X-Git-Url: https://perl5.git.perl.org/perl5.git/blobdiff_plain/d5d9880cc2523c10f7be68257f4f1768a4e552d9..f4800c994262159b335faadbee6463acacd4842d:/README.aix diff --git a/README.aix b/README.aix index 0b14612..97e94ab 100644 --- a/README.aix +++ b/README.aix @@ -4,97 +4,486 @@ designed to be readable as is. =head1 NAME -README.aix - Perl version 5 on IBM Unix (AIX) systems +perlaix - Perl version 5 on IBM AIX (UNIX) systems =head1 DESCRIPTION -This document describes various features of IBM's Unix operating system -(AIX) that will affect how Perl version 5 (hereafter just Perl) is -compiled and/or runs. +This document describes various features of IBM's UNIX operating +system AIX that will affect how Perl version 5 (hereafter just Perl) +is compiled and/or runs. =head2 Compiling Perl 5 on AIX +For information on compilers on older versions of AIX, see L. + +When compiling Perl, you must use an ANSI C compiler. AIX does not ship +an ANSI compliant C compiler with AIX by default, but binary builds of +gcc for AIX are widely available. A version of gcc is also included in +the AIX Toolbox which is shipped with AIX. + +=head2 Supported Compilers + +Currently all versions of IBM's "xlc", "xlc_r", "cc", "cc_r" or +"vac" ANSI/C compiler will work for building Perl if that compiler +works on your system. + +If you plan to link Perl to any module that requires thread-support, +like DBD::Oracle, it is better to use the _r version of the compiler. +This will not build a threaded Perl, but a thread-enabled Perl. See +also L later on. + +As of writing (2010-09) only the I or I compiler is supported by IBM on AIX 5L/6.1/7.1. + +The following compiler versions are currently supported by IBM: + + IBM XL C and IBM XL C/C++ V8, V9, V10, V11 + +The XL C for AIX is integrated in the XL C/C++ for AIX compiler and +therefore also supported. + +If you choose XL C/C++ V9 you need APAR IZ35785 installed +otherwise the integrated SDBM_File do not compile correctly due +to an optimization bug. You can circumvent this problem by +adding -qipa to the optimization flags (-Doptimize='-O -qipa'). +The PTF for APAR IZ35785 which solves this problem is available +from IBM (April 2009 PTF for XL C/C++ Enterprise Edition for AIX, V9.0). + +If you choose XL C/C++ V11 you need the April 2010 PTF (or newer) +installed otherwise you will not get a working Perl version. + +Perl can be compiled with either IBM's ANSI C compiler or with gcc. +The former is recommended, as not only it can compile Perl with no +difficulty, but also can take advantage of features listed later +that require the use of IBM compiler-specific command-line flags. + +If you decide to use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and +complete, and be sure to read the Perl INSTALL file for more gcc-specific +details. Please report any hoops you had to jump through to the +development team. + +=head2 Incompatibility with AIX Toolbox lib gdbm + +If the AIX Toolbox version of lib gdbm < 1.8.3-5 is installed on your +system then Perl will not work. This library contains the header files +/opt/freeware/include/gdbm/dbm.h|ndbm.h which conflict with the AIX +system versions. The lib gdbm will be automatically removed from the +wanted libraries if the presence of one of these two header files is +detected. If you want to build Perl with GDBM support then please install +at least gdbm-devel-1.8.3-5 (or higher). + +=head2 Perl 5 was successfully compiled and tested on: + + Perl | AIX Level | Compiler Level | w th | w/o th + -------+---------------------+-------------------------+------+------- + 5.12.2 |5.1 TL9 32 bit | XL C/C++ V7 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.1 TL9 64 bit | XL C/C++ V7 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.2 TL10 SP8 32 bit | XL C/C++ V8 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.2 TL10 SP8 32 bit | gcc 3.2.2 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.2 TL10 SP8 64 bit | XL C/C++ V8 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.3 TL8 SP8 32 bit | XL C/C++ V9 + IZ35785 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.3 TL8 SP8 32 bit | gcc 4.2.4 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.3 