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2It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is specially
3designed to be readable as is.
4
5=head1 NAME
6
7README.hpux - Perl version 5 on Hewlett-Packard Unix (HP-UX) systems
8
9=head1 DESCRIPTION
10
11This document describes various features of HP's Unix operating system
12(HP-UX) that will affect how Perl version 5 (hereafter just Perl) is
13compiled and/or runs.
14
15=head2 Using perl as shipped with HP-UX
16
17Application release September 2001, HP-UX 11.00 is the first to ship
18with Perl. By the time it was perl-5.6.1 in /opt/perl. The first
19occurrence is on CD 5012-7954 and can be installed using
20
21 swinstall -s /cdrom perl
22
23assuming you have mounted that CD on /cdrom. In this version the
24following modules were installed:
25
26 ActivePerl::DocTools-0.04 HTML::Parser-3.19 XML::DOM-1.25
27 Archive::Tar-0.072 HTML::Tagset-3.03 XML::Parser-2.27
28 Compress::Zlib-1.08 MIME::Base64-2.11 XML::Simple-1.05
29 Convert::ASN1-0.10 Net-1.07 XML::XPath-1.09
30 Digest::MD5-2.11 PPM-2.1.5 XML::XSLT-0.32
31 File::CounterFile-0.12 SOAP::Lite-0.46 libwww-perl-5.51
32 Font::AFM-1.18 Storable-1.011 libxml-perl-0.07
33 HTML-Tree-3.11 URI-1.11 perl-ldap-0.23
34
35That build was a portable hppa-1.1 multithread build that supports large
36files compiled with gcc-2.9-hppa-991112.
37
38If you perform a new installation, then (a newer) Perl will be installed
39automatically. Preinstalled HP-UX systems now slao have more recent versions
40of Perl and the updated modules.
41
42The official (threaded) builds from HP, as they are shipped on the
43Application DVD/CD's are available on
44http://www.software.hp.com/cgi-bin/swdepot_parser.cgi/cgi/displayProductInfo.pl?productNumber=PERL
45for both PA-RISC and IPF (Itanium Processor Family). They are built
46with the HP ANSI-C compiler.
47
48=head2 Using perl from HP's porting centre
49
50HP porting centre tries very hard to keep up with customer demand and
51release updates from the Open Source community. Having precompiled
52Perl binaries available is obvious.
53
54The HP porting centres are limited in what systems they are allowed
55to port to and they usually choose the two most recent OS versions
56available. This means that at the moment of writing, there are only
57HP-UX 11.11 (pa-risc 2.0) and HP-UX 11.23 (Itanium 2) ports available
58on the porting centres.
59
60HP has asked the porting centre to move Open Source binaries
61from /opt to /usr/local, so binaries produced since the start
62of July 2002 are located in /usr/local.
63
64One of HP porting centres URL's is http://hpux.connect.org.uk/
65The port currently available is built with GNU gcc.
66
67=head2 Compiling Perl 5 on HP-UX
68
69When compiling Perl, you must use an ANSI C compiler. The C compiler
70that ships with all HP-UX systems is a K&R compiler that should only be
71used to build new kernels.
72
73Perl can be compiled with either HP's ANSI C compiler or with gcc. The
74former is recommended, as not only can it compile Perl with no
75difficulty, but also can take advantage of features listed later that
76require the use of HP compiler-specific command-line flags.
77
78If you decide to use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and
79complete, and be sure to read the Perl INSTALL file for more gcc-specific
80details.
81
82=head2 PA-RISC
83
84HP's HP9000 Unix systems run on HP's own Precision Architecture
85(PA-RISC) chip. HP-UX used to run on the Motorola MC68000 family of
86chips, but any machine with this chip in it is quite obsolete and this
87document will not attempt to address issues for compiling Perl on the
88Motorola chipset.
89
90The most recent version of PA-RISC at the time of this document's last
91update is 2.0. HP PA-RISC systems are usually refered to with model
92description "HP 9000". The last CPU in this series is the PA-8900.
