Current Path : /usr/src/contrib/nvi/build/ |
FreeBSD hs32.drive.ne.jp 9.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE #1: Wed Jan 14 12:18:08 JST 2015 root@hs32.drive.ne.jp:/sys/amd64/compile/hs32 amd64 |
Current File : //usr/src/contrib/nvi/build/README.LynxOS |
README.LynxOS ============= Written by Ronald F. Guilmette <rfg@monkeys.com> Last modified Wed Aug 14 23:10:07 PDT 1996 ------------------------------------------ 0. Introduction --------------- This file describes how to build and install the Berkeley nvi editor for the LynxOS 2.4.0 operating system. LynxOS 2.4.0 is available for a variety of different hardware platforms, in particular, x86, m680x0, Sparc, and PowerPC. I have successfully built nvi on all four of these flavors of LynxOS by following the procedures given in this file. Note that these procedures may not work on versions of LynxOS prior to 2.4.0. (As I understand it, a good deal of work went into making the 2.4.0 release more POSIX-compliant, and I have no idea what build glitches, if any, you might encounter if you try to build nvi on a pre-2.4.0 version of LynxOS.) There are basically four steps to configuring, building, and installing nvi on LynxOS, namely: 1. Get setup to use the proper C compiler. 2. Replace your installed `tr' program. 3. Fix your system include files. 4. Do a normal configure, build, and install of nvi. These steps are described in separate sections below. 1. Get Setup to Use the Proper C Compiler ------------------------------------------ The first step when building nvi on LynxOS is to set your $PATH environment variable properly so that the gcc 2.x compiler appears first on your path, prior to the older (and less robust) gcc 1.xx compiler (typically installed as /bin/gcc) and/or the old Lynx proprietary C compiler (typically installed as /bin/cc), both of which may also be present on your system. Note that for most operating systems, the configure script for nvi tries to use whatever compiler you have installed (and in your $PATH) as "cc", however in the special case of LynxOS, the configure script will auto- matically try to find a "gcc" program on your $PATH in preference to a compiler called "cc". If the nvi configure script only find a compiler called "cc", that's OK. It will still try to see if that is really just the GNU C compiler installed under the name "cc". Regardless of the name however (be it "gcc" or "cc") the first C compiler in your $PATH should be some _recent_ (i.e. 2.0 or later) version of the GNU C compiler... and the nvi configure script now checks that this is the case, and fails if it isn't. Oddly enough, LynxOS 2.4.0 (and some prior versions) shipped with as many as three different C compilers installed, so it is important to set your $PATH environment variable carfully in order to get the proper C compiler to appear first in your $PATH. You want to avoid having either the /bin/gcc compiler or the /bin/cc compiler be the first C compiler in your $PATH. To make sure that the GNU C version 2.x compiler which was shipped with your LynxOS system appears first on your path, you will need to either set your $PATH variable (for sh/bash/ksh users) or your $path variable (for csh/tcsh users). You can, of course, just do this at the shell command prompt, but it is probably better to actually edit this change into your .profile file (for sh/bash/ksh users) or into your .cshrc file (for csh/tcsh users). The pathname of the directory that contains the GNU C version 2.x compiler is (unfortunately) dependent upon the exact type of LynxOS system you have. For LynxOS 2.4.0 on x86 systems, gcc 2.x is located in: /cygnus/94q4-lynxos-x86/bin For LynxOS 2.4.0 on m680x0 systems, gcc 2.x is located in: /cygnus/94q4-lynxos-68k/bin For LynxOS 2.4.0 on Sparc systems, gcc 2.x is located in: /cygnus/94q4-lynxos-usparc/bin For LynxOS 2.4.0 on PowerPC systems, gcc 2.x is located in: /cygnus/95q2-lynxos-ppc/bin (Note also that these locations may change in LynxOS 2.5.x and beyond.) Anyway, it is imperative that you setup your $PATH environment variable (*before* you do the configure step for nvi) so that the GNU C version 2.x compiler appears in your $PATH before either the /bin/cc or /bin/gcc compilers (if present). If you fail to do this, the configure step for nvi will fail, because the compiler script actually checks (now) that the compiler you are using (if your are on a LynxOS system) is gcc 2.0 or later. To make absolutely sure that you will be configuring and building nvi with the proper C compiler (i.e. the GNU C version 2.x compiler on your system) you should add the directory name listed above for your specific system type to your $PATH setting in your $HOME/.profile file. (For csh/tcsh users, you will instead want to add the relevant directory name to the setting of your $path variable in your ~/.cshrc file.) Once you have added the proper direc- tory name (from the list given above) to your $HOME/.profile file (or to