| 1 | If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you | 
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| 2 | see.  It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is | 
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| 3 | specifically designed to be readable as is. | 
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| 4 |  | 
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| 5 | =head1 NAME | 
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| 6 |  | 
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| 7 | README.solaris - Perl version 5 on Solaris systems | 
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| 8 |  | 
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| 9 | =head1 DESCRIPTION | 
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| 10 |  | 
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| 11 | This document describes various features of Sun's Solaris operating system | 
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| 12 | that will affect how Perl version 5 (hereafter just perl) is | 
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| 13 | compiled and/or runs.  Some issues relating to the older SunOS 4.x are | 
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| 14 | also discussed, though they may be out of date. | 
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| 15 |  | 
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| 16 | For the most part, everything should just work. | 
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| 17 |  | 
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| 18 | Starting with Solaris 8, perl5.00503 (or higher) is supplied with the | 
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| 19 | operating system, so you might not even need to build a newer version | 
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| 20 | of perl at all.  The Sun-supplied version is installed in /usr/perl5 | 
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| 21 | with /usr/bin/perl pointing to /usr/perl5/bin/perl.  Do not disturb | 
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| 22 | that installation unless you really know what you are doing.  If you | 
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| 23 | remove the perl supplied with the OS, you will render some bits of | 
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| 24 | your system inoperable.  If you wish to install a newer version of perl, | 
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| 25 | install it under a different prefix from /usr/perl5.  Common prefixes | 
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| 26 | to use are /usr/local and /opt/perl. | 
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| 27 |  | 
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| 28 | You may wish to put your version of perl in the PATH of all users by | 
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| 29 | changing the link /usr/bin/perl.  This is probably OK, as most perl | 
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| 30 | scripts shipped with Solaris use an explicit path.  (There are a few | 
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| 31 | exceptions, such as /usr/bin/rpm2cpio and /etc/rcm/scripts/README, but | 
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| 32 | these are also sufficiently generic that the actual version of perl | 
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| 33 | probably doesn't matter too much.) | 
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| 34 |  | 
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| 35 | Solaris ships with a range of Solaris-specific modules.  If you choose | 
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| 36 | to install your own version of perl you will find the source of many of | 
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| 37 | these modules is available on CPAN under the Sun::Solaris:: namespace. | 
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| 38 |  | 
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| 39 | Solaris may include two versions of perl, e.g. Solaris 9 includes | 
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| 40 | both 5.005_03 and 5.6.1.  This is to provide stability across Solaris | 
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| 41 | releases, in cases where a later perl version has incompatibilities | 
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| 42 | with the version included in the preceeding Solaris release.  The | 
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| 43 | default perl version will always be the most recent, and in general | 
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| 44 | the old version will only be retained for one Solaris release.  Note | 
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| 45 | also that the default perl will NOT be configured to search for modules | 
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| 46 | in the older version, again due to compatibility/stability concerns. | 
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| 47 | As a consequence if you upgrade Solaris, you will have to | 
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| 48 | rebuild/reinstall any additional CPAN modules that you installed for | 
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| 49 | the previous Solaris version.  See the CPAN manpage under 'autobundle' | 
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| 50 | for a quick way of doing this. | 
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| 51 |  | 
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| 52 | As an interim measure, you may either change the #! line of your | 
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| 53 | scripts to specifically refer to the old perl version, e.g. on | 
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| 54 | Solaris 9 use #!/usr/perl5/5.00503/bin/perl to use the perl version | 
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| 55 | that was the default for Solaris 8, or if you have a large number of | 
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| 56 | scripts it may be more convenient to make the old version of perl the | 
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| 57 | default on your system.  You can do this by changing the appropriate | 
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| 58 | symlinks under /usr/perl5 as follows (example for Solaris 9): | 
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| 59 |  | 
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| 60 | # cd /usr/perl5 | 
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| 61 | # rm bin man pod | 
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| 62 | # ln -s ./5.00503/bin | 
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| 63 | # ln -s ./5.00503/man | 
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| 64 | # ln -s ./5.00503/lib/pod | 
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| 65 | # rm /usr/bin/perl | 
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| 66 | # ln -s ../perl5/5.00503/bin/perl /usr/bin/perl | 
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| 67 |  | 