93Support for PA-RISC architectured machines officially ends as shown
94in the following table:
95
96 PA-RISC End-of-Life Roadmap
97 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+
98 | HP9000 | Superdome | PA-8700 | Spring 2011 |
99 | 4-128 | | PA-8800/sx1000 | Summer 2012 |
100 | cores | | PA-8900/sx1000 | 2014 |
101 | | | PA-8900/sx2000 | 2015 |
102 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+
103 | HP9000 | rp7410, rp8400 | PA-8700 | Spring 2011 |
104 | 2-32 | rp7420, rp8420 | PA-8800/sx1000 | 2012 |
105 | cores | rp7440, rp8440 | PA-8900/sx1000 | Autumn 2013 |
106 | | | PA-8900/sx2000 | 2015 |
107 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+
108 | HP9000 | rp44x0 | PA-8700 | Spring 2011 |
109 | 1-8 | | PA-8800/rp44x0 | 2012 |
110 | cores | | PA-8900/rp44x0 | 2014 |
111 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+
112 | HP9000 | rp34x0 | PA-8700 | Spring 2011 |
113 | 1-4 | | PA-8800/rp34x0 | 2012 |
114 | cores | | PA-8900/rp34x0 | 2014 |
115 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+
116
117A complete list of models at the time the OS was built is in the file
118/usr/sam/lib/mo/sched.models. The first column corresponds to the last
119part of the output of the "model" command. The second column is the
120PA-RISC version and the third column is the exact chip type used.
121(Start browsing at the bottom to prevent confusion ;-)
122
123 # model
124 9000/800/L1000-44
125 # grep L1000-44 /usr/sam/lib/mo/sched.models
126 L1000-44 2.0 PA8500
127
128=head2 Portability Between PA-RISC Versions
129
130An executable compiled on a PA-RISC 2.0 platform will not execute on a
131PA-RISC 1.1 platform, even if they are running the same version of
132HP-UX. If you are building Perl on a PA-RISC 2.0 platform and want that
133Perl to also run on a PA-RISC 1.1, the compiler flags +DAportable and
134+DS32 should be used.
135
136It is no longer possible to compile PA-RISC 1.0 executables on either
137the PA-RISC 1.1 or 2.0 platforms. The command-line flags are accepted,
138but the resulting executable will not run when transferred to a PA-RISC
1391.0 system.
140
141=head2 PA-RISC 1.0
142
143The original version of PA-RISC, HP no longer sells any system with this chip.
144
145The following systems contained PA-RISC 1.0 chips:
146
147 600, 635, 645, 808, 815, 822, 825, 832, 834, 835, 840, 842, 845, 850,
148 852, 855, 860, 865, 870, 890
149
150=head2 PA-RISC 1.1
151
152An upgrade to the PA-RISC design, it shipped for many years in many different
153system.
154
155The following systems contain with PA-RISC 1.1 chips:
156
157 705, 710, 712, 715, 720, 722, 725, 728, 730, 735, 742, 743, 744, 745,
158 747, 750, 755, 770, 777, 778, 779, 800, 801, 803, 806, 807, 809, 811,
159 813, 816, 817, 819, 821, 826, 827, 829, 831, 837, 839, 841, 847, 849,
160 851, 856, 857, 859, 867, 869, 877, 887, 891, 892, 897, A180, A180C,
161 B115, B120, B132L, B132L+, B160L, B180L, C100, C110, C115, C120,
162 C160L, D200, D210, D220, D230, D250, D260, D310, D320, D330, D350,
163 D360, D410, DX0, DX5, DXO, E25, E35, E45, E55, F10, F20, F30, G30,
164 G40, G50, G60, G70, H20, H30, H40, H50, H60, H70, I30, I40, I50, I60,
165 I70, J200, J210, J210XC, K100, K200, K210, K220, K230, K400, K410,
166 K420, S700i, S715, S744, S760, T500, T520
167
168=head2 PA-RISC 2.0
169
170The most recent upgrade to the PA-RISC design, it added support for
17164-bit integer data.
