storable::flags unless defined $flags; 439 my $fd = fileno($file); 440 logcroak "not a valid file descriptor" unless defined $fd; 441 my $self; 442 my $da = $@; # Could be from exception handler 443 eval { $self = pretrieve($file, $flags) }; # Call C routine 444 if ($@) { 445 $@ =~ s/\.?\n$/,/ unless ref $@; 446 logcroak $@; 447 } 448 $@ = $da; 449 return $self; 450} 451 452sub retrieve_fd { &fd_retrieve } # Backward compatibility 453 454# 455# thaw 456# 457# Recreate objects in memory from an existing frozen image created 458# by freeze. If the frozen image passed is undef, return undef. 459# 460# thaw(frozen_obj, flags) 461# flags include by default BLESS_OK=2 | TIE_OK=4 462# with flags=0 or the global $Storable::flags set to 0, no resulting object 463# will be blessed nor tied. 464# 465sub thaw { 466 my ($frozen, $flags) = @_; 467 $flags = $Storable::flags unless defined $flags; 468 return undef unless defined $frozen; 469 my $self; 470 my $da = $@; # Could be from exception handler 471 eval { $self = mretrieve($frozen, $flags) };# Call C routine 472 if ($@) { 473 $@ =~ s/\.?\n$/,/ unless ref $@; 474 logcroak $@; 475 } 476 $@ = $da; 477 return $self; 478} 479 480# 481# _make_re($re, $flags) 482# 483# Internal function used to thaw a regular expression. 484# 485 486my $re_flags; 487BEGIN { 488 if ($] < 5.010) { 489 $re_flags = qr/\A[imsx]*\z/; 490 } 491 elsif ($] < 5.014) { 492 $re_flags = qr/\A[msixp]*\z/; 493 } 494 elsif ($] < 5.022) { 495 $re_flags = qr/\A[msixpdual]*\z/; 496 } 497 else { 498 $re_flags = qr/\A[msixpdualn]*\z/; 499 } 500} 501 502sub _make_re { 503 my ($re, $flags) = @_; 504 505 $flags =~ $re_flags 506 or die "regexp flags invalid"; 507 508 my $qr = eval "qr/\$re/$flags"; 509 die $@ if $@; 510 511 $qr; 512} 513 514if ($] < 5.012) { 515 eval <<'EOS' 516sub _regexp_pattern { 517 my $re = "" . shift; 518 $re =~ /\A\(\?([xism]*)(?:-[xism]*)?:(.*)\)\z/s 519 or die "Cannot parse regexp /$re/"; 520 return ($2, $1); 521} 5221 523EOS 524 or die "Cannot define _regexp_pattern: $@"; 525} 526 5271; 528__END__ 529 530=head1 NAME 531 532Storable - persistence for Perl data structures 533 534=head1 SYNOPSIS 535 536 use Storable; 537 store \%table, 'file'; 538 $hashref = retrieve('file'); 539 540 use Storable qw(nstore store_fd nstore_fd freeze thaw dclone); 541 542 # Network order 543 nstore \%table, 'file'; 544 $hashref = retrieve('file'); # There is NO nretrieve() 545 546 # Storing to and retrieving from an already opened file 547 store_fd \@array, \*STDOUT; 548 nstore_fd \%table, \*STDOUT; 549 $aryref = fd_retrieve(\*SOCKET); 550 $hashref = fd_retrieve(\*SOCKET); 551 552 # Serializing to memory 553 $serialized = freeze \%table; 554 %table_clone = %{ thaw($serialized) }; 555 556 # Deep (recursive) cloning 557 $cloneref = dclone($ref); 558 559 # Advisory locking 560 use Storable qw(lock_store lock_nstore lock_retrieve) 561 lock_store \%table, 'file'; 562 lock_nstore \%table, 'file'; 563 $hashref = lock_retrieve('file'); 564 565=head1 DESCRIPTION 566 567The Storable package brings persistence to your Perl data structures 568containing SCALAR, ARRAY, HASH or REF objects, i.e. anything that can be 569conveniently stored to disk and retrieved at a later time. 570 571It can be used in the regular procedural way by calling C<store> with 572a reference to the object to be stored, along with the file name where 573the image should be written. 574 575The routine returns C<undef> for I/O problems or other internal error, 576a true value otherwise. Serious errors are propagated as a C<die> exception. 577 578To retrieve data stored to disk, use C<retrieve> with a file name. 579The objects stored into that file are recreated into memory for you, 580and a I<reference> to the root object is returned. In case an I/O error 581occurs while reading, C<undef> is returned instead. Other serious 582errors are propagated via C<die>. 583 584Since storage is performed recursively, you might want to stuff references 585to objects that share a lot of common data into a single array or hash 586table, and then store that object. That way, when you retrieve back the 587whole thing, the objects will continue to share what they originally shared. 588 589At the cost of a slight header overhead, you may store to an already 590opened file descriptor using the C<store_fd> routine, and retrieve 591from a file via C<fd_retrieve>. Those names aren't imported by default, 592so you will have to do that explicitly if you need those routines. 593The file descriptor you supply must be already opened, for read 594if you're going to retrieve and for write if you wish to store. 595 596 store_fd(\%table, *STDOUT) || die "can't store to stdout\n"; 597 $hashref = fd_retrieve(*STDIN); 598 599You can also store data in network order to allow easy sharing across 600multiple platforms, or when storing on a socket known to be remotely 601connected. The routines to call have an initial C<n> prefix for I<network>, 602as in C<nstore> and C<nstore_fd>. At retrieval time, your data will be 603correctly restored so you don't have to know whether you're restoring 604from native or network ordered data. Double values are stored stringified 605to ensure portability as well, at the slight risk of loosing some precision 606in the last decimals. 607 608When using C<fd_retrieve>, objects are retrieved in sequence, one 609object (i.e. one recursive tree) per associated C<store_fd>. 