Leaked source code of windows server 2003
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

7492 lines
190 KiB

  1. package Config;
  2. use Exporter ();
  3. @EXPORT = qw(%Config);
  4. @EXPORT_OK = qw(myconfig config_sh config_vars);
  5. # Define our own import method to avoid pulling in the full Exporter:
  6. sub import {
  7. my $pkg = shift;
  8. @_ = @EXPORT unless @_;
  9. my @func = grep {$_ ne '%Config'} @_;
  10. local $Exporter::ExportLevel = 1;
  11. Exporter::import('Config', @func) if @func;
  12. return if @func == @_;
  13. my $callpkg = caller(0);
  14. *{"$callpkg\::Config"} = \%Config;
  15. }
  16. die "Perl lib version (v5.6.1) doesn't match executable version ($])"
  17. unless $^V;
  18. $^V eq v5.6.1
  19. or die "Perl lib version (v5.6.1) doesn't match executable version (" .
  20. (sprintf "v%vd",$^V) . ")";
  21. # This file was created by configpm when Perl was built. Any changes
  22. # made to this file will be lost the next time perl is built.
  23. ## Configured by: [email protected]
  24. ### Target system: WIN32
  25. my $config_sh = <<'!END!';
  26. archlibexp='C:\Perl\lib'
  27. archname='MSWin32-x86-multi-thread'
  28. cc='cl'
  29. ccflags='-nologo -O1 -MD -DNDEBUG -DWIN32 -D_CONSOLE -DNO_STRICT -DHAVE_DES_FCRYPT -DPERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT -DPERL_IMPLICIT_SYS -DPERL_MSVCRT_READFIX'
  30. cppflags='-DWIN32'
  31. dlsrc='dl_win32.xs'
  32. dynamic_ext='Socket IO Fcntl Opcode SDBM_File POSIX attrs Thread B re Data/Dumper Devel/Peek ByteLoader Devel/DProf File/Glob Sys/Hostname'
  33. extensions='DynaLoader Socket IO Fcntl Opcode SDBM_File POSIX attrs Thread B re Data/Dumper Devel/Peek ByteLoader Devel/DProf File/Glob Sys/Hostname Errno'
  34. installarchlib='C:\Perl\lib'
  35. installprivlib='C:\Perl\lib'
  36. libpth='"C:\Perl\lib\CORE"'
  37. libs=' oldnames.lib kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib netapi32.lib uuid.lib wsock32.lib mpr.lib winmm.lib version.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib msvcrt.lib'
  38. osname='MSWin32'
  39. osvers='4.0'
  40. prefix='C:\Perl'
  41. privlibexp='C:\Perl\lib'
  42. sharpbang='#!'
  43. shsharp='true'
  44. sig_name='ZERO NUM01 INT QUIT ILL NUM05 NUM06 NUM07 FPE KILL NUM10 SEGV NUM12 PIPE ALRM TERM NUM16 NUM17 NUM18 NUM19 CHLD BREAK ABRT STOP NUM24 CONT CLD'
  45. sig_num='0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 20 0'
  46. so='dll'
  47. startsh='#!/bin/sh'
  48. static_ext='DynaLoader'
  49. Author=''
  50. CONFIGDOTSH='true'
  51. Date='$Date'
  52. Header=''
  53. Id='$Id'
  54. Locker=''
  55. Log='$Log'
  56. PERL_API_REVISION='5'
  57. PERL_API_SUBVERSION='0'
  58. PERL_API_VERSION='5'
  59. PERL_REVISION='5'
  60. PERL_SUBVERSION='1'
  61. PERL_VERSION='6'
  62. RCSfile='$RCSfile'
  63. Revision='$Revision'
  64. Source=''
  65. State=''
  66. _a='.lib'
  67. _exe='.exe'
  68. _o='.obj'
  69. afs='false'
  70. alignbytes='8'
  71. ansi2knr=''
  72. aphostname=''
  73. api_revision='5'
  74. api_subversion='0'
  75. api_version='5'
  76. api_versionstring='5.5.0'
  77. ar='lib'
  78. archlib='C:\Perl\lib'
  79. archname64=''
  80. archobjs=''
  81. awk='awk'
  82. baserev='5'
  83. bash=''
  84. bin='C:\Perl\bin'
  85. bincompat5005='undef'
  86. binexp='C:\Perl\bin'
  87. bison=''
  88. byacc='byacc'
  89. byteorder='1234'
  90. c=''
  91. castflags='0'
  92. cat='type'
  93. cccdlflags=' '
  94. ccdlflags=' '
  95. ccflags_uselargefiles=''
  96. ccname=''
  97. ccsymbols=''
  98. ccversion=''
  99. cf_by='bryant'
  100. cf_email='bryant@localhost'
  101. cf_time='Wed Oct 31 20:29:27 2001'
  102. charsize='1'
  103. chgrp=''
  104. chmod=''
  105. chown=''
  106. clocktype='clock_t'
  107. comm=''
  108. compress=''
  109. contains='grep'
  110. cp='copy'
  111. cpio=''
  112. cpp='cl -nologo -E'
  113. cpp_stuff='42'
  114. cppccsymbols=''
  115. cpplast=''
  116. cppminus=''
  117. cpprun='cl -nologo -E'
  118. cppstdin='cl -nologo -E'
  119. cppsymbols=''
  120. crosscompile='undef'
  121. cryptlib=''
  122. csh='undef'
  123. d_Gconvert='sprintf((b),"%.*g",(n),(x))'
  124. d_PRIEUldbl='undef'
  125. d_PRIFUldbl='undef'
  126. d_PRIGUldbl='undef'
  127. d_PRIXU64='undef'
  128. d_PRId64='undef'
  129. d_PRIeldbl='undef'
  130. d_PRIfldbl='undef'
  131. d_PRIgldbl='undef'
  132. d_PRIi64='undef'
  133. d_PRIo64='undef'
  134. d_PRIu64='undef'
  135. d_PRIx64='undef'
  136. d_SCNfldbl='undef'
  137. d__fwalk='undef'
  138. d_access='define'
  139. d_accessx='undef'
  140. d_alarm='undef'
  141. d_archlib='define'
  142. d_atolf='undef'
  143. d_atoll='undef'
  144. d_attribut='undef'
  145. d_bcmp='undef'
  146. d_bcopy='undef'
  147. d_bincompat5005='undef'
  148. d_bsd='define'
  149. d_bsdgetpgrp='undef'
  150. d_bsdsetpgrp='undef'
  151. d_bzero='undef'
  152. d_casti32='undef'
  153. d_castneg='define'
  154. d_charvspr='undef'
  155. d_chown='undef'
  156. d_chroot='undef'
  157. d_chsize='define'
  158. d_closedir='define'
  159. d_const='define'
  160. d_crypt='define'
  161. d_csh='undef'
  162. d_cuserid='undef'
  163. d_dbl_dig='define'
  164. d_difftime='define'
  165. d_dirnamlen='define'
  166. d_dlerror='define'
  167. d_dlopen='define'
  168. d_dlsymun='undef'
  169. d_dosuid='undef'
  170. d_drand48proto='undef'
  171. d_dup2='define'
  172. d_eaccess='undef'
  173. d_endgrent='undef'
  174. d_endhent='undef'
  175. d_endnent='undef'
  176. d_endpent='undef'
  177. d_endpwent='undef'
  178. d_endsent='undef'
  179. d_eofnblk='define'
  180. d_eunice='undef'
  181. d_fchmod='undef'
  182. d_fchown='undef'
  183. d_fcntl='undef'
  184. d_fcntl_can_lock='undef'
  185. d_fd_macros='define'
  186. d_fd_set='define'
  187. d_fds_bits='define'
  188. d_fgetpos='define'
  189. d_flexfnam='define'
  190. d_flock='define'
  191. d_fork='undef'
  192. d_fpathconf='undef'
  193. d_fpos64_t='undef'
  194. d_frexpl='undef'
  195. d_fs_data_s='undef'
  196. d_fseeko='undef'
  197. d_fsetpos='define'
  198. d_fstatfs='undef'
  199. d_fstatvfs='undef'
  200. d_fsync='undef'
  201. d_ftello='undef'
  202. d_ftime='define'
  203. d_getcwd='undef'
  204. d_getespwnam='undef'
  205. d_getfsstat='undef'
  206. d_getgrent='undef'
  207. d_getgrps='undef'
  208. d_gethbyaddr='define'
  209. d_gethbyname='define'
  210. d_gethent='undef'
  211. d_gethname='define'
  212. d_gethostprotos='define'
  213. d_getlogin='define'
  214. d_getmnt='undef'
  215. d_getmntent='undef'
  216. d_getnbyaddr='undef'
  217. d_getnbyname='undef'
  218. d_getnent='undef'
  219. d_getnetprotos='undef'
  220. d_getpagsz='undef'
  221. d_getpbyname='define'
  222. d_getpbynumber='define'
  223. d_getpent='undef'
  224. d_getpgid='undef'
  225. d_getpgrp2='undef'
  226. d_getpgrp='undef'
  227. d_getppid='undef'
  228. d_getprior='undef'
  229. d_getprotoprotos='define'
  230. d_getprpwnam='undef'
  231. d_getpwent='undef'
  232. d_getsbyname='define'
  233. d_getsbyport='define'
  234. d_getsent='undef'
  235. d_getservprotos='define'
  236. d_getspnam='undef'
  237. d_gettimeod='undef'
  238. d_gnulibc='undef'
  239. d_grpasswd='undef'
  240. d_hasmntopt='undef'
  241. d_htonl='define'
  242. d_iconv='undef'
  243. d_index='undef'
  244. d_inetaton='undef'
  245. d_int64_t='undef'
  246. d_isascii='define'
  247. d_isnan='define'
  248. d_isnanl='undef'
  249. d_killpg='undef'
  250. d_lchown='undef'
  251. d_ldbl_dig='define'
  252. d_link='define'
  253. d_locconv='define'
  254. d_lockf='undef'
  255. d_longdbl='define'
  256. d_longlong='undef'
  257. d_lseekproto='define'
  258. d_lstat='undef'
  259. d_madvise='undef'
  260. d_mblen='define'
  261. d_mbstowcs='define'
  262. d_mbtowc='define'
  263. d_memchr='define'
  264. d_memcmp='define'
  265. d_memcpy='define'
  266. d_memmove='define'
  267. d_memset='define'
  268. d_mkdir='define'
  269. d_mkdtemp='undef'
  270. d_mkfifo='undef'
  271. d_mkstemp='undef'
  272. d_mkstemps='undef'
  273. d_mktime='define'
  274. d_mmap='undef'
  275. d_modfl='undef'
  276. d_mprotect='undef'
  277. d_msg='undef'
  278. d_msg_ctrunc='undef'
  279. d_msg_dontroute='undef'
  280. d_msg_oob='undef'
  281. d_msg_peek='undef'
  282. d_msg_proxy='undef'
  283. d_msgctl='undef'
  284. d_msgget='undef'
  285. d_msgrcv='undef'
  286. d_msgsnd='undef'
  287. d_msync='undef'
  288. d_munmap='undef'
  289. d_mymalloc='undef'
  290. d_nice='undef'
  291. d_nv_preserves_uv='define'
  292. d_nv_preserves_uv_bits='32'
  293. d_off64_t='undef'
  294. d_old_pthread_create_joinable='undef'
  295. d_oldpthreads='undef'
  296. d_oldsock='undef'
  297. d_open3='undef'
  298. d_pathconf='undef'
  299. d_pause='define'
  300. d_perl_otherlibdirs='undef'
  301. d_phostname='undef'
  302. d_pipe='define'
  303. d_poll='undef'
  304. d_portable='define'
  305. d_pthread_yield='undef'
  306. d_pwage='undef'
  307. d_pwchange='undef'
  308. d_pwclass='undef'
  309. d_pwcomment='undef'
  310. d_pwexpire='undef'
  311. d_pwgecos='undef'
  312. d_pwpasswd='undef'
  313. d_pwquota='undef'
  314. d_qgcvt='undef'
  315. d_quad='undef'
  316. d_readdir='define'
  317. d_readlink='undef'
  318. d_rename='define'
  319. d_rewinddir='define'
  320. d_rmdir='define'
  321. d_safebcpy='undef'
  322. d_safemcpy='undef'
  323. d_sanemcmp='define'
  324. d_sbrkproto='undef'
  325. d_sched_yield='undef'
  326. d_scm_rights='undef'
  327. d_seekdir='define'
  328. d_select='define'
  329. d_sem='undef'
  330. d_semctl='undef'
  331. d_semctl_semid_ds='undef'
  332. d_semctl_semun='undef'
  333. d_semget='undef'
  334. d_semop='undef'
  335. d_setegid='undef'
  336. d_seteuid='undef'
  337. d_setgrent='undef'
  338. d_setgrps='undef'
  339. d_sethent='undef'
  340. d_setlinebuf='undef'
  341. d_setlocale='define'
  342. d_setnent='undef'
  343. d_setpent='undef'
  344. d_setpgid='undef'
  345. d_setpgrp2='undef'
  346. d_setpgrp='undef'
  347. d_setprior='undef'
  348. d_setproctitle='undef'
  349. d_setpwent='undef'
  350. d_setregid='undef'
  351. d_setresgid='undef'
  352. d_setresuid='undef'
  353. d_setreuid='undef'
  354. d_setrgid='undef'
  355. d_setruid='undef'
  356. d_setsent='undef'
  357. d_setsid='undef'
  358. d_setvbuf='define'
  359. d_sfio='undef'
  360. d_shm='undef'
  361. d_shmat='undef'
  362. d_shmatprototype='undef'
  363. d_shmctl='undef'
  364. d_shmdt='undef'
  365. d_shmget='undef'
  366. d_sigaction='undef'
  367. d_sigsetjmp='undef'
  368. d_socket='define'
  369. d_socklen_t='undef'
  370. d_sockpair='undef'
  371. d_socks5_init='undef'
  372. d_sqrtl='undef'
  373. d_statblks='undef'
  374. d_statfs_f_flags='undef'
  375. d_statfs_s='undef'
  376. d_statvfs='undef'
  377. d_stdio_cnt_lval='define'
  378. d_stdio_ptr_lval='define'
  379. d_stdio_ptr_lval_nochange_cnt='undef'
  380. d_stdio_ptr_lval_sets_cnt='undef'
  381. d_stdio_stream_array='undef'
  382. d_stdiobase='define'
  383. d_stdstdio='define'
  384. d_strchr='define'
  385. d_strcoll='define'
  386. d_strctcpy='define'
  387. d_strerrm='strerror(e)'
  388. d_strerror='define'
  389. d_strtod='define'
  390. d_strtol='define'
  391. d_strtold='undef'
  392. d_strtoll='undef'
  393. d_strtoul='define'
  394. d_strtoull='undef'
  395. d_strtouq='undef'
  396. d_strxfrm='define'
  397. d_suidsafe='undef'
  398. d_symlink='undef'
  399. d_syscall='undef'
  400. d_sysconf='undef'
  401. d_sysernlst=''
  402. d_syserrlst='define'
  403. d_system='define'
  404. d_tcgetpgrp='undef'
  405. d_tcsetpgrp='undef'
  406. d_telldir='define'
  407. d_telldirproto='define'
  408. d_time='define'
  409. d_times='define'
  410. d_truncate='undef'
  411. d_tzname='define'
  412. d_umask='define'
  413. d_uname='define'
  414. d_union_semun='define'
  415. d_ustat='undef'
  416. d_vendorarch='undef'
  417. d_vendorbin='undef'
  418. d_vendorlib='undef'
  419. d_vfork='undef'
  420. d_void_closedir='undef'
  421. d_voidsig='define'
  422. d_voidtty=''
  423. d_volatile='define'
  424. d_vprintf='define'
  425. d_wait4='undef'
  426. d_waitpid='define'
  427. d_wcstombs='define'
  428. d_wctomb='define'
  429. d_xenix='undef'
  430. date='date'
  431. db_hashtype='int'
  432. db_prefixtype='int'
  433. defvoidused='15'
  434. direntrytype='struct direct'
  435. dlext='dll'
  436. doublesize='8'
  437. drand01='(rand()/(double)((unsigned)1<<RANDBITS))'
  438. eagain='EAGAIN'
  439. ebcdic='undef'
  440. echo='echo'
  441. egrep='egrep'
  442. emacs=''
  443. eunicefix=':'
  444. exe_ext='.exe'
  445. expr='expr'
  446. fflushNULL='define'
  447. fflushall='undef'
  448. find='find'
  449. firstmakefile='makefile'
  450. flex=''
  451. fpossize='4'
  452. fpostype='fpos_t'
  453. freetype='void'
  454. full_ar=''
  455. full_csh=''
  456. full_sed=''
  457. gccosandvers=''
  458. gccversion=''
  459. gidformat='"ld"'
  460. gidsign='-1'
  461. gidsize='4'
  462. gidtype='gid_t'
  463. glibpth='/usr/shlib /lib/pa1.1 /usr/lib/large /lib /usr/lib /usr/lib/386 /lib/386 /lib/large /usr/lib/small /lib/small /usr/ccs/lib /usr/ucblib /usr/shlib '
  464. grep='grep'
  465. groupcat=''
  466. groupstype='gid_t'
  467. gzip='gzip'
  468. h_fcntl='false'
  469. h_sysfile='true'
  470. hint='recommended'
  471. hostcat='ypcat hosts'
  472. i16size='2'
  473. i16type='short'
  474. i32size='4'
  475. i32type='long'
  476. i64size='8'
  477. i64type='__int64'
  478. i8size='1'
  479. i8type='char'
  480. i_arpainet='define'
  481. i_bsdioctl=''
  482. i_db='undef'
  483. i_dbm='undef'
  484. i_dirent='define'
  485. i_dld='undef'
  486. i_dlfcn='define'
  487. i_fcntl='define'
  488. i_float='define'
  489. i_gdbm='undef'
  490. i_grp='undef'
  491. i_iconv='undef'
  492. i_ieeefp='undef'
  493. i_inttypes='undef'
  494. i_libutil='undef'
  495. i_limits='define'
  496. i_locale='define'
  497. i_machcthr='undef'
  498. i_malloc='define'
  499. i_math='define'
  500. i_memory='undef'
  501. i_mntent='undef'
  502. i_ndbm='undef'
  503. i_netdb='undef'
  504. i_neterrno='undef'
  505. i_netinettcp='undef'
  506. i_niin='undef'
  507. i_poll='undef'
  508. i_prot='undef'
  509. i_pthread='undef'
  510. i_pwd='undef'
  511. i_rpcsvcdbm='define'
  512. i_sfio='undef'
  513. i_sgtty='undef'
  514. i_shadow='undef'
  515. i_socks='undef'
  516. i_stdarg='define'
  517. i_stddef='define'
  518. i_stdlib='define'
  519. i_string='define'
  520. i_sunmath='undef'
  521. i_sysaccess='undef'
  522. i_sysdir='undef'
  523. i_sysfile='undef'
  524. i_sysfilio='define'
  525. i_sysin='undef'
  526. i_sysioctl='undef'
  527. i_syslog='undef'
  528. i_sysmman='undef'
  529. i_sysmode='undef'
  530. i_sysmount='undef'
  531. i_sysndir='undef'
  532. i_sysparam='undef'
  533. i_sysresrc='undef'
  534. i_syssecrt='undef'
  535. i_sysselct='undef'
  536. i_syssockio=''
  537. i_sysstat='define'
  538. i_sysstatfs='undef'
  539. i_sysstatvfs='undef'
  540. i_systime='undef'
  541. i_systimek='undef'
  542. i_systimes='undef'
  543. i_systypes='define'
  544. i_sysuio='undef'
  545. i_sysun='undef'
  546. i_sysutsname='undef'
  547. i_sysvfs='undef'
  548. i_syswait='undef'
  549. i_termio='undef'
  550. i_termios='undef'
  551. i_time='define'
  552. i_unistd='undef'
  553. i_ustat='undef'
  554. i_utime='define'
  555. i_values='undef'
  556. i_varargs='undef'
  557. i_varhdr='varargs.h'
  558. i_vfork='undef'
  559. ignore_versioned_solibs=''
  560. inc_version_list=''
  561. inc_version_list_init='0'
  562. incpath='C:\DEVSTU~2\VC98\include'
  563. inews=''
  564. installbin='C:\Perl\bin'
  565. installhtmldir='C:\Perl\html'
  566. installhtmlhelpdir='C:\Perl\htmlhelp'
  567. installman1dir=''
  568. installman3dir=''
  569. installprefix='C:\Perl'
  570. installprefixexp='C:\Perl'
  571. installscript='C:\Perl\bin'
  572. installsitearch='C:\Perl\site\lib'
  573. installsitebin='C:\Perl\bin'
  574. installsitelib='C:\Perl\site\lib'
  575. installstyle='lib'
  576. installusrbinperl='undef'
  577. installvendorarch=''
  578. installvendorbin=''
  579. installvendorlib=''
  580. intsize='4'
  581. issymlink=''
  582. ivdformat='"ld"'
  583. ivsize='4'
  584. ivtype='long'
  585. known_extensions='DynaLoader Socket IO Fcntl Opcode SDBM_File POSIX attrs Thread B re Data/Dumper Devel/Peek ByteLoader Devel/DProf File/Glob Sys/Hostname Errno'
  586. ksh=''
  587. ld='link'
  588. lddlflags='-dll -nologo -nodefaultlib -release -libpath:"C:\Perl\lib\CORE" -machine:x86'
  589. ldflags='-nologo -nodefaultlib -release -libpath:"C:\Perl\lib\CORE" -machine:x86'
  590. ldflags_uselargefiles=''
  591. ldlibpthname=''
  592. less='less'
  593. lib_ext='.lib'
  594. libc='msvcrt.lib'
  595. libperl='perl56.lib'
  596. libsdirs=''
  597. libsfiles=''
  598. libsfound=''
  599. libspath=''
  600. libswanted='net socket inet nsl nm ndbm gdbm dbm db malloc dl dld ld sun m c cposix posix ndir dir crypt ucb bsd BSD PW x'
  601. libswanted_uselargefiles=''
  602. line='line'
  603. lint=''
  604. lkflags=''
  605. ln=''
  606. lns='copy'
  607. locincpth='/usr/local/include /opt/local/include /usr/gnu/include /opt/gnu/include /usr/GNU/include /opt/GNU/include'
  608. loclibpth='/usr/local/lib /opt/local/lib /usr/gnu/lib /opt/gnu/lib /usr/GNU/lib /opt/GNU/lib'
  609. longdblsize='10'
  610. longlongsize='8'
  611. longsize='4'
  612. lp=''
  613. lpr=''
  614. ls='dir'
  615. lseeksize='4'
  616. lseektype='off_t'
  617. mail=''
  618. mailx=''
  619. make='nmake'
  620. make_set_make='#'
  621. mallocobj='malloc.o'
  622. mallocsrc='malloc.c'
  623. malloctype='void *'
  624. man1dir=''
  625. man1direxp=''
  626. man1ext='1'
  627. man3dir=''
  628. man3direxp=''
  629. man3ext='3'
  630. mips_type=''
  631. mkdir='mkdir'
  632. mmaptype='void *'
  633. modetype='mode_t'
  634. more='more /e'
  635. multiarch='undef'
  636. mv=''
  637. myarchname='MSWin32'
  638. mydomain=''
  639. myhostname=''
  640. myuname=''
  641. n='-n'
  642. netdb_hlen_type='int'
  643. netdb_host_type='char *'
  644. netdb_name_type='char *'
  645. netdb_net_type='long'
  646. nm=''
  647. nm_opt=''
  648. nm_so_opt=''
  649. nonxs_ext='Errno'
  650. nroff=''
  651. nvEUformat='"E"'
  652. nvFUformat='"F"'
  653. nvGUformat='"G"'
  654. nveformat='"e"'
  655. nvfformat='"f"'
  656. nvgformat='"g"'
  657. nvsize='8'
  658. nvtype='double'
  659. o_nonblock='O_NONBLOCK'
  660. obj_ext='.obj'
  661. old_pthread_create_joinable=''
  662. optimize='-O1 -MD -DNDEBUG'
  663. orderlib='false'
  664. otherlibdirs=''
  665. package='perl5'
  666. pager='more /e'
  667. passcat=''
  668. patchlevel='6'
  669. path_sep=';'
  670. perl5=''
  671. perl='perl'
  672. perladmin=''
  673. perllibs=' oldnames.lib kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib netapi32.lib uuid.lib wsock32.lib mpr.lib winmm.lib version.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib msvcrt.lib'
  674. perlpath='C:\Perl\bin\perl.exe'
  675. pg=''
  676. phostname='hostname'
  677. pidtype='int'
  678. plibpth=''
  679. pm_apiversion='5.005'
  680. pmake=''
  681. pr=''
  682. prefixexp='p:'
  683. privlib='C:\Perl\lib'
  684. prototype='define'
  685. ptrsize='4'
  686. quadkind='5'
  687. quadtype='__int64'
  688. randbits='15'
  689. randfunc='rand'
  690. randseedtype='unsigned'
  691. ranlib='rem'
  692. rd_nodata='-1'
  693. revision='5'
  694. rm='del'
  695. rmail=''
  696. runnm='true'
  697. sPRIEUldbl='"E"'
  698. sPRIFUldbl='"F"'
  699. sPRIGUldbl='"G"'
  700. sPRIXU64='"lX"'
  701. sPRId64='"ld"'
  702. sPRIeldbl='"e"'
  703. sPRIfldbl='"f"'
  704. sPRIgldbl='"g"'
  705. sPRIi64='"li"'
  706. sPRIo64='"lo"'
  707. sPRIu64='"lu"'
  708. sPRIx64='"lx"'
  709. sSCNfldbl='"f"'
  710. sched_yield=''
  711. scriptdir='C:\Perl\bin'
  712. scriptdirexp='C:\Perl\bin'
  713. sed='sed'
  714. seedfunc='srand'
  715. selectminbits='32'
  716. selecttype='Perl_fd_set *'
  717. sendmail='blat'
  718. sh='cmd /x /c'
  719. shar=''
  720. shmattype='void *'
  721. shortsize='2'
  722. shrpenv=''
  723. sig_count='26'
  724. sig_name_init='"ZERO", "NUM01", "INT", "QUIT", "ILL", "NUM05", "NUM06", "NUM07", "FPE", "KILL", "NUM10", "SEGV", "NUM12", "PIPE", "ALRM", "TERM", "NUM16", "NUM17", "NUM18", "NUM19", "CHLD", "BREAK", "ABRT", "STOP", "NUM24", "CONT", "CLD", 0'
  725. sig_num_init='0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 20, 0'
  726. signal_t='void'
  727. sitearch='C:\Perl\site\lib'
  728. sitearchexp='C:\Perl\site\lib'
  729. sitebin='C:\Perl\site\bin'
  730. sitebinexp='C:\Perl\site\bin'
  731. sitelib='C:\Perl\site\lib'
  732. sitelib_stem=''
  733. sitelibexp='C:\Perl\site\lib'
  734. siteprefix='C:\Perl\site'
  735. siteprefixexp='C:\Perl\site'
  736. sizesize='4'
  737. sizetype='size_t'
  738. sleep=''
  739. smail=''
  740. sockethdr=''
  741. socketlib=''
  742. socksizetype='int'
  743. sort='sort'
  744. spackage='Perl5'
  745. spitshell=''
  746. src=''
  747. ssizetype='int'
  748. startperl='#!perl'
  749. stdchar='char'
  750. stdio_base='((fp)->_base)'
  751. stdio_bufsiz='((fp)->_cnt + (fp)->_ptr - (fp)->_base)'
  752. stdio_cnt='((fp)->_cnt)'
  753. stdio_filbuf=''
  754. stdio_ptr='((fp)->_ptr)'
  755. stdio_stream_array=''
  756. strings='/usr/include/string.h'
  757. submit=''
  758. subversion='1'
  759. sysman='/usr/man/man1'
  760. tail=''
  761. tar=''
  762. tbl=''
  763. tee=''
  764. test=''
  765. timeincl='/usr/include/sys/time.h '
  766. timetype='time_t'
  767. touch='touch'
  768. tr=''
  769. trnl='\012'
  770. troff=''
  771. u16size='2'
  772. u16type='unsigned short'
  773. u32size='4'
  774. u32type='unsigned long'
  775. u64size='8'
  776. u64type='unsigned __int64'
  777. u8size='1'
  778. u8type='unsigned char'
  779. uidformat='"ld"'
  780. uidsign='-1'
  781. uidsize='4'
  782. uidtype='uid_t'
  783. uname='uname'
  784. uniq='uniq'
  785. uquadtype='unsigned __int64'
  786. use5005threads='undef'
  787. use64bitall='undef'
  788. use64bitint='undef'
  789. usedl='define'
  790. useithreads='define'
  791. uselargefiles='undef'
  792. uselongdouble='undef'
  793. usemorebits='undef'
  794. usemultiplicity='define'
  795. usemymalloc='n'
  796. usenm='false'
  797. useopcode='true'
  798. useperlio='undef'
  799. useposix='true'
  800. usesfio='false'
  801. useshrplib='yes'
  802. usesocks='undef'
  803. usethreads='undef'
  804. usevendorprefix='undef'
  805. usevfork='false'
  806. usrinc='/usr/include'
  807. uuname=''
  808. uvXUformat='"lX"'
  809. uvoformat='"lo"'
  810. uvsize='4'
  811. uvtype='unsigned long'
  812. uvuformat='"lu"'
  813. uvxformat='"lx"'
  814. vendorarch=''
  815. vendorarchexp=''
  816. vendorbin=''
  817. vendorbinexp=''
  818. vendorlib=''
  819. vendorlib_stem=''
  820. vendorlibexp=''
  821. vendorprefix=''
  822. vendorprefixexp=''
  823. version='5.6.1'
  824. versiononly='undef'
  825. vi=''
  826. voidflags='15'
  827. xlibpth='/usr/lib/386 /lib/386'
  828. xs_apiversion='5.6.0'
  829. zcat=''
  830. zip='zip'
  831. !END!
