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a56dbb1c 1If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you
2see. It is written in the POD format (see perlpod manpage) which is
3specially designed to be readable as is.
4
5=head1 NAME
6
72ea3524 7perlos2 - Perl under OS/2, DOS, Win0.3*, Win0.95 and WinNT.
a56dbb1c 8
9=head1 SYNOPSIS
10
11One can read this document in the following formats:
12
13 man perlos2
14 view perl perlos2
15 explorer perlos2.html
16 info perlos2
17
18to list some (not all may be available simultaneously), or it may
19be read I<as is>: either as F<README.os2>, or F<pod/perlos2.pod>.
20
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21To read the F<.INF> version of documentation (B<very> recommended)
22outside of OS/2, one needs an IBM's reader (may be available on IBM
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23ftp sites (?) (URL anyone?)) or shipped with PC DOS 7.0 and IBM's
24Visual Age C++ 3.5.
25
26A copy of a Win* viewer is contained in the "Just add OS/2 Warp" package
27
28 ftp://ftp.software.ibm.com/ps/products/os2/tools/jaow/jaow.zip
29
aa689395 30in F<?:\JUST_ADD\view.exe>. This gives one an access to EMX's
df3ef7a9 31F<.INF> docs as well (text form is available in F</emx/doc> in
25417810 32EMX's distribution). There is also a different viewer named xview.
72ea3524 33
25417810 34Note that if you have F<lynx.exe> or F<netscape.exe> installed, you can follow WWW links
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35from this document in F<.INF> format. If you have EMX docs installed
36correctly, you can follow library links (you need to have C<view emxbook>
37working by setting C<EMXBOOK> environment variable as it is described
38in EMX docs).
39
a56dbb1c 40=cut
41
25417810 42Contents (This may be a little bit obsolete)
a56dbb1c 43
df3ef7a9 44 perlos2 - Perl under OS/2, DOS, Win0.3*, Win0.95 and WinNT.
a56dbb1c 45
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46 NAME
47 SYNOPSIS
48 DESCRIPTION
49 - Target
50 - Other OSes
51 - Prerequisites
52 - Starting Perl programs under OS/2 (and DOS and...)
53 - Starting OS/2 (and DOS) programs under Perl
54 Frequently asked questions
55 - "It does not work"
56 - I cannot run external programs
57 - I cannot embed perl into my program, or use perl.dll from my
58 - `` and pipe-open do not work under DOS.
59 - Cannot start find.exe "pattern" file
60 INSTALLATION
61 - Automatic binary installation
62 - Manual binary installation
63 - Warning
64 Accessing documentation
65 - OS/2 .INF file
66 - Plain text
67 - Manpages
68 - HTML
69 - GNU info files
70 - PDF files
71 - LaTeX docs
72 BUILD
73 - The short story
74 - Prerequisites
75 - Getting perl source
76 - Application of the patches
77 - Hand-editing
78 - Making
79 - Testing
80 - Installing the built perl
81 - a.out-style build
82 Build FAQ
83 - Some / became \ in pdksh.
84 - 'errno' - unresolved external
85 - Problems with tr or sed
86 - Some problem (forget which ;-)
87 - Library ... not found
88 - Segfault in make
89 - op/sprintf test failure
90 Specific (mis)features of OS/2 port
91 - setpriority, getpriority
92 - system()
93 - extproc on the first line
94 - Additional modules:
95 - Prebuilt methods:
96 - Prebuilt variables:
97 - Misfeatures
98 - Modifications
99 - Identifying DLLs
100 - Centralized management of resources
101 Perl flavors
102 - perl.exe
103 - perl_.exe
104 - perl__.exe
105 - perl___.exe
106 - Why strange names?
107 - Why dynamic linking?
108 - Why chimera build?
109 ENVIRONMENT
110 - PERLLIB_PREFIX
111 - PERL_BADLANG
112 - PERL_BADFREE
113 - PERL_SH_DIR
114 - USE_PERL_FLOCK
115 - TMP or TEMP
116 Evolution
117 - Text-mode filehandles
118 - Priorities
119 - DLL name mangling: pre 5.6.2
120 - DLL name mangling: 5.6.2 and beyond
121 - DLL forwarder generation
122 - Threading
123 - Calls to external programs
124 - Memory allocation
125 - Threads
126 BUGS
127 AUTHOR
128 SEE ALSO
abe67105 129
a56dbb1c 130=head1 DESCRIPTION
131
132=head2 Target
133
25417810 134The target is to make OS/2 one of the best supported platform for
72ea3524 135using/building/developing Perl and I<Perl applications>, as well as
aa689395 136make Perl the best language to use under OS/2. The secondary target is
137to try to make this work under DOS and Win* as well (but not B<too> hard).
a56dbb1c 138
139The current state is quite close to this target. Known limitations:
140
141=over 5
142
143=item *
144
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145Some *nix programs use fork() a lot; with the mostly useful flavors of
146perl for OS/2 (there are several built simultaneously) this is
147supported; but some flavors do not support this (e.g., when Perl is
148called from inside REXX). Using fork() after
149I<use>ing dynamically loading extensions would not work with I<very> old
150versions of EMX.
a56dbb1c 151
152=item *
153
446e94bd 154You need a separate perl executable F<perl__.exe> (see L</perl__.exe>)
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155if you want to use PM code in your application (as Perl/Tk or OpenGL
156Perl modules do) without having a text-mode window present.
157
158While using the standard F<perl.exe> from a text-mode window is possible
159too, I have seen cases when this causes degradation of the system stability.
160Using F<perl__.exe> avoids such a degradation.
a56dbb1c 161
162=item *
163
aa689395 164There is no simple way to access WPS objects. The only way I know
7622680c 165is via C<OS2::REXX> and C<SOM> extensions (see L<OS2::REXX>, L<SOM>).
25417810 166However, we do not have access to
aa689395 167convenience methods of Object-REXX. (Is it possible at all? I know
3998488b 168of no Object-REXX API.) The C<SOM> extension (currently in alpha-text)
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169may eventually remove this shortcoming; however, due to the fact that
170DII is not supported by the C<SOM> module, using C<SOM> is not as
171convenient as one would like it.
a56dbb1c 172
173=back
174
175Please keep this list up-to-date by informing me about other items.
176
177=head2 Other OSes
178
aa689395 179Since OS/2 port of perl uses a remarkable EMX environment, it can
3998488b 180run (and build extensions, and - possibly - be built itself) under any
a56dbb1c 181environment which can run EMX. The current list is DOS,
72ea3524 182DOS-inside-OS/2, Win0.3*, Win0.95 and WinNT. Out of many perl flavors,
a56dbb1c 183only one works, see L<"perl_.exe">.
184
185Note that not all features of Perl are available under these
186environments. This depends on the features the I<extender> - most
aa689395 187probably RSX - decided to implement.
a56dbb1c 188
eea834d0 189Cf. L</Prerequisites>.
a56dbb1c 190
191=head2 Prerequisites
192
193=over 6
194
aa689395 195=item EMX
a56dbb1c 196
aa689395 197EMX runtime is required (may be substituted by RSX). Note that
55497cff 198it is possible to make F<perl_.exe> to run under DOS without any
90c87169 199external support by binding F<emx.exe>/F<rsx.exe> to it, see C<emxbind>. Note
aa689395 200that under DOS for best results one should use RSX runtime, which
55497cff 201has much more functions working (like C<fork>, C<popen> and so on). In
aa689395 202fact RSX is required if there is no VCPI present. Note the
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203RSX requires DPMI. Many implementations of DPMI are known to be very
204buggy, beware!
a56dbb1c 205
884335e8 206Only the latest runtime is supported, currently C<0.9d fix 03>. Perl may run
aa689395 207under earlier versions of EMX, but this is not tested.
a56dbb1c 208
aa689395 209One can get different parts of EMX from, say
a56dbb1c 210
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211 ftp://crydee.sai.msu.ru/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/gnu/emx+gcc/
212 http://hobbes.nmsu.edu/h-browse.php?dir=/pub/os2/dev/emx/v0.9d/
a56dbb1c 213
214The runtime component should have the name F<emxrt.zip>.
215
25417810 216B<NOTE>. When using F<emx.exe>/F<rsx.exe>, it is enough to have them on your path. One
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217does not need to specify them explicitly (though this
218
219 emx perl_.exe -de 0
220
221will work as well.)
222
aa689395 223=item RSX
a56dbb1c 224
aa689395 225To run Perl on DPMI platforms one needs RSX runtime. This is
72ea3524 226needed under DOS-inside-OS/2, Win0.3*, Win0.95 and WinNT (see
aa689395 227L<"Other OSes">). RSX would not work with VCPI
228only, as EMX would, it requires DMPI.
55497cff 229
aa689395 230Having RSX and the latest F<sh.exe> one gets a fully functional
55497cff 231B<*nix>-ish environment under DOS, say, C<fork>, C<``> and
232pipe-C<open> work. In fact, MakeMaker works (for static build), so one
233can have Perl development environment under DOS.
a56dbb1c 234
aa689395 235One can get RSX from, say
a56dbb1c 236
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237 http://cd.textfiles.com/hobbesos29804/disk1/EMX09C/
238 ftp://crydee.sai.msu.ru/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/gnu/emx+gcc/contrib/
a56dbb1c 239
240Contact the author on C<rainer@mathematik.uni-bielefeld.de>.
241
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242The latest F<sh.exe> with DOS hooks is available in
243
25417810 244 http://www.ilyaz.org/software/os2/
55497cff 245
3998488b 246as F<sh_dos.zip> or under similar names starting with C<sh>, C<pdksh> etc.
55497cff 247
aa689395 248=item HPFS
a56dbb1c 249
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250Perl does not care about file systems, but the perl library contains
251many files with long names, so to install it intact one needs a file
252system which supports long file names.
a56dbb1c 253
254Note that if you do not plan to build the perl itself, it may be
aa689395 255possible to fool EMX to truncate file names. This is not supported,
256read EMX docs to see how to do it.
257
258=item pdksh
259
260To start external programs with complicated command lines (like with
261pipes in between, and/or quoting of arguments), Perl uses an external
3998488b 262shell. With EMX port such shell should be named F<sh.exe>, and located
aa689395 263either in the wired-in-during-compile locations (usually F<F:/bin>),
264or in configurable location (see L<"PERL_SH_DIR">).
265
3998488b 266For best results use EMX pdksh. The standard binary (5.2.14 or later) runs
7622680c 267under DOS (with L</RSX>) as well, see
aa689395 268
25417810 269 http://www.ilyaz.org/software/os2/
a56dbb1c 270
271=back
272
aa689395 273=head2 Starting Perl programs under OS/2 (and DOS and...)
a56dbb1c 274
275Start your Perl program F<foo.pl> with arguments C<arg1 arg2 arg3> the
276same way as on any other platform, by
277
278 perl foo.pl arg1 arg2 arg3
279
280If you want to specify perl options C<-my_opts> to the perl itself (as
d1be9408 281opposed to your program), use
a56dbb1c 282
283 perl -my_opts foo.pl arg1 arg2 arg3
284
aa689395 285Alternately, if you use OS/2-ish shell, like CMD or 4os2, put
a56dbb1c 286the following at the start of your perl script:
287
aa689395 288 extproc perl -S -my_opts
a56dbb1c 289
290rename your program to F<foo.cmd>, and start it by typing
291
292 foo arg1 arg2 arg3
293
a56dbb1c 294Note that because of stupid OS/2 limitations the full path of the perl
295script is not available when you use C<extproc>, thus you are forced to
3998488b 296use C<-S> perl switch, and your script should be on the C<PATH>. As a plus
a56dbb1c 297side, if you know a full path to your script, you may still start it
298with
299
aa689395 300 perl ../../blah/foo.cmd arg1 arg2 arg3
a56dbb1c 301
aa689395 302(note that the argument C<-my_opts> is taken care of by the C<extproc> line
303in your script, see L<C<extproc> on the first line>).
a56dbb1c 304
305To understand what the above I<magic> does, read perl docs about C<-S>
aa689395 306switch - see L<perlrun>, and cmdref about C<extproc>:
a56dbb1c 307
308 view perl perlrun
309 man perlrun
310 view cmdref extproc
311 help extproc
312
313or whatever method you prefer.
314
72ea3524 315There are also endless possibilities to use I<executable extensions> of
aa689395 3164os2, I<associations> of WPS and so on... However, if you use
a56dbb1c 317*nixish shell (like F<sh.exe> supplied in the binary distribution),
7622680c 318you need to follow the syntax specified in L<perlrun/"Command Switches">.
a56dbb1c 319
25417810 320Note that B<-S> switch supports scripts with additional extensions
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321F<.cmd>, F<.btm>, F<.bat>, F<.pl> as well.
322
aa689395 323=head2 Starting OS/2 (and DOS) programs under Perl
a56dbb1c 324
325This is what system() (see L<perlfunc/system>), C<``> (see
326L<perlop/"I/O Operators">), and I<open pipe> (see L<perlfunc/open>)
327are for. (Avoid exec() (see L<perlfunc/exec>) unless you know what you
328do).
329
330Note however that to use some of these operators you need to have a
aa689395 331sh-syntax shell installed (see L<"Pdksh">,
a56dbb1c 332L<"Frequently asked questions">), and perl should be able to find it
333(see L<"PERL_SH_DIR">).
334
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335The cases when the shell is used are:
336
337=over
338
339=item 1
340
341One-argument system() (see L<perlfunc/system>), exec() (see L<perlfunc/exec>)
342with redirection or shell meta-characters;
343
344=item 2
345
346Pipe-open (see L<perlfunc/open>) with the command which contains redirection
347or shell meta-characters;
348
349=item 3
350
351Backticks C<``> (see L<perlop/"I/O Operators">) with the command which contains
352redirection or shell meta-characters;
353
354=item 4
355
356If the executable called by system()/exec()/pipe-open()/C<``> is a script
357with the "magic" C<#!> line or C<extproc> line which specifies shell;
358
359=item 5
360
361If the executable called by system()/exec()/pipe-open()/C<``> is a script
362without "magic" line, and C<$ENV{EXECSHELL}> is set to shell;
363
364=item 6
365
366If the executable called by system()/exec()/pipe-open()/C<``> is not
25417810 367found (is not this remark obsolete?);
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368
369=item 7
370
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371For globbing (see L<perlfunc/glob>, L<perlop/"I/O Operators">)
372(obsolete? Perl uses builtin globbing nowadays...).