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| 68 | In both cases this should only be considered to be a temporary | 
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| 69 | measure - you should upgrade to the later version of perl as soon as | 
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| 70 | is practicable. | 
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| 71 |  | 
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| 72 | Note also that the perl command-line utilities (e.g. perldoc) and any | 
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| 73 | that are added by modules that you install will be under | 
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| 74 | /usr/perl5/bin, so that directory should be added to your PATH. | 
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| 75 |  | 
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| 76 | =head2 Solaris Version Numbers. | 
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| 77 |  | 
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| 78 | For consistency with common usage, perl's Configure script performs | 
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| 79 | some minor manipulations on the operating system name and version | 
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| 80 | number as reported by uname.  Here's a partial translation table: | 
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| 81 |  | 
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| 82 | Sun:                      perl's Configure: | 
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| 83 | uname    uname -r   Name           osname     osvers | 
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| 84 | SunOS    4.1.3     Solaris 1.1     sunos      4.1.3 | 
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| 85 | SunOS    5.6       Solaris 2.6     solaris    2.6 | 
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| 86 | SunOS    5.8       Solaris 8       solaris    2.8 | 
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| 87 | SunOS    5.9       Solaris 9       solaris    2.9 | 
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| 88 | SunOS    5.10      Solaris 10      solaris    2.10 | 
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| 89 |  | 
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| 90 | The complete table can be found in the Sun Managers' FAQ | 
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| 91 | L<ftp://ftp.cs.toronto.edu/pub/jdd/sunmanagers/faq> under | 
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| 92 | "9.1) Which Sun models run which versions of SunOS?". | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 | =head1 RESOURCES | 
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| 95 |  | 
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| 96 | There are many, many sources for Solaris information.  A few of the | 
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| 97 | important ones for perl: | 
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| 98 |  | 
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| 99 | =over 4 | 
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| 100 |  | 
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| 101 | =item Solaris FAQ | 
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| 102 |  | 
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| 103 | The Solaris FAQ is available at | 
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| 104 | L<http://www.science.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2.html>. | 
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| 105 |  | 
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| 106 | The Sun Managers' FAQ is available at | 
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| 107 | L<ftp://ftp.cs.toronto.edu/pub/jdd/sunmanagers/faq> | 
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| 108 |  | 
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| 109 | =item Precompiled Binaries | 
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| 110 |  | 
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| 111 | Precompiled binaries, links to many sites, and much, much more are | 
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| 112 | available at L<http://www.sunfreeware.com/> and | 
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| 113 | L<http://www.blastwave.org/>. | 
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| 114 |  | 
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| 115 | =item Solaris Documentation | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | All Solaris documentation is available on-line at L<http://docs.sun.com/>. | 
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| 118 |  | 
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| 119 | =back | 
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| 120 |  | 
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| 121 | =head1 SETTING UP | 
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| 122 |  | 
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| 123 | =head2 File Extraction Problems on Solaris. | 
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| 124 |  | 
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| 125 | Be sure to use a tar program compiled under Solaris (not SunOS 4.x) | 
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| 126 | to extract the perl-5.x.x.tar.gz file.  Do not use GNU tar compiled | 
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| 127 | for SunOS4 on Solaris.  (GNU tar compiled for Solaris should be fine.) | 
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| 128 | When you run SunOS4 binaries on Solaris, the run-time system magically | 
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| 129 | alters pathnames matching m#lib/locale# so that when tar tries to create | 
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| 130 | lib/locale.pm, a file named lib/oldlocale.pm gets created instead. | 
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| 131 | If you found this advice too late and used a SunOS4-compiled tar | 
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| 132 | anyway, you must find the incorrectly renamed file and move it back | 
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| 133 | to lib/locale.pm. | 
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| 134 |  | 
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| 135 | =head2 Compiler and Related Tools on Solaris. | 
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| 136 |  | 
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| 137 | You must use an ANSI C compiler to build perl.  Perl can be compiled | 
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| 138 | with either Sun's add-on C compiler or with gcc.  The C compiler that | 
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| 139 | shipped with SunOS4 will not do. | 
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| 140 |  | 
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| 141 | =head3 Include /usr/ccs/bin/ in your PATH. | 
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| 142 |  | 
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| 143 | Several tools needed to build perl are located in /usr/ccs/bin/:  ar, | 
