Various tweaks for getting Perl to compile on SunOS 4.x.
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / README.solaris
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d420ca49 1If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you
2see. It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is
3specifically designed to be readable as is.
4
5=head1 NAME
6
7README.solaris - Perl version 5 on Solaris systems
8
9=head1 DESCRIPTION
10
11This document describes various features of Sun's Solaris operating system
12that will affect how Perl version 5 (hereafter just perl) is
13compiled and/or runs. Some issues relating to the older SunOS 4.x are
14also discussed, though they may be out of date.
15
16For the most part, everything should just work.
17
18Starting with Solaris 8, perl5.00503 (or higher) is supplied with the
19operating system, so you might not even need to build a newer version
20of perl at all. The Sun-supplied version is installed in /usr/perl5
2a5ccb22 21with /usr/bin/perl pointing to /usr/perl5/bin/perl. Do not disturb
22that installation unless you really know what you are doing. If you
43857681 23remove the perl supplied with the OS, you will render some bits of
24your system inoperable. If you wish to install a newer version of perl,
25install it under a different prefix from /usr/perl5. Common prefixes
26to use are /usr/local and /opt/perl.
2a5ccb22 27
28You may wish to put your version of perl in the PATH of all users by
43857681 29changing the link /usr/bin/perl. This is OK, as all perl scripts
30shipped with Solaris use an explicit path. Solaris ships with a
31range of Solaris-specific modules. If you choose to install your own
32version of perl you will find the source of many of these modules is
33available on CPAN under the Sun::Solaris:: namespace.
34
35Solaris may include two versions of perl, e.g. Solaris 9 includes
36both 5.005_03 and 5.6.1. This is to provide stability across Solaris
37releases, in cases where a later perl version has incompatibilities
38with the version included in the preceeding Solaris release. The
39default perl version will always be the most recent, and in general
40the old version will only be retained for one Solaris release. Note
41also that the default perl will NOT be configured to search for modules
42in the older version, again due to compatibility/stability concerns.
43As a consequence if you upgrade Solaris, you will have to
44rebuild/reinstall any additional CPAN modules that you installed for
45the previous Solaris version. See the CPAN manpage under 'autobundle'
46for a quick way of doing this.
47
48As an interim measure, you may either change the #! line of your
49scripts to specifically refer to the old perl version, e.g. on
50Solaris 9 use #!/usr/perl5/5.00503/bin/perl to use the perl version
51that was the default for Solaris 8, or if you have a large number of
52scripts it may be more convenient to make the old version of perl the
53default on your system. You can do this by changing the appropriate
54symlinks under /usr/perl5 as follows (example for Solaris 9):
55
56 # cd /usr/perl5
57 # rm bin man pod
58 # ln -s ./5.00503/bin
59 # ln -s ./5.00503/man
60 # ln -s ./5.00503/lib/pod
61 # rm /usr/bin/perl
62 # ln -s ../perl5/5.00503/bin/perl /usr/bin/perl
63
64In both cases this should only be considered to be a temporary
65measure - you should upgrade to the later version of perl as soon as
66is practicable.
67
68Note also that the perl command-line utilities (e.g. perldoc) and any
69that are added by modules that you install will be under
70/usr/perl5/bin, so that directory should be added to your PATH.
d420ca49 71
72=head2 Solaris Version Numbers.
73
74For consistency with common usage, perl's Configure script performs
75some minor manipulations on the operating system name and version
76number as reported by uname. Here's a partial translation table:
77
43857681 78 Sun: perl's Configure:
79 uname uname -r Name osname osvers
80 SunOS 4.1.3 Solaris 1.1 sunos 4.1.3
81 SunOS 5.6 Solaris 2.6 solaris 2.6
82 SunOS 5.8 Solaris 8 solaris 2.8
83 SunOS 5.9 Solaris 9 solaris 2.9
84 SunOS 5.10 Solaris 10 solaris 2.10
d420ca49 85
2a5ccb22 86The complete table can be found in the Sun Managers' FAQ
37a78d01 87L<ftp://ftp.cs.toronto.edu/pub/jdd/sunmanagers/faq> under
2a5ccb22 88"9.1) Which Sun models run which versions of SunOS?".