TL8 SP8 64 bit | XL C/C++ V9 + IZ35785 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.3 TL10 SP3 32 bit | XL C/C++ V11 + Apr 2010 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |5.3 TL10 SP3 64 bit | XL C/C++ V11 + Apr 2010 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |6.1 TL1 SP7 32 bit | XL C/C++ V10 | OK | OK + 5.12.2 |6.1 TL1 SP7 64 bit | XL C/C++ V10 | OK | OK + 5.13 |7.1 TL0 SP1 32 bit | XL C/C++ V11 + Jul 2010 | OK | OK + 5.13 |7.1 TL0 SP1 64 bit | XL C/C++ V11 + Jul 2010 | OK | OK + + w th = with thread support + w/o th = without thread support + OK = tested + +Successfully tested means that all "make test" runs finish with a +result of 100% OK. All tests were conducted with -Duseshrplib set. + +All tests were conducted on the oldest supported AIX technology level +with the latest support package applied. If the tested AIX version is +out of support (AIX 4.3.3, 5.1, 5.2) then the last available support +level was used. + +=head2 Building Dynamic Extensions on AIX + +Starting from Perl 5.7.2 (and consequently 5.8.x / 5.10.x / 5.12.x) +and AIX 4.3 or newer Perl uses the AIX native dynamic loading interface +in the so called runtime linking mode instead of the emulated interface +that was used in Perl releases 5.6.1 and earlier or, for AIX releases +4.2 and earlier. This change does break backward compatibility with +compiled modules from earlier Perl releases. The change was made to make +Perl more compliant with other applications like Apache/mod_perl which are +using the AIX native interface. This change also enables the use of +C++ code with static constructors and destructors in Perl extensions, +which was not possible using the emulated interface. + +It is highly recommended to use the new interface. + +=head2 Using Large Files with Perl + +Should yield no problems. + +=head2 Threaded Perl + +Should yield no problems with AIX 5.1 / 5.2 / 5.3 / 6.1 / 7.1. + +IBM uses the AIX system Perl (V5.6.0 on AIX 5.1 and V5.8.2 on +AIX 5.2 / 5.3 and 6.1; V5.8.8 on AIX 5.3 TL11 and AIX 6.1 TL4; V5.10.1 +on AIX 7.1) for some AIX system scripts. If you switch the links in +/usr/bin from the AIX system Perl (/usr/opt/perl5) to the newly build +Perl then you get the same features as with the IBM AIX system Perl if +the threaded options are used. + +The threaded Perl build works also on AIX 5.1 but the IBM Perl +build (Perl v5.6.0) is not threaded on AIX 5.1. + +Perl 5.12 an newer is not compatible with the IBM fileset perl.libext. + +=head2 64-bit Perl + +If your AIX system is installed with 64-bit support, you can expect 64-bit +configurations to work. If you want to use 64-bit Perl on AIX 6.1 +you need an APAR for a libc.a bug which affects (n)dbm_XXX functions. +The APAR number for this problem is IZ39077. + +If you need more memory (larger data segment) for your Perl programs you +can set: + + /etc/security/limits + default: (or your user) + data = -1 (default is 262144 * 512 byte) + +With the default setting the size is limited to 128MB. +The -1 removes this limit. If the "make test" fails please change +your /etc/security/limits as stated above. + +=head2 Recommended Options AIX 5.1/5.2/5.3/6.1 and 7.1 (threaded/32-bit) + +With the following options you get a threaded Perl version which +passes all make tests in threaded 32-bit mode, which is the default +configuration for the Perl builds that AIX ships with. + + rm config.sh + ./Configure \ + -d \ + -Dcc=cc_r \ + -Duseshrplib \ + -Dusethreads \ + -Dprefix=/usr/opt/perl5_32 + +The -Dprefix option will install Perl in a directory parallel to the +IBM AIX system Perl installation. + +=head2 Recommended Options AIX 5.1/5.2/5.3/6.1 and 7.1 (32-bit) + +With the following options you get a Perl version which passes +all make tests in 32-bit mode. + + rm config.sh + ./Configure \ + -d \ + -Dcc=cc_r \ + -Duseshrplib \ + -Dprefix=/usr/opt/perl5_32 + +The -Dprefix option will install Perl in a directory parallel to the +IBM AIX system Perl installation. + +=head2 Recommended Options AIX 5.1/5.2/5.3/6.1 and 7.1 (threaded/64-bit) + +With the following options you get a threaded Perl version which +passes all make tests in 