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373
374=back
375
376For the sake of speed for a common case, in the above algorithms
377backslashes in the command name are not considered as shell metacharacters.
378
379Perl starts scripts which begin with cookies
380C<extproc> or C<#!> directly, without an intervention of shell. Perl uses the
381same algorithm to find the executable as F<pdksh>: if the path
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382on C<#!> line does not work, and contains C</>, then the directory
383part of the executable is ignored, and the executable
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384is searched in F<.> and on C<PATH>. To find arguments for these scripts
385Perl uses a different algorithm than F<pdksh>: up to 3 arguments are
386recognized, and trailing whitespace is stripped.
387
388If a script
389does not contain such a cooky, then to avoid calling F<sh.exe>, Perl uses
390the same algorithm as F<pdksh>: if C<$ENV{EXECSHELL}> is set, the
391script is given as the first argument to this command, if not set, then
392C<$ENV{COMSPEC} /c> is used (or a hardwired guess if C<$ENV{COMSPEC}> is
393not set).
491527d0 394
25417810 395When starting scripts directly, Perl uses exactly the same algorithm as for
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396the search of script given by B<-S> command-line option: it will look in
397the current directory, then on components of C<$ENV{PATH}> using the
398following order of appended extensions: no extension, F<.cmd>, F<.btm>,
399F<.bat>, F<.pl>.
400
401Note that Perl will start to look for scripts only if OS/2 cannot start the
402specified application, thus C<system 'blah'> will not look for a script if
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403there is an executable file F<blah.exe> I<anywhere> on C<PATH>. In
404other words, C<PATH> is essentially searched twice: once by the OS for
405an executable, then by Perl for scripts.
491527d0 406
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407Note also that executable files on OS/2 can have an arbitrary extension, but
408F<.exe> will be automatically appended if no dot is present in the name. The
409workaround is as simple as that: since F<blah.> and F<blah> denote the same
410file (at list on FAT and HPFS file systems), to start an executable residing in
411file F<n:/bin/blah> (no extension) give an argument C<n:/bin/blah.> (dot
412appended) to system().
491527d0 413
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414Perl will start PM programs from VIO (=text-mode) Perl process in a
415separate PM session;
3998488b 416the opposite is not true: when you start a non-PM program from a PM
25417810 417Perl process, Perl would not run it in a separate session. If a separate
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418session is desired, either ensure
419that shell will be used, as in C<system 'cmd /c myprog'>, or start it using
491527d0 420optional arguments to system() documented in C<OS2::Process> module. This
3998488b 421is considered to be a feature.
a56dbb1c 422
423=head1 Frequently asked questions
424
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425=head2 "It does not work"
426
427Perl binary distributions come with a F<testperl.cmd> script which tries
428to detect common problems with misconfigured installations. There is a
429pretty large chance it will discover which step of the installation you
430managed to goof. C<;-)>
431
72ea3524 432=head2 I cannot run external programs
a56dbb1c 433
55497cff 434=over 4
435
13a2d996 436=item *
55497cff 437
a56dbb1c 438Did you run your programs with C<-w> switch? See
79481703 439L<Starting OSE<sol>2 (and DOS) programs under Perl>.
a56dbb1c 440
13a2d996 441=item *
55497cff 442
443Do you try to run I<internal> shell commands, like C<`copy a b`>
444(internal for F<cmd.exe>), or C<`glob a*b`> (internal for ksh)? You
72ea3524 445need to specify your shell explicitly, like C<`cmd /c copy a b`>,
55497cff 446since Perl cannot deduce which commands are internal to your shell.
447
448=back
449
a56dbb1c 450=head2 I cannot embed perl into my program, or use F<perl.dll> from my
451program.
452
453=over 4
454
aa689395 455=item Is your program EMX-compiled with C<-Zmt -Zcrtdll>?
a56dbb1c 456
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457Well, nowadays Perl DLL should be usable from a differently compiled
458program too... If you can run Perl code from REXX scripts (see
459L<OS2::REXX>), then there are some other aspect of interaction which
460are overlooked by the current hackish code to support
461differently-compiled principal programs.
462
463If everything else fails, you need to build a stand-alone DLL for
464perl. Contact me, I did it once. Sockets would not work, as a lot of
465other stuff.
a56dbb1c 466
aa689395 467=item Did you use L<ExtUtils::Embed>?
a56dbb1c 468
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469Some time ago I had reports it does not work. Nowadays it is checked
470in the Perl test suite, so grep F<./t> subdirectory of the build tree
471(as well as F<*.t> files in the F<./lib> subdirectory) to find how it
472should be done "correctly".
a56dbb1c 473
474=back
475
55497cff 476=head2 C<``> and pipe-C<open> do not work under DOS.
477
72ea3524 478This may a variant of just L<"I cannot run external programs">, or a
eea834d0 479deeper problem. Basically: you I<need> RSX (see L</Prerequisites>)
72ea3524 480for these commands to work, and you may need a port of F<sh.exe> which
55497cff 481understands command arguments. One of such ports is listed in
eea834d0 482L</Prerequisites> under RSX. Do not forget to set variable
aa689395 483C<L<"PERL_SH_DIR">> as well.
484
485DPMI is required for RSX.
486
487=head2 Cannot start C<find.exe "pattern" file>
55497cff 488
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489The whole idea of the "standard C API to start applications" is that
490the forms C<foo> and C<"foo"> of program arguments are completely
f858446f 491interchangeable. F<find> breaks this paradigm;
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492
493 find "pattern" file
494 find pattern file
495
496are not equivalent; F<find> cannot be started directly using the above
497API. One needs a way to surround the doublequotes in some other
498quoting construction, necessarily having an extra non-Unixish shell in
499between.
500
aa689395 501Use one of
502
503 system 'cmd', '/c', 'find "pattern" file';
504 `cmd /c 'find "pattern" file'`
505
506This would start F<find.exe> via F<cmd.exe> via C<sh.exe> via
507C<perl.exe>, but this is a price to pay if you want to use
25417810 508non-conforming program.
55497cff 509
a56dbb1c 510=head1 INSTALLATION
511
512=head2 Automatic binary installation
513
3998488b 514The most convenient way of installing a binary distribution of perl is via perl installer
a56dbb1c 515F<install.exe>. Just follow the instructions, and 99% of the
516installation blues would go away.
517
518Note however, that you need to have F<unzip.exe> on your path, and
aa689395 519EMX environment I<running>. The latter means that if you just
520installed EMX, and made all the needed changes to F<Config.sys>,
521you may need to reboot in between. Check EMX runtime by running
a56dbb1c 522
523 emxrev
524
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525Binary installer also creates a folder on your desktop with some useful
526objects. If you need to change some aspects of the work of the binary
527installer, feel free to edit the file F<Perl.pkg>. This may be useful
528e.g., if you need to run the installer many times and do not want to
529make many interactive changes in the GUI.
a56dbb1c 530
531B<Things not taken care of by automatic binary installation:>
532
533=over 15
534
535=item C<PERL_BADLANG>
536
537may be needed if you change your codepage I<after> perl installation,
aa689395 538and the new value is not supported by EMX. See L<"PERL_BADLANG">.
a56dbb1c 539
540=item C<PERL_BADFREE>
541
542see L<"PERL_BADFREE">.
543
544=item F<Config.pm>
545
546This file resides somewhere deep in the location you installed your
547perl library, find it out by
548
549 perl -MConfig -le "print $INC{'Config.pm'}"
550
551While most important values in this file I<are> updated by the binary
552installer, some of them may need to be hand-edited. I know no such
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553data, please keep me informed if you find one. Moreover, manual
554changes to the installed version may need to be accompanied by an edit
555of this file.
a56dbb1c 556
557=back
558
aa689395 559B<NOTE>. Because of a typo the binary installer of 5.00305
560would install a variable C<PERL_SHPATH> into F<Config.sys>. Please
7622680c 561remove this variable and put C<L</PERL_SH_DIR>> instead.
aa689395 562
a56dbb1c 563=head2 Manual binary installation
564
72ea3524 565As of version 5.00305, OS/2 perl binary distribution comes split
a56dbb1c 566into 11 components. Unfortunately, to enable configurable binary
aa689395 567installation, the file paths in the zip files are not absolute, but
a56dbb1c 568relative to some directory.
569
570Note that the extraction with the stored paths is still necessary
aa689395 571(default with unzip, specify C<-d> to pkunzip). However, you
a56dbb1c 572need to know where to extract the files. You need also to manually
573change entries in F<Config.sys> to reflect where did you put the
72ea3524 574files. Note that if you have some primitive unzipper (like
25417810 575C<pkunzip>), you may get a lot of warnings/errors during
72ea3524 576unzipping. Upgrade to C<(w)unzip>.
a56dbb1c 577
578Below is the sample of what to do to reproduce the configuration on my
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579machine. In F<VIEW.EXE> you can press C<Ctrl-Insert> now, and
580cut-and-paste from the resulting file - created in the directory you
581started F<VIEW.EXE> from.
582
583For each component, we mention environment variables related to each
584installation directory. Either choose directories to match your
585values of the variables, or create/append-to variables to take into
586account the directories.
a56dbb1c 587
588=over 3
589
590=item Perl VIO and PM executables (dynamically linked)
591
592 unzip perl_exc.zip *.exe *.ico -d f:/emx.add/bin
593 unzip perl_exc.zip *.dll -d f:/emx.add/dll
594
aa689395 595(have the directories with C<*.exe> on PATH, and C<*.dll> on
596LIBPATH);
a56dbb1c 597
598=item Perl_ VIO executable (statically linked)
599
600 unzip perl_aou.zip -d f:/emx.add/bin
601
aa689395 602(have the directory on PATH);
a56dbb1c 603
604=item Executables for Perl utilities
605
606 unzip perl_utl.zip -d f:/emx.add/bin
607
aa689395 608(have the directory on PATH);
a56dbb1c 609
610=item Main Perl library
611
612 unzip perl_mlb.zip -d f:/perllib/lib
613
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614If this directory is exactly the same as the prefix which was compiled
615into F<perl.exe>, you do not need to change
616anything. However, for perl to find the library if you use a different
617path, you need to
a56dbb1c 618C<set PERLLIB_PREFIX> in F<Config.sys>, see L<"PERLLIB_PREFIX">.
619
620=item Additional Perl modules
621
b95300a8 622 unzip perl_ste.zip -d f:/perllib/lib/site_perl/5.23.8/
a56dbb1c 623
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624Same remark as above applies. Additionally, if this directory is not
625one of directories on @INC (and @INC is influenced by C<PERLLIB_PREFIX>), you
626need to put this
a56dbb1c 627directory and subdirectory F<./os2> in C<PERLLIB> or C<PERL5LIB>
628variable. Do not use C<PERL5LIB> unless you have it set already. See
3998488b 629L<perl/"ENVIRONMENT">.
a56dbb1c 630
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631B<[Check whether this extraction directory is still applicable with
632the new directory structure layout!]>
633
a56dbb1c 634=item Tools to compile Perl modules
635
636 unzip perl_blb.zip -d f:/perllib/lib
637
3998488b 638Same remark as for F<perl_ste.zip>.
a56dbb1c 639
640=item Manpages for Perl and utilities
641
642 unzip perl_man.zip -d f:/perllib/man
643
644This directory should better be on C<MANPATH>. You need to have a
25417810 645working F<man> to access these files.
a56dbb1c 646
647=item Manpages for Perl modules
648
649 unzip perl_mam.zip -d f:/perllib/man
650
651This directory should better be on C<MANPATH>. You need to have a
aa689395 652working man to access these files.
a56dbb1c 653
654=item Source for Perl documentation
655
656 unzip perl_pod.zip -d f:/perllib/lib
657
3998488b 658This is used by the C<perldoc> program (see L<perldoc>), and may be used to
aa689395 659generate HTML documentation usable by WWW browsers, and
a56dbb1c 660documentation in zillions of other formats: C<info>, C<LaTeX>,
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661C<Acrobat>, C<FrameMaker> and so on. [Use programs such as
662F<pod2latex> etc.]
a56dbb1c 663
aa689395 664=item Perl manual in F<.INF> format
a56dbb1c 665
666 unzip perl_inf.zip -d d:/os2/book
667
668This directory should better be on C<BOOKSHELF>.
669
670=item Pdksh
671
672 unzip perl_sh.zip -d f:/bin
673
72ea3524 674This is used by perl to run external commands which explicitly
a56dbb1c 675require shell, like the commands using I<redirection> and I<shell
676metacharacters>. It is also used instead of explicit F</bin/sh>.
677
678Set C<PERL_SH_DIR> (see L<"PERL_SH_DIR">) if you move F<sh.exe> from
679the above location.
680
25417810 681B<Note.> It may be possible to use some other sh-compatible shell (untested).
a56dbb1c 682
683=back
684
685After you installed the components you needed and updated the
686F<Config.sys> correspondingly, you need to hand-edit
687F<Config.pm>. This file resides somewhere deep in the location you
688installed your perl library, find it out by
689
690 perl -MConfig -le "print $INC{'Config.pm'}"
691
692You need to correct all the entries which look like file paths (they
693currently start with C<f:/>).
694
695=head2 B<Warning>
696
697The automatic and manual perl installation leave precompiled paths
698inside perl executables. While these paths are overwriteable (see
25417810 699L<"PERLLIB_PREFIX">, L<"PERL_SH_DIR">), some people may prefer
a56dbb1c 700binary editing of paths inside the executables/DLLs.
701
702=head1 Accessing documentation
703
704Depending on how you built/installed perl you may have (otherwise
705identical) Perl documentation in the following formats:
706
707=head2 OS/2 F<.INF> file
708
aa689395 709Most probably the most convenient form. Under OS/2 view it as
a56dbb1c 710
711 view perl
712 view perl perlfunc
713 view perl less
714 view perl ExtUtils::MakeMaker
715
716(currently the last two may hit a wrong location, but this may improve
aa689395 717soon). Under Win* see L<"SYNOPSIS">.
a56dbb1c 718
719If you want to build the docs yourself, and have I<OS/2 toolkit>, run
720
721 pod2ipf > perl.ipf
722
723in F</perllib/lib/pod> directory, then
724
725 ipfc /inf perl.ipf
726
727(Expect a lot of errors during the both steps.) Now move it on your
728BOOKSHELF path.
