1If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you 2see. It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is 3specifically designed to be readable as is. 4 5=head1 NAME 6 7README.solaris - Perl version 5 on Solaris systems 8 9=head1 DESCRIPTION 10 11This document describes various features of Sun's Solaris operating system 12that will affect how Perl version 5 (hereafter just perl) is 13compiled and/or runs. Some issues relating to the older SunOS 4.x are 14also discussed, though they may be out of date. 15 16For the most part, everything should just work. 17 18Starting with Solaris 8, perl5.00503 (or higher) is supplied with the 19operating system, so you might not even need to build a newer version 20of perl at all. The Sun-supplied version is installed in /usr/perl5 21with /usr/bin/perl pointing to /usr/perl5/bin/perl. Do not disturb 22that installation unless you really know what you are doing. If you 23remove the perl supplied with the OS, there is a good chance you will 24render some bits of your system inoperable. If you wish to install a 25newer version of perl, install it under a different prefix from 26/usr/perl5. Common prefixes to use are /usr/local and /opt/perl. 27 28You may wish to put your version of perl in the PATH of all users by 29changing the link /usr/bin/perl. This is OK, as all Perl scripts 30shipped with Solaris use /usr/perl5/bin/perl. 31 32=head2 Solaris Version Numbers. 33 34For consistency with common usage, perl's Configure script performs 35some minor manipulations on the operating system name and version 36number as reported by uname. Here's a partial translation table: 37 38 Sun: perl's Configure: 39 uname uname -r Name osname osvers 40 SunOS 4.1.3 Solaris 1.1 sunos 4.1.3 41 SunOS 5.6 Solaris 2.6 solaris 2.6 42 SunOS 5.8 Solaris 8 solaris 2.8 43 44The complete table can be found in the Sun Managers' FAQ 45L<ftp://ftp.cs.toronto.edu/pub/jdd/sun-managers/faq> under 46"9.1) Which Sun models run which versions of SunOS?". 47 48=head1 RESOURCES 49 50There are many, many source for Solaris information. A few of the 51important ones for perl: 52 53=over 4 54 55=item Solaris FAQ 56 57The Solaris FAQ is available at 58L<http://www.science.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2.html>. 59 60The Sun Managers' FAQ is available at 61L<ftp://ftp.cs.toronto.edu/pub/jdd/sun-managers/faq> 62 63=item Precompiled Binaries 64 65Precompiled binaries, links to many sites, and much, much more is 66available at L<http://www.sunfreeware.com>. 67 68=item Solaris Documentation 69 70All Solaris documentation is available on-line at L<http://docs.sun.com>. 71 72=back 73 74=head1 SETTING UP 75 76=head2 File Extraction Problems. 77 78Be sure to use a tar program compiled under Solaris (not SunOS 4.x) 79to extract the perl-5.x.x.tar.gz file. Do not use GNU tar compiled 80for SunOS4 on Solaris. (GNU tar compiled for Solaris should be fine.) 81When you run SunOS4 binaries on Solaris, the run-time system magically 82alters pathnames matching m#lib/locale# so that when tar tries to create 83lib/locale.pm, a file named lib/oldlocale.pm gets created instead. 84If you found this advice it too late and used a SunOS4-compiled tar 85anyway, you must find the incorrectly renamed file and move it back 86to lib/locale.pm. 87 88=head2 Compiler and Related Tools. 89 90You must use an ANSI C compiler to build perl. Perl can be compiled 91with either Sun's add-on C compiler or with gcc. The C compiler that 92shipped with SunOS4 will not do. 93 94=head3 Include /usr/ccs/bin/ in your PATH. 95 96Several tools needed to build perl are located in /usr/ccs/bin/: ar, 97as, ld, and make. Make sure that /usr/ccs/bin/ is in your PATH. 98 99You need to make sure the following packages are installed 100(this info is extracted from the Solaris FAQ): 101 102for tools (sccs, lex, yacc, make, nm, truss, ld, as): SUNWbtool, 103SUNWsprot, SUNWtoo 104 105for libraries & headers: SUNWhea, SUNWarc, SUNWlibm, SUNWlibms, SUNWdfbh, 106SUNWcg6h, SUNWxwinc, SUNWolinc 107 108for 64 bit development: SUNWarcx, SUNWbtoox, SUNWdplx, SUNWscpux, 109SUNWsprox, SUNWtoox, SUNWlmsx, SUNWlmx, SUNWlibCx 110 111If you are in doubt which package contains a file you are missing, 112try to find an installation that has that file. Then do a 113 114 grep /my/missing/file /var/sadm/install/contents 115 116This will display a line like this: 117 118/usr/include/sys/errno.h f none 0644 root bin 7471 37605 956241356 SUNWhea 119 120The last item listed (SUNWhea in this example) is the package you need. 121 122=head3 Avoid /usr/ucb/cc. 123 124You don't need to have /usr/ucb/ in your PATH to build perl. If you 125want /usr/ucb/ in your PATH anyway, make sure that /usr/ucb/ is NOT 126in your PATH before the directory containing the right C compiler. 