3 # If these # comments don't work, trim them. Don't worry about any other
4 # shell scripts, Configure will trim # comments from them for you.
6 # (If you are trying to port this package to a machine without sh,
7 # I would suggest you have a look at the prototypical config_h.SH file
8 # and edit it to reflect your system. Some packages may include samples
9 # of config.h for certain machines, so you might look for one of those.)
11 # Yes, you may rip this off to use in other distribution packages. This
12 # script belongs to the public domain and cannot be copyrighted.
14 # (Note: this Configure script was generated automatically. Rather than
15 # working with this copy of Configure, you may wish to get metaconfig.
16 # The dist-3.0 package (which contains metaconfig) was posted in
17 # comp.sources.misc so you may fetch it yourself from your nearest
18 # archive site. Check with Archie if you don't know where that can be.)
21 # $Id: Head.U,v 3.0.1.8 1995/07/25 13:40:02 ram Exp $
23 # Generated on Sat Feb 1 00:26:40 EST 1997 [metaconfig 3.0 PL60]
28 SCO csh still thinks true is false. Write to SCO today and tell them that next
29 year Configure ought to "rm /bin/csh" unless they fix their blasted shell. :-)
31 (Actually, Configure ought to just patch csh in place. Hmm. Hmmmmm. All
32 we'd have to do is go in and swap the && and || tokens, wherever they are.)
34 [End of diatribe. We now return you to your regularly scheduled programming...]
38 OOPS! You naughty creature! You didn't run Configure with sh!
39 I will attempt to remedy the situation by running sh for you...
42 true || cat /tmp/c1$$ /tmp/c2$$
43 true || exec sh $0 $argv:q
45 (exit $?0) || cat /tmp/c2$$
46 (exit $?0) || exec sh $0 $argv:q
47 rm -f /tmp/c1$$ /tmp/c2$$
49 : compute my invocation name
53 me=`echo $0 | sed -e 's!.*/\(.*\)!\1!' 2>/dev/null`
58 : Proper PATH separator
60 : On OS/2 this directory should exist if this is not floppy only system :-]
61 if test -d c:/. -a -n "$OS2_SHELL"; then
63 PATH=`cmd /c "echo %PATH%" | tr '\\\\' / `
64 OS2_SHELL=`cmd /c "echo %OS2_SHELL%" | tr '\\\\' / | tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'`
66 if test -d c:/. -a -n "$DJDIR"; then
71 paths='/bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin /usr/ucb /usr/local /usr/lbin'
72 paths="$paths /opt/bin /opt/local/bin /opt/local /opt/lbin"
73 paths="$paths /usr/5bin /etc /usr/gnu/bin /usr/new /usr/new/bin /usr/nbin"
74 paths="$paths /opt/gnu/bin /opt/new /opt/new/bin /opt/nbin"
75 paths="$paths /sys5.3/bin /sys5.3/usr/bin /bsd4.3/bin /bsd4.3/usr/ucb"
76 paths="$paths /bsd4.3/usr/bin /usr/bsd /bsd43/bin /usr/ccs/bin"
77 paths="$paths /etc /usr/lib /usr/ucblib /lib /usr/ccs/lib"
78 paths="$paths /sbin /usr/sbin /usr/libexec"
84 *) test -d $p && PATH=$PATH$p_$p ;;
91 : This should not matter in scripts, but apparently it does, sometimes
99 echo "Say 'sh $me', not 'sh <$me'"
103 : Test and see if we are running under ksh, either blatantly or in disguise.
104 if (PATH=.; alias -x) >/dev/null 2>&1; then
105 : running under ksh. Is this a good thing?
106 if test -d /usr/lpp -a -f /usr/bin/bsh -a -f /usr/bin/uname ; then
107 if test X`/usr/bin/uname -v` = X4 ; then
108 : on AIX 4, /bin/sh is really ksh, and it causes us problems.
111 (Feeding myself to /usr/bin/bsh to avoid AIX 4's /bin/sh.)
114 exec /usr/bin/bsh $0 "$@"
117 if test ! -f /hp-ux ; then
118 : Warn them if they use ksh on other systems
120 (I see you are using the Korn shell. Some ksh's blow up on $me,
121 especially on older exotic systems. If yours does, try the Bourne
128 : Not running under ksh. Maybe we should be?
129 : On HP-UX, large Configure scripts may exercise a bug in /bin/sh
130 if test -f /hp-ux -a -f /bin/ksh; then
132 (Feeding myself to ksh to avoid nasty sh bug in "here document" expansion.)
135 exec /bin/ksh $0 "$@"
139 : Configure runs within the UU subdirectory
140 test -d UU || mkdir UU
506 d_pthreads_created_joinable=''
657 smallmach='pdp11 i8086 z8000 i80286 iAPX286'
660 : We must find out about Eunice early
662 if test -f /etc/unixtovms; then
663 eunicefix=/etc/unixtovms
665 if test -f /etc/unixtovms.exe; then
666 eunicefix=/etc/unixtovms.exe
669 : list of known cpp symbols, sorted alphabetically
670 al="AMIX BIT_MSF BSD BSD4_3 BSD_NET2 CMU CRAY DGUX DOLPHIN DPX2"
671 al="$al GO32 GOULD_PN HP700 I386 I80960 I960 Lynx M68000 M68K MACH"
672 al="$al MIPSEB MIPSEL MSDOS MTXINU MULTIMAX MVS"
673 al="$al M_COFF M_I186 M_I286 M_I386 M_I8086 M_I86 M_I86SM"
674 al="$al M_SYS3 M_SYS5 M_SYSIII M_SYSV M_UNIX M_XENIX"
675 al="$al NeXT OCS88 OSF1 PARISC PC532 PORTAR POSIX"
676 al="$al PWB R3000 RES RISC6000 RT Sun386i SVR3 SVR4"
677 al="$al SYSTYPE_BSD SYSTYPE_SVR4 SYSTYPE_SYSV Tek4132 Tek4300"
678 al="$al UMAXV USGr4 USGr4_2 UTEK UTS UTek UnicomPBB UnicomPBD Utek"
679 al="$al VMS Xenix286"
680 al="$al _AIX _AIX32 _AIX370 _AM29000 _COFF _CRAY _CX_UX _EPI"
681 al="$al _IBMESA _IBMR2 _M88K _M88KBCS_TARGET"
682 al="$al _MIPSEB _MIPSEL _M_COFF _M_I86 _M_I86SM _M_SYS3"
683 al="$al _M_SYS5 _M_SYSIII _M_SYSV _M_UNIX _M_XENIX _NLS _PGC_ _R3000"
684 al="$al _SYSTYPE_BSD _SYSTYPE_BSD43 _SYSTYPE_SVR4"
685 al="$al _SYSTYPE_SYSV _SYSV3 _U370 _UNICOS"
686 al="$al __386BSD__ __BIG_ENDIAN __BIG_ENDIAN__ __BSD_4_4__"
687 al="$al __DGUX__ __DPX2__ __H3050R __H3050RX"
688 al="$al __LITTLE_ENDIAN __LITTLE_ENDIAN__ __MACH__"
689 al="$al __MIPSEB __MIPSEB__ __MIPSEL __MIPSEL__"
690 al="$al __Next__ __OSF1__ __PARAGON__ __PGC__ __PWB __STDC__"
691 al="$al __SVR4_2__ __UMAXV__"
692 al="$al ____386BSD____ __alpha __alpha__ __amiga"
693 al="$al __bsd4_2 __bsd4_2__ __bsdi__ __convex__"
694 al="$al __host_mips__"
695 al="$al __hp9000s200 __hp9000s300 __hp9000s400 __hp9000s500"
696 al="$al __hp9000s500 __hp9000s700 __hp9000s800"
697 al="$al __hppa __hpux __hp_osf __i286 __i286__ __i386 __i386__"
698 al="$al __i486 __i486__ __i860 __i860__ __ibmesa __ksr1__ __linux__"
699 al="$al __m68k __m68k__ __m88100__ __m88k __m88k__"
700 al="$al __mc68000 __mc68000__ __mc68020 __mc68020__"
701 al="$al __mc68030 __mc68030__ __mc68040 __mc68040__"
702 al="$al __mc88100 __mc88100__ __mips __mips__"
703 al="$al __motorola__ __osf__ __pa_risc __sparc__ __stdc__"
704 al="$al __sun __sun__ __svr3__ __svr4__ __ultrix __ultrix__"
705 al="$al __unix __unix__ __uxpm__ __uxps__ __vax __vax__"
706 al="$al _host_mips _mips _unix"
707 al="$al a29k aegis aix aixpc alliant alpha am29000 amiga ansi ardent"
708 al="$al apollo ardent att386 att3b"
709 al="$al bsd bsd43 bsd4_2 bsd4_3 bsd4_4 bsdi bull"
710 al="$al cadmus clipper concurrent convex cray ctix"
711 al="$al dmert encore gcos gcx gimpel gould"
712 al="$al hbullx20 hcx host_mips hp200 hp300 hp700 hp800"
713 al="$al hp9000 hp9000s300 hp9000s400 hp9000s500"
714 al="$al hp9000s700 hp9000s800 hp9k8 hppa hpux"
715 al="$al i186 i286 i386 i486 i8086"
716 al="$al i80960 i860 iAPX286 ibm ibm032 ibmrt interdata is68k"
717 al="$al ksr1 linux luna luna88k m68k m88100 m88k"
718 al="$al mc300 mc500 mc68000 mc68010 mc68020 mc68030"
719 al="$al mc68040 mc68060 mc68k mc68k32 mc700"
720 al="$al mc88000 mc88100 merlin mert mips mvs n16"
721 al="$al ncl_el ncl_mr"
722 al="$al news1500 news1700 news1800 news1900 news3700"
723 al="$al news700 news800 news900 ns16000 ns32000"
724 al="$al ns32016 ns32332 ns32k nsc32000 os osf"
725 al="$al parisc pc532 pdp11 plexus posix pyr"
726 al="$al riscix riscos scs sequent sgi sinix sony sony_news"
727 al="$al sonyrisc sparc sparclite spectrum stardent stratos"
728 al="$al sun sun3 sun386 svr4 sysV68 sysV88"
729 al="$al titan tower tower32 tower32_200 tower32_600 tower32_700"
730 al="$al tower32_800 tower32_850 tss u370 u3b u3b2 u3b20 u3b200"
731 al="$al u3b20d u3b5 ultrix unix unixpc unos vax venix vms"
736 : default library list
738 : set useposix=false in your hint file to disable the POSIX extension.
740 : set useopcode=false in your hint file to disable the Opcode extension.
742 : Define several unixisms. These can be used in hint files.
744 : Extra object files, if any, needed on this platform.
746 : Possible local include directories to search.
747 : Set locincpth to "" in a hint file to defeat local include searches.
748 locincpth="/usr/local/include /opt/local/include /usr/gnu/include"
749 locincpth="$locincpth /opt/gnu/include /usr/GNU/include /opt/GNU/include"
751 : no include file wanted by default
754 : change the next line if compiling for Xenix/286 on Xenix/386
755 xlibpth='/usr/lib/386 /lib/386'
757 : Possible local library directories to search.
758 loclibpth="/usr/local/lib /opt/local/lib /usr/gnu/lib"
759 loclibpth="$loclibpth /opt/gnu/lib /usr/GNU/lib /opt/GNU/lib"
761 : general looking path for locating libraries
762 glibpth="/shlib /usr/shlib /usr/lib/pa1.1 /usr/lib/large"
763 glibpth="$glibpth /lib /usr/lib $xlibpth"
764 glibpth="$glibpth /lib/large /usr/lib/small /lib/small"
765 glibpth="$glibpth /usr/ccs/lib /usr/ucblib /usr/local/lib"
767 : Private path used by Configure to find libraries. Its value
768 : is prepended to libpth. This variable takes care of special
769 : machines, like the mips. Usually, it should be empty.
772 : full support for void wanted by default
775 : List of libraries we want.
776 libswanted='sfio net socket inet nsl nm ndbm gdbm dbm db malloc dl'
777 libswanted="$libswanted dld ld sun m c cposix posix ndir dir crypt"
778 libswanted="$libswanted ucb bsd BSD PW x"
779 : We probably want to search /usr/shlib before most other libraries.
780 : This is only used by the lib/ExtUtils/MakeMaker.pm routine extliblist.
781 glibpth=`echo " $glibpth " | sed -e 's! /usr/shlib ! !'`
782 glibpth="/usr/shlib $glibpth"
783 : Do not use vfork unless overridden by a hint file.
786 : Find the basic shell for Bourne shell scripts
789 : SYSTYPE is for some older MIPS systems.
790 : I do not know if it is still needed.
792 *bsd*|sys5*) xxx="/$SYSTYPE/bin/sh";;
795 if test -f "$xxx"; then
798 : Build up a list and do a single loop so we can 'break' out.
799 pth=`echo $PATH | sed -e "s/$p_/ /g"`
800 for xxx in sh bash ksh pdksh ash; do
802 try="$try ${p}/${xxx}"
806 if test -f "$xxx"; then
808 echo "Your Bourne shell appears to be in $sh."
810 elif test -f "$xxx.exe"; then
812 echo "Hmm. Your Bourne shell appears to be in $sh."
822 $me: Fatal Error: I can't find a Bourne Shell anywhere.
823 Usually it's in /bin/sh. How did you even get this far?
824 Please contact me (Chip Salzenberg) at chip@perl.com and
825 we'll try to straigten this all out.
831 : see if sh knows # comments
832 if `$sh -c '#' >/dev/null 2>&1`; then
837 test -f $xcat || xcat=/usr/bin/cat
842 if test -s today; then
845 echo "#! $xcat" > try
849 if test -s today; then
852 echo "Okay, let's see if #! works on this system..."
853 echo "It's just a comment."
858 echo "Your $sh doesn't grok # comments--I will strip them later on."
861 echo "exec grep -v '^[ ]*#'" >spitshell
864 spitshell=`pwd`/spitshell
866 echo "I presume that if # doesn't work, #! won't work either!"
871 : figure out how to guarantee sh startup
873 '') startsh=${sharpbang}${sh} ;;
885 : echo "Yup, it does."
887 echo "Hmm. '$startsh' didn't work."
888 echo "You may have to fix up the shell scripts to make sure sh runs them."
892 : script used to extract .SH files with variable substitutions
896 cat >>extract <<'EOS'
898 echo "Doing variable substitutions on .SH files..."
899 if test -f MANIFEST; then
900 shlist=`awk '{print $1}' <MANIFEST | grep '\.SH'`
901 : Pick up possible extension manifests.
902 for dir in ext/* ; do
903 if test -f $dir/MANIFEST; then
904 xxx=`awk '{print $1}' < $dir/MANIFEST |
905 sed -n "/\.SH$/ s@^@$dir/@p"`
906 shlist="$shlist $xxx"
911 echo "(Looking for .SH files under the current directory.)"
912 set x `find . -name "*.SH" -print`
916 0) set x *.SH; shift;;
918 if test ! -f $1; then
924 dir=`expr X$file : 'X\(.*\)/'`
925 file=`expr X$file : 'X.*/\(.*\)'`
926 (cd $dir && . ./$file)
933 if test -f config_h.SH; then
934 if test ! -f config.h; then
935 : oops, they left it out of MANIFEST, probably, so do it anyway.
941 : produce awk script to parse command line options
942 cat >options.awk <<'EOF'
944 optstr = "dD:eEf:hKOrsSU:V"; # getopt-style specification
946 len = length(optstr);
947 for (i = 1; i <= len; i++) {
948 c = substr(optstr, i, 1);
949 if (i < len) a = substr(optstr, i + 1, 1); else a = "";
960 if (substr(str, 1, 1) != "-") {
961 printf("'%s'\n", str);
965 for (i = 2; i <= len; i++) {
966 c = substr(str, i, 1);
968 printf("-%s\n", substr(str, i));
974 printf("'%s'\n", substr(str, i + 1));
987 : process the command line options
988 set X `for arg in "$@"; do echo "X$arg"; done |
989 sed -e s/X// | awk -f options.awk`
994 : set up default values
1006 cat >optdef.sh <<EOS
1011 while test $# -gt 0; do
1013 -d) shift; fastread=yes;;
1014 -e) shift; alldone=cont;;
1018 if test -r "$1"; then
1021 echo "$me: cannot read config file $1." >&2
1026 -h) shift; error=true;;
1027 -r) shift; reuseval=true;;
1028 -s) shift; silent=true;;
1029 -E) shift; alldone=exit;;
1030 -K) shift; knowitall=true;;
1031 -O) shift; override=true;;
1032 -S) shift; extractsh=true;;
1037 echo "$me: use '-U symbol=', not '-D symbol='." >&2
1038 echo "$me: ignoring -D $1" >&2
1041 sed -e "s/'/'\"'\"'/g" -e "s/=\(.*\)/='\1'/" >> optdef.sh;;
1042 *) echo "$1='define'" >> optdef.sh;;
1049 *=) echo "$1" >> optdef.sh;;
1051 echo "$me: use '-D symbol=val', not '-U symbol=val'." >&2
1052 echo "$me: ignoring -U $1" >&2
1054 *) echo "$1='undef'" >> optdef.sh;;
1058 -V) echo "$me generated by metaconfig 3.0 PL60." >&2
1061 -*) echo "$me: unknown option $1" >&2; shift; error=true;;
1069 Usage: $me [-dehrsEKOSV] [-f config.sh] [-D symbol] [-D symbol=value]
1070 [-U symbol] [-U symbol=]
1071 -d : use defaults for all answers.
1072 -e : go on without questioning past the production of config.sh.
1073 -f : specify an alternate default configuration file.
1074 -h : print this help message and exit (with an error status).
1075 -r : reuse C symbols value if possible (skips costly nm extraction).
1076 -s : silent mode, only echoes questions and essential information.
1077 -D : define symbol to have some value:
1078 -D symbol symbol gets the value 'define'
1079 -D symbol=value symbol gets the value 'value'
1080 -E : stop at the end of questions, after having produced config.sh.
1081 -K : do not use unless you know what you are doing.
1082 -O : let -D and -U override definitions from loaded configuration file.
1083 -S : perform variable substitutions on all .SH files (can mix with -f)
1084 -U : undefine symbol:
1085 -U symbol symbol gets the value 'undef'
1086 -U symbol= symbol gets completely empty
1087 -V : print version number and exit (with a zero status).
1095 true) exec 1>/dev/null;;
1098 : run the defines and the undefines, if any, but leave the file out there...
1102 case "$extractsh" in
1104 case "$config_sh" in
1105 '') config_sh='config.sh'; config='./config.sh';;
1106 /*) config="$config_sh";;
1107 *) config="./$config_sh";;
1110 echo "Fetching answers from $config_sh..."
1113 test "$override" && . ./optdef.sh
1124 first=`echo $package | sed -e 's/^\(.\).*/\1/'`
1125 last=`echo $package | sed -e 's/^.\(.*\)/\1/'`
1126 case "`echo AbyZ | tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]' 2>/dev/null`" in
1127 ABYZ) spackage=`echo $first | tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]'`$last;;
1128 *) spackage=`echo $first | tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'`$last;;
1131 : Eunice requires " " instead of "", can you believe it
1134 echo "Beginning of configuration questions for $package."
1136 trap 'echo " "; test -d ../UU && rm -rf X $rmlist; exit 1' 1 2 3 15
1138 : Some greps do not return status, grrr.
1139 echo "grimblepritz" >grimble
1140 if grep blurfldyick grimble >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
1142 elif grep grimblepritz grimble >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
1148 : the following should work in any shell
1152 echo "AGH! Grep doesn't return a status. Attempting remedial action."
1153 cat >contains <<'EOSS'
1154 grep "$1" "$2" >.greptmp && cat .greptmp && test -s .greptmp
1159 : first determine how to suppress newline on echo command
1161 echo "Checking echo to see how to suppress newlines..."
1162 (echo "hi there\c" ; echo " ") >.echotmp
1163 if $contains c .echotmp >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
1174 echo $n "The star should be here-->$c"
1178 : Now test for existence of everything in MANIFEST
1180 if test -f ../MANIFEST; then
1181 echo "First let's make sure your kit is complete. Checking..." >&4
1182 awk '$1 !~ /PACK[A-Z]+/ {print $1}' ../MANIFEST | split -50
1184 for filelist in x??; do
1185 (cd ..; ls `cat UU/$filelist` >/dev/null 2>>UU/missing)
1187 if test -s missing; then
1191 THIS PACKAGE SEEMS TO BE INCOMPLETE.
1193 You have the option of continuing the configuration process, despite the
1194 distinct possibility that your kit is damaged, by typing 'y'es. If you
1195 do, don't blame me if something goes wrong. I advise you to type 'n'o
1196 and contact the author (chip@perl.com).
1199 echo $n "Continue? [n] $c" >&4
1203 echo "Continuing..." >&4
1207 echo "ABORTING..." >&4
1212 echo "Looks good..." >&4
1215 echo "There is no MANIFEST file. I hope your kit is complete !"
1219 : compute the number of columns on the terminal for proper question formatting
1224 : set up the echo used in my read
1225 myecho="case \"\$xxxm\" in
1226 '') echo $n \"\$rp $c\" >&4;;
1228 '') echo $n \"[\$xxxm] $c\";;
1230 if test \`echo \"\$rp [\$xxxm] \" | wc -c\` -ge $COLUMNS; then
1232 echo $n \"[\$xxxm] $c\" >&4
1234 echo $n \"\$rp [\$xxxm] $c\" >&4
1240 : now set up to do reads with possible shell escape and default assignment
1246 case "\$fastread" in
1247 yes) case "\$dflt" in
1250 case "\$silent-\$rp" in
1255 *) case "\$silent" in
1256 true) case "\$rp" in
1261 while expr "X\$ans" : "X!" >/dev/null; do
1265 aok=''; eval ans="\\"\$answ\\"" && aok=y
1270 set x \`expr "X\$ans" : "X&\(.*\)\$"\`
1275 echo "(OK, I'll run with -d after this question.)" >&4
1278 echo "*** Sorry, \$1 not supported yet." >&4
1290 set x \`expr "X\$ans" : "X!\(.*\)\$"\`
1300 echo "*** Substitution done -- please confirm."
1302 ans=\`echo $n "\$ans$c" | tr '\012' ' '\`
1307 echo "*** Error -- try again."
1314 case "\$ans\$xxxm\$nostick" in
1326 : create .config dir to save info across Configure sessions
1327 test -d ../.config || mkdir ../.config
1328 cat >../.config/README <<EOF
1329 This directory created by Configure to save information that should
1330 persist across sessions.
1332 You may safely delete it if you wish.
1335 : general instructions
1338 user=`(logname) 2>/dev/null`
1340 user=`whoami 2>&1` ;;
1342 if $contains "^$user\$" ../.config/instruct >/dev/null 2>&1; then
1345 rp='Would you like to see the instructions?'
1356 This installation shell script will examine your system and ask you questions
1357 to determine how the perl5 package should be installed. If you get
1358 stuck on a question, you may use a ! shell escape to start a subshell or
1359 execute a command. Many of the questions will have default answers in square
1360 brackets; typing carriage return will give you the default.
1362 On some of the questions which ask for file or directory names you are allowed
1363 to use the ~name construct to specify the login directory belonging to "name",
1364 even if you don't have a shell which knows about that. Questions where this is
1365 allowed will be marked "(~name ok)".
1369 dflt='Type carriage return to continue'
1373 The prompter used in this script allows you to use shell variables and
1374 backticks in your answers. You may use $1, $2, etc... to refer to the words
1375 in the default answer, as if the default line was a set of arguments given to a
1376 script shell. This means you may also use $* to repeat the whole default line,
1377 so you do not have to re-type everything to add something to the default.
1379 Everytime there is a substitution, you will have to confirm. If there is an
1380 error (e.g. an unmatched backtick), the default answer will remain unchanged
1381 and you will be prompted again.
1383 If you are in a hurry, you may run 'Configure -d'. This will bypass nearly all
1384 the questions and use the computed defaults (or the previous answers if there
1385 was already a config.sh file). Type 'Configure -h' for a list of options.
1386 You may also start interactively and then answer '& -d' at any prompt to turn
1387 on the non-interactive behavior for the remainder of the execution.
1393 Much effort has been expended to ensure that this shell script will run on any
1394 Unix system. If despite that it blows up on yours, your best bet is to edit
1395 Configure and run it again. If you can't run Configure for some reason,
1396 you'll have to generate a config.sh file by hand. Whatever problems you
1397 have, let me (chip@perl.com) know how I blew it.
1399 This installation script affects things in two ways:
1401 1) it may do direct variable substitutions on some of the files included
1403 2) it builds a config.h file for inclusion in C programs. You may edit
1404 any of these files as the need arises after running this script.
1406 If you make a mistake on a question, there is no easy way to back up to it
1407 currently. The easiest thing to do is to edit config.sh and rerun all the SH
1408 files. Configure will offer to let you do this before it runs the SH files.
1411 dflt='Type carriage return to continue'
1413 case "$firsttime" in
1414 true) echo $user >>../.config/instruct;;
1418 : find out where common programs are
1420 echo "Locating common programs..." >&4
1433 if test -d \$dir/\$thing; then
1439 for thisthing in \$dir/\$thing; do
1440 : just loop through to pick last item
1442 if test -f \$thisthing; then
1445 elif test -f \$dir/\$thing.exe; then
1446 : on Eunice apparently
1496 pth=`echo $PATH | sed -e "s/$p_/ /g"`
1497 pth="$pth /lib /usr/lib"
1498 for file in $loclist; do
1499 xxx=`./loc $file $file $pth`
1504 echo $file is in $xxx.
1507 echo $file is in $xxx.
1510 echo "I don't know where '$file' is, and my life depends on it." >&4
1511 echo "Go find a public domain implementation or fix your PATH setting!" >&4
1517 echo "Don't worry if any of the following aren't found..."
1519 for file in $trylist; do
1520 xxx=`./loc $file $file $pth`
1525 echo $file is in $xxx.
1528 echo $file is in $xxx.
1531 echo "I don't see $file out there, $say."
1538 echo "Substituting grep for egrep."
1544 echo "Substituting cp for ln."
1550 echo "Hopefully test is built into your sh."
1553 if `sh -c "PATH= test true" >/dev/null 2>&1`; then
1554 echo "Using the test built into your sh."
1562 echo "Hopefully echo is built into your sh."
1567 echo "Checking compatibility between $echo and builtin echo (if any)..." >&4
1568 $echo $n "hi there$c" >foo1
1569 echo $n "hi there$c" >foo2
1570 if cmp foo1 foo2 >/dev/null 2>&1; then
1571 echo "They are compatible. In fact, they may be identical."
1578 They are not compatible! You are probably running ksh on a non-USG system.
1579 I'll have to use $echo instead of the builtin, since Bourne shell doesn't
1580 have echo built in and we may have to run some Bourne shell scripts. That
1581 means I'll have to use '$n$c' to suppress newlines now. Life is ridiculous.