89
d420ca49 90=head1 RESOURCES
91
5511f325 92There are many, many sources for Solaris information. A few of the
d420ca49 93important ones for perl:
94
95=over 4
96
97=item Solaris FAQ
98
99The Solaris FAQ is available at
100L<http://www.science.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2.html>.
101
2a5ccb22 102The Sun Managers' FAQ is available at
37a78d01 103L<ftp://ftp.cs.toronto.edu/pub/jdd/sunmanagers/faq>
2a5ccb22 104
d420ca49 105=item Precompiled Binaries
106
43857681 107Precompiled binaries, links to many sites, and much, much more are
108available at L<http://www.sunfreeware.com/> and
109L<http://www.blastwave.org/>.
d420ca49 110
111=item Solaris Documentation
112
5511f325 113All Solaris documentation is available on-line at L<http://docs.sun.com/>.
d420ca49 114
115=back
116
117=head1 SETTING UP
118
a83b6f46 119=head2 File Extraction Problems on Solaris.
d420ca49 120
121Be sure to use a tar program compiled under Solaris (not SunOS 4.x)
122to extract the perl-5.x.x.tar.gz file. Do not use GNU tar compiled
123for SunOS4 on Solaris. (GNU tar compiled for Solaris should be fine.)
124When you run SunOS4 binaries on Solaris, the run-time system magically
125alters pathnames matching m#lib/locale# so that when tar tries to create
126lib/locale.pm, a file named lib/oldlocale.pm gets created instead.
5511f325 127If you found this advice too late and used a SunOS4-compiled tar
2a5ccb22 128anyway, you must find the incorrectly renamed file and move it back
129to lib/locale.pm.
d420ca49 130
a83b6f46 131=head2 Compiler and Related Tools on Solaris.
d420ca49 132
133You must use an ANSI C compiler to build perl. Perl can be compiled
134with either Sun's add-on C compiler or with gcc. The C compiler that
135shipped with SunOS4 will not do.
136
137=head3 Include /usr/ccs/bin/ in your PATH.
138
139Several tools needed to build perl are located in /usr/ccs/bin/: ar,
140as, ld, and make. Make sure that /usr/ccs/bin/ is in your PATH.
141
142You need to make sure the following packages are installed
143(this info is extracted from the Solaris FAQ):
144
145for tools (sccs, lex, yacc, make, nm, truss, ld, as): SUNWbtool,
146SUNWsprot, SUNWtoo
147
148for libraries & headers: SUNWhea, SUNWarc, SUNWlibm, SUNWlibms, SUNWdfbh,
149SUNWcg6h, SUNWxwinc, SUNWolinc
150
151for 64 bit development: SUNWarcx, SUNWbtoox, SUNWdplx, SUNWscpux,
152SUNWsprox, SUNWtoox, SUNWlmsx, SUNWlmx, SUNWlibCx
153
2a5ccb22 154If you are in doubt which package contains a file you are missing,
155try to find an installation that has that file. Then do a
156
43857681 157 $ grep /my/missing/file /var/sadm/install/contents
2a5ccb22 158
159This will display a line like this:
160
161/usr/include/sys/errno.h f none 0644 root bin 7471 37605 956241356 SUNWhea
162
b29a8fb9 163The last item listed (SUNWhea in this example) is the package you need.
2a5ccb22 164
d420ca49 165=head3 Avoid /usr/ucb/cc.
166
167You don't need to have /usr/ucb/ in your PATH to build perl. If you
2a5ccb22 168want /usr/ucb/ in your PATH anyway, make sure that /usr/ucb/ is NOT
169in your PATH before the directory containing the right C compiler.
d420ca49 170
171=head3 Sun's C Compiler
172
173If you use Sun's C compiler, make sure the correct directory
2a5ccb22 174(usually /opt/SUNWspro/bin/) is in your PATH (before /usr/ucb/).
d420ca49 175
176=head3 GCC
177
9a04b58a 178If you use gcc, make sure your installation is recent and complete.
