1This document is written in pod format hence there are punctuation 2characters in odd places. Do not worry, you have apparently got the 3ASCII->EBCDIC translation worked out correctly. You can read more 4about pod in pod/perlpod.pod or the short summary in the INSTALL file. 5 6=head1 NAME 7 8perlos390 - building and installing Perl for OS/390 and z/OS 9 10=head1 SYNOPSIS 11 12This document will help you Configure, build, test and install Perl 13on OS/390 (aka z/OS) Unix System Services. 14 15B<This document needs to be updated, but we don't know what it should say. 16Please submit comments to L<https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues>.> 17 18=head1 DESCRIPTION 19 20This is a fully ported Perl for OS/390 Version 2 Release 3, 5, 6, 7, 218, and 9. It may work on other versions or releases, but those are 22the ones we have tested it on. 23 24You may need to carry out some system configuration tasks before 25running the Configure script for Perl. 26 27 28=head2 Tools 29 30The z/OS Unix Tools and Toys list may prove helpful and contains links 31to ports of much of the software helpful for building Perl. 32L<http://www.ibm.com/servers/eserver/zseries/zos/unix/bpxa1toy.html> 33 34 35=head2 Unpacking Perl distribution on OS/390 36 37If using ftp remember to transfer the distribution in binary format. 38 39Gunzip/gzip for OS/390 is discussed at: 40 41 http://www.ibm.com/servers/eserver/zseries/zos/unix/bpxa1ty1.html 42 43to extract an ASCII tar archive on OS/390, try this: 44 45 pax -o to=IBM-1047,from=ISO8859-1 -r < latest.tar 46 47or 48 49 zcat latest.tar.Z | pax -o to=IBM-1047,from=ISO8859-1 -r 50 51If you get lots of errors of the form 52 53 tar: FSUM7171 ...: cannot set uid/gid: EDC5139I Operation not permitted 54 55you did not read the above and tried to use tar instead of pax, you'll 56first have to remove the (now corrupt) perl directory 57 58 rm -rf perl-... 59 60and then use pax. 61 62=head2 Setup and utilities for Perl on OS/390 63 64Be sure that your yacc installation is in place including any necessary 65parser template files. If you have not already done so then be sure to: 66 67 cp /samples/yyparse.c /etc 68 69This may also be a good time to ensure that your /etc/protocol file 70and either your /etc/resolv.conf or /etc/hosts files are in place. 71The IBM document that described such USS system setup issues was 72SC28-1890-07 "OS/390 UNIX System Services Planning", in particular 73Chapter 6 on customizing the OE shell. 74 75GNU make for OS/390, which is recommended for the build of perl (as 76well as building CPAN modules and extensions), is available from the 77L</Tools>. 78 79Some people have reported encountering "Out of memory!" errors while 80trying to build Perl using GNU make binaries. If you encounter such 81trouble then try to download the source code kit and build GNU make 82from source to eliminate any such trouble. You might also find GNU make 83(as well as Perl and Apache) in the red-piece/book "Open Source Software 84for OS/390 UNIX", SG24-5944-00 from IBM. 85 86If instead of the recommended GNU make you would like to use the system 87supplied make program then be sure to install the default rules file 88properly via the shell command: 89 90 cp /samples/startup.mk /etc 91 92and be sure to also set the environment variable _C89_CCMODE=1 (exporting 93_C89_CCMODE=1 is also a good idea for users of GNU make). 94 95You might also want to have GNU groff for OS/390 installed before 96running the "make install" step for Perl. 97 98There is a syntax error in the /usr/include/sys/socket.h header file 99that IBM supplies with USS V2R7, V2R8, and possibly V2R9. The problem with 100the header file is that near the definition of the SO_REUSEPORT constant 101there is a spurious extra '/' character outside of a comment like so: 102 103 #define SO_REUSEPORT 0x0200 /* allow local address & port 104 reuse */ / 105 106You could edit that header yourself to remove that last '/', or you might 107note that Language Environment (LE) APAR PQ39997 describes the problem 108and PTF's UQ46272 and UQ46271 are the (R8 at least) fixes and apply them. 109If left unattended that syntax error will turn up as an inability for Perl 110to build its "Socket" extension. 111 112For successful testing you may need to turn on the sticky bit for your 113world readable /tmp directory if you have not already done so (see man chmod). 