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-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Downloaded.txt13
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/Artistic131
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/COPYING340
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/INSTALL31
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/MANIFEST25
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/META.json39
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/META.yml21
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/Makefile.PL7
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/README339
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/lib/Text/Template.pm1973
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/lib/Text/Template/Preprocess.pm144
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/00-version.t11
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/01-basic.t266
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/02-hash.t111
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/03-out.t56
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/04-safe.t161
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/05-safe2.t105
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/06-ofh.t39
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/07-safe3.t91
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/08-exported.t75
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/09-error.t63
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/10-delimiters.t99
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/11-prepend.t94
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/12-preprocess.t52
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/13-taint.t119
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/14-broken.t82
-rw-r--r--openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/transfer/Text/Template.pm20
27 files changed, 4507 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Downloaded.txt b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Downloaded.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..af0c20a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Downloaded.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
+Intro
+-----
+
+If we find a useful Perl module that isn't one of the core Perl
+modules, we may choose to bundle it with the OpenSSL source.
+
+Here, we simply list those modules and where we downloaded them from.
+
+Downloaded and bundled Perl modules
+-----------------------------------
+
+Text::Template 1.46 was downloaded from
+http://search.cpan.org/CPAN/authors/id/M/MJ/MJD/Text-Template-1.46.tar.gz
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/Artistic b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/Artistic
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5f22124
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/Artistic
@@ -0,0 +1,131 @@
+
+
+
+
+ The "Artistic License"
+
+ Preamble
+
+The intent of this document is to state the conditions under which a
+Package may be copied, such that the Copyright Holder maintains some
+semblance of artistic control over the development of the package,
+while giving the users of the package the right to use and distribute
+the Package in a more-or-less customary fashion, plus the right to make
+reasonable modifications.
+
+Definitions:
+
+ "Package" refers to the collection of files distributed by the
+ Copyright Holder, and derivatives of that collection of files
+ created through textual modification.
+
+ "Standard Version" refers to such a Package if it has not been
+ modified, or has been modified in accordance with the wishes
+ of the Copyright Holder as specified below.
+
+ "Copyright Holder" is whoever is named in the copyright or
+ copyrights for the package.
+
+ "You" is you, if you're thinking about copying or distributing
+ this Package.
+
+ "Reasonable copying fee" is whatever you can justify on the
+ basis of media cost, duplication charges, time of people involved,
+ and so on. (You will not be required to justify it to the
+ Copyright Holder, but only to the computing community at large
+ as a market that must bear the fee.)
+
+ "Freely Available" means that no fee is charged for the item
+ itself, though there may be fees involved in handling the item.
+ It also means that recipients of the item may redistribute it
+ under the same conditions they received it.
+
+1. You may make and give away verbatim copies of the source form of the
+Standard Version of this Package without restriction, provided that you
+duplicate all of the original copyright notices and associated disclaimers.
+
+2. You may apply bug fixes, portability fixes and other modifications
+derived from the Public Domain or from the Copyright Holder. A Package
+modified in such a way shall still be considered the Standard Version.
+
+3. You may otherwise modify your copy of this Package in any way, provided
+that you insert a prominent notice in each changed file stating how and
+when you changed that file, and provided that you do at least ONE of the
+following:
+
+ a) place your modifications in the Public Domain or otherwise make them
+ Freely Available, such as by posting said modifications to Usenet or
+ an equivalent medium, or placing the modifications on a major archive
+ site such as uunet.uu.net, or by allowing the Copyright Holder to include
+ your modifications in the Standard Version of the Package.
+
+ b) use the modified Package only within your corporation or organization.
+
+ c) rename any non-standard executables so the names do not conflict
+ with standard executables, which must also be provided, and provide
+ a separate manual page for each non-standard executable that clearly
+ documents how it differs from the Standard Version.
+
+ d) make other distribution arrangements with the Copyright Holder.
+
+4. You may distribute the programs of this Package in object code or
+executable form, provided that you do at least ONE of the following:
+
+ a) distribute a Standard Version of the executables and library files,
+ together with instructions (in the manual page or equivalent) on where
+ to get the Standard Version.
+
+ b) accompany the distribution with the machine-readable source of
+ the Package with your modifications.
+
+ c) give non-standard executables non-standard names, and clearly
+ document the differences in manual pages (or equivalent), together
+ with instructions on where to get the Standard Version.
+
+ d) make other distribution arrangements with the Copyright Holder.
+
+5. You may charge a reasonable copying fee for any distribution of this
+Package. You may charge any fee you choose for support of this
+Package. You may not charge a fee for this Package itself. However,
+you may distribute this Package in aggregate with other (possibly
+commercial) programs as part of a larger (possibly commercial) software
+distribution provided that you do not advertise this Package as a
+product of your own. You may embed this Package's interpreter within
+an executable of yours (by linking); this shall be construed as a mere
+form of aggregation, provided that the complete Standard Version of the
+interpreter is so embedded.
+
+6. The scripts and library files supplied as input to or produced as
+output from the programs of this Package do not automatically fall
+under the copyright of this Package, but belong to whoever generated
+them, and may be sold commercially, and may be aggregated with this
+Package. If such scripts or library files are aggregated with this
+Package via the so-called "undump" or "unexec" methods of producing a
+binary executable image, then distribution of such an image shall
+neither be construed as a distribution of this Package nor shall it
+fall under the restrictions of Paragraphs 3 and 4, provided that you do
+not represent such an executable image as a Standard Version of this
+Package.
+
+7. C subroutines (or comparably compiled subroutines in other
+languages) supplied by you and linked into this Package in order to
+emulate subroutines and variables of the language defined by this
+Package shall not be considered part of this Package, but are the
+equivalent of input as in Paragraph 6, provided these subroutines do
+not change the language in any way that would cause it to fail the
+regression tests for the language.
+
+8. Aggregation of this Package with a commercial distribution is always
+permitted provided that the use of this Package is embedded; that is,
+when no overt attempt is made to make this Package's interfaces visible
+to the end user of the commercial distribution. Such use shall not be
+construed as a distribution of this Package.
+
+9. The name of the Copyright Holder may not be used to endorse or promote
+products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
+
+10. THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
+IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+ The End
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/COPYING b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/COPYING
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a3f6b12
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/COPYING
@@ -0,0 +1,340 @@
+ GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
+ Version 2, June 1991
+
+ Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA
+ 02111-1307, USA.
+ Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
+ of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
+
+ Preamble
+
+ The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
+freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public
+License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
+software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This
+General Public License applies to most of the Free Software
+Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to
+using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by
+the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to
+your programs, too.
+
+ When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
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+ TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
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+You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and
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+ when run, you must cause it, when started running for such
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+with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of
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+ 9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
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+Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program
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+later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions
+either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
+Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
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+Foundation.
+
+ 10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free
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+ NO WARRANTY
+
+ 11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
+FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
+OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
+PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
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+TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
+PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING,
+REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
+
+ 12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
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+REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
+INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING
+OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
+TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY
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+PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+ END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
+
+ Appendix: How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
+
+ If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
+possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
+free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
+
+ To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
+to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
+convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
+the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
+
+ <one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
+ Copyright (C) 19yy <name of author>
+
+ This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
+
+ This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+
+Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
+
+If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
+when it starts in an interactive mode:
+
+ Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) 19yy name of author
+ Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
+ This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
+ under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
+
+The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
+parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
+be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
+mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
+
+You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
+school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
+necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
+
+ Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
+ `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
+
+ <signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
+ Ty Coon, President of Vice
+
+This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
+proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
+consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
+library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
+Public License instead of this License.
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/INSTALL b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/INSTALL
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7c5e4c6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/INSTALL
@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
+
+To install:
+
+ perl Makefile.PL
+
+to construct the Makefile, then
+
+ make test
+
+to test the package. If it fails any tests, please send me the output
+of `make test' and `perl -V'. I'll tell you whether it is safe to go
+ahead, or I'll provide a fix.
+
+If it passes the tests, use
+
+ make install
+
+to install it.
+
+Detailed documentation is at the bottom of the lib/Text/Template.pm
+file. You may be able to view it with the following command:
+
+ perldoc Text::Template
+
+Or:
+
+ perldoc lib/Text/Template.pm
+
+If you have problems, send me mail:
+
+mjd-perl-template+@plover.com
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/MANIFEST b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/MANIFEST
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..22460fe
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/MANIFEST
@@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
+MANIFEST
+COPYING
+Artistic
+Makefile.PL
+INSTALL
+README
+lib/Text/Template.pm
+lib/Text/Template/Preprocess.pm
+t/00-version.t
+t/01-basic.t
+t/02-hash.t
+t/03-out.t
+t/04-safe.t
+t/05-safe2.t
+t/06-ofh.t
+t/07-safe3.t
+t/08-exported.t
+t/09-error.t
+t/10-delimiters.t
+t/11-prepend.t
+t/12-preprocess.t
+t/13-taint.t
+t/14-broken.t
+META.yml Module meta-data (added by MakeMaker)
+META.json Module JSON meta-data (added by MakeMaker)
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/META.json b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/META.json
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6b335eb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/META.json
@@ -0,0 +1,39 @@
+{
+ "abstract" : "unknown",
+ "author" : [
+ "unknown"
+ ],
+ "dynamic_config" : 1,
+ "generated_by" : "ExtUtils::MakeMaker version 6.62, CPAN::Meta::Converter version 2.120630",
+ "license" : [
+ "unknown"
+ ],
+ "meta-spec" : {
+ "url" : "http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?CPAN::Meta::Spec",
+ "version" : "2"
+ },
+ "name" : "Text-Template",
+ "no_index" : {
+ "directory" : [
+ "t",
+ "inc"
+ ]
+ },
+ "prereqs" : {
+ "build" : {
+ "requires" : {
+ "ExtUtils::MakeMaker" : "0"
+ }
+ },
+ "configure" : {
+ "requires" : {
+ "ExtUtils::MakeMaker" : "0"
+ }
+ },
+ "runtime" : {
+ "requires" : {}
+ }
+ },
+ "release_status" : "stable",
+ "version" : "1.46"
+}
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/META.yml b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/META.yml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a2e2715
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/META.yml
@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
+---
+abstract: unknown
+author:
+ - unknown
+build_requires:
+ ExtUtils::MakeMaker: 0
+configure_requires:
+ ExtUtils::MakeMaker: 0
+dynamic_config: 1
+generated_by: 'ExtUtils::MakeMaker version 6.62, CPAN::Meta::Converter version 2.120630'
+license: unknown
+meta-spec:
+ url: http://module-build.sourceforge.net/META-spec-v1.4.html
+ version: 1.4
+name: Text-Template
+no_index:
+ directory:
+ - t
+ - inc
+requires: {}
+version: 1.46
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/Makefile.PL b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/Makefile.PL
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..491e03c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/Makefile.PL
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
+use ExtUtils::MakeMaker;
+WriteMakefile(
+ NAME => 'Text::Template',
+ VERSION_FROM => 'lib/Text/Template.pm',
+# 'linkext' => {LINKTYPE => ''},
+ 'dist' => {COMPRESS => 'gzip', SUFFIX => 'gz'},
+);
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/README b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/README
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e184d8c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/README
@@ -0,0 +1,339 @@
+
+Text::Template v1.46
+
+This is a library for generating form letters, building HTML pages, or
+filling in templates generally. A `template' is a piece of text that
+has little Perl programs embedded in it here and there. When you
+`fill in' a template, you evaluate the little programs and replace
+them with their values.
+
+Here's an example of a template:
+
+ Dear {$title} {$lastname},
+
+ It has come to our attention that you are delinquent in your
+ {$monthname[$last_paid_month]} payment. Please remit
+ ${sprintf("%.2f", $amount)} immediately, or your patellae may
+ be needlessly endangered.
+
+ Love,
+
+ Mark "{nickname(rand 20)}" Dominus
+
+
+The result of filling in this template is a string, which might look
+something like this:
+
+ Dear Mr. Gates,
+
+ It has come to our attention that you are delinquent in your
+ February payment. Please remit
+ $392.12 immediately, or your patellae may
+ be needlessly endangered.
+
+
+ Love,
+
+ Mark "Vizopteryx" Dominus
+
+You can store a template in a file outside your program. People can
+modify the template without modifying the program. You can separate
+the formatting details from the main code, and put the formatting
+parts of the program into the template. That prevents code bloat and
+encourages functional separation.
+
+You can fill in the template in a `Safe' compartment. This means that
+if you don't trust the person who wrote the code in the template, you
+won't have to worry that they are tampering with your program when you
+execute it.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Text::Template was originally released some time in late 1995 or early
+1996. After three years of study and investigation, I rewrote it from
+scratch in January 1999. The new version, 1.0, was much faster,
+delivered better functionality and was almost 100% backward-compatible
+with the previous beta versions.
+
+I have added a number of useful features and conveniences since the
+1.0 release, while still retaining backward compatibility. With one
+merely cosmetic change, the current version of Text::Template passes
+the test suite that the old beta versions passed.
+
+Questions or comments should be addressed to
+mjd-perl-template+@plover.com. This address goes directly to me, and
+not to anyone else; it is not a mailing list address.
+
+To receive occasional announcements of new versions of T::T, send an
+empty note to mjd-perl-template-request@plover.com. This mailing list
+is not for discussion; it is for announcements only. Therefore, there
+is no address for sending messages to the list.
+
+You can get the most recent version of Text::Template, news, comments,
+and other collateral information from
+<URL:http://www.plover.com/~mjd/perl/Template/>.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What's new in v1.46 since v1.44:
+
+ Thanks to Rik Signes, there is a new
+ Text::Template->append_text_to_output method, which
+ Text::Template always uses whenever it wants to emit output.
+ You can subclass this to get control over the output, for
+ example for postprocessing.
+
+ A spurious warning is no longer emitted when the TYPE
+ parameter to ->new is omitted.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+What's new in v1.44 since v1.43:
+
+This is a maintentance release. There are no feature changes.
+
+ _scrubpkg, which was responsible for eptying out temporary
+ packages after the module had done with them, wasn't always
+ working; the result was memory-leaks in long-running
+ applications. This should be fixed now, and there is a test
+ in the test suite for it.
+
+ Minor changes to the test suite to prevent spurious errors.
+
+ Minor documentation changes.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+What's new in v1.43 since v1.42:
+
+ The ->new method now fails immediately and sets
+ $Text::Template::ERROR if the file that is named by a filename
+ argument does not exist or cannot be opened for some other
+ reason. Formerly, the constructor would succeed and the
+ ->fill_in call would fail.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What's new in v1.42 since v1.41:
+
+This is a maintentance release. There are no feature changes.
+
+ Fixed a bug relating to use of UNTAINT under perl 5.005_03 and
+ possibly other versions.
+
+ Taint-related tests are now more comprehensive.
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What's new in v1.41 since v1.40:
+
+This is a maintentance release. There are no feature changes.
+
+ Tests now work correctly on Windows systems and possibly on
+ other non-unix systems.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What's new in v1.40 since v1.31:
+
+ New UNTAINT option tells the module that it is safe to 'eval'
+ code even though it has come from a file or filehandle.
+
+ Code added to prevent memory leaks when filling many
+ templates. Thanks to Itamar Almeida de Carvalho.
+
+ Bug fix: $OUT was not correctly initialized when used in
+ conjunction with SAFE.
+
+ You may now use a glob ref when passing a filehandle to the
+ ->new funcion. Formerly, a glob was reuqired.
+
+ New subclass: Text::Template::Preprocess. Just like
+ Text::Template, but you may supply a PREPROCESS option in the
+ constructor or the fill_in call; this is a function which
+ receives each code fragment prior to evaluation, and which may
+ modify and return the fragment; the modified fragment is what
+ is evaluated.
+
+ Error messages passed to BROKEN subroutines will now report
+ the correct line number of the template at which the error
+ occurred:
+
+ Illegal division by zero at template line 37.
+
+ If the template comes from a file, the filename will be
+ reported as well:
+
+ Illegal division by zero at catalog.tmpl line 37.
