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[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / Porting / pumpkin.pod
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aa689395 1=head1 NAME
2
3Pumpkin - Notes on handling the Perl Patch Pumpkin
4
5=head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7There is no simple synopsis, yet.
8
9=head1 DESCRIPTION
10
98dddfbd 11This document attempts to begin to describe some of the considerations
12involved in patching, porting, and maintaining perl.
aa689395 13
14This document is still under construction, and still subject to
15significant changes. Still, I hope parts of it will be useful,
16so I'm releasing it even though it's not done.
17
18For the most part, it's a collection of anecdotal information that
19already assumes some familiarity with the Perl sources. I really need
20an introductory section that describes the organization of the sources
21and all the various auxiliary files that are part of the distribution.
22
23=head1 Where Do I Get Perl Sources and Related Material?
24
25The Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (or CPAN) is the place to go.
26There are many mirrors, but the easiest thing to use is probably
7b5757d1 27http://www.perl.com/CPAN/README.html , which automatically points you to a
aa689395 28mirror site "close" to you.
29
30=head2 Perl5-porters mailing list
31
32The mailing list perl5-porters@perl.org
33is the main group working with the development of perl. If you're
34interested in all the latest developments, you should definitely
35subscribe. The list is high volume, but generally has a
36fairly low noise level.
37
38Subscribe by sending the message (in the body of your letter)
39
40 subscribe perl5-porters
41
42to perl5-porters-request@perl.org .
43
fb73857a 44Archives of the list are held at:
45
46 http://www.rosat.mpe-garching.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl-porters/
47
aa689395 48=head1 How are Perl Releases Numbered?
49
f5a32c7f 50Beginning with v5.6.0, even versions will stand for maintenance releases
51and odd versions for development releases, i.e., v5.6.x for maintenance
52releases, and v5.7.x for development releases. Before v5.6.0, subversions
53_01 through _49 were reserved for bug-fix maintenance releases, and
54subversions _50 through _99 for unstable development versions.
7b5757d1 55
f5a32c7f 56For example, in v5.6.1, the revision number is 5, the version is 6,
57and 1 is the subversion.
aa689395 58
f5a32c7f 59For compatibility with the older numbering scheme the composite floating
60point version number continues to be available as the magic variable $],
61and amounts to C<$revision + $version/1000 + $subversion/1000000>. This
62can still be used in comparisons.
aa689395 63
f5a32c7f 64 print "You've got an old perl\n" if $] < 5.005_03;
aa689395 65
f5a32c7f 66In addition, the version is also available as a string in $^V.
aa689395 67
f5a32c7f 68 print "You've got a new perl\n" if $^V and $^V ge v5.6.0;
7b5757d1 69
f5a32c7f 70You can also require particular version (or later) with:
aa689395 71
f5a32c7f 72 use 5.006;
aa689395 73
f5a32c7f 74or using the new syntax available only from v5.6 onward:
aa689395 75
f5a32c7f 76 use v5.6.0;
aa689395 77
f5a32c7f 78At some point in the future, we may need to decide what to call the
79next big revision. In the .package file used by metaconfig to
80generate Configure, there are two variables that might be relevant:
81$baserev=5 and $package=perl5.
aa689395 82
f5a32c7f 83Perl releases produced by the members of perl5-porters are usually
e04b929a 84available on CPAN in the F<src/5.0/maint> and F<src/5.0/devel>
85directories.
aa689395 86
7b5757d1 87=head2 Maintenance and Development Subversions
88
f5a32c7f 89The first rule of maintenance work is "First, do no harm."
7b5757d1 90
fb73857a 91Trial releases of bug-fix maintenance releases are announced on
92perl5-porters. Trial releases use the new subversion number (to avoid
93testers installing it over the previous release) and include a 'local
e04b929a 94patch' entry in patchlevel.h. The distribution file contains the
95string C<MAINT_TRIAL> to make clear that the file is not meant for
96public consumption.
fb73857a 97
e04b929a 98In general, the names of official distribution files for the public
f5a32c7f 99always match the regular expression:
e04b929a 100
f5a32c7f 101 ^perl\d+\.(\d+)\.\d+(-MAINT_TRIAL_\d+)\.tar\.gz$
e04b929a 102
f5a32c7f 103C<$1> in the pattern is always an even number for maintenance
104versions, and odd for developer releases.
e04b929a 105
106In the past it has been observed that pumkings tend to invent new
107naming conventions on the fly. If you are a pumpking, before you
108invent a new name for any of the three types of perl distributions,
109please inform the guys from the CPAN who are doing indexing and
110provide the trees of symlinks and the like. They will have to know
111I<in advance> what you decide.
20f245af 112
aa689395 113=head2 Why is it called the patch pumpkin?
114
115Chip Salzenberg gets credit for that, with a nod to his cow orker,
116David Croy. We had passed around various names (baton, token, hot
117potato) but none caught on. Then, Chip asked:
118
119[begin quote]
120
121 Who has the patch pumpkin?
122
123To explain: David Croy once told me once that at a previous job,
124there was one tape drive and multiple systems that used it for backups.
125But instead of some high-tech exclusion software, they used a low-tech
126method to prevent multiple simultaneous backups: a stuffed pumpkin.
127No one was allowed to make backups unless they had the "backup pumpkin".
128
129[end quote]
130
131The name has stuck.
132
a6968aa6 133=head1 Philosophical Issues in Patching and Porting Perl
aa689395 134
135There are no absolute rules, but there are some general guidelines I
136have tried to follow as I apply patches to the perl sources.
137(This section is still under construction.)
138
139=head2 Solve problems as generally as possible
140
7b5757d1 141Never implement a specific restricted solution to a problem when you
142can solve the same problem in a more general, flexible way.
143
144For example, for dynamic loading to work on some SVR4 systems, we had
145to build a shared libperl.so library. In order to build "FAT" binaries
146on NeXT 4.0 systems, we had to build a special libperl library. Rather
147than continuing to build a contorted nest of special cases, I
148generalized the process of building libperl so that NeXT and SVR4 users
149could still get their work done, but others could build a shared
150libperl if they wanted to as well.
aa689395 151
a6968aa6 152Contain your changes carefully. Assume nothing about other operating
153systems, not even closely related ones. Your changes must not affect
154other platforms.
155
156Spy shamelessly on how similar patching or porting issues have been
157settled elsewhere.
158
159If feasible, try to keep filenames 8.3-compliant to humor those poor
160souls that get joy from running Perl under such dire limitations.
161
aa689395 162=head2 Seek consensus on major changes
163
164If you are making big changes, don't do it in secret. Discuss the
165ideas in advance on perl5-porters.