172
173As of the date of this document's last update, the following systems
174contain PA-RISC 2.0 chips:
175
176 700, 780, 781, 782, 783, 785, 802, 804, 810, 820, 861, 871, 879, 889,
177 893, 895, 896, 898, 899, A400, A500, B1000, B2000, C130, C140, C160,
178 C180, C180+, C180-XP, C200+, C400+, C3000, C360, C3600, CB260, D270,
179 D280, D370, D380, D390, D650, J220, J2240, J280, J282, J400, J410,
180 J5000, J5500XM, J5600, J7000, J7600, K250, K260, K260-EG, K270, K360,
181 K370, K380, K450, K460, K460-EG, K460-XP, K470, K570, K580, L1000,
182 L2000, L3000, N4000, R380, R390, SD16000, SD32000, SD64000, T540,
183 T600, V2000, V2200, V2250, V2500, V2600
184
185Just before HP took over Compaq, some systems were renamed. the link
186that contained the explanation is dead, so here's a short summary:
187
188 HP 9000 A-Class servers, now renamed HP Server rp2400 series.
189 HP 9000 L-Class servers, now renamed HP Server rp5400 series.
190 HP 9000 N-Class servers, now renamed HP Server rp7400.
191
192 rp2400, rp2405, rp2430, rp2450, rp2470, rp3410, rp3440, rp4410,
193 rp4440, rp5400, rp5405, rp5430, rp5450, rp5470, rp7400, rp7405,
194 rp7410, rp7420, rp7440, rp8400, rp8420, rp8440, Superdome
195
196The current naming convention is:
197
198 aadddd
199 ||||`+- 00 - 99 relative capacity & newness (upgrades, etc.)
200 |||`--- unique number for each architecture to ensure different
201 ||| systems do not have the same numbering across
202 ||| architectures
203 ||`---- 1 - 9 identifies family and/or relative positioning
204 ||
205 |`----- c = ia32 (cisc)
206 | p = pa-risc
207 | x = ia-64 (Itanium & Itanium 2)
208 | h = housing
209 `------ t = tower
210 r = rack optimized
211 s = super scalable
212 b = blade
213 sa = appliance
214
215=head2 Itanium Processor Family (IPF) and HP-UX
216
217HP-UX also runs on the new Itanium processor. This requires the use
218of a different version of HP-UX (currently 11.23 or 11i v2), and with
219the exception of a few differences detailed below and in later sections,
220Perl should compile with no problems.
221
222Although PA-RISC binaries can run on Itanium systems, you should not
223attempt to use a PA-RISC version of Perl on an Itanium system. This is
224because shared libraries created on an Itanium system cannot be loaded
225while running a PA-RISC executable.
226
227HP Itanium 2 systems are usually refered to with model description
228"HP Integrity".
229
230=head2 Itanium, Itanium 2 & Madison 6
231
232HP also ships servers with the 128-bit Itanium processor(s). The cx26x0
233is told to have Madison 6. As of the date of this document's last update,
234the following systems contain Itanium or Itanium 2 chips (this is likely
235to be out of date):
236
237 BL60p, BL860c, cx2600, cx2620, rx1600, rx1620, rx2600, rx2600hptc,
238 rx2620, rx2660, rx3600, rx4610, rx4640, rx5670, rx6600, rx7420,
239 rx7620, rx7640, rx8420, rx8620, rx8640, rx9610, sx1000, sx2000
240
241To see all about your machine, type
242
243 # model
244 ia64 hp server rx2600
245 # /usr/contrib/bin/machinfo
246
247=head2 Building Dynamic Extensions on HP-UX
248
249HP-UX supports dynamically loadable libraries (shared libraries).
250Shared libraries end with the suffix .sl. On Itanium systems,
251they end with the suffix .so.
252
253Shared libraries created on a platform using a particular PA-RISC
254version are not usable on platforms using an earlier PA-RISC version by
255default. However, this backwards compatibility may be enabled using the
256same +DAportable compiler flag (with the same PA-RISC 1.0 caveat
257mentioned above).
258
259Shared libraries created on an Itanium platform cannot be loaded on
260a PA-RISC platform. Shared libraries created on a PA-RISC platform
261can only be loaded on an Itanium platform if it is a PA-RISC executable
262that is attempting to load the PA-RISC library. A PA-RISC shared
263library cannot be loaded into an Itanium executable nor vice-versa.
264
265To create a shared library, the following steps must be performed:
266
267 1. Compile source modules with +z or +Z flag to create a .o module
268 which contains Position-Independent Code (PIC). The linker will
269 tell you in the next step if +Z was needed.