729
730=head2 Plain text
731
732If you have perl documentation in the source form, perl utilities
aa689395 733installed, and GNU groff installed, you may use
a56dbb1c 734
735 perldoc perlfunc
736 perldoc less
737 perldoc ExtUtils::MakeMaker
738
72ea3524 739to access the perl documentation in the text form (note that you may get
a56dbb1c 740better results using perl manpages).
741
742Alternately, try running pod2text on F<.pod> files.
743
744=head2 Manpages
745
25417810 746If you have F<man> installed on your system, and you installed perl
a56dbb1c 747manpages, use something like this:
5243f9ae 748
5243f9ae 749 man perlfunc
750 man 3 less
751 man ExtUtils.MakeMaker
5243f9ae 752
a56dbb1c 753to access documentation for different components of Perl. Start with
754
755 man perl
756
757Note that dot (F<.>) is used as a package separator for documentation
758for packages, and as usual, sometimes you need to give the section - C<3>
759above - to avoid shadowing by the I<less(1) manpage>.
760
761Make sure that the directory B<above> the directory with manpages is
762on our C<MANPATH>, like this
763
764 set MANPATH=c:/man;f:/perllib/man
765
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766for Perl manpages in C<f:/perllib/man/man1/> etc.
767
aa689395 768=head2 HTML
a56dbb1c 769
770If you have some WWW browser available, installed the Perl
771documentation in the source form, and Perl utilities, you can build
aa689395 772HTML docs. Cd to directory with F<.pod> files, and do like this
a56dbb1c 773
774 cd f:/perllib/lib/pod
5243f9ae 775 pod2html
5243f9ae 776
a56dbb1c 777After this you can direct your browser the file F<perl.html> in this
778directory, and go ahead with reading docs, like this:
5243f9ae 779
a56dbb1c 780 explore file:///f:/perllib/lib/pod/perl.html
5243f9ae 781
aa689395 782Alternatively you may be able to get these docs prebuilt from CPAN.
5243f9ae 783
aa689395 784=head2 GNU C<info> files
bb14ff96 785
aa689395 786Users of Emacs would appreciate it very much, especially with
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787C<CPerl> mode loaded. You need to get latest C<pod2texi> from C<CPAN>,
788or, alternately, the prebuilt info pages.
615d1a09 789
5cb3728c 790=head2 F<PDF> files
a56dbb1c 791
25417810 792for C<Acrobat> are available on CPAN (may be for slightly older version of
a56dbb1c 793perl).
794
795=head2 C<LaTeX> docs
796
797can be constructed using C<pod2latex>.
798
799=head1 BUILD
800
eb863851 801Here we discuss how to build Perl under OS/2.
a56dbb1c 802
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803=head2 The short story
804
805Assume that you are a seasoned porter, so are sure that all the necessary
806tools are already present on your system, and you know how to get the Perl
807source distribution. Untar it, change to the extract directory, and
808
809 gnupatch -p0 < os2\diff.configure
810 sh Configure -des -D prefix=f:/perllib
811 make
812 make test
813 make install
814 make aout_test
815 make aout_install
816
817This puts the executables in f:/perllib/bin. Manually move them to the
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818C<PATH>, manually move the built F<perl*.dll> to C<LIBPATH> (here for
819Perl DLL F<*> is a not-very-meaningful hex checksum), and run
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820
821 make installcmd INSTALLCMDDIR=d:/ir/on/path
822
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823Assuming that the C<man>-files were put on an appropriate location,
824this completes the installation of minimal Perl system. (The binary
825distribution contains also a lot of additional modules, and the
826documentation in INF format.)
827
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828What follows is a detailed guide through these steps.
829
a56dbb1c 830=head2 Prerequisites
831
aa689395 832You need to have the latest EMX development environment, the full
833GNU tool suite (gawk renamed to awk, and GNU F<find.exe>
a56dbb1c 834earlier on path than the OS/2 F<find.exe>, same with F<sort.exe>, to
835check use
836
837 find --version
838 sort --version
839
840). You need the latest version of F<pdksh> installed as F<sh.exe>.
841
2c2e0e8c
IZ
842Check that you have B<BSD> libraries and headers installed, and -
843optionally - Berkeley DB headers and libraries, and crypt.
844
25417810 845Possible locations to get the files:
a56dbb1c 846
eb863851
LB
847
848 ftp://ftp.uni-heidelberg.de/pub/os2/unix/
849 http://hobbes.nmsu.edu/h-browse.php?dir=/pub/os2
850 http://cd.textfiles.com/hobbesos29804/disk1/DEV32/
851 http://cd.textfiles.com/hobbesos29804/disk1/EMX09C/
a56dbb1c 852
eb447b86 853It is reported that the following archives contain enough utils to
3998488b 854build perl: F<gnufutil.zip>, F<gnusutil.zip>, F<gnututil.zip>, F<gnused.zip>,
25417810 855F<gnupatch.zip>, F<gnuawk.zip>, F<gnumake.zip>, F<gnugrep.zip>, F<bsddev.zip> and
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856F<ksh527rt.zip> (or a later version). Note that all these utilities are
857known to be available from LEO:
eb447b86 858
eb863851 859 ftp://crydee.sai.msu.ru/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/gnu/
a56dbb1c 860
25417810
IZ
861Note also that the F<db.lib> and F<db.a> from the EMX distribution
862are not suitable for multi-threaded compile (even single-threaded
863flavor of Perl uses multi-threaded C RTL, for
864compatibility with XFree86-OS/2). Get a corrected one from
865
866 http://www.ilyaz.org/software/os2/db_mt.zip
867
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868If you have I<exactly the same version of Perl> installed already,
869make sure that no copies or perl are currently running. Later steps
870of the build may fail since an older version of F<perl.dll> loaded into
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871memory may be found. Running C<make test> becomes meaningless, since
872the test are checking a previous build of perl (this situation is detected
cb0ee57a 873and reported by F<os2/os2_base.t> test). Do not forget to unset
1933e12c 874C<PERL_EMXLOAD_SEC> in environment.
a56dbb1c 875
876Also make sure that you have F</tmp> directory on the current drive,
877and F<.> directory in your C<LIBPATH>. One may try to correct the
878latter condition by
879
25417810 880 set BEGINLIBPATH .\.
a56dbb1c 881
25417810
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882if you use something like F<CMD.EXE> or latest versions of
883F<4os2.exe>. (Setting BEGINLIBPATH to just C<.> is ignored by the
884OS/2 kernel.)
a56dbb1c 885
aa689395 886Make sure your gcc is good for C<-Zomf> linking: run C<omflibs>
a56dbb1c 887script in F</emx/lib> directory.
888
aa689395 889Check that you have link386 installed. It comes standard with OS/2,
a56dbb1c 890but may be not installed due to customization. If typing
891
892 link386
893
894shows you do not have it, do I<Selective install>, and choose C<Link
72ea3524 895object modules> in I<Optional system utilities/More>. If you get into
3998488b 896link386 prompts, press C<Ctrl-C> to exit.
a56dbb1c 897
898=head2 Getting perl source
899
72ea3524 900You need to fetch the latest perl source (including developers
a56dbb1c 901releases). With some probability it is located in
902
e59066d8
LB
903 http://www.cpan.org/src/
904 http://www.cpan.org/src/unsupported
a56dbb1c 905
906If not, you may need to dig in the indices to find it in the directory
907of the current maintainer.
908
72ea3524 909Quick cycle of developers release may break the OS/2 build time to
a56dbb1c 910time, looking into
911
6c8d78fb 912 http://www.cpan.org/ports/os2/
a56dbb1c 913
914may indicate the latest release which was publicly released by the
915maintainer. Note that the release may include some additional patches
916to apply to the current source of perl.
917
918Extract it like this
919
920 tar vzxf perl5.00409.tar.gz
921
922You may see a message about errors while extracting F<Configure>. This is
923because there is a conflict with a similarly-named file F<configure>.
924
a56dbb1c 925Change to the directory of extraction.
926
927=head2 Application of the patches
928
10fb174d 929You need to apply the patches in F<./os2/diff.*> like this:
a56dbb1c 930
df3ef7a9 931 gnupatch -p0 < os2\diff.configure
a56dbb1c 932
933You may also need to apply the patches supplied with the binary
25417810
IZ
934distribution of perl. It also makes sense to look on the
935perl5-porters mailing list for the latest OS/2-related patches (see
936L<http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl5-porters/>). Such
937patches usually contain strings C</os2/> and C<patch>, so it makes
938sense looking for these strings.
a56dbb1c 939
940=head2 Hand-editing
941
942You may look into the file F<./hints/os2.sh> and correct anything
943wrong you find there. I do not expect it is needed anywhere.
615d1a09 944
a56dbb1c 945=head2 Making
615d1a09 946
a56dbb1c 947 sh Configure -des -D prefix=f:/perllib
615d1a09 948
aa689395 949C<prefix> means: where to install the resulting perl library. Giving
a56dbb1c 950correct prefix you may avoid the need to specify C<PERLLIB_PREFIX>,
951see L<"PERLLIB_PREFIX">.
5243f9ae 952
a56dbb1c 953I<Ignore the message about missing C<ln>, and about C<-c> option to
3998488b
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954tr>. The latter is most probably already fixed, if you see it and can trace
955where the latter spurious warning comes from, please inform me.
615d1a09 956
a56dbb1c 957Now
5243f9ae 958
a56dbb1c 959 make
5243f9ae 960
a56dbb1c 961At some moment the built may die, reporting a I<version mismatch> or
3998488b
JH
962I<unable to run F<perl>>. This means that you do not have F<.> in
963your LIBPATH, so F<perl.exe> cannot find the needed F<perl67B2.dll> (treat
964these hex digits as line noise). After this is fixed the build
965should finish without a lot of fuss.
615d1a09 966
a56dbb1c 967=head2 Testing
968
969Now run
970
971 make test
972
25417810
IZ
973All tests should succeed (with some of them skipped). If you have the
974same version of Perl installed, it is crucial that you have C<.> early
975in your LIBPATH (or in BEGINLIBPATH), otherwise your tests will most
976probably test the wrong version of Perl.
a56dbb1c 977
ec40c0cd 978Some tests may generate extra messages similar to
a56dbb1c 979
ec40c0cd 980=over 4
a56dbb1c 981
ec40c0cd 982=item A lot of C<bad free>
a56dbb1c 983
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984in database tests related to Berkeley DB. I<This should be fixed already.>
985If it persists, you may disable this warnings, see L<"PERL_BADFREE">.
72ea3524 986
ec40c0cd 987=item Process terminated by SIGTERM/SIGINT
72ea3524 988
ec40c0cd 989This is a standard message issued by OS/2 applications. *nix
3998488b 990applications die in silence. It is considered to be a feature. One can
ec40c0cd 991easily disable this by appropriate sighandlers.
a56dbb1c 992
ec40c0cd
IZ
993However the test engine bleeds these message to screen in unexpected
994moments. Two messages of this kind I<should> be present during
995testing.
a56dbb1c 996
ec40c0cd 997=back
a56dbb1c 998
ec40c0cd
IZ
999To get finer test reports, call
1000
1001 perl t/harness
1002
1003The report with F<io/pipe.t> failing may look like this:
a56dbb1c 1004
ec40c0cd
IZ
1005 Failed Test Status Wstat Total Fail Failed List of failed
1006 ------------------------------------------------------------
1007 io/pipe.t 12 1 8.33% 9
1008 7 tests skipped, plus 56 subtests skipped.
1009 Failed 1/195 test scripts, 99.49% okay. 1/6542 subtests failed, 99.98% okay.
1010
1011The reasons for most important skipped tests are:
1012
1013=over 8
a56dbb1c 1014
ec40c0cd 1015=item F<op/fs.t>
a56dbb1c 1016
a7665c5e
GS
1017=over 4
1018
c9dde696 1019=item Z<>18
a56dbb1c 1020
ec40c0cd
IZ
1021Checks C<atime> and C<mtime> of C<stat()> - unfortunately, HPFS
1022provides only 2sec time granularity (for compatibility with FAT?).
a56dbb1c 1023
c9dde696 1024=item Z<>25
a56dbb1c 1025
1026Checks C<truncate()> on a filehandle just opened for write - I do not
1027know why this should or should not work.
1028
1029=back
1030
a56dbb1c 1031=item F<op/stat.t>
1032
1033Checks C<stat()>. Tests:
1034
1035=over 4
1036
a56dbb1c 1037=item 4
1038
ec40c0cd
IZ
1039Checks C<atime> and C<mtime> of C<stat()> - unfortunately, HPFS
1040provides only 2sec time granularity (for compatibility with FAT?).
a56dbb1c 1041
1042=back
1043
a56dbb1c 1044=back
615d1a09 1045
a56dbb1c 1046=head2 Installing the built perl
615d1a09 1047
25417810 1048If you haven't yet moved C<perl*.dll> onto LIBPATH, do it now.
491527d0 1049
a56dbb1c 1050Run
615d1a09 1051
a56dbb1c 1052 make install
615d1a09 1053
a56dbb1c 1054It would put the generated files into needed locations. Manually put
1055F<perl.exe>, F<perl__.exe> and F<perl___.exe> to a location on your
aa689395 1056PATH, F<perl.dll> to a location on your LIBPATH.
615d1a09 1057
a56dbb1c 1058Run
615d1a09 1059
3998488b 1060 make installcmd INSTALLCMDDIR=d:/ir/on/path
615d1a09 1061
a56dbb1c 1062to convert perl utilities to F<.cmd> files and put them on
aa689395 1063PATH. You need to put F<.EXE>-utilities on path manually. They are
a56dbb1c 1064installed in C<$prefix/bin>, here C<$prefix> is what you gave to
7622680c 1065F<Configure>, see L</Making>.
a56dbb1c 1066
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IZ
1067If you use C<man>, either move the installed F<*/man/> directories to
1068your C<MANPATH>, or modify C<MANPATH> to match the location. (One
1069could have avoided this by providing a correct C<manpath> option to
1070F<./Configure>, or editing F<./config.sh> between configuring and
1071making steps.)