  832. my $summary = <<'!END!';
  833. Summary of my $package (revision $baserev version $PERL_VERSION subversion $PERL_SUBVERSION) configuration:
  834. Platform:
  835. osname=$osname, osvers=$osvers, archname=$archname
  836. uname='$myuname'
  837. config_args='$config_args'
  838. hint=$hint, useposix=$useposix, d_sigaction=$d_sigaction
  839. usethreads=$usethreads use5005threads=$use5005threads useithreads=$useithreads usemultiplicity=$usemultiplicity
  840. useperlio=$useperlio d_sfio=$d_sfio uselargefiles=$uselargefiles usesocks=$usesocks
  841. use64bitint=$use64bitint use64bitall=$use64bitall uselongdouble=$uselongdouble
  842. Compiler:
  843. cc='$cc', ccflags ='$ccflags',
  844. optimize='$optimize',
  845. cppflags='$cppflags'
  846. ccversion='$ccversion', gccversion='$gccversion', gccosandvers='$gccosandvers'
  847. intsize=$intsize, longsize=$longsize, ptrsize=$ptrsize, doublesize=$doublesize, byteorder=$byteorder
  848. d_longlong=$d_longlong, longlongsize=$longlongsize, d_longdbl=$d_longdbl, longdblsize=$longdblsize
  849. ivtype='$ivtype', ivsize=$ivsize, nvtype='$nvtype', nvsize=$nvsize, Off_t='$lseektype', lseeksize=$lseeksize
  850. alignbytes=$alignbytes, usemymalloc=$usemymalloc, prototype=$prototype
  851. Linker and Libraries:
  852. ld='$ld', ldflags ='$ldflags'
  853. libpth=$libpth
  854. libs=$libs
  855. perllibs=$perllibs
  856. libc=$libc, so=$so, useshrplib=$useshrplib, libperl=$libperl
  857. Dynamic Linking:
  858. dlsrc=$dlsrc, dlext=$dlext, d_dlsymun=$d_dlsymun, ccdlflags='$ccdlflags'
  859. cccdlflags='$cccdlflags', lddlflags='$lddlflags'
  860. !END!
  861. my $summary_expanded = 0;
  862. sub myconfig {
  863. return $summary if $summary_expanded;
  864. $summary =~ s{\$(\w+)}
  865. { my $c = $Config{$1}; defined($c) ? $c : 'undef' }ge;
  866. $summary_expanded = 1;
  867. $summary;
  868. }
  869. sub FETCH {
  870. # check for cached value (which may be undef so we use exists not defined)
  871. return $_[0]->{$_[1]} if (exists $_[0]->{$_[1]});
  872. # Search for it in the big string
  873. my($value, $start, $marker, $quote_type);
  874. $quote_type = "'";
  875. # Virtual entries.
  876. if ($_[1] eq 'byteorder') {
  877. # byteorder does exist on its own but we overlay a virtual
  878. # dynamically recomputed value.
  879. my $t = $Config{ivtype};
  880. my $s = $Config{ivsize};
  881. my $f = $t eq 'long' ? 'L!' : $s == 8 ? 'Q': 'I';
  882. if ($s == 4 || $s == 8) {
  883. my $i = 0;
  884. foreach my $c (reverse(2..$s)) { $i |= ord($c); $i <<= 8 }
  885. $i |= ord(1);
  886. $value = join('', unpack('a'x$s, pack($f, $i)));
  887. } else {
  888. $value = '?'x$s;
  889. }
  890. } elsif ($_[1] =~ /^((?:cc|ld)flags|libs(?:wanted)?)_nolargefiles/) {
  891. # These are purely virtual, they do not exist, but need to
  892. # be computed on demand for largefile-incapable extensions.
  893. my $key = "${1}_uselargefiles";
  894. $value = $Config{$1};
  895. my $withlargefiles = $Config{$key};
  896. if ($key =~ /^(?:cc|ld)flags_/) {
  897. $value =~ s/\Q$withlargefiles\E\b//;
  898. } elsif ($key =~ /^libs/) {
  899. my @lflibswanted = split(' ', $Config{libswanted_uselargefiles});
  900. if (@lflibswanted) {
  901. my %lflibswanted;
  902. @lflibswanted{@lflibswanted} = ();
  903. if ($key =~ /^libs_/) {
  904. my @libs = grep { /^-l(.+)/ &&
  905. not exists $lflibswanted{$1} }
  906. split(' ', $Config{libs});
  907. $Config{libs} = join(' ', @libs);
  908. } elsif ($key =~ /^libswanted_/) {
  909. my @libswanted = grep { not exists $lflibswanted{$_} }
  910. split(' ', $Config{libswanted});
  911. $Config{libswanted} = join(' ', @libswanted);
  912. }
  913. }
  914. }
  915. } else {
  916. $marker = "$_[1]=";
  917. # return undef unless (($value) = $config_sh =~ m/^$_[1]='(.*)'\s*$/m);
  918. # Check for the common case, ' delimeted
  919. $start = index($config_sh, "\n$marker$quote_type");
  920. # If that failed, check for " delimited
  921. if ($start == -1) {
  922. $quote_type = '"';
  923. $start = index($config_sh, "\n$marker$quote_type");
  924. }
  925. return undef if ( ($start == -1) && # in case it's first
  926. (substr($config_sh, 0, length($marker)) ne $marker) );
  927. if ($start == -1) {
  928. # It's the very first thing we found. Skip $start forward
  929. # and figure out the quote mark after the =.
  930. $start = length($marker) + 1;
  931. $quote_type = substr($config_sh, $start - 1, 1);
  932. }
  933. else {
  934. $start += length($marker) + 2;
  935. }
  936. $value = substr($config_sh, $start,
  937. index($config_sh, "$quote_type\n", $start) - $start);
  938. }
  939. # If we had a double-quote, we'd better eval it so escape
  940. # sequences and such can be interpolated. Since the incoming
  941. # value is supposed to follow shell rules and not perl rules,
  942. # we escape any perl variable markers
  943. if ($quote_type eq '"') {
  944. $value =~ s/\$/\\\$/g;
  945. $value =~ s/\@/\\\@/g;
  946. eval "\$value = \"$value\"";
  947. }
  948. #$value = sprintf($value) if $quote_type eq '"';
  949. # So we can say "if $Config{'foo'}".
  950. $value = undef if $value eq 'undef';
  951. $_[0]->{$_[1]} = $value; # cache it
  952. return $value;
  953. }
  954. my $prevpos = 0;
  955. sub FIRSTKEY {
  956. $prevpos = 0;
  957. # my($key) = $config_sh =~ m/^(.*?)=/;
  958. substr($config_sh, 0, index($config_sh, '=') );
  959. # $key;
  960. }
  961. sub NEXTKEY {
  962. # Find out how the current key's quoted so we can skip to its end.
  963. my $quote = substr($config_sh, index($config_sh, "=", $prevpos)+1, 1);
  964. my $pos = index($config_sh, qq($quote\n), $prevpos) + 2;
  965. my $len = index($config_sh, "=", $pos) - $pos;
  966. $prevpos = $pos;
  967. $len > 0 ? substr($config_sh, $pos, $len) : undef;
  968. }
  969. sub EXISTS {
  970. # exists($_[0]->{$_[1]}) or $config_sh =~ m/^$_[1]=/m;
  971. exists($_[0]->{$_[1]}) or
  972. index($config_sh, "\n$_[1]='") != -1 or
  973. substr($config_sh, 0, length($_[1])+2) eq "$_[1]='" or
  974. index($config_sh, "\n$_[1]=\"") != -1 or
  975. substr($config_sh, 0, length($_[1])+2) eq "$_[1]=\"" or
  976. $_[1] =~ /^(?:(?:cc|ld)flags|libs(?:wanted)?)_nolargefiles$/;
  977. }
  978. sub STORE { die "\%Config::Config is read-only\n" }
  979. sub DELETE { &STORE }
  980. sub CLEAR { &STORE }
  981. sub config_sh {
  982. $config_sh
  983. }
  984. sub config_re {
  985. my $re = shift;
  986. my @matches = ($config_sh =~ /^$re=.*\n/mg);
  987. @matches ? (print @matches) : print "$re: not found\n";
  988. }
  989. sub config_vars {
  990. foreach(@_){
  991. config_re($_), next if /\W/;
  992. my $v=(exists $Config{$_}) ? $Config{$_} : 'UNKNOWN';
  993. $v='undef' unless defined $v;
  994. print "$_='$v';\n";
  995. }
  996. }
  997. sub TIEHASH { bless {} }
  998. # avoid Config..Exporter..UNIVERSAL search for DESTROY then AUTOLOAD
  999. sub DESTROY { }
  1000. tie %Config, 'Config';
  1001. 1;
  1002. __END__
  1003. =head1 NAME
  1004. Config - access Perl configuration information
  1005. =head1 SYNOPSIS
  1006. use Config;
  1007. if ($Config{'cc'} =~ /gcc/) {
  1008. print "built by gcc\n";
  1009. }
  1010. use Config qw(myconfig config_sh config_vars);
  1011. print myconfig();
  1012. print config_sh();
  1013. config_vars(qw(osname archname));
  1014. =head1 DESCRIPTION
  1015. The Config module contains all the information that was available to
  1016. the C<Configure> program at Perl build time (over 900 values).
  1017. Shell variables from the F<config.sh> file (written by Configure) are
  1018. stored in the readonly-variable C<%Config>, indexed by their names.
  1019. Values stored in config.sh as 'undef' are returned as undefined
  1020. values. The perl C<exists> function can be used to check if a
  1021. named variable exists.
  1022. =over 4
  1023. =item myconfig()
  1024. Returns a textual summary of the major perl configuration values.
  1025. See also C<-V> in L<perlrun/Switches>.
  1026. =item config_sh()
  1027. Returns the entire perl configuration information in the form of the
  1028. original config.sh shell variable assignment script.
  1029. =item config_vars(@names)
  1030. Prints to STDOUT the values of the named configuration variable. Each is
  1031. printed on a separate line in the form:
  1032. name='value';
  1033. Names which are unknown are output as C<name='UNKNOWN';>.
  1034. See also C<-V:name> in L<perlrun/Switches>.
  1035. =back
  1036. =head1 EXAMPLE
  1037. Here's a more sophisticated example of using %Config:
  1038. use Config;
  1039. use strict;
  1040. my %sig_num;
  1041. my @sig_name;
  1042. unless($Config{sig_name} && $Config{sig_num}) {
  1043. die "No sigs?";
  1044. } else {
  1045. my @names = split ' ', $Config{sig_name};
  1046. @sig_num{@names} = split ' ', $Config{sig_num};
  1047. foreach (@names) {
  1048. $sig_name[$sig_num{$_}] ||= $_;
  1049. }
  1050. }
  1051. print "signal #17 = $sig_name[17]\n";
  1052. if ($sig_num{ALRM}) {
  1053. print "SIGALRM is $sig_num{ALRM}\n";
  1054. }
  1055. =head1 WARNING
  1056. Because this information is not stored within the perl executable
  1057. itself it is possible (but unlikely) that the information does not
  1058. relate to the actual perl binary which is being used to access it.
  1059. The Config module is installed into the architecture and version
  1060. specific library directory ($Config{installarchlib}) and it checks the
  1061. perl version number when loaded.
  1062. The values stored in config.sh may be either single-quoted or
  1063. double-quoted. Double-quoted strings are handy for those cases where you
  1064. need to include escape sequences in the strings. To avoid runtime variable
  1065. interpolation, any C<$> and C<@> characters are replaced by C<\$> and
  1066. C<\@>, respectively. This isn't foolproof, of course, so don't embed C<\$>
  1067. or C<\@> in double-quoted strings unless you're willing to deal with the
  1068. consequences. (The slashes will end up escaped and the C<$> or C<@> will
  1069. trigger variable interpolation)
  1070. =head1 GLOSSARY
  1071. Most C<Config> variables are determined by the C<Configure> script
  1072. on platforms supported by it (which is most UNIX platforms). Some
  1073. platforms have custom-made C<Config> variables, and may thus not have
  1074. some of the variables described below, or may have extraneous variables
  1075. specific to that particular port. See the port specific documentation
  1076. in such cases.
  1077. =head2 _
  1078. =over
  1079. =item C<_a>
  1080. From F<Unix.U>:
  1081. This variable defines the extension used for ordinary libraries.
  1082. For unix, it is F<.a>. The F<.> is included. Other possible
  1083. values include F<.lib>.
  1084. =item C<_exe>
  1085. From F<Unix.U>:
  1086. This variable defines the extension used for executable files.
  1087. For unix it is empty. Other possible values include F<.exe>.
  1088. =item C<_o>
  1089. From F<Unix.U>:
  1090. This variable defines the extension used for object files.
  1091. For unix, it is F<.o>. The F<.> is included. Other possible
  1092. values include F<.obj>.
  1093. =back
  1094. =head2 a
  1095. =over
  1096. =item C<afs>
  1097. From F<afs.U>:
  1098. This variable is set to C<true> if C<AFS> (Andrew File System) is used
  1099. on the system, C<false> otherwise. It is possible to override this
  1100. with a hint value or command line option, but you'd better know
  1101. what you are doing.
  1102. =item C<alignbytes>
  1103. From F<alignbytes.U>:
  1104. This variable holds the number of bytes required to align a
  1105. double-- or a long double when applicable. Usual values are
  1106. 2, 4 and 8. The default is eight, for safety.
  1107. =item C<ansi2knr>
  1108. From F<ansi2knr.U>:
  1109. This variable is set if the user needs to run ansi2knr.
  1110. Currently, this is not supported, so we just abort.
  1111. =item C<aphostname>
  1112. From F<d_gethname.U>:
  1113. This variable contains the command which can be used to compute the
  1114. host name. The command is fully qualified by its absolute path, to make
  1115. it safe when used by a process with super-user privileges.
  1116. =item C<api_revision>
  1117. From F<patchlevel.U>:
  1118. The three variables, api_revision, api_version, and
  1119. api_subversion, specify the version of the oldest perl binary
  1120. compatible with the present perl. In a full version string
  1121. such as F<5.6.1>, api_revision is the C<5>.
  1122. Prior to 5.5.640, the format was a floating point number,
  1123. like 5.00563.
  1124. F<perl.c>:incpush() and F<lib/lib.pm> will automatically search in
  1125. $F<sitelib/.>. for older directories back to the limit specified
  1126. by these api_ variables. This is only useful if you have a
  1127. perl library directory tree structured like the default one.
  1128. See C<INSTALL> for how this works. The versioned site_perl
  1129. directory was introduced in 5.005, so that is the lowest
  1130. possible value. The version list appropriate for the current
  1131. system is determined in F<inc_version_list.U>.
  1132. C<XXX> To do: Since compatibility can depend on compile time
  1133. options (such as bincompat, longlong, F<etc.>) it should
  1134. (perhaps) be set by Configure, but currently it isn't.
  1135. Currently, we read a hard-wired value from F<patchlevel.h>.
  1136. Perhaps what we ought to do is take the hard-wired value from
  1137. F<patchlevel.h> but then modify it if the current Configure
  1138. options warrant. F<patchlevel.h> then would use an #ifdef guard.
  1139. =item C<api_subversion>
  1140. From F<patchlevel.U>:
  1141. The three variables, api_revision, api_version, and
  1142. api_subversion, specify the version of the oldest perl binary
  1143. compatible with the present perl. In a full version string
  1144. such as F<5.6.1>, api_subversion is the C<1>. See api_revision for
  1145. full details.
  1146. =item C<api_version>
  1147. From F<patchlevel.U>:
  1148. The three variables, api_revision, api_version, and
  1149. api_subversion, specify the version of the oldest perl binary
  1150. compatible with the present perl. In a full version string
  1151. such as F<5.6.1>, api_version is the C<6>. See api_revision for
  1152. full details. As a special case, 5.5.0 is rendered in the
  1153. old-style as 5.005. (In the 5.005_0x maintenance series,
  1154. this was the only versioned directory in $F<sitelib.>)
  1155. =item C<api_versionstring>
  1156. From F<patchlevel.U>:
  1157. This variable combines api_revision, api_version, and
  1158. api_subversion in a format such as 5.6.1 (or 5_6_1) suitable
  1159. for use as a directory name. This is filesystem dependent.
  1160. =item C<ar>
  1161. From F<Loc.U>:
  1162. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  1163. full pathname (if any) of the ar program. After Configure runs,
  1164. the value is reset to a plain C<ar> and is not useful.
  1165. =item C<archlib>
  1166. From F<archlib.U>:
  1167. This variable holds the name of the directory in which the user wants
  1168. to put architecture-dependent public library files for $package.
  1169. It is most often a local directory such as F</usr/local/lib>.
  1170. Programs using this variable must be prepared to deal
  1171. with filename expansion.
  1172. =item C<archlibexp>
  1173. From F<archlib.U>:
  1174. This variable is the same as the archlib variable, but is
  1175. filename expanded at configuration time, for convenient use.
  1176. =item C<archname64>
  1177. From F<use64bits.U>:
  1178. This variable is used for the 64-bitness part of $archname.
  1179. =item C<archname>
  1180. From F<archname.U>:
  1181. This variable is a short name to characterize the current
  1182. architecture. It is used mainly to construct the default archlib.
  1183. =item C<archobjs>
  1184. From F<Unix.U>:
  1185. This variable defines any additional objects that must be linked
  1186. in with the program on this architecture. On unix, it is usually
  1187. empty. It is typically used to include emulations of unix calls
  1188. or other facilities. For perl on F<OS/2>, for example, this would
  1189. include F<os2/os2.obj>.
  1190. =item C<awk>
  1191. From F<Loc.U>:
  1192. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  1193. full pathname (if any) of the awk program. After Configure runs,
  1194. the value is reset to a plain C<awk> and is not useful.
  1195. =back
  1196. =head2 b
  1197. =over
  1198. =item C<baserev>
  1199. From F<baserev.U>:
  1200. The base revision level of this package, from the F<.package> file.
  1201. =item C<bash>
  1202. From F<Loc.U>:
  1203. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  1204. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  1205. =item C<bin>
  1206. From F<bin.U>:
  1207. This variable holds the name of the directory in which the user wants
  1208. to put publicly executable images for the package in question. It
  1209. is most often a local directory such as F</usr/local/bin>. Programs using
  1210. this variable must be prepared to deal with F<~name> substitution.
  1211. =item C<bincompat5005>
  1212. From F<bincompat5005.U>:
  1213. This variable contains y if this version of Perl should be
  1214. binary-compatible with Perl 5.005.
  1215. =item C<binexp>
  1216. From F<bin.U>:
  1217. This is the same as the bin variable, but is filename expanded at
  1218. configuration time, for use in your makefiles.
  1219. =item C<bison>
  1220. From F<Loc.U>:
  1221. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  1222. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  1223. =item C<byacc>
  1224. From F<Loc.U>:
  1225. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  1226. full pathname (if any) of the byacc program. After Configure runs,
  1227. the value is reset to a plain C<byacc> and is not useful.
  1228. =item C<byteorder>
  1229. From F<byteorder.U>:
  1230. This variable holds the byte order. In the following, larger digits
  1231. indicate more significance. The variable byteorder is either 4321
  1232. on a big-endian machine, or 1234 on a little-endian, or 87654321
  1233. on a Cray ... or 3412 with weird order !
  1234. =back
  1235. =head2 c
  1236. =over
  1237. =item C<c>
  1238. From F<n.U>:
  1239. This variable contains the \c string if that is what causes the echo
  1240. command to suppress newline. Otherwise it is null. Correct usage is
  1241. $echo $n "prompt for a question: $c".
  1242. =item C<castflags>
  1243. From F<d_castneg.U>:
  1244. This variable contains a flag that precise difficulties the
  1245. compiler has casting odd floating values to unsigned long:
  1246. 0 = ok
  1247. 1 = couldn't cast < 0
  1248. 2 = couldn't cast >= 0x80000000
  1249. 4 = couldn't cast in argument expression list
  1250. =item C<cat>
  1251. From F<Loc.U>:
  1252. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  1253. full pathname (if any) of the cat program. After Configure runs,
  1254. the value is reset to a plain C<cat> and is not useful.
