1If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you see. 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 7perlhpux - 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. 24 25That build was a portable hppa-1.1 multithread build that supports large 26files compiled with gcc-2.9-hppa-991112. 27 28If you perform a new installation, then (a newer) Perl will be installed 29automatically. Pre-installed HP-UX systems now have more recent versions 30of Perl and the updated modules. 31 32The official (threaded) builds from HP, as they are shipped on the 33Application DVD/CD's are available on 34L<http://www.software.hp.com/portal/swdepot/displayProductInfo.do?productNumber=PERL> 35for both PA-RISC and IPF (Itanium Processor Family). They are built 36with the HP ANSI-C compiler. Up till 5.8.8 that was done by ActiveState. 37 38To see what version is included on the DVD (assumed here to be mounted 39on /cdrom), issue this command: 40 41 # swlist -s /cdrom perl 42 # perl D.5.8.8.B 5.8.8 Perl Programming Language 43 perl.Perl5-32 D.5.8.8.B 32-bit 5.8.8 Perl Programming Language with Extensions 44 perl.Perl5-64 D.5.8.8.B 64-bit 5.8.8 Perl Programming Language with Extensions 45 46To see what is installed on your system: 47 48 # swlist -R perl 49 # perl E.5.8.8.J Perl Programming Language 50 # perl.Perl5-32 E.5.8.8.J 32-bit Perl Programming Language with Extensions 51 perl.Perl5-32.PERL-MAN E.5.8.8.J 32-bit Perl Man Pages for IA 52 perl.Perl5-32.PERL-RUN E.5.8.8.J 32-bit Perl Binaries for IA 53 # perl.Perl5-64 E.5.8.8.J 64-bit Perl Programming Language with Extensions 54 perl.Perl5-64.PERL-MAN E.5.8.8.J 64-bit Perl Man Pages for IA 55 perl.Perl5-64.PERL-RUN E.5.8.8.J 64-bit Perl Binaries for IA 56 57=head2 Using perl from HP's porting centre 58 59HP porting centre tries to keep up with customer demand and release 60updates from the Open Source community. Having precompiled Perl binaries 61available is obvious, though "up-to-date" is something relative. At the 62moment of writing only perl-5.10.1 was available (with 5.16.3 being the 63latest stable release from the porters point of view). 64 65The HP porting centres are limited in what systems they are allowed 66to port to and they usually choose the two most recent OS versions 67available. 68 69HP has asked the porting centre to move Open Source binaries 70from /opt to /usr/local, so binaries produced since the start 71of July 2002 are located in /usr/local. 72 73One of HP porting centres URL's is L<http://hpux.connect.org.uk/> 74The port currently available is built with GNU gcc. 75 76=head2 Other prebuilt perl binaries 77 78To get even more recent perl depots for the whole range of HP-UX, visit 79H.Merijn Brand's site at L<http://mirrors.develooper.com/hpux/#Perl>. 80Carefully read the notes to see if the available versions suit your needs. 81 82=head2 Compiling Perl 5 on HP-UX 83 84When compiling Perl, you must use an ANSI C compiler. The C compiler 85that ships with all HP-UX systems is a K&R compiler that should only be 86used to build new kernels. 87 88Perl can be compiled with either HP's ANSI C compiler or with gcc. The 89former is recommended, as not only can it compile Perl with no 90difficulty, but also can take advantage of features listed later that 91require the use of HP compiler-specific command-line flags. 92 93If you decide to use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and 94complete, and be sure to read the Perl INSTALL file for more gcc-specific 95details. 96 97=head2 PA-RISC 98 99HP's HP9000 Unix systems run on HP's own Precision Architecture 100(PA-RISC) chip. HP-UX used to run on the Motorola MC68000 family of 101chips, but any machine with this chip in it is quite obsolete and this 102document will not attempt to address issues for compiling Perl on the 103Motorola chipset. 