+
+
+ INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE:
+
+ The format of the default error message has changed. It used
+ to look like:
+
+ Program fragment at line 30 delivered error ``Illegal division by zero''
+
+ It now looks like:
+
+ Program fragment delivered error ``Illegal division by zero at catalog.tmpl line 37''
+
+ Note that the default message used to report the line number
+ at which the program fragment began; it now reports the line
+ number at which the error actually occurred.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+What's new in v1.31 since v1.23:
+
+ Just bug fixes---fill_in_string was failing. Thanks to
+ Donald L. Greer Jr. for the test case.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+What's new in v1.23 since v1.22:
+
+ Small bug fix: DELIMITER and other arguments were being
+ ignored in calls to fill_in_file and fill_this_in. (Thanks to
+ Jonathan Roy for reporting this.)
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+What's new in v1.22 since v1.20:
+
+ You can now specify that certain Perl statements be prepended
+ to the beginning of every program fragment in a template,
+ either per template, or for all templates, or for the duration
+ of only one call to fill_in. This is useful, for example, if
+ you want to enable `strict' checks in your templates but you
+ don't want to manually add `use strict' to the front of every
+ program fragment everywhere.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+What's new in v1.20 since v1.12:
+
+ You can now specify that the program fragment delimiters are
+ strings other than { and }. This has three interesting
+ effects: First, it changes the delimiter strings. Second, it
+ disables the special meaning of \, so you have to be really,
+ really sure that the delimiters will not appear in your
+ templates. And third, because of the simplifications
+ introduced by the elimination of \ processing, template
+ parsing is 20-25% faster.
+
+ See the manual section on `Alternative Delimiters'.
+
+ Fixed bug having to do with undefined values in HASH options.
+ In particular, Text::Template no longer generates a warning if
+ you try to give a variable an undefined value.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What's new in v1.12 since v1.11:
+
+ I forgot to say that Text::Template ISA Exporter, so the
+ exported functions never got exported. Duhhh!
+
+ Template TYPEs are now case-insensitive. The `new' method now
+ diagnoses attempts to use an invalid TYPE.
+
+ More tests for these things.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What's new in v1.11 since v1.10:
+
+ Fixed a bug in the way backslashes were processed. The 1.10
+ behavior was incompatible with the beta versions and was also
+ inconvenient. (`\n' in templates was replaced with `n' before
+ it was given to Perl for evaluation.) The new behavior is
+ also incompatible with the beta versions, but it is only a
+ little bit incompatible, and it is probbaly better.
+
+ Documentation for the new behavior, and tests for the bug.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What's new in v1.10 since v1.03:
+
+ New OUTPUT option delivers template results directly to a
+ filehandle instead of making them into a string. Saves space
+ and time.
+
+ PACKAGE and HASH now work intelligently with SAFE.
+
+ Fragments may now output data directly to the template, rather
+ than having to arrange to return it as a return value at the
+ end. This means that where you used to have to write this:
+
+ { my $blist = '';
+ foreach $i (@items) {
+ $blist .= qq{ * $i\n};
+ }
+ $blist;
+ }
+
+ You can now write this instead, because $OUT is special.
+
+ { foreach $i (@items) {
+ $OUT.= " * $i\n";
+ }
+ }
+
+ (`A spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down.')
+
+ Fixed some small bugs. Worked around a bug in Perl that does
+ the wrong thing with $x = <Y> when $x contains a glob.
+
+ More documentation. Errors fixed.
+
+ Lots more tests.
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What's new in v1.03 since v1.0:
+
+ Code added to support HASH option to fill_in.
+ (Incl. `_gensym' function.)
+
+ Documentation for HASH.
+
+ New test file for HASH.
+
+ Note about failure of lexical variables to propagate into
+ templates. Why does this surprise people?
+
+ Bug fix: program fragments are evaluated in an environment with
+ `no strict' by default. Otherwise, you get a lot of `Global
+ symbol "$v" requires explicit package name' failures. Why didn't
+ the test program pick this up? Because the only variable the test
+ program ever used was `$a', which is exempt. Duhhhhh.
+
+ Fixed the test program.
+
+ Various minor documentation fixes.
+
+
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Improvements of 1.0 over the old 0.1beta:
+
+New features:
+
+ At least twice as fast
+
+ Better support for filling out the same template more than once
+
+ Now supports evaluation of program fragments in Safe
+ compartments. (Thanks, Jonathan!)
+
+ Better argument syntax
+
+ More convenience functions
+
+ The parser is much better and simpler.
+
+ Once a template is parsed, the parsed version is stored so that
+ it needn't be parsed again.
+
+ BROKEN function behavior is rationalized. You can now pass an
+ arbitrary argument to your BROKEN function, or return a value
+ from it to the main program.
+
+ Documentation overhauled.
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/lib/Text/Template.pm b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/lib/Text/Template.pm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dc4f3ba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/lib/Text/Template.pm
@@ -0,0 +1,1973 @@
+# -*- perl -*-
+# Text::Template.pm
+#
+# Fill in `templates'
+#
+# Copyright 2013 M. J. Dominus.
+# You may copy and distribute this program under the
+# same terms as Perl iteself.
+# If in doubt, write to mjd-perl-template+@plover.com for a license.
+#
+# Version 1.46
+
+package Text::Template;
+require 5.004;
+use Exporter;
+@ISA = qw(Exporter);
+@EXPORT_OK = qw(fill_in_file fill_in_string TTerror);
+use vars '$ERROR';
+use strict;
+
+$Text::Template::VERSION = '1.46';
+my %GLOBAL_PREPEND = ('Text::Template' => '');
+
+sub Version {
+ $Text::Template::VERSION;
+}
+
+sub _param {
+ my $kk;
+ my ($k, %h) = @_;
+ for $kk ($k, "\u$k", "\U$k", "-$k", "-\u$k", "-\U$k") {
+ return $h{$kk} if exists $h{$kk};
+ }
+ return;
+}
+
+sub always_prepend
+{
+ my $pack = shift;
+ my $old = $GLOBAL_PREPEND{$pack};
+ $GLOBAL_PREPEND{$pack} = shift;
+ $old;
+}
+
+{
+ my %LEGAL_TYPE;
+ BEGIN {
+ %LEGAL_TYPE = map {$_=>1} qw(FILE FILEHANDLE STRING ARRAY);
+ }
+ sub new {
+ my $pack = shift;
+ my %a = @_;
+ my $stype = uc(_param('type', %a) || "FILE");
+ my $source = _param('source', %a);
+ my $untaint = _param('untaint', %a);
+ my $prepend = _param('prepend', %a);
+ my $alt_delim = _param('delimiters', %a);
+ my $broken = _param('broken', %a);
+ unless (defined $source) {
+ require Carp;
+ Carp::croak("Usage: $ {pack}::new(TYPE => ..., SOURCE => ...)");
+ }
+ unless ($LEGAL_TYPE{$stype}) {
+ require Carp;
+ Carp::croak("Illegal value `$stype' for TYPE parameter");
+ }
+ my $self = {TYPE => $stype,
+ PREPEND => $prepend,
+ UNTAINT => $untaint,
+ BROKEN => $broken,
+ (defined $alt_delim ? (DELIM => $alt_delim) : ()),
+ };
+ # Under 5.005_03, if any of $stype, $prepend, $untaint, or $broken
+ # are tainted, all the others become tainted too as a result of
+ # sharing the expression with them. We install $source separately
+ # to prevent it from acquiring a spurious taint.
+ $self->{SOURCE} = $source;
+
+ bless $self => $pack;
+ return unless $self->_acquire_data;
+
+ $self;
+ }
+}
+
+# Convert template objects of various types to type STRING,
+# in which the template data is embedded in the object itself.
+sub _acquire_data {
+ my ($self) = @_;
+ my $type = $self->{TYPE};
+ if ($type eq 'STRING') {
+ # nothing necessary
+ } elsif ($type eq 'FILE') {
+ my $data = _load_text($self->{SOURCE});
+ unless (defined $data) {
+ # _load_text already set $ERROR
+ return undef;
+ }
+ if ($self->{UNTAINT} && _is_clean($self->{SOURCE})) {
+ _unconditionally_untaint($data);
+ }
+ $self->{TYPE} = 'STRING';
+ $self->{FILENAME} = $self->{SOURCE};
+ $self->{SOURCE} = $data;
+ } elsif ($type eq 'ARRAY') {
+ $self->{TYPE} = 'STRING';
+ $self->{SOURCE} = join '', @{$self->{SOURCE}};
+ } elsif ($type eq 'FILEHANDLE') {
+ $self->{TYPE} = 'STRING';
+ local $/;
+ my $fh = $self->{SOURCE};
+ my $data = <$fh>; # Extra assignment avoids bug in Solaris perl5.00[45].
+ if ($self->{UNTAINT}) {
+ _unconditionally_untaint($data);
+ }
+ $self->{SOURCE} = $data;
+ } else {
+ # This should have been caught long ago, so it represents a
+ # drastic `can't-happen' sort of failure
+ my $pack = ref $self;
+ die "Can only acquire data for $pack objects of subtype STRING, but this is $type; aborting";
+ }
+ $self->{DATA_ACQUIRED} = 1;
+}
+
+sub source {
+ my ($self) = @_;
+ $self->_acquire_data unless $self->{DATA_ACQUIRED};
+ return $self->{SOURCE};
+}
+
+sub set_source_data {
+ my ($self, $newdata) = @_;
+ $self->{SOURCE} = $newdata;
+ $self->{DATA_ACQUIRED} = 1;
+ $self->{TYPE} = 'STRING';
+ 1;
+}
+
+sub compile {
+ my $self = shift;
+
+ return 1 if $self->{TYPE} eq 'PREPARSED';
+
+ return undef unless $self->_acquire_data;
+ unless ($self->{TYPE} eq 'STRING') {
+ my $pack = ref $self;
+ # This should have been caught long ago, so it represents a
+ # drastic `can't-happen' sort of failure
+ die "Can only compile $pack objects of subtype STRING, but this is $self->{TYPE}; aborting";
+ }
+
+ my @tokens;
+ my $delim_pats = shift() || $self->{DELIM};
+
+
+
+ my ($t_open, $t_close) = ('{', '}');
+ my $DELIM; # Regex matches a delimiter if $delim_pats
+ if (defined $delim_pats) {
+ ($t_open, $t_close) = @$delim_pats;
+ $DELIM = "(?:(?:\Q$t_open\E)|(?:\Q$t_close\E))";
+ @tokens = split /($DELIM|\n)/, $self->{SOURCE};
+ } else {
+ @tokens = split /(\\\\(?=\\*[{}])|\\[{}]|[{}\n])/, $self->{SOURCE};
+ }
+ my $state = 'TEXT';
+ my $depth = 0;
+ my $lineno = 1;
+ my @content;
+ my $cur_item = '';
+ my $prog_start;
+ while (@tokens) {
+ my $t = shift @tokens;
+ next if $t eq '';
+ if ($t eq $t_open) { # Brace or other opening delimiter
+ if ($depth == 0) {
+ push @content, [$state, $cur_item, $lineno] if $cur_item ne '';
+ $cur_item = '';
+ $state = 'PROG';
+ $prog_start = $lineno;
+ } else {
+ $cur_item .= $t;
+ }
+ $depth++;
+ } elsif ($t eq $t_close) { # Brace or other closing delimiter
+ $depth--;
+ if ($depth < 0) {
+ $ERROR = "Unmatched close brace at line $lineno";
+ return undef;
+ } elsif ($depth == 0) {
+ push @content, [$state, $cur_item, $prog_start] if $cur_item ne '';
+ $state = 'TEXT';
+ $cur_item = '';
+ } else {
+ $cur_item .= $t;
+ }
+ } elsif (!$delim_pats && $t eq '\\\\') { # precedes \\\..\\\{ or \\\..\\\}
+ $cur_item .= '\\';
+ } elsif (!$delim_pats && $t =~ /^\\([{}])$/) { # Escaped (literal) brace?
+ $cur_item .= $1;
+ } elsif ($t eq "\n") { # Newline
+ $lineno++;
+ $cur_item .= $t;
+ } else { # Anything else
+ $cur_item .= $t;
+ }
+ }
+
+ if ($state eq 'PROG') {
+ $ERROR = "End of data inside program text that began at line $prog_start";
+ return undef;
+ } elsif ($state eq 'TEXT') {
+ push @content, [$state, $cur_item, $lineno] if $cur_item ne '';
+ } else {
+ die "Can't happen error #1";
+ }
+
+ $self->{TYPE} = 'PREPARSED';
+ $self->{SOURCE} = \@content;
+ 1;
+}
+
+sub prepend_text {
+ my ($self) = @_;
+ my $t = $self->{PREPEND};
+ unless (defined $t) {
+ $t = $GLOBAL_PREPEND{ref $self};
+ unless (defined $t) {
+ $t = $GLOBAL_PREPEND{'Text::Template'};
+ }
+ }
+ $self->{PREPEND} = $_[1] if $#_ >= 1;
+ return $t;
+}
+
+sub fill_in {
+ my $fi_self = shift;
+ my %fi_a = @_;
+
+ unless ($fi_self->{TYPE} eq 'PREPARSED') {
+ my $delims = _param('delimiters', %fi_a);
+ my @delim_arg = (defined $delims ? ($delims) : ());
+ $fi_self->compile(@delim_arg)
+ or return undef;
+ }
+
+ my $fi_varhash = _param('hash', %fi_a);
+ my $fi_package = _param('package', %fi_a) ;
+ my $fi_broken =
+ _param('broken', %fi_a) || $fi_self->{BROKEN} || \&_default_broken;
+ my $fi_broken_arg = _param('broken_arg', %fi_a) || [];
+ my $fi_safe = _param('safe', %fi_a);
+ my $fi_ofh = _param('output', %fi_a);
+ my $fi_eval_package;
+ my $fi_scrub_package = 0;
+ my $fi_filename = _param('filename') || $fi_self->{FILENAME} || 'template';
+
+ my $fi_prepend = _param('prepend', %fi_a);
+ unless (defined $fi_prepend) {
+ $fi_prepend = $fi_self->prepend_text;
+ }
+
+ if (defined $fi_safe) {
+ $fi_eval_package = 'main';
+ } elsif (defined $fi_package) {
+ $fi_eval_package = $fi_package;
+ } elsif (defined $fi_varhash) {
+ $fi_eval_package = _gensym();
+ $fi_scrub_package = 1;
+ } else {
+ $fi_eval_package = caller;
+ }
+
+ my $fi_install_package;
+ if (defined $fi_varhash) {
+ if (defined $fi_package) {
+ $fi_install_package = $fi_package;
+ } elsif (defined $fi_safe) {
+ $fi_install_package = $fi_safe->root;
+ } else {
+ $fi_install_package = $fi_eval_package; # The gensymmed one
+ }
+ _install_hash($fi_varhash => $fi_install_package);
+ }
+
+ if (defined $fi_package && defined $fi_safe) {
+ no strict 'refs';
+ # Big fat magic here: Fix it so that the user-specified package
+ # is the default one available in the safe compartment.
+ *{$fi_safe->root . '::'} = \%{$fi_package . '::'}; # LOD
+ }
+
+ my $fi_r = '';
+ my $fi_item;
+ foreach $fi_item (@{$fi_self->{SOURCE}}) {
+ my ($fi_type, $fi_text, $fi_lineno) = @$fi_item;
+ if ($fi_type eq 'TEXT') {
+ $fi_self->append_text_to_output(
+ text => $fi_text,
+ handle => $fi_ofh,
+ out => \$fi_r,
+ type => $fi_type,
+ );
+ } elsif ($fi_type eq 'PROG') {
+ no strict;
+ my $fi_lcomment = "#line $fi_lineno $fi_filename";
+ my $fi_progtext =
+ "package $fi_eval_package; $fi_prepend;\n$fi_lcomment\n$fi_text;";
+ my $fi_res;
+ my $fi_eval_err = '';
+ if ($fi_safe) {
+ $fi_safe->reval(q{undef $OUT});
+ $fi_res = $fi_safe->reval($fi_progtext);
+ $fi_eval_err = $@;
+ my $OUT = $fi_safe->reval('$OUT');
+ $fi_res = $OUT if defined $OUT;
+ } else {
+ my $OUT;
+ $fi_res = eval $fi_progtext;
+ $fi_eval_err = $@;
+ $fi_res = $OUT if defined $OUT;
+ }
+
+ # If the value of the filled-in text really was undef,
+ # change it to an explicit empty string to avoid undefined
+ # value warnings later.
