Advertisement
Not a member of Pastebin yet?
Sign Up,
it unlocks many cool features!
- Beginning of configuration questions for perl5.
- Checking echo to see how to suppress newlines...
- ...using -n.
- The star should be here-->*
- First let's make sure your kit is complete. Checking...
- Looks good...
- This installation shell script will examine your system and ask you questions
- to determine how the perl5 package should be installed. If you get
- stuck on a question, you may use a ! shell escape to start a subshell or
- execute a command. Many of the questions will have default answers in square
- brackets; typing carriage return will give you the default.
- On some of the questions which ask for file or directory names you are allowed
- to use the ~name construct to specify the login directory belonging to "name",
- even if you don't have a shell which knows about that. Questions where this is
- allowed will be marked "(~name ok)".
- [Type carriage return to continue]
- The prompter used in this script allows you to use shell variables and
- backticks in your answers. You may use $1, $2, etc... to refer to the words
- in the default answer, as if the default line was a set of arguments given to a
- script shell. This means you may also use $* to repeat the whole default line,
- so you do not have to re-type everything to add something to the default.
- Every time there is a substitution, you will have to confirm. If there is an
- error (e.g. an unmatched backtick), the default answer will remain unchanged
- and you will be prompted again.
- If you are in a hurry, you may run 'Configure -d'. This will bypass nearly all
- the questions and use the computed defaults (or the previous answers if there
- was already a config.sh file). Type 'Configure -h' for a list of options.
- You may also start interactively and then answer '& -d' at any prompt to turn
- on the non-interactive behaviour for the remainder of the execution.
- [Type carriage return to continue]
- Much effort has been expended to ensure that this shell script will run on any
- Unix system. If despite that it blows up on yours, your best bet is to edit
- Configure and run it again. If you can't run Configure for some reason,
- you'll have to generate a config.sh file by hand. Whatever problems you
- have, let me (perlbug@perl.org) know how I blew it.
- This installation script affects things in two ways:
- 1) it may do direct variable substitutions on some of the files included
- in this kit.
- 2) it builds a config.h file for inclusion in C programs. You may edit
- any of these files as the need arises after running this script.
- If you make a mistake on a question, there is no easy way to back up to it
- currently. The easiest thing to do is to edit config.sh and rerun all the SH
- files. Configure will offer to let you do this before it runs the SH files.
- [Type carriage return to continue]
- Locating common programs...
- awk is in /usr/bin/awk.
- cat is in /bin/cat.
- chmod is in /bin/chmod.
- comm is in /usr/bin/comm.
- cp is in /bin/cp.
- echo is in /bin/echo.
- expr is in /usr/bin/expr.
- grep is in /bin/grep.
- ls is in /bin/ls.
- mkdir is in /bin/mkdir.
- rm is in /bin/rm.
- sed is in /bin/sed.
- sort is in /bin/sort.
- touch is in /bin/touch.
- tr is in /usr/bin/tr.
- uniq is in /usr/bin/uniq.
- Don't worry if any of the following aren't found...
- ar is in /usr/bin/ar.
- I don't see bison out there, offhand.
- I don't see byacc out there, either.
- cpp is in /usr/bin/cpp.
- I don't see csh out there, either.
- date is in /bin/date.
- egrep is in /bin/egrep.
- gmake is in /usr/bin/gmake.
- gzip is in /usr/bin/gzip.
- less is in /usr/bin/less.
- ln is in /bin/ln.
- make is in /usr/bin/make.
- more is in /bin/more.
- nm is in /usr/bin/nm.
- nroff is in /usr/bin/nroff.
- perl is in /home/mpeters/perl5/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.8.9/bin/perl.
- I don't see pg out there, either.
- test is in /usr/bin/test.
- uname is in /bin/uname.
- zip is in /usr/bin/zip.
- Substituting less -R for less.
- Using the test built into your sh.
- Checking compatibility between /bin/echo and builtin echo (if any)...
- They are compatible. In fact, they may be identical.
- The following message is sponsored by
- Dresden.pm<--The stars should be here.
- Dear Perl user, system administrator or package
- maintainer, the Perl community sends greetings to
- you. Do you (emblematical) greet back [Y/n]? n
- Symbolic links are supported.
- Checking how to test for symbolic links...
- You can test for symbolic links with 'test -h'.
- Good, your tr supports [:lower:] and [:upper:] to convert case.
- Using [:upper:] and [:lower:] to convert case.
- First time through, eh? I have some defaults handy for some systems
- that need some extra help getting the Configure answers right:
- 3b1 dragonfly irix_6_1 opus super-ux
- aix_3 dynixptx irix_6 os2 svr4
- aix_4 dynix isc_2 os390 svr5
- aix epix isc os400 ti1500
- altos486 esix4 linux posix-bc titanos
- amigaos fps lynxos powerux ultrix_4
- atheos freebsd midnightbsd qnx umips
- aux_3 genix mips rhapsody unicosmk
- beos gnukfreebsd mirbsd riscos unicos
- bsdos gnuknetbsd mpc sco_2_3_0 unisysdynix
- catamount gnu mpeix sco_2_3_1 utekv
- convexos greenhills ncr_tower sco_2_3_2 uts
- cxux haiku netbsd sco_2_3_3 uwin
- cygwin hpux newsos4 sco_2_3_4 vmesa
- darwin i386 next_3_0 sco vos
- dcosx interix next_3 solaris_2
- dec_osf irix_4 next_4 stellar
- dgux irix_5 nonstopux sunos_4_0
- dos_djgpp irix_6_0 openbsd sunos_4_1
- You may give one or more space-separated answers, or "none" if appropriate.
- If you have a handcrafted Policy.sh file or a Policy.sh file generated by a
- previous run of Configure, you may specify it as well as or instead of
- OS-specific hints. If hints are provided for your OS, you should use them:
- although Perl can probably be built without hints on many platforms, using
- hints often improve performance and may enable features that Configure can't
- set up on its own. If there are no hints that match your OS, specify "none";
- DO NOT give a wrong version or a wrong OS.
- Which of these apply, if any? [linux]
- You appear to have ELF support. I'll try to use it for dynamic loading.
- If dynamic loading doesn't work, read hints/linux.sh for further information.
- You appear to have a working bash. Good.
- nm: /usr/lib/libdb.so: no symbols
- Configure uses the operating system name and version to set some defaults.
- The default value is probably right if the name rings a bell. Otherwise,
- since spelling matters for me, either accept the default or answer "none"
- to leave it blank.
- Operating system name? [linux]
- Operating system version? [2.6.35.13-92.fc14.i686]
- By default, perl5 will be installed in /usr/local/bin, manual pages
- under /usr/local/man, etc..., i.e. with /usr/local as prefix for all
- installation directories. Typically this is something like /usr/local.
- If you wish to have binaries under /usr/bin but other parts of the
- installation under /usr/local, that's ok: you will be prompted
- separately for each of the installation directories, the prefix being
- only used to set the defaults.
- Installation prefix to use? (~name ok) [/usr/local]
- AFS does not seem to be running...
- In some special cases, particularly when building perl5 for distribution,
- it is convenient to distinguish the directory in which files should be
- installed from the directory (/usr/local) in which they will
- eventually reside. For most users, these two directories are the same.
- What installation prefix should I use for installing files? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local]
- Perl can be built to use the SOCKS proxy protocol library. To do so,
- Configure must be run with -Dusesocks. If you use SOCKS you also need
- to use the PerlIO abstraction layer, this will be implicitly selected.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- Build Perl for SOCKS? [n]
- Previous version of perl5 used the standard IO mechanisms as
- defined in <stdio.h>. Versions 5.003_02 and later of perl5 allow
- alternate IO mechanisms via the PerlIO abstraction layer, but the
- stdio mechanism is still available if needed. The abstraction layer
- can use AT&T's sfio (if you already have sfio installed) or regular stdio.