166
167=head2 Keep the documentation up-to-date
168
169If your changes may affect how users use perl, then check to be sure
170that the documentation is in sync with your changes. Be sure to
171check all the files F<pod/*.pod> and also the F<INSTALL> document.
172
173Consider writing the appropriate documentation first and then
7b5757d1 174implementing your change to correspond to the documentation.
aa689395 175
176=head2 Avoid machine-specific #ifdef's
177
178To the extent reasonable, try to avoid machine-specific #ifdef's in
179the sources. Instead, use feature-specific #ifdef's. The reason is
180that the machine-specific #ifdef's may not be valid across major
181releases of the operating system. Further, the feature-specific tests
182may help out folks on another platform who have the same problem.
183
a6968aa6 184=head2 Machine-specific files
185
98dddfbd 186=over 4
187
188=item source code
189
a6968aa6 190If you have many machine-specific #defines or #includes, consider
191creating an "osish.h" (os2ish.h, vmsish.h, and so on) and including
192that in perl.h. If you have several machine-specific files (function
193emulations, function stubs, build utility wrappers) you may create a
194separate subdirectory (djgpp, win32) and put the files in there.
98dddfbd 195Remember to update C<MANIFEST> when you add files.
a6968aa6 196
ff935051 197If your system supports dynamic loading but none of the existing
98dddfbd 198methods at F<ext/DynaLoader/dl_*.xs> work for you, you must write
199a new one. Study the existing ones to see what kind of interface
200you must supply.
201
202=item build hints
a6968aa6 203
204There are two kinds of hints: hints for building Perl and hints for
205extensions. The former live in the C<hints> subdirectory, the latter
206in C<ext/*/hints> subdirectories.
207
208The top level hints are Bourne-shell scripts that set, modify and
209unset appropriate Configure variables, based on the Configure command
210line options and possibly existing config.sh and Policy.sh files from
211previous Configure runs.
212
213The extension hints are written Perl (by the time they are used
214miniperl has been built) and control the building of their respective
215extensions. They can be used to for example manipulate compilation
216and linking flags.
217
98dddfbd 218=item build and installation Makefiles, scripts, and so forth
219
220Sometimes you will also need to tweak the Perl build and installation
221procedure itself, like for example F<Makefile.SH> and F<installperl>.
222Tread very carefully, even more than usual. Contain your changes
223with utmost care.
a6968aa6 224
98dddfbd 225=item test suite
226
227Many of the tests in C<t> subdirectory assume machine-specific things
a6968aa6 228like existence of certain functions, something about filesystem
229semantics, certain external utilities and their error messages. Use
230the C<$^O> and the C<Config> module (which contains the results of the
231Configure run, in effect the C<config.sh> converted to Perl) to either
98dddfbd 232skip (preferably not) or customize (preferable) the tests for your
233platform.
234
235=item modules
236
237Certain standard modules may need updating if your operating system
238sports for example a native filesystem naming. You may want to update
239some or all of the modules File::Basename, File::Spec, File::Path, and
240File::Copy to become aware of your native filesystem syntax and
241peculiarities.
242
243=item documentation
244
245If your operating system comes from outside UNIX you almost certainly
246will have differences in the available operating system functionality
247(missing system calls, different semantics, whatever). Please
248document these at F<pod/perlport.pod>. If your operating system is
249the first B<not> to have a system call also update the list of
250"portability-bewares" at the beginning of F<pod/perlfunc.pod>.
251
252A file called F<README.youros> at the top level that explains things
253like how to install perl at this platform, where to get any possibly
254required additional software, and for example what test suite errors
255to expect, is nice too.
256
257You may also want to write a separate F<.pod> file for your operating
258system to tell about existing mailing lists, os-specific modules,
259documentation, whatever. Please name these along the lines of
260F<perl>I<youros>.pod. [unfinished: where to put this file (the pod/
261subdirectory, of course: but more importantly, which/what index files
262should be updated?)]
263
264=back
a6968aa6 265
aa689395 266=head2 Allow for lots of testing
267
268We should never release a main version without testing it as a
269subversion first.
270
6877a1cf 271=head2 Test popular applications and modules.
272
273We should never release a main version without testing whether or not
274it breaks various popular modules and applications. A partial list of
275such things would include majordomo, metaconfig, apache, Tk, CGI,
276libnet, and libwww, to name just a few. Of course it's quite possible
277that some of those things will be just plain broken and need to be fixed,
278but, in general, we ought to try to avoid breaking widely-installed
279things.
280
98dddfbd 281=head2 Automated generation of derivative files
aa689395 282
283The F<embed.h>, F<keywords.h>, F<opcode.h>, and F<perltoc.pod> files
284are all automatically generated by perl scripts. In general, don't
285patch these directly; patch the data files instead.
286
287F<Configure> and F<config_h.SH> are also automatically generated by
288B<metaconfig>. In general, you should patch the metaconfig units
a6968aa6 289instead of patching these files directly. However, very minor changes
290to F<Configure> may be made in between major sync-ups with the
291metaconfig units, which tends to be complicated operations. But be
292careful, this can quickly spiral out of control. Running metaconfig
293is not really hard.
aa689395 294
98dddfbd 295Also F<Makefile> is automatically produced from F<Makefile.SH>.
296In general, look out for all F<*.SH> files.
297
a8119d38 298Finally, the sample files in the F<Porting/> subdirectory are
299generated automatically by the script F<U/mksample> included
300with the metaconfig units. See L<"run metaconfig"> below for
301information on obtaining the metaconfig units.
302
aa689395 303=head1 How to Make a Distribution
304
305There really ought to be a 'make dist' target, but there isn't.
306The 'dist' suite of tools also contains a number of tools that I haven't
307learned how to use yet. Some of them may make this all a bit easier.
308
309Here are the steps I go through to prepare a patch & distribution.
310
3e3baf6d 311Lots of it could doubtless be automated but isn't. The Porting/makerel
312(make release) perl script does now help automate some parts of it.
aa689395 313
314=head2 Announce your intentions
315
316First, you should volunteer out loud to take the patch pumpkin. It's
317generally counter-productive to have multiple people working in secret
318on the same thing.
319
320At the same time, announce what you plan to do with the patch pumpkin,
321to allow folks a chance to object or suggest alternatives, or do it for
322you. Naturally, the patch pumpkin holder ought to incorporate various
323bug fixes and documentation improvements that are posted while he or
324she has the pumpkin, but there might also be larger issues at stake.
325
326One of the precepts of the subversion idea is that we shouldn't give
7b5757d1 327the patch pumpkin to anyone unless we have some idea what he or she
328is going to do with it.
aa689395 329
330=head2 refresh pod/perltoc.pod
331
332Presumably, you have done a full C<make> in your working source
333directory. Before you C<make spotless> (if you do), and if you have
334changed any documentation in any module or pod file, change to the
335F<pod> directory and run C<make toc>.
