1# vim: syntax=pod 2 3If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you see. 4It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is specially 5designed to be readable as is. 6 7=head1 NAME 8 9perltru64 - Perl version 5 on Tru64 (formerly known as Digital UNIX formerly known as DEC OSF/1) systems 10 11=head1 DESCRIPTION 12 13This document describes various features of HP's (formerly Compaq's, 14formerly Digital's) Unix operating system (Tru64) that will affect 15how Perl version 5 (hereafter just Perl) is configured, compiled 16and/or runs. 17 18=head2 Compiling Perl 5 on Tru64 19 20The recommended compiler to use in Tru64 is the native C compiler. 21The native compiler produces much faster code (the speed difference is 22noticeable: several dozen percentages) and also more correct code: if 23you are considering using the GNU C compiler you should use at the 24very least the release of 2.95.3 since all older gcc releases are 25known to produce broken code when compiling Perl. One manifestation 26of this brokenness is the lib/sdbm test dumping core; another is many 27of the op/regexp and op/pat, or ext/Storable tests dumping core 28(the exact pattern of failures depending on the GCC release and 29optimization flags). 30 31Both the native cc and gcc seem to consume lots of memory when 32building Perl. toke.c is a known trouble spot when optimizing: 33256 megabytes of data section seems to be enough. Another known 34trouble spot is the mktables script which builds the Unicode support 35tables. The default setting of the process data section in Tru64 36should be one gigabyte, but some sites/setups might have lowered that. 37The configuration process of Perl checks for too low process limits, 38and lowers the optimization for the toke.c if necessary, and also 39gives advice on how to raise the process limits 40(for example: C<ulimit -d 262144>) 41 42Also, Configure might abort with 43 44 Build a threading Perl? [n] 45 Configure[2437]: Syntax error at line 1 : 'config.sh' is not expected. 46 47This indicates that Configure is being run with a broken Korn shell 48(even though you think you are using a Bourne shell by using 49"sh Configure" or "./Configure"). The Korn shell bug has been reported 50to Compaq as of February 1999 but in the meanwhile, the reason ksh is 51being used is that you have the environment variable BIN_SH set to 52'xpg4'. This causes /bin/sh to delegate its duties to /bin/posix/sh 53(a ksh). Unset the environment variable and rerun Configure. 54 55=head2 Using Large Files with Perl on Tru64 56 57In Tru64 Perl is automatically able to use large files, that is, 58files larger than 2 gigabytes, there is no need to use the Configure 59-Duselargefiles option as described in INSTALL (though using the option 60is harmless). 61 62=head2 Threaded Perl on Tru64 63 64If you want to use threads, you should primarily use the Perl 655.8.0 threads model by running Configure with -Duseithreads. 66 67Perl threading is going to work only in Tru64 4.0 and newer releases, 68older operating releases like 3.2 aren't probably going to work 69properly with threads. 70 71In Tru64 V5 (at least V5.1A, V5.1B) you cannot build threaded Perl with gcc 72because the system header <pthread.h> explicitly checks for supported 73C compilers, gcc (at least 3.2.2) not being one of them. But the 74system C compiler should work just fine. 75 76=head2 Long Doubles on Tru64 77 78You cannot Configure Perl to use long doubles unless you have at least 79Tru64 V5.0, the long double support simply wasn't functional enough 80before that. Perl's Configure will override attempts to use the long 81doubles (you can notice this by Configure finding out that the modfl() 82function does not work as it should). 83 84At the time of this writing (June 2002), there is a known bug in the 85Tru64 libc printing of long doubles when not using "e" notation. 86The values are correct and usable, but you only get a limited number 87of digits displayed unless you force the issue by using C<printf 88"%.33e",$num> or the like. For Tru64 versions V5.0A through V5.1A, a 89patch is expected sometime after perl 5.8.0 is released. If your libc 90has not yet been patched, you'll get a warning from Configure when 91selecting long doubles. 