1584 $echo $n "The star should be here-->$c"
1591 : determine whether symbolic links are supported
1594 if $ln -s blurfl sym > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
1595 echo "Symbolic links are supported." >&4
1598 echo "Symbolic links are NOT supported." >&4
1603 : see whether [:lower:] and [:upper:] are supported character classes
1607 case "`echo AbyZ | $tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]' 2>/dev/null`" in
1609 echo "Good, your tr supports [:lower:] and [:upper:] to convert case." >&4
1614 echo "Your tr only supports [a-z] and [A-Z] to convert case." >&4
1617 : set up the translation script tr, must be called with ./tr of course
1621 '[A-Z][a-z]') exec $tr '$up' '$low';;
1622 '[a-z][A-Z]') exec $tr '$low' '$up';;
1629 : Try to determine whether config.sh was made on this system
1630 case "$config_sh" in
1632 myuname=`( ($uname -a) 2>/dev/null || hostname) 2>&1`
1633 myuname=`echo $myuname | $sed -e 's/^[^=]*=//' -e 's/\///g' | \
1634 ./tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]' | tr '\012' ' '`
1635 newmyuname="$myuname"
1637 case "$knowitall" in
1639 if test -f ../config.sh; then
1640 if $contains myuname= ../config.sh >/dev/null 2>&1; then
1641 eval "`grep myuname= ../config.sh`"
1643 if test "X$myuname" = "X$newmyuname"; then
1651 : Get old answers from old config file if Configure was run on the
1652 : same system, otherwise use the hints.
1655 if test -f config.sh; then
1657 rp="I see a config.sh file. Shall I use it to set the defaults?"
1660 n*|N*) echo "OK, I'll ignore it."; mv config.sh config.sh.old;;
1661 *) echo "Fetching default answers from your old config.sh file..." >&4
1669 : Older versions did not always set $sh. Catch re-use of such
1678 if test ! -f config.sh; then
1681 First time through, eh? I have some defaults handy for the following systems:
1684 cd hints; ls -C *.sh | $sed 's/\.sh/ /g' >&4
1686 : Half the following guesses are probably wrong... If you have better
1687 : tests or hints, please send them to chip@perl.com
1688 : The metaconfig authors would also appreciate a copy...
1689 $test -f /irix && osname=irix
1690 $test -f /xenix && osname=sco_xenix
1691 $test -f /dynix && osname=dynix
1692 $test -f /dnix && osname=dnix
1693 $test -f /lynx.os && osname=lynxos
1694 $test -f /unicos && osname=unicos && osvers=`$uname -r`
1695 $test -f /unicosmk.ar && osname=unicosmk && osvers=`$uname -r`
1696 $test -f /bin/mips && /bin/mips && osname=mips
1697 $test -d /NextApps && set X `hostinfo | grep 'NeXT Mach.*:' | \
1698 $sed -e 's/://' -e 's/\./_/'` && osname=next && osvers=$4
1699 $test -d /usr/apollo/bin && osname=apollo
1700 $test -f /etc/saf/_sactab && osname=svr4
1701 $test -d /usr/include/minix && osname=minix
1702 if $test -d /MachTen; then
1704 if $test -x /sbin/version; then
1705 osvers=`/sbin/version | $awk '{print $2}' |
1706 $sed -e 's/[A-Za-z]$//'`
1707 elif $test -x /usr/etc/version; then
1708 osvers=`/usr/etc/version | $awk '{print $2}' |
1709 $sed -e 's/[A-Za-z]$//'`
1714 if $test -f $uname; then
1722 umips) osname=umips ;;
1725 [23]100) osname=mips ;;
1726 next*) osname=next ;;
1728 if $test -f /etc/kconfig; then
1730 if test "$lns" = "ln -s"; then
1732 elif $contains _SYSV3 /usr/include/stdio.h > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
1734 elif $contains _POSIX_SOURCE /usr/include/stdio.h > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
1743 tmp=`( (oslevel) 2>/dev/null || echo "not found") 2>&1`
1745 'not found') osvers="$4"."$3" ;;
1746 '<3240'|'<>3240') osvers=3.2.0 ;;
1747 '=3240'|'>3240'|'<3250'|'<>3250') osvers=3.2.4 ;;
1748 '=3250'|'>3250') osvers=3.2.5 ;;
1752 *dc.osx) osname=dcosx
1758 domainos) osname=apollo
1764 dynixptx*) osname=dynixptx
1767 freebsd) osname=freebsd
1769 genix) osname=genix ;;
1774 *.10.*) osvers=10 ;;
1790 netbsd*) osname=netbsd
1793 news-os) osvers="$3"
1795 4*) osname=newsos4 ;;
1799 bsd386) osname=bsd386
1802 powerux | power_ux | powermax_os | powermaxos | \
1803 powerunix | power_unix) osname=powerux
1806 next*) osname=next ;;
1807 solaris) osname=solaris
1809 5*) osvers=`echo $3 | $sed 's/^5/2/g'` ;;
1816 osvers=`echo $3 | $sed 's/^5/2/g'` ;;
1820 titanos) osname=titanos
1829 ultrix) osname=ultrix
1832 osf1|mls+) case "$5" in
1835 osvers=`echo "$3" | sed 's/^[xvt]//'`
1837 hp*) osname=hp_osf1 ;;
1838 mips) osname=mips_osf1 ;;
1847 $2) case "$osname" in
1851 : svr4.x or possibly later
1861 if test -f /stand/boot ; then
1862 eval `grep '^INITPROG=[a-z/0-9]*$' /stand/boot`
1863 if test -n "$INITPROG" -a -f "$INITPROG"; then
1864 isesix=`strings -a $INITPROG|grep 'ESIX SYSTEM V/386 Release 4.0'`
1865 if test -n "$isesix"; then
1873 *) if test -f /etc/systemid; then
1875 set `echo $3 | $sed 's/\./ /g'` $4
1876 if $test -f sco_$1_$2_$3.sh; then
1878 elif $test -f sco_$1_$2.sh; then
1880 elif $test -f sco_$1.sh; then
1885 '') : Still unknown. Probably a generic Sys V.
1894 *) case "$osname" in
1895 '') : Still unknown. Probably a generic BSD.
1903 if test -f /vmunix -a -f newsos4.sh; then
1904 (what /vmunix | ../UU/tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]') > ../UU/kernel.what 2>&1
1905 if $contains news-os ../UU/kernel.what >/dev/null 2>&1; then
1908 $rm -f ../UU/kernel.what
1909 elif test -d c:/.; then
1913 if test -n "$DJDIR"; then
1920 : Now look for a hint file osname_osvers, unless one has been
1921 : specified already.
1924 file=`echo "${osname}_${osvers}" | $sed -e 's@\.@_@g' -e 's@_$@@'`
1925 : Also try without trailing minor version numbers.
1926 xfile=`echo $file | $sed -e 's@_[^_]*$@@'`
1927 xxfile=`echo $xfile | $sed -e 's@_[^_]*$@@'`
1928 xxxfile=`echo $xxfile | $sed -e 's@_[^_]*$@@'`
1929 xxxxfile=`echo $xxxfile | $sed -e 's@_[^_]*$@@'`
1932 *) case "$osvers" in
1935 *) if $test -f $file.sh ; then
1937 elif $test -f $xfile.sh ; then
1939 elif $test -f $xxfile.sh ; then
1941 elif $test -f $xxxfile.sh ; then
1943 elif $test -f $xxxxfile.sh ; then
1945 elif $test -f "${osname}.sh" ; then
1956 dflt=`echo $hintfile | $sed 's/\.sh$//'`
1962 You may give one or more space-separated answers, or "none" if appropriate.
1963 If your OS version has no hints, DO NOT give a wrong version -- say "none".
1966 rp="Which of these apply, if any?"
1969 for file in $tans; do
1970 if $test -f $file.sh; then
1972 $cat $file.sh >> ../UU/config.sh
1973 elif $test X$tans = X -o X$tans = Xnone ; then
1976 : Give one chance to correct a possible typo.
1977 echo "$file.sh does not exist"
1979 rp="hint to use instead?"
1981 for file in $ans; do
1982 if $test -f "$file.sh"; then
1984 $cat $file.sh >> ../UU/config.sh
1985 elif $test X$ans = X -o X$ans = Xnone ; then
1988 echo "$file.sh does not exist -- ignored."
1995 : Remember our hint file for later.
1996 if $test -f "$file.sh" ; then
2008 echo "Fetching default answers from $config_sh..." >&4
2012 cp $config_sh config.sh 2>/dev/null
2022 test "$override" && . ./optdef.sh
2023 myuname="$newmyuname"
2025 : Restore computed paths
2026 for file in $loclist $trylist; do
2027 eval $file="\$_$file"
2032 Configure uses the operating system name and version to set some defaults.
2033 The default value is probably right if the name rings a bell. Otherwise,
2034 since spelling matters for me, either accept the default or answer "none"
2041 ''|' '|none) dflt=none ;;
2042 *) dflt=`echo $hintfile | $sed -e 's/\.sh$//' -e 's/_.*$//'` ;;
2045 *) dflt="$osname" ;;
2047 rp="Operating system name?"
2051 *) osname=`echo "$ans" | $sed -e 's/[ ][ ]*/_/g' | ./tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'`;;
2057 ''|' '|none) dflt=none ;;
2058 *) dflt=`echo $hintfile | $sed -e 's/\.sh$//' -e 's/^[^_]*//'`
2059 dflt=`echo $dflt | $sed -e 's/^_//' -e 's/_/./g'`
2061 ''|' ') dflt=none ;;
2066 *) dflt="$osvers" ;;
2068 rp="Operating system version?"
2077 : who configured the system
2078 cf_time=`LC_ALL=C; export LC_ALL; $date 2>&1`
2079 cf_by=`(logname) 2>/dev/null`
2080 case "$cf_by" in "")
2081 cf_by=`(whoami) 2>/dev/null`
2082 case "$cf_by" in "")
2087 : determine the architecture name
2089 if xxx=`./loc arch blurfl $pth`; $test -f "$xxx"; then
2090 tarch=`arch`"-$osname"
2091 elif xxx=`./loc uname blurfl $pth`; $test -f "$xxx" ; then
2092 if uname -m > tmparch 2>&1 ; then
2093 tarch=`$sed -e 's/ *$//' -e 's/ /_/g' \
2094 -e 's/$/'"-$osname/" tmparch`
2102 case "$myarchname" in
2105 echo "(Your architecture name used to be $myarchname.)"
2111 *) dflt="$archname";;
2113 rp='What is your architecture name'
2115 case "$usethreads" in
2116 $define) echo "Threads selected." >&4
2118 *-thread) echo "...and architecture name already ends in -thread." >&4
2121 *) archname="$ans-thread"
2122 echo "...setting architecture name to $archname." >&4
2126 *) archname="$ans" ;;
2133 $define|true) afs=true ;;
2134 $undef|false) afs=false ;;
2135 *) if test -d /afs; then
2143 echo "AFS may be running... I'll be extra cautious then..." >&4
2145 echo "AFS does not seem to be running..." >&4
2148 : decide how portable to be. Allow command line overrides.
2149 case "$d_portable" in
2151 *) d_portable="$define" ;;
2154 : set up shell script to do ~ expansion
2160 echo \$1 | $sed "s|~|\${HOME-\$LOGDIR}|"
2163 if $test -f /bin/csh; then
2164 /bin/csh -f -c "glob \$1"
2169 name=\`$expr x\$1 : '..\([^/]*\)'\`
2170 dir=\`$sed -n -e "/^\${name}:/{s/^[^:]*:[^:]*:[^:]*:[^:]*:[^:]*:\([^:]*\).*"'\$'"/\1/" -e p -e q -e '}' </etc/passwd\`
2171 if $test ! -d "\$dir"; then
2173 echo "\$me: can't locate home directory for: \$name" >&2
2178 echo \$dir/\`$expr x\$1 : '..[^/]*/\(.*\)'\`
2194 : now set up to get a file name
2198 cat <<'EOSC' >>getfile
2211 expr $fn : '.*(\(.*\)).*' | tr ',' '\012' >getfile.ok
2212 fn=`echo $fn | sed 's/(.*)//'`
2218 loc_file=`expr $fn : '.*:\(.*\)'`
2219 fn=`expr $fn : '\(.*\):.*'`
2227 */*) fullpath=true;;
2236 *e*) exp_file=true;;
2239 *p*) nopath_ok=true;;
2244 *d*) type='Directory';;
2245 *l*) type='Locate';;
2250 Locate) what='File';;
2255 case "$d_portable" in
2263 while test "$type"; do
2268 true) rp="$rp (~name ok)";;
2271 if test -f UU/getfile.ok && \
2272 $contains "^$ans\$" UU/getfile.ok >/dev/null 2>&1
2291 value=`UU/filexp $ans`
2294 if test "$ans" != "$value"; then
2295 echo "(That expands to $value on this system.)"
2309 /*) value="$ansexp" ;;
2314 echo "I shall only accept a full path name, as in /bin/ls." >&4
2315 echo "Use a ! shell escape if you wish to check pathnames." >&4
2318 echo "Please give a full path name, starting with slash." >&4
2321 echo "Note that using ~name is ok provided it expands well." >&4
2334 if test -f "$ansexp"; then
2336 elif test -r "$ansexp" || (test -h "$ansexp") >/dev/null 2>&1
2338 echo "($value is not a plain file, but that's ok.)"
2343 if test -d "$ansexp"; then
2348 if test -d "$ansexp"; then
2349 echo "(Looking for $loc_file in directory $value.)"
2350 value="$value/$loc_file"
2351 ansexp="$ansexp/$loc_file"
2353 if test -f "$ansexp"; then
2356 case "$nopath_ok" in
2357 true) case "$value" in
2359 *) echo "Assuming $value will be in people's path."
2375 if test "$fastread" = yes; then
2380 rp="$what $value doesn't exist. Use that name anyway?"
2401 : determine root of directory hierarchy where package will be installed.
2404 dflt=`./loc . /usr/local /usr/local /local /opt /usr`
2412 By default, $package will be installed in $dflt/bin, manual
2413 pages under $dflt/man, etc..., i.e. with $dflt as prefix for
2414 all installation directories. Typically set to /usr/local, but you
2415 may choose /usr if you wish to install $package among your system
2416 binaries. If you wish to have binaries under /bin but manual pages
2417 under /usr/local/man, that's ok: you will be prompted separately
2418 for each of the installation directories, the prefix being only used
2419 to set the defaults.
2423 rp='Installation prefix to use?'
2431 *) oldprefix="$prefix";;
2438 : set the prefixit variable, to compute a suitable default value
2439 prefixit='case "$3" in
2441 case "$oldprefix" in
2442 "") eval "$1=\"\$$2\"";;
2449 ""|" ") eval "$1=\"\$$2\"";;
2455 eval "tp=\"$oldprefix-\$$2-\""; eval "tp=\"$tp\"";
2457 --|/*--|\~*--) eval "$1=\"$prefix/$3\"";;
2458 /*-$oldprefix/*|\~*-$oldprefix/*)
2459 eval "$1=\`echo \$$2 | sed \"s,^$oldprefix,$prefix,\"\`";;
2460 *) eval "$1=\"\$$2\"";;
2464 : determine where private library files go
2465 : Usual default is /usr/local/lib/perl5. Also allow things like
2466 : /opt/perl/lib, since /opt/perl/lib/perl5 would be redundant.
2468 *perl*) set dflt privlib lib ;;
2469 *) set dflt privlib lib/$package ;;
2474 There are some auxiliary files for $package that need to be put into a
2475 private library directory that is accessible by everyone.
2479 rp='Pathname where the private library files will reside?'
2481 if $test "X$privlibexp" != "X$ansexp"; then
2485 privlibexp="$ansexp"
2489 Since you are running AFS, I need to distinguish the directory in which
2490 private files reside from the directory in which they are installed (and from
2491 which they are presumably copied to the former directory by occult means).
2494 case "$installprivlib" in
2495 '') dflt=`echo $privlibexp | sed 's#^/afs/#/afs/.#'`;;
2496 *) dflt="$installprivlib";;
2499 rp='Where will private files be installed?'
2501 installprivlib="$ans"
2503 installprivlib="$privlibexp"
2506 : set the base revision
2509 : get the patchlevel
2511 echo "Getting the current patchlevel..." >&4
2512 if $test -r ../patchlevel.h;then
2513 patchlevel=`awk '/PATCHLEVEL/ {print $3}' ../patchlevel.h`
2514 subversion=`awk '/SUBVERSION/ {print $3}' ../patchlevel.h`
2519 $echo $n "(You have $package" $c
2522 *) $echo $n " $baserev" $c ;;
2524 $echo $n " patchlevel $patchlevel" $c
2525 test 0 -eq "$subversion" || $echo $n " subversion $subversion" $c
2528 : set the prefixup variable, to restore leading tilda escape
2529 prefixup='case "$prefixexp" in
2531 *) eval "$1=\`echo \$$1 | sed \"s,^$prefixexp,$prefix,\"\`";;
2534 : determine where public architecture dependent libraries go
2540 '') dflt=`./loc . "." $prefixexp/lib /usr/local/lib /usr/lib /lib`
2544 *) if test 0 -eq "$subversion"; then
2545 version=`LC_ALL=C; export LC_ALL; \
2546 echo $baserev $patchlevel | \
2547 $awk '{ printf "%.3f\n", $1 + $2/1000.0 }'`
2549 version=`LC_ALL=C; export LC_ALL; \
2550 echo $baserev $patchlevel $subversion | \
2551 $awk '{ printf "%.5f\n", $1 + $2/1000.0 + $3/100000.0 }'`
2553 dflt="$privlib/$archname/$version"
2563 $spackage contains architecture-dependent library files. If you are
2564 sharing libraries in a heterogeneous environment, you might store
2565 these files in a separate location. Otherwise, you can just include
2566 them with the rest of the public library files.
2570 rp='Where do you want to put the public architecture-dependent libraries?'
2573 archlibexp="$ansexp"
2578 Since you are running AFS, I need to distinguish the directory in
2579 which architecture-dependent library files reside from the directory
2580 in which they are installed (and from which they are presumably copied
2581 to the former directory by occult means).
2584 case "$installarchlib" in
2585 '') dflt=`echo $archlibexp | sed 's#^/afs/#/afs/.#'`;;
2586 *) dflt="$installarchlib";;
2589 rp='Where will architecture-dependent library files be installed?'
2591 installarchlib="$ans"
2593 installarchlib="$archlibexp"
2595 if $test X"$archlib" = X"$privlib"; then
2601 : set up the script used to warn in case of inconsistency
2608 echo "*** WHOA THERE!!! ***" >&4
2609 echo " The $hint value for \$$var on this machine was \"$was\"!" >&4
2610 rp=" Keep the $hint value?"
2613 y) td=$was; tu=$was;;
2617 : function used to set $1 to $val
2618 setvar='var=$1; eval "was=\$$1"; td=$define; tu=$undef;
2620 $define$undef) . ./whoa; eval "$var=\$td";;
2621 $undef$define) . ./whoa; eval "$var=\$tu";;
2622 *) eval "$var=$val";;
2625 : bincompat3 is no more even possible starting with 5.005
2628 : make some quick guesses about what we are up against
2630 $echo $n "Hmm... $c"
2640 $cat /usr/include/signal.h /usr/include/sys/signal.h >foo 2>/dev/null
2641 if test -f /osf_boot || $contains 'OSF/1' /usr/include/ctype.h >/dev/null 2>&1
2643 echo "Looks kind of like an OSF/1 system, but we'll see..."
2645 elif test `echo abc | tr a-z A-Z` = Abc ; then
2646 xxx=`./loc addbib blurfl $pth`
2647 if $test -f $xxx; then
2648 echo "Looks kind of like a USG system with BSD features, but we'll see..."
2652 if $contains SIGTSTP foo >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
2653 echo "Looks kind of like an extended USG system, but we'll see..."
2655 echo "Looks kind of like a USG system, but we'll see..."
2659 elif $contains SIGTSTP foo >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
2660 echo "Looks kind of like a BSD system, but we'll see..."
2664 echo "Looks kind of like a Version 7 system, but we'll see..."
2667 case "$eunicefix" in
2670 There is, however, a strange, musty smell in the air that reminds me of
2671 something...hmm...yes...I've got it...there's a VMS nearby, or I'm a Blit.
2675 : it so happens the Eunice I know will not run shell scripts in Unix format
2679 echo "Congratulations. You aren't running Eunice."
2683 : Detect OS2. The p_ variable is set above in the Head.U unit.
2688 I have the feeling something is not exactly right, however...don't tell me...
2689 lemme think...does HAL ring a bell?...no, of course, you're only running OS/2!
2694 if test -f /xenix; then
2695 echo "Actually, this looks more like a XENIX system..."
2700 echo "It's not Xenix..."
2705 if test -f /venix; then
2706 echo "Actually, this looks more like a VENIX system..."
2713 echo "Nor is it Venix..."
2716 chmod +x bsd usg v7 osf1 eunice xenix venix os2
2717 $eunicefix bsd usg v7 osf1 eunice xenix venix os2
2720 : see if setuid scripts can be secure
2723 Some kernels have a bug that prevents setuid #! scripts from being
2724 secure. Some sites have disabled setuid #! scripts because of this.
2726 First let's decide if your kernel supports secure setuid #! scripts.
2727 (If setuid #! scripts would be secure but have been disabled anyway,
2728 don't say that they are secure if asked.)
2733 if $test -d /dev/fd; then
2734 echo "#!$ls" >reflect
2735 chmod +x,u+s reflect
2736 ./reflect >flect 2>&1
2737 if $contains "/dev/fd" flect >/dev/null; then
2738 echo "Congratulations, your kernel has secure setuid scripts!" >&4
2742 If you are not sure if they are secure, I can check but I'll need a
2743 username and password different from the one you are using right now.
2744 If you don't have such a username or don't want me to test, simply
2748 rp='Other username to test security of setuid scripts with?'
2753 case "$d_suidsafe" in
2754 '') echo "I'll assume setuid scripts are *not* secure." >&4
2757 echo "Well, the $hint value is *not* secure." >&4
2759 *) echo "Well, the $hint value *is* secure." >&4
2764 $rm -f reflect flect
2765 echo "#!$ls" >reflect
2766 chmod +x,u+s reflect
2769 echo '"su" will (probably) prompt you for '"$ans's password."
2770 su $ans -c './reflect >flect'
2771 if $contains "/dev/fd" flect >/dev/null; then
2772 echo "Okay, it looks like setuid scripts are secure." >&4
2775 echo "I don't think setuid scripts are secure." >&4
2780 rp='Does your kernel have *secure* setuid scripts?'
2783 [yY]*) val="$define";;
2788 echo "I don't think setuid scripts are secure (no /dev/fd directory)." >&4
2789 echo "(That's for file descriptors, not floppy disks.)"
2795 $rm -f reflect flect
2797 : now see if they want to do setuid emulation
2800 case "$d_suidsafe" in
2803 echo "No need to emulate SUID scripts since they are secure here." >& 4
2807 Some systems have disabled setuid scripts, especially systems where
2808 setuid scripts cannot be secure. On systems where setuid scripts have
2809 been disabled, the setuid/setgid bits on scripts are currently
2810 useless. It is possible for $package to detect those bits and emulate
2811 setuid/setgid in a secure fashion. This emulation will only work if
2812 setuid scripts have been disabled in your kernel.
2816 "$define") dflt=y ;;
2819 rp="Do you want to do setuid/setgid emulation?"
2822 [yY]*) val="$define";;
2830 : determine where site specific libraries go.
2834 '') dflt="$privlib/site_perl" ;;
2835 *) dflt="$sitelib" ;;
2839 The installation process will also create a directory for
2840 site-specific extensions and modules. Some users find it convenient
2841 to place all local files in this directory rather than in the main
2842 distribution directory.
2846 rp='Pathname for the site-specific library files?'
2848 if $test "X$sitelibexp" != "X$ansexp"; then
2852 sitelibexp="$ansexp"
2856 Since you are running AFS, I need to distinguish the directory in
2857 which site-specific files reside from the directory in which they are
2858 installed (and from which they are presumably copied to the former
2859 directory by occult means).
2862 case "$installsitelib" in
2863 '') dflt=`echo $sitelibexp | sed 's#^/afs/#/afs/.#'`;;
2864 *) dflt="$installsitelib";;
2867 rp='Where will site-specific files be installed?'
2869 installsitelib="$ans"
2871 installsitelib="$sitelibexp"
2874 : determine where site specific architecture-dependent libraries go.
2875 xxx=`echo $sitelib/$archname | sed 's!^$prefix!!'`
2876 : xxx is usuually lib/site_perl/archname.
2877 set sitearch sitearch none
2880 '') dflt="$sitelib/$archname" ;;
2881 *) dflt="$sitearch" ;;
2885 The installation process will also create a directory for
2886 architecture-dependent site-specific extensions and modules.
2890 rp='Pathname for the site-specific architecture-dependent library files?'
2892 if $test "X$sitearchexp" != "X$ansexp"; then
2896 sitearchexp="$ansexp"
2900 Since you are running AFS, I need to distinguish the directory in
2901 which site-specific architecture-dependent library files reside from
2902 the directory in which they are installed (and from which they are
2903 presumably copied to the former directory by occult means).
2906 case "$installsitearch" in
2907 '') dflt=`echo $sitearchexp | sed 's#^/afs/#/afs/.#'`;;
2908 *) dflt="$installsitearch";;
2911 rp='Where will site-specific architecture-dependent files be installed?'
2913 installsitearch="$ans"
2915 installsitearch="$sitearchexp"
2918 : determine where old public architecture dependent libraries might be
2919 case "$oldarchlib" in
2920 '') case "$privlib" in
2922 *) dflt="$privlib/$archname"
2926 *) dflt="$oldarchlib"
2929 if $test ! -d "$dflt/auto"; then
2934 In 5.001, Perl stored architecture-dependent library files in a directory
2935 with a name such as $privlib/$archname,
2936 and this directory contained files from the standard extensions and
2937 files from any additional extensions you might have added. Starting
2938 with version 5.002, all the architecture-dependent standard extensions
2939 will go into a version-specific directory such as
2941 while locally-added extensions will go into
2944 If you wish Perl to continue to search the old architecture-dependent
2945 library for your local extensions, give the path to that directory.
2946 If you do not wish to use your old architecture-dependent library
2947 files, answer 'none'.
2951 rp='Directory for your old 5.001 architecture-dependent libraries?'
2954 oldarchlibexp="$ansexp"
2955 case "$oldarchlib" in
2956 ''|' ') val="$undef" ;;
2962 : determine where public executables go
2967 rp='Pathname where the public executables will reside?'
2969 if $test "X$ansexp" != "X$binexp"; then
2977 Since you are running AFS, I need to distinguish the directory in which
2978 executables reside from the directory in which they are installed (and from
2979 which they are presumably copied to the former directory by occult means).
2982 case "$installbin" in
2983 '') dflt=`echo $binexp | sed 's#^/afs/#/afs/.#'`;;
2984 *) dflt="$installbin";;
2987 rp='Where will public executables be installed?'