- Using PerlIO with sfio may cause problems with some extension modules.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'y'.
- Use the PerlIO abstraction layer? [y]
- Getting the current patchlevel...
- (You have perl5 version 14 subversion 1.)
- Perl can be built to take advantage of threads on some systems.
- To do so, Configure can be run with -Dusethreads.
- Note that Perl built with threading support runs slightly slower
- and uses more memory than plain Perl. The current implementation
- is believed to be stable, but it is fairly new, and so should be
- treated with caution.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- Build a threading Perl? [n]
- Your platform has some specific hints regarding threaded builds, using them...
- Perl can be built so that multiple Perl interpreters can coexist
- within the same Perl executable.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- Build Perl for multiplicity? [n]
- Use which C compiler? [cc]
- Hmm... Looks kind of like a Version 7 system, but we'll see...
- Congratulations. You aren't running Eunice.
- It's not Xenix...
- Nor is it Venix...
- Checking for GNU cc in disguise and/or its version number...
- You are using GNU cc 4.5.1 20100924 (Red Hat 4.5.1-4).
- Hmm... Doesn't look like a MIPS system.
- Now, how can we feed standard input to your C preprocessor...
- Maybe "cc -E" will work...
- Nope...maybe "cc -E -" will work...
- Yup, it does.
- Some systems have incompatible or broken versions of libraries. Among
- the directories listed in the question below, please remove any you
- know not to be holding relevant libraries, and add any that are needed.
- Say "none" for none.
- Directories to use for library searches? [/usr/local/lib /lib /usr/lib]
- On some systems, shared libraries may be available. Answer 'none' if
- you want to suppress searching of shared libraries for the remainder
- of this configuration.
- What is the file extension used for shared libraries? [so]
- Perl can be built to take advantage of long doubles which
- (if available) may give more accuracy and range for floating point numbers.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- Try to use long doubles if available? [n]
- Checking for optional libraries...
- No -lsfio.
- No -lsocket.
- No -linet.
- Found -lnsl (shared).
- No -lnm.
- No -lndbm.
- Found -lgdbm (shared).
- No -ldbm.
- Found -ldb (shared).
- No -lmalloc.
- Found -ldl (shared).
- No -ldld.
- No -lld.
- No -lsun.
- Found -lm (shared).
- Found -lcrypt (shared).
- No -lsec.
- Found -lutil (shared).
- Found -lc (shared).
- No -lcposix.
- No -lposix.
- No -lucb.
- No -lBSD.
- Found -lgdbm_compat (shared).
- In order to compile perl5 on your machine, a number of libraries
- are usually needed. Include any other special libraries here as well.
- Say "none" for none. The default list is almost always right.
- What libraries to use?
- [-lnsl -lgdbm -ldb -ldl -lm -lcrypt -lutil -lc -lgdbm_compat]
- By default, perl5 compiles with the -O flag to use the optimizer.
- Alternately, you might want to use the symbolic debugger, which uses
- the -g flag (on traditional Unix systems). Either flag can be
- specified here. To use neither flag, specify the word "none".
- What optimizer/debugger flag should be used? [-O2]
- Checking if your compiler accepts -fno-strict-aliasing
- Yes, it does.
- Checking if your compiler accepts -pipe
- Yes, it does.
- Checking if your compiler accepts -fstack-protector
- Yes, it does.
- Your C compiler may want other flags. For this question you should include
- -I/whatever and -DWHATEVER flags and any other flags used by the C compiler,
- but you should NOT include libraries or ld flags like -lwhatever. If you
- want perl5 to honor its debug switch, you should include -DDEBUGGING here.
- Your C compiler might also need additional flags, such as -D_POSIX_SOURCE.
- To use no flags, specify the word "none".
- Any additional cc flags?
- [-fno-strict-aliasing -pipe -fstack-protector -I/usr/local/include]
- Let me guess what the preprocessor flags are...
- They appear to be: -fno-strict-aliasing -pipe -fstack-protector -I/usr/local/include
- Your C linker may need flags. For this question you should
- include -L/whatever and any other flags used by the C linker, but you
- should NOT include libraries like -lwhatever.
- Make sure you include the appropriate -L/path flags if your C linker
- does not normally search all of the directories you specified above,
- namely
- /usr/local/lib /lib /usr/lib
- To use no flags, specify the word "none".
- Any additional ld flags (NOT including libraries)?
- [ -fstack-protector -L/usr/local/lib]
- Checking your choice of C compiler and flags for coherency...
- OK, that should do.
- Computing filename position in cpp output for #include directives...
- Your cpp writes the filename in the third field of the line.
- <stdlib.h> found.
- Checking to see how big your integers are...
- Your integers are 4 bytes long.
- Your long integers are 4 bytes long.
- Your short integers are 2 bytes long.
- Checking to see if you have long long...
- You have long long.
- Checking to see how big your long longs are...
- Your long longs are 8 bytes long.
- <inttypes.h> found.
- Checking to see if you have int64_t...
- You have int64_t.
- Checking which 64-bit integer type we could use...
- We could use 'long long' for 64-bit integers.
- Perl can be built to take advantage of 64-bit integer types
- on some systems. To do so, Configure can be run with -Duse64bitint.
- Choosing this option will most probably introduce binary incompatibilities.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- (The default has been chosen based on your configuration.)
- Try to use 64-bit integers, if available? [n]
- You may also choose to try maximal 64-bitness. It means using as much
- 64-bitness as possible on the platform. This in turn means even more
- binary incompatibilities. On the other hand, your platform may not
- have any more 64-bitness available than what you already have chosen.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- (The default has been chosen based on your configuration.)
- Try to use maximal 64-bit support, if available? [n]
- Checking to see how big your double precision numbers are...
- Your double is 8 bytes long.
- Checking to see if you have long double...
- You have long double.
- Checking to see how big your long doubles are...
- Your long doubles are 12 bytes long.
- What is your architecture name [i686-linux]
- Perlio selected.
- Pathname where the public executables will reside? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/bin]
- Would you like to build Perl so that the installation is relocatable, so that
- library paths in @INC are determined relative to the path of the perl binary?
- This is not advised for system Perl installs, or if you need to run setid
- scripts or scripts under taint mode.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- Use relocatable @INC? [n]
- There are some auxiliary files for perl5 that need to be put into a
- private library directory that is accessible by everyone.
- Pathname where the private library files will reside? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/lib/perl5/5.14.1]
- Perl5 contains architecture-dependent library files. If you are
- sharing libraries in a heterogeneous environment, you might store
- these files in a separate location. Otherwise, you can just include
- them with the rest of the public library files.
- Where do you want to put the public architecture-dependent libraries? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/lib/perl5/5.14.1/i686-linux]
- Some kernels have a bug that prevents setuid #! scripts from being
- secure. Some sites have disabled setuid #! scripts because of this.
- First let's decide if your kernel supports secure setuid #! scripts.
- (If setuid #! scripts would be secure but have been disabled anyway,
- don't say that they are secure if asked.)
- If you are not sure if they are secure, I can check but I'll need a
- username and password different from the one you are using right now.
- If you don't have such a username or don't want me to test, simply
- enter 'none'.
- Other username to test security of setuid scripts with? [none]
- Well, the recommended value is *not* secure.
- Does your kernel have *secure* setuid scripts? [n]
- Looking for a previously installed perl5.005 or later...
- Using /home/mpeters/perl5/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.8.9/bin/perl.
- After perl5 is installed, you may wish to install various
- add-on modules and utilities. Typically, these add-ons will
- be installed under /usr/local with the rest
- of this package. However, you may wish to install such add-ons
- elsewhere under a different prefix.
- If you do not wish to put everything under a single prefix, that's
- ok. You will be prompted for the individual locations; this siteprefix
- is only used to suggest the defaults.
- The default should be fine for most people.