104 105The version of PA-RISC at the time of this document's last update is 2.0, 106which is also the last there will be. HP PA-RISC systems are usually 107refered to with model description "HP 9000". The last CPU in this series 108is the PA-8900. Support for PA-RISC architectured machines officially 109ends as shown in the following table: 110 111 PA-RISC End-of-Life Roadmap 112 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ 113 | HP9000 | Superdome | PA-8700 | Spring 2011 | 114 | 4-128 | | PA-8800/sx1000 | Summer 2012 | 115 | cores | | PA-8900/sx1000 | 2014 | 116 | | | PA-8900/sx2000 | 2015 | 117 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ 118 | HP9000 | rp7410, rp8400 | PA-8700 | Spring 2011 | 119 | 2-32 | rp7420, rp8420 | PA-8800/sx1000 | 2012 | 120 | cores | rp7440, rp8440 | PA-8900/sx1000 | Autumn 2013 | 121 | | | PA-8900/sx2000 | 2015 | 122 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ 123 | HP9000 | rp44x0 | PA-8700 | Spring 2011 | 124 | 1-8 | | PA-8800/rp44x0 | 2012 | 125 | cores | | PA-8900/rp44x0 | 2014 | 126 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ 127 | HP9000 | rp34x0 | PA-8700 | Spring 2011 | 128 | 1-4 | | PA-8800/rp34x0 | 2012 | 129 | cores | | PA-8900/rp34x0 | 2014 | 130 +--------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ 131 132From L<http://www.hp.com/products1/evolution/9000/faqs.html> 133 134 The last order date for HP 9000 systems was December 31, 2008. 135 136A complete list of models at the time the OS was built is in the file 137/usr/sam/lib/mo/sched.models. The first column corresponds to the last 138part of the output of the "model" command. The second column is the 139PA-RISC version and the third column is the exact chip type used. 140(Start browsing at the bottom to prevent confusion ;-) 141 142 # model 143 9000/800/L1000-44 144 # grep L1000-44 /usr/sam/lib/mo/sched.models 145 L1000-44 2.0 PA8500 146 147=head2 Portability Between PA-RISC Versions 148 149An executable compiled on a PA-RISC 2.0 platform will not execute on a 150PA-RISC 1.1 platform, even if they are running the same version of 151HP-UX. If you are building Perl on a PA-RISC 2.0 platform and want that 152Perl to also run on a PA-RISC 1.1, the compiler flags +DAportable and 153+DS32 should be used. 154 155It is no longer possible to compile PA-RISC 1.0 executables on either 156the PA-RISC 1.1 or 2.0 platforms. The command-line flags are accepted, 157but the resulting executable will not run when transferred to a PA-RISC 1581.0 system. 159 160=head2 PA-RISC 1.0 161 162The original version of PA-RISC, HP no longer sells any system with this chip. 163 164The following systems contained PA-RISC 1.0 chips: 165 166 600, 635, 645, 808, 815, 822, 825, 832, 834, 835, 840, 842, 845, 850, 167 852, 855, 860, 865, 870, 890 168 169=head2 PA-RISC 1.1 170 171An upgrade to the PA-RISC design, it shipped for many years in many different 172system. 173 174The following systems contain with PA-RISC 1.1 chips: 175 176 705, 710, 712, 715, 720, 722, 725, 728, 730, 735, 742, 743, 744, 745, 177 747, 750, 755, 770, 777, 778, 779, 800, 801, 803, 806, 807, 809, 811, 178 813, 816, 817, 819, 821, 826, 827, 829, 831, 837, 839, 841, 847, 849, 179 851, 856, 857, 859, 867, 869, 877, 887, 891, 892, 897, A180, A180C, 180 B115, B120, B132L, B132L+, B160L, B180L, C100, C110, C115, C120, 181 C160L, D200, D210, D220, D230, D250, D260, D310, D320, D330, D350, 182 D360, D410, DX0, DX5, DXO, E25, E35, E45, E55, F10, F20, F30, G30, 183 G40, G50, G60, G70, H20, H30, H40, H50, H60, H70, I30, I40, I50, I60, 