+ $fi_res = '' unless defined $fi_res;
+
+ if ($fi_eval_err) {
+ $fi_res = $fi_broken->(text => $fi_text,
+ error => $fi_eval_err,
+ lineno => $fi_lineno,
+ arg => $fi_broken_arg,
+ );
+ if (defined $fi_res) {
+ $fi_self->append_text_to_output(
+ text => $fi_res,
+ handle => $fi_ofh,
+ out => \$fi_r,
+ type => $fi_type,
+ );
+ } else {
+ return $fi_res; # Undefined means abort processing
+ }
+ } else {
+ $fi_self->append_text_to_output(
+ text => $fi_res,
+ handle => $fi_ofh,
+ out => \$fi_r,
+ type => $fi_type,
+ );
+ }
+ } else {
+ die "Can't happen error #2";
+ }
+ }
+
+ _scrubpkg($fi_eval_package) if $fi_scrub_package;
+ defined $fi_ofh ? 1 : $fi_r;
+}
+
+sub append_text_to_output {
+ my ($self, %arg) = @_;
+
+ if (defined $arg{handle}) {
+ print { $arg{handle} } $arg{text};
+ } else {
+ ${ $arg{out} } .= $arg{text};
+ }
+
+ return;
+}
+
+sub fill_this_in {
+ my $pack = shift;
+ my $text = shift;
+ my $templ = $pack->new(TYPE => 'STRING', SOURCE => $text, @_)
+ or return undef;
+ $templ->compile or return undef;
+ my $result = $templ->fill_in(@_);
+ $result;
+}
+
+sub fill_in_string {
+ my $string = shift;
+ my $package = _param('package', @_);
+ push @_, 'package' => scalar(caller) unless defined $package;
+ Text::Template->fill_this_in($string, @_);
+}
+
+sub fill_in_file {
+ my $fn = shift;
+ my $templ = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'FILE', SOURCE => $fn, @_)
+ or return undef;
+ $templ->compile or return undef;
+ my $text = $templ->fill_in(@_);
+ $text;
+}
+
+sub _default_broken {
+ my %a = @_;
+ my $prog_text = $a{text};
+ my $err = $a{error};
+ my $lineno = $a{lineno};
+ chomp $err;
+# $err =~ s/\s+at .*//s;
+ "Program fragment delivered error ``$err''";
+}
+
+sub _load_text {
+ my $fn = shift;
+ local *F;
+ unless (open F, $fn) {
+ $ERROR = "Couldn't open file $fn: $!";
+ return undef;
+ }
+ local $/;
+ <F>;
+}
+
+sub _is_clean {
+ my $z;
+ eval { ($z = join('', @_)), eval '#' . substr($z,0,0); 1 } # LOD
+}
+
+sub _unconditionally_untaint {
+ for (@_) {
+ ($_) = /(.*)/s;
+ }
+}
+
+{
+ my $seqno = 0;
+ sub _gensym {
+ __PACKAGE__ . '::GEN' . $seqno++;
+ }
+ sub _scrubpkg {
+ my $s = shift;
+ $s =~ s/^Text::Template:://;
+ no strict 'refs';
+ my $hash = $Text::Template::{$s."::"};
+ foreach my $key (keys %$hash) {
+ undef $hash->{$key};
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+# Given a hashful of variables (or a list of such hashes)
+# install the variables into the specified package,
+# overwriting whatever variables were there before.
+sub _install_hash {
+ my $hashlist = shift;
+ my $dest = shift;
+ if (UNIVERSAL::isa($hashlist, 'HASH')) {
+ $hashlist = [$hashlist];
+ }
+ my $hash;
+ foreach $hash (@$hashlist) {
+ my $name;
+ foreach $name (keys %$hash) {
+ my $val = $hash->{$name};
+ no strict 'refs';
+ local *SYM = *{"$ {dest}::$name"};
+ if (! defined $val) {
+ delete ${"$ {dest}::"}{$name};
+ } elsif (ref $val) {
+ *SYM = $val;
+ } else {
+ *SYM = \$val;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+sub TTerror { $ERROR }
+
+1;
+
+
+=head1 NAME
+
+Text::Template - Expand template text with embedded Perl
+
+=head1 VERSION
+
+This file documents C<Text::Template> version B<1.46>
+
+=head1 SYNOPSIS
+
+ use Text::Template;
+
+
+ $template = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'FILE', SOURCE => 'filename.tmpl');
+ $template = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'ARRAY', SOURCE => [ ... ] );
+ $template = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'FILEHANDLE', SOURCE => $fh );
+ $template = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'STRING', SOURCE => '...' );
+ $template = Text::Template->new(PREPEND => q{use strict;}, ...);
+
+ # Use a different template file syntax:
+ $template = Text::Template->new(DELIMITERS => [$open, $close], ...);
+
+ $recipient = 'King';
+ $text = $template->fill_in(); # Replaces `{$recipient}' with `King'
+ print $text;
+
+ $T::recipient = 'Josh';
+ $text = $template->fill_in(PACKAGE => T);
+
+ # Pass many variables explicitly
+ $hash = { recipient => 'Abed-Nego',
+ friends => [ 'me', 'you' ],
+ enemies => { loathsome => 'Bill Gates',
+ fearsome => 'Larry Ellison' },
+ };
+ $text = $template->fill_in(HASH => $hash, ...);
+ # $recipient is Abed-Nego,
+ # @friends is ( 'me', 'you' ),
+ # %enemies is ( loathsome => ..., fearsome => ... )
+
+
+ # Call &callback in case of programming errors in template
+ $text = $template->fill_in(BROKEN => \&callback, BROKEN_ARG => $ref, ...);
+
+ # Evaluate program fragments in Safe compartment with restricted permissions
+ $text = $template->fill_in(SAFE => $compartment, ...);
+
+ # Print result text instead of returning it
+ $success = $template->fill_in(OUTPUT => \*FILEHANDLE, ...);
+
+ # Parse template with different template file syntax:
+ $text = $template->fill_in(DELIMITERS => [$open, $close], ...);
+ # Note that this is *faster* than using the default delimiters
+
+ # Prepend specified perl code to each fragment before evaluating:
+ $text = $template->fill_in(PREPEND => q{use strict 'vars';}, ...);
+
+ use Text::Template 'fill_in_string';
+ $text = fill_in_string( <<EOM, PACKAGE => 'T', ...);
+ Dear {$recipient},
+ Pay me at once.
+ Love,
+ G.V.
+ EOM
+
+ use Text::Template 'fill_in_file';
+ $text = fill_in_file($filename, ...);
+
+ # All templates will always have `use strict vars' attached to all fragments
+ Text::Template->always_prepend(q{use strict 'vars';});
+
+=head1 DESCRIPTION
+
+This is a library for generating form letters, building HTML pages, or
+filling in templates generally. A `template' is a piece of text that
+has little Perl programs embedded in it here and there. When you
+`fill in' a template, you evaluate the little programs and replace
+them with their values.
+
+You can store a template in a file outside your program. People can
+modify the template without modifying the program. You can separate
+the formatting details from the main code, and put the formatting
+parts of the program into the template. That prevents code bloat and
+encourages functional separation.
+
+=head2 Example
+
+Here's an example of a template, which we'll suppose is stored in the
+file C<formletter.tmpl>:
+
+ Dear {$title} {$lastname},
+
+ It has come to our attention that you are delinquent in your
+ {$monthname[$last_paid_month]} payment. Please remit
+ ${sprintf("%.2f", $amount)} immediately, or your patellae may
+ be needlessly endangered.
+
+ Love,
+
+ Mark "Vizopteryx" Dominus
+
+
+The result of filling in this template is a string, which might look
+something like this:
+
+ Dear Mr. Gates,
+
+ It has come to our attention that you are delinquent in your
+ February payment. Please remit
+ $392.12 immediately, or your patellae may
+ be needlessly endangered.
+
+
+ Love,
+
+ Mark "Vizopteryx" Dominus
+
+Here is a complete program that transforms the example
+template into the example result, and prints it out:
+
+ use Text::Template;
+
+ my $template = Text::Template->new(SOURCE => 'formletter.tmpl')
+ or die "Couldn't construct template: $Text::Template::ERROR";
+
+ my @monthname = qw(January February March April May June
+ July August September October November December);
+ my %vars = (title => 'Mr.',
+ firstname => 'Bill',
+ lastname => 'Gates',
+ last_paid_month => 1, # February
+ amount => 392.12,
+ monthname => \@monthname,
+ );
+
+ my $result = $template->fill_in(HASH => \%vars);
+
+ if (defined $result) { print $result }
+ else { die "Couldn't fill in template: $Text::Template::ERROR" }
+
+
+=head2 Philosophy
+
+When people make a template module like this one, they almost always
+start by inventing a special syntax for substitutions. For example,
+they build it so that a string like C<%%VAR%%> is replaced with the
+value of C<$VAR>. Then they realize the need extra formatting, so
+they put in some special syntax for formatting. Then they need a
+loop, so they invent a loop syntax. Pretty soon they have a new
+little template language.
+
+This approach has two problems: First, their little language is
+crippled. If you need to do something the author hasn't thought of,
+you lose. Second: Who wants to learn another language? You already
+know Perl, so why not use it?
+
+C<Text::Template> templates are programmed in I<Perl>. You embed Perl
+code in your template, with C<{> at the beginning and C<}> at the end.
+If you want a variable interpolated, you write it the way you would in
+Perl. If you need to make a loop, you can use any of the Perl loop
+constructions. All the Perl built-in functions are available.
+
+=head1 Details
+
+=head2 Template Parsing
+
+The C<Text::Template> module scans the template source. An open brace
+C<{> begins a program fragment, which continues until the matching
+close brace C<}>. When the template is filled in, the program
+fragments are evaluated, and each one is replaced with the resulting
+value to yield the text that is returned.
+
+A backslash C<\> in front of a brace (or another backslash that is in
+front of a brace) escapes its special meaning. The result of filling
+out this template:
+
+ \{ The sum of 1 and 2 is {1+2} \}
+
+is
+
+ { The sum of 1 and 2 is 3 }
+
+If you have an unmatched brace, C<Text::Template> will return a
+failure code and a warning about where the problem is. Backslashes
+that do not precede a brace are passed through unchanged. If you have
+a template like this:
+
+ { "String that ends in a newline.\n" }
+
+The backslash inside the string is passed through to Perl unchanged,
+so the C<\n> really does turn into a newline. See the note at the end
+for details about the way backslashes work. Backslash processing is
+I<not> done when you specify alternative delimiters with the
+C<DELIMITERS> option. (See L<"Alternative Delimiters">, below.)
+
+Each program fragment should be a sequence of Perl statements, which
+are evaluated the usual way. The result of the last statement
+executed will be evaluted in scalar context; the result of this
+statement is a string, which is interpolated into the template in
+place of the program fragment itself.
+
+The fragments are evaluated in order, and side effects from earlier
+fragments will persist into later fragments:
+
+ {$x = @things; ''}The Lord High Chamberlain has gotten {$x}
+ things for me this year.
+ { $diff = $x - 17;
+ $more = 'more'
+ if ($diff == 0) {
+ $diff = 'no';
+ } elsif ($diff < 0) {
+ $more = 'fewer';
+ }
+ '';
+ }
+ That is {$diff} {$more} than he gave me last year.
+
+The value of C<$x> set in the first line will persist into the next
+fragment that begins on the third line, and the values of C<$diff> and
+C<$more> set in the second fragment will persist and be interpolated
+into the last line. The output will look something like this:
+
+ The Lord High Chamberlain has gotten 42
+ things for me this year.
+
+ That is 25 more than he gave me last year.
+
+That is all the syntax there is.
+
+=head2 The C<$OUT> variable
+
+There is one special trick you can play in a template. Here is the
+motivation for it: Suppose you are going to pass an array, C<@items>,
+into the template, and you want the template to generate a bulleted
+list with a header, like this:
+
+ Here is a list of the things I have got for you since 1907:
+ * Ivory
+ * Apes
+ * Peacocks
+ * ...
+
+One way to do it is with a template like this:
+
+ Here is a list of the things I have got for you since 1907:
+ { my $blist = '';
+ foreach $i (@items) {
+ $blist .= qq{ * $i\n};
+ }
+ $blist;
+ }
+
+Here we construct the list in a variable called C<$blist>, which we
+return at the end. This is a little cumbersome. There is a shortcut.
+
+Inside of templates, there is a special variable called C<$OUT>.
+Anything you append to this variable will appear in the output of the
+template. Also, if you use C<$OUT> in a program fragment, the normal
+behavior, of replacing the fragment with its return value, is
+disabled; instead the fragment is replaced with the value of C<$OUT>.
+This means that you can write the template above like this:
+
+ Here is a list of the things I have got for you since 1907:
+ { foreach $i (@items) {
+ $OUT .= " * $i\n";
+ }
+ }
+
+C<$OUT> is reinitialized to the empty string at the start of each
+program fragment. It is private to C<Text::Template>, so
+you can't use a variable named C<$OUT> in your template without
+invoking the special behavior.
+
+=head2 General Remarks
+
+All C<Text::Template> functions return C<undef> on failure, and set the
+variable C<$Text::Template::ERROR> to contain an explanation of what
+went wrong. For example, if you try to create a template from a file
+that does not exist, C<$Text::Template::ERROR> will contain something like:
+
+ Couldn't open file xyz.tmpl: No such file or directory
+
+=head2 C<new>
+
+ $template = new Text::Template ( TYPE => ..., SOURCE => ... );
+
+This creates and returns a new template object. C<new> returns
+C<undef> and sets C<$Text::Template::ERROR> if it can't create the
+template object. C<SOURCE> says where the template source code will
+come from. C<TYPE> says what kind of object the source is.
+
+The most common type of source is a file:
+
+ new Text::Template ( TYPE => 'FILE', SOURCE => $filename );
+
+This reads the template from the specified file. The filename is
+opened with the Perl C<open> command, so it can be a pipe or anything
+else that makes sense with C<open>.
+
+The C<TYPE> can also be C<STRING>, in which case the C<SOURCE> should
+be a string:
+
+ new Text::Template ( TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => "This is the actual template!" );
+
+The C<TYPE> can be C<ARRAY>, in which case the source should be a
+reference to an array of strings. The concatenation of these strings
+is the template:
+
+ new Text::Template ( TYPE => 'ARRAY',
+ SOURCE => [ "This is ", "the actual",
+ " template!",
+ ]
+ );
+
+The C<TYPE> can be FILEHANDLE, in which case the source should be an
+open filehandle (such as you got from the C<FileHandle> or C<IO::*>
+packages, or a glob, or a reference to a glob). In this case
+C<Text::Template> will read the text from the filehandle up to
+end-of-file, and that text is the template:
+
+ # Read template source code from STDIN:
+ new Text::Template ( TYPE => 'FILEHANDLE',
+ SOURCE => \*STDIN );
+
+
+If you omit the C<TYPE> attribute, it's taken to be C<FILE>.
+C<SOURCE> is required. If you omit it, the program will abort.
+
+The words C<TYPE> and C<SOURCE> can be spelled any of the following ways:
+
+ TYPE SOURCE
+ Type Source
+ type source
+ -TYPE -SOURCE
+ -Type -Source
+ -type -source
+
+Pick a style you like and stick with it.
