1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
|
If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you
see. It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is
specially designed to be readable as is.
=head1 NAME
perlwin32 - Perl under Win32
=head1 SYNOPSIS
These are instructions for building Perl under Windows (9x, NT and
2000).
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Before you start, you should glance through the README file
found in the top-level directory where the Perl distribution
was extracted. Make sure you read and understand the terms under
which this software is being distributed.
Also make sure you read L<BUGS AND CAVEATS> below for the
known limitations of this port.
The INSTALL file in the perl top-level has much information that is
only relevant to people building Perl on Unix-like systems. In
particular, you can safely ignore any information that talks about
"Configure".
You may also want to look at two other options for building
a perl that will work on Windows NT: the README.cygwin and
README.os2 files, which each give a different set of rules to build
a Perl that will work on Win32 platforms. Those two methods will
probably enable you to build a more Unix-compatible perl, but you
will also need to download and use various other build-time and
run-time support software described in those files.
This set of instructions is meant to describe a so-called "native"
port of Perl to Win32 platforms. The resulting Perl requires no
additional software to run (other than what came with your operating
system). Currently, this port is capable of using one of the
following compilers:
Borland C++ version 5.02 or later
Microsoft Visual C++ version 4.2 or later
Mingw32 with GCC version 2.95.2 or better
The last of these is a high quality freeware compiler. Support
for it is still experimental. (Older versions of GCC are known
not to work.)
This port currently supports MakeMaker (the set of modules that
is used to build extensions to perl). Therefore, you should be
able to build and install most extensions found in the CPAN sites.
See L<Usage Hints> below for general hints about this.
=head2 Setting Up
=over 4
=item Make
You need a "make" program to build the sources. If you are using
Visual C++ under Windows NT or 2000, nmake will work. All other
builds need dmake.
dmake is a freely available make that has very nice macro features
and parallelability.
A port of dmake for Windows is available from:
http://www.cpan.org/authors/id/GSAR/dmake-4.1pl1-win32.zip
(This is a fixed version of original dmake sources obtained from
http://www.wticorp.com/dmake/. As of version 4.1PL1, the original
sources did not build as shipped, and had various other problems.
A patch is included in the above fixed version.)
Fetch and install dmake somewhere on your path (follow the instructions
in the README.NOW file).
=item Command Shell
Use the default "cmd" shell that comes with NT. Some versions of the
popular 4DOS/NT shell have incompatibilities that may cause you trouble.
If the build fails under that shell, try building again with the cmd
shell.
The nmake Makefile also has known incompatibilities with the
"command.com" shell that comes with Windows 9x. You will need to
use dmake and makefile.mk to build under Windows 9x.
The surest way to build it is on Windows NT, using the cmd shell.
Make sure the path to the build directory does not contain spaces. The
build usually works in this circumstance, but some tests will fail.
=item Borland C++
If you are using the Borland compiler, you will need dmake.
(The make that Borland supplies is seriously crippled, and will not
work for MakeMaker builds.)
See L/"Make"> above.
=item Microsoft Visual C++
The nmake that comes with Visual C++ will suffice for building.
You will need to run the VCVARS32.BAT file usually found somewhere
like C:\MSDEV4.2\BIN. This will set your build environment.
You can also use dmake to build using Visual C++, provided:
you set OSRELEASE to "microsft" (or whatever the directory name
under which the Visual C dmake configuration lives) in your environment,
and edit win32/config.vc to change "make=nmake" into "make=dmake". The
latter step is only essential if you want to use dmake as your default
make for building extensions using MakeMaker.
=item Mingw32 with GCC
GCC-2.95.2 binaries can be downloaded from:
ftp://ftp.xraylith.wisc.edu/pub/khan/gnu-win32/mingw32/
The GCC-2.95.2 bundle comes with Mingw32 libraries and headers.
Make sure you install the binaries that work with MSVCRT.DLL as indicated
in the README for the GCC bundle. You may need to set up a few environment
variables (usually run from a batch file).
The version of gcc-2.95.2-msvcrt.exe released 7 November 1999 left out
a fix for certain command line quotes, so be sure to download and install
fixes/quote-fix-msvcrt.exe too.
You also need dmake. See L</"Make"> above on how to get it.
=back
=head2 Building
=over 4
=item *
Make sure you are in the "win32" subdirectory under the perl toplevel.
This directory contains a "Makefile" that will work with
versions of nmake that come with Visual C++, and a dmake "makefile.mk"
that will work for all supported compilers. The defaults in the dmake
makefile are setup to build using the GCC compiler.
