1If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the equal signs on the left. 2This file is written in the POD format (see [.POD]PERLPOD.POD;1) which is 3specially designed to be readable as is. 4 5=head1 NAME 6 7README.vms - Configuring, building, testing, and installing perl on VMS 8 9=head1 SYNOPSIS 10 11To configure, build, test, and install perl on VMS: 12 13 @ Configure 14 mms 15 mms test 16 mms install 17 18mmk may be used in place of mms in the last three steps. 19 20=head1 DESCRIPTION 21 22=head2 Important safety tip 23 24The build and install procedures have changed significantly from the 5.004 25releases! Make sure you read the "Configuring the Perl Build", "Building 26Perl", and "Installing Perl" sections of this document before you build or 27install. Also please note other changes in the current release by having 28a look at L<perldelta/VMS>. 29 30Also note that, as of Perl version 5.005 and later, an ANSI C compliant 31compiler is required to build Perl. VAX C is *not* ANSI compliant, as it 32died a natural death some time before the standard was set. Therefore 33VAX C will not compile Perl 5.005 or later. We are sorry about that. 34 35If you are stuck without Compaq (formerly DEC) C consider trying Gnu C 36instead, though there have been no recent reports of builds using Gnu C. 37There is minimal support for Compaq C++ but this support is not complete; 38if you get it working please write to the vmsperl list (for info see 39L</"Mailing Lists">). 40 41 42=head2 Introduction to Perl on VMS 43 44The VMS port of Perl is as functionally complete as any other Perl port 45(and as complete as the ports on some Unix systems). The Perl binaries 46provide all the Perl system calls that are either available under VMS or 47reasonably emulated. There are some incompatibilities in process handling 48(e.g. the fork/exec model for creating subprocesses doesn't do what you 49might expect under Unix), mainly because VMS and Unix handle processes and 50sub-processes very differently. 51 52There are still some unimplemented system functions, and of course we 53could use modules implementing useful VMS system services, so if you'd like 54to lend a hand we'd love to have you. Join the Perl Porting Team Now! 55 56The current sources and build procedures have been tested on a VAX using 57DEC C, and on an AXP using DEC C. If you run into problems with 58other compilers, please let us know. (Note: DEC C was renamed to Compaq C 59around version 6.2). 60 61There are issues with various versions of DEC C, so if you're not running a 62relatively modern version, check the "DEC C issues" section later on in this 63document. 64 65=head2 Other required software for Compiling Perl on VMS 66 67In addition to VMS and DCL you will need two things: 68 69=over 4 70 71=item 1 A C compiler. 72 73DEC (now Compaq) C or gcc for VMS (AXP or VAX). 74 75=item 2 A make tool. 76 77DEC's MMS (v2.6 or later), or MadGoat's free MMS 78analog MMK (available from ftp.madgoat.com/madgoat) both work 79just fine. Gnu Make might work, but it's been so long since 80anyone's tested it that we're not sure. MMK is free though, so 81go ahead and use that. 82 83=back 84 85=head2 Additional software that is optional for Perl on VMS 86 87You may also want to have on hand: 88 89=over 4 90 91=item 1 GUNZIP/GZIP.EXE for VMS 92 93A de-compressor for *.gz and *.tgz files available from a number 94of web/ftp sites and is distributed on the OpenVMS Freeware CD-ROM 95from Compaq. 96 97 http://www.fsf.org/order/ftp.html 98 http://www.openvms.compaq.com/freeware/ 99 http://www.crinoid.com/utils/ 100 101=item 2 VMS TAR 102 103For reading and writing unix tape archives (*.tar files). Vmstar is also 104available from a number of web/ftp sites and is distributed on the OpenVMS 105Freeware CD-ROM from Compaq. 106 107 ftp://ftp.lp.se/vms/ 108 http://www.openvms.compaq.com/freeware/ 109 110Recent versions of VMS tar on ODS-5 volumes may extract tape archive 111files with ^. escaped periods in them. See below for further workarounds. 112 113=item 3 UNZIP.EXE for VMS 114 115A combination decompressor and archive reader/writer for *.zip files. 