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1 | If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the equal signs on the left. |
2 | This file is written in the POD format (see [.POD]PERLPOD.POD;1) which is |
3 | specially designed to be readable as is. |
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4 | |
b4bc034f |
5 | =head1 NAME |
6 | |
7 | README.vms - Configuring, building, testing, and installing perl on VMS |
8 | |
9 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
10 | |
11 | To configure, build, test, and install perl on VMS: |
12 | |
13 | @ Configure |
14 | mms |
15 | mms test |
16 | mms install |
17 | |
18 | mmk may be used in place of mms in the last three steps. |
19 | |
20 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
21 | |
22 | =head2 Important safety tip |
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23 | |
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24 | The build and install procedures have changed significantly from the 5.004 |
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25 | releases! Make sure you read the "Configuring the Perl Build", "Building |
26 | Perl", and "Installing Perl" sections of this document before you build or |
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27 | install. Also please note other changes in the current release by having |
28 | a look at L<perldelta/VMS>. |
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29 | |
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30 | Also note that, as of Perl version 5.005 and later, an ANSI C compliant |
31 | compiler is required to build Perl. VAX C is *not* ANSI compliant, as it |
32 | died a natural death some time before the standard was set. Therefore |
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33 | VAX C will not compile Perl 5.005 or later. We are sorry about that. |
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34 | |
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35 | If you are stuck without Compaq (formerly DEC) C consider trying Gnu C |
36 | instead, though there have been no recent reports of builds using Gnu C. |
37 | There is minimal support for Compaq C++ but this support is not complete; |
38 | if you get it working please write to the vmsperl list (for info see |
39 | L</"Mailing Lists">). |
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40 | |
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41 | |
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42 | =head2 Introduction to Perl on VMS |
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43 | |
44 | The VMS port of Perl is as functionally complete as any other Perl port |
45 | (and as complete as the ports on some Unix systems). The Perl binaries |
46 | provide all the Perl system calls that are either available under VMS or |
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47 | reasonably emulated. There are some incompatibilities in process handling |
48 | (e.g. the fork/exec model for creating subprocesses doesn't do what you |
fb73857a |
49 | might expect under Unix), mainly because VMS and Unix handle processes and |
50 | sub-processes very differently. |
51 | |
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52 | There are still some unimplemented system functions, and of course we |
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53 | could use modules implementing useful VMS system services, so if you'd like |
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54 | to lend a hand we'd love to have you. Join the Perl Porting Team Now! |
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55 | |
56 | The current sources and build procedures have been tested on a VAX using |
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57 | DEC C, and on an AXP using DEC C. If you run into problems with |
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58 | other compilers, please let us know. (Note: DEC C was renamed to Compaq C |
59 | around version 6.2). |
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60 | |
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61 | There are issues with various versions of DEC C, so if you're not running a |
62 | relatively modern version, check the "DEC C issues" section later on in this |
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63 | document. |
64 | |
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65 | =head2 Other required software for Compiling Perl on VMS |
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66 | |
67 | In addition to VMS and DCL you will need two things: |
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68 | |
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69 | =over 4 |
70 | |
71 | =item 1 A C compiler. |
72 | |
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73 | DEC (now Compaq) C or gcc for VMS (AXP or VAX). |
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74 | |
75 | =item 2 A make tool. |
76 | |
77 | DEC's MMS (v2.6 or later), or MadGoat's free MMS |
78 | analog MMK (available from ftp.madgoat.com/madgoat) both work |
79 | just fine. Gnu Make might work, but it's been so long since |
80 | anyone's tested it that we're not sure. MMK is free though, so |
81 | go ahead and use that. |
82 | |
83 | =back |
84 | |
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85 | =head2 Additional software that is optional for Perl on VMS |
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86 | |
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87 | You may also want to have on hand: |
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88 | |