+
+=over 4
+
+=item C<DELIMITERS>
+
+You may also add a C<DELIMITERS> option. If this option is present,
+its value should be a reference to an array of two strings. The first
+string is the string that signals the beginning of each program
+fragment, and the second string is the string that signals the end of
+each program fragment. See L<"Alternative Delimiters">, below.
+
+=item C<UNTAINT>
+
+If your program is running in taint mode, you may have problems if
+your templates are stored in files. Data read from files is
+considered 'untrustworthy', and taint mode will not allow you to
+evaluate the Perl code in the file. (It is afraid that a malicious
+person might have tampered with the file.)
+
+In some environments, however, local files are trustworthy. You can
+tell C<Text::Template> that a certain file is trustworthy by supplying
+C<UNTAINT =E<gt> 1> in the call to C<new>. This will tell
+C<Text::Template> to disable taint checks on template code that has
+come from a file, as long as the filename itself is considered
+trustworthy. It will also disable taint checks on template code that
+comes from a filehandle. When used with C<TYPE =E<gt> 'string'> or C<TYPE
+=E<gt> 'array'>, it has no effect.
+
+See L<perlsec> for more complete information about tainting.
+
+Thanks to Steve Palincsar, Gerard Vreeswijk, and Dr. Christoph Baehr
+for help with this feature.
+
+=item C<PREPEND>
+
+This option is passed along to the C<fill_in> call unless it is
+overridden in the arguments to C<fill_in>. See L<C<PREPEND> feature
+and using C<strict> in templates> below.
+
+=item C<BROKEN>
+
+This option is passed along to the C<fill_in> call unless it is
+overridden in the arguments to C<fill_in>. See L<C<BROKEN>> below.
+
+=back
+
+=head2 C<compile>
+
+ $template->compile()
+
+Loads all the template text from the template's source, parses and
+compiles it. If successful, returns true; otherwise returns false and
+sets C<$Text::Template::ERROR>. If the template is already compiled,
+it returns true and does nothing.
+
+You don't usually need to invoke this function, because C<fill_in>
+(see below) compiles the template if it isn't compiled already.
+
+If there is an argument to this function, it must be a reference to an
+array containing alternative delimiter strings. See C<"Alternative
+Delimiters">, below.
+
+=head2 C<fill_in>
+
+ $template->fill_in(OPTIONS);
+
+Fills in a template. Returns the resulting text if successful.
+Otherwise, returns C<undef> and sets C<$Text::Template::ERROR>.
+
+The I<OPTIONS> are a hash, or a list of key-value pairs. You can
+write the key names in any of the six usual styles as above; this
+means that where this manual says C<PACKAGE> (for example) you can
+actually use any of
+
+ PACKAGE Package package -PACKAGE -Package -package
+
+Pick a style you like and stick with it. The all-lowercase versions
+may yield spurious warnings about
+
+ Ambiguous use of package => resolved to "package"
+
+so you might like to avoid them and use the capitalized versions.
+
+At present, there are eight legal options: C<PACKAGE>, C<BROKEN>,
+C<BROKEN_ARG>, C<SAFE>, C<HASH>, C<OUTPUT>, and C<DELIMITERS>.
+
+=over 4
+
+=item C<PACKAGE>
+
+C<PACKAGE> specifies the name of a package in which the program
+fragments should be evaluated. The default is to use the package from
+which C<fill_in> was called. For example, consider this template:
+
+ The value of the variable x is {$x}.
+
+If you use C<$template-E<gt>fill_in(PACKAGE =E<gt> 'R')> , then the C<$x> in
+the template is actually replaced with the value of C<$R::x>. If you
+omit the C<PACKAGE> option, C<$x> will be replaced with the value of
+the C<$x> variable in the package that actually called C<fill_in>.
+
+You should almost always use C<PACKAGE>. If you don't, and your
+template makes changes to variables, those changes will be propagated
+back into the main program. Evaluating the template in a private
+package helps prevent this. The template can still modify variables
+in your program if it wants to, but it will have to do so explicitly.
+See the section at the end on `Security'.
+
+Here's an example of using C<PACKAGE>:
+
+ Your Royal Highness,
+
+ Enclosed please find a list of things I have gotten
+ for you since 1907:
+
+ { foreach $item (@items) {
+ $item_no++;
+ $OUT .= " $item_no. \u$item\n";
+ }
+ }
+
+ Signed,
+ Lord High Chamberlain
+
+We want to pass in an array which will be assigned to the array
+C<@items>. Here's how to do that:
+
+
+ @items = ('ivory', 'apes', 'peacocks', );
+ $template->fill_in();
+
+This is not very safe. The reason this isn't as safe is that if you
+had a variable named C<$item_no> in scope in your program at the point
+you called C<fill_in>, its value would be clobbered by the act of
+filling out the template. The problem is the same as if you had
+written a subroutine that used those variables in the same way that
+the template does. (C<$OUT> is special in templates and is always
+safe.)
+
+One solution to this is to make the C<$item_no> variable private to the
+template by declaring it with C<my>. If the template does this, you
+are safe.
+
+But if you use the C<PACKAGE> option, you will probably be safe even
+if the template does I<not> declare its variables with C<my>:
+
+ @Q::items = ('ivory', 'apes', 'peacocks', );
+ $template->fill_in(PACKAGE => 'Q');
+
+In this case the template will clobber the variable C<$Q::item_no>,
+which is not related to the one your program was using.
+
+Templates cannot affect variables in the main program that are
+declared with C<my>, unless you give the template references to those
+variables.
+
+=item C<HASH>
+
+You may not want to put the template variables into a package.
+Packages can be hard to manage: You can't copy them, for example.
+C<HASH> provides an alternative.
+
+The value for C<HASH> should be a reference to a hash that maps
+variable names to values. For example,
+
+ $template->fill_in(HASH => { recipient => "The King",
+ items => ['gold', 'frankincense', 'myrrh'],
+ object => \$self,
+ });
+
+will fill out the template and use C<"The King"> as the value of
+C<$recipient> and the list of items as the value of C<@items>. Note
+that we pass an array reference, but inside the template it appears as
+an array. In general, anything other than a simple string or number
+should be passed by reference.
+
+We also want to pass an object, which is in C<$self>; note that we
+pass a reference to the object, C<\$self> instead. Since we've passed
+a reference to a scalar, inside the template the object appears as
+C<$object>.
+
+The full details of how it works are a little involved, so you might
+want to skip to the next section.
+
+Suppose the key in the hash is I<key> and the value is I<value>.
+
+=over 4
+
+=item *
+
+If the I<value> is C<undef>, then any variables named C<$key>,
+C<@key>, C<%key>, etc., are undefined.
+
+=item *
+
+If the I<value> is a string or a number, then C<$key> is set to that
+value in the template.
+
+=item *
+
+For anything else, you must pass a reference.
+
+If the I<value> is a reference to an array, then C<@key> is set to
+that array. If the I<value> is a reference to a hash, then C<%key> is
+set to that hash. Similarly if I<value> is any other kind of
+reference. This means that
+
+ var => "foo"
+
+and
+
+ var => \"foo"
+
+have almost exactly the same effect. (The difference is that in the
+former case, the value is copied, and in the latter case it is
+aliased.)
+
+=item *
+
+In particular, if you want the template to get an object or any kind,
+you must pass a reference to it:
+
+ $template->fill_in(HASH => { database_handle => \$dbh, ... });
+
+If you do this, the template will have a variable C<$database_handle>
+which is the database handle object. If you leave out the C<\>, the
+template will have a hash C<%database_handle>, which exposes the
+internal structure of the database handle object; you don't want that.
+
+=back
+
+Normally, the way this works is by allocating a private package,
+loading all the variables into the package, and then filling out the
+template as if you had specified that package. A new package is
+allocated each time. However, if you I<also> use the C<PACKAGE>
+option, C<Text::Template> loads the variables into the package you
+specified, and they stay there after the call returns. Subsequent
+calls to C<fill_in> that use the same package will pick up the values
+you loaded in.
+
+If the argument of C<HASH> is a reference to an array instead of a
+reference to a hash, then the array should contain a list of hashes
+whose contents are loaded into the template package one after the
+other. You can use this feature if you want to combine several sets
+of variables. For example, one set of variables might be the defaults
+for a fill-in form, and the second set might be the user inputs, which
+override the defaults when they are present:
+
+ $template->fill_in(HASH => [\%defaults, \%user_input]);
+
+You can also use this to set two variables with the same name:
+
+ $template->fill_in(HASH => [{ v => "The King" },
+ { v => [1,2,3] },
+ ]
+ );
+
+This sets C<$v> to C<"The King"> and C<@v> to C<(1,2,3)>.
+
+=item C<BROKEN>
+
+If any of the program fragments fails to compile or aborts for any
+reason, and you have set the C<BROKEN> option to a function reference,
+C<Text::Template> will invoke the function. This function is called
+the I<C<BROKEN> function>. The C<BROKEN> function will tell
+C<Text::Template> what to do next.
+
+If the C<BROKEN> function returns C<undef>, C<Text::Template> will
+immediately abort processing the template and return the text that it
+has accumulated so far. If your function does this, it should set a
+flag that you can examine after C<fill_in> returns so that you can
+tell whether there was a premature return or not.
+
+If the C<BROKEN> function returns any other value, that value will be
+interpolated into the template as if that value had been the return
+value of the program fragment to begin with. For example, if the
+C<BROKEN> function returns an error string, the error string will be
+interpolated into the output of the template in place of the program
+fragment that cased the error.
+
+If you don't specify a C<BROKEN> function, C<Text::Template> supplies
+a default one that returns something like
+
+ Program fragment delivered error ``Illegal division by 0 at
+ template line 37''
+
+(Note that the format of this message has changed slightly since
+version 1.31.) The return value of the C<BROKEN> function is
+interpolated into the template at the place the error occurred, so
+that this template:
+
+ (3+4)*5 = { 3+4)*5 }
+
+yields this result:
+
+ (3+4)*5 = Program fragment delivered error ``syntax error at template line 1''
+
+If you specify a value for the C<BROKEN> attribute, it should be a
+reference to a function that C<fill_in> can call instead of the
+default function.
+
+C<fill_in> will pass a hash to the C<broken> function.
+The hash will have at least these three members:
+
+=over 4
+
+=item C<text>
+
+The source code of the program fragment that failed
+
+=item C<error>
+
+The text of the error message (C<$@>) generated by eval.
+
+The text has been modified to omit the trailing newline and to include
+the name of the template file (if there was one). The line number
+counts from the beginning of the template, not from the beginning of
+the failed program fragment.
+
+=item C<lineno>
+
+The line number of the template at which the program fragment began.
+
+=back
+
+There may also be an C<arg> member. See C<BROKEN_ARG>, below
+
+=item C<BROKEN_ARG>
+
+If you supply the C<BROKEN_ARG> option to C<fill_in>, the value of the
+option is passed to the C<BROKEN> function whenever it is called. The
+default C<BROKEN> function ignores the C<BROKEN_ARG>, but you can
+write a custom C<BROKEN> function that uses the C<BROKEN_ARG> to get
+more information about what went wrong.
+
+The C<BROKEN> function could also use the C<BROKEN_ARG> as a reference
+to store an error message or some other information that it wants to
+communicate back to the caller. For example:
+
+ $error = '';
+
+ sub my_broken {
+ my %args = @_;
+ my $err_ref = $args{arg};
+ ...
+ $$err_ref = "Some error message";
+ return undef;
+ }
+
+ $template->fill_in(BROKEN => \&my_broken,
+ BROKEN_ARG => \$error,
+ );
+
+ if ($error) {
+ die "It didn't work: $error";
+ }
+
+If one of the program fragments in the template fails, it will call
+the C<BROKEN> function, C<my_broken>, and pass it the C<BROKEN_ARG>,
+which is a reference to C<$error>. C<my_broken> can store an error
+message into C<$error> this way. Then the function that called
+C<fill_in> can see if C<my_broken> has left an error message for it
+to find, and proceed accordingly.
+
+=item C<SAFE>
+
+If you give C<fill_in> a C<SAFE> option, its value should be a safe
+compartment object from the C<Safe> package. All evaluation of
+program fragments will be performed in this compartment. See L<Safe>
+for full details about such compartments and how to restrict the
+operations that can be performed in them.
+
+If you use the C<PACKAGE> option with C<SAFE>, the package you specify
+will be placed into the safe compartment and evaluation will take
+place in that package as usual.
+
+If not, C<SAFE> operation is a little different from the default.
+Usually, if you don't specify a package, evaluation of program
+fragments occurs in the package from which the template was invoked.
+But in C<SAFE> mode the evaluation occurs inside the safe compartment
+and cannot affect the calling package. Normally, if you use C<HASH>
+without C<PACKAGE>, the hash variables are imported into a private,
+one-use-only package. But if you use C<HASH> and C<SAFE> together
+without C<PACKAGE>, the hash variables will just be loaded into the
+root namespace of the C<Safe> compartment.
+
+=item C<OUTPUT>
+
+If your template is going to generate a lot of text that you are just
+going to print out again anyway, you can save memory by having
+C<Text::Template> print out the text as it is generated instead of
+making it into a big string and returning the string. If you supply
+the C<OUTPUT> option to C<fill_in>, the value should be a filehandle.
+The generated text will be printed to this filehandle as it is
+constructed. For example:
+
+ $template->fill_in(OUTPUT => \*STDOUT, ...);
+
+fills in the C<$template> as usual, but the results are immediately
+printed to STDOUT. This may result in the output appearing more
+quickly than it would have otherwise.
+
+If you use C<OUTPUT>, the return value from C<fill_in> is still true on
+success and false on failure, but the complete text is not returned to
+the caller.
+
+=item C<PREPEND>
+
+You can have some Perl code prepended automatically to the beginning
+of every program fragment. See L<C<PREPEND> feature and using
+C<strict> in templates> below.
+
+=item C<DELIMITERS>
+
+If this option is present, its value should be a reference to a list
+of two strings. The first string is the string that signals the
+beginning of each program fragment, and the second string is the
+string that signals the end of each program fragment. See
+L<"Alternative Delimiters">, below.
+
+If you specify C<DELIMITERS> in the call to C<fill_in>, they override
+any delimiters you set when you created the template object with
+C<new>.
+
+=back
+
+=head1 Convenience Functions
+
+=head2 C<fill_this_in>
+
+The basic way to fill in a template is to create a template object and
+then call C<fill_in> on it. This is useful if you want to fill in
+the same template more than once.
+
+In some programs, this can be cumbersome. C<fill_this_in> accepts a
+string, which contains the template, and a list of options, which are
+passed to C<fill_in> as above. It constructs the template object for
+you, fills it in as specified, and returns the results. It returns
+C<undef> and sets C<$Text::Template::ERROR> if it couldn't generate
+any results.
+
+An example:
+
+ $Q::name = 'Donald';
+ $Q::amount = 141.61;
+ $Q::part = 'hyoid bone';
+
+ $text = Text::Template->fill_this_in( <<'EOM', PACKAGE => Q);
+ Dear {$name},
+ You owe me \\${sprintf('%.2f', $amount)}.
+ Pay or I will break your {$part}.
+ Love,
+ Grand Vizopteryx of Irkutsk.
+ EOM
+
+Notice how we included the template in-line in the program by using a
+`here document' with the C<E<lt>E<lt>> notation.
+
+C<fill_this_in> is a deprecated feature. It is only here for
+backwards compatibility, and may be removed in some far-future version
+in C<Text::Template>. You should use C<fill_in_string> instead. It
+is described in the next section.
+
+=head2 C<fill_in_string>
+
+It is stupid that C<fill_this_in> is a class method. It should have
+been just an imported function, so that you could omit the
+C<Text::Template-E<gt>> in the example above. But I made the mistake
+four years ago and it is too late to change it.
+
+C<fill_in_string> is exactly like C<fill_this_in> except that it is
+not a method and you can omit the C<Text::Template-E<gt>> and just say
+
+ print fill_in_string(<<'EOM', ...);
+ Dear {$name},
+ ...