270 (For gcc, the appropriate flag is -fpic or -fPIC.)
271
272 2. Link the shared library using the -b flag. If the code calls
273 any functions in other system libraries (e.g., libm), it must
274 be included on this line.
275
276(Note that these steps are usually handled automatically by the extension's
277Makefile).
278
279If these dependent libraries are not listed at shared library creation
280time, you will get fatal "Unresolved symbol" errors at run time when the
281library is loaded.
282
283You may create a shared library that refers to another library, which
284may be either an archive library or a shared library. If this second
285library is a shared library, this is called a "dependent library". The
286dependent library's name is recorded in the main shared library, but it
287is not linked into the shared library. Instead, it is loaded when the
288main shared library is loaded. This can cause problems if you build an
289extension on one system and move it to another system where the
290libraries may not be located in the same place as on the first system.
291
292If the referred library is an archive library, then it is treated as a
293simple collection of .o modules (all of which must contain PIC). These
294modules are then linked into the shared library.
295
296Note that it is okay to create a library which contains a dependent
297library that is already linked into perl.
298
299Some extensions, like DB_File and Compress::Zlib use/require prebuilt
300libraries for the perl extensions/modules to work. If these libraries
301are built using the default configuration, it might happen that you
302run into an error like "invalid loader fixup" during load phase.
303HP is aware of this problem. Search the HP-UX cxx-dev forums for
304discussions about the subject. The short answer is that B<everything>
305(all libraries, everything) must be compiled with C<+z> or C<+Z> to be
306PIC (position independent code). (For gcc, that would be
307C<-fpic> or C<-fPIC>). In HP-UX 11.00 or newer the linker
308error message should tell the name of the offending object file.
309
310A more general approach is to intervene manually, as with an example for
311the DB_File module, which requires SleepyCat's libdb.sl:
312
313 # cd .../db-3.2.9/build_unix
314 # vi Makefile
315 ... add +Z to all cflags to create shared objects
316 CFLAGS= -c $(CPPFLAGS) +Z -Ae +O2 +Onolimit \
317 -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/include/X11R6
318 CXXFLAGS= -c $(CPPFLAGS) +Z -Ae +O2 +Onolimit \
319 -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/include/X11R6
320
321 # make clean
322 # make
323 # mkdir tmp
324 # cd tmp
325 # ar x ../libdb.a
326 # ld -b -o libdb-3.2.sl *.o
327 # mv libdb-3.2.sl /usr/local/lib
328 # rm *.o
329 # cd /usr/local/lib
330 # rm -f libdb.sl
331 # ln -s libdb-3.2.sl libdb.sl
332
333 # cd .../DB_File-1.76
334 # make distclean
335 # perl Makefile.PL
336 # make
337 # make test
338 # make install
339
340As of db-4.2.x it is no longer needed to do this by hand. Sleepycat
341has changed the configuration process to add +z on HP-UX automatically.
342
343 # cd .../db-4.2.25/build_unix
344 # env CFLAGS=+DD64 LDFLAGS=+DD64 ../dist/configure
345
346should work to generate 64bit shared libraries for HP-UX 11.00 and 11i.
347
348It is no longer possible to link PA-RISC 1.0 shared libraries (even
349though the command-line flags are still present).
350
351PA-RISC and Itanium object files are not interchangeable. Although
352you may be able to use ar to create an archive library of PA-RISC
353object files on an Itanium system, you cannot link against it using
354an Itanium link editor.
355
356=head2 The HP ANSI C Compiler
357
358When using this compiler to build Perl, you should make sure that the
359flag -Aa is added to the cpprun and cppstdin variables in the config.sh
360file (though see the section on 64-bit perl below). If you are using a
361recent version of the Perl distribution, these flags are set automatically.
362
363Even though HP-UX 10.20 and 11.00 are not actively maintained by HP
364anymore, updates for the HP ANSI C compiler are still available from
365time to time, and it might be advisable to see if updates are applicable.
366At the moment of writing, the latests available patches for 11.00 that
367should be applied are PHSS_35098, PHSS_35175, PHSS_35100, PHSS_33036,
368and PHSS_33902). If you have a SUM account, you can use it to search
369for updates/patches. Enter "ANSI" as keyword.