1072
a56dbb1c 1073=head2 C<a.out>-style build
1074
1075Proceed as above, but make F<perl_.exe> (see L<"perl_.exe">) by
1076
1077 make perl_
1078
1079test and install by
1080
1081 make aout_test
1082 make aout_install
1083
aa689395 1084Manually put F<perl_.exe> to a location on your PATH.
a56dbb1c 1085
a56dbb1c 1086B<Note.> The build process for C<perl_> I<does not know> about all the
1087dependencies, so you should make sure that anything is up-to-date,
1088say, by doing
1089
3998488b 1090 make perl_dll
a56dbb1c 1091
1092first.
1093
1933e12c
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1094=head1 Building a binary distribution
1095
1096[This section provides a short overview only...]
1097
1098Building should proceed differently depending on whether the version of perl
1099you install is already present and used on your system, or is a new version
1100not yet used. The description below assumes that the version is new, so
1101installing its DLLs and F<.pm> files will not disrupt the operation of your
1102system even if some intermediate steps are not yet fully working.
1103
1104The other cases require a little bit more convoluted procedures. Below I
1105suppose that the current version of Perl is C<5.8.2>, so the executables are
1106named accordingly.
1107
1108=over
1109
1110=item 1.
1111
1112Fully build and test the Perl distribution. Make sure that no tests are
1113failing with C<test> and C<aout_test> targets; fix the bugs in Perl and
1114the Perl test suite detected by these tests. Make sure that C<all_test>
90c87169 1115make target runs as clean as possible. Check that F<os2/perlrexx.cmd>
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1116runs fine.
1117
1118=item 2.
1119
1120Fully install Perl, including C<installcmd> target. Copy the generated DLLs
1121to C<LIBPATH>; copy the numbered Perl executables (as in F<perl5.8.2.exe>)
1122to C<PATH>; copy C<perl_.exe> to C<PATH> as C<perl_5.8.2.exe>. Think whether
1123you need backward-compatibility DLLs. In most cases you do not need to install
1124them yet; but sometime this may simplify the following steps.
1125
1126=item 3.
1127
1128Make sure that C<CPAN.pm> can download files from CPAN. If not, you may need
1129to manually install C<Net::FTP>.
1130
1131=item 4.
1132
1133Install the bundle C<Bundle::OS2_default>
1134
1135 perl5.8.2 -MCPAN -e "install Bundle::OS2_default" < nul |& tee 00cpan_i_1
1136
1137This may take a couple of hours on 1GHz processor (when run the first time).
1138And this should not be necessarily a smooth procedure. Some modules may not
1139specify required dependencies, so one may need to repeat this procedure several
1140times until the results stabilize.
1141
1142 perl5.8.2 -MCPAN -e "install Bundle::OS2_default" < nul |& tee 00cpan_i_2
1143 perl5.8.2 -MCPAN -e "install Bundle::OS2_default" < nul |& tee 00cpan_i_3
1144
1145Even after they stabilize, some tests may fail.
1146
1147Fix as many discovered bugs as possible. Document all the bugs which are not
1148fixed, and all the failures with unknown reasons. Inspect the produced logs
1149F<00cpan_i_1> to find suspiciously skipped tests, and other fishy events.
1150
1151Keep in mind that I<installation> of some modules may fail too: for example,
1152the DLLs to update may be already loaded by F<CPAN.pm>. Inspect the C<install>
1153logs (in the example above F<00cpan_i_1> etc) for errors, and install things
1154manually, as in
1155
1156 cd $CPANHOME/.cpan/build/Digest-MD5-2.31
1157 make install
1158
1159Some distributions may fail some tests, but you may want to install them
1160anyway (as above, or via C<force install> command of C<CPAN.pm> shell-mode).
1161
1162Since this procedure may take quite a long time to complete, it makes sense
1163to "freeze" your CPAN configuration by disabling periodic updates of the
1164local copy of CPAN index: set C<index_expire> to some big value (I use 365),
1165then save the settings
1166
1167 CPAN> o conf index_expire 365
1168 CPAN> o conf commit
1169
1170Reset back to the default value C<1> when you are finished.
1171
1172=item 5.
1173
1174When satisfied with the results, rerun the C<installcmd> target. Now you
1175can copy C<perl5.8.2.exe> to C<perl.exe>, and install the other OMF-build
1176executables: C<perl__.exe> etc. They are ready to be used.
1177
1178=item 6.
1179
1180Change to the C<./pod> directory of the build tree, download the Perl logo
1181F<CamelGrayBig.BMP>, and run
1182
1183 ( perl2ipf > perl.ipf ) |& tee 00ipf
1184 ipfc /INF perl.ipf |& tee 00inf
1185
1186This produces the Perl docs online book C<perl.INF>. Install in on
1187C<BOOKSHELF> path.
1188
1189=item 7.
1190
1191Now is the time to build statically linked executable F<perl_.exe> which
1192includes newly-installed via C<Bundle::OS2_default> modules. Doing testing
1193via C<CPAN.pm> is going to be painfully slow, since it statically links
1194a new executable per XS extension.
1195
1196Here is a possible workaround: create a toplevel F<Makefile.PL> in
1197F<$CPANHOME/.cpan/build/> with contents being (compare with L<Making
1198executables with a custom collection of statically loaded extensions>)
1199
1200 use ExtUtils::MakeMaker;
1201 WriteMakefile NAME => 'dummy';
1202
1203execute this as
1204
1205 perl_5.8.2.exe Makefile.PL <nul |& tee 00aout_c1
1206 make -k all test <nul |& 00aout_t1
1207
1208Again, this procedure should not be absolutely smooth. Some C<Makefile.PL>'s
1209in subdirectories may be buggy, and would not run as "child" scripts. The
1210interdependency of modules can strike you; however, since non-XS modules
1211are already installed, the prerequisites of most modules have a very good
1212chance to be present.
1213
1214If you discover some glitches, move directories of problematic modules to a
1215different location; if these modules are non-XS modules, you may just ignore
1216them - they are already installed; the remaining, XS, modules you need to
1217install manually one by one.
1218
1219After each such removal you need to rerun the C<Makefile.PL>/C<make> process;
1220usually this procedure converges soon. (But be sure to convert all the
1221necessary external C libraries from F<.lib> format to F<.a> format: run one of
1222
1223 emxaout foo.lib
1224 emximp -o foo.a foo.lib
1225
1226whichever is appropriate.) Also, make sure that the DLLs for external
1227libraries are usable with with executables compiled without C<-Zmtd> options.
1228
1229When you are sure that only a few subdirectories
1230lead to failures, you may want to add C<-j4> option to C<make> to speed up
1231skipping subdirectories with already finished build.
1232
1233When you are satisfied with the results of tests, install the build C libraries
1234for extensions:
1235
1236 make install |& tee 00aout_i
1237
1238Now you can rename the file F<./perl.exe> generated during the last phase
1239to F<perl_5.8.2.exe>; place it on C<PATH>; if there is an inter-dependency
1240between some XS modules, you may need to repeat the C<test>/C<install> loop
1241with this new executable and some excluded modules - until the procedure
1242converges.
1243
1244Now you have all the necessary F<.a> libraries for these Perl modules in the
1245places where Perl builder can find it. Use the perl builder: change to an
1246empty directory, create a "dummy" F<Makefile.PL> again, and run
1247
1248 perl_5.8.2.exe Makefile.PL |& tee 00c
1249 make perl |& tee 00p
1250
1251This should create an executable F<./perl.exe> with all the statically loaded
1252extensions built in. Compare the generated F<perlmain.c> files to make sure
1253that during the iterations the number of loaded extensions only increases.
1254Rename F<./perl.exe> to F<perl_5.8.2.exe> on C<PATH>.
1255
1256When it converges, you got a functional variant of F<perl_5.8.2.exe>; copy it
1257to C<perl_.exe>. You are done with generation of the local Perl installation.
1258
1259=item 8.
1260
1261Make sure that the installed modules are actually installed in the location
1262of the new Perl, and are not inherited from entries of @INC given for
1263inheritance from the older versions of Perl: set C<PERLLIB_582_PREFIX> to
1264redirect the new version of Perl to a new location, and copy the installed
1265files to this new location. Redo the tests to make sure that the versions of
1266modules inherited from older versions of Perl are not needed.
1267
7622680c 1268Actually, the log output of L<pod2ipf(1)> during the step 6 gives a very detailed
1933e12c
IZ
1269info about which modules are loaded from which place; so you may use it as
1270an additional verification tool.
1271
1272Check that some temporary files did not make into the perl install tree.
1273Run something like this
1274
1275 pfind . -f "!(/\.(pm|pl|ix|al|h|a|lib|txt|pod|imp|bs|dll|ld|bs|inc|xbm|yml|cgi|uu|e2x|skip|packlist|eg|cfg|html|pub|enc|all|ini|po|pot)$/i or /^\w+$/") | less
1276
1277in the install tree (both top one and F<sitelib> one).
1278
1279Compress all the DLLs with F<lxlite>. The tiny F<.exe> can be compressed with
1280C</c:max> (the bug only appears when there is a fixup in the last 6 bytes of a
1281page (?); since the tiny executables are much smaller than a page, the bug
1282will not hit). Do not compress C<perl_.exe> - it would not work under DOS.
1283
1284=item 9.
1285
1286Now you can generate the binary distribution. This is done by running the
1287test of the CPAN distribution C<OS2::SoftInstaller>. Tune up the file
1288F<test.pl> to suit the layout of current version of Perl first. Do not
1289forget to pack the necessary external DLLs accordingly. Include the
1290description of the bugs and test suite failures you could not fix. Include
1291the small-stack versions of Perl executables from Perl build directory.
1292
1293Include F<perl5.def> so that people can relink the perl DLL preserving
1294the binary compatibility, or can create compatibility DLLs. Include the diff
1295files (C<diff -pu old new>) of fixes you did so that people can rebuild your
1296version. Include F<perl5.map> so that one can use remote debugging.
1297
1298=item 10.
1299
1300Share what you did with the other people. Relax. Enjoy fruits of your work.
1301
1302=item 11.
1303
1304Brace yourself for thanks, bug reports, hate mail and spam coming as result
1305of the previous step. No good deed should remain unpunished!
1306
1307=back
1308
1309=head1 Building custom F<.EXE> files
1310
1311The Perl executables can be easily rebuilt at any moment. Moreover, one can
1312use the I<embedding> interface (see L<perlembed>) to make very customized
1313executables.
1314
1315=head2 Making executables with a custom collection of statically loaded extensions
1316
1317It is a little bit easier to do so while I<decreasing> the list of statically
1318loaded extensions. We discuss this case only here.
1319
1320=over
1321
1322=item 1.
1323
1324Change to an empty directory, and create a placeholder <Makefile.PL>:
1325
1326 use ExtUtils::MakeMaker;
1327 WriteMakefile NAME => 'dummy';
1328
1329=item 2.
1330
1331Run it with the flavor of Perl (F<perl.exe> or F<perl_.exe>) you want to
1332rebuild.
1333
1334 perl_ Makefile.PL
1335
1336=item 3.
1337
1338Ask it to create new Perl executable:
1339
1340 make perl
1341
1342(you may need to manually add C<PERLTYPE=-DPERL_CORE> to this commandline on
1343some versions of Perl; the symptom is that the command-line globbing does not
1344work from OS/2 shells with the newly-compiled executable; check with
1345
1346 .\perl.exe -wle "print for @ARGV" *
1347
1348).
1349
1350=item 4.
1351
1352The previous step created F<perlmain.c> which contains a list of newXS() calls
1353near the end. Removing unnecessary calls, and rerunning
1354
1355 make perl
1356
1357will produce a customized executable.
1358
1359=back
1360
1361=head2 Making executables with a custom search-paths
1362
1363The default perl executable is flexible enough to support most usages.
1364However, one may want something yet more flexible; for example, one may want
1365to find Perl DLL relatively to the location of the EXE file; or one may want
1366to ignore the environment when setting the Perl-library search patch, etc.
1367
1368If you fill comfortable with I<embedding> interface (see L<perlembed>), such
1369things are easy to do repeating the steps outlined in L<Making
1370executables with a custom collection of statically loaded extensions>, and
1371doing more comprehensive edits to main() of F<perlmain.c>. The people with
1372little desire to understand Perl can just rename main(), and do necessary
1373modification in a custom main() which calls the renamed function in appropriate
1374time.
1375
1376However, there is a third way: perl DLL exports the main() function and several
1377callbacks to customize the search path. Below is a complete example of a
1378"Perl loader" which
1379
1380=over
1381
1382=item 1.
1383
1384Looks for Perl DLL in the directory C<$exedir/../dll>;
1385
1386=item 2.
1387
1388Prepends the above directory to C<BEGINLIBPATH>;
1389
1390=item 3.
1391
1392Fails if the Perl DLL found via C<BEGINLIBPATH> is different from what was
1393loaded on step 1; e.g., another process could have loaded it from C<LIBPATH>
1394or from a different value of C<BEGINLIBPATH>. In these cases one needs to
1395modify the setting of the system so that this other process either does not
1396run, or loads the DLL from C<BEGINLIBPATH> with C<LIBPATHSTRICT=T> (available
1397with kernels after September 2000).
1398
1399=item 4.
1400
1401Loads Perl library from C<$exedir/../dll/lib/>.
1402
1403=item 5.
1404
1405Uses Bourne shell from C<$exedir/../dll/sh/ksh.exe>.
