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Perl 5.14.1 configure output on Fedora 14

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  1. Beginning of configuration questions for perl5.
  2.  
  3. Checking echo to see how to suppress newlines...
  4. ...using -n.
  5. The star should be here-->*
  6.  
  7. First let's make sure your kit is complete. Checking...
  8. Looks good...
  9.  
  10.  
  11. This installation shell script will examine your system and ask you questions
  12. to determine how the perl5 package should be installed. If you get
  13. stuck on a question, you may use a ! shell escape to start a subshell or
  14. execute a command. Many of the questions will have default answers in square
  15. brackets; typing carriage return will give you the default.
  16.  
  17. On some of the questions which ask for file or directory names you are allowed
  18. to use the ~name construct to specify the login directory belonging to "name",
  19. even if you don't have a shell which knows about that. Questions where this is
  20. allowed will be marked "(~name ok)".
  21.  
  22. [Type carriage return to continue]
  23.  
  24. The prompter used in this script allows you to use shell variables and
  25. backticks in your answers. You may use $1, $2, etc... to refer to the words
  26. in the default answer, as if the default line was a set of arguments given to a
  27. script shell. This means you may also use $* to repeat the whole default line,
  28. so you do not have to re-type everything to add something to the default.
  29.  
  30. Every time there is a substitution, you will have to confirm. If there is an
  31. error (e.g. an unmatched backtick), the default answer will remain unchanged
  32. and you will be prompted again.
  33.  
  34. If you are in a hurry, you may run 'Configure -d'. This will bypass nearly all
  35. the questions and use the computed defaults (or the previous answers if there
  36. was already a config.sh file). Type 'Configure -h' for a list of options.
  37. You may also start interactively and then answer '& -d' at any prompt to turn
  38. on the non-interactive behaviour for the remainder of the execution.
  39.  
  40. [Type carriage return to continue]
  41.  
  42. Much effort has been expended to ensure that this shell script will run on any
  43. Unix system. If despite that it blows up on yours, your best bet is to edit
  44. Configure and run it again. If you can't run Configure for some reason,
  45. you'll have to generate a config.sh file by hand. Whatever problems you
  46. have, let me (perlbug@perl.org) know how I blew it.
  47.  
  48. This installation script affects things in two ways:
  49.  
  50. 1) it may do direct variable substitutions on some of the files included
  51. in this kit.
  52. 2) it builds a config.h file for inclusion in C programs. You may edit
  53. any of these files as the need arises after running this script.
  54.  
  55. If you make a mistake on a question, there is no easy way to back up to it
  56. currently. The easiest thing to do is to edit config.sh and rerun all the SH
  57. files. Configure will offer to let you do this before it runs the SH files.
  58.  
  59. [Type carriage return to continue]
  60.  
  61. Locating common programs...
  62. awk is in /usr/bin/awk.
  63. cat is in /bin/cat.
  64. chmod is in /bin/chmod.
  65. comm is in /usr/bin/comm.
  66. cp is in /bin/cp.
  67. echo is in /bin/echo.
  68. expr is in /usr/bin/expr.
  69. grep is in /bin/grep.
  70. ls is in /bin/ls.
  71. mkdir is in /bin/mkdir.
  72. rm is in /bin/rm.
  73. sed is in /bin/sed.
  74. sort is in /bin/sort.
  75. touch is in /bin/touch.
  76. tr is in /usr/bin/tr.
  77. uniq is in /usr/bin/uniq.
  78.  
  79. Don't worry if any of the following aren't found...
  80. ar is in /usr/bin/ar.
  81. I don't see bison out there, offhand.
  82. I don't see byacc out there, either.
  83. cpp is in /usr/bin/cpp.
  84. I don't see csh out there, either.
  85. date is in /bin/date.
  86. egrep is in /bin/egrep.
  87. gmake is in /usr/bin/gmake.
  88. gzip is in /usr/bin/gzip.
  89. less is in /usr/bin/less.
  90. ln is in /bin/ln.
  91. make is in /usr/bin/make.
  92. more is in /bin/more.
  93. nm is in /usr/bin/nm.
  94. nroff is in /usr/bin/nroff.
  95. perl is in /home/mpeters/perl5/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.8.9/bin/perl.
  96. I don't see pg out there, either.
  97. test is in /usr/bin/test.
  98. uname is in /bin/uname.
  99. zip is in /usr/bin/zip.
  100. Substituting less -R for less.
  101. Using the test built into your sh.
  102.  
  103. Checking compatibility between /bin/echo and builtin echo (if any)...
  104. They are compatible. In fact, they may be identical.
  105. The following message is sponsored by
  106.  
  107. Dresden.pm<--The stars should be here.
  108.  
  109. Dear Perl user, system administrator or package
  110. maintainer, the Perl community sends greetings to
  111. you. Do you (emblematical) greet back [Y/n]? n
  112.  
  113.  
  114. Symbolic links are supported.
  115.  
  116. Checking how to test for symbolic links...
  117. You can test for symbolic links with 'test -h'.
  118.  
  119.  
  120. Good, your tr supports [:lower:] and [:upper:] to convert case.
  121. Using [:upper:] and [:lower:] to convert case.
  122.  
  123. First time through, eh? I have some defaults handy for some systems
  124. that need some extra help getting the Configure answers right:
  125.  
  126. 3b1 dragonfly irix_6_1 opus super-ux
  127. aix_3 dynixptx irix_6 os2 svr4
  128. aix_4 dynix isc_2 os390 svr5
  129. aix epix isc os400 ti1500
  130. altos486 esix4 linux posix-bc titanos
  131. amigaos fps lynxos powerux ultrix_4
  132. atheos freebsd midnightbsd qnx umips
  133. aux_3 genix mips rhapsody unicosmk
  134. beos gnukfreebsd mirbsd riscos unicos
  135. bsdos gnuknetbsd mpc sco_2_3_0 unisysdynix
  136. catamount gnu mpeix sco_2_3_1 utekv
  137. convexos greenhills ncr_tower sco_2_3_2 uts
  138. cxux haiku netbsd sco_2_3_3 uwin
  139. cygwin hpux newsos4 sco_2_3_4 vmesa
  140. darwin i386 next_3_0 sco vos
  141. dcosx interix next_3 solaris_2
  142. dec_osf irix_4 next_4 stellar
  143. dgux irix_5 nonstopux sunos_4_0
  144. dos_djgpp irix_6_0 openbsd sunos_4_1
  145.  
  146. You may give one or more space-separated answers, or "none" if appropriate.
  147. If you have a handcrafted Policy.sh file or a Policy.sh file generated by a
  148. previous run of Configure, you may specify it as well as or instead of
  149. OS-specific hints. If hints are provided for your OS, you should use them:
  150. although Perl can probably be built without hints on many platforms, using
  151. hints often improve performance and may enable features that Configure can't
  152. set up on its own. If there are no hints that match your OS, specify "none";
  153. DO NOT give a wrong version or a wrong OS.
  154.  
  155. Which of these apply, if any? [linux]
  156.  
  157. You appear to have ELF support. I'll try to use it for dynamic loading.
  158. If dynamic loading doesn't work, read hints/linux.sh for further information.
  159.  
  160. You appear to have a working bash. Good.
  161. nm: /usr/lib/libdb.so: no symbols
  162.  
  163. Configure uses the operating system name and version to set some defaults.
  164. The default value is probably right if the name rings a bell. Otherwise,
  165. since spelling matters for me, either accept the default or answer "none"
  166. to leave it blank.
  167.  
  168. Operating system name? [linux]
  169.  
  170. Operating system version? [2.6.35.13-92.fc14.i686]
  171.  
  172. By default, perl5 will be installed in /usr/local/bin, manual pages
  173. under /usr/local/man, etc..., i.e. with /usr/local as prefix for all
  174. installation directories. Typically this is something like /usr/local.
  175. If you wish to have binaries under /usr/bin but other parts of the
  176. installation under /usr/local, that's ok: you will be prompted
  177. separately for each of the installation directories, the prefix being
  178. only used to set the defaults.
  179.  
  180. Installation prefix to use? (~name ok) [/usr/local]
  181.  
  182. AFS does not seem to be running...
  183.  
  184. In some special cases, particularly when building perl5 for distribution,
  185. it is convenient to distinguish the directory in which files should be
  186. installed from the directory (/usr/local) in which they will
  187. eventually reside. For most users, these two directories are the same.
  188.  
  189. What installation prefix should I use for installing files? (~name ok)
  190. [/usr/local]
  191.  
  192. Perl can be built to use the SOCKS proxy protocol library. To do so,
  193. Configure must be run with -Dusesocks. If you use SOCKS you also need
  194. to use the PerlIO abstraction layer, this will be implicitly selected.
  195.  
  196. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  197. Build Perl for SOCKS? [n]
  198.  
  199. Previous version of perl5 used the standard IO mechanisms as
  200. defined in <stdio.h>. Versions 5.003_02 and later of perl5 allow
  201. alternate IO mechanisms via the PerlIO abstraction layer, but the
  202. stdio mechanism is still available if needed. The abstraction layer
  203. can use AT&T's sfio (if you already have sfio installed) or regular stdio.
  204. Using PerlIO with sfio may cause problems with some extension modules.
  205.  
  206. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'y'.
  207. Use the PerlIO abstraction layer? [y]
  208.  
  209. Getting the current patchlevel...
  210. (You have perl5 version 14 subversion 1.)
  211.  
  212. Perl can be built to take advantage of threads on some systems.
  213. To do so, Configure can be run with -Dusethreads.
  214.  
  215. Note that Perl built with threading support runs slightly slower
  216. and uses more memory than plain Perl. The current implementation
  217. is believed to be stable, but it is fairly new, and so should be
  218. treated with caution.
  219.  
  220. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  221. Build a threading Perl? [n]
  222. Your platform has some specific hints regarding threaded builds, using them...
  223.  
  224. Perl can be built so that multiple Perl interpreters can coexist
  225. within the same Perl executable.
  226.  
  227. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  228. Build Perl for multiplicity? [n]
  229.  
  230. Use which C compiler? [cc]
  231.  
  232. Hmm... Looks kind of like a Version 7 system, but we'll see...
  233.  
  234. Congratulations. You aren't running Eunice.
  235.  
  236. It's not Xenix...
  237.  
  238. Nor is it Venix...
  239.  
  240. Checking for GNU cc in disguise and/or its version number...
  241. You are using GNU cc 4.5.1 20100924 (Red Hat 4.5.1-4).
  242.  