- Installation prefix to use for add-on modules and utilities? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local]
- The installation process will create a directory for
- site-specific extensions and modules. Most users find it convenient
- to place all site-specific files in this directory rather than in the
- main distribution directory.
- Pathname for the site-specific library files? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.14.1]
- In order to ease the process of upgrading, this version of perl
- can be configured to use modules built and installed with earlier
- versions of perl that were installed under /usr/local. Specify here
- the list of earlier versions that this version of perl should check.
- If Configure detected no earlier versions of perl installed under
- /usr/local, then the list will be empty. Answer 'none' to tell perl
- to not search earlier versions.
- The default should almost always be sensible, so if you're not sure,
- just accept the default.
- List of earlier versions to include in @INC? [none]
- <malloc/malloc.h> NOT found.
- <malloc.h> found.
- Checking to see how well your C compiler groks the void type...
- Good. It appears to support void to the level perl5 wants.
- Checking to see how big your pointers are...
- Your pointers are 4 bytes long.
- Do you wish to wrap malloc calls to protect against potential overflows? [y]
- Do you wish to attempt to use the malloc that comes with perl5? [n]
- Your system wants malloc to return 'void *', it would seem.
- Your system uses void free(), it would seem.
- The installation process will also create a directory for
- architecture-dependent site-specific extensions and modules.
- Pathname for the site-specific architecture-dependent library files? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.14.1/i686-linux]
- The installation process will also create a directory for
- vendor-supplied add-ons. Vendors who supply perl with their system
- may find it convenient to place all vendor-supplied files in this
- directory rather than in the main distribution directory. This will
- ease upgrades between binary-compatible maintenance versions of perl.
- Of course you may also use these directories in whatever way you see
- fit. For example, you might use them to access modules shared over a
- company-wide network.
- The default answer should be fine for most people.
- This causes further questions about vendor add-ons to be skipped
- and no vendor-specific directories will be configured for perl.
- Do you want to configure vendor-specific add-on directories? [n]
- Lastly, you can have perl look in other directories for extensions and
- modules in addition to those already specified.
- These directories will be searched after
- /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.14.1/i686-linux
- /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.14.1
- Enter a colon-separated set of extra paths to include in perl's @INC
- search path, or enter 'none' for no extra paths.
- Colon-separated list of additional directories for perl to search? [none]
- Checking out function prototypes...
- Your C compiler appears to support function prototypes.
- Perl can be built to support DTrace on platforms that support it.
- DTrace is a diagnosis and performance analysis tool from Sun.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'none'.
- Support DTrace if available? [n]
- Perl can be built with extra modules or bundles of modules which
- will be fetched from the CPAN and installed alongside Perl.
- Notice that you will need access to the CPAN; either via the Internet,
- or a local copy, for example a CD-ROM or a local CPAN mirror. (You will
- be asked later to configure the CPAN.pm module which will in turn do
- the installation of the rest of the extra modules or bundles.)
- Notice also that if the modules require any external software such as
- libraries and headers (the libz library and the zlib.h header for the
- Compress::Zlib module, for example) you MUST have any such software
- already installed, this configuration process will NOT install such
- things for you.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- Install any extra modules (y or n)? [n]
- If you wish to install html files for programs in Perl5, indicate
- the appropriate directory here. To skip installing html files,
- answer "none".
- Directory for the main Perl5 html pages? (~name ok) [none]
- If you wish to install html files for modules associated with Perl5,
- indicate the appropriate directory here. To skip installing html files,
- answer "none".
- Directory for the Perl5 module html pages? (~name ok) [none]
- Many scripts expect perl to be installed as /usr/bin/perl.
- If you want to, I can install the perl you are about to compile
- as /usr/bin/perl (in addition to /usr/local/bin/perl).
- However, please note that because you already have a /usr/bin/perl,
- overwriting that with a new Perl would very probably cause problems.
- Therefore I'm assuming you don't want to do that (unless you insist).
- Do you want to install perl as /usr/bin/perl? [n]
- Checking for GNU C Library...
- You are using the GNU C Library version 2.13
- nm probably won't work on the GNU C Library.
- I can use /usr/bin/nm to extract the symbols from your C libraries. This
- is a time consuming task which may generate huge output on the disk (up
- to 3 megabytes) but that should make the symbols extraction faster. The
- alternative is to skip the 'nm' extraction part and to compile a small
- test program instead to determine whether each symbol is present. If
- you have a fast C compiler and/or if your 'nm' output cannot be parsed,
- this may be the best solution.
- You probably shouldn't let me use 'nm' if you are using the GNU C Library.
- Shall I use /usr/bin/nm to extract C symbols from the libraries? [n]
- <dld.h> NOT found.
- Checking for C++...
- You are not using a C++ compiler.
- dlopen() found.
- <unistd.h> found.
- Do you wish to use dynamic loading? [y]
- The following dynamic loading files are available:
- ext/DynaLoader/dl_aix.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_mpeix.xs
- ext/DynaLoader/dl_beos.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_next.xs
- ext/DynaLoader/dl_dld.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_none.xs
- ext/DynaLoader/dl_dllload.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_symbian.xs
- ext/DynaLoader/dl_dlopen.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_vmesa.xs
- ext/DynaLoader/dl_dyld.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_vms.xs
- ext/DynaLoader/dl_hpux.xs ext/DynaLoader/dl_win32.xs
- Source file to use for dynamic loading [ext/DynaLoader/dl_dlopen.xs]
- Some systems may require passing special flags to cc -c to
- compile modules that will be used to create a shared library.
- To use no flags, say "none".
- Any special flags to pass to cc -c to compile shared library modules?
- [-fPIC]
- Some systems use ld to create libraries that can be dynamically loaded,
- while other systems (such as those using ELF) use cc.
- You appear to have ELF support. I'll use cc to build dynamic libraries.
- What command should be used to create dynamic libraries? [cc]
- Some systems may require passing special flags to cc to create a
- library that can be dynamically loaded. If your ld flags include
- -L/other/path options to locate libraries outside your loader's normal
- search path, you may need to specify those -L options here as well. To
- use no flags, say "none".
- Any special flags to pass to cc to create a dynamically loaded library?
- [-shared -O2 -L/usr/local/lib -fstack-protector]
- Some systems may require passing special flags to cc to indicate that
- the resulting executable will use dynamic linking. To use no flags,
- say "none".
- Any special flags to pass to cc to use dynamic linking? [-Wl,-E]
- The perl executable is normally obtained by linking perlmain.c with
- libperl.a, any static extensions (usually just DynaLoader), and
- any other libraries needed on this system (such as -lm, etc.). Since
- your system supports dynamic loading, it is probably possible to build
- a shared libperl.so. If you will have more than one executable linked
- to libperl.so, this will significantly reduce the size of each
- executable, but it may have a noticeable effect on performance. The
- default is probably sensible for your system.
- Build a shared libperl.so (y/n) [n]
- System manual is in /usr/share/man/man1.
- Perl5 has manual pages available in source form.
- If you don't want the manual sources installed, answer 'none'.
- Where do the main Perl5 manual pages (source) go? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/share/man/man1]
- What suffix should be used for the main Perl5 man pages? [1]
- You can have filenames longer than 14 characters.
- Perl5 has manual pages for many of the library modules.
- If you don't want the manual sources installed, answer 'none'.
- Where do the perl5 library man pages (source) go? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/share/man/man3]
- What suffix should be used for the perl5 library man pages? [3]
- Figuring out host name...
- Maybe "hostname" will work...
- Your host name appears to be "giles". Right? [y]
- (Normalizing case in your host name)
- (You do not have fully-qualified names in the hosts database)
- (Attempting domain name extraction from /etc/resolv.conf)
- (No help from resolv.conf either -- attempting clever guess)
- What is your domain name? [.(none)]
- (Normalizing case in your domain name)
- I need to get your e-mail address in Internet format if possible, i.e.