116Unzip is available from a number of web/ftp sites. 117 118 http://www.info-zip.org/UnZip.html 119 http://www.openvms.compaq.com/freeware/ 120 ftp://ftp.openvms.compaq.com/ 121 ftp://ftp.madgoat.com/madgoat/ 122 ftp://ftp.process.com/vms-freeware/ 123 124=item 4 MOST 125 126Most is an optional pager that is convenient to use with perldoc (unlike 127TYPE/PAGE, MOST can go forward and backwards in a document and supports 128regular expression searching). Most builds with the slang 129library on VMS. Most and slang are available from: 130 131 ftp://space.mit.edu/pub/davis/ 132 ftp://ftp.process.com/vms-freeware/narnia/ 133 134=item 5 GNU PATCH and DIFFUTILS for VMS 135 136Patches to Perl are usually distributed as GNU unified or contextual diffs. 137Such patches are created by the GNU diff program (part of the diffutils 138distribution) and applied with GNU patch. VMS ports of these utilities are 139available here: 140 141 http://www.crinoid.com/utils/ 142 http://www.openvms.compaq.com/freeware/ 143 144=back 145 146Please note that UNZIP and GUNZIP are not the same thing (they work with 147different formats). Many of the useful files from CPAN (the Comprehensive 148Perl Archive Network) are in *.tar.gz or *.tgz format (this includes copies 149of the source code for perl as well as modules and scripts that you may 150wish to add later) hence you probably want to have GUNZIP.EXE and 151VMSTAR.EXE on your VMS machine. 152 153If you want to include socket support, you'll need a TCP/IP stack and either 154DEC C, or socket libraries. See the "Socket Support (optional)" topic 155for more details. 156 157=head1 Unpacking the Perl source code 158 159You may need to set up a foreign symbol for the unpacking utility of choice. 160 161If you unpack a perl source kit with a name containing multiple periods on 162an ODS-5 volume using recent versions of vmstar (e.g. V3.4 or later) you may 163need to be especially careful in unpacking the tape archive file. Try to use 164the ODS-2 compatability qualifiers such as: 165 166 vmstar /extract/verbose/ods2 perl-V^.VIII^.III.tar 167 168or: 169 170 vmstar -xvof perl-5^.8^.8.tar 171 172If you neglected to use the /ODS2 qualifier or the -o switch then you 173could rename the source directory: 174 175 set security/protection=(o:rwed) perl-5^.8^.8.dir 176 rename perl-5^.8^.8.dir perl-5_8_8.dir 177 178Perl on VMS as of 5.8.8 does not completely handle extended file 179parse styles such as are encountered on ODS-5. While it can be built, 180installed, and run on ODS-5 filesystems; it may encounter 181trouble with characters that are otherwise illegal on ODS-2 182volumes (notably the ^. escaped period sequence). 183 184=head1 Configuring the Perl build 185 186To configure perl (a necessary first step), issue the command 187 188 @ Configure 189 190from the top of an unpacked perl source directory. You will be asked a 191series of questions, and the answers to them (along with the capabilities 192of your C compiler and network stack) will determine how perl is custom 193built for your machine. 194 195If you have multiple C compilers installed, you'll have your choice of 196which one to use. Various older versions of DEC C had some caveats, so if 197you're using a version older than 5.2, check the "DEC C Issues" section. 198 199If you have any symbols or logical names in your environment that may 200interfere with the build or regression testing of perl then configure.com 201will try to warn you about them. If a logical name is causing 202you trouble but is in an LNM table that you do not have write access to 203then try defining your own to a harmless equivalence string in a table 204such that it is resolved before the other (e.g. if TMP is defined in the 205SYSTEM table then try DEFINE TMP "NL:" or somesuch in your process table) 206otherwise simply deassign the dangerous logical names. The potentially 207troublesome logicals and symbols are: 208 209 COMP "LOGICAL" 210 EXT "LOGICAL" 211 FOO "LOGICAL" 212 LIB "LOGICAL" 213 LIST "LOGICAL" 214 MIME "LOGICAL" 215 POSIX "LOGICAL" 216 SYS "LOGICAL" 217 T "LOGICAL" 218 THREAD "LOGICAL" 219 THREADS "LOGICAL" 220 TIME "LOGICAL" 221 TMP "LOGICAL" 222 UNICODE "LOGICAL" 223 UTIL "LOGICAL" 224 TEST "SYMBOL" 225 226As a handy shortcut, the command: 227 228 @ Configure "-des" 229 230(note the quotation marks and case) will choose reasonable defaults 231automatically (it takes DEC C over Gnu C, DEC C sockets over SOCKETSHR 232sockets, and either over no sockets). Some options can be given 233explicitly on the command line; the following example specifies a 234non-default location for where Perl will be installed: 235 236 @ Configure "-d" "-Dprefix=dka100:[utils.perl5.]" 