89 | =over 4 |
90 | |
91 | =item 1 GUNZIP/GZIP.EXE for VMS |
92 | |
93 | A de-compressor for *.gz and *.tgz files available from a number |
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94 | of web/ftp sites and is distributed on the OpenVMS Freeware CD-ROM |
95 | from Compaq. |
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96 | |
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97 | http://www.fsf.org/order/ftp.html |
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98 | http://www.openvms.compaq.com/freeware/ |
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99 | http://www.crinoid.com/utils/ |
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100 | |
101 | =item 2 VMS TAR |
102 | |
103 | For reading and writing unix tape archives (*.tar files). Vmstar is also |
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104 | available from a number of web/ftp sites and is distributed on the OpenVMS |
105 | Freeware CD-ROM from Compaq. |
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106 | |
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107 | ftp://ftp.lp.se/vms/ |
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108 | http://www.openvms.compaq.com/freeware/ |
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109 | |
110 | =item 3 UNZIP.EXE for VMS |
111 | |
112 | A combination decompressor and archive reader/writer for *.zip files. |
113 | Unzip is available from a number of web/ftp sites. |
114 | |
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115 | http://www.info-zip.org/UnZip.html |
116 | http://www.openvms.compaq.com/freeware/ |
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117 | ftp://ftp.openvms.compaq.com/ |
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118 | ftp://ftp.madgoat.com/madgoat/ |
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119 | ftp://ftp.process.com/vms-freeware/ |
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120 | |
121 | =item 4 MOST |
122 | |
123 | Most is an optional pager that is convenient to use with perldoc (unlike |
124 | TYPE/PAGE, MOST can go forward and backwards in a document and supports |
125 | regular expression searching). Most builds with the slang |
126 | library on VMS. Most and slang are available from: |
127 | |
128 | ftp://space.mit.edu/pub/davis/ |
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129 | ftp://ftp.process.com/vms-freeware/narnia/ |
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130 | |
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131 | =item 5 GNU PATCH and DIFFUTILS for VMS |
132 | |
133 | Patches to Perl are usually distributed as GNU unified or contextual diffs. |
134 | Such patches are created by the GNU diff program (part of the diffutils |
135 | distribution) and applied with GNU patch. VMS ports of these utilities are |
136 | available here: |
137 | |
138 | http://www.crinoid.com/utils/ |
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139 | http://www.openvms.compaq.com/freeware/ |
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140 | |
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141 | =back |
142 | |
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143 | Please note that UNZIP and GUNZIP are not the same thing (they work with |
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144 | different formats). Many of the useful files from CPAN (the Comprehensive |
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145 | Perl Archive Network) are in *.tar.gz or *.tgz format (this includes copies |
146 | of the source code for perl as well as modules and scripts that you may |
147 | wish to add later) hence you probably want to have GUNZIP.EXE and |
148 | VMSTAR.EXE on your VMS machine. |
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149 | |
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150 | If you want to include socket support, you'll need a TCP/IP stack and either |
151 | DEC C, or socket libraries. See the "Socket Support (optional)" topic |
152 | for more details. |
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153 | |
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154 | =head1 Configuring the Perl build |
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155 | |
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156 | To configure perl (a necessary first step), issue the command |
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157 | |
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158 | @ Configure |
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159 | |
b4bc034f |
160 | from the top of an unpacked perl source directory. You will be asked a |
161 | series of questions, and the answers to them (along with the capabilities |
162 | of your C compiler and network stack) will determine how perl is custom |
163 | built for your machine. |
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164 | |
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165 | If you have multiple C compilers installed, you'll have your choice of |
166 | which one to use. Various older versions of DEC C had some caveats, so if |
167 | you're using a version older than 5.2, check the "DEC C Issues" section. |
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168 | |
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169 | If you have any symbols or logical names in your environment that may |
170 | interfere with the build or regression testing of perl then configure.com |
171 | will try to warn you about them. If a logical name is causing |
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172 | you trouble but is in an LNM table that you do not have write access to |