- something like user@host.domain. Please answer accurately since I have
- no easy means to double check it. The default value provided below
- is most probably close to reality but may not be valid from outside
- your organization...
- What is your e-mail address? [mpeters@giles.(none)]
- If you or somebody else will be maintaining perl at your site, please
- fill in the correct e-mail address here so that they may be contacted
- if necessary. Currently, the "perlbug" program included with perl
- will send mail to this address in addition to perlbug@perl.org. You may
- enter "none" for no administrator.
- Perl administrator e-mail address [mpeters@giles.(none)]
- Do you want to install only the version-specific parts of the perl
- distribution? Usually you do *not* want to do this.
- Do you want to install only the version-specific parts of perl? [n]
- I can use the #! construct to start perl on your system. This will
- make startup of perl scripts faster, but may cause problems if you
- want to share those scripts and perl is not in a standard place
- (/usr/local/bin/perl) on all your platforms. The alternative
- is to force a shell by starting the script with a single ':' character.
- What shall I put after the #! to start up perl ("none" to not use #!)?
- [/usr/local/bin/perl]
- I'll use #!/usr/local/bin/perl to start perl scripts.
- Some installations have a separate directory just for executable scripts so
- that they can mount it across multiple architectures but keep the scripts in
- one spot. You might, for example, have a subdirectory of /usr/share for this.
- Or you might just lump your scripts in with all your other executables.
- Where do you keep publicly executable scripts? (~name ok) [/usr/local/bin]
- Pathname where the add-on public executables should be installed? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/bin]
- Pathname where the site-specific html pages should be installed? (~name ok)
- [none]
- Pathname where the site-specific library html pages should be installed? (~name ok)
- [none]
- Pathname where the site-specific manual pages should be installed? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/share/man/man1]
- Pathname where the site-specific library manual pages should be installed? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/share/man/man3]
- Pathname where add-on public executable scripts should be installed? (~name ok)
- [/usr/local/bin]
- Perl can be built to use 'fast stdio', which means using the stdio
- library but also directly manipulating the stdio buffers to enable
- faster I/O. Using stdio is better for backward compatibility (especially
- for Perl extensions), but on the other hand since Perl 5.8 the 'perlio'
- interface has been preferred instead of stdio.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- Use the "fast stdio" if available? [n]
- Looking for the type used for lseek's offset on this system.
- off_t found.
- Checking to see how big your file offsets are...
- Your file offsets are 4 bytes long.
- Looking for the type for file position used by fsetpos().
- fpos_t found.
- Checking the size of fpos_t...
- Your fpos_t is 12 bytes long.
- Perl can be built to understand large files (files larger than 2 gigabytes)
- on some systems. To do so, Configure can be run with -Duselargefiles.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'y'.
- Try to understand large files, if available? [y]
- Your platform has some specific hints regarding large file builds, using them...
- Rechecking to see how big your file offsets are...
- Your file offsets are now 8 bytes long.
- Rechecking the size of fpos_t... 16 bytes.
- Using <string.h> instead of <strings.h>.
- qgcvt() found.
- Checking how to print long doubles...
- We will use %Lf.
- Checking for an efficient way to convert floats to strings.
- Trying gconvert...
- gconvert NOT found.
- Trying gcvt...
- gcvt() found.
- I'll use gcvt to convert floats into a string.
- fwalk() NOT found.
- access() found.
- <sys/file.h> defines the *_OK access constants.
- accessx() NOT found.
- aintl() NOT found.
- alarm() found.
- ctime64() NOT found.
- localtime64() NOT found.
- gmtime64() NOT found.
- mktime64() NOT found.
- difftime64() NOT found.
- asctime64() NOT found.
- <pthread.h> found.
- <sys/types.h> found.
- <sys/select.h> found.
- Testing to see if we should include <time.h>, <sys/time.h> or both.
- I'm now running the test program......
- Succeeded with -DI_TIME -DI_SYSTIME -DS_TIMEVAL
- We'll include <time.h>.
- We'll include <sys/time.h>.
- Checking to see if your struct tm has tm_zone field...
- Yes, it does.
- Checking to see if your struct tm has tm_gmtoff field...
- Yes, it does.
- asctime_r() found.
- atolf() NOT found.
- atoll() found.
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((format)) ...
- Your C compiler supports __attribute__((format)).
- Checking whether your compiler allows __printf__ format to be null ...
- Your C compiler allows __printf__ format to be null.
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((malloc)) ...
- Your C compiler supports __attribute__((malloc)).
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((nonnull(1))) ...
- Your C compiler supports __attribute__((nonnull)).
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((noreturn)) ...
- Your C compiler supports __attribute__((noreturn)).
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((pure)) ...
- Your C compiler supports __attribute__((pure)).
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((unused)) ...
- Your C compiler supports __attribute__((unused)).
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((deprecated)) ...
- Your C compiler supports __attribute__((deprecated)).
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__((warn_unused_result)) ...
- Your C compiler supports __attribute__((warn_unused_result)).
- bcmp() found.
- bcopy() found.
- getpgrp() found.
- Checking to see which flavor of getpgrp is in use...
- You have to use getpgrp() instead of getpgrp(pid).
- setpgrp() found.
- Checking to see which flavor of setpgrp is in use...
- You have to use setpgrp() instead of setpgrp(pid,pgrp).
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __builtin_choose_expr ...
- All good!
- Your C compiler supports __builtin_choose_expr.
- Checking whether your compiler can handle __builtin_expect ...
- Your C compiler supports __builtin_expect.
- bzero() found.
- <stdarg.h> found.
- <varargs.h> found.
- We'll include <stdarg.h> to get va_dcl definition.
- You have <stdarg.h> and <stdlib.h>, so checking for C99 variadic macros.
- You have C99 variadic macros.
- I can't determine whether signal handler returns void or int...
- What type does your signal handler return? [void]
- Checking whether your C compiler can cast large floats to int32.
- Nope, it can't.
- Checking whether your C compiler can cast negative float to unsigned.
- Yup, it can.
- vprintf() found.
- Your vsprintf() returns (int).
- chown() found.
- chroot() found.
- chsize() NOT found.
- class() NOT found.
- clearenv() found.
- Hmm... Looks like you have Berkeley networking support.
- socketpair() found.
- Checking the availability sa_len in the sock struct ...
- Checking the availability sin6_scope_id in struct sockaddr_in6 ...
- Checking the availability of certain socket constants...
- <sys/uio.h> found.
- Checking to see if your system supports struct cmsghdr...
- Yes, it does.
- Checking to see if your C compiler knows about "const"...
- Yup, it does.
- copysignl() found.
- crypt() found.
- <crypt.h> found.
- crypt_r() found.
- ctermid() found.
- ctermid_r() NOT found.
- ctime_r() found.
- cuserid() found.
- <limits.h> found.
- <float.h> found.
- DBL_DIG found.
- dbmclose() found.
- <dbm.h> NOT found.
- <rpcsvc/dbm.h> NOT found.
- dbminit() prototype NOT found.
- difftime() found.
- <dirent.h> found.
- Your directory entries are struct dirent.
- Your directory entry does not know about the d_namlen field.
- Checking to see if DIR has a dd_fd member variable
- No, it does not.
- <sys/dir.h> found.
- <sys/ndir.h> NOT found.
- dirfd() found.
- dlerror() found.
- <dlfcn.h> found.
- On a few systems, the dynamically loaded modules that perl generates and uses
- will need a different extension than shared libs. The default will probably
- be appropriate.
- What is the extension of dynamically loaded modules [so]
- Checking whether your dlsym() needs a leading underscore ...
- dlsym doesn't need a leading underscore.
- drand48_r() found.
- drand48() prototype found.
- dup2() found.
- eaccess() found.
- endgrent() found.
- <grp.h> found.