114 115=head2 Configure Perl on OS/390 116 117Once you have unpacked the distribution, run "sh Configure" (see INSTALL 118for a full discussion of the Configure options). There is a "hints" file 119for os390 that specifies the correct values for most things. Some things 120to watch out for include: 121 122=head3 Shell 123 124A message of the form: 125 126 (I see you are using the Korn shell. Some ksh's blow up on Configure, 127 mainly on older exotic systems. If yours does, try the Bourne shell instead.) 128 129is nothing to worry about at all. 130 131=head3 Samples 132 133Some of the parser default template files in /samples are needed in /etc. 134In particular be sure that you at least copy /samples/yyparse.c to /etc 135before running Perl's Configure. This step ensures successful extraction 136of EBCDIC versions of parser files such as perly.c and perly.h. 137This has to be done before running Configure the first time. If you failed 138to do so then the easiest way to re-Configure Perl is to delete your 139misconfigured build root and re-extract the source from the tar ball. 140Then you must ensure that /etc/yyparse.c is properly in place before 141attempting to re-run Configure. 142 143=head3 Dynamic loading 144 145Dynamic loading is required if you want to use XS modules from CPAN (like 146DBI (and DBD's), JSON::XS, and Text::CSV_XS) or update CORE modules from 147CPAN with newer versions (like Encode) without rebuilding all of the perl 148binary. 149 150This port will support dynamic loading, but it is not selected by 151default. If you would like to experiment with dynamic loading then 152be sure to specify -Dusedl in the arguments to the Configure script. 153See the comments in hints/os390.sh for more information on dynamic loading. 154If you build with dynamic loading then you will need to add the 155$archlibexp/CORE directory to your LIBPATH environment variable in order 156for perl to work. See the config.sh file for the value of $archlibexp. 157If in trying to use Perl you see an error message similar to: 158 159 CEE3501S The module libperl.dll was not found. 160 From entry point __dllstaticinit at compile unit offset +00000194 161 at 162 163then your LIBPATH does not have the location of libperl.x and either 164libperl.dll or libperl.so in it. Add that directory to your LIBPATH and 165proceed. 166 167In hints/os390.sh, selecting -Dusedl will default to *also* select 168-Duseshrplib. Having a shared plib not only requires LIBPATH to be set to 169the correct location of libperl.so but also makes it close to impossible 170to run more than one different perl that was built this way at the same 171time. 172 173All objects that are involved in -Dusedl builds should be compiled for 174this, probably by adding to all ccflags 175 176 -qexportall -qxplink -qdll -Wc,XPLINK,dll,EXPORTALL -Wl,XPLINK,dll 177 178=head3 Optimizing 179 180Do not turn on the compiler optimization flag "-O". There is 181a bug in either the optimizer or perl that causes perl to 182not work correctly when the optimizer is on. 183 184=head3 Config files 185 186Some of the configuration files in /etc used by the 187networking APIs are either missing or have the wrong 188names. In particular, make sure that there's either 189an /etc/resolv.conf or an /etc/hosts, so that 190gethostbyname() works, and make sure that the file 191/etc/proto has been renamed to /etc/protocol (NOT 192/etc/protocols, as used by other Unix systems). 193You may have to look for things like HOSTNAME and DOMAINORIGIN 194in the "//'SYS1.TCPPARMS(TCPDATA)'" PDS member in order to 195properly set up your /etc networking files. 196 197=head2 Build, Test, Install Perl on OS/390 198 199Simply put: 200 201 sh Configure 202 make 203 make test 204 205if everything looks ok (see the next section for test/IVP diagnosis) then: 206 207 make install 208 209this last step may or may not require UID=0 privileges depending 210on how you answered the questions that Configure asked and whether 211or not you have write access to the directories you specified. 212 213=head2 Build Anomalies with Perl on OS/390 214 215"Out of memory!" messages during the build of Perl are most often fixed 216by re building the GNU make utility for OS/390 from a source code kit. 217 218Building debugging-enabled binaries (with -g or -g3) will increase the 219chance of getting these errors. Prevent -g if possible. 