173 | then try defining your own to a harmless equivalence string in a table |
174 | such that it is resolved before the other (e.g. if TMP is defined in the |
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175 | SYSTEM table then try DEFINE TMP "NL:" or somesuch in your process table) |
176 | otherwise simply deassign the dangerous logical names. The potentially |
177 | troublesome logicals and symbols are: |
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178 | |
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179 | COMP "LOGICAL" |
180 | EXT "LOGICAL" |
181 | FOO "LOGICAL" |
182 | LIB "LOGICAL" |
183 | LIST "LOGICAL" |
184 | MIME "LOGICAL" |
185 | POSIX "LOGICAL" |
186 | SYS "LOGICAL" |
187 | T "LOGICAL" |
188 | THREAD "LOGICAL" |
189 | THREADS "LOGICAL" |
190 | TIME "LOGICAL" |
191 | TMP "LOGICAL" |
192 | UNICODE "LOGICAL" |
193 | UTIL "LOGICAL" |
194 | TEST "SYMBOL" |
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195 | |
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196 | As a handy shortcut, the command: |
197 | |
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198 | @ Configure "-des" |
199 | |
200 | (note the quotation marks and case) will choose reasonable defaults |
201 | automatically (it takes DEC C over Gnu C, DEC C sockets over SOCKETSHR |
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202 | sockets, and either over no sockets). Some options can be given |
203 | explicitly on the command line; the following example specifies a |
204 | non-default location for where Perl will be installed: |
205 | |
206 | @ Configure "-d" "-Dprefix=dka100:[utils.perl5.]" |
207 | |
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208 | Note that the installation location would be by default where you unpacked |
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209 | the source with a "_ROOT." appended. For example if you unpacked the perl |
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210 | source into: |
211 | |
212 | DKA200:[PERL-5_10_2...] |
213 | |
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214 | Then the PERL_SETUP.COM that gets written out by CONFIGURE.COM will |
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215 | try to DEFINE your installation PERL_ROOT to be: |
216 | |
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217 | DKA200:[PERL-5_10_2_ROOT.] |
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218 | |
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219 | More help with configure.com is available from: |
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220 | |
221 | @ Configure "-h" |
222 | |
223 | See the "Changing compile-time options (optional)" section below to learn |
224 | even more details about how to influence the outcome of the important |
225 | configuration step. If you find yourself reconfiguring and rebuilding |
226 | then be sure to also follow the advice in the "Cleaning up and starting |
227 | fresh (optional)" and the checklist of items in the "CAVEATS" sections |
228 | below. |
229 | |
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230 | =head2 Changing compile-time options (optional) for Perl on VMS |
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231 | |
232 | Most of the user definable features of Perl are enabled or disabled in |
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233 | configure.com, which processes the hints file config_h.SH. There is |
234 | code in there to Do The Right Thing, but that may end up being the |
235 | wrong thing for you. Make sure you understand what you are doing since |
236 | inappropriate changes to configure.com or config_h.SH can render perl |
237 | unbuildable; odds are that there's nothing in there you'll need to |
238 | change. |
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239 | |
240 | The one exception is the various *DIR install locations. Changing those |
241 | requires changes in genconfig.pl as well. Be really careful if you need to |
242 | change these, as they can cause some fairly subtle problems. |
243 | |
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244 | =head2 Socket Support (optional) for Perl on VMS |
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245 | |
246 | Perl includes a number of functions for IP sockets, which are available if |
247 | you choose to compile Perl with socket support. Since IP networking is an |
248 | optional addition to VMS, there are several different IP stacks available. |
249 | How well integrated they are into the system depends on the stack, your |
250 | version of VMS, and the version of your C compiler. |
251 | |
252 | The most portable solution uses the SOCKETSHR library. In combination with |
253 | either UCX or NetLib, this supports all the major TCP stacks (Multinet, |
254 | Pathways, TCPWare, UCX, and CMU) on all versions of VMS Perl runs on, with |
255 | all the compilers on both VAX and Alpha. The socket interface is also |
256 | consistent across versions of VMS and C compilers. It has a problem with |
257 | UDP sockets when used with Multinet, though, so you should be aware of |
258 | that. |
259 | |
260 | The other solution available is to use the socket routines built into DEC |
261 | C. Which routines are available depend on the version of VMS you're |
262 | running, and require proper UCX emulation by your TCP/IP vendor. |
263 | Relatively current versions of Multinet, TCPWare, Pathway, and UCX all |
264 | provide the required libraries--check your manuals or release notes to see |
265 | if your version is new enough. |
266 | |