370
371=head2 The GNU C Compiler
372
373When you are going to use the GNU C compiler (gcc), and you don't have
374gcc yet, you can either build it yourself from the sources (available
375from e.g. http://www.gnu.ai.mit.edu/software/gcc/releases.html) or fetch
376a prebuilt binary from the HP porting center. There are two places where
377gcc prebuilds can be fetched; the first and best (for HP-UX 11 only) is
378http://h21007.www2.hp.com/dspp/tech/tech_TechSoftwareDetailPage_IDX/1,1703,547,00.html
379the second is http://hpux.cs.utah.edu/hppd/hpux/Gnu/ where you can also
380find the GNU binutils package. (Browse through the list, because there
381are often multiple versions of the same package available).
382
383Above mentioned distributions are depots. H.Merijn Brand has made prebuilt
384gcc binaries available on http://mirrors.develooper.com/hpux/ and/or
385http://www.cmve.net/~merijn/ for HP-UX 10.20, HP-UX 11.00, and HP-UX 11.11
386(HP-UX 11i) in both 32- and 64-bit versions. These are bzipped tar archives
387that also include recent GNU binutils and GNU gdb. Read the instructions
388on that page to rebuild gcc using itself.
389
390On PA-RISC you need a different compiler for 32-bit applications and for
39164-bit applications. On PA-RISC, 32-bit objects and 64-bit objects do
392not mix. Period. There is no different behaviour for HP C-ANSI-C or GNU
393gcc. So if you require your perl binary to use 64-bit libraries, like
394Oracle-64bit, you MUST build a 64-bit perl.
395
396Building a 64-bit capable gcc on PA-RISC from source is possible only when
397you have the HP C-ANSI C compiler or an already working 64-bit binary of
398gcc available. Best performance for perl is achieved with HP's native
399compiler.
400
401=head2 Using Large Files with Perl on HP-UX
402
403Beginning with HP-UX version 10.20, files larger than 2GB (2^31 bytes)
404may be created and manipulated. Three separate methods of doing this
405are available. Of these methods, the best method for Perl is to compile
406using the -Duselargefiles flag to Configure. This causes Perl to be
407compiled using structures and functions in which these are 64 bits wide,
408rather than 32 bits wide. (Note that this will only work with HP's ANSI
409C compiler. If you want to compile Perl using gcc, you will have to get
410a version of the compiler that supports 64-bit operations. See above for
411where to find it.)
412
413There are some drawbacks to this approach. One is that any extension
414which calls any file-manipulating C function will need to be recompiled
415(just follow the usual "perl Makefile.PL; make; make test; make install"
416procedure).
417
418The list of functions that will need to recompiled is:
419 creat, fgetpos, fopen,
420 freopen, fsetpos, fstat,
421 fstatvfs, fstatvfsdev, ftruncate,
422 ftw, lockf, lseek,
423 lstat, mmap, nftw,
424 open, prealloc, stat,
425 statvfs, statvfsdev, tmpfile,
426 truncate, getrlimit, setrlimit
427
428Another drawback is only valid for Perl versions before 5.6.0. This
429drawback is that the seek and tell functions (both the builtin version
430and POSIX module version) will not perform correctly.
431
432It is strongly recommended that you use this flag when you run
433Configure. If you do not do this, but later answer the question about
434large files when Configure asks you, you may get a configuration that
435cannot be compiled, or that does not function as expected.
436
437=head2 Threaded Perl on HP-UX
438
439It is possible to compile a version of threaded Perl on any version of
440HP-UX before 10.30, but it is strongly suggested that you be running on
441HP-UX 11.00 at least.
442
443To compile Perl with threads, add -Dusethreads to the arguments of
444Configure. Verify that the -D_POSIX_C_SOURCE=199506L compiler flag is
445automatically added to the list of flags. Also make sure that -lpthread
446is listed before -lc in the list of libraries to link Perl with. The
447hints provided for HP-UX during Configure will try very hard to get
448this right for you.
