1# vim: syntax=pod 2 3If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you see. 4It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is specially 5designed to be readable as is. 6 7=head1 NAME 8 9perlaix - Perl version 5 on IBM AIX (UNIX) systems 10 11=head1 DESCRIPTION 12 13This document describes various features of IBM's UNIX operating 14system AIX that will affect how Perl version 5 (hereafter just Perl) 15is compiled and/or runs. 16 17=head2 Compiling Perl 5 on AIX 18 19For information on compilers on older versions of AIX, see L</Compiling 20Perl 5 on older AIX versions up to 4.3.3>. 21 22When compiling Perl, you must use an ANSI C compiler. AIX does not ship 23an ANSI compliant C compiler with AIX by default, but binary builds of 24gcc for AIX are widely available. A version of gcc is also included in 25the AIX Toolbox which is shipped with AIX. 26 27=head2 Supported Compilers 28 29Currently all versions of IBM's "xlc", "xlc_r", "cc", "cc_r" or 30"vac" ANSI/C compiler will work for building Perl if that compiler 31works on your system. 32 33If you plan to link Perl to any module that requires thread-support, 34like DBD::Oracle, it is better to use the _r version of the compiler. 35This will not build a threaded Perl, but a thread-enabled Perl. See 36also L</Threaded Perl> later on. 37 38As of writing (2010-09) only the I<IBM XL C for AIX> or I<IBM XL C/C++ 39for AIX> compiler is supported by IBM on AIX 5L/6.1/7.1. 40 41The following compiler versions are currently supported by IBM: 42 43 IBM XL C and IBM XL C/C++ V8, V9, V10, V11 44 45The XL C for AIX is integrated in the XL C/C++ for AIX compiler and 46therefore also supported. 47 48If you choose XL C/C++ V9 you need APAR IZ35785 installed 49otherwise the integrated SDBM_File do not compile correctly due 50to an optimization bug. You can circumvent this problem by 51adding -qipa to the optimization flags (-Doptimize='-O -qipa'). 52The PTF for APAR IZ35785 which solves this problem is available 53from IBM (April 2009 PTF for XL C/C++ Enterprise Edition for AIX, V9.0). 54 55If you choose XL C/C++ V11 you need the April 2010 PTF (or newer) 56installed otherwise you will not get a working Perl version. 57 58Perl can be compiled with either IBM's ANSI C compiler or with gcc. 59The former is recommended, as not only it can compile Perl with no 60difficulty, but also can take advantage of features listed later 61that require the use of IBM compiler-specific command-line flags. 62 63If you decide to use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and 64complete, and be sure to read the Perl INSTALL file for more gcc-specific 65details. Please report any hoops you had to jump through to the 66development team. 67 68=head2 Incompatibility with AIX Toolbox lib gdbm 69 70If the AIX Toolbox version of lib gdbm < 1.8.3-5 is installed on your 71system then Perl will not work. This library contains the header files 72/opt/freeware/include/gdbm/dbm.h|ndbm.h which conflict with the AIX 73system versions. The lib gdbm will be automatically removed from the 74wanted libraries if the presence of one of these two header files is 75detected. If you want to build Perl with GDBM support then please install 76at least gdbm-devel-1.8.3-5 (or higher). 