This is a problem with perl5db.pl creating __DIE__ handlers. If I localize $SIG{__DIE__} in your eval, things work as you expect.
eval {
local $SIG{__DIE__};
die MyEx->new
};
If you don't do that, you're getting the handler from DB::dbdie, which uses Carp::longmess. That won't shouldn't happen if dieLevel is 0, but by default it is 1, and it gets set to 1 if it is not defined. This was a patch to perl5db.pl back in 2001, and previously the default had been 0.
You're supposed to turn this off with:
PERLDB_OPT="dieLevel=0" perl5.10.0 -d program
But there is still a code reference in $SIG{__DIE__} after that, and it's a reference to dbdie. I think this is a bug in handling the global variable $prevdie in perl5db.pl's dieLevel. At the end of that subroutine, there is:
# perl5db.pl dieLevel, around line 7777
elsif ($prevdie) {
$SIG{__DIE__} = $prevdie;
print $OUT "Default die handler restored.\n";
}
But notice that after restoring $SIG{__DIE__}, it keeps the previous value in $prevdie, meaning whatever is in there leaks to another call. When I run that command line, there are two calls to dieLevel before it handles PERLDB_OPT, so $prevdie is probably dirty.
So, that's as far as I got before I didn't want to think about perl5db.pl anymore.