127 128=head3 Sun's C Compiler 129 130If you use Sun's C compiler, make sure the correct directory 131(usually /opt/SUNWspro/bin/) is in your PATH (before /usr/ucb/). 132 133=head3 GCC 134 135If you use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and 136complete. As a point of reference, perl-5.6.0 built fine with 137gcc-2.8.1 on both Solaris 2.6 and Solaris 8. You'll be able to 138Configure perl with 139 140 sh Configure -Dcc=gcc 141 142If you have updated your Solaris version, you may also have to update 143your GCC. For example, if you are running Solaris 2.6 and your gcc is 144installed under /usr/local, check in /usr/local/lib/gcc-lib and make 145sure you have the appropriate directory, sparc-sun-solaris2.6/ or 146i386-pc-solaris2.6/. If gcc's directory is for a different version of 147Solaris than you are running, then you will need to rebuild gcc for 148your new version of Solaris. 149 150You can get a precompiled version of gcc from 151L<http://www.sunfreeware.com/>. Make sure you pick up the package for 152your Solaris release. 153 154=head3 GNU as and GNU ld 155 156The versions of as and ld supplied with Solaris work fine for building 157perl. There is normally no need to install the GNU versions. 158 159If you decide to ignore this advice and use the GNU versions anyway, 160then be sure that they are relatively recent. Versions newer than 2.7 161are apparently new enough. Older versions may have trouble with 162dynamic loading. 163 164If your gcc is configured to use GNU as and ld but you want to use the 165Solaris ones instead to build perl, then you'll need to add 166-B/usr/ccs/bin/ to the gcc command line. One convenient way to do 167that is with 168 169 sh Configure -Dcc='gcc -B/usr/ccs/bin/' 170 171Note that the trailing slash is required. This will result in some 172harmless warnings as Configure is run: 173 174 gcc: file path prefix `/usr/ccs/bin/' never used 175 176These messages may safely be ignored. 177(Note that for a SunOS4 system, you must use -B/bin/ instead.) 178 179Alternatively, you can use the GCC_EXEC_PREFIX environment variable to 180ensure that Sun's as and ld are used. Consult your gcc documentation 181for further information on the -B option and the GCC_EXEC_PREFIX variable. 182 183=head3 GNU make 184 185Sun's make works fine for building perl. 186If you wish to use GNU make anyway, be sure that the set-group-id bit is not 187set. If it is, then arrange your PATH so that /usr/ccs/bin/make is 188before GNU make or else have the system administrator disable the 189set-group-id bit on GNU make. 190 191=head3 Avoid libucb. 192 193Solaris provides some BSD-compatibility functions in /usr/ucblib/libucb.a. 194Perl will not build and run correctly if linked against -lucb since it 195contains routines that are incompatible with the standard Solaris libc. 196Normally this is not a problem since the solaris hints file prevents 197Configure from even looking in /usr/ucblib for libraries, and also 198explicitly omits -lucb. 199 200=head2 Environment 201 202=head3 PATH 203 204Make sure your PATH includes the compiler (/opt/SUNWspro/bin/ if you're 205using Sun's compiler) as well as /usr/ccs/bin/ to pick up the other 206development tools (such as make, ar, as, and ld). Make sure your path 207either doesn't include /usr/ucb or that it includes it after the 208compiler and compiler tools and other standard Solaris directories. 209You definitely don't want /usr/ucb/cc. 210 211=head3 LD_LIBRARY_PATH 212 213If you have the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable set, be sure that 214it does NOT include /lib or /usr/lib. If you will be building 215extensions that call third-party shared libraries (e.g. Berkeley DB) 216then make sure that your LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable includes 217the directory with that library (e.g. /usr/local/lib). 