+ EOM
+
+To use C<fill_in_string>, you need to say
+
+ use Text::Template 'fill_in_string';
+
+at the top of your program. You should probably use
+C<fill_in_string> instead of C<fill_this_in>.
+
+=head2 C<fill_in_file>
+
+If you import C<fill_in_file>, you can say
+
+ $text = fill_in_file(filename, ...);
+
+The C<...> are passed to C<fill_in> as above. The filename is the
+name of the file that contains the template you want to fill in. It
+returns the result text. or C<undef>, as usual.
+
+If you are going to fill in the same file more than once in the same
+program you should use the longer C<new> / C<fill_in> sequence instead.
+It will be a lot faster because it only has to read and parse the file
+once.
+
+=head2 Including files into templates
+
+People always ask for this. ``Why don't you have an include
+function?'' they want to know. The short answer is this is Perl, and
+Perl already has an include function. If you want it, you can just put
+
+ {qx{cat filename}}
+
+into your template. VoilE<agrave>.
+
+If you don't want to use C<cat>, you can write a little four-line
+function that opens a file and dumps out its contents, and call it
+from the template. I wrote one for you. In the template, you can say
+
+ {Text::Template::_load_text(filename)}
+
+If that is too verbose, here is a trick. Suppose the template package
+that you are going to be mentioning in the C<fill_in> call is package
+C<Q>. Then in the main program, write
+
+ *Q::include = \&Text::Template::_load_text;
+
+This imports the C<_load_text> function into package C<Q> with the
+name C<include>. From then on, any template that you fill in with
+package C<Q> can say
+
+ {include(filename)}
+
+to insert the text from the named file at that point. If you are
+using the C<HASH> option instead, just put C<include =E<gt>
+\&Text::Template::_load_text> into the hash instead of importing it
+explicitly.
+
+Suppose you don't want to insert a plain text file, but rather you
+want to include one template within another? Just use C<fill_in_file>
+in the template itself:
+
+ {Text::Template::fill_in_file(filename)}
+
+You can do the same importing trick if this is too much to type.
+
+=head1 Miscellaneous
+
+=head2 C<my> variables
+
+People are frequently surprised when this doesn't work:
+
+ my $recipient = 'The King';
+ my $text = fill_in_file('formletter.tmpl');
+
+The text C<The King> doesn't get into the form letter. Why not?
+Because C<$recipient> is a C<my> variable, and the whole point of
+C<my> variables is that they're private and inaccessible except in the
+scope in which they're declared. The template is not part of that
+scope, so the template can't see C<$recipient>.
+
+If that's not the behavior you want, don't use C<my>. C<my> means a
+private variable, and in this case you don't want the variable to be
+private. Put the variables into package variables in some other
+package, and use the C<PACKAGE> option to C<fill_in>:
+
+ $Q::recipient = $recipient;
+ my $text = fill_in_file('formletter.tmpl', PACKAGE => 'Q');
+
+
+or pass the names and values in a hash with the C<HASH> option:
+
+ my $text = fill_in_file('formletter.tmpl', HASH => { recipient => $recipient });
+
+=head2 Security Matters
+
+All variables are evaluated in the package you specify with the
+C<PACKAGE> option of C<fill_in>. if you use this option, and if your
+templates don't do anything egregiously stupid, you won't have to
+worry that evaluation of the little programs will creep out into the
+rest of your program and wreck something.
+
+Nevertheless, there's really no way (except with C<Safe>) to protect
+against a template that says
+
+ { $Important::Secret::Security::Enable = 0;
+ # Disable security checks in this program
+ }
+
+or
+
+ { $/ = "ho ho ho"; # Sabotage future uses of <FH>.
+ # $/ is always a global variable
+ }
+
+or even
+
+ { system("rm -rf /") }
+
+so B<don't> go filling in templates unless you're sure you know what's
+in them. If you're worried, or you can't trust the person who wrote
+the template, use the C<SAFE> option.
+
+A final warning: program fragments run a small risk of accidentally
+clobbering local variables in the C<fill_in> function itself. These
+variables all have names that begin with C<$fi_>, so if you stay away
+from those names you'll be safe. (Of course, if you're a real wizard
+you can tamper with them deliberately for exciting effects; this is
+actually how C<$OUT> works.) I can fix this, but it will make the
+package slower to do it, so I would prefer not to. If you are worried
+about this, send me mail and I will show you what to do about it.
+
+=head2 Alternative Delimiters
+
+Lorenzo Valdettaro pointed out that if you are using C<Text::Template>
+to generate TeX output, the choice of braces as the program fragment
+delimiters makes you suffer suffer suffer. Starting in version 1.20,
+you can change the choice of delimiters to something other than curly
+braces.
+
+In either the C<new()> call or the C<fill_in()> call, you can specify
+an alternative set of delimiters with the C<DELIMITERS> option. For
+example, if you would like code fragments to be delimited by C<[@-->
+and C<--@]> instead of C<{> and C<}>, use
+
+ ... DELIMITERS => [ '[@--', '--@]' ], ...
+
+Note that these delimiters are I<literal strings>, not regexes. (I
+tried for regexes, but it complicates the lexical analysis too much.)
+Note also that C<DELIMITERS> disables the special meaning of the
+backslash, so if you want to include the delimiters in the literal
+text of your template file, you are out of luck---it is up to you to
+choose delimiters that do not conflict with what you are doing. The
+delimiter strings may still appear inside of program fragments as long
+as they nest properly. This means that if for some reason you
+absolutely must have a program fragment that mentions one of the
+delimiters, like this:
+
+ [@--
+ print "Oh no, a delimiter: --@]\n"
+ --@]
+
+you may be able to make it work by doing this instead:
+
+ [@--
+ # Fake matching delimiter in a comment: [@--
+ print "Oh no, a delimiter: --@]\n"
+ --@]
+
+It may be safer to choose delimiters that begin with a newline
+character.
+
+Because the parsing of templates is simplified by the absence of
+backslash escapes, using alternative C<DELIMITERS> may speed up the
+parsing process by 20-25%. This shows that my original choice of C<{>
+and C<}> was very bad.
+
+=head2 C<PREPEND> feature and using C<strict> in templates
+
+Suppose you would like to use C<strict> in your templates to detect
+undeclared variables and the like. But each code fragment is a
+separate lexical scope, so you have to turn on C<strict> at the top of
+each and every code fragment:
+
+ { use strict;
+ use vars '$foo';
+ $foo = 14;
+ ...
+ }
+
+ ...
+
+ { # we forgot to put `use strict' here
+ my $result = $boo + 12; # $boo is misspelled and should be $foo
+ # No error is raised on `$boo'
+ }
+
+Because we didn't put C<use strict> at the top of the second fragment,
+it was only active in the first fragment, and we didn't get any
+C<strict> checking in the second fragment. Then we mispelled C<$foo>
+and the error wasn't caught.
+
+C<Text::Template> version 1.22 and higher has a new feature to make
+this easier. You can specify that any text at all be automatically
+added to the beginning of each program fragment.
+
+When you make a call to C<fill_in>, you can specify a
+
+ PREPEND => 'some perl statements here'
+
+option; the statements will be prepended to each program fragment for
+that one call only. Suppose that the C<fill_in> call included a
+
+ PREPEND => 'use strict;'
+
+option, and that the template looked like this:
+
+ { use vars '$foo';
+ $foo = 14;
+ ...
+ }
+
+ ...
+
+ { my $result = $boo + 12; # $boo is misspelled and should be $foo
+ ...
+ }
+
+The code in the second fragment would fail, because C<$boo> has not
+been declared. C<use strict> was implied, even though you did not
+write it explicitly, because the C<PREPEND> option added it for you
+automatically.
+
+There are two other ways to do this. At the time you create the
+template object with C<new>, you can also supply a C<PREPEND> option,
+in which case the statements will be prepended each time you fill in
+that template. If the C<fill_in> call has its own C<PREPEND> option,
+this overrides the one specified at the time you created the
+template. Finally, you can make the class method call
+
+ Text::Template->always_prepend('perl statements');
+
+If you do this, then call calls to C<fill_in> for I<any> template will
+attach the perl statements to the beginning of each program fragment,
+except where overridden by C<PREPEND> options to C<new> or C<fill_in>.
+
+=head2 Prepending in Derived Classes
+
+This section is technical, and you should skip it on the first few
+readings.
+
+Normally there are three places that prepended text could come from.
+It could come from the C<PREPEND> option in the C<fill_in> call, from
+the C<PREPEND> option in the C<new> call that created the template
+object, or from the argument of the C<always_prepend> call.
+C<Text::Template> looks for these three things in order and takes the
+first one that it finds.
+
+In a subclass of C<Text::Template>, this last possibility is
+ambiguous. Suppose C<S> is a subclass of C<Text::Template>. Should
+
+ Text::Template->always_prepend(...);
+
+affect objects in class C<Derived>? The answer is that you can have it
+either way.
+
+The C<always_prepend> value for C<Text::Template> is normally stored
+in a hash variable named C<%GLOBAL_PREPEND> under the key
+C<Text::Template>. When C<Text::Template> looks to see what text to
+prepend, it first looks in the template object itself, and if not, it
+looks in C<$GLOBAL_PREPEND{I<class>}> where I<class> is the class to
+which the template object belongs. If it doesn't find any value, it
+looks in C<$GLOBAL_PREPEND{'Text::Template'}>. This means that
+objects in class C<Derived> I<will> be affected by
+
+ Text::Template->always_prepend(...);
+
+I<unless> there is also a call to
+
+ Derived->always_prepend(...);
+
+So when you're designing your derived class, you can arrange to have
+your objects ignore C<Text::Template::always_prepend> calls by simply
+putting C<Derived-E<gt>always_prepend('')> at the top of your module.
+
+Of course, there is also a final escape hatch: Templates support a
+C<prepend_text> that is used to look up the appropriate text to be
+prepended at C<fill_in> time. Your derived class can override this
+method to get an arbitrary effect.
+
+=head2 JavaScript
+
+Jennifer D. St Clair asks:
+
+ > Most of my pages contain JavaScript and Stylesheets.
+ > How do I change the template identifier?
+
+Jennifer is worried about the braces in the JavaScript being taken as
+the delimiters of the Perl program fragments. Of course, disaster
+will ensue when perl tries to evaluate these as if they were Perl
+programs. The best choice is to find some unambiguous delimiter
+strings that you can use in your template instead of curly braces, and
+then use the C<DELIMITERS> option. However, if you can't do this for
+some reason, there are two easy workarounds:
+
+1. You can put C<\> in front of C<{>, C<}>, or C<\> to remove its
+special meaning. So, for example, instead of
+
+ if (br== "n3") {
+ // etc.
+ }
+
+you can put
+
+ if (br== "n3") \{
+ // etc.
+ \}
+
+and it'll come out of the template engine the way you want.
+
+But here is another method that is probably better. To see how it
+works, first consider what happens if you put this into a template:
+
+ { 'foo' }
+
+Since it's in braces, it gets evaluated, and obviously, this is going
+to turn into
+
+ foo
+
+So now here's the trick: In Perl, C<q{...}> is the same as C<'...'>.
+So if we wrote
+
+ {q{foo}}
+
+it would turn into
+
+ foo
+
+So for your JavaScript, just write
+
+ {q{if (br== "n3") {
+ // etc.
+ }}
+ }
+
+and it'll come out as
+
+ if (br== "n3") {
+ // etc.
+ }
+
+which is what you want.
+
+
+=head2 Shut Up!
+
+People sometimes try to put an initialization section at the top of
+their templates, like this:
+
+ { ...
+ $var = 17;
+ }
+
+Then they complain because there is a C<17> at the top of the output
+that they didn't want to have there.
+
+Remember that a program fragment is replaced with its own return
+value, and that in Perl the return value of a code block is the value
+of the last expression that was evaluated, which in this case is 17.
+If it didn't do that, you wouldn't be able to write C<{$recipient}>
+and have the recipient filled in.
+
+To prevent the 17 from appearing in the output is very simple:
+
+ { ...
+ $var = 17;
+ '';
+ }
+
+Now the last expression evaluated yields the empty string, which is
+invisible. If you don't like the way this looks, use
+
+ { ...
+ $var = 17;
+ ($SILENTLY);
+ }
+
+instead. Presumably, C<$SILENTLY> has no value, so nothing will be
+interpolated. This is what is known as a `trick'.
+
+=head2 Compatibility
+
+Every effort has been made to make this module compatible with older
+versions. The only known exceptions follow:
+
+The output format of the default C<BROKEN> subroutine has changed
+twice, most recently between versions 1.31 and 1.40.
+
+Starting in version 1.10, the C<$OUT> variable is arrogated for a
+special meaning. If you had templates before version 1.10 that
+happened to use a variable named C<$OUT>, you will have to change them
+to use some other variable or all sorts of strangeness will result.
+
+Between versions 0.1b and 1.00 the behavior of the \ metacharacter
+changed. In 0.1b, \\ was special everywhere, and the template
+processor always replaced it with a single backslash before passing
+the code to Perl for evaluation. The rule now is more complicated but
+probably more convenient. See the section on backslash processing,
+below, for a full discussion.
+
+=head2 Backslash Processing
+
+In C<Text::Template> beta versions, the backslash was special whenever
+it appeared before a brace or another backslash. That meant that
+while C<{"\n"}> did indeed generate a newline, C<{"\\"}> did not
+generate a backslash, because the code passed to Perl for evaluation
+was C<"\"> which is a syntax error. If you wanted a backslash, you
+would have had to write C<{"\\\\"}>.
+
+In C<Text::Template> versions 1.00 through 1.10, there was a bug:
+Backslash was special everywhere. In these versions, C<{"\n"}>
+generated the letter C<n>.
+
+The bug has been corrected in version 1.11, but I did not go back to
+exactly the old rule, because I did not like the idea of having to
+write C<{"\\\\"}> to get one backslash. The rule is now more
+complicated to remember, but probably easier to use. The rule is now:
+Backslashes are always passed to Perl unchanged I<unless> they occur
+as part of a sequence like C<\\\\\\{> or C<\\\\\\}>. In these
+contexts, they are special; C<\\> is replaced with C<\>, and C<\{> and
+C<\}> signal a literal brace.
+
+Examples:
+
+ \{ foo \}
+
+is I<not> evaluated, because the C<\> before the braces signals that
+they should be taken literally. The result in the output looks like this:
+
+ { foo }
+
+
+This is a syntax error:
+
+ { "foo}" }
+
+because C<Text::Template> thinks that the code ends at the first C<}>,
+and then gets upset when it sees the second one. To make this work
+correctly, use
+
+ { "foo\}" }
+
+This passes C<"foo}"> to Perl for evaluation. Note there's no C<\> in
+the evaluated code. If you really want a C<\> in the evaluated code,
+use
+
+ { "foo\\\}" }
+
+This passes C<"foo\}"> to Perl for evaluation.
+
+Starting with C<Text::Template> version 1.20, backslash processing is
+disabled if you use the C<DELIMITERS> option to specify alternative
+delimiter strings.
+
+=head2 A short note about C<$Text::Template::ERROR>
+
+In the past some people have fretted about `violating the package
+boundary' by examining a variable inside the C<Text::Template>
+package. Don't feel this way. C<$Text::Template::ERROR> is part of
+the published, official interface to this package. It is perfectly OK
+to inspect this variable. The interface is not going to change.
+
+If it really, really bothers you, you can import a function called
+C<TTerror> that returns the current value of the C<$ERROR> variable.
+So you can say:
+
+ use Text::Template 'TTerror';
+
+ my $template = new Text::Template (SOURCE => $filename);
+ unless ($template) {
+ my $err = TTerror;
+ die "Couldn't make template: $err; aborting";
+ }
+
+I don't see what benefit this has over just doing this:
+
+ use Text::Template;
+
+ my $template = new Text::Template (SOURCE => $filename)
+ or die "Couldn't make template: $Text::Template::ERROR; aborting";
+
+But if it makes you happy to do it that way, go ahead.