77 78=head2 Perl 5 was successfully compiled and tested on: 79 80 Perl | AIX Level | Compiler Level | w th | w/o th 81 -------+---------------------+-------------------------+------+------- 82 5.12.2 |5.1 TL9 32 bit | XL C/C++ V7 | OK | OK 83 5.12.2 |5.1 TL9 64 bit | XL C/C++ V7 | OK | OK 84 5.12.2 |5.2 TL10 SP8 32 bit | XL C/C++ V8 | OK | OK 85 5.12.2 |5.2 TL10 SP8 32 bit | gcc 3.2.2 | OK | OK 86 5.12.2 |5.2 TL10 SP8 64 bit | XL C/C++ V8 | OK | OK 87 5.12.2 |5.3 TL8 SP8 32 bit | XL C/C++ V9 + IZ35785 | OK | OK 88 5.12.2 |5.3 TL8 SP8 32 bit | gcc 4.2.4 | OK | OK 89 5.12.2 |5.3 TL8 SP8 64 bit | XL C/C++ V9 + IZ35785 | OK | OK 90 5.12.2 |5.3 TL10 SP3 32 bit | XL C/C++ V11 + Apr 2010 | OK | OK 91 5.12.2 |5.3 TL10 SP3 64 bit | XL C/C++ V11 + Apr 2010 | OK | OK 92 5.12.2 |6.1 TL1 SP7 32 bit | XL C/C++ V10 | OK | OK 93 5.12.2 |6.1 TL1 SP7 64 bit | XL C/C++ V10 | OK | OK 94 5.13 |7.1 TL0 SP1 32 bit | XL C/C++ V11 + Jul 2010 | OK | OK 95 5.13 |7.1 TL0 SP1 64 bit | XL C/C++ V11 + Jul 2010 | OK | OK 96 97 w th = with thread support 98 w/o th = without thread support 99 OK = tested 100 101Successfully tested means that all "make test" runs finish with a 102result of 100% OK. All tests were conducted with -Duseshrplib set. 103 104All tests were conducted on the oldest supported AIX technology level 105with the latest support package applied. If the tested AIX version is 106out of support (AIX 4.3.3, 5.1, 5.2) then the last available support 107level was used. 108 109=head2 Building Dynamic Extensions on AIX 110 111Starting from Perl 5.7.2 (and consequently 5.8.x / 5.10.x / 5.12.x) 112and AIX 4.3 or newer Perl uses the AIX native dynamic loading interface 113in the so called runtime linking mode instead of the emulated interface 114that was used in Perl releases 5.6.1 and earlier or, for AIX releases 1154.2 and earlier. This change does break backward compatibility with 116compiled modules from earlier Perl releases. The change was made to make 117Perl more compliant with other applications like Apache/mod_perl which are 118using the AIX native interface. This change also enables the use of 119C++ code with static constructors and destructors in Perl extensions, 120which was not possible using the emulated interface. 121 122It is highly recommended to use the new interface. 123 124=head2 Using Large Files with Perl 125 126Should yield no problems. 127 128=head2 Threaded Perl 129 130Should yield no problems with AIX 5.1 / 5.2 / 5.3 / 6.1 / 7.1. 131 132IBM uses the AIX system Perl (V5.6.0 on AIX 5.1 and V5.8.2 on 133AIX 5.2 / 5.3 and 6.1; V5.8.8 on AIX 5.3 TL11 and AIX 6.1 TL4; V5.10.1 134on AIX 7.1) for some AIX system scripts. If you switch the links in 135/usr/bin from the AIX system Perl (/usr/opt/perl5) to the newly build 136Perl then you get the same features as with the IBM AIX system Perl if 137the threaded options are used. 138 139The threaded Perl build works also on AIX 5.1 but the IBM Perl 140build (Perl v5.6.0) is not threaded on AIX 5.1. 141 142Perl 5.12 an newer is not compatible with the IBM fileset perl.libext. 143 144=head2 64-bit Perl 145 146If your AIX system is installed with 64-bit support, you can expect 64-bit 147configurations to work. If you want to use 64-bit Perl on AIX 6.1 148you need an APAR for a libc.a bug which affects (n)dbm_XXX functions. 149The APAR number for this problem is IZ39077. 150 151If you need more memory (larger data segment) for your Perl programs you 152can set: 153 154 /etc/security/limits 155 default: (or your user) 156 data = -1 (default is 262144 * 512 byte) 157 158With the default setting the size is limited to 128MB. 159The -1 removes this limit. If the "make test" fails please change 160your /etc/security/limits as stated above. 161 162=head2 Long doubles 163 164IBM calls its implementation of long doubles 128-bit, but it is not 165the IEEE 128-bit ("quadruple precision") which would give 116 bit of 166mantissa (nor it is implemented in hardware), instead it's a special 167software implementation called "double-double", which gives 106 bits 168of mantissa. 