EMX runtime is required (may be substituted by RSX). Note that
it is possible to make F<perl_.exe> to run under DOS without any
-external support by binding F<emx.exe>/F<rsx.exe> to it, see L<emxbind>. Note
+external support by binding F<emx.exe>/F<rsx.exe> to it, see C<emxbind>. Note
that under DOS for best results one should use RSX runtime, which
has much more functions working (like C<fork>, C<popen> and so on). In
fact RSX is required if there is no VCPI present. Note the
=item Additional Perl modules
- unzip perl_ste.zip -d f:/perllib/lib/site_perl/5.15.0/
+ unzip perl_ste.zip -d f:/perllib/lib/site_perl/5.15.1/
Same remark as above applies. Additionally, if this directory is not
one of directories on @INC (and @INC is influenced by C<PERLLIB_PREFIX>), you
Fully build and test the Perl distribution. Make sure that no tests are
failing with C<test> and C<aout_test> targets; fix the bugs in Perl and
the Perl test suite detected by these tests. Make sure that C<all_test>
-make target runs as clean as possible. Check that C<os2/perlrexx.cmd>
+make target runs as clean as possible. Check that F<os2/perlrexx.cmd>
runs fine.
=item 2.
Since Perl processes the C<#!>-line (cf.
L<perlrun/DESCRIPTION>, L<perlrun/Command Switches>,
-L<perldiag/"Not a perl script">,
L<perldiag/"No Perl script found in input">), it should know when a
program I<is a Perl>. There is some naming convention which allows
Perl to distinguish correct lines from wrong ones. The above names are