+
+=head2 Sticky Widgets in Template Files
+
+The C<CGI> module provides functions for `sticky widgets', which are
+form input controls that retain their values from one page to the
+next. Sometimes people want to know how to include these widgets
+into their template output.
+
+It's totally straightforward. Just call the C<CGI> functions from
+inside the template:
+
+ { $q->checkbox_group(NAME => 'toppings',
+ LINEBREAK => true,
+ COLUMNS => 3,
+ VALUES => \@toppings,
+ );
+ }
+
+=head2 Automatic preprocessing of program fragments
+
+It may be useful to preprocess the program fragments before they are
+evaluated. See C<Text::Template::Preprocess> for more details.
+
+=head2 Automatic postprocessing of template hunks
+
+It may be useful to process hunks of output before they are appended to
+the result text. For this, subclass and replace the C<append_text_to_result>
+method. It is passed a list of pairs with these entries:
+
+ handle - a filehandle to which to print the desired output
+ out - a ref to a string to which to append, to use if handle is not given
+ text - the text that will be appended
+ type - where the text came from: TEXT for literal text, PROG for code
+
+=head2 Author
+
+Mark Jason Dominus, Plover Systems
+
+Please send questions and other remarks about this software to
+C<mjd-perl-template+@plover.com>
+
+You can join a very low-volume (E<lt>10 messages per year) mailing
+list for announcements about this package. Send an empty note to
+C<mjd-perl-template-request@plover.com> to join.
+
+For updates, visit C<http://www.plover.com/~mjd/perl/Template/>.
+
+=head2 Support?
+
+This software is version 1.46. It may have bugs. Suggestions and bug
+reports are always welcome. Send them to
+C<mjd-perl-template+@plover.com>. (That is my address, not the address
+of the mailing list. The mailing list address is a secret.)
+
+=head1 LICENSE
+
+ Text::Template version 1.46
+ Copyright 2013 Mark Jason Dominus
+
+ This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
+ published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
+ License, or (at your option) any later version. You may also can
+ redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Perl
+ Artistic License.
+
+ This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received copies of the GNU General Public License
+ along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+
+
+=head1 THANKS
+
+Many thanks to the following people for offering support,
+encouragement, advice, bug reports, and all the other good stuff.
+
+David H. Adler /
+Joel Appelbaum /
+Klaus Arnhold /
+AntE<oacute>nio AragE<atilde>o /
+Kevin Atteson /
+Chris.Brezil /
+Mike Brodhead /
+Tom Brown /
+Dr. Frank Bucolo /
+Tim Bunce /
+Juan E. Camacho /
+Itamar Almeida de Carvalho /
+Joseph Cheek /
+Gene Damon /
+San Deng /
+Bob Dougherty /
+Marek Grac /
+Dan Franklin /
+gary at dls.net /
+Todd A. Green /
+Donald L. Greer Jr. /
+Michelangelo Grigni /
+Zac Hansen /
+Tom Henry /
+Jarko Hietaniemi /
+Matt X. Hunter /
+Robert M. Ioffe /
+Daniel LaLiberte /
+Reuven M. Lerner /
+Trip Lilley /
+Yannis Livassof /
+Val Luck /
+Kevin Madsen /
+David Marshall /
+James Mastros /
+Joel Meulenberg /
+Jason Moore /
+Sergey Myasnikov /
+Chris Nandor /
+Bek Oberin /
+Steve Palincsar /
+Ron Pero /
+Hans Persson /
+Sean Roehnelt /
+Jonathan Roy /
+Shabbir J. Safdar /
+Jennifer D. St Clair /
+Uwe Schneider /
+Randal L. Schwartz /
+Michael G Schwern /
+Yonat Sharon /
+Brian C. Shensky /
+Niklas Skoglund /
+Tom Snee /
+Fred Steinberg /
+Hans Stoop /
+Michael J. Suzio /
+Dennis Taylor /
+James H. Thompson /
+Shad Todd /
+Lieven Tomme /
+Lorenzo Valdettaro /
+Larry Virden /
+Andy Wardley /
+Archie Warnock /
+Chris Wesley /
+Matt Womer /
+Andrew G Wood /
+Daini Xie /
+Michaely Yeung
+
+Special thanks to:
+
+=over 2
+
+=item Jonathan Roy
+
+for telling me how to do the C<Safe> support (I spent two years
+worrying about it, and then Jonathan pointed out that it was trivial.)
+
+=item Ranjit Bhatnagar
+
+for demanding less verbose fragments like they have in ASP, for
+helping me figure out the Right Thing, and, especially, for talking me
+out of adding any new syntax. These discussions resulted in the
+C<$OUT> feature.
+
+=back
+
+=head2 Bugs and Caveats
+
+C<my> variables in C<fill_in> are still susceptible to being clobbered
+by template evaluation. They all begin with C<fi_>, so avoid those
+names in your templates.
+
+The line number information will be wrong if the template's lines are
+not terminated by C<"\n">. You should let me know if this is a
+problem. If you do, I will fix it.
+
+The C<$OUT> variable has a special meaning in templates, so you cannot
+use it as if it were a regular variable.
+
+There are not quite enough tests in the test suite.
+
+=cut
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/lib/Text/Template/Preprocess.pm b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/lib/Text/Template/Preprocess.pm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1e41037
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/lib/Text/Template/Preprocess.pm
@@ -0,0 +1,144 @@
+
+package Text::Template::Preprocess;
+use Text::Template;
+@ISA = qw(Text::Template);
+$Text::Template::Preprocess::VERSION = 1.46;
+
+sub fill_in {
+ my $self = shift;
+ my (%args) = @_;
+ my $pp = $args{PREPROCESSOR} || $self->{PREPROCESSOR} ;
+ if ($pp) {
+ local $_ = $self->source();
+# print "# fill_in: before <$_>\n";
+ &$pp;
+# print "# fill_in: after <$_>\n";
+ $self->set_source_data($_);
+ }
+ $self->SUPER::fill_in(@_);
+}
+
+sub preprocessor {
+ my ($self, $pp) = @_;
+ my $old_pp = $self->{PREPROCESSOR};
+ $self->{PREPROCESSOR} = $pp if @_ > 1; # OK to pass $pp=undef
+ $old_pp;
+}
+
+1;
+
+
+=head1 NAME
+
+Text::Template::Preprocess - Expand template text with embedded Perl
+
+=head1 VERSION
+
+This file documents C<Text::Template::Preprocess> version B<1.46>
+
+=head1 SYNOPSIS
+
+ use Text::Template::Preprocess;
+
+ my $t = Text::Template::Preprocess->new(...); # identical to Text::Template
+
+ # Fill in template, but preprocess each code fragment with pp().
+ my $result = $t->fill_in(..., PREPROCESSOR => \&pp);
+
+ my $old_pp = $t->preprocessor(\&new_pp);
+
+=head1 DESCRIPTION
+
+C<Text::Template::Preprocess> provides a new C<PREPROCESSOR> option to
+C<fill_in>. If the C<PREPROCESSOR> option is supplied, it must be a
+reference to a preprocessor subroutine. When filling out a template,
+C<Text::Template::Preprocessor> will use this subroutine to preprocess
+the program fragment prior to evaluating the code.
+
+The preprocessor subroutine will be called repeatedly, once for each
+program fragment. The program fragment will be in C<$_>. The
+subroutine should modify the contents of C<$_> and return.
+C<Text::Template::Preprocess> will then execute contents of C<$_> and
+insert the result into the appropriate part of the template.
+
+C<Text::Template::Preprocess> objects also support a utility method,
+C<preprocessor()>, which sets a new preprocessor for the object. This
+preprocessor is used for all subsequent calls to C<fill_in> except
+where overridden by an explicit C<PREPROCESSOR> option.
+C<preprocessor()> returns the previous default preprocessor function,
+or undefined if there wasn't one. When invoked with no arguments,
+C<preprocessor()> returns the object's current default preprocessor
+function without changing it.
+
+In all other respects, C<Text::Template::Preprocess> is identical to
+C<Text::Template>.
+
+=head1 WHY?
+
+One possible purpose: If your files contain a lot of JavaScript, like
+this:
+
+
+ Plain text here...
+ { perl code }
+ <script language=JavaScript>
+ if (br== "n3") {
+ // etc.
+ }
+ </script>
+ { more perl code }
+ More plain text...
+
+You don't want C<Text::Template> to confuse the curly braces in the
+JavaScript program with executable Perl code. One strategy:
+
+ sub quote_scripts {
+ s(<script(.*?)</script>)(q{$1})gsi;
+ }
+
+Then use C<PREPROCESSOR =E<gt> \&quote_scripts>. This will transform
+
+
+
+=head1 SEE ALSO
+
+L<Text::Template>
+
+=head1 AUTHOR
+
+
+Mark Jason Dominus, Plover Systems
+
+Please send questions and other remarks about this software to
+C<mjd-perl-template+@plover.com>
+
+You can join a very low-volume (E<lt>10 messages per year) mailing
+list for announcements about this package. Send an empty note to
+C<mjd-perl-template-request@plover.com> to join.
+
+For updates, visit C<http://www.plover.com/~mjd/perl/Template/>.
+
+=head1 LICENSE
+
+ Text::Template::Preprocess version 1.46
+ Copyright 2013 Mark Jason Dominus
+
+ This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
+ published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
+ License, or (at your option) any later version. You may also can
+ redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Perl
+ Artistic License.
+
+ This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received copies of the GNU General Public License
+ along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+
+
+=cut
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/00-version.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/00-version.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5f9560f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/00-version.t
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+#!perl
+
+use Text::Template;
+print "1..1\n";
+
+if ($Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46) {
+ print "ok 1\n";
+} else {
+ print "not ok 1\n";
+}
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/01-basic.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/01-basic.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..be43390
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/01-basic.t
@@ -0,0 +1,266 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# Tests of basic, essential functionality
+#
+
+use Text::Template;
+$X::v = $Y::v = 0; # Suppress `var used only once'
+
+print "1..31\n";
+
+$n=1;
+
+$template_1 = <<EOM;
+We will put value of \$v (which is "abc") here -> {\$v}
+We will evaluate 1+1 here -> {1 + 1}
+EOM
+
+# (1) Construct temporary template file for testing
+# file operations
+$TEMPFILE = "tt$$";
+open(TMP, "> $TEMPFILE") or print "not ok $n\n" && &abort("Couldn\'t write tempfile $TEMPFILE: $!");
+print TMP $template_1;
+close TMP;
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+
+# (2) Build template from file
+$template = new Text::Template ('type' => 'FILE', 'source' => $TEMPFILE);
+if (defined($template)) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n $Text::Template::ERROR\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+# (3) Fill in template from file
+$X::v = "abc";
+$resultX = <<EOM;
+We will put value of \$v (which is "abc") here -> abc
+We will evaluate 1+1 here -> 2
+EOM
+$Y::v = "ABC";
+$resultY = <<EOM;
+We will put value of \$v (which is "abc") here -> ABC
+We will evaluate 1+1 here -> 2
+EOM
+
+$text = $template->fill_in('package' => X);
+if ($text eq $resultX) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+# (4) Fill in same template again
+$text = $template->fill_in('package' => Y);
+if ($text eq $resultY) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+
+
+# (5) Simple test of `fill_this_in'
+$text = Text::Template->fill_this_in( $template_1, 'package' => X);
+if ($text eq $resultX) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+# (6) test creation of template from filehandle
+if (open (TMPL, "< $TEMPFILE")) {
+ $template = new Text::Template ('type' => 'FILEHANDLE',
+ 'source' => *TMPL);
+ if (defined($template)) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n $Text::Template::ERROR\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+
+# (7) test filling in of template from filehandle
+ $text = $template->fill_in('package' => X);
+ if ($text eq $resultX) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+
+# (8) test second fill_in on same template object
+ $text = $template->fill_in('package' => Y);
+ if ($text eq $resultY) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+ close TMPL;
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n\n"; $n++;
+ print "not ok $n\n"; $n++;
+ print "not ok $n\n"; $n++;
+}
+
+
+# (9) test creation of template from array
+$template = new Text::Template
+ ('type' => 'ARRAY',
+ 'source' => [
+ 'We will put value of $v (which is "abc") here -> {$v}',
+ "\n",
+ 'We will evaluate 1+1 here -> {1+1}',
+ "\n",
+ ]);
+if (defined($template)) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n $Text::Template::ERROR\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+# (10) test filling in of template from array
+$text = $template->fill_in('package' => X);
+if ($text eq $resultX) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+# (11) test second fill_in on same array template object
+$text = $template->fill_in('package' => Y);
+if ($text eq $resultY) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+ print STDERR "$resultX\n---\n$text";
+ unless (!defined($text)) { print STDERR "ERROR: $Text::Template::ERROR\n"};
+}
+$n++;
+
+
+
+# (12) Make sure \ is working properly
+# Test added for version 1.11
+my $tmpl = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => 'B{"\\}"}C{"\\{"}D',
+ );
+# This should fail if the \ are not interpreted properly.
+my $text = $tmpl->fill_in();
+print +($text eq "B}C{D" ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (13) Make sure \ is working properly
+# Test added for version 1.11
+$tmpl = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => qq{A{"\t"}B},
+ );
+# Symptom of old problem: ALL \ were special in templates, so
+# The lexer would return (A, PROGTEXT("t"), B), and the
+# result text would be AtB instead of A(tab)B.
+$text = $tmpl->fill_in();
+
+print +($text eq "A\tB" ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (14-27) Make sure \ is working properly
+# Test added for version 1.11
+# This is a sort of general test.
+my @tests = ('{""}' => '', # (14)
+ '{"}"}' => undef, # (15)
+ '{"\\}"}' => '}', # One backslash
+ '{"\\\\}"}' => undef, # Two backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\}"}' => '}', # Three backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\\\}"}' => undef, # Four backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\\\\\}"}' => '\}', # Five backslashes (20)
+ '{"x20"}' => 'x20',
+ '{"\\x20"}' => ' ', # One backslash
+ '{"\\\\x20"}' => '\\x20', # Two backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\x20"}' => '\\ ', # Three backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\\\x20"}' => '\\\\x20', # Four backslashes (25)
+ '{"\\\\\\\\\\x20"}' => '\\\\ ', # Five backslashes
+ '{"\\x20\\}"}' => ' }', # (27)
+ );
+
+my $i;
+for ($i=0; $i<@tests; $i+=2) {
+ my $tmpl = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => $tests[$i],
+ );
+ my $text = $tmpl->fill_in;
+ my $result = $tests[$i+1];
+ my $ok = (! defined $text && ! defined $result
+ || $text eq $result);
+ unless ($ok) {
+ print STDERR "($n) expected .$result., got .$text.\n";
+ }
+ print +($ok ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+ $n++;
+}
+
+
+# (28-30) I discovered that you can't pass a glob ref as your filehandle.
+# MJD 20010827
+# (28) test creation of template from filehandle
+if (open (TMPL, "< $TEMPFILE")) {
+ $template = new Text::Template ('type' => 'FILEHANDLE',
+ 'source' => \*TMPL);
+ if (defined($template)) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n $Text::Template::ERROR\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+
+# (29) test filling in of template from filehandle
+ $text = $template->fill_in('package' => X);
+ if ($text eq $resultX) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+
+# (30) test second fill_in on same template object
+ $text = $template->fill_in('package' => Y);
+ if ($text eq $resultY) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+ close TMPL;
+} else {
+ print "not ok $n\n"; $n++;
+ print "not ok $n\n"; $n++;
+ print "not ok $n\n"; $n++;
+}
+
+# (31) Test _scrubpkg for leakiness
+$Text::Template::GEN0::test = 1;
+Text::Template::_scrubpkg('Text::Template::GEN0');
+if ($Text::Template::GEN0::test) {
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+
+END {unlink $TEMPFILE;}
+
+exit;
+
+
+
+
+sub abort {
+ unlink $TEMPFILE;
+ die $_[0];
+}
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/02-hash.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/02-hash.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..29ba51a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/02-hash.t
@@ -0,0 +1,111 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+# still incomplete.