237 238Note that the installation location would be by default where you unpacked 239the source with a "_ROOT." appended. For example if you unpacked the perl 240source into: 241 242 DKA200:[PERL-5_10_2...] 243 244Then the PERL_SETUP.COM that gets written out by CONFIGURE.COM will 245try to DEFINE your installation PERL_ROOT to be: 246 247 DKA200:[PERL-5_10_2_ROOT.] 248 249More help with configure.com is available from: 250 251 @ Configure "-h" 252 253See the "Changing compile-time options (optional)" section below to learn 254even more details about how to influence the outcome of the important 255configuration step. If you find yourself reconfiguring and rebuilding 256then be sure to also follow the advice in the "Cleaning up and starting 257fresh (optional)" and the checklist of items in the "CAVEATS" sections 258below. 259 260=head2 Changing compile-time options (optional) for Perl on VMS 261 262Most of the user definable features of Perl are enabled or disabled in 263configure.com, which processes the hints file config_h.SH. There is 264code in there to Do The Right Thing, but that may end up being the 265wrong thing for you. Make sure you understand what you are doing since 266inappropriate changes to configure.com or config_h.SH can render perl 267unbuildable; odds are that there's nothing in there you'll need to 268change. 269 270The one exception is the various *DIR install locations. Changing those 271requires changes in genconfig.pl as well. Be really careful if you need to 272change these, as they can cause some fairly subtle problems. 273 274=head2 Socket Support (optional) for Perl on VMS 275 276Perl includes a number of functions for IP sockets, which are available if 277you choose to compile Perl with socket support. Since IP networking is an 278optional addition to VMS, there are several different IP stacks available. 279How well integrated they are into the system depends on the stack, your 280version of VMS, and the version of your C compiler. 281 282The most portable solution uses the SOCKETSHR library. In combination with 283either UCX or NetLib, this supports all the major TCP stacks (Multinet, 284Pathways, TCPWare, UCX, and CMU) on all versions of VMS Perl runs on, with 285all the compilers on both VAX and Alpha. The socket interface is also 286consistent across versions of VMS and C compilers. It has a problem with 287UDP sockets when used with Multinet, though, so you should be aware of 288that. 289 290The other solution available is to use the socket routines built into DEC 291C. Which routines are available depend on the version of VMS you're 292running, and require proper UCX emulation by your TCP/IP vendor. 293Relatively current versions of Multinet, TCPWare, Pathway, and UCX all 294provide the required libraries--check your manuals or release notes to see 295if your version is new enough. 296 297=head1 Building Perl 298 299The configuration script will print out, at the very end, the MMS or MMK 300command you need to compile perl. Issue it (exactly as printed) to start 301the build. 302 303Once you issue your MMS or MMK command, sit back and wait. Perl should 304compile and link without a problem. If a problem does occur check the 305"CAVEATS" section of this document. If that does not help send some 306mail to the VMSPERL mailing list. Instructions are in the "Mailing Lists" 307section of this document. 