336
3e3baf6d 337=head2 run installhtml to check the validity of the pod files
338
aa689395 339=head2 update patchlevel.h
340
341Don't be shy about using the subversion number, even for a relatively
342modest patch. We've never even come close to using all 99 subversions,
343and it's better to have a distinctive number for your patch. If you
344need feedback on your patch, go ahead and issue it and promise to
345incorporate that feedback quickly (e.g. within 1 week) and send out a
346second patch.
347
348=head2 run metaconfig
349
350If you need to make changes to Configure or config_h.SH, it may be best to
351change the appropriate metaconfig units instead, and regenerate Configure.
352
353 metaconfig -m
354
20f245af 355will regenerate Configure and config_h.SH. Much more information
356on obtaining and running metaconfig is in the F<U/README> file
357that comes with Perl's metaconfig units. Perl's metaconfig units
358should be available on CPAN. A set of units that will work with
359perl5.005 is in the file F<mc_units-5.005_00-01.tar.gz> under
360http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/id/ANDYD/ . The mc_units tar file
361should be unpacked in your main perl source directory. Note: those
362units were for use with 5.005. There may have been changes since then.
d562869c 363Check for later versions or contact perl5-porters@perl.org to obtain a
20f245af 364pointer to the current version.
aa689395 365
366Alternatively, do consider if the F<*ish.h> files might be a better
367place for your changes.
368
369=head2 MANIFEST
370
371Make sure the MANIFEST is up-to-date. You can use dist's B<manicheck>
372program for this. You can also use
373
3e3baf6d 374 perl -w -MExtUtils::Manifest=fullcheck -e fullcheck
aa689395 375
3e3baf6d 376Both commands will also list extra files in the directory that are not
377listed in MANIFEST.
aa689395 378
bfb7748a 379The MANIFEST is normally sorted.
aa689395 380
381If you are using metaconfig to regenerate Configure, then you should note
382that metaconfig actually uses MANIFEST.new, so you want to be sure
383MANIFEST.new is up-to-date too. I haven't found the MANIFEST/MANIFEST.new
384distinction particularly useful, but that's probably because I still haven't
385learned how to use the full suite of tools in the dist distribution.
386
387=head2 Check permissions
388
389All the tests in the t/ directory ought to be executable. The
390main makefile used to do a 'chmod t/*/*.t', but that resulted in
391a self-modifying distribution--something some users would strongly
d562869c 392prefer to avoid. The F<t/TEST> script will check for this
393and do the chmod if needed, but the tests still ought to be
394executable.
aa689395 395
396In all, the following files should probably be executable:
397
398 Configure
399 configpm
32fcaa0b 400 configure.gnu
aa689395 401 embed.pl
402 installperl
403 installman
404 keywords.pl
aa689395 405 myconfig
406 opcode.pl
407 perly.fixer
408 t/TEST
409 t/*/*.t
410 *.SH
411 vms/ext/Stdio/test.pl
412 vms/ext/filespec.t
aa689395 413 x2p/*.SH
414
415Other things ought to be readable, at least :-).
416
417Probably, the permissions for the files could be encoded in MANIFEST
418somehow, but I'm reluctant to change MANIFEST itself because that
419could break old scripts that use MANIFEST.
420
421I seem to recall that some SVR3 systems kept some sort of file that listed
422permissions for system files; something like that might be appropriate.
423
424=head2 Run Configure
425
426This will build a config.sh and config.h. You can skip this if you haven't
693762b4 427changed Configure or config_h.SH at all. I use the following command
aa689395 428
693762b4 429 sh Configure -Dprefix=/opt/perl -Doptimize=-O -Dusethreads \
430 -Dcf_by='yourname' \
431 -Dcf_email='yourname@yourhost.yourplace.com' \
432 -Dperladmin='yourname@yourhost.yourplace.com' \
433 -Dmydomain='.yourplace.com' \
434 -Dmyhostname='yourhost' \
435 -des
aa689395 436
693762b4 437=head2 Update Porting/config.sh and Porting/config_H
dfe9444c 438
693762b4 439[XXX
440This section needs revision. We're currently working on easing
441the task of keeping the vms, win32, and plan9 config.sh info
442up-to-date. The plan is to use keep up-to-date 'canned' config.sh
443files in the appropriate subdirectories and then generate 'canned'
444config.h files for vms, win32, etc. from the generic config.sh file.
445This is to ease maintenance. When Configure gets updated, the parts
446sometimes get scrambled around, and the changes in config_H can
447sometimes be very hard to follow. config.sh, on the other hand, can
448safely be sorted, so it's easy to track (typically very small) changes
449to config.sh and then propoagate them to a canned 'config.h' by any
450number of means, including a perl script in win32/ or carrying
451config.sh and config_h.SH to a Unix system and running sh
452config_h.SH.)
453XXX]
454
455The Porting/config.sh and Porting/config_H files are provided to
456help those folks who can't run Configure. It is important to keep
457them up-to-date. If you have changed config_h.SH, those changes must
458be reflected in config_H as well. (The name config_H was chosen to
459distinguish the file from config.h even on case-insensitive file systems.)
460Simply edit the existing config_H file; keep the first few explanatory
461lines and then copy your new config.h below.
aa689395 462
d562869c 463It may also be necessary to update win32/config.?c, vms/config.vms and
aa689395 464plan9/config.plan9, though you should be quite careful in doing so if
465you are not familiar with those systems. You might want to issue your
466patch with a promise to quickly issue a follow-up that handles those
467directories.
468
469=head2 make run_byacc
470
471If you have byacc-1.8.2 (available from CPAN), and if there have been
472changes to F<perly.y>, you can regenerate the F<perly.c> file. The
473run_byacc makefile target does this by running byacc and then applying
474some patches so that byacc dynamically allocates space, rather than
475having fixed limits. This patch is handled by the F<perly.fixer>
476script. Depending on the nature of the changes to F<perly.y>, you may
477or may not have to hand-edit the patch to apply correctly. If you do,
478you should include the edited patch in the new distribution. If you
479have byacc-1.9, the patch won't apply cleanly. Changes to the printf
480output statements mean the patch won't apply cleanly. Long ago I
481started to fix F<perly.fixer> to detect this, but I never completed the
482task.
483
ebb99254 484If C<perly.c> changes, make sure you run C<perl vms/vms_yfix.pl> to
485update the corresponding VMS files. See L<VMS-specific updates>.