64-bit mode. + + export OBJECT_MODE=64 / setenv OBJECT_MODE 64 (depending on your shell) + + rm config.sh + ./Configure \ + -d \ + -Dcc=cc_r \ + -Duseshrplib \ + -Dusethreads \ + -Duse64bitall \ + -Dprefix=/usr/opt/perl5_64 + +=head2 Recommended Options AIX 5.1/5.2/5.3/6.1 and 7.1 (64-bit) + +With the following options you get a Perl version which passes all +make tests in 64-bit mode. + + export OBJECT_MODE=64 / setenv OBJECT_MODE 64 (depending on your shell) + + rm config.sh + ./Configure \ + -d \ + -Dcc=cc_r \ + -Duseshrplib \ + -Duse64bitall \ + -Dprefix=/usr/opt/perl5_64 + +The -Dprefix option will install Perl in a directory parallel to the +IBM AIX system Perl installation. + +If you choose gcc to compile 64-bit Perl then you need to add the +following option: + + -Dcc='gcc -maix64' + + +=head2 Compiling Perl 5 on older AIX versions up to 4.3.3 + +Due to the fact that AIX 4.3.3 reached end-of-service in December 31, +2003 this information is provided as is. The Perl versions prior to +Perl 5.8.9 could be compiled on AIX up to 4.3.3 with the following +settings (your mileage may vary): + When compiling Perl, you must use an ANSI C compiler. AIX does not ship an ANSI compliant C-compiler with AIX by default, but binary builds of gcc for AIX are widely available. At the moment of writing, AIX supports two different native C compilers, -for which you have to pay: B and B. If you decide to use eiter +for which you have to pay: B and B. If you decide to use either of these two (which is quite a lot easier than using gcc), be sure to upgrade to the latest available patch level. Currently: - xlC.C 3.1.4.0 - vac.C 4.4.0.3 (5.0 is already available) + xlC.C 3.1.4.10 or 3.6.6.0 or 4.0.2.2 or 5.0.2.9 or 6.0.0.3 + vac.C 4.4.0.3 or 5.0.2.6 or 6.0.0.1 + +note that xlC has the OS version in the name as of version 4.0.2.0, so +you will find xlC.C for AIX-5.0 as package + + xlC.aix50.rte 5.0.2.0 or 6.0.0.3 -Perl can be compiled with either IBM's ANSI C compiler or with gcc. The -former is recommended, as not only can it compile Perl with no +subversions are not the same "latest" on all OS versions. For example, +the latest xlC-5 on aix41 is 5.0.2.9, while on aix43, it is 5.0.2.7. + +Perl can be compiled with either IBM's ANSI C compiler or with gcc. +The former is recommended, as not only can it compile Perl with no difficulty, but also can take advantage of features listed later that require the use of IBM compiler-specific command-line flags. +The IBM's compiler patch levels 5.0.0.0 and 5.0.1.0 have compiler +optimization bugs that affect compiling perl.c and regcomp.c, +respectively. If Perl's configuration detects those compiler patch +levels, optimization is turned off for the said source code files. +Upgrading to at least 5.0.2.0 is recommended. + If you decide to use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and -complete, and be sure to read the Perl README file for more gcc-specific -details. +complete, and be sure to read the Perl INSTALL file for more gcc-specific +details. Please report any hoops you had to jump through to the development +team. =head2 OS level Before installing the patches to the IBM C-compiler you need to know the level of patching for the Operating System. IBM's command 'oslevel' will -show the base, but is not allways complete: +show the base, but is not always complete (in this example oslevel shows +4.3.NULL, whereas the system might run most of 4.3.THREE): # oslevel 4.3.0.0 # lslpp -l | grep 'bos.rte ' - bos.rte 4.3.2.1 COMMITTED Base Operating System Runtime - bos.rte 4.3.2.0 COMMITTED Base Operating System Runtime + bos.rte 4.3.3.75 COMMITTED Base Operating System Runtime + bos.rte 4.3.2.0 COMMITTED Base Operating System Runtime # -=head2 Building Dynamic Extensions on AIX +The same might happen to AIX 5.1 or other OS levels. As a side note, Perl +cannot be built without bos.adt.syscalls and bos.adt.libm installed -AIX supports dynamically loadable libraries (shared libraries). -Shared libraries end with the suffix .a, which is a bit misleading, -cause *all* libraries are shared ;-). + # lslpp -l | egrep "syscalls|libm" + bos.adt.libm 5.1.0.25 COMMITTED Base