  243. Hmm... Doesn't look like a MIPS system.
  244.  
  245. Now, how can we feed standard input to your C preprocessor...
  246. Maybe "cc -E" will work...
  247. Nope...maybe "cc -E -" will work...
  248. Yup, it does.
  249.  
  250. Some systems have incompatible or broken versions of libraries. Among
  251. the directories listed in the question below, please remove any you
  252. know not to be holding relevant libraries, and add any that are needed.
  253. Say "none" for none.
  254.  
  255. Directories to use for library searches? [/usr/local/lib /lib /usr/lib]
  256.  
  257. On some systems, shared libraries may be available. Answer 'none' if
  258. you want to suppress searching of shared libraries for the remainder
  259. of this configuration.
  260.  
  261. What is the file extension used for shared libraries? [so]
  262.  
  263. Perl can be built to take advantage of long doubles which
  264. (if available) may give more accuracy and range for floating point numbers.
  265.  
  266. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  267. Try to use long doubles if available? [n]
  268.  
  269. Checking for optional libraries...
  270. No -lsfio.
  271. No -lsocket.
  272. No -linet.
  273. Found -lnsl (shared).
  274. No -lnm.
  275. No -lndbm.
  276. Found -lgdbm (shared).
  277. No -ldbm.
  278. Found -ldb (shared).
  279. No -lmalloc.
  280. Found -ldl (shared).
  281. No -ldld.
  282. No -lld.
  283. No -lsun.
  284. Found -lm (shared).
  285. Found -lcrypt (shared).
  286. No -lsec.
  287. Found -lutil (shared).
  288. Found -lc (shared).
  289. No -lcposix.
  290. No -lposix.
  291. No -lucb.
  292. No -lBSD.
  293. Found -lgdbm_compat (shared).
  294.  
  295. In order to compile perl5 on your machine, a number of libraries
  296. are usually needed. Include any other special libraries here as well.
  297. Say "none" for none. The default list is almost always right.
  298.  
  299. What libraries to use?
  300. [-lnsl -lgdbm -ldb -ldl -lm -lcrypt -lutil -lc -lgdbm_compat]
  301.  
  302. By default, perl5 compiles with the -O flag to use the optimizer.
  303. Alternately, you might want to use the symbolic debugger, which uses
  304. the -g flag (on traditional Unix systems). Either flag can be
  305. specified here. To use neither flag, specify the word "none".
  306.  
  307. What optimizer/debugger flag should be used? [-O2]
  308.  
  309. Checking if your compiler accepts -fno-strict-aliasing
  310. Yes, it does.
  311.  
  312. Checking if your compiler accepts -pipe
  313. Yes, it does.
  314.  
  315. Checking if your compiler accepts -fstack-protector
  316. Yes, it does.
  317.  
  318. Your C compiler may want other flags. For this question you should include
  319. -I/whatever and -DWHATEVER flags and any other flags used by the C compiler,
  320. but you should NOT include libraries or ld flags like -lwhatever. If you
  321. want perl5 to honor its debug switch, you should include -DDEBUGGING here.
  322. Your C compiler might also need additional flags, such as -D_POSIX_SOURCE.
  323.  
  324. To use no flags, specify the word "none".
  325.  
  326. Any additional cc flags?
  327. [-fno-strict-aliasing -pipe -fstack-protector -I/usr/local/include]
  328.  
  329. Let me guess what the preprocessor flags are...
  330. They appear to be: -fno-strict-aliasing -pipe -fstack-protector -I/usr/local/include
  331.  
  332. Your C linker may need flags. For this question you should
  333. include -L/whatever and any other flags used by the C linker, but you
  334. should NOT include libraries like -lwhatever.
  335.  
  336. Make sure you include the appropriate -L/path flags if your C linker
  337. does not normally search all of the directories you specified above,
  338. namely
  339. /usr/local/lib /lib /usr/lib
  340. To use no flags, specify the word "none".
  341.  
  342. Any additional ld flags (NOT including libraries)?
  343. [ -fstack-protector -L/usr/local/lib]
  344.  
  345. Checking your choice of C compiler and flags for coherency...
  346. OK, that should do.
  347.  
  348. Computing filename position in cpp output for #include directives...
  349. Your cpp writes the filename in the third field of the line.
  350.  
  351. <stdlib.h> found.
  352.  
  353. Checking to see how big your integers are...
  354. Your integers are 4 bytes long.
  355. Your long integers are 4 bytes long.
  356. Your short integers are 2 bytes long.
  357.  
  358. Checking to see if you have long long...
  359. You have long long.
  360.  
  361. Checking to see how big your long longs are...
  362. Your long longs are 8 bytes long.
  363.  
  364. <inttypes.h> found.
  365.  
  366. Checking to see if you have int64_t...
  367. You have int64_t.
  368.  
  369. Checking which 64-bit integer type we could use...
  370. We could use 'long long' for 64-bit integers.
  371.  
  372. Perl can be built to take advantage of 64-bit integer types
  373. on some systems. To do so, Configure can be run with -Duse64bitint.
  374. Choosing this option will most probably introduce binary incompatibilities.
  375.  
  376. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  377. (The default has been chosen based on your configuration.)
  378. Try to use 64-bit integers, if available? [n]
  379.  
  380. You may also choose to try maximal 64-bitness. It means using as much
  381. 64-bitness as possible on the platform. This in turn means even more
  382. binary incompatibilities. On the other hand, your platform may not
  383. have any more 64-bitness available than what you already have chosen.
  384.  
  385. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  386. (The default has been chosen based on your configuration.)
  387. Try to use maximal 64-bit support, if available? [n]
  388.  
  389. Checking to see how big your double precision numbers are...
  390. Your double is 8 bytes long.
  391.  
  392. Checking to see if you have long double...
  393. You have long double.
  394.  
  395. Checking to see how big your long doubles are...
  396. Your long doubles are 12 bytes long.
  397.  
  398. What is your architecture name [i686-linux]
  399. Perlio selected.
  400.  
  401. Pathname where the public executables will reside? (~name ok)
  402. [/usr/local/bin]
  403.  
  404. Would you like to build Perl so that the installation is relocatable, so that
  405. library paths in @INC are determined relative to the path of the perl binary?
  406. This is not advised for system Perl installs, or if you need to run setid
  407. scripts or scripts under taint mode.
  408.  
  409. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  410. Use relocatable @INC? [n]
  411.  
  412. There are some auxiliary files for perl5 that need to be put into a
  413. private library directory that is accessible by everyone.
  414.  
  415. Pathname where the private library files will reside? (~name ok)
  416. [/usr/local/lib/perl5/5.14.1]
  417.  
  418. Perl5 contains architecture-dependent library files. If you are
  419. sharing libraries in a heterogeneous environment, you might store
  420. these files in a separate location. Otherwise, you can just include
  421. them with the rest of the public library files.
  422.  
  423. Where do you want to put the public architecture-dependent libraries? (~name ok)
  424. [/usr/local/lib/perl5/5.14.1/i686-linux]
  425.  
  426. Some kernels have a bug that prevents setuid #! scripts from being
  427. secure. Some sites have disabled setuid #! scripts because of this.
  428.  
  429. First let's decide if your kernel supports secure setuid #! scripts.
  430. (If setuid #! scripts would be secure but have been disabled anyway,
  431. don't say that they are secure if asked.)
  432.  
  433. If you are not sure if they are secure, I can check but I'll need a
  434. username and password different from the one you are using right now.
  435. If you don't have such a username or don't want me to test, simply
  436. enter 'none'.
  437.  
  438. Other username to test security of setuid scripts with? [none]
  439. Well, the recommended value is *not* secure.
  440. Does your kernel have *secure* setuid scripts? [n]
  441. Looking for a previously installed perl5.005 or later...
  442. Using /home/mpeters/perl5/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.8.9/bin/perl.
  443.  
  444. After perl5 is installed, you may wish to install various
  445. add-on modules and utilities. Typically, these add-ons will
  446. be installed under /usr/local with the rest
  447. of this package. However, you may wish to install such add-ons
  448. elsewhere under a different prefix.
  449.  
  450. If you do not wish to put everything under a single prefix, that's
  451. ok. You will be prompted for the individual locations; this siteprefix
  452. is only used to suggest the defaults.
  453.  
  454. The default should be fine for most people.
  455.  
  456. Installation prefix to use for add-on modules and utilities? (~name ok)
  457. [/usr/local]
  458.  
  459. The installation process will create a directory for
  460. site-specific extensions and modules. Most users find it convenient
  461. to place all site-specific files in this directory rather than in the
  462. main distribution directory.
  463.  
  464. Pathname for the site-specific library files? (~name ok)
  465. [/usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.14.1]
  466.  
  467. In order to ease the process of upgrading, this version of perl
  468. can be configured to use modules built and installed with earlier
  469. versions of perl that were installed under /usr/local. Specify here
  470. the list of earlier versions that this version of perl should check.
  471. If Configure detected no earlier versions of perl installed under
  472. /usr/local, then the list will be empty. Answer 'none' to tell perl
  473. to not search earlier versions.
  474.  
  475. The default should almost always be sensible, so if you're not sure,
  476. just accept the default.
  477. List of earlier versions to include in @INC? [none]
  478.  
  479. <malloc/malloc.h> NOT found.
  480.  
  481. <malloc.h> found.
  482.  
  483. Checking to see how well your C compiler groks the void type...
  484. Good. It appears to support void to the level perl5 wants.
  485.  
  486. Checking to see how big your pointers are...
  487. Your pointers are 4 bytes long.
  488.  
  489. Do you wish to wrap malloc calls to protect against potential overflows? [y]
  490.  
  491. Do you wish to attempt to use the malloc that comes with perl5? [n]
  492.  
  493. Your system wants malloc to return 'void *', it would seem.
  494. Your system uses void free(), it would seem.
  495.  
  496. The installation process will also create a directory for
  497. architecture-dependent site-specific extensions and modules.
  498.  
  499. Pathname for the site-specific architecture-dependent library files? (~name ok)
  500. [/usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.14.1/i686-linux]
  501.  
  502. The installation process will also create a directory for
  503. vendor-supplied add-ons. Vendors who supply perl with their system
  504. may find it convenient to place all vendor-supplied files in this
  505. directory rather than in the main distribution directory. This will
  506. ease upgrades between binary-compatible maintenance versions of perl.
  507.  
  508. Of course you may also use these directories in whatever way you see
  509. fit. For example, you might use them to access modules shared over a
  510. company-wide network.