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| 144 | as, ld, and make.  Make sure that /usr/ccs/bin/ is in your PATH. | 
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| 145 |  | 
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| 146 | You need to make sure the following packages are installed | 
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| 147 | (this info is extracted from the Solaris FAQ): | 
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| 148 |  | 
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| 149 | for tools (sccs, lex, yacc, make, nm, truss, ld, as): SUNWbtool, | 
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| 150 | SUNWsprot, SUNWtoo | 
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| 151 |  | 
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| 152 | for libraries & headers: SUNWhea, SUNWarc, SUNWlibm, SUNWlibms, SUNWdfbh, | 
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| 153 | SUNWcg6h, SUNWxwinc, SUNWolinc | 
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| 154 |  | 
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| 155 | for 64 bit development: SUNWarcx, SUNWbtoox, SUNWdplx, SUNWscpux, | 
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| 156 | SUNWsprox, SUNWtoox, SUNWlmsx, SUNWlmx, SUNWlibCx | 
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| 157 |  | 
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| 158 | If you are in doubt which package contains a file you are missing, | 
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| 159 | try to find an installation that has that file. Then do a | 
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| 160 |  | 
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| 161 | $ grep /my/missing/file /var/sadm/install/contents | 
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| 162 |  | 
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| 163 | This will display a line like this: | 
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| 164 |  | 
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| 165 | /usr/include/sys/errno.h f none 0644 root bin 7471 37605 956241356 SUNWhea | 
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| 166 |  | 
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| 167 | The last item listed (SUNWhea in this example) is the package you need. | 
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| 168 |  | 
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| 169 | =head3 Avoid /usr/ucb/cc. | 
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| 170 |  | 
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| 171 | You don't need to have /usr/ucb/ in your PATH to build perl.  If you | 
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| 172 | want /usr/ucb/ in your PATH anyway, make sure that /usr/ucb/ is NOT | 
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| 173 | in your PATH before the directory containing the right C compiler. | 
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| 174 |  | 
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| 175 | =head3 Sun's C Compiler | 
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| 176 |  | 
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| 177 | If you use Sun's C compiler, make sure the correct directory | 
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| 178 | (usually /opt/SUNWspro/bin/) is in your PATH (before /usr/ucb/). | 
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| 179 |  | 
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| 180 | =head3 GCC | 
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| 181 |  | 
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| 182 | If you use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and complete. | 
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| 183 | perl versions since 5.6.0 build fine with gcc > 2.8.1 on Solaris >= | 
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| 184 | 2.6. | 
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| 185 |  | 
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| 186 | You must Configure perl with | 
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| 187 |  | 
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| 188 | $ sh Configure -Dcc=gcc | 
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| 189 |  | 
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| 190 | If you don't, you may experience strange build errors. | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 | If you have updated your Solaris version, you may also have to update | 
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| 193 | your gcc.  For example, if you are running Solaris 2.6 and your gcc is | 
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| 194 | installed under /usr/local, check in /usr/local/lib/gcc-lib and make | 
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| 195 | sure you have the appropriate directory, sparc-sun-solaris2.6/ or | 
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| 196 | i386-pc-solaris2.6/.  If gcc's directory is for a different version of | 
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| 197 | Solaris than you are running, then you will need to rebuild gcc for | 
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| 198 | your new version of Solaris. | 
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| 199 |  | 
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| 200 | You can get a precompiled version of gcc from | 
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| 201 | L<http://www.sunfreeware.com/> or L<http://www.blastwave.org/>. Make | 
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| 202 | sure you pick up the package for your Solaris release. | 
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| 203 |  | 
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| 204 | If you wish to use gcc to build add-on modules for use with the perl | 
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| 205 | shipped with Solaris, you should use the Solaris::PerlGcc module | 
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| 206 | which is available from CPAN.  The perl shipped with Solaris | 
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| 207 | is configured and built with the Sun compilers, and the compiler | 
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| 208 | configuration information stored in Config.pm is therefore only | 
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| 209 | relevant to the Sun compilers.  The Solaris:PerlGcc module contains a | 
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| 210 | replacement Config.pm that is correct for gcc - see the module for | 
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| 211 | details. | 
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| 212 |  | 
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| 213 | =head3 GNU as and GNU ld | 
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| 214 |  | 
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| 215 | The following information applies to gcc version 2.  Volunteers to | 
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| 216 | update it as appropropriate for gcc version 3 would be appreciated. | 
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| 217 |  | 