267 | =head1 Building Perl |
268 | |
269 | The configuration script will print out, at the very end, the MMS or MMK |
270 | command you need to compile perl. Issue it (exactly as printed) to start |
271 | the build. |
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272 | |
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273 | Once you issue your MMS or MMK command, sit back and wait. Perl should |
274 | compile and link without a problem. If a problem does occur check the |
275 | "CAVEATS" section of this document. If that does not help send some |
276 | mail to the VMSPERL mailing list. Instructions are in the "Mailing Lists" |
277 | section of this document. |
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278 | |
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279 | =head1 Testing Perl |
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280 | |
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281 | Once Perl has built cleanly you need to test it to make sure things work. |
282 | This step is very important since there are always things that can go wrong |
283 | somehow and yield a dysfunctional Perl for you. |
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284 | |
285 | Testing is very easy, though, as there's a full test suite in the perl |
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286 | distribution. To run the tests, enter the *exact* MMS line you used to |
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287 | compile Perl and add the word "test" to the end, like this: |
288 | |
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289 | If the compile command was: |
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290 | |
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291 | MMS |
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292 | |
b4bc034f |
293 | then the test command ought to be: |
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294 | |
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295 | MMS test |
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296 | |
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297 | MMS (or MMK) will run all the tests. This may take some time, as there are |
298 | a lot of tests. If any tests fail, there will be a note made on-screen. |
299 | At the end of all the tests, a summary of the tests, the number passed and |
300 | failed, and the time taken will be displayed. |
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301 | |
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302 | The test driver invoked via MMS TEST has a DCL wrapper ([.VMS]TEST.COM) that |
303 | downgrades privileges to NETMBX, TMPMBX for the duration of the test run, |
304 | and then restores them to their prior state upon completion of testing. |
305 | This is done to ensure that the tests run in a private sandbox and can do no |
306 | harm to your system even in the unlikely event something goes badly wrong in |
307 | one of the test scripts while running the tests from a privileged account. |
308 | A side effect of this safety precaution is that the account used to run the |
309 | test suite must be the owner of the directory tree in which Perl has been |
310 | built; otherwise the manipulations of temporary files and directories |
311 | attempted by some of the tests will fail. |
312 | |
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313 | If any tests fail, it means something is wrong with Perl. If the test suite |
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314 | hangs (some tests can take upwards of two or three minutes, or more if |
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315 | you're on an especially slow machine, depending on your machine speed, so |
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316 | don't be hasty), then the test *after* the last one displayed failed. Don't |
317 | install Perl unless you're confident that you're OK. Regardless of how |
318 | confident you are, make a bug report to the VMSPerl mailing list. |
319 | |
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320 | If one or more tests fail, you can get more information on the failure by |
321 | issuing this command sequence: |
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322 | |
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323 | @ [.VMS]TEST .typ "" "-v" [.subdir]test.T |
fb73857a |
324 | |
325 | where ".typ" is the file type of the Perl images you just built (if you |
326 | didn't do anything special, use .EXE), and "[.subdir]test.T" is the test |
327 | that failed. For example, with a normal Perl build, if the test indicated |
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328 | that t/op/time failed, then you'd do this: |
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329 | |
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330 | @ [.VMS]TEST .EXE "" "-v" [.OP]TIME.T |
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331 | |
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332 | Note that test names are reported in UNIX syntax and relative to the |
333 | top-level build directory. When supplying them individually to the test |
334 | driver, you can use either UNIX or VMS syntax, but you must give the path |
335 | relative to the [.T] directory and you must also add the .T extension to the |
336 | filename. So, for example if the test lib/Math/Trig fails, you would run: |
337 | |
338 | @ [.VMS]TEST .EXE "" -"v" [-.lib.math]trig.t |
339 | |
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340 | When you send in a bug report for failed tests, please include the output |