1406
1407=back
1408
1409For best results compile the C file below with the same options as the Perl
1410DLL. However, a lot of functionality will work even if the executable is not
1411an EMX applications, e.g., if compiled with
1412
1dcc3c19
DG
1413 gcc -Wall -DDOSISH -DOS2=1 -O2 -s -Zomf -Zsys perl-starter.c \
1414 -DPERL_DLL_BASENAME=\"perl312F\" -Zstack 8192 -Zlinker /PM:VIO
1933e12c
IZ
1415
1416Here is the sample C file:
1417
1418 #define INCL_DOS
1419 #define INCL_NOPM
1420 /* These are needed for compile if os2.h includes os2tk.h, not os2emx.h */
1421 #define INCL_DOSPROCESS
1422 #include <os2.h>
1423
1424 #include "EXTERN.h"
1425 #define PERL_IN_MINIPERLMAIN_C
1426 #include "perl.h"
1427
1428 static char *me;
1429 HMODULE handle;
1430
1431 static void
1432 die_with(char *msg1, char *msg2, char *msg3, char *msg4)
1433 {
1434 ULONG c;
1435 char *s = " error: ";
1436
1437 DosWrite(2, me, strlen(me), &c);
1438 DosWrite(2, s, strlen(s), &c);
1439 DosWrite(2, msg1, strlen(msg1), &c);
1440 DosWrite(2, msg2, strlen(msg2), &c);
1441 DosWrite(2, msg3, strlen(msg3), &c);
1442 DosWrite(2, msg4, strlen(msg4), &c);
1443 DosWrite(2, "\r\n", 2, &c);
1444 exit(255);
1445 }
1446
1447 typedef ULONG (*fill_extLibpath_t)(int type, char *pre, char *post, int replace, char *msg);
1448 typedef int (*main_t)(int type, char *argv[], char *env[]);
1449 typedef int (*handler_t)(void* data, int which);
1450
1451 #ifndef PERL_DLL_BASENAME
1452 # define PERL_DLL_BASENAME "perl"
1453 #endif
1454
1455 static HMODULE
1456 load_perl_dll(char *basename)
1457 {
1458 char buf[300], fail[260];
1459 STRLEN l, dirl;
1460 fill_extLibpath_t f;
1461 ULONG rc_fullname;
1462 HMODULE handle, handle1;
1463
1464 if (_execname(buf, sizeof(buf) - 13) != 0)
1465 die_with("Can't find full path: ", strerror(errno), "", "");
fe004f0c 1466 /* XXXX Fill 'me' with new value */
1933e12c
IZ
1467 l = strlen(buf);
1468 while (l && buf[l-1] != '/' && buf[l-1] != '\\')
1469 l--;
1470 dirl = l - 1;
1471 strcpy(buf + l, basename);
1472 l += strlen(basename);
1473 strcpy(buf + l, ".dll");
1474 if ( (rc_fullname = DosLoadModule(fail, sizeof fail, buf, &handle)) != 0
1475 && DosLoadModule(fail, sizeof fail, basename, &handle) != 0 )
1476 die_with("Can't load DLL ", buf, "", "");
1477 if (rc_fullname)
1478 return handle; /* was loaded with short name; all is fine */
1479 if (DosQueryProcAddr(handle, 0, "fill_extLibpath", (PFN*)&f))
1480 die_with(buf, ": DLL exports no symbol ", "fill_extLibpath", "");
1481 buf[dirl] = 0;
1482 if (f(0 /*BEGINLIBPATH*/, buf /* prepend */, NULL /* append */,
1483 0 /* keep old value */, me))
1484 die_with(me, ": prepending BEGINLIBPATH", "", "");
1485 if (DosLoadModule(fail, sizeof fail, basename, &handle1) != 0)
1486 die_with(me, ": finding perl DLL again via BEGINLIBPATH", "", "");
1487 buf[dirl] = '\\';
1488 if (handle1 != handle) {
1489 if (DosQueryModuleName(handle1, sizeof(fail), fail))
1490 strcpy(fail, "???");
1491 die_with(buf, ":\n\tperl DLL via BEGINLIBPATH is different: \n\t",
1492 fail,
1493 "\n\tYou may need to manipulate global BEGINLIBPATH and LIBPATHSTRICT"
1494 "\n\tso that the other copy is loaded via BEGINLIBPATH.");
1495 }
1496 return handle;
1497 }
1498
1499 int
1500 main(int argc, char **argv, char **env)
1501 {
1502 main_t f;
1503 handler_t h;
193454d5 1504
1933e12c
IZ
1505 me = argv[0];
1506 /**/
1507 handle = load_perl_dll(PERL_DLL_BASENAME);
1508
1509 if (DosQueryProcAddr(handle, 0, "Perl_OS2_handler_install", (PFN*)&h))
1510 die_with(PERL_DLL_BASENAME, ": DLL exports no symbol ", "Perl_OS2_handler_install", "");
1511 if ( !h((void *)"~installprefix", Perlos2_handler_perllib_from)
1512 || !h((void *)"~dll", Perlos2_handler_perllib_to)
1513 || !h((void *)"~dll/sh/ksh.exe", Perlos2_handler_perl_sh) )
1514 die_with(PERL_DLL_BASENAME, ": Can't install @INC manglers", "", "");
1515
1516 if (DosQueryProcAddr(handle, 0, "dll_perlmain", (PFN*)&f))
1517 die_with(PERL_DLL_BASENAME, ": DLL exports no symbol ", "dll_perlmain", "");
1518 return f(argc, argv, env);
1519 }
1520
1521
a56dbb1c 1522=head1 Build FAQ
1523
1524=head2 Some C</> became C<\> in pdksh.
1525
eea834d0 1526You have a very old pdksh. See L</Prerequisites>.
a56dbb1c 1527
1528=head2 C<'errno'> - unresolved external
1529
eea834d0 1530You do not have MT-safe F<db.lib>. See L</Prerequisites>.
a56dbb1c 1531
2c2e0e8c 1532=head2 Problems with tr or sed
a56dbb1c 1533
2c2e0e8c 1534reported with very old version of tr and sed.
a56dbb1c 1535
1536=head2 Some problem (forget which ;-)
1537
aa689395 1538You have an older version of F<perl.dll> on your LIBPATH, which
a56dbb1c 1539broke the build of extensions.
1540
1541=head2 Library ... not found
1542
eea834d0 1543You did not run C<omflibs>. See L</Prerequisites>.
a56dbb1c 1544
1545=head2 Segfault in make
1546
eea834d0 1547You use an old version of GNU make. See L</Prerequisites>.
a56dbb1c 1548
884335e8
YST
1549=head2 op/sprintf test failure
1550
1551This can result from a bug in emx sprintf which was fixed in 0.9d fix 03.
1552
a56dbb1c 1553=head1 Specific (mis)features of OS/2 port
1554
1555=head2 C<setpriority>, C<getpriority>
1556
1557Note that these functions are compatible with *nix, not with the older
1558ports of '94 - 95. The priorities are absolute, go from 32 to -95,
72ea3524 1559lower is quicker. 0 is the default priority.
a56dbb1c 1560
d88df687
IZ
1561B<WARNING>. Calling C<getpriority> on a non-existing process could lock
1562the system before Warp3 fixpak22. Starting with Warp3, Perl will use
1563a workaround: it aborts getpriority() if the process is not present.
1564This is not possible on older versions C<2.*>, and has a race
1565condition anyway.
3998488b 1566
a56dbb1c 1567=head2 C<system()>
1568
1569Multi-argument form of C<system()> allows an additional numeric
1570argument. The meaning of this argument is described in
1571L<OS2::Process>.
1572
3998488b 1573When finding a program to run, Perl first asks the OS to look for executables
d88df687
IZ
1574on C<PATH> (OS/2 adds extension F<.exe> if no extension is present).
1575If not found, it looks for a script with possible extensions
3998488b
JH
1576added in this order: no extension, F<.cmd>, F<.btm>,
1577F<.bat>, F<.pl>. If found, Perl checks the start of the file for magic
1578strings C<"#!"> and C<"extproc ">. If found, Perl uses the rest of the
1579first line as the beginning of the command line to run this script. The
1580only mangling done to the first line is extraction of arguments (currently
1581up to 3), and ignoring of the path-part of the "interpreter" name if it can't
1582be found using the full path.
1583
1584E.g., C<system 'foo', 'bar', 'baz'> may lead Perl to finding
1585F<C:/emx/bin/foo.cmd> with the first line being
1586
1587 extproc /bin/bash -x -c
1588
d88df687 1589If F</bin/bash.exe> is not found, then Perl looks for an executable F<bash.exe> on
3998488b
JH
1590C<PATH>. If found in F<C:/emx.add/bin/bash.exe>, then the above system() is
1591translated to
1592
1593 system qw(C:/emx.add/bin/bash.exe -x -c C:/emx/bin/foo.cmd bar baz)
1594
1595One additional translation is performed: instead of F</bin/sh> Perl uses
1596the hardwired-or-customized shell (see C<L<"PERL_SH_DIR">>).
1597
1598The above search for "interpreter" is recursive: if F<bash> executable is not
1599found, but F<bash.btm> is found, Perl will investigate its first line etc.
1600The only hardwired limit on the recursion depth is implicit: there is a limit
16014 on the number of additional arguments inserted before the actual arguments
1602given to system(). In particular, if no additional arguments are specified
1603on the "magic" first lines, then the limit on the depth is 4.
1604
25417810
IZ
1605If Perl finds that the found executable is of PM type when the
1606current session is not, it will start the new process in a separate session of
3998488b
JH
1607necessary type. Call via C<OS2::Process> to disable this magic.
1608
d88df687
IZ
1609B<WARNING>. Due to the described logic, you need to explicitly
1610specify F<.com> extension if needed. Moreover, if the executable
1611F<perl5.6.1> is requested, Perl will not look for F<perl5.6.1.exe>.
1612[This may change in the future.]
1613
aa689395 1614=head2 C<extproc> on the first line
1615
3998488b 1616If the first chars of a Perl script are C<"extproc ">, this line is treated
aa689395 1617as C<#!>-line, thus all the switches on this line are processed (twice
3998488b 1618if script was started via cmd.exe). See L<perlrun/DESCRIPTION>.
aa689395 1619
a56dbb1c 1620=head2 Additional modules:
615d1a09 1621
3998488b 1622L<OS2::Process>, L<OS2::DLL>, L<OS2::REXX>, L<OS2::PrfDB>, L<OS2::ExtAttr>. These
2c2e0e8c 1623modules provide access to additional numeric argument for C<system>
3998488b
JH
1624and to the information about the running process,
1625to DLLs having functions with REXX signature and to the REXX runtime, to
a56dbb1c 1626OS/2 databases in the F<.INI> format, and to Extended Attributes.
615d1a09 1627
72ea3524 1628Two additional extensions by Andreas Kaiser, C<OS2::UPM>, and
3998488b 1629C<OS2::FTP>, are included into C<ILYAZ> directory, mirrored on CPAN.
25417810 1630Other OS/2-related extensions are available too.
615d1a09 1631
a56dbb1c 1632=head2 Prebuilt methods:
615d1a09 1633
a56dbb1c 1634=over 4
615d1a09 1635
a56dbb1c 1636=item C<File::Copy::syscopy>
615d1a09 1637
d7678ab8 1638used by C<File::Copy::copy>, see L<File::Copy>.
615d1a09 1639
a56dbb1c 1640=item C<DynaLoader::mod2fname>
615d1a09 1641
72ea3524 1642used by C<DynaLoader> for DLL name mangling.
615d1a09 1643
a56dbb1c 1644=item C<Cwd::current_drive()>
615d1a09 1645
a56dbb1c 1646Self explanatory.
615d1a09 1647
a56dbb1c 1648=item C<Cwd::sys_chdir(name)>
615d1a09 1649
a56dbb1c 1650leaves drive as it is.
615d1a09 1651
a56dbb1c 1652=item C<Cwd::change_drive(name)>
615d1a09 1653
f858446f 1654changes the "current" drive.
615d1a09 1655
a56dbb1c 1656=item C<Cwd::sys_is_absolute(name)>
615d1a09 1657
a56dbb1c 1658means has drive letter and is_rooted.
615d1a09 1659
a56dbb1c 1660=item C<Cwd::sys_is_rooted(name)>
615d1a09 1661
a56dbb1c 1662means has leading C<[/\\]> (maybe after a drive-letter:).
615d1a09 1663
a56dbb1c 1664=item C<Cwd::sys_is_relative(name)>
615d1a09 1665
a56dbb1c 1666means changes with current dir.
615d1a09 1667
a56dbb1c 1668=item C<Cwd::sys_cwd(name)>
615d1a09 1669
aa689395 1670Interface to cwd from EMX. Used by C<Cwd::cwd>.
615d1a09 1671
a56dbb1c 1672=item C<Cwd::sys_abspath(name, dir)>
615d1a09 1673
a56dbb1c 1674Really really odious function to implement. Returns absolute name of
1675file which would have C<name> if CWD were C<dir>. C<Dir> defaults to the
1676current dir.
615d1a09 1677
6d0f518e 1678=item C<Cwd::extLibpath([type])>
615d1a09 1679
a56dbb1c 1680Get current value of extended library search path. If C<type> is
25417810
IZ
1681present and positive, works with C<END_LIBPATH>, if negative, works
1682with C<LIBPATHSTRICT>, otherwise with C<BEGIN_LIBPATH>.
615d1a09 1683
a56dbb1c 1684=item C<Cwd::extLibpath_set( path [, type ] )>
615d1a09 1685
a56dbb1c 1686Set current value of extended library search path. If C<type> is
25417810
IZ
1687present and positive, works with <END_LIBPATH>, if negative, works
1688with C<LIBPATHSTRICT>, otherwise with C<BEGIN_LIBPATH>.
615d1a09 1689
3998488b
JH
1690=item C<OS2::Error(do_harderror,do_exception)>
1691
1692Returns C<undef> if it was not called yet, otherwise bit 1 is
1693set if on the previous call do_harderror was enabled, bit
d1be9408 16942 is set if on previous call do_exception was enabled.
3998488b
JH
1695
1696This function enables/disables error popups associated with
1697hardware errors (Disk not ready etc.) and software exceptions.
1698
1699I know of no way to find out the state of popups I<before> the first call
1700to this function.
1701
1702=item C<OS2::Errors2Drive(drive)>
1703
1704Returns C<undef> if it was not called yet, otherwise return false if errors
1705were not requested to be written to a hard drive, or the drive letter if
1706this was requested.
1707
1708This function may redirect error popups associated with hardware errors
1709(Disk not ready etc.) and software exceptions to the file POPUPLOG.OS2 at
1710the root directory of the specified drive. Overrides OS2::Error() specified
1711by individual programs. Given argument undef will disable redirection.
1712
1713Has global effect, persists after the application exits.
1714
1715I know of no way to find out the state of redirection of popups to the disk
1716I<before> the first call to this function.
1717
1718=item OS2::SysInfo()
1719
1720Returns a hash with system information. The keys of the hash are
1721
1722 MAX_PATH_LENGTH, MAX_TEXT_SESSIONS, MAX_PM_SESSIONS,
1723 MAX_VDM_SESSIONS, BOOT_DRIVE, DYN_PRI_VARIATION,
1724 MAX_WAIT, MIN_SLICE, MAX_SLICE, PAGE_SIZE,
1725 VERSION_MAJOR, VERSION_MINOR, VERSION_REVISION,
1726 MS_COUNT, TIME_LOW, TIME_HIGH, TOTPHYSMEM, TOTRESMEM,
1727 TOTAVAILMEM, MAXPRMEM, MAXSHMEM, TIMER_INTERVAL,
1728 MAX_COMP_LENGTH, FOREGROUND_FS_SESSION,
1729 FOREGROUND_PROCESS
1730
1731=item OS2::BootDrive()
1732
1733Returns a letter without colon.