  1255. =item C<cc>
  1256. From F<cc.U>:
  1257. This variable holds the name of a command to execute a C compiler which
  1258. can resolve multiple global references that happen to have the same
  1259. name. Usual values are C<cc> and C<gcc>.
  1260. Fervent C<ANSI> compilers may be called C<c89>. C<AIX> has xlc.
  1261. =item C<cccdlflags>
  1262. From F<dlsrc.U>:
  1263. This variable contains any special flags that might need to be
  1264. passed with C<cc -c> to compile modules to be used to create a shared
  1265. library that will be used for dynamic loading. For hpux, this
  1266. should be +z. It is up to the makefile to use it.
  1267. =item C<ccdlflags>
  1268. From F<dlsrc.U>:
  1269. This variable contains any special flags that might need to be
  1270. passed to cc to link with a shared library for dynamic loading.
  1271. It is up to the makefile to use it. For sunos 4.1, it should
  1272. be empty.
  1273. =item C<ccflags>
  1274. From F<ccflags.U>:
  1275. This variable contains any additional C compiler flags desired by
  1276. the user. It is up to the Makefile to use this.
  1277. =item C<ccflags_uselargefiles>
  1278. From F<uselfs.U>:
  1279. This variable contains the compiler flags needed by large file builds
  1280. and added to ccflags by hints files.
  1281. =item C<ccname>
  1282. From F<Checkcc.U>:
  1283. This can set either by hints files or by Configure. If using
  1284. gcc, this is gcc, and if not, usually equal to cc, unimpressive, no?
  1285. Some platforms, however, make good use of this by storing the
  1286. flavor of the C compiler being used here. For example if using
  1287. the Sun WorkShop suite, ccname will be C<workshop>.
  1288. =item C<ccsymbols>
  1289. From F<Cppsym.U>:
  1290. The variable contains the symbols defined by the C compiler alone.
  1291. The symbols defined by cpp or by cc when it calls cpp are not in
  1292. this list, see cppsymbols and cppccsymbols.
  1293. The list is a space-separated list of symbol=value tokens.
  1294. =item C<ccversion>
  1295. From F<Checkcc.U>:
  1296. This can set either by hints files or by Configure. If using
  1297. a (non-gcc) vendor cc, this variable may contain a version for
  1298. the compiler.
  1299. =item C<cf_by>
  1300. From F<cf_who.U>:
  1301. Login name of the person who ran the Configure script and answered the
  1302. questions. This is used to tag both F<config.sh> and F<config_h.SH>.
  1303. =item C<cf_email>
  1304. From F<cf_email.U>:
  1305. Electronic mail address of the person who ran Configure. This can be
  1306. used by units that require the user's e-mail, like F<MailList.U>.
  1307. =item C<cf_time>
  1308. From F<cf_who.U>:
  1309. Holds the output of the C<date> command when the configuration file was
  1310. produced. This is used to tag both F<config.sh> and F<config_h.SH>.
  1311. =item C<charsize>
  1312. From F<charsize.U>:
  1313. This variable contains the value of the C<CHARSIZE> symbol, which
  1314. indicates to the C program how many bytes there are in a character.
  1315. =item C<chgrp>
  1316. From F<Loc.U>:
  1317. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  1318. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  1319. =item C<chmod>
  1320. From F<Loc.U>:
  1321. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  1322. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  1323. =item C<chown>
  1324. From F<Loc.U>:
  1325. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  1326. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  1327. =item C<clocktype>
  1328. From F<d_times.U>:
  1329. This variable holds the type returned by times(). It can be long,
  1330. or clock_t on C<BSD> sites (in which case <sys/types.h> should be
  1331. included).
  1332. =item C<comm>
  1333. From F<Loc.U>:
  1334. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  1335. full pathname (if any) of the comm program. After Configure runs,
  1336. the value is reset to a plain C<comm> and is not useful.
  1337. =item C<compress>
  1338. From F<Loc.U>:
  1339. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  1340. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  1341. =back
  1342. =head2 C
  1343. =over
  1344. =item C<CONFIGDOTSH>
  1345. From F<Oldsyms.U>:
  1346. This is set to C<true> in F<config.sh> so that a shell script
  1347. sourcing F<config.sh> can tell if it has been sourced already.
  1348. =item C<contains>
  1349. From F<contains.U>:
  1350. This variable holds the command to do a grep with a proper return
  1351. status. On most sane systems it is simply C<grep>. On insane systems
  1352. it is a grep followed by a cat followed by a test. This variable
  1353. is primarily for the use of other Configure units.
  1354. =item C<cp>
  1355. From F<Loc.U>:
  1356. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  1357. full pathname (if any) of the cp program. After Configure runs,
  1358. the value is reset to a plain C<cp> and is not useful.
  1359. =item C<cpio>
  1360. From F<Loc.U>:
  1361. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  1362. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  1363. =item C<cpp>
  1364. From F<Loc.U>:
  1365. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  1366. full pathname (if any) of the cpp program. After Configure runs,
  1367. the value is reset to a plain C<cpp> and is not useful.
  1368. =item C<cpp_stuff>
  1369. From F<cpp_stuff.U>:
  1370. This variable contains an identification of the catenation mechanism
  1371. used by the C preprocessor.
  1372. =item C<cppccsymbols>
  1373. From F<Cppsym.U>:
  1374. The variable contains the symbols defined by the C compiler
  1375. when it calls cpp. The symbols defined by the cc alone or cpp
  1376. alone are not in this list, see ccsymbols and cppsymbols.
  1377. The list is a space-separated list of symbol=value tokens.
  1378. =item C<cppflags>
  1379. From F<ccflags.U>:
  1380. This variable holds the flags that will be passed to the C pre-
  1381. processor. It is up to the Makefile to use it.
  1382. =item C<cpplast>
  1383. From F<cppstdin.U>:
  1384. This variable has the same functionality as cppminus, only it applies
  1385. to cpprun and not cppstdin.
  1386. =item C<cppminus>
  1387. From F<cppstdin.U>:
  1388. This variable contains the second part of the string which will invoke
  1389. the C preprocessor on the standard input and produce to standard
  1390. output. This variable will have the value C<-> if cppstdin needs
  1391. a minus to specify standard input, otherwise the value is "".
  1392. =item C<cpprun>
  1393. From F<cppstdin.U>:
  1394. This variable contains the command which will invoke a C preprocessor
  1395. on standard input and put the output to stdout. It is guaranteed not
  1396. to be a wrapper and may be a null string if no preprocessor can be
  1397. made directly available. This preprocessor might be different from the
  1398. one used by the C compiler. Don't forget to append cpplast after the
  1399. preprocessor options.
  1400. =item C<cppstdin>
  1401. From F<cppstdin.U>:
  1402. This variable contains the command which will invoke the C
  1403. preprocessor on standard input and put the output to stdout.
  1404. It is primarily used by other Configure units that ask about
  1405. preprocessor symbols.
  1406. =item C<cppsymbols>
  1407. From F<Cppsym.U>:
  1408. The variable contains the symbols defined by the C preprocessor
  1409. alone. The symbols defined by cc or by cc when it calls cpp are
  1410. not in this list, see ccsymbols and cppccsymbols.
  1411. The list is a space-separated list of symbol=value tokens.
  1412. =item C<crosscompile>
  1413. From F<crosscompile.U>:
  1414. This variable conditionally defines the C<CROSSCOMPILE> symbol
  1415. which signifies that the build process is be a cross-compilation.
  1416. This is normally set by hints files or from Configure command line.
  1417. =item C<cryptlib>
  1418. From F<d_crypt.U>:
  1419. This variable holds -lcrypt or the path to a F<libcrypt.a> archive if
  1420. the crypt() function is not defined in the standard C library. It is
  1421. up to the Makefile to use this.
  1422. =item C<csh>
  1423. From F<Loc.U>:
  1424. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  1425. full pathname (if any) of the csh program. After Configure runs,
  1426. the value is reset to a plain C<csh> and is not useful.
  1427. =back
  1428. =head2 d
  1429. =over
  1430. =item C<d__fwalk>
  1431. From F<d__fwalk.U>:
  1432. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS__FWALK> if _fwalk() is
  1433. available to apply a function to all the file handles.
  1434. =item C<d_access>
  1435. From F<d_access.U>:
  1436. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_ACCESS> if the access() system
  1437. call is available to check for access permissions using real IDs.
  1438. =item C<d_accessx>
  1439. From F<d_accessx.U>:
  1440. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ACCESSX> symbol, which
  1441. indicates to the C program that the accessx() routine is available.
  1442. =item C<d_alarm>
  1443. From F<d_alarm.U>:
  1444. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ALARM> symbol, which
  1445. indicates to the C program that the alarm() routine is available.
  1446. =item C<d_archlib>
  1447. From F<archlib.U>:
  1448. This variable conditionally defines C<ARCHLIB> to hold the pathname
  1449. of architecture-dependent library files for $package. If
  1450. $archlib is the same as $privlib, then this is set to undef.
  1451. =item C<d_atolf>
  1452. From F<atolf.U>:
  1453. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ATOLF> symbol, which
  1454. indicates to the C program that the atolf() routine is available.
  1455. =item C<d_atoll>
  1456. From F<atoll.U>:
  1457. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ATOLL> symbol, which
  1458. indicates to the C program that the atoll() routine is available.
  1459. =item C<d_attribut>
  1460. From F<d_attribut.U>:
  1461. This variable conditionally defines C<HASATTRIBUTE>, which
  1462. indicates the C compiler can check for function attributes,
  1463. such as printf formats.
  1464. =item C<d_bcmp>
  1465. From F<d_bcmp.U>:
  1466. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_BCMP> symbol if
  1467. the bcmp() routine is available to compare strings.
  1468. =item C<d_bcopy>
  1469. From F<d_bcopy.U>:
  1470. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_BCOPY> symbol if
  1471. the bcopy() routine is available to copy strings.
  1472. =item C<d_bincompat5005>
  1473. From F<bincompat5005.U>:
  1474. This variable conditionally defines BINCOMPAT5005 so that F<embed.h>
  1475. can take special action if this version of Perl should be
  1476. binary-compatible with Perl 5.005. This is impossible for builds
  1477. that use features like threads and multiplicity it is always $undef
  1478. for those versions.
  1479. =item C<d_bsd>
  1480. From F<Guess.U>:
  1481. This symbol conditionally defines the symbol C<BSD> when running on a
  1482. C<BSD> system.
  1483. =item C<d_bsdgetpgrp>
  1484. From F<d_getpgrp.U>:
  1485. This variable conditionally defines C<USE_BSD_GETPGRP> if
  1486. getpgrp needs one arguments whereas C<USG> one needs none.
  1487. =item C<d_bsdsetpgrp>
  1488. From F<d_setpgrp.U>:
  1489. This variable conditionally defines C<USE_BSD_SETPGRP> if
  1490. setpgrp needs two arguments whereas C<USG> one needs none.
  1491. See also d_setpgid for a C<POSIX> interface.
  1492. =item C<d_bzero>
  1493. From F<d_bzero.U>:
  1494. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_BZERO> symbol if
  1495. the bzero() routine is available to set memory to 0.
  1496. =item C<d_casti32>
  1497. From F<d_casti32.U>:
  1498. This variable conditionally defines CASTI32, which indicates
  1499. whether the C compiler can cast large floats to 32-bit ints.
  1500. =item C<d_castneg>
  1501. From F<d_castneg.U>:
  1502. This variable conditionally defines C<CASTNEG>, which indicates
  1503. wether the C compiler can cast negative float to unsigned.
  1504. =item C<d_charvspr>
  1505. From F<d_vprintf.U>:
  1506. This variable conditionally defines C<CHARVSPRINTF> if this system
  1507. has vsprintf returning type (char*). The trend seems to be to
  1508. declare it as "int vsprintf()".
  1509. =item C<d_chown>
  1510. From F<d_chown.U>:
  1511. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_CHOWN> symbol, which
  1512. indicates to the C program that the chown() routine is available.
  1513. =item C<d_chroot>
  1514. From F<d_chroot.U>:
  1515. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_CHROOT> symbol, which
  1516. indicates to the C program that the chroot() routine is available.
  1517. =item C<d_chsize>
  1518. From F<d_chsize.U>:
  1519. This variable conditionally defines the C<CHSIZE> symbol, which
  1520. indicates to the C program that the chsize() routine is available
  1521. to truncate files. You might need a -lx to get this routine.
  1522. =item C<d_closedir>
  1523. From F<d_closedir.U>:
  1524. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_CLOSEDIR> if closedir() is
  1525. available.
  1526. =item C<d_const>
  1527. From F<d_const.U>:
  1528. This variable conditionally defines the C<HASCONST> symbol, which
  1529. indicates to the C program that this C compiler knows about the
  1530. const type.
  1531. =item C<d_crypt>
  1532. From F<d_crypt.U>:
  1533. This variable conditionally defines the C<CRYPT> symbol, which
  1534. indicates to the C program that the crypt() routine is available
  1535. to encrypt passwords and the like.
  1536. =item C<d_csh>
  1537. From F<d_csh.U>:
  1538. This variable conditionally defines the C<CSH> symbol, which
  1539. indicates to the C program that the C-shell exists.
  1540. =item C<d_cuserid>
  1541. From F<d_cuserid.U>:
  1542. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_CUSERID> symbol, which
  1543. indicates to the C program that the cuserid() routine is available
  1544. to get character login names.
  1545. =item C<d_dbl_dig>
  1546. From F<d_dbl_dig.U>:
  1547. This variable conditionally defines d_dbl_dig if this system's
  1548. header files provide C<DBL_DIG>, which is the number of significant
  1549. digits in a double precision number.
  1550. =item C<d_difftime>
  1551. From F<d_difftime.U>:
  1552. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_DIFFTIME> symbol, which
  1553. indicates to the C program that the difftime() routine is available.
  1554. =item C<d_dirnamlen>
  1555. From F<i_dirent.U>:
  1556. This variable conditionally defines C<DIRNAMLEN>, which indicates
  1557. to the C program that the length of directory entry names is
  1558. provided by a d_namelen field.
  1559. =item C<d_dlerror>
  1560. From F<d_dlerror.U>:
  1561. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_DLERROR> symbol, which
  1562. indicates to the C program that the dlerror() routine is available.
  1563. =item C<d_dlopen>
  1564. From F<d_dlopen.U>:
  1565. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_DLOPEN> symbol, which
  1566. indicates to the C program that the dlopen() routine is available.
  1567. =item C<d_dlsymun>
  1568. From F<d_dlsymun.U>:
  1569. This variable conditionally defines C<DLSYM_NEEDS_UNDERSCORE>, which
  1570. indicates that we need to prepend an underscore to the symbol
  1571. name before calling dlsym().
  1572. =item C<d_dosuid>
  1573. From F<d_dosuid.U>:
  1574. This variable conditionally defines the symbol C<DOSUID>, which
  1575. tells the C program that it should insert setuid emulation code
  1576. on hosts which have setuid #! scripts disabled.
  1577. =item C<d_drand48proto>
  1578. From F<d_drand48proto.U>:
  1579. This variable conditionally defines the HAS_DRAND48_PROTO symbol,
  1580. which indicates to the C program that the system provides
  1581. a prototype for the drand48() function. Otherwise, it is
  1582. up to the program to supply one.
  1583. =item C<d_dup2>
  1584. From F<d_dup2.U>:
  1585. This variable conditionally defines HAS_DUP2 if dup2() is
  1586. available to duplicate file descriptors.
  1587. =item C<d_eaccess>
  1588. From F<d_eaccess.U>:
  1589. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_EACCESS> symbol, which
  1590. indicates to the C program that the eaccess() routine is available.
  1591. =item C<d_endgrent>
  1592. From F<d_endgrent.U>:
  1593. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ENDGRENT> symbol, which
  1594. indicates to the C program that the endgrent() routine is available
  1595. for sequential access of the group database.
  1596. =item C<d_endhent>
  1597. From F<d_endhent.U>:
  1598. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_ENDHOSTENT> if endhostent() is
  1599. available to close whatever was being used for host queries.
  1600. =item C<d_endnent>
  1601. From F<d_endnent.U>:
  1602. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_ENDNETENT> if endnetent() is
  1603. available to close whatever was being used for network queries.
  1604. =item C<d_endpent>
  1605. From F<d_endpent.U>:
  1606. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_ENDPROTOENT> if endprotoent() is
  1607. available to close whatever was being used for protocol queries.
  1608. =item C<d_endpwent>
  1609. From F<d_endpwent.U>:
  1610. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ENDPWENT> symbol, which
  1611. indicates to the C program that the endpwent() routine is available
  1612. for sequential access of the passwd database.
  1613. =item C<d_endsent>
  1614. From F<d_endsent.U>:
  1615. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_ENDSERVENT> if endservent() is
  1616. available to close whatever was being used for service queries.
  1617. =item C<d_eofnblk>
  1618. From F<nblock_io.U>:
  1619. This variable conditionally defines C<EOF_NONBLOCK> if C<EOF> can be seen
  1620. when reading from a non-blocking F<I/O> source.
  1621. =item C<d_eunice>
  1622. From F<Guess.U>:
  1623. This variable conditionally defines the symbols C<EUNICE> and C<VAX>, which
  1624. alerts the C program that it must deal with ideosyncracies of C<VMS>.
  1625. =item C<d_fchmod>
  1626. From F<d_fchmod.U>:
  1627. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FCHMOD> symbol, which
  1628. indicates to the C program that the fchmod() routine is available
  1629. to change mode of opened files.
  1630. =item C<d_fchown>
  1631. From F<d_fchown.U>:
  1632. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FCHOWN> symbol, which
  1633. indicates to the C program that the fchown() routine is available
  1634. to change ownership of opened files.
  1635. =item C<d_fcntl>
  1636. From F<d_fcntl.U>:
  1637. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FCNTL> symbol, and indicates
  1638. whether the fcntl() function exists
  1639. =item C<d_fcntl_can_lock>
  1640. From F<d_fcntl_can_lock.U>:
  1641. This variable conditionally defines the C<FCNTL_CAN_LOCK> symbol
  1642. and indicates whether file locking with fcntl() works.
  1643. =item C<d_fd_macros>
  1644. From F<d_fd_set.U>:
  1645. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<HAS_FD_MACROS> symbol,
  1646. which indicates if your C compiler knows about the macros which
  1647. manipulate an fd_set.
  1648. =item C<d_fd_set>
  1649. From F<d_fd_set.U>:
  1650. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<HAS_FD_SET> symbol,
  1651. which indicates if your C compiler knows about the fd_set typedef.
  1652. =item C<d_fds_bits>
  1653. From F<d_fd_set.U>:
  1654. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<HAS_FDS_BITS> symbol,
  1655. which indicates if your fd_set typedef contains the fds_bits member.
  1656. If you have an fd_set typedef, but the dweebs who installed it did
  1657. a half-fast job and neglected to provide the macros to manipulate
  1658. an fd_set, C<HAS_FDS_BITS> will let us know how to fix the gaffe.
  1659. =item C<d_fgetpos>
  1660. From F<d_fgetpos.U>:
  1661. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_FGETPOS> if fgetpos() is
  1662. available to get the file position indicator.
  1663. =item C<d_flexfnam>
  1664. From F<d_flexfnam.U>:
  1665. This variable conditionally defines the C<FLEXFILENAMES> symbol, which
  1666. indicates that the system supports filenames longer than 14 characters.
  1667. =item C<d_flock>
  1668. From F<d_flock.U>:
  1669. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_FLOCK> if flock() is
  1670. available to do file locking.
  1671. =item C<d_fork>
  1672. From F<d_fork.U>:
  1673. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FORK> symbol, which
  1674. indicates to the C program that the fork() routine is available.
  1675. =item C<d_fpathconf>
  1676. From F<d_pathconf.U>:
  1677. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FPATHCONF> symbol, which
  1678. indicates to the C program that the pathconf() routine is available
  1679. to determine file-system related limits and options associated
  1680. with a given open file descriptor.
  1681. =item C<d_fpos64_t>
  1682. From F<d_fpos64_t.U>:
  1683. This symbol will be defined if the C compiler supports fpos64_t.
  1684. =item C<d_frexpl>
  1685. From F<d_frexpl.U>:
  1686. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FREXPL> symbol, which
  1687. indicates to the C program that the frexpl() routine is available.
  1688. =item C<d_fs_data_s>
  1689. From F<d_fs_data_s.U>:
  1690. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRUCT_FS_DATA> symbol,
  1691. which indicates that the struct fs_data is supported.
  1692. =item C<d_fseeko>
  1693. From F<d_fseeko.U>:
  1694. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FSEEKO> symbol, which
  1695. indicates to the C program that the fseeko() routine is available.
  1696. =item C<d_fsetpos>
  1697. From F<d_fsetpos.U>:
  1698. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_FSETPOS> if fsetpos() is
  1699. available to set the file position indicator.
  1700. =item C<d_fstatfs>
  1701. From F<d_fstatfs.U>:
  1702. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FSTATFS> symbol, which
  1703. indicates to the C program that the fstatfs() routine is available.
  1704. =item C<d_fstatvfs>
  1705. From F<d_statvfs.U>:
  1706. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FSTATVFS> symbol, which
  1707. indicates to the C program that the fstatvfs() routine is available.
  1708. =item C<d_fsync>
  1709. From F<d_fsync.U>:
  1710. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FSYNC> symbol, which
  1711. indicates to the C program that the fsync() routine is available.
  1712. =item C<d_ftello>
  1713. From F<d_ftello.U>:
  1714. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FTELLO> symbol, which
  1715. indicates to the C program that the ftello() routine is available.
  1716. =item C<d_ftime>
  1717. From F<d_ftime.U>:
  1718. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_FTIME> symbol, which indicates
  1719. that the ftime() routine exists. The ftime() routine is basically
  1720. a sub-second accuracy clock.
  1721. =item C<d_Gconvert>
  1722. From F<d_gconvert.U>:
  1723. This variable holds what Gconvert is defined as to convert
  1724. floating point numbers into strings. It could be C<gconvert>
  1725. or a more C<complex> macro emulating gconvert with gcvt() or sprintf.
  1726. Possible values are:
  1727. d_Gconvert=C<gconvert((x),(n),(t),(b))>
  1728. d_Gconvert=C<gcvt((x),(n),(b))>
  1729. d_Gconvert=C<sprintf((b),F<%F<.>*g>,(n),(x))>
  1730. =item C<d_getcwd>
  1731. From F<d_getcwd.U>:
  1732. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETCWD> symbol, which
  1733. indicates to the C program that the getcwd() routine is available
  1734. to get the current working directory.
  1735. =item C<d_getespwnam>
  1736. From F<d_getespwnam.U>:
  1737. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETESPWNAM> if getespwnam() is
  1738. available to retrieve enchanced (shadow) password entries by name.
  1739. =item C<d_getfsstat>
  1740. From F<d_getfsstat.U>:
  1741. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETFSSTAT> symbol, which
  1742. indicates to the C program that the getfsstat() routine is available.
  1743. =item C<d_getgrent>
  1744. From F<d_getgrent.U>:
  1745. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETGRENT> symbol, which
  1746. indicates to the C program that the getgrent() routine is available
  1747. for sequential access of the group database.
  1748. =item C<d_getgrps>
  1749. From F<d_getgrps.U>:
  1750. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETGROUPS> symbol, which
  1751. indicates to the C program that the getgroups() routine is available
  1752. to get the list of process groups.
  1753. =item C<d_gethbyaddr>
  1754. From F<d_gethbyad.U>:
  1755. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETHOSTBYADDR> symbol, which
  1756. indicates to the C program that the gethostbyaddr() routine is available
  1757. to look up hosts by their C<IP> addresses.
  1758. =item C<d_gethbyname>
  1759. From F<d_gethbynm.U>:
  1760. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETHOSTBYNAME> symbol, which
  1761. indicates to the C program that the gethostbyname() routine is available
  1762. to look up host names in some data base or other.
  1763. =item C<d_gethent>
  1764. From F<d_gethent.U>:
  1765. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETHOSTENT> if gethostent() is
  1766. available to look up host names in some data base or another.
  1767. =item C<d_gethname>
  1768. From F<d_gethname.U>:
  1769. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETHOSTNAME> symbol, which
  1770. indicates to the C program that the gethostname() routine may be
  1771. used to derive the host name.
  1772. =item C<d_gethostprotos>
  1773. From F<d_gethostprotos.U>:
  1774. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETHOST_PROTOS> symbol,
  1775. which indicates to the C program that <netdb.h> supplies
  1776. prototypes for the various gethost*() functions.
  1777. See also F<netdbtype.U> for probing for various netdb types.
  1778. =item C<d_getlogin>
  1779. From F<d_getlogin.U>:
  1780. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETLOGIN> symbol, which
  1781. indicates to the C program that the getlogin() routine is available
  1782. to get the login name.