220 221Another memory limiting item to check is your MAXASSIZE parameter in your 222'SYS1.PARMLIB(BPXPRMxx)' data set (note too that as of V2R8 address space 223limits can be set on a per user ID basis in the USS segment of a RACF 224profile). People have reported successful builds of Perl with MAXASSIZE 225parameters as small as 503316480 (and it may be possible to build Perl 226with a MAXASSIZE smaller than that). 227 228Within USS your /etc/profile or $HOME/.profile may limit your ulimit 229settings. Check that the following command returns reasonable values: 230 231 ulimit -a 232 233To conserve memory you should have your compiler modules loaded into the 234Link Pack Area (LPA/ELPA) rather than in a link list or step lib. 235 236If the c89 compiler complains of syntax errors during the build of the 237Socket extension then be sure to fix the syntax error in the system 238header /usr/include/sys/socket.h. 239 240=head2 Testing Anomalies with Perl on OS/390 241 242The "make test" step runs a Perl Verification Procedure, usually before 243installation. You might encounter STDERR messages even during a successful 244run of "make test". Here is a guide to some of the more commonly seen 245anomalies: 246 247=head3 Signals 248 249A message of the form: 250 251 io/openpid...........CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received. 252 CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received. 253 CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received. 254 ok 255 256indicates that the t/io/openpid.t test of Perl has passed but done so 257with extraneous messages on stderr from CEE. 258 259=head3 File::Temp 260 261A message of the form: 262 263 lib/ftmp-security....File::Temp::_gettemp: Parent directory (/tmp/) 264 is not safe (sticky bit not set when world writable?) at 265 lib/ftmp-security.t line 100 266 File::Temp::_gettemp: Parent directory (/tmp/) is not safe (sticky 267 bit not set when world writable?) at lib/ftmp-security.t line 100 268 ok 269 270indicates a problem with the permissions on your /tmp directory within the HFS. 271To correct that problem issue the command: 272 273 chmod a+t /tmp 274 275from an account with write access to the directory entry for /tmp. 276 277=head3 Out of Memory! 278 279Recent perl test suite is quite memory hungry. In addition to the comments 280above on memory limitations it is also worth checking for _CEE_RUNOPTS 281in your environment. Perl now has (in miniperlmain.c) a C #pragma 282to set CEE run options, but the environment variable wins. 283 284The C code asks for: 285 286 #pragma runopts(HEAP(2M,500K,ANYWHERE,KEEP,8K,4K) STACK(,,ANY,) ALL31(ON)) 287 288The important parts of that are the second argument (the increment) to HEAP, 289and allowing the stack to be "Above the (16M) line". If the heap 290increment is too small then when perl (for example loading unicode/Name.pl) tries 291to create a "big" (400K+) string it cannot fit in a single segment 292and you get "Out of Memory!" - even if there is still plenty of memory 293available. 294 295A related issue is use with perl's malloc. Perl's malloc uses C<sbrk()> 296to get memory, and C<sbrk()> is limited to the first allocation so in this 297case something like: 298 299 HEAP(8M,500K,ANYWHERE,KEEP,8K,4K) 300 301is needed to get through the test suite. 302 303=head2 Installation Anomalies with Perl on OS/390 304 305The installman script will try to run on OS/390. There will be fewer errors 306if you have a roff utility installed. You can obtain GNU groff from the 307Redbook SG24-5944-00 ftp site. 308 309=head2 Usage Hints for Perl on OS/390 310 311When using perl on OS/390 please keep in mind that the EBCDIC and ASCII 312character sets are different. See perlebcdic.pod for more on such character 313set issues. Perl builtin functions that may behave differently under 314EBCDIC are also mentioned in the perlport.pod document. 315 316Open Edition (UNIX System Services) from V2R8 onward does support 317#!/path/to/perl script invocation. There is a PTF available from 318IBM for V2R7 that will allow shell/kernel support for #!. USS 319releases prior to V2R7 did not support the #! means of script invocation. 320If you are running V2R6 or earlier then see: 321 322 head `whence perldoc` 323 324for an example of how to use the "eval exec" trick to ask the shell to 325have Perl run your scripts on those older releases of Unix System Services. 