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# Hints for the PowerUX operating system running on Concurrent (formerly
# Harris) NightHawk machines. Written by Tom.Horsley@mail.ccur.com
#
# Note: The OS is fated to change names again to PowerMAX OS, but this
# PowerUX file should still work (I wish marketing would make up their mind
# about the name :-).
#
# This config uses dynamic linking and the Concurrent C compiler. It has
# been tested on Power PC based 6000 series machines running PowerUX.
# Internally at Concurrent, we use a source management tool which winds up
# giving us read-only copies of source trees that are mostly symbolic links.
# That upsets the perl build process when it tries to edit opcode.h and
# embed.h or touch perly.c or perly.h, so turn those files into "real" files
# when Configure runs. (If you already have "real" source files, this won't
# do anything).
#
if [ -x /usr/local/mkreal ]
then
for i in '.' '..'
do
for j in embed.h opcode.h perly.h perly.c
do
if [ -h $i/$j ]
then
( cd $i ; /usr/local/mkreal $j ; chmod 666 $j )
fi
done
done
fi
# We DO NOT want -lmalloc or -lPW, we DO need -lgen to follow -lnsl, so
# fixup libswanted to reflect that desire (also need -lresolv if you want
# DNS name lookup to work, which seems desirable :-).
#
libswanted=`echo ' '$libswanted' ' | sed -e 's/ malloc / /' -e 's/ PW / /' -e 's/ nsl / nsl gen resolv /'`
# We DO NOT want /usr/ucblib in glibpth
#
glibpth=`echo ' '$glibpth' ' | sed -e 's@ /usr/ucblib @ @'`
# Yes, csh exists, but doesn't work worth beans, if perl tries to use it,
# the glob test fails, so just pretend it isn't there...
#
d_csh='undef'
# Need to use Concurrent cc for most of these options to be meaningful (if you
# want to get this to work with gcc, you're on your own :-). Passing
# -Bexport to the linker when linking perl is important because it leaves
# the interpreter internal symbols visible to the shared libs that will be
# loaded on demand (and will try to reference those symbols).
#
cc='/bin/cc'
cccdlflags='-Zpic'
ccdlflags='-Zlink=dynamic -Wl,-Bexport'
lddlflags='-Zlink=so'
# Configure sometime finds what it believes to be ndbm header files on the
# system and imagines that we have the NDBM library, but we really don't.
# There is something there that once resembled ndbm, but it is purely
# for internal use in some tool and has been hacked beyond recognition
# (or even function :-)
#
i_ndbm='undef'
# There is a bug in memcmp (which I hope will be fixed soon) which sometimes
# fails to provide the correct compare status (it is data dependant), so just
# pretend there is no memcmp...
#
d_memcmp='undef'
# Due to problems with dynamic linking (which I also hope will be fixed soon)
# you can't build a libperl.so, the core has to be in the static part of the
# perl executable.
#
useshrplib='false'
# PowerMAX OS has support for a few different kinds of filesystems. The
# newer "xfs" filesystem does *not* report a reasonable value in the
# 'nlinks' field of stat() info for directories (in fact, it is always 1).
# Since xfs is the only filesystem which supports partitions bigger than
# 2gig and you can't hardly buy a disk that small anymore, xfs is coming in
# to greater and greater use, so we pretty much have no choice but to
# abandon all hope that number of links will mean anything.
#
dont_use_nlink=define
# Misc other flags that might be able to change, but I know these work right.
#
d_suidsafe='define'
d_isascii='define'
d_mymalloc='undef'
usemymalloc='n'
ssizetype='ssize_t'
usevfork='false'
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