341 | from this command, which is run from the main source directory: |
342 | |
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343 | MCR []MINIPERL "-V" |
344 | |
345 | Note that -"V" really is a capital V in double quotes. This will dump out a |
346 | couple of screens worth of configuration information, and can help us |
347 | diagnose the problem. If (and only if) that did not work then try enclosing |
348 | the output of: |
349 | |
350 | MMS printconfig |
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351 | |
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352 | If (and only if) that did not work then try enclosing the output of: |
353 | |
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354 | @ [.vms]myconfig |
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355 | |
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356 | You may also be asked to provide your C compiler version ("CC/VERSION NL:" |
357 | with DEC C, "gcc --version" with GNU CC). To obtain the version of MMS or |
358 | MMK you are running try "MMS/ident" or "MMK /ident". The GNU make version |
359 | can be identified with "make --version". |
360 | |
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361 | =head2 Cleaning up and starting fresh (optional) installing Perl on VMS |
fb73857a |
362 | |
363 | If you need to recompile from scratch, you have to make sure you clean up |
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364 | first. There is a procedure to do it--enter the *exact* MMS line you used |
365 | to compile and add "realclean" at the end, like this: |
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366 | |
b4bc034f |
367 | if the compile command was: |
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368 | |
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369 | MMS |
fb73857a |
370 | |
b4bc034f |
371 | then the cleanup command ought to be: |
fb73857a |
372 | |
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373 | MMS realclean |
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374 | |
b4bc034f |
375 | If you do not do this things may behave erratically during the subsequent |
376 | rebuild attempt. They might not, too, so it is best to be sure and do it. |
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377 | |
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378 | =head1 Installing Perl |
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379 | |
380 | There are several steps you need to take to get Perl installed and |
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381 | running. |
fb73857a |
382 | |
a3ef2c6f |
383 | =over 4 |
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384 | |
a3ef2c6f |
385 | =item 1 |
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386 | |
a3ef2c6f |
387 | Check your default file protections with |
fb73857a |
388 | |
a3ef2c6f |
389 | SHOW PROTECTION /DEFAULT |
fb73857a |
390 | |
a3ef2c6f |
391 | and adjust if necessary with SET PROTECTION=(code)/DEFAULT. |
fb73857a |
392 | |
a3ef2c6f |
393 | =item 2 |
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394 | |
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395 | Decide where you want Perl to be installed (unless you have already done so |
396 | by using the "prefix" configuration parameter -- see the example in the |
397 | "Configuring the Perl build" section). |
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398 | |
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399 | The DCL script PERL_SETUP.COM that is written by CONFIGURE.COM will help you |
400 | with the definition of the PERL_ROOT and PERLSHR logical names and the PERL |
401 | foreign command symbol. Take a look at PERL_SETUP.COM and modify it if you |
402 | want to. The installation process will execute PERL_SETUP.COM and copy |
403 | files to the directory tree pointed to by the PERL_ROOT logical name defined |
404 | there, so make sure that you have write access to the parent directory of |
405 | what will become the root of your Perl installation. |
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406 | |
a3ef2c6f |
407 | =item 3 |
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408 | |
a3ef2c6f |
409 | Run the install script via: |
b4bc034f |
410 | |
a3ef2c6f |
411 | MMS install |
b4bc034f |
412 | |
a3ef2c6f |
413 | or |
9f3f8d50 |
414 | |
a3ef2c6f |
415 | MMK install |
b4bc034f |
416 | |
a3ef2c6f |
417 | If for some reason it complains about target INSTALL being up to date, |
418 | throw a /FORCE switch on the MMS or MMK command. |
b4bc034f |
419 | |
a3ef2c6f |
420 | =back |
421 | |
1bc81404 |
422 | Copy PERL_SETUP.COM to a place accessible to your perl users. |
423 | |
a3ef2c6f |
424 | For example: |
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425 | |
a3ef2c6f |
426 | COPY PERL_SETUP.COM SYS$LIBRARY: |
b4bc034f |
427 | |
a3ef2c6f |
428 | If you want to have everyone on the system have access to perl |
429 | then add a line that reads |
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430 | |
a3ef2c6f |
431 | $ @sys$library:perl_setup |
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432 | |
a3ef2c6f |
433 | to SYS$MANAGER:SYLOGIN.COM. |
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434 | |
a3ef2c6f |
435 | Two alternatives to the foreign symbol would be to install PERL into |
436 | DCLTABLES.EXE (Check out the section "Installing Perl into DCLTABLES |
437 | (optional)" for more information), or put the image in a |
438 | directory that's in your DCL$PATH (if you're using VMS V6.2 or higher). |
85988417 |
439 | |
a3ef2c6f |
440 | An alternative to having PERL_SETUP.COM define the PERLSHR logical name |