486
aa689395 487Some additional notes from Larry on this:
488
e262e9be 489Don't forget to regenerate perly_c.diff.
aa689395 490
7b5757d1 491 byacc -d perly.y
aa689395 492 mv y.tab.c perly.c
e262e9be 493 patch perly.c <perly_c.diff
aa689395 494 # manually apply any failed hunks
e262e9be 495 diff -c2 perly.c.orig perly.c >perly_c.diff
aa689395 496
497One chunk of lines that often fails begins with
498
499 #line 29 "perly.y"
500
501and ends one line before
502
503 #define YYERRCODE 256
504
505This only happens when you add or remove a token type. I suppose this
506could be automated, but it doesn't happen very often nowadays.
507
508Larry
509
510=head2 make regen_headers
511
512The F<embed.h>, F<keywords.h>, and F<opcode.h> files are all automatically
513generated by perl scripts. Since the user isn't guaranteed to have a
514working perl, we can't require the user to generate them. Hence you have
515to, if you're making a distribution.
516
517I used to include rules like the following in the makefile:
518
519 # The following three header files are generated automatically
520 # The correct versions should be already supplied with the perl kit,
521 # in case you don't have perl or 'sh' available.
522 # The - is to ignore error return codes in case you have the source
523 # installed read-only or you don't have perl yet.
524 keywords.h: keywords.pl
525 @echo "Don't worry if this fails."
526 - perl keywords.pl
527
528
7b5757d1 529However, I got B<lots> of mail consisting of people worrying because the
aa689395 530command failed. I eventually decided that I would save myself time
531and effort by manually running C<make regen_headers> myself rather
532than answering all the questions and complaints about the failing
533command.
534
3e3baf6d 535=head2 global.sym, interp.sym and perlio.sym
aa689395 536
537Make sure these files are up-to-date. Read the comments in these
538files and in perl_exp.SH to see what to do.
539
540=head2 Binary compatibility
541
542If you do change F<global.sym> or F<interp.sym>, think carefully about
543what you are doing. To the extent reasonable, we'd like to maintain
544souce and binary compatibility with older releases of perl. That way,
545extensions built under one version of perl will continue to work with
546new versions of perl.
547
548Of course, some incompatible changes may well be necessary. I'm just
549suggesting that we not make any such changes without thinking carefully
550about them first. If possible, we should provide
551backwards-compatibility stubs. There's a lot of XS code out there.
552Let's not force people to keep changing it.
553
554=head2 Changes
555
556Be sure to update the F<Changes> file. Try to include both an overall
557summary as well as detailed descriptions of the changes. Your
3e3baf6d 558audience will include other developers and users, so describe
aa689395 559user-visible changes (if any) in terms they will understand, not in
560code like "initialize foo variable in bar function".
561
562There are differing opinions on whether the detailed descriptions
563ought to go in the Changes file or whether they ought to be available
564separately in the patch file (or both). There is no disagreement that
565detailed descriptions ought to be easily available somewhere.
566
2a26e2f1 567=head2 Todo
568
569The F<Todo> file contains a roughly-catgorized unordered list of
570aspects of Perl that could use enhancement, features that could be
571added, areas that could be cleaned up, and so on. During your term as
572pumpkin-holder, you will probably address some of these issues, and
573perhaps identify others which, while you decide not to address them
574this time around, may be tackled in the future. Update the file
575reflect the situation as it stands when you hand over the pumpkin.
576
577You might like, early in your pumpkin-holding career, to see if you
578can find champions for partiticular issues on the to-do list: an issue
579owned is an issue more likely to be resolved.
580
c4f23d77 581There are also some more porting-specific L<Todo> items later in this
582file.
583
aa689395 584=head2 OS/2-specific updates
585
586In the os2 directory is F<diff.configure>, a set of OS/2-specific
587diffs against B<Configure>. If you make changes to Configure, you may
588want to consider regenerating this diff file to save trouble for the
589OS/2 maintainer.
590
7b5757d1 591You can also consider the OS/2 diffs as reminders of portability
592things that need to be fixed in Configure.
593
aa689395 594=head2 VMS-specific updates
595
ebb99254 596If you have changed F<perly.y> or F<perly.c>, then you most probably want
597to update F<vms/perly_{h,c}.vms> by running C<perl vms/vms_yfix.pl>.
aa689395 598
599The Perl version number appears in several places under F<vms>.
600It is courteous to update these versions. For example, if you are
601making 5.004_42, replace "5.00441" with "5.00442".
602
603=head2 Making the new distribution
604
605Suppose, for example, that you want to make version 5.004_08. Then you can
606do something like the following
607
608 mkdir ../perl5.004_08
609 awk '{print $1}' MANIFEST | cpio -pdm ../perl5.004_08
610 cd ../
611 tar cf perl5.004_08.tar perl5.004_08
612 gzip --best perl5.004_08.tar
613
3e3baf6d 614These steps, with extra checks, are automated by the Porting/makerel
615script.
616
aa689395 617=head2 Making a new patch
618
619I find the F<makepatch> utility quite handy for making patches.
620You can obtain it from any CPAN archive under
3e3baf6d 621http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/Johan_Vromans/ . There are a couple
622of differences between my version and the standard one. I have mine do
623a
aa689395 624
625 # Print a reassuring "End of Patch" note so people won't
626 # wonder if their mailer truncated patches.
627 print "\n\nEnd of Patch.\n";
628
3e3baf6d 629at the end. That's because I used to get questions from people asking
630if their mail was truncated.
631
632It also writes Index: lines which include the new directory prefix
633(change Index: print, approx line 294 or 310 depending on the version,
634to read: print PATCH ("Index: $newdir$new\n");). That helps patches
635work with more POSIX conformant patch programs.
aa689395 636
637Here's how I generate a new patch. I'll use the hypothetical
6385.004_07 to 5.004_08 patch as an example.
639
640 # unpack perl5.004_07/
641 gzip -d -c perl5.004_07.tar.gz | tar -xof -
642 # unpack perl5.004_08/
643 gzip -d -c perl5.004_08.tar.gz | tar -xof -
644 makepatch perl5.004_07 perl5.004_08 > perl5.004_08.pat
645
646Makepatch will automatically generate appropriate B<rm> commands to remove
647deleted files. Unfortunately, it will not correctly set permissions
648for newly created files, so you may have to do so manually. For example,
649patch 5.003_04 created a new test F<t/op/gv.t> which needs to be executable,
650so at the top of the patch, I inserted the following lines:
651
652 # Make a new test
653 touch t/op/gv.t
654 chmod +x t/opt/gv.t
655
656Now, of course, my patch is now wrong because makepatch didn't know I
657was going to do that command, and it patched against /dev/null.