218 219If you get an error message 220 221 dlopen: stub interception failed 222 223it is probably because your LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable 224includes a directory which is a symlink to /usr/lib (such as /lib). 225The reason this causes a problem is quite subtle. The file 226libdl.so.1.0 actually *only* contains functions which generate 'stub 227interception failed' errors! The runtime linker intercepts links to 228"/usr/lib/libdl.so.1.0" and links in internal implementations of those 229functions instead. [Thanks to Tim Bunce for this explanation.] 230 231=head1 RUN CONFIGURE. 232 233See the INSTALL file for general information regarding Configure. 234Only Solaris-specific issues are discussed here. Usually, the 235defaults should be fine. 236 237=head2 64-bit Issues. 238 239See the INSTALL file for general information regarding 64-bit compiles. 240In general, the defaults should be fine for most people. 241 242By default, perl-5.6.0 (or later) is compiled as a 32-bit application 243with largefile and long-long support. 244 245=head3 General 32-bit vs. 64-bit issues. 246 247Solaris 7 and above will run in either 32 bit or 64 bit mode on SPARC 248CPUs, via a reboot. You can build 64 bit apps whilst running 32 bit 249mode and vice-versa. 32 bit apps will run under Solaris running in 250either 32 or 64 bit mode. 64 bit apps require Solaris to be running 25164 bit mode. 252 253Existing 32 bit apps are properly known as LP32, i.e. Longs and 254Pointers are 32 bit. 64-bit apps are more properly known as LP64. 255The discriminating feature of a LP64 bit app is its ability to utilise a 25664-bit address space. It is perfectly possible to have a LP32 bit app 257that supports both 64-bit integers (long long) and largefiles (> 2GB), 258and this is the default for perl-5.6.0. 259 260For a more complete explanation of 64-bit issues, see the Solaris 64-bit 261Developer's Guide at http://docs.sun.com:80/ab2/coll.45.13/SOL64TRANS/ 262 263You can detect the OS mode using "isainfo -v", e.g. 264 265 fubar$ isainfo -v # Ultra 30 in 64 bit mode 266 64-bit sparcv9 applications 267 32-bit sparc applications 268 269By default, perl will be compiled as a 32-bit application. Unless you 270want to allocate more than ~ 4GB of memory inside Perl, you probably 271don't need Perl to be a 64-bit app. 272 273=head3 Large File Suppprt 274 275For Solaris 2.6 and onwards, there are two different ways for 32-bit 276applications to manipulate large files (files whose size is > 2GByte). 277(A 64-bit application automatically has largefile support built in 278by default.) 279 280First is the "transitional compilation environment", described in 281lfcompile64(5). According to the man page, 282 283 The transitional compilation environment exports all the 284 explicit 64-bit functions (xxx64()) and types in addition to 285 all the regular functions (xxx()) and types. Both xxx() and 286 xxx64() functions are available to the program source. A 287 32-bit application must use the xxx64() functions in order 288 to access large files. See the lf64(5) manual page for a 289 complete listing of the 64-bit transitional interfaces. 290 291The transitional compilation environment is obtained with the 292following compiler and linker flags: 293 294 getconf LFS64_CFLAGS -D_LARGEFILE64_SOURCE 295 getconf LFS64_LDFLAG # nothing special needed 296 getconf LFS64_LIBS # nothing special needed 297 298Second is the "large file compilation environment", described in 299lfcompile(5). According to the man page, 300 301 Each interface named xxx() that needs to access 64-bit entities 302 to access large files maps to a xxx64() call in the 303 resulting binary. All relevant data types are defined to be 304 of correct size (for example, off_t has a typedef definition 305 for a 64-bit entity). 306 307 An application compiled in this environment is able to use 308 the xxx() source interfaces to access both large and small 309 files, rather than having to explicitly utilize the transitional 310 xxx64() interface calls to access large files. 311 312Two exceptions are fseek() and ftell(). 32-bit applications should 313use fseeko(3C) and ftello(3C). These will get automatically mapped 314to fseeko64() and ftello64(). 