92 93=head2 DB_File tests failing on Tru64 94 95The DB_File tests (db-btree.t, db-hash.t, db-recno.t) may fail you 96have installed a newer version of Berkeley DB into the system and the 97-I and -L compiler and linker flags introduce version conflicts with 98the DB 1.85 headers and libraries that came with the Tru64. For example, 99mixing a DB v2 library with the DB v1 headers is a bad idea. Watch 100out for Configure options -Dlocincpth and -Dloclibpth, and check your 101/usr/local/include and /usr/local/lib since they are included by default. 102 103The second option is to explicitly instruct Configure to detect the 104newer Berkeley DB installation, by supplying the right directories with 105C<-Dlocincpth=/some/include> and C<-Dloclibpth=/some/lib> B<and> before 106running "make test" setting your LD_LIBRARY_PATH to F</some/lib>. 107 108The third option is to work around the problem by disabling the 109DB_File completely when build Perl by specifying -Ui_db to Configure, 110and then using the BerkeleyDB module from CPAN instead of DB_File. 111The BerkeleyDB works with Berkeley DB versions 2.* or greater. 112 113The Berkeley DB 4.1.25 has been tested with Tru64 V5.1A and found 114to work. The latest Berkeley DB can be found from L<http://www.sleepycat.com>. 115 116=head2 64-bit Perl on Tru64 117 118In Tru64 Perl's integers are automatically 64-bit wide, there is 119no need to use the Configure -Duse64bitint option as described 120in INSTALL. Similarly, there is no need for -Duse64bitall 121since pointers are automatically 64-bit wide. 122 123=head2 Warnings about floating-point overflow when compiling Perl on Tru64 124 125When compiling Perl in Tru64 you may (depending on the compiler 126release) see two warnings like this 127 128 cc: Warning: numeric.c, line 104: In this statement, floating-point 129 overflow occurs in evaluating the expression "1.8e308". (floatoverfl) 130 return HUGE_VAL; 131 -----------^ 132 133and when compiling the POSIX extension 134 135 cc: Warning: const-c.inc, line 2007: In this statement, floating-point 136 overflow occurs in evaluating the expression "1.8e308". (floatoverfl) 137 return HUGE_VAL; 138 -------------------^ 139 140The exact line numbers may vary between Perl releases. The warnings 141are benign and can be ignored: in later C compiler releases the warnings 142should be gone. 143 144When the file F<pp_sys.c> is being compiled you may (depending on the 145operating system release) see an additional compiler flag being used: 146C<-DNO_EFF_ONLY_OK>. This is normal and refers to a feature that is 147relevant only if you use the C<filetest> pragma. In older releases of 148the operating system the feature was broken and the NO_EFF_ONLY_OK 149instructs Perl not to use the feature. 150 151=head1 Testing Perl on Tru64 152 153During "make test" the C<comp>/C<cpp> will be skipped because on Tru64 it 154cannot be tested before Perl has been installed. The test refers to 155the use of the C<-P> option of Perl. 156 157=head1 ext/ODBM_File/odbm Test Failing With Static Builds 158 159The ext/ODBM_File/odbm is known to fail with static builds 160(Configure -Uusedl) due to a known bug in Tru64's static libdbm 161library. The good news is that you very probably don't need to ever 162use the ODBM_File extension since more advanced NDBM_File works fine, 163not to mention the even more advanced DB_File. 164 165=head1 Perl Fails Because Of Unresolved Symbol sockatmark 166 167If you get an error like 168 169 Can't load '.../OSF1/lib/perl5/5.8.0/alpha-dec_osf/auto/IO/IO.so' for module IO: Unresolved symbol in .../lib/perl5/5.8.0/alpha-dec_osf/auto/IO/IO.so: sockatmark at .../lib/perl5/5.8.0/alpha-dec_osf/XSLoader.pm line 75. 170 171you need to either recompile your Perl in Tru64 4.0D or upgrade your 172Tru64 4.0D to at least 4.0F: the sockatmark() system call was 173added in Tru64 4.0F, and the IO extension refers that symbol. 174 175=head1 read_cur_obj_info: bad file magic number 176 177You may be mixing the Tru64 cc/ar/ld with the GNU gcc/ar/ld. 178That may work, but sometimes it doesn't (your gcc or GNU utils 179may have been compiled for an incompatible OS release). 180 181Try 'which ld' and 'which ld' (or try 'ar --version' and 'ld --version', 182which work only for the GNU tools, and will announce themselves to be such), 183and adjust your PATH so that you are consistently using either 184the native tools or the GNU tools. After fixing your PATH, you should 185do 'make distclean' and start all the way from running the Configure 186since you may have quite a confused situation. 187 188=head1 AUTHOR 189 190Jarkko Hietaniemi <jhi@iki.fi> 191 192=cut 193