- endgrent_r() NOT found.
- endhostent() found.
- <netdb.h> found.
- endhostent_r() NOT found.
- endnetent() found.
- endnetent_r() NOT found.
- endprotoent() found.
- endprotoent_r() NOT found.
- endpwent() found.
- <pwd.h> found.
- endpwent_r() NOT found.
- endservent() found.
- endservent_r() NOT found.
- <sys/file.h> defines the O_* constants...
- and you have the 3 argument form of open().
- <sys/file.h> found.
- We'll be including <sys/file.h>.
- <fcntl.h> found.
- We don't need to include <fcntl.h> if we include <sys/file.h>.
- fork() found.
- pipe() found.
- Figuring out the flag used by open() for non-blocking I/O...
- Seems like we can use O_NONBLOCK.
- Let's see what value errno gets from read() on a O_NONBLOCK file...
- A read() system call with no data present returns -1.
- Your read() sets errno to EAGAIN when no data is available.
- And it correctly returns 0 to signal EOF.
- (Looks like you have stdio.h from Linux.)
- Checking how std your stdio is...
- Your stdio acts pretty std.
- Checking to see what happens if we set the stdio ptr...
- Increasing ptr in your stdio decreases cnt by the same amount. Good.
- And its _base field acts std.
- You seem to have 'fast stdio' to directly manipulate the stdio buffers.
- fchdir() found.
- fchmod() found.
- fchown() found.
- fcntl() found.
- Checking if fcntl-based file locking works...
- Yes, it seems to work.
- Checking to see how well your C compiler handles fd_set and friends ...
- Hmm, your compiler has some difficulty with fd_set. Checking further...
- Well, your system has some sort of fd_set available...
- and you have the normal fd_set macros.
- fgetpos() found.
- finite() found.
- finitel() found.
- flock() found.
- flock() prototype found.
- fp_class() NOT found.
- pathconf() found.
- fpathconf() found.
- fpclass() NOT found.
- fpclassify() NOT found.
- fpclassl() NOT found.
- Checking to see if you have fpos64_t...
- You do not have fpos64_t.
- frexpl() found.
- <sys/param.h> found.
- <sys/mount.h> found.
- Checking to see if your system supports struct fs_data...
- No, it doesn't.
- fseeko() found.
- fsetpos() found.
- fstatfs() found.
- statvfs() found.
- fstatvfs() found.
- fsync() found.
- ftello() found.
- Checking if you have a working futimes()
- Yes, you have
- <ndbm.h> NOT found.
- <gdbm/ndbm.h> found.
- <gdbm-ndbm.h> NOT found.
- dbm_open() found.
- Checking if your <gdbm/ndbm.h> uses prototypes...
- Your <gdbm/ndbm.h> does not seem to have prototypes
- getaddrinfo() found.
- getcwd() found.
- getespwnam() NOT found.
- getfsstat() NOT found.
- getgrent() found.
- getgrent_r() found.
- getgrgid_r() found.
- getgrnam_r() found.
- gethostbyaddr() found.
- gethostbyname() found.
- gethostent() found.
- gethostname() found.
- uname() found.
- Every now and then someone has a gethostname() that lies about the hostname
- but can't be fixed for political or economic reasons. If you wish, I can
- pretend gethostname() isn't there and maybe compute hostname at run-time
- thanks to the 'hostname' command.
- Shall I ignore gethostname() from now on? [n]
- gethostbyaddr_r() found.
- gethostbyname_r() found.
- gethostent_r() found.
- gethostent() prototype found.
- getitimer() found.
- getlogin() found.
- getlogin_r() found.
- getmnt() NOT found.
- getmntent() found.
- getnameinfo() found.
- getnetbyaddr() found.
- getnetbyname() found.
- getnetent() found.
- getnetbyaddr_r() found.
- getnetbyname_r() found.
- getnetent_r() found.
- getnetent() prototype found.
- getpagesize() found.
- getprotobyname() found.
- getprotobynumber() found.
- getprotoent() found.
- getpgid() found.
- getpgrp2() NOT found.
- getppid() found.
- getpriority() found.
- getprotobyname_r() found.
- getprotobynumber_r() found.
- getprotoent_r() found.
- getprotoent() prototype found.
- getprpwnam() NOT found.
- getpwent() found.
- getpwent_r() found.
- getpwnam_r() found.
- getpwuid_r() found.
- getservbyname() found.
- getservbyport() found.
- getservent() found.
- getservbyname_r() found.
- getservbyport_r() found.
- getservent_r() found.
- getservent() prototype found.
- getspnam() found.
- <shadow.h> found.
- getspnam_r() found.
- gettimeofday() found.
- gmtime_r() found.
- hasmntopt() found.
- <netinet/in.h> found.
- <arpa/inet.h> found.
- htonl() found.
- ilogbl() found.
- strchr() found.
- inet_aton() found.
- inet_ntop() found.
- inet_pton() found.
- isascii() found.
- isfinite() NOT found.
- isinf() found.
- isnan() found.
- isnanl() found.
- killpg() found.
- lchown() found.
- LDBL_DIG found.
- <math.h> found.
- Checking to see if your libm supports _LIB_VERSION...
- Yes, it does (2)
- link() found.
- localtime_r() found.
- localeconv() found.
- lockf() found.
- lseek() prototype found.
- lstat() found.
- madvise() found.
- malloc_size() NOT found.
- malloc_good_size() NOT found.
- mblen() found.
- mbstowcs() found.
- mbtowc() found.
- memchr() found.
- memcmp() found.
- memcpy() found.
- memmove() found.
- memset() found.
- mkdir() found.
- mkdtemp() found.
- mkfifo() found.
- mkstemp() found.
- mkstemps() found.
- mktime() found.
- <sys/mman.h> found.
- mmap() found.
- and it returns (void *).
- sqrtl() found.
- scalbnl() found.
- modfl() found.
- modfl() prototype found.
- Checking to see whether your modfl() is okay for large values...
- Your modfl() seems okay for large values.
- mprotect() found.
- msgctl() found.
- msgget() found.
- msgsnd() found.
- msgrcv() found.
- You have the full msg*(2) library.
- Checking to see if your system supports struct msghdr...
- Yes, it does.
- msync() found.
- munmap() found.
- nice() found.
- <langinfo.h> found.
- nl_langinfo() found.
- Checking to see if your C compiler knows about "volatile"...
- Yup, it does.
- Choosing the C types to be used for Perl's internal types...
- (IV will be long, 4 bytes)
- (UV will be unsigned long, 4 bytes)
- (NV will be double, 8 bytes)
- Checking how many bits of your UVs your NVs can preserve...
- Your NVs can preserve all 32 bits of your UVs.
- Checking to find the largest integer value your NVs can hold...
- 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
- Checking whether NV 0.0 is all bits zero in memory...
- 0.0 is represented as all bits zero in memory
- Checking to see if you have off64_t...
- You do not have off64_t.
- (Your off_t is 64 bits, so you could use that.)
- pause() found.
- poll() found.
- prctl() found.
- Your prctl (PR_SET_NAME, ...) works
- readlink() found.
- You have Linux-like /proc/self/exe.
- vfork() found.
- Perl can only use a vfork() that doesn't suffer from strict
- restrictions on calling functions or modifying global data in
- the child. For example, glibc-2.1 contains such a vfork()
- that is unsuitable. If your system provides a proper fork()
- call, chances are that you do NOT want perl to use vfork().
- Do you still want to use vfork()? [n]
- Ok, we won't use vfork().
- pthread_attr_setscope() found.
- random_r() found.
- readdir() found.
- seekdir() found.
- telldir() found.
- rewinddir() found.
- readdir64_r() found.
- readdir_r() found.
- readv() found.
- recvmsg() found.
- rename() found.
- rmdir() found.
- <memory.h> found.
- We won't be including <memory.h>.