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| 218 | The versions of as and ld supplied with Solaris work fine for building | 
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| 219 | perl.  There is normally no need to install the GNU versions to | 
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| 220 | compile perl. | 
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| 221 |  | 
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| 222 | If you decide to ignore this advice and use the GNU versions anyway, | 
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| 223 | then be sure that they are relatively recent.  Versions newer than 2.7 | 
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| 224 | are apparently new enough.  Older versions may have trouble with | 
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| 225 | dynamic loading. | 
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| 226 |  | 
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| 227 | If you wish to use GNU ld, then you need to pass it the -Wl,-E flag. | 
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| 228 | The hints/solaris_2.sh file tries to do this automatically by setting | 
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| 229 | the following Configure variables: | 
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| 230 |  | 
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| 231 | ccdlflags="$ccdlflags -Wl,-E" | 
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| 232 | lddlflags="$lddlflags -Wl,-E -G" | 
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| 233 |  | 
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| 234 | However, over the years, changes in gcc, GNU ld, and Solaris ld have made | 
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| 235 | it difficult to automatically detect which ld ultimately gets called. | 
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| 236 | You may have to manually edit config.sh and add the -Wl,-E flags | 
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| 237 | yourself, or else run Configure interactively and add the flags at the | 
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| 238 | appropriate prompts. | 
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| 239 |  | 
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| 240 | If your gcc is configured to use GNU as and ld but you want to use the | 
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| 241 | Solaris ones instead to build perl, then you'll need to add | 
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| 242 | -B/usr/ccs/bin/ to the gcc command line.  One convenient way to do | 
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| 243 | that is with | 
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| 244 |  | 
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| 245 | $ sh Configure -Dcc='gcc -B/usr/ccs/bin/' | 
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| 246 |  | 
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| 247 | Note that the trailing slash is required.  This will result in some | 
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| 248 | harmless warnings as Configure is run: | 
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| 249 |  | 
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| 250 | gcc: file path prefix `/usr/ccs/bin/' never used | 
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| 251 |  | 
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| 252 | These messages may safely be ignored. | 
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| 253 | (Note that for a SunOS4 system, you must use -B/bin/ instead.) | 
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| 254 |  | 
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| 255 | Alternatively, you can use the GCC_EXEC_PREFIX environment variable to | 
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| 256 | ensure that Sun's as and ld are used.  Consult your gcc documentation | 
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| 257 | for further information on the -B option and the GCC_EXEC_PREFIX variable. | 
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| 258 |  | 
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| 259 | =head3 Sun and GNU make | 
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| 260 |  | 
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| 261 | The make under /usr/ccs/bin works fine for building perl.  If you | 
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| 262 | have the Sun C compilers, you will also have a parallel version of | 
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| 263 | make (dmake).  This works fine to build perl, but can sometimes cause | 
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| 264 | problems when running 'make test' due to underspecified dependencies | 
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| 265 | between the different test harness files.  The same problem can also | 
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| 266 | affect the building of some add-on modules, so in those cases either | 
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| 267 | specify '-m serial' on the dmake command line, or use | 
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| 268 | /usr/ccs/bin/make instead.  If you wish to use GNU make, be sure that | 
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| 269 | the set-group-id bit is not set.  If it is, then arrange your PATH so | 
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| 270 | that /usr/ccs/bin/make is before GNU make or else have the system | 
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| 271 | administrator disable the set-group-id bit on GNU make. | 
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| 272 |  | 
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| 273 | =head3 Avoid libucb. | 
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| 274 |  | 
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| 275 | Solaris provides some BSD-compatibility functions in /usr/ucblib/libucb.a. | 
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| 276 | Perl will not build and run correctly if linked against -lucb since it | 
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| 277 | contains routines that are incompatible with the standard Solaris libc. | 
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| 278 | Normally this is not a problem since the solaris hints file prevents | 
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| 279 | Configure from even looking in /usr/ucblib for libraries, and also | 
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| 280 | explicitly omits -lucb. | 
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| 281 |  | 
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| 282 | =head2 Environment for Compiling perl on Solaris | 
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| 283 |  | 
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| 284 | =head3 PATH | 
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| 285 |  | 
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| 286 | Make sure your PATH includes the compiler (/opt/SUNWspro/bin/ if you're | 
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| 287 | using Sun's compiler) as well as /usr/ccs/bin/ to pick up the other | 