441 | is to simply copy it into the system shareable library directory with: |
442 | |
443 | copy perl_root:[000000]perlshr.exe sys$share: |
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444 | |
a3ef2c6f |
445 | See also the "INSTALLing images (optional)" section. |
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446 | |
a83b6f46 |
447 | =head2 Installing Perl into DCLTABLES (optional) on VMS |
fb73857a |
448 | |
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449 | Execute the following command file to define PERL as a DCL command. |
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450 | You'll need CMKRNL privilege to install the new dcltables.exe. |
fb73857a |
451 | |
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452 | $ create perl.cld |
453 | ! |
454 | ! modify to reflect location of your perl.exe |
455 | ! |
456 | define verb perl |
457 | image perl_root:[000000]perl.exe |
458 | cliflags (foreign) |
459 | $! |
460 | $ set command perl /table=sys$common:[syslib]dcltables.exe - |
461 | /output=sys$common:[syslib]dcltables.exe |
462 | $ install replace sys$common:[syslib]dcltables.exe |
463 | $ exit |
fb73857a |
464 | |
a83b6f46 |
465 | =head2 INSTALLing Perl images (optional) on VMS |
9f3f8d50 |
466 | |
467 | On systems that are using perl quite a bit, and particularly those with |
468 | minimal RAM, you can boost the performance of perl by INSTALLing it as |
adc5a9a5 |
469 | a known image. PERLSHR.EXE is typically larger than 3000 blocks |
9f3f8d50 |
470 | and that is a reasonably large amount of IO to load each time perl is |
471 | invoked. |
472 | |
473 | INSTALL ADD PERLSHR/SHARE |
b4bc034f |
474 | INSTALL ADD PERL/HEADER |
9f3f8d50 |
475 | |
476 | should be enough for PERLSHR.EXE (/share implies /header and /open), |
477 | while /HEADER should do for PERL.EXE (perl.exe is not a shared image). |
478 | |
b4bc034f |
479 | If your code 'use's modules, check to see if there is a shareable image for |
480 | them, too. In the base perl build, POSIX, IO, Fcntl, Opcode, SDBM_File, |
e7948fac |
481 | DCLsym, and Stdio, and other extensions all have shared images that can be |
482 | installed /SHARE. |
9f3f8d50 |
483 | |
b4bc034f |
484 | How much of a win depends on your memory situation, but if you are firing |
9f3f8d50 |
485 | off perl with any regularity (like more than once every 20 seconds or so) |
b4bc034f |
486 | it is probably beneficial to INSTALL at least portions of perl. |
9f3f8d50 |
487 | |
488 | While there is code in perl to remove privileges as it runs you are advised |
489 | to NOT INSTALL PERL.EXE with PRIVs! |
fb73857a |
490 | |
dab31494 |
491 | =head2 Running h2ph to create perl header files (optional) on VMS |
492 | |
493 | If using DEC C or Compaq C ensure that you have extracted loose versions |
494 | of your compiler's header or *.H files. Be sure to check the contents of: |
495 | |
496 | SYS$LIBRARY:DECC$RTLDEF.TLB |
497 | SYS$LIBRARY:SYS$LIB_C.TLB |
498 | SYS$LIBRARY:SYS$STARLET_C.TLB |
499 | |
500 | etcetera. |
501 | |
502 | If using GNU cc then also check your GNU_CC:[000000...] tree for the locations |
503 | of the GNU cc headers. |
504 | |
b4bc034f |
505 | =head1 Reporting Bugs |
fb73857a |
506 | |
507 | If you come across what you think might be a bug in Perl, please report |
508 | it. There's a script in PERL_ROOT:[UTILS], perlbug, that walks you through |
509 | the process of creating a bug report. This script includes details of your |
510 | installation, and is very handy. Completed bug reports should go to |
9f3f8d50 |
511 | perlbug@perl.com. |
fb73857a |
512 | |
b4bc034f |
513 | =head1 CAVEATS |
fb73857a |
514 | |
515 | Probably the single biggest gotcha in compiling Perl is giving the wrong |
b4bc034f |
516 | switches to MMS/MMK when you build. Use *exactly* what the configure.com |
517 | script prints! |
518 | |
519 | The next big gotcha is directory depth. Perl can create directories four, |
520 | five, or even six levels deep during the build, so you don't have to be |
dab31494 |
521 | too deep to start to hit the RMS 8 level limit (for ODS 2 volumes which were |
522 | common on versions of VMS prior to V7.2 and even with V7.2 on the VAX). |
523 | It is best to do: |
b4bc034f |
524 | |
525 | DEFINE/TRANS=(CONC,TERM) PERLSRC "disk:[dir.dir.dir.perldir.]" |
526 | SET DEFAULT PERLSRC:[000000] |
527 | |
528 | before building in cases where you have to unpack the distribution so deep |
529 | (note the trailing period in the definition of PERLSRC). Perl modules |
530 | from CPAN can be just as bad (or worse), so watch out for them, too. Perl's |
531 | configuration script will warn if it thinks you are too deep (at least on |
532 | a VAX or on Alpha versions of VMS prior to 7.2). But MakeMaker will not |
533 | warn you if you start out building a module too deep in a directory. |
534 | |
535 | Be sure that the process that you use to build perl has a PGFLQ greater |
536 | than 100000. Be sure to have a correct local time zone to UTC offset |
537 | defined (in seconds) in the logical name SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL before |
538 | running the regression test suite. The SYS$MANAGER:UTC$CONFIGURE_TDF.COM |
539 | procedure will help you set that logical for your system but may require |
540 | system privileges. For example, a location 5 hours west of UTC (such as |
541 | the US East coast while not on daylight savings time) would have: |
542 | |
543 | DEFINE SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL "-18000" |
544 | |
545 | A final thing that causes trouble is leftover pieces from a failed |