184 I70, J200, J210, J210XC, K100, K200, K210, K220, K230, K400, K410, 185 K420, S700i, S715, S744, S760, T500, T520 186 187=head2 PA-RISC 2.0 188 189The most recent upgrade to the PA-RISC design, it added support for 19064-bit integer data. 191 192As of the date of this document's last update, the following systems 193contain PA-RISC 2.0 chips: 194 195 700, 780, 781, 782, 783, 785, 802, 804, 810, 820, 861, 871, 879, 889, 196 893, 895, 896, 898, 899, A400, A500, B1000, B2000, C130, C140, C160, 197 C180, C180+, C180-XP, C200+, C400+, C3000, C360, C3600, CB260, D270, 198 D280, D370, D380, D390, D650, J220, J2240, J280, J282, J400, J410, 199 J5000, J5500XM, J5600, J7000, J7600, K250, K260, K260-EG, K270, K360, 200 K370, K380, K450, K460, K460-EG, K460-XP, K470, K570, K580, L1000, 201 L2000, L3000, N4000, R380, R390, SD16000, SD32000, SD64000, T540, 202 T600, V2000, V2200, V2250, V2500, V2600 203 204Just before HP took over Compaq, some systems were renamed. the link 205that contained the explanation is dead, so here's a short summary: 206 207 HP 9000 A-Class servers, now renamed HP Server rp2400 series. 208 HP 9000 L-Class servers, now renamed HP Server rp5400 series. 209 HP 9000 N-Class servers, now renamed HP Server rp7400. 210 211 rp2400, rp2405, rp2430, rp2450, rp2470, rp3410, rp3440, rp4410, 212 rp4440, rp5400, rp5405, rp5430, rp5450, rp5470, rp7400, rp7405, 213 rp7410, rp7420, rp7440, rp8400, rp8420, rp8440, Superdome 214 215The current naming convention is: 216 217 aadddd 218 ||||`+- 00 - 99 relative capacity & newness (upgrades, etc.) 219 |||`--- unique number for each architecture to ensure different 220 ||| systems do not have the same numbering across 221 ||| architectures 222 ||`---- 1 - 9 identifies family and/or relative positioning 223 || 224 |`----- c = ia32 (cisc) 225 | p = pa-risc 226 | x = ia-64 (Itanium & Itanium 2) 227 | h = housing 228 `------ t = tower 229 r = rack optimized 230 s = super scalable 231 b = blade 232 sa = appliance 233 234=head2 Itanium Processor Family (IPF) and HP-UX 235 236HP-UX also runs on the new Itanium processor. This requires the use 237of a different version of HP-UX (currently 11.23 or 11i v2), and with 238the exception of a few differences detailed below and in later sections, 239Perl should compile with no problems. 240 241Although PA-RISC binaries can run on Itanium systems, you should not 242attempt to use a PA-RISC version of Perl on an Itanium system. This is 243because shared libraries created on an Itanium system cannot be loaded 244while running a PA-RISC executable. 245 246HP Itanium 2 systems are usually refered to with model description 247"HP Integrity". 248 249=head2 Itanium, Itanium 2 & Madison 6 250 251HP also ships servers with the 128-bit Itanium processor(s). The cx26x0 252is told to have Madison 6. As of the date of this document's last update, 253the following systems contain Itanium or Itanium 2 chips (this is likely 254to be out of date): 255 256 BL60p, BL860c, BL870c, BL890c, cx2600, cx2620, rx1600, rx1620, rx2600, 257 rx2600hptc, rx2620, rx2660, rx2800, rx3600, rx4610, rx4640, rx5670, 258 rx6600, rx7420, rx7620, rx7640, rx8420, rx8620, rx8640, rx9610, 259 sx1000, sx2000 260 261To see all about your machine, type 262 263 # model 264 ia64 hp server rx2600 265 # /usr/contrib/bin/machinfo 266 267=head2 HP-UX versions 268 269Not all architectures (PA = PA-RISC, IPF = Itanium Processor Family) 270support all versions of HP-UX, here is a short list 271 272 HP-UX version Kernel Architecture End-of-factory support 273 ------------- ------ ------------ ---------------------------------- 274 10.20 32 bit PA 30-Jun-2003 275 11.00 32/64 PA 31-Dec-2006 276 11.11 11i v1 32/64 PA 31-Dec-2015 277 11.22 11i v2 64 IPF 30-Apr-2004 278 11.23 11i v2 64 PA & IPF 31-Dec-2015 279 11.31 11i v3 64 PA & IPF 31-Dec-2020 (PA) 31-Dec-2022 (IPF) 280 281See for the full list of hardware/OS support and expected end-of-life 282L<http://www.hp.com/go/hpuxservermatrix> 283 284=head2 Building Dynamic Extensions on HP-UX 285 286HP-UX supports dynamically loadable libraries (shared libraries). 