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| 288 | development tools (such as make, ar, as, and ld).  Make sure your path | 
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| 289 | either doesn't include /usr/ucb or that it includes it after the | 
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| 290 | compiler and compiler tools and other standard Solaris directories. | 
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| 291 | You definitely don't want /usr/ucb/cc. | 
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| 292 |  | 
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| 293 | =head3 LD_LIBRARY_PATH | 
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| 294 |  | 
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| 295 | If you have the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable set, be sure that | 
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| 296 | it does NOT include /lib or /usr/lib.  If you will be building | 
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| 297 | extensions that call third-party shared libraries (e.g. Berkeley DB) | 
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| 298 | then make sure that your LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable includes | 
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| 299 | the directory with that library (e.g. /usr/local/lib). | 
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| 300 |  | 
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| 301 | If you get an error message | 
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| 302 |  | 
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| 303 | dlopen: stub interception failed | 
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| 304 |  | 
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| 305 | it is probably because your LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable | 
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| 306 | includes a directory which is a symlink to /usr/lib (such as /lib). | 
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| 307 | The reason this causes a problem is quite subtle.  The file | 
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| 308 | libdl.so.1.0 actually *only* contains functions which generate 'stub | 
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| 309 | interception failed' errors!  The runtime linker intercepts links to | 
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| 310 | "/usr/lib/libdl.so.1.0" and links in internal implementations of those | 
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| 311 | functions instead.  [Thanks to Tim Bunce for this explanation.] | 
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| 312 |  | 
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| 313 | =head1 RUN CONFIGURE. | 
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| 314 |  | 
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| 315 | See the INSTALL file for general information regarding Configure. | 
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| 316 | Only Solaris-specific issues are discussed here.  Usually, the | 
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| 317 | defaults should be fine. | 
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| 318 |  | 
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| 319 | =head2 64-bit perl on Solaris. | 
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| 320 |  | 
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| 321 | See the INSTALL file for general information regarding 64-bit compiles. | 
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| 322 | In general, the defaults should be fine for most people. | 
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| 323 |  | 
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| 324 | By default, perl-5.6.0 (or later) is compiled as a 32-bit application | 
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| 325 | with largefile and long-long support. | 
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| 326 |  | 
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| 327 | =head3 General 32-bit vs. 64-bit issues. | 
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| 328 |  | 
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| 329 | Solaris 7 and above will run in either 32 bit or 64 bit mode on SPARC | 
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| 330 | CPUs, via a reboot. You can build 64 bit apps whilst running 32 bit | 
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| 331 | mode and vice-versa. 32 bit apps will run under Solaris running in | 
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| 332 | either 32 or 64 bit mode.  64 bit apps require Solaris to be running | 
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| 333 | 64 bit mode. | 
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| 334 |  | 
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| 335 | Existing 32 bit apps are properly known as LP32, i.e. Longs and | 
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| 336 | Pointers are 32 bit.  64-bit apps are more properly known as LP64. | 
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| 337 | The discriminating feature of a LP64 bit app is its ability to utilise a | 
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| 338 | 64-bit address space.  It is perfectly possible to have a LP32 bit app | 
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| 339 | that supports both 64-bit integers (long long) and largefiles (> 2GB), | 
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| 340 | and this is the default for perl-5.6.0. | 
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| 341 |  | 
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| 342 | For a more complete explanation of 64-bit issues, see the | 
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| 343 | "Solaris 64-bit Developer's Guide" at L<http://docs.sun.com/> | 
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| 344 |  | 
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| 345 | You can detect the OS mode using "isainfo -v", e.g. | 
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| 346 |  | 
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| 347 | $ isainfo -v   # Ultra 30 in 64 bit mode | 
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| 348 | 64-bit sparcv9 applications | 
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| 349 | 32-bit sparc applications | 
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| 350 |  | 
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| 351 | By default, perl will be compiled as a 32-bit application.  Unless | 
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| 352 | you want to allocate more than ~ 4GB of memory inside perl, or unless | 
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| 353 | you need more than 255 open file descriptors, you probably don't need | 
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| 354 | perl to be a 64-bit app. | 
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| 355 |  | 
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| 356 | =head3 Large File Support | 
