#define BIN "/usr/local/bin" /**/
#define BIN_EXP "" /**/
-/* PERL_BINCOMPAT_5005:
- * This symbol, if defined, indicates that this version of Perl should be
- * binary-compatible with Perl 5.005. This is impossible for builds
- * that use features like threads and multiplicity it is always
- * for those versions.
- */
-/*#define PERL_BINCOMPAT_5005 / **/
-
/* BYTEORDER:
* This symbol holds the hexadecimal constant defined in byteorder,
- * i.e. 0x1234 or 0x4321, etc...
+ * in a UV, i.e. 0x1234 or 0x4321 or 0x12345678, etc...
* If the compiler supports cross-compiling or multiple-architecture
* binaries (eg. on NeXT systems), use compiler-defined macros to
* determine the byte order.
*/
/*#define HAS_TELLDIR_PROTO / **/
+/* HAS_TIME:
+ * This symbol, if defined, indicates that the time() routine exists.
+ */
/* Time_t:
* This symbol holds the type returned by time(). It can be long,
* or time_t on BSD sites (in which case <sys/types.h> should be
* included).
*/
-#define Time_t int /* Time type */
+#define HAS_TIME /**/
+#define Time_t time_t /* Time type */
/* HAS_TIMES:
* This symbol, if defined, indicates that the times() routine exists.
* See INSTALL for how this works.
* The versioned site_perl directory was introduced in 5.005,
* so that is the lowest possible value.
- * Since this can depend on compile time options (such as
- * bincompat) it is set by Configure. Other non-default sources
+ * Since this can depend on compile time options
+ * it is set by Configure. Other non-default sources
* of potential incompatibility, such as multiplicity, threads,
* debugging, 64bits, sfio, etc., are not checked for currently,
* though in principle we could go snooping around in old
* This symbol, if defined, indicates that you must access
* character data through U32-aligned pointers.
*/
+#ifndef U32_ALIGNMENT_REQUIRED
#define U32_ALIGNMENT_REQUIRED /**/
+#endif
/* HAS_USLEEP_PROTO:
* This symbol, if defined, indicates that the system provides