2991 installbin="$binexp"
2994 : determine where manual pages are on this system
2998 syspath='/usr/man/man1 /usr/man/mann /usr/man/manl /usr/man/local/man1'
2999 syspath="$syspath /usr/man/u_man/man1 /usr/share/man/man1"
3000 syspath="$syspath /usr/catman/u_man/man1 /usr/man/l_man/man1"
3001 syspath="$syspath /usr/local/man/u_man/man1 /usr/local/man/l_man/man1"
3002 syspath="$syspath /usr/man/man.L /local/man/man1 /usr/local/man/man1"
3003 sysman=`./loc . /usr/man/man1 $syspath`
3006 if $test -d "$sysman"; then
3007 echo "System manual is in $sysman." >&4
3009 echo "Could not find manual pages in source form." >&4
3012 : see what memory models we can support
3015 $cat >pdp11.c <<'EOP'
3024 (cc -o pdp11 pdp11.c) >/dev/null 2>&1
3025 if $test -f pdp11 && ./pdp11 2>/dev/null; then
3026 dflt='unsplit split'
3028 tans=`./loc . X /lib/small /lib/large /usr/lib/small /usr/lib/large /lib/medium /usr/lib/medium /lib/huge`
3031 *) if $test -d /lib/small || $test -d /usr/lib/small; then
3036 if $test -d /lib/medium || $test -d /usr/lib/medium; then
3039 if $test -d /lib/large || $test -d /usr/lib/large; then
3042 if $test -d /lib/huge || $test -d /usr/lib/huge; then
3051 Some systems have different model sizes. On most systems they are called
3052 small, medium, large, and huge. On the PDP11 they are called unsplit and
3053 split. If your system doesn't support different memory models, say "none".
3054 If you wish to force everything to one memory model, say "none" here and
3055 put the appropriate flags later when it asks you for other cc and ld flags.
3056 Venix systems may wish to put "none" and let the compiler figure things out.
3057 (In the following question multiple model names should be space separated.)
3060 rp="Which memory models are supported?"
3075 '') if $contains '\-i' $sysman/ld.1 >/dev/null 2>&1 || \
3076 $contains '\-i' $sysman/cc.1 >/dev/null 2>&1; then
3083 rp="What flag indicates separate I and D space?"
3091 *large*|*small*|*medium*|*huge*)
3098 rp="What flag indicates large model?"
3108 *huge*) case "$huge" in
3112 rp="What flag indicates huge model?"
3122 *medium*) case "$medium" in
3126 rp="What flag indicates medium model?"
3133 *) medium="$large";;
3136 *small*) case "$small" in
3140 rp="What flag indicates small model?"
3151 echo "Unrecognized memory models--you may have to edit Makefile.SH" >&4
3155 : see if we need a special compiler
3163 *) if $contains '\-M' $sysman/cc.1 >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3164 if $contains '\-M' $sysman/cpp.1 >/dev/null 2>&1; then
3177 On some systems the default C compiler will not resolve multiple global
3178 references that happen to have the same name. On some such systems the "Mcc"
3179 command may be used to force these to be resolved. On other systems a "cc -M"
3180 command is required. (Note that the -M flag on other systems indicates a
3181 memory model to use!) If you have the Gnu C compiler, you might wish to use
3185 rp="What command will force resolution on this system?"
3193 rp="Use which C compiler?"
3198 echo "Checking for GNU cc in disguise and/or its version number..." >&4
3199 $cat >gccvers.c <<EOM
3204 printf("%s\n", __VERSION__);
3206 printf("%s\n", "1");
3212 if $cc -o gccvers gccvers.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
3213 gccversion=`./gccvers`
3214 case "$gccversion" in
3215 '') echo "You are not using GNU cc." ;;
3216 *) echo "You are using GNU cc $gccversion." ;;
3220 echo "*** WHOA THERE!!! ***" >&4
3221 echo " Your C compiler \"$cc\" doesn't seem to be working!" >&4
3222 case "$knowitall" in
3224 echo " You'd better start hunting for one and let me know about it." >&4
3230 case "$gccversion" in
3231 1*) cpp=`./loc gcc-cpp $cpp $pth` ;;
3234 : What should the include directory be ?
3236 $echo $n "Hmm... $c"
3240 if $test -f /bin/mips && /bin/mips; then
3241 echo "Looks like a MIPS system..."
3242 $cat >usr.c <<'EOCP'
3243 #ifdef SYSTYPE_BSD43
3247 if $cc -E usr.c > usr.out && $contains / usr.out >/dev/null 2>&1; then
3248 dflt='/bsd43/usr/include'
3252 mips_type='System V'
3254 $rm -f usr.c usr.out
3255 echo "and you're compiling with the $mips_type compiler and libraries."
3259 echo "Doesn't look like a MIPS system."
3270 case "$xxx_prompt" in
3272 rp='Where are the include files you want to use?'
3280 : Set private lib path
3283 plibpth="$incpath/usr/lib /usr/local/lib /usr/ccs/lib"
3288 '') dlist="$loclibpth $plibpth $glibpth";;
3289 *) dlist="$libpth";;
3292 : Now check and see which directories actually exist, avoiding duplicates
3296 if $test -d $xxx; then
3299 *) libpth="$libpth $xxx";;
3305 Some systems have incompatible or broken versions of libraries. Among
3306 the directories listed in the question below, please remove any you
3307 know not to be holding relevant libraries, and add any that are needed.
3308 Say "none" for none.
3319 rp="Directories to use for library searches?"
3326 : Define several unixisms. Hints files or command line options
3327 : can be used to override them.
3340 : Which makefile gets called first. This is used by make depend.
3341 case "$firstmakefile" in
3342 '') firstmakefile='makefile';;
3345 : compute shared library extension
3348 if xxx=`./loc libc.sl X $libpth`; $test -f "$xxx"; then
3358 On some systems, shared libraries may be available. Answer 'none' if
3359 you want to suppress searching of shared libraries for the remaining
3360 of this configuration.
3363 rp='What is the file extension used for shared libraries?'
3367 : Looking for optional libraries
3369 echo "Checking for optional libraries..." >&4
3374 case "$libswanted" in
3375 '') libswanted='c_s';;
3377 for thislib in $libswanted; do
3379 if xxx=`./loc lib$thislib.$so.[0-9]'*' X $libpth`; $test -f "$xxx"; then
3380 echo "Found -l$thislib (shared)."
3383 *) dflt="$dflt -l$thislib";;
3385 elif xxx=`./loc lib$thislib.$so X $libpth` ; $test -f "$xxx"; then
3386 echo "Found -l$thislib (shared)."
3389 *) dflt="$dflt -l$thislib";;
3391 elif xxx=`./loc lib$thislib$lib_ext X $libpth`; $test -f "$xxx"; then
3392 echo "Found -l$thislib."
3395 *) dflt="$dflt -l$thislib";;
3397 elif xxx=`./loc $thislib$lib_ext X $libpth`; $test -f "$xxx"; then
3398 echo "Found -l$thislib."
3401 *) dflt="$dflt -l$thislib";;
3403 elif xxx=`./loc lib${thislib}_s$lib_ext X $libpth`; $test -f "$xxx"; then
3404 echo "Found -l${thislib}_s."
3407 *) dflt="$dflt -l${thislib}_s";;
3409 elif xxx=`./loc Slib$thislib$lib_ext X $xlibpth`; $test -f "$xxx"; then
3410 echo "Found -l$thislib."
3413 *) dflt="$dflt -l$thislib";;
3416 echo "No -l$thislib."
3427 ' '|'') dflt='none';;
3432 Some versions of Unix support shared libraries, which make executables smaller
3433 but make load time slightly longer.
3435 On some systems, mostly System V Release 3's, the shared library is included
3436 by putting the option "-lc_s" as the last thing on the cc command line when
3437 linking. Other systems use shared libraries by default. There may be other
3438 libraries needed to compile $package on your machine as well. If your system
3439 needs the "-lc_s" option, include it here. Include any other special libraries
3440 here as well. Say "none" for none.
3444 rp="Any additional libraries?"
3451 : see how we invoke the C preprocessor
3453 echo "Now, how can we feed standard input to your C preprocessor..." >&4
3454 cat <<'EOT' >testcpp.c
3460 echo 'cat >.$$.c; '"$cc"' -E ${1+"$@"} .$$.c; rm .$$.c' >cppstdin
3462 wrapper=`pwd`/cppstdin
3466 if $test "X$cppstdin" != "X" && \
3467 $cppstdin $cppminus <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1 && \
3468 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1
3470 echo "You used to use $cppstdin $cppminus so we'll use that again."
3472 '') echo "But let's see if we can live without a wrapper..." ;;
3474 if $cpprun $cpplast <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1 && \
3475 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1
3477 echo "(And we'll use $cpprun $cpplast to preprocess directly.)"
3480 echo "(However, $cpprun $cpplast does not work, let's see...)"
3488 echo "Good old $cppstdin $cppminus does not seem to be of any help..."
3495 elif echo 'Maybe "'"$cc"' -E" will work...'; \
3496 $cc -E <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1; \
3497 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3498 echo "Yup, it does."
3501 elif echo 'Nope...maybe "'"$cc"' -E -" will work...'; \
3502 $cc -E - <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1; \
3503 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3504 echo "Yup, it does."
3507 elif echo 'Nope...maybe "'"$cc"' -P" will work...'; \
3508 $cc -P <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1; \
3509 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3510 echo "Yipee, that works!"
3513 elif echo 'Nope...maybe "'"$cc"' -P -" will work...'; \
3514 $cc -P - <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1; \
3515 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3516 echo "At long last!"
3519 elif echo 'No such luck, maybe "'$cpp'" will work...'; \
3520 $cpp <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1; \
3521 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3525 elif echo 'Nixed again...maybe "'$cpp' -" will work...'; \
3526 $cpp - <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1; \
3527 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3528 echo "Hooray, it works! I was beginning to wonder."
3531 elif echo 'Uh-uh. Time to get fancy. Trying a wrapper...'; \
3532 $wrapper <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1; \
3533 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3539 rp="No dice. I can't find a C preprocessor. Name one:"
3543 $x_cpp <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1
3544 if $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
3545 echo "OK, that will do." >&4
3547 echo "Sorry, I can't get that to work. Go find one and rerun Configure." >&4
3562 echo "Perhaps can we force $cc -E using a wrapper..."
3563 if $wrapper <testcpp.c >testcpp.out 2>&1; \
3564 $contains 'abc.*xyz' testcpp.out >/dev/null 2>&1
3570 echo "Nope, we'll have to live without it..."
3585 *) $rm -f $wrapper;;
3587 $rm -f testcpp.c testcpp.out
3589 : determine optimize, if desired, or use for debug flag also
3591 ' '|$undef) dflt='none';;
3593 *) dflt="$optimize";;
3597 Some C compilers have problems with their optimizers. By default, $package
3598 compiles with the -O flag to use the optimizer. Alternately, you might want
3599 to use the symbolic debugger, which uses the -g flag (on traditional Unix
3600 systems). Either flag can be specified here. To use neither flag, specify
3604 rp="What optimizer/debugger flag should be used?"
3608 'none') optimize=" ";;
3612 : We will not override a previous value, but we might want to
3613 : augment a hint file
3616 case "$gccversion" in
3617 1*) dflt='-fpcc-struct-return' ;;
3620 *-g*) dflt="$dflt -DDEBUGGING";;
3622 case "$gccversion" in
3623 2*) if test -d /etc/conf/kconfig.d &&
3624 $contains _POSIX_VERSION $usrinc/sys/unistd.h >/dev/null 2>&1
3633 case "$mips_type" in
3634 *BSD*|'') inclwanted="$locincpth $usrinc";;
3635 *) inclwanted="$locincpth $inclwanted $usrinc/bsd";;
3637 for thisincl in $inclwanted; do
3638 if $test -d $thisincl; then
3639 if $test x$thisincl != x$usrinc; then
3642 *) dflt="$dflt -I$thisincl";;
3648 inctest='if $contains $2 $usrinc/$1 >/dev/null 2>&1; then
3650 elif $contains $2 $usrinc/sys/$1 >/dev/null 2>&1; then
3658 *) dflt="$dflt -D$2";;
3663 set signal.h __LANGUAGE_C__; eval $inctest
3665 set signal.h LANGUAGE_C; eval $inctest
3669 none|recommended) dflt="$ccflags $dflt" ;;
3670 *) dflt="$ccflags";;
3678 Your C compiler may want other flags. For this question you should include
3679 -I/whatever and -DWHATEVER flags and any other flags used by the C compiler,
3680 but you should NOT include libraries or ld flags like -lwhatever. If you
3681 want $package to honor its debug switch, you should include -DDEBUGGING here.
3682 Your C compiler might also need additional flags, such as -D_POSIX_SOURCE,
3683 -DHIDEMYMALLOC or -DCRIPPLED_CC.
3685 To use no flags, specify the word "none".
3691 rp="Any additional cc flags?"
3698 : the following weeds options from ccflags that are of no interest to cpp
3700 case "$gccversion" in
3701 1*) cppflags="$cppflags -D__GNUC__"
3703 case "$mips_type" in
3705 *BSD*) cppflags="$cppflags -DSYSTYPE_BSD43";;
3711 echo "Let me guess what the preprocessor flags are..." >&4
3725 *) ftry="$previous $flag";;
3727 if $cppstdin -DLFRULB=bar $cppflags $ftry $cppminus <cpp.c \
3728 >cpp1.out 2>/dev/null && \
3729 $cpprun -DLFRULB=bar $ftry $cpplast <cpp.c \
3730 >cpp2.out 2>/dev/null && \
3731 $contains 'foo.*xx.*bar' cpp1.out >/dev/null 2>&1 && \
3732 $contains 'foo.*xx.*bar' cpp2.out >/dev/null 2>&1
3734 cppflags="$cppflags $ftry"
3744 *-*) echo "They appear to be: $cppflags";;
3746 $rm -f cpp.c cpp?.out
3750 : flags used in final linking phase
3753 '') if ./venix; then
3759 *-posix*) dflt="$dflt -posix" ;;
3762 *) dflt="$ldflags";;
3765 : Try to guess additional flags to pick up local libraries.
3766 for thislibdir in $libpth; do
3767 case " $loclibpth " in
3770 *"-L$thislibdir "*) ;;
3771 *) dflt="$dflt -L$thislibdir" ;;
3783 Your C linker may need flags. For this question you should
3784 include -L/whatever and any other flags used by the C linker, but you
3785 should NOT include libraries like -lwhatever.
3787 Make sure you include the appropriate -L/path flags if your C linker
3788 does not normally search all of the directories you specified above,
3791 To use no flags, specify the word "none".
3795 rp="Any additional ld flags (NOT including libraries)?"
3801 rmlist="$rmlist pdp11"
3805 echo "Checking your choice of C compiler, libs, and flags for coherency..." >&4
3806 set X $cc $optimize $ccflags $ldflags -o try try.c $libs
3809 I've tried to compile and run a simple program with:
3814 and I got the following output:
3817 $cat > try.c <<'EOF'
3822 if sh -c "$cc $optimize $ccflags -o try try.c $ldflags $libs" >>try.msg 2>&1; then
3823 if sh -c './try' >>try.msg 2>&1; then
3826 echo "The program compiled OK, but exited with status $?." >>try.msg
3827 rp="You have a problem. Shall I abort Configure (and explain the problem)"
3831 echo "I can't compile the test program." >>try.msg
3832 rp="You have a BIG problem. Shall I abort Configure (and explain the problem)"
3838 case "$knowitall" in
3840 echo "(The supplied flags might be incorrect with this C compiler.)"
3848 *) echo "Ok. Stopping Configure." >&4
3853 n) echo "OK, that should do.";;
3855 $rm -f try try.* core
3858 echo "Checking for GNU C Library..." >&4
3859 cat >gnulibc.c <<EOM
3863 return __libc_main();
3866 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o gnulibc gnulibc.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 && \
3867 ./gnulibc | $contains '^GNU C Library' >/dev/null 2>&1; then
3869 echo "You are using the GNU C Library"
3872 echo "You are not using the GNU C Library"
3878 : see if nm is to be used to determine whether a symbol is defined or not
3881 case "$d_gnulibc" in
3886 dflt=`egrep 'inlibc|csym' ../Configure | wc -l 2>/dev/null`
3887 if $test $dflt -gt 20; then
3904 I can use 'nm' to extract the symbols from your C libraries. This is a time
3905 consuming task which may generate huge output on the disk (up to 3 megabytes)
3906 but that should make the symbols extraction faster. The alternative is to skip
3907 the 'nm' extraction part and to compile a small test program instead to
3908 determine whether each symbol is present. If you have a fast C compiler and/or
3909 if your 'nm' output cannot be parsed, this may be the best solution.
3910 You shouldn't let me use 'nm' if you have the GNU C Library.
3913 rp='Shall I use nm to extract C symbols from the libraries?'
3925 : nm options which may be necessary
3927 '') if $test -f /mach_boot; then
3929 elif $test -d /usr/ccs/lib; then
3930 nm_opt='-p' # Solaris (and SunOS?)
3931 elif $test -f /dgux; then
3933 elif $test -f /lib64/rld; then
3934 nm_opt='-p' # 64-bit Irix
3940 : nm options which may be necessary for shared libraries but illegal
3941 : for archive libraries. Thank you, Linux.
3942 case "$nm_so_opt" in
3943 '') case "$myuname" in
3945 if nm --help | $grep 'dynamic' > /dev/null 2>&1; then
3946 nm_so_opt='--dynamic'
3955 : get list of predefined functions in a handy place
3960 *-lc_s*) libc=`./loc libc_s$lib_ext $libc $libpth`
3967 *) for thislib in $libs; do
3970 : Handle C library specially below.
3973 thislib=`echo $thislib | $sed -e 's/^-l//'`
3974 if try=`./loc lib$thislib.$so.'*' X $libpth`; $test -f "$try"; then
3976 elif try=`./loc lib$thislib.$so X $libpth`; $test -f "$try"; then
3978 elif try=`./loc lib$thislib$lib_ext X $libpth`; $test -f "$try"; then
3980 elif try=`./loc $thislib$lib_ext X $libpth`; $test -f "$try"; then
3982 elif try=`./loc lib$thislib X $libpth`; $test -f "$try"; then
3984 elif try=`./loc $thislib X $libpth`; $test -f "$try"; then
3986 elif try=`./loc Slib$thislib$lib_ext X $xlibpth`; $test -f "$try"; then
3991 libnames="$libnames $try"
3993 *) libnames="$libnames $thislib" ;;
4002 for xxx in $libpth; do
4003 $test -r $1 || set $xxx/libc.$so
4004 : The messy sed command sorts on library version numbers.
4006 set `echo blurfl; echo $xxx/libc.$so.[0-9]* | \
4007 tr ' ' '\012' | egrep -v '\.[A-Za-z]*$' | $sed -e '
4009 s/[0-9][0-9]*/0000&/g
4010 s/0*\([0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]\)/\1/g
4013 sort | $sed -e 's/^.* //'`
4016 $test -r $1 || set /usr/ccs/lib/libc.$so
4017 $test -r $1 || set /lib/libsys_s$lib_ext
4023 if $test -r "$1"; then
4024 echo "Your (shared) C library seems to be in $1."
4026 elif $test -r /lib/libc && $test -r /lib/clib; then
4027 echo "Your C library seems to be in both /lib/clib and /lib/libc."
4029 libc='/lib/clib /lib/libc'
4030 if $test -r /lib/syslib; then
4031 echo "(Your math library is in /lib/syslib.)"
4032 libc="$libc /lib/syslib"
4034 elif $test -r "$libc" || (test -h "$libc") >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4035 echo "Your C library seems to be in $libc, as you said before."
4036 elif $test -r $incpath/usr/lib/libc$lib_ext; then
4037 libc=$incpath/usr/lib/libc$lib_ext;
4038 echo "Your C library seems to be in $libc. That's fine."
4039 elif $test -r /lib/libc$lib_ext; then
4040 libc=/lib/libc$lib_ext;
4041 echo "Your C library seems to be in $libc. You're normal."
4043 if tans=`./loc libc$lib_ext blurfl/dyick $libpth`; $test -r "$tans"; then
4045 elif tans=`./loc libc blurfl/dyick $libpth`; $test -r "$tans"; then
4046 libnames="$libnames "`./loc clib blurfl/dyick $libpth`
4047 elif tans=`./loc clib blurfl/dyick $libpth`; $test -r "$tans"; then
4049 elif tans=`./loc Slibc$lib_ext blurfl/dyick $xlibpth`; $test -r "$tans"; then
4051 elif tans=`./loc Mlibc$lib_ext blurfl/dyick $xlibpth`; $test -r "$tans"; then
4054 tans=`./loc Llibc$lib_ext blurfl/dyick $xlibpth`
4056 if $test -r "$tans"; then
4057 echo "Your C library seems to be in $tans, of all places."
4063 if $test $xxx = apollo -o -r "$libc" || (test -h "$libc") >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4067 If the guess above is wrong (which it might be if you're using a strange
4068 compiler, or your machine supports multiple models), you can override it here.
4073 echo $libpth | tr ' ' '\012' | sort | uniq > libpath
4075 I can't seem to find your C library. I've looked in the following places:
4078 $sed 's/^/ /' libpath
4081 None of these seems to contain your C library. I need to get its name...
4086 rp='Where is your C library?'
4091 echo $libc $libnames | tr ' ' '\012' | sort | uniq > libnames
4092 set X `cat libnames`
4095 case $# in 1) xxx=file; esac
4096 echo "Extracting names from the following $xxx for later perusal:" >&4
4098 $sed 's/^/ /' libnames >&4
4100 $echo $n "This may take a while...$c" >&4
4102 : Linux may need the special Dynamic option to nm for shared libraries.
4103 : In general, this is stored in the nm_so_opt variable.
4104 : Unfortunately, that option may be fatal on non-shared libraries.
4105 for nm_libs_ext in $*; do
4106 case $nm_libs_ext in
4107 *$so*) nm $nm_so_opt $nm_opt $nm_libs_ext 2>/dev/null ;;
4108 *) nm $nm_opt $nm_libs_ext 2>/dev/null ;;
4113 $grep fprintf libc.tmp > libc.ptf
4114 xscan='eval "<libc.ptf $com >libc.list"; $echo $n ".$c" >&4'
4115 xrun='eval "<libc.tmp $com >libc.list"; echo "done" >&4'
4117 if com="$sed -n -e 's/__IO//' -e 's/^.* $xxx *_[_.]*//p' -e 's/^.* $xxx *//p'";\
4119 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4121 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/^__*//' -e 's/^\([a-zA-Z_0-9$]*\).*xtern.*/\1/p'";\
4123 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4125 elif com="$sed -n -e '/|UNDEF/d' -e '/FUNC..GL/s/^.*|__*//p'";\
4127 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4129 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/^.* D __*//p' -e 's/^.* D //p'";\
4131 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4133 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/^_//' -e 's/^\([a-zA-Z_0-9]*\).*xtern.*text.*/\1/p'";\
4135 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4137 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/^.*|FUNC |GLOB .*|//p'";\
4139 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4141 elif com="$grep '|' | $sed -n -e '/|COMMON/d' -e '/|DATA/d' \
4142 -e '/ file/d' -e 's/^\([^ ]*\).*/\1/p'";\
4144 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4146 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/^.*|FUNC |GLOB .*|//p' -e 's/^.*|FUNC |WEAK .*|//p'";\
4148 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4150 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/^__//' -e '/|Undef/d' -e '/|Proc/s/ .*//p'";\
4152 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4154 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/^.*|Proc .*|Text *| *//p'";\
4156 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4158 elif com="$sed -n -e '/Def. Text/s/.* \([^ ]*\)\$/\1/p'";\
4160 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4162 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/^[-0-9a-f ]*_\(.*\)=.*/\1/p'";\
4164 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4166 elif com="$sed -n -e 's/.*\.text n\ \ \ \.//p'";\
4168 $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
4171 nm -p $* 2>/dev/null >libc.tmp
4172 $grep fprintf libc.tmp > libc.ptf
4173 if com="$sed -n -e 's/^.* [ADTSIW] *_[_.]*//p' -e 's/^.* [ADTSIW] //p'";\
4174 eval $xscan; $contains '^fprintf$' libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1
4180 echo "nm didn't seem to work right. Trying ar instead..." >&4
4182 if ar t $libc > libc.tmp; then
4183 for thisname in $libnames; do
4184 ar t $thisname >>libc.tmp
4186 $sed -e 's/\.o$//' < libc.tmp > libc.list
4189 echo "ar didn't seem to work right." >&4
4190 echo "Maybe this is a Cray...trying bld instead..." >&4
4191 if bld t $libc | $sed -e 's/.*\///' -e 's/\.o:.*$//' > libc.list
4193 for thisname in $libnames; do
4195 $sed -e 's/.*\///' -e 's/\.o:.*$//' >>libc.list
4196 ar t $thisname >>libc.tmp
4200 echo "That didn't work either. Giving up." >&4
4207 if $test -f /lib/syscalls.exp; then
4209 echo "Also extracting names from /lib/syscalls.exp for good ole AIX..." >&4
4210 $sed -n 's/^\([^ ]*\)[ ]*syscall$/\1/p' /lib/syscalls.exp >>libc.list
4214 $rm -f libnames libpath
4216 : determine filename position in cpp output
4218 echo "Computing filename position in cpp output for #include directives..." >&4
4219 echo '#include <stdio.h>' > foo.c
4222 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus <foo.c 2>/dev/null | \
4223 $grep '^[ ]*#.*stdio\.h' | \
4224 while read cline; do
4227 while $test \$# -gt 0; do
4228 if $test -r \`echo \$1 | $tr -d '"'\`; then
4233 pos=\`expr \$pos + 1\`
4245 *) pos="${fieldn}th";;
4247 echo "Your cpp writes the filename in the $pos field of the line."
4249 : locate header file
4254 if test -f $usrinc/\$wanted; then
4255 echo "$usrinc/\$wanted"
4258 awkprg='{ print \$$fieldn }'
4259 echo "#include <\$wanted>" > foo\$\$.c
4260 $cppstdin $cppminus $cppflags < foo\$\$.c 2>/dev/null | \
4261 $grep "^[ ]*#.*\$wanted" | \
4262 while read cline; do
4263 name=\`echo \$cline | $awk "\$awkprg" | $tr -d '"'\`
4265 */\$wanted) echo "\$name"; exit 0;;
4276 : define an alternate in-header-list? function
4277 inhdr='echo " "; td=$define; tu=$undef; yyy=$@;
4278 cont=true; xxf="echo \"<\$1> found.\" >&4";
4279 case $# in 2) xxnf="echo \"<\$1> NOT found.\" >&4";;
4280 *) xxnf="echo \"<\$1> NOT found, ...\" >&4";;
4282 case $# in 4) instead=instead;; *) instead="at last";; esac;
4283 while $test "$cont"; do
4285 var=$2; eval "was=\$$2";
4286 if $test "$xxx" && $test -r "$xxx";
4288 eval "case \"\$$var\" in $undef) . ./whoa; esac"; eval "$var=\$td";
4291 eval "case \"\$$var\" in $define) . ./whoa; esac"; eval "$var=\$tu"; fi;
4292 set $yyy; shift; shift; yyy=$@;
4293 case $# in 0) cont="";;
4294 2) xxf="echo \"but I found <\$1> $instead.\" >&4";
4295 xxnf="echo \"and I did not find <\$1> either.\" >&4";;
4296 *) xxf="echo \"but I found <\$1\> instead.\" >&4";
4297 xxnf="echo \"there is no <\$1>, ...\" >&4";;
4301 do set $yyy; var=$2; eval "was=\$$2";
4302 eval "case \"\$$var\" in $define) . ./whoa; esac"; eval "$var=\$tu";
4303 set $yyy; shift; shift; yyy=$@;
4306 : see if dld is available
4310 : is a C symbol defined?