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| 357 |  | 
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| 358 | For Solaris 2.6 and onwards, there are two different ways for 32-bit | 
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| 359 | applications to manipulate large files (files whose size is > 2GByte). | 
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| 360 | (A 64-bit application automatically has largefile support built in | 
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| 361 | by default.) | 
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| 362 |  | 
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| 363 | First is the "transitional compilation environment", described in | 
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| 364 | lfcompile64(5).  According to the man page, | 
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| 365 |  | 
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| 366 | The transitional compilation  environment  exports  all  the | 
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| 367 | explicit 64-bit functions (xxx64()) and types in addition to | 
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| 368 | all the regular functions (xxx()) and types. Both xxx()  and | 
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| 369 | xxx64()  functions  are  available to the program source.  A | 
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| 370 | 32-bit application must use the xxx64() functions in  order | 
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| 371 | to  access  large  files.  See the lf64(5) manual page for a | 
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| 372 | complete listing of the 64-bit transitional interfaces. | 
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| 373 |  | 
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| 374 | The transitional compilation environment is obtained with the | 
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| 375 | following compiler and linker flags: | 
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| 376 |  | 
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| 377 | getconf LFS64_CFLAGS        -D_LARGEFILE64_SOURCE | 
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| 378 | getconf LFS64_LDFLAG        # nothing special needed | 
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| 379 | getconf LFS64_LIBS          # nothing special needed | 
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| 380 |  | 
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| 381 | Second is the "large file compilation environment", described in | 
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| 382 | lfcompile(5).  According to the man page, | 
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| 383 |  | 
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| 384 | Each interface named xxx() that needs to access 64-bit entities | 
|---|
| 385 | to  access  large  files maps to a xxx64() call in the | 
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| 386 | resulting binary. All relevant data types are defined to  be | 
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| 387 | of correct size (for example, off_t has a typedef definition | 
|---|
| 388 | for a 64-bit entity). | 
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| 389 |  | 
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| 390 | An application compiled in this environment is able  to  use | 
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| 391 | the  xxx()  source interfaces to access both large and small | 
|---|
| 392 | files, rather than having to explicitly utilize the  transitional | 
|---|
| 393 | xxx64()  interface  calls to access large files. | 
|---|
| 394 |  | 
|---|
| 395 | Two exceptions are fseek() and ftell().  32-bit applications should | 
|---|
| 396 | use fseeko(3C) and ftello(3C).  These will get automatically mapped | 
|---|
| 397 | to fseeko64() and ftello64(). | 
|---|
| 398 |  | 
|---|
| 399 | The large file compilation environment is obtained with | 
|---|
| 400 |  | 
|---|
| 401 | getconf LFS_CFLAGS      -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 | 
|---|
| 402 | getconf LFS_LDFLAGS     # nothing special needed | 
|---|
| 403 | getconf LFS_LIBS        # nothing special needed | 
|---|
| 404 |  | 
|---|
| 405 | By default, perl uses the large file compilation environment and | 
|---|
| 406 | relies on Solaris to do the underlying mapping of interfaces. | 
|---|
| 407 |  | 
|---|
| 408 | =head3 Building an LP64 perl | 
|---|
| 409 |  | 
|---|
| 410 | To compile a 64-bit application on an UltraSparc with a recent Sun Compiler, | 
|---|
| 411 | you need to use the flag "-xarch=v9".  getconf(1) will tell you this, e.g. | 
|---|
| 412 |  | 
|---|
| 413 | $ getconf -a | grep v9 | 
|---|
| 414 | XBS5_LP64_OFF64_CFLAGS:         -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 415 | XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LDFLAGS:        -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 416 | XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LINTFLAGS:      -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 417 | XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_CFLAGS:       -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 418 | XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LDFLAGS:      -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 419 | XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LINTFLAGS:    -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 420 | _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_CFLAGS:        -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 421 | _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LDFLAGS:       -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 422 | _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LINTFLAGS:     -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 423 | _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_CFLAGS:      -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 424 | _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LDFLAGS:     -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 425 | _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LINTFLAGS:   -xarch=v9 | 
|---|
| 426 |  | 
|---|
| 427 | This flag is supported in Sun WorkShop Compilers 5.0 and onwards | 
|---|
| 428 | (now marketed under the name Forte) when used on Solaris 7 or later on | 
|---|
| 429 | UltraSparc systems. | 
|---|
| 430 |  | 
|---|
| 431 | If you are using gcc, you would need to use -mcpu=v9 -m64 instead.  This | 
|---|
| 432 | option is not yet supported as of gcc 2.95.2; from install/SPECIFIC | 
|---|
| 433 | in that release: | 
|---|
| 434 |  | 
|---|
| 435 | GCC version 2.95 is not able to compile code correctly for sparc64 | 
|---|
| 436 | targets. Users of the Linux kernel, at least, can use the sparc32 | 
|---|
| 437 | program to start up a new shell invocation with an environment that | 
|---|
| 438 | causes configure to recognize (via uname -a) the system as sparc-*-* | 
|---|
| 439 | instead. | 
|---|
| 440 |  | 
|---|
| 441 | All this should be handled automatically by the hints file, if | 
|---|
| 442 | requested. | 
|---|
| 443 |  | 
|---|
| 444 | =head3 Long Doubles. | 
|---|
| 445 |  | 
|---|