287Shared libraries end with the suffix .sl. On Itanium systems, 288they end with the suffix .so. 289 290Shared libraries created on a platform using a particular PA-RISC 291version are not usable on platforms using an earlier PA-RISC version by 292default. However, this backwards compatibility may be enabled using the 293same +DAportable compiler flag (with the same PA-RISC 1.0 caveat 294mentioned above). 295 296Shared libraries created on an Itanium platform cannot be loaded on 297a PA-RISC platform. Shared libraries created on a PA-RISC platform 298can only be loaded on an Itanium platform if it is a PA-RISC executable 299that is attempting to load the PA-RISC library. A PA-RISC shared 300library cannot be loaded into an Itanium executable nor vice-versa. 301 302To create a shared library, the following steps must be performed: 303 304 1. Compile source modules with +z or +Z flag to create a .o module 305 which contains Position-Independent Code (PIC). The linker will 306 tell you in the next step if +Z was needed. 307 (For gcc, the appropriate flag is -fpic or -fPIC.) 308 309 2. Link the shared library using the -b flag. If the code calls 310 any functions in other system libraries (e.g., libm), it must 311 be included on this line. 312 313(Note that these steps are usually handled automatically by the extension's 314Makefile). 315 316If these dependent libraries are not listed at shared library creation 317time, you will get fatal "Unresolved symbol" errors at run time when the 318library is loaded. 319 320You may create a shared library that refers to another library, which 321may be either an archive library or a shared library. If this second 322library is a shared library, this is called a "dependent library". The 323dependent library's name is recorded in the main shared library, but it 324is not linked into the shared library. Instead, it is loaded when the 325main shared library is loaded. This can cause problems if you build an 326extension on one system and move it to another system where the 327libraries may not be located in the same place as on the first system. 328 329If the referred library is an archive library, then it is treated as a 330simple collection of .o modules (all of which must contain PIC). These 331modules are then linked into the shared library. 332 333Note that it is okay to create a library which contains a dependent 334library that is already linked into perl. 335 336Some extensions, like DB_File and Compress::Zlib use/require prebuilt 337libraries for the perl extensions/modules to work. If these libraries 338are built using the default configuration, it might happen that you 339run into an error like "invalid loader fixup" during load phase. 340HP is aware of this problem. Search the HP-UX cxx-dev forums for 341discussions about the subject. The short answer is that B<everything> 342(all libraries, everything) must be compiled with C<+z> or C<+Z> to be 343PIC (position independent code). (For gcc, that would be 344C<-fpic> or C<-fPIC>). In HP-UX 11.00 or newer the linker 345error message should tell the name of the offending object file. 346 347A more general approach is to intervene manually, as with an example for 348the DB_File module, which requires SleepyCat's libdb.sl: 349 350 # cd .../db-3.2.9/build_unix 