315 316The large file compilation environment is obtained with 317 318 getconf LFS_CFLAGS -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 319 getconf LFS_LDFLAGS # nothing special needed 320 getconf LFS_LIBS # nothing special needed 321 322By default, perl uses the large file compilation environment and 323relies on Solaris to do the underlying mapping of interfaces. 324 325=head3 Building an LP64 Perl 326 327To compile a 64-bit application on an UltraSparc with a recent Sun Compiler, 328you need to use the flag "-xarch=v9". getconf(1) will tell you this, e.g. 329 330 fubar$ getconf -a | grep v9 331 XBS5_LP64_OFF64_CFLAGS: -xarch=v9 332 XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LDFLAGS: -xarch=v9 333 XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LINTFLAGS: -xarch=v9 334 XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_CFLAGS: -xarch=v9 335 XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LDFLAGS: -xarch=v9 336 XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LINTFLAGS: -xarch=v9 337 _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_CFLAGS: -xarch=v9 338 _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LDFLAGS: -xarch=v9 339 _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LINTFLAGS: -xarch=v9 340 _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_CFLAGS: -xarch=v9 341 _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LDFLAGS: -xarch=v9 342 _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LINTFLAGS: -xarch=v9 343 344This flag is supported in Sun WorkShop Compilers 5.0 and onwards 345(now marketed under the name Forte) when used on Solaris 7 or later on 346UltraSparc systems. 347 348If you are using gcc, you would need to use -mcpu=v9 -m64 instead. This 349option is not yet supported as of gcc 2.95.2; from install/SPECIFIC 350in that release: 351 352GCC version 2.95 is not able to compile code correctly for sparc64 353targets. Users of the Linux kernel, at least, can use the sparc32 354program to start up a new shell invocation with an environment that 355causes configure to recognize (via uname -a) the system as sparc-*-* 356instead. 357 358All this should be handled automatically by the hints file, if 359requested. 360 361If you do want to be able to allocate more than 4GB memory inside 362perl, then you should use the Solaris malloc, since the perl 363malloc breaks when dealing with more than 2GB of memory. You can do 364this with 365 366 sh Configure -Uusemymalloc 367 368Note that this will break binary compatibility with any version that 369was not compiled with -Uusemymalloc. 370 371=head3 Long Doubles. 372 373As of 5.6.0, long doubles are not working. 374 375=head2 Threads. 376 377It is possible to build a threaded version of perl on Solaris. The entire 378perl thread implementation is still experimental, however, so beware. 379Perl uses the sched_yield(3RT) function. In versions of Solaris up 380to 2.6, that function is in -lposix4. Starting with Solaris 7, it is 381in -lrt. The hints file should handle adding this automatically. 382 383=head2 Malloc Issues. 384 385You should not use perl's malloc if you are building with gcc. There 386are reports of core dumps, especially in the PDL module. The problem 387appears to go away under -DDEBUGGING, so it has been difficult to 388track down. Sun's compiler appears to be ok with or without perl's 389malloc. [XXX further investigation is needed here.] 390 391You should also not use perl's malloc if you are building perl as 392an LP64 application, since perl's malloc has trouble allocating more 393than 2GB of memory. 394 395You can avoid perl's malloc by Configuring with 396 397 sh Configure -Uusemymalloc 398 399See the note about binary compatibility above. This option will be 400enabled by default beginning with 5.7.1. 401 402=head1 MAKE PROBLEMS. 403 404=over 4 405 406=item Dynamic Loading Problems With GNU as and GNU ld 407 408If you have problems with dynamic loading using gcc on SunOS or 409Solaris, and you are using GNU as and GNU ld, see the section 410L<"GNU as and GNU ld"> above. 411 412=item ld.so.1: ./perl: fatal: relocation error: 413 414If you get this message on SunOS or Solaris, and you're using gcc, 415it's probably the GNU as or GNU ld problem in the previous item 416L<"GNU as and GNU ld">. 417 418=item dlopen: stub interception failed 419 420The primary cause of the 'dlopen: stub interception failed' message is 421that the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable includes a directory 422which is a symlink to /usr/lib (such as /lib). See 423L<"LD_LIBRARY_PATH"> above. 