| 446 | As of 5.8.1, long doubles are working if you use the Sun compilers | 
|---|
| 447 | (needed for additional math routines not included in libm). | 
|---|
| 448 |  | 
|---|
| 449 | =head2 Threads in perl on Solaris. | 
|---|
| 450 |  | 
|---|
| 451 | It is possible to build a threaded version of perl on Solaris.  The entire | 
|---|
| 452 | perl thread implementation is still experimental, however, so beware. | 
|---|
| 453 |  | 
|---|
| 454 | =head2 Malloc Issues with perl on Solaris. | 
|---|
| 455 |  | 
|---|
| 456 | Starting from perl 5.7.1 perl uses the Solaris malloc, since the perl | 
|---|
| 457 | malloc breaks when dealing with more than 2GB of memory, and the Solaris | 
|---|
| 458 | malloc also seems to be faster. | 
|---|
| 459 |  | 
|---|
| 460 | If you for some reason (such as binary backward compatibility) really | 
|---|
| 461 | need to use perl's malloc, you can rebuild perl from the sources | 
|---|
| 462 | and Configure the build with | 
|---|
| 463 |  | 
|---|
| 464 | $ sh Configure -Dusemymalloc | 
|---|
| 465 |  | 
|---|
| 466 | You should not use perl's malloc if you are building with gcc.  There | 
|---|
| 467 | are reports of core dumps, especially in the PDL module.  The problem | 
|---|
| 468 | appears to go away under -DDEBUGGING, so it has been difficult to | 
|---|
| 469 | track down.  Sun's compiler appears to be okay with or without perl's | 
|---|
| 470 | malloc. [XXX further investigation is needed here.] | 
|---|
| 471 |  | 
|---|
| 472 | =head1 MAKE PROBLEMS. | 
|---|
| 473 |  | 
|---|
| 474 | =over 4 | 
|---|
| 475 |  | 
|---|
| 476 | =item Dynamic Loading Problems With GNU as and GNU ld | 
|---|
| 477 |  | 
|---|
| 478 | If you have problems with dynamic loading using gcc on SunOS or | 
|---|
| 479 | Solaris, and you are using GNU as and GNU ld, see the section | 
|---|
| 480 | L<"GNU as and GNU ld"> above. | 
|---|
| 481 |  | 
|---|
| 482 | =item ld.so.1: ./perl: fatal: relocation error: | 
|---|
| 483 |  | 
|---|
| 484 | If you get this message on SunOS or Solaris, and you're using gcc, | 
|---|
| 485 | it's probably the GNU as or GNU ld problem in the previous item | 
|---|
| 486 | L<"GNU as and GNU ld">. | 
|---|
| 487 |  | 
|---|
| 488 | =item dlopen: stub interception failed | 
|---|
| 489 |  | 
|---|
| 490 | The primary cause of the 'dlopen: stub interception failed' message is | 
|---|
| 491 | that the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable includes a directory | 
|---|
| 492 | which is a symlink to /usr/lib (such as /lib).  See | 
|---|
| 493 | L<"LD_LIBRARY_PATH"> above. | 
|---|
| 494 |  | 
|---|
| 495 | =item #error "No DATAMODEL_NATIVE specified" | 
|---|
| 496 |  | 
|---|
| 497 | This is a common error when trying to build perl on Solaris 2.6 with a | 
|---|
| 498 | gcc installation from Solaris 2.5 or 2.5.1.  The Solaris header files | 
|---|
| 499 | changed, so you need to update your gcc installation.  You can either | 
|---|
| 500 | rerun the fixincludes script from gcc or take the opportunity to | 
|---|
| 501 | update your gcc installation. | 
|---|
| 502 |  | 
|---|
| 503 | =item sh: ar: not found | 
|---|
| 504 |  | 
|---|
| 505 | This is a message from your shell telling you that the command 'ar' | 
|---|
| 506 | was not found.  You need to check your PATH environment variable to | 
|---|
| 507 | make sure that it includes the directory with the 'ar' command.  This | 
|---|
| 508 | is a common problem on Solaris, where 'ar' is in the /usr/ccs/bin/ | 
|---|
| 509 | directory. | 
|---|
| 510 |  | 
|---|
| 511 | =back | 
|---|
| 512 |  | 
|---|
| 513 | =head1 MAKE TEST | 
|---|
| 514 |  | 
|---|
| 515 | =head2 op/stat.t test 4 in Solaris | 
|---|
| 516 |  | 
|---|
| 517 | op/stat.t test 4 may fail if you are on a tmpfs of some sort. | 
|---|
| 518 | Building in /tmp sometimes shows this behavior.  The | 
|---|
| 519 | test suite detects if you are building in /tmp, but it may not be able | 
|---|
| 520 | to catch all tmpfs situations. | 
|---|
| 521 |  | 
|---|
| 522 | =head2 nss_delete core dump from op/pwent or op/grent | 
|---|
| 523 |  | 
|---|
| 524 | See L<perlhpux/"nss_delete core dump from op/pwent or op/grent">. | 
|---|
| 525 |  | 
|---|
| 526 | =head1 PREBUILT BINARIES OF PERL FOR SOLARIS. | 
|---|
| 527 |  | 
|---|
| 528 | You can pick up prebuilt binaries for Solaris from | 
|---|
| 529 | L<http://www.sunfreeware.com/>, L<http://www.blastwave.org>, | 
|---|
| 530 | ActiveState L<http://www.activestate.com/>, and | 
|---|
| 531 | L<http://www.perl.com/> under the Binaries list at the top of the | 
|---|
| 532 | page.  There are probably other sources as well.  Please note that | 
|---|
| 533 | these sites are under the control of their respective owners, not the | 
|---|
| 534 | perl developers. | 
|---|
| 535 |  | 
|---|
| 536 | =head1 RUNTIME ISSUES FOR PERL ON SOLARIS. | 
|---|
| 537 |  | 
|---|
| 538 | =head2 Limits on Numbers of Open Files on Solaris. | 
|---|
| 539 |  | 
|---|
| 540 | The stdio(3C) manpage notes that for LP32 applications, only 255 | 
|---|
| 541 | files may be opened using fopen(), and only file descriptors 0 | 
|---|
| 542 | through 255 can be used in a stream.  Since perl calls open() and | 
|---|
| 543 | then fdopen(3C) with the resulting file descriptor, perl is limited | 
|---|
| 544 | to 255 simultaneous open files, even if sysopen() is used.  If this | 
|---|
| 545 | proves to be an insurmountable problem, you can compile perl as a | 
|---|
| 546 | LP64 application, see L<Building an LP64 perl> for details.  Note | 
|---|
| 547 | also that the default resource limit for open file descriptors on | 
|---|
| 548 | Solaris is 255, so you will have to modify your ulimit or rctl | 
|---|
| 549 | (Solaris 9 onwards) appropriately. | 
|---|
| 550 |  | 
|---|
| 551 | =head1 SOLARIS-SPECIFIC MODULES. | 
|---|
| 552 |  | 
|---|
| 553 | See the modules under the Solaris:: and Sun::Solaris namespaces on CPAN, | 
|---|
| 554 | see L<http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Solaris/> and | 
|---|
| 555 | L<http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Sun/>. | 
|---|
| 556 |  | 
|---|
| 557 | =head1 SOLARIS-SPECIFIC PROBLEMS WITH MODULES. | 
|---|
| 558 |  | 
|---|
| 559 | =head2 Proc::ProcessTable on Solaris | 
|---|
| 560 |  | 
|---|
| 561 | Proc::ProcessTable does not compile on Solaris with perl5.6.0 and higher | 
|---|
| 562 | if you have LARGEFILES defined.  Since largefile support is the | 
|---|
| 563 | default in 5.6.0 and later, you have to take special steps to use this | 
|---|
| 564 | module. | 
|---|
| 565 |  | 
|---|
| 566 | The problem is that various structures visible via procfs use off_t, | 
|---|
| 567 | and if you compile with largefile support these change from 32 bits to | 
|---|
| 568 | 64 bits.  Thus what you get back from procfs doesn't match up with | 
|---|
| 569 | the structures in perl, resulting in garbage.  See proc(4) for further | 
|---|
| 570 | discussion. | 
|---|
| 571 |  | 
|---|
| 572 | A fix for Proc::ProcessTable is to edit Makefile to | 
|---|
| 573 | explicitly remove the largefile flags from the ones MakeMaker picks up | 
|---|
| 574 | from Config.pm.  This will result in Proc::ProcessTable being built | 
|---|
| 575 | under the correct environment.  Everything should then be OK as long as | 
|---|
| 576 | Proc::ProcessTable doesn't try to share off_t's with the rest of perl, | 