351 # vi Makefile 352 ... add +Z to all cflags to create shared objects 353 CFLAGS= -c $(CPPFLAGS) +Z -Ae +O2 +Onolimit \ 354 -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/include/X11R6 355 CXXFLAGS= -c $(CPPFLAGS) +Z -Ae +O2 +Onolimit \ 356 -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/include/X11R6 357 358 # make clean 359 # make 360 # mkdir tmp 361 # cd tmp 362 # ar x ../libdb.a 363 # ld -b -o libdb-3.2.sl *.o 364 # mv libdb-3.2.sl /usr/local/lib 365 # rm *.o 366 # cd /usr/local/lib 367 # rm -f libdb.sl 368 # ln -s libdb-3.2.sl libdb.sl 369 370 # cd .../DB_File-1.76 371 # make distclean 372 # perl Makefile.PL 373 # make 374 # make test 375 # make install 376 377As of db-4.2.x it is no longer needed to do this by hand. Sleepycat 378has changed the configuration process to add +z on HP-UX automatically. 379 380 # cd .../db-4.2.25/build_unix 381 # env CFLAGS=+DD64 LDFLAGS=+DD64 ../dist/configure 382 383should work to generate 64bit shared libraries for HP-UX 11.00 and 11i. 384 385It is no longer possible to link PA-RISC 1.0 shared libraries (even 386though the command-line flags are still present). 387 388PA-RISC and Itanium object files are not interchangeable. Although 389you may be able to use ar to create an archive library of PA-RISC 390object files on an Itanium system, you cannot link against it using 391an Itanium link editor. 392 393=head2 The HP ANSI C Compiler 394 395When using this compiler to build Perl, you should make sure that the 396flag -Aa is added to the cpprun and cppstdin variables in the config.sh 397file (though see the section on 64-bit perl below). If you are using a 398recent version of the Perl distribution, these flags are set automatically. 399 400Even though HP-UX 10.20 and 11.00 are not actively maintained by HP 401anymore, updates for the HP ANSI C compiler are still available from 402time to time, and it might be advisable to see if updates are applicable. 403At the moment of writing, the latests available patches for 11.00 that 404should be applied are PHSS_35098, PHSS_35175, PHSS_35100, PHSS_33036, 405and PHSS_33902). If you have a SUM account, you can use it to search 406for updates/patches. Enter "ANSI" as keyword. 407 408=head2 The GNU C Compiler 409 410When you are going to use the GNU C compiler (gcc), and you don't have 411gcc yet, you can either build it yourself from the sources (available 412from e.g. L<http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html>) or fetch 413a prebuilt binary from the HP porting center 414at L<http://hpux.connect.org.uk/hppd/cgi-bin/search?term=gcc&Search=Search> 415or from the DSPP (you need to be a member) at 416L<http://h21007.www2.hp.com/portal/site/dspp/menuitem.863c3e4cbcdc3f3515b49c108973a801?ciid=2a08725cc2f02110725cc2f02110275d6e10RCRD&jumpid=reg_r1002_usen_c-001_title_r0001> 417(Browse through the list, because there are often multiple versions of 418the same package available). 419 420Most mentioned distributions are depots. H.Merijn Brand has made prebuilt 421gcc binaries available on L<http://mirrors.develooper.com/hpux/> and/or 422L<http://www.cmve.net/~merijn/> for HP-UX 10.20 (only 32bit), HP-UX 11.00, 423HP-UX 11.11 (HP-UX 11i v1), and HP-UX 11.23 (HP-UX 11i v2 PA-RISC) in both 42432- and 64-bit versions. For HP-UX 11.23 IPF and HP-UX 11.31 IPF depots are 425available too. The IPF versions do not need two versions of GNU gcc. 426 427On PA-RISC you need a different compiler for 32-bit applications and for 42864-bit applications. On PA-RISC, 32-bit objects and 64-bit objects do 429not mix. Period. There is no different behaviour for HP C-ANSI-C or GNU 430gcc. So if you require your perl binary to use 64-bit libraries, like 431Oracle-64bit, you MUST build a 64-bit perl. 432 433Building a 64-bit capable gcc on PA-RISC from source is possible only when 434you have the HP C-ANSI C compiler or an already working 64-bit binary of 435gcc available. Best performance for perl is achieved with HP's native 436compiler. 