449
450HP-UX versions before 10.30 require a separate installation of a POSIX
451threads library package. Two examples are the HP DCE package, available
452on "HP-UX Hardware Extensions 3.0, Install and Core OS, Release 10.20,
453April 1999 (B3920-13941)" or the Freely available PTH package, available
454on H.Merijn's site (http://mirrors.develooper.com/hpux/).
455
456If you are going to use the HP DCE package, the library used for threading
457is /usr/lib/libcma.sl, but there have been multiple updates of that
458library over time. Perl will build with the first version, but it
459will not pass the test suite. Older Oracle versions might be a compelling
460reason not to update that library, otherwise please find a newer version
461in one of the following patches: PHSS_19739, PHSS_20608, or PHSS_23672
462
463reformatted output:
464
465 d3:/usr/lib 106 > what libcma-*.1
466 libcma-00000.1:
467 HP DCE/9000 1.5 Module: libcma.sl (Export)
468 Date: Apr 29 1996 22:11:24
469 libcma-19739.1:
470 HP DCE/9000 1.5 PHSS_19739-40 Module: libcma.sl (Export)
471 Date: Sep 4 1999 01:59:07
472 libcma-20608.1:
473 HP DCE/9000 1.5 PHSS_20608 Module: libcma.1 (Export)
474 Date: Dec 8 1999 18:41:23
475 libcma-23672.1:
476 HP DCE/9000 1.5 PHSS_23672 Module: libcma.1 (Export)
477 Date: Apr 9 2001 10:01:06
478 d3:/usr/lib 107 >
479
480If you choose for the PTH package, use swinstall to install pth in
481the default location (/opt/pth), and then make symbolic links to the
482libraries from /usr/lib
483
484 # cd /usr/lib
485 # ln -s /opt/pth/lib/libpth* .
486
487For building perl to support Oracle, it needs to be linked with libcl
488and libpthread. So even if your perl is an unthreaded build, these
489libraries might be required. See "Oracle on HP-UX" below.
490
491=head2 64-bit Perl on HP-UX
492
493Beginning with HP-UX 11.00, programs compiled under HP-UX can take
494advantage of the LP64 programming environment (LP64 means Longs and
495Pointers are 64 bits wide), in which scalar variables will be able
496to hold numbers larger than 2^32 with complete precision. Perl has
497proven to be consistent and reliable in 64bit mode since 5.8.1 on
498all HP-UX 11.xx.
499
500As of the date of this document, Perl is fully 64-bit compliant on
501HP-UX 11.00 and up for both cc- and gcc builds. If you are about to
502build a 64-bit perl with GNU gcc, please read the gcc section carefully.
503
504Should a user have the need for compiling Perl in the LP64 environment,
505use the -Duse64bitall flag to Configure. This will force Perl to be
506compiled in a pure LP64 environment (with the +DD64 flag for HP C-ANSI-C,
507with no additional options for GNU gcc 64-bit on PA-RISC, and with
508-mlp64 for GNU gcc on Itanium).
509If you want to compile Perl using gcc, you will have to get a version of
510the compiler that supports 64-bit operations.)
511
512You can also use the -Duse64bitint flag to Configure. Although there
513are some minor differences between compiling Perl with this flag versus
514the -Duse64bitall flag, they should not be noticeable from a Perl user's
515perspective. When configuring -Duse64bitint using a 64bit gcc on a
516pa-risc architecture, -Duse64bitint is silently promoted to -Duse64bitall.
517
518In both cases, it is strongly recommended that you use these flags when
519you run Configure. If you do not use do this, but later answer the
520questions about 64-bit numbers when Configure asks you, you may get a
521configuration that cannot be compiled, or that does not function as
522expected.
523
524=head2 Oracle on HP-UX
525
526Using perl to connect to Oracle databases through DBI and DBD::Oracle
527has caused a lot of people many headaches. Read README.hpux in the
528DBD::Oracle for much more information. The reason to mention it here
529is that Oracle requires a perl built with libcl and libpthread, the
530latter even when perl is build without threads. Building perl using
531all defaults, but still enabling to build DBD::Oracle later on can be
532achieved using
533
534 Configure -A prepend:libswanted='cl pthread ' ...
535
536Do not forget the space before the trailing quote.