4313 -v) tf=libc.tmp; tc=""; tdc="";;
4314 -a) tf=libc.tmp; tc="[0]"; tdc="[]";;
4315 *) tlook="^$1\$"; tf=libc.list; tc="()"; tdc="()";;
4318 case "$reuseval-$4" in
4320 true-*) tx=no; eval "tval=\$$4"; case "$tval" in "") tx=yes;; esac;;
4326 if $contains $tlook $tf >/dev/null 2>&1;
4331 echo "main() { extern short $1$tdc; printf(\"%hd\", $1$tc); }" > t.c;
4332 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o t t.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1;
4340 $define) tval=true;;
4346 : define an is-in-libc? function
4347 inlibc='echo " "; td=$define; tu=$undef;
4348 sym=$1; var=$2; eval "was=\$$2";
4350 case "$reuseval$was" in
4360 echo "$sym() found." >&4;
4361 case "$was" in $undef) . ./whoa; esac; eval "$var=\$td";;
4363 echo "$sym() NOT found." >&4;
4364 case "$was" in $define) . ./whoa; esac; eval "$var=\$tu";;
4368 $define) echo "$sym() found." >&4;;
4369 *) echo "$sym() NOT found." >&4;;
4373 : see if dlopen exists
4380 : determine which dynamic loading, if any, to compile in
4382 dldir="ext/DynaLoader"
4395 $define) dflt='y' ;;
4398 $define) dflt='y' ;;
4400 : Does a dl_xxx.xs file exist for this operating system
4401 $test -f ../$dldir/dl_${osname}.xs && dflt='y'
4404 rp="Do you wish to use dynamic loading?"
4411 if $test -f ../$dldir/dl_${osname}.xs ; then
4412 dflt="$dldir/dl_${osname}.xs"
4413 elif $test "$d_dlopen" = "$define" ; then
4414 dflt="$dldir/dl_dlopen.xs"
4415 elif $test "$i_dld" = "$define" ; then
4416 dflt="$dldir/dl_dld.xs"
4421 *) dflt="$dldir/$dlsrc"
4424 echo "The following dynamic loading files are available:"
4425 : Can not go over to $dldir because getfile has path hard-coded in.
4426 cd ..; ls -C $dldir/dl*.xs; cd UU
4427 rp="Source file to use for dynamic loading"
4432 dlsrc=`echo $ans | $sed -e 's@.*/\([^/]*\)$@\1@'`
4436 Some systems may require passing special flags to $cc -c to
4437 compile modules that will be used to create a shared library.
4438 To use no flags, say "none".
4441 case "$cccdlflags" in
4442 '') case "$gccversion" in
4443 '') case "$osname" in
4445 next) dflt='none' ;;
4446 svr4*|esix*) dflt='-Kpic' ;;
4447 irix*) dflt='-KPIC' ;;
4448 solaris) case "$ccflags" in
4449 *-DDEBUGGING*) dflt='-KPIC' ;;
4452 sunos) dflt='-pic' ;;
4455 *) case "$osname/$ccflags" in
4456 solaris/*-DDEBUGGING*) dflt='-fPIC' ;;
4460 *) dflt="$cccdlflags" ;;
4462 rp="Any special flags to pass to $cc -c to compile shared library modules?"
4465 none) cccdlflags=' ' ;;
4466 *) cccdlflags="$ans" ;;
4471 Some systems use ld to create libraries that can be dynamically loaded,
4472 while other systems (such as those using ELF) use $cc.
4476 '') $cat >try.c <<'EOM'
4477 /* Test for whether ELF binaries are produced */
4482 int i = open("a.out",O_RDONLY);
4485 if(read(i,b,4)==4 && b[0]==127 && b[1]=='E' && b[2]=='L' && b[3]=='F')
4486 exit(0); /* succeed (yes, it's ELF) */
4491 if $cc $ccflags try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 && ./a.out; then
4493 You appear to have ELF support. I'll use $cc to build dynamic libraries.
4497 echo "I'll use ld to build dynamic libraries."
4506 rp="What command should be used to create dynamic libraries?"
4512 Some systems may require passing special flags to $ld to create a
4513 library that can be dynamically loaded. If your ld flags include
4514 -L/other/path options to locate libraries outside your loader's normal
4515 search path, you may need to specify those -L options here as well. To
4516 use no flags, say "none".
4519 case "$lddlflags" in
4520 '') case "$osname" in
4522 linux|irix*) dflt='-shared' ;;
4523 next) dflt='none' ;;
4524 solaris) dflt='-G' ;;
4525 sunos) dflt='-assert nodefinitions' ;;
4526 svr4*|esix*) dflt="-G $ldflags" ;;
4530 *) dflt="$lddlflags" ;;
4533 : Try to guess additional flags to pick up local libraries.
4534 for thisflag in $ldflags; do
4539 *) dflt="$dflt $thisflag" ;;
4549 rp="Any special flags to pass to $ld to create a dynamically loaded library?"
4552 none) lddlflags=' ' ;;
4553 *) lddlflags="$ans" ;;
4558 Some systems may require passing special flags to $cc to indicate that
4559 the resulting executable will use dynamic linking. To use no flags,
4563 case "$ccdlflags" in
4564 '') case "$osname" in
4565 hpux) dflt='-Wl,-E' ;;
4566 linux) dflt='-rdynamic' ;;
4567 next) dflt='none' ;;
4568 sunos) dflt='none' ;;
4571 *) dflt="$ccdlflags" ;;
4573 rp="Any special flags to pass to $cc to use dynamic loading?"
4576 none) ccdlflags=' ' ;;
4577 *) ccdlflags="$ans" ;;
4591 # No dynamic loading being used, so don't bother even to prompt.
4594 *) case "$useshrplib" in
4595 '') case "$osname" in
4596 svr4*|dgux|dynixptx|esix|powerux)
4598 also='Building a shared libperl is required for dynamic loading to work on your system.'
4603 also='Building a shared libperl is needed for MAB support.'
4611 also='Building a shared libperl will definitely not work on SunOS 4.'
4625 The perl executable is normally obtained by linking perlmain.c with
4626 libperl${lib_ext}, any static extensions (usually just DynaLoader), and
4627 any other libraries needed on this system (such as -lm, etc.). Since
4628 your system supports dynamic loading, it is probably possible to build
4629 a shared libperl.$so. If you will have more than one executable linked
4630 to libperl.$so, this will significantly reduce the size of each
4631 executable, but it may have a noticeable affect on performance. The
4632 default is probably sensible for your system.
4636 rp="Build a shared libperl.$so (y/n)"
4641 # Why does next4 have to be so different?
4642 case "${osname}${osvers}" in
4643 next4*) xxx='DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH' ;;
4644 *) xxx='LD_LIBRARY_PATH' ;;
4648 To build perl, you must add the current working directory to your
4649 $xxx environtment variable before running make. You can do
4651 $xxx=\`pwd\`; export $xxx
4652 for Bourne-style shells, or
4654 for Csh-style shells. You *MUST* do this before running make.
4658 *) useshrplib='false' ;;
4663 case "$useshrplib" in
4667 # Figure out a good name for libperl.so. Since it gets stored in
4668 # a version-specific architecture-dependent library, the version
4669 # number isn't really that important, except for making cc/ld happy.
4671 # A name such as libperl.so.3.1
4672 majmin="libperl.$so.$patchlevel.$subversion"
4673 # A name such as libperl.so.301
4674 majonly=`echo $patchlevel $subversion |
4675 $awk '{printf "%d%02d", $1, $2}'`
4676 majonly=libperl.$so.$majonly
4677 # I'd prefer to keep the os-specific stuff here to a minimum, and
4678 # rely on figuring it out from the naming of libc.
4679 case "${osname}${osvers}" in
4682 # XXX How handle the --version stuff for MAB?
4684 linux*) # ld won't link with a bare -lperl otherwise.
4687 *) # Try to guess based on whether libc has major.minor.
4689 *libc.$so.[0-9]*.[0-9]*) dflt=$majmin ;;
4690 *libc.$so.[0-9]*) dflt=$majonly ;;
4691 *) dflt=libperl.$so ;;
4701 I need to select a good name for the shared libperl. If your system uses
4702 library names with major and minor numbers, then you might want something
4703 like $majmin. Alternatively, if your system uses a single version
4704 number for shared libraries, then you might want to use $majonly.
4705 Or, your system might be quite happy with a simple libperl.$so.
4707 Since the shared libperl will get installed into a version-specific
4708 architecture-dependent directory, the version number of the shared perl
4709 library probably isn't important, so the default should be o.k.
4712 rp='What name do you want to give to the shared libperl?'
4715 echo "Ok, I'll use $libperl"
4718 libperl="libperl${lib_ext}"
4722 # Detect old use of shrpdir via undocumented Configure -Dshrpdir
4726 WARNING: Use of the shrpdir variable for the installation location of
4727 the shared $libperl is not supported. It was never documented and
4728 will not work in this version. Let me (chip@perl.com) know of any
4729 problems this may cause.
4735 But your current setting of $shrpdir is
4736 the default anyway, so it's harmless.
4741 Further, your current attempted setting of $shrpdir
4742 conflicts with the value of $archlibexp/CORE
4743 that installperl will use.
4750 # How will the perl executable find the installed shared $libperl?
4751 # Add $xxx to ccdlflags.
4752 # If we can't figure out a command-line option, use $shrpenv to
4753 # set env LD_RUN_PATH. The main perl makefile uses this.
4754 shrpdir=$archlibexp/CORE
4757 if "$useshrplib"; then
4760 # We'll set it in Makefile.SH...
4766 xxx="-Wl,-R$shrpdir"
4768 linux|irix*|dec_osf)
4769 xxx="-Wl,-rpath,$shrpdir"
4772 # next doesn't like the default...
4775 tmp_shrpenv="env LD_RUN_PATH=$shrpdir"
4781 # Only add $xxx if it isn't already in ccdlflags.
4782 case " $ccdlflags " in
4784 *) ccdlflags="$ccdlflags $xxx"
4787 Adding $xxx to the flags
4788 passed to $ld so that the perl executable will find the
4789 installed shared $libperl.
4797 # Respect a hint or command-line value.
4799 '') shrpenv="$tmp_shrpenv" ;;
4802 : determine where manual pages go
4803 set man1dir man1dir none
4807 $spackage has manual pages available in source form.
4811 echo "However, you don't have nroff, so they're probably useless to you."
4813 '') man1dir="none";;
4816 echo "If you don't want the manual sources installed, answer 'none'."
4821 lookpath="$prefixexp/man/man1 $prefixexp/man/l_man/man1"
4822 lookpath="$lookpath $prefixexp/man/p_man/man1"
4823 lookpath="$lookpath $prefixexp/man/u_man/man1"
4824 lookpath="$lookpath $prefixexp/man/man.1"
4825 : If prefix contains 'perl' then we want to keep the man pages
4826 : under the prefix directory. Otherwise, look in a variety of
4827 : other possible places. This is debatable, but probably a
4828 : good compromise. Well, apparently not.
4829 : Experience has shown people expect man1dir to be under prefix,
4830 : so we now always put it there. Users who want other behavior
4831 : can answer interactively or use a command line option.
4832 : Does user have System V-style man paths.
4834 */?_man*) dflt=`./loc . $prefixexp/l_man/man1 $lookpath` ;;
4835 *) dflt=`./loc . $prefixexp/man/man1 $lookpath` ;;
4845 rp="Where do the main $spackage manual pages (source) go?"
4847 if $test "X$man1direxp" != "X$ansexp"; then
4851 man1direxp="$ansexp"
4859 Since you are running AFS, I need to distinguish the directory in which
4860 manual pages reside from the directory in which they are installed (and from
4861 which they are presumably copied to the former directory by occult means).
4864 case "$installman1dir" in
4865 '') dflt=`echo $man1direxp | sed 's#^/afs/#/afs/.#'`;;
4866 *) dflt="$installman1dir";;
4869 rp='Where will man pages be installed?'
4871 installman1dir="$ans"
4873 installman1dir="$man1direxp"
4876 : What suffix to use on installed man pages
4883 rp="What suffix should be used for the main $spackage man pages?"
4885 '') case "$man1dir" in
4899 *) dflt="$man1ext";;
4906 : see if we can have long filenames
4908 rmlist="$rmlist /tmp/cf$$"
4909 $test -d /tmp/cf$$ || mkdir /tmp/cf$$
4910 first=123456789abcdef
4911 second=/tmp/cf$$/$first
4912 $rm -f $first $second
4913 if (echo hi >$first) 2>/dev/null; then
4914 if $test -f 123456789abcde; then
4915 echo 'You cannot have filenames longer than 14 characters. Sigh.' >&4
4918 if (echo hi >$second) 2>/dev/null; then
4919 if $test -f /tmp/cf$$/123456789abcde; then
4921 That's peculiar... You can have filenames longer than 14 characters, but only
4922 on some of the filesystems. Maybe you are using NFS. Anyway, to avoid problems
4923 I shall consider your system cannot support long filenames at all.
4927 echo 'You can have filenames longer than 14 characters.' >&4
4932 How confusing! Some of your filesystems are sane enough to allow filenames
4933 longer than 14 characters but some others like /tmp can't even think about them.
4934 So, for now on, I shall assume your kernel does not allow them at all.
4941 You can't have filenames longer than 14 chars. You can't even think about them!
4947 $rm -rf /tmp/cf$$ 123456789abcde*
4949 : determine where library module manual pages go
4950 set man3dir man3dir none
4954 $spackage has manual pages for many of the library modules.
4960 However, you don't have nroff, so they're probably useless to you.
4961 You can use the supplied perldoc script instead.
4964 '') man3dir="none";;
4968 case "$d_flexfnam" in
4971 However, your system can't handle the long file names like File::Basename.3.
4972 You can use the supplied perldoc script instead.
4975 '') man3dir="none";;
4979 echo "If you don't want the manual sources installed, answer 'none'."
4980 : We dont use /usr/local/man/man3 because some man programs will
4981 : only show the /usr/local/man/man3 contents, and not the system ones,
4982 : thus man less will show the perl module less.pm, but not the system
4983 : less command. We might also conflict with TCL man pages.
4984 : However, something like /opt/perl/man/man3 is fine.
4986 '') case "$prefix" in
4987 *perl*) dflt=`echo $man1dir |
4988 $sed -e 's/man1/man3/g' -e 's/man\.1/man\.3/g'` ;;
4989 *) dflt="$privlib/man/man3" ;;
4993 *) dflt="$man3dir" ;;
4998 rp="Where do the $spackage library man pages (source) go?"
5000 if test "X$man3direxp" != "X$ansexp"; then
5005 man3direxp="$ansexp"
5013 Since you are running AFS, I need to distinguish the directory in which
5014 manual pages reside from the directory in which they are installed (and from
5015 which they are presumably copied to the former directory by occult means).
5018 case "$installman3dir" in
5019 '') dflt=`echo $man3direxp | sed 's#^/afs/#/afs/.#'`;;
5020 *) dflt="$installman3dir";;
5023 rp='Where will man pages be installed?'
5025 installman3dir="$ans"
5027 installman3dir="$man3direxp"
5030 : What suffix to use on installed man pages
5037 rp="What suffix should be used for the $spackage library man pages?"
5039 '') case "$man3dir" in
5053 *) dflt="$man3ext";;
5060 : see if we have to deal with yellow pages, now NIS.
5061 if $test -d /usr/etc/yp || $test -d /etc/yp; then
5062 if $test -f /usr/etc/nibindd; then
5064 echo "I'm fairly confident you're on a NeXT."
5066 rp='Do you get the hosts file via NetInfo?'
5075 y*) hostcat='nidump hosts .';;
5076 *) case "$hostcat" in
5077 nidump*) hostcat='';;
5087 '') if $contains '^\+' /etc/passwd >/dev/null 2>&1; then
5095 rp='Are you getting the hosts file via yellow pages?'
5098 y*) hostcat='ypcat hosts';;
5099 *) hostcat='cat /etc/hosts';;
5105 : now get the host name
5107 echo "Figuring out host name..." >&4
5108 case "$myhostname" in
5110 echo 'Maybe "hostname" will work...'
5111 if tans=`sh -c hostname 2>&1` ; then
5119 if $test "$cont"; then
5121 echo 'Oh, dear. Maybe "/etc/systemid" is the key...'
5122 if tans=`cat /etc/systemid 2>&1` ; then
5124 phostname='cat /etc/systemid'
5125 echo "Whadyaknow. Xenix always was a bit strange..."
5128 elif $test -r /etc/systemid; then
5129 echo "(What is a non-Xenix system doing with /etc/systemid?)"
5132 if $test "$cont"; then
5133 echo 'No, maybe "uuname -l" will work...'
5134 if tans=`sh -c 'uuname -l' 2>&1` ; then
5136 phostname='uuname -l'
5138 echo 'Strange. Maybe "uname -n" will work...'
5139 if tans=`sh -c 'uname -n' 2>&1` ; then
5141 phostname='uname -n'
5143 echo 'Oh well, maybe I can mine it out of whoami.h...'
5144 if tans=`sh -c $contains' sysname $usrinc/whoami.h' 2>&1` ; then
5145 myhostname=`echo "$tans" | $sed 's/^.*"\(.*\)"/\1/'`
5146 phostname="sed -n -e '"'/sysname/s/^.*\"\\(.*\\)\"/\1/{'"' -e p -e q -e '}' <$usrinc/whoami.h"
5148 case "$myhostname" in
5149 '') echo "Does this machine have an identity crisis or something?"
5152 echo "Well, you said $myhostname before..."
5153 phostname='echo $myhostname';;
5159 : you do not want to know about this
5164 if $test "$myhostname" ; then
5166 rp='Your host name appears to be "'$myhostname'".'" Right?"
5174 : bad guess or no guess
5175 while $test "X$myhostname" = X ; do
5177 rp="Please type the (one word) name of your host:"
5182 : translate upper to lower if necessary
5183 case "$myhostname" in
5185 echo "(Normalizing case in your host name)"
5186 myhostname=`echo $myhostname | ./tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'`
5190 case "$myhostname" in
5192 dflt=`expr "X$myhostname" : "X[^.]*\(\..*\)"`
5193 myhostname=`expr "X$myhostname" : "X\([^.]*\)\."`
5194 echo "(Trimming domain name from host name--host name is now $myhostname)"
5196 *) case "$mydomain" in
5199 : If we use NIS, try ypmatch.
5200 : Is there some reason why this was not done before?
5201 test "X$hostcat" = "Xypcat hosts" &&
5202 ypmatch "$myhostname" hosts 2>/dev/null |\
5203 $sed -e 's/[ ]*#.*//; s/$/ /' > hosts && \
5206 : Extract only the relevant hosts, reducing file size,
5207 : remove comments, insert trailing space for later use.
5208 $hostcat | $sed -n -e "s/[ ]*#.*//; s/\$/ /
5209 /[ ]$myhostname[ . ]/p" > hosts
5212 $test x`$awk "/[0-9].*[ ]$myhostname$tmp_re/ { sum++ }
5213 END { print sum }" hosts` = x1 || tmp_re="[ ]"
5214 dflt=.`$awk "/[0-9].*[ ]$myhostname$tmp_re/ {for(i=2; i<=NF;i++) print \\\$i}" \
5215 hosts | $sort | $uniq | \
5216 $sed -n -e "s/$myhostname\.\([-a-zA-Z0-9_.]\)/\1/p"`
5217 case `$echo X$dflt` in
5218 X*\ *) echo "(Several hosts in /etc/hosts matched hostname)"
5221 X.) echo "(You do not have fully-qualified names in /etc/hosts)"
5226 tans=`./loc resolv.conf X /etc /usr/etc`
5227 if $test -f "$tans"; then
5228 echo "(Attempting domain name extraction from $tans)"
5229 : Why was there an Egrep here, when Sed works?
5230 : Look for either a search or a domain directive.
5231 dflt=.`$sed -n -e 's/ / /g' \
5232 -e 's/^search *\([^ ]*\).*/\1/p' $tans \
5233 | ./tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]' 2>/dev/null`
5235 .) dflt=.`$sed -n -e 's/ / /g' \
5236 -e 's/^domain *\([^ ]*\).*/\1/p' $tans \
5237 | ./tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]' 2>/dev/null`
5244 .) echo "(No help from resolv.conf either -- attempting clever guess)"
5245 dflt=.`sh -c domainname 2>/dev/null`
5248 .nis.*|.yp.*|.main.*) dflt=`echo $dflt | $sed -e 's/^\.[^.]*//'`;;
5253 .) echo "(Lost all hope -- silly guess then)"
5259 *) dflt="$mydomain";;
5263 rp="What is your domain name?"
5273 : translate upper to lower if necessary
5276 echo "(Normalizing case in your domain name)"
5277 mydomain=`echo $mydomain | ./tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'`
5281 : a little sanity check here
5282 case "$phostname" in
5285 case `$phostname | ./tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'` in
5286 $myhostname$mydomain|$myhostname) ;;
5288 case "$phostname" in
5290 echo "(That doesn't agree with your whoami.h file, by the way.)"
5293 echo "(That doesn't agree with your $phostname command, by the way.)"
5303 I need to get your e-mail address in Internet format if possible, i.e.
5304 something like user@host.domain. Please answer accurately since I have
5305 no easy means to double check it. The default value provided below
5306 is most probably close to the reality but may not be valid from outside
5307 your organization...
5311 while test "$cont"; do
5313 '') dflt="$cf_by@$myhostname$mydomain";;
5314 *) dflt="$cf_email";;
5316 rp='What is your e-mail address?'
5322 rp='Address does not look like an Internet one. Use it anyway?'
5338 If you or somebody else will be maintaining perl at your site, please
5339 fill in the correct e-mail address here so that they may be contacted
5340 if necessary. Currently, the "perlbug" program included with perl
5341 will send mail to this address in addition to perlbug@perl.com. You may
5342 enter "none" for no administrator.
5345 case "$perladmin" in
5346 '') dflt="$cf_email";;
5347 *) dflt="$perladmin";;
5349 rp='Perl administrator e-mail address'
5353 : figure out how to guarantee perl startup
5354 case "$startperl" in
5356 case "$sharpbang" in
5360 I can use the #! construct to start perl on your system. This will
5361 make startup of perl scripts faster, but may cause problems if you
5362 want to share those scripts and perl is not in a standard place
5363 ($binexp/perl) on all your platforms. The alternative is to force
5364 a shell by starting the script with a single ':' character.
5368 rp='What shall I put after the #! to start up perl ("none" to not use #!)?'
5371 none) startperl=": # use perl";;
5372 *) startperl="#!$ans"
5373 if $test 30 -lt `echo "$ans" | wc -c`; then
5376 WARNING: Some systems limit the #! command to 32 characters.
5377 If you experience difficulty running Perl scripts with #!, try
5378 installing Perl in a directory with a shorter pathname.
5384 *) startperl=": # use perl"
5389 echo "I'll use $startperl to start perl scripts."
5391 : figure best path for perl in scripts
5394 perlpath="$binexp/perl"
5395 case "$startperl" in
5400 I will use the "eval 'exec'" idiom to start Perl on your system.
5401 I can use the full path of your Perl binary for this purpose, but
5402 doing so may cause problems if you want to share those scripts and
5403 Perl is not always in a standard place ($binexp/perl).
5407 rp="What path shall I use in \"eval 'exec'\"?"
5414 case "$startperl" in
5416 *) echo "I'll use $perlpath in \"eval 'exec'\"" ;;
5419 : determine where public executable scripts go
5420 set scriptdir scriptdir
5422 case "$scriptdir" in
5425 : guess some guesses
5426 $test -d /usr/share/scripts && dflt=/usr/share/scripts
5427 $test -d /usr/share/bin && dflt=/usr/share/bin
5428 $test -d /usr/local/script && dflt=/usr/local/script
5429 $test -d $prefixexp/script && dflt=$prefixexp/script
5433 *) dflt="$scriptdir"
5438 Some installations have a separate directory just for executable scripts so
5439 that they can mount it across multiple architectures but keep the scripts in
5440 one spot. You might, for example, have a subdirectory of /usr/share for this.
5441 Or you might just lump your scripts in with all your other executables.
5445 rp='Where do you keep publicly executable scripts?'
5447 if $test "X$ansexp" != "X$scriptdirexp"; then
5451 scriptdirexp="$ansexp"
5455 Since you are running AFS, I need to distinguish the directory in which
5456 scripts reside from the directory in which they are installed (and from
5457 which they are presumably copied to the former directory by occult means).
5460 case "$installscript" in
5461 '') dflt=`echo $scriptdirexp | sed 's#^/afs/#/afs/.#'`;;
5462 *) dflt="$installscript";;
5465 rp='Where will public scripts be installed?'
5467 installscript="$ans"
5469 installscript="$scriptdirexp"
5474 Previous version of $package used the standard IO mechanisms as defined
5475 in <stdio.h>. Versions 5.003_02 and later of perl allow alternate IO
5476 mechanisms via a "PerlIO" abstraction, but the stdio mechanism is still
5477 the default. This abstraction layer can use AT&T's sfio (if you already
5478 have sfio installed) or regular stdio. Using PerlIO with sfio may cause
5479 problems with some extension modules. Using PerlIO with stdio is safe,
5480 but it is slower than plain stdio and therefore is not the default.
5482 If this doesn't make any sense to you, just accept the default 'n'.
5484 case "$useperlio" in
5485 $define|true|[yY]*) dflt='y';;
5488 rp='Use the experimental PerlIO abstraction layer?'
5495 echo "Ok, doing things the stdio way"
5502 : Check how to convert floats to strings.
5504 echo "Checking for an efficient way to convert floats to strings."