546 | build. If things go wrong make sure you do a "(MMK|MMS|make) realclean" |
fb73857a |
547 | before you rebuild. |
548 | |
a83b6f46 |
549 | =head2 DEC C issues with Perl on VMS |
fb73857a |
550 | |
b4bc034f |
551 | Note to DEC C users: Some early versions (pre-5.2, some pre-4. If you're DEC |
c54e8273 |
552 | C 5.x or higher, with current patches if any, you're fine) of the DECCRTL |
fb73857a |
553 | contained a few bugs which affect Perl performance: |
b4bc034f |
554 | |
555 | =over 4 |
556 | |
557 | =item - pipes |
558 | |
559 | Newlines are lost on I/O through pipes, causing lines to run together. |
560 | This shows up as RMS RTB errors when reading from a pipe. You can |
561 | work around this by having one process write data to a file, and |
562 | then having the other read the file, instead of the pipe. This is |
563 | fixed in version 4 of DEC C. |
564 | |
565 | =item - modf() |
566 | |
567 | The modf() routine returns a non-integral value for some values above |
568 | INT_MAX; the Perl "int" operator will return a non-integral value in |
569 | these cases. This is fixed in version 4 of DEC C. |
570 | |
571 | =item - ALPACRT ECO |
572 | |
573 | On the AXP, if SYSNAM privilege is enabled, the CRTL chdir() routine |
574 | changes the process default device and directory permanently, even |
575 | though the call specified that the change should not persist after |
576 | Perl exited. This is fixed by DEC CSC patch ALPACRT04_061 or later. |
577 | See also: |
578 | |
172b4273 |
579 | http://ftp.support.compaq.com/patches/.new/openvms.shtml |
b4bc034f |
580 | |
581 | =back |
582 | |
583 | Please note that in later versions "DEC C" may also be known as |
584 | "Compaq C". |
585 | |
a83b6f46 |
586 | =head2 GNU issues with Perl on VMS |
b4bc034f |
587 | |
588 | It has been a while since the GNU utilities such as GCC or GNU make |
589 | were used to build perl on VMS. Hence they may require a great deal |
590 | of source code modification to work again. |
591 | |
592 | http://slacvx.slac.stanford.edu/HELP/GCC |
593 | http://www.progis.de/ |
b4bc034f |
594 | http://www.lp.se/products/gnu.html |
595 | |
e7948fac |
596 | =head2 Floating Point Considerations |
597 | |
598 | Prior to 5.8.0, Perl simply accepted the default floating point options of the |
599 | C compiler, namely representing doubles with D_FLOAT on VAX and G_FLOAT on |
600 | Alpha. Single precision floating point values are represented in F_FLOAT |
601 | format when either D_FLOAT or G_FLOAT is in use for doubles. Beginning with |
602 | 5.8.0, Alpha builds now use IEEE floating point formats by default, which in |
603 | VMS parlance are S_FLOAT for singles and T_FLOAT for doubles. IEEE is not |
604 | available on VAX, so F_FLOAT and D_FLOAT remain the defaults for singles and |
605 | doubles respectively. The available non-default options are G_FLOAT on VAX |
606 | and D_FLOAT or G_FLOAT on Alpha. |
607 | |
608 | The use of IEEE on Alpha introduces NaN, infinity, and denormalization |
609 | capabilities not available with D_FLOAT and G_FLOAT. When using one of those |
610 | non-IEEE formats, silent underflow and overflow are emulated in the conversion |
611 | of strings to numbers, but it is preferable to get the real thing by using |
612 | IEEE where possible. |
613 | |
614 | Regardless of what floating point format you consider preferable, be aware |
615 | that the choice may have an impact on compatibility with external libraries, |
616 | such as database interfaces, and with existing data, such as data created with |
617 | the C<pack> function and written to disk, or data stored via the Storable |
618 | extension. For example, a C<pack("d", $foo)")> will create a D_FLOAT, |
619 | G_FLOAT, or T_FLOAT depending on what your Perl was configured with. When |
620 | written to disk, the value can only be retrieved later by a Perl configured |
621 | with the same floating point option that was in effect when it was created. |
622 | |
623 | To obtain a non-IEEE build on Alpha, simply answer no to the "Use IEEE math?" |
624 | question during the configuration. To obtain an option different from the C |
625 | compiler default on either VAX or Alpha, put in the option that you want in |
626 | answer to the "Any additional cc flags?" question. For example, to obtain a |
627 | G_FLOAT build on VAX, put in C</FLOAT=G_FLOAT>. |
628 | |
49fd6f17 |
629 | =head2 Multinet issues with Perl on VMS |
630 | |
631 | Prior to the release of Perl 5.8.0 it was noted that the regression |
632 | test for lib/Net/hostent (in file [.lib.Net]hostent.t) will fail owing |
633 | to problems with the hostent structure returned by C calls to either |
634 | gethostbyname() or gethostbyaddr() using DEC or Compaq C with a |
635 | Multinet TCP/IP stack. The problem was noted in Multinet 4.3A |
636 | using either Compaq C 6.5 or DEC C 6.0, and with Multinet 4.2A |
637 | using DEC C 5.2, but could easily affect other versions of Multinet. |
c2a352b2 |
638 | Process Software Inc. has acknowledged a bug in the Multinet version |
639 | of UCX$IPC_SHR and has provided an ECO for it. The ECO is called |
640 | UCX_LIBRARY_EMULATION-010_A044 and is available from: |
49fd6f17 |
641 | |
642 | http://www.multinet.process.com/eco.html |
643 | |
c2a352b2 |
644 | As of this writing, the ECO is only available for Multinet versions |
645 | 4.3A and later. You may determine the version of Multinet that you |
646 | are running using the command: |
49fd6f17 |
647 | |
648 | multinet show /version |
649 | |
650 | from the DCL command prompt. |
651 | |
c2a352b2 |
652 | If the ECO is unavailable for your version of Multinet and you are |
653 | unable to upgrade, you might try using Perl programming constructs |