  511.  
  512. The default answer should be fine for most people.
  513. This causes further questions about vendor add-ons to be skipped
  514. and no vendor-specific directories will be configured for perl.
  515.  
  516. Do you want to configure vendor-specific add-on directories? [n]
  517.  
  518. Lastly, you can have perl look in other directories for extensions and
  519. modules in addition to those already specified.
  520. These directories will be searched after
  521. /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.14.1/i686-linux
  522. /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.14.1
  523.  
  524. Enter a colon-separated set of extra paths to include in perl's @INC
  525. search path, or enter 'none' for no extra paths.
  526.  
  527. Colon-separated list of additional directories for perl to search? [none]
  528.  
  529. Checking out function prototypes...
  530. Your C compiler appears to support function prototypes.
  531.  
  532. Perl can be built to support DTrace on platforms that support it.
  533. DTrace is a diagnosis and performance analysis tool from Sun.
  534.  
  535. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'none'.
  536. Support DTrace if available? [n]
  537.  
  538. Perl can be built with extra modules or bundles of modules which
  539. will be fetched from the CPAN and installed alongside Perl.
  540.  
  541. Notice that you will need access to the CPAN; either via the Internet,
  542. or a local copy, for example a CD-ROM or a local CPAN mirror. (You will
  543. be asked later to configure the CPAN.pm module which will in turn do
  544. the installation of the rest of the extra modules or bundles.)
  545.  
  546. Notice also that if the modules require any external software such as
  547. libraries and headers (the libz library and the zlib.h header for the
  548. Compress::Zlib module, for example) you MUST have any such software
  549. already installed, this configuration process will NOT install such
  550. things for you.
  551.  
  552. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  553. Install any extra modules (y or n)? [n]
  554.  
  555.  
  556. If you wish to install html files for programs in Perl5, indicate
  557. the appropriate directory here. To skip installing html files,
  558. answer "none".
  559. Directory for the main Perl5 html pages? (~name ok) [none]
  560.  
  561. If you wish to install html files for modules associated with Perl5,
  562. indicate the appropriate directory here. To skip installing html files,
  563. answer "none".
  564. Directory for the Perl5 module html pages? (~name ok) [none]
  565.  
  566. Many scripts expect perl to be installed as /usr/bin/perl.
  567.  
  568. If you want to, I can install the perl you are about to compile
  569. as /usr/bin/perl (in addition to /usr/local/bin/perl).
  570.  
  571. However, please note that because you already have a /usr/bin/perl,
  572. overwriting that with a new Perl would very probably cause problems.
  573. Therefore I'm assuming you don't want to do that (unless you insist).
  574.  
  575. Do you want to install perl as /usr/bin/perl? [n]
  576.  
  577. Checking for GNU C Library...
  578. You are using the GNU C Library version 2.13
  579.  
  580. nm probably won't work on the GNU C Library.
  581.  
  582. I can use /usr/bin/nm to extract the symbols from your C libraries. This
  583. is a time consuming task which may generate huge output on the disk (up
  584. to 3 megabytes) but that should make the symbols extraction faster. The
  585. alternative is to skip the 'nm' extraction part and to compile a small
  586. test program instead to determine whether each symbol is present. If
  587. you have a fast C compiler and/or if your 'nm' output cannot be parsed,
  588. this may be the best solution.
  589.  
  590. You probably shouldn't let me use 'nm' if you are using the GNU C Library.
  591.  
  592. Shall I use /usr/bin/nm to extract C symbols from the libraries? [n]
  593.  
  594. <dld.h> NOT found.
  595.  
  596. Checking for C++...
  597. You are not using a C++ compiler.
  598.  
  599. dlopen() found.
  600.  
  601. <unistd.h> found.
  602.  
  603. Do you wish to use dynamic loading? [y]
  604. The following dynamic loading files are available:
  605. ext/DynaLoader/dl_aix.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_mpeix.xs
  606. ext/DynaLoader/dl_beos.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_next.xs
  607. ext/DynaLoader/dl_dld.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_none.xs
  608. ext/DynaLoader/dl_dllload.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_symbian.xs
  609. ext/DynaLoader/dl_dlopen.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_vmesa.xs
  610. ext/DynaLoader/dl_dyld.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_vms.xs
  611. ext/DynaLoader/dl_hpux.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_win32.xs
  612. Source file to use for dynamic loading [ext/DynaLoader/dl_dlopen.xs]
  613.  
  614. Some systems may require passing special flags to cc -c to
  615. compile modules that will be used to create a shared library.
  616. To use no flags, say "none".
  617.  
  618. Any special flags to pass to cc -c to compile shared library modules?
  619. [-fPIC]
  620.  
  621. Some systems use ld to create libraries that can be dynamically loaded,
  622. while other systems (such as those using ELF) use cc.
  623.  
  624. You appear to have ELF support. I'll use cc to build dynamic libraries.
  625. What command should be used to create dynamic libraries? [cc]
  626.  
  627. Some systems may require passing special flags to cc to create a
  628. library that can be dynamically loaded. If your ld flags include
  629. -L/other/path options to locate libraries outside your loader's normal
  630. search path, you may need to specify those -L options here as well. To
  631. use no flags, say "none".
  632.  
  633. Any special flags to pass to cc to create a dynamically loaded library?
  634. [-shared -O2 -L/usr/local/lib -fstack-protector]
  635.  
  636. Some systems may require passing special flags to cc to indicate that
  637. the resulting executable will use dynamic linking. To use no flags,
  638. say "none".
  639.  
  640. Any special flags to pass to cc to use dynamic linking? [-Wl,-E]
  641.  
  642. The perl executable is normally obtained by linking perlmain.c with
  643. libperl.a, any static extensions (usually just DynaLoader), and
  644. any other libraries needed on this system (such as -lm, etc.). Since
  645. your system supports dynamic loading, it is probably possible to build
  646. a shared libperl.so. If you will have more than one executable linked
  647. to libperl.so, this will significantly reduce the size of each
  648. executable, but it may have a noticeable effect on performance. The
  649. default is probably sensible for your system.
  650.  
  651.  
  652. Build a shared libperl.so (y/n) [n]
  653.  
  654. System manual is in /usr/share/man/man1.
  655.  
  656. Perl5 has manual pages available in source form.
  657. If you don't want the manual sources installed, answer 'none'.
  658.  
  659. Where do the main Perl5 manual pages (source) go? (~name ok)
  660. [/usr/local/share/man/man1]
  661. What suffix should be used for the main Perl5 man pages? [1]
  662.  
  663. You can have filenames longer than 14 characters.
  664.  
  665. Perl5 has manual pages for many of the library modules.
  666. If you don't want the manual sources installed, answer 'none'.
  667.  
  668. Where do the perl5 library man pages (source) go? (~name ok)
  669. [/usr/local/share/man/man3]
  670. What suffix should be used for the perl5 library man pages? [3]
  671.  
  672. Figuring out host name...
  673. Maybe "hostname" will work...
  674. Your host name appears to be "giles". Right? [y]
  675. (Normalizing case in your host name)
  676. (You do not have fully-qualified names in the hosts database)
  677. (Attempting domain name extraction from /etc/resolv.conf)
  678. (No help from resolv.conf either -- attempting clever guess)
  679.  
  680. What is your domain name? [.(none)]
  681. (Normalizing case in your domain name)
  682.  
  683. I need to get your e-mail address in Internet format if possible, i.e.
  684. something like user@host.domain. Please answer accurately since I have
  685. no easy means to double check it. The default value provided below
  686. is most probably close to reality but may not be valid from outside
  687. your organization...
  688.  
  689. What is your e-mail address? [mpeters@giles.(none)]
  690.  
  691. If you or somebody else will be maintaining perl at your site, please
  692. fill in the correct e-mail address here so that they may be contacted
  693. if necessary. Currently, the "perlbug" program included with perl
  694. will send mail to this address in addition to perlbug@perl.org. You may
  695. enter "none" for no administrator.
  696.  
  697. Perl administrator e-mail address [mpeters@giles.(none)]
  698.  
  699. Do you want to install only the version-specific parts of the perl
  700. distribution? Usually you do *not* want to do this.
  701. Do you want to install only the version-specific parts of perl? [n]
  702.  
  703. I can use the #! construct to start perl on your system. This will
  704. make startup of perl scripts faster, but may cause problems if you
  705. want to share those scripts and perl is not in a standard place
  706. (/usr/local/bin/perl) on all your platforms. The alternative
  707. is to force a shell by starting the script with a single ':' character.
  708.  
  709. What shall I put after the #! to start up perl ("none" to not use #!)?
  710. [/usr/local/bin/perl]
  711. I'll use #!/usr/local/bin/perl to start perl scripts.
  712.  
  713. Some installations have a separate directory just for executable scripts so
  714. that they can mount it across multiple architectures but keep the scripts in
  715. one spot. You might, for example, have a subdirectory of /usr/share for this.
  716. Or you might just lump your scripts in with all your other executables.
  717.  
  718. Where do you keep publicly executable scripts? (~name ok) [/usr/local/bin]
  719. Pathname where the add-on public executables should be installed? (~name ok)
  720. [/usr/local/bin]
  721. Pathname where the site-specific html pages should be installed? (~name ok)
  722. [none]
  723. Pathname where the site-specific library html pages should be installed? (~name ok)
  724. [none]
  725. Pathname where the site-specific manual pages should be installed? (~name ok)
  726. [/usr/local/share/man/man1]
  727. Pathname where the site-specific library manual pages should be installed? (~name ok)
  728. [/usr/local/share/man/man3]
  729. Pathname where add-on public executable scripts should be installed? (~name ok)
  730. [/usr/local/bin]
  731.  
  732. Perl can be built to use 'fast stdio', which means using the stdio
  733. library but also directly manipulating the stdio buffers to enable
  734. faster I/O. Using stdio is better for backward compatibility (especially
  735. for Perl extensions), but on the other hand since Perl 5.8 the 'perlio'
  736. interface has been preferred instead of stdio.
  737.  
  738. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  739. Use the "fast stdio" if available? [n]
  740.  
  741. Looking for the type used for lseek's offset on this system.
  742. off_t found.
  743.  
  744. Checking to see how big your file offsets are...
  745. Your file offsets are 4 bytes long.
  746.  
  747. Looking for the type for file position used by fsetpos().
  748. fpos_t found.
  749.  
  750. Checking the size of fpos_t...
  751. Your fpos_t is 12 bytes long.
  752.  