610 611If you're more from the object-oriented camp, you can inherit from 612Storable and directly store your objects by invoking C<store> as 613a method. The fact that the root of the to-be-stored tree is a 614blessed reference (i.e. an object) is special-cased so that the 615retrieve does not provide a reference to that object but rather the 616blessed object reference itself. (Otherwise, you'd get a reference 617to that blessed object). 618 619=head1 MEMORY STORE 620 621The Storable engine can also store data into a Perl scalar instead, to 622later retrieve them. This is mainly used to freeze a complex structure in 623some safe compact memory place (where it can possibly be sent to another 624process via some IPC, since freezing the structure also serializes it in 625effect). Later on, and maybe somewhere else, you can thaw the Perl scalar 626out and recreate the original complex structure in memory. 627 628Surprisingly, the routines to be called are named C<freeze> and C<thaw>. 629If you wish to send out the frozen scalar to another machine, use 630C<nfreeze> instead to get a portable image. 631 632Note that freezing an object structure and immediately thawing it 633actually achieves a deep cloning of that structure: 634 635 dclone(.) = thaw(freeze(.)) 636 637Storable provides you with a C<dclone> interface which does not create 638that intermediary scalar but instead freezes the structure in some 639internal memory space and then immediately thaws it out. 640 641=head1 ADVISORY LOCKING 642 643The C<lock_store> and C<lock_nstore> routine are equivalent to 644C<store> and C<nstore>, except that they get an exclusive lock on 645the file before writing. Likewise, C<lock_retrieve> does the same 646as C<retrieve>, but also gets a shared lock on the file before reading. 647 648As with any advisory locking scheme, the protection only works if you 649systematically use C<lock_store> and C<lock_retrieve>. If one side of 650your application uses C<store> whilst the other uses C<lock_retrieve>, 651you will get no protection at all. 652 653The internal advisory locking is implemented using Perl's flock() 654routine. If your system does not support any form of flock(), or if 655you share your files across NFS, you might wish to use other forms 656of locking by using modules such as LockFile::Simple which lock a 657file using a filesystem entry, instead of locking the file descriptor. 658 659=head1 SPEED 660 661The heart of Storable is written in C for decent speed. Extra low-level 662optimizations have been made when manipulating perl internals, to 663sacrifice encapsulation for the benefit of greater speed. 664 665=head1 CANONICAL REPRESENTATION 666 667Normally, Storable stores elements of hashes in the order they are 668stored internally by Perl, i.e. pseudo-randomly. If you set 669C<$Storable::canonical> to some C<TRUE> value, Storable will store 670hashes with the elements sorted by their key. This allows you to 671compare data structures by comparing their frozen representations (or 672even the compressed frozen representations), which can be useful for 673creating lookup tables for complicated queries. 674 675Canonical order does not imply network order; those are two orthogonal 676settings. 677 678=head1 CODE REFERENCES 679 680Since Storable version 2.05, CODE references may be serialized with 681the help of L<B::Deparse>. To enable this feature, set 682C<$Storable::Deparse> to a true value. To enable deserialization, 683C<$Storable::Eval> should be set to a true value. Be aware that 684deserialization is done through C<eval>, which is dangerous if the 685Storable file contains malicious data. You can set C<$Storable::Eval> 686to a subroutine reference which would be used instead of C<eval>. See 687below for an example using a L<Safe> compartment for deserialization 688of CODE references. 689 690If C<$Storable::Deparse> and/or C<$Storable::Eval> are set to false 691values, then the value of C<$Storable::forgive_me> (see below) is 692respected while serializing and deserializing. 693 694=head1 FORWARD COMPATIBILITY 695 696This release of Storable can be used on a newer version of Perl to 697serialize data which is not supported by earlier Perls. By default, 698Storable will attempt to do the right thing, by C<croak()>ing if it 699encounters data that it cannot deserialize. However, the defaults 700can be changed as follows: 701 702=over 4 703 704=item utf8 data 705 706Perl 5.6 added support for Unicode characters with code points > 255, 707and Perl 5.8 has full support for Unicode characters in hash keys. 708Perl internally encodes strings with these characters using utf8, and 709Storable serializes them as utf8. By default, if an older version of 710Perl encounters a utf8 value it cannot represent, it will C<croak()>. 711To change this behaviour so that Storable deserializes utf8 encoded 712values as the string of bytes (effectively dropping the I<is_utf8> flag) 713set C<$Storable::drop_utf8> to some C<TRUE> value. This is a form of 714data loss, because with C<$drop_utf8> true, it becomes impossible to tell 715whether the original data was the Unicode string, or a series of bytes 716that happen to be valid utf8. 