1This document is written in pod format hence there are punctuation 2characters in odd places. You can read more 3about pod in pod/perlpod.pod or the short summary in the INSTALL file. 4 5=head1 NAME 6 7perlos390 - building and installing Perl for z/OS (previously called OS/390) 8 9=head1 SYNOPSIS 10 11This document will help you Configure, build, test and install Perl 12on z/OS Unix System Services. 13 14=head1 DESCRIPTION 15 16This is a ported Perl for z/OS. It has been tested on z/OS 2.4 and 17should work fine with z/OS 2.5. 18It may work on other versions or releases, but those are 19the ones it has been tested on. 20 21The native character set for z/OS is EBCDIC, but it can also run in ASCII mode. 22Perl can support either, but you have to compile it explicitly for one or the 23other. You could have both an ASCII perl, and an EBCDIC perl on the same 24machine. If you use ASCII mode and an ASCII perl, the Encode module shipped 25with perl can be used to translate files from various EBCDIC code pages for 26handling by perl, and then back on output 27 28This document describes how to build a 64-bit Dynamic Perl, either ASCII or 29EBCDIC. You can interactively choose other configurations, as well as many 30other options in the Configure script that is run as part of the build 31process. You may need to carry out some system configuration tasks before 32running Configure, as detailed below. 33 34=head2 Tools 35 36You will want to get GNU make 4.1 or later. GNU make can be downloaded from a 37port that Rocket Software provides. You will need the z/OS c99 compiler from 38IBM (though xlc in c99 mode without optimization turned on works in EBCDIC). 39 40If you want the latest development version of Perl, you will need git. 41You can use git on another platform and transfer the result via sftp or ftp to 42z/OS. But there is a z/OS native git client port available through Rocket 43Software. 44 45You may also need the gunzip client port that Rocket Software provides to unzip 46any zipped tarball you upload to z/OS. 47 48=head2 Building a 64-bit Dynamic ASCII Perl 49 50For building from an official stable release of Perl, go to 51L<https://www.perl.org/get.html> and choose any one of the 52"Download latest stable source" buttons. This will get you a tarball. The 53name of that tarball will be something like 'perl-V.R.M,tar,gz', where V.R.M is 54the version/release/modification of the perl you are downloading. Do 55 56 gunzip perl-V.R.M.tar.gz 57 58Then one of: 59 60 tar -xvf perl-V.R.M.tar 61 62 pax -r -f perl-V.R.M.tar 63 64Either of these will create the source directory. You can rename it to 65whatever you like; for these instructions, 'perl' is assumed to be the name. 66 67If instead you want the latest unstable development release, using the native 68git on z/OS, clone Perl: 69 70 git clone https://github.com/Perl/perl5.git perl 71 72Either way, once you have a 'perl' directory containing the source, cd into it, 73and tag all the code as ASCII: 74 75 cd perl 76 chtag -R -h -t -cISO8859-1 * 77 78Configure the build environment as 64-bit, Dynamic, ASCII, development, 79deploying it to F</usr/local/perl/ascii>: 80 81 export PATH=$PWD:$PATH 82 export LIBPATH=$PWD:$PATH 83 ./Configure -Dprefix=/usr/local/perl/ascii -des -Dusedevel \ 84 -Duse64bitall -Dusedl 85 86If you are building from a stable source, you don't need "-Dusedevel". 87(If you run Configure without options, it will interactively ask you about 88every possible option based on its probing of what's available on your 89particular machine, so you can choose as you go along.) 90 91Run GNU make to build Perl 92 93 make 94 95Run tests to ensure Perl is working correctly. Currently, there are about a 96dozen failing tests out of nearly 2500 97 98 make test_harness 99 100Install Perl into F</usr/local/perl/ascii>: 101 102 make install 103 104=head2 Building a 64-bit Dynamic EBCDIC Perl 105 106You will need a working perl on some box with connectivity to the destination 107machine. On z/OS, it could be an ASCII perl, or a previous EBCDIC one. 108Many machines will already have a pre-built perl already running, or one can 109easily be downloaded from L<https://www.perl.org/get.html>. 110 111Follow the directions above in "Building a 64-bit Dynamic ASCII Perl" as far as 112getting a populated 'perl' directory. Then come back here to proceed. 113 114The downloaded perl will need to be converted to 1047 EBCDIC. To do this: 115 116 cd perl 117 Porting/makerel -e 118 119If the Porting/makerel step fails with an error that it can not issue the tar 120command, proceed to issue the command interactively, where V.R.M is the 121version/release/modification of Perl you are uploading: 122 123 cd ../ 124 tar cf - --format=ustar perl-V.R.M | gzip --best > perl-V.R.M.tar.gz 125 126Use sftp to upload the zipped tar file to z/OS: 127 128 sftp <your system> 129 cd /tmp 130 put perl-V.R.M.tar.gz 131 132Unzip and untar the zipped tar file on z/OS: 133 134 cd /tmp 135 gunzip perl-V.R.M.tar.gz 136 137Then one of: 138 139 tar -xvf perl-V.R.M.tar 140 141 pax -r -f perl-V.R.M.tar 142 143You now have the source code for the EBCDIC Perl on z/OS and can proceed to 144build it. This is analagous to how you would build the code for ASCII, but 145note: you B<should not> tag the code but instead leave it untagged. 