658
659So, what I do is sort out all such shell commands that need to be in the
660patch (including possible mv-ing of files, if needed) and put that in the
661shell commands at the top of the patch. Next, I delete all the patch parts
662of perl5.004_08.pat, leaving just the shell commands. Then, I do the
663following:
664
7b5757d1 665 cd perl5.004_07
666 sh ../perl5.004_08.pat
aa689395 667 cd ..
7b5757d1 668 makepatch perl5.004_07 perl5.004_08 >> perl5.004_08.pat
aa689395 669
670(Note the append to preserve my shell commands.)
671Now, my patch will line up with what the end users are going to do.
672
673=head2 Testing your patch
674
675It seems obvious, but be sure to test your patch. That is, verify that
676it produces exactly the same thing as your full distribution.
677
7b5757d1 678 rm -rf perl5.004_07
679 gzip -d -c perl5.004_07.tar.gz | tar -xf -
680 cd perl5.004_07
681 sh ../perl5.004_08.pat
682 patch -p1 -N < ../perl5.004_08.pat
aa689395 683 cd ..
7b5757d1 684 gdiff -r perl5.004_07 perl5.004_08
aa689395 685
686where B<gdiff> is GNU diff. Other diff's may also do recursive checking.
687
688=head2 More testing
689
690Again, it's obvious, but you should test your new version as widely as you
691can. You can be sure you'll hear about it quickly if your version doesn't
692work on both ANSI and pre-ANSI compilers, and on common systems such as
693SunOS 4.1.[34], Solaris, and Linux.
694
695If your changes include conditional code, try to test the different
696branches as thoroughly as you can. For example, if your system
697supports dynamic loading, you can also test static loading with
698
699 sh Configure -Uusedl
700
701You can also hand-tweak your config.h to try out different #ifdef
702branches.
703
22d4bb9c 704=head2 Other tests
705
706=over 4
707
708=item CHECK_FORMAT
709
710To test the correct use of printf-style arguments, C<Configure> with
711S<-Dccflags='-DCHECK_FORMAT -Wformat'> and run C<make>. The compiler
712will produce warning of incorrect use of format arguments. CHECK_FORMAT
713changes perl-defined formats to common formats, so DO NOT USE the executable
714produced by this process.
715
716A more accurate approach is the following commands:
717
718 sh Configure -des -Dccflags=-Wformat ...
719 make miniperl # without -DCHECK_FORMAT
720 perl -i.orig -pwe 's/-Wformat/-DCHECK_FORMAT $&/' config.sh
721 sh Configure -S
722 make >& make.log # build from correct miniperl
723 make clean
724 make miniperl >& mini.log # build miniperl with -DCHECK_FORMAT
725 perl -nwe 'print if /^\S+:/ and not /^make\b/' mini.log make.log
726 make clean
727
728(-Wformat support by Robin Barker.)
729
730=back
731
d33b2eba 732=head1 Running Purify
f5a32c7f 733
734Purify is a commercial tool that is helpful in identifying memory
735overruns, wild pointers, memory leaks and other such badness. Perl
736must be compiled in a specific way for optimal testing with Purify.
737
738Use the following commands to test perl with Purify:
739
740 sh Configure -des -Doptimize=-g -Uusemymalloc -Dusemultiplicity \
741 -Accflags=-DPURIFY
742 setenv PURIFYOPTIONS "-chain-length=25"
743 make all pureperl
744 cd t
745 ln -s ../pureperl perl
d33b2eba 746 setenv PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL 5
f5a32c7f 747 ./perl TEST
748
749Disabling Perl's malloc allows Purify to monitor allocations and leaks
750more closely; using Perl's malloc will make Purify report most leaks
751in the "potential" leaks category. Enabling the multiplicity option
752allows perl to clean up thoroughly when the interpreter shuts down, which
753reduces the number of bogus leak reports from Purify. The -DPURIFY
754enables any Purify-specific debugging code in the sources.
755
756Purify outputs messages in "Viewer" windows by default. If you don't have
757a windowing environment or if you simply want the Purify output to
758unobtrusively go to a log file instead of to the interactive window,
759use the following options instead:
760
761 setenv PURIFYOPTIONS "-chain-length=25 -windows=no -log-file=perl.log \
762 -append-logfile=yes"
763
764The only currently known leaks happen when there are compile-time errors
765within eval or require. (Fixing these is non-trivial, unfortunately, but
766they must be fixed eventually.)
767
aa689395 768=head1 Common Gotcha's
769
770=over 4
771
772=item #elif
773
774The '#elif' preprocessor directive is not understood on all systems.
775Specifically, I know that Pyramids don't understand it. Thus instead of the
776simple
777
778 #if defined(I_FOO)
779 # include <foo.h>
780 #elif defined(I_BAR)
781 # include <bar.h>
782 #else
783 # include <fubar.h>
784 #endif
785
786You have to do the more Byzantine
787
788 #if defined(I_FOO)
789 # include <foo.h>
790 #else
791 # if defined(I_BAR)
792 # include <bar.h>
793 # else
794 # include <fubar.h>
795 # endif
796 #endif
797
798Incidentally, whitespace between the leading '#' and the preprocessor
799command is not guaranteed, but is very portable and you may use it freely.
800I think it makes things a bit more readable, especially once things get
801rather deeply nested. I also think that things should almost never get
802too deeply nested, so it ought to be a moot point :-)
803
804=item Probably Prefer POSIX
805
806It's often the case that you'll need to choose whether to do
807something the BSD-ish way or the POSIX-ish way. It's usually not
808a big problem when the two systems use different names for similar
809functions, such as memcmp() and bcmp(). The perl.h header file
810handles these by appropriate #defines, selecting the POSIX mem*()
811functions if available, but falling back on the b*() functions, if
812need be.
813
814More serious is the case where some brilliant person decided to
815use the same function name but give it a different meaning or
816calling sequence :-). getpgrp() and setpgrp() come to mind.
817These are a real problem on systems that aim for conformance to
818one standard (e.g. POSIX), but still try to support the other way
819of doing things (e.g. BSD). My general advice (still not really
820implemented in the source) is to do something like the following.
821Suppose there are two alternative versions, fooPOSIX() and
822fooBSD().
823
824 #ifdef HAS_FOOPOSIX
825 /* use fooPOSIX(); */
826 #else
827 # ifdef HAS_FOOBSD
828 /* try to emulate fooPOSIX() with fooBSD();
829 perhaps with the following: */
830 # define fooPOSIX fooBSD
831 # else
832 # /* Uh, oh. We have to supply our own. */
833 # define fooPOSIX Perl_fooPOSIX
834 # endif
835 #endif
836
837=item Think positively
838
839If you need to add an #ifdef test, it is usually easier to follow if you
840think positively, e.g.