326 327If you are having trouble with square brackets then consider switching your 328rlogin or telnet client. Try to avoid older 3270 emulators and ISHELL for 329working with Perl on USS. 330 331=head2 Floating Point Anomalies with Perl on OS/390 332 333There appears to be a bug in the floating point implementation on S/390 334systems such that calling int() on the product of a number and a small 335magnitude number is not the same as calling int() on the quotient of 336that number and a large magnitude number. For example, in the following 337Perl code: 338 339 my $x = 100000.0; 340 my $y = int($x * 1e-5) * 1e5; # '0' 341 my $z = int($x / 1e+5) * 1e5; # '100000' 342 print "\$y is $y and \$z is $z\n"; # $y is 0 and $z is 100000 343 344Although one would expect the quantities $y and $z to be the same and equal 345to 100000 they will differ and instead will be 0 and 100000 respectively. 346 347The problem can be further examined in a roughly equivalent C program: 348 349 #include <stdio.h> 350 #include <math.h> 351 main() 352 { 353 double r1,r2; 354 double x = 100000.0; 355 double y = 0.0; 356 double z = 0.0; 357 x = 100000.0 * 1e-5; 358 r1 = modf (x,&y); 359 x = 100000.0 / 1e+5; 360 r2 = modf (x,&z); 361 printf("y is %e and z is %e\n",y*1e5,z*1e5); 362 /* y is 0.000000e+00 and z is 1.000000e+05 (with c89) */ 363 } 364 365=head2 Modules and Extensions for Perl on OS/390 366 367Pure Perl (that is non XS) modules may be installed via the usual: 368 369 perl Makefile.PL 370 make 371 make test 372 make install 373 374If you built perl with dynamic loading capability then that would also 375be the way to build XS based extensions. However, if you built perl with 376the default static linking you can still build XS based extensions for OS/390 377but you will need to follow the instructions in ExtUtils::MakeMaker for 378building statically linked perl binaries. In the simplest configurations 379building a static perl + XS extension boils down to: 380 381 perl Makefile.PL 382 make 383 make perl 384 make test 385 make install 386 make -f Makefile.aperl inst_perl MAP_TARGET=perl 387 388In most cases people have reported better results with GNU make rather 389than the system's /bin/make program, whether for plain modules or for 390XS based extensions. 391 392If the make process encounters trouble with either compilation or 393linking then try setting the _C89_CCMODE to 1. Assuming sh is your 394login shell then run: 395 396 export _C89_CCMODE=1 397 398If tcsh is your login shell then use the setenv command. 399 400=head1 AUTHORS 401 402David Fiander and Peter Prymmer with thanks to Dennis Longnecker 403and William Raffloer for valuable reports, LPAR and PTF feedback. 404Thanks to Mike MacIsaac and Egon Terwedow for SG24-5944-00. 405Thanks to Ignasi Roca for pointing out the floating point problems. 406Thanks to John Goodyear for dynamic loading help. 407 408=head1 SEE ALSO 409 410L<INSTALL>, L<perlport>, L<perlebcdic>, L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker>. 411 412 http://www.ibm.com/servers/eserver/zseries/zos/unix/bpxa1toy.html 413 414 http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/redbooks/SG245944.html 415 416 http://www.ibm.com/servers/eserver/zseries/zos/unix/bpxa1ty1.html#opensrc 417 418 http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl-mvs/ 419 420 http://publibz.boulder.ibm.com:80/cgi-bin/bookmgr_OS390/BOOKS/ceea3030/ 421 422 http://publibz.boulder.ibm.com:80/cgi-bin/bookmgr_OS390/BOOKS/CBCUG030/ 423 424=head2 Mailing list for Perl on OS/390 425 426If you are interested in the z/OS (formerly known as OS/390) 427and POSIX-BC (BS2000) ports of Perl then see the perl-mvs mailing list. 428To subscribe, send an empty message to perl-mvs-subscribe@perl.org. 429 430See also: 431 432 https://lists.perl.org/list/perl-mvs.html 433 434There are web archives of the mailing list at: 435 436 https://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.mvs/ 437 438=head1 HISTORY 439 440This document was originally written by David Fiander for the 5.005 441release of Perl. 442 443This document was podified for the 5.005_03 release of Perl 11 March 1999. 444 445Updated 12 November 2000 for the 5.7.1 release of Perl. 446 447Updated 15 January 2001 for the 5.7.1 release of Perl. 448 449Updated 24 January 2001 to mention dynamic loading. 450 451Updated 12 March 2001 to mention //'SYS1.TCPPARMS(TCPDATA)'. 452 453Updated 28 November 2001 for broken URLs. 454 455Updated 03 October 2019 for perl-5.32.0+ 456 457=cut 458 459