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+
+print "1..12\n";
+
+$n=1;
+
+$template = 'We will put value of $v (which is "good") here -> {$v}';
+
+$v = 'oops (main)';
+$Q::v = 'oops (Q)';
+
+$vars = { 'v' => \'good' };
+
+# (1) Build template from string
+$template = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $template);
+print +($template ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (2) Fill in template in anonymous package
+$result2 = 'We will put value of $v (which is "good") here -> good';
+$text = $template->fill_in(HASH => $vars);
+print +($text eq $result2 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (3) Did we clobber the main variable?
+print +($v eq 'oops (main)' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (4) Fill in same template again
+$result4 = 'We will put value of $v (which is "good") here -> good';
+$text = $template->fill_in(HASH => $vars);
+print +($text eq $result4 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (5) Now with a package
+$result5 = 'We will put value of $v (which is "good") here -> good';
+$text = $template->fill_in(HASH => $vars, PACKAGE => 'Q');
+print +($text eq $result5 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (6) We expect to have clobbered the Q variable.
+print +($Q::v eq 'good' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (7) Now let's try it without a package
+$result7 = 'We will put value of $v (which is "good") here -> good';
+$text = $template->fill_in(HASH => $vars);
+print +($text eq $result7 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (8-11) Now what does it do when we pass a hash with undefined values?
+# Roy says it does something bad. (Added for 1.20.)
+my $WARNINGS = 0;
+{
+ local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub {$WARNINGS++};
+ local $^W = 1; # Make sure this is on for this test
+ $template8 = 'We will put value of $v (which is "good") here -> {defined $v ? "bad" : "good"}';
+ $result8 = 'We will put value of $v (which is "good") here -> good';
+ my $template =
+ new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $template8);
+ my $text = $template->fill_in(HASH => {'v' => undef});
+ # (8) Did we generate a warning?
+ print +($WARNINGS == 0 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+ $n++;
+
+ # (9) Was the output correct?
+ print +($text eq $result8 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+ $n++;
+
+ # (10-11) Let's try that again, with a twist this time
+ $WARNINGS = 0;
+ $text = $template->fill_in(HASH => [{'v' => 17}, {'v' => undef}]);
+ # (10) Did we generate a warning?
+ print +($WARNINGS == 0 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+ $n++;
+
+ # (11) Was the output correct?
+ if ($] < 5.005) {
+ print "ok $n # skipped -- not supported before 5.005\n";
+ } else {
+ print +($text eq $result8 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+}
+
+
+# (12) Now we'll test the multiple-hash option (Added for 1.20.)
+$text = Text::Template::fill_in_string(q{$v: {$v}. @v: [{"@v"}].},
+ HASH => [{'v' => 17},
+ {'v' => ['a', 'b', 'c']},
+ {'v' => \23},
+ ]);
+$result = q{$v: 23. @v: [a b c].};
+print +($text eq $result ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+
+exit;
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/03-out.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/03-out.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0ba65a5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/03-out.t
@@ -0,0 +1,56 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+# still incomplete.
+#
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..1\n";
+
+$n=1;
+
+$template = q{
+This line should have a 3: {1+2}
+
+This line should have several numbers:
+{ $t = ''; foreach $n (1 .. 20) { $t .= $n . ' ' } $t }
+};
+
+$templateOUT = q{
+This line should have a 3: { $OUT = 1+2 }
+
+This line should have several numbers:
+{ foreach $n (1 .. 20) { $OUT .= $n . ' ' } }
+};
+
+# Build templates from string
+$template = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $template)
+ or die;
+$templateOUT = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $templateOUT)
+ or die;
+
+# Fill in templates
+$text = $template->fill_in()
+ or die;
+$textOUT = $templateOUT->fill_in()
+ or die;
+
+# (1) They should be the same
+print +($text eq $textOUT ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# Missing: Test this feature in Safe compartments;
+# it's a totally different code path.
+# Decision: Put that into safe.t, because that file should
+# be skipped when Safe.pm is unavailable.
+
+
+exit;
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/04-safe.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/04-safe.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4c07121
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/04-safe.t
@@ -0,0 +1,161 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+# still incomplete.
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+BEGIN {
+ eval "use Safe";
+ if ($@) {
+ print "1..0\n";
+ exit 0;
+ }
+}
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..16\n";
+
+if ($^O eq 'MacOS') {
+ $BADOP = qq{};
+ $FAILURE = q{};
+} else {
+ $BADOP = qq{kill 0};
+ $FAILURE = q{Program fragment at line 1 delivered error ``kill trapped by operation mask''};
+}
+
+$n=1;
+$v = $v = 119;
+
+$c = new Safe or die;
+
+$goodtemplate = q{This should succeed: { $v }};
+$goodoutput = q{This should succeed: 119};
+
+$template1 = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $goodtemplate)
+ or die;
+$template2 = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $goodtemplate)
+ or die;
+
+$text1 = $template1->fill_in();
+$text2 = $template1->fill_in(SAFE => $c);
+$ERR2 = $@;
+$text3 = $template2->fill_in(SAFE => $c);
+$ERR3 = $@;
+
+# (1)(2)(3) None of these should have failed.
+print +(defined $text1 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+print +(defined $text2 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+print +(defined $text3 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (4) Safe and non-safe fills of different template objects with the
+# same template text should yield the same result.
+# print +($text1 eq $text3 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+# (4) voided this test: it's not true, because the unsafe fill
+# uses package main, while the safe fill uses the secret safe package.
+# We could alias the secret safe package to be identical to main,
+# but that wouldn't be safe. If you want the aliasing, you have to
+# request it explicitly with `PACKAGE'.
+print "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (5) Safe and non-safe fills of the same template object
+# should yield the same result.
+# (5) voided this test for the same reason as #4.
+# print +($text1 eq $text2 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+print "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (6) Make sure the output was actually correct
+print +($text1 eq $goodoutput ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+
+$badtemplate = qq{This should fail: { $BADOP; 'NOFAIL' }};
+$badnosafeoutput = q{This should fail: NOFAIL};
+$badsafeoutput = q{This should fail: Program fragment delivered error ``kill trapped by operation mask at template line 1.''};
+
+$template1 = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $badtemplate)
+ or die;
+$template2 = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $badtemplate)
+ or die;
+
+$text1 = $template1->fill_in();
+$text2 = $template1->fill_in(SAFE => $c);
+$ERR2 = $@;
+$text3 = $template2->fill_in(SAFE => $c);
+$ERR3 = $@;
+$text4 = $template1->fill_in();
+
+# (7)(8)(9)(10) None of these should have failed.
+print +(defined $text1 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+print +(defined $text2 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+print +(defined $text3 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+print +(defined $text4 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (11) text1 and text4 should be the same (using safe in between
+# didn't change anything.)
+print +($text1 eq $text4 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (12) text2 and text3 should be the same (same template text in different
+# objects
+print +($text2 eq $text3 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (13) text1 should yield badnosafeoutput
+print +($text1 eq $badnosafeoutput ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (14) text2 should yield badsafeoutput
+$text2 =~ s/'kill'/kill/; # 5.8.1 added quote marks around the op name
+print "# expected: <$badsafeoutput>\n# got : <$text2>\n";
+print +($text2 eq $badsafeoutput ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+
+$template = q{{$x=1}{$x+1}};
+
+$template1 = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $template)
+ or die;
+$template2 = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $template)
+ or die;
+
+$text1 = $template1->fill_in();
+$text2 = $template1->fill_in(SAFE => new Safe);
+
+# (15) Do effects persist in safe compartments?
+print +($text1 eq $text2 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (16) Try the BROKEN routine in safe compartments
+sub my_broken {
+ my %a = @_; $a{error} =~ s/ at.*//s;
+ "OK! text:$a{text} error:$a{error} lineno:$a{lineno} arg:$a{arg}" ;
+}
+$templateB = new Text::Template (TYPE => 'STRING', SOURCE => '{die}')
+ or die;
+$text1 = $templateB->fill_in(BROKEN => \&my_broken,
+ BROKEN_ARG => 'barg',
+ SAFE => new Safe,
+ );
+$result1 = qq{OK! text:die error:Died lineno:1 arg:barg};
+print +($text1 eq $result1 ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+
+
+exit;
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/05-safe2.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/05-safe2.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0353477
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/05-safe2.t
@@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+# still incomplete.
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+BEGIN {
+ eval "use Safe";
+ if ($@) {
+ print "1..0\n";
+ exit 0;
+ }
+}
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..12\n";
+$n = 1;
+
+$c = new Safe or die;
+
+# Test handling of packages and importing.
+$c->reval('$P = "safe root"');
+$P = $P = 'main';
+$Q::P = $Q::P = 'Q';
+
+# How to effectively test the gensymming?
+
+$t = new Text::Template TYPE => 'STRING', SOURCE => 'package is {$P}'
+ or die;
+
+# (1) Default behavior: Inherit from calling package, `main' in this case.
+$text = $t->fill_in();
+print +($text eq 'package is main' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (2) When a package is specified, we should use that package instead.
+$text = $t->fill_in(PACKAGE => 'Q');
+print +($text eq 'package is Q' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (3) When no package is specified in safe mode, we should use the
+# default safe root.
+$text = $t->fill_in(SAFE => $c);
+print +($text eq 'package is safe root' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (4) When a package is specified in safe mode, we should use the
+# default safe root, after aliasing to the specified package
+$text = $t->fill_in(SAFE => $c, PACKAGE => Q);
+print +($text eq 'package is Q' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# Now let's see if hash vars are installed properly into safe templates
+$t = new Text::Template TYPE => 'STRING', SOURCE => 'hash is {$H}'
+ or die;
+
+# (5) First in default mode
+$text = $t->fill_in(HASH => {H => 'good5'} );
+print +($text eq 'hash is good5' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (6) Now in packages
+$text = $t->fill_in(HASH => {H => 'good6'}, PACKAGE => 'Q' );
+print +($text eq 'hash is good6' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (7) Now in the default root of the safe compartment
+$text = $t->fill_in(HASH => {H => 'good7'}, SAFE => $c );
+print +($text eq 'hash is good7' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (8) Now in the default root after aliasing to a package that
+# got the hash stuffed in
+$text = $t->fill_in(HASH => {H => 'good8'}, SAFE => $c, PACKAGE => 'Q2' );
+print +($text eq 'hash is good8' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# Now let's make sure that none of the packages leaked on each other.
+# (9) This var should NOT have been installed into the main package
+print +(defined $H ? 'not ' : ''), "ok $n\n";
+$H=$H;
+$n++;
+
+# (10) good6 was overwritten in test 7, so there's nothing to test for here.
+print "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (11) this value overwrote the one from test 6.
+print +($Q::H eq 'good7' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$Q::H = $Q::H;
+$n++;
+
+# (12)
+print +($Q2::H eq 'good8' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$Q2::H = $Q2::H;
+$n++;
+
+
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/06-ofh.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/06-ofh.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6865ad1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/06-ofh.t
@@ -0,0 +1,39 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+# still incomplete.
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..2\n";
+
+$n=1;
+
+$template = new Text::Template TYPE => STRING, SOURCE => q{My process ID is {$$}};
+$of = "t$$";
+END { unlink $of }
+open O, "> $of" or die;
+
+$text = $template->fill_in(OUTPUT => \*O);
+
+# (1) No $text should have been constructed. Return value should be true.
+print +($text eq '1' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+close O or die;
+open I, "< $of" or die;
+{ local $/; $t = <I> }
+close I;
+
+# (2) The text should have been printed to the file
+print +($t eq "My process ID is $$" ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+exit;
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/07-safe3.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/07-safe3.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5f438f6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/07-safe3.t
@@ -0,0 +1,91 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+BEGIN {
+ eval "use Safe";
+ if ($@) {
+ print "1..0\n";
+ exit 0;
+ }
+}
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..3\n";
+
+$n=1;
+
+# Test the OUT feature with safe compartments
+
+$template = q{
+This line should have a 3: {1+2}
+
+This line should have several numbers:
+{ $t = ''; foreach $n (1 .. 20) { $t .= $n . ' ' } $t }
+};
+
+$templateOUT = q{
+This line should have a 3: { $OUT = 1+2 }
+
+This line should have several numbers:
+{ foreach $n (1 .. 20) { $OUT .= $n . ' ' } }
+};
+
+$c = new Safe;
+
+# Build templates from string
+$template = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $template,
+ SAFE => $c)
+ or die;
+$templateOUT = new Text::Template ('type' => 'STRING', 'source' => $templateOUT,
+ SAFE => $c)
+ or die;
+
+# Fill in templates
+$text = $template->fill_in()
+ or die;
+$textOUT = $templateOUT->fill_in()
+ or die;
+
+# (1) They should be the same
+print +($text eq $textOUT ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (2-3) "Joel Appelbaum" <joel@orbz.com> <000701c0ac2c$aed1d6e0$0201a8c0@prime>
+# "Contrary to the documentation the $OUT variable is not always
+# undefined at the start of each program fragment. The $OUT variable
+# is never undefined after it is used once if you are using the SAFE
+# option. The result is that every fragment after the fragment that
+# $OUT was used in is replaced by the old $OUT value instead of the
+# result of the fragment. This holds true even after the
+# Text::Template object goes out of scope and a new one is created!"
+#
+# Also reported by Daini Xie.
+
+{
+ my $template = q{{$OUT = 'x'}y{$OUT .= 'z'}};
+ my $expected = "xyz";
+ my $s = Safe->new;
+ my $o = Text::Template->new(type => 'string',
+ source => $template,
+ );
+ for (1..2) {
+ my $r = $o->fill_in(SAFE => $s);
+ if ($r ne $expected) {
+ print "not ok $n # <$r>\n";
+ } else {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+ }
+}
+
+exit;
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/08-exported.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/08-exported.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ef9cfaf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/08-exported.t
@@ -0,0 +1,75 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+# still incomplete.
+
+use Text::Template 'fill_in_file', 'fill_in_string';
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..6\n";
+
+$n=1;
+$Q::n = $Q::n = 119;
+
+# (1) Test fill_in_string
+$out = fill_in_string('The value of $n is {$n}.', PACKAGE => 'Q' );
+print +($out eq 'The value of $n is 119.' ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (2) Test fill_in_file
+$TEMPFILE = "tt$$";
+open F, "> $TEMPFILE" or die "Couldn't open test file: $!; aborting";
+print F 'The value of $n is {$n}.', "\n";
+close F or die "Couldn't write test file: $!; aborting";
+$R::n = $R::n = 8128;
+
+$out = fill_in_file($TEMPFILE, PACKAGE => 'R');
+print +($out eq "The value of \$n is 8128.\n" ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (3) Jonathan Roy reported this bug:
+open F, "> $TEMPFILE" or die "Couldn't open test file: $!; aborting";
+print F "With a message here? [% \$var %]\n";
+close F or die "Couldn't close test file: $!; aborting";
+$out = fill_in_file($TEMPFILE, DELIMITERS => ['[%', '%]'],
+ HASH => { "var" => \"It is good!" });
+print +($out eq "With a message here? It is good!\n" ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (4) It probably occurs in fill_this_in also:
+$out =
+ Text::Template->fill_this_in("With a message here? [% \$var %]\n",
+ DELIMITERS => ['[%', '%]'],
+ HASH => { "var" => \"It is good!" });
+print +($out eq "With a message here? It is good!\n" ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (5) This test failed in 1.25. It was supplied by Donald L. Greer Jr.
+# Note that it's different from (1) in that there's no explicit
+# package=> argument.