- I'll use memmove() instead of bcopy() for overlapping copies.
- I'll use memmove() instead of memcpy() for overlapping copies.
- Checking if your memcmp() can compare relative magnitude...
- Yes, it can.
- sbrk() prototype found.
- select() found.
- semctl() found.
- semget() found.
- semop() found.
- You have the full sem*(2) library.
- You do not have union semun in <sys/sem.h>.
- You can use union semun for semctl IPC_STAT.
- You can also use struct semid_ds* for semctl IPC_STAT.
- sendmsg() found.
- setegid() found.
- seteuid() found.
- setgrent() found.
- setgrent_r() NOT found.
- sethostent() found.
- sethostent_r() NOT found.
- setitimer() found.
- setlinebuf() found.
- setlocale() found.
- <locale.h> found.
- setlocale_r() NOT found.
- setnetent() found.
- setnetent_r() NOT found.
- setprotoent() found.
- setpgid() found.
- setpgrp2() NOT found.
- setpriority() found.
- setproctitle() NOT found.
- setprotoent_r() NOT found.
- setpwent() found.
- setpwent_r() NOT found.
- setregid() found.
- setresgid() found.
- setreuid() found.
- setresuid() found.
- setrgid() NOT found.
- setruid() NOT found.
- setservent() found.
- setservent_r() NOT found.
- setsid() found.
- setvbuf() found.
- <sfio.h> NOT found.
- shmctl() found.
- shmget() found.
- shmat() found.
- and it returns (void *).
- shmdt() found.
- You have the full shm*(2) library.
- sigaction() found.
- <sunmath.h> NOT found.
- Checking to see if you have signbit() available to work on double... Yes.
- sigprocmask() found.
- POSIX sigsetjmp found.
- snprintf() found.
- vsnprintf() found.
- Checking whether your snprintf() and vsnprintf() work okay...
- Your snprintf() and vsnprintf() seem to be working okay.
- sockatmark() found.
- sockatmark() prototype found.
- socks5_init() NOT found.
- Checking whether sprintf returns the length of the string...
- sprintf returns the length of the string (as ANSI says it should)
- srand48_r() found.
- srandom_r() found.
- setresgid() prototype NOT found.
- setresuid() prototype NOT found.
- <sys/stat.h> found.
- Checking to see if your struct stat has st_blocks field...
- <sys/vfs.h> found.
- <sys/statfs.h> found.
- Checking to see if your system supports struct statfs...
- Yes, it does.
- Checking to see if your struct statfs has f_flags field...
- Yes, it does.
- Checking to see if your system supports static inline...
- Your compiler supports static __inline__.
- Checking how to access stdio streams by file descriptor number...
- I can't figure out how to access stdio streams by file descriptor number.
- strcoll() found.
- Checking to see if your C compiler can copy structs...
- Yup, it can.
- strerror() found.
- (You also have sys_errlist[], so we could roll our own strerror.)
- strerror_r() found.
- strftime() found.
- strlcat() NOT found.
- strlcpy() NOT found.
- strtod() found.
- strtol() found.
- strtold() found.
- strtoll() found.
- Checking whether your strtoll() works okay...
- Your strtoll() seems to be working okay.
- strtoq() found.
- strtoul() found.
- Checking whether your strtoul() works okay...
- Your strtoul() seems to be working okay.
- strtoull() found.
- Checking whether your strtoull() works okay...
- Your strtoull() seems to be working okay.
- strtouq() found.
- Checking whether your strtouq() works okay...
- Your strtouq() seems to be working okay.
- strxfrm() found.
- symlink() found.
- syscall() found.
- syscall() prototype found.
- sysconf() found.
- system() found.
- tcgetpgrp() found.
- tcsetpgrp() found.
- telldir() prototype found.
- time() found.
- Looking for the type returned by time() on this system.
- time_t found.
- timegm() found.
- <sys/times.h> found.
- times() found.
- Looking for the type returned by times() on this system.
- clock_t found.
- tmpnam_r() found.
- truncate() found.
- ttyname_r() found.
- tzname[] found.
- In the following, larger digits indicate more significance. A big-endian
- machine like a Pyramid or a Motorola 680?0 chip will come out to 4321. A
- little-endian machine like a Vax or an Intel 80?86 chip would be 1234. Other
- machines may have weird orders like 3412. A Cray will report 87654321,
- an Alpha will report 12345678. If the test program works the default is
- probably right.
- I'm now running the test program...
- (The test program ran ok.)
- byteorder=1234
- Checking to see whether you can access character data unalignedly...
- (Testing for character data alignment may crash the test. That's okay.)
- You can access character data pretty unalignedly.
- ualarm() found.
- umask() found.
- unordered() NOT found.
- unsetenv() found.
- usleep() found.
- usleep() prototype found.
- ustat() found.
- closedir() found.
- Checking whether closedir() returns a status...
- Yes, it does.
- wait4() found.
- waitpid() found.
- wcstombs() found.
- wctomb() found.
- writev() found.
- Checking alignment constraints...
- Doubles must be aligned on a how-many-byte boundary? [4]
- Checking how long a character is (in bits)...
- What is the length of a character (in bits)? [8]
- Checking to see how your cpp does stuff like concatenate tokens...
- Oh! Smells like ANSI's been here.
- We can catify or stringify, separately or together!
- <db.h> found.
- Checking Berkeley DB version ...
- You have Berkeley DB Version 2 or greater.
- db.h is from Berkeley DB Version 5.0.26
- libdb is from Berkeley DB Version 5.0.26
- db.h and libdb are compatible.
- Looks OK.
- Checking return type needed for hash for Berkeley DB ...
- Your version of Berkeley DB uses u_int32_t for hash.
- Checking return type needed for prefix for Berkeley DB ...
- Your version of Berkeley DB uses size_t for prefix.
- Looking for a random number function...
- Good, found drand48().
- Use which function to generate random numbers? [drand48]
- Determining whether or not we are on an EBCDIC system...
- Nope, no EBCDIC, probably ASCII or some ISO Latin. Or UTF-8.
- Checking how to flush all pending stdio output...
- Your fflush(NULL) works okay for output streams.
- Let's see if it clobbers input pipes...
- fflush(NULL) seems to behave okay with input streams.
- Looking for the type for group ids returned by getgid().
- gid_t found.
- Checking the size of gid_t...
- Your gid_t is 4 bytes long.
- Checking the sign of gid_t...
- Your gid_t is unsigned.
- Checking how to print 64-bit integers...
- We will use %Ld.
- Checking the format strings to be used for Perl's internal types...
- Checking the format string to be used for gids...
- getgroups() found.
- setgroups() found.
- What type of pointer is the second argument to getgroups() and setgroups()?
- Usually this is the same as group ids, gid_t, but not always.
- What type pointer is the second argument to getgroups() and setgroups()?
- [gid_t]
- Would you like to build with Misc Attribute Decoration? This is development
- work leading to a Perl 5 to Perl 6 convertor, which imposes a space and speed
- overhead on the interpreter.
- If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
- Build Perl with MAD? [n]
- Checking if your /usr/bin/make program sets $(MAKE)...
- Yup, it does.
- Looking for the type used for file modes for system calls (e.g. fchmod()).
- mode_t found.
- It seems that you don't need va_copy().
- Looking for the type used for the length parameter for string functions.
- size_t found.
- Checking to see what type of arguments are accepted by gethostbyaddr().
- Your system accepts const void * for the first arg.
- ...and size_t for the second arg.
- Checking to see what type of argument is accepted by gethostbyname().
- Your system accepts const char *.
- Checking to see what type of 1st argument is accepted by getnetbyaddr().
- Your system accepts in_addr_t.
- What pager is used on your system? [/usr/bin/less -R]
- File /usr/bin/less -R doesn't exist. Use that name anyway? [y]
- Looking for the type of process ids on this system.
- pid_t found.