717 718=item restricted hashes 719 720Perl 5.8 adds support for restricted hashes, which have keys 721restricted to a given set, and can have values locked to be read only. 722By default, when Storable encounters a restricted hash on a perl 723that doesn't support them, it will deserialize it as a normal hash, 724silently discarding any placeholder keys and leaving the keys and 725all values unlocked. To make Storable C<croak()> instead, set 726C<$Storable::downgrade_restricted> to a C<FALSE> value. To restore 727the default set it back to some C<TRUE> value. 728 729The cperl PERL_PERTURB_KEYS_TOP hash strategy has a known problem with 730restricted hashes. 731 732=item huge objects 733 734On 64bit systems some data structures may exceed the 2G (i.e. I32_MAX) 735limit. On 32bit systems also strings between I32 and U32 (2G-4G). 736Since Storable 3.00 (not in perl5 core) we are able to store and 737retrieve these objects, even if perl5 itself is not able to handle 738them. These are strings longer then 4G, arrays with more then 2G 739elements and hashes with more then 2G elements. cperl forbids hashes 740with more than 2G elements, but this fail in cperl then. perl5 itself 741at least until 5.26 allows it, but cannot iterate over them. 742Note that creating those objects might cause out of memory 743exceptions by the operating system before perl has a chance to abort. 744 745=item files from future versions of Storable 746 747Earlier versions of Storable would immediately croak if they encountered 748a file with a higher internal version number than the reading Storable 749knew about. Internal version numbers are increased each time new data 750types (such as restricted hashes) are added to the vocabulary of the file 751format. This meant that a newer Storable module had no way of writing a 752file readable by an older Storable, even if the writer didn't store newer 753data types. 754 755This version of Storable will defer croaking until it encounters a data 756type in the file that it does not recognize. This means that it will 757continue to read files generated by newer Storable modules which are careful 758in what they write out, making it easier to upgrade Storable modules in a 759mixed environment. 760 761The old behaviour of immediate croaking can be re-instated by setting 762C<$Storable::accept_future_minor> to some C<FALSE> value. 763 764=back 765 766All these variables have no effect on a newer Perl which supports the 767relevant feature. 768 769=head1 ERROR REPORTING 770 771Storable uses the "exception" paradigm, in that it does not try to 772workaround failures: if something bad happens, an exception is 773generated from the caller's perspective (see L<Carp> and C<croak()>). 774Use eval {} to trap those exceptions. 775 776When Storable croaks, it tries to report the error via the C<logcroak()> 777routine from the C<Log::Agent> package, if it is available. 778 779Normal errors are reported by having store() or retrieve() return C<undef>. 780Such errors are usually I/O errors (or truncated stream errors at retrieval). 781 782When Storable throws the "Max. recursion depth with nested structures 783exceeded" error we are already out of stack space. Unfortunately on 784some earlier perl versions cleaning up a recursive data structure 785recurses into the free calls, which will lead to stack overflows in 786the cleanup. This data structure is not properly cleaned up then, it 787will only be destroyed during global destruction. 788 789=head1 WIZARDS ONLY 790 791=head2 Hooks 792 793Any class may define hooks that will be called during the serialization 794and deserialization process on objects that are instances of that class. 795Those hooks can redefine the way serialization is performed (and therefore, 796how the symmetrical deserialization should be conducted). 797 798Since we said earlier: 799 800 dclone(.) = thaw(freeze(.)) 801 802everything we say about hooks should also hold for deep cloning. However, 803hooks get to know whether the operation is a mere serialization, or a cloning. 804 805Therefore, when serializing hooks are involved, 806 807 dclone(.) <> thaw(freeze(.)) 808 809Well, you could keep them in sync, but there's no guarantee it will always 810hold on classes somebody else wrote. Besides, there is little to gain in 811doing so: a serializing hook could keep only one attribute of an object, 812which is probably not what should happen during a deep cloning of that 813same object. 814 815Here is the hooking interface: 816 817=over 4 818 819=item C<STORABLE_freeze> I<obj>, I<cloning> 820 821The serializing hook, called on the object during serialization. It can be 822inherited, or defined in the class itself, like any other method. 823 824Arguments: I<obj> is the object to serialize, I<cloning> is a flag indicating 825whether we're in a dclone() or a regular serialization via store() or freeze(). 826 827Returned value: A LIST C<($serialized, $ref1, $ref2, ...)> where $serialized 828is the serialized form to be used, and the optional $ref1, $ref2, etc... are 829extra references that you wish to let the Storable engine serialize. 830 831At deserialization time, you will be given back the same LIST, but all the 832extra references will be pointing into the deserialized structure. 833 834The B<first time> the hook is hit in a serialization flow, you may have it 835return an empty list. That will signal the Storable engine to further 836discard that hook for this class and to therefore revert to the default 837serialization of the underlying Perl data. The hook will again be normally 838processed in the next serialization. 