# hints/hpux.sh # Perl Configure hints file for Hewlett Packard HP/UX 9.x and 10.x # This file is based on # hints/hpux_9.sh, Perl Configure hints file for Hewlett Packard HP/UX 9.x # Use Configure -Dcc=gcc to use gcc. # From: Jeff Okamoto # Date: Thu, 28 Sep 95 11:06:07 PDT # and # hints/hpux_10.sh, Perl Configure hints file for Hewlett Packard HP/UX 10.x # From: Giles Lean # Date: Tue, 27 Jun 1995 08:17:45 +1000 # Use Configure -Dcc=gcc to use gcc. # Use Configure -Dprefix=/usr/local to install in /usr/local. # Some users have reported problems with dynamic loading if the # environment variable LDOPTS='-a archive' . # Turn on the _HPUX_SOURCE flag to get many of the HP add-ons ccflags="$ccflags -D_HPUX_SOURCE" ldflags="$ldflags" # Check if you're using the bundled C compiler. This compiler doesn't support # ANSI C (the -Aa flag) nor can it produce shared libraries. Thus we have # to turn off dynamic loading. case "$cc" in '') if cc $ccflags -Aa 2>&1 | $contains 'option' >/dev/null then case "$usedl" in '') usedl="$undef" cat <<'EOM' The bundled C compiler can not produce shared libraries, so you will not be able to use dynamic loading. EOM ;; esac else ccflags="$ccflags -Aa" # The add-on compiler supports ANSI C fi optimize='-O' ;; esac # Determine the architecture type of this system. xxuname=`uname -r` if echo $xxuname | $contains '10' then # This system is running 10.0 xxcontext=`grep $(printf %#x $(getconf CPU_VERSION)) /usr/include/sys/unistd.h` if echo "$xxcontext" | $contains 'PA-RISC1.1' then archname='PA-RISC1.1' elif echo "$xxcontext" | $contains 'PA-RISC1.0' then archname='PA-RISC1.0' elif echo "$xxcontext" | $contains 'PA-RISC2' then archname='PA-RISC2' else echo "This 10.0 system is of a PA-RISC type I don't recognize." echo "Debugging output: $xxcontext" archname='' fi else # This system is not running 10.0 xxcontext=`/bin/getcontext` if echo "$xxcontext" | $contains 'PA-RISC1.1' then archname='PA-RISC1.1' elif echo "$xxcontext" | $contains 'PA-RISC1.0' then archname='PA-RISC1.0' elif echo "$xxcontext" | $contains 'HP-MC' then archname='HP-MC68K' else echo "I cannot recognize what chip set this system is using." echo "Debugging output: $xxcontext" archname='' fi fi # Remove bad libraries that will cause problems # (This doesn't remove libraries that don't actually exist) # -lld is unneeded (and I can't figure out what it's used for anyway) # -ldbm is obsolete and should not be used # -lBSD contains BSD-style duplicates of SVR4 routines that cause confusion # -lPW is obsolete and should not be used # The libraries crypt, malloc, ndir, and net are empty. # Although -lndbm should be included, it will make perl blow up if you should # copy the binary to a system without libndbm.sl. See ccdlflags below. set `echo " $libswanted " | sed -e 's@ ld @ @' -e 's@ dbm @ @' -e 's@ BSD @ @' -e 's@ PW @ @'` libswanted="$*" # By setting the deferred flag below, this means that if you run perl on a # system that does not have the required shared library that you linked it # with, it will die when you try to access a symbol in the (missing) shared # library. If you would rather know at perl startup time that you are # missing an important shared library, switch the comments so that immediate, # rather than deferred loading is performed. # ccdlflags="-Wl,-E $ccdlflags" ccdlflags="-Wl,-E -Wl,-B,deferred $ccdlflags" usemymalloc='y' alignbytes=8 selecttype='int *' # If your compile complains about FLT_MIN, uncomment the next line # POSIX_cflags='ccflags="$ccflags -DFLT_MIN=1.17549435E-38"' # Comment this out if you don't want to follow the SVR4 filesystem layout # that HP-UX 10.0 uses case "$prefix" in '') prefix='/opt/perl5' ;; esac # Date: Fri, 6 Sep 96 23:15:31 CDT # From: "Daniel S. Lewart" # I looked through the gcc.info and found this: # * GNU CC compiled code sometimes emits warnings from the HP-UX # assembler of the form: # (warning) Use of GR3 when frame >= 8192 may cause conflict. # These warnings are harmless and can be safely ignored.