Application Development + bos.adt.syscalls 5.1.0.36 COMMITTED System Calls Application + # + +=head2 Building Dynamic Extensions on AIX E 5L + +AIX supports dynamically loadable objects as well as shared libraries. +Shared libraries by convention end with the suffix .a, which is a bit +misleading, as an archive can contain static as well as dynamic members. +For Perl dynamically loaded objects we use the .so suffix also used on +many other platforms. + +Note that starting from Perl 5.7.2 (and consequently 5.8.0) and AIX 4.3 +or newer Perl uses the AIX native dynamic loading interface in the so +called runtime linking mode instead of the emulated interface that was +used in Perl releases 5.6.1 and earlier or, for AIX releases 4.2 and +earlier. This change does break backward compatibility with compiled +modules from earlier Perl releases. The change was made to make Perl +more compliant with other applications like Apache/mod_perl which are +using the AIX native interface. This change also enables the use of C++ +code with static constructors and destructors in Perl extensions, which +was not possible using the emulated interface. =head2 The IBM ANSI C Compiler All defaults for Configure can be used. If you've chosen to use vac 4, be sure to run 4.4.0.3. Older versions -will turn up nasty later on. - -=head2 Using GNU's gcc for building perl - -... ? - -Wait, I'll have to scan perlbug ... +will turn up nasty later on. For vac 5 be sure to run at least 5.0.1.0, +but vac 5.0.2.6 or up is highly recommended. Note that since IBM has +removed vac 5.0.2.1 through 5.0.2.5 from the software depot, these +versions should be considered obsolete. + +Here's a brief lead of how to upgrade the compiler to the latest +level. Of course this is subject to changes. You can only upgrade +versions from ftp-available updates if the first three digit groups +are the same (in where you can skip intermediate unlike the patches +in the developer snapshots of Perl), or to one version up where the +"base" is available. In other words, the AIX compiler patches are +cumulative. + + vac.C.4.4.0.1 => vac.C.4.4.0.3 is OK (vac.C.4.4.0.2 not needed) + xlC.C.3.1.3.3 => xlC.C.3.1.4.10 is NOT OK (xlC.C.3.1.4.0 is not available) + + # ftp ftp.software.ibm.com + Connected to service.boulder.ibm.com. + : welcome message ... + Name (ftp.software.ibm.com:merijn): anonymous + 331 Guest login ok, send your complete e-mail address as password. + Password: + ... accepted login stuff + ftp> cd /aix/fixes/v4/ + ftp> dir other other.ll + output to local-file: other.ll? y + 200 PORT command successful. + 150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for /bin/ls. + 226 Transfer complete. + ftp> dir xlc xlc.ll + output to local-file: xlc.ll? y + 200 PORT command successful. + 150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for /bin/ls. + 226 Transfer complete. + ftp> bye + ... goodbye messages + # ls -l *.ll + -rw-rw-rw- 1 merijn system 1169432 Nov 2 17:29 other.ll + -rw-rw-rw- 1 merijn system 29170 Nov 2 17:29 xlc.ll + +On AIX 4.2 using xlC, we continue: + + # lslpp -l | fgrep 'xlC.C ' + xlC.C 3.1.4.9 COMMITTED C for AIX Compiler + xlC.C 3.1.4.0 COMMITTED C for AIX Compiler + # grep 'xlC.C.3.1.4.*.bff' xlc.ll + -rw-r--r-- 1 45776101 1 6286336 Jul 22 1996 xlC.C.3.1.4.1.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6173696 Aug 24 1998 xlC.C.3.1.4.10.bff + -rw-r--r-- 1 45776101 1 6319104 Aug 14 1996 xlC.C.3.1.4.2.bff + -rw-r--r-- 1 45776101 1 6316032 Oct 21 1996 xlC.C.3.1.4.3.bff + -rw-r--r-- 1 45776101 1 6315008 Dec 20 1996 xlC.C.3.1.4.4.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6178816 Mar 28 1997 xlC.C.3.1.4.5.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6188032 May 22 1997 xlC.C.3.1.4.6.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6191104 Sep 5 1997 xlC.C.3.1.4.7.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6185984 Jan 13 1998 xlC.C.3.1.4.8.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6169600 May 27 1998 xlC.C.3.1.4.9.bff + # wget ftp://ftp.software.ibm.com/aix/fixes/v4/xlc/xlC.C.3.1.4.10.bff + # + +On AIX 4.3 using vac, we continue: + + # lslpp -l | grep 'vac.C ' + vac.C 5.0.2.2 COMMITTED C for AIX Compiler + vac.C 5.0.2.0 COMMITTED C for AIX Compiler + # grep 'vac.C.5.0.2.