1734
1735=item C<OS2::MorphPM(serve)>, C<OS2::UnMorphPM(serve)>
1736
1737Transforms the current application into a PM application and back.
1738The argument true means that a real message loop is going to be served.
1739OS2::MorphPM() returns the PM message queue handle as an integer.
1740
1741See L<"Centralized management of resources"> for additional details.
1742
1743=item C<OS2::Serve_Messages(force)>
1744
1745Fake on-demand retrieval of outstanding PM messages. If C<force> is false,
1746will not dispatch messages if a real message loop is known to
1747be present. Returns number of messages retrieved.
1748
1749Dies with "QUITing..." if WM_QUIT message is obtained.
1750
1751=item C<OS2::Process_Messages(force [, cnt])>
1752
1753Retrieval of PM messages until window creation/destruction.
1754If C<force> is false, will not dispatch messages if a real message loop
1755is known to be present.
1756
1757Returns change in number of windows. If C<cnt> is given,
1758it is incremented by the number of messages retrieved.
1759
1760Dies with "QUITing..." if WM_QUIT message is obtained.
1761
1762=item C<OS2::_control87(new,mask)>
1763
1764the same as L<_control87(3)> of EMX. Takes integers as arguments, returns
1765the previous coprocessor control word as an integer. Only bits in C<new> which
1766are present in C<mask> are changed in the control word.
1767
1768=item OS2::get_control87()
1769
1770gets the coprocessor control word as an integer.
1771
1772=item C<OS2::set_control87_em(new=MCW_EM,mask=MCW_EM)>
1773
1774The variant of OS2::_control87() with default values good for
1775handling exception mask: if no C<mask>, uses exception mask part of C<new>
1776only. If no C<new>, disables all the floating point exceptions.
1777
1778See L<"Misfeatures"> for details.
1779
25417810
IZ
1780=item C<OS2::DLLname([how [, \&xsub]])>
1781
1782Gives the information about the Perl DLL or the DLL containing the C
1783function bound to by C<&xsub>. The meaning of C<how> is: default (2):
1784full name; 0: handle; 1: module name.
1785
a56dbb1c 1786=back
615d1a09 1787
a56dbb1c 1788(Note that some of these may be moved to different libraries -
1789eventually).
615d1a09 1790
615d1a09 1791
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1792=head2 Prebuilt variables:
1793
1794=over 4
1795
1796=item $OS2::emx_rev
1797
25417810
IZ
1798numeric value is the same as _emx_rev of EMX, a string value the same
1799as _emx_vprt (similar to C<0.9c>).
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1800
1801=item $OS2::emx_env
1802
1803same as _emx_env of EMX, a number similar to 0x8001.
1804
1805=item $OS2::os_ver
1806
1807a number C<OS_MAJOR + 0.001 * OS_MINOR>.
1808
25417810
IZ
1809=item $OS2::is_aout
1810
1811true if the Perl library was compiled in AOUT format.
1812
1813=item $OS2::can_fork
1814
1815true if the current executable is an AOUT EMX executable, so Perl can
1816fork. Do not use this, use the portable check for
1817$Config::Config{dfork}.
1818
1819=item $OS2::nsyserror
1820
1821This variable (default is 1) controls whether to enforce the contents
1822of $^E to start with C<SYS0003>-like id. If set to 0, then the string
1823value of $^E is what is available from the OS/2 message file. (Some
1824messages in this file have an C<SYS0003>-like id prepended, some not.)
1825
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1826=back
1827
a56dbb1c 1828=head2 Misfeatures
615d1a09 1829
a56dbb1c 1830=over 4
615d1a09 1831
13a2d996 1832=item *
615d1a09 1833
367f3c24
IZ
1834Since L<flock(3)> is present in EMX, but is not functional, it is
1835emulated by perl. To disable the emulations, set environment variable
1836C<USE_PERL_FLOCK=0>.
1837
13a2d996 1838=item *
367f3c24
IZ
1839
1840Here is the list of things which may be "broken" on
55497cff 1841EMX (from EMX docs):
1842
13a2d996 1843=over 4
d7678ab8
CS
1844
1845=item *
1846
1847The functions L<recvmsg(3)>, L<sendmsg(3)>, and L<socketpair(3)> are not
1848implemented.
1849
1850=item *
1851
1852L<sock_init(3)> is not required and not implemented.
1853
1854=item *
1855
367f3c24 1856L<flock(3)> is not yet implemented (dummy function). (Perl has a workaround.)
d7678ab8
CS
1857
1858=item *
1859
1860L<kill(3)>: Special treatment of PID=0, PID=1 and PID=-1 is not implemented.
1861
1862=item *
1863
1864L<waitpid(3)>:
1865
55497cff 1866 WUNTRACED
1867 Not implemented.
1868 waitpid() is not implemented for negative values of PID.
1869
d7678ab8
CS
1870=back
1871
55497cff 1872Note that C<kill -9> does not work with the current version of EMX.
615d1a09 1873
13a2d996 1874=item *
615d1a09 1875
25417810 1876See L<"Text-mode filehandles">.
615d1a09 1877
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1878=item *
1879
1880Unix-domain sockets on OS/2 live in a pseudo-file-system C</sockets/...>.
1881To avoid a failure to create a socket with a name of a different form,
1882C<"/socket/"> is prepended to the socket name (unless it starts with this
1883already).
1884
1885This may lead to problems later in case the socket is accessed via the
1886"usual" file-system calls using the "initial" name.
1887
1888=item *
1889
1890Apparently, IBM used a compiler (for some period of time around '95?) which
1891changes FP mask right and left. This is not I<that> bad for IBM's
1892programs, but the same compiler was used for DLLs which are used with
1893general-purpose applications. When these DLLs are used, the state of
1894floating-point flags in the application is not predictable.
1895
1896What is much worse, some DLLs change the floating point flags when in
1897_DLLInitTerm() (e.g., F<TCP32IP>). This means that even if you do not I<call>
1898any function in the DLL, just the act of loading this DLL will reset your
1899flags. What is worse, the same compiler was used to compile some HOOK DLLs.
1900Given that HOOK dlls are executed in the context of I<all> the applications
f858446f 1901in the system, this means a complete unpredictability of floating point
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1902flags on systems using such HOOK DLLs. E.g., F<GAMESRVR.DLL> of B<DIVE>
1903origin changes the floating point flags on each write to the TTY of a VIO
1904(windowed text-mode) applications.
1905
1906Some other (not completely debugged) situations when FP flags change include
1907some video drivers (?), and some operations related to creation of the windows.
1908People who code B<OpenGL> may have more experience on this.
1909
1910Perl is generally used in the situation when all the floating-point
1911exceptions are ignored, as is the default under EMX. If they are not ignored,
1912some benign Perl programs would get a C<SIGFPE> and would die a horrible death.
1913
1914To circumvent this, Perl uses two hacks. They help against I<one> type of
1915damage only: FP flags changed when loading a DLL.
1916
25417810 1917One of the hacks is to disable floating point exceptions on Perl startup (as
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1918is the default with EMX). This helps only with compile-time-linked DLLs
1919changing the flags before main() had a chance to be called.
1920
1921The other hack is to restore FP flags after a call to dlopen(). This helps
1922against similar damage done by DLLs _DLLInitTerm() at runtime. Currently
1923no way to switch these hacks off is provided.
1924
a56dbb1c 1925=back
615d1a09 1926
55497cff 1927=head2 Modifications
1928
1929Perl modifies some standard C library calls in the following ways:
1930
1931=over 9
1932
1933=item C<popen>
1934
72ea3524 1935C<my_popen> uses F<sh.exe> if shell is required, cf. L<"PERL_SH_DIR">.
55497cff 1936
1937=item C<tmpnam>
1938
1939is created using C<TMP> or C<TEMP> environment variable, via
1940C<tempnam>.
1941
1942=item C<tmpfile>
1943
72ea3524 1944If the current directory is not writable, file is created using modified
55497cff 1945C<tmpnam>, so there may be a race condition.
1946
1947=item C<ctermid>
1948
1949a dummy implementation.
1950
1951=item C<stat>
1952
1953C<os2_stat> special-cases F</dev/tty> and F</dev/con>.
1954
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1955=item C<mkdir>, C<rmdir>
1956
1957these EMX functions do not work if the path contains a trailing C</>.
1958Perl contains a workaround for this.
1959
367f3c24
IZ
1960=item C<flock>
1961
1962Since L<flock(3)> is present in EMX, but is not functional, it is
1963emulated by perl. To disable the emulations, set environment variable
1964C<USE_PERL_FLOCK=0>.
1965
55497cff 1966=back
1967
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1968=head2 Identifying DLLs
1969
1970All the DLLs built with the current versions of Perl have ID strings
1971identifying the name of the extension, its version, and the version
1972of Perl required for this DLL. Run C<bldlevel DLL-name> to find this
1973info.
1974
1975=head2 Centralized management of resources
1976
1977Since to call certain OS/2 API one needs to have a correctly initialized
1978C<Win> subsystem, OS/2-specific extensions may require getting C<HAB>s and
1979C<HMQ>s. If an extension would do it on its own, another extension could
1980fail to initialize.
1981
1982Perl provides a centralized management of these resources:
1983
1984=over
1985
1986=item C<HAB>
1987
1988To get the HAB, the extension should call C<hab = perl_hab_GET()> in C. After
1989this call is performed, C<hab> may be accessed as C<Perl_hab>. There is
1990no need to release the HAB after it is used.
1991
1992If by some reasons F<perl.h> cannot be included, use
1993
1994 extern int Perl_hab_GET(void);
1995
1996instead.
1997
1998=item C<HMQ>
1999
2000There are two cases:
2001
2002=over
2003
2004=item *
2005
2006the extension needs an C<HMQ> only because some API will not work otherwise.
2007Use C<serve = 0> below.
2008
2009=item *
2010
2011the extension needs an C<HMQ> since it wants to engage in a PM event loop.
2012Use C<serve = 1> below.
2013
2014=back
2015
2016To get an C<HMQ>, the extension should call C<hmq = perl_hmq_GET(serve)> in C.
2017After this call is performed, C<hmq> may be accessed as C<Perl_hmq>.
2018
2019To signal to Perl that HMQ is not needed any more, call
2020C<perl_hmq_UNSET(serve)>. Perl process will automatically morph/unmorph itself
2021into/from a PM process if HMQ is needed/not-needed. Perl will automatically
2022enable/disable C<WM_QUIT> message during shutdown if the message queue is
2023served/not-served.
2024
2025B<NOTE>. If during a shutdown there is a message queue which did not disable
2026WM_QUIT, and which did not process the received WM_QUIT message, the
2027shutdown will be automatically cancelled. Do not call C<perl_hmq_GET(1)>
2028unless you are going to process messages on an orderly basis.
2029
193454d5 2030=item Treating errors reported by OS/2 API
25417810
IZ
2031
2032There are two principal conventions (it is useful to call them C<Dos*>
2033and C<Win*> - though this part of the function signature is not always
2034determined by the name of the API) of reporting the error conditions
2035of OS/2 API. Most of C<Dos*> APIs report the error code as the result
2036of the call (so 0 means success, and there are many types of errors).
2037Most of C<Win*> API report success/fail via the result being
2038C<TRUE>/C<FALSE>; to find the reason for the failure one should call
2039WinGetLastError() API.
2040
2041Some C<Win*> entry points also overload a "meaningful" return value
2042with the error indicator; having a 0 return value indicates an error.
2043Yet some other C<Win*> entry points overload things even more, and 0
2044return value may mean a successful call returning a valid value 0, as
2045well as an error condition; in the case of a 0 return value one should
2046call WinGetLastError() API to distinguish a successful call from a
2047failing one.
2048
2049By convention, all the calls to OS/2 API should indicate their
2050failures by resetting $^E. All the Perl-accessible functions which
2051call OS/2 API may be broken into two classes: some die()s when an API
2052error is encountered, the other report the error via a false return
2053value (of course, this does not concern Perl-accessible functions
2054which I<expect> a failure of the OS/2 API call, having some workarounds
2055coded).
2056
2057Obviously, in the situation of the last type of the signature of an OS/2
2058API, it is must more convenient for the users if the failure is
2059indicated by die()ing: one does not need to check $^E to know that
2060something went wrong. If, however, this solution is not desirable by
2061some reason, the code in question should reset $^E to 0 before making
2062this OS/2 API call, so that the caller of this Perl-accessible
2063function has a chance to distinguish a success-but-0-return value from
2064a failure. (One may return undef as an alternative way of reporting
2065an error.)
2066
2067The macros to simplify this type of error propagation are
2068
2069=over
2070
2071=item C<CheckOSError(expr)>
2072
2073Returns true on error, sets $^E. Expects expr() be a call of
2074C<Dos*>-style API.
2075
2076=item C<CheckWinError(expr)>
2077
2078Returns true on error, sets $^E. Expects expr() be a call of
2079C<Win*>-style API.
2080
2081=item C<SaveWinError(expr)>
2082
2083Returns C<expr>, sets $^E from WinGetLastError() if C<expr> is false.
2084
2085=item C<SaveCroakWinError(expr,die,name1,name2)>
2086
2087Returns C<expr>, sets $^E from WinGetLastError() if C<expr> is false,
2088and die()s if C<die> and $^E are true. The message to die is the
2089concatenated strings C<name1> and C<name2>, separated by C<": "> from
2090the contents of $^E.
2091
2092=item C<WinError_2_Perl_rc>
2093
2094Sets C<Perl_rc> to the return value of WinGetLastError().
2095
2096=item C<FillWinError>
2097
2098Sets C<Perl_rc> to the return value of WinGetLastError(), and sets $^E
2099to the corresponding value.
2100
2101=item C<FillOSError(rc)>
2102
2103Sets C<Perl_rc> to C<rc>, and sets $^E to the corresponding value.