43857681 179perl versions since 5.6.0 build fine with gcc > 2.8.1 on Solaris >=
9a04b58a 1802.6.
181
182You must Configure perl with
d420ca49 183
43857681 184 $ sh Configure -Dcc=gcc
d420ca49 185
9a04b58a 186If you don't, you may experience strange build errors.
187
d420ca49 188If you have updated your Solaris version, you may also have to update
9a04b58a 189your gcc. For example, if you are running Solaris 2.6 and your gcc is
d420ca49 190installed under /usr/local, check in /usr/local/lib/gcc-lib and make
2a5ccb22 191sure you have the appropriate directory, sparc-sun-solaris2.6/ or
192i386-pc-solaris2.6/. If gcc's directory is for a different version of
193Solaris than you are running, then you will need to rebuild gcc for
194your new version of Solaris.
d420ca49 195
196You can get a precompiled version of gcc from
43857681 197L<http://www.sunfreeware.com/> or L<http://www.blastwave.org/>. Make
198sure you pick up the package for your Solaris release.
199
200If you wish to use gcc to build add-on modules for use with the perl
201shipped with Solaris, you should use the Solaris::PerlGcc module
202which is available from CPAN. The perl shipped with Solaris
203is configured and built with the Sun compilers, and the compiler
204configuration information stored in Config.pm is therefore only
205relevant to the Sun compilers. The Solaris:PerlGcc module contains a
206replacement Config.pm that is correct for gcc - see the module for
207details.
d420ca49 208
209=head3 GNU as and GNU ld
210
74144837 211The following information applies to gcc version 2. Volunteers to
212update it as appropropriate for gcc version 3 would be appreciated.
213
d420ca49 214The versions of as and ld supplied with Solaris work fine for building
74144837 215perl. There is normally no need to install the GNU versions to
216compile perl.
d420ca49 217
218If you decide to ignore this advice and use the GNU versions anyway,
219then be sure that they are relatively recent. Versions newer than 2.7
220are apparently new enough. Older versions may have trouble with
221dynamic loading.
222
74144837 223If you wish to use GNU ld, then you need to pass it the -Wl,-E flag.
43857681 224The hints/solaris_2.sh file tries to do this automatically by setting
225the following Configure variables:
74144837 226
43857681 227 ccdlflags="$ccdlflags -Wl,-E"
228 lddlflags="$lddlflags -Wl,-E -G"
74144837 229
230However, over the years, changes in gcc, GNU ld, and Solaris ld have made
231it difficult to automatically detect which ld ultimately gets called.
232You may have to manually edit config.sh and add the -Wl,-E flags
233yourself, or else run Configure interactively and add the flags at the
234appropriate prompts.
235
b76f91fc 236In SunOS 4.x you most probably want to use the SunOS ld, /usr/bin/ld,
237since the more recent versions of GNU ld (like 2.13) do not seem to
238work for building Perl anymore. When linking the extensions, the
239GNU ld gets very unhappy and spews a lot of errors like this
240
241 ... relocation truncated to fit: BASE13 ...
242
243and dies. Therefore the SunOS 4.1 hints file explicitly sets the
244ld to be /usr/bin/ld.
245
d420ca49 246If your gcc is configured to use GNU as and ld but you want to use the
247Solaris ones instead to build perl, then you'll need to add
248-B/usr/ccs/bin/ to the gcc command line. One convenient way to do
249that is with
250
43857681 251 $ sh Configure -Dcc='gcc -B/usr/ccs/bin/'
d420ca49 252
253Note that the trailing slash is required. This will result in some
2a5ccb22 254harmless warnings as Configure is run:
d420ca49 255
43857681 256 gcc: file path prefix `/usr/ccs/bin/' never used
d420ca49 257
258These messages may safely be ignored.
259(Note that for a SunOS4 system, you must use -B/bin/ instead.)
260
261Alternatively, you can use the GCC_EXEC_PREFIX environment variable to
262ensure that Sun's as and ld are used. Consult your gcc documentation
263for further information on the -B option and the GCC_EXEC_PREFIX variable.