  753. Perl can be built to understand large files (files larger than 2 gigabytes)
  754. on some systems. To do so, Configure can be run with -Duselargefiles.
  755.  
  756. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'y'.
  757. Try to understand large files, if available? [y]
  758. Your platform has some specific hints regarding large file builds, using them...
  759.  
  760. Rechecking to see how big your file offsets are...
  761. Your file offsets are now 8 bytes long.
  762. Rechecking the size of fpos_t... 16 bytes.
  763.  
  764. Using <string.h> instead of <strings.h>.
  765.  
  766. qgcvt() found.
  767.  
  768. Checking how to print long doubles...
  769. We will use %Lf.
  770.  
  771. Checking for an efficient way to convert floats to strings.
  772. Trying gconvert...
  773. gconvert NOT found.
  774. Trying gcvt...
  775. gcvt() found.
  776. I'll use gcvt to convert floats into a string.
  777.  
  778. fwalk() NOT found.
  779.  
  780. access() found.
  781.  
  782. <sys/file.h> defines the *_OK access constants.
  783.  
  784. accessx() NOT found.
  785.  
  786. aintl() NOT found.
  787.  
  788. alarm() found.
  789.  
  790. ctime64() NOT found.
  791.  
  792. localtime64() NOT found.
  793.  
  794. gmtime64() NOT found.
  795.  
  796. mktime64() NOT found.
  797.  
  798. difftime64() NOT found.
  799.  
  800. asctime64() NOT found.
  801.  
  802. <pthread.h> found.
  803.  
  804. <sys/types.h> found.
  805.  
  806. <sys/select.h> found.
  807.  
  808. Testing to see if we should include <time.h>, <sys/time.h> or both.
  809. I'm now running the test program......
  810. Succeeded with -DI_TIME -DI_SYSTIME -DS_TIMEVAL
  811. We'll include <time.h>.
  812. We'll include <sys/time.h>.
  813.  
  814. Checking to see if your struct tm has tm_zone field...
  815. Yes, it does.
  816.  
  817. Checking to see if your struct tm has tm_gmtoff field...
  818. Yes, it does.
  819.  
  820. asctime_r() found.
  821.  
  822. atolf() NOT found.
  823.  
  824. atoll() found.
  825.  
  826. Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((format)) ...
  827. Your C compiler supports __attribute__((format)).
  828.  
  829. Checking whether your compiler allows __printf__ format to be null ...
  830. Your C compiler allows __printf__ format to be null.
  831.  
  832. Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((malloc)) ...
  833. Your C compiler supports __attribute__((malloc)).
  834.  
  835. Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((nonnull(1))) ...
  836. Your C compiler supports __attribute__((nonnull)).
  837.  
  838. Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((noreturn)) ...
  839. Your C compiler supports __attribute__((noreturn)).
  840.  
  841. Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((pure)) ...
  842. Your C compiler supports __attribute__((pure)).
  843.  
  844. Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((unused)) ...
  845. Your C compiler supports __attribute__((unused)).
  846.  
  847. Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((deprecated)) ...
  848. Your C compiler supports __attribute__((deprecated)).
  849.  
  850. Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((warn_unused_result)) ...
  851. Your C compiler supports __attribute__((warn_unused_result)).
  852.  
  853. bcmp() found.
  854.  
  855. bcopy() found.
  856.  
  857. getpgrp() found.
  858.  
  859. Checking to see which flavor of getpgrp is in use...
  860. You have to use getpgrp() instead of getpgrp(pid).
  861.  
  862. setpgrp() found.
  863.  
  864. Checking to see which flavor of setpgrp is in use...
  865. You have to use setpgrp() instead of setpgrp(pid,pgrp).
  866.  
  867. Checking whether your compiler can handle __builtin_choose_expr ...
  868. All good!
  869. Your C compiler supports __builtin_choose_expr.
  870.  
  871. Checking whether your compiler can handle __builtin_expect ...
  872. Your C compiler supports __builtin_expect.
  873.  
  874. bzero() found.
  875.  
  876. <stdarg.h> found.
  877.  
  878. <varargs.h> found.
  879.  
  880. We'll include <stdarg.h> to get va_dcl definition.
  881. You have <stdarg.h> and <stdlib.h>, so checking for C99 variadic macros.
  882. You have C99 variadic macros.
  883.  
  884. I can't determine whether signal handler returns void or int...
  885. What type does your signal handler return? [void]
  886.  
  887. Checking whether your C compiler can cast large floats to int32.
  888. Nope, it can't.
  889.  
  890. Checking whether your C compiler can cast negative float to unsigned.
  891. Yup, it can.
  892.  
  893. vprintf() found.
  894. Your vsprintf() returns (int).
  895.  
  896. chown() found.
  897.  
  898. chroot() found.
  899.  
  900. chsize() NOT found.
  901.  
  902. class() NOT found.
  903.  
  904. clearenv() found.
  905.  
  906. Hmm... Looks like you have Berkeley networking support.
  907.  
  908. socketpair() found.
  909.  
  910. Checking the availability sa_len in the sock struct ...
  911.  
  912. Checking the availability sin6_scope_id in struct sockaddr_in6 ...
  913.  
  914. Checking the availability of certain socket constants...
  915.  
  916. <sys/uio.h> found.
  917.  
  918. Checking to see if your system supports struct cmsghdr...
  919. Yes, it does.
  920.  
  921. Checking to see if your C compiler knows about "const"...
  922. Yup, it does.
  923.  
  924. copysignl() found.
  925.  
  926.  
  927. crypt() found.
  928.  
  929. <crypt.h> found.
  930.  
  931. crypt_r() found.
  932.  
  933. ctermid() found.
  934.  
  935. ctermid_r() NOT found.
  936.  
  937. ctime_r() found.
  938.  
  939. cuserid() found.
  940.  
  941. <limits.h> found.
  942.  
  943. <float.h> found.
  944.  
  945. DBL_DIG found.
  946.  
  947. dbmclose() found.
  948.  
  949. <dbm.h> NOT found.
  950.  
  951. <rpcsvc/dbm.h> NOT found.
  952.  
  953. dbminit() prototype NOT found.
  954.  
  955. difftime() found.
  956.  
  957. <dirent.h> found.
  958.  
  959. Your directory entries are struct dirent.
  960.  
  961. Your directory entry does not know about the d_namlen field.
  962. Checking to see if DIR has a dd_fd member variable
  963. No, it does not.
  964.  
  965. <sys/dir.h> found.
  966.  
  967. <sys/ndir.h> NOT found.
  968.  
  969. dirfd() found.
  970.  
  971. dlerror() found.
  972.  
  973. <dlfcn.h> found.
  974.  
  975. On a few systems, the dynamically loaded modules that perl generates and uses
  976. will need a different extension than shared libs. The default will probably
  977. be appropriate.
  978.  
  979. What is the extension of dynamically loaded modules [so]
  980.  
  981. Checking whether your dlsym() needs a leading underscore ...
  982. dlsym doesn't need a leading underscore.
  983.  
  984. drand48_r() found.
  985.  
  986. drand48() prototype found.
  987.  
  988. dup2() found.
  989.  
  990. eaccess() found.
  991.  
  992. endgrent() found.
  993.  
  994. <grp.h> found.
  995.  
  996. endgrent_r() NOT found.
  997.  
  998. endhostent() found.
  999.  
  1000. <netdb.h> found.
  1001.  
  1002. endhostent_r() NOT found.
  1003.  
  1004. endnetent() found.
  1005.  
  1006. endnetent_r() NOT found.
  1007.  
  1008. endprotoent() found.
  1009.  
  1010. endprotoent_r() NOT found.
  1011.  
  1012. endpwent() found.
  1013.  
  1014. <pwd.h> found.
  1015.  
  1016. endpwent_r() NOT found.
  1017.  
  1018. endservent() found.
  1019.  
  1020. endservent_r() NOT found.
  1021.  
  1022. <sys/file.h> defines the O_* constants...
  1023. and you have the 3 argument form of open().
  1024.  
  1025. <sys/file.h> found.
  1026.  
  1027. We'll be including <sys/file.h>.
  1028.  
  1029. <fcntl.h> found.
  1030.  
  1031. We don't need to include <fcntl.h> if we include <sys/file.h>.
  1032.  
  1033. fork() found.
  1034.  
  1035. pipe() found.
  1036.  
  1037. Figuring out the flag used by open() for non-blocking I/O...
  1038. Seems like we can use O_NONBLOCK.
  1039.  
  1040. Let's see what value errno gets from read() on a O_NONBLOCK file...
  1041. A read() system call with no data present returns -1.
  1042. Your read() sets errno to EAGAIN when no data is available.
  1043. And it correctly returns 0 to signal EOF.
  1044.  
  1045. (Looks like you have stdio.h from Linux.)
  1046. Checking how std your stdio is...
  1047. Your stdio acts pretty std.
  1048. Checking to see what happens if we set the stdio ptr...
  1049. Increasing ptr in your stdio decreases cnt by the same amount. Good.
  1050. And its _base field acts std.
  1051. You seem to have 'fast stdio' to directly manipulate the stdio buffers.
  1052.  
  1053. fchdir() found.
  1054.  
  1055. fchmod() found.
  1056.  
  1057. fchown() found.
  1058.  
  1059. fcntl() found.
  1060.  
  1061. Checking if fcntl-based file locking works...
  1062. Yes, it seems to work.
  1063.  
  1064. Checking to see how well your C compiler handles fd_set and friends ...
  1065. Hmm, your compiler has some difficulty with fd_set. Checking further...
  1066. Well, your system has some sort of fd_set available...
  1067. and you have the normal fd_set macros.
  1068.  
  1069. fgetpos() found.
  1070.  
  1071. finite() found.
  1072.  
  1073. finitel() found.
  1074.  
  1075. flock() found.
  1076.  
  1077. flock() prototype found.
  1078.  
  1079. fp_class() NOT found.
  1080.  
  1081. pathconf() found.
  1082.  
  1083. fpathconf() found.
  1084.  
  1085. fpclass() NOT found.
  1086.  
  1087. fpclassify() NOT found.
  1088.  
  1089. fpclassl() NOT found.
  1090.  
  1091. Checking to see if you have fpos64_t...
  1092. You do not have fpos64_t.
  1093.  
  1094. frexpl() found.
  1095.  
  1096. <sys/param.h> found.
  1097.  
  1098. <sys/mount.h> found.
  1099.  
