(Graphics credit to Leonardo Maia.)

Thanks to The Perl Foundation and our beloved sponsors, a large portion of the critical contributors to the Perl 5 Porters (p5p), the core group of Perl 5 developers, were able to get together on November 11th, 2016 at the Booking.com headquarters in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, for our very first Perl 5 Core hackathon, nicknamed Perl 5 Hack.

This is our report.

It was a four-day event, composed of discussions (centralized and specialized) on a myriad of important topics, knowledge sharing, and cooperative hacking. It provided us with the ability to cut down several months worth of discussions and loss of time due to timezone differences.

We worked on several topics, such as the Configure phase, core modules, security updates to Perl library loading order ("dot in @INC "), improving compilation under C++11, Core API and internals, replacements for the buggy utf8 IO layer, conditional lexical variable warnings, and deparsing some internal warnings information ( ${^WARNING_BITS} ).

This alone would have been quite the fit, but we also achieved a few things along with those discussions. Some of our achievements include:

Cleaning up dead hints code (pre-ELF)

Improved our release guide

Improved our Configure process Removing hundreds of complicated C conditionals Faster Configure script

Cleaned up our install output

Improved our API documentation

Massive speed improvements to core modules

Explored the new Test2 testing framework for Perl

Reviewed and listed all current deprecations

Tied all deprecations to an exact version, to improve transparency and communicate better our intentions regarding deprecated features and syntax

Cleaned up core code: Removed obscure and unused SVs Removed dead code Moved Unicode::Normalize to upstream blead

Had done optimizations, such as when assigning to references.

Reduced memory usage in core modules: Data::Dumper and Time::Local .

and . Fuzzed core modules

Have rewritten much of our readline implementation

Introduced the indented HEREDOC feature, being released in the upcoming 5.26

We raised a lot of topics and we made numerous important and valuable changes to the core code and core utilities, but we have also held in-depth discussions on the following topics:

Our COW implementation and where to take it in the future

Efficiency of our hash bucket sizing

Overloading indication

Our policy on editing dual-life modules

OP tree cloning

Subroutine Signatures and their introspection

The internals of the Perl to C compiler and what may be gleaned from it on improving perl

The contribution hurdles when working with RT

Vulnerability triage, classification, and handling - covering our security handling policies

EBCDIC-portability

Unicode (and specifically grapheme delimiters)

Regular Expression internals

Vtable-based hashes

Most of these have led to changes in policy, improvements or cleanups in core, and a "leg-up" on additional research into those topics.

All in all, despite it only being the first hackathon, it had already proved successful and beneficial. For this reason we intend to holding future hackathons, while both preparing better for them, as well as communicating better our work on them onward to the community.

Thank you to all attendees: Aaron Crane, Abigail, Brian Fraser, Dagfinn Mannsåker, Dave Mitchell, Dennis Kaarsemaker, Gonzalo Diethelm, H. Merijn Brand, John Lightsey, J. Nick Koston. Karl Williamson, Leon Timmermans, Lukas Mai, Matthew Horsfall, Mattia Barbon, Nicholas Clark, Nicolas Rochelemagne, Sawyer X, Steffen Mueller, Stevan Little, Todd Rinaldo, Viekntiy Fusenov, and Yves Orton,

And thank you to The Perl Foundation for helping in organizing this event, and to all of our sponsors for contributing and assisting in this event: Our Diamond Sponsors, Booking.com; our Platinum Sponsors of cPanel and Craigslist; Silver Sponsors, Bluehost; and Bronze Sponsors of Assurant, Grant Street Group and Signature Information Solutions, and to FastMail, for their support of this, and future Perl Foundation activities.

A special thank you to the Perl community for the support it has given us and to the Perl 5 Porters group.

Sawyer X and Todd Rinaldo, Perl 5 Hackathon organizers.