308 309=head1 Testing Perl 310 311Once Perl has built cleanly you need to test it to make sure things work. 312This step is very important since there are always things that can go wrong 313somehow and yield a dysfunctional Perl for you. 314 315Testing is very easy, though, as there's a full test suite in the perl 316distribution. To run the tests, enter the *exact* MMS line you used to 317compile Perl and add the word "test" to the end, like this: 318 319If the compile command was: 320 321 MMS 322 323then the test command ought to be: 324 325 MMS test 326 327MMS (or MMK) will run all the tests. This may take some time, as there are 328a lot of tests. If any tests fail, there will be a note made on-screen. 329At the end of all the tests, a summary of the tests, the number passed and 330failed, and the time taken will be displayed. 331 332The test driver invoked via MMS TEST has a DCL wrapper ([.VMS]TEST.COM) that 333downgrades privileges to NETMBX, TMPMBX for the duration of the test run, 334and then restores them to their prior state upon completion of testing. 335This is done to ensure that the tests run in a private sandbox and can do no 336harm to your system even in the unlikely event something goes badly wrong in 337one of the test scripts while running the tests from a privileged account. 338A side effect of this safety precaution is that the account used to run the 339test suite must be the owner of the directory tree in which Perl has been 340built; otherwise the manipulations of temporary files and directories 341attempted by some of the tests will fail. 342 343If any tests fail, it means something is wrong with Perl. If the test suite 344hangs (some tests can take upwards of two or three minutes, or more if 345you're on an especially slow machine, depending on your machine speed, so 346don't be hasty), then the test *after* the last one displayed failed. Don't 347install Perl unless you're confident that you're OK. Regardless of how 348confident you are, make a bug report to the VMSPerl mailing list. 349 350If one or more tests fail, you can get more information on the failure by 351issuing this command sequence: 352 353 @ [.VMS]TEST .typ "" "-v" [.subdir]test.T 354 355where ".typ" is the file type of the Perl images you just built (if you 356didn't do anything special, use .EXE), and "[.subdir]test.T" is the test 357that failed. For example, with a normal Perl build, if the test indicated 358that t/op/time failed, then you'd do this: 359 360 @ [.VMS]TEST .EXE "" "-v" [.OP]TIME.T 361 362Note that test names are reported in UNIX syntax and relative to the 363top-level build directory. When supplying them individually to the test 364driver, you can use either UNIX or VMS syntax, but you must give the path 365relative to the [.T] directory and you must also add the .T extension to the 366filename. So, for example if the test lib/Math/Trig fails, you would run: 367 368 @ [.VMS]TEST .EXE "" -"v" [-.lib.math]trig.t 369 370When you send in a bug report for failed tests, please include the output 371from this command, which is run from the main source directory: 372 373 MCR []MINIPERL "-V" 374 375Note that -"V" really is a capital V in double quotes. This will dump out a 376couple of screens worth of configuration information, and can help us 377diagnose the problem. If (and only if) that did not work then try enclosing 378the output of: 379 380 MMS printconfig 381 382If (and only if) that did not work then try enclosing the output of: 383 384 @ [.vms]myconfig 385 386You may also be asked to provide your C compiler version ("CC/VERSION NL:" 387with DEC C, "gcc --version" with GNU CC). To obtain the version of MMS or 388MMK you are running try "MMS/ident" or "MMK /ident". The GNU make version 389can be identified with "make --version". 390 391=head2 Cleaning up and starting fresh (optional) installing Perl on VMS 392 393If you need to recompile from scratch, you have to make sure you clean up 394first. There is a procedure to do it--enter the *exact* MMS line you used 395to compile and add "realclean" at the end, like this: 396 397if the compile command was: 398 399 MMS 400 401then the cleanup command ought to be: 402 403 MMS realclean 404 405If you do not do this things may behave erratically during the subsequent 406rebuild attempt. They might not, too, so it is best to be sure and do it. 407 408=head1 Installing Perl 409 410There are several steps you need to take to get Perl installed and 411running. 