  1100. Checking to see if your system supports struct fs_data...
  1101. No, it doesn't.
  1102.  
  1103. fseeko() found.
  1104.  
  1105. fsetpos() found.
  1106.  
  1107. fstatfs() found.
  1108.  
  1109. statvfs() found.
  1110.  
  1111. fstatvfs() found.
  1112.  
  1113. fsync() found.
  1114.  
  1115. ftello() found.
  1116.  
  1117. Checking if you have a working futimes()
  1118. Yes, you have
  1119.  
  1120. <ndbm.h> NOT found.
  1121.  
  1122. <gdbm/ndbm.h> found.
  1123.  
  1124. <gdbm-ndbm.h> NOT found.
  1125.  
  1126. dbm_open() found.
  1127. Checking if your <gdbm/ndbm.h> uses prototypes...
  1128. Your <gdbm/ndbm.h> does not seem to have prototypes
  1129.  
  1130. getaddrinfo() found.
  1131.  
  1132. getcwd() found.
  1133.  
  1134. getespwnam() NOT found.
  1135.  
  1136. getfsstat() NOT found.
  1137.  
  1138. getgrent() found.
  1139.  
  1140. getgrent_r() found.
  1141.  
  1142. getgrgid_r() found.
  1143.  
  1144. getgrnam_r() found.
  1145.  
  1146. gethostbyaddr() found.
  1147.  
  1148. gethostbyname() found.
  1149.  
  1150. gethostent() found.
  1151.  
  1152. gethostname() found.
  1153. uname() found.
  1154.  
  1155. Every now and then someone has a gethostname() that lies about the hostname
  1156. but can't be fixed for political or economic reasons. If you wish, I can
  1157. pretend gethostname() isn't there and maybe compute hostname at run-time
  1158. thanks to the 'hostname' command.
  1159.  
  1160. Shall I ignore gethostname() from now on? [n]
  1161.  
  1162. gethostbyaddr_r() found.
  1163.  
  1164. gethostbyname_r() found.
  1165.  
  1166. gethostent_r() found.
  1167.  
  1168. gethostent() prototype found.
  1169.  
  1170. getitimer() found.
  1171.  
  1172. getlogin() found.
  1173.  
  1174. getlogin_r() found.
  1175.  
  1176. getmnt() NOT found.
  1177.  
  1178. getmntent() found.
  1179.  
  1180. getnameinfo() found.
  1181.  
  1182. getnetbyaddr() found.
  1183.  
  1184. getnetbyname() found.
  1185.  
  1186. getnetent() found.
  1187.  
  1188. getnetbyaddr_r() found.
  1189.  
  1190. getnetbyname_r() found.
  1191.  
  1192. getnetent_r() found.
  1193.  
  1194. getnetent() prototype found.
  1195.  
  1196. getpagesize() found.
  1197.  
  1198. getprotobyname() found.
  1199.  
  1200. getprotobynumber() found.
  1201.  
  1202. getprotoent() found.
  1203.  
  1204. getpgid() found.
  1205.  
  1206. getpgrp2() NOT found.
  1207.  
  1208. getppid() found.
  1209.  
  1210. getpriority() found.
  1211.  
  1212. getprotobyname_r() found.
  1213.  
  1214. getprotobynumber_r() found.
  1215.  
  1216. getprotoent_r() found.
  1217.  
  1218. getprotoent() prototype found.
  1219.  
  1220. getprpwnam() NOT found.
  1221.  
  1222. getpwent() found.
  1223.  
  1224. getpwent_r() found.
  1225.  
  1226. getpwnam_r() found.
  1227.  
  1228. getpwuid_r() found.
  1229.  
  1230. getservbyname() found.
  1231.  
  1232. getservbyport() found.
  1233.  
  1234. getservent() found.
  1235.  
  1236. getservbyname_r() found.
  1237.  
  1238. getservbyport_r() found.
  1239.  
  1240. getservent_r() found.
  1241.  
  1242. getservent() prototype found.
  1243.  
  1244. getspnam() found.
  1245.  
  1246. <shadow.h> found.
  1247.  
  1248. getspnam_r() found.
  1249.  
  1250. gettimeofday() found.
  1251.  
  1252. gmtime_r() found.
  1253.  
  1254. hasmntopt() found.
  1255.  
  1256. <netinet/in.h> found.
  1257.  
  1258. <arpa/inet.h> found.
  1259.  
  1260. htonl() found.
  1261.  
  1262. ilogbl() found.
  1263.  
  1264. strchr() found.
  1265.  
  1266. inet_aton() found.
  1267.  
  1268. inet_ntop() found.
  1269.  
  1270. inet_pton() found.
  1271.  
  1272. isascii() found.
  1273.  
  1274. isfinite() NOT found.
  1275.  
  1276. isinf() found.
  1277.  
  1278. isnan() found.
  1279.  
  1280. isnanl() found.
  1281.  
  1282. killpg() found.
  1283.  
  1284. lchown() found.
  1285.  
  1286. LDBL_DIG found.
  1287.  
  1288. <math.h> found.
  1289.  
  1290. Checking to see if your libm supports _LIB_VERSION...
  1291. Yes, it does (2)
  1292.  
  1293. link() found.
  1294.  
  1295. localtime_r() found.
  1296.  
  1297. localeconv() found.
  1298.  
  1299. lockf() found.
  1300.  
  1301. lseek() prototype found.
  1302.  
  1303. lstat() found.
  1304.  
  1305. madvise() found.
  1306.  
  1307. malloc_size() NOT found.
  1308.  
  1309. malloc_good_size() NOT found.
  1310.  
  1311. mblen() found.
  1312.  
  1313. mbstowcs() found.
  1314.  
  1315. mbtowc() found.
  1316.  
  1317. memchr() found.
  1318.  
  1319. memcmp() found.
  1320.  
  1321. memcpy() found.
  1322.  
  1323. memmove() found.
  1324.  
  1325. memset() found.
  1326.  
  1327. mkdir() found.
  1328.  
  1329. mkdtemp() found.
  1330.  
  1331. mkfifo() found.
  1332.  
  1333. mkstemp() found.
  1334.  
  1335. mkstemps() found.
  1336.  
  1337. mktime() found.
  1338.  
  1339. <sys/mman.h> found.
  1340.  
  1341. mmap() found.
  1342. and it returns (void *).
  1343.  
  1344. sqrtl() found.
  1345.  
  1346. scalbnl() found.
  1347.  
  1348. modfl() found.
  1349.  
  1350. modfl() prototype found.
  1351. Checking to see whether your modfl() is okay for large values...
  1352. Your modfl() seems okay for large values.
  1353.  
  1354. mprotect() found.
  1355.  
  1356. msgctl() found.
  1357.  
  1358. msgget() found.
  1359.  
  1360. msgsnd() found.
  1361.  
  1362. msgrcv() found.
  1363.  
  1364. You have the full msg*(2) library.
  1365.  
  1366. Checking to see if your system supports struct msghdr...
  1367. Yes, it does.
  1368.  
  1369. msync() found.
  1370.  
  1371. munmap() found.
  1372.  
  1373. nice() found.
  1374.  
  1375. <langinfo.h> found.
  1376.  
  1377. nl_langinfo() found.
  1378.  
  1379. Checking to see if your C compiler knows about "volatile"...
  1380. Yup, it does.
  1381.  
  1382. Choosing the C types to be used for Perl's internal types...
  1383. (IV will be long, 4 bytes)
  1384. (UV will be unsigned long, 4 bytes)
  1385. (NV will be double, 8 bytes)
  1386. Checking how many bits of your UVs your NVs can preserve...
  1387. Your NVs can preserve all 32 bits of your UVs.
  1388. Checking to find the largest integer value your NVs can hold...
  1389. The largest integer your NVs can preserve is equal to 256.0*256.0*256.0*256.0*256.0*256.0*2.0*2.0*2.0*2.0*2.0
  1390. Checking whether NV 0.0 is all bits zero in memory...
  1391. 0.0 is represented as all bits zero in memory
  1392.  
  1393. Checking to see if you have off64_t...
  1394. You do not have off64_t.
  1395. (Your off_t is 64 bits, so you could use that.)
  1396.  
  1397. pause() found.
  1398.  
  1399. poll() found.
  1400.  
  1401. prctl() found.
  1402. Your prctl (PR_SET_NAME, ...) works
  1403.  
  1404. readlink() found.
  1405.  
  1406. You have Linux-like /proc/self/exe.
  1407.  
  1408. vfork() found.
  1409.  
  1410.  
  1411. Perl can only use a vfork() that doesn't suffer from strict
  1412. restrictions on calling functions or modifying global data in
  1413. the child. For example, glibc-2.1 contains such a vfork()
  1414. that is unsuitable. If your system provides a proper fork()
  1415. call, chances are that you do NOT want perl to use vfork().
  1416.  
  1417. Do you still want to use vfork()? [n]
  1418. Ok, we won't use vfork().
  1419.  
  1420. pthread_attr_setscope() found.
  1421.  
  1422. random_r() found.
  1423.  
  1424. readdir() found.
  1425.  
  1426. seekdir() found.
  1427.  
  1428. telldir() found.
  1429.  
  1430. rewinddir() found.
  1431.  
  1432. readdir64_r() found.
  1433.  
  1434. readdir_r() found.
  1435.  
  1436. readv() found.
  1437.  
  1438. recvmsg() found.
  1439.  
  1440. rename() found.
  1441.  
  1442. rmdir() found.
  1443.  
  1444. <memory.h> found.
  1445.  
  1446. We won't be including <memory.h>.
  1447.  
  1448. I'll use memmove() instead of bcopy() for overlapping copies.
  1449.  
  1450. I'll use memmove() instead of memcpy() for overlapping copies.
  1451.  
  1452. Checking if your memcmp() can compare relative magnitude...
  1453. Yes, it can.
  1454.  
  1455. sbrk() prototype found.
  1456.  
  1457. select() found.
  1458.  
  1459. semctl() found.
  1460.  
  1461. semget() found.
  1462.  
  1463. semop() found.
  1464.  
  1465. You have the full sem*(2) library.
  1466.  
  1467. You do not have union semun in <sys/sem.h>.
  1468.  
  1469. You can use union semun for semctl IPC_STAT.
  1470. You can also use struct semid_ds* for semctl IPC_STAT.
  1471.  
  1472. sendmsg() found.
  1473.  
  1474. setegid() found.
  1475.  
  1476. seteuid() found.
  1477.  
  1478. setgrent() found.