839 840Unless you know better, serializing hook should always say: 841 842 sub STORABLE_freeze { 843 my ($self, $cloning) = @_; 844 return if $cloning; # Regular default serialization 845 .... 846 } 847 848in order to keep reasonable dclone() semantics. 849 850=item C<STORABLE_thaw> I<obj>, I<cloning>, I<serialized>, ... 851 852The deserializing hook called on the object during deserialization. 853But wait: if we're deserializing, there's no object yet... right? 854 855Wrong: the Storable engine creates an empty one for you. If you know Eiffel, 856you can view C<STORABLE_thaw> as an alternate creation routine. 857 858This means the hook can be inherited like any other method, and that 859I<obj> is your blessed reference for this particular instance. 860 861The other arguments should look familiar if you know C<STORABLE_freeze>: 862I<cloning> is true when we're part of a deep clone operation, I<serialized> 863is the serialized string you returned to the engine in C<STORABLE_freeze>, 864and there may be an optional list of references, in the same order you gave 865them at serialization time, pointing to the deserialized objects (which 866have been processed courtesy of the Storable engine). 867 868When the Storable engine does not find any C<STORABLE_thaw> hook routine, 869it tries to load the class by requiring the package dynamically (using 870the blessed package name), and then re-attempts the lookup. If at that 871time the hook cannot be located, the engine croaks. Note that this mechanism 872will fail if you define several classes in the same file, but L<perlmod> 873warned you. 874 875It is up to you to use this information to populate I<obj> the way you want. 876 877Returned value: none. 878 879=item C<STORABLE_attach> I<class>, I<cloning>, I<serialized> 880 881While C<STORABLE_freeze> and C<STORABLE_thaw> are useful for classes where 882each instance is independent, this mechanism has difficulty (or is 883incompatible) with objects that exist as common process-level or 884system-level resources, such as singleton objects, database pools, caches 885or memoized objects. 886 887The alternative C<STORABLE_attach> method provides a solution for these 888shared objects. Instead of C<STORABLE_freeze> --E<gt> C<STORABLE_thaw>, 889you implement C<STORABLE_freeze> --E<gt> C<STORABLE_attach> instead. 890 891Arguments: I<class> is the class we are attaching to, I<cloning> is a flag 892indicating whether we're in a dclone() or a regular de-serialization via 893thaw(), and I<serialized> is the stored string for the resource object. 894 895Because these resource objects are considered to be owned by the entire 896process/system, and not the "property" of whatever is being serialized, 897no references underneath the object should be included in the serialized 898string. Thus, in any class that implements C<STORABLE_attach>, the 899C<STORABLE_freeze> method cannot return any references, and C<Storable> 900will throw an error if C<STORABLE_freeze> tries to return references. 901 902All information required to "attach" back to the shared resource object 903B<must> be contained B<only> in the C<STORABLE_freeze> return string. 904Otherwise, C<STORABLE_freeze> behaves as normal for C<STORABLE_attach> 905classes. 906 907Because C<STORABLE_attach> is passed the class (rather than an object), 908it also returns the object directly, rather than modifying the passed 909object. 910 911Returned value: object of type C<class> 912 913=back 914 915=head2 Predicates 916 917Predicates are not exportable. They must be called by explicitly prefixing 918them with the Storable package name. 919 920=over 4 921 922=item C<Storable::last_op_in_netorder> 923 924The C<Storable::last_op_in_netorder()> predicate will tell you whether 925network order was used in the last store or retrieve operation. If you 926don't know how to use this, just forget about it. 927 928=item C<Storable::is_storing> 929 930Returns true if within a store operation (via STORABLE_freeze hook). 931 932=item C<Storable::is_retrieving> 933 934Returns true if within a retrieve operation (via STORABLE_thaw hook). 935 936=back 937 938=head2 Recursion 939 940With hooks comes the ability to recurse back to the Storable engine. 941Indeed, hooks are regular Perl code, and Storable is convenient when 942it comes to serializing and deserializing things, so why not use it 943to handle the serialization string? 944 945There are a few things you need to know, however: 946 947=over 4 948 949=item * 950 951From Storable 3.05 to 3.13 we probed for the stack recursion limit for references, 952arrays and hashes to a maximal depth of ~1200-35000, otherwise we might 953fall into a stack-overflow. On JSON::XS this limit is 512 btw. With 954references not immediately referencing each other there's no such 955limit yet, so you might fall into such a stack-overflow segfault. 956 957This probing and the checks we performed have some limitations: 958 959=over 960 961=item * 962 963the stack size at build time might be different at run time, eg. the 964stack size may have been modified with ulimit(1). If it's larger at 965run time Storable may fail the freeze() or thaw() unnecessarily. If 966it's larger at build time Storable may segmentation fault when 967processing a deep structure at run time. 968 969=item * 970 971the stack size might be different in a thread. 