654 | such as: |
49fd6f17 |
655 | |
656 | $address = substr($gethostbyname_addr,0,4); |
657 | |
658 | to temporarily work around the problem, or if you are brave |
659 | and do not mind the possibility of breaking IPv6 addresses, |
660 | you might modify the pp_sys.c file to add an ad-hoc correction |
661 | like so: |
662 | |
663 | |
664 | --- pp_sys.c;1 Thu May 30 14:42:17 2002 |
665 | +++ pp_sys.c Thu May 30 12:54:02 2002 |
666 | @@ -4684,6 +4684,10 @@ |
667 | } |
668 | #endif |
669 | |
670 | + if (hent) { |
671 | + hent->h_length = 4; |
672 | + } |
673 | + |
674 | if (GIMME != G_ARRAY) { |
675 | PUSHs(sv = sv_newmortal()); |
676 | if (hent) { |
677 | |
678 | then re-compile and re-test your perl. After the installation |
679 | of the Multinet ECO you ought to back out any such changes though. |
680 | |
b4bc034f |
681 | =head1 Mailing Lists |
682 | |
683 | There are several mailing lists available to the Perl porter. For VMS |
fb73857a |
684 | specific issues (including both Perl questions and installation problems) |
b4bc034f |
685 | there is the VMSPERL mailing list. It is usually a low-volume (10-12 |
fb73857a |
686 | messages a week) mailing list. |
687 | |
1bc81404 |
688 | To subscribe, send a mail message to VMSPERL-SUBSCRIBE@PERL.ORG. The VMSPERL |
689 | mailing list address is VMSPERL@PERL.ORG. Any mail sent there gets echoed |
690 | to all subscribers of the list. There is a searchable archive of the list |
691 | on the web at: |
b4bc034f |
692 | |
693 | http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/vmsperl/ |
a83b6f46 |
694 | |
1bc81404 |
695 | To unsubscribe from VMSPERL send a message to VMSPERL-UNSUBSCRIBE@PERL.ORG. |
696 | Be sure to do so from the subscribed account that you are canceling. |
b4bc034f |
697 | |
a83b6f46 |
698 | =head2 Web sites for Perl on VMS |
b4bc034f |
699 | |
700 | Vmsperl pages on the web include: |
701 | |
702 | http://www.sidhe.org/vmsperl/index.html |
1bc81404 |
703 | http://www.crinoid.com/ |
b4bc034f |
704 | http://duphy4.physics.drexel.edu/pub/cgi_info.htmlx |
468f45d5 |
705 | http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/VMS/ |
60d9c7be |
706 | http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/vmsperl/ |
b4bc034f |
707 | http://www.best.com/~pvhp/vms/ |
adc5a9a5 |
708 | http://www-ang.kfunigraz.ac.at/~binder/perl.html |
60d9c7be |
709 | http://lists.perl.org/showlist.cgi?name=vmsperl |
710 | http://archive.develooper.com/vmsperl@perl.org/ |
adc5a9a5 |
711 | http://www.openvms.compaq.com/openvms/products/ips/apache/csws_modperl.html |
fb73857a |
712 | |
b4bc034f |
713 | =head1 SEE ALSO |
714 | |
715 | Perl information for users and programmers about the port of perl to VMS is |
716 | available from the [.VMS]PERLVMS.POD file that gets installed as L<perlvms>. |
717 | For administrators the perlvms document also includes a detailed discussion |
718 | of extending vmsperl with CPAN modules after Perl has been installed. |
719 | |
720 | =head1 AUTHORS |
721 | |
adc5a9a5 |
722 | Revised 10-October-2001 by Craig Berry craigberry@mac.com. |
1bc81404 |
723 | Revised 25-February-2000 by Peter Prymmer pvhp@best.com. |
724 | Revised 27-October-1999 by Craig Berry craigberry@mac.com. |
b4bc034f |
725 | Revised 01-March-1999 by Dan Sugalski dan@sidhe.org. |
726 | Originally by Charles Bailey bailey@newman.upenn.edu. |
727 | |
728 | =head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
fb73857a |
729 | |
730 | A real big thanks needs to go to Charles Bailey |
b4bc034f |
731 | bailey@newman.upenn.edu, who is ultimately responsible for Perl 5.004 |
fb73857a |
732 | running on VMS. Without him, nothing the rest of us have done would be at |
733 | all important. |
734 | |
735 | There are, of course, far too many people involved in the porting and testing |
736 | of Perl to mention everyone who deserves it, so please forgive us if we've |
737 | missed someone. That said, special thanks are due to the following: |
b4bc034f |
738 | |
739 | Tim Adye T.J.Adye@rl.ac.uk |
fb73857a |
740 | for the VMS emulations of getpw*() |
b4bc034f |
741 | David Denholm denholm@conmat.phys.soton.ac.uk |
fb73857a |
742 | for extensive testing and provision of pipe and SocketShr code, |
b4bc034f |
743 | Mark Pizzolato mark@infocomm.com |
fb73857a |
744 | for the getredirection() code |
b4bc034f |
745 | Rich Salz rsalz@bbn.com |
fb73857a |
746 | for readdir() and related routines |
b4bc034f |
747 | Peter Prymmer pvhp@best.com |
fb73857a |
748 | for extensive testing, as well as development work on |
749 | configuration and documentation for VMS Perl, |
b4bc034f |
750 | Dan Sugalski dan@sidhe.org |
fb73857a |
751 | for extensive contributions to recent version support, |
752 | development of VMS-specific extensions, and dissemination |
753 | of information about VMS Perl, |
754 | the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory and the |
755 | Laboratory of Nuclear Studies at Cornell University for |
9f3f8d50 |
756 | the opportunity to test and develop for the AXP, |
a3ef2c6f |
757 | John Hasstedt John.Hasstedt@sunysb.edu |
758 | for VAX VMS V7.2 support |
b4bc034f |
759 | |
fb73857a |
760 | and to the entire VMSperl group for useful advice and suggestions. In |
761 | addition the perl5-porters deserve credit for their creativity and |
762 | willingness to work with the VMS newcomers. Finally, the greatest debt of |
b4bc034f |
763 | gratitude is due to Larry Wall larry@wall.org, for having the ideas which |
fb73857a |
764 | have made our sleepless nights possible. |
765 | |
766 | Thanks, |
767 | The VMSperl group |
b4bc034f |
768 | |
769 | =cut |
770 | |