412 413=over 4 414 415=item 1 416 417Check your default file protections with 418 419 SHOW PROTECTION /DEFAULT 420 421and adjust if necessary with SET PROTECTION=(code)/DEFAULT. 422 423=item 2 424 425Decide where you want Perl to be installed (unless you have already done so 426by using the "prefix" configuration parameter -- see the example in the 427"Configuring the Perl build" section). 428 429The DCL script PERL_SETUP.COM that is written by CONFIGURE.COM will help you 430with the definition of the PERL_ROOT and PERLSHR logical names and the PERL 431foreign command symbol. Take a look at PERL_SETUP.COM and modify it if you 432want to. The installation process will execute PERL_SETUP.COM and copy 433files to the directory tree pointed to by the PERL_ROOT logical name defined 434there, so make sure that you have write access to the parent directory of 435what will become the root of your Perl installation. 436 437=item 3 438 439Run the install script via: 440 441 MMS install 442 443or 444 445 MMK install 446 447If for some reason it complains about target INSTALL being up to date, 448throw a /FORCE switch on the MMS or MMK command. 449 450=back 451 452Copy PERL_SETUP.COM to a place accessible to your perl users. 453 454For example: 455 456 COPY PERL_SETUP.COM SYS$LIBRARY: 457 458If you want to have everyone on the system have access to perl 459then add a line that reads 460 461 $ @sys$library:perl_setup 462 463to SYS$MANAGER:SYLOGIN.COM. 464 465Two alternatives to the foreign symbol would be to install PERL into 466DCLTABLES.EXE (Check out the section "Installing Perl into DCLTABLES 467(optional)" for more information), or put the image in a 468directory that's in your DCL$PATH (if you're using VMS V6.2 or higher). 469 470An alternative to having PERL_SETUP.COM define the PERLSHR logical name 471is to simply copy it into the system shareable library directory with: 472 473 copy perl_root:[000000]perlshr.exe sys$share: 474 475See also the "INSTALLing images (optional)" section. 476 477=head2 Installing Perl into DCLTABLES (optional) on VMS 478 479Execute the following command file to define PERL as a DCL command. 480You'll need CMKRNL privilege to install the new dcltables.exe. 481 482 $ create perl.cld 483 ! 484 ! modify to reflect location of your perl.exe 485 ! 486 define verb perl 487 image perl_root:[000000]perl.exe 488 cliflags (foreign) 489 $! 490 $ set command perl /table=sys$common:[syslib]dcltables.exe - 491 /output=sys$common:[syslib]dcltables.exe 492 $ install replace sys$common:[syslib]dcltables.exe 493 $ exit 494 495=head2 INSTALLing Perl images (optional) on VMS 496 497On systems that are using perl quite a bit, and particularly those with 498minimal RAM, you can boost the performance of perl by INSTALLing it as 499a known image. PERLSHR.EXE is typically larger than 3000 blocks 500and that is a reasonably large amount of IO to load each time perl is 501invoked. 502 503 INSTALL ADD PERLSHR/SHARE 504 INSTALL ADD PERL/HEADER 505 506should be enough for PERLSHR.EXE (/share implies /header and /open), 507while /HEADER should do for PERL.EXE (perl.exe is not a shared image). 508 509If your code 'use's modules, check to see if there is a shareable image for 510them, too. In the base perl build, POSIX, IO, Fcntl, Opcode, SDBM_File, 511DCLsym, and Stdio, and other extensions all have shared images that can be 512installed /SHARE. 513 514How much of a win depends on your memory situation, but if you are firing 515off perl with any regularity (like more than once every 20 seconds or so) 516it is probably beneficial to INSTALL at least portions of perl. 517 518While there is code in perl to remove privileges as it runs you are advised 519to NOT INSTALL PERL.EXE with PRIVs! 520 521=head2 Running h2ph to create perl header files (optional) on VMS 522 523If using DEC C or Compaq C ensure that you have extracted loose versions 524of your compiler's header or *.H files. Be sure to check the contents of: 525 526 SYS$LIBRARY:DECC$RTLDEF.TLB 527 SYS$LIBRARY:SYS$LIB_C.TLB 528 SYS$LIBRARY:SYS$STARLET_C.TLB 529 530etcetera. 531 532If using GNU cc then also check your GNU_CC:[000000...] tree for the locations 533of the GNU cc headers. 534 535=head1 Reporting Bugs 536 537If you come across what you think might be a bug in Perl, please report 538it. There's a script in PERL_ROOT:[UTILS], perlbug, that walks you through 539the process of creating a bug report. This script includes details of your 540installation, and is very handy. Completed bug reports should go to 541perlbug@perl.com. 542 543=head1 CAVEATS 544 545Probably the single biggest gotcha in compiling Perl is giving the wrong 546switches to MMS/MMK when you build. Use *exactly* what the configure.com 547script prints! 548 549The next big gotcha is directory depth. Perl can create directories four, 550five, or even six levels deep during the build, so you don't have to be 551too deep to start to hit the RMS 8 level limit (for ODS 2 volumes which were 552common on versions of VMS prior to V7.2 and even with V7.2 on the VAX). 553It is best to do: 554 555 DEFINE/TRANS=(CONC,TERM) PERLSRC "disk:[dir.dir.dir.perldir.]" 556 SET DEFAULT PERLSRC:[000000] 557 558before building in cases where you have to unpack the distribution so deep 559(note the trailing period in the definition of PERLSRC). Perl modules 560from CPAN can be just as bad (or worse), so watch out for them, too. Perl's 561configuration script will warn if it thinks you are too deep (at least on 562a VAX or on Alpha versions of VMS prior to 7.2). But MakeMaker will not 563warn you if you start out building a module too deep in a directory. 564 565As noted above ODS-5 escape sequences such as ^. can break the perl 566build. Solutions include renaming files and directories as needed or 567being careful to use the -o switch or /ODS2 qualifier with latter 568versions of the vmstar utility when unpacking perl or CPAN modules 569on ODS-5 volumes. 570 571Be sure that the process that you use to build perl has a PGFLQ greater 572than 100000. Be sure to have a correct local time zone to UTC offset 573defined (in seconds) in the logical name SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL before 574running the regression test suite. The SYS$MANAGER:UTC$CONFIGURE_TDF.COM 575procedure will help you set that logical for your system but may require 576system privileges. For example, a location 5 hours west of UTC (such as 577the US East coast while not on daylight savings time) would have: 578 579 DEFINE SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL "-18000" 580 581A final thing that causes trouble is leftover pieces from a failed 582build. If things go wrong make sure you do a "(MMK|MMS|make) realclean" 583before you rebuild. 584 585=head2 DEC C issues with Perl on VMS 586 587Note to DEC C users: Some early versions (pre-5.2, some pre-4. If you're DEC 588C 5.x or higher, with current patches if any, you're fine) of the DECCRTL 589contained a few bugs which affect Perl performance: 590 591=over 4 592 593=item - pipes 594 595Newlines are lost on I/O through pipes, causing lines to run together. 596This shows up as RMS RTB errors when reading from a pipe. You can 597work around this by having one process write data to a file, and 598then having the other read the file, instead of the pipe. This is 599fixed in version 4 of DEC C. 600 601=item - modf() 602 603The modf() routine returns a non-integral value for some values above 604INT_MAX; the Perl "int" operator will return a non-integral value in 605these cases. This is fixed in version 4 of DEC C. 606 607=item - ALPACRT ECO 608 609On the AXP, if SYSNAM privilege is enabled, the CRTL chdir() routine 610changes the process default device and directory permanently, even 611though the call specified that the change should not persist after 612Perl exited. This is fixed by DEC CSC patch ALPACRT04_061 or later. 613See also: 614 615 http://ftp.support.compaq.com/patches/.new/openvms.shtml 616 617=back 618 619Please note that in later versions "DEC C" may also be known as 620"Compaq C". 621 622=head2 GNU issues with Perl on VMS 623 624It has been a while since the GNU utilities such as GCC or GNU make 625were used to build perl on VMS. Hence they may require a great deal 626of source code modification to work again. 627 628 http://slacvx.slac.stanford.edu/HELP/GCC 629 http://www.progis.de/ 630 http://www.lp.se/products/gnu.html 631 632=head2 Floating Point Considerations 633 634Prior to 5.8.0, Perl simply accepted the default floating point options of the 635C compiler, namely representing doubles with D_FLOAT on VAX and G_FLOAT on 636Alpha. Single precision floating point values are represented in F_FLOAT 637format when either D_FLOAT or G_FLOAT is in use for doubles. Beginning with 6385.8.0, Alpha builds now use IEEE floating point formats by default, which in 639VMS parlance are S_FLOAT for singles and T_FLOAT for doubles. IEEE is not 640available on VAX, so F_FLOAT and D_FLOAT remain the defaults for singles and 641doubles respectively. The available non-default options are G_FLOAT on VAX 642and D_FLOAT or G_FLOAT on Alpha. 643 644The use of IEEE on Alpha introduces NaN, infinity, and denormalization 645capabilities not available with D_FLOAT and G_FLOAT. When using one of those 646non-IEEE formats, silent underflow and overflow are emulated in the conversion 647of strings to numbers, but it is preferable to get the real thing by using 648IEEE where possible. 649 650Regardless of what floating point format you consider preferable, be aware 651that the choice may have an impact on compatibility with external libraries, 652such as database interfaces, and with existing data, such as data created with 653the C<pack> function and written to disk, or data stored via the Storable 654extension. For example, a C<pack("d", $foo)")> will create a D_FLOAT, 655G_FLOAT, or T_FLOAT depending on what your Perl was configured with. When 656written to disk, the value can only be retrieved later by a Perl configured 657with the same floating point option that was in effect when it was created. 658 659To obtain a non-IEEE build on Alpha, simply answer no to the "Use IEEE math?" 660question during the configuration. To obtain an option different from the C 661compiler default on either VAX or Alpha, put in the option that you want in 662answer to the "Any additional cc flags?" question. For example, to obtain a 663G_FLOAT build on VAX, put in C</FLOAT=G_FLOAT>. 664 665=head2 Multinet issues with Perl on VMS 666 667Prior to the release of Perl 5.8.0 it was noted that the regression 668test for lib/Net/hostent (in file [.lib.Net]hostent.t) will fail owing 669to problems with the hostent structure returned by C calls to either 670gethostbyname() or gethostbyaddr() using DEC or Compaq C with a 671Multinet TCP/IP stack. The problem was noted in Multinet 4.3A 672using either Compaq C 6.5 or DEC C 6.0, and with Multinet 4.2A 673using DEC C 5.2, but could easily affect other versions of Multinet. 674Process Software Inc. has acknowledged a bug in the Multinet version 675of UCX$IPC_SHR and has provided an ECO for it. The ECO is called 676UCX_LIBRARY_EMULATION-010_A044 and is available from: 677 678 http://www.multinet.process.com/eco.html 679 680As of this writing, the ECO is only available for Multinet versions 6814.3A and later. You may determine the version of Multinet that you 682are running using the command: 683 684 multinet show /version 685 686from the DCL command prompt. 687 688If the ECO is unavailable for your version of Multinet and you are 689unable to upgrade, you might try using Perl programming constructs 690such as: 691 692 $address = substr($gethostbyname_addr,0,4); 693 694to temporarily work around the problem, or if you are brave 695and do not mind the possibility of breaking IPv6 addresses, 696you might modify the pp_sys.c file to add an ad-hoc correction 697like so: 698 699 700 --- pp_sys.c;1 Thu May 30 14:42:17 2002 701 +++ pp_sys.c Thu May 30 12:54:02 2002 702 @@ -4684,6 +4684,10 @@ 703 } 704 #endif 705 706 + if (hent) { 707 + hent->h_length = 4; 708 + } 709 + 710 if (GIMME != G_ARRAY) { 711 PUSHs(sv = sv_newmortal()); 712 if (hent) { 713 714then re-compile and re-test your perl. After the installation 715of the Multinet ECO you ought to back out any such changes though. 716 717=head1 Mailing Lists 718 719There are several mailing lists available to the Perl porter. For VMS 720specific issues (including both Perl questions and installation problems) 721there is the VMSPERL mailing list. It is usually a low-volume (10-12 722messages a week) mailing list. 723 724To subscribe, send a mail message to VMSPERL-SUBSCRIBE@PERL.ORG. The VMSPERL 725mailing list address is VMSPERL@PERL.ORG. Any mail sent there gets echoed 726to all subscribers of the list. There is a searchable archive of the list 727on the web at: 728 729 http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/vmsperl/ 730 731To unsubscribe from VMSPERL send a message to VMSPERL-UNSUBSCRIBE@PERL.ORG. 732Be sure to do so from the subscribed account that you are canceling. 733 734=head2 Web sites for Perl on VMS 735 736Vmsperl pages on the web include: 737 738 http://www.sidhe.org/vmsperl/index.html 739 http://www.crinoid.com/ 740 http://duphy4.physics.drexel.edu/pub/cgi_info.htmlx 741 http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/VMS/ 742 http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/vmsperl/ 743 http://www.best.com/~pvhp/vms/ 744 http://www-ang.kfunigraz.ac.at/~binder/perl.html 745 http://lists.perl.org/showlist.cgi?name=vmsperl 746 http://archive.develooper.com/vmsperl@perl.org/ 747 http://www.openvms.compaq.com/openvms/products/ips/apache/csws_modperl.html 748 749=head1 SEE ALSO 750 751Perl information for users and programmers about the port of perl to VMS is 752available from the [.VMS]PERLVMS.POD file that gets installed as L<perlvms>. 753For administrators the perlvms document also includes a detailed discussion 754of extending vmsperl with CPAN modules after Perl has been installed. 755 756=head1 AUTHORS 757 758Revised 10-October-2001 by Craig Berry craigberry@mac.com. 759Revised 25-February-2000 by Peter Prymmer pvhp@best.com. 760Revised 27-October-1999 by Craig Berry craigberry@mac.com. 761Revised 01-March-1999 by Dan Sugalski dan@sidhe.org. 762Originally by Charles Bailey bailey@newman.upenn.edu. 763 764=head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 765 766A real big thanks needs to go to Charles Bailey 767bailey@newman.upenn.edu, who is ultimately responsible for Perl 5.004 768running on VMS. Without him, nothing the rest of us have done would be at 769all important. 770 771There are, of course, far too many people involved in the porting and testing 772of Perl to mention everyone who deserves it, so please forgive us if we've 773missed someone. That said, special thanks are due to the following: 774 775 Tim Adye T.J.Adye@rl.ac.uk 776 for the VMS emulations of getpw*() 777 David Denholm denholm@conmat.phys.soton.ac.uk 778 for extensive testing and provision of pipe and SocketShr code, 779 Mark Pizzolato mark@infocomm.com 780 for the getredirection() code 781 Rich Salz rsalz@bbn.com 782 for readdir() and related routines 783 Peter Prymmer pvhp@best.com 784 for extensive testing, as well as development work on 785 configuration and documentation for VMS Perl, 786 Dan Sugalski dan@sidhe.org 787 for extensive contributions to recent version support, 788 development of VMS-specific extensions, and dissemination 789 of information about VMS Perl, 790 the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory and the 791 Laboratory of Nuclear Studies at Cornell University for 792 the opportunity to test and develop for the AXP, 793 John Hasstedt John.Hasstedt@sunysb.edu 794 for VAX VMS V7.2 support 795 796and to the entire VMSperl group for useful advice and suggestions. In 797addition the perl5-porters deserve credit for their creativity and 798willingness to work with the VMS newcomers. Finally, the greatest debt of 799gratitude is due to Larry Wall larry@wall.org, for having the ideas which 800have made our sleepless nights possible. 801 802Thanks, 803The VMSperl group 804 805=cut 806 807