972 973=item * 974 975array and hash recursion limits are checked separately against the 976same recursion depth, a frozen structure with a large sequence of 977nested arrays within many nested hashes may exhaust the processor 978stack without triggering Storable's recursion protection. 979 980=back 981 982So these now have simple defaults rather than probing at build-time. 983 984You can control the maximum array and hash recursion depths by 985modifying C<$Storable::recursion_limit> and 986C<$Storable::recursion_limit_hash> respectively. Either can be set to 987C<-1> to prevent any depth checks, though this isn't recommended. 988 989If you want to test what the limits are, the F<stacksize> tool is 990included in the C<Storable> distribution. 991 992=item * 993 994You can create endless loops if the things you serialize via freeze() 995(for instance) point back to the object we're trying to serialize in 996the hook. 997 998=item * 999 1000Shared references among objects will not stay shared: if we're serializing 1001the list of object [A, C] where both object A and C refer to the SAME object 1002B, and if there is a serializing hook in A that says freeze(B), then when 1003deserializing, we'll get [A', C'] where A' refers to B', but C' refers to D, 1004a deep clone of B'. The topology was not preserved. 1005 1006=item * 1007 1008The maximal stack recursion limit for your system is returned by 1009C<stack_depth()> and C<stack_depth_hash()>. The hash limit is usually 1010half the size of the array and ref limit, as the Perl hash API is not optimal. 1011 1012=back 1013 1014That's why C<STORABLE_freeze> lets you provide a list of references 1015to serialize. The engine guarantees that those will be serialized in the 1016same context as the other objects, and therefore that shared objects will 1017stay shared. 1018 1019In the above [A, C] example, the C<STORABLE_freeze> hook could return: 1020 1021 ("something", $self->{B}) 1022 1023and the B part would be serialized by the engine. In C<STORABLE_thaw>, you 1024would get back the reference to the B' object, deserialized for you. 1025 1026Therefore, recursion should normally be avoided, but is nonetheless supported. 1027 1028=head2 Deep Cloning 1029 1030There is a Clone module available on CPAN which implements deep cloning 1031natively, i.e. without freezing to memory and thawing the result. It is 1032aimed to replace Storable's dclone() some day. However, it does not currently 1033support Storable hooks to redefine the way deep cloning is performed. 1034 1035=head1 Storable magic 1036 1037Yes, there's a lot of that :-) But more precisely, in UNIX systems 1038there's a utility called C<file>, which recognizes data files based on 1039their contents (usually their first few bytes). For this to work, 1040a certain file called F<magic> needs to taught about the I<signature> 1041of the data. Where that configuration file lives depends on the UNIX 1042flavour; often it's something like F</usr/share/misc/magic> or 1043F</etc/magic>. Your system administrator needs to do the updating of 1044the F<magic> file. The necessary signature information is output to 1045STDOUT by invoking Storable::show_file_magic(). Note that the GNU 1046implementation of the C<file> utility, version 3.38 or later, 1047is expected to contain support for recognising Storable files 1048out-of-the-box, in addition to other kinds of Perl files. 1049 1050You can also use the following functions to extract the file header 1051information from Storable images: 1052 1053=over 1054 1055=item $info = Storable::file_magic( $filename ) 1056 1057If the given file is a Storable image return a hash describing it. If 1058the file is readable, but not a Storable image return C<undef>. If 1059the file does not exist or is unreadable then croak. 1060 1061The hash returned has the following elements: 1062 1063=over 1064 1065=item C<version> 1066 1067This returns the file format version. It is a string like "2.7". 1068 1069Note that this version number is not the same as the version number of 1070the Storable module itself. For instance Storable v0.7 create files 1071in format v2.0 and Storable v2.15 create files in format v2.7. The 1072file format version number only increment when additional features 1073that would confuse older versions of the module are added. 1074 1075Files older than v2.0 will have the one of the version numbers "-1", 1076"0" or "1". No minor number was used at that time. 1077 1078=item C<version_nv> 1079 1080This returns the file format version as number. It is a string like 1081"2.007". This value is suitable for numeric comparisons. 1082 1083The constant function C<Storable::BIN_VERSION_NV> returns a comparable 1084number that represents the highest file version number that this 1085version of Storable fully supports (but see discussion of 1086C<$Storable::accept_future_minor> above). The constant 1087C<Storable::BIN_WRITE_VERSION_NV> function returns what file version 1088is written and might be less than C<Storable::BIN_VERSION_NV> in some 1089configurations. 1090 1091=item C<major>, C<minor> 1092 1093This also returns the file format version. If the version is "2.7" 1094then major would be 2 and minor would be 7. The minor element is 1095missing for when major is less than 2. 