  1479.  
  1480. setgrent_r() NOT found.
  1481.  
  1482. sethostent() found.
  1483.  
  1484. sethostent_r() NOT found.
  1485.  
  1486. setitimer() found.
  1487.  
  1488. setlinebuf() found.
  1489.  
  1490. setlocale() found.
  1491.  
  1492. <locale.h> found.
  1493.  
  1494. setlocale_r() NOT found.
  1495.  
  1496. setnetent() found.
  1497.  
  1498. setnetent_r() NOT found.
  1499.  
  1500. setprotoent() found.
  1501.  
  1502. setpgid() found.
  1503.  
  1504. setpgrp2() NOT found.
  1505.  
  1506. setpriority() found.
  1507.  
  1508. setproctitle() NOT found.
  1509.  
  1510. setprotoent_r() NOT found.
  1511.  
  1512. setpwent() found.
  1513.  
  1514. setpwent_r() NOT found.
  1515.  
  1516. setregid() found.
  1517.  
  1518. setresgid() found.
  1519.  
  1520. setreuid() found.
  1521.  
  1522. setresuid() found.
  1523.  
  1524. setrgid() NOT found.
  1525.  
  1526. setruid() NOT found.
  1527.  
  1528. setservent() found.
  1529.  
  1530. setservent_r() NOT found.
  1531.  
  1532. setsid() found.
  1533.  
  1534. setvbuf() found.
  1535.  
  1536. <sfio.h> NOT found.
  1537.  
  1538. shmctl() found.
  1539.  
  1540. shmget() found.
  1541.  
  1542. shmat() found.
  1543. and it returns (void *).
  1544.  
  1545. shmdt() found.
  1546.  
  1547. You have the full shm*(2) library.
  1548.  
  1549. sigaction() found.
  1550.  
  1551. <sunmath.h> NOT found.
  1552. Checking to see if you have signbit() available to work on double... Yes.
  1553.  
  1554. sigprocmask() found.
  1555.  
  1556. POSIX sigsetjmp found.
  1557.  
  1558. snprintf() found.
  1559.  
  1560. vsnprintf() found.
  1561. Checking whether your snprintf() and vsnprintf() work okay...
  1562. Your snprintf() and vsnprintf() seem to be working okay.
  1563.  
  1564. sockatmark() found.
  1565.  
  1566. sockatmark() prototype found.
  1567.  
  1568. socks5_init() NOT found.
  1569. Checking whether sprintf returns the length of the string...
  1570. sprintf returns the length of the string (as ANSI says it should)
  1571.  
  1572. srand48_r() found.
  1573.  
  1574. srandom_r() found.
  1575.  
  1576. setresgid() prototype NOT found.
  1577.  
  1578. setresuid() prototype NOT found.
  1579.  
  1580. <sys/stat.h> found.
  1581.  
  1582. Checking to see if your struct stat has st_blocks field...
  1583.  
  1584. <sys/vfs.h> found.
  1585.  
  1586. <sys/statfs.h> found.
  1587.  
  1588. Checking to see if your system supports struct statfs...
  1589. Yes, it does.
  1590.  
  1591. Checking to see if your struct statfs has f_flags field...
  1592. Yes, it does.
  1593.  
  1594. Checking to see if your system supports static inline...
  1595. Your compiler supports static __inline__.
  1596. Checking how to access stdio streams by file descriptor number...
  1597. I can't figure out how to access stdio streams by file descriptor number.
  1598.  
  1599. strcoll() found.
  1600.  
  1601. Checking to see if your C compiler can copy structs...
  1602. Yup, it can.
  1603.  
  1604. strerror() found.
  1605. (You also have sys_errlist[], so we could roll our own strerror.)
  1606.  
  1607. strerror_r() found.
  1608.  
  1609. strftime() found.
  1610.  
  1611. strlcat() NOT found.
  1612.  
  1613. strlcpy() NOT found.
  1614.  
  1615. strtod() found.
  1616.  
  1617. strtol() found.
  1618.  
  1619. strtold() found.
  1620.  
  1621. strtoll() found.
  1622. Checking whether your strtoll() works okay...
  1623. Your strtoll() seems to be working okay.
  1624.  
  1625. strtoq() found.
  1626.  
  1627. strtoul() found.
  1628. Checking whether your strtoul() works okay...
  1629. Your strtoul() seems to be working okay.
  1630.  
  1631. strtoull() found.
  1632. Checking whether your strtoull() works okay...
  1633. Your strtoull() seems to be working okay.
  1634.  
  1635. strtouq() found.
  1636. Checking whether your strtouq() works okay...
  1637. Your strtouq() seems to be working okay.
  1638.  
  1639. strxfrm() found.
  1640.  
  1641. symlink() found.
  1642.  
  1643. syscall() found.
  1644.  
  1645. syscall() prototype found.
  1646.  
  1647. sysconf() found.
  1648.  
  1649. system() found.
  1650.  
  1651. tcgetpgrp() found.
  1652.  
  1653. tcsetpgrp() found.
  1654.  
  1655. telldir() prototype found.
  1656.  
  1657. time() found.
  1658.  
  1659. Looking for the type returned by time() on this system.
  1660. time_t found.
  1661.  
  1662. timegm() found.
  1663.  
  1664. <sys/times.h> found.
  1665.  
  1666. times() found.
  1667.  
  1668. Looking for the type returned by times() on this system.
  1669. clock_t found.
  1670.  
  1671. tmpnam_r() found.
  1672.  
  1673. truncate() found.
  1674.  
  1675. ttyname_r() found.
  1676.  
  1677. tzname[] found.
  1678.  
  1679. In the following, larger digits indicate more significance. A big-endian
  1680. machine like a Pyramid or a Motorola 680?0 chip will come out to 4321. A
  1681. little-endian machine like a Vax or an Intel 80?86 chip would be 1234. Other
  1682. machines may have weird orders like 3412. A Cray will report 87654321,
  1683. an Alpha will report 12345678. If the test program works the default is
  1684. probably right.
  1685. I'm now running the test program...
  1686. (The test program ran ok.)
  1687. byteorder=1234
  1688.  
  1689. Checking to see whether you can access character data unalignedly...
  1690. (Testing for character data alignment may crash the test. That's okay.)
  1691. You can access character data pretty unalignedly.
  1692.  
  1693. ualarm() found.
  1694.  
  1695. umask() found.
  1696.  
  1697. unordered() NOT found.
  1698.  
  1699. unsetenv() found.
  1700.  
  1701. usleep() found.
  1702.  
  1703. usleep() prototype found.
  1704.  
  1705. ustat() found.
  1706.  
  1707. closedir() found.
  1708.  
  1709. Checking whether closedir() returns a status...
  1710. Yes, it does.
  1711.  
  1712. wait4() found.
  1713.  
  1714. waitpid() found.
  1715.  
  1716. wcstombs() found.
  1717.  
  1718. wctomb() found.
  1719.  
  1720. writev() found.
  1721.  
  1722. Checking alignment constraints...
  1723. Doubles must be aligned on a how-many-byte boundary? [4]
  1724. Checking how long a character is (in bits)...
  1725. What is the length of a character (in bits)? [8]
  1726.  
  1727. Checking to see how your cpp does stuff like concatenate tokens...
  1728. Oh! Smells like ANSI's been here.
  1729. We can catify or stringify, separately or together!
  1730.  
  1731. <db.h> found.
  1732.  
  1733. Checking Berkeley DB version ...
  1734. You have Berkeley DB Version 2 or greater.
  1735. db.h is from Berkeley DB Version 5.0.26
  1736. libdb is from Berkeley DB Version 5.0.26
  1737. db.h and libdb are compatible.
  1738. Looks OK.
  1739.  
  1740. Checking return type needed for hash for Berkeley DB ...
  1741. Your version of Berkeley DB uses u_int32_t for hash.
  1742.  
  1743. Checking return type needed for prefix for Berkeley DB ...
  1744. Your version of Berkeley DB uses size_t for prefix.
  1745.  
  1746. Looking for a random number function...
  1747. Good, found drand48().
  1748.  
  1749. Use which function to generate random numbers? [drand48]
  1750.  
  1751. Determining whether or not we are on an EBCDIC system...
  1752. Nope, no EBCDIC, probably ASCII or some ISO Latin. Or UTF-8.
  1753.  
  1754. Checking how to flush all pending stdio output...
  1755. Your fflush(NULL) works okay for output streams.
  1756. Let's see if it clobbers input pipes...
  1757. fflush(NULL) seems to behave okay with input streams.
  1758.  
  1759. Looking for the type for group ids returned by getgid().
  1760. gid_t found.
  1761.  
  1762. Checking the size of gid_t...
  1763. Your gid_t is 4 bytes long.
  1764.  
  1765. Checking the sign of gid_t...
  1766. Your gid_t is unsigned.
  1767.  
  1768. Checking how to print 64-bit integers...
  1769. We will use %Ld.
  1770.  
  1771. Checking the format strings to be used for Perl's internal types...
  1772.  
  1773. Checking the format string to be used for gids...
  1774.  
  1775. getgroups() found.
  1776.  
  1777. setgroups() found.
  1778.  
  1779. What type of pointer is the second argument to getgroups() and setgroups()?
  1780. Usually this is the same as group ids, gid_t, but not always.
  1781.  
  1782. What type pointer is the second argument to getgroups() and setgroups()?
  1783. [gid_t]
  1784.  
  1785. Would you like to build with Misc Attribute Decoration? This is development
  1786. work leading to a Perl 5 to Perl 6 convertor, which imposes a space and speed
  1787. overhead on the interpreter.
  1788.  
  1789. If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
  1790. Build Perl with MAD? [n]
  1791.  
  1792. Checking if your /usr/bin/make program sets $(MAKE)...
  1793. Yup, it does.
  1794.  
  1795. Looking for the type used for file modes for system calls (e.g. fchmod()).
  1796. mode_t found.
  1797.  
  1798. It seems that you don't need va_copy().
  1799.  
  1800. Looking for the type used for the length parameter for string functions.
  1801. size_t found.
  1802.  
  1803. Checking to see what type of arguments are accepted by gethostbyaddr().
  1804. Your system accepts const void * for the first arg.
  1805. ...and size_t for the second arg.
  1806.  
  1807. Checking to see what type of argument is accepted by gethostbyname().
  1808. Your system accepts const char *.
  1809.  
  1810. Checking to see what type of 1st argument is accepted by getnetbyaddr().
  1811. Your system accepts in_addr_t.
  1812.  