5507 #define Gconvert(x,n,t,b) gconvert((x),(n),(t),(b))
5508 char *myname = "gconvert";
5511 #define Gconvert(x,n,t,b) gcvt((x),(n),(b))
5512 char *myname = "gcvt";
5515 #define Gconvert(x,n,t,b) sprintf((b),"%.*g",(n),(x))
5516 char *myname = "sprintf";
5522 checkit(expect, got)
5526 if (strcmp(expect, got)) {
5527 printf("%s oddity: Expected %s, got %s\n",
5528 myname, expect, got);
5539 /* This must be 1st test on (which?) platform */
5540 /* Alan Burlison <AlanBurlsin@unn.unisys.com> */
5541 Gconvert(0.1, 8, 0, buf);
5542 checkit("0.1", buf);
5544 Gconvert(1.0, 8, 0, buf);
5547 Gconvert(0.0, 8, 0, buf);
5550 Gconvert(-1.0, 8, 0, buf);
5553 /* Some Linux gcvt's give 1.e+5 here. */
5554 Gconvert(100000.0, 8, 0, buf);
5555 checkit("100000", buf);
5557 /* Some Linux gcvt's give -1.e+5 here. */
5558 Gconvert(-100000.0, 8, 0, buf);
5559 checkit("-100000", buf);
5564 case "$d_Gconvert" in
5565 gconvert*) xxx_list='gconvert gcvt sprintf' ;;
5566 gcvt*) xxx_list='gcvt gconvert sprintf' ;;
5567 sprintf*) xxx_list='sprintf gconvert gcvt' ;;
5568 *) xxx_list='gconvert gcvt sprintf' ;;
5571 for xxx_convert in $xxx_list; do
5572 echo "Trying $xxx_convert"
5574 if $cc $ccflags -DTRY_$xxx_convert $ldflags -o try \
5575 try.c $libs > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
5576 echo "$xxx_convert" found. >&4
5578 echo "I'll use $xxx_convert to convert floats into a string." >&4
5581 echo "...But $xxx_convert didn't work as I expected."
5584 echo "$xxx_convert NOT found." >&4
5588 case "$xxx_convert" in
5589 gconvert) d_Gconvert='gconvert((x),(n),(t),(b))' ;;
5590 gcvt) d_Gconvert='gcvt((x),(n),(b))' ;;
5591 *) d_Gconvert='sprintf((b),"%.*g",(n),(x))' ;;
5594 : Initialize h_fcntl
5597 : Initialize h_sysfile
5600 : access call always available on UNIX
5604 : locate the flags for 'access()'
5608 $cat >access.c <<'EOCP'
5609 #include <sys/types.h>
5614 #include <sys/file.h>
5623 : check sys/file.h first, no particular reason here
5624 if $test `./findhdr sys/file.h` && \
5625 $cc $cppflags -DI_SYS_FILE access.c -o access >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
5627 echo "<sys/file.h> defines the *_OK access constants." >&4
5628 elif $test `./findhdr fcntl.h` && \
5629 $cc $cppflags -DI_FCNTL access.c -o access >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
5631 echo "<fcntl.h> defines the *_OK access constants." >&4
5632 elif $test `./findhdr unistd.h` && \
5633 $cc $cppflags -DI_UNISTD access.c -o access >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
5634 echo "<unistd.h> defines the *_OK access constants." >&4
5636 echo "I can't find the four *_OK access constants--I'll use mine." >&4
5642 : see if alarm exists
5646 : Look for GNU-cc style attribute checking
5648 echo "Checking whether your compiler can handle __attribute__ ..." >&4
5649 $cat >attrib.c <<'EOCP'
5651 void croak (char* pat,...) __attribute__((format(printf,1,2),noreturn));
5653 if $cc $ccflags -c attrib.c >attrib.out 2>&1 ; then
5654 if $contains 'warning' attrib.out >/dev/null 2>&1; then
5655 echo "Your C compiler doesn't fully support __attribute__."
5658 echo "Your C compiler supports __attribute__."
5662 echo "Your C compiler doesn't seem to understand __attribute__ at all."
5669 : see if bcmp exists
5673 : see if bcopy exists
5677 : see if this is a unistd.h system
5678 set unistd.h i_unistd
5681 : see if getpgrp exists
5682 set getpgrp d_getpgrp
5685 echo "Checking to see which flavor of getpgrp is in use . . . "
5686 case "$d_getpgrp" in
5691 #include <sys/types.h>
5693 # include <unistd.h>
5697 if (getuid() == 0) {
5698 printf("(I see you are running Configure as super-user...)\n");
5702 if (getpgrp(1) == 0)
5711 if $cc -DTRY_BSD_PGRP $ccflags $ldflags -o set set.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 && ./set; then
5712 echo "You have to use getpgrp(pid) instead of getpgrp()." >&4
5714 elif $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o set set.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 && ./set; then
5715 echo "You have to use getpgrp() instead of getpgrp(pid)." >&4
5718 echo "I can't seem to compile and run the test program."
5720 xxx="a USG one, i.e. you use getpgrp()."
5722 # SVR4 systems can appear rather BSD-ish.
5725 xxx="a BSD one, i.e. you use getpgrp(pid)."
5729 xxx="probably a USG one, i.e. you use getpgrp()."
5734 echo "Assuming your getpgrp is $xxx" >&4
5743 : see if setpgrp exists
5744 set setpgrp d_setpgrp
5747 echo "Checking to see which flavor of setpgrp is in use . . . "
5748 case "$d_setpgrp" in
5753 #include <sys/types.h>
5755 # include <unistd.h>
5759 if (getuid() == 0) {
5760 printf("(I see you are running Configure as super-user...)\n");
5764 if (-1 == setpgrp(1, 1))
5767 if (setpgrp() != -1)
5773 if $cc -DTRY_BSD_PGRP $ccflags $ldflags -o set set.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 && ./set; then
5774 echo 'You have to use setpgrp(pid,pgrp) instead of setpgrp().' >&4
5776 elif $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o set set.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 && ./set; then
5777 echo 'You have to use setpgrp() instead of setpgrp(pid,pgrp).' >&4
5780 echo "I can't seem to compile and run the test program."
5782 xxx="a USG one, i.e. you use setpgrp()."
5784 # SVR4 systems can appear rather BSD-ish.
5787 xxx="a BSD one, i.e. you use setpgrp(pid,pgrp)."
5791 xxx="probably a USG one, i.e. you use setpgrp()."
5796 echo "Assuming your setpgrp is $xxx" >&4
5803 d_bsdpgrp=$d_bsdsetpgrp
5805 : see if bzero exists
5809 : check for lengths of integral types
5813 echo "Checking to see how big your integers are..." >&4
5814 $cat >intsize.c <<'EOCP'
5818 printf("intsize=%d;\n", sizeof(int));
5819 printf("longsize=%d;\n", sizeof(long));
5820 printf("shortsize=%d;\n", sizeof(short));
5825 # If $libs contains -lsfio, and sfio is mis-configured, then it
5826 # sometimes (apparently) runs and exits with a 0 status, but with no
5827 # output!. Thus we check with test -s whether we actually got any
5828 # output. I think it has to do with sfio's use of _exit vs. exit,
5829 # but I don't know for sure. --Andy Dougherty 1/27/97.
5830 if $cc $optimize $ccflags $ldflags -o intsize intsize.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 &&
5831 ./intsize > intsize.out 2>/dev/null && test -s intsize.out ; then
5832 eval `$cat intsize.out`
5833 echo "Your integers are $intsize bytes long."
5834 echo "Your long integers are $longsize bytes long."
5835 echo "Your short integers are $shortsize bytes long."
5839 Help! I can't compile and run the intsize test program: please enlighten me!
5840 (This is probably a misconfiguration in your system or libraries, and
5841 you really ought to fix it. Still, I'll try anyway.)
5845 rp="What is the size of an integer (in bytes)?"
5849 rp="What is the size of a long integer (in bytes)?"
5853 rp="What is the size of a short integer (in bytes)?"
5859 $rm -f intsize intsize.[co] intsize.out
5861 : see if signal is declared as pointer to function returning int or void
5863 xxx=`./findhdr signal.h`
5864 $test "$xxx" && $cppstdin $cppminus $cppflags < $xxx >$$.tmp 2>/dev/null
5865 if $contains 'int.*\*[ ]*signal' $$.tmp >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
5866 echo "You have int (*signal())() instead of void." >&4
5868 elif $contains 'void.*\*[ ]*signal' $$.tmp >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
5869 echo "You have void (*signal())() instead of int." >&4
5871 elif $contains 'extern[ ]*[(\*]*signal' $$.tmp >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
5872 echo "You have int (*signal())() instead of void." >&4
5875 case "$d_voidsig" in
5877 echo "I can't determine whether signal handler returns void or int..." >&4
5879 rp="What type does your signal handler return?"
5886 echo "As you already told me, signal handler returns void." >&4;;
5888 echo "As you already told me, signal handler returns int." >&4;;
5893 case "$d_voidsig" in
5894 "$define") signal_t="void";;
5899 : check for ability to cast large floats to 32-bit ints.
5901 echo 'Checking whether your C compiler can cast large floats to int32.' >&4
5902 if $test "$intsize" -eq 4; then
5908 #include <sys/types.h>
5910 $signal_t blech() { exit(3); }
5916 signal(SIGFPE, blech);
5918 f = (double) 0x7fffffff;
5922 if (i32 != ($xxx) f)
5927 if $cc -o try $ccflags try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
5931 echo "(I can't seem to compile the test program--assuming it can't)"
5939 echo "Nope, it can't."
5946 : check for ability to cast negative floats to unsigned
5948 echo 'Checking whether your C compiler can cast negative float to unsigned.' >&4
5950 #include <sys/types.h>
5952 $signal_t blech() { exit(7); }
5953 $signal_t blech_in_list() { exit(4); }
5954 unsigned long dummy_long(p) unsigned long p; { return p; }
5955 unsigned int dummy_int(p) unsigned int p; { return p; }
5956 unsigned short dummy_short(p) unsigned short p; { return p; }
5960 unsigned long along;
5962 unsigned short ashort;
5965 signal(SIGFPE, blech);
5966 along = (unsigned long)f;
5967 aint = (unsigned int)f;
5968 ashort = (unsigned short)f;
5969 if (along != (unsigned long)-123)
5971 if (aint != (unsigned int)-123)
5973 if (ashort != (unsigned short)-123)
5975 f = (double)0x40000000;
5978 along = (unsigned long)f;
5979 if (along != 0x80000000)
5983 along = (unsigned long)f;
5984 if (along != 0x7fffffff)
5988 along = (unsigned long)f;
5989 if (along != 0x80000001)
5993 signal(SIGFPE, blech_in_list);
5995 along = dummy_long((unsigned long)f);
5996 aint = dummy_int((unsigned int)f);
5997 ashort = dummy_short((unsigned short)f);
5998 if (along != (unsigned long)123)
6000 if (aint != (unsigned int)123)
6002 if (ashort != (unsigned short)123)
6008 if $cc -o try $ccflags try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6012 echo "(I can't seem to compile the test program--assuming it can't)"
6015 case "$castflags" in
6020 echo "Nope, it can't."
6027 : see if vprintf exists
6029 if set vprintf val -f d_vprintf; eval $csym; $val; then
6030 echo 'vprintf() found.' >&4
6032 $cat >vprintf.c <<'EOF'
6033 #include <varargs.h>
6035 main() { xxx("foo"); }
6044 exit((unsigned long)vsprintf(buf,"%s",args) > 10L);
6047 if $cc $ccflags vprintf.c -o vprintf >/dev/null 2>&1 && ./vprintf; then
6048 echo "Your vsprintf() returns (int)." >&4
6051 echo "Your vsprintf() returns (char*)." >&4
6055 echo 'vprintf() NOT found.' >&4
6065 : see if chown exists
6069 : see if chroot exists
6073 : see if chsize exists
6077 : check for const keyword
6079 echo 'Checking to see if your C compiler knows about "const"...' >&4
6080 $cat >const.c <<'EOCP'
6081 typedef struct spug { int drokk; } spug;
6088 if $cc -c $ccflags const.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
6090 echo "Yup, it does."
6093 echo "Nope, it doesn't."
6098 : see if crypt exists
6100 if set crypt val -f d_crypt; eval $csym; $val; then
6101 echo 'crypt() found.' >&4
6105 cryptlib=`./loc Slibcrypt$lib_ext "" $xlibpth`
6106 if $test -z "$cryptlib"; then
6107 cryptlib=`./loc Mlibcrypt$lib_ext "" $xlibpth`
6111 if $test -z "$cryptlib"; then
6112 cryptlib=`./loc Llibcrypt$lib_ext "" $xlibpth`
6116 if $test -z "$cryptlib"; then
6117 cryptlib=`./loc libcrypt$lib_ext "" $libpth`
6121 if $test -z "$cryptlib"; then
6122 echo 'crypt() NOT found.' >&4
6131 : get csh whereabouts
6133 'csh') val="$undef" ;;
6138 : Respect a hint or command line value for full_csh.
6140 '') full_csh=$csh ;;
6143 : see if cuserid exists
6144 set cuserid d_cuserid
6147 : see if this is a limits.h system
6148 set limits.h i_limits
6151 : see if this is a float.h system
6155 : See if number of significant digits in a double precision number is known
6157 $cat >dbl_dig.c <<EOM
6167 printf("Contains DBL_DIG");
6170 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus < dbl_dig.c >dbl_dig.E 2>/dev/null
6171 if $contains 'DBL_DIG' dbl_dig.E >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6172 echo "DBL_DIG found." >&4
6175 echo "DBL_DIG NOT found." >&4
6182 : see if difftime exists
6183 set difftime d_difftime
6186 : see if this is a dirent system
6188 if xinc=`./findhdr dirent.h`; $test "$xinc"; then
6190 echo "<dirent.h> found." >&4
6193 if xinc=`./findhdr sys/dir.h`; $test "$xinc"; then
6194 echo "<sys/dir.h> found." >&4
6197 xinc=`./findhdr sys/ndir.h`
6199 echo "<dirent.h> NOT found." >&4
6204 : Look for type of directory structure.
6206 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus < "$xinc" > try.c
6208 case "$direntrytype" in
6211 $define) guess1='struct dirent' ;;
6212 *) guess1='struct direct' ;;
6215 *) guess1="$direntrytype"
6220 'struct dirent') guess2='struct direct' ;;
6221 *) guess2='struct dirent' ;;
6224 if $contains "$guess1" try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6225 direntrytype="$guess1"
6226 echo "Your directory entries are $direntrytype." >&4
6227 elif $contains "$guess2" try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6228 direntrytype="$guess2"
6229 echo "Your directory entries seem to be $direntrytype." >&4
6231 echo "I don't recognize your system's directory entries." >&4
6232 rp="What type is used for directory entries on this system?"
6240 : see if the directory entry stores field length
6242 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus < "$xinc" > try.c
6243 if $contains 'd_namlen' try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6244 echo "Good, your directory entry keeps length information in d_namlen." >&4
6247 echo "Your directory entry does not know about the d_namlen field." >&4
6254 : see if dlerror exists
6257 set dlerror d_dlerror
6261 : see if dlfcn is available
6269 On a few systems, the dynamically loaded modules that perl generates and uses
6270 will need a different extension then shared libs. The default will probably
6278 rp='What is the extension of dynamically loaded modules'
6287 : Check if dlsym need a leading underscore
6293 echo "Checking whether your dlsym() needs a leading underscore ..." >&4
6294 $cat >dyna.c <<'EOM'
6303 #include <dlfcn.h> /* the dynamic linker include file for Sunos/Solaris */
6305 #include <sys/types.h>
6319 int mode = RTLD_LAZY ;
6321 handle = dlopen("./dyna.$dlext", mode) ;
6322 if (handle == NULL) {
6327 symbol = dlsym(handle, "fred") ;
6328 if (symbol == NULL) {
6329 /* try putting a leading underscore */
6330 symbol = dlsym(handle, "_fred") ;
6331 if (symbol == NULL) {
6344 : Call the object file tmp-dyna.o in case dlext=o.
6345 if $cc $ccflags $cccdlflags -c dyna.c > /dev/null 2>&1 &&
6346 mv dyna${obj_ext} tmp-dyna${obj_ext} > /dev/null 2>&1 &&
6347 $ld $lddlflags -o dyna.$dlext tmp-dyna${obj_ext} > /dev/null 2>&1 &&
6348 $cc $ccflags $ldflags $cccdlflags $ccdlflags fred.c -o fred $libs > /dev/null 2>&1; then
6351 1) echo "Test program failed using dlopen." >&4
6352 echo "Perhaps you should not use dynamic loading." >&4;;
6353 2) echo "Test program failed using dlsym." >&4
6354 echo "Perhaps you should not use dynamic loading." >&4;;
6355 3) echo "dlsym needs a leading underscore" >&4
6357 4) echo "dlsym doesn't need a leading underscore." >&4;;
6360 echo "I can't compile and run the test program." >&4
6365 $rm -f fred fred.? dyna.$dlext dyna.? tmp-dyna.?
6370 : see if dup2 exists
6374 : Locate the flags for 'open()'
6376 $cat >open3.c <<'EOCP'
6377 #include <sys/types.h>
6382 #include <sys/file.h>
6393 : check sys/file.h first to get FREAD on Sun
6394 if $test `./findhdr sys/file.h` && \
6395 $cc $ccflags "-DI_SYS_FILE" -o open3 $ldflags open3.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
6397 echo "<sys/file.h> defines the O_* constants..." >&4
6399 echo "and you have the 3 argument form of open()." >&4
6402 echo "but not the 3 argument form of open(). Oh, well." >&4
6405 elif $test `./findhdr fcntl.h` && \
6406 $cc $ccflags "-DI_FCNTL" -o open3 $ldflags open3.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
6408 echo "<fcntl.h> defines the O_* constants..." >&4
6410 echo "and you have the 3 argument form of open()." >&4
6413 echo "but not the 3 argument form of open(). Oh, well." >&4
6418 echo "I can't find the O_* constant definitions! You got problems." >&4
6424 : check for non-blocking I/O stuff
6425 case "$h_sysfile" in
6426 true) echo "#include <sys/file.h>" > head.c;;
6429 true) echo "#include <fcntl.h>" > head.c;;
6430 *) echo "#include <sys/fcntl.h>" > head.c;;
6435 echo "Figuring out the flag used by open() for non-blocking I/O..." >&4
6436 case "$o_nonblock" in
6439 $cat >>try.c <<'EOCP'
6442 printf("O_NONBLOCK\n");
6446 printf("O_NDELAY\n");
6450 printf("FNDELAY\n");
6456 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags try.c -o try >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6458 case "$o_nonblock" in
6459 '') echo "I can't figure it out, assuming O_NONBLOCK will do.";;
6460 *) echo "Seems like we can use $o_nonblock.";;
6463 echo "(I can't compile the test program; pray O_NONBLOCK is right!)"
6466 *) echo "Using $hint value $o_nonblock.";;
6468 $rm -f try try.* .out core
6471 echo "Let's see what value errno gets from read() on a $o_nonblock file..." >&4
6477 #include <sys/types.h>
6479 #define MY_O_NONBLOCK $o_nonblock
6481 $signal_t blech(x) int x; { exit(3); }
6483 $cat >> try.c <<'EOCP'
6491 pipe(pd); /* Down: child -> parent */
6492 pipe(pu); /* Up: parent -> child */
6495 close(pd[1]); /* Parent reads from pd[0] */
6496 close(pu[0]); /* Parent writes (blocking) to pu[1] */
6497 if (-1 == fcntl(pd[0], F_SETFL, MY_O_NONBLOCK))
6499 signal(SIGALRM, blech);
6501 if ((ret = read(pd[0], buf, 1)) > 0) /* Nothing to read! */
6503 sprintf(string, "%d\n", ret);
6504 write(2, string, strlen(string));
6507 if (errno == EAGAIN) {
6513 if (errno == EWOULDBLOCK)
6514 printf("EWOULDBLOCK\n");
6517 write(pu[1], buf, 1); /* Unblocks child, tell it to close our pipe */
6518 sleep(2); /* Give it time to close our pipe */
6520 ret = read(pd[0], buf, 1); /* Should read EOF */
6522 sprintf(string, "%d\n", ret);
6523 write(3, string, strlen(string));
6527 close(pd[0]); /* We write to pd[1] */
6528 close(pu[1]); /* We read from pu[0] */
6529 read(pu[0], buf, 1); /* Wait for parent to signal us we may continue */
6530 close(pd[1]); /* Pipe pd is now fully closed! */
6531 exit(0); /* Bye bye, thank you for playing! */
6534 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags try.c -o try >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6535 echo "$startsh" >mtry
6536 echo "./try >try.out 2>try.ret 3>try.err || exit 4" >>mtry
6538 ./mtry >/dev/null 2>&1
6540 0) eagain=`$cat try.out`;;
6541 1) echo "Could not perform non-blocking setting!";;
6542 2) echo "I did a successful read() for something that was not there!";;
6543 3) echo "Hmm... non-blocking I/O does not seem to be working!";;
6544 *) echo "Something terribly wrong happened during testing.";;
6546 rd_nodata=`$cat try.ret`
6547 echo "A read() system call with no data present returns $rd_nodata."
6548 case "$rd_nodata" in
6551 echo "(That's peculiar, fixing that to be -1.)"
6557 echo "Forcing errno EAGAIN on read() with no data available."
6561 echo "Your read() sets errno to $eagain when no data is available."
6564 status=`$cat try.err`
6566 0) echo "And it correctly returns 0 to signal EOF.";;
6567 -1) echo "But it also returns -1 to signal EOF, so be careful!";;
6568 *) echo "However, your read() returns '$status' on EOF??";;
6571 if test "$status" = "$rd_nodata"; then
6572 echo "WARNING: you can't distinguish between EOF and no data!"
6576 echo "I can't compile the test program--assuming errno EAGAIN will do."
6583 echo "Using $hint value $eagain."
6584 echo "Your read() returns $rd_nodata when no data is present."
6585 case "$d_eofnblk" in
6586 "$define") echo "And you can see EOF because read() returns 0.";;
6587 "$undef") echo "But you can't see EOF status from read() returned value.";;
6589 echo "(Assuming you can't see EOF status from read anyway.)"
6595 $rm -f try try.* .out core head.c mtry
6597 : see if fchmod exists
6601 : see if fchown exists
6605 : see if this is an fcntl system
6609 : see if fgetpos exists
6610 set fgetpos d_fgetpos
6613 : see if flock exists
6617 : see if fork exists
6621 : see if pathconf exists
6622 set pathconf d_pathconf
6625 : see if fpathconf exists
6626 set fpathconf d_fpathconf
6629 : see if fsetpos exists
6630 set fsetpos d_fsetpos
6633 : see if gethostbyaddr exists
6634 set gethostbyaddr d_gethbyaddr
6637 : see if gethostbyname exists
6638 set gethostbyname d_gethbyname
6641 : see if gethostent exists
6642 set gethostent d_gethent
6645 : see if getlogin exists
6646 set getlogin d_getlogin
6649 : see if getnetbyaddr exists
6650 set getnetbyaddr d_getnbyaddr
6653 : see if getnetbyname exists
6654 set getnetbyname d_getnbyname
6657 : see if getpgid exists
6658 set getpgid d_getpgid
6661 : see if getpgrp2 exists
6662 set getpgrp2 d_getpgrp2
6665 : see if getppid exists
6666 set getppid d_getppid
6669 : see if getpriority exists
6670 set getpriority d_getprior
6673 : see if getprotobyname exists
6674 set getprotobyname d_getpbyname
6677 : see if getprotobynumber exists
6678 set getprotobynumber d_getpbynumber
6681 : see if getservbyname exists
6682 set getservbyname d_getsbyname
6685 : see if getservbyport exists
6686 set getservbyport d_getsbyport
6689 : see if gettimeofday or ftime exists
6690 set gettimeofday d_gettimeod
6692 case "$d_gettimeod" in
6698 val="$undef"; set d_ftime; eval $setvar
6701 case "$d_gettimeod$d_ftime" in
6704 echo 'No ftime() nor gettimeofday() -- timing may be less accurate.' >&4
6708 : see if this is a netinet/in.h or sys/in.h system
6709 set netinet/in.h i_niin sys/in.h i_sysin
6712 : see if htonl --and friends-- exists
6717 : Maybe they are macros.
6722 #include <sys/types.h>
6723 #$i_niin I_NETINET_IN
6726 #include <netinet/in.h>
6732 printf("Defined as a macro.");
6735 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus < htonl.c >htonl.E 2>/dev/null
6736 if $contains 'Defined as a macro' htonl.E >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6738 echo "But it seems to be defined as a macro." >&4
6746 : see which of string.h or strings.h is needed
6748 strings=`./findhdr string.h`
6749 if $test "$strings" && $test -r "$strings"; then
6750 echo "Using <string.h> instead of <strings.h>." >&4
6754 strings=`./findhdr strings.h`
6755 if $test "$strings" && $test -r "$strings"; then
6756 echo "Using <strings.h> instead of <string.h>." >&4
6758 echo "No string header found -- You'll surely have problems." >&4
6764 "$undef") strings=`./findhdr strings.h`;;
6765 *) strings=`./findhdr string.h`;;
6770 if set index val -f; eval $csym; $val; then
6771 if set strchr val -f d_strchr; eval $csym; $val; then
6772 if $contains strchr "$strings" >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
6775 echo "strchr() found." >&4
6779 echo "index() found." >&4
6784 echo "index() found." >&4
6787 if set strchr val -f d_strchr; eval $csym; $val; then
6790 echo "strchr() found." >&4
6792 echo "No index() or strchr() found!" >&4
6797 set d_strchr; eval $setvar
6799 set d_index; eval $setvar
6801 : check whether inet_aton exists
6802 set inet_aton d_inetaton
6807 $cat >isascii.c <<'EOCP'
6818 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o isascii isascii.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
6819 echo "isascii() found." >&4
6822 echo "isascii() NOT found." >&4
6829 : see if killpg exists
6833 : see if link exists
6837 : see if localeconv exists
6838 set localeconv d_locconv
6841 : see if lockf exists
6845 : see if lstat exists
6849 : see if mblen exists
6853 : see if mbstowcs exists
6854 set mbstowcs d_mbstowcs
6857 : see if mbtowc exists
6861 : see if memcmp exists
6865 : see if memcpy exists
6869 : see if memmove exists
6870 set memmove d_memmove
6873 : see if memset exists
6877 : see if mkdir exists
6881 : see if mkfifo exists
6885 : see if mktime exists
6889 : see if msgctl exists
6893 : see if msgget exists
6897 : see if msgsnd exists
6901 : see if msgrcv exists
6905 : see how much of the 'msg*(2)' library is present.
6908 case "$d_msgctl$d_msgget$d_msgsnd$d_msgrcv" in
6909 *"$undef"*) h_msg=false;;
6911 : we could also check for sys/ipc.h ...
6912 if $h_msg && $test `./findhdr sys/msg.h`; then
6913 echo "You have the full msg*(2) library." >&4
6916 echo "You don't have the full msg*(2) library." >&4
6922 : see if this is a malloc.h system
6923 set malloc.h i_malloc
6926 : see if stdlib is available
6927 set stdlib.h i_stdlib
6930 : determine which malloc to compile in
6932 case "$usemymalloc" in
6933 ''|y*|true) dflt='y' ;;
6934 n*|false) dflt='n' ;;
6935 *) dflt="$usemymalloc" ;;
6937 rp="Do you wish to attempt to use the malloc that comes with $package?"