=item *
Edit the makefile.mk (or Makefile, if using nmake) and change the values
of INST_DRV and INST_TOP. You can also enable various build
flags. These are explained in the makefiles.
You will have to make sure CCTYPE is set correctly, and CCHOME points
to wherever you installed your compiler.
The default value for CCHOME in the makefiles for Visual C++
may not be correct for some versions. Make sure the default exists
and is valid.
If you have either the source or a library that contains des_fcrypt(),
enable the appropriate option in the makefile. des_fcrypt() is not
bundled with the distribution due to US Government restrictions
on the export of cryptographic software. Nevertheless, this routine
is part of the "libdes" library (written by Eric Young) which is widely
available worldwide, usually along with SSLeay (for example:
"ftp://fractal.mta.ca/pub/crypto/SSLeay/DES/"). Set CRYPT_SRC to the
name of the file that implements des_fcrypt(). Alternatively, if
you have built a library that contains des_fcrypt(), you can set
CRYPT_LIB to point to the library name. The location above contains
many versions of the "libdes" library, all with slightly different
implementations of des_fcrypt(). Older versions have a single,
self-contained file (fcrypt.c) that implements crypt(), so they may be
easier to use. A patch against the fcrypt.c found in libdes-3.06 is
in des_fcrypt.patch.
Perl will also build without des_fcrypt(), but the crypt() builtin will
fail at run time.
Be sure to read the instructions near the top of the makefiles carefully.
=item *
Type "dmake" (or "nmake" if you are using that make).
This should build everything. Specifically, it will create perl.exe,
perl56.dll at the perl toplevel, and various other extension dll's
under the lib\auto directory. If the build fails for any reason, make
sure you have done the previous steps correctly.
=back
=head2 Testing
Type "dmake test" (or "nmake test"). This will run most of the tests from
the testsuite (many tests will be skipped).
There should be no test failures when running under Windows NT 4.0 or
Windows 2000. Many tests I<will> fail under Windows 9x due to the inferior
command shell.
Some test failures may occur if you use a command shell other than the
native "cmd.exe", or if you are building from a path that contains
spaces. So don't do that.
If you are running the tests from a emacs shell window, you may see
failures in op/stat.t. Run "dmake test-notty" in that case.
If you're using the Borland compiler, you may see a failure in op/taint.t
arising from the inability to find the Borland Runtime DLLs on the system
default path. You will need to copy the DLLs reported by the messages
from where Borland chose to install it, into the Windows system directory
(usually somewhere like C:\WINNT\SYSTEM32), and rerun the test.
Please report any other failures as described under L<BUGS AND CAVEATS>.
=head2 Installation
Type "dmake install" (or "nmake install"). This will put the newly
built perl and the libraries under whatever C<INST_TOP> points to in the
Makefile. It will also install the pod documentation under
C<$INST_TOP\$VERSION\lib\pod> and HTML versions of the same under
C<$INST_TOP\$VERSION\lib\pod\html>. To use the Perl you just installed,
you will need to add two components to your PATH environment variable,
C<$INST_TOP\$VERSION\bin>, and C<$INST_TOP\$VERSION\bin\$ARCHNAME>.
For example:
set PATH c:\perl\5.6.0\bin;c:\perl\5.6.0\bin\MSWin32-x86;%PATH%
If you opt to comment out INST_VER and INST_ARCH in the makefiles, the
installation structure is much simpler. In that case, it will be
sufficient to add a single entry to the path, for instance:
set PATH c:\perl\bin;%PATH%
=head2 Usage Hints
=over 4
=item Environment Variables
The installation paths that you set during the build get compiled
into perl, so you don't have to do anything additional to start
using that perl (except add its location to your PATH variable).
If you put extensions in unusual places, you can set PERL5LIB
to a list of paths separated by semicolons where you want perl
to look for libraries. Look for descriptions of other environment
variables you can set in L<perlrun>.
You can also control the shell that perl uses to run system() and
backtick commands via PERL5SHELL. See L<perlrun>.
Perl does not depend on the registry, but it can look up certain default
values if you choose to put them there. Perl attempts to read entries from
C<HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Perl> and C<HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Perl>.
Entries in the former override entries in the latter. One or more of the
following entries (of type REG_SZ or REG_EXPAND_SZ) may be set:
lib-$] version-specific standard library path to add to @INC
lib standard library path to add to @INC
sitelib-$] version-specific site library path to add to @INC
sitelib site library path to add to @INC
vendorlib-$] version-specific vendor library path to add to @INC
vendorlib vendor library path to add to @INC
PERL* fallback for all %ENV lookups that begin with "PERL"
Note the C<$]> in the above is not literal. Substitute whatever version
of perl you want to honor that entry, e.g. C<5.6.0>. Paths must be
separated with semicolons, as usual on win32.