|---|
| 577 | or if it does they should be explicitly specified as off64_t. | 
|---|
| 578 |  | 
|---|
| 579 | =head2 BSD::Resource on Solaris | 
|---|
| 580 |  | 
|---|
| 581 | BSD::Resource versions earlier than 1.09 do not compile on Solaris | 
|---|
| 582 | with perl 5.6.0 and higher, for the same reasons as Proc::ProcessTable. | 
|---|
| 583 | BSD::Resource versions starting from 1.09 have a workaround for the problem. | 
|---|
| 584 |  | 
|---|
| 585 | =head2 Net::SSLeay on Solaris | 
|---|
| 586 |  | 
|---|
| 587 | Net::SSLeay requires a /dev/urandom to be present. This device is | 
|---|
| 588 | available from Solaris 9 onwards.  For earlier Solaris versions you | 
|---|
| 589 | can either get the package SUNWski (packaged with several Sun | 
|---|
| 590 | software products, for example the Sun WebServer, which is part of | 
|---|
| 591 | the Solaris Server Intranet Extension, or the Sun Directory Services, | 
|---|
| 592 | part of Solaris for ISPs) or download the ANDIrand package from | 
|---|
| 593 | L<http://www.cosy.sbg.ac.at/~andi/>. If you use SUNWski, make a | 
|---|
| 594 | symbolic link /dev/urandom pointing to /dev/random.  For more details, | 
|---|
| 595 | see Document ID27606 entitled "Differing /dev/random support requirements | 
|---|
| 596 | within Solaris[TM] Operating Environments", available at | 
|---|
| 597 | http://sunsolve.sun.com . | 
|---|
| 598 |  | 
|---|
| 599 | It may be possible to use the Entropy Gathering Daemon (written in | 
|---|
| 600 | Perl!), available from L<http://www.lothar.com/tech/crypto/>. | 
|---|
| 601 |  | 
|---|
| 602 | =head1 SunOS 4.x | 
|---|
| 603 |  | 
|---|
| 604 | In SunOS 4.x you most probably want to use the SunOS ld, /usr/bin/ld, | 
|---|
| 605 | since the more recent versions of GNU ld (like 2.13) do not seem to | 
|---|
| 606 | work for building Perl anymore.  When linking the extensions, the | 
|---|
| 607 | GNU ld gets very unhappy and spews a lot of errors like this | 
|---|
| 608 |  | 
|---|
| 609 | ... relocation truncated to fit: BASE13 ... | 
|---|
| 610 |  | 
|---|
| 611 | and dies.  Therefore the SunOS 4.1 hints file explicitly sets the | 
|---|
| 612 | ld to be /usr/bin/ld. | 
|---|
| 613 |  | 
|---|
| 614 | As of Perl 5.8.1 the dynamic loading of libraries (DynaLoader, XSLoader) | 
|---|
| 615 | also seems to have become broken in in SunOS 4.x.  Therefore the default | 
|---|
| 616 | is to build Perl statically. | 
|---|
| 617 |  | 
|---|
| 618 | Running the test suite in SunOS 4.1 is a bit tricky since the | 
|---|
| 619 | F<lib/Tie/File/t/09_gen_rs> test hangs (subtest #51, FWIW) for some | 
|---|
| 620 | unknown reason.  Just stop the test and kill that particular Perl | 
|---|
| 621 | process. | 
|---|
| 622 |  | 
|---|
| 623 | There are various other failures, that as of SunOS 4.1.4 and gcc 3.2.2 | 
|---|
| 624 | look a lot like gcc bugs.  Many of the failures happen in the Encode | 
|---|
| 625 | tests, where for example when the test expects "0" you get "0" | 
|---|
| 626 | which should after a little squinting look very odd indeed. | 
|---|
| 627 | Another example is earlier in F<t/run/fresh_perl> where chr(0xff) is | 
|---|
| 628 | expected but the test fails because the result is chr(0xff).  Exactly. | 
|---|
| 629 |  | 
|---|
| 630 | This is the "make test" result from the said combination: | 
|---|
| 631 |  | 
|---|
| 632 | Failed 27 test scripts out of 745, 96.38% okay. | 
|---|
| 633 |  | 
|---|
| 634 | Running the C<harness> is painful because of the many failing | 
|---|
| 635 | Unicode-related tests will output megabytes of failure messages, | 
|---|
| 636 | but if one patiently waits, one gets these results: | 
|---|
| 637 |  | 
|---|
| 638 | Failed Test                     Stat Wstat Total Fail  Failed  List of Failed | 
|---|
| 639 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
|---|
| 640 | ... | 
|---|
| 641 | ../ext/Encode/t/at-cn.t            4  1024    29    4  13.79%  14-17 | 
|---|
| 642 | ../ext/Encode/t/at-tw.t           10  2560    17   10  58.82%  2 4 6 8 10 12 | 
|---|
| 643 | 14-17 | 
|---|
| 644 | ../ext/Encode/t/enc_data.t        29  7424    ??   ??       %  ?? | 
|---|
| 645 | ../ext/Encode/t/enc_eucjp.t       29  7424    ??   ??       %  ?? | 
|---|
| 646 | ../ext/Encode/t/enc_module.t      29  7424    ??   ??       %  ?? | 
|---|
| 647 | ../ext/Encode/t/encoding.t        29  7424    ??   ??       %  ?? | 
|---|
| 648 | ../ext/Encode/t/grow.t            12  3072    24   12  50.00%  2 4 6 8 10 12 14 | 
|---|
| 649 | 16 18 20 22 24 | 
|---|
| 650 | Failed Test                     Stat Wstat Total Fail  Failed  List of Failed | 
|---|
| 651 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | 
|---|
| 652 | ../ext/Encode/t/guess.t          255 65280    29   40 137.93%  10-29 | 
|---|
| 653 | ../ext/Encode/t/jperl.t           29  7424    15   30 200.00%  1-15 | 
|---|
| 654 | ../ext/Encode/t/mime-header.t      2   512    10    2  20.00%  2-3 | 
|---|
| 655 | ../ext/Encode/t/perlio.t          22  5632    38   22  57.89%  1-4 9-16 19-20 | 
|---|
| 656 | 23-24 27-32 | 
|---|
| 657 | ../ext/List/Util/t/shuffle.t       0   139    ??   ??       %  ?? | 
|---|
| 658 | ../ext/PerlIO/t/encoding.t                    14    1   7.14%  11 | 
|---|
| 659 | ../ext/PerlIO/t/fallback.t                     9    2  22.22%  3 5 | 
|---|
| 660 | ../ext/Socket/t/socketpair.t       0     2    45   70 155.56%  11-45 | 
|---|
| 661 | ../lib/CPAN/t/vcmp.t                          30    1   3.33%  25 | 
|---|
| 662 | ../lib/Tie/File/t/09_gen_rs.t      0    15    ??   ??       %  ?? | 
|---|
| 663 | ../lib/Unicode/Collate/t/test.t              199   30  15.08%  7 26-27 71-75 | 
|---|
| 664 | 81-88 95 101 | 
|---|
| 665 | 103-104 106 108- | 
|---|
| 666 | 109 122 124 161 | 
|---|
| 667 | 169-172 | 
|---|
| 668 | ../lib/sort.t                      0   139   119   26  21.85%  107-119 | 
|---|
| 669 | op/alarm.t                                     4    1  25.00%  4 | 
|---|
| 670 | op/utfhash.t                                  97    1   1.03%  31 | 
|---|
| 671 | run/fresh_perl.t                              91    1   1.10%  32 | 
|---|
| 672 | uni/tr_7jis.t                                 ??   ??       %  ?? | 
|---|
| 673 | uni/tr_eucjp.t                    29  7424     6   12 200.00%  1-6 | 
|---|
| 674 | uni/tr_sjis.t                     29  7424     6   12 200.00%  1-6 | 
|---|
| 675 | 56 tests and 467 subtests skipped. | 
|---|
| 676 | Failed 27/811 test scripts, 96.67% okay. 1383/75399 subtests failed, 98.17% okay. | 
|---|
| 677 |  | 
|---|
| 678 | The alarm() test failure is caused by system() apparently blocking | 
|---|
| 679 | alarm().  That is probably a libc bug, and given that SunOS 4.x | 
|---|
| 680 | has been end-of-lifed years ago, don't hold your breath for a fix. | 
|---|
| 681 | In addition to that, don't try anything too Unicode-y, especially | 
|---|
| 682 | with Encode, and you should be fine in SunOS 4.x. | 
|---|
| 683 |  | 
|---|
| 684 | =head1 AUTHOR | 
|---|
| 685 |  | 
|---|
| 686 | The original was written by Andy Dougherty F<doughera@lafayette.edu> | 
|---|
| 687 | drawing heavily on advice from Alan Burlison, Nick Ing-Simmons, Tim Bunce, | 
|---|
| 688 | and many other Solaris users over the years. | 
|---|
| 689 |  | 
|---|
| 690 | Please report any errors, updates, or suggestions to F<perlbug@perl.org>. | 
|---|