437 438=head2 Using Large Files with Perl on HP-UX 439 440Beginning with HP-UX version 10.20, files larger than 2GB (2^31 bytes) 441may be created and manipulated. Three separate methods of doing this 442are available. Of these methods, the best method for Perl is to compile 443using the -Duselargefiles flag to Configure. This causes Perl to be 444compiled using structures and functions in which these are 64 bits wide, 445rather than 32 bits wide. (Note that this will only work with HP's ANSI 446C compiler. If you want to compile Perl using gcc, you will have to get 447a version of the compiler that supports 64-bit operations. See above for 448where to find it.) 449 450There are some drawbacks to this approach. One is that any extension 451which calls any file-manipulating C function will need to be recompiled 452(just follow the usual "perl Makefile.PL; make; make test; make install" 453procedure). 454 455The list of functions that will need to recompiled is: 456 creat, fgetpos, fopen, 457 freopen, fsetpos, fstat, 458 fstatvfs, fstatvfsdev, ftruncate, 459 ftw, lockf, lseek, 460 lstat, mmap, nftw, 461 open, prealloc, stat, 462 statvfs, statvfsdev, tmpfile, 463 truncate, getrlimit, setrlimit 464 465Another drawback is only valid for Perl versions before 5.6.0. This 466drawback is that the seek and tell functions (both the builtin version 467and POSIX module version) will not perform correctly. 468 469It is strongly recommended that you use this flag when you run 470Configure. If you do not do this, but later answer the question about 471large files when Configure asks you, you may get a configuration that 472cannot be compiled, or that does not function as expected. 473 474=head2 Threaded Perl on HP-UX 475 476It is possible to compile a version of threaded Perl on any version of 477HP-UX before 10.30, but it is strongly suggested that you be running on 478HP-UX 11.00 at least. 479 480To compile Perl with threads, add -Dusethreads to the arguments of 481Configure. Verify that the -D_POSIX_C_SOURCE=199506L compiler flag is 482automatically added to the list of flags. Also make sure that -lpthread 483is listed before -lc in the list of libraries to link Perl with. The 484hints provided for HP-UX during Configure will try very hard to get 485this right for you. 486 487HP-UX versions before 10.30 require a separate installation of a POSIX 488threads library package. Two examples are the HP DCE package, available 489on "HP-UX Hardware Extensions 3.0, Install and Core OS, Release 10.20, 490April 1999 (B3920-13941)" or the Freely available PTH package, available 491on H.Merijn's site (L<http://mirrors.develooper.com/hpux/>). The use of PTH 492will be unsupported in perl-5.12 and up and is rather buggy in 5.11.x. 493 494If you are going to use the HP DCE package, the library used for threading 495is /usr/lib/libcma.sl, but there have been multiple updates of that 496library over time. Perl will build with the first version, but it 497will not pass the test suite. Older Oracle versions might be a compelling 498reason not to update that library, otherwise please find a newer version 499in one of the following patches: PHSS_19739, PHSS_20608, or PHSS_23672 500 501reformatted output: 502 503 d3:/usr/lib 106 > what libcma-*.1 504 libcma-00000.1: 505 HP DCE/9000 1.5 Module: libcma.sl (Export) 506 Date: Apr 29 1996 22:11:24 507 libcma-19739.1: 508 HP DCE/9000 1.5 PHSS_19739-40 Module: libcma.sl (Export) 509 Date: Sep 4 1999 01:59:07 510 libcma-20608.1: 511 HP DCE/9000 1.5 PHSS_20608 Module: libcma.1 (Export) 512 Date: Dec 8 1999 18:41:23 513 libcma-23672.1: 514 HP DCE/9000 1.5 PHSS_23672 Module: libcma.1 (Export) 515 Date: Apr 9 2001 10:01:06 516 d3:/usr/lib 107 > 517 518If you choose for the PTH package, use swinstall to install pth in 519the default location (/opt/pth), and then make symbolic links to the 520libraries from /usr/lib 521 522 # cd /usr/lib 523 # ln -s /opt/pth/lib/libpth* . 