264
43857681 265=head3 Sun and GNU make
d420ca49 266
43857681 267The make under /usr/ccs/bin works fine for building perl. If you
268have the Sun C compilers, you will also have a parallel version of
269make (dmake). This works fine to build perl, but can sometimes cause
270problems when running 'make test' due to underspecified dependencies
271between the different test harness files. The same problem can also
272affect the building of some add-on modules, so in those cases either
273specify '-m serial' on the dmake command line, or use
274/usr/ccs/bin/make instead. If you wish to use GNU make, be sure that
275the set-group-id bit is not set. If it is, then arrange your PATH so
276that /usr/ccs/bin/make is before GNU make or else have the system
277administrator disable the set-group-id bit on GNU make.
d420ca49 278
279=head3 Avoid libucb.
280
281Solaris provides some BSD-compatibility functions in /usr/ucblib/libucb.a.
282Perl will not build and run correctly if linked against -lucb since it
283contains routines that are incompatible with the standard Solaris libc.
284Normally this is not a problem since the solaris hints file prevents
285Configure from even looking in /usr/ucblib for libraries, and also
286explicitly omits -lucb.
287
43857681 288=head2 Environment for Compiling perl on Solaris
d420ca49 289
290=head3 PATH
291
292Make sure your PATH includes the compiler (/opt/SUNWspro/bin/ if you're
293using Sun's compiler) as well as /usr/ccs/bin/ to pick up the other
294development tools (such as make, ar, as, and ld). Make sure your path
295either doesn't include /usr/ucb or that it includes it after the
296compiler and compiler tools and other standard Solaris directories.
297You definitely don't want /usr/ucb/cc.
298
299=head3 LD_LIBRARY_PATH
300
301If you have the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable set, be sure that
302it does NOT include /lib or /usr/lib. If you will be building
303extensions that call third-party shared libraries (e.g. Berkeley DB)
304then make sure that your LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable includes
305the directory with that library (e.g. /usr/local/lib).
306
307If you get an error message
308
43857681 309 dlopen: stub interception failed
d420ca49 310
311it is probably because your LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable
312includes a directory which is a symlink to /usr/lib (such as /lib).
313The reason this causes a problem is quite subtle. The file
314libdl.so.1.0 actually *only* contains functions which generate 'stub
315interception failed' errors! The runtime linker intercepts links to
316"/usr/lib/libdl.so.1.0" and links in internal implementations of those
317functions instead. [Thanks to Tim Bunce for this explanation.]
318
319=head1 RUN CONFIGURE.
320
321See the INSTALL file for general information regarding Configure.
322Only Solaris-specific issues are discussed here. Usually, the
323defaults should be fine.
324
43857681 325=head2 64-bit perl on Solaris.
d420ca49 326
327See the INSTALL file for general information regarding 64-bit compiles.
328In general, the defaults should be fine for most people.
329
330By default, perl-5.6.0 (or later) is compiled as a 32-bit application
331with largefile and long-long support.
332
333=head3 General 32-bit vs. 64-bit issues.
334
2a5ccb22 335Solaris 7 and above will run in either 32 bit or 64 bit mode on SPARC
336CPUs, via a reboot. You can build 64 bit apps whilst running 32 bit
337mode and vice-versa. 32 bit apps will run under Solaris running in
338either 32 or 64 bit mode. 64 bit apps require Solaris to be running
b29a8fb9 33964 bit mode.
d420ca49 340
341Existing 32 bit apps are properly known as LP32, i.e. Longs and
342Pointers are 32 bit. 64-bit apps are more properly known as LP64.
343The discriminating feature of a LP64 bit app is its ability to utilise a
34464-bit address space. It is perfectly possible to have a LP32 bit app
2a5ccb22 345that supports both 64-bit integers (long long) and largefiles (> 2GB),
d420ca49 346and this is the default for perl-5.6.0.
347
43857681 348For a more complete explanation of 64-bit issues, see the
349"Solaris 64-bit Developer's Guide" at L<http://docs.sun.com/>
d420ca49 350
351You can detect the OS mode using "isainfo -v", e.g.