6943 mallocsrc='malloc.c'
6944 mallocobj='malloc.o'
6945 d_mymalloc="$define"
6948 : Remove malloc from list of libraries to use
6949 echo "Removing unneeded -lmalloc from library list" >&4
6950 set `echo X $libs | $sed -e 's/-lmalloc / /' -e 's/-lmalloc$//'`
6953 echo "libs = $libs" >&4
6965 : compute the return types of malloc and free
6967 $cat >malloc.c <<END
6971 #include <sys/types.h>
6985 case "$malloctype" in
6987 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY_MALLOC malloc.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6994 echo "Your system wants malloc to return '$malloctype', it would seem." >&4
6998 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY_FREE malloc.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7005 echo "Your system uses $freetype free(), it would seem." >&4
7007 : see if nice exists
7011 : see if pause exists
7015 : see if pipe exists
7019 : see if poll exists
7023 : see if this is a pwd.h system
7029 xxx=`./findhdr pwd.h`
7030 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus < $xxx >$$.h
7032 if $contains 'pw_quota' $$.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7040 if $contains 'pw_age' $$.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7048 if $contains 'pw_change' $$.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7056 if $contains 'pw_class' $$.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7064 if $contains 'pw_expire' $$.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7072 if $contains 'pw_comment' $$.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7084 set d_pwquota; eval $setvar
7085 set d_pwage; eval $setvar
7086 set d_pwchange; eval $setvar
7087 set d_pwclass; eval $setvar
7088 set d_pwexpire; eval $setvar
7089 set d_pwcomment; eval $setvar
7093 : see if readdir and friends exist
7094 set readdir d_readdir
7096 set seekdir d_seekdir
7098 set telldir d_telldir
7100 set rewinddir d_rewinddir
7103 : see if readlink exists
7104 set readlink d_readlink
7107 : see if rename exists
7111 : see if rmdir exists
7115 : see if memory.h is available.
7120 : See if it conflicts with string.h
7126 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus < $strings > mem.h
7127 if $contains 'memcpy' mem.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7129 echo "We won't be including <memory.h>."
7139 : can bcopy handle overlapping blocks?
7144 echo "Checking to see if your bcopy() can do overlapping copies..." >&4
7151 $cat >>foo.c <<'EOCP'
7155 # include <memory.h>
7158 # include <stdlib.h>
7161 # include <string.h>
7163 # include <strings.h>
7166 # include <unistd.h> /* Needed for NetBSD */
7170 char buf[128], abc[128];
7176 /* Copy "abcde..." string to char abc[] so that gcc doesn't
7177 try to store the string in read-only memory. */
7178 bcopy("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789", abc, 36);
7180 for (align = 7; align >= 0; align--) {
7181 for (len = 36; len; len--) {
7184 for (off = 1; off <= len; off++) {
7185 bcopy(b, b+off, len);
7186 bcopy(b+off, b, len);
7187 if (bcmp(b, abc, len))
7195 if $cc $optimize $ccflags $ldflags foo.c \
7196 -o safebcpy $libs >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7197 if ./safebcpy 2>/dev/null; then
7201 echo "It can't, sorry."
7202 case "$d_memmove" in
7203 "$define") echo "But that's Ok since you have memmove()." ;;
7207 echo "(I can't compile the test program, so we'll assume not...)"
7208 case "$d_memmove" in
7209 "$define") echo "But that's Ok since you have memmove()." ;;
7214 $rm -f foo.* safebcpy core
7218 : can memcpy handle overlapping blocks?
7223 echo "Checking to see if your memcpy() can do overlapping copies..." >&4
7230 $cat >>foo.c <<'EOCP'
7234 # include <memory.h>
7237 # include <stdlib.h>
7240 # include <string.h>
7242 # include <strings.h>
7245 # include <unistd.h> /* Needed for NetBSD */
7249 char buf[128], abc[128];
7255 /* Copy "abcde..." string to char abc[] so that gcc doesn't
7256 try to store the string in read-only memory. */
7257 memcpy(abc, "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789", 36);
7259 for (align = 7; align >= 0; align--) {
7260 for (len = 36; len; len--) {
7262 memcpy(b, abc, len);
7263 for (off = 1; off <= len; off++) {
7264 memcpy(b+off, b, len);
7265 memcpy(b, b+off, len);
7266 if (memcmp(b, abc, len))
7274 if $cc $optimize $ccflags $ldflags foo.c \
7275 -o safemcpy $libs >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7276 if ./safemcpy 2>/dev/null; then
7280 echo "It can't, sorry."
7281 case "$d_memmove" in
7282 "$define") echo "But that's Ok since you have memmove()." ;;
7286 echo "(I can't compile the test program, so we'll assume not...)"
7287 case "$d_memmove" in
7288 "$define") echo "But that's Ok since you have memmove()." ;;
7293 $rm -f foo.* safemcpy core
7297 : can memcmp be trusted to compare relative magnitude?
7302 echo "Checking to see if your memcmp() can compare relative magnitude..." >&4
7309 $cat >>foo.c <<'EOCP'
7313 # include <memory.h>
7316 # include <stdlib.h>
7319 # include <string.h>
7321 # include <strings.h>
7324 # include <unistd.h> /* Needed for NetBSD */
7330 if ((a < b) && memcmp(&a, &b, 1) < 0)
7335 if $cc $optimize $ccflags $ldflags foo.c \
7336 -o sanemcmp $libs >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7337 if ./sanemcmp 2>/dev/null; then
7341 echo "No, it can't (it uses signed chars)."
7344 echo "(I can't compile the test program, so we'll assume not...)"
7348 $rm -f foo.* sanemcmp core
7352 : see if select exists
7356 : see if semctl exists
7360 : see if semget exists
7364 : see if semop exists
7368 : see how much of the 'sem*(2)' library is present.
7371 case "$d_semctl$d_semget$d_semop" in
7372 *"$undef"*) h_sem=false;;
7374 : we could also check for sys/ipc.h ...
7375 if $h_sem && $test `./findhdr sys/sem.h`; then
7376 echo "You have the full sem*(2) library." >&4
7379 echo "You don't have the full sem*(2) library." >&4
7385 : see if setegid exists
7386 set setegid d_setegid
7389 : see if seteuid exists
7390 set seteuid d_seteuid
7393 : see if setlinebuf exists
7394 set setlinebuf d_setlinebuf
7397 : see if setlocale exists
7398 set setlocale d_setlocale
7401 : see if setpgid exists
7402 set setpgid d_setpgid
7405 : see if setpgrp2 exists
7406 set setpgrp2 d_setpgrp2
7409 : see if setpriority exists
7410 set setpriority d_setprior
7413 : see if setregid exists
7414 set setregid d_setregid
7416 set setresgid d_setresgid
7419 : see if setreuid exists
7420 set setreuid d_setreuid
7422 set setresuid d_setresuid
7425 : see if setrgid exists
7426 set setrgid d_setrgid
7429 : see if setruid exists
7430 set setruid d_setruid
7433 : see if setsid exists
7437 : see if sfio.h is available
7442 : see if sfio library is available
7453 : Ok, but do we want to use it.
7457 true|$define|[yY]*) dflt='y';;
7460 echo "$package can use the sfio library, but it is experimental."
7461 rp="You seem to have sfio available, do you want to try using it?"
7465 *) echo "Ok, avoiding sfio this time. I'll use stdio instead."
7467 : Remove sfio from list of libraries to use
7468 set `echo X $libs | $sed -e 's/-lsfio / /' -e 's/-lsfio$//'`
7471 echo "libs = $libs" >&4
7475 *) case "$usesfio" in
7477 echo "Sorry, cannot find sfio on this machine" >&4
7478 echo "Ignoring your setting of usesfio=$usesfio" >&4
7486 $define) usesfio='true';;
7487 *) usesfio='false';;
7490 : see if shmctl exists
7494 : see if shmget exists
7498 : see if shmat exists
7501 : see what shmat returns
7504 $cat >shmat.c <<'END'
7505 #include <sys/shm.h>
7508 if $cc $ccflags -c shmat.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7513 echo "and it returns ($shmattype)." >&4
7514 : see if a prototype for shmat is available
7515 xxx=`./findhdr sys/shm.h`
7516 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus < $xxx > shmat.c 2>/dev/null
7517 if $contains 'shmat.*(' shmat.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7528 set d_shmatprototype
7531 : see if shmdt exists
7535 : see how much of the 'shm*(2)' library is present.
7538 case "$d_shmctl$d_shmget$d_shmat$d_shmdt" in
7539 *"$undef"*) h_shm=false;;
7541 : we could also check for sys/ipc.h ...
7542 if $h_shm && $test `./findhdr sys/shm.h`; then
7543 echo "You have the full shm*(2) library." >&4
7546 echo "You don't have the full shm*(2) library." >&4
7553 : see if we have sigaction
7554 if set sigaction val -f d_sigaction; eval $csym; $val; then
7555 echo 'sigaction() found.' >&4
7558 echo 'sigaction NOT found.' >&4
7562 $cat > set.c <<'EOP'
7563 /* Solaris 2.5_x86 with SunWorks Pro C 3.0.1 doesn't have a complete
7564 sigaction structure if compiled with cc -Xc. This compile test
7565 will fail then. <doughera@lafcol.lafayette.edu>
7568 #include <sys/types.h>
7572 struct sigaction act, oact;
7576 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o set set.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7579 echo "But you don't seem to have a useable struct sigaction." >&4
7582 set d_sigaction; eval $setvar
7583 $rm -f set set.o set.c
7585 : see if sigsetjmp exists
7587 case "$d_sigsetjmp" in
7595 if (sigsetjmp(env,1))
7602 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o set set.c $libs > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
7603 if ./set >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7604 echo "POSIX sigsetjmp found." >&4
7608 Uh-Oh! You have POSIX sigsetjmp and siglongjmp, but they do not work properly!!
7614 echo "sigsetjmp not found." >&4
7618 *) val="$d_sigsetjmp"
7619 case "$d_sigsetjmp" in
7620 $define) echo "POSIX sigsetjmp found." >&4;;
7621 $undef) echo "sigsetjmp not found." >&4;;
7631 : see whether socket exists
7633 $echo $n "Hmm... $c" >&4
7634 if set socket val -f d_socket; eval $csym; $val; then
7635 echo "Looks like you have Berkeley networking support." >&4
7637 if set setsockopt val -f; eval $csym; $val; then
7640 echo "...but it uses the old 4.1c interface, rather than 4.2" >&4
7644 if $contains socklib libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7645 echo "Looks like you have Berkeley networking support." >&4
7647 : we will have to assume that it supports the 4.2 BSD interface
7650 echo "You don't have Berkeley networking in libc$lib_ext..." >&4
7651 if test -f /usr/lib/libnet$lib_ext; then
7652 ( (nm $nm_opt /usr/lib/libnet$lib_ext | eval $nm_extract) || \
7653 ar t /usr/lib/libnet$lib_ext) 2>/dev/null >> libc.list
7654 if $contains socket libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7655 echo "...but the Wollongong group seems to have hacked it in." >&4
7657 sockethdr="-I/usr/netinclude"
7659 if $contains setsockopt libc.list >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7662 echo "...using the old 4.1c interface, rather than 4.2" >&4
7666 echo "or even in libnet$lib_ext, which is peculiar." >&4
7671 echo "or anywhere else I see." >&4
7678 : see if socketpair exists
7679 set socketpair d_sockpair
7682 : see if stat knows about block sizes
7684 xxx=`./findhdr sys/stat.h`
7685 if $contains 'st_blocks;' "$xxx" >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
7686 if $contains 'st_blksize;' "$xxx" >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
7687 echo "Your stat() knows about block sizes." >&4
7690 echo "Your stat() doesn't know about block sizes." >&4
7694 echo "Your stat() doesn't know about block sizes." >&4
7700 : see if _ptr and _cnt from stdio act std
7702 if $contains '_IO_fpos_t' `./findhdr stdio.h` >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
7703 echo "(Looks like you have stdio.h from Linux.)"
7704 case "$stdio_ptr" in
7705 '') stdio_ptr='((fp)->_IO_read_ptr)'
7708 *) ptr_lval=$d_stdio_ptr_lval;;
7710 case "$stdio_cnt" in
7711 '') stdio_cnt='((fp)->_IO_read_end - (fp)->_IO_read_ptr)'
7714 *) cnt_lval=$d_stdio_cnt_lval;;
7716 case "$stdio_base" in
7717 '') stdio_base='((fp)->_IO_read_base)';;
7719 case "$stdio_bufsiz" in
7720 '') stdio_bufsiz='((fp)->_IO_read_end - (fp)->_IO_read_base)';;
7723 case "$stdio_ptr" in
7724 '') stdio_ptr='((fp)->_ptr)'
7727 *) ptr_lval=$d_stdio_ptr_lval;;
7729 case "$stdio_cnt" in
7730 '') stdio_cnt='((fp)->_cnt)'
7733 *) cnt_lval=$d_stdio_cnt_lval;;
7735 case "$stdio_base" in
7736 '') stdio_base='((fp)->_base)';;
7738 case "$stdio_bufsiz" in
7739 '') stdio_bufsiz='((fp)->_cnt + (fp)->_ptr - (fp)->_base)';;
7742 : test whether _ptr and _cnt really work
7743 echo "Checking how std your stdio is..." >&4
7746 #define FILE_ptr(fp) $stdio_ptr
7747 #define FILE_cnt(fp) $stdio_cnt
7749 FILE *fp = fopen("try.c", "r");
7752 18 <= FILE_cnt(fp) &&
7753 strncmp(FILE_ptr(fp), "include <stdio.h>\n", 18) == 0
7760 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o try try.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7762 echo "Your stdio acts pretty std."
7765 echo "Your stdio isn't very std."
7768 echo "Your stdio doesn't appear very std."
7774 : Can _ptr be used as an lvalue?
7775 case "$d_stdstdio$ptr_lval" in
7776 $define$define) val=$define ;;
7779 set d_stdio_ptr_lval
7782 : Can _cnt be used as an lvalue?
7783 case "$d_stdstdio$cnt_lval" in
7784 $define$define) val=$define ;;
7787 set d_stdio_cnt_lval
7791 : see if _base is also standard
7793 case "$d_stdstdio" in
7797 #define FILE_base(fp) $stdio_base
7798 #define FILE_bufsiz(fp) $stdio_bufsiz
7800 FILE *fp = fopen("try.c", "r");
7803 19 <= FILE_bufsiz(fp) &&
7804 strncmp(FILE_base(fp), "#include <stdio.h>\n", 19) == 0
7810 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o try try.c $libs > /dev/null 2>&1; then
7812 echo "And its _base field acts std."
7815 echo "But its _base field isn't std."
7818 echo "However, it seems to be lacking the _base field."
7826 : see if strcoll exists
7827 set strcoll d_strcoll
7830 : check for structure copying
7832 echo "Checking to see if your C compiler can copy structs..." >&4
7833 $cat >try.c <<'EOCP'
7843 if $cc -c try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
7848 echo "Nope, it can't."
7854 : see if strerror and/or sys_errlist[] exist
7856 if set strerror val -f d_strerror; eval $csym; $val; then
7857 echo 'strerror() found.' >&4
7858 d_strerror="$define"
7859 d_strerrm='strerror(e)'
7860 if set sys_errlist val -a d_syserrlst; eval $csym; $val; then
7861 echo "(You also have sys_errlist[], so we could roll our own strerror.)"
7862 d_syserrlst="$define"
7864 echo "(Since you don't have sys_errlist[], sterror() is welcome.)"
7865 d_syserrlst="$undef"
7867 elif xxx=`./findhdr string.h`; test "$xxx" || xxx=`./findhdr strings.h`; \
7868 $contains '#[ ]*define.*strerror' "$xxx" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7869 echo 'strerror() found in string header.' >&4
7870 d_strerror="$define"
7871 d_strerrm='strerror(e)'
7872 if set sys_errlist val -a d_syserrlst; eval $csym; $val; then
7873 echo "(Most probably, strerror() uses sys_errlist[] for descriptions.)"
7874 d_syserrlst="$define"
7876 echo "(You don't appear to have any sys_errlist[], how can this be?)"
7877 d_syserrlst="$undef"
7879 elif set sys_errlist val -a d_syserrlst; eval $csym; $val; then
7880 echo "strerror() not found, but you have sys_errlist[] so we'll use that." >&4
7882 d_syserrlst="$define"
7883 d_strerrm='((e)<0||(e)>=sys_nerr?"unknown":sys_errlist[e])'
7885 echo 'strerror() and sys_errlist[] NOT found.' >&4
7887 d_syserrlst="$undef"
7888 d_strerrm='"unknown"'
7891 : see if strtod exists
7895 : see if strtol exists
7899 : see if strtoul exists
7900 set strtoul d_strtoul
7903 : see if strxfrm exists
7904 set strxfrm d_strxfrm
7907 : see if symlink exists
7908 set symlink d_symlink
7911 : see if syscall exists
7912 set syscall d_syscall
7915 : see if sysconf exists
7916 set sysconf d_sysconf
7919 : see if system exists
7923 : see if tcgetpgrp exists
7924 set tcgetpgrp d_tcgetpgrp
7927 : see if tcsetpgrp exists
7928 set tcsetpgrp d_tcsetpgrp
7931 : define an is-a-typedef? function
7932 typedef='type=$1; var=$2; def=$3; shift; shift; shift; inclist=$@;
7934 "") inclist="sys/types.h";;
7936 eval "varval=\$$var";
7940 for inc in $inclist; do
7941 echo "#include <$inc>" >>temp.c;
7943 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus < temp.c >temp.E 2>/dev/null;
7944 if $contains $type temp.E >/dev/null 2>&1; then
7950 *) eval "$var=\$varval";;
7953 : see if this is a sys/times.h system
7954 set sys/times.h i_systimes
7957 : see if times exists
7959 if set times val -f d_times; eval $csym; $val; then
7960 echo 'times() found.' >&4
7963 case "$i_systimes" in
7964 "$define") inc='sys/times.h';;
7966 set clock_t clocktype long stdio.h sys/types.h $inc
7970 rp="What type is returned by times() on this system?"
7974 echo 'times() NOT found, hope that will do.' >&4
7979 : see if truncate exists
7980 set truncate d_truncate
7983 : see if tzname[] exists
7985 if set tzname val -a d_tzname; eval $csym; $val; then
7987 echo 'tzname[] found.' >&4
7990 echo 'tzname[] NOT found.' >&4
7995 : see if umask exists
7999 : see how we will look up host name
8002 : dummy stub to allow use of elif
8003 elif set uname val -f d_uname; eval $csym; $val; then
8006 uname() was found, but you're running xenix, and older versions of xenix
8007 have a broken uname(). If you don't really know whether your xenix is old
8008 enough to have a broken system call, use the default answer.
8015 rp='Is your uname() broken?'
8018 n*) d_uname="$define"; call=uname;;
8021 echo 'uname() found.' >&4
8026 case "$d_gethname" in
8027 '') d_gethname="$undef";;
8030 '') d_uname="$undef";;
8032 case "$d_phostname" in
8033 '') d_phostname="$undef";;
8036 : backward compatibility for d_hvfork
8037 if test X$d_hvfork != X; then
8041 : see if there is a vfork
8046 : Ok, but do we want to use it. vfork is reportedly unreliable in
8047 : perl on Solaris 2.x, and probably elsewhere.
8055 rp="Some systems have problems with vfork(). Do you want to use it?"
8060 echo "Ok, we won't use vfork()."
8069 $define) usevfork='true';;
8070 *) usevfork='false';;
8073 : see if this is an sysdir system
8074 set sys/dir.h i_sysdir
8077 : see if this is an sysndir system
8078 set sys/ndir.h i_sysndir
8081 : see if closedir exists
8082 set closedir d_closedir
8085 case "$d_closedir" in
8088 echo "Checking whether closedir() returns a status..." >&4
8089 cat > closedir.c <<EOM
8090 #$i_dirent I_DIRENT /**/
8091 #$i_sysdir I_SYS_DIR /**/
8092 #$i_sysndir I_SYS_NDIR /**/
8094 #if defined(I_DIRENT)
8096 #if defined(NeXT) && defined(I_SYS_DIR) /* NeXT needs dirent + sys/dir.h */
8097 #include <sys/dir.h>
8101 #include <sys/ndir.h>
8105 #include <ndir.h> /* may be wrong in the future */
8107 #include <sys/dir.h>
8112 int main() { return closedir(opendir(".")); }
8114 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o closedir closedir.c $libs > /dev/null 2>&1; then
8115 if ./closedir > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
8116 echo "Yes, it does."
8119 echo "No, it doesn't."
8123 echo "(I can't seem to compile the test program--assuming it doesn't)"
8134 : check for volatile keyword
8136 echo 'Checking to see if your C compiler knows about "volatile"...' >&4
8137 $cat >try.c <<'EOCP'
8140 typedef struct _goo_struct goo_struct;
8141 goo_struct * volatile goo = ((goo_struct *)0);
8142 struct _goo_struct {
8147 typedef unsigned short foo_t;
8150 volatile foo_t blech;
8154 if $cc -c $ccflags try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
8156 echo "Yup, it does."
8159 echo "Nope, it doesn't."
8165 : see if there is a wait4
8169 : see if waitpid exists
8170 set waitpid d_waitpid
8173 : see if wcstombs exists
8174 set wcstombs d_wcstombs
8177 : see if wctomb exists
8181 : preserve RCS keywords in files with variable substitution, grrr
8186 Revision='$Revision'
8188 : check for alignment requirements
8190 case "$alignbytes" in
8191 '') echo "Checking alignment constraints..." >&4
8192 $cat >try.c <<'EOCP'
8199 printf("%d\n", (char *)&try.bar - (char *)&try.foo);
8202 if $cc $ccflags try.c -o try >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8206 echo "(I can't seem to compile the test program...)"
8209 *) dflt="$alignbytes"
8212 rp="Doubles must be aligned on a how-many-byte boundary?"
8217 : check for ordering of bytes in a long
8218 case "$byteorder" in
8222 In the following, larger digits indicate more significance. A big-endian
8223 machine like a Pyramid or a Motorola 680?0 chip will come out to 4321. A
8224 little-endian machine like a Vax or an Intel 80?86 chip would be 1234. Other
8225 machines may have weird orders like 3412. A Cray will report 87654321. If
8226 the test program works the default is probably right.
8227 I'm now running the test program...
8229 $cat >try.c <<'EOCP'
8236 char c[sizeof(long)];
8239 if (sizeof(long) > 4)
8240 u.l = (0x08070605L << 32) | 0x04030201L;
8243 for (i = 0; i < sizeof(long); i++)
8244 printf("%c", u.c[i]+'0');
8250 if $cc $ccflags try.c -o try >/dev/null 2>&1 && ./try > /dev/null; then
8253 [1-4][1-4][1-4][1-4]|12345678|87654321)
8254 echo "(The test program ran ok.)"
8255 echo "byteorder=$dflt"
8258 ????|????????) echo "(The test program ran ok.)" ;;
8259 *) echo "(The test program didn't run right for some reason.)" ;;
8264 (I can't seem to compile the test program. Guessing big-endian...)
8267 case "$xxx_prompt" in
8269 rp="What is the order of bytes in a long?"
8280 : how do we catenate cpp tokens here?
8282 echo "Checking to see how your cpp does stuff like catenate tokens..." >&4
8283 $cat >cpp_stuff.c <<'EOCP'
8284 #define RCAT(a,b)a/**/b
8285 #define ACAT(a,b)a ## b
8289 $cppstdin $cppflags $cppminus <cpp_stuff.c >cpp_stuff.out 2>&1
8290 if $contains 'Circus' cpp_stuff.out >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8291 echo "Oh! Smells like ANSI's been here."
8292 echo "We can catify or stringify, separately or together!"
8294 elif $contains 'Reiser' cpp_stuff.out >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8295 echo "Ah, yes! The good old days!"
8296 echo "However, in the good old days we don't know how to stringify and"
8297 echo "catify at the same time."
8301 Hmm, I don't seem to be able to catenate tokens with your cpp. You're going
8302 to have to edit the values of CAT[2-5] in config.h...
8304 cpp_stuff="/* Help! How do we handle cpp_stuff? */*/"
8308 : see if this is a db.h system
8316 echo "Checking Berkeley DB version ..." >&4
8322 #include <sys/types.h>
8327 #ifdef DB_VERSION_MAJOR /* DB version >= 2 */
8328 int Major, Minor, Patch ;
8329 (void)db_version(&Major, &Minor, &Patch) ;
8330 printf("You have Berkeley DB Version 2 or greater\n");
8332 printf("db.h is from Berkeley DB Version %d.%d.%d\n",
8333 DB_VERSION_MAJOR, DB_VERSION_MINOR, DB_VERSION_PATCH);
8334 printf("libdb is from Berkeley DB Version %d.%d.%d\n",
8335 Major, Minor, Patch) ;
8337 /* check that db.h & libdb are compatible */
8338 if (DB_VERSION_MAJOR != Major || DB_VERSION_MINOR != Minor || DB_VERSION_PATCH != Patch) {
8339 printf("db.h and libdb are incompatible\n") ;
8343 printf("db.h and libdb are compatible\n") ;
8344 /* needs to be >= 2.05 */
8345 if (DB_VERSION_MAJOR == 2 && DB_VERSION_MINOR == 0 && DB_VERSION_PATCH < 5) {
8346 printf("but Perl needs Berkeley DB 2.0.5 or greater\n") ;
8352 #if defined(_DB_H_) && defined(BTREEMAGIC) && defined(HASHMAGIC)
8353 printf("You have Berkeley DB Version 1\n");
8354 exit(0); /* DB version < 2: the coast is clear. */
8356 exit(1); /* <db.h> not Berkeley DB? */
8361 if $cc $optimize $ccflags $ldflags -o try try.c $libs && ./try; then
8362 echo 'Looks OK.' >&4
8364 echo "I can't use Berkeley DB with your <db.h>. I'll disable Berkeley DB." >&4
8368 : Remove db from list of libraries to use
8369 echo "Removing unusable -ldb from library list" >&4
8370 set `echo X $libs | $sed -e 's/-ldb / /' -e 's/-ldb$//'`
8373 echo "libs = $libs" >&4
8383 : Check the return type needed for hash
8385 echo "Checking return type needed for hash for Berkeley DB ..." >&4
8391 #include <sys/types.h>
8394 #ifndef DB_VERSION_MAJOR
8395 u_int32_t hash_cb (ptr, size)
8403 info.hash = hash_cb;
8407 if $cc $ccflags -c try.c >try.out 2>&1 ; then
8408 if $contains warning try.out >>/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
8411 db_hashtype='u_int32_t'
8414 : XXX Maybe we should just give up here.
8415 db_hashtype=u_int32_t
8416 echo "Help: I can't seem to compile the db test program." >&4
8417 echo "Something's wrong, but I'll assume you use $db_hashtype." >&4
8420 echo "Your version of Berkeley DB uses $db_hashtype for hash."
8422 *) db_hashtype=u_int32_t
8428 : Check the return type needed for prefix
8430 echo "Checking return type needed for prefix for Berkeley DB ..." >&4
8436 #include <sys/types.h>
8439 #ifndef DB_VERSION_MAJOR
8440 size_t prefix_cb (key1, key2)
8448 info.prefix = prefix_cb;
8452 if $cc $ccflags -c try.c >try.out 2>&1 ; then
8453 if $contains warning try.out >>/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
8456 db_prefixtype='size_t'
8459 db_prefixtype='size_t'
8460 : XXX Maybe we should just give up here.