524 525For building perl to support Oracle, it needs to be linked with libcl 526and libpthread. So even if your perl is an unthreaded build, these 527libraries might be required. See "Oracle on HP-UX" below. 528 529=head2 64-bit Perl on HP-UX 530 531Beginning with HP-UX 11.00, programs compiled under HP-UX can take 532advantage of the LP64 programming environment (LP64 means Longs and 533Pointers are 64 bits wide), in which scalar variables will be able 534to hold numbers larger than 2^32 with complete precision. Perl has 535proven to be consistent and reliable in 64bit mode since 5.8.1 on 536all HP-UX 11.xx. 537 538As of the date of this document, Perl is fully 64-bit compliant on 539HP-UX 11.00 and up for both cc- and gcc builds. If you are about to 540build a 64-bit perl with GNU gcc, please read the gcc section carefully. 541 542Should a user have the need for compiling Perl in the LP64 environment, 543use the -Duse64bitall flag to Configure. This will force Perl to be 544compiled in a pure LP64 environment (with the +DD64 flag for HP C-ANSI-C, 545with no additional options for GNU gcc 64-bit on PA-RISC, and with 546-mlp64 for GNU gcc on Itanium). 547If you want to compile Perl using gcc, you will have to get a version of 548the compiler that supports 64-bit operations.) 549 550You can also use the -Duse64bitint flag to Configure. Although there 551are some minor differences between compiling Perl with this flag versus 552the -Duse64bitall flag, they should not be noticeable from a Perl user's 553perspective. When configuring -Duse64bitint using a 64bit gcc on a 554pa-risc architecture, -Duse64bitint is silently promoted to -Duse64bitall. 555 556In both cases, it is strongly recommended that you use these flags when 557you run Configure. If you do not use do this, but later answer the 558questions about 64-bit numbers when Configure asks you, you may get a 559configuration that cannot be compiled, or that does not function as 560expected. 561 562=head2 Oracle on HP-UX 563 564Using perl to connect to Oracle databases through DBI and DBD::Oracle 565has caused a lot of people many headaches. Read README.hpux in the 566DBD::Oracle for much more information. The reason to mention it here 567is that Oracle requires a perl built with libcl and libpthread, the 568latter even when perl is build without threads. Building perl using 569all defaults, but still enabling to build DBD::Oracle later on can be 570achieved using 571 572 Configure -A prepend:libswanted='cl pthread ' ... 573 574Do not forget the space before the trailing quote. 575 576Also note that this does not (yet) work with all configurations, 577it is known to fail with 64-bit versions of GCC. 578 579=head2 GDBM and Threads on HP-UX 580 581If you attempt to compile Perl with (POSIX) threads on an 11.X system 582and also link in the GDBM library, then Perl will immediately core dump 583when it starts up. The only workaround at this point is to relink the 584GDBM library under 11.X, then relink it into Perl. 585 586the error might show something like: 587 588Pthread internal error: message: __libc_reinit() failed, file: ../pthreads/pthread.c, line: 1096 589Return Pointer is 0xc082bf33 590sh: 5345 Quit(coredump) 591 592and Configure will give up. 593 594=head2 NFS filesystems and utime(2) on HP-UX 595 596If you are compiling Perl on a remotely-mounted NFS filesystem, the test 597io/fs.t may fail on test #18. This appears to be a bug in HP-UX and no 598fix is currently available. 