$ENV{PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL} = 0 unless $ENV{PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL} > 3;
}
$| = 1;
-print "1..18\n";
-use Thread;
+print "1..21\n";
+use Thread 'yield';
print "ok 1\n";
sub content
Loch::Ness->new->monster(16);
Loch::Ness->gollum(17);
Loch::Ness->new->gollum(18);
+
+my $short = "This is a long string that goes on and on.";
+my $shorte = " a long string that goes on and on.";
+my $long = "This is short.";
+my $longe = " short.";
+my $thr1 = new Thread \&threaded, $short, $shorte, "19";
+my $thr2 = new Thread \&threaded, $long, $longe, "20";
+
+sub threaded {
+ my ($string, $string_end, $testno) = @_;
+
+ # Do the match, saving the output in appropriate variables
+ $string =~ /(.*)(is)(.*)/;
+ # Yield control, allowing the other thread to fill in the match variables
+ yield();
+ # Examine the match variable contents; on broken perls this fails
+ if ($3 eq $string_end) {
+ print "ok $testno\n";
+ }
+ else {
+ warn <<EOT;
+
+#
+# This is a KNOWN FAILURE, and one of the reasons why threading
+# is still an experimental feature. It is here to stop people
+# from deploying threads in production. ;-)
+#
+EOT
+ print "not ok $testno # other thread filled in match variables\n";
+ }
+}
+$thr1->join;
+$thr2->join;
+print "ok 21\n";