your ~/.cshrc file, if you are using csh or tcsh) you should log out completely and then log back into the system just to make sure your new $PATH/$path setting takes effect properly. When you finish making this adjustment to your $PATH (or $path), the most up-to-date version of gcc on your system should be available to you as the first `gcc' program on your $PATH. You should verify that this is indeed the case simply by typing `gcc -v' and then checking the version number reported by the compiler. It should say either "2.6-94q4" or (on PowerPC systems) it should say "2.6-95q2". If you don't get these results, try again to set your $PATH (or $path) until you do. You won't be able to build nvi until you are properly setup to use gcc version 2.0 or later. Performing the steps shown above will insure that your subsequent configura- tion and build steps for nvi will make use of the most up-to-date version of gcc that was shipped with your Lynx operating system. (Note that the versions of gcc which are currently shipping with LynxOS 2.4.0 are also somewhat out- of-date themselves, but they are still quite a bit newer and more bug-free and ANSI conformant that those other two C compilers, /bin/cc and /bin/gcc, which also ship with LynxOS 2.4.0.) (Note: At present, LynxOS version 2.4.0 is the latest officially released version of LynxOS, and all of the above information is accurate and correct for LynxOS 2.4.0 as of the time of this writing. However it is rumored that future releases of LynxOS may provide a still newer version of gcc, and that it may be located in the /usr/bin directory. Thus, if you are building nvi for some LynxOS version later than 2.4.0, you may wish to check and see if your system has a program called /usr/bin/gcc, and use that version of gcc, if available, rather than the one suggested above.) 2. Replace Your Installed `tr' Program --------------------------------------- The `tr' program which comes bundled with LynxOS 2.4.0 (as /bin/tr) has a somewhat obscure bug which just happens to be tickled by almost all GNU `autoconf' generated `configure' scripts (including the one that nowadays comes bundled with nvi). Using the stock /bin/tr program on LynxOS when executing such `configure' scripts _will_ cause these scripts to malfunction in various ways. It is therefore imperative that you replace your LynxOS /bin/tr program with a properly working version of the `tr' command _before_ you even try to configure nvi. (You can tell if your `tr' program has the bug by executng the command "echo ab- | tr ab- ABC". If this yields the string "Ab-" then you have the bug. If it yields "ABC" then you don't.) You can obtain sources for a working version of the `tr' command as part of the GNU `textutils' package (the latest version of which, at the time of this writing, is 1.19). The GNU textutils package is available for downloading from prep.ai.mit.edu in the pub/gnu directory. Look for the file named textutils-1.19.tar.gz, or an even more recent version of textutils, if one is available. Fetch it, gunzip it, untar it, and follow the directions in the INSTALL file included in the tar file to build and install the entire textutils set of utility programs (which includes a working `tr' program). Then just make sure that the GNU version of `tr' appears on your $PATH _before_ the LynxOS version of `tr' (i.e. /bin/tr). Be sure to do this step _before_ you start to configure nvi. When building the textutils set of programs, I suggest that you use the most up-to-date C compiler available on your system (as described above). Also, note that it will be important for you to AVOID using the -O (optimize) compiler option when building the GNU textutils package, even if you are using the most up-to-date version of gcc which shipped with your system. If you try to use -O when building the textutils package on an x86 with the Cygnus 94q4 C compiler, you will end up with a `tr' program which will malfunction even worse than the one you are trying to replace! If you use -O when building the textutils package on LynxOS on the PowerPC (using the Cygnus 95q2 C compiler) you will just get yourself a compiler crash. So just don't use -O when building textutils. You can avoid using -O by in- voking make in the textutils directory as follows: make CFLAGS="-g" (Note: At present, LynxOS version 2.4.0 is the latest officially released version of LynxOS, and all of the above information is accurate and correct for LynxOS 2.4.0 as of the time of this writing. However it is rumored that the bug in the /bin/tr program will be fixed in future releases of LynxOS, so if you have a version of LynxOS later than 2.4.0, you may wish to check and see if your /bin/tr program even has the problematic bug before bothering with all of this.) 3. Fix Your System Include Files --------------------------------- If you are building nvi on a PowerPC system, it is also important that you apply the patches given at the end of this