599 600=head2 HP-UX Kernel Parameters (maxdsiz) for Compiling Perl 601 602By default, HP-UX comes configured with a maximum data segment size of 60364MB. This is too small to correctly compile Perl with the maximum 604optimization levels. You can increase the size of the maxdsiz kernel 605parameter through the use of SAM. 606 607When using the GUI version of SAM, click on the Kernel Configuration 608icon, then the Configurable Parameters icon. Scroll down and select 609the maxdsiz line. From the Actions menu, select the Modify Configurable 610Parameter item. Insert the new formula into the Formula/Value box. 611Then follow the instructions to rebuild your kernel and reboot your 612system. 613 614In general, a value of 256MB (or "256*1024*1024") is sufficient for 615Perl to compile at maximum optimization. 616 617=head1 nss_delete core dump from op/pwent or op/grent 618 619You may get a bus error core dump from the op/pwent or op/grent 620tests. If compiled with -g you will see a stack trace much like 621the following: 622 623 #0 0xc004216c in () from /usr/lib/libc.2 624 #1 0xc00d7550 in __nss_src_state_destr () from /usr/lib/libc.2 625 #2 0xc00d7768 in __nss_src_state_destr () from /usr/lib/libc.2 626 #3 0xc00d78a8 in nss_delete () from /usr/lib/libc.2 627 #4 0xc01126d8 in endpwent () from /usr/lib/libc.2 628 #5 0xd1950 in Perl_pp_epwent () from ./perl 629 #6 0x94d3c in Perl_runops_standard () from ./perl 630 #7 0x23728 in S_run_body () from ./perl 631 #8 0x23428 in perl_run () from ./perl 632 #9 0x2005c in main () from ./perl 633 634The key here is the C<nss_delete> call. One workaround for this 635bug seems to be to create add to the file F</etc/nsswitch.conf> 636(at least) the following lines 637 638 group: files 639 passwd: files 640 641Whether you are using NIS does not matter. Amazingly enough, 642the same bug also affects Solaris. 643 644=head1 error: pasting ")" and "l" does not give a valid preprocessing token 645 646There seems to be a broken system header file in HP-UX 11.00 that 647breaks perl building in 32bit mode with GNU gcc-4.x causing this 648error. The same file for HP-UX 11.11 (even though the file is older) 649does not show this failure, and has the correct definition, so the 650best fix is to patch the header to match: 651 652 --- /usr/include/inttypes.h 2001-04-20 18:42:14 +0200 653 +++ /usr/include/inttypes.h 2000-11-14 09:00:00 +0200 654 @@ -72,7 +72,7 @@ 655 #define UINT32_C(__c) __CONCAT_U__(__c) 656 #else /* __LP64 */ 657 #define INT32_C(__c) __CONCAT__(__c,l) 658 -#define UINT32_C(__c) __CONCAT__(__CONCAT_U__(__c),l) 659 +#define UINT32_C(__c) __CONCAT__(__c,ul) 660 #endif /* __LP64 */ 661 662 #define INT64_C(__c) __CONCAT_L__(__c,l) 663 664 665=head1 Miscellaneous 666 667HP-UX 11 Y2K patch "Y2K-1100 B.11.00.B0125 HP-UX Core OS Year 2000 668Patch Bundle" has been reported to break the io/fs test #18 which 669tests whether utime() can change timestamps. The Y2K patch seems to 670break utime() so that over NFS the timestamps do not get changed 671(on local filesystems utime() still works). This has probably been 672fixed on your system by now. 673 674=head1 AUTHOR 675 676H.Merijn Brand <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl> 677Jeff Okamoto <okamoto@corp.hp.com> 678 679With much assistance regarding shared libraries from Marc Sabatella. 680 681=cut 682