146 147Configure the build environment as 64-bit, Dynamic, native, development, 148deploying it to F</usr/local/perl/ebcdic>: 149 150 export PATH=$PWD:$PATH 151 export LIBPATH=$PWD:$PATH 152 ./Configure -Dprefix=/usr/local/perl/ebcdic -des -Dusedevel \ 153 -Duse64bitall -Dusedl 154 155If you are building from a stable source, you don't need "-Dusedevel". 156(If you run Configure without options, it will interactively ask you about 157every possible option based on its probing of what's available on your 158particular machine, so you can choose as you go along.) 159 160Run GNU make to build Perl 161 162 make 163 164Run tests to ensure Perl is working correctly. 165 166 make test_harness 167 168You might also want to have GNU groff for OS/390 installed before 169running the "make install" step for Perl. 170 171Install Perl into F</usr/local/perl/ebcdic>: 172 173 make install 174 175EBCDIC Perl is still a work in progress. All the core code works as far as we 176know, but various modules you might want to download from CPAN do not. The 177failures range from very minor to catastrophic. Many of them are simply bugs 178in the tests, with the module actually working properly. This happens because, 179for example, the test is coded to expect a certain character ASCII code point; 180when it gets the EBCDIC value back instead, it complains. But the code 181actually worked. Other potential failures that aren't really failures stem 182from checksums coming out differently, since C<A>, for example, has a different 183bit representation between the character sets. A test that is expecting the 184ASCII value will show failure, even if the module is working perfectly. Also 185in sorting, uppercase letters come before lowercase letters on ASCII systems; 186the reverse on EBCDIC. 187 188Some CPAN modules come bundled with the downloaded perl. And a few of those 189have yet to be fixed to pass on EBCDIC platforms. As a result they are skipped 190when you run 'make test'. The current list is: 191 192 Archive::Tar 193 Config::Perl::V 194 CPAN::Meta 195 CPAN::Meta::YAML 196 Digest::MD5 197 Digest::SHA 198 Encode 199 ExtUtils::MakeMaker 200 ExtUtils::Manifest 201 HTTP::Tiny 202 IO::Compress 203 IPC::Cmd 204 JSON::PP 205 libnet 206 MIME::Base64 207 Module::Metadata 208 PerlIO::via-QuotedPrint 209 Pod::Checker 210 podlators 211 Pod::Simple 212 Socket 213 Test::Harness 214 215See also F<hints/os390.sh> for other potential gotchas. 216 217=head2 Setup and utilities for Perl on OS/390 218 219This may also be a good time to ensure that your F</etc/protocol> file 220and either your F</etc/resolv.conf> or F</etc/hosts> files are in place. 221The IBM document that describes such USS system setup issues is 222"z/OS UNIX System Services Planning" 223 224For successful testing you may need to turn on the sticky bit for your 225world readable /tmp directory if you have not already done so (see man chmod). 226 227=head2 Useful files for trouble-shooting 228 229If your configuration is failing, read hints/os390.sh 230This file provides z/OS specific options to direct the build process. 231 232=head3 Shell 233 234A message of the form: 235 236 (I see you are using the Korn shell. Some ksh's blow up on Configure, 237 mainly on older exotic systems. If yours does, try the Bourne shell 238 instead.) 239 240is nothing to worry about at all. 241 242=head3 Dynamic loading 243 244Dynamic loading is required if you want to use XS modules from CPAN (like 245DBI (and DBD's), JSON::XS, and Text::CSV_XS) or update CORE modules from 246CPAN with newer versions (like Encode) without rebuilding all of the perl 247binary. 248 249The instructions above will create a dynamic Perl. If you do not want to 250use dynamic loading, remove the -Dusedl option. 251See the comments in hints/os390.sh for more information on dynamic loading. 252 253=head3 Optimizing 254 255Optimization has not been turned on yet. There may be issues if Perl 256is optimized. 257 258=head2 Build Anomalies with Perl on OS/390 259 260"Out of memory!" messages during the build of Perl are most often fixed 261by re building the GNU make utility for OS/390 from a source code kit. 262 263Within USS your F</etc/profile> or F<$HOME/.profile> may limit your ulimit 264settings. Check that the following command returns reasonable values: 265 266 ulimit -a 267 268To conserve memory you should have your compiler modules loaded into the 269Link Pack Area (LPA/ELPA) rather than in a link list or step lib. 270 271If the compiler complains of syntax errors during the build of the 272Socket extension then be sure to fix the syntax error in the system 273header /usr/include/sys/socket.h. 274 275=head2 Testing Anomalies with Perl on OS/390 276 277The "make test" step runs a Perl Verification Procedure, usually before 278installation. You might encounter STDERR messages even during