  1813. What pager is used on your system? [/usr/bin/less -R]
  1814. File /usr/bin/less -R doesn't exist. Use that name anyway? [y]
  1815.  
  1816. Looking for the type of process ids on this system.
  1817. pid_t found.
  1818.  
  1819. Checking how to generate random libraries on your machine...
  1820. /usr/bin/ar appears to generate random libraries itself.
  1821.  
  1822. <values.h> found.
  1823. Checking max offsets that gmtime () accepts
  1824. Sizeof time_t = 4
  1825. Checking max offsets that localtime () accepts
  1826.  
  1827. Checking to see what type of arguments are accepted by select().
  1828. Your system accepts fd_set *.
  1829.  
  1830. Checking to see on how many bits at a time your select() operates...
  1831. Your select() operates on 32 bits at a time.
  1832.  
  1833. Generating a list of signal names and numbers...
  1834. The following 65 signals are available:
  1835.  
  1836. SIGZERO SIGHUP SIGINT SIGQUIT SIGILL SIGTRAP SIGABRT SIGBUS SIGFPE
  1837. SIGKILL SIGUSR1 SIGSEGV SIGUSR2 SIGPIPE SIGALRM SIGTERM SIGSTKFLT
  1838. SIGCHLD SIGCONT SIGSTOP SIGTSTP SIGTTIN SIGTTOU SIGURG SIGXCPU
  1839. SIGXFSZ SIGVTALRM SIGPROF SIGWINCH SIGIO SIGPWR SIGSYS SIGNUM32
  1840. SIGNUM33 SIGRTMIN SIGNUM35 SIGNUM36 SIGNUM37 SIGNUM38 SIGNUM39
  1841. SIGNUM40 SIGNUM41 SIGNUM42 SIGNUM43 SIGNUM44 SIGNUM45 SIGNUM46
  1842. SIGNUM47 SIGNUM48 SIGNUM49 SIGNUM50 SIGNUM51 SIGNUM52 SIGNUM53
  1843. SIGNUM54 SIGNUM55 SIGNUM56 SIGNUM57 SIGNUM58 SIGNUM59 SIGNUM60
  1844. SIGNUM61 SIGNUM62 SIGNUM63 SIGRTMAX SIGIOT SIGCLD SIGPOLL SIGUNUSED
  1845.  
  1846. Checking the size of size_t...
  1847. Your size_t size is 4 bytes.
  1848.  
  1849. Checking to see if you have socklen_t...
  1850. You have socklen_t.
  1851.  
  1852. <socks.h> NOT found.
  1853.  
  1854. Checking to see what type is the last argument of accept().
  1855. Your system accepts 'socklen_t *' for the last argument of accept().
  1856.  
  1857. I'll be using ssize_t for functions returning a byte count.
  1858.  
  1859. Your stdio uses signed chars.
  1860.  
  1861. Looking for the type for user ids returned by getuid().
  1862. uid_t found.
  1863.  
  1864. Checking the size of uid_t...
  1865. Your uid_t is 4 bytes long.
  1866.  
  1867. Checking the sign of uid_t...
  1868. Your uid_t is unsigned.
  1869.  
  1870. Checking the format string to be used for uids...
  1871.  
  1872. It appears we'll be able to prototype varargs functions.
  1873.  
  1874. Which compiler compiler (yacc) shall I use? [yacc]
  1875.  
  1876. <assert.h> found.
  1877.  
  1878. <fp.h> NOT found.
  1879.  
  1880. <fp_class.h> NOT found.
  1881.  
  1882. <gdbm.h> found.
  1883.  
  1884. gdbm_open() found.
  1885.  
  1886. <ieeefp.h> NOT found.
  1887.  
  1888. <libutil.h> NOT found.
  1889.  
  1890. <mntent.h> found.
  1891.  
  1892. <net/errno.h> NOT found.
  1893.  
  1894. <netinet/tcp.h> found.
  1895.  
  1896. <poll.h> found.
  1897.  
  1898. <prot.h> NOT found.
  1899.  
  1900. Guessing which symbols your C compiler and preprocessor define...
  1901. try.c: In function ‘main’:
  1902. try.c:4045:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1903. try.c:4048:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1904. try.c:4051:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1905. try.c:4054:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1906. try.c:4081:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1907. try.c:4084:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1908. try.c:4087:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1909. try.c:4090:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1910. try.c:4141:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1911. try.c:4144:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1912. try.c:4147:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1913. try.c:4150:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1914. try.c:4177:16: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1915. try.c:4180:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1916. try.c:4183:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1917. try.c:4186:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1918. try.c:4441:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1919. try.c:4444:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1920. try.c:4447:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1921. try.c:4450:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1922. try.c:10093:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1923. try.c:10096:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1924. try.c:10099:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1925. try.c:10102:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1926. try.c:10129:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1927. try.c:10132:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1928. try.c:10135:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1929. try.c:10138:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1930. try.c:10165:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1931. try.c:10168:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1932. try.c:10171:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1933. try.c:10174:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1934. try.c:10201:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1935. try.c:10204:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1936. try.c:10207:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1937. try.c:10210:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1938. try.c:10429:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1939. try.c:10432:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1940. try.c:10435:21: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1941. try.c:10438:21: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
  1942. Your C pre-processor defines the following symbols:
  1943. __BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__
  1944. __CHAR16_TYPE__
  1945. __CHAR32_TYPE__
  1946. __CHAR_BIT__
  1947. __DBL_DENORM_MIN__
  1948. __DBL_DIG__
  1949. __DBL_EPSILON__
  1950. __DBL_HAS_DENORM__
  1951. __DBL_HAS_INFINITY__
  1952. __DBL_HAS_QUIET_NAN__
  1953. __DBL_MANT_DIG__
  1954. __DBL_MAX_10_EXP__
  1955. __DBL_MAX__
  1956. __DBL_MAX_EXP__
  1957. __DBL_MIN_10_EXP__
  1958. __DBL_MIN__
  1959. __DBL_MIN_EXP__
  1960. __DEC128_EPSILON__
  1961. __DEC128_MANT_DIG__
  1962. __DEC128_MAX__
  1963. __DEC128_MAX_EXP__
  1964. __DEC128_MIN__
  1965. __DEC128_MIN_EXP__
  1966. __DEC128_SUBNORMAL_MIN__
  1967. __DEC32_EPSILON__
  1968. __DEC32_MANT_DIG__
  1969. __DEC32_MAX__
  1970. __DEC32_MAX_EXP__
  1971. __DEC32_MIN__
  1972. __DEC32_MIN_EXP__
  1973. __DEC32_SUBNORMAL_MIN__
  1974. __DEC64_EPSILON__
  1975. __DEC64_MANT_DIG__
  1976. __DEC64_MAX__
  1977. __DEC64_MAX_EXP__
  1978. __DEC64_MIN__
  1979. __DEC64_MIN_EXP__
  1980. __DEC64_SUBNORMAL_MIN__
  1981. __DEC_EVAL_METHOD__
  1982. __DECIMAL_BID_FORMAT__
  1983. __DECIMAL_DIG__
  1984. __ELF__
  1985. _FILE_OFFSET_BITS
  1986. __FINITE_MATH_ONLY__
  1987. __FLT_DENORM_MIN__
  1988. __FLT_DIG__
  1989. __FLT_EPSILON__
  1990. __FLT_EVAL_METHOD__
  1991. __FLT_HAS_DENORM__
  1992. __FLT_HAS_INFINITY__
  1993. __FLT_HAS_QUIET_NAN__
  1994. __FLT_MANT_DIG__
  1995. __FLT_MAX_10_EXP__
  1996. __FLT_MAX__
  1997. __FLT_MAX_EXP__
  1998. __FLT_MIN_10_EXP__
  1999. __FLT_MIN__
  2000. __FLT_MIN_EXP__
  2001. __FLT_RADIX__
  2002. __GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_1
  2003. __GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_2
  2004. __GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_4
  2005. __GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_8
  2006. __GLIBC__
  2007. __GLIBC_MINOR__
  2008. __GNUC__
  2009. __GNUC_GNU_INLINE__
  2010. __GNUC_MINOR__
  2011. __GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__
  2012. __GNUC_RH_RELEASE__
  2013. __GNU_LIBRARY__
  2014. __gnu_linux__
  2015. __GXX_ABI_VERSION
  2016. __i386
  2017. __i386__
  2018. i386
  2019. __i686
  2020. __i686__
  2021. __INT16_C(c)
  2022. __INT16_MAX__
  2023. __INT16_TYPE__
  2024. __INT32_C(c)
  2025. __INT32_MAX__
  2026. __INT32_TYPE__
  2027. __INT64_C(c)
  2028. __INT64_MAX__
  2029. __INT64_TYPE__
  2030. __INT8_C(c)
  2031. __INT8_MAX__
  2032. __INT8_TYPE__
  2033. __INT_FAST16_MAX__
  2034. __INT_FAST16_TYPE__
  2035. __INT_FAST32_MAX__
  2036. __INT_FAST32_TYPE__
  2037. __INT_FAST64_MAX__
  2038. __INT_FAST64_TYPE__
  2039. __INT_FAST8_MAX__
  2040. __INT_FAST8_TYPE__
  2041. __INT_LEAST16_MAX__
  2042. __INT_LEAST16_TYPE__
  2043. __INT_LEAST32_MAX__
  2044. __INT_LEAST32_TYPE__
  2045. __INT_LEAST64_MAX__
  2046. __INT_LEAST64_TYPE__
  2047. __INT_LEAST8_MAX__
  2048. __INT_LEAST8_TYPE__
  2049. __INT_MAX__
  2050. __INTMAX_C(c)
  2051. __INTMAX_MAX__
  2052. __INTMAX_TYPE__
  2053. __INTPTR_MAX__
  2054. __INTPTR_TYPE__
  2055. _LARGEFILE_SOURCE
  2056. __LDBL_DENORM_MIN__