8461 echo "Help: I can't seem to compile the db test program." >&4
8462 echo "Something's wrong, but I'll assume you use $db_prefixtype." >&4
8465 echo "Your version of Berkeley DB uses $db_prefixtype for prefix."
8467 *) db_prefixtype='size_t'
8471 : check for void type
8473 echo "Checking to see how well your C compiler groks the void type..." >&4
8476 Support flag bits are:
8477 1: basic void declarations.
8478 2: arrays of pointers to functions returning void.
8479 4: operations between pointers to and addresses of void functions.
8480 8: generic void pointers.
8483 case "$voidflags" in
8485 $cat >try.c <<'EOCP'
8491 extern void moo(); /* function returning void */
8492 void (*goo)(); /* ptr to func returning void */
8494 void *hue; /* generic ptr */
8509 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY=$defvoidused try.c >.out 2>&1 ; then
8510 voidflags=$defvoidused
8511 echo "It appears to support void to the level $package wants ($defvoidused)."
8512 if $contains warning .out >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8513 echo "However, you might get some warnings that look like this:"
8517 echo "Hmm, your compiler has some difficulty with void. Checking further..." >&4
8518 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY=1 try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8519 echo "It supports 1..."
8520 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY=3 try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8521 echo "It also supports 2..."
8522 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY=7 try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8524 echo "And it supports 4 but not 8 definitely."
8526 echo "It doesn't support 4..."
8527 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY=11 try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8529 echo "But it supports 8."
8532 echo "Neither does it support 8."
8536 echo "It does not support 2..."
8537 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY=13 try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8539 echo "But it supports 4 and 8."
8541 if $cc $ccflags -c -DTRY=5 try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8543 echo "And it supports 4 but has not heard about 8."
8545 echo "However it supports 8 but not 4."
8550 echo "There is no support at all for void."
8555 : Only prompt user if support does not match the level we want
8556 case "$voidflags" in
8560 rp="Your void support flags add up to what?"
8567 : see what type file positions are declared as in the library
8568 set fpos_t fpostype long stdio.h sys/types.h
8572 rp="What is the type for file position used by fsetpos()?"
8576 : Store the full pathname to the sed program for use in the C program
8579 : see what type gids are declared as in the kernel
8580 set gid_t gidtype xxx stdio.h sys/types.h
8584 xxx=`./findhdr sys/user.h`
8585 set `grep 'groups\[NGROUPS\];' "$xxx" 2>/dev/null` unsigned short
8587 unsigned) dflt="$1 $2" ;;
8591 *) dflt="$gidtype";;
8594 rp="What is the type for group ids returned by getgid()?"
8598 : see if getgroups exists
8599 set getgroups d_getgrps
8602 : see if setgroups exists
8603 set setgroups d_setgrps
8606 : Find type of 2nd arg to 'getgroups()' and 'setgroups()'
8608 case "$d_getgrps$d_setgrps" in
8610 case "$groupstype" in
8611 '') dflt="$gidtype" ;;
8612 *) dflt="$groupstype" ;;
8615 What is the type of the second argument to getgroups() and setgroups()?
8616 Usually this is the same as group ids, $gidtype, but not always.
8619 rp='What type is the second argument to getgroups() and setgroups()?'
8623 *) groupstype="$gidtype";;
8626 : see what type lseek is declared as in the kernel
8627 set off_t lseektype long stdio.h sys/types.h
8631 rp="What type is lseek's offset on this system declared as?"
8638 make=`./loc make make $pth`
8640 /*) echo make is in $make. ;;
8641 ?:[\\/]*) echo make is in $make. ;;
8642 *) echo "I don't know where 'make' is, and my life depends on it." >&4
8643 echo "Go find a make program or fix your PATH setting!" >&4
8648 *) echo make is in $make. ;;
8651 $echo $n "Checking if your $make program sets \$(MAKE)... $c" >&4
8652 case "$make_set_make" in
8654 $sed 's/^X //' > testmake.mak << 'EOF'
8656 X @echo 'ac_maketemp="$(MAKE)"'
8658 : GNU make sometimes prints "make[1]: Entering...", which would confuse us.
8659 case "`$make -f testmake.mak 2>/dev/null`" in
8660 *ac_maketemp=*) make_set_make='#' ;;
8661 *) make_set_make="MAKE=$make" ;;
8666 case "$make_set_make" in
8667 '#') echo "Yup, it does." >&4 ;;
8668 *) echo "Nope, it doesn't." >&4 ;;
8671 : see what type is used for mode_t
8672 set mode_t modetype int stdio.h sys/types.h
8676 rp="What type is used for file modes?"
8680 : locate the preferred pager for this system
8694 '') dflt=/usr/ucb/more;;
8701 rp='What pager is used on your system?'
8705 : Cruising for prototypes
8707 echo "Checking out function prototypes..." >&4
8708 $cat >prototype.c <<'EOCP'
8709 main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
8712 if $cc $ccflags -c prototype.c >prototype.out 2>&1 ; then
8713 echo "Your C compiler appears to support function prototypes."
8716 echo "Your C compiler doesn't seem to understand function prototypes."
8723 : check for size of random number generator
8727 echo "Checking to see how many bits your rand function produces..." >&4
8733 # include <unistd.h>
8736 # include <stdlib.h>
8739 $cat >>try.c <<'EOCP'
8743 register unsigned long tmp;
8744 register unsigned long max = 0L;
8746 for (i = 1000; i; i--) {
8747 tmp = (unsigned long)rand();
8748 if (tmp > max) max = tmp;
8750 for (i = 0; max; i++)
8756 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o try try.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
8760 echo "(I can't seem to compile the test program...)"
8767 rp='How many bits does your rand() function produce?'
8770 $rm -f try.c try.o try
8772 : see if ar generates random libraries by itself
8774 echo "Checking how to generate random libraries on your machine..." >&4
8775 echo 'int bar1() { return bar2(); }' > bar1.c
8776 echo 'int bar2() { return 2; }' > bar2.c
8777 $cat > foo.c <<'EOP'
8778 main() { printf("%d\n", bar1()); exit(0); }
8780 $cc $ccflags -c bar1.c >/dev/null 2>&1
8781 $cc $ccflags -c bar2.c >/dev/null 2>&1
8782 $cc $ccflags -c foo.c >/dev/null 2>&1
8783 ar rc bar$lib_ext bar2.o bar1.o >/dev/null 2>&1
8784 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o foobar foo.o bar$lib_ext $libs > /dev/null 2>&1 &&
8785 ./foobar >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8786 echo "ar appears to generate random libraries itself."
8789 elif ar ts bar$lib_ext >/dev/null 2>&1 &&
8790 $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o foobar foo.o bar$lib_ext $libs > /dev/null 2>&1 &&
8791 ./foobar >/dev/null 2>&1; then
8792 echo "a table of contents needs to be added with 'ar ts'."
8799 ranlib=`./loc ranlib X /usr/bin /bin /usr/local/bin`
8800 $test -f $ranlib || ranlib=''
8803 if $test -n "$ranlib"; then
8804 echo "your system has '$ranlib'; we'll use that."
8807 echo "your system doesn't seem to support random libraries"
8808 echo "so we'll use lorder and tsort to order the libraries."
8815 : see if sys/select.h has to be included
8816 set sys/select.h i_sysselct
8819 : see if we should include time.h, sys/time.h, or both
8821 echo "Testing to see if we should include <time.h>, <sys/time.h> or both." >&4
8822 $echo $n "I'm now running the test program...$c"
8823 $cat >try.c <<'EOCP'
8824 #include <sys/types.h>
8829 #ifdef SYSTIMEKERNEL
8832 #include <sys/time.h>
8835 #include <sys/select.h>
8844 struct timezone tzp;
8846 if (foo.tm_sec == foo.tm_sec)
8849 if (bar.tv_sec == bar.tv_sec)
8856 for s_timezone in '-DS_TIMEZONE' ''; do
8858 for s_timeval in '-DS_TIMEVAL' ''; do
8859 for i_systimek in '' '-DSYSTIMEKERNEL'; do
8860 for i_time in '' '-DI_TIME'; do
8861 for i_systime in '-DI_SYSTIME' ''; do
8865 $i_time $i_systime $i_systimek $sysselect $s_timeval $s_timezone \
8866 try.c -o try >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
8867 set X $i_time $i_systime $i_systimek $sysselect $s_timeval
8871 $echo $n "Succeeded with $flags$c"
8883 *SYSTIMEKERNEL*) i_systimek="$define"
8884 timeincl=`./findhdr sys/time.h`
8885 echo "We'll include <sys/time.h> with KERNEL defined." >&4;;
8886 *) i_systimek="$undef";;
8889 *I_TIME*) i_time="$define"
8890 timeincl=`./findhdr time.h`" $timeincl"
8891 echo "We'll include <time.h>." >&4;;
8892 *) i_time="$undef";;
8895 *I_SYSTIME*) i_systime="$define"
8896 timeincl=`./findhdr sys/time.h`" $timeincl"
8897 echo "We'll include <sys/time.h>." >&4;;
8898 *) i_systime="$undef";;
8902 : check for fd_set items
8905 Checking to see how well your C compiler handles fd_set and friends ...
8907 $cat >fd_set.c <<EOCP
8908 #$i_systime I_SYS_TIME
8909 #$i_sysselct I_SYS_SELECT
8910 #$d_socket HAS_SOCKET
8911 #include <sys/types.h>
8913 #include <sys/socket.h> /* Might include <sys/bsdtypes.h> */
8916 #include <sys/time.h>
8919 #include <sys/select.h>
8928 #if defined(FD_SET) && defined(FD_CLR) && defined(FD_ISSET) && defined(FD_ZERO)
8935 if $cc $ccflags -DTRYBITS fd_set.c -o fd_set >fd_set.out 2>&1 ; then
8936 d_fds_bits="$define"
8938 echo "Well, your system knows about the normal fd_set typedef..." >&4
8940 echo "and you have the normal fd_set macros (just as I'd expect)." >&4
8941 d_fd_macros="$define"
8944 but not the normal fd_set macros! Gaaack! I'll have to cover for you.
8946 d_fd_macros="$undef"
8950 Hmm, your compiler has some difficulty with fd_set. Checking further...
8952 if $cc $ccflags fd_set.c -o fd_set >fd_set.out 2>&1 ; then
8955 echo "Well, your system has some sort of fd_set available..." >&4
8957 echo "and you have the normal fd_set macros." >&4
8958 d_fd_macros="$define"
8961 but not the normal fd_set macros! Gross! More work for me...
8963 d_fd_macros="$undef"
8966 echo "Well, you got zip. That's OK, I can roll my own fd_set stuff." >&4
8969 d_fd_macros="$undef"
8975 : check for type of arguments to select. This will only really
8976 : work if the system supports prototypes and provides one for
8980 : Make initial guess
8981 case "$selecttype" in
8984 $define) xxx='fd_set *' ;;
8988 *) xxx="$selecttype"
8993 'fd_set *') yyy='int *' ;;
8994 'int *') yyy='fd_set *' ;;
8999 Checking to see what type of arguments are expected by select().
9002 #$i_systime I_SYS_TIME
9003 #$i_sysselct I_SYS_SELECT
9004 #$d_socket HAS_SOCKET
9005 #include <sys/types.h>
9007 #include <sys/socket.h> /* Might include <sys/bsdtypes.h> */
9010 #include <sys/time.h>
9013 #include <sys/select.h>
9018 Select_fd_set_t readfds;
9019 Select_fd_set_t writefds;
9020 Select_fd_set_t exceptfds;
9021 struct timeval timeout;
9022 select(width, readfds, writefds, exceptfds, &timeout);
9026 if $cc $ccflags -c -DSelect_fd_set_t="$xxx" try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
9028 echo "Your system uses $xxx for the arguments to select." >&4
9029 elif $cc $ccflags -c -DSelect_fd_set_t="$yyy" try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
9031 echo "Your system uses $yyy for the arguments to select." >&4
9033 rp='What is the type for the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th arguments to select?'
9040 *) selecttype='int *'
9044 : Trace out the files included by signal.h, then look for SIGxxx names.
9045 : Remove SIGARRAYSIZE used by HPUX.
9046 : Remove SIGTYP void lines used by OS2.
9047 xxx=`echo '#include <signal.h>' |
9048 $cppstdin $cppminus $cppflags 2>/dev/null |
9049 $grep '^[ ]*#.*include' |
9050 $awk "{print \\$$fieldn}" | $sed 's!"!!g' | $sort | $uniq`
9051 : Check this list of files to be sure we have parsed the cpp output ok.
9052 : This will also avoid potentially non-existent files, such
9055 for xx in $xxx /dev/null ; do
9056 $test -f "$xx" && xxxfiles="$xxxfiles $xx"
9058 : If we have found no files, at least try signal.h
9060 '') xxxfiles=`./findhdr signal.h` ;;
9063 $1 ~ /^#define$/ && $2 ~ /^SIG[A-Z0-9]*$/ && $2 !~ /SIGARRAYSIZE/ && $3 !~ /void/ {
9064 print substr($2, 4, 20)
9066 $1 == "#" && $2 ~ /^define$/ && $3 ~ /^SIG[A-Z0-9]*$/ && $3 !~ /SIGARRAYSIZE/ && $4 !~ /void/ {
9067 print substr($3, 4, 20)
9069 : Append some common names just in case the awk scan failed.
9070 xxx="$xxx ABRT ALRM BUS CHLD CLD CONT DIL EMT FPE HUP ILL INT IO IOT KILL"
9071 xxx="$xxx LOST PHONE PIPE POLL PROF PWR QUIT SEGV STKFLT STOP SYS TERM TRAP"
9072 xxx="$xxx TSTP TTIN TTOU URG USR1 USR2 USR3 USR4 VTALRM"
9073 xxx="$xxx WINCH WIND WINDOW XCPU XFSZ"
9074 : generate a few handy files for later
9075 $cat > signal.c <<'EOP'
9076 #include <sys/types.h>
9080 /* Strange style to avoid deeply-nested #if/#else/#endif */
9083 # define NSIG (_NSIG)
9089 # define NSIG (SIGMAX+1)
9095 # define NSIG (SIG_MAX+1)
9101 # define NSIG (MAXSIG+1)
9107 # define NSIG (MAX_SIG+1)
9112 # ifdef SIGARRAYSIZE
9113 # define NSIG (SIGARRAYSIZE+1) /* Not sure of the +1 */
9119 # define NSIG (_sys_nsig) /* Solaris 2.5 */
9123 /* Default to some arbitrary number that's big enough to get most
9124 of the common signals.
9130 printf("NSIG %d\n", NSIG);
9133 echo $xxx | $tr ' ' '\012' | $sort | $uniq | $awk '
9135 printf "#ifdef SIG"; printf $1; printf "\n"
9136 printf "printf(\""; printf $1; printf " %%d\\n\",SIG";
9137 printf $1; printf ");\n"
9144 $cat >signal.awk <<'EOP'
9146 $1 ~ /^NSIG$/ { nsig = $2 }
9147 ($1 !~ /^NSIG$/) && (NF == 2) {
9148 if ($2 > maxsig) { maxsig = $2 }
9150 dup_name[ndups] = $1
9161 if (nsig == 0) { nsig = maxsig + 1 }
9162 for (n = 1; n < nsig; n++) {
9164 printf("%s %d\n", sig_name[n], sig_num[n])
9167 printf("NUM%d %d\n", n, n)
9170 for (n = 0; n < ndups; n++) {
9171 printf("%s %d\n", dup_name[n], dup_num[n])
9175 $cat >signal_cmd <<EOS
9177 $test -s signal.lst && exit 0
9178 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags signal.c -o signal >/dev/null 2>&1; then
9179 ./signal | $sort -n +1 | $uniq | $awk -f signal.awk >signal.lst
9181 echo "(I can't seem be able to compile the test program -- Guessing)"
9182 echo 'kill -l' >signal
9183 set X \`csh -f <signal\`
9187 0) set HUP INT QUIT ILL TRAP ABRT EMT FPE KILL BUS SEGV SYS PIPE ALRM TERM;;
9189 echo \$@ | $tr ' ' '\012' | \
9190 $awk '{ printf \$1; printf " %d\n", ++s; }' >signal.lst
9192 $rm -f signal.c signal signal.o
9194 chmod a+x signal_cmd
9195 $eunicefix signal_cmd
9197 : generate list of signal names
9207 echo "Generating a list of signal names and numbers..." >&4
9209 sig_name=`$awk '{printf "%s ", $1}' signal.lst`
9210 sig_name="ZERO $sig_name"
9211 sig_num=`$awk '{printf "%d ", $2}' signal.lst`
9212 sig_num="0 $sig_num"
9215 echo "The following signals are available:"
9217 echo $sig_name | $awk \
9218 'BEGIN { linelen = 0 }
9220 for (i = 1; i <= NF; i++) {
9222 linelen = linelen + length(name)
9225 linelen = length(name)
9231 $rm -f signal signal.c signal.awk signal.lst signal_cmd
9233 : see what type is used for size_t
9234 set size_t sizetype 'unsigned int' stdio.h sys/types.h
9238 rp="What type is used for the length parameter for string functions?"
9242 : see what type is used for signed size_t
9243 set ssize_t ssizetype int stdio.h sys/types.h
9246 $cat > ssize.c <<EOM
9248 #include <sys/types.h>
9249 #define Size_t $sizetype
9250 #define SSize_t $dflt
9253 if (sizeof(Size_t) == sizeof(SSize_t))
9255 else if (sizeof(Size_t) == sizeof(int))
9264 # If $libs contains -lsfio, and sfio is mis-configured, then it
9265 # sometimes (apparently) runs and exits with a 0 status, but with no
9266 # output!. Thus we check with test -s whether we actually got any
9267 # output. I think it has to do with sfio's use of _exit vs. exit,
9268 # but I don't know for sure. --Andy Dougherty 1/27/97.
9269 if $cc $optimize $ccflags $ldflags -o ssize ssize.c $libs > /dev/null 2>&1 &&
9270 ./ssize > ssize.out 2>/dev/null && test -s ssize.out ; then
9271 ssizetype=`$cat ssize.out`
9272 echo "I'll be using $ssizetype for functions returning a byte count." >&4
9276 Help! I can't compile and run the ssize_t test program: please enlighten me!
9277 (This is probably a misconfiguration in your system or libraries, and
9278 you really ought to fix it. Still, I'll try anyway.)
9280 I need a type that is the same size as $sizetype, but is guaranteed to
9281 be signed. Common values are ssize_t, int and long.
9284 rp="What signed type is the same size as $sizetype?"
9288 $rm -f ssize ssize.[co] ssize.out
9290 : see if this is a netdb.h system
9294 : check for type of arguments to gethostbyaddr. This will only really
9295 : work if the system supports prototypes and provides one for
9296 : gethostbyaddr. The netdb_host_type and netdb_hlen_type get defined.
9297 case "$d_gethbyaddr" in
9299 if test "X$netdb_host_type" = X -o "X$netdb_hlen_type" = X; then
9302 Checking to see what type of arguments are expected by gethostbyaddr().
9305 #include <sys/types.h>
9309 #$d_socket HAS_SOCKET
9310 #$d_socket HAS_SOCKET
9312 #include <sys/socket.h> /* Might include <sys/bsdtypes.h> */
9315 #include <netinet/in.h>
9323 #define Size_t $sizetype
9326 Netdb_alen_t alen = sizeof(struct in_addr);
9327 Netdb_addr_t addr = (Netdb_addr_t)malloc(alen);
9328 struct hostent* hent;
9330 extern struct hostent *gethostbyaddr(Netdb_addr_t, Netdb_alen_t, int);
9332 /* We do not execute this so the arguments matter not. */
9333 hent = gethostbyaddr(addr, alen, AF_INET);
9338 for xxx in in_addr_t "const void *" "const char *" "void *" "char *"; do
9339 for yyy in Size_t long int; do
9340 if $cc $ccflags -c -DNetdb_addr_t="$xxx" -DNetdb_alen_t="$yyy" try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
9341 netdb_host_type="$xxx"
9342 netdb_hlen_type="$yyy"
9344 Your system accepts $xxx for the 1st argument to gethostbyaddr.
9345 and the 2nd argument to gethostbyaddr can be $yyy.
9350 test "X$netdb_host_type" != X && break
9352 if test "X$netdb_host_type" = X; then
9353 rp='What is the type for the 1st argument to gethostbyaddr?'
9356 netdb_host_type="$ans"
9358 # Remove the "const" if needed.
9359 netdb_host_type=`echo "$netdb_host_type" | sed 's/^const //'`
9361 rp='What is the type for the 2nd argument to gethostbyaddr ?'
9364 netdb_hlen_type="$ans"
9369 Your system accepts $netdb_host_type for the 1st argument to gethostbyaddr.
9370 and the 2nd argument to gethostbyaddr can be $netdb_hlen_type.
9374 *) netdb_host_type='void *'
9375 netdb_hlen_type='Size_t'
9379 : check for type of arguments to gethostbyname. This will only really
9380 : work if the system supports prototypes and provides one for
9381 : gethostbyname. The netdb_name_type gets defined.
9382 case "$d_gethbyname" in
9384 if test "X$netdb_name_type" = X; then
9387 Checking to see what type of arguments are expected by gethostbyname().
9392 #$d_socket HAS_SOCKET
9393 #$d_socket HAS_SOCKET
9394 #include <sys/types.h>
9396 #include <sys/socket.h> /* Might include <sys/bsdtypes.h> */
9399 #include <netinet/in.h>
9406 char* host = "localhost";
9407 struct hostent* hent;
9409 extern struct hostent *gethostbyname(Netdb_name_t);
9411 /* We do not execute this so the arguments matter not. */
9412 hent = gethostbyname(host);
9417 for xxx in "const char *" "char *"; do
9418 if $cc $ccflags -c -DNetdb_name_t="$xxx" try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
9419 netdb_name_type="$xxx"
9420 echo "Your system accepts $xxx for the 1st argument to gethostbyname." >&4
9424 if test "X$netdb_name_type" = X; then
9425 rp='What is the type for the 1st argument to gethostbyname?'
9428 netdb_name_type="$ans"
9432 echo "Your system accepts $netdb_name_type for the 1st argument to gethostbyname." >&4
9435 *) netdb_name_type='char *'
9439 : check for type of arguments to getnetbyaddr. This will only really
9440 : work if the system supports prototypes and provides one for
9441 : getnetbyaddr. The netdb_net_type gets defined.
9442 case "$d_getnbyaddr" in
9444 if test "X$netdb_net_type" = X; then
9447 Checking to see what type of arguments are expected by getnetbyaddr().
9452 #$d_socket HAS_SOCKET
9453 #$d_socket HAS_SOCKET
9454 #include <sys/types.h>
9456 #include <sys/socket.h> /* Might include <sys/bsdtypes.h> */
9459 #include <netinet/in.h>
9467 struct netent* nent;
9469 extern struct netent *getnetbyaddr(Netdb_net_t, int);
9471 /* We do not execute this so the arguments matter not. */
9472 nent = getnetbyaddr(net, 2);
9477 for xxx in in_addr_t "unsigned long" long "unsigned int" int; do
9478 if $cc $ccflags -c -DNetdb_net_t="$xxx" try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
9479 netdb_net_type="$xxx"
9480 echo "Your system accepts $xxx for the 1st argument to getnetbyaddr." >&4
9484 if test "X$netdb_net_type" = X; then
9485 rp='What is the type for the 1st argument to getnetbyaddr?'
9488 netdb_net_type="$ans"
9492 echo "Your system accepts $netdb_net_type for the 1st argument to getnetbyaddr." >&4
9495 *) netdb_net_type='long'
9499 : see what type of char stdio uses.
9501 if $contains 'unsigned.*char.*_ptr;' `./findhdr stdio.h` >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
9502 echo "Your stdio uses unsigned chars." >&4
9503 stdchar="unsigned char"
9505 echo "Your stdio uses signed chars." >&4
9509 : see if time exists
9511 if set time val -f d_time; eval $csym; $val; then
9512 echo 'time() found.' >&4
9514 set time_t timetype long stdio.h sys/types.h
9518 rp="What type is returned by time() on this system?"
9522 echo 'time() not found, hope that will do.' >&4
9529 : see what type uids are declared as in the kernel
9530 set uid_t uidtype xxx stdio.h sys/types.h
9534 xxx=`./findhdr sys/user.h`
9535 set `grep '_ruid;' "$xxx" 2>/dev/null` unsigned short
9537 unsigned) dflt="$1 $2" ;;
9541 *) dflt="$uidtype";;
9544 rp="What is the type for user ids returned by getuid()?"
9548 : see if dbm.h is available
9549 : see if dbmclose exists
9550 set dbmclose d_dbmclose
9553 case "$d_dbmclose" in
9563 *) set rpcsvc/dbm.h i_rpcsvcdbm
9568 *) echo "We won't be including <dbm.h>"
9578 : see if this is a sys/file.h system
9583 : do we need to include sys/file.h ?
9589 echo "We'll be including <sys/file.h>." >&4
9592 echo "We won't be including <sys/file.h>." >&4
9602 : see if fcntl.h is there
9607 : see if we can include fcntl.h
9613 echo "We'll be including <fcntl.h>." >&4
9617 echo "We don't need to include <fcntl.h> if we include <sys/file.h>." >&4
9619 echo "We won't be including <fcntl.h>." >&4
9631 : see if this is an grp system
9635 : see if locale.h is available
9636 set locale.h i_locale
9639 : see if this is a math.h system
9643 : see if ndbm.h is available
9648 : see if dbm_open exists
9649 set dbm_open d_dbm_open
9651 case "$d_dbm_open" in
9654 echo "We won't be including <ndbm.h>"
9663 : see if net/errno.h is available
9668 : Unfortunately, it causes problems on some systems. Arrgh.