352
43857681 353 $ isainfo -v # Ultra 30 in 64 bit mode
354 64-bit sparcv9 applications
355 32-bit sparc applications
d420ca49 356
43857681 357By default, perl will be compiled as a 32-bit application. Unless
358you want to allocate more than ~ 4GB of memory inside perl, or unless
359you need more than 255 open file descriptors, you probably don't need
360perl to be a 64-bit app.
d420ca49 361
5511f325 362=head3 Large File Support
d420ca49 363
364For Solaris 2.6 and onwards, there are two different ways for 32-bit
2a5ccb22 365applications to manipulate large files (files whose size is > 2GByte).
d420ca49 366(A 64-bit application automatically has largefile support built in
367by default.)
368
369First is the "transitional compilation environment", described in
370lfcompile64(5). According to the man page,
371
43857681 372 The transitional compilation environment exports all the
373 explicit 64-bit functions (xxx64()) and types in addition to
374 all the regular functions (xxx()) and types. Both xxx() and
375 xxx64() functions are available to the program source. A
376 32-bit application must use the xxx64() functions in order
377 to access large files. See the lf64(5) manual page for a
378 complete listing of the 64-bit transitional interfaces.
d420ca49 379
380The transitional compilation environment is obtained with the
381following compiler and linker flags:
382
43857681 383 getconf LFS64_CFLAGS -D_LARGEFILE64_SOURCE
384 getconf LFS64_LDFLAG # nothing special needed
385 getconf LFS64_LIBS # nothing special needed
d420ca49 386
387Second is the "large file compilation environment", described in
388lfcompile(5). According to the man page,
389
43857681 390 Each interface named xxx() that needs to access 64-bit entities
391 to access large files maps to a xxx64() call in the
392 resulting binary. All relevant data types are defined to be
393 of correct size (for example, off_t has a typedef definition
394 for a 64-bit entity).
d420ca49 395
43857681 396 An application compiled in this environment is able to use
397 the xxx() source interfaces to access both large and small
398 files, rather than having to explicitly utilize the transitional
399 xxx64() interface calls to access large files.
d420ca49 400
401Two exceptions are fseek() and ftell(). 32-bit applications should
402use fseeko(3C) and ftello(3C). These will get automatically mapped
403to fseeko64() and ftello64().
404
405The large file compilation environment is obtained with
406
43857681 407 getconf LFS_CFLAGS -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64
408 getconf LFS_LDFLAGS # nothing special needed
409 getconf LFS_LIBS # nothing special needed
d420ca49 410
411By default, perl uses the large file compilation environment and
412relies on Solaris to do the underlying mapping of interfaces.
413
43857681 414=head3 Building an LP64 perl
d420ca49 415
b29a8fb9 416To compile a 64-bit application on an UltraSparc with a recent Sun Compiler,
417you need to use the flag "-xarch=v9". getconf(1) will tell you this, e.g.
d420ca49 418
43857681 419 $ getconf -a | grep v9
420 XBS5_LP64_OFF64_CFLAGS: -xarch=v9
421 XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LDFLAGS: -xarch=v9
422 XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LINTFLAGS: -xarch=v9
423 XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_CFLAGS: -xarch=v9
424 XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LDFLAGS: -xarch=v9
425 XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LINTFLAGS: -xarch=v9
426 _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_CFLAGS: -xarch=v9
427 _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LDFLAGS: -xarch=v9
428 _XBS5_LP64_OFF64_LINTFLAGS: -xarch=v9
429 _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_CFLAGS: -xarch=v9
430 _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LDFLAGS: -xarch=v9
431 _XBS5_LPBIG_OFFBIG_LINTFLAGS: -xarch=v9
d420ca49 432
b29a8fb9 433This flag is supported in Sun WorkShop Compilers 5.0 and onwards
434(now marketed under the name Forte) when used on Solaris 7 or later on
435UltraSparc systems.