  1783. =item C<d_getmnt>
  1784. From F<d_getmnt.U>:
  1785. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETMNT> symbol, which
  1786. indicates to the C program that the getmnt() routine is available
  1787. to retrieve one or more mount info blocks by filename.
  1788. =item C<d_getmntent>
  1789. From F<d_getmntent.U>:
  1790. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETMNTENT> symbol, which
  1791. indicates to the C program that the getmntent() routine is available
  1792. to iterate through mounted files to get their mount info.
  1793. =item C<d_getnbyaddr>
  1794. From F<d_getnbyad.U>:
  1795. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETNETBYADDR> symbol, which
  1796. indicates to the C program that the getnetbyaddr() routine is available
  1797. to look up networks by their C<IP> addresses.
  1798. =item C<d_getnbyname>
  1799. From F<d_getnbynm.U>:
  1800. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETNETBYNAME> symbol, which
  1801. indicates to the C program that the getnetbyname() routine is available
  1802. to look up networks by their names.
  1803. =item C<d_getnent>
  1804. From F<d_getnent.U>:
  1805. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETNETENT> if getnetent() is
  1806. available to look up network names in some data base or another.
  1807. =item C<d_getnetprotos>
  1808. From F<d_getnetprotos.U>:
  1809. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETNET_PROTOS> symbol,
  1810. which indicates to the C program that <netdb.h> supplies
  1811. prototypes for the various getnet*() functions.
  1812. See also F<netdbtype.U> for probing for various netdb types.
  1813. =item C<d_getpagsz>
  1814. From F<d_getpagsz.U>:
  1815. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETPAGESIZE> if getpagesize()
  1816. is available to get the system page size.
  1817. =item C<d_getpbyname>
  1818. From F<d_getprotby.U>:
  1819. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETPROTOBYNAME>
  1820. symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
  1821. getprotobyname() routine is available to look up protocols
  1822. by their name.
  1823. =item C<d_getpbynumber>
  1824. From F<d_getprotby.U>:
  1825. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETPROTOBYNUMBER>
  1826. symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
  1827. getprotobynumber() routine is available to look up protocols
  1828. by their number.
  1829. =item C<d_getpent>
  1830. From F<d_getpent.U>:
  1831. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETPROTOENT> if getprotoent() is
  1832. available to look up protocols in some data base or another.
  1833. =item C<d_getpgid>
  1834. From F<d_getpgid.U>:
  1835. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETPGID> symbol, which
  1836. indicates to the C program that the getpgid(pid) function
  1837. is available to get the process group id.
  1838. =item C<d_getpgrp2>
  1839. From F<d_getpgrp2.U>:
  1840. This variable conditionally defines the HAS_GETPGRP2 symbol, which
  1841. indicates to the C program that the getpgrp2() (as in F<DG/C<UX>>) routine
  1842. is available to get the current process group.
  1843. =item C<d_getpgrp>
  1844. From F<d_getpgrp.U>:
  1845. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETPGRP> if getpgrp() is
  1846. available to get the current process group.
  1847. =item C<d_getppid>
  1848. From F<d_getppid.U>:
  1849. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETPPID> symbol, which
  1850. indicates to the C program that the getppid() routine is available
  1851. to get the parent process C<ID>.
  1852. =item C<d_getprior>
  1853. From F<d_getprior.U>:
  1854. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETPRIORITY> if getpriority()
  1855. is available to get a process's priority.
  1856. =item C<d_getprotoprotos>
  1857. From F<d_getprotoprotos.U>:
  1858. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETPROTO_PROTOS> symbol,
  1859. which indicates to the C program that <netdb.h> supplies
  1860. prototypes for the various getproto*() functions.
  1861. See also F<netdbtype.U> for probing for various netdb types.
  1862. =item C<d_getprpwnam>
  1863. From F<d_getprpwnam.U>:
  1864. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETPRPWNAM> if getprpwnam() is
  1865. available to retrieve protected (shadow) password entries by name.
  1866. =item C<d_getpwent>
  1867. From F<d_getpwent.U>:
  1868. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETPWENT> symbol, which
  1869. indicates to the C program that the getpwent() routine is available
  1870. for sequential access of the passwd database.
  1871. =item C<d_getsbyname>
  1872. From F<d_getsrvby.U>:
  1873. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETSERVBYNAME>
  1874. symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
  1875. getservbyname() routine is available to look up services
  1876. by their name.
  1877. =item C<d_getsbyport>
  1878. From F<d_getsrvby.U>:
  1879. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETSERVBYPORT>
  1880. symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
  1881. getservbyport() routine is available to look up services
  1882. by their port.
  1883. =item C<d_getsent>
  1884. From F<d_getsent.U>:
  1885. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETSERVENT> if getservent() is
  1886. available to look up network services in some data base or another.
  1887. =item C<d_getservprotos>
  1888. From F<d_getservprotos.U>:
  1889. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETSERV_PROTOS> symbol,
  1890. which indicates to the C program that <netdb.h> supplies
  1891. prototypes for the various getserv*() functions.
  1892. See also F<netdbtype.U> for probing for various netdb types.
  1893. =item C<d_getspnam>
  1894. From F<d_getspnam.U>:
  1895. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_GETSPNAM> if getspnam() is
  1896. available to retrieve SysV shadow password entries by name.
  1897. =item C<d_gettimeod>
  1898. From F<d_ftime.U>:
  1899. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_GETTIMEOFDAY> symbol, which
  1900. indicates that the gettimeofday() system call exists (to obtain a
  1901. sub-second accuracy clock). You should probably include <sys/resource.h>.
  1902. =item C<d_gnulibc>
  1903. From F<d_gnulibc.U>:
  1904. Defined if we're dealing with the C<GNU> C Library.
  1905. =item C<d_grpasswd>
  1906. From F<i_grp.U>:
  1907. This variable conditionally defines C<GRPASSWD>, which indicates
  1908. that struct group in <grp.h> contains gr_passwd.
  1909. =item C<d_hasmntopt>
  1910. From F<d_hasmntopt.U>:
  1911. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_HASMNTOPT> symbol, which
  1912. indicates to the C program that the hasmntopt() routine is available
  1913. to query the mount options of file systems.
  1914. =item C<d_htonl>
  1915. From F<d_htonl.U>:
  1916. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_HTONL> if htonl() and its
  1917. friends are available to do network order byte swapping.
  1918. =item C<d_iconv>
  1919. From F<d_iconv.U>:
  1920. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ICONV> symbol, which
  1921. indicates to the C program that the iconv() routine is available.
  1922. =item C<d_index>
  1923. From F<d_strchr.U>:
  1924. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_INDEX> if index() and
  1925. rindex() are available for string searching.
  1926. =item C<d_inetaton>
  1927. From F<d_inetaton.U>:
  1928. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_INET_ATON> symbol, which
  1929. indicates to the C program that the inet_aton() function is available
  1930. to parse C<IP> address C<dotted-quad> strings.
  1931. =item C<d_int64_t>
  1932. From F<d_int64_t.U>:
  1933. This symbol will be defined if the C compiler supports int64_t.
  1934. =item C<d_isascii>
  1935. From F<d_isascii.U>:
  1936. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ISASCII> constant,
  1937. which indicates to the C program that isascii() is available.
  1938. =item C<d_isnan>
  1939. From F<d_isnan.U>:
  1940. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ISNAN> symbol, which
  1941. indicates to the C program that the isnan() routine is available.
  1942. =item C<d_isnanl>
  1943. From F<d_isnanl.U>:
  1944. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_ISNANL> symbol, which
  1945. indicates to the C program that the isnanl() routine is available.
  1946. =item C<d_killpg>
  1947. From F<d_killpg.U>:
  1948. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_KILLPG> symbol, which
  1949. indicates to the C program that the killpg() routine is available
  1950. to kill process groups.
  1951. =item C<d_lchown>
  1952. From F<d_lchown.U>:
  1953. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_LCHOWN> symbol, which
  1954. indicates to the C program that the lchown() routine is available
  1955. to operate on a symbolic link (instead of following the link).
  1956. =item C<d_ldbl_dig>
  1957. From F<d_ldbl_dig.U>:
  1958. This variable conditionally defines d_ldbl_dig if this system's
  1959. header files provide C<LDBL_DIG>, which is the number of significant
  1960. digits in a long double precision number.
  1961. =item C<d_link>
  1962. From F<d_link.U>:
  1963. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_LINK> if link() is
  1964. available to create hard links.
  1965. =item C<d_locconv>
  1966. From F<d_locconv.U>:
  1967. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_LOCALECONV> if localeconv() is
  1968. available for numeric and monetary formatting conventions.
  1969. =item C<d_lockf>
  1970. From F<d_lockf.U>:
  1971. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_LOCKF> if lockf() is
  1972. available to do file locking.
  1973. =item C<d_longdbl>
  1974. From F<d_longdbl.U>:
  1975. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_LONG_DOUBLE> if
  1976. the long double type is supported.
  1977. =item C<d_longlong>
  1978. From F<d_longlong.U>:
  1979. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_LONG_LONG> if
  1980. the long long type is supported.
  1981. =item C<d_lseekproto>
  1982. From F<d_lseekproto.U>:
  1983. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_LSEEK_PROTO> symbol,
  1984. which indicates to the C program that the system provides
  1985. a prototype for the lseek() function. Otherwise, it is
  1986. up to the program to supply one.
  1987. =item C<d_lstat>
  1988. From F<d_lstat.U>:
  1989. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_LSTAT> if lstat() is
  1990. available to do file stats on symbolic links.
  1991. =item C<d_madvise>
  1992. From F<d_madvise.U>:
  1993. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_MADVISE> if madvise() is
  1994. available to map a file into memory.
  1995. =item C<d_mblen>
  1996. From F<d_mblen.U>:
  1997. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MBLEN> symbol, which
  1998. indicates to the C program that the mblen() routine is available
  1999. to find the number of bytes in a multibye character.
  2000. =item C<d_mbstowcs>
  2001. From F<d_mbstowcs.U>:
  2002. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MBSTOWCS> symbol, which
  2003. indicates to the C program that the mbstowcs() routine is available
  2004. to convert a multibyte string into a wide character string.
  2005. =item C<d_mbtowc>
  2006. From F<d_mbtowc.U>:
  2007. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MBTOWC> symbol, which
  2008. indicates to the C program that the mbtowc() routine is available
  2009. to convert multibyte to a wide character.
  2010. =item C<d_memchr>
  2011. From F<d_memchr.U>:
  2012. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MEMCHR> symbol, which
  2013. indicates to the C program that the memchr() routine is available
  2014. to locate characters within a C string.
  2015. =item C<d_memcmp>
  2016. From F<d_memcmp.U>:
  2017. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MEMCMP> symbol, which
  2018. indicates to the C program that the memcmp() routine is available
  2019. to compare blocks of memory.
  2020. =item C<d_memcpy>
  2021. From F<d_memcpy.U>:
  2022. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MEMCPY> symbol, which
  2023. indicates to the C program that the memcpy() routine is available
  2024. to copy blocks of memory.
  2025. =item C<d_memmove>
  2026. From F<d_memmove.U>:
  2027. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MEMMOVE> symbol, which
  2028. indicates to the C program that the memmove() routine is available
  2029. to copy potentatially overlapping blocks of memory.
  2030. =item C<d_memset>
  2031. From F<d_memset.U>:
  2032. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MEMSET> symbol, which
  2033. indicates to the C program that the memset() routine is available
  2034. to set blocks of memory.
  2035. =item C<d_mkdir>
  2036. From F<d_mkdir.U>:
  2037. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MKDIR> symbol, which
  2038. indicates to the C program that the mkdir() routine is available
  2039. to create F<directories.>.
  2040. =item C<d_mkdtemp>
  2041. From F<d_mkdtemp.U>:
  2042. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MKDTEMP> symbol, which
  2043. indicates to the C program that the mkdtemp() routine is available
  2044. to exclusively create a uniquely named temporary directory.
  2045. =item C<d_mkfifo>
  2046. From F<d_mkfifo.U>:
  2047. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MKFIFO> symbol, which
  2048. indicates to the C program that the mkfifo() routine is available.
  2049. =item C<d_mkstemp>
  2050. From F<d_mkstemp.U>:
  2051. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MKSTEMP> symbol, which
  2052. indicates to the C program that the mkstemp() routine is available
  2053. to exclusively create and open a uniquely named temporary file.
  2054. =item C<d_mkstemps>
  2055. From F<d_mkstemps.U>:
  2056. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MKSTEMPS> symbol, which
  2057. indicates to the C program that the mkstemps() routine is available
  2058. to exclusively create and open a uniquely named (with a suffix)
  2059. temporary file.
  2060. =item C<d_mktime>
  2061. From F<d_mktime.U>:
  2062. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MKTIME> symbol, which
  2063. indicates to the C program that the mktime() routine is available.
  2064. =item C<d_mmap>
  2065. From F<d_mmap.U>:
  2066. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_MMAP> if mmap() is
  2067. available to map a file into memory.
  2068. =item C<d_modfl>
  2069. From F<d_modfl.U>:
  2070. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MODFL> symbol, which
  2071. indicates to the C program that the modfl() routine is available.
  2072. =item C<d_mprotect>
  2073. From F<d_mprotect.U>:
  2074. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_MPROTECT> if mprotect() is
  2075. available to modify the access protection of a memory mapped file.
  2076. =item C<d_msg>
  2077. From F<d_msg.U>:
  2078. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSG> symbol, which
  2079. indicates that the entire msg*(2) library is present.
  2080. =item C<d_msg_ctrunc>
  2081. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2082. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSG_CTRUNC> symbol,
  2083. which indicates that the C<MSG_CTRUNC> is available. #ifdef is
  2084. not enough because it may be an enum, glibc has been known to do this.
  2085. =item C<d_msg_dontroute>
  2086. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2087. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSG_DONTROUTE> symbol,
  2088. which indicates that the C<MSG_DONTROUTE> is available. #ifdef is
  2089. not enough because it may be an enum, glibc has been known to do this.
  2090. =item C<d_msg_oob>
  2091. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2092. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSG_OOB> symbol,
  2093. which indicates that the C<MSG_OOB> is available. #ifdef is
  2094. not enough because it may be an enum, glibc has been known to do this.
  2095. =item C<d_msg_peek>
  2096. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2097. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSG_PEEK> symbol,
  2098. which indicates that the C<MSG_PEEK> is available. #ifdef is
  2099. not enough because it may be an enum, glibc has been known to do this.
  2100. =item C<d_msg_proxy>
  2101. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2102. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSG_PROXY> symbol,
  2103. which indicates that the C<MSG_PROXY> is available. #ifdef is
  2104. not enough because it may be an enum, glibc has been known to do this.
  2105. =item C<d_msgctl>
  2106. From F<d_msgctl.U>:
  2107. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSGCTL> symbol, which
  2108. indicates to the C program that the msgctl() routine is available.
  2109. =item C<d_msgget>
  2110. From F<d_msgget.U>:
  2111. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSGGET> symbol, which
  2112. indicates to the C program that the msgget() routine is available.
  2113. =item C<d_msgrcv>
  2114. From F<d_msgrcv.U>:
  2115. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSGRCV> symbol, which
  2116. indicates to the C program that the msgrcv() routine is available.
  2117. =item C<d_msgsnd>
  2118. From F<d_msgsnd.U>:
  2119. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_MSGSND> symbol, which
  2120. indicates to the C program that the msgsnd() routine is available.
  2121. =item C<d_msync>
  2122. From F<d_msync.U>:
  2123. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_MSYNC> if msync() is
  2124. available to synchronize a mapped file.
  2125. =item C<d_munmap>
  2126. From F<d_munmap.U>:
  2127. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_MUNMAP> if munmap() is
  2128. available to unmap a region mapped by mmap().
  2129. =item C<d_mymalloc>
  2130. From F<mallocsrc.U>:
  2131. This variable conditionally defines C<MYMALLOC> in case other parts
  2132. of the source want to take special action if C<MYMALLOC> is used.
  2133. This may include different sorts of profiling or error detection.
  2134. =item C<d_nice>
  2135. From F<d_nice.U>:
  2136. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_NICE> symbol, which
  2137. indicates to the C program that the nice() routine is available.
  2138. =item C<d_nv_preserves_uv>
  2139. From F<perlxv.U>:
  2140. This variable indicates whether a variable of type nvtype
  2141. can preserve all the bits a variable of type uvtype.
  2142. =item C<d_nv_preserves_uv_bits>
  2143. From F<perlxv.U>:
  2144. This variable indicates how many of bits type uvtype
  2145. a variable nvtype can preserve.
  2146. =item C<d_off64_t>
  2147. From F<d_off64_t.U>:
  2148. This symbol will be defined if the C compiler supports off64_t.
  2149. =item C<d_old_pthread_create_joinable>
  2150. From F<d_pthrattrj.U>:
  2151. This variable conditionally defines pthread_create_joinable.
  2152. undef if F<pthread.h> defines C<PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE>.
  2153. =item C<d_oldpthreads>
  2154. From F<usethreads.U>:
  2155. This variable conditionally defines the C<OLD_PTHREADS_API> symbol,
  2156. and indicates that Perl should be built to use the old
  2157. draft C<POSIX> threads C<API>. This is only potentially meaningful if
  2158. usethreads is set.
  2159. =item C<d_oldsock>
  2160. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2161. This variable conditionally defines the C<OLDSOCKET> symbol, which
  2162. indicates that the C<BSD> socket interface is based on 4.1c and not 4.2.
  2163. =item C<d_open3>
  2164. From F<d_open3.U>:
  2165. This variable conditionally defines the HAS_OPEN3 manifest constant,
  2166. which indicates to the C program that the 3 argument version of
  2167. the open(2) function is available.
  2168. =item C<d_pathconf>
  2169. From F<d_pathconf.U>:
  2170. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_PATHCONF> symbol, which
  2171. indicates to the C program that the pathconf() routine is available
  2172. to determine file-system related limits and options associated
  2173. with a given filename.
  2174. =item C<d_pause>
  2175. From F<d_pause.U>:
  2176. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_PAUSE> symbol, which
  2177. indicates to the C program that the pause() routine is available
  2178. to suspend a process until a signal is received.
  2179. =item C<d_perl_otherlibdirs>
  2180. From F<otherlibdirs.U>:
  2181. This variable conditionally defines C<PERL_OTHERLIBDIRS>, which
  2182. contains a colon-separated set of paths for the perl binary to
  2183. include in @C<INC>. See also otherlibdirs.
  2184. =item C<d_phostname>
  2185. From F<d_gethname.U>:
  2186. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_PHOSTNAME> symbol, which
  2187. contains the shell command which, when fed to popen(), may be
  2188. used to derive the host name.
  2189. =item C<d_pipe>
  2190. From F<d_pipe.U>:
  2191. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_PIPE> symbol, which
  2192. indicates to the C program that the pipe() routine is available
  2193. to create an inter-process channel.
  2194. =item C<d_poll>
  2195. From F<d_poll.U>:
  2196. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_POLL> symbol, which
  2197. indicates to the C program that the poll() routine is available
  2198. to poll active file descriptors.
  2199. =item C<d_portable>
  2200. From F<d_portable.U>:
  2201. This variable conditionally defines the C<PORTABLE> symbol, which
  2202. indicates to the C program that it should not assume that it is
  2203. running on the machine it was compiled on.
  2204. =item C<d_PRId64>
  2205. From F<quadfio.U>:
  2206. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRId64 symbol, which
  2207. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print 64-bit decimal numbers.
  2208. =item C<d_PRIeldbl>
  2209. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  2210. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl symbol, which
  2211. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print long doubles.
  2212. =item C<d_PRIEUldbl>
  2213. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  2214. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl symbol, which
  2215. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print long doubles.
  2216. The C<U> in the name is to separate this from d_PRIeldbl so that even
  2217. case-blind systems can see the difference.
  2218. =item C<d_PRIfldbl>
  2219. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  2220. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl symbol, which
  2221. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print long doubles.
  2222. =item C<d_PRIFUldbl>
  2223. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  2224. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl symbol, which
  2225. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print long doubles.
  2226. The C<U> in the name is to separate this from d_PRIfldbl so that even
  2227. case-blind systems can see the difference.
  2228. =item C<d_PRIgldbl>
  2229. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  2230. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl symbol, which
  2231. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print long doubles.
  2232. =item C<d_PRIGUldbl>
  2233. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  2234. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl symbol, which
  2235. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print long doubles.
  2236. The C<U> in the name is to separate this from d_PRIgldbl so that even
  2237. case-blind systems can see the difference.
  2238. =item C<d_PRIi64>
  2239. From F<quadfio.U>:
  2240. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIi64 symbol, which
  2241. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print 64-bit decimal numbers.
  2242. =item C<d_PRIo64>
  2243. From F<quadfio.U>:
  2244. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIo64 symbol, which
  2245. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print 64-bit octal numbers.
  2246. =item C<d_PRIu64>
  2247. From F<quadfio.U>:
  2248. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIu64 symbol, which
  2249. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print 64-bit unsigned decimal
  2250. numbers.
  2251. =item C<d_PRIx64>
  2252. From F<quadfio.U>:
  2253. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIx64 symbol, which
  2254. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print 64-bit hexadecimal numbers.
  2255. =item C<d_PRIXU64>
  2256. From F<quadfio.U>:
  2257. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIXU64 symbol, which
  2258. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print 64-bit hExADECimAl numbers.
  2259. The C<U> in the name is to separate this from d_PRIx64 so that even
  2260. case-blind systems can see the difference.
  2261. =item C<d_pthread_yield>
  2262. From F<d_pthread_y.U>:
  2263. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_PTHREAD_YIELD>
  2264. symbol if the pthread_yield routine is available to yield
  2265. the execution of the current thread.
  2266. =item C<d_pwage>
  2267. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  2268. This variable conditionally defines C<PWAGE>, which indicates
  2269. that struct passwd contains pw_age.
  2270. =item C<d_pwchange>
  2271. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  2272. This variable conditionally defines C<PWCHANGE>, which indicates
  2273. that struct passwd contains pw_change.
  2274. =item C<d_pwclass>
  2275. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  2276. This variable conditionally defines C<PWCLASS>, which indicates
  2277. that struct passwd contains pw_class.
  2278. =item C<d_pwcomment>
  2279. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  2280. This variable conditionally defines C<PWCOMMENT>, which indicates
  2281. that struct passwd contains pw_comment.
  2282. =item C<d_pwexpire>
  2283. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  2284. This variable conditionally defines C<PWEXPIRE>, which indicates
  2285. that struct passwd contains pw_expire.
  2286. =item C<d_pwgecos>
  2287. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  2288. This variable conditionally defines C<PWGECOS>, which indicates
  2289. that struct passwd contains pw_gecos.
  2290. =item C<d_pwpasswd>
  2291. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  2292. This variable conditionally defines C<PWPASSWD>, which indicates
  2293. that struct passwd contains pw_passwd.
  2294. =item C<d_pwquota>
  2295. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  2296. This variable conditionally defines C<PWQUOTA>, which indicates
  2297. that struct passwd contains pw_quota.
  2298. =item C<d_qgcvt>
  2299. From F<d_qgcvt.U>:
  2300. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_QGCVT> symbol, which
  2301. indicates to the C program that the qgcvt() routine is available.
  2302. =item C<d_quad>
  2303. From F<quadtype.U>:
  2304. This variable, if defined, tells that there's a 64-bit integer type,
  2305. quadtype.
  2306. =item C<d_readdir>
  2307. From F<d_readdir.U>:
  2308. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_READDIR> if readdir() is
  2309. available to read directory entries.
  2310. =item C<d_readlink>
  2311. From F<d_readlink.U>:
  2312. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_READLINK> symbol, which
  2313. indicates to the C program that the readlink() routine is available
  2314. to read the value of a symbolic link.
  2315. =item C<d_rename>
  2316. From F<d_rename.U>:
  2317. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_RENAME> symbol, which
  2318. indicates to the C program that the rename() routine is available
  2319. to rename files.
  2320. =item C<d_rewinddir>
  2321. From F<d_readdir.U>:
  2322. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_REWINDDIR> if rewinddir() is
  2323. available.
  2324. =item C<d_rmdir>
  2325. From F<d_rmdir.U>:
  2326. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_RMDIR> if rmdir() is
  2327. available to remove directories.
  2328. =item C<d_safebcpy>
  2329. From F<d_safebcpy.U>:
  2330. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SAFE_BCOPY> symbol if
  2331. the bcopy() routine can do overlapping copies.
  2332. =item C<d_safemcpy>
  2333. From F<d_safemcpy.U>:
  2334. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SAFE_MEMCPY> symbol if
  2335. the memcpy() routine can do overlapping copies.
  2336. =item C<d_sanemcmp>
  2337. From F<d_sanemcmp.U>:
  2338. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SANE_MEMCMP> symbol if
  2339. the memcpy() routine is available and can be used to compare relative
  2340. magnitudes of chars with their high bits set.