=item File Globbing
By default, perl handles file globbing using the File::Glob extension,
which provides portable globbing.
If you want perl to use globbing that emulates the quirks of DOS
filename conventions, you might want to consider using File::DosGlob
to override the internal glob() implementation. See L<File::DosGlob> for
details.
=item Using perl from the command line
If you are accustomed to using perl from various command-line
shells found in UNIX environments, you will be less than pleased
with what Windows offers by way of a command shell.
The crucial thing to understand about the Windows environment is that
the command line you type in is processed twice before Perl sees it.
First, your command shell (usually CMD.EXE on Windows NT, and
COMMAND.COM on Windows 9x) preprocesses the command line, to handle
redirection, environment variable expansion, and location of the
executable to run. Then, the perl executable splits the remaining
command line into individual arguments, using the C runtime library
upon which Perl was built.
It is particularly important to note that neither the shell nor the C
runtime do any wildcard expansions of command-line arguments (so
wildcards need not be quoted). Also, the quoting behaviours of the
shell and the C runtime are rudimentary at best (and may, if you are
using a non-standard shell, be inconsistent). The only (useful) quote
character is the double quote ("). It can be used to protect spaces in
arguments and other special characters. The Windows NT documentation
has almost no description of how the quoting rules are implemented, but
here are some general observations based on experiments: The C runtime
breaks arguments at spaces and passes them to programs in argc/argv.
Doublequotes can be used to prevent arguments with spaces in them from
being split up. You can put a double quote in an argument by escaping
it with a backslash and enclosing the whole argument within double
quotes. The backslash and the pair of double quotes surrounding the
argument will be stripped by the C runtime.
The file redirection characters "<", ">", and "|" can be quoted by
double quotes (although there are suggestions that this may not always
be true). Single quotes are not treated as quotes by the shell or the C
runtime. The caret "^" has also been observed to behave as a quoting
character, but this appears to be a shell feature, and the caret is not
stripped from the command line, so Perl still sees it (and the C runtime
phase does not treat the caret as a quote character).
Here are some examples of usage of the "cmd" shell:
This prints two doublequotes:
perl -e "print '\"\"' "
This does the same:
perl -e "print \"\\\"\\\"\" "
This prints "bar" and writes "foo" to the file "blurch":
perl -e "print 'foo'; print STDERR 'bar'" > blurch
This prints "foo" ("bar" disappears into nowhereland):
perl -e "print 'foo'; print STDERR 'bar'" 2> nul
This prints "bar" and writes "foo" into the file "blurch":
perl -e "print 'foo'; print STDERR 'bar'" 1> blurch
This pipes "foo" to the "less" pager and prints "bar" on the console:
perl -e "print 'foo'; print STDERR 'bar'" | less
This pipes "foo\nbar\n" to the less pager:
perl -le "print 'foo'; print STDERR 'bar'" 2>&1 | less
This pipes "foo" to the pager and writes "bar" in the file "blurch":
perl -e "print 'foo'; print STDERR 'bar'" 2> blurch | less
Discovering the usefulness of the "command.com" shell on Windows 9x
is left as an exercise to the reader :)
One particularly pernicious problem with the 4NT command shell for
Windows NT is that it (nearly) always treats a % character as indicating
that environment variable expansion is needed. Under this shell, it is
therefore important to always double any % characters which you want
Perl to see (for example, for hash variables), even when they are
quoted.
=item Building Extensions
The Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN) offers a wealth
of extensions, some of which require a C compiler to build.
Look in http://www.cpan.org/ for more information on CPAN.
Note that not all of the extensions available from CPAN may work
in the Win32 environment; you should check the information at
http://testers.cpan.org/ before investing too much effort into
porting modules that don't readily build.
Most extensions (whether they require a C compiler or not) can
be built, tested and installed with the standard mantra:
perl Makefile.PL
$MAKE
$MAKE test
$MAKE install
where $MAKE is whatever 'make' program you have configured perl to
use. Use "perl -V:make" to find out what this is. Some extensions
may not provide a testsuite (so "$MAKE test" may not do anything, or
fail), but most serious ones do.