841
842 #ifdef HAS_NEATO_FEATURE
843 /* use neato feature */
844 #else
845 /* use some fallback mechanism */
846 #endif
847
848rather than the more impenetrable
849
850 #ifndef MISSING_NEATO_FEATURE
851 /* Not missing it, so we must have it, so use it */
852 #else
853 /* Are missing it, so fall back on something else. */
854 #endif
855
856Of course for this toy example, there's not much difference. But when
857the #ifdef's start spanning a couple of screen fulls, and the #else's
858are marked something like
859
860 #else /* !MISSING_NEATO_FEATURE */
861
862I find it easy to get lost.
863
864=item Providing Missing Functions -- Problem
865
866Not all systems have all the neat functions you might want or need, so
867you might decide to be helpful and provide an emulation. This is
868sound in theory and very kind of you, but please be careful about what
869you name the function. Let me use the C<pause()> function as an
870illustration.
871
872Perl5.003 has the following in F<perl.h>
873
874 #ifndef HAS_PAUSE
875 #define pause() sleep((32767<<16)+32767)
876 #endif
877
878Configure sets HAS_PAUSE if the system has the pause() function, so
879this #define only kicks in if the pause() function is missing.
880Nice idea, right?
881
882Unfortunately, some systems apparently have a prototype for pause()
883in F<unistd.h>, but don't actually have the function in the library.
884(Or maybe they do have it in a library we're not using.)
885
886Thus, the compiler sees something like
887
888 extern int pause(void);
889 /* . . . */
890 #define pause() sleep((32767<<16)+32767)
891
892and dies with an error message. (Some compilers don't mind this;
893others apparently do.)
894
895To work around this, 5.003_03 and later have the following in perl.h:
896
897 /* Some unistd.h's give a prototype for pause() even though
898 HAS_PAUSE ends up undefined. This causes the #define
899 below to be rejected by the compiler. Sigh.
900 */
901 #ifdef HAS_PAUSE
902 # define Pause pause
903 #else
904 # define Pause() sleep((32767<<16)+32767)
905 #endif
906
907This works.
908
909The curious reader may wonder why I didn't do the following in
910F<util.c> instead:
911
912 #ifndef HAS_PAUSE
913 void pause()
914 {
915 sleep((32767<<16)+32767);
916 }
917 #endif
918
919That is, since the function is missing, just provide it.
920Then things would probably be been alright, it would seem.
921
922Well, almost. It could be made to work. The problem arises from the
923conflicting needs of dynamic loading and namespace protection.
924
925For dynamic loading to work on AIX (and VMS) we need to provide a list
926of symbols to be exported. This is done by the script F<perl_exp.SH>,
927which reads F<global.sym> and F<interp.sym>. Thus, the C<pause>
928symbol would have to be added to F<global.sym> So far, so good.
929
930On the other hand, one of the goals of Perl5 is to make it easy to
931either extend or embed perl and link it with other libraries. This
932means we have to be careful to keep the visible namespace "clean".
933That is, we don't want perl's global variables to conflict with
934those in the other application library. Although this work is still
935in progress, the way it is currently done is via the F<embed.h> file.
936This file is built from the F<global.sym> and F<interp.sym> files,
937since those files already list the globally visible symbols. If we
938had added C<pause> to global.sym, then F<embed.h> would contain the
939line
940
941 #define pause Perl_pause
942
943and calls to C<pause> in the perl sources would now point to
944C<Perl_pause>. Now, when B<ld> is run to build the F<perl> executable,
945it will go looking for C<perl_pause>, which probably won't exist in any
946of the standard libraries. Thus the build of perl will fail.
947
948Those systems where C<HAS_PAUSE> is not defined would be ok, however,
949since they would get a C<Perl_pause> function in util.c. The rest of
950the world would be in trouble.
951
952And yes, this scenario has happened. On SCO, the function C<chsize>
953is available. (I think it's in F<-lx>, the Xenix compatibility
954library.) Since the perl4 days (and possibly before), Perl has
955included a C<chsize> function that gets called something akin to
956
957 #ifndef HAS_CHSIZE
958 I32 chsize(fd, length)
959 /* . . . */
960 #endif
961
962When 5.003 added
963
964 #define chsize Perl_chsize
965
966to F<embed.h>, the compile started failing on SCO systems.
967
968The "fix" is to give the function a different name. The one
969implemented in 5.003_05 isn't optimal, but here's what was done:
970
971 #ifdef HAS_CHSIZE
972 # ifdef my_chsize /* Probably #defined to Perl_my_chsize in embed.h */
973 # undef my_chsize
974 # endif
975 # define my_chsize chsize
976 #endif
977
978My explanatory comment in patch 5.003_05 said:
979
980 Undef and then re-define my_chsize from Perl_my_chsize to
981 just plain chsize if this system HAS_CHSIZE. This probably only
982 applies to SCO. This shows the perils of having internal
983 functions with the same name as external library functions :-).
984
985Now, we can safely put C<my_chsize> in F<global.sym>, export it, and
986hide it with F<embed.h>.
987
988To be consistent with what I did for C<pause>, I probably should have
989called the new function C<Chsize>, rather than C<my_chsize>.
990However, the perl sources are quite inconsistent on this (Consider
991New, Mymalloc, and Myremalloc, to name just a few.)
992
993There is a problem with this fix, however, in that C<Perl_chsize>
994was available as a F<libperl.a> library function in 5.003, but it
995isn't available any more (as of 5.003_07). This means that we've
996broken binary compatibility. This is not good.
997
998=item Providing missing functions -- some ideas
999
1000We currently don't have a standard way of handling such missing
1001function names. Right now, I'm effectively thinking aloud about a
1002solution. Some day, I'll try to formally propose a solution.
1003
1004Part of the problem is that we want to have some functions listed as
1005exported but not have their names mangled by embed.h or possibly
1006conflict with names in standard system headers. We actually already
1007have such a list at the end of F<perl_exp.SH> (though that list is
1008out-of-date):
1009
1010 # extra globals not included above.
1011 cat <<END >> perl.exp
1012 perl_init_ext
1013 perl_init_fold
1014 perl_init_i18nl14n
1015 perl_alloc
1016 perl_construct
1017 perl_destruct
1018 perl_free
1019 perl_parse
1020 perl_run
1021 perl_get_sv
1022 perl_get_av
1023 perl_get_hv
1024 perl_get_cv
1025 perl_call_argv
1026 perl_call_pv
1027 perl_call_method
1028 perl_call_sv
1029 perl_requirepv
1030 safecalloc
1031 safemalloc
1032 saferealloc
1033 safefree
1034
1035This still needs much thought, but I'm inclined to think that one
1036possible solution is to prefix all such functions with C<perl_> in the
1037source and list them along with the other C<perl_*> functions in
1038F<perl_exp.SH>.