1096 1097=item C<hdrsize> 1098 1099The is the number of bytes that the Storable header occupies. 1100 1101=item C<netorder> 1102 1103This is TRUE if the image store data in network order. This means 1104that it was created with nstore() or similar. 1105 1106=item C<byteorder> 1107 1108This is only present when C<netorder> is FALSE. It is the 1109$Config{byteorder} string of the perl that created this image. It is 1110a string like "1234" (32 bit little endian) or "87654321" (64 bit big 1111endian). This must match the current perl for the image to be 1112readable by Storable. 1113 1114=item C<intsize>, C<longsize>, C<ptrsize>, C<nvsize> 1115 1116These are only present when C<netorder> is FALSE. These are the sizes of 1117various C datatypes of the perl that created this image. These must 1118match the current perl for the image to be readable by Storable. 1119 1120The C<nvsize> element is only present for file format v2.2 and 1121higher. 1122 1123=item C<file> 1124 1125The name of the file. 1126 1127=back 1128 1129=item $info = Storable::read_magic( $buffer ) 1130 1131=item $info = Storable::read_magic( $buffer, $must_be_file ) 1132 1133The $buffer should be a Storable image or the first few bytes of it. 1134If $buffer starts with a Storable header, then a hash describing the 1135image is returned, otherwise C<undef> is returned. 1136 1137The hash has the same structure as the one returned by 1138Storable::file_magic(). The C<file> element is true if the image is a 1139file image. 1140 1141If the $must_be_file argument is provided and is TRUE, then return 1142C<undef> unless the image looks like it belongs to a file dump. 1143 1144The maximum size of a Storable header is currently 21 bytes. If the 1145provided $buffer is only the first part of a Storable image it should 1146at least be this long to ensure that read_magic() will recognize it as 1147such. 1148 1149=back 1150 1151=head1 EXAMPLES 1152 1153Here are some code samples showing a possible usage of Storable: 1154 1155 use Storable qw(store retrieve freeze thaw dclone); 1156 1157 %color = ('Blue' => 0.1, 'Red' => 0.8, 'Black' => 0, 'White' => 1); 1158 1159 store(\%color, 'mycolors') or die "Can't store %a in mycolors!\n"; 1160 1161 $colref = retrieve('mycolors'); 1162 die "Unable to retrieve from mycolors!\n" unless defined $colref; 1163 printf "Blue is still %lf\n", $colref->{'Blue'}; 1164 1165 $colref2 = dclone(\%color); 1166 1167 $str = freeze(\%color); 1168 printf "Serialization of %%color is %d bytes long.\n", length($str); 1169 $colref3 = thaw($str); 1170 1171which prints (on my machine): 1172 1173 Blue is still 0.100000 1174 Serialization of %color is 102 bytes long. 1175 1176Serialization of CODE references and deserialization in a safe 1177compartment: 1178 1179=for example begin 1180 1181 use Storable qw(freeze thaw); 1182 use Safe; 1183 use strict; 1184 my $safe = new Safe; 1185 # because of opcodes used in "use strict": 1186 $safe->permit(qw(:default require)); 1187 local $Storable::Deparse = 1; 1188 local $Storable::Eval = sub { $safe->reval($_[0]) }; 1189 my $serialized = freeze(sub { 42 }); 1190 my $code = thaw($serialized); 1191 $code->() == 42; 1192 1193=for example end 1194 1195=for example_testing 1196 is( $code->(), 42 ); 1197 1198=head1 SECURITY WARNING 1199 1200B<Do not accept Storable documents from untrusted sources!> There is 1201B<no> way to configure Storable so that it can be used safely to process 1202untrusted data. While there I<are> various options that can be used to 1203mitigate specific security issues these options do I<not> comprise a 1204complete safety net for the user, and processing untrusted data may 1205result in segmentation faults, remote code execution, or privilege 1206escalation. The following lists some known features which represent 1207security issues that should be considered by users of this module. 1208 1209Most obviously, the optional (off by default) CODE reference 1210serialization feature allows transfer of code to the deserializing 1211process. Furthermore, any serialized object will cause Storable to 1212helpfully load the module corresponding to the class of the object in 1213the deserializing module. For manipulated module names, this can load 1214almost arbitrary code. Finally, the deserialized object's destructors 1215will be invoked when the objects get destroyed in the deserializing 1216process. Maliciously crafted Storable documents may put such objects 1217in the value of a hash key that is overridden by another key/value 1218pair in the same hash, thus causing immediate destructor execution. 1219 1220To disable blessing objects while thawing/retrieving remove the flag 1221C<BLESS_OK> = 2 from C<$Storable::flags> or set the 2nd argument for 1222thaw/retrieve to 0. 1223 1224To disable tieing data while thawing/retrieving remove the flag C<TIE_OK> 1225= 4 from C<$Storable::flags> or set the 2nd argument for thaw/retrieve 1226to 0. 1227 1228With the default setting of C<$Storable::flags> = 6, creating or destroying 1229random objects, even renamed objects can be controlled by an attacker. 1230See CVE-2015-1592 and its metasploit module. 