169 170There seem to be various problems in this long double implementation. 171If Configure detects this brokenness, it will disable the long double support. 172This can be overridden with explicit C<-Duselongdouble> (or C<-Dusemorebits>, 173which enables both long doubles and 64 bit integers). If you decide to 174enable long doubles, for most of the broken things Perl has implemented 175workarounds, but the handling of the special values infinity and NaN 176remains badly broken: for example infinity plus zero results in NaN. 177 178=head2 Recommended Options AIX 5.1/5.2/5.3/6.1 and 7.1 (threaded/32-bit) 179 180With the following options you get a threaded Perl version which 181passes all make tests in threaded 32-bit mode, which is the default 182configuration for the Perl builds that AIX ships with. 183 184 rm config.sh 185 ./Configure \ 186 -d \ 187 -Dcc=cc_r \ 188 -Duseshrplib \ 189 -Dusethreads \ 190 -Dprefix=/usr/opt/perl5_32 191 192The -Dprefix option will install Perl in a directory parallel to the 193IBM AIX system Perl installation. 194 195=head2 Recommended Options AIX 5.1/5.2/5.3/6.1 and 7.1 (32-bit) 196 197With the following options you get a Perl version which passes 198all make tests in 32-bit mode. 199 200 rm config.sh 201 ./Configure \ 202 -d \ 203 -Dcc=cc_r \ 204 -Duseshrplib \ 205 -Dprefix=/usr/opt/perl5_32 206 207The -Dprefix option will install Perl in a directory parallel to the 208IBM AIX system Perl installation. 209 210=head2 Recommended Options AIX 5.1/5.2/5.3/6.1 and 7.1 (threaded/64-bit) 211 212With the following options you get a threaded Perl version which 213passes all make tests in 64-bit mode. 214 215 export OBJECT_MODE=64 / setenv OBJECT_MODE 64 (depending on your shell) 216 217 rm config.sh 218 ./Configure \ 219 -d \ 220 -Dcc=cc_r \ 221 -Duseshrplib \ 222 -Dusethreads \ 223 -Duse64bitall \ 224 -Dprefix=/usr/opt/perl5_64 225 226=head2 Recommended Options AIX 5.1/5.2/5.3/6.1 and 7.1 (64-bit) 227 228With the following options you get a Perl version which passes all 229make tests in 64-bit mode. 230 231 export OBJECT_MODE=64 / setenv OBJECT_MODE 64 (depending on your shell) 232 233 rm config.sh 234 ./Configure \ 235 -d \ 236 -Dcc=cc_r \ 237 -Duseshrplib \ 238 -Duse64bitall \ 239 -Dprefix=/usr/opt/perl5_64 240 241The -Dprefix option will install Perl in a directory parallel to the 242IBM AIX system Perl installation. 243 244If you choose gcc to compile 64-bit Perl then you need to add the 245following option: 246 247 -Dcc='gcc -maix64' 248 249 250=head2 Compiling Perl 5 on AIX 7.1.0 251 252A regression in AIX 7 causes a failure in make test in Time::Piece during 253daylight savings time. APAR IV16514 provides the fix for this. A quick 254test to see if it's required, assuming it is currently daylight savings 255in Eastern Time, would be to run C< TZ=EST5 date +%Z >. This will come 256back with C<EST> normally, but nothing if you have the problem. 257 258 259=head2 Compiling Perl 5 on older AIX versions up to 4.3.3 260 261Due to the fact that AIX 4.3.3 reached end-of-service in December 31, 2622003 this information is provided as is. The Perl versions prior to 263Perl 5.8.9 could be compiled on AIX up to 4.3.3 with the following 264settings (your mileage may vary): 265 266When compiling Perl, you must use an ANSI C compiler. AIX does not ship 267an ANSI compliant C-compiler with AIX by default, but binary builds of 268gcc for AIX are widely available. 