*.bff' other.ll + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 13592576 Apr 16 2001 vac.C.5.0.2.0.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 14133248 Apr 9 2002 vac.C.5.0.2.3.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 14173184 May 20 2002 vac.C.5.0.2.4.bff + -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 14192640 Nov 22 2002 vac.C.5.0.2.6.bff + # wget ftp://ftp.software.ibm.com/aix/fixes/v4/other/vac.C.5.0.2.6.bff + # + +Likewise on all other OS levels. Then execute the following command, and +fill in its choices + + # smit install_update + -> Install and Update from LATEST Available Software + * INPUT device / directory for software [ vac.C.5.0.2.6.bff ] + [ OK ] + [ OK ] + +Follow the messages ... and you're done. + +If you like a more web-like approach, a good start point can be +http://www14.software.ibm.com/webapp/download/downloadaz.jsp and click +"C for AIX", and follow the instructions. + +=head2 The usenm option + +If linking miniperl + + cc -o miniperl ... miniperlmain.o opmini.o perl.o ... -lm -lc ... + +causes error like this + + ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .aintl + ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .copysignl + ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .syscall + ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .eaccess + ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .setresuid + ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .setresgid + ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .setproctitle + ld: 0711-345 Use the -bloadmap or -bnoquiet option to obtain more information. + +you could retry with + + make realclean + rm config.sh + ./Configure -Dusenm ... + +which makes Configure to use the C tool when scanning for library +symbols, which usually is not done in AIX. + +Related to this, you probably should not use the C<-r> option of +Configure in AIX, because that affects of how the C tool is used. + +=head2 Using GNU's gcc for building Perl + +Using gcc-3.x (tested with 3.0.4, 3.1, and 3.2) now works out of the box, +as do recent gcc-2.9 builds available directly from IBM as part of their +Linux compatibility packages, available here: + + http://www.ibm.com/servers/aix/products/aixos/linux/ + +=head2 Using Large Files with Perl E 5L -=head2 Using Large Files with Perl - -... ? +Should yield no problems. -=head2 Threaded Perl +=head2 Threaded Perl E 5L -... ? +Threads seem to work OK, though at the moment not all tests pass when +threads are used in combination with 64-bit configurations. -=head2 64-bit Perl +You may get a warning when doing a threaded build: -... ? + "pp_sys.c", line 4640.39: 1506-280 (W) Function argument assignment + between types "unsigned char*" and "const void*" is not allowed. -=head2 GDBM and Threads +The exact line number may vary, but if the warning (W) comes from a line +line this -... ? + hent = PerlSock_gethostbyaddr(addr, (Netdb_hlen_t) addrlen, addrtype); -=head2 NFS filesystems and utime(2) +in the "pp_ghostent" function, you may ignore it safely. The warning +is caused by the reentrant variant of gethostbyaddr() having a slightly +different prototype than its non-reentrant variant, but the difference +is not really significant here. -... ? +=head2 64-bit Perl E 5L -=head1 AUTHOR +If your AIX is installed with 64-bit support, you can expect 64-bit +configurations to work. In combination with threads some tests might +still fail. -H.Merijn Brand +=head2 AIX 4.2 and extensions using C++ with statics -Structure copied from README.hpux +In AIX 4.2 Perl extensions that use C++ functions that use statics +may have problems in that the statics are not getting initialized. +In newer AIX releases this has been solved by linking Perl with +the libC_r library, but unfortunately in AIX 4.2 the said library +has an obscure bug where the various functions related to time +(such as time() and gettimeofday()) return broken values, and +therefore in AIX 4.2 Perl is not linked against the libC_r. -=head1 DATE +=head1 AUTHORS -Version 0.0.1: 16-10-2000 +Rainer Tammer =cut