1039
1040Thus, for C<chsize>, we'd do something like the following:
1041
1042 /* in perl.h */
1043 #ifdef HAS_CHSIZE
1044 # define perl_chsize chsize
1045 #endif
1046
1047then in some file (e.g. F<util.c> or F<doio.c>) do
1048
1049 #ifndef HAS_CHSIZE
1050 I32 perl_chsize(fd, length)
1051 /* implement the function here . . . */
1052 #endif
1053
1054Alternatively, we could just always use C<chsize> everywhere and move
1055C<chsize> from F<global.sym> to the end of F<perl_exp.SH>. That would
1056probably be fine as long as our C<chsize> function agreed with all the
1057C<chsize> function prototypes in the various systems we'll be using.
1058As long as the prototypes in actual use don't vary that much, this is
1059probably a good alternative. (As a counter-example, note how Configure
1060and perl have to go through hoops to find and use get Malloc_t and
1061Free_t for C<malloc> and C<free>.)
1062
1063At the moment, this latter option is what I tend to prefer.
1064
1065=item All the world's a VAX
1066
1067Sorry, showing my age:-). Still, all the world is not BSD 4.[34],
1068SVR4, or POSIX. Be aware that SVR3-derived systems are still quite
1069common (do you have any idea how many systems run SCO?) If you don't
1070have a bunch of v7 manuals handy, the metaconfig units (by default
1071installed in F</usr/local/lib/dist/U>) are a good resource to look at
1072for portability.
1073
1074=back
1075
1076=head1 Miscellaneous Topics
1077
1078=head2 Autoconf
1079
1080Why does perl use a metaconfig-generated Configure script instead of an
1081autoconf-generated configure script?
1082
1083Metaconfig and autoconf are two tools with very similar purposes.
1084Metaconfig is actually the older of the two, and was originally written
1085by Larry Wall, while autoconf is probably now used in a wider variety of
1086packages. The autoconf info file discusses the history of autoconf and
1087how it came to be. The curious reader is referred there for further
1088information.
1089
1090Overall, both tools are quite good, I think, and the choice of which one
1091to use could be argued either way. In March, 1994, when I was just
1092starting to work on Configure support for Perl5, I considered both
1093autoconf and metaconfig, and eventually decided to use metaconfig for the
1094following reasons:
1095
1096=over 4
1097
1098=item Compatibility with Perl4
1099
1100Perl4 used metaconfig, so many of the #ifdef's were already set up for
1101metaconfig. Of course metaconfig had evolved some since Perl4's days,
1102but not so much that it posed any serious problems.
1103
1104=item Metaconfig worked for me
1105
1106My system at the time was Interactive 2.2, a SVR3.2/386 derivative that
1107also had some POSIX support. Metaconfig-generated Configure scripts
1108worked fine for me on that system. On the other hand, autoconf-generated
1109scripts usually didn't. (They did come quite close, though, in some
1110cases.) At the time, I actually fetched a large number of GNU packages
1111and checked. Not a single one configured and compiled correctly
1112out-of-the-box with the system's cc compiler.
1113
1114=item Configure can be interactive
1115
1116With both autoconf and metaconfig, if the script works, everything is
1117fine. However, one of my main problems with autoconf-generated scripts
1118was that if it guessed wrong about something, it could be B<very> hard to
1119go back and fix it. For example, autoconf always insisted on passing the
1120-Xp flag to cc (to turn on POSIX behavior), even when that wasn't what I
1121wanted or needed for that package. There was no way short of editing the
1122configure script to turn this off. You couldn't just edit the resulting
1123Makefile at the end because the -Xp flag influenced a number of other
1124configure tests.
1125
1126Metaconfig's Configure scripts, on the other hand, can be interactive.
1127Thus if Configure is guessing things incorrectly, you can go back and fix
1128them. This isn't as important now as it was when we were actively
1129developing Configure support for new features such as dynamic loading,
1130but it's still useful occasionally.
1131
1132=item GPL
1133
1134At the time, autoconf-generated scripts were covered under the GNU Public
1135License, and hence weren't suitable for inclusion with Perl, which has a
1136different licensing policy. (Autoconf's licensing has since changed.)
1137
1138=item Modularity
1139
1140Metaconfig builds up Configure from a collection of discrete pieces
1141called "units". You can override the standard behavior by supplying your
1142own unit. With autoconf, you have to patch the standard files instead.
1143I find the metaconfig "unit" method easier to work with. Others
1144may find metaconfig's units clumsy to work with.
1145
1146=back
1147
aa689395 1148=head2 Why isn't there a directory to override Perl's library?
1149
1150Mainly because no one's gotten around to making one. Note that
1151"making one" involves changing perl.c, Configure, config_h.SH (and
1152associated files, see above), and I<documenting> it all in the
1153INSTALL file.
1154
1155Apparently, most folks who want to override one of the standard library
1156files simply do it by overwriting the standard library files.
1157
1158=head2 APPLLIB
1159
1160In the perl.c sources, you'll find an undocumented APPLLIB_EXP
1161variable, sort of like PRIVLIB_EXP and ARCHLIB_EXP (which are
1162documented in config_h.SH). Here's what APPLLIB_EXP is for, from
1163a mail message from Larry:
1164
1165 The main intent of APPLLIB_EXP is for folks who want to send out a
1166 version of Perl embedded in their product. They would set the symbol
1167 to be the name of the library containing the files needed to run or to
1168 support their particular application. This works at the "override"
1169 level to make sure they get their own versions of any library code that
1170 they absolutely must have configuration control over.
1171
1172 As such, I don't see any conflict with a sysadmin using it for a
1173 override-ish sort of thing, when installing a generic Perl. It should
1174 probably have been named something to do with overriding though. Since
1175 it's undocumented we could still change it... :-)
1176
1177Given that it's already there, you can use it to override
1178distribution modules. If you do
1179
1180 sh Configure -Dccflags='-DAPPLLIB_EXP=/my/override'
1181
1182then perl.c will put /my/override ahead of ARCHLIB and PRIVLIB.
1183
c4f23d77 1184=head2 Shared libperl.so location
1185
1186Why isn't the shared libperl.so installed in /usr/lib/ along
1187with "all the other" shared libraries? Instead, it is installed
1188in $archlib, which is typically something like
1189
1190 /usr/local/lib/perl5/archname/5.00404
1191
1192and is architecture- and version-specific.
1193
1194The basic reason why a shared libperl.so gets put in $archlib is so that
1195you can have more than one version of perl on the system at the same time,
1196and have each refer to its own libperl.so.