2a5ccb22 436
437If you are using gcc, you would need to use -mcpu=v9 -m64 instead. This
438option is not yet supported as of gcc 2.95.2; from install/SPECIFIC
439in that release:
d420ca49 440
43857681 441 GCC version 2.95 is not able to compile code correctly for sparc64
442 targets. Users of the Linux kernel, at least, can use the sparc32
443 program to start up a new shell invocation with an environment that
444 causes configure to recognize (via uname -a) the system as sparc-*-*
445 instead.
d420ca49 446
447All this should be handled automatically by the hints file, if
448requested.
449
d420ca49 450=head3 Long Doubles.
451
43857681 452As of 5.8.1, long doubles are working if you use the Sun compilers
453(needed for additional math routines not included in libm).
d420ca49 454
43857681 455=head2 Threads in perl on Solaris.
d420ca49 456
457It is possible to build a threaded version of perl on Solaris. The entire
458perl thread implementation is still experimental, however, so beware.
d420ca49 459
43857681 460=head2 Malloc Issues with perl on Solaris.
d420ca49 461
43857681 462Starting from perl 5.7.1 perl uses the Solaris malloc, since the perl
83bd2f30 463malloc breaks when dealing with more than 2GB of memory, and the Solaris
464malloc also seems to be faster.
465
466If you for some reason (such as binary backward compatibility) really
43857681 467need to use perl's malloc, you can rebuild perl from the sources
83bd2f30 468and Configure the build with
469
43857681 470 $ sh Configure -Dusemymalloc
210b36aa 471
d420ca49 472You should not use perl's malloc if you are building with gcc. There
473are reports of core dumps, especially in the PDL module. The problem
474appears to go away under -DDEBUGGING, so it has been difficult to
5511f325 475track down. Sun's compiler appears to be okay with or without perl's
d420ca49 476malloc. [XXX further investigation is needed here.]
477
d420ca49 478=head1 MAKE PROBLEMS.
479
480=over 4
481
482=item Dynamic Loading Problems With GNU as and GNU ld
483
484If you have problems with dynamic loading using gcc on SunOS or
485Solaris, and you are using GNU as and GNU ld, see the section
486L<"GNU as and GNU ld"> above.
487
488=item ld.so.1: ./perl: fatal: relocation error:
489
490If you get this message on SunOS or Solaris, and you're using gcc,
491it's probably the GNU as or GNU ld problem in the previous item
492L<"GNU as and GNU ld">.
493
494=item dlopen: stub interception failed
495
496The primary cause of the 'dlopen: stub interception failed' message is
497that the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable includes a directory
498which is a symlink to /usr/lib (such as /lib). See
499L<"LD_LIBRARY_PATH"> above.
500
501=item #error "No DATAMODEL_NATIVE specified"
502
503This is a common error when trying to build perl on Solaris 2.6 with a
504gcc installation from Solaris 2.5 or 2.5.1. The Solaris header files
505changed, so you need to update your gcc installation. You can either
506rerun the fixincludes script from gcc or take the opportunity to
507update your gcc installation.
508
509=item sh: ar: not found
510
511This is a message from your shell telling you that the command 'ar'
512was not found. You need to check your PATH environment variable to
513make sure that it includes the directory with the 'ar' command. This
514is a common problem on Solaris, where 'ar' is in the /usr/ccs/bin/
515directory.
516
517=back
518
519=head1 MAKE TEST
520
a83b6f46 521=head2 op/stat.t test 4 in Solaris
d420ca49 522
523op/stat.t test 4 may fail if you are on a tmpfs of some sort.
524Building in /tmp sometimes shows this behavior. The
525test suite detects if you are building in /tmp, but it may not be able
526to catch all tmpfs situations.
527
1081c3b9 528=head2 nss_delete core dump from op/pwent or op/grent
529
530See L<perlhpux/"nss_delete core dump from op/pwent or op/grent">.
