I don't know if there's an easy way or a built-in package, and I don't know what happens when you just do %hash1 == %hash2 (but that's probably not it), but it's not terribly hard to roll your own:
sub hash_comp (\%\%) {
my %hash1 = %{ shift };
my %hash2 = %{ shift };
foreach (keys %hash1) {
return 1 unless defined $hash2{$_} and $hash1{$_} == $hash2{$_};
delete $hash1{$_};
delete $hash2{$_};
}
return 1 if keys $hash2;
return 0;
}
Untested, but should return 0 if the hashes have all the same elements and all the same values. This function will have to be modified to account for multidimensional hashes.
If you want something from a standard distribution, you could use Data::Dumper; and just dump the two hashes into two scalar variables, then compare the strings for equality. That might work.
There's also a package on CPAN called FreezeThaw that looks like it does what you want.
Note that to use the smart match (not repeated here because it's already posted), you will have to use feature; and it's only available for Perl 5.10. But who's still using Perl 5.8.8, right?