1231 1232If your application requires accepting data from untrusted sources, you 1233are best off with a less powerful and more-likely safe serialization 1234format and implementation. If your data is sufficiently simple, 1235L<Cpanel::JSON::XS> or L<Data::MessagePack> are fine alternatives. For 1236more complex data structures containing various Perl specific data types 1237like regular expressions or aliased data L<Sereal> is the best 1238alternative and offers maximum interoperability. Note that Sereal is 1239L<unsafe by default|Sereal::Decoder/ROBUSTNESS>, but you can configure 1240the encoder and decoder to mitigate any security issues. 1241 1242=head1 WARNING 1243 1244If you're using references as keys within your hash tables, you're bound 1245to be disappointed when retrieving your data. Indeed, Perl stringifies 1246references used as hash table keys. If you later wish to access the 1247items via another reference stringification (i.e. using the same 1248reference that was used for the key originally to record the value into 1249the hash table), it will work because both references stringify to the 1250same string. 1251 1252It won't work across a sequence of C<store> and C<retrieve> operations, 1253however, because the addresses in the retrieved objects, which are 1254part of the stringified references, will probably differ from the 1255original addresses. The topology of your structure is preserved, 1256but not hidden semantics like those. 1257 1258On platforms where it matters, be sure to call C<binmode()> on the 1259descriptors that you pass to Storable functions. 1260 1261Storing data canonically that contains large hashes can be 1262significantly slower than storing the same data normally, as 1263temporary arrays to hold the keys for each hash have to be allocated, 1264populated, sorted and freed. Some tests have shown a halving of the 1265speed of storing -- the exact penalty will depend on the complexity of 1266your data. There is no slowdown on retrieval. 1267 1268=head1 REGULAR EXPRESSIONS 1269 1270Storable now has experimental support for storing regular expressions, 1271but there are significant limitations: 1272 1273=over 1274 1275=item * 1276 1277perl 5.8 or later is required. 1278 1279=item * 1280 1281regular expressions with code blocks, ie C</(?{ ... })/> or C</(??{ 1282... })/> will throw an exception when thawed. 1283 1284=item * 1285 1286regular expression syntax and flags have changed over the history of 1287perl, so a regular expression that you freeze in one version of perl 1288may fail to thaw or behave differently in another version of perl. 1289 1290=item * 1291 1292depending on the version of perl, regular expressions can change in 1293behaviour depending on the context, but later perls will bake that 1294behaviour into the regexp. 1295 1296=back 1297 1298Storable will throw an exception if a frozen regular expression cannot 1299be thawed. 1300 1301=head1 BUGS 1302 1303You can't store GLOB, FORMLINE, etc.... If you can define semantics 1304for those operations, feel free to enhance Storable so that it can 1305deal with them. 1306 1307The store functions will C<croak> if they run into such references 1308unless you set C<$Storable::forgive_me> to some C<TRUE> value. In that 1309case, the fatal message is converted to a warning and some meaningless 1310string is stored instead. 1311 1312Setting C<$Storable::canonical> may not yield frozen strings that 1313compare equal due to possible stringification of numbers. When the 1314string version of a scalar exists, it is the form stored; therefore, 1315if you happen to use your numbers as strings between two freezing 1316operations on the same data structures, you will get different 1317results. 1318 1319When storing doubles in network order, their value is stored as text. 1320However, you should also not expect non-numeric floating-point values 1321such as infinity and "not a number" to pass successfully through a 1322nstore()/retrieve() pair. 1323 1324As Storable neither knows nor cares about character sets (although it 1325does know that characters may be more than eight bits wide), any difference 1326in the interpretation of character codes between a host and a target 1327system is your problem. In particular, if host and target use different 1328code points to represent the characters used in the text representation 1329of floating-point numbers, you will not be able be able to exchange 1330floating-point data, even with nstore(). 1331 1332C<Storable::drop_utf8> is a blunt tool. There is no facility either to 1333return B<all> strings as utf8 sequences, or to attempt to convert utf8 1334data back to 8 bit and C<croak()> if the conversion fails. 1335 1336Prior to Storable 2.01, no distinction was made between signed and 1337unsigned integers on storing. By default Storable prefers to store a 1338scalars string representation (if it has one) so this would only cause 1339problems when storing large unsigned integers that had never been converted 1340to string or floating point. In other words values that had been generated 1341by integer operations such as logic ops and then not used in any string or 1342arithmetic context before storing. 