Perl threads do not support sharing filehandles. All the elements of a shared data structure must be shared. This presents a problem if one needs to share an object which contains a filehandle.
{
package Foo;
use Mouse;
has fh =>
is => 'rw',
default => sub { \*STDOUT };
}
use threads;
use threads::shared;
my $obj = Foo->new;
$obj = shared_clone($obj); # error: "Unsupported ref type: GLOB"
print {$obj->fh} "Hello, world!\n";
It really doesn't matter if the filehandle is "shared" or not, it's only used for output. Perhaps there is a trick where the filehandle is stored outside the shared object?
This object is actually contained in another shared object which is in another and so on. The grand irony is the objects in question never use threads themselves, but must remain coordinated across the process if the user uses threads.
The real code in question can be seen here: These objects are used to configure where formatted output goes. An object is necessary because output does not always go to a filehandle.