531
a83b6f46 532=head1 PREBUILT BINARIES OF PERL FOR SOLARIS.
d420ca49 533
534You can pick up prebuilt binaries for Solaris from
43857681 535L<http://www.sunfreeware.com/>, L<http://www.blastwave.org>,
536ActiveState L<http://www.activestate.com/>, and
537L<http://www.perl.com/> under the Binaries list at the top of the
538page. There are probably other sources as well. Please note that
539these sites are under the control of their respective owners, not the
540perl developers.
d420ca49 541
a83b6f46 542=head1 RUNTIME ISSUES FOR PERL ON SOLARIS.
d420ca49 543
a83b6f46 544=head2 Limits on Numbers of Open Files on Solaris.
d420ca49 545
43857681 546The stdio(3C) manpage notes that for LP32 applications, only 255
547files may be opened using fopen(), and only file descriptors 0
548through 255 can be used in a stream. Since perl calls open() and
549then fdopen(3C) with the resulting file descriptor, perl is limited
550to 255 simultaneous open files, even if sysopen() is used. If this
551proves to be an insurmountable problem, you can compile perl as a
552LP64 application, see L<Building an LP64 perl> for details. Note
553also that the default resource limit for open file descriptors on
554Solaris is 255, so you will have to modify your ulimit or rctl
555(Solaris 9 onwards) appropriately.
d420ca49 556
557=head1 SOLARIS-SPECIFIC MODULES.
558
43857681 559See the modules under the Solaris:: and Sun::Solaris namespaces on CPAN,
560see L<http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Solaris/> and
561L<http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Sun/>.
d420ca49 562
563=head1 SOLARIS-SPECIFIC PROBLEMS WITH MODULES.
564
a83b6f46 565=head2 Proc::ProcessTable on Solaris
d420ca49 566
567Proc::ProcessTable does not compile on Solaris with perl5.6.0 and higher
568if you have LARGEFILES defined. Since largefile support is the
569default in 5.6.0 and later, you have to take special steps to use this
570module.
571
572The problem is that various structures visible via procfs use off_t,
573and if you compile with largefile support these change from 32 bits to
57464 bits. Thus what you get back from procfs doesn't match up with
575the structures in perl, resulting in garbage. See proc(4) for further
576discussion.
577
578A fix for Proc::ProcessTable is to edit Makefile to
579explicitly remove the largefile flags from the ones MakeMaker picks up
580from Config.pm. This will result in Proc::ProcessTable being built
2a5ccb22 581under the correct environment. Everything should then be OK as long as
d420ca49 582Proc::ProcessTable doesn't try to share off_t's with the rest of perl,
583or if it does they should be explicitly specified as off64_t.
584
5511f325 585=head2 BSD::Resource on Solaris
d420ca49 586
587BSD::Resource versions earlier than 1.09 do not compile on Solaris
588with perl 5.6.0 and higher, for the same reasons as Proc::ProcessTable.
589BSD::Resource versions starting from 1.09 have a workaround for the problem.
590
5511f325 591=head2 Net::SSLeay on Solaris
2a5ccb22 592
43857681 593Net::SSLeay requires a /dev/urandom to be present. This device is
594available from Solaris 9 onwards. For earlier Solaris versions you
595can either get the package SUNWski (packaged with several Sun
596software products, for example the Sun WebServer, which is part of
597the Solaris Server Intranet Extension, or the Sun Directory Services,
598part of Solaris for ISPs) or download the ANDIrand package from
599L<http://www.cosy.sbg.ac.at/~andi/>. If you use SUNWski, make a
2a5ccb22 600symbolic link /dev/urandom pointing to /dev/random.
601
602It may be possible to use the Entropy Gathering Daemon (written in
603Perl!), available from L<http://www.lothar.com/tech/crypto/>.
604
d420ca49 605=head1 AUTHOR
606
607The original was written by Andy Dougherty F<doughera@lafayette.edu>
608drawing heavily on advice from Alan Burlison, Nick Ing-Simmons, Tim Bunce,
609and many other Solaris users over the years.
610
611Please report any errors, updates, or suggestions to F<perlbug@perl.org>.
612
613=head1 LAST MODIFIED
614
b29a8fb9 615$Id: README.solaris,v 1.4 2000/11/11 20:29:58 doughera Exp $