It is important that you use a supported 'make' program, and
ensure Config.pm knows about it. If you don't have nmake, you can
either get dmake from the location mentioned earlier, or get an
old version of nmake reportedly available from:
ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/Softlib/MSLFILES/nmake15.exe
Another option is to use the make written in Perl, available from
CPAN:
http://www.cpan.org/authors/id/NI-S/Make-0.03.tar.gz
You may also use dmake. See L</"Make"> above on how to get it.
Note that MakeMaker actually emits makefiles with different syntax
depending on what 'make' it thinks you are using. Therefore, it is
important that one of the following values appears in Config.pm:
make='nmake' # MakeMaker emits nmake syntax
make='dmake' # MakeMaker emits dmake syntax
any other value # MakeMaker emits generic make syntax
(e.g GNU make, or Perl make)
If the value doesn't match the 'make' program you want to use,
edit Config.pm to fix it.
If a module implements XSUBs, you will need one of the supported
C compilers. You must make sure you have set up the environment for
the compiler for command-line compilation.
If a module does not build for some reason, look carefully for
why it failed, and report problems to the module author. If
it looks like the extension building support is at fault, report
that with full details of how the build failed using the perlbug
utility.
=item Command-line Wildcard Expansion
The default command shells on DOS descendant operating systems (such
as they are) usually do not expand wildcard arguments supplied to
programs. They consider it the application's job to handle that.
This is commonly achieved by linking the application (in our case,
perl) with startup code that the C runtime libraries usually provide.
However, doing that results in incompatible perl versions (since the
behavior of the argv expansion code differs depending on the
compiler, and it is even buggy on some compilers). Besides, it may
be a source of frustration if you use such a perl binary with an
alternate shell that *does* expand wildcards.
Instead, the following solution works rather well. The nice things
about it: 1) you can start using it right away 2) it is more powerful,
because it will do the right thing with a pattern like */*/*.c
3) you can decide whether you do/don't want to use it 4) you can
extend the method to add any customizations (or even entirely
different kinds of wildcard expansion).
C:\> copy con c:\perl\lib\Wild.pm
# Wild.pm - emulate shell @ARGV expansion on shells that don't
use File::DosGlob;
@ARGV = map {
my @g = File::DosGlob::glob($_) if /[*?]/;
@g ? @g : $_;
} @ARGV;
1;
^Z
C:\> set PERL5OPT=-MWild
C:\> perl -le "for (@ARGV) { print }" */*/perl*.c
p4view/perl/perl.c
p4view/perl/perlio.c
p4view/perl/perly.c
perl5.005/win32/perlglob.c
perl5.005/win32/perllib.c
perl5.005/win32/perlglob.c
perl5.005/win32/perllib.c
perl5.005/win32/perlglob.c
perl5.005/win32/perllib.c
Note there are two distinct steps there: 1) You'll have to create
Wild.pm and put it in your perl lib directory. 2) You'll need to
set the PERL5OPT environment variable. If you want argv expansion
to be the default, just set PERL5OPT in your default startup
environment.
If you are using the Visual C compiler, you can get the C runtime's
command line wildcard expansion built into perl binary. The resulting
binary will always expand unquoted command lines, which may not be
what you want if you use a shell that does that for you. The expansion
done is also somewhat less powerful than the approach suggested above.
=item Win32 Specific Extensions
A number of extensions specific to the Win32 platform are available
from CPAN. You may find that many of these extensions are meant to
be used under the Activeware port of Perl, which used to be the only
native port for the Win32 platform. Since the Activeware port does not
have adequate support for Perl's extension building tools, these
extensions typically do not support those tools either, and therefore
cannot be built using the generic steps shown in the previous section.
To ensure smooth transitioning of existing code that uses the
ActiveState port, there is a bundle of Win32 extensions that contains
all of the ActiveState extensions and most other Win32 extensions from
CPAN in source form, along with many added bugfixes, and with MakeMaker
support. This bundle is available at:
http://www.cpan.org/authors/id/GSAR/libwin32-0.151.zip
See the README in that distribution for building and installation
instructions. Look for later versions that may be available at the
same location.
=item Running Perl Scripts
Perl scripts on UNIX use the "#!" (a.k.a "shebang") line to
indicate to the OS that it should execute the file using perl.
Win32 has no comparable means to indicate arbitrary files are
executables.
Instead, all available methods to execute plain text files on
Win32 rely on the file "extension". There are three methods
to use this to execute perl scripts:
=over 8
=item 1
There is a facility called "file extension associations" that will
work in Windows NT 4.0. This can be manipulated via the two
commands "assoc" and "ftype" that come standard with Windows NT
4.0. Type "ftype /?" for a complete example of how to set this
up for perl scripts (Say what? You thought Windows NT wasn't
perl-ready? :).