file to your /usr/include files. (Note that you will have to be root in order to do this.) Two of the patches included below fix a pair of serious bugs in the /usr/include/stdarg.h file on the PowerPC, and you really _do_ want to have these bugs fixed anyway, because without these fixes, anything that you compile which uses <stdarg.h> will very likely malfunction at run-time. Regardless of which LynxOS platform you are using (i.e. x86, PowerPC, Sparc, or m680x0) you may want to apply all of the system include files patches that are included below anyway. Doing so will clean up a few minor problems with the relevant system include files (i.e. <stdarg.h>, <ioctl.h>, and <wait.h>) and this step will also prevent a few warnings which you would otherwise get during the build of nvi. You can apply all of the patches given at the end of this file simply by doing the following: su root cd /usr/include /bin/patch < this-file Where `this-file' is the actual full pathname of the file you are now reading, wherever it may reside on your own system. (Note: At present, LynxOS version 2.4.0 is the latest officially released version of LynxOS, and all of the above information is accurate and correct for LynxOS 2.4.0 as of the time of this writing. However it is rumored that future releases of LynxOS may incorporate some or all of the important system include file fixes provided below. Thus, if you are building nvi for some LynxOS version later than 2.4.0, you should probably go ahead and try to apply the patches given below to your system include files, and then just don't worry about it if these patches seem to have already been applied.) 4. A Brief Note about Sendmail ------------------------------- I should mention also that LynxOS does not normally ship with the `sendmail' mail transfer program installed, either under /usr/lib/ or anywhere else for that matter. This isn't really a big problem, but nvi normally wants and expects to have a sendmail program available so that it can send users notifi- cations (by mail) whenever a partially edited file is preserved by the editor in response to a sudden system crash, a sudden system shutdown, or an unexpect- ed serial-line hangup. You can configure and build nvi without any sendmail program installed on your system, but you will get warnings about its absence when you are doing the initial configure step prior to actually building nvi. If you want to have a fully-functional nvi which does send out notification messages (by mail) whenever partially edited files are preserved during a serial line hangup or system crash, then you should get the BSD sendmail sources (via ftp from ftp.cs.berkeley.edu), build and install sendmail, and then reconfigure, rebuild, and reinstall nvi. Please contact me at the E-mail address below if you experience any problems in building or using nvi on LynxOS. I make no guarrantees, but I may be willing to try to help. Ron Guilmette Roseville, California <rfg@monkeys.com> August 14, 1996 cut here for LynxOS 2.4.0 system include files patches ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- *** wait.h Fri Apr 26 10:02:45 1996 --- wait.h Sun May 19 05:36:50 1996 *************** *** 94,104 **** /* Function prototypes */ #ifndef __LYNXOS - #ifdef _POSIX_SOURCE extern pid_t wait _AP((int *)); extern pid_t waitpid _AP((pid_t, int *, int)); ! #else ! extern int wait _AP((union wait *)); ! extern int waitpid _AP((int, union wait *, int)); ! extern int wait3 _AP((union wait *, int, struct rusage *)); #endif #endif /* !__LYNXOS */ --- 94,101 ---- /* Function prototypes */ #ifndef __LYNXOS extern pid_t wait _AP((int *)); extern pid_t waitpid _AP((pid_t, int *, int)); ! #ifndef _POSIX_SOURCE ! extern int wait3 _AP((int *, int, struct rusage *)); #endif #endif /* !__LYNXOS */ *** ioctl.h Fri Apr 26 16:50:51 1996 --- ioctl.h Sat May 18 17:55:16 1996 *************** *** 572,576 **** #ifndef __LYNXOS ! extern int ioctl _AP((int, int, char *)); #endif --- 572,576 ---- #ifndef __LYNXOS ! extern int ioctl _AP((int, int, ...)); #endif *** stdarg.h Fri Apr 26 16:51:02 1996 --- stdarg.h Sat May 18 19:34:13 1996 *************** *** 88,92 **** (((sizeof(TYPE) + sizeof(int) - 1) / sizeof(int)) * sizeof(int)) ! #define va_start(AP, LASTARG) (AP = ((char *) __builtin_next_arg ())) void va_end(va_list); /* Defined in libgcc.a */ --- 88,92 ---- (((sizeof(TYPE) + sizeof(int) - 1) / sizeof(int)) * sizeof(int)) ! #define va_start(AP, LASTARG) (AP = ((char *) __builtin_next_arg (LASTARG))) void va_end(va_list); /* Defined in libgcc.a */ *************** *** 162,166 **** (((sizeof(TYPE) + sizeof(int) - 1) / sizeof(int)) * sizeof(int)) ! #define va_start(AP, LASTARG) (AP = ((char *) __builtin_next_arg ())) void va_end(va_list); /* Defined in libgcc.a */ --- 162,166 ---- (((sizeof(TYPE) + sizeof(int) - 1) / sizeof(int)) * sizeof(int)) ! #define va_start(AP, LASTARG) (AP = ((char *) __builtin_next_arg (LASTARG))) void va_end(va_list); /* Defined in libgcc.a */