  2341. =item C<d_sbrkproto>
  2342. From F<d_sbrkproto.U>:
  2343. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SBRK_PROTO> symbol,
  2344. which indicates to the C program that the system provides
  2345. a prototype for the sbrk() function. Otherwise, it is
  2346. up to the program to supply one.
  2347. =item C<d_sched_yield>
  2348. From F<d_pthread_y.U>:
  2349. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SCHED_YIELD>
  2350. symbol if the sched_yield routine is available to yield
  2351. the execution of the current thread.
  2352. =item C<d_scm_rights>
  2353. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2354. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SCM_RIGHTS> symbol,
  2355. which indicates that the C<SCM_RIGHTS> is available. #ifdef is
  2356. not enough because it may be an enum, glibc has been known to do this.
  2357. =item C<d_SCNfldbl>
  2358. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  2359. This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl symbol, which
  2360. indiciates that stdio has a symbol to scan long doubles.
  2361. =item C<d_seekdir>
  2362. From F<d_readdir.U>:
  2363. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SEEKDIR> if seekdir() is
  2364. available.
  2365. =item C<d_select>
  2366. From F<d_select.U>:
  2367. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SELECT> if select() is
  2368. available to select active file descriptors. A <sys/time.h>
  2369. inclusion may be necessary for the timeout field.
  2370. =item C<d_sem>
  2371. From F<d_sem.U>:
  2372. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SEM> symbol, which
  2373. indicates that the entire sem*(2) library is present.
  2374. =item C<d_semctl>
  2375. From F<d_semctl.U>:
  2376. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SEMCTL> symbol, which
  2377. indicates to the C program that the semctl() routine is available.
  2378. =item C<d_semctl_semid_ds>
  2379. From F<d_union_semun.U>:
  2380. This variable conditionally defines C<USE_SEMCTL_SEMID_DS>, which
  2381. indicates that struct semid_ds * is to be used for semctl C<IPC_STAT>.
  2382. =item C<d_semctl_semun>
  2383. From F<d_union_semun.U>:
  2384. This variable conditionally defines C<USE_SEMCTL_SEMUN>, which
  2385. indicates that union semun is to be used for semctl C<IPC_STAT>.
  2386. =item C<d_semget>
  2387. From F<d_semget.U>:
  2388. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SEMGET> symbol, which
  2389. indicates to the C program that the semget() routine is available.
  2390. =item C<d_semop>
  2391. From F<d_semop.U>:
  2392. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SEMOP> symbol, which
  2393. indicates to the C program that the semop() routine is available.
  2394. =item C<d_setegid>
  2395. From F<d_setegid.U>:
  2396. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETEGID> symbol, which
  2397. indicates to the C program that the setegid() routine is available
  2398. to change the effective gid of the current program.
  2399. =item C<d_seteuid>
  2400. From F<d_seteuid.U>:
  2401. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETEUID> symbol, which
  2402. indicates to the C program that the seteuid() routine is available
  2403. to change the effective uid of the current program.
  2404. =item C<d_setgrent>
  2405. From F<d_setgrent.U>:
  2406. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETGRENT> symbol, which
  2407. indicates to the C program that the setgrent() routine is available
  2408. for initializing sequential access to the group database.
  2409. =item C<d_setgrps>
  2410. From F<d_setgrps.U>:
  2411. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETGROUPS> symbol, which
  2412. indicates to the C program that the setgroups() routine is available
  2413. to set the list of process groups.
  2414. =item C<d_sethent>
  2415. From F<d_sethent.U>:
  2416. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETHOSTENT> if sethostent() is
  2417. available.
  2418. =item C<d_setlinebuf>
  2419. From F<d_setlnbuf.U>:
  2420. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETLINEBUF> symbol, which
  2421. indicates to the C program that the setlinebuf() routine is available
  2422. to change stderr or stdout from block-buffered or unbuffered to a
  2423. line-buffered mode.
  2424. =item C<d_setlocale>
  2425. From F<d_setlocale.U>:
  2426. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETLOCALE> if setlocale() is
  2427. available to handle locale-specific ctype implementations.
  2428. =item C<d_setnent>
  2429. From F<d_setnent.U>:
  2430. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETNETENT> if setnetent() is
  2431. available.
  2432. =item C<d_setpent>
  2433. From F<d_setpent.U>:
  2434. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETPROTOENT> if setprotoent() is
  2435. available.
  2436. =item C<d_setpgid>
  2437. From F<d_setpgid.U>:
  2438. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETPGID> symbol if the
  2439. setpgid(pid, gpid) function is available to set process group C<ID>.
  2440. =item C<d_setpgrp2>
  2441. From F<d_setpgrp2.U>:
  2442. This variable conditionally defines the HAS_SETPGRP2 symbol, which
  2443. indicates to the C program that the setpgrp2() (as in F<DG/C<UX>>) routine
  2444. is available to set the current process group.
  2445. =item C<d_setpgrp>
  2446. From F<d_setpgrp.U>:
  2447. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETPGRP> if setpgrp() is
  2448. available to set the current process group.
  2449. =item C<d_setprior>
  2450. From F<d_setprior.U>:
  2451. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETPRIORITY> if setpriority()
  2452. is available to set a process's priority.
  2453. =item C<d_setproctitle>
  2454. From F<d_setproctitle.U>:
  2455. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETPROCTITLE> symbol,
  2456. which indicates to the C program that the setproctitle() routine
  2457. is available.
  2458. =item C<d_setpwent>
  2459. From F<d_setpwent.U>:
  2460. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETPWENT> symbol, which
  2461. indicates to the C program that the setpwent() routine is available
  2462. for initializing sequential access to the passwd database.
  2463. =item C<d_setregid>
  2464. From F<d_setregid.U>:
  2465. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETREGID> if setregid() is
  2466. available to change the real and effective gid of the current
  2467. process.
  2468. =item C<d_setresgid>
  2469. From F<d_setregid.U>:
  2470. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETRESGID> if setresgid() is
  2471. available to change the real, effective and saved gid of the current
  2472. process.
  2473. =item C<d_setresuid>
  2474. From F<d_setreuid.U>:
  2475. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETREUID> if setresuid() is
  2476. available to change the real, effective and saved uid of the current
  2477. process.
  2478. =item C<d_setreuid>
  2479. From F<d_setreuid.U>:
  2480. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETREUID> if setreuid() is
  2481. available to change the real and effective uid of the current
  2482. process.
  2483. =item C<d_setrgid>
  2484. From F<d_setrgid.U>:
  2485. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETRGID> symbol, which
  2486. indicates to the C program that the setrgid() routine is available
  2487. to change the real gid of the current program.
  2488. =item C<d_setruid>
  2489. From F<d_setruid.U>:
  2490. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETRUID> symbol, which
  2491. indicates to the C program that the setruid() routine is available
  2492. to change the real uid of the current program.
  2493. =item C<d_setsent>
  2494. From F<d_setsent.U>:
  2495. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETSERVENT> if setservent() is
  2496. available.
  2497. =item C<d_setsid>
  2498. From F<d_setsid.U>:
  2499. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SETSID> if setsid() is
  2500. available to set the process group C<ID>.
  2501. =item C<d_setvbuf>
  2502. From F<d_setvbuf.U>:
  2503. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SETVBUF> symbol, which
  2504. indicates to the C program that the setvbuf() routine is available
  2505. to change buffering on an open stdio stream.
  2506. =item C<d_sfio>
  2507. From F<d_sfio.U>:
  2508. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_SFIO> symbol,
  2509. and indicates whether sfio is available (and should be used).
  2510. =item C<d_shm>
  2511. From F<d_shm.U>:
  2512. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SHM> symbol, which
  2513. indicates that the entire shm*(2) library is present.
  2514. =item C<d_shmat>
  2515. From F<d_shmat.U>:
  2516. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SHMAT> symbol, which
  2517. indicates to the C program that the shmat() routine is available.
  2518. =item C<d_shmatprototype>
  2519. From F<d_shmat.U>:
  2520. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SHMAT_PROTOTYPE>
  2521. symbol, which indicates that F<sys/shm.h> has a prototype for
  2522. shmat.
  2523. =item C<d_shmctl>
  2524. From F<d_shmctl.U>:
  2525. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SHMCTL> symbol, which
  2526. indicates to the C program that the shmctl() routine is available.
  2527. =item C<d_shmdt>
  2528. From F<d_shmdt.U>:
  2529. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SHMDT> symbol, which
  2530. indicates to the C program that the shmdt() routine is available.
  2531. =item C<d_shmget>
  2532. From F<d_shmget.U>:
  2533. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SHMGET> symbol, which
  2534. indicates to the C program that the shmget() routine is available.
  2535. =item C<d_sigaction>
  2536. From F<d_sigaction.U>:
  2537. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SIGACTION> symbol, which
  2538. indicates that the Vr4 sigaction() routine is available.
  2539. =item C<d_sigprocmask>
  2540. From F<d_sigprocmask.U>:
  2541. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SIGPROCMASK>
  2542. if sigprocmask() is available to examine or change the signal mask
  2543. of the calling process.
  2544. =item C<d_sigsetjmp>
  2545. From F<d_sigsetjmp.U>:
  2546. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SIGSETJMP> symbol,
  2547. which indicates that the sigsetjmp() routine is available to
  2548. call setjmp() and optionally save the process's signal mask.
  2549. =item C<d_socket>
  2550. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2551. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SOCKET>, which indicates
  2552. that the C<BSD> socket interface is supported.
  2553. =item C<d_socklen_t>
  2554. From F<d_socklen_t.U>:
  2555. This symbol will be defined if the C compiler supports socklen_t.
  2556. =item C<d_sockpair>
  2557. From F<d_socket.U>:
  2558. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SOCKETPAIR> symbol, which
  2559. indicates that the C<BSD> socketpair() is supported.
  2560. =item C<d_socks5_init>
  2561. From F<d_socks5_init.U>:
  2562. This variable conditionally defines the HAS_SOCKS5_INIT symbol, which
  2563. indicates to the C program that the socks5_init() routine is available.
  2564. =item C<d_sqrtl>
  2565. From F<d_sqrtl.U>:
  2566. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SQRTL> symbol, which
  2567. indicates to the C program that the sqrtl() routine is available.
  2568. =item C<d_statblks>
  2569. From F<d_statblks.U>:
  2570. This variable conditionally defines C<USE_STAT_BLOCKS>
  2571. if this system has a stat structure declaring
  2572. st_blksize and st_blocks.
  2573. =item C<d_statfs_f_flags>
  2574. From F<d_statfs_f_flags.U>:
  2575. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRUCT_STATFS_F_FLAGS>
  2576. symbol, which indicates to struct statfs from has f_flags member.
  2577. This kind of struct statfs is coming from F<sys/mount.h> (C<BSD>),
  2578. not from F<sys/statfs.h> (C<SYSV>).
  2579. =item C<d_statfs_s>
  2580. From F<d_statfs_s.U>:
  2581. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRUCT_STATFS> symbol,
  2582. which indicates that the struct statfs is supported.
  2583. =item C<d_statvfs>
  2584. From F<d_statvfs.U>:
  2585. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STATVFS> symbol, which
  2586. indicates to the C program that the statvfs() routine is available.
  2587. =item C<d_stdio_cnt_lval>
  2588. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  2589. This variable conditionally defines C<STDIO_CNT_LVALUE> if the
  2590. C<FILE_cnt> macro can be used as an lvalue.
  2591. =item C<d_stdio_ptr_lval>
  2592. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  2593. This variable conditionally defines C<STDIO_PTR_LVALUE> if the
  2594. C<FILE_ptr> macro can be used as an lvalue.
  2595. =item C<d_stdio_ptr_lval_nochange_cnt>
  2596. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  2597. This symbol is defined if using the C<FILE_ptr> macro as an lvalue
  2598. to increase the pointer by n leaves File_cnt(fp) unchanged.
  2599. =item C<d_stdio_ptr_lval_sets_cnt>
  2600. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  2601. This symbol is defined if using the C<FILE_ptr> macro as an lvalue
  2602. to increase the pointer by n has the side effect of decreasing the
  2603. value of File_cnt(fp) by n.
  2604. =item C<d_stdio_stream_array>
  2605. From F<stdio_streams.U>:
  2606. This variable tells whether there is an array holding
  2607. the stdio streams.
  2608. =item C<d_stdiobase>
  2609. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  2610. This variable conditionally defines C<USE_STDIO_BASE> if this system
  2611. has a C<FILE> structure declaring a usable _base field (or equivalent)
  2612. in F<stdio.h>.
  2613. =item C<d_stdstdio>
  2614. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  2615. This variable conditionally defines C<USE_STDIO_PTR> if this system
  2616. has a C<FILE> structure declaring usable _ptr and _cnt fields (or
  2617. equivalent) in F<stdio.h>.
  2618. =item C<d_strchr>
  2619. From F<d_strchr.U>:
  2620. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_STRCHR> if strchr() and
  2621. strrchr() are available for string searching.
  2622. =item C<d_strcoll>
  2623. From F<d_strcoll.U>:
  2624. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_STRCOLL> if strcoll() is
  2625. available to compare strings using collating information.
  2626. =item C<d_strctcpy>
  2627. From F<d_strctcpy.U>:
  2628. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_STRUCT_COPY> symbol, which
  2629. indicates to the C program that this C compiler knows how to copy
  2630. structures.
  2631. =item C<d_strerrm>
  2632. From F<d_strerror.U>:
  2633. This variable holds what Strerrr is defined as to translate an error
  2634. code condition into an error message string. It could be C<strerror>
  2635. or a more C<complex> macro emulating strrror with sys_errlist[], or the
  2636. C<unknown> string when both strerror and sys_errlist are missing.
  2637. =item C<d_strerror>
  2638. From F<d_strerror.U>:
  2639. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_STRERROR> if strerror() is
  2640. available to translate error numbers to strings.
  2641. =item C<d_strtod>
  2642. From F<d_strtod.U>:
  2643. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRTOD> symbol, which
  2644. indicates to the C program that the strtod() routine is available
  2645. to provide better numeric string conversion than atof().
  2646. =item C<d_strtol>
  2647. From F<d_strtol.U>:
  2648. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRTOL> symbol, which
  2649. indicates to the C program that the strtol() routine is available
  2650. to provide better numeric string conversion than atoi() and friends.
  2651. =item C<d_strtold>
  2652. From F<d_strtold.U>:
  2653. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRTOLD> symbol, which
  2654. indicates to the C program that the strtold() routine is available.
  2655. =item C<d_strtoll>
  2656. From F<d_strtoll.U>:
  2657. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRTOLL> symbol, which
  2658. indicates to the C program that the strtoll() routine is available.
  2659. =item C<d_strtoq>
  2660. From F<d_strtoq.U>:
  2661. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRTOQ> symbol, which
  2662. indicates to the C program that the strtoq() routine is available.
  2663. =item C<d_strtoul>
  2664. From F<d_strtoul.U>:
  2665. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRTOUL> symbol, which
  2666. indicates to the C program that the strtoul() routine is available
  2667. to provide conversion of strings to unsigned long.
  2668. =item C<d_strtoull>
  2669. From F<d_strtoull.U>:
  2670. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRTOULL> symbol, which
  2671. indicates to the C program that the strtoull() routine is available.
  2672. =item C<d_strtouq>
  2673. From F<d_strtouq.U>:
  2674. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_STRTOUQ> symbol, which
  2675. indicates to the C program that the strtouq() routine is available.
  2676. =item C<d_strxfrm>
  2677. From F<d_strxfrm.U>:
  2678. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_STRXFRM> if strxfrm() is
  2679. available to transform strings.
  2680. =item C<d_suidsafe>
  2681. From F<d_dosuid.U>:
  2682. This variable conditionally defines C<SETUID_SCRIPTS_ARE_SECURE_NOW>
  2683. if setuid scripts can be secure. This test looks in F</dev/fd/>.
  2684. =item C<d_symlink>
  2685. From F<d_symlink.U>:
  2686. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SYMLINK> symbol, which
  2687. indicates to the C program that the symlink() routine is available
  2688. to create symbolic links.
  2689. =item C<d_syscall>
  2690. From F<d_syscall.U>:
  2691. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SYSCALL> if syscall() is
  2692. available call arbitrary system calls.
  2693. =item C<d_sysconf>
  2694. From F<d_sysconf.U>:
  2695. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_SYSCONF> symbol, which
  2696. indicates to the C program that the sysconf() routine is available
  2697. to determine system related limits and options.
  2698. =item C<d_sysernlst>
  2699. From F<d_strerror.U>:
  2700. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SYS_ERRNOLIST> if sys_errnolist[]
  2701. is available to translate error numbers to the symbolic name.
  2702. =item C<d_syserrlst>
  2703. From F<d_strerror.U>:
  2704. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SYS_ERRLIST> if sys_errlist[] is
  2705. available to translate error numbers to strings.
  2706. =item C<d_system>
  2707. From F<d_system.U>:
  2708. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_SYSTEM> if system() is
  2709. available to issue a shell command.
  2710. =item C<d_tcgetpgrp>
  2711. From F<d_tcgtpgrp.U>:
  2712. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_TCGETPGRP> symbol, which
  2713. indicates to the C program that the tcgetpgrp() routine is available.
  2714. to get foreground process group C<ID>.
  2715. =item C<d_tcsetpgrp>
  2716. From F<d_tcstpgrp.U>:
  2717. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_TCSETPGRP> symbol, which
  2718. indicates to the C program that the tcsetpgrp() routine is available
  2719. to set foreground process group C<ID>.
  2720. =item C<d_telldir>
  2721. From F<d_readdir.U>:
  2722. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_TELLDIR> if telldir() is
  2723. available.
  2724. =item C<d_telldirproto>
  2725. From F<d_telldirproto.U>:
  2726. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_TELLDIR_PROTO> symbol,
  2727. which indicates to the C program that the system provides
  2728. a prototype for the telldir() function. Otherwise, it is
  2729. up to the program to supply one.
  2730. =item C<d_time>
  2731. From F<d_time.U>:
  2732. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_TIME> symbol, which indicates
  2733. that the time() routine exists. The time() routine is normaly
  2734. provided on C<UNIX> systems.
  2735. =item C<d_times>
  2736. From F<d_times.U>:
  2737. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_TIMES> symbol, which indicates
  2738. that the times() routine exists. The times() routine is normaly
  2739. provided on C<UNIX> systems. You may have to include <sys/times.h>.
  2740. =item C<d_truncate>
  2741. From F<d_truncate.U>:
  2742. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_TRUNCATE> if truncate() is
  2743. available to truncate files.
  2744. =item C<d_tzname>
  2745. From F<d_tzname.U>:
  2746. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_TZNAME> if tzname[] is
  2747. available to access timezone names.
  2748. =item C<d_umask>
  2749. From F<d_umask.U>:
  2750. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_UMASK> symbol, which
  2751. indicates to the C program that the umask() routine is available.
  2752. to set and get the value of the file creation mask.
  2753. =item C<d_uname>
  2754. From F<d_gethname.U>:
  2755. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_UNAME> symbol, which
  2756. indicates to the C program that the uname() routine may be
  2757. used to derive the host name.
  2758. =item C<d_union_semun>
  2759. From F<d_union_semun.U>:
  2760. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_UNION_SEMUN> if the
  2761. union semun is defined by including <sys/sem.h>.
  2762. =item C<d_ustat>
  2763. From F<d_ustat.U>:
  2764. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_USTAT> if ustat() is
  2765. available to query file system statistics by dev_t.
  2766. =item C<d_vendorarch>
  2767. From F<vendorarch.U>:
  2768. This variable conditionally defined C<PERL_VENDORARCH>.
  2769. =item C<d_vendorbin>
  2770. From F<vendorbin.U>:
  2771. This variable conditionally defines C<PERL_VENDORBIN>.
  2772. =item C<d_vendorlib>
  2773. From F<vendorlib.U>:
  2774. This variable conditionally defines C<PERL_VENDORLIB>.
  2775. =item C<d_vfork>
  2776. From F<d_vfork.U>:
  2777. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_VFORK> symbol, which
  2778. indicates the vfork() routine is available.
  2779. =item C<d_void_closedir>
  2780. From F<d_closedir.U>:
  2781. This variable conditionally defines C<VOID_CLOSEDIR> if closedir()
  2782. does not return a value.
  2783. =item C<d_voidsig>
  2784. From F<d_voidsig.U>:
  2785. This variable conditionally defines C<VOIDSIG> if this system
  2786. declares "void (*signal(...))()" in F<signal.h>. The old way was to
  2787. declare it as "int (*signal(...))()".
  2788. =item C<d_voidtty>
  2789. From F<i_sysioctl.U>:
  2790. This variable conditionally defines C<USE_IOCNOTTY> to indicate that the
  2791. ioctl() call with C<TIOCNOTTY> should be used to void tty association.
  2792. Otherwise (on C<USG> probably), it is enough to close the standard file
  2793. decriptors and do a setpgrp().
  2794. =item C<d_volatile>
  2795. From F<d_volatile.U>:
  2796. This variable conditionally defines the C<HASVOLATILE> symbol, which
  2797. indicates to the C program that this C compiler knows about the
  2798. volatile declaration.
  2799. =item C<d_vprintf>
  2800. From F<d_vprintf.U>:
  2801. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_VPRINTF> symbol, which
  2802. indicates to the C program that the vprintf() routine is available
  2803. to printf with a pointer to an argument list.
  2804. =item C<d_wait4>
  2805. From F<d_wait4.U>:
  2806. This variable conditionally defines the HAS_WAIT4 symbol, which
  2807. indicates the wait4() routine is available.
  2808. =item C<d_waitpid>
  2809. From F<d_waitpid.U>:
  2810. This variable conditionally defines C<HAS_WAITPID> if waitpid() is
  2811. available to wait for child process.
  2812. =item C<d_wcstombs>
  2813. From F<d_wcstombs.U>:
  2814. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_WCSTOMBS> symbol, which
  2815. indicates to the C program that the wcstombs() routine is available
  2816. to convert wide character strings to multibyte strings.
  2817. =item C<d_wctomb>
  2818. From F<d_wctomb.U>:
  2819. This variable conditionally defines the C<HAS_WCTOMB> symbol, which
  2820. indicates to the C program that the wctomb() routine is available
  2821. to convert a wide character to a multibyte.
  2822. =item C<d_xenix>
  2823. From F<Guess.U>:
  2824. This variable conditionally defines the symbol C<XENIX>, which alerts
  2825. the C program that it runs under Xenix.
  2826. =item C<date>
  2827. From F<Loc.U>:
  2828. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  2829. full pathname (if any) of the date program. After Configure runs,
  2830. the value is reset to a plain C<date> and is not useful.
  2831. =item C<db_hashtype>
  2832. From F<i_db.U>:
  2833. This variable contains the type of the hash structure element
  2834. in the <db.h> header file. In older versions of C<DB>, it was
  2835. int, while in newer ones it is u_int32_t.
  2836. =item C<db_prefixtype>
  2837. From F<i_db.U>:
  2838. This variable contains the type of the prefix structure element
  2839. in the <db.h> header file. In older versions of C<DB>, it was
  2840. int, while in newer ones it is size_t.
  2841. =item C<defvoidused>
  2842. From F<voidflags.U>:
  2843. This variable contains the default value of the C<VOIDUSED> symbol (15).
  2844. =item C<direntrytype>
  2845. From F<i_dirent.U>:
  2846. This symbol is set to C<struct direct> or C<struct dirent> depending on
  2847. whether dirent is available or not. You should use this pseudo type to
  2848. portably declare your directory entries.
  2849. =item C<dlext>
  2850. From F<dlext.U>:
  2851. This variable contains the extension that is to be used for the
  2852. dynamically loaded modules that perl generaties.
  2853. =item C<dlsrc>
  2854. From F<dlsrc.U>:
  2855. This variable contains the name of the dynamic loading file that
  2856. will be used with the package.
  2857. =item C<doublesize>
  2858. From F<doublesize.U>:
  2859. This variable contains the value of the C<DOUBLESIZE> symbol, which
  2860. indicates to the C program how many bytes there are in a double.
  2861. =item C<drand01>
  2862. From F<randfunc.U>:
  2863. Indicates the macro to be used to generate normalized
  2864. random numbers. Uses randfunc, often divided by
  2865. (double) (((unsigned long) 1 << randbits)) in order to
  2866. normalize the result.
  2867. In C programs, the macro C<Drand01> is mapped to drand01.
  2868. =item C<dynamic_ext>
  2869. From F<Extensions.U>:
  2870. This variable holds a list of C<XS> extension files we want to
  2871. link dynamically into the package. It is used by Makefile.
  2872. =back
  2873. =head2 e
  2874. =over
  2875. =item C<eagain>
  2876. From F<nblock_io.U>:
  2877. This variable bears the symbolic errno code set by read() when no
  2878. data is present on the file and non-blocking F<I/O> was enabled (otherwise,
  2879. read() blocks naturally).