=item 2
Since file associations don't work everywhere, and there are
reportedly bugs with file associations where it does work, the
old method of wrapping the perl script to make it look like a
regular batch file to the OS, may be used. The install process
makes available the "pl2bat.bat" script which can be used to wrap
perl scripts into batch files. For example:
pl2bat foo.pl
will create the file "FOO.BAT". Note "pl2bat" strips any
.pl suffix and adds a .bat suffix to the generated file.
If you use the 4DOS/NT or similar command shell, note that
"pl2bat" uses the "%*" variable in the generated batch file to
refer to all the command line arguments, so you may need to make
sure that construct works in batch files. As of this writing,
4DOS/NT users will need a "ParameterChar = *" statement in their
4NT.INI file, or will need to execute "setdos /p*" in the 4DOS/NT
startup file to enable this to work.
=item 3
Using "pl2bat" has a few problems: the file name gets changed,
so scripts that rely on C<$0> to find what they must do may not
run properly; running "pl2bat" replicates the contents of the
original script, and so this process can be maintenance intensive
if the originals get updated often. A different approach that
avoids both problems is possible.
A script called "runperl.bat" is available that can be copied
to any filename (along with the .bat suffix). For example,
if you call it "foo.bat", it will run the file "foo" when it is
executed. Since you can run batch files on Win32 platforms simply
by typing the name (without the extension), this effectively
runs the file "foo", when you type either "foo" or "foo.bat".
With this method, "foo.bat" can even be in a different location
than the file "foo", as long as "foo" is available somewhere on
the PATH. If your scripts are on a filesystem that allows symbolic
links, you can even avoid copying "runperl.bat".
Here's a diversion: copy "runperl.bat" to "runperl", and type
"runperl". Explain the observed behavior, or lack thereof. :)
Hint: .gnidnats llits er'uoy fi ,"lrepnur" eteled :tniH
=back
=item Miscellaneous Things
A full set of HTML documentation is installed, so you should be
able to use it if you have a web browser installed on your
system.
C<perldoc> is also a useful tool for browsing information contained
in the documentation, especially in conjunction with a pager
like C<less> (recent versions of which have Win32 support). You may
have to set the PAGER environment variable to use a specific pager.
"perldoc -f foo" will print information about the perl operator
"foo".
If you find bugs in perl, you can run C<perlbug> to create a
bug report (you may have to send it manually if C<perlbug> cannot
find a mailer on your system).
=back
=head1 BUGS AND CAVEATS
Some of the built-in functions do not act exactly as documented in
L<perlfunc>, and a few are not implemented at all. To avoid
surprises, particularly if you have had prior exposure to Perl
in other operating environments or if you intend to write code
that will be portable to other environments, see L<perlport>
for a reasonably definitive list of these differences.
Not all extensions available from CPAN may build or work properly
in the Win32 environment. See L</"Building Extensions">.
Most C<socket()> related calls are supported, but they may not
behave as on Unix platforms. See L<perlport> for the full list.
Signal handling may not behave as on Unix platforms (where it
doesn't exactly "behave", either :). For instance, calling C<die()>
or C<exit()> from signal handlers will cause an exception, since most
implementations of C<signal()> on Win32 are severely crippled.
Thus, signals may work only for simple things like setting a flag
variable in the handler. Using signals under this port should
currently be considered unsupported.
Please send detailed descriptions of any problems and solutions that
you may find to <F<perlbug@perl.com>>, along with the output produced
by C<perl -V>.
=head1 AUTHORS
=over 4
=item Gary Ng E<lt>71564.1743@CompuServe.COME<gt>
=item Gurusamy Sarathy E<lt>gsar@activestate.comE<gt>
=item Nick Ing-Simmons E<lt>nick@ni-s.u-net.comE<gt>
=back
This document is maintained by Gurusamy Sarathy.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<perl>
=head1 HISTORY
This port was originally contributed by Gary Ng around 5.003_24,
and borrowed from the Hip Communications port that was available
at the time. Various people have made numerous and sundry hacks
since then.
Borland support was added in 5.004_01 (Gurusamy Sarathy).
GCC/mingw32 support was added in 5.005 (Nick Ing-Simmons).
Support for PERL_OBJECT was added in 5.005 (ActiveState Tool Corp).
Support for fork() emulation was added in 5.6 (ActiveState Tool Corp).
Win9x support was added in 5.6 (Benjamin Stuhl).
Last updated: 22 March 2000
=cut
|