269 270At the moment of writing, AIX supports two different native C compilers, 271for which you have to pay: B<xlC> and B<vac>. If you decide to use either 272of these two (which is quite a lot easier than using gcc), be sure to 273upgrade to the latest available patch level. Currently: 274 275 xlC.C 3.1.4.10 or 3.6.6.0 or 4.0.2.2 or 5.0.2.9 or 6.0.0.3 276 vac.C 4.4.0.3 or 5.0.2.6 or 6.0.0.1 277 278note that xlC has the OS version in the name as of version 4.0.2.0, so 279you will find xlC.C for AIX-5.0 as package 280 281 xlC.aix50.rte 5.0.2.0 or 6.0.0.3 282 283subversions are not the same "latest" on all OS versions. For example, 284the latest xlC-5 on aix41 is 5.0.2.9, while on aix43, it is 5.0.2.7. 285 286Perl can be compiled with either IBM's ANSI C compiler or with gcc. 287The former is recommended, as not only can it compile Perl with no 288difficulty, but also can take advantage of features listed later that 289require the use of IBM compiler-specific command-line flags. 290 291The IBM's compiler patch levels 5.0.0.0 and 5.0.1.0 have compiler 292optimization bugs that affect compiling perl.c and regcomp.c, 293respectively. If Perl's configuration detects those compiler patch 294levels, optimization is turned off for the said source code files. 295Upgrading to at least 5.0.2.0 is recommended. 296 297If you decide to use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and 298complete, and be sure to read the Perl INSTALL file for more gcc-specific 299details. Please report any hoops you had to jump through to the development 300team. 301 302=head2 OS level 303 304Before installing the patches to the IBM C-compiler you need to know the 305level of patching for the Operating System. IBM's command 'oslevel' will 306show the base, but is not always complete (in this example oslevel shows 3074.3.NULL, whereas the system might run most of 4.3.THREE): 308 309 # oslevel 310 4.3.0.0 311 # lslpp -l | grep 'bos.rte ' 312 bos.rte 4.3.3.75 COMMITTED Base Operating System Runtime 313 bos.rte 4.3.2.0 COMMITTED Base Operating System Runtime 314 # 315 316The same might happen to AIX 5.1 or other OS levels. As a side note, Perl 317cannot be built without bos.adt.syscalls and bos.adt.libm installed 318 319 # lslpp -l | egrep "syscalls|libm" 320 bos.adt.libm 5.1.0.25 COMMITTED Base Application Development 321 bos.adt.syscalls 5.1.0.36 COMMITTED System Calls Application 322 # 323 324=head2 Building Dynamic Extensions on AIX E<lt> 5L 325 326AIX supports dynamically loadable objects as well as shared libraries. 327Shared libraries by convention end with the suffix .a, which is a bit 328misleading, as an archive can contain static as well as dynamic members. 329For Perl dynamically loaded objects we use the .so suffix also used on 330many other platforms. 331 332Note that starting from Perl 5.7.2 (and consequently 5.8.0) and AIX 4.3 333or newer Perl uses the AIX native dynamic loading interface in the so 334called runtime linking mode instead of the emulated interface that was 335used in Perl releases 5.6.1 and earlier or, for AIX releases 4.2 and 336earlier. This change does break backward compatibility with compiled 337modules from earlier Perl releases. The change was made to make Perl 338more compliant with other applications like Apache/mod_perl which are 339using the AIX native interface. This change also enables the use of C++ 340code with static constructors and destructors in Perl extensions, which 341was not possible using the emulated interface. 