1197
1198Three examples might help. All of these work now; none would work if you
1199put libperl.so in /usr/lib.
1200
1201=over
1202
1203=item 1.
1204
1205Suppose you want to have both threaded and non-threaded perl versions
1206around. Configure will name both perl libraries "libperl.so" (so that
1207you can link to them with -lperl). The perl binaries tell them apart
1208by having looking in the appropriate $archlib directories.
1209
1210=item 2.
1211
1212Suppose you have perl5.004_04 installed and you want to try to compile
1213it again, perhaps with different options or after applying a patch.
1214If you already have libperl.so installed in /usr/lib/, then it may be
1215either difficult or impossible to get ld.so to find the new libperl.so
1216that you're trying to build. If, instead, libperl.so is tucked away in
1217$archlib, then you can always just change $archlib in the current perl
1218you're trying to build so that ld.so won't find your old libperl.so.
1219(The INSTALL file suggests you do this when building a debugging perl.)
1220
1221=item 3.
1222
1223The shared perl library is not a "well-behaved" shared library with
1224proper major and minor version numbers, so you can't necessarily
1225have perl5.004_04 and perl5.004_05 installed simultaneously. Suppose
1226perl5.004_04 were to install /usr/lib/libperl.so.4.4, and perl5.004_05
1227were to install /usr/lib/libperl.so.4.5. Now, when you try to run
1228perl5.004_04, ld.so might try to load libperl.so.4.5, since it has
1229the right "major version" number. If this works at all, it almost
1230certainly defeats the reason for keeping perl5.004_04 around. Worse,
1231with development subversions, you certaily can't guarantee that
1232libperl.so.4.4 and libperl.so.4.55 will be compatible.
1233
1234Anyway, all this leads to quite obscure failures that are sure to drive
1235casual users crazy. Even experienced users will get confused :-). Upon
1236reflection, I'd say leave libperl.so in $archlib.
1237
1238=back
1239
aa689395 1240=head1 Upload Your Work to CPAN
1241
1242You can upload your work to CPAN if you have a CPAN id. Check out
1243http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/04pause.html for information on
1244_PAUSE_, the Perl Author's Upload Server.
1245
1246I typically upload both the patch file, e.g. F<perl5.004_08.pat.gz>
1247and the full tar file, e.g. F<perl5.004_08.tar.gz>.
1248
1249If you want your patch to appear in the F<src/5.0/unsupported>
1250directory on CPAN, send e-mail to the CPAN master librarian. (Check
7b5757d1 1251out http://www.perl.com/CPAN/CPAN.html ).
aa689395 1252
1253=head1 Help Save the World
1254
1255You should definitely announce your patch on the perl5-porters list.
1256You should also consider announcing your patch on
1257comp.lang.perl.announce, though you should make it quite clear that a
1258subversion is not a production release, and be prepared to deal with
1259people who will not read your disclaimer.
1260
1261=head1 Todo
1262
1263Here, in no particular order, are some Configure and build-related
1264items that merit consideration. This list isn't exhaustive, it's just
1265what I came up with off the top of my head.
1266
1267=head2 Good ideas waiting for round tuits
1268
1269=over 4
1270
c4f23d77 1271=item Configure -Dsrc=/blah/blah
aa689395 1272
1273We should be able to emulate B<configure --srcdir>. Tom Tromey
1274tromey@creche.cygnus.com has submitted some patches to
c4f23d77 1275the dist-users mailing list along these lines. They have been folded
1276back into the main distribution, but various parts of the perl
1277Configure/build/install process still assume src='.'.
aa689395 1278
1279=item Hint file fixes
1280
1281Various hint files work around Configure problems. We ought to fix
1282Configure so that most of them aren't needed.
1283
1284=item Hint file information
1285
1286Some of the hint file information (particularly dynamic loading stuff)
1287ought to be fed back into the main metaconfig distribution.
1288
1289=back
1290
1291=head2 Probably good ideas waiting for round tuits
1292
1293=over 4
1294
1295=item GNU configure --options
1296
1297I've received sensible suggestions for --exec_prefix and other
1298GNU configure --options. It's not always obvious exactly what is
1299intended, but this merits investigation.
1300
1301=item make clean
1302
1303Currently, B<make clean> isn't all that useful, though
1304B<make realclean> and B<make distclean> are. This needs a bit of
1305thought and documentation before it gets cleaned up.
1306
1307=item Try gcc if cc fails
1308
1309Currently, we just give up.
1310
1311=item bypassing safe*alloc wrappers
1312
1313On some systems, it may be safe to call the system malloc directly
1314without going through the util.c safe* layers. (Such systems would
1315accept free(0), for example.) This might be a time-saver for systems
1316that already have a good malloc. (Recent Linux libc's apparently have
1317a nice malloc that is well-tuned for the system.)
1318
1319=back
1320
1321=head2 Vague possibilities
1322
1323=over 4
1324
aa689395 1325=item MacPerl
1326
3e3baf6d 1327Get some of the Macintosh stuff folded back into the main distribution.
aa689395 1328
1329=item gconvert replacement
1330
1331Maybe include a replacement function that doesn't lose data in rare
1332cases of coercion between string and numerical values.
1333
aa689395 1334=item Improve makedepend
1335
1336The current makedepend process is clunky and annoyingly slow, but it
1337works for most folks. Alas, it assumes that there is a filename
1338$firstmakefile that the B<make> command will try to use before it uses
1339F<Makefile>. Such may not be the case for all B<make> commands,
1340particularly those on non-Unix systems.
1341
1342Probably some variant of the BSD F<.depend> file will be useful.
1343We ought to check how other packages do this, if they do it at all.
1344We could probably pre-generate the dependencies (with the exception of
1345malloc.o, which could probably be determined at F<Makefile.SH>
1346extraction time.
1347
1348=item GNU Makefile standard targets
1349
1350GNU software generally has standardized Makefile targets. Unless we
1351have good reason to do otherwise, I see no reason not to support them.
1352
1353=item File locking
1354
1355Somehow, straighten out, document, and implement lockf(), flock(),
1356and/or fcntl() file locking. It's a mess.
1357
1358=back
1359
fb73857a 1360=head1 AUTHORS
aa689395 1361
fb73857a 1362Original author: Andy Dougherty doughera@lafcol.lafayette.edu .
1363Additions by Chip Salzenberg chip@perl.com and
1364Tim Bunce Tim.Bunce@ig.co.uk .
aa689395 1365
1366All opinions expressed herein are those of the authorZ<>(s).
1367
1368=head1 LAST MODIFIED
1369
ff935051 1370$Id: pumpkin.pod,v 1.23 2000/01/13 19:45:13 doughera Released $