2104
2105=back
2106
193454d5 2107=item Loading DLLs and ordinals in DLLs
25417810
IZ
2108
2109Some DLLs are only present in some versions of OS/2, or in some
2110configurations of OS/2. Some exported entry points are present only
2111in DLLs shipped with some versions of OS/2. If these DLLs and entry
2112points were linked directly for a Perl executable/DLL or from a Perl
2113extensions, this binary would work only with the specified
2114versions/setups. Even if these entry points were not needed, the
2115I<load> of the executable (or DLL) would fail.
2116
2117For example, many newer useful APIs are not present in OS/2 v2; many
2118PM-related APIs require DLLs not available on floppy-boot setup.
2119
2120To make these calls fail I<only when the calls are executed>, one
2121should call these API via a dynamic linking API. There is a subsystem
2122in Perl to simplify such type of calls. A large number of entry
2123points available for such linking is provided (see C<entries_ordinals>
2124- and also C<PMWIN_entries> - in F<os2ish.h>). These ordinals can be
2125accessed via the APIs:
2126
2127 CallORD(), DeclFuncByORD(), DeclVoidFuncByORD(),
2128 DeclOSFuncByORD(), DeclWinFuncByORD(), AssignFuncPByORD(),
2129 DeclWinFuncByORD_CACHE(), DeclWinFuncByORD_CACHE_survive(),
2130 DeclWinFuncByORD_CACHE_resetError_survive(),
2131 DeclWinFunc_CACHE(), DeclWinFunc_CACHE_resetError(),
2132 DeclWinFunc_CACHE_survive(), DeclWinFunc_CACHE_resetError_survive()
2133
2134See the header files and the C code in the supplied OS/2-related
2135modules for the details on usage of these functions.
2136
2137Some of these functions also combine dynaloading semantic with the
2138error-propagation semantic discussed above.
d6fd60d6 2139
3998488b
JH
2140=back
2141
a56dbb1c 2142=head1 Perl flavors
615d1a09 2143
72ea3524 2144Because of idiosyncrasies of OS/2 one cannot have all the eggs in the
aa689395 2145same basket (though EMX environment tries hard to overcome this
a56dbb1c 2146limitations, so the situation may somehow improve). There are 4
2147executables for Perl provided by the distribution:
615d1a09 2148
a56dbb1c 2149=head2 F<perl.exe>
615d1a09 2150
a56dbb1c 2151The main workhorse. This is a chimera executable: it is compiled as an
2152C<a.out>-style executable, but is linked with C<omf>-style dynamic
aa689395 2153library F<perl.dll>, and with dynamic CRT DLL. This executable is a
2154VIO application.
a56dbb1c 2155
3998488b 2156It can load perl dynamic extensions, and it can fork().
a56dbb1c 2157
2158B<Note.> Keep in mind that fork() is needed to open a pipe to yourself.
2159
2160=head2 F<perl_.exe>
2161
3998488b
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2162This is a statically linked C<a.out>-style executable. It cannot
2163load dynamic Perl extensions. The executable supplied in binary
2164distributions has a lot of extensions prebuilt, thus the above restriction is
2165important only if you use custom-built extensions. This executable is a VIO
a56dbb1c 2166application.
2167
3998488b 2168I<This is the only executable with does not require OS/2.> The
a56dbb1c 2169friends locked into C<M$> world would appreciate the fact that this
72ea3524 2170executable runs under DOS, Win0.3*, Win0.95 and WinNT with an
a56dbb1c 2171appropriate extender. See L<"Other OSes">.
2172
2173=head2 F<perl__.exe>
2174
aa689395 2175This is the same executable as F<perl___.exe>, but it is a PM
a56dbb1c 2176application.
2177
3998488b
JH
2178B<Note.> Usually (unless explicitly redirected during the startup)
2179STDIN, STDERR, and STDOUT of a PM
2180application are redirected to F<nul>. However, it is possible to I<see>
a56dbb1c 2181them if you start C<perl__.exe> from a PM program which emulates a
aa689395 2182console window, like I<Shell mode> of Emacs or EPM. Thus it I<is
a56dbb1c 2183possible> to use Perl debugger (see L<perldebug>) to debug your PM
3998488b
JH
2184application (but beware of the message loop lockups - this will not
2185work if you have a message queue to serve, unless you hook the serving
2186into the getc() function of the debugger).
a56dbb1c 2187
3998488b
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2188Another way to see the output of a PM program is to run it as
2189
2190 pm_prog args 2>&1 | cat -
2191
2192with a shell I<different> from F<cmd.exe>, so that it does not create
2193a link between a VIO session and the session of C<pm_porg>. (Such a link
2194closes the VIO window.) E.g., this works with F<sh.exe> - or with Perl!
2195
2196 open P, 'pm_prog args 2>&1 |' or die;
2197 print while <P>;
2198
2199The flavor F<perl__.exe> is required if you want to start your program without
2200a VIO window present, but not C<detach>ed (run C<help detach> for more info).
2201Very useful for extensions which use PM, like C<Perl/Tk> or C<OpenGL>.
a56dbb1c 2202
25417810
IZ
2203Note also that the differences between PM and VIO executables are only
2204in the I<default> behaviour. One can start I<any> executable in
2205I<any> kind of session by using the arguments C</fs>, C</pm> or
2206C</win> switches of the command C<start> (of F<CMD.EXE> or a similar
2207shell). Alternatively, one can use the numeric first argument of the
5f0135eb 2208C<system> Perl function (see L<OS2::Process>).
25417810 2209
a56dbb1c 2210=head2 F<perl___.exe>
2211
2212This is an C<omf>-style executable which is dynamically linked to
aa689395 2213F<perl.dll> and CRT DLL. I know no advantages of this executable
a56dbb1c 2214over C<perl.exe>, but it cannot fork() at all. Well, one advantage is
2215that the build process is not so convoluted as with C<perl.exe>.
2216
aa689395 2217It is a VIO application.
a56dbb1c 2218
2219=head2 Why strange names?
2220
2221Since Perl processes the C<#!>-line (cf.
7622680c 2222L<perlrun/DESCRIPTION>, L<perlrun/Command Switches>,
a56dbb1c 2223L<perldiag/"No Perl script found in input">), it should know when a
2224program I<is a Perl>. There is some naming convention which allows
2225Perl to distinguish correct lines from wrong ones. The above names are
72ea3524 2226almost the only names allowed by this convention which do not contain
a56dbb1c 2227digits (which have absolutely different semantics).
2228
2229=head2 Why dynamic linking?
2230
2231Well, having several executables dynamically linked to the same huge
2232library has its advantages, but this would not substantiate the
3998488b
JH
2233additional work to make it compile. The reason is the complicated-to-developers
2234but very quick and convenient-to-users "hard" dynamic linking used by OS/2.
2235
2236There are two distinctive features of the dyna-linking model of OS/2:
25417810
IZ
2237first, all the references to external functions are resolved at the compile time;
2238second, there is no runtime fixup of the DLLs after they are loaded into memory.
3998488b
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2239The first feature is an enormous advantage over other models: it avoids
2240conflicts when several DLLs used by an application export entries with
2241the same name. In such cases "other" models of dyna-linking just choose
2242between these two entry points using some random criterion - with predictable
2243disasters as results. But it is the second feature which requires the build
2244of F<perl.dll>.
a56dbb1c 2245
72ea3524 2246The address tables of DLLs are patched only once, when they are
3998488b
JH
2247loaded. The addresses of the entry points into DLLs are guaranteed to be
2248the same for all the programs which use the same DLL. This removes the
2249runtime fixup - once DLL is loaded, its code is read-only.
a56dbb1c 2250
3998488b
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2251While this allows some (significant?) performance advantages, this makes life
2252much harder for developers, since the above scheme makes it impossible
2253for a DLL to be "linked" to a symbol in the F<.EXE> file. Indeed, this
2254would need a DLL to have different relocations tables for the
2255(different) executables which use this DLL.
2256
2257However, a dynamically loaded Perl extension is forced to use some symbols
2258from the perl
2259executable, e.g., to know how to find the arguments to the functions:
2260the arguments live on the perl
2261internal evaluation stack. The solution is to put the main code of
2262the interpreter into a DLL, and make the F<.EXE> file which just loads
2263this DLL into memory and supplies command-arguments. The extension DLL
2264cannot link to symbols in F<.EXE>, but it has no problem linking
2265to symbols in the F<.DLL>.
a56dbb1c 2266
72ea3524 2267This I<greatly> increases the load time for the application (as well as
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2268complexity of the compilation). Since interpreter is in a DLL,
2269the C RTL is basically forced to reside in a DLL as well (otherwise
2270extensions would not be able to use CRT). There are some advantages if
2271you use different flavors of perl, such as running F<perl.exe> and
2272F<perl__.exe> simultaneously: they share the memory of F<perl.dll>.
2273
2274B<NOTE>. There is one additional effect which makes DLLs more wasteful:
2275DLLs are loaded in the shared memory region, which is a scarse resource
2276given the 512M barrier of the "standard" OS/2 virtual memory. The code of
2277F<.EXE> files is also shared by all the processes which use the particular
2278F<.EXE>, but they are "shared in the private address space of the process";
2279this is possible because the address at which different sections
2280of the F<.EXE> file are loaded is decided at compile-time, thus all the
2281processes have these sections loaded at same addresses, and no fixup
2282of internal links inside the F<.EXE> is needed.
2283
d1be9408 2284Since DLLs may be loaded at run time, to have the same mechanism for DLLs
3998488b
JH
2285one needs to have the address range of I<any of the loaded> DLLs in the
2286system to be available I<in all the processes> which did not load a particular
2287DLL yet. This is why the DLLs are mapped to the shared memory region.
a56dbb1c 2288
2289=head2 Why chimera build?
2290
aa689395 2291Current EMX environment does not allow DLLs compiled using Unixish
3998488b
JH
2292C<a.out> format to export symbols for data (or at least some types of
2293data). This forces C<omf>-style compile of F<perl.dll>.
a56dbb1c 2294
aa689395 2295Current EMX environment does not allow F<.EXE> files compiled in
a56dbb1c 2296C<omf> format to fork(). fork() is needed for exactly three Perl
2297operations:
2298
2299=over 4
2300
3998488b 2301=item *
a56dbb1c 2302
3998488b 2303explicit fork() in the script,
a56dbb1c 2304
3998488b 2305=item *
a56dbb1c 2306
3998488b
JH
2307C<open FH, "|-">
2308
2309=item *
a56dbb1c 2310
3998488b 2311C<open FH, "-|">, in other words, opening pipes to itself.
a56dbb1c 2312
2313=back
2314
3998488b
JH
2315While these operations are not questions of life and death, they are
2316needed for a lot of
2317useful scripts. This forces C<a.out>-style compile of
a56dbb1c 2318F<perl.exe>.
2319
2320
2321=head1 ENVIRONMENT
2322
aa689395 2323Here we list environment variables with are either OS/2- and DOS- and
2324Win*-specific, or are more important under OS/2 than under other OSes.
a56dbb1c 2325
2326=head2 C<PERLLIB_PREFIX>
2327
aa689395 2328Specific for EMX port. Should have the form
a56dbb1c 2329
2330 path1;path2
2331
2332or
2333
2334 path1 path2
2335
2336If the beginning of some prebuilt path matches F<path1>, it is
2337substituted with F<path2>.
2338
2339Should be used if the perl library is moved from the default
2340location in preference to C<PERL(5)LIB>, since this would not leave wrong
3998488b 2341entries in @INC. For example, if the compiled version of perl looks for @INC
eb447b86
IZ
2342in F<f:/perllib/lib>, and you want to install the library in
2343F<h:/opt/gnu>, do
2344
2345 set PERLLIB_PREFIX=f:/perllib/lib;h:/opt/gnu
a56dbb1c 2346
3998488b
JH
2347This will cause Perl with the prebuilt @INC of
2348
2349 f:/perllib/lib/5.00553/os2
2350 f:/perllib/lib/5.00553
2351 f:/perllib/lib/site_perl/5.00553/os2
2352 f:/perllib/lib/site_perl/5.00553
2353 .
2354
2355to use the following @INC:
2356
2357 h:/opt/gnu/5.00553/os2
2358 h:/opt/gnu/5.00553
2359 h:/opt/gnu/site_perl/5.00553/os2
2360 h:/opt/gnu/site_perl/5.00553
2361 .
2362
a56dbb1c 2363=head2 C<PERL_BADLANG>
2364
3998488b 2365If 0, perl ignores setlocale() failing. May be useful with some
a56dbb1c 2366strange I<locale>s.
2367
2368=head2 C<PERL_BADFREE>
2369
3998488b
JH
2370If 0, perl would not warn of in case of unwarranted free(). With older
2371perls this might be
2372useful in conjunction with the module DB_File, which was buggy when
2373dynamically linked and OMF-built.
2374
2375Should not be set with newer Perls, since this may hide some I<real> problems.
a56dbb1c 2376
2377=head2 C<PERL_SH_DIR>
2378
aa689395 2379Specific for EMX port. Gives the directory part of the location for
a56dbb1c 2380F<sh.exe>.
2381
367f3c24
IZ
2382=head2 C<USE_PERL_FLOCK>
2383
2384Specific for EMX port. Since L<flock(3)> is present in EMX, but is not
2385functional, it is emulated by perl. To disable the emulations, set
2386environment variable C<USE_PERL_FLOCK=0>.
2387
a56dbb1c 2388=head2 C<TMP> or C<TEMP>
2389
3998488b 2390Specific for EMX port. Used as storage place for temporary files.
a56dbb1c 2391
2392=head1 Evolution
2393
2394Here we list major changes which could make you by surprise.
2395
25417810
IZ
2396=head2 Text-mode filehandles
2397
2398Starting from version 5.8, Perl uses a builtin translation layer for
2399text-mode files. This replaces the efficient well-tested EMX layer by
2400some code which should be best characterized as a "quick hack".
2401
2402In addition to possible bugs and an inability to follow changes to the
2403translation policy with off/on switches of TERMIO translation, this
2404introduces a serious incompatible change: before sysread() on
2405text-mode filehandles would go through the translation layer, now it
2406would not.
2407
a56dbb1c 2408=head2 Priorities
2409
2410C<setpriority> and C<getpriority> are not compatible with earlier
2411ports by Andreas Kaiser. See C<"setpriority, getpriority">.