  2057. __LDBL_DIG__
  2058. __LDBL_EPSILON__
  2059. __LDBL_HAS_DENORM__
  2060. __LDBL_HAS_INFINITY__
  2061. __LDBL_HAS_QUIET_NAN__
  2062. __LDBL_MANT_DIG__
  2063. __LDBL_MAX_10_EXP__
  2064. __LDBL_MAX__
  2065. __LDBL_MAX_EXP__
  2066. __LDBL_MIN_10_EXP__
  2067. __LDBL_MIN__
  2068. __LDBL_MIN_EXP__
  2069. __linux
  2070. __linux__
  2071. linux
  2072. __LONG_LONG_MAX__
  2073. __LONG_MAX__
  2074. __pentiumpro
  2075. __pentiumpro__
  2076. _POSIX_C_SOURCE
  2077. _POSIX_SOURCE
  2078. __PRAGMA_REDEFINE_EXTNAME
  2079. __PTRDIFF_MAX__
  2080. __PTRDIFF_TYPE__
  2081. __REGISTER_PREFIX__
  2082. __SCHAR_MAX__
  2083. __SHRT_MAX__
  2084. __SIG_ATOMIC_MAX__
  2085. __SIG_ATOMIC_MIN__
  2086. __SIG_ATOMIC_TYPE__
  2087. __SIZE_MAX__
  2088. __SIZEOF_DOUBLE__
  2089. __SIZEOF_FLOAT__
  2090. __SIZEOF_INT__
  2091. __SIZEOF_LONG__
  2092. __SIZEOF_LONG_DOUBLE__
  2093. __SIZEOF_LONG_LONG__
  2094. __SIZEOF_POINTER__
  2095. __SIZEOF_PTRDIFF_T__
  2096. __SIZEOF_SHORT__
  2097. __SIZEOF_SIZE_T__
  2098. __SIZEOF_WCHAR_T__
  2099. __SIZEOF_WINT_T__
  2100. __SIZE_TYPE__
  2101. __STDC__
  2102. __STDC_HOSTED__
  2103. __UINT16_C(c)
  2104. __UINT16_MAX__
  2105. __UINT16_TYPE__
  2106. __UINT32_C(c)
  2107. __UINT32_MAX__
  2108. __UINT32_TYPE__
  2109. __UINT64_C(c)
  2110. __UINT64_MAX__
  2111. __UINT64_TYPE__
  2112. __UINT8_C(c)
  2113. __UINT8_MAX__
  2114. __UINT8_TYPE__
  2115. __UINT_FAST16_MAX__
  2116. __UINT_FAST16_TYPE__
  2117. __UINT_FAST32_MAX__
  2118. __UINT_FAST32_TYPE__
  2119. __UINT_FAST64_MAX__
  2120. __UINT_FAST64_TYPE__
  2121. __UINT_FAST8_MAX__
  2122. __UINT_FAST8_TYPE__
  2123. __UINT_LEAST16_MAX__
  2124. __UINT_LEAST16_TYPE__
  2125. __UINT_LEAST32_MAX__
  2126. __UINT_LEAST32_TYPE__
  2127. __UINT_LEAST64_MAX__
  2128. __UINT_LEAST64_TYPE__
  2129. __UINT_LEAST8_MAX__
  2130. __UINT_LEAST8_TYPE__
  2131. __UINTMAX_C(c)
  2132. __UINTMAX_MAX__
  2133. __UINTMAX_TYPE__
  2134. __UINTPTR_MAX__
  2135. __UINTPTR_TYPE__
  2136. __unix
  2137. __unix__
  2138. unix
  2139. __USE_BSD
  2140. __USE_FILE_OFFSET64
  2141. __USE_LARGEFILE
  2142. __USE_MISC
  2143. __USE_POSIX
  2144. __USE_POSIX199309
  2145. __USE_POSIX199506
  2146. __USE_POSIX2
  2147. __USER_LABEL_PREFIX__
  2148. __USE_SVID
  2149. __VERSION__
  2150. __WCHAR_MAX__
  2151. __WCHAR_MIN__
  2152. __WCHAR_TYPE__
  2153. __WINT_MAX__
  2154. __WINT_MIN__
  2155. __WINT_TYPE__
  2156.  
  2157. tcsetattr() found.
  2158.  
  2159. You have POSIX termios.h... good!
  2160.  
  2161. <stddef.h> found.
  2162.  
  2163. <sys/access.h> NOT found.
  2164.  
  2165. <sys/filio.h> NOT found.
  2166.  
  2167. <sys/ioctl.h> found.
  2168.  
  2169. <sys/sockio.h> not found, assuming socket ioctls are in <sys/ioctl.h>.
  2170.  
  2171. <syslog.h> found.
  2172.  
  2173. <sys/mode.h> NOT found.
  2174.  
  2175. <sys/poll.h> found.
  2176.  
  2177. <sys/resource.h> found.
  2178.  
  2179. <sys/security.h> NOT found.
  2180.  
  2181. <sys/statvfs.h> found.
  2182.  
  2183. <sys/un.h> found.
  2184.  
  2185. <sys/utsname.h> found.
  2186.  
  2187. <sys/wait.h> found.
  2188.  
  2189. <ustat.h> found.
  2190.  
  2191. <utime.h> found.
  2192.  
  2193. Looking for extensions...
  2194. A number of extensions are supplied with perl5. You may choose to
  2195. compile these extensions for dynamic loading (the default), compile
  2196. them into the perl5 executable (static loading), or not include
  2197. them at all. Answer "none" to include no extensions.
  2198. Note that DynaLoader is always built and need not be mentioned here.
  2199.  
  2200. What extensions do you wish to load dynamically? [none]
  2201. What extensions do you wish to load statically? [none]
  2202.  
  2203.  
  2204. End of configuration questions.
  2205.  
  2206.  
  2207. Stripping down executable paths...
  2208.  
  2209. Creating config.sh...
  2210. Hmm...You had some extra variables I don't know about...I'll try to keep 'em...
  2211. Propagating recommended variable $libdb_needs_pthread...
  2212.  
  2213. If you'd like to make any changes to the config.sh file before I begin
  2214. to configure things, do it as a shell escape now (e.g. !vi config.sh).
  2215.  
  2216. Press return or use a shell escape to edit config.sh:
  2217. Doing variable substitutions on .SH files...
  2218. Extracting config.h (with variable substitutions)
  2219. Extracting cflags (with variable substitutions)
  2220. Not re-extracting config.h
  2221. Extracting makedepend (with variable substitutions)
  2222. Extracting Makefile (with variable substitutions)
  2223. Extracting myconfig (with variable substitutions)
  2224. Extracting pod/Makefile (with variable substitutions)
  2225. Extracting Policy.sh (with variable substitutions)
  2226. Extracting runtests (with variable substitutions)
  2227. Extracting utils/Makefile (with variable substitutions)
  2228. Extracting x2p/cflags (with variable substitutions)
  2229. Extracting x2p/Makefile (with variable substitutions)
  2230.  
  2231. Now you need to generate make dependencies by running "make depend".
  2232. You might prefer to run it in background: "make depend > makedepend.out &"
  2233. It can take a while, so you might not want to run it right now.
  2234.  
  2235. Run make depend now? [y]
  2236. sh ./makedepend MAKE=make
  2237. make[1]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1'
  2238. rm -f opmini.c
  2239. /bin/ln -s op.c opmini.c
  2240. rm -f perlmini.c
  2241. /bin/ln -s perl.c perlmini.c
  2242. echo av.c scope.c op.c doop.c doio.c dump.c gv.c hv.c mg.c reentr.c mro.c perl.c perly.c pp.c pp_hot.c pp_ctl.c pp_sys.c regcomp.c regexec.c utf8.c sv.c taint.c toke.c util.c deb.c run.c universal.c pad.c globals.c keywords.c perlio.c perlapi.c numeric.c mathoms.c locale.c pp_pack.c pp_sort.c miniperlmain.c opmini.c perlmini.c | tr ' ' '\n' >.clist
  2243. make[1]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1'
  2244. Finding dependencies for av.o.
  2245. Finding dependencies for scope.o.
  2246. Finding dependencies for op.o.
  2247. Finding dependencies for doop.o.
  2248. Finding dependencies for doio.o.
  2249. Finding dependencies for dump.o.
  2250. Finding dependencies for gv.o.
  2251. Finding dependencies for hv.o.
  2252. Finding dependencies for mg.o.
  2253. Finding dependencies for reentr.o.
  2254. Finding dependencies for mro.o.
  2255. Finding dependencies for perl.o.
  2256. Finding dependencies for perly.o.
  2257. Finding dependencies for pp.o.
  2258. Finding dependencies for pp_hot.o.
  2259. Finding dependencies for pp_ctl.o.
  2260. Finding dependencies for pp_sys.o.
  2261. Finding dependencies for regcomp.o.
  2262. Finding dependencies for regexec.o.
  2263. Finding dependencies for utf8.o.
  2264. Finding dependencies for sv.o.
  2265. Finding dependencies for taint.o.
  2266. Finding dependencies for toke.o.
  2267. Finding dependencies for util.o.
  2268. Finding dependencies for deb.o.
  2269. Finding dependencies for run.o.
  2270. Finding dependencies for universal.o.
  2271. Finding dependencies for pad.o.
  2272. Finding dependencies for globals.o.
  2273. Finding dependencies for keywords.o.
  2274. Finding dependencies for perlio.o.
  2275. Finding dependencies for perlapi.o.
  2276. Finding dependencies for numeric.o.
  2277. Finding dependencies for mathoms.o.
  2278. Finding dependencies for locale.o.
  2279. Finding dependencies for pp_pack.o.
  2280. Finding dependencies for pp_sort.o.
  2281. Finding dependencies for miniperlmain.o.
  2282. Finding dependencies for opmini.o.
  2283. Finding dependencies for perlmini.o.
  2284. make[1]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1'
  2285. echo Makefile.SH cflags.SH config_h.SH makedepend.SH myconfig.SH pod/Makefile.SH | tr ' ' '\n' >.shlist
  2286. make[1]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1'
  2287. Updating makefile...
  2288. cd x2p; make depend
  2289. make[1]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
  2290. sh ../makedepend MAKE=make
  2291. make[2]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
  2292. echo hash.c str.c util.c walk.c | tr ' ' '\n' >.clist
  2293. make[2]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
  2294. Finding dependencies for hash.o.
  2295. Finding dependencies for str.o.
  2296. Finding dependencies for util.o.
  2297. Finding dependencies for walk.o.
  2298. make[2]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
  2299. echo Makefile.SH cflags.SH | tr ' ' '\n' >.shlist
  2300. make[2]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
  2301. Updating makefile...
  2302. make[1]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
  2303. Now you must run 'make'.
  2304.  
  2305. If you compile perl5 on a different machine or from a different object
  2306. directory, copy the Policy.sh file from this object directory to the
  2307. new one before you run Configure -- this will help you with most of
  2308. the policy defaults.
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