- Checking how to generate random libraries on your machine...
- /usr/bin/ar appears to generate random libraries itself.
- <values.h> found.
- Checking max offsets that gmtime () accepts
- Sizeof time_t = 4
- Checking max offsets that localtime () accepts
- Checking to see what type of arguments are accepted by select().
- Your system accepts fd_set *.
- Checking to see on how many bits at a time your select() operates...
- Your select() operates on 32 bits at a time.
- Generating a list of signal names and numbers...
- The following 65 signals are available:
- SIGZERO SIGHUP SIGINT SIGQUIT SIGILL SIGTRAP SIGABRT SIGBUS SIGFPE
- SIGKILL SIGUSR1 SIGSEGV SIGUSR2 SIGPIPE SIGALRM SIGTERM SIGSTKFLT
- SIGCHLD SIGCONT SIGSTOP SIGTSTP SIGTTIN SIGTTOU SIGURG SIGXCPU
- SIGXFSZ SIGVTALRM SIGPROF SIGWINCH SIGIO SIGPWR SIGSYS SIGNUM32
- SIGNUM33 SIGRTMIN SIGNUM35 SIGNUM36 SIGNUM37 SIGNUM38 SIGNUM39
- SIGNUM40 SIGNUM41 SIGNUM42 SIGNUM43 SIGNUM44 SIGNUM45 SIGNUM46
- SIGNUM47 SIGNUM48 SIGNUM49 SIGNUM50 SIGNUM51 SIGNUM52 SIGNUM53
- SIGNUM54 SIGNUM55 SIGNUM56 SIGNUM57 SIGNUM58 SIGNUM59 SIGNUM60
- SIGNUM61 SIGNUM62 SIGNUM63 SIGRTMAX SIGIOT SIGCLD SIGPOLL SIGUNUSED
- Checking the size of size_t...
- Your size_t size is 4 bytes.
- Checking to see if you have socklen_t...
- You have socklen_t.
- <socks.h> NOT found.
- Checking to see what type is the last argument of accept().
- Your system accepts 'socklen_t *' for the last argument of accept().
- I'll be using ssize_t for functions returning a byte count.
- Your stdio uses signed chars.
- Looking for the type for user ids returned by getuid().
- uid_t found.
- Checking the size of uid_t...
- Your uid_t is 4 bytes long.
- Checking the sign of uid_t...
- Your uid_t is unsigned.
- Checking the format string to be used for uids...
- It appears we'll be able to prototype varargs functions.
- Which compiler compiler (yacc) shall I use? [yacc]
- <assert.h> found.
- <fp.h> NOT found.
- <fp_class.h> NOT found.
- <gdbm.h> found.
- gdbm_open() found.
- <ieeefp.h> NOT found.
- <libutil.h> NOT found.
- <mntent.h> found.
- <net/errno.h> NOT found.
- <netinet/tcp.h> found.
- <poll.h> found.
- <prot.h> NOT found.
- Guessing which symbols your C compiler and preprocessor define...
- try.c: In function βmainβ:
- try.c:4045:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4048:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4051:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4054:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4081:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4084:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4087:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4090:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4141:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4144:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4147:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4150:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4177:16: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4180:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4183:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4186:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4441:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4444:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4447:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:4450:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10093:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10096:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10099:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10102:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10129:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10132:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10135:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10138:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10165:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10168:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10171:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10174:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10201:17: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10204:18: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10207:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10210:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10429:19: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10432:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10435:21: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- try.c:10438:21: warning: extra tokens at end of #ifdef directive
- Your C pre-processor defines the following symbols:
- __BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__
- __CHAR16_TYPE__
- __CHAR32_TYPE__
- __CHAR_BIT__
- __DBL_DENORM_MIN__
- __DBL_DIG__
- __DBL_EPSILON__
- __DBL_HAS_DENORM__
- __DBL_HAS_INFINITY__
- __DBL_HAS_QUIET_NAN__
- __DBL_MANT_DIG__
- __DBL_MAX_10_EXP__
- __DBL_MAX__
- __DBL_MAX_EXP__
- __DBL_MIN_10_EXP__
- __DBL_MIN__
- __DBL_MIN_EXP__
- __DEC128_EPSILON__
- __DEC128_MANT_DIG__
- __DEC128_MAX__
- __DEC128_MAX_EXP__
- __DEC128_MIN__
- __DEC128_MIN_EXP__
- __DEC128_SUBNORMAL_MIN__
- __DEC32_EPSILON__
- __DEC32_MANT_DIG__
- __DEC32_MAX__
- __DEC32_MAX_EXP__
- __DEC32_MIN__
- __DEC32_MIN_EXP__
- __DEC32_SUBNORMAL_MIN__
- __DEC64_EPSILON__
- __DEC64_MANT_DIG__
- __DEC64_MAX__
- __DEC64_MAX_EXP__
- __DEC64_MIN__
- __DEC64_MIN_EXP__
- __DEC64_SUBNORMAL_MIN__
- __DEC_EVAL_METHOD__
- __DECIMAL_BID_FORMAT__
- __DECIMAL_DIG__
- __ELF__
- _FILE_OFFSET_BITS
- __FINITE_MATH_ONLY__
- __FLT_DENORM_MIN__
- __FLT_DIG__
- __FLT_EPSILON__
- __FLT_EVAL_METHOD__
- __FLT_HAS_DENORM__
- __FLT_HAS_INFINITY__
- __FLT_HAS_QUIET_NAN__
- __FLT_MANT_DIG__
- __FLT_MAX_10_EXP__
- __FLT_MAX__
- __FLT_MAX_EXP__
- __FLT_MIN_10_EXP__
- __FLT_MIN__
- __FLT_MIN_EXP__
- __FLT_RADIX__
- __GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_1
- __GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_2
- __GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_4
- __GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_8
- __GLIBC__
- __GLIBC_MINOR__
- __GNUC__
- __GNUC_GNU_INLINE__
- __GNUC_MINOR__
- __GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__
- __GNUC_RH_RELEASE__
- __GNU_LIBRARY__
- __gnu_linux__
- __GXX_ABI_VERSION
- __i386
- __i386__
- i386
- __i686
- __i686__
- __INT16_C(c)
- __INT16_MAX__
- __INT16_TYPE__
- __INT32_C(c)
- __INT32_MAX__
- __INT32_TYPE__
- __INT64_C(c)
- __INT64_MAX__
- __INT64_TYPE__
- __INT8_C(c)
- __INT8_MAX__
- __INT8_TYPE__
- __INT_FAST16_MAX__
- __INT_FAST16_TYPE__
- __INT_FAST32_MAX__
- __INT_FAST32_TYPE__
- __INT_FAST64_MAX__
- __INT_FAST64_TYPE__
- __INT_FAST8_MAX__
- __INT_FAST8_TYPE__
- __INT_LEAST16_MAX__
- __INT_LEAST16_TYPE__
- __INT_LEAST32_MAX__
- __INT_LEAST32_TYPE__
- __INT_LEAST64_MAX__
- __INT_LEAST64_TYPE__
- __INT_LEAST8_MAX__
- __INT_LEAST8_TYPE__
- __INT_MAX__
- __INTMAX_C(c)
- __INTMAX_MAX__
- __INTMAX_TYPE__
- __INTPTR_MAX__
- __INTPTR_TYPE__
- _LARGEFILE_SOURCE
- __LDBL_DENORM_MIN__
- __LDBL_DIG__
- __LDBL_EPSILON__
- __LDBL_HAS_DENORM__
- __LDBL_HAS_INFINITY__
- __LDBL_HAS_QUIET_NAN__