  2880. =item C<ebcdic>
  2881. From F<ebcdic.U>:
  2882. This variable conditionally defines C<EBCDIC> if this
  2883. system uses C<EBCDIC> encoding. Among other things, this
  2884. means that the character ranges are not contiguous.
  2885. See F<trnl.U>
  2886. =item C<echo>
  2887. From F<Loc.U>:
  2888. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  2889. full pathname (if any) of the echo program. After Configure runs,
  2890. the value is reset to a plain C<echo> and is not useful.
  2891. =item C<egrep>
  2892. From F<Loc.U>:
  2893. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  2894. full pathname (if any) of the egrep program. After Configure runs,
  2895. the value is reset to a plain C<egrep> and is not useful.
  2896. =item C<emacs>
  2897. From F<Loc.U>:
  2898. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  2899. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  2900. =item C<eunicefix>
  2901. From F<Init.U>:
  2902. When running under Eunice this variable contains a command which will
  2903. convert a shell script to the proper form of text file for it to be
  2904. executable by the shell. On other systems it is a no-op.
  2905. =item C<exe_ext>
  2906. From F<Unix.U>:
  2907. This is an old synonym for _exe.
  2908. =item C<expr>
  2909. From F<Loc.U>:
  2910. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  2911. full pathname (if any) of the expr program. After Configure runs,
  2912. the value is reset to a plain C<expr> and is not useful.
  2913. =item C<extensions>
  2914. From F<Extensions.U>:
  2915. This variable holds a list of all extension files (both C<XS> and
  2916. non-xs linked into the package. It is propagated to F<Config.pm>
  2917. and is typically used to test whether a particular extesion
  2918. is available.
  2919. =back
  2920. =head2 f
  2921. =over
  2922. =item C<fflushall>
  2923. From F<fflushall.U>:
  2924. This symbol, if defined, tells that to flush
  2925. all pending stdio output one must loop through all
  2926. the stdio file handles stored in an array and fflush them.
  2927. Note that if fflushNULL is defined, fflushall will not
  2928. even be probed for and will be left undefined.
  2929. =item C<fflushNULL>
  2930. From F<fflushall.U>:
  2931. This symbol, if defined, tells that fflush(C<NULL>) does flush
  2932. all pending stdio output.
  2933. =item C<find>
  2934. From F<Loc.U>:
  2935. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  2936. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  2937. =item C<firstmakefile>
  2938. From F<Unix.U>:
  2939. This variable defines the first file searched by make. On unix,
  2940. it is makefile (then Makefile). On case-insensitive systems,
  2941. it might be something else. This is only used to deal with
  2942. convoluted make depend tricks.
  2943. =item C<flex>
  2944. From F<Loc.U>:
  2945. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  2946. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  2947. =item C<fpossize>
  2948. From F<fpossize.U>:
  2949. This variable contains the size of a fpostype in bytes.
  2950. =item C<fpostype>
  2951. From F<fpostype.U>:
  2952. This variable defines Fpos_t to be something like fpos_t, long,
  2953. uint, or whatever type is used to declare file positions in libc.
  2954. =item C<freetype>
  2955. From F<mallocsrc.U>:
  2956. This variable contains the return type of free(). It is usually
  2957. void, but occasionally int.
  2958. =item C<full_ar>
  2959. From F<Loc_ar.U>:
  2960. This variable contains the full pathname to C<ar>, whether or
  2961. not the user has specified C<portability>. This is only used
  2962. in the F<Makefile.SH>.
  2963. =item C<full_csh>
  2964. From F<d_csh.U>:
  2965. This variable contains the full pathname to C<csh>, whether or
  2966. not the user has specified C<portability>. This is only used
  2967. in the compiled C program, and we assume that all systems which
  2968. can share this executable will have the same full pathname to
  2969. F<csh.>
  2970. =item C<full_sed>
  2971. From F<Loc_sed.U>:
  2972. This variable contains the full pathname to C<sed>, whether or
  2973. not the user has specified C<portability>. This is only used
  2974. in the compiled C program, and we assume that all systems which
  2975. can share this executable will have the same full pathname to
  2976. F<sed.>
  2977. =back
  2978. =head2 g
  2979. =over
  2980. =item C<gccosandvers>
  2981. From F<gccvers.U>:
  2982. If C<GNU> cc (gcc) is used, this variable the operating system and
  2983. version used to compile the gcc. It is set to '' if not gcc,
  2984. or if nothing useful can be parsed as the os version.
  2985. =item C<gccversion>
  2986. From F<gccvers.U>:
  2987. If C<GNU> cc (gcc) is used, this variable holds C<1> or C<2> to
  2988. indicate whether the compiler is version 1 or 2. This is used in
  2989. setting some of the default cflags. It is set to '' if not gcc.
  2990. =item C<gidformat>
  2991. From F<gidf.U>:
  2992. This variable contains the format string used for printing a Gid_t.
  2993. =item C<gidsign>
  2994. From F<gidsign.U>:
  2995. This variable contains the signedness of a gidtype.
  2996. 1 for unsigned, -1 for signed.
  2997. =item C<gidsize>
  2998. From F<gidsize.U>:
  2999. This variable contains the size of a gidtype in bytes.
  3000. =item C<gidtype>
  3001. From F<gidtype.U>:
  3002. This variable defines Gid_t to be something like gid_t, int,
  3003. ushort, or whatever type is used to declare the return type
  3004. of getgid(). Typically, it is the type of group ids in the kernel.
  3005. =item C<glibpth>
  3006. From F<libpth.U>:
  3007. This variable holds the general path (space-separated) used to
  3008. find libraries. It may contain directories that do not exist on
  3009. this platform, libpth is the cleaned-up version.
  3010. =item C<grep>
  3011. From F<Loc.U>:
  3012. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3013. full pathname (if any) of the grep program. After Configure runs,
  3014. the value is reset to a plain C<grep> and is not useful.
  3015. =item C<groupcat>
  3016. From F<nis.U>:
  3017. This variable contains a command that produces the text of the
  3018. F</etc/group> file. This is normally "cat F</etc/group>", but can be
  3019. "ypcat group" when C<NIS> is used.
  3020. On some systems, such as os390, there may be no equivalent
  3021. command, in which case this variable is unset.
  3022. =item C<groupstype>
  3023. From F<groupstype.U>:
  3024. This variable defines Groups_t to be something like gid_t, int,
  3025. ushort, or whatever type is used for the second argument to
  3026. getgroups() and setgroups(). Usually, this is the same as
  3027. gidtype (gid_t), but sometimes it isn't.
  3028. =item C<gzip>
  3029. From F<Loc.U>:
  3030. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3031. full pathname (if any) of the gzip program. After Configure runs,
  3032. the value is reset to a plain C<gzip> and is not useful.
  3033. =back
  3034. =head2 h
  3035. =over
  3036. =item C<h_fcntl>
  3037. From F<h_fcntl.U>:
  3038. This is variable gets set in various places to tell i_fcntl that
  3039. <fcntl.h> should be included.
  3040. =item C<h_sysfile>
  3041. From F<h_sysfile.U>:
  3042. This is variable gets set in various places to tell i_sys_file that
  3043. <sys/file.h> should be included.
  3044. =item C<hint>
  3045. From F<Oldconfig.U>:
  3046. Gives the type of hints used for previous answers. May be one of
  3047. C<default>, C<recommended> or C<previous>.
  3048. =item C<hostcat>
  3049. From F<nis.U>:
  3050. This variable contains a command that produces the text of the
  3051. F</etc/hosts> file. This is normally "cat F</etc/hosts>", but can be
  3052. "ypcat hosts" when C<NIS> is used.
  3053. On some systems, such as os390, there may be no equivalent
  3054. command, in which case this variable is unset.
  3055. =back
  3056. =head2 i
  3057. =over
  3058. =item C<i16size>
  3059. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3060. This variable is the size of an I16 in bytes.
  3061. =item C<i16type>
  3062. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3063. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's I16.
  3064. =item C<i32size>
  3065. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3066. This variable is the size of an I32 in bytes.
  3067. =item C<i32type>
  3068. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3069. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's I32.
  3070. =item C<i64size>
  3071. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3072. This variable is the size of an I64 in bytes.
  3073. =item C<i64type>
  3074. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3075. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's I64.
  3076. =item C<i8size>
  3077. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3078. This variable is the size of an I8 in bytes.
  3079. =item C<i8type>
  3080. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3081. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's I8.
  3082. =item C<i_arpainet>
  3083. From F<i_arpainet.U>:
  3084. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_ARPA_INET> symbol,
  3085. and indicates whether a C program should include <arpa/inet.h>.
  3086. =item C<i_bsdioctl>
  3087. From F<i_sysioctl.U>:
  3088. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_BSDIOCTL> symbol, which
  3089. indicates to the C program that <sys/bsdioctl.h> exists and should
  3090. be included.
  3091. =item C<i_db>
  3092. From F<i_db.U>:
  3093. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_DB> symbol, and indicates
  3094. whether a C program may include Berkeley's C<DB> include file <db.h>.
  3095. =item C<i_dbm>
  3096. From F<i_dbm.U>:
  3097. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_DBM> symbol, which
  3098. indicates to the C program that <dbm.h> exists and should
  3099. be included.
  3100. =item C<i_dirent>
  3101. From F<i_dirent.U>:
  3102. This variable conditionally defines C<I_DIRENT>, which indicates
  3103. to the C program that it should include <dirent.h>.
  3104. =item C<i_dld>
  3105. From F<i_dld.U>:
  3106. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_DLD> symbol, which
  3107. indicates to the C program that <dld.h> (C<GNU> dynamic loading)
  3108. exists and should be included.
  3109. =item C<i_dlfcn>
  3110. From F<i_dlfcn.U>:
  3111. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_DLFCN> symbol, which
  3112. indicates to the C program that <dlfcn.h> exists and should
  3113. be included.
  3114. =item C<i_fcntl>
  3115. From F<i_fcntl.U>:
  3116. This variable controls the value of C<I_FCNTL> (which tells
  3117. the C program to include <fcntl.h>).
  3118. =item C<i_float>
  3119. From F<i_float.U>:
  3120. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_FLOAT> symbol, and indicates
  3121. whether a C program may include <float.h> to get symbols like C<DBL_MAX>
  3122. or C<DBL_MIN>, F<i.e>. machine dependent floating point values.
  3123. =item C<i_gdbm>
  3124. From F<i_gdbm.U>:
  3125. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_GDBM> symbol, which
  3126. indicates to the C program that <gdbm.h> exists and should
  3127. be included.
  3128. =item C<i_grp>
  3129. From F<i_grp.U>:
  3130. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_GRP> symbol, and indicates
  3131. whether a C program should include <grp.h>.
  3132. =item C<i_iconv>
  3133. From F<i_iconv.U>:
  3134. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_ICONV> symbol, and indicates
  3135. whether a C program should include <iconv.h>.
  3136. =item C<i_ieeefp>
  3137. From F<i_ieeefp.U>:
  3138. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_IEEEFP> symbol, and indicates
  3139. whether a C program should include <ieeefp.h>.
  3140. =item C<i_inttypes>
  3141. From F<i_inttypes.U>:
  3142. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_INTTYPES> symbol,
  3143. and indicates whether a C program should include <inttypes.h>.
  3144. =item C<i_libutil>
  3145. From F<i_libutil.U>:
  3146. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_LIBUTIL> symbol, and indicates
  3147. whether a C program should include <libutil.h>.
  3148. =item C<i_limits>
  3149. From F<i_limits.U>:
  3150. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_LIMITS> symbol, and indicates
  3151. whether a C program may include <limits.h> to get symbols like C<WORD_BIT>
  3152. and friends.
  3153. =item C<i_locale>
  3154. From F<i_locale.U>:
  3155. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_LOCALE> symbol,
  3156. and indicates whether a C program should include <locale.h>.
  3157. =item C<i_machcthr>
  3158. From F<i_machcthr.U>:
  3159. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_MACH_CTHREADS> symbol,
  3160. and indicates whether a C program should include <mach/cthreads.h>.
  3161. =item C<i_malloc>
  3162. From F<i_malloc.U>:
  3163. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_MALLOC> symbol, and indicates
  3164. whether a C program should include <malloc.h>.
  3165. =item C<i_math>
  3166. From F<i_math.U>:
  3167. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_MATH> symbol, and indicates
  3168. whether a C program may include <math.h>.
  3169. =item C<i_memory>
  3170. From F<i_memory.U>:
  3171. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_MEMORY> symbol, and indicates
  3172. whether a C program should include <memory.h>.
  3173. =item C<i_mntent>
  3174. From F<i_mntent.U>:
  3175. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_MNTENT> symbol, and indicates
  3176. whether a C program should include <mntent.h>.
  3177. =item C<i_ndbm>
  3178. From F<i_ndbm.U>:
  3179. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_NDBM> symbol, which
  3180. indicates to the C program that <ndbm.h> exists and should
  3181. be included.
  3182. =item C<i_netdb>
  3183. From F<i_netdb.U>:
  3184. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_NETDB> symbol, and indicates
  3185. whether a C program should include <netdb.h>.
  3186. =item C<i_neterrno>
  3187. From F<i_neterrno.U>:
  3188. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_NET_ERRNO> symbol, which
  3189. indicates to the C program that <net/errno.h> exists and should
  3190. be included.
  3191. =item C<i_netinettcp>
  3192. From F<i_netinettcp.U>:
  3193. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_NETINET_TCP> symbol,
  3194. and indicates whether a C program should include <netinet/tcp.h>.
  3195. =item C<i_niin>
  3196. From F<i_niin.U>:
  3197. This variable conditionally defines C<I_NETINET_IN>, which indicates
  3198. to the C program that it should include <netinet/in.h>. Otherwise,
  3199. you may try <sys/in.h>.
  3200. =item C<i_poll>
  3201. From F<i_poll.U>:
  3202. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_POLL> symbol, and indicates
  3203. whether a C program should include <poll.h>.
  3204. =item C<i_prot>
  3205. From F<i_prot.U>:
  3206. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_PROT> symbol, and indicates
  3207. whether a C program should include <prot.h>.
  3208. =item C<i_pthread>
  3209. From F<i_pthread.U>:
  3210. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_PTHREAD> symbol,
  3211. and indicates whether a C program should include <pthread.h>.
  3212. =item C<i_pwd>
  3213. From F<i_pwd.U>:
  3214. This variable conditionally defines C<I_PWD>, which indicates
  3215. to the C program that it should include <pwd.h>.
  3216. =item C<i_rpcsvcdbm>
  3217. From F<i_dbm.U>:
  3218. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_RPCSVC_DBM> symbol, which
  3219. indicates to the C program that <rpcsvc/dbm.h> exists and should
  3220. be included. Some System V systems might need this instead of <dbm.h>.
  3221. =item C<i_sfio>
  3222. From F<i_sfio.U>:
  3223. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SFIO> symbol,
  3224. and indicates whether a C program should include <sfio.h>.
  3225. =item C<i_sgtty>
  3226. From F<i_termio.U>:
  3227. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SGTTY> symbol, which
  3228. indicates to the C program that it should include <sgtty.h> rather
  3229. than <termio.h>.
  3230. =item C<i_shadow>
  3231. From F<i_shadow.U>:
  3232. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SHADOW> symbol, and indicates
  3233. whether a C program should include <shadow.h>.
  3234. =item C<i_socks>
  3235. From F<i_socks.U>:
  3236. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SOCKS> symbol, and indicates
  3237. whether a C program should include <socks.h>.
  3238. =item C<i_stdarg>
  3239. From F<i_varhdr.U>:
  3240. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_STDARG> symbol, which
  3241. indicates to the C program that <stdarg.h> exists and should
  3242. be included.
  3243. =item C<i_stddef>
  3244. From F<i_stddef.U>:
  3245. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_STDDEF> symbol, which
  3246. indicates to the C program that <stddef.h> exists and should
  3247. be included.
  3248. =item C<i_stdlib>
  3249. From F<i_stdlib.U>:
  3250. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_STDLIB> symbol, which
  3251. indicates to the C program that <stdlib.h> exists and should
  3252. be included.
  3253. =item C<i_string>
  3254. From F<i_string.U>:
  3255. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_STRING> symbol, which
  3256. indicates that <string.h> should be included rather than <strings.h>.
  3257. =item C<i_sunmath>
  3258. From F<i_sunmath.U>:
  3259. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SUNMATH> symbol, and indicates
  3260. whether a C program should include <sunmath.h>.
  3261. =item C<i_sysaccess>
  3262. From F<i_sysaccess.U>:
  3263. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_ACCESS> symbol,
  3264. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/access.h>.
  3265. =item C<i_sysdir>
  3266. From F<i_sysdir.U>:
  3267. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_DIR> symbol, and indicates
  3268. whether a C program should include <sys/dir.h>.
  3269. =item C<i_sysfile>
  3270. From F<i_sysfile.U>:
  3271. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_FILE> symbol, and indicates
  3272. whether a C program should include <sys/file.h> to get C<R_OK> and friends.
  3273. =item C<i_sysfilio>
  3274. From F<i_sysioctl.U>:
  3275. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_FILIO> symbol, which
  3276. indicates to the C program that <sys/filio.h> exists and should
  3277. be included in preference to <sys/ioctl.h>.
  3278. =item C<i_sysin>
  3279. From F<i_niin.U>:
  3280. This variable conditionally defines C<I_SYS_IN>, which indicates
  3281. to the C program that it should include <sys/in.h> instead of
  3282. <netinet/in.h>.
  3283. =item C<i_sysioctl>
  3284. From F<i_sysioctl.U>:
  3285. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_IOCTL> symbol, which
  3286. indicates to the C program that <sys/ioctl.h> exists and should
  3287. be included.
  3288. =item C<i_syslog>
  3289. From F<i_syslog.U>:
  3290. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYSLOG> symbol,
  3291. and indicates whether a C program should include <syslog.h>.
  3292. =item C<i_sysmman>
  3293. From F<i_sysmman.U>:
  3294. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_MMAN> symbol, and
  3295. indicates whether a C program should include <sys/mman.h>.
  3296. =item C<i_sysmode>
  3297. From F<i_sysmode.U>:
  3298. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYSMODE> symbol,
  3299. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/mode.h>.
  3300. =item C<i_sysmount>
  3301. From F<i_sysmount.U>:
  3302. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYSMOUNT> symbol,
  3303. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/mount.h>.
  3304. =item C<i_sysndir>
  3305. From F<i_sysndir.U>:
  3306. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_NDIR> symbol, and indicates
  3307. whether a C program should include <sys/ndir.h>.
  3308. =item C<i_sysparam>
  3309. From F<i_sysparam.U>:
  3310. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_PARAM> symbol, and indicates
  3311. whether a C program should include <sys/param.h>.
  3312. =item C<i_sysresrc>
  3313. From F<i_sysresrc.U>:
  3314. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_RESOURCE> symbol,
  3315. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/resource.h>.
  3316. =item C<i_syssecrt>
  3317. From F<i_syssecrt.U>:
  3318. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_SECURITY> symbol,
  3319. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/security.h>.
  3320. =item C<i_sysselct>
  3321. From F<i_sysselct.U>:
  3322. This variable conditionally defines C<I_SYS_SELECT>, which indicates
  3323. to the C program that it should include <sys/select.h> in order to
  3324. get the definition of struct timeval.
  3325. =item C<i_syssockio>
  3326. From F<i_sysioctl.U>:
  3327. This variable conditionally defines C<I_SYS_SOCKIO> to indicate to the
  3328. C program that socket ioctl codes may be found in <sys/sockio.h>
  3329. instead of <sys/ioctl.h>.
  3330. =item C<i_sysstat>
  3331. From F<i_sysstat.U>:
  3332. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_STAT> symbol,
  3333. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/stat.h>.
  3334. =item C<i_sysstatfs>
  3335. From F<i_sysstatfs.U>:
  3336. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYSSTATFS> symbol,
  3337. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/statfs.h>.
  3338. =item C<i_sysstatvfs>
  3339. From F<i_sysstatvfs.U>:
  3340. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYSSTATVFS> symbol,
  3341. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/statvfs.h>.
  3342. =item C<i_systime>
  3343. From F<i_time.U>:
  3344. This variable conditionally defines C<I_SYS_TIME>, which indicates
  3345. to the C program that it should include <sys/time.h>.
  3346. =item C<i_systimek>
  3347. From F<i_time.U>:
  3348. This variable conditionally defines C<I_SYS_TIME_KERNEL>, which
  3349. indicates to the C program that it should include <sys/time.h>
  3350. with C<KERNEL> defined.
  3351. =item C<i_systimes>
  3352. From F<i_systimes.U>:
  3353. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_TIMES> symbol, and indicates
  3354. whether a C program should include <sys/times.h>.
  3355. =item C<i_systypes>
  3356. From F<i_systypes.U>:
  3357. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYS_TYPES> symbol,
  3358. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/types.h>.
  3359. =item C<i_sysuio>
  3360. From F<i_sysuio.U>:
  3361. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYSUIO> symbol, and indicates
  3362. whether a C program should include <sys/uio.h>.
  3363. =item C<i_sysun>
  3364. From F<i_sysun.U>:
  3365. This variable conditionally defines C<I_SYS_UN>, which indicates
  3366. to the C program that it should include <sys/un.h> to get C<UNIX>
  3367. domain socket definitions.
  3368. =item C<i_sysutsname>
  3369. From F<i_sysutsname.U>:
  3370. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYSUTSNAME> symbol,
  3371. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/utsname.h>.
  3372. =item C<i_sysvfs>
  3373. From F<i_sysvfs.U>:
  3374. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_SYSVFS> symbol,
  3375. and indicates whether a C program should include <sys/vfs.h>.
  3376. =item C<i_syswait>
  3377. From F<i_syswait.U>:
  3378. This variable conditionally defines C<I_SYS_WAIT>, which indicates
  3379. to the C program that it should include <sys/wait.h>.
  3380. =item C<i_termio>
  3381. From F<i_termio.U>:
  3382. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_TERMIO> symbol, which
  3383. indicates to the C program that it should include <termio.h> rather
  3384. than <sgtty.h>.
  3385. =item C<i_termios>
  3386. From F<i_termio.U>:
  3387. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_TERMIOS> symbol, which
  3388. indicates to the C program that the C<POSIX> <termios.h> file is
  3389. to be included.
  3390. =item C<i_time>
  3391. From F<i_time.U>:
  3392. This variable conditionally defines C<I_TIME>, which indicates
  3393. to the C program that it should include <time.h>.
  3394. =item C<i_unistd>
  3395. From F<i_unistd.U>:
  3396. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_UNISTD> symbol, and indicates
  3397. whether a C program should include <unistd.h>.
  3398. =item C<i_ustat>
  3399. From F<i_ustat.U>:
  3400. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_USTAT> symbol, and indicates
  3401. whether a C program should include <ustat.h>.
  3402. =item C<i_utime>
  3403. From F<i_utime.U>:
  3404. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_UTIME> symbol, and indicates
  3405. whether a C program should include <utime.h>.
  3406. =item C<i_values>
  3407. From F<i_values.U>:
  3408. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_VALUES> symbol, and indicates
  3409. whether a C program may include <values.h> to get symbols like C<MAXLONG>
  3410. and friends.
  3411. =item C<i_varargs>
  3412. From F<i_varhdr.U>:
  3413. This variable conditionally defines C<I_VARARGS>, which indicates
  3414. to the C program that it should include <varargs.h>.
  3415. =item C<i_varhdr>
  3416. From F<i_varhdr.U>:
  3417. Contains the name of the header to be included to get va_dcl definition.
  3418. Typically one of F<varargs.h> or F<stdarg.h>.
  3419. =item C<i_vfork>
  3420. From F<i_vfork.U>:
  3421. This variable conditionally defines the C<I_VFORK> symbol, and indicates
  3422. whether a C program should include F<vfork.h>.
  3423. =item C<ignore_versioned_solibs>
  3424. From F<libs.U>:
  3425. This variable should be non-empty if non-versioned shared
  3426. libraries (F<libfoo.so.x.y>) are to be ignored (because they
  3427. cannot be linked against).
  3428. =item C<inc_version_list>
  3429. From F<inc_version_list.U>:
  3430. This variable specifies the list of subdirectories in over
  3431. which F<perl.c>:incpush() and F<lib/lib.pm> will automatically
  3432. search when adding directories to @C<INC>. The elements in
  3433. the list are separated by spaces. This is only useful
  3434. if you have a perl library directory tree structured like the
  3435. default one. See C<INSTALL> for how this works. The versioned
  3436. site_perl directory was introduced in 5.005, so that is the
  3437. lowest possible value.
  3438. =item C<inc_version_list_init>
  3439. From F<inc_version_list.U>:
  3440. This variable holds the same list as inc_version_list, but
  3441. each item is enclosed in double quotes and separated by commas,
  3442. suitable for use in the C<PERL_INC_VERSION_LIST> initialization.
  3443. =item C<incpath>
  3444. From F<usrinc.U>:
  3445. This variable must preceed the normal include path to get hte
  3446. right one, as in F<$F<incpath/usr/include>> or F<$F<incpath/usr/lib>>.