1343 1344=head2 64 bit data in perl 5.6.0 and 5.6.1 1345 1346This section only applies to you if you have existing data written out 1347by Storable 2.02 or earlier on perl 5.6.0 or 5.6.1 on Unix or Linux which 1348has been configured with 64 bit integer support (not the default) 1349If you got a precompiled perl, rather than running Configure to build 1350your own perl from source, then it almost certainly does not affect you, 1351and you can stop reading now (unless you're curious). If you're using perl 1352on Windows it does not affect you. 1353 1354Storable writes a file header which contains the sizes of various C 1355language types for the C compiler that built Storable (when not writing in 1356network order), and will refuse to load files written by a Storable not 1357on the same (or compatible) architecture. This check and a check on 1358machine byteorder is needed because the size of various fields in the file 1359are given by the sizes of the C language types, and so files written on 1360different architectures are incompatible. This is done for increased speed. 1361(When writing in network order, all fields are written out as standard 1362lengths, which allows full interworking, but takes longer to read and write) 1363 1364Perl 5.6.x introduced the ability to optional configure the perl interpreter 1365to use C's C<long long> type to allow scalars to store 64 bit integers on 32 1366bit systems. However, due to the way the Perl configuration system 1367generated the C configuration files on non-Windows platforms, and the way 1368Storable generates its header, nothing in the Storable file header reflected 1369whether the perl writing was using 32 or 64 bit integers, despite the fact 1370that Storable was storing some data differently in the file. Hence Storable 1371running on perl with 64 bit integers will read the header from a file 1372written by a 32 bit perl, not realise that the data is actually in a subtly 1373incompatible format, and then go horribly wrong (possibly crashing) if it 1374encountered a stored integer. This is a design failure. 1375 1376Storable has now been changed to write out and read in a file header with 1377information about the size of integers. It's impossible to detect whether 1378an old file being read in was written with 32 or 64 bit integers (they have 1379the same header) so it's impossible to automatically switch to a correct 1380backwards compatibility mode. Hence this Storable defaults to the new, 1381correct behaviour. 1382 1383What this means is that if you have data written by Storable 1.x running 1384on perl 5.6.0 or 5.6.1 configured with 64 bit integers on Unix or Linux 1385then by default this Storable will refuse to read it, giving the error 1386I<Byte order is not compatible>. If you have such data then you 1387should set C<$Storable::interwork_56_64bit> to a true value to make this 1388Storable read and write files with the old header. You should also 1389migrate your data, or any older perl you are communicating with, to this 1390current version of Storable. 1391 1392If you don't have data written with specific configuration of perl described 1393above, then you do not and should not do anything. Don't set the flag - 1394not only will Storable on an identically configured perl refuse to load them, 1395but Storable a differently configured perl will load them believing them 1396to be correct for it, and then may well fail or crash part way through 1397reading them. 1398 1399=head1 CREDITS 1400 1401Thank you to (in chronological order): 1402 1403 Jarkko Hietaniemi <jhi@iki.fi> 1404 Ulrich Pfeifer <pfeifer@charly.informatik.uni-dortmund.de> 1405 Benjamin A. Holzman <bholzman@earthlink.net> 1406 Andrew Ford <A.Ford@ford-mason.co.uk> 1407 Gisle Aas <gisle@aas.no> 1408 Jeff Gresham <gresham_jeffrey@jpmorgan.com> 1409 Murray Nesbitt <murray@activestate.com> 1410 Marc Lehmann <pcg@opengroup.org> 1411 Justin Banks <justinb@wamnet.com> 1412 Jarkko Hietaniemi <jhi@iki.fi> (AGAIN, as perl 5.7.0 Pumpkin!) 1413 Salvador Ortiz Garcia <sog@msg.com.mx> 1414 Dominic Dunlop <domo@computer.org> 1415 Erik Haugan <erik@solbors.no> 1416 Benjamin A. Holzman <ben.holzman@grantstreet.com> 1417 Reini Urban <rurban@cpan.org> 1418 Todd Rinaldo <toddr@cpanel.net> 1419 Aaron Crane <arc@cpan.org> 1420 1421for their bug reports, suggestions and contributions. 1422 1423Benjamin Holzman contributed the tied variable support, Andrew Ford 1424contributed the canonical order for hashes, and Gisle Aas fixed 1425a few misunderstandings of mine regarding the perl internals, 1426and optimized the emission of "tags" in the output streams by 1427simply counting the objects instead of tagging them (leading to 1428a binary incompatibility for the Storable image starting at version 14290.6--older images are, of course, still properly understood). 1430Murray Nesbitt made Storable thread-safe. Marc Lehmann added overloading 1431and references to tied items support. Benjamin Holzman added a performance 1432improvement for overloaded classes; thanks to Grant Street Group for footing 1433the bill. 1434Reini Urban took over maintenance from p5p, and added security fixes 1435and huge object support. 1436 1437=head1 AUTHOR 1438 1439Storable was written by Raphael Manfredi 1440F<E<lt>Raphael_Manfredi@pobox.comE<gt>> 1441Maintenance is now done by cperl L<http://perl11.org/cperl> 1442 1443Please e-mail us with problems, bug fixes, comments and complaints, 1444although if you have compliments you should send them to Raphael. 1445Please don't e-mail Raphael with problems, as he no longer works on 1446Storable, and your message will be delayed while he forwards it to us. 1447 1448=head1 SEE ALSO 1449 1450L<Clone>. 1451 1452=cut 1453