Clang now builds world and kernel, on i386 and amd64

Dimitry Andric dim at FreeBSD.org
Wed Sep 29 11:34:38 UTC 2010


On 2010-09-29 13:23, Renato Botelho wrote:
> #!/usr/bin/perl
>
> use File::Temp;
>
> my ( $fh, $filename ) = File::Temp::tempfile();
> print "$filename\n";

For me it works perfectly, though I am using perl 5.10:

$ cat foo.pl
#!/usr/bin/perl

use File::Temp;

my ( $fh, $filename ) = File::Temp::tempfile();
print "$filename\n";
$ perl -v

This is perl, v5.10.1 (*) built for i386-freebsd-64int

Copyright 1987-2009, Larry Wall

Perl may be copied only under the terms of either the Artistic License or the
GNU General Public License, which may be found in the Perl 5 source kit.

Complete documentation for Perl, including FAQ lists, should be found on
this system using "man perl" or "perldoc perl".  If you have access to the
Internet, point your browser at http://www.perl.org/, the Perl Home Page.

$ perl foo.pl
/tmp/tv25CPnWhF
$ perl foo.pl
/tmp/L2UJQ5_JJs
$ perl foo.pl
/tmp/6ynQYvWIc1
$ perl foo.pl
/tmp/Tdpf7PKBMg
$ perl foo.pl
/tmp/76ir2i1ici
$ perl foo.pl
/tmp/LhfD0eZgd8

I'll try building perl 5.12 and try it again.

Btw, I assume you did *not* rebuild perl with clang, so your perl is
still compiled with gcc?


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