9674 #include <net/errno.h>
9680 if $cc $ccflags -c try.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
9681 echo "We'll be including <net/errno.h>." >&4
9683 echo "We won't be including <net/errno.h>." >&4
9692 : get C preprocessor symbols handy
9694 $echo $n "Hmm... $c"
9695 echo $al | $tr ' ' '\012' >Cppsym.know
9707 if $contains "^\$1$" Cppsym.true >/dev/null 2>&1; then
9709 elif $contains "^\$1$" Cppsym.know >/dev/null 2>&1; then
9712 unknown="\$unknown \$sym"
9722 echo \$* | $tr ' ' '\012' | $sed -e 's/\(.*\)/\\
9724 exit 0; _ _ _ _\1\\ \1\\
9727 echo "exit 1; _ _ _" >>Cppsym\$\$
9728 $cppstdin $cppminus <Cppsym\$\$ | $grep '^exit [01]; _ _' >Cppsym2\$\$
9730 true) $awk 'NF > 5 {print substr(\$6,2,100)}' <Cppsym2\$\$ ;;
9736 $rm -f Cppsym\$\$ Cppsym2\$\$
9741 ./Cppsym -l $al | $sort | $grep -v '^$' >Cppsym.true
9743 : now check the C compiler for additional symbols
9749 for i in \`$cc -v -c tmp.c 2>&1\`
9752 -D*) echo "\$i" | $sed 's/^-D//';;
9753 -A*) $test "$gccversion" && echo "\$i" | $sed 's/^-A\(.*\)(\(.*\))/\1=\2/';;
9760 ./ccsym | $sort | $uniq >ccsym.raw
9761 $awk '/\=/ { print $0; next }
9762 { print $0"=1" }' ccsym.raw >ccsym.list
9763 $awk '{ print $0"=1" }' Cppsym.true >ccsym.true
9764 $comm -13 ccsym.true ccsym.list >ccsym.own
9765 $comm -12 ccsym.true ccsym.list >ccsym.com
9766 $comm -23 ccsym.true ccsym.list >ccsym.cpp
9769 if $test -z ccsym.raw; then
9770 echo "Your C compiler doesn't seem to define any symbol!" >&4
9772 echo "However, your C preprocessor defines the following ones:"
9775 if $test -s ccsym.com; then
9776 echo "Your C compiler and pre-processor define these symbols:"
9777 $sed -e 's/\(.*\)=.*/\1/' ccsym.com
9780 $test "$silent" || sleep 1
9782 if $test -s ccsym.cpp; then
9783 $test "$also" && echo " "
9784 echo "Your C pre-processor ${also}defines the following $symbols:"
9785 $sed -e 's/\(.*\)=.*/\1/' ccsym.cpp
9787 $test "$silent" || sleep 1
9789 if $test -s ccsym.own; then
9790 $test "$also" && echo " "
9791 echo "Your C compiler ${also}defines the following cpp variables:"
9792 $sed -e 's/\(.*\)=1/\1/' ccsym.own
9793 $sed -e 's/\(.*\)=.*/\1/' ccsym.own | $uniq >>Cppsym.true
9794 $test "$silent" || sleep 1
9799 : see if this is a termio system
9803 if $test `./findhdr termios.h`; then
9804 set tcsetattr i_termios
9810 "$define") echo "You have POSIX termios.h... good!" >&4;;
9811 *) if ./Cppsym pyr; then
9812 case "`/bin/universe`" in
9813 ucb) if $test `./findhdr sgtty.h`; then
9815 echo "<sgtty.h> found." >&4
9817 echo "System is pyramid with BSD universe."
9818 echo "<sgtty.h> not found--you could have problems." >&4
9820 *) if $test `./findhdr termio.h`; then
9822 echo "<termio.h> found." >&4
9824 echo "System is pyramid with USG universe."
9825 echo "<termio.h> not found--you could have problems." >&4
9829 if $test `./findhdr termio.h`; then
9830 echo "<termio.h> found." >&4
9832 elif $test `./findhdr sgtty.h`; then
9833 echo "<sgtty.h> found." >&4
9836 echo "Neither <termio.h> nor <sgtty.h> found--you could have problems." >&4
9839 if $test `./findhdr sgtty.h`; then
9840 echo "<sgtty.h> found." >&4
9842 elif $test `./findhdr termio.h`; then
9843 echo "<termio.h> found." >&4
9846 echo "Neither <sgtty.h> nor <termio.h> found--you could have problems." >&4
9850 set i_termio; eval $setvar
9851 val=$val2; set i_sgtty; eval $setvar
9852 val=$val3; set i_termios; eval $setvar
9854 : see if stdarg is available
9856 if $test `./findhdr stdarg.h`; then
9857 echo "<stdarg.h> found." >&4
9860 echo "<stdarg.h> NOT found." >&4
9864 : see if varags is available
9866 if $test `./findhdr varargs.h`; then
9867 echo "<varargs.h> found." >&4
9869 echo "<varargs.h> NOT found, but that's ok (I hope)." >&4
9872 : set up the varargs testing programs
9873 $cat > varargs.c <<EOP
9878 #include <varargs.h>
9896 p = va_arg(ap, char *);
9901 $cat > varargs <<EOP
9903 if $cc -c $ccflags -D\$1 varargs.c >/dev/null 2>&1; then
9912 : now check which varargs header should be included
9917 if `./varargs I_STDARG`; then
9919 elif `./varargs I_VARARGS`; then
9924 if `./varargs I_VARARGS`; then
9931 echo "I could not find the definition for va_dcl... You have problems..." >&4
9932 val="$undef"; set i_stdarg; eval $setvar
9933 val="$undef"; set i_varargs; eval $setvar
9940 val="$define"; set i_stdarg; eval $setvar
9941 val="$undef"; set i_varargs; eval $setvar
9944 val="$undef"; set i_stdarg; eval $setvar
9945 val="$define"; set i_varargs; eval $setvar
9948 echo "We'll include <$i_varhdr> to get va_dcl definition." >&4;;
9952 : see if stddef is available
9953 set stddef.h i_stddef
9956 : see if ioctl defs are in sgtty, termio, sys/filio or sys/ioctl
9957 set sys/filio.h i_sysfilio
9960 if $test `./findhdr sys/ioctl.h`; then
9962 echo '<sys/ioctl.h> found.' >&4
9965 if $test $i_sysfilio = "$define"; then
9966 echo '<sys/ioctl.h> NOT found.' >&4
9968 $test $i_sgtty = "$define" && xxx="sgtty.h"
9969 $test $i_termio = "$define" && xxx="termio.h"
9970 $test $i_termios = "$define" && xxx="termios.h"
9971 echo "No <sys/ioctl.h> found, assuming ioctl args are defined in <$xxx>." >&4
9977 : see if this is a sys/param system
9978 set sys/param.h i_sysparam
9981 : see if sys/resource.h has to be included
9982 set sys/resource.h i_sysresrc
9985 : see if sys/stat.h is available
9986 set sys/stat.h i_sysstat
9989 : see if sys/types.h has to be included
9990 set sys/types.h i_systypes
9993 : see if this is a sys/un.h system
9994 set sys/un.h i_sysun
9997 : see if this is a syswait system
9998 set sys/wait.h i_syswait
10001 : see if this is an utime system
10002 set utime.h i_utime
10005 : see if this is a values.h system
10006 set values.h i_values
10009 : see if this is a vfork system
10012 set vfork.h i_vfork
10020 : see if gdbm.h is available
10025 : see if gdbm_open exists
10026 set gdbm_open d_gdbm_open
10028 case "$d_gdbm_open" in
10031 echo "We won't be including <gdbm.h>"
10040 : test whether pthreads are created in joinable -- aka undetached -- state
10041 if test "X$usethreads" != X; then
10042 if test "X$d_pthreads_created_joinable" = X; then
10043 echo >&4 "Checking whether pthreads are created joinable."
10045 #include <pthread.h>
10048 pthread_attr_t attr;
10051 pthread_attr_init(&attr) == 0 &&
10052 pthread_attr_getdetachstate(&attr, &detachstate) == 0 &&
10053 detachstate == PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED ?
10054 "detached" : "joinable");
10058 if $cc $ccflags $ldflags -o try try.c $libs >/dev/null 2>&1; then
10062 echo "Nope, they aren't."
10065 echo "Yup, they are."
10069 echo "(I can't execute the test program--assuming they are.)"
10080 set d_pthreads_created_joinable
10085 d_pthreads_created_joinable="$undef"
10088 : see whether the various POSIXish _yields exist within given cccmd
10090 #include <pthread.h>
10096 : see if pthread_yield exists within given cccmd,
10097 : if we do not usethreads this may well end up undef.
10098 if $cc $ccflags -DYIELD=pthread_yield $ldflags -o try try.c $libs > /dev/null 2>&1; then
10100 echo 'pthread_yield() found.' >&4
10103 echo 'pthread_yield() NOT found.' >&4
10105 set d_pthread_yield
10108 : see if sched_yield exists within given cccmd,
10109 : if we do not usethreads this may well end up undef.
10110 if $cc $ccflags -DYIELD=sched_yield $ldflags -o try try.c $libs > /dev/null 2>&1; then
10112 echo 'sched_yield() found.' >&4
10115 echo 'sched_yield() NOT found.' >&4
10120 : common to both the pthread_yield and sched_yield tests
10124 echo "Looking for extensions..." >&4
10126 : If we are using the old config.sh, known_extensions may contain
10127 : old or inaccurate or duplicate values.
10128 known_extensions=''
10129 : We do not use find because it might not be available.
10130 : We do not just use MANIFEST because the user may have dropped
10131 : some additional extensions into the source tree and expect them
10136 *) if $test -f $xxx/$xxx.xs; then
10137 known_extensions="$known_extensions $xxx"
10139 if $test -d $xxx; then
10142 if $test -f $yyy/$yyy.xs; then
10143 known_extensions="$known_extensions $xxx/$yyy"
10151 set X $known_extensions
10153 known_extensions="$*"
10156 : Now see which are supported on this system.
10158 for xxx in $known_extensions ; do
10160 DB_File|db_file) case "$i_db" in
10161 $define) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx" ;;
10164 GDBM_File|gdbm_fil) case "$i_gdbm" in
10165 $define) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx" ;;
10168 NDBM_File|ndbm_fil) case "$i_ndbm" in
10169 $define) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx" ;;
10172 ODBM_File|odbm_fil) case "${i_dbm}${i_rpcsvcdbm}" in
10173 *"${define}"*) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx" ;;
10176 POSIX|posix) case "$useposix" in
10177 true|define|y) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx" ;;
10180 Opcode|opcode) case "$useopcode" in
10181 true|define|y) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx" ;;
10184 Socket|socket) case "$d_socket" in
10185 $define) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx" ;;
10188 Thread|thread) case "$usethreads" in
10189 $define) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx" ;;
10192 *) avail_ext="$avail_ext $xxx"
10204 A number of extensions are supplied with $package. You may choose to
10205 compile these extensions for dynamic loading (the default), compile
10206 them into the $package executable (static loading), or not include
10207 them at all. Answer "none" to include no extensions.
10210 case "$dynamic_ext" in
10211 '') dflt="$avail_ext" ;;
10212 *) dflt="$dynamic_ext" ;;
10217 rp="What extensions do you wish to load dynamically?"
10220 none) dynamic_ext=' ' ;;
10221 *) dynamic_ext="$ans" ;;
10224 case "$static_ext" in
10226 : Exclude those already listed in dynamic linking
10228 for xxx in $avail_ext; do
10229 case " $dynamic_ext " in
10231 *) dflt="$dflt $xxx" ;;
10238 *) dflt="$static_ext"
10245 rp="What extensions do you wish to load statically?"
10248 none) static_ext=' ' ;;
10249 *) static_ext="$ans" ;;
10254 A number of extensions are supplied with $package. Answer "none"
10255 to include no extensions.
10258 case "$static_ext" in
10259 '') dflt="$avail_ext" ;;
10260 *) dflt="$static_ext" ;;
10266 rp="What extensions do you wish to include?"
10269 none) static_ext=' ' ;;
10270 *) static_ext="$ans" ;;
10275 set X $dynamic_ext $static_ext
10279 : Remove build directory name from cppstdin so it can be used from
10280 : either the present location or the final installed location.
10282 : Get out of the UU directory to get correct path name.
10284 case "$cppstdin" in
10286 echo "Stripping down cppstdin path name"
10292 : end of configuration questions
10294 echo "End of configuration questions."
10297 : back to where it started
10298 if test -d ../UU; then
10302 : configuration may be patched via a 'config.over' file
10303 if $test -f config.over; then
10306 rp='I see a config.over file. Do you wish to load it?'
10309 n*) echo "OK, I'll ignore it.";;
10311 echo "Configuration override changes have been loaded."
10316 : in case they want portability, strip down executable paths
10317 case "$d_portable" in
10320 echo "Stripping down executable paths..." >&4
10321 for file in $loclist $trylist; do
10322 eval $file="\$file"
10327 : create config.sh file
10329 echo "Creating config.sh..." >&4
10330 $spitshell <<EOT >config.sh
10333 # This file was produced by running the Configure script. It holds all
10334 # the definitions figured out by Configure. Should you modify any of
10335 # these values, do not forget to propagate your changes by running
10336 # "Configure -S"; or, equivalently, you may run each .SH file yourself.
10339 # Configuration time: $cf_time
10340 # Configured by: $cf_by
10341 # Target system: $myuname
10351 Revision='$Revision'
10355 alignbytes='$alignbytes'
10356 aphostname='$aphostname'
10359 archlibexp='$archlibexp'
10360 archname='$archname'
10361 archobjs='$archobjs'
10366 bincompat3='$bincompat3'
10370 byteorder='$byteorder'
10372 castflags='$castflags'
10375 cccdlflags='$cccdlflags'
10376 ccdlflags='$ccdlflags'
10379 cf_email='$cf_email'
10384 clocktype='$clocktype'
10386 compress='$compress'
10387 contains='$contains'
10391 cpp_stuff='$cpp_stuff'
10392 cppflags='$cppflags'
10394 cppminus='$cppminus'
10396 cppstdin='$cppstdin'
10397 cryptlib='$cryptlib'
10399 d_Gconvert='$d_Gconvert'
10400 d_access='$d_access'
10402 d_archlib='$d_archlib'
10403 d_attribut='$d_attribut'
10406 d_bincompat3='$d_bincompat3'
10408 d_bsdgetpgrp='$d_bsdgetpgrp'
10409 d_bsdpgrp='$d_bsdpgrp'
10410 d_bsdsetpgrp='$d_bsdsetpgrp'
10412 d_casti32='$d_casti32'
10413 d_castneg='$d_castneg'
10414 d_charvspr='$d_charvspr'
10416 d_chroot='$d_chroot'
10417 d_chsize='$d_chsize'
10418 d_closedir='$d_closedir'
10422 d_cuserid='$d_cuserid'
10423 d_dbl_dig='$d_dbl_dig'
10424 d_difftime='$d_difftime'
10425 d_dirnamlen='$d_dirnamlen'
10426 d_dlerror='$d_dlerror'
10427 d_dlopen='$d_dlopen'
10428 d_dlsymun='$d_dlsymun'
10429 d_dosuid='$d_dosuid'
10431 d_eofnblk='$d_eofnblk'
10432 d_eunice='$d_eunice'
10433 d_fchmod='$d_fchmod'
10434 d_fchown='$d_fchown'
10436 d_fd_macros='$d_fd_macros'
10437 d_fd_set='$d_fd_set'
10438 d_fds_bits='$d_fds_bits'
10439 d_fgetpos='$d_fgetpos'
10440 d_flexfnam='$d_flexfnam'
10443 d_fpathconf='$d_fpathconf'
10444 d_fsetpos='$d_fsetpos'
10446 d_getgrps='$d_getgrps'
10447 d_setgrps='$d_setgrps'
10448 d_gethbyaddr='$d_gethbyaddr'
10449 netdb_host_type='$netdb_host_type'
10450 netdb_hlen_type='$netdb_hlen_type'
10451 d_gethbyname='$d_gethbyname'
10452 netdb_name_type='$netdb_name_type'
10453 d_gethent='$d_gethent'
10454 d_gethname='$d_gethname'
10455 d_getlogin='$d_getlogin'
10456 d_getnbyaddr='$d_getnbyaddr'
10457 d_getnbyname='$d_getnbyname'
10458 netdb_net_type='$netdb_net_type'
10459 d_getpgid='$d_getpgid'
10460 d_getpgrp2='$d_getpgrp2'
10461 d_getpgrp='$d_getpgrp'
10462 d_getppid='$d_getppid'
10463 d_getprior='$d_getprior'
10464 d_getpbyname='$d_getpbyname'
10465 d_getpbynumber='$d_getpbynumber'
10466 d_getsbyname='$d_getsbyname'
10467 d_getsbyport='$d_getsbyport'
10468 d_gettimeod='$d_gettimeod'
10469 d_gnulibc='$d_gnulibc'
10472 d_inetaton='$d_inetaton'
10473 d_isascii='$d_isascii'
10474 d_killpg='$d_killpg'
10476 d_locconv='$d_locconv'
10480 d_mbstowcs='$d_mbstowcs'
10481 d_mbtowc='$d_mbtowc'
10482 d_memcmp='$d_memcmp'
10483 d_memcpy='$d_memcpy'
10484 d_memmove='$d_memmove'
10485 d_memset='$d_memset'
10487 d_mkfifo='$d_mkfifo'
10488 d_mktime='$d_mktime'
10490 d_msgctl='$d_msgctl'
10491 d_msgget='$d_msgget'
10492 d_msgrcv='$d_msgrcv'
10493 d_msgsnd='$d_msgsnd'
10494 d_mymalloc='$d_mymalloc'
10496 d_oldarchlib='$d_oldarchlib'
10497 d_oldsock='$d_oldsock'
10499 d_pathconf='$d_pathconf'
10501 d_phostname='$d_phostname'
10504 d_portable='$d_portable'
10505 d_pthread_yield='$d_pthread_yield'
10506 d_pthreads_created_joinable='$d_pthreads_created_joinable'
10508 d_pwchange='$d_pwchange'
10509 d_pwclass='$d_pwclass'
10510 d_pwcomment='$d_pwcomment'
10511 d_pwexpire='$d_pwexpire'
10512 d_pwquota='$d_pwquota'
10513 d_readdir='$d_readdir'
10514 d_readlink='$d_readlink'
10515 d_rename='$d_rename'
10516 d_rewinddir='$d_rewinddir'
10518 d_safebcpy='$d_safebcpy'
10519 d_safemcpy='$d_safemcpy'
10520 d_sanemcmp='$d_sanemcmp'
10521 d_sched_yield='$d_sched_yield'
10522 d_seekdir='$d_seekdir'
10523 d_select='$d_select'
10525 d_semctl='$d_semctl'
10526 d_semget='$d_semget'
10528 d_setegid='$d_setegid'
10529 d_seteuid='$d_seteuid'
10530 d_setlinebuf='$d_setlinebuf'
10531 d_setlocale='$d_setlocale'
10532 d_setpgid='$d_setpgid'
10533 d_setpgrp2='$d_setpgrp2'
10534 d_setpgrp='$d_setpgrp'
10535 d_setprior='$d_setprior'
10536 d_setregid='$d_setregid'
10537 d_setresgid='$d_setresgid'
10538 d_setresuid='$d_setresuid'
10539 d_setreuid='$d_setreuid'
10540 d_setrgid='$d_setrgid'
10541 d_setruid='$d_setruid'
10542 d_setsid='$d_setsid'
10546 d_shmatprototype='$d_shmatprototype'
10547 d_shmctl='$d_shmctl'
10549 d_shmget='$d_shmget'
10550 d_sigaction='$d_sigaction'
10551 d_sigsetjmp='$d_sigsetjmp'
10552 d_socket='$d_socket'
10553 d_sockpair='$d_sockpair'
10554 d_statblks='$d_statblks'
10555 d_stdio_cnt_lval='$d_stdio_cnt_lval'
10556 d_stdio_ptr_lval='$d_stdio_ptr_lval'
10557 d_stdiobase='$d_stdiobase'
10558 d_stdstdio='$d_stdstdio'
10559 d_strchr='$d_strchr'
10560 d_strcoll='$d_strcoll'
10561 d_strctcpy='$d_strctcpy'
10562 d_strerrm='$d_strerrm'
10563 d_strerror='$d_strerror'
10564 d_strtod='$d_strtod'
10565 d_strtol='$d_strtol'
10566 d_strtoul='$d_strtoul'
10567 d_strxfrm='$d_strxfrm'
10568 d_suidsafe='$d_suidsafe'
10569 d_symlink='$d_symlink'
10570 d_syscall='$d_syscall'
10571 d_sysconf='$d_sysconf'
10572 d_sysernlst='$d_sysernlst'
10573 d_syserrlst='$d_syserrlst'
10574 d_system='$d_system'
10575 d_tcgetpgrp='$d_tcgetpgrp'
10576 d_tcsetpgrp='$d_tcsetpgrp'
10577 d_telldir='$d_telldir'
10580 d_truncate='$d_truncate'
10581 d_tzname='$d_tzname'
10585 d_void_closedir='$d_void_closedir'
10586 d_voidsig='$d_voidsig'
10587 d_voidtty='$d_voidtty'
10588 d_volatile='$d_volatile'
10589 d_vprintf='$d_vprintf'
10591 d_waitpid='$d_waitpid'
10592 d_wcstombs='$d_wcstombs'
10593 d_wctomb='$d_wctomb'
10596 db_hashtype='$db_hashtype'
10597 db_prefixtype='$db_prefixtype'
10598 defvoidused='$defvoidused'
10599 direntrytype='$direntrytype'
10602 dynamic_ext='$dynamic_ext'
10607 eunicefix='$eunicefix'
10610 extensions='$extensions'
10612 firstmakefile='$firstmakefile'
10614 fpostype='$fpostype'
10615 freetype='$freetype'
10616 full_csh='$full_csh'
10617 full_sed='$full_sed'
10619 gccversion='$gccversion'
10623 groupcat='$groupcat'
10624 groupstype='$groupstype'
10627 h_sysfile='$h_sysfile'
10631 i_bsdioctl='$i_bsdioctl'
10634 i_dirent='$i_dirent'
10641 i_limits='$i_limits'
10642 i_locale='$i_locale'
10643 i_malloc='$i_malloc'
10645 i_memory='$i_memory'
10648 i_neterrno='$i_neterrno'
10651 i_rpcsvcdbm='$i_rpcsvcdbm'
10654 i_stdarg='$i_stdarg'
10655 i_stddef='$i_stddef'
10656 i_stdlib='$i_stdlib'
10657 i_string='$i_string'
10658 i_sysdir='$i_sysdir'
10659 i_sysfile='$i_sysfile'
10660 i_sysfilio='$i_sysfilio'
10662 i_sysioctl='$i_sysioctl'
10663 i_sysndir='$i_sysndir'
10664 i_sysparam='$i_sysparam'
10665 i_sysresrc='$i_sysresrc'
10666 i_sysselct='$i_sysselct'
10667 i_syssockio='$i_syssockio'
10668 i_sysstat='$i_sysstat'
10669 i_systime='$i_systime'
10670 i_systimek='$i_systimek'
10671 i_systimes='$i_systimes'
10672 i_systypes='$i_systypes'
10674 i_syswait='$i_syswait'
10675 i_termio='$i_termio'
10676 i_termios='$i_termios'
10678 i_unistd='$i_unistd'
10680 i_values='$i_values'
10681 i_varargs='$i_varargs'
10682 i_varhdr='$i_varhdr'
10686 installarchlib='$installarchlib'
10687 installbin='$installbin'
10688 installman1dir='$installman1dir'
10689 installman3dir='$installman3dir'
10690 installprivlib='$installprivlib'
10691 installscript='$installscript'
10692 installsitearch='$installsitearch'
10693 installsitelib='$installsitelib'
10695 known_extensions='$known_extensions'
10699 lddlflags='$lddlflags'
10707 libswanted='$libswanted'
10713 locincpth='$locincpth'
10714 loclibpth='$loclibpth'
10715 longsize='$longsize'
10719 lseektype='$lseektype'
10723 make_set_make='$make_set_make'
10724 mallocobj='$mallocobj'
10725 mallocsrc='$mallocsrc'
10726 malloctype='$malloctype'
10728 man1direxp='$man1direxp'
10731 man3direxp='$man3direxp'
10735 mips_type='$mips_type'
10738 modetype='$modetype'
10741 myarchname='$myarchname'
10742 mydomain='$mydomain'
10743 myhostname='$myhostname'
10747 nm_so_opt='$nm_so_opt'
10749 o_nonblock='$o_nonblock'
10751 oldarchlib='$oldarchlib'
10752 oldarchlibexp='$oldarchlibexp'
10753 optimize='$optimize'
10754 orderlib='$orderlib'
10760 patchlevel='$patchlevel'
10761 path_sep='$path_sep'
10763 perladmin='$perladmin'
10764 perlpath='$perlpath'
10766 phostname='$phostname'
10771 prefixexp='$prefixexp'
10773 privlibexp='$privlibexp'
10774 prototype='$prototype'
10775 randbits='$randbits'
10777 rd_nodata='$rd_nodata'
10781 scriptdir='$scriptdir'
10782 scriptdirexp='$scriptdirexp'
10784 selecttype='$selecttype'
10785 sendmail='$sendmail'
10788 sharpbang='$sharpbang'
10789 shmattype='$shmattype'
10790 shortsize='$shortsize'
10793 sig_name='$sig_name'
10795 signal_t='$signal_t'
10796 sitearch='$sitearch'
10797 sitearchexp='$sitearchexp'
10799 sitelibexp='$sitelibexp'
10800 sizetype='$sizetype'
10805 sockethdr='$sockethdr'
10806 socketlib='$socketlib'
10808 spackage='$spackage'
10809 spitshell='$spitshell'
10811 ssizetype='$ssizetype'
10812 startperl='$startperl'
10814 static_ext='$static_ext'
10816 stdio_base='$stdio_base'
10817 stdio_bufsiz='$stdio_bufsiz'
10818 stdio_cnt='$stdio_cnt'
10819 stdio_ptr='$stdio_ptr'
10822 subversion='$subversion'
10828 timeincl='$timeincl'
10829 timetype='$timetype'
10837 usemymalloc='$usemymalloc'
10839 useopcode='$useopcode'
10840 useperlio='$useperlio'
10841 useposix='$useposix'
10843 useshrplib='$useshrplib'
10844 usevfork='$usevfork'
10848 voidflags='$voidflags'
10854 : add special variables
10855 $test -f patchlevel.h && \
10856 awk '/^#define/ {printf "%s=%s\n",$2,$3}' patchlevel.h >>config.sh
10857 echo "CONFIG=true" >>config.sh
10859 : propagate old symbols
10860 if $test -f UU/config.sh; then
10861 <UU/config.sh sort | uniq >UU/oldconfig.sh
10862 sed -n 's/^\([a-zA-Z_0-9]*\)=.*/\1/p' config.sh config.sh UU/oldconfig.sh |\
10863 sort | uniq -u >UU/oldsyms
10864 set X `cat UU/oldsyms`
10870 Hmm...You had some extra variables I don't know about...I'll try to keep 'em...
10872 echo "# Variables propagated from previous config.sh file." >>config.sh
10873 for sym in `cat UU/oldsyms`; do
10874 echo " Propagating $hint variable "'$'"$sym..."
10875 eval 'tmp="$'"${sym}"'"'
10877 sed -e "s/'/'\"'\"'/g" -e "s/^/$sym='/" -e "s/$/'/" >>config.sh
10883 : Finish up by extracting the .SH files
10897 If you'd like to make any changes to the config.sh file before I begin
10898 to configure things, do it as a shell escape now (e.g. !vi config.sh).
10901 rp="Press return or use a shell escape to edit config.sh:"
10906 *) : in case they cannot read
10907 sh 1>&4 -c "$ans";;
10912 : if this fails, just run all the .SH files by hand
10919 if $contains '^depend:' [Mm]akefile >/dev/null 2>&1; then
10926 Now you need to generate make dependencies by running "make depend".
10927 You might prefer to run it in background: "make depend > makedepend.out &"
10928 It can take a while, so you might not want to run it right now.
10933 rp="Run make depend now?"
10937 make depend && echo "Now you must run a make."
10940 echo "You must run 'make depend' then 'make'."
10943 elif test -f [Mm]akefile; then
10945 echo "Now you must run a make."
10950 $rm -f kit*isdone ark*isdone