  3447. Value can be "" or F</bsd43> on mips.
  3448. =item C<inews>
  3449. From F<Loc.U>:
  3450. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3451. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3452. =item C<installarchlib>
  3453. From F<archlib.U>:
  3454. This variable is really the same as archlibexp but may differ on
  3455. those systems using C<AFS>. For extra portability, only this variable
  3456. should be used in makefiles.
  3457. =item C<installbin>
  3458. From F<bin.U>:
  3459. This variable is the same as binexp unless C<AFS> is running in which case
  3460. the user is explicitely prompted for it. This variable should always
  3461. be used in your makefiles for maximum portability.
  3462. =item C<installman1dir>
  3463. From F<man1dir.U>:
  3464. This variable is really the same as man1direxp, unless you are using
  3465. C<AFS> in which case it points to the F<read/write> location whereas
  3466. man1direxp only points to the read-only access location. For extra
  3467. portability, you should only use this variable within your makefiles.
  3468. =item C<installman3dir>
  3469. From F<man3dir.U>:
  3470. This variable is really the same as man3direxp, unless you are using
  3471. C<AFS> in which case it points to the F<read/write> location whereas
  3472. man3direxp only points to the read-only access location. For extra
  3473. portability, you should only use this variable within your makefiles.
  3474. =item C<installprefix>
  3475. From F<installprefix.U>:
  3476. This variable holds the name of the directory below which
  3477. "make install" will install the package. For most users, this
  3478. is the same as prefix. However, it is useful for
  3479. installing the software into a different (usually temporary)
  3480. location after which it can be bundled up and moved somehow
  3481. to the final location specified by prefix.
  3482. =item C<installprefixexp>
  3483. From F<installprefix.U>:
  3484. This variable holds the full absolute path of installprefix
  3485. with all F<~>-expansion done.
  3486. =item C<installprivlib>
  3487. From F<privlib.U>:
  3488. This variable is really the same as privlibexp but may differ on
  3489. those systems using C<AFS>. For extra portability, only this variable
  3490. should be used in makefiles.
  3491. =item C<installscript>
  3492. From F<scriptdir.U>:
  3493. This variable is usually the same as scriptdirexp, unless you are on
  3494. a system running C<AFS>, in which case they may differ slightly. You
  3495. should always use this variable within your makefiles for portability.
  3496. =item C<installsitearch>
  3497. From F<sitearch.U>:
  3498. This variable is really the same as sitearchexp but may differ on
  3499. those systems using C<AFS>. For extra portability, only this variable
  3500. should be used in makefiles.
  3501. =item C<installsitebin>
  3502. From F<sitebin.U>:
  3503. This variable is usually the same as sitebinexp, unless you are on
  3504. a system running C<AFS>, in which case they may differ slightly. You
  3505. should always use this variable within your makefiles for portability.
  3506. =item C<installsitelib>
  3507. From F<sitelib.U>:
  3508. This variable is really the same as sitelibexp but may differ on
  3509. those systems using C<AFS>. For extra portability, only this variable
  3510. should be used in makefiles.
  3511. =item C<installstyle>
  3512. From F<installstyle.U>:
  3513. This variable describes the C<style> of the perl installation.
  3514. This is intended to be useful for tools that need to
  3515. manipulate entire perl distributions. Perl itself doesn't use
  3516. this to find its libraries -- the library directories are
  3517. stored directly in F<Config.pm>. Currently, there are only two
  3518. styles: C<lib> and F<lib/perl5>. The default library locations
  3519. (e.g. privlib, sitelib) are either $F<prefix/lib> or
  3520. $F<prefix/lib/perl5>. The former is useful if $prefix is a
  3521. directory dedicated to perl (e.g. F</opt/perl>), while the latter
  3522. is useful if $prefix is shared by many packages, e.g. if
  3523. $prefix=F</usr/local>.
  3524. This may later be extended to include other information, so
  3525. be careful with pattern-matching on the results.
  3526. For compatibility with F<perl5.005> and earlier, the default
  3527. setting is based on whether or not $prefix contains the string
  3528. C<perl>.
  3529. =item C<installusrbinperl>
  3530. From F<instubperl.U>:
  3531. This variable tells whether Perl should be installed also as
  3532. F</usr/bin/perl> in addition to
  3533. $F<installbin/perl>
  3534. =item C<installvendorarch>
  3535. From F<vendorarch.U>:
  3536. This variable is really the same as vendorarchexp but may differ on
  3537. those systems using C<AFS>. For extra portability, only this variable
  3538. should be used in makefiles.
  3539. =item C<installvendorbin>
  3540. From F<vendorbin.U>:
  3541. This variable is really the same as vendorbinexp but may differ on
  3542. those systems using C<AFS>. For extra portability, only this variable
  3543. should be used in makefiles.
  3544. =item C<installvendorlib>
  3545. From F<vendorlib.U>:
  3546. This variable is really the same as vendorlibexp but may differ on
  3547. those systems using C<AFS>. For extra portability, only this variable
  3548. should be used in makefiles.
  3549. =item C<intsize>
  3550. From F<intsize.U>:
  3551. This variable contains the value of the C<INTSIZE> symbol, which
  3552. indicates to the C program how many bytes there are in an int.
  3553. =item C<issymlink>
  3554. From F<issymlink.U>:
  3555. This variable holds the test command to test for a symbolic link
  3556. (if they are supported). Typical values include C<test -h> and
  3557. C<test -L>.
  3558. =item C<ivdformat>
  3559. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  3560. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  3561. a Perl C<IV> as a signed decimal integer.
  3562. =item C<ivsize>
  3563. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3564. This variable is the size of an C<IV> in bytes.
  3565. =item C<ivtype>
  3566. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3567. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's C<IV>.
  3568. =back
  3569. =head2 k
  3570. =over
  3571. =item C<known_extensions>
  3572. From F<Extensions.U>:
  3573. This variable holds a list of all C<XS> extensions included in
  3574. the package.
  3575. =item C<ksh>
  3576. From F<Loc.U>:
  3577. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3578. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3579. =back
  3580. =head2 l
  3581. =over
  3582. =item C<ld>
  3583. From F<dlsrc.U>:
  3584. This variable indicates the program to be used to link
  3585. libraries for dynamic loading. On some systems, it is C<ld>.
  3586. On C<ELF> systems, it should be $cc. Mostly, we'll try to respect
  3587. the hint file setting.
  3588. =item C<lddlflags>
  3589. From F<dlsrc.U>:
  3590. This variable contains any special flags that might need to be
  3591. passed to $ld to create a shared library suitable for dynamic
  3592. loading. It is up to the makefile to use it. For hpux, it
  3593. should be C<-b>. For sunos 4.1, it is empty.
  3594. =item C<ldflags>
  3595. From F<ccflags.U>:
  3596. This variable contains any additional C loader flags desired by
  3597. the user. It is up to the Makefile to use this.
  3598. =item C<ldflags_uselargefiles>
  3599. From F<uselfs.U>:
  3600. This variable contains the loader flags needed by large file builds
  3601. and added to ldflags by hints files.
  3602. =item C<ldlibpthname>
  3603. From F<libperl.U>:
  3604. This variable holds the name of the shared library
  3605. search path, often C<LD_LIBRARY_PATH>. To get an empty
  3606. string, the hints file must set this to C<none>.
  3607. =item C<less>
  3608. From F<Loc.U>:
  3609. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3610. full pathname (if any) of the less program. After Configure runs,
  3611. the value is reset to a plain C<less> and is not useful.
  3612. =item C<lib_ext>
  3613. From F<Unix.U>:
  3614. This is an old synonym for _a.
  3615. =item C<libc>
  3616. From F<libc.U>:
  3617. This variable contains the location of the C library.
  3618. =item C<libperl>
  3619. From F<libperl.U>:
  3620. The perl executable is obtained by linking F<perlmain.c> with
  3621. libperl, any static extensions (usually just DynaLoader),
  3622. and any other libraries needed on this system. libperl
  3623. is usually F<libperl.a>, but can also be F<libperl.so.xxx> if
  3624. the user wishes to build a perl executable with a shared
  3625. library.
  3626. =item C<libpth>
  3627. From F<libpth.U>:
  3628. This variable holds the general path (space-separated) used to find
  3629. libraries. It is intended to be used by other units.
  3630. =item C<libs>
  3631. From F<libs.U>:
  3632. This variable holds the additional libraries we want to use.
  3633. It is up to the Makefile to deal with it.
  3634. =item C<libsdirs>
  3635. From F<libs.U>:
  3636. This variable holds the directory names aka dirnames of the libraries
  3637. we found and accepted, duplicates are removed.
  3638. =item C<libsfiles>
  3639. From F<libs.U>:
  3640. This variable holds the filenames aka basenames of the libraries
  3641. we found and accepted.
  3642. =item C<libsfound>
  3643. From F<libs.U>:
  3644. This variable holds the full pathnames of the libraries
  3645. we found and accepted.
  3646. =item C<libspath>
  3647. From F<libs.U>:
  3648. This variable holds the directory names probed for libraries.
  3649. =item C<libswanted>
  3650. From F<Myinit.U>:
  3651. This variable holds a list of all the libraries we want to
  3652. search. The order is chosen to pick up the c library
  3653. ahead of ucb or bsd libraries for SVR4.
  3654. =item C<libswanted_uselargefiles>
  3655. From F<uselfs.U>:
  3656. This variable contains the libraries needed by large file builds
  3657. and added to ldflags by hints files. It is a space separated list
  3658. of the library names without the C<lib> prefix or any suffix, just
  3659. like F<libswanted.>.
  3660. =item C<line>
  3661. From F<Loc.U>:
  3662. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3663. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3664. =item C<lint>
  3665. From F<Loc.U>:
  3666. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3667. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3668. =item C<lkflags>
  3669. From F<ccflags.U>:
  3670. This variable contains any additional C partial linker flags desired by
  3671. the user. It is up to the Makefile to use this.
  3672. =item C<ln>
  3673. From F<Loc.U>:
  3674. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3675. full pathname (if any) of the ln program. After Configure runs,
  3676. the value is reset to a plain C<ln> and is not useful.
  3677. =item C<lns>
  3678. From F<lns.U>:
  3679. This variable holds the name of the command to make
  3680. symbolic links (if they are supported). It can be used
  3681. in the Makefile. It is either C<ln -s> or C<ln>
  3682. =item C<locincpth>
  3683. From F<ccflags.U>:
  3684. This variable contains a list of additional directories to be
  3685. searched by the compiler. The appropriate C<-I> directives will
  3686. be added to ccflags. This is intended to simplify setting
  3687. local directories from the Configure command line.
  3688. It's not much, but it parallels the loclibpth stuff in F<libpth.U>.
  3689. =item C<loclibpth>
  3690. From F<libpth.U>:
  3691. This variable holds the paths (space-separated) used to find local
  3692. libraries. It is prepended to libpth, and is intended to be easily
  3693. set from the command line.
  3694. =item C<longdblsize>
  3695. From F<d_longdbl.U>:
  3696. This variable contains the value of the C<LONG_DOUBLESIZE> symbol, which
  3697. indicates to the C program how many bytes there are in a long double,
  3698. if this system supports long doubles.
  3699. =item C<longlongsize>
  3700. From F<d_longlong.U>:
  3701. This variable contains the value of the C<LONGLONGSIZE> symbol, which
  3702. indicates to the C program how many bytes there are in a long long,
  3703. if this system supports long long.
  3704. =item C<longsize>
  3705. From F<intsize.U>:
  3706. This variable contains the value of the C<LONGSIZE> symbol, which
  3707. indicates to the C program how many bytes there are in a long.
  3708. =item C<lp>
  3709. From F<Loc.U>:
  3710. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3711. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3712. =item C<lpr>
  3713. From F<Loc.U>:
  3714. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3715. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3716. =item C<ls>
  3717. From F<Loc.U>:
  3718. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3719. full pathname (if any) of the ls program. After Configure runs,
  3720. the value is reset to a plain C<ls> and is not useful.
  3721. =item C<lseeksize>
  3722. From F<lseektype.U>:
  3723. This variable defines lseektype to be something like off_t, long,
  3724. or whatever type is used to declare lseek offset's type in the
  3725. kernel (which also appears to be lseek's return type).
  3726. =item C<lseektype>
  3727. From F<lseektype.U>:
  3728. This variable defines lseektype to be something like off_t, long,
  3729. or whatever type is used to declare lseek offset's type in the
  3730. kernel (which also appears to be lseek's return type).
  3731. =back
  3732. =head2 m
  3733. =over
  3734. =item C<mail>
  3735. From F<Loc.U>:
  3736. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3737. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3738. =item C<mailx>
  3739. From F<Loc.U>:
  3740. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3741. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3742. =item C<make>
  3743. From F<Loc.U>:
  3744. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3745. full pathname (if any) of the make program. After Configure runs,
  3746. the value is reset to a plain C<make> and is not useful.
  3747. =item C<make_set_make>
  3748. From F<make.U>:
  3749. Some versions of C<make> set the variable C<MAKE>. Others do not.
  3750. This variable contains the string to be included in F<Makefile.SH>
  3751. so that C<MAKE> is set if needed, and not if not needed.
  3752. Possible values are:
  3753. make_set_make=C<#> # If your make program handles this for you,
  3754. make_set_make=C<MAKE=$make> # if it doesn't.
  3755. I used a comment character so that we can distinguish a
  3756. C<set> value (from a previous F<config.sh> or Configure C<-D> option)
  3757. from an uncomputed value.
  3758. =item C<mallocobj>
  3759. From F<mallocsrc.U>:
  3760. This variable contains the name of the F<malloc.o> that this package
  3761. generates, if that F<malloc.o> is preferred over the system malloc.
  3762. Otherwise the value is null. This variable is intended for generating
  3763. Makefiles. See mallocsrc.
  3764. =item C<mallocsrc>
  3765. From F<mallocsrc.U>:
  3766. This variable contains the name of the F<malloc.c> that comes with
  3767. the package, if that F<malloc.c> is preferred over the system malloc.
  3768. Otherwise the value is null. This variable is intended for generating
  3769. Makefiles.
  3770. =item C<malloctype>
  3771. From F<mallocsrc.U>:
  3772. This variable contains the kind of ptr returned by malloc and realloc.
  3773. =item C<man1dir>
  3774. From F<man1dir.U>:
  3775. This variable contains the name of the directory in which manual
  3776. source pages are to be put. It is the responsibility of the
  3777. F<Makefile.SH> to get the value of this into the proper command.
  3778. You must be prepared to do the F<~name> expansion yourself.
  3779. =item C<man1direxp>
  3780. From F<man1dir.U>:
  3781. This variable is the same as the man1dir variable, but is filename
  3782. expanded at configuration time, for convenient use in makefiles.
  3783. =item C<man1ext>
  3784. From F<man1dir.U>:
  3785. This variable contains the extension that the manual page should
  3786. have: one of C<n>, C<l>, or C<1>. The Makefile must supply the F<.>.
  3787. See man1dir.
  3788. =item C<man3dir>
  3789. From F<man3dir.U>:
  3790. This variable contains the name of the directory in which manual
  3791. source pages are to be put. It is the responsibility of the
  3792. F<Makefile.SH> to get the value of this into the proper command.
  3793. You must be prepared to do the F<~name> expansion yourself.
  3794. =item C<man3direxp>
  3795. From F<man3dir.U>:
  3796. This variable is the same as the man3dir variable, but is filename
  3797. expanded at configuration time, for convenient use in makefiles.
  3798. =item C<man3ext>
  3799. From F<man3dir.U>:
  3800. This variable contains the extension that the manual page should
  3801. have: one of C<n>, C<l>, or C<3>. The Makefile must supply the F<.>.
  3802. See man3dir.
  3803. =back
  3804. =head2 M
  3805. =over
  3806. =item C<Mcc>
  3807. From F<Loc.U>:
  3808. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3809. full pathname (if any) of the Mcc program. After Configure runs,
  3810. the value is reset to a plain C<Mcc> and is not useful.
  3811. =item C<mips_type>
  3812. From F<usrinc.U>:
  3813. This variable holds the environment type for the mips system.
  3814. Possible values are "BSD 4.3" and "System V".
  3815. =item C<mkdir>
  3816. From F<Loc.U>:
  3817. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3818. full pathname (if any) of the mkdir program. After Configure runs,
  3819. the value is reset to a plain C<mkdir> and is not useful.
  3820. =item C<mmaptype>
  3821. From F<d_mmap.U>:
  3822. This symbol contains the type of pointer returned by mmap()
  3823. (and simultaneously the type of the first argument).
  3824. It can be C<void *> or C<caddr_t>.
  3825. =item C<modetype>
  3826. From F<modetype.U>:
  3827. This variable defines modetype to be something like mode_t,
  3828. int, unsigned short, or whatever type is used to declare file
  3829. modes for system calls.
  3830. =item C<more>
  3831. From F<Loc.U>:
  3832. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3833. full pathname (if any) of the more program. After Configure runs,
  3834. the value is reset to a plain C<more> and is not useful.
  3835. =item C<multiarch>
  3836. From F<multiarch.U>:
  3837. This variable conditionally defines the C<MULTIARCH> symbol
  3838. which signifies the presence of multiplatform files.
  3839. This is normally set by hints files.
  3840. =item C<mv>
  3841. From F<Loc.U>:
  3842. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  3843. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  3844. =item C<myarchname>
  3845. From F<archname.U>:
  3846. This variable holds the architecture name computed by Configure in
  3847. a previous run. It is not intended to be perused by any user and
  3848. should never be set in a hint file.
  3849. =item C<mydomain>
  3850. From F<myhostname.U>:
  3851. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<MYDOMAIN> symbol,
  3852. which is the domain of the host the program is going to run on.
  3853. The domain must be appended to myhostname to form a complete host name.
  3854. The dot comes with mydomain, and need not be supplied by the program.
  3855. =item C<myhostname>
  3856. From F<myhostname.U>:
  3857. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<MYHOSTNAME> symbol,
  3858. which is the name of the host the program is going to run on.
  3859. The domain is not kept with hostname, but must be gotten from mydomain.
  3860. The dot comes with mydomain, and need not be supplied by the program.
  3861. =item C<myuname>
  3862. From F<Oldconfig.U>:
  3863. The output of C<uname -a> if available, otherwise the hostname. On Xenix,
  3864. pseudo variables assignments in the output are stripped, thank you. The
  3865. whole thing is then lower-cased.
  3866. =back
  3867. =head2 n
  3868. =over
  3869. =item C<n>
  3870. From F<n.U>:
  3871. This variable contains the C<-n> flag if that is what causes the echo
  3872. command to suppress newline. Otherwise it is null. Correct usage is
  3873. $echo $n "prompt for a question: $c".
  3874. =item C<need_va_copy>
  3875. From F<need_va_copy.U>:
  3876. This symbol, if defined, indicates that the system stores
  3877. the variable argument list datatype, va_list, in a format
  3878. that cannot be copied by simple assignment, so that some
  3879. other means must be used when copying is required.
  3880. As such systems vary in their provision (or non-provision)
  3881. of copying mechanisms, F<handy.h> defines a platform-
  3882. C<independent> macro, Perl_va_copy(src, dst), to do the job.
  3883. =item C<netdb_hlen_type>
  3884. From F<netdbtype.U>:
  3885. This variable holds the type used for the 2nd argument to
  3886. gethostbyaddr(). Usually, this is int or size_t or unsigned.
  3887. This is only useful if you have gethostbyaddr(), naturally.
  3888. =item C<netdb_host_type>
  3889. From F<netdbtype.U>:
  3890. This variable holds the type used for the 1st argument to
  3891. gethostbyaddr(). Usually, this is char * or void *, possibly
  3892. with or without a const prefix.
  3893. This is only useful if you have gethostbyaddr(), naturally.
  3894. =item C<netdb_name_type>
  3895. From F<netdbtype.U>:
  3896. This variable holds the type used for the argument to
  3897. gethostbyname(). Usually, this is char * or const char *.
  3898. This is only useful if you have gethostbyname(), naturally.
  3899. =item C<netdb_net_type>
  3900. From F<netdbtype.U>:
  3901. This variable holds the type used for the 1st argument to
  3902. getnetbyaddr(). Usually, this is int or long.
  3903. This is only useful if you have getnetbyaddr(), naturally.
  3904. =item C<nm>
  3905. From F<Loc.U>:
  3906. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3907. full pathname (if any) of the nm program. After Configure runs,
  3908. the value is reset to a plain C<nm> and is not useful.
  3909. =item C<nm_opt>
  3910. From F<usenm.U>:
  3911. This variable holds the options that may be necessary for nm.
  3912. =item C<nm_so_opt>
  3913. From F<usenm.U>:
  3914. This variable holds the options that may be necessary for nm
  3915. to work on a shared library but that can not be used on an
  3916. archive library. Currently, this is only used by Linux, where
  3917. nm --dynamic is *required* to get symbols from an C<ELF> library which
  3918. has been stripped, but nm --dynamic is *fatal* on an archive library.
  3919. Maybe Linux should just always set usenm=false.
  3920. =item C<nonxs_ext>
  3921. From F<Extensions.U>:
  3922. This variable holds a list of all non-xs extensions included
  3923. in the package. All of them will be built.
  3924. =item C<nroff>
  3925. From F<Loc.U>:
  3926. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  3927. full pathname (if any) of the nroff program. After Configure runs,
  3928. the value is reset to a plain C<nroff> and is not useful.
  3929. =item C<nveformat>
  3930. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  3931. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  3932. a Perl C<NV> using %e-ish floating point format.
  3933. =item C<nvEUformat>
  3934. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  3935. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  3936. a Perl C<NV> using %E-ish floating point format.
  3937. =item C<nvfformat>
  3938. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  3939. This variable confains the format string used for printing
  3940. a Perl C<NV> using %f-ish floating point format.
  3941. =item C<nvFUformat>
  3942. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  3943. This variable confains the format string used for printing
  3944. a Perl C<NV> using %F-ish floating point format.
  3945. =item C<nvgformat>
  3946. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  3947. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  3948. a Perl C<NV> using %g-ish floating point format.
  3949. =item C<nvGUformat>
  3950. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  3951. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  3952. a Perl C<NV> using %G-ish floating point format.
  3953. =item C<nvsize>
  3954. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3955. This variable is the size of an C<NV> in bytes.
  3956. =item C<nvtype>
  3957. From F<perlxv.U>:
  3958. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's C<NV>.
  3959. =back
  3960. =head2 o
  3961. =over
  3962. =item C<o_nonblock>
  3963. From F<nblock_io.U>:
  3964. This variable bears the symbol value to be used during open() or fcntl()
  3965. to turn on non-blocking F<I/O> for a file descriptor. If you wish to switch
  3966. between blocking and non-blocking, you may try ioctl(C<FIOSNBIO>) instead,
  3967. but that is only supported by some devices.
  3968. =item C<obj_ext>
  3969. From F<Unix.U>:
  3970. This is an old synonym for _o.
  3971. =item C<old_pthread_create_joinable>
  3972. From F<d_pthrattrj.U>:
  3973. This variable defines the constant to use for creating joinable
  3974. (aka undetached) pthreads. Unused if F<pthread.h> defines
  3975. C<PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE>. If used, possible values are
  3976. C<PTHREAD_CREATE_UNDETACHED> and C<__UNDETACHED>.
  3977. =item C<optimize>
  3978. From F<ccflags.U>:
  3979. This variable contains any F<optimizer/debugger> flag that should be used.
  3980. It is up to the Makefile to use it.
  3981. =item C<orderlib>
  3982. From F<orderlib.U>:
  3983. This variable is C<true> if the components of libraries must be ordered
  3984. (with `lorder $* | tsort`) before placing them in an archive. Set to
  3985. C<false> if ranlib or ar can generate random libraries.
  3986. =item C<osname>
  3987. From F<Oldconfig.U>:
  3988. This variable contains the operating system name (e.g. sunos,
  3989. solaris, hpux, F<etc.>). It can be useful later on for setting
  3990. defaults. Any spaces are replaced with underscores. It is set
  3991. to a null string if we can't figure it out.
  3992. =item C<osvers>
  3993. From F<Oldconfig.U>:
  3994. This variable contains the operating system version (e.g.
  3995. 4.1.3, 5.2, F<etc.>). It is primarily used for helping select
  3996. an appropriate hints file, but might be useful elsewhere for
  3997. setting defaults. It is set to '' if we can't figure it out.
  3998. We try to be flexible about how much of the version number
  3999. to keep, e.g. if 4.1.1, 4.1.2, and 4.1.3 are essentially the
  4000. same for this package, hints files might just be F<os_4.0> or
  4001. F<os_4.1>, F<etc.>, not keeping separate files for each little release.
  4002. =item C<otherlibdirs>
  4003. From F<otherlibdirs.U>:
  4004. This variable contains a colon-separated set of paths for the perl
  4005. binary to search for additional library files or modules.
  4006. These directories will be tacked to the end of @C<INC>.
  4007. Perl will automatically search below each path for version-
  4008. and architecture-specific directories. See inc_version_list
  4009. for more details.