- __LDBL_MANT_DIG__
- __LDBL_MAX_10_EXP__
- __LDBL_MAX__
- __LDBL_MAX_EXP__
- __LDBL_MIN_10_EXP__
- __LDBL_MIN__
- __LDBL_MIN_EXP__
- __linux
- __linux__
- linux
- __LONG_LONG_MAX__
- __LONG_MAX__
- __pentiumpro
- __pentiumpro__
- _POSIX_C_SOURCE
- _POSIX_SOURCE
- __PRAGMA_REDEFINE_EXTNAME
- __PTRDIFF_MAX__
- __PTRDIFF_TYPE__
- __REGISTER_PREFIX__
- __SCHAR_MAX__
- __SHRT_MAX__
- __SIG_ATOMIC_MAX__
- __SIG_ATOMIC_MIN__
- __SIG_ATOMIC_TYPE__
- __SIZE_MAX__
- __SIZEOF_DOUBLE__
- __SIZEOF_FLOAT__
- __SIZEOF_INT__
- __SIZEOF_LONG__
- __SIZEOF_LONG_DOUBLE__
- __SIZEOF_LONG_LONG__
- __SIZEOF_POINTER__
- __SIZEOF_PTRDIFF_T__
- __SIZEOF_SHORT__
- __SIZEOF_SIZE_T__
- __SIZEOF_WCHAR_T__
- __SIZEOF_WINT_T__
- __SIZE_TYPE__
- __STDC__
- __STDC_HOSTED__
- __UINT16_C(c)
- __UINT16_MAX__
- __UINT16_TYPE__
- __UINT32_C(c)
- __UINT32_MAX__
- __UINT32_TYPE__
- __UINT64_C(c)
- __UINT64_MAX__
- __UINT64_TYPE__
- __UINT8_C(c)
- __UINT8_MAX__
- __UINT8_TYPE__
- __UINT_FAST16_MAX__
- __UINT_FAST16_TYPE__
- __UINT_FAST32_MAX__
- __UINT_FAST32_TYPE__
- __UINT_FAST64_MAX__
- __UINT_FAST64_TYPE__
- __UINT_FAST8_MAX__
- __UINT_FAST8_TYPE__
- __UINT_LEAST16_MAX__
- __UINT_LEAST16_TYPE__
- __UINT_LEAST32_MAX__
- __UINT_LEAST32_TYPE__
- __UINT_LEAST64_MAX__
- __UINT_LEAST64_TYPE__
- __UINT_LEAST8_MAX__
- __UINT_LEAST8_TYPE__
- __UINTMAX_C(c)
- __UINTMAX_MAX__
- __UINTMAX_TYPE__
- __UINTPTR_MAX__
- __UINTPTR_TYPE__
- __unix
- __unix__
- unix
- __USE_BSD
- __USE_FILE_OFFSET64
- __USE_LARGEFILE
- __USE_MISC
- __USE_POSIX
- __USE_POSIX199309
- __USE_POSIX199506
- __USE_POSIX2
- __USER_LABEL_PREFIX__
- __USE_SVID
- __VERSION__
- __WCHAR_MAX__
- __WCHAR_MIN__
- __WCHAR_TYPE__
- __WINT_MAX__
- __WINT_MIN__
- __WINT_TYPE__
- tcsetattr() found.
- You have POSIX termios.h... good!
- <stddef.h> found.
- <sys/access.h> NOT found.
- <sys/filio.h> NOT found.
- <sys/ioctl.h> found.
- <sys/sockio.h> not found, assuming socket ioctls are in <sys/ioctl.h>.
- <syslog.h> found.
- <sys/mode.h> NOT found.
- <sys/poll.h> found.
- <sys/resource.h> found.
- <sys/security.h> NOT found.
- <sys/statvfs.h> found.
- <sys/un.h> found.
- <sys/utsname.h> found.
- <sys/wait.h> found.
- <ustat.h> found.
- <utime.h> found.
- Looking for extensions...
- A number of extensions are supplied with perl5. You may choose to
- compile these extensions for dynamic loading (the default), compile
- them into the perl5 executable (static loading), or not include
- them at all. Answer "none" to include no extensions.
- Note that DynaLoader is always built and need not be mentioned here.
- What extensions do you wish to load dynamically? [none]
- What extensions do you wish to load statically? [none]
- End of configuration questions.
- Stripping down executable paths...
- Creating config.sh...
- Hmm...You had some extra variables I don't know about...I'll try to keep 'em...
- Propagating recommended variable $libdb_needs_pthread...
- If you'd like to make any changes to the config.sh file before I begin
- to configure things, do it as a shell escape now (e.g. !vi config.sh).
- Press return or use a shell escape to edit config.sh:
- Doing variable substitutions on .SH files...
- Extracting config.h (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting cflags (with variable substitutions)
- Not re-extracting config.h
- Extracting makedepend (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting Makefile (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting myconfig (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting pod/Makefile (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting Policy.sh (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting runtests (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting utils/Makefile (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting x2p/cflags (with variable substitutions)
- Extracting x2p/Makefile (with variable substitutions)
- Now you need to generate make dependencies by running "make depend".
- You might prefer to run it in background: "make depend > makedepend.out &"
- It can take a while, so you might not want to run it right now.
- Run make depend now? [y]
- sh ./makedepend MAKE=make
- make[1]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1'
- rm -f opmini.c
- /bin/ln -s op.c opmini.c
- rm -f perlmini.c
- /bin/ln -s perl.c perlmini.c
- 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
- make[1]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1'
- Finding dependencies for av.o.
- Finding dependencies for scope.o.
- Finding dependencies for op.o.
- Finding dependencies for doop.o.
- Finding dependencies for doio.o.
- Finding dependencies for dump.o.
- Finding dependencies for gv.o.
- Finding dependencies for hv.o.
- Finding dependencies for mg.o.
- Finding dependencies for reentr.o.
- Finding dependencies for mro.o.
- Finding dependencies for perl.o.
- Finding dependencies for perly.o.
- Finding dependencies for pp.o.
- Finding dependencies for pp_hot.o.
- Finding dependencies for pp_ctl.o.
- Finding dependencies for pp_sys.o.
- Finding dependencies for regcomp.o.
- Finding dependencies for regexec.o.
- Finding dependencies for utf8.o.
- Finding dependencies for sv.o.
- Finding dependencies for taint.o.
- Finding dependencies for toke.o.
- Finding dependencies for util.o.
- Finding dependencies for deb.o.
- Finding dependencies for run.o.
- Finding dependencies for universal.o.
- Finding dependencies for pad.o.
- Finding dependencies for globals.o.
- Finding dependencies for keywords.o.
- Finding dependencies for perlio.o.
- Finding dependencies for perlapi.o.
- Finding dependencies for numeric.o.
- Finding dependencies for mathoms.o.
- Finding dependencies for locale.o.
- Finding dependencies for pp_pack.o.
- Finding dependencies for pp_sort.o.
- Finding dependencies for miniperlmain.o.
- Finding dependencies for opmini.o.
- Finding dependencies for perlmini.o.
- make[1]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1'
- echo Makefile.SH cflags.SH config_h.SH makedepend.SH myconfig.SH pod/Makefile.SH | tr ' ' '\n' >.shlist
- make[1]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1'
- Updating makefile...
- cd x2p; make depend
- make[1]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
- sh ../makedepend MAKE=make
- make[2]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
- echo hash.c str.c util.c walk.c | tr ' ' '\n' >.clist
- make[2]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
- Finding dependencies for hash.o.
- Finding dependencies for str.o.
- Finding dependencies for util.o.
- Finding dependencies for walk.o.
- make[2]: Entering directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
- echo Makefile.SH cflags.SH | tr ' ' '\n' >.shlist
- make[2]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
- Updating makefile...
- make[1]: Leaving directory `/tmp/perl-5.14.1/x2p'
- Now you must run 'make'.
- If you compile perl5 on a different machine or from a different object
- directory, copy the Policy.sh file from this object directory to the
- new one before you run Configure -- this will help you with most of
- the policy defaults.
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement