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1 If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you see. 2 It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is specially 3 designed to be readable as is. 4 5 =head1 NAME 6 7 README.macosx - Perl under Mac OS X 8 9 =head1 SYNOPSIS 10 11 This document briefly describes perl under Mac OS X. 12 13 14 =head1 DESCRIPTION 15 16 The latest Perl release (5.8.8 as of this writing) builds without changes 17 under Mac OS X. Under 10.3 "Panther" and newer OS versions, all self-tests 18 pass, and all standard features are supported. 19 20 Earlier Mac OS X releases (10.2 "Jaguar" and older) did not include a 21 completely thread-safe libc, so threading is not fully supported. Also, 22 earlier releases included a buggy libdb, so some of the DB_File tests 23 are known to fail on those releases. 24 25 26 =head2 Installation Prefix 27 28 The default installation location for this release uses the traditional 29 UNIX directory layout under /usr/local. This is the recommended location 30 for most users, and will leave the Apple-supplied Perl and its modules 31 undisturbed. 32 33 Using an installation prefix of '/usr' will result in a directory layout 34 that mirrors that of Apple's default Perl, with core modules stored in 35 '/System/Library/Perl/$version}', CPAN modules stored in 36 '/Library/Perl/$version}', and the addition of 37 '/Network/Library/Perl/$version}' to @INC for modules that are stored 38 on a file server and used by many Macs. 39 40 41 =head2 SDK support 42 43 First, export the path to the SDK into the build environment: 44 45 export SDK=/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.3.9.sdk 46 47 Use an SDK by exporting some additions to Perl's 'ccflags' and '..flags' 48 config variables: 49 50 ./Configure -Accflags="-nostdinc -B$SDK/usr/include/gcc \ 51 -B$SDK/usr/lib/gcc -isystem$SDK/usr/include \ 52 -F$SDK/System/Library/Frameworks" \ 53 -Aldflags="-Wl,-syslibroot,$SDK" \ 54 -de 55 56 =head2 Universal Binary support 57 58 To compile perl as a universal binary (built for both ppc and intel), export 59 the SDK variable as above, selecting the 10.4u SDK: 60 61 export SDK=/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk 62 63 In addition to the compiler flags used to select the SDK, also add the flags 64 for creating a universal binary: 65 66 ./Configure -Accflags="-arch i686 -arch ppc -nostdinc -B$SDK/usr/include/gcc \ 67 -B$SDK/usr/lib/gcc -isystem$SDK/usr/include \ 68 -F$SDK/System/Library/Frameworks" \ 69 -Aldflags="-arch i686 -arch ppc -Wl,-syslibroot,$SDK" \ 70 -de 71 72 Keep in mind that these compiler and linker settings will also be used when 73 building CPAN modules. For XS modules to be compiled as a universal binary, any 74 libraries it links to must also be universal binaries. The system libraries that 75 Apple includes with the 10.4u SDK are all universal, but user-installed libraries 76 may need to be re-installed as universal binaries. 77 78 =head2 64-bit PPC support 79 80 Follow the instructions in F<INSTALL> to build perl with support for 64-bit 81 integers (C<use64bitint>) or both 64-bit integers and 64-bit addressing 82 (C<use64bitall>). In the latter case, the resulting binary will run only 83 on G5-based hosts. 84 85 Support for 64-bit addressing is experimental: some aspects of Perl may be 86 omitted or buggy. Note the messages output by F<Configure> for further 87 information. Please use C<perlbug> to submit a problem report in the 88 event that you encounter difficulties. 89 90 When building 64-bit modules, it is your responsiblity to ensure that linked 91 external libraries and frameworks provide 64-bit support: if they do not, 92 module building may appear to succeed, but attempts to use the module will 93 result in run-time dynamic linking errors, and subsequent test failures. 94 You can use C<file> to discover the architectures supported by a library: 95 96 $ file libgdbm.3.0.0.dylib 97 libgdbm.3.0.0.dylib: Mach-O fat file with 2 architectures 98 libgdbm.3.0.0.dylib (for architecture ppc): Mach-O dynamically linked shared library ppc 99 libgdbm.3.0.0.dylib (for architecture ppc64): Mach-O 64-bit dynamically linked shared library ppc64 100 101 Note that this issue precludes the building of many Macintosh-specific CPAN 102 modules (C<Mac::*>), as the required Apple frameworks do not provide PPC64 103 support. Similarly, downloads from Fink or Darwinports are unlikely to provide 104 64-bit support; the libraries must be rebuilt from source with the appropriate 105 compiler and linker flags. For further information, see Apple's 106 I<64-Bit Transition Guide> at 107 L<http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Darwin/Conceptual/64bitPorting/index.html>. 108 109 =head2 libperl and Prebinding 110 111 Mac OS X ships with a dynamically-loaded libperl, but the default for 112 this release is to compile a static libperl. The reason for this is 113 pre-binding. Dynamic libraries can be pre-bound to a specific address in 114 memory in order to decrease load time. To do this, one needs to be aware 115 of the location and size of all previously-loaded libraries. Apple 116 collects this information as part of their overall OS build process, and 117 thus has easy access to it when building Perl, but ordinary users would 118 need to go to a great deal of effort to obtain the information needed 119 for pre-binding. 120 121 You can override the default and build a shared libperl if you wish 122 (S<Configure ... -Duseshrlib>), but the load time on pre-10.4 OS 123 releases will be greater than either the static library, or Apple's 124 pre-bound dynamic library. 125 126 With 10.4 "Tiger" and newer, Apple has all but eliminated the performance 127 penalty for non-prebound libraries. 128 129 130 =head2 Updating Apple's Perl 131 132 In a word - don't, at least without a *very* good reason. Your scripts 133 can just as easily begin with "#!/usr/local/bin/perl" as with 134 "#!/usr/bin/perl". Scripts supplied by Apple and other third parties as 135 part of installation packages and such have generally only been tested 136 with the /usr/bin/perl that's installed by Apple. 137 138 If you find that you do need to update the system Perl, one issue worth 139 keeping in mind is the question of static vs. dynamic libraries. If you 140 upgrade using the default static libperl, you will find that the dynamic 141 libperl supplied by Apple will not be deleted. If both libraries are 142 present when an application that links against libperl is built, ld will 143 link against the dynamic library by default. So, if you need to replace 144 Apple's dynamic libperl with a static libperl, you need to be sure to 145 delete the older dynamic library after you've installed the update. 146 147 148 =head2 Known problems 149 150 If you have installed extra libraries such as GDBM through Fink 151 (in other words, you have libraries under F</sw/lib>), or libdlcompat 152 to F</usr/local/lib>, you may need to be extra careful when running 153 Configure to not to confuse Configure and Perl about which libraries 154 to use. Being confused will show up for example as "dyld" errors about 155 symbol problems, for example during "make test". The safest bet is to run 156 Configure as 157 158 Configure ... -Uloclibpth -Dlibpth=/usr/lib 159 160 to make Configure look only into the system libraries. If you have some 161 extra library directories that you really want to use (such as newer 162 Berkeley DB libraries in pre-Panther systems), add those to the libpth: 163 164 Configure ... -Uloclibpth -Dlibpth='/usr/lib /opt/lib' 165 166 The default of building Perl statically may cause problems with complex 167 applications like Tk: in that case consider building shared Perl 168 169 Configure ... -Duseshrplib 170 171 but remember that there's a startup cost to pay in that case (see above 172 "libperl and Prebinding"). 173 174 Starting with Tiger (Mac OS X 10.4), Apple shipped broken locale files for 175 the eu_ES locale (Basque-Spain). In previous releases of Perl, this resulted in 176 failures in the C<lib/locale> test. These failures have been supressed 177 in the current release of Perl by making the test ignore the broken locale. 178 If you need to use the eu_ES locale, you should contact Apple support. 179 180 =head2 MacPerl 181 182 Quite a bit has been written about MacPerl, the Perl distribution for 183 "Classic MacOS" - that is, versions 9 and earlier of MacOS. Because it 184 runs in environment that's very different from that of UNIX, many things 185 are done differently in MacPerl. Modules are installed using a different 186 procedure, Perl itself is built differently, path names are different, 187 etc. 188 189 From the perspective of a Perl programmer, Mac OS X is more like a 190 traditional UNIX than Classic MacOS. If you find documentation that 191 refers to a special procedure that's needed for MacOS that's drastically 192 different from the instructions provided for UNIX, the MacOS 193 instructions are quite often intended for MacPerl on Classic MacOS. In 194 that case, the correct procedure on Mac OS X is usually to follow the 195 UNIX instructions, rather than the MacPerl instructions. 196 197 198 =head2 Carbon 199 200 MacPerl ships with a number of modules that are used to access the 201 classic MacOS toolbox. Many of these modules have been updated to use 202 Mac OS X's newer "Carbon" toolbox, and are available from CPAN in the 203 "Mac::Carbon" module. 204 205 206 =head2 Cocoa 207 208 There are two ways to use Cocoa from Perl. Apple's PerlObjCBridge 209 module, included with Mac OS X, can be used by standalone scripts to 210 access Foundation (i.e. non-GUI) classes and objects. 211 212 An alternative is CamelBones, a framework that allows access to both 213 Foundation and AppKit classes and objects, so that full GUI applications 214 can be built in Perl. CamelBones can be found on SourceForge, at 215 L<http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/camelbones/>. 216 217 218 =head1 Starting From Scratch 219 220 Unfortunately it is not that difficult somehow manage to break one's 221 Mac OS X Perl rather severely. If all else fails and you want to 222 really, B<REALLY>, start from scratch and remove even your Apple Perl 223 installation (which has become corrupted somehow), the following 224 instructions should do it. B<Please think twice before following 225 these instructions: they are much like conducting brain surgery to 226 yourself. Without anesthesia.> We will B<not> come to fix your system 227 if you do this. 228 229 First, get rid of the libperl.dylib: 230 231 # cd /System/Library/Perl/darwin/CORE 232 # rm libperl.dylib 233 234 Then delete every .bundle file found anywhere in the folders: 235 236 /System/Library/Perl 237 /Library/Perl 238 239 You can find them for example by 240 241 # find /System/Library/Perl /Library/Perl -name '*.bundle' -print 242 243 After this you can either copy Perl from your operating system media 244 (you will need at least the /System/Library/Perl and /usr/bin/perl), 245 or rebuild Perl from the source code with C<Configure -Dprefix=/usr 246 -Dusershrplib> NOTE: the C<-Dprefix=/usr> to replace the system Perl 247 works much better with Perl 5.8.1 and later, in Perl 5.8.0 the 248 settings were not quite right. 249 250 "Pacifist" from CharlesSoft (L<http://www.charlessoft.com/>) is a nice 251 way to extract the Perl binaries from the OS media, without having to 252 reinstall the entire OS. 253 254 255 =head1 AUTHOR 256 257 This README was written by Sherm Pendley E<lt>sherm@dot-app.orgE<gt>, 258 and subsequently updated by Dominic Dunlop E<lt>domo@computer.orgE<gt>. 259 The "Starting From Scratch" recipe was contributed by John Montbriand 260 E<lt>montbriand@apple.comE<gt>. 261 262 =head1 DATE 263 264 Last modified 2006-02-24.
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