342 343=head2 The IBM ANSI C Compiler 344 345All defaults for Configure can be used. 346 347If you've chosen to use vac 4, be sure to run 4.4.0.3. Older versions 348will turn up nasty later on. For vac 5 be sure to run at least 5.0.1.0, 349but vac 5.0.2.6 or up is highly recommended. Note that since IBM has 350removed vac 5.0.2.1 through 5.0.2.5 from the software depot, these 351versions should be considered obsolete. 352 353Here's a brief lead of how to upgrade the compiler to the latest 354level. Of course this is subject to changes. You can only upgrade 355versions from ftp-available updates if the first three digit groups 356are the same (in where you can skip intermediate unlike the patches 357in the developer snapshots of Perl), or to one version up where the 358"base" is available. In other words, the AIX compiler patches are 359cumulative. 360 361 vac.C.4.4.0.1 => vac.C.4.4.0.3 is OK (vac.C.4.4.0.2 not needed) 362 xlC.C.3.1.3.3 => xlC.C.3.1.4.10 is NOT OK (xlC.C.3.1.4.0 is not 363 available) 364 365 # ftp ftp.software.ibm.com 366 Connected to service.boulder.ibm.com. 367 : welcome message ... 368 Name (ftp.software.ibm.com:merijn): anonymous 369 331 Guest login ok, send your complete e-mail address as password. 370 Password: 371 ... accepted login stuff 372 ftp> cd /aix/fixes/v4/ 373 ftp> dir other other.ll 374 output to local-file: other.ll? y 375 200 PORT command successful. 376 150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for /bin/ls. 377 226 Transfer complete. 378 ftp> dir xlc xlc.ll 379 output to local-file: xlc.ll? y 380 200 PORT command successful. 381 150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for /bin/ls. 382 226 Transfer complete. 383 ftp> bye 384 ... goodbye messages 385 # ls -l *.ll 386 -rw-rw-rw- 1 merijn system 1169432 Nov 2 17:29 other.ll 387 -rw-rw-rw- 1 merijn system 29170 Nov 2 17:29 xlc.ll 388 389On AIX 4.2 using xlC, we continue: 390 391 # lslpp -l | fgrep 'xlC.C ' 392 xlC.C 3.1.4.9 COMMITTED C for AIX Compiler 393 xlC.C 3.1.4.0 COMMITTED C for AIX Compiler 394 # grep 'xlC.C.3.1.4.*.bff' xlc.ll 395 -rw-r--r-- 1 45776101 1 6286336 Jul 22 1996 xlC.C.3.1.4.1.bff 396 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6173696 Aug 24 1998 xlC.C.3.1.4.10.bff 397 -rw-r--r-- 1 45776101 1 6319104 Aug 14 1996 xlC.C.3.1.4.2.bff 398 -rw-r--r-- 1 45776101 1 6316032 Oct 21 1996 xlC.C.3.1.4.3.bff 399 -rw-r--r-- 1 45776101 1 6315008 Dec 20 1996 xlC.C.3.1.4.4.bff 400 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6178816 Mar 28 1997 xlC.C.3.1.4.5.bff 401 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6188032 May 22 1997 xlC.C.3.1.4.6.bff 402 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6191104 Sep 5 1997 xlC.C.3.1.4.7.bff 403 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6185984 Jan 13 1998 xlC.C.3.1.4.8.bff 404 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 6169600 May 27 1998 xlC.C.3.1.4.9.bff 405 # wget ftp://ftp.software.ibm.com/aix/fixes/v4/xlc/xlC.C.3.1.4.10.bff 406 # 407 408On AIX 4.3 using vac, we continue: 409 410 # lslpp -l | grep 'vac.C ' 411 vac.C 5.0.2.2 COMMITTED C for AIX Compiler 412 vac.C 5.0.2.0 COMMITTED C for AIX Compiler 413 # grep 'vac.C.5.0.2.*.bff' other.ll 414 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 13592576 Apr 16 2001 vac.C.5.0.2.0.bff 415 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 14133248 Apr 9 2002 vac.C.5.0.2.3.bff 416 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 14173184 May 20 2002 vac.C.5.0.2.4.bff 417 -rw-rw-r-- 1 45776101 1 14192640 Nov 22 2002 vac.C.5.0.2.6.bff 418 # wget ftp://ftp.software.ibm.com/aix/fixes/v4/other/vac.C.5.0.2.6.bff 419 # 420 421Likewise on all other OS levels. Then execute the following command, and 422fill in its choices 423 424 # smit install_update 425 -> Install and Update from LATEST Available Software 426 * INPUT device / directory for software [ vac.C.5.0.2.6.bff ] 427 [ OK ] 428 [ OK ] 429 430Follow the messages ... and you're done. 431 432If you like a more web-like approach, a good start point can be 433L<http://www14.software.ibm.com/webapp/download/downloadaz.jsp> and click 434"C for AIX", and follow the instructions. 