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PARROT(1)	      User Contributed Perl Documentation	     PARROT(1)

NAME
       parrot - Parrot Virtual Machine

SYNOPSIS
       parrot [-options] <file> [arguments ...]

DESCRIPTION
       Parrot is a virtual machine designed to efficiently compile and execute
       bytecode for dynamic languages. Parrot currently hosts a variety of
       language implementations in various stages of completion, including
       Tcl, Javascript, Ruby, Lua, Scheme, PHP, Python, Perl 6, APL, and a
       .NET bytecode translator.  Parrot is not about parrots, but we are
       rather fond of them, for obvious reasons.

OPTIONS
       -h
       --help	      Print the option summary on the command line.
       -V
       --version      Print version information and exit.
       -I
       --include      Add "path" to the include search path.
       -L
       --library      Add "path" to the library search path.
       --hash-seed [hexnum]
	   Sets the hash seed to the specified value. This option is useful
	   for debugging intermittent failures, but should not be used in
	   production.	For more information about this option, see
	   docs/dev/profiling.pod, docs/project/hacking_tips.pod,
	   docs/running.pod, and docs/submissions.pod.

       -X
       --dynext	      Add "path" to the dynamic extension search path.

   Run core options
       These options select the runcore, which is useful for performance
       tuning and debugging.  For more information about these options, see
       the "About runcores" section in docs/running.pod.

       -R
       --runcore [CORE]
	   Select the runcore. The following cores are available in Parrot,
	   but not all may be available on your system:

	     fast	    bare-bones core without bounds-checking or
			    context-updating (default)

	     slow, bounds   bounds checking core

	     trace	    bounds checking core with trace info
			    (see 'parrot --help-debug')

	     profiling	    see F<docs/dev/profiling.pod>

	     subprof	    subroutine-level profiler
			    (see POD in F<src/runcore/subprof.c>)

       -p
       --profile      Run with the slow core and print an execution profile.
       -t
       --trace	      Run with the slow core and print trace information to
       stderr.
	   See "parrot --help-debug" for available flag bits.

   VM options
       -D
       --parrot-debug[=HEXFLAGS]
	   Turn on interpreter debug flag.  See "parrot --help-debug" for
	   available flag bits.

       --help-debug   Print the summary of debugging and tracing flag bits.
       -w
       --warnings     Turn on warnings.
	   See "parrot --help-debug" for available flag bits.

       -G
       --no-gc	      Turn off GC.
	   This may prove useful for finding GC-related bugs.

	   Note:      Do not use this option for longer running programs:
		      since memory is no longer recycled, it may quickly
		      become exhausted.

       -g
       --gc [GC-type]

       GC MS2 options

       --gc-dynamic-threshold=percentage
	   Maximum memory wasted by GC

       --gc-min-threshold=Kb

       GC GMS options

       --gc-nursery-size=percent of system
	   Size of gen0 (default 2)

       --gc-debug     Turn on GC (Garbage Collection) debugging.
	   This imposes some stress on the GC subsystem and can considerably
	   slow down execution.

       --leak-test|--destroy-at-end
	   Free all memory of the last interpreter.  This is useful when
	   running leak checkers.

       -.
       --wait	      Read a keystroke before starting.
	   This is useful when you want to attach a debugger on platforms such
	   as Windows.

       --runtime-prefix
	   Print the runtime prefix path and exit.

       --numthreads <number>
	   Overrides the automatically detected number of CPU cores to set the
	   number of OS threads. Minimum number: 2

   Compiler options
       -O[level]
	   Valid optimizer levels: "-O", "-O1", "-O2", "-Op"

	   -O1 enables the pre_optimizer, runs before control flow graph (CFG)
	   is built.  It includes strength reduction and rewrites certain
	   if/branch/label constructs.

	   -O2 runs afterwards, handles constant propagation, jump
	   optimizations, removal of unused labels and dead code.

	   -Op applies -O2 to pasm files also.

	   The old options -Oc (tailcall) and -Oj are currently ineffective.

	   -O defaults to -O1.

       -d[=HEXFLAGS]
       --imcc-debug[=HEXFLAGS]
	   Turn on compiler debug flags.  See "parrot --help-debug" for
	   available flag bits.

       -E
       --pre-process-only
	   Preprocess source file (expand macros) and print result to
	   "stdout":

	     $> parrot -E t/op/macro_10.pasm
	     $> parrot -E t/op/macro_10.pasm | parrot -- -

       -o
       --output=FILE  Act like an assembler, but do not execute the code,
	   unless the -r is supplied as well. If 'outputfile' ends with .pbc,
	   'parrot' will write a PBC file. If it ends with .pasm, 'parrot'
	   will output a PASM file, even from PASM input.

       --output-pbc   Act like an assembler, but always output bytecode,
	   even if the output file does not end in .pbc

       -a
       --pasm	      Assume PASM input on "stdin".
       -c
       --pbc	      Assume PBC file on "stdin" and execute it.
	   NOTE: If whitespace separates the -d switch from the argument, the
	   argument must start with a number, i.e., a decimal digit.

       -r
       --run-pbc      Only useful after "-o" or "--output-pbc".
	   Execute the program from the compiled in-memory image. If two "-r"
	   options are supplied, the .pbc file is read from disc and executed.
	   This is needed, primarily, for tests.

       -y
       --yydebug      Turn on yydebug in yacc/bison.
       -v
       --verbose      Turn on compiler verbosity.

   <file>
       If the file ends in .pbc it will be interpreted immediately.

       If the file ends in .pasm, then it is parsed as PASM code. Otherwise,
       it is parsed as PIR code. In both cases, it will then be executed,
       unless the "-o" flag was supplied.

       If the "file" is a single dash, input from "stdin" is read.

   [arguments ...]
       Optional arguments passed to the running program as ARGV. The program
       is assumed to know what to do with the arguments.

ENVIRONMENT
       PARROT_RUNTIME
	   If this environment variable is set, parrot will use this path as
	   its runtime prefix instead of the compiled-in path.	This is useful
	   if you want to execute a version of parrot different from the one
	   on the "compiled-in" path.

       PARROT_GC_DEBUG
	   Turn on the --gc-debug flag.

SEE ALSO
       'docs/running.pod'	    Additional information on command line
       options.

       http://www.parrot.org/	    The official Parrot web site.

       http://docs.parrot.org/	    Parrot's official documentation site.

       http://parrot.github.com/    An alternative documentation site.

REPORTING BUGS
       For information on how to submit a bug report, see
       docs/submissions.pod.

AUTHORS
       Parrot is a product of the contributions of a great many people.	 For a
       list of most of these people, see CREDITS.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 2001-2014, Parrot Foundation.

perl v5.20.3			  2015-02-21			     PARROT(1)
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