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Perl Kit, Version 4.0
Copyright (c) 1989,1990,1991, Larry Wall
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
My interpretation of the GNU General Public License is that no Perl
script falls under the terms of the License unless you explicitly put
said script under the terms of the License yourself. Furthermore, any
object code linked with uperl.o does not automatically fall under the
terms of the License, provided such object code only adds definitions
of subroutines and variables, and does not otherwise impair the
resulting interpreter from executing any standard Perl script. I
consider linking in C subroutines in this manner to be the moral
equivalent of defining subroutines in the Perl language itself. You
may sell such an object file as proprietary provided that you provide
or offer to provide the Perl source, as specified by the GNU General
Public License. (This is merely an alternate way of specifying input
to the program.) You may also sell a binary produced by the dumping of
a running Perl script that belongs to you, provided that you provide or
offer to provide the Perl source as specified by the License. (The
fact that a Perl interpreter and your code are in the same binary file
is, in this case, a form of mere aggregation.) This is my interpretation
of the License. If you still have concerns or difficulties understanding
my intent, feel free to contact me.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Perl is a language that combines some of the features of C, sed, awk and shell.
See the manual page for more hype.
Perl will probably not run on machines with a small address space.
Please read all the directions below before you proceed any further, and
then follow them carefully.
After you have unpacked your kit, you should have all the files listed
in MANIFEST.
Installation
1) Run Configure. This will figure out various things about your system.
Some things Configure will figure out for itself, other things it will
ask you about. It will then proceed to make config.h, config.sh, and
Makefile. If you're a hotshot, run Configure -d to take all the
defaults and then edit config.sh to patch up any flaws.
You might possibly have to trim # comments from the front of Configure
if your sh doesn't handle them, but all other # comments will be taken
care of.
(If you don't have sh, you'll have to copy the sample file config.H to
config.h and edit the config.h to reflect your system's peculiarities.)
2) Glance through config.h to make sure system dependencies are correct.
Most of them should have been taken care of by running the Configure script.
If you have any additional changes to make to the C definitions, they
can be done in the Makefile, or in config.h. Bear in mind that they will
get undone next time you run Configure.
3) make depend
This will look for all the includes and modify Makefile accordingly.
Configure will offer to do this for you.
4) make
This will attempt to make perl in the current directory.
If you can't compile successfully, try adding a -DCRIPPLED_CC flag.
(Just because you get no errors doesn't mean it compiled right!)
This simplifies some complicated expressions for compilers that
get indigestion easily. If that has no effect, try turning off
optimization. If you have missing routines, you probably need to
add some library or other, or you need to undefine some feature that
Configure thought was there but is defective or incomplete.
Some compilers will not compile or optimize the larger files without
some extra switches to use larger jump offsets or allocate larger
internal tables. It's okay to insert rules for specific files into
Makefile.SH, since a default rule only takes effect in the
absence of a specific rule.
The 3b2 needs to turn off -O.
Compilers with limited switch tables may have to define -DSMALLSWITCHES
Domain/OS 10.3 (at least) native C 6.7 may need -opt 2 for eval.c
AIX/RT may need a -a switch and -DCRIPPLED_CC.
AIX RS/6000 needs to use system malloc and avoid -O on eval.c and toke.c.
AIX RS/6000 needs -D_NO_PROTO.
SUNOS 4.0.[12] needs #define fputs(str,fp) fprintf(fp,"%s",str) in perl.h
SUNOS 3.[45] should use the system malloc.
SGI machines may need -Ddouble="long float" and -O1.
Vax-based systems may need to hand assemble teval.s with a -J switch.
Ultrix on MIPS machines may need -DLANGUAGE_C.
Ultrix 4.0 on MIPS machines may need -Olimit 2820 or so.
Ultrix 3.[01] on MIPS needs to undefine WAITPID--the system call is busted.
MIPS machines may need to undef d_volatile.
MIPS machines may need to turn off -O on cmd.c, perl.c and tperl.c.
Some MIPS machines may need to undefine CASTNEGFLOAT.
Xenix 386 needs -Sm11000 for yacc, and may need -UM_I86.
SCO Xenix may need -m25000 for yacc. See also README.xenix.
Genix needs to use libc rather than libc_s, or #undef VARARGS.
NCR Tower 32 (OS 2.01.01) may need -W2,-Sl,2000 and #undef MKDIR.
A/UX may appears to work with -O -B/usr/lib/big/ optimizer flags.
A/UX needs -lposix to find rewinddir.
A/UX may need -ZP -DPOSIX, and -g if big cc is used.
FPS machines may need -J and -DBADSWITCH.
UTS may need one or more of -DCRIPPLED_CC, -K or -g, and undef LSTAT.
dynix may need to undefine CASTNEGFLOAT (d_castneg='undef' in config.sh).
Dnix (not dynix) may need to remove -O.
IRIX 3.3 may need to undefine VFORK.
HP/UX may need to pull cerror.o and syscall.o out of libc.a and link
them in explicitly.
If you get syntax errors on '(', try -DCRIPPLED_CC or -DBADSWITCH or both.
Machines with half-implemented dbm routines will need to #undef ODBM & NDBM.
If you have GDBM available and want it instead of NDBM, say -DHAS_GDBM.
C's that don't try to restore registers on longjmp() may need -DJMPCLOBBER.
(Try this if you get random glitches.)
5) make test
This will run the regression tests on the perl you just made.
If it doesn't say "All tests successful" then something went wrong.
See the README in the t subdirectory. Note that you can't run it
in background if this disables opening of /dev/tty. If "make test"
bombs out, just cd to the t directory and run TEST by hand to see if
it makes any difference.
6) make install
This will put perl into a public directory (such as /usr/local/bin).
It will also try to put the man pages in a reasonable place. It will not
nroff the man page, however. You may need to be root to do this. If
you are not root, you must own the directories in question and you should
ignore any messages about chown not working.
7) Read the manual entry before running perl.
8) IMPORTANT! Help save the world! Communicate any problems and suggested
patches to me, lwall@netlabs.com (Larry Wall), so we can
keep the world in sync. If you have a problem, there's someone else
out there who either has had or will have the same problem.
If possible, send in patches such that the patch program will apply them.
Context diffs are the best, then normal diffs. Don't send ed scripts--
I've probably changed my copy since the version you have.
Watch for perl patches in comp.lang.perl. Patches will generally be
in a form usable by the patch program. If you are just now bringing up
perl and aren't sure how many patches there are, write to me and I'll
send any you don't have. Your current patch level is shown in patchlevel.h.
Just a personal note: I want you to know that I create nice things like this
because it pleases the Author of my story. If this bothers you, then your
notion of Authorship needs some revision. But you can use perl anyway. :-)
The author.
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