424 425=item #error "No DATAMODEL_NATIVE specified" 426 427This is a common error when trying to build perl on Solaris 2.6 with a 428gcc installation from Solaris 2.5 or 2.5.1. The Solaris header files 429changed, so you need to update your gcc installation. You can either 430rerun the fixincludes script from gcc or take the opportunity to 431update your gcc installation. 432 433=item sh: ar: not found 434 435This is a message from your shell telling you that the command 'ar' 436was not found. You need to check your PATH environment variable to 437make sure that it includes the directory with the 'ar' command. This 438is a common problem on Solaris, where 'ar' is in the /usr/ccs/bin/ 439directory. 440 441=back 442 443=head1 MAKE TEST 444 445=head2 op/stat.t test 4 446 447op/stat.t test 4 may fail if you are on a tmpfs of some sort. 448Building in /tmp sometimes shows this behavior. The 449test suite detects if you are building in /tmp, but it may not be able 450to catch all tmpfs situations. 451 452=head1 PREBUILT BINARIES. 453 454You can pick up prebuilt binaries for Solaris from 455L<http://www.sunfreeware.com/>, ActiveState L<http://www.activestate.com/>, 456and L<http://www.perl.com/> under the Binaries list at the top of the page. 457There are probably other sources as well. Please note that these sites 458are under the control of their respective owners, not the perl developers. 459 460=head1 RUNTIME ISSUES. 461 462=head2 Limits on Numbers of Open Files. 463 464The stdio(3C) manpage notes that only 255 files may be opened using 465fopen(), and only file descriptors 0 through 255 can be used in a 466stream. Since perl calls open() and then fdopen(3C) with the 467resulting file descriptor, perl is limited to 255 simultaneous open 468files. 469 470=head1 SOLARIS-SPECIFIC MODULES. 471 472See the modules under the Solaris:: namespace on CPAN, 473L<http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Solaris/>. 474 475=head1 SOLARIS-SPECIFIC PROBLEMS WITH MODULES. 476 477=head2 Proc::ProcessTable 478 479Proc::ProcessTable does not compile on Solaris with perl5.6.0 and higher 480if you have LARGEFILES defined. Since largefile support is the 481default in 5.6.0 and later, you have to take special steps to use this 482module. 483 484The problem is that various structures visible via procfs use off_t, 485and if you compile with largefile support these change from 32 bits to 48664 bits. Thus what you get back from procfs doesn't match up with 487the structures in perl, resulting in garbage. See proc(4) for further 488discussion. 489 490A fix for Proc::ProcessTable is to edit Makefile to 491explicitly remove the largefile flags from the ones MakeMaker picks up 492from Config.pm. This will result in Proc::ProcessTable being built 493under the correct environment. Everything should then be OK as long as 494Proc::ProcessTable doesn't try to share off_t's with the rest of perl, 495or if it does they should be explicitly specified as off64_t. 496 497=head2 BSD::Resource 498 499BSD::Resource versions earlier than 1.09 do not compile on Solaris 500with perl 5.6.0 and higher, for the same reasons as Proc::ProcessTable. 501BSD::Resource versions starting from 1.09 have a workaround for the problem. 502 503=head2 Net::SSLeay 504 505Net::SSLeay requires a /dev/urandom to be present. This device is not 506part of Solaris. You can either get the package SUNWski (packaged with 507several Sun software products, for example the Sun WebServer, which is 508part of the Solaris Server Intranet Extension, or the Sun Directory 509Services, part of Solaris for ISPs) or download the ANDIrand package 510from L<http://www.cosy.sbg.ac.at/~andi/>. If you use SUNWski, make a 511symbolic link /dev/urandom pointing to /dev/random. 512 513It may be possible to use the Entropy Gathering Daemon (written in 514Perl!), available from L<http://www.lothar.com/tech/crypto/>. 515 516=head1 AUTHOR 517 518The original was written by Andy Dougherty F<doughera@lafayette.edu> 519drawing heavily on advice from Alan Burlison, Nick Ing-Simmons, Tim Bunce, 520and many other Solaris users over the years. 521 522Please report any errors, updates, or suggestions to F<perlbug@perl.org>. 523 524=head1 LAST MODIFIED 525 526$Id: README.solaris,v 1.4 2000/11/11 20:29:58 doughera Exp $ 527