a successful 279run of "make test". Here is a guide to some of the more commonly seen 280anomalies: 281 282=head3 Out of Memory (31-bit only) 283 284Out of memory problems should not be an issue, unless you are attempting to build 285a 31-bit Perl. 286 287If you _are_ building a 31-bit Perl, the constrained environment may mean you 288need to change memory options for Perl. 289In addition to the comments 290above on memory limitations it is also worth checking for _CEE_RUNOPTS 291in your environment. Perl now has (in miniperlmain.c) a C #pragma for 31-bit only 292to set CEE run options, but the environment variable wins. 293 294The 31-bit C code asks for: 295 296 #pragma runopts(HEAP(2M,500K,ANYWHERE,KEEP,8K,4K) STACK(,,ANY,) ALL31(ON)) 297 298The important parts of that are the second argument (the increment) to HEAP, 299and allowing the stack to be "Above the (16M) line". If the heap 300increment is too small then when perl (for example loading unicode/Name.pl) tries 301to create a "big" (400K+) string it cannot fit in a single segment 302and you get "Out of Memory!" - even if there is still plenty of memory 303available. 304 305A related issue is use with perl's malloc. Perl's malloc uses C<sbrk()> 306to get memory, and C<sbrk()> is limited to the first allocation so in this 307case something like: 308 309 HEAP(8M,500K,ANYWHERE,KEEP,8K,4K) 310 311is needed to get through the test suite. 312 313=head2 Usage Hints for Perl on z/OS 314 315When using Perl on z/OS please keep in mind that the EBCDIC and ASCII 316character sets are different. See L<perlebcdic> for more on such character 317set issues. Perl builtin functions that may behave differently under 318EBCDIC are also mentioned in the perlport.pod document. 319 320If you are having trouble with square brackets then consider switching your 321rlogin or telnet client. Try to avoid older 3270 emulators and ISHELL for 322working with Perl on USS. 323 324=head2 Modules and Extensions for Perl on z/OS (Static Only) 325 326Pure Perl (that is non XS) modules may be installed via the usual: 327 328 perl Makefile.PL 329 make 330 make test 331 make install 332 333If you built perl with dynamic loading capability then that would also 334be the way to build XS based extensions. However, if you built perl with 335static linking you can still build XS based extensions for z/OS 336but you will need to follow the instructions in ExtUtils::MakeMaker for 337building statically linked perl binaries. In the simplest configurations 338building a static perl + XS extension boils down to: 339 340 perl Makefile.PL 341 make 342 make perl 343 make test 344 make install 345 make -f Makefile.aperl inst_perl MAP_TARGET=perl 346 347=head2 Running Perl on z/OS 348 349To run the 64-bit Dynamic Perl environment, update your PATH and LIBPATH 350to include the location you installed Perl into, and then run the perl you 351installed as perlV.R.M where V/R/M is the Version/Release/Modification level 352of the current development level. 353If you are running the ASCII/EBCDIC Bi-Modal Perl environment, you also need to 354set up your ASCII/EBCDIC Bi-Modal environment variables, and ensure any Perl 355source code you run is tagged appropriately as ASCII or EBCDIC using 356"chtag -t -c<CCSID>": 357 358=over 359 360=item For ASCII Only: 361 362 export _BPXK_AUTOCVT=ON 363 export _CEE_RUNOPTS="FILETAG(AUTOCVT,AUTOTAG),POSIX(ON)" 364 export _TAG_REDIR_ERR="txt" 365 export _TAG_REDIR_IN="txt" 366 export _TAG_REDIR_OUT="txt" 367 368=item For ASCII or EBCDIC: 369 370 export PATH=/usr/local/perl/ascii:$PATH 371 export LIBPATH=/usr/local/perl/ascii/lib:$LIBPATH 372 perlV.R.M args 373 374=back 375 376If tcsh is your login shell then use the setenv command. 377 378=head1 AUTHORS 379 380David Fiander and Peter Prymmer with thanks to Dennis Longnecker 381and William Raffloer for valuable reports, LPAR and PTF feedback. 382Thanks to Mike MacIsaac and Egon Terwedow for SG24-5944-00. 383Thanks to Ignasi Roca for pointing out the floating point problems. 384Thanks to John Goodyear for dynamic loading help. 385 386Mike Fulton and Karl Williamson have provided updates for UTF8, DLL, 64-bit and 387ASCII/EBCDIC Bi-Modal support 388 389=head1 OTHER SITES 390 391L<https://github.com/ZOSOpenTools/perlport/> provides documentation and tools 392for building various z/OS Perl configurations and has some useful tools in the 393'bin' directory you may want to use for building z/OS Perl yourself. 394 395=head1 HISTORY 396 397Updated 24 December 2021 to enable initial ASCII support 398 399Updated 03 October 2019 for perl-5.33.3+ 400 401Updated 28 November 2001 for broken URLs. 402 403Updated 12 March 2001 to mention //'SYS1.TCPPARMS(TCPDATA)'. 404 405Updated 24 January 2001 to mention dynamic loading. 406 407Updated 15 January 2001 for the 5.7.1 release of Perl. 408 409Updated 12 November 2000 for the 5.7.1 release of Perl. 410 411This document was podified for the 5.005_03 release of Perl 11 March 1999. 412 413This document was originally written by David Fiander for the 5.005 414release of Perl. 415 416=cut 417 418