  4010. A value of C< > means C<none> and is used to preserve this value
  4011. for the next run through Configure.
  4012. =back
  4013. =head2 p
  4014. =over
  4015. =item C<package>
  4016. From F<package.U>:
  4017. This variable contains the name of the package being constructed.
  4018. It is primarily intended for the use of later Configure units.
  4019. =item C<pager>
  4020. From F<pager.U>:
  4021. This variable contains the name of the preferred pager on the system.
  4022. Usual values are (the full pathnames of) more, less, pg, or cat.
  4023. =item C<passcat>
  4024. From F<nis.U>:
  4025. This variable contains a command that produces the text of the
  4026. F</etc/passwd> file. This is normally "cat F</etc/passwd>", but can be
  4027. "ypcat passwd" when C<NIS> is used.
  4028. On some systems, such as os390, there may be no equivalent
  4029. command, in which case this variable is unset.
  4030. =item C<patchlevel>
  4031. From F<patchlevel.U>:
  4032. The patchlevel level of this package.
  4033. The value of patchlevel comes from the F<patchlevel.h> file.
  4034. In a version number such as 5.6.1, this is the C<6>.
  4035. In F<patchlevel.h>, this is referred to as C<PERL_VERSION>.
  4036. =item C<path_sep>
  4037. From F<Unix.U>:
  4038. This is an old synonym for p_ in F<Head.U>, the character
  4039. used to separate elements in the command shell search C<PATH>.
  4040. =item C<perl5>
  4041. From F<perl5.U>:
  4042. This variable contains the full path (if any) to a previously
  4043. installed F<perl5.005> or later suitable for running the script
  4044. to determine inc_version_list.
  4045. =item C<perl>
  4046. From F<Loc.U>:
  4047. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4048. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4049. =back
  4050. =head2 P
  4051. =over
  4052. =item C<PERL_REVISION>
  4053. From F<Oldsyms.U>:
  4054. In a Perl version number such as 5.6.2, this is the 5.
  4055. This value is manually set in F<patchlevel.h>
  4056. =item C<PERL_SUBVERSION>
  4057. From F<Oldsyms.U>:
  4058. In a Perl version number such as 5.6.2, this is the 2.
  4059. Values greater than 50 represent potentially unstable
  4060. development subversions.
  4061. This value is manually set in F<patchlevel.h>
  4062. =item C<PERL_VERSION>
  4063. From F<Oldsyms.U>:
  4064. In a Perl version number such as 5.6.2, this is the 6.
  4065. This value is manually set in F<patchlevel.h>
  4066. =item C<perladmin>
  4067. From F<perladmin.U>:
  4068. Electronic mail address of the perl5 administrator.
  4069. =item C<perllibs>
  4070. From F<End.U>:
  4071. The list of libraries needed by Perl only (any libraries needed
  4072. by extensions only will by dropped, if using dynamic loading).
  4073. =item C<perlpath>
  4074. From F<perlpath.U>:
  4075. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<PERLPATH> symbol,
  4076. which contains the name of the perl interpreter to be used in
  4077. shell scripts and in the "eval C<exec>" idiom.
  4078. =item C<pg>
  4079. From F<Loc.U>:
  4080. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4081. full pathname (if any) of the pg program. After Configure runs,
  4082. the value is reset to a plain C<pg> and is not useful.
  4083. =item C<phostname>
  4084. From F<myhostname.U>:
  4085. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<PHOSTNAME> symbol,
  4086. which is a command that can be fed to popen() to get the host name.
  4087. The program should probably not presume that the domain is or isn't
  4088. there already.
  4089. =item C<pidtype>
  4090. From F<pidtype.U>:
  4091. This variable defines C<PIDTYPE> to be something like pid_t, int,
  4092. ushort, or whatever type is used to declare process ids in the kernel.
  4093. =item C<plibpth>
  4094. From F<libpth.U>:
  4095. Holds the private path used by Configure to find out the libraries.
  4096. Its value is prepend to libpth. This variable takes care of special
  4097. machines, like the mips. Usually, it should be empty.
  4098. =item C<pm_apiversion>
  4099. From F<xs_apiversion.U>:
  4100. This variable contains the version of the oldest perl
  4101. compatible with the present perl. (That is, pure perl modules
  4102. written for $pm_apiversion will still work for the current
  4103. version). F<perl.c>:incpush() and F<lib/lib.pm> will automatically
  4104. search in $sitelib for older directories across major versions
  4105. back to pm_apiversion. This is only useful if you have a perl
  4106. library directory tree structured like the default one. The
  4107. versioned site_perl library was introduced in 5.005, so that's
  4108. the default setting for this variable. It's hard to imagine
  4109. it changing before Perl6. It is included here for symmetry
  4110. with xs_apiveprsion -- the searching algorithms will
  4111. (presumably) be similar.
  4112. See the C<INSTALL> file for how this works.
  4113. =item C<pmake>
  4114. From F<Loc.U>:
  4115. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4116. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4117. =item C<pr>
  4118. From F<Loc.U>:
  4119. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4120. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4121. =item C<prefix>
  4122. From F<prefix.U>:
  4123. This variable holds the name of the directory below which the
  4124. user will install the package. Usually, this is F</usr/local>, and
  4125. executables go in F</usr/local/bin>, library stuff in F</usr/local/lib>,
  4126. man pages in F</usr/local/man>, etc. It is only used to set defaults
  4127. for things in F<bin.U>, F<mansrc.U>, F<privlib.U>, or F<scriptdir.U>.
  4128. =item C<prefixexp>
  4129. From F<prefix.U>:
  4130. This variable holds the full absolute path of the directory below
  4131. which the user will install the package. Derived from prefix.
  4132. =item C<privlib>
  4133. From F<privlib.U>:
  4134. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<PRIVLIB> symbol,
  4135. which is the name of the private library for this package. It may
  4136. have a F<~> on the front. It is up to the makefile to eventually create
  4137. this directory while performing installation (with F<~> substitution).
  4138. =item C<privlibexp>
  4139. From F<privlib.U>:
  4140. This variable is the F<~name> expanded version of privlib, so that you
  4141. may use it directly in Makefiles or shell scripts.
  4142. =item C<prototype>
  4143. From F<prototype.U>:
  4144. This variable holds the eventual value of C<CAN_PROTOTYPE>, which
  4145. indicates the C compiler can handle funciton prototypes.
  4146. =item C<ptrsize>
  4147. From F<ptrsize.U>:
  4148. This variable contains the value of the C<PTRSIZE> symbol, which
  4149. indicates to the C program how many bytes there are in a pointer.
  4150. =back
  4151. =head2 q
  4152. =over
  4153. =item C<quadkind>
  4154. From F<quadtype.U>:
  4155. This variable, if defined, encodes the type of a quad:
  4156. 1 = int, 2 = long, 3 = long long, 4 = int64_t.
  4157. =item C<quadtype>
  4158. From F<quadtype.U>:
  4159. This variable defines Quad_t to be something like long, int,
  4160. long long, int64_t, or whatever type is used for 64-bit integers.
  4161. =back
  4162. =head2 r
  4163. =over
  4164. =item C<randbits>
  4165. From F<randfunc.U>:
  4166. Indicates how many bits are produced by the function used to
  4167. generate normalized random numbers.
  4168. =item C<randfunc>
  4169. From F<randfunc.U>:
  4170. Indicates the name of the random number function to use.
  4171. Values include drand48, random, and rand. In C programs,
  4172. the C<Drand01> macro is defined to generate uniformly distributed
  4173. random numbers over the range [0., 1.[ (see drand01 and nrand).
  4174. =item C<randseedtype>
  4175. From F<randfunc.U>:
  4176. Indicates the type of the argument of the seedfunc.
  4177. =item C<ranlib>
  4178. From F<orderlib.U>:
  4179. This variable is set to the pathname of the ranlib program, if it is
  4180. needed to generate random libraries. Set to C<:> if ar can generate
  4181. random libraries or if random libraries are not supported
  4182. =item C<rd_nodata>
  4183. From F<nblock_io.U>:
  4184. This variable holds the return code from read() when no data is
  4185. present. It should be -1, but some systems return 0 when C<O_NDELAY> is
  4186. used, which is a shame because you cannot make the difference between
  4187. no data and an F<EOF.>. Sigh!
  4188. =item C<revision>
  4189. From F<patchlevel.U>:
  4190. The value of revision comes from the F<patchlevel.h> file.
  4191. In a version number such as 5.6.1, this is the C<5>.
  4192. In F<patchlevel.h>, this is referred to as C<PERL_REVISION>.
  4193. =item C<rm>
  4194. From F<Loc.U>:
  4195. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4196. full pathname (if any) of the rm program. After Configure runs,
  4197. the value is reset to a plain C<rm> and is not useful.
  4198. =item C<rmail>
  4199. From F<Loc.U>:
  4200. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4201. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4202. =item C<runnm>
  4203. From F<usenm.U>:
  4204. This variable contains C<true> or C<false> depending whether the
  4205. nm extraction should be performed or not, according to the value
  4206. of usenm and the flags on the Configure command line.
  4207. =back
  4208. =head2 s
  4209. =over
  4210. =item C<sched_yield>
  4211. From F<d_pthread_y.U>:
  4212. This variable defines the way to yield the execution
  4213. of the current thread.
  4214. =item C<scriptdir>
  4215. From F<scriptdir.U>:
  4216. This variable holds the name of the directory in which the user wants
  4217. to put publicly scripts for the package in question. It is either
  4218. the same directory as for binaries, or a special one that can be
  4219. mounted across different architectures, like F</usr/share>. Programs
  4220. must be prepared to deal with F<~name> expansion.
  4221. =item C<scriptdirexp>
  4222. From F<scriptdir.U>:
  4223. This variable is the same as scriptdir, but is filename expanded
  4224. at configuration time, for programs not wanting to bother with it.
  4225. =item C<sed>
  4226. From F<Loc.U>:
  4227. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4228. full pathname (if any) of the sed program. After Configure runs,
  4229. the value is reset to a plain C<sed> and is not useful.
  4230. =item C<seedfunc>
  4231. From F<randfunc.U>:
  4232. Indicates the random number generating seed function.
  4233. Values include srand48, srandom, and srand.
  4234. =item C<selectminbits>
  4235. From F<selectminbits.U>:
  4236. This variable holds the minimum number of bits operated by select.
  4237. That is, if you do select(n, ...), how many bits at least will be
  4238. cleared in the masks if some activity is detected. Usually this
  4239. is either n or 32*ceil(F<n/32>), especially many little-endians do
  4240. the latter. This is only useful if you have select(), naturally.
  4241. =item C<selecttype>
  4242. From F<selecttype.U>:
  4243. This variable holds the type used for the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th
  4244. arguments to select. Usually, this is C<fd_set *>, if C<HAS_FD_SET>
  4245. is defined, and C<int *> otherwise. This is only useful if you
  4246. have select(), naturally.
  4247. =item C<sendmail>
  4248. From F<Loc.U>:
  4249. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4250. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4251. =item C<sh>
  4252. From F<sh.U>:
  4253. This variable contains the full pathname of the shell used
  4254. on this system to execute Bourne shell scripts. Usually, this will be
  4255. F</bin/sh>, though it's possible that some systems will have F</bin/ksh>,
  4256. F</bin/pdksh>, F</bin/ash>, F</bin/bash>, or even something such as
  4257. D:F</bin/sh.exe>.
  4258. This unit comes before F<Options.U>, so you can't set sh with a C<-D>
  4259. option, though you can override this (and startsh)
  4260. with C<-O -Dsh=F</bin/whatever> -Dstartsh=whatever>
  4261. =item C<shar>
  4262. From F<Loc.U>:
  4263. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4264. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4265. =item C<sharpbang>
  4266. From F<spitshell.U>:
  4267. This variable contains the string #! if this system supports that
  4268. construct.
  4269. =item C<shmattype>
  4270. From F<d_shmat.U>:
  4271. This symbol contains the type of pointer returned by shmat().
  4272. It can be C<void *> or C<char *>.
  4273. =item C<shortsize>
  4274. From F<intsize.U>:
  4275. This variable contains the value of the C<SHORTSIZE> symbol which
  4276. indicates to the C program how many bytes there are in a short.
  4277. =item C<shrpenv>
  4278. From F<libperl.U>:
  4279. If the user builds a shared F<libperl.so>, then we need to tell the
  4280. C<perl> executable where it will be able to find the installed F<libperl.so>.
  4281. One way to do this on some systems is to set the environment variable
  4282. C<LD_RUN_PATH> to the directory that will be the final location of the
  4283. shared F<libperl.so>. The makefile can use this with something like
  4284. $shrpenv $(C<CC>) -o perl F<perlmain.o> $libperl $libs
  4285. Typical values are
  4286. shrpenv="env C<LD_RUN_PATH>=$F<archlibexp/C<CORE>>"
  4287. or
  4288. shrpenv=''
  4289. See the main perl F<Makefile.SH> for actual working usage.
  4290. Alternatively, we might be able to use a command line option such
  4291. as -R $F<archlibexp/C<CORE>> (Solaris, NetBSD) or -Wl,-rpath
  4292. $F<archlibexp/C<CORE>> (Linux).
  4293. =item C<shsharp>
  4294. From F<spitshell.U>:
  4295. This variable tells further Configure units whether your sh can
  4296. handle # comments.
  4297. =item C<sig_count>
  4298. From F<sig_name.U>:
  4299. This variable holds a number larger than the largest valid
  4300. signal number. This is usually the same as the C<NSIG> macro.
  4301. =item C<sig_name>
  4302. From F<sig_name.U>:
  4303. This variable holds the signal names, space separated. The leading
  4304. C<SIG> in signal name is removed. A C<ZERO> is prepended to the
  4305. list. This is currently not used.
  4306. =item C<sig_name_init>
  4307. From F<sig_name.U>:
  4308. This variable holds the signal names, enclosed in double quotes and
  4309. separated by commas, suitable for use in the C<SIG_NAME> definition
  4310. below. A C<ZERO> is prepended to the list, and the list is
  4311. terminated with a plain 0. The leading C<SIG> in signal names
  4312. is removed. See sig_num.
  4313. =item C<sig_num>
  4314. From F<sig_name.U>:
  4315. This variable holds the signal numbers, space separated. A C<ZERO> is
  4316. prepended to the list (corresponding to the fake C<SIGZERO>), and
  4317. the list is terminated with a 0. Those numbers correspond to
  4318. the value of the signal listed in the same place within the
  4319. sig_name list.
  4320. =item C<sig_num_init>
  4321. From F<sig_name.U>:
  4322. This variable holds the signal numbers, enclosed in double quotes and
  4323. separated by commas, suitable for use in the C<SIG_NUM> definition
  4324. below. A C<ZERO> is prepended to the list, and the list is
  4325. terminated with a plain 0.
  4326. =item C<sig_size>
  4327. From F<sig_name.U>:
  4328. This variable contains the number of elements of the sig_name
  4329. and sig_num arrays, excluding the final C<NULL> entry.
  4330. =item C<signal_t>
  4331. From F<d_voidsig.U>:
  4332. This variable holds the type of the signal handler (void or int).
  4333. =item C<sitearch>
  4334. From F<sitearch.U>:
  4335. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<SITEARCH> symbol,
  4336. which is the name of the private library for this package. It may
  4337. have a F<~> on the front. It is up to the makefile to eventually create
  4338. this directory while performing installation (with F<~> substitution).
  4339. The standard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
  4340. After perl has been installed, users may install their own local
  4341. architecture-dependent modules in this directory with
  4342. MakeMaker F<Makefile.PL>
  4343. or equivalent. See C<INSTALL> for details.
  4344. =item C<sitearchexp>
  4345. From F<sitearch.U>:
  4346. This variable is the F<~name> expanded version of sitearch, so that you
  4347. may use it directly in Makefiles or shell scripts.
  4348. =item C<sitebin>
  4349. From F<sitebin.U>:
  4350. This variable holds the name of the directory in which the user wants
  4351. to put add-on publicly executable files for the package in question. It
  4352. is most often a local directory such as F</usr/local/bin>. Programs using
  4353. this variable must be prepared to deal with F<~name> substitution.
  4354. The standard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
  4355. After perl has been installed, users may install their own local
  4356. executables in this directory with
  4357. MakeMaker F<Makefile.PL>
  4358. or equivalent. See C<INSTALL> for details.
  4359. =item C<sitebinexp>
  4360. From F<sitebin.U>:
  4361. This is the same as the sitebin variable, but is filename expanded at
  4362. configuration time, for use in your makefiles.
  4363. =item C<sitelib>
  4364. From F<sitelib.U>:
  4365. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<SITELIB> symbol,
  4366. which is the name of the private library for this package. It may
  4367. have a F<~> on the front. It is up to the makefile to eventually create
  4368. this directory while performing installation (with F<~> substitution).
  4369. The standard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
  4370. After perl has been installed, users may install their own local
  4371. architecture-independent modules in this directory with
  4372. MakeMaker F<Makefile.PL>
  4373. or equivalent. See C<INSTALL> for details.
  4374. =item C<sitelib_stem>
  4375. From F<sitelib.U>:
  4376. This variable is $sitelibexp with any trailing version-specific component
  4377. removed. The elements in inc_version_list (F<inc_version_list.U>) can
  4378. be tacked onto this variable to generate a list of directories to search.
  4379. =item C<sitelibexp>
  4380. From F<sitelib.U>:
  4381. This variable is the F<~name> expanded version of sitelib, so that you
  4382. may use it directly in Makefiles or shell scripts.
  4383. =item C<siteprefix>
  4384. From F<siteprefix.U>:
  4385. This variable holds the full absolute path of the directory below
  4386. which the user will install add-on packages.
  4387. See C<INSTALL> for usage and examples.
  4388. =item C<siteprefixexp>
  4389. From F<siteprefix.U>:
  4390. This variable holds the full absolute path of the directory below
  4391. which the user will install add-on packages. Derived from siteprefix.
  4392. =item C<sizesize>
  4393. From F<sizesize.U>:
  4394. This variable contains the size of a sizetype in bytes.
  4395. =item C<sizetype>
  4396. From F<sizetype.U>:
  4397. This variable defines sizetype to be something like size_t,
  4398. unsigned long, or whatever type is used to declare length
  4399. parameters for string functions.
  4400. =item C<sleep>
  4401. From F<Loc.U>:
  4402. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4403. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4404. =item C<smail>
  4405. From F<Loc.U>:
  4406. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4407. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4408. =item C<so>
  4409. From F<so.U>:
  4410. This variable holds the extension used to identify shared libraries
  4411. (also known as shared objects) on the system. Usually set to C<so>.
  4412. =item C<sockethdr>
  4413. From F<d_socket.U>:
  4414. This variable has any cpp C<-I> flags needed for socket support.
  4415. =item C<socketlib>
  4416. From F<d_socket.U>:
  4417. This variable has the names of any libraries needed for socket support.
  4418. =item C<socksizetype>
  4419. From F<socksizetype.U>:
  4420. This variable holds the type used for the size argument
  4421. for various socket calls like accept. Usual values include
  4422. socklen_t, size_t, and int.
  4423. =item C<sort>
  4424. From F<Loc.U>:
  4425. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4426. full pathname (if any) of the sort program. After Configure runs,
  4427. the value is reset to a plain C<sort> and is not useful.
  4428. =item C<spackage>
  4429. From F<package.U>:
  4430. This variable contains the name of the package being constructed,
  4431. with the first letter uppercased, F<i.e>. suitable for starting
  4432. sentences.
  4433. =item C<spitshell>
  4434. From F<spitshell.U>:
  4435. This variable contains the command necessary to spit out a runnable
  4436. shell on this system. It is either cat or a grep C<-v> for # comments.
  4437. =item C<sPRId64>
  4438. From F<quadfio.U>:
  4439. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4440. format 64-bit decimal numbers (format C<d>) for output.
  4441. =item C<sPRIeldbl>
  4442. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  4443. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4444. format long doubles (format C<e>) for output.
  4445. =item C<sPRIEUldbl>
  4446. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  4447. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4448. format long doubles (format C<E>) for output.
  4449. The C<U> in the name is to separate this from sPRIeldbl so that even
  4450. case-blind systems can see the difference.
  4451. =item C<sPRIfldbl>
  4452. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  4453. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4454. format long doubles (format C<f>) for output.
  4455. =item C<sPRIFUldbl>
  4456. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  4457. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4458. format long doubles (format C<F>) for output.
  4459. The C<U> in the name is to separate this from sPRIfldbl so that even
  4460. case-blind systems can see the difference.
  4461. =item C<sPRIgldbl>
  4462. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  4463. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4464. format long doubles (format C<g>) for output.
  4465. =item C<sPRIGUldbl>
  4466. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  4467. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4468. format long doubles (format C<G>) for output.
  4469. The C<U> in the name is to separate this from sPRIgldbl so that even
  4470. case-blind systems can see the difference.
  4471. =item C<sPRIi64>
  4472. From F<quadfio.U>:
  4473. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4474. format 64-bit decimal numbers (format C<i>) for output.
  4475. =item C<sPRIo64>
  4476. From F<quadfio.U>:
  4477. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4478. format 64-bit octal numbers (format C<o>) for output.
  4479. =item C<sPRIu64>
  4480. From F<quadfio.U>:
  4481. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4482. format 64-bit unsigned decimal numbers (format C<u>) for output.
  4483. =item C<sPRIx64>
  4484. From F<quadfio.U>:
  4485. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4486. format 64-bit hexadecimal numbers (format C<x>) for output.
  4487. =item C<sPRIXU64>
  4488. From F<quadfio.U>:
  4489. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4490. format 64-bit hExADECimAl numbers (format C<X>) for output.
  4491. The C<U> in the name is to separate this from sPRIx64 so that even
  4492. case-blind systems can see the difference.
  4493. =item C<src>
  4494. From F<src.U>:
  4495. This variable holds the path to the package source. It is up to
  4496. the Makefile to use this variable and set C<VPATH> accordingly to
  4497. find the sources remotely.
  4498. =item C<sSCNfldbl>
  4499. From F<longdblfio.U>:
  4500. This variable, if defined, contains the string used by stdio to
  4501. format long doubles (format C<f>) for input.
  4502. =item C<ssizetype>
  4503. From F<ssizetype.U>:
  4504. This variable defines ssizetype to be something like ssize_t,
  4505. long or int. It is used by functions that return a count
  4506. of bytes or an error condition. It must be a signed type.
  4507. We will pick a type such that sizeof(SSize_t) == sizeof(Size_t).
  4508. =item C<startperl>
  4509. From F<startperl.U>:
  4510. This variable contains the string to put on the front of a perl
  4511. script to make sure (hopefully) that it runs with perl and not some
  4512. shell. Of course, that leading line must be followed by the classical
  4513. perl idiom:
  4514. eval 'exec perl -S $0 ${1+C<$@>}'
  4515. if $running_under_some_shell;
  4516. to guarantee perl startup should the shell execute the script. Note
  4517. that this magic incatation is not understood by csh.
  4518. =item C<startsh>
  4519. From F<startsh.U>:
  4520. This variable contains the string to put on the front of a shell
  4521. script to make sure (hopefully) that it runs with sh and not some
  4522. other shell.
  4523. =item C<static_ext>
  4524. From F<Extensions.U>:
  4525. This variable holds a list of C<XS> extension files we want to
  4526. link statically into the package. It is used by Makefile.
  4527. =item C<stdchar>
  4528. From F<stdchar.U>:
  4529. This variable conditionally defines C<STDCHAR> to be the type of char
  4530. used in F<stdio.h>. It has the values "unsigned char" or C<char>.
  4531. =item C<stdio_base>
  4532. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  4533. This variable defines how, given a C<FILE> pointer, fp, to access the
  4534. _base field (or equivalent) of F<stdio.h>'s C<FILE> structure. This will
  4535. be used to define the macro FILE_base(fp).
  4536. =item C<stdio_bufsiz>
  4537. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  4538. This variable defines how, given a C<FILE> pointer, fp, to determine
  4539. the number of bytes store in the F<I/O> buffer pointer to by the
  4540. _base field (or equivalent) of F<stdio.h>'s C<FILE> structure. This will
  4541. be used to define the macro FILE_bufsiz(fp).
  4542. =item C<stdio_cnt>
  4543. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  4544. This variable defines how, given a C<FILE> pointer, fp, to access the
  4545. _cnt field (or equivalent) of F<stdio.h>'s C<FILE> structure. This will
  4546. be used to define the macro FILE_cnt(fp).
  4547. =item C<stdio_filbuf>
  4548. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  4549. This variable defines how, given a C<FILE> pointer, fp, to tell
  4550. stdio to refill it's internal buffers (?). This will
  4551. be used to define the macro FILE_filbuf(fp).
  4552. =item C<stdio_ptr>
  4553. From F<d_stdstdio.U>:
  4554. This variable defines how, given a C<FILE> pointer, fp, to access the
  4555. _ptr field (or equivalent) of F<stdio.h