+use vars qw($string $foo $r);
+$string='Hello {$foo}';
+$foo="Don";
+$r = fill_in_string($string);
+print (($r eq 'Hello Don' ? '' : 'not '), 'ok ', $n++, "\n");
+
+# (6) This test failed in 1.25. It's a variation on (5)
+package Q2;
+use Text::Template 'fill_in_string';
+use vars qw($string $foo $r);
+$string='Hello {$foo}';
+$foo="Don";
+$r = fill_in_string($string);
+print (($r eq 'Hello Don' ? '' : 'not '), 'ok ', $main::n++, "\n");
+
+package main;
+
+END { $TEMPFILE && unlink $TEMPFILE }
+
+exit;
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/09-error.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/09-error.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..40f9fac
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/09-error.t
@@ -0,0 +1,63 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+# still incomplete.
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..5\n";
+$n = 1;
+
+# (1-2) Missing source
+eval {
+ Text::Template->new();
+};
+unless ($@ =~ /^\QUsage: Text::Template::new(TYPE => ..., SOURCE => ...)/) {
+ print STDERR $@;
+ print "not ";
+}
+print "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+eval {
+ Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'FILE');
+};
+if ($@ =~ /^\QUsage: Text::Template::new(TYPE => ..., SOURCE => ...)/) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print STDERR $@;
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+# (3) Invalid type
+eval {
+ Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'wlunch', SOURCE => 'fish food');
+};
+if ($@ =~ /^\QIllegal value `WLUNCH' for TYPE parameter/) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+} else {
+ print STDERR $@;
+ print "not ok $n\n";
+}
+$n++;
+
+# (4-5) File does not exist
+my $o = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'file',
+ SOURCE => 'this file does not exist');
+print $o ? "not ok $n\n" : "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+print defined($Text::Template::ERROR)
+ && $Text::Template::ERROR =~ /^Couldn't open file/
+ ? "ok $n\n" : "not ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+
+exit;
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/10-delimiters.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/10-delimiters.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f74d591
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/10-delimiters.t
@@ -0,0 +1,99 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# Tests for user-specified delimiter functions
+# These tests first appeared in version 1.20.
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..18\n";
+$n = 1;
+
+# (1) Try a simple delimiter: <<..>>
+# First with the delimiters specified at object creation time
+$V = $V = 119;
+$template = q{The value of $V is <<$V>>.};
+$result = q{The value of $V is 119.};
+$template1 = Text::Template->new(TYPE => STRING,
+ SOURCE => $template,
+ DELIMITERS => ['<<', '>>']
+ )
+ or die "Couldn't construct template object: $Text::Template::ERROR; aborting";
+$text = $template1->fill_in();
+print +($text eq $result ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (2) Now with delimiter choice deferred until fill-in time.
+$template1 = Text::Template->new(TYPE => STRING, SOURCE => $template);
+$text = $template1->fill_in(DELIMITERS => ['<<', '>>']);
+print +($text eq $result ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (3) Now we'll try using regex metacharacters
+# First with the delimiters specified at object creation time
+$template = q{The value of $V is [$V].};
+$template1 = Text::Template->new(TYPE => STRING,
+ SOURCE => $template,
+ DELIMITERS => ['[', ']']
+ )
+ or die "Couldn't construct template object: $Text::Template::ERROR; aborting";
+$text = $template1->fill_in();
+print +($text eq $result ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+# (4) Now with delimiter choice deferred until fill-in time.
+$template1 = Text::Template->new(TYPE => STRING, SOURCE => $template);
+$text = $template1->fill_in(DELIMITERS => ['[', ']']);
+print +($text eq $result ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+$n++;
+
+
+
+# (5-18) Make sure \ is working properly
+# (That is to say, it is ignored.)
+# These tests are similar to those in 01-basic.t.
+my @tests = ('{""}' => '', # (5)
+
+ # Backslashes don't matter
+ '{"}"}' => undef,
+ '{"\\}"}' => undef, # One backslash
+ '{"\\\\}"}' => undef, # Two backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\}"}' => undef, # Three backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\\\}"}' => undef, # Four backslashes (10)
+ '{"\\\\\\\\\\}"}' => undef, # Five backslashes
+
+ # Backslashes are always passed directly to Perl
+ '{"x20"}' => 'x20',
+ '{"\\x20"}' => ' ', # One backslash
+ '{"\\\\x20"}' => '\\x20', # Two backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\x20"}' => '\\ ', # Three backslashes (15)
+ '{"\\\\\\\\x20"}' => '\\\\x20', # Four backslashes
+ '{"\\\\\\\\\\x20"}' => '\\\\ ', # Five backslashes
+ '{"\\x20\\}"}' => undef, # (18)
+ );
+
+my $i;
+for ($i=0; $i<@tests; $i+=2) {
+ my $tmpl = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => $tests[$i],
+ DELIMITERS => ['{', '}'],
+ );
+ my $text = $tmpl->fill_in;
+ my $result = $tests[$i+1];
+ my $ok = (! defined $text && ! defined $result
+ || $text eq $result);
+ unless ($ok) {
+ print STDERR "($n) expected .$result., got .$text.\n";
+ }
+ print +($ok ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+ $n++;
+}
+
+
+exit;
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/11-prepend.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/11-prepend.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fe242e5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/11-prepend.t
@@ -0,0 +1,94 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# Tests for PREPEND features
+# These tests first appeared in version 1.22.
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+print "1..9\n";
+my $n = 1;
+
+@Emptyclass1::ISA = 'Text::Template';
+@Emptyclass2::ISA = 'Text::Template';
+
+my $tin = q{The value of $foo is: {$foo}};
+
+Text::Template->always_prepend(q{$foo = "global"});
+
+$tmpl1 = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => $tin,
+ );
+
+$tmpl2 = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => $tin,
+ PREPEND => q{$foo = "template"},
+ );
+
+$tmpl1->compile;
+$tmpl2->compile;
+
+$t1 = $tmpl1->fill_in(PACKAGE => 'T1');
+$t2 = $tmpl2->fill_in(PACKAGE => 'T2');
+$t3 = $tmpl2->fill_in(PREPEND => q{$foo = "fillin"}, PACKAGE => 'T3');
+
+($t1 eq 'The value of $foo is: global') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+($t2 eq 'The value of $foo is: template') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+($t3 eq 'The value of $foo is: fillin') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+
+Emptyclass1->always_prepend(q{$foo = 'Emptyclass global';});
+$tmpl1 = Emptyclass1->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => $tin,
+ );
+
+$tmpl2 = Emptyclass1->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => $tin,
+ PREPEND => q{$foo = "template"},
+ );
+
+$tmpl1->compile;
+$tmpl2->compile;
+
+$t1 = $tmpl1->fill_in(PACKAGE => 'T4');
+$t2 = $tmpl2->fill_in(PACKAGE => 'T5');
+$t3 = $tmpl2->fill_in(PREPEND => q{$foo = "fillin"}, PACKAGE => 'T6');
+
+($t1 eq 'The value of $foo is: Emptyclass global') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+($t2 eq 'The value of $foo is: template') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+($t3 eq 'The value of $foo is: fillin') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+
+$tmpl1 = Emptyclass2->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => $tin,
+ );
+
+$tmpl2 = Emptyclass2->new(TYPE => 'STRING',
+ SOURCE => $tin,
+ PREPEND => q{$foo = "template"},
+ );
+
+$tmpl1->compile;
+$tmpl2->compile;
+
+$t1 = $tmpl1->fill_in(PACKAGE => 'T4');
+$t2 = $tmpl2->fill_in(PACKAGE => 'T5');
+$t3 = $tmpl2->fill_in(PREPEND => q{$foo = "fillin"}, PACKAGE => 'T6');
+
+($t1 eq 'The value of $foo is: global') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+($t2 eq 'The value of $foo is: template') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+($t3 eq 'The value of $foo is: fillin') or print "not ";
+print "ok $n\n"; $n++;
+
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/12-preprocess.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/12-preprocess.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..60b6b0c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/12-preprocess.t
@@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
+#!perl
+#
+# Tests for PREPROCESSOR features
+# These tests first appeared in version 1.25.
+
+use Text::Template::Preprocess;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template::Preprocess version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::Preprocess::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::Preprocess::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+$TMPFILE = "tt$$";
+
+print "1..8\n";
+my $n = 1;
+
+my $py = sub { tr/x/y/ };
+my $pz = sub { tr/x/z/ };
+
+my $t = 'xxx The value of $x is {$x}';
+my $outx = 'xxx The value of $x is 119';
+my $outy = 'yyy The value of $y is 23';
+my $outz = 'zzz The value of $z is 5';
+open TF, "> $TMPFILE" or die "Couldn't open test file: $!; aborting";
+print TF $t;
+close TF;
+
+@result = ($outx, $outy, $outz, $outz);
+for my $trial (1, 0) {
+ for my $test (0 .. 3) {
+ my $tmpl;
+ if ($trial == 0) {
+ $tmpl = new Text::Template::Preprocess
+ (TYPE => 'STRING', SOURCE => $t) or die;
+ } else {
+ open TF, "< $TMPFILE" or die "Couldn't open test file: $!; aborting";
+ $tmpl = new Text::Template::Preprocess
+ (TYPE => 'FILEHANDLE', SOURCE => \*TF) or die;
+ }
+ $tmpl->preprocessor($py) if ($test & 1) == 1;
+ my @args = ((($test & 2) == 2) ? (PREPROCESSOR => $pz) : ());
+ my $o = $tmpl->fill_in(@args,
+ HASH => {x => 119, 'y' => 23, z => 5});
+# print STDERR "$o/$result[$test]\n";
+ print +(($o eq $result[$test]) ? '' : 'not '), "ok $n\n";
+ $n++;
+ }
+}
+
+unlink $TMPFILE;
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/13-taint.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/13-taint.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d92a374
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/13-taint.t
@@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
+#!perl -T
+# Tests for taint-mode features
+
+use lib 'blib/lib';
+use Text::Template;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+my $r = int(rand(10000));
+my $file = "tt$r";
+
+# makes its arguments tainted
+sub taint {
+ for (@_) {
+ $_ .= substr($0,0,0); # LOD
+ }
+}
+
+
+print "1..21\n";
+
+my $n =1;
+print "ok ", $n++, "\n";
+
+my $template = 'The value of $n is {$n}.';
+
+open T, "> $file" or die "Couldn't write temporary file $file: $!";
+print T $template, "\n";
+close T or die "Couldn't finish temporary file $file: $!";
+
+sub should_fail {
+ my $obj = Text::Template->new(@_);
+ eval {$obj->fill_in()};
+ if ($@) {
+ print "ok $n # $@\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n # (didn't fail)\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+}
+
+sub should_work {
+ my $obj = Text::Template->new(@_);
+ eval {$obj->fill_in()};
+ if ($@) {
+ print "not ok $n # $@\n";
+ } else {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+}
+
+sub should_be_tainted {
+ if (Text::Template::_is_clean($_[0])) {
+ print "not ok $n\n"; $n++; return;
+ }
+ print "ok $n\n"; $n++; return;
+}
+
+sub should_be_clean {
+ unless (Text::Template::_is_clean($_[0])) {
+ print "not ok $n\n"; $n++; return;
+ }
+ print "ok $n\n"; $n++; return;
+}
+
+# Tainted filename should die with and without UNTAINT option
+# untainted filename should die without UNTAINT option
+# filehandle should die without UNTAINT option
+# string and array with tainted data should die either way
+
+# (2)-(7)
+my $tfile = $file;
+taint($tfile);
+should_be_tainted($tfile);
+should_be_clean($file);
+should_fail TYPE => 'file', SOURCE => $tfile;
+should_fail TYPE => 'file', SOURCE => $tfile, UNTAINT => 1;
+should_fail TYPE => 'file', SOURCE => $file;
+should_work TYPE => 'file', SOURCE => $file, UNTAINT => 1;
+
+# (8-9)
+open H, "< $file" or die "Couldn't open $file for reading: $!; aborting";
+should_fail TYPE => 'filehandle', SOURCE => \*H;
+close H;
+open H, "< $file" or die "Couldn't open $file for reading: $!; aborting";
+should_work TYPE => 'filehandle', SOURCE => \*H, UNTAINT => 1;
+close H;
+
+# (10-15)
+my $ttemplate = $template;
+taint($ttemplate);
+should_be_tainted($ttemplate);
+should_be_clean($template);
+should_fail TYPE => 'string', SOURCE => $ttemplate;
+should_fail TYPE => 'string', SOURCE => $ttemplate, UNTAINT => 1;
+should_work TYPE => 'string', SOURCE => $template;
+should_work TYPE => 'string', SOURCE => $template, UNTAINT => 1;
+
+# (16-19)
+my $array = [ $template ];
+my $tarray = [ $ttemplate ];
+should_fail TYPE => 'array', SOURCE => $tarray;
+should_fail TYPE => 'array', SOURCE => $tarray, UNTAINT => 1;
+should_work TYPE => 'array', SOURCE => $array;
+should_work TYPE => 'array', SOURCE => $array, UNTAINT => 1;
+
+# (20-21) Test _unconditionally_untaint utility function
+Text::Template::_unconditionally_untaint($ttemplate);
+should_be_clean($ttemplate);
+Text::Template::_unconditionally_untaint($tfile);
+should_be_clean($tfile);
+
+END { unlink $file }
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/14-broken.t b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/14-broken.t
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d362395
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/Text-Template-1.46/t/14-broken.t
@@ -0,0 +1,82 @@
+#!perl
+# test apparatus for Text::Template module
+
+use Text::Template;
+
+print "1..5\n";
+
+$n=1;
+
+die "This is the test program for Text::Template version 1.46.
+You are using version $Text::Template::VERSION instead.
+That does not make sense.\n
+Aborting"
+ unless $Text::Template::VERSION == 1.46;
+
+# (1) basic error delivery
+{ my $r = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'string',
+ SOURCE => '{1/0}',
+ )->fill_in();
+ if ($r eq q{Program fragment delivered error ``Illegal division by zero at template line 1.''}) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n# $r\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+}
+
+# (2) BROKEN sub called in ->new?
+{ my $r = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'string',
+ SOURCE => '{1/0}',
+ BROKEN => sub {'---'},
+ )->fill_in();
+ if ($r eq q{---}) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n# $r\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+}
+
+# (3) BROKEN sub called in ->fill_in?
+{ my $r = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'string',
+ SOURCE => '{1/0}',
+ )->fill_in(BROKEN => sub {'---'});
+ if ($r eq q{---}) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n# $r\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+}
+
+# (4) BROKEN sub passed correct args when called in ->new?
+{ my $r = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'string',
+ SOURCE => '{1/0}',
+ BROKEN => sub { my %a = @_;
+ qq{$a{lineno},$a{error},$a{text}}
+ },
+ )->fill_in();
+ if ($r eq qq{1,Illegal division by zero at template line 1.\n,1/0}) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n# $r\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+}
+
+# (5) BROKEN sub passed correct args when called in ->fill_in?
+{ my $r = Text::Template->new(TYPE => 'string',
+ SOURCE => '{1/0}',
+ )->fill_in(BROKEN =>
+ sub { my %a = @_;
+ qq{$a{lineno},$a{error},$a{text}}
+ });
+ if ($r eq qq{1,Illegal division by zero at template line 1.\n,1/0}) {
+ print "ok $n\n";
+ } else {
+ print "not ok $n\n# $r\n";
+ }
+ $n++;
+}
+
diff --git a/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/transfer/Text/Template.pm b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/transfer/Text/Template.pm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7dbfe3f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/openssl-1.1.0h/external/perl/transfer/Text/Template.pm
@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
+# Copyright 2016 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
+#
+# Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use
+# this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
+# in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
+# https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
+
+# Quick transfer to the downloaded Text::Template
+
+BEGIN {
+ use File::Spec::Functions;
+ use File::Basename;
+ use lib catdir(dirname(__FILE__), "..", "..", "Text-Template-1.46", "lib");
+ # Some unpackers on VMS convert periods in directory names to underscores
+ use lib catdir(dirname(__FILE__), "..", "..", "Text-Template-1_46", "lib");
+ use Text::Template;
+ shift @INC; # Takes away the effect of use lib
+ shift @INC; # Takes away the effect of use lib
+}
+1;