2412
d88df687 2413=head2 DLL name mangling: pre 5.6.2
a56dbb1c 2414
2415With the release 5.003_01 the dynamically loadable libraries
3998488b
JH
2416should be rebuilt when a different version of Perl is compiled. In particular,
2417DLLs (including F<perl.dll>) are now created with the names
a56dbb1c 2418which contain a checksum, thus allowing workaround for OS/2 scheme of
2419caching DLLs.
2420
3998488b
JH
2421It may be possible to code a simple workaround which would
2422
2423=over
2424
2425=item *
2426
2427find the old DLLs looking through the old @INC;
2428
2429=item *
2430
2431mangle the names according to the scheme of new perl and copy the DLLs to
2432these names;
2433
2434=item *
2435
2436edit the internal C<LX> tables of DLL to reflect the change of the name
2437(probably not needed for Perl extension DLLs, since the internally coded names
2438are not used for "specific" DLLs, they used only for "global" DLLs).
2439
2440=item *
2441
2442edit the internal C<IMPORT> tables and change the name of the "old"
2443F<perl????.dll> to the "new" F<perl????.dll>.
2444
2445=back
2446
354a27bf 2447=head2 DLL name mangling: 5.6.2 and beyond
d88df687
IZ
2448
2449In fact mangling of I<extension> DLLs was done due to misunderstanding
2450of the OS/2 dynaloading model. OS/2 (effectively) maintains two
2451different tables of loaded DLL:
2452
2453=over
2454
2455=item Global DLLs
2456
2457those loaded by the base name from C<LIBPATH>; including those
2458associated at link time;
2459
2460=item specific DLLs
2461
2462loaded by the full name.
2463
2464=back
2465
2466When resolving a request for a global DLL, the table of already-loaded
2467specific DLLs is (effectively) ignored; moreover, specific DLLs are
2468I<always> loaded from the prescribed path.
2469
2470There is/was a minor twist which makes this scheme fragile: what to do
2471with DLLs loaded from
2472
2473=over
2474
2475=item C<BEGINLIBPATH> and C<ENDLIBPATH>
2476
2477(which depend on the process)
2478
2479=item F<.> from C<LIBPATH>
2480
2481which I<effectively> depends on the process (although C<LIBPATH> is the
2482same for all the processes).
2483
2484=back
2485
2486Unless C<LIBPATHSTRICT> is set to C<T> (and the kernel is after
24872000/09/01), such DLLs are considered to be global. When loading a
2488global DLL it is first looked in the table of already-loaded global
2489DLLs. Because of this the fact that one executable loaded a DLL from
2490C<BEGINLIBPATH> and C<ENDLIBPATH>, or F<.> from C<LIBPATH> may affect
2491I<which> DLL is loaded when I<another> executable requests a DLL with
2492the same name. I<This> is the reason for version-specific mangling of
2493the DLL name for perl DLL.
2494
2495Since the Perl extension DLLs are always loaded with the full path,
2496there is no need to mangle their names in a version-specific ways:
2497their directory already reflects the corresponding version of perl,
2498and @INC takes into account binary compatibility with older version.
2499Starting from C<5.6.2> the name mangling scheme is fixed to be the
2500same as for Perl 5.005_53 (same as in a popular binary release). Thus
2501new Perls will be able to I<resolve the names> of old extension DLLs
2502if @INC allows finding their directories.
2503
210b36aa 2504However, this still does not guarantee that these DLL may be loaded.
d88df687
IZ
2505The reason is the mangling of the name of the I<Perl DLL>. And since
2506the extension DLLs link with the Perl DLL, extension DLLs for older
2507versions would load an older Perl DLL, and would most probably
2508segfault (since the data in this DLL is not properly initialized).
2509
2510There is a partial workaround (which can be made complete with newer
2511OS/2 kernels): create a forwarder DLL with the same name as the DLL of
2512the older version of Perl, which forwards the entry points to the
2513newer Perl's DLL. Make this DLL accessible on (say) the C<BEGINLIBPATH> of
2514the new Perl executable. When the new executable accesses old Perl's
2515extension DLLs, they would request the old Perl's DLL by name, get the
2516forwarder instead, so effectively will link with the currently running
2517(new) Perl DLL.
2518
2519This may break in two ways:
2520
2521=over
2522
2523=item *
2524
2525Old perl executable is started when a new executable is running has
2526loaded an extension compiled for the old executable (ouph!). In this
2527case the old executable will get a forwarder DLL instead of the old
2528perl DLL, so would link with the new perl DLL. While not directly
210b36aa 2529fatal, it will behave the same as new executable. This beats the whole
d88df687
IZ
2530purpose of explicitly starting an old executable.
2531
2532=item *
2533
2534A new executable loads an extension compiled for the old executable
2535when an old perl executable is running. In this case the extension
2536will not pick up the forwarder - with fatal results.
2537
2538=back
2539
2540With support for C<LIBPATHSTRICT> this may be circumvented - unless
2541one of DLLs is started from F<.> from C<LIBPATH> (I do not know
2542whether C<LIBPATHSTRICT> affects this case).
2543
2544B<REMARK>. Unless newer kernels allow F<.> in C<BEGINLIBPATH> (older
25417810
IZ
2545do not), this mess cannot be completely cleaned. (It turns out that
2546as of the beginning of 2002, F<.> is not allowed, but F<.\.> is - and
2547it has the same effect.)
d88df687
IZ
2548
2549
2550B<REMARK>. C<LIBPATHSTRICT>, C<BEGINLIBPATH> and C<ENDLIBPATH> are
2551not environment variables, although F<cmd.exe> emulates them on C<SET
6f1e9ccb
KW
2552...> lines. From Perl they may be accessed by
2553L<Cwd::extLibpath|/Cwd::extLibpath([type])> and
2554L<Cwd::extLibpath_set|/Cwd::extLibpath_set( path [, type ] )>.
d88df687
IZ
2555
2556=head2 DLL forwarder generation
2557
2558Assume that the old DLL is named F<perlE0AC.dll> (as is one for
25595.005_53), and the new version is 5.6.1. Create a file
2560F<perl5shim.def-leader> with
2561
2562 LIBRARY 'perlE0AC' INITINSTANCE TERMINSTANCE
2563 DESCRIPTION '@#perl5-porters@perl.org:5.006001#@ Perl module for 5.00553 -> Perl 5.6.1 forwarder'
2564 CODE LOADONCALL
2565 DATA LOADONCALL NONSHARED MULTIPLE
2566 EXPORTS
2567
2568modifying the versions/names as needed. Run
2569
2570 perl -wnle "next if 0../EXPORTS/; print qq( \"$1\") if /\"(\w+)\"/" perl5.def >lst
2571
2572in the Perl build directory (to make the DLL smaller replace perl5.def
2573with the definition file for the older version of Perl if present).
2574
2575 cat perl5shim.def-leader lst >perl5shim.def
2576 gcc -Zomf -Zdll -o perlE0AC.dll perl5shim.def -s -llibperl
2577
2578(ignore multiple C<warning L4085>).
2579
a56dbb1c 2580=head2 Threading
2581
3998488b
JH
2582As of release 5.003_01 perl is linked to multithreaded C RTL
2583DLL. If perl itself is not compiled multithread-enabled, so will not be perl's
a56dbb1c 2584malloc(). However, extensions may use multiple thread on their own
2585risk.
2586
3998488b
JH
2587This was needed to compile C<Perl/Tk> for XFree86-OS/2 out-of-the-box, and
2588link with DLLs for other useful libraries, which typically are compiled
2589with C<-Zmt -Zcrtdll>.
a56dbb1c 2590
2591=head2 Calls to external programs
2592
2593Due to a popular demand the perl external program calling has been
72ea3524 2594changed wrt Andreas Kaiser's port. I<If> perl needs to call an
a56dbb1c 2595external program I<via shell>, the F<f:/bin/sh.exe> will be called, or
2596whatever is the override, see L<"PERL_SH_DIR">.
2597
2598Thus means that you need to get some copy of a F<sh.exe> as well (I
3998488b 2599use one from pdksh). The path F<F:/bin> above is set up automatically during
a56dbb1c 2600the build to a correct value on the builder machine, but is
2601overridable at runtime,
2602
2603B<Reasons:> a consensus on C<perl5-porters> was that perl should use
2604one non-overridable shell per platform. The obvious choices for OS/2
2605are F<cmd.exe> and F<sh.exe>. Having perl build itself would be impossible
3998488b 2606with F<cmd.exe> as a shell, thus I picked up C<sh.exe>. This assures almost
aa689395 2607100% compatibility with the scripts coming from *nix. As an added benefit
2608this works as well under DOS if you use DOS-enabled port of pdksh
eea834d0 2609(see L</Prerequisites>).
a56dbb1c 2610
aa689395 2611B<Disadvantages:> currently F<sh.exe> of pdksh calls external programs
a56dbb1c 2612via fork()/exec(), and there is I<no> functioning exec() on
3998488b 2613OS/2. exec() is emulated by EMX by an asynchronous call while the caller
72ea3524 2614waits for child completion (to pretend that the C<pid> did not change). This
a56dbb1c 2615means that 1 I<extra> copy of F<sh.exe> is made active via fork()/exec(),
2616which may lead to some resources taken from the system (even if we do
2617not count extra work needed for fork()ing).
2618
72ea3524
IZ
2619Note that this a lesser issue now when we do not spawn F<sh.exe>
2620unless needed (metachars found).
2621
2622One can always start F<cmd.exe> explicitly via
a56dbb1c 2623
2624 system 'cmd', '/c', 'mycmd', 'arg1', 'arg2', ...
2625
72ea3524 2626If you need to use F<cmd.exe>, and do not want to hand-edit thousands of your
a56dbb1c 2627scripts, the long-term solution proposed on p5-p is to have a directive
2628
2629 use OS2::Cmd;
2630
2631which will override system(), exec(), C<``>, and
2632C<open(,'...|')>. With current perl you may override only system(),
2633readpipe() - the explicit version of C<``>, and maybe exec(). The code
2634will substitute the one-argument call to system() by
2635C<CORE::system('cmd.exe', '/c', shift)>.
2636
2637If you have some working code for C<OS2::Cmd>, please send it to me,
2638I will include it into distribution. I have no need for such a module, so
2639cannot test it.
2640
2c2e0e8c 2641For the details of the current situation with calling external programs,
79481703 2642see L<Starting OSE<sol>2 (and DOS) programs under Perl>. Set us mention a couple
3998488b 2643of features:
2c2e0e8c 2644
13a2d996 2645=over 4
2c2e0e8c 2646
13a2d996 2647=item *
2c2e0e8c 2648
3998488b
JH
2649External scripts may be called by their basename. Perl will try the same
2650extensions as when processing B<-S> command-line switch.
2651
2652=item *
2653
2654External scripts starting with C<#!> or C<extproc > will be executed directly,
2655without calling the shell, by calling the program specified on the rest of
2656the first line.
2c2e0e8c
IZ
2657
2658=back
2659
df3ef7a9
IZ
2660=head2 Memory allocation
2661
2662Perl uses its own malloc() under OS/2 - interpreters are usually malloc-bound
ec40c0cd 2663for speed, but perl is not, since its malloc is lightning-fast.
4375e838
GS
2664Perl-memory-usage-tuned benchmarks show that Perl's malloc is 5 times quicker
2665than EMX one. I do not have convincing data about memory footprint, but
3998488b 2666a (pretty random) benchmark showed that Perl's one is 5% better.
df3ef7a9
IZ
2667
2668Combination of perl's malloc() and rigid DLL name resolution creates
2669a special problem with library functions which expect their return value to
2670be free()d by system's free(). To facilitate extensions which need to call
2671such functions, system memory-allocation functions are still available with
2672the prefix C<emx_> added. (Currently only DLL perl has this, it should
2673propagate to F<perl_.exe> shortly.)
2674
ec40c0cd
IZ
2675=head2 Threads
2676
2677One can build perl with thread support enabled by providing C<-D usethreads>
2678option to F<Configure>. Currently OS/2 support of threads is very
2679preliminary.
2680
2681Most notable problems:
2682
13a2d996 2683=over 4
ec40c0cd
IZ
2684
2685=item C<COND_WAIT>
2686
25417810
IZ
2687may have a race condition (but probably does not due to edge-triggered
2688nature of OS/2 Event semaphores). (Needs a reimplementation (in terms of chaining
2689waiting threads, with the linked list stored in per-thread structure?)?)
ec40c0cd
IZ
2690
2691=item F<os2.c>
2692
2693has a couple of static variables used in OS/2-specific functions. (Need to be
2694moved to per-thread structure, or serialized?)
2695
2696=back
2697
2698Note that these problems should not discourage experimenting, since they
2699have a low probability of affecting small programs.
2700
d88df687
IZ
2701=head1 BUGS
2702
1933e12c 2703This description is not updated often (since 5.6.1?), see F<./os2/Changes>
7622680c 2704for more info.
d88df687 2705
a56dbb1c 2706=cut
2707
2708OS/2 extensions
2709~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
72ea3524 2710I include 3 extensions by Andreas Kaiser, OS2::REXX, OS2::UPM, and OS2::FTP,
a56dbb1c 2711into my ftp directory, mirrored on CPAN. I made
2712some minor changes needed to compile them by standard tools. I cannot
2713test UPM and FTP, so I will appreciate your feedback. Other extensions
2714there are OS2::ExtAttr, OS2::PrfDB for tied access to EAs and .INI
2715files - and maybe some other extensions at the time you read it.
2716
2717Note that OS2 perl defines 2 pseudo-extension functions
aa689395 2718OS2::Copy::copy and DynaLoader::mod2fname (many more now, see
2719L<Prebuilt methods>).
a56dbb1c 2720
2721The -R switch of older perl is deprecated. If you need to call a REXX code
2722which needs access to variables, include the call into a REXX compartment
2723created by
2724 REXX_call {...block...};
2725
2726Two new functions are supported by REXX code,
2727 REXX_eval 'string';
2728 REXX_eval_with 'string', REXX_function_name => \&perl_sub_reference;
2729
2730If you have some other extensions you want to share, send the code to
2731me. At least two are available: tied access to EA's, and tied access
2732to system databases.
615d1a09 2733
a56dbb1c 2734=head1 AUTHOR
615d1a09 2735
25417810 2736Ilya Zakharevich, cpan@ilyaz.org
615d1a09 2737
a56dbb1c 2738=head1 SEE ALSO
615d1a09 2739
a56dbb1c 2740perl(1).
615d1a09 2741
a56dbb1c 2742=cut
615d1a09 2743