2 # Darwin (Mac OS) hints
3 # Wilfredo Sanchez <wsanchez@mit.edu>
13 # Default install; use non-system directories
14 prefix='/usr/local'; # Built-in perl uses /usr
15 siteprefix='/usr/local';
16 vendorprefix='/usr/local'; usevendorprefix='define';
18 # Where to put modules.
19 privlib='/Library/Perl'; # Built-in perl uses /System/Library/Perl
20 sitelib='/Library/Perl';
21 vendorlib='/Network/Library/Perl';
24 # We are building/replacing the built-in perl
25 siteprefix='/usr/local';
26 vendorprefix='/usr/local'; usevendorprefix='define';
28 # Where to put modules.
29 privlib='/System/Library/Perl';
30 sitelib='/Library/Perl';
31 vendorlib='/Network/Library/Perl';
35 # 4BSD uses ${prefix}/share/man, not ${prefix}/man.
36 man1dir="${prefix}/share/man/man1";
37 man3dir="${prefix}/share/man/man3";
43 # Since we can build fat, the archname doesn't need the processor type
50 if [ "x$optimize" = 'x' ]; then
54 # XXX Unclear why we require -pipe and -fno-common here. --Andy Dougherty
55 # We don't like commons. --Fred Sánchez
56 ccflags="${ccflags} -pipe -fno-common"
58 # At least on Darwin 1.3.x:
60 # # define INT32_MIN -2147483648
62 # double a = INT32_MIN;
63 # printf ("INT32_MIN=%g\n", a);
67 # INT32_MIN=2.14748e+09
68 # Note that the INT32_MIN has become positive.
69 # INT32_MIN is set in /usr/include/stdint.h by:
70 # #define INT32_MIN -2147483648
71 # which seems to break the gcc. Defining INT32_MIN as (-2147483647-1)
72 # seems to work. INT64_MIN seems to be similarly broken.
73 # -- Nicholas Clark, Ken Williams, and Edward Moy
75 ccflags="${ccflags} -DINT32_MIN_BROKEN -DINT64_MIN_BROKEN"
77 # cpp-precomp is problematic.
78 cppflags='-traditional-cpp';
80 # Shared library extension is .dylib.
81 # Bundle extension is .bundle.
85 dlsrc='dl_dyld.xs'; usedl='define';
86 cccdlflags=' '; # space, not empty, because otherwise we get -fpic
87 lddlflags="${ldflags} -bundle -undefined suppress";
88 ldlibpthname='DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH';
105 # Locales aren't feeling well.
106 LC_ALL=C; export LC_ALL;
108 # Case-insensitive filesystems don't get along with Makefile and
109 # makefile in the same place. Since Darwin uses GNU make, this dodges
111 firstmakefile=GNUmakefile;