537
538Also note that this does not (yet) work with all configurations,
539it is known to fail with 64-bit versions of GCC.
540
541=head2 GDBM and Threads on HP-UX
542
543If you attempt to compile Perl with (POSIX) threads on an 11.X system
544and also link in the GDBM library, then Perl will immediately core dump
545when it starts up. The only workaround at this point is to relink the
546GDBM library under 11.X, then relink it into Perl.
547
548the error might show something like:
549
550Pthread internal error: message: __libc_reinit() failed, file: ../pthreads/pthread.c, line: 1096
551Return Pointer is 0xc082bf33
552sh: 5345 Quit(coredump)
553
554and Configure will give up.
555
556=head2 NFS filesystems and utime(2) on HP-UX
557
558If you are compiling Perl on a remotely-mounted NFS filesystem, the test
559io/fs.t may fail on test #18. This appears to be a bug in HP-UX and no
560fix is currently available.
561
562=head2 perl -P and // and HP-UX
563
564If HP-UX Perl is compiled with flags that will cause problems if the
565-P flag of Perl (preprocess Perl code with the C preprocessor before
566perl sees it) is used. The problem is that C<//>, being a C++-style
567until-end-of-line comment, will disappear along with the remainder
568of the line. This means that common Perl constructs like
569
570 s/foo//;
571
572will turn into illegal code
573
574 s/foo
575
576The workaround is to use some other quoting separator than C<"/">,
577like for example C<"!">:
578
579 s!foo!!;
580
581=head2 HP-UX Kernel Parameters (maxdsiz) for Compiling Perl
582
583By default, HP-UX comes configured with a maximum data segment size of
58464MB. This is too small to correctly compile Perl with the maximum
585optimization levels. You can increase the size of the maxdsiz kernel
586parameter through the use of SAM.
587
588When using the GUI version of SAM, click on the Kernel Configuration
589icon, then the Configurable Parameters icon. Scroll down and select
590the maxdsiz line. From the Actions menu, select the Modify Configurable
591Parameter item. Insert the new formula into the Formula/Value box.
592Then follow the instructions to rebuild your kernel and reboot your
593system.
594
595In general, a value of 256MB (or "256*1024*1024") is sufficient for
596Perl to compile at maximum optimization.
597
598=head1 nss_delete core dump from op/pwent or op/grent
599
600You may get a bus error core dump from the op/pwent or op/grent
601tests. If compiled with -g you will see a stack trace much like
602the following:
603
604 #0 0xc004216c in () from /usr/lib/libc.2
605 #1 0xc00d7550 in __nss_src_state_destr () from /usr/lib/libc.2
606 #2 0xc00d7768 in __nss_src_state_destr () from /usr/lib/libc.2
607 #3 0xc00d78a8 in nss_delete () from /usr/lib/libc.2
608 #4 0xc01126d8 in endpwent () from /usr/lib/libc.2
609 #5 0xd1950 in Perl_pp_epwent () from ./perl
610 #6 0x94d3c in Perl_runops_standard () from ./perl
611 #7 0x23728 in S_run_body () from ./perl
612 #8 0x23428 in perl_run () from ./perl
613 #9 0x2005c in main () from ./perl
614
615The key here is the C<nss_delete> call. One workaround for this
616bug seems to be to create add to the file F</etc/nsswitch.conf>
617(at least) the following lines
618
619 group: files
620 passwd: files
621
622Whether you are using NIS does not matter. Amazingly enough,
623the same bug also affects Solaris.
624
625=head1 Miscellaneous
626
627HP-UX 11 Y2K patch "Y2K-1100 B.11.00.B0125 HP-UX Core OS Year 2000
628Patch Bundle" has been reported to break the io/fs test #18 which
629tests whether utime() can change timestamps. The Y2K patch seems to
630break utime() so that over NFS the timestamps do not get changed
631(on local filesystems utime() still works). This has probably been
632fixed on your system by now.
633
634=head1 AUTHOR
635
636H.Merijn Brand <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl>
637Jeff Okamoto <okamoto@corp.hp.com>
638
639With much assistance regarding shared libraries from Marc Sabatella.
640
641=head1 DATE
642
643Version 0.8.0: 2007-09-09
644
645=cut