435 436=head2 The usenm option 437 438If linking miniperl 439 440 cc -o miniperl ... miniperlmain.o opmini.o perl.o ... -lm -lc ... 441 442causes error like this 443 444 ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .aintl 445 ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .copysignl 446 ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .syscall 447 ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .eaccess 448 ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .setresuid 449 ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .setresgid 450 ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .setproctitle 451 ld: 0711-345 Use the -bloadmap or -bnoquiet option to obtain more 452 information. 453 454you could retry with 455 456 make realclean 457 rm config.sh 458 ./Configure -Dusenm ... 459 460which makes Configure to use the C<nm> tool when scanning for library 461symbols, which usually is not done in AIX. 462 463Related to this, you probably should not use the C<-r> option of 464Configure in AIX, because that affects of how the C<nm> tool is used. 465 466=head2 Using GNU's gcc for building Perl 467 468Using gcc-3.x (tested with 3.0.4, 3.1, and 3.2) now works out of the box, 469as do recent gcc-2.9 builds available directly from IBM as part of their 470Linux compatibility packages, available here: 471 472 http://www.ibm.com/servers/aix/products/aixos/linux/ 473 474=head2 Using Large Files with Perl E<lt> 5L 475 476Should yield no problems. 477 478=head2 Threaded Perl E<lt> 5L 479 480Threads seem to work OK, though at the moment not all tests pass when 481threads are used in combination with 64-bit configurations. 482 483You may get a warning when doing a threaded build: 484 485 "pp_sys.c", line 4640.39: 1506-280 (W) Function argument assignment 486 between types "unsigned char*" and "const void*" is not allowed. 487 488The exact line number may vary, but if the warning (W) comes from a line 489line this 490 491 hent = PerlSock_gethostbyaddr(addr, (Netdb_hlen_t) addrlen, addrtype); 492 493in the "pp_ghostent" function, you may ignore it safely. The warning 494is caused by the reentrant variant of gethostbyaddr() having a slightly 495different prototype than its non-reentrant variant, but the difference 496is not really significant here. 497 498=head2 64-bit Perl E<lt> 5L 499 500If your AIX is installed with 64-bit support, you can expect 64-bit 501configurations to work. In combination with threads some tests might 502still fail. 503 504=head2 AIX 4.2 and extensions using C++ with statics 505 506In AIX 4.2 Perl extensions that use C++ functions that use statics 507may have problems in that the statics are not getting initialized. 508In newer AIX releases this has been solved by linking Perl with 509the libC_r library, but unfortunately in AIX 4.2 the said library 510has an obscure bug where the various functions related to time 511(such as time() and gettimeofday()) return broken values, and 512therefore in AIX 4.2 Perl is not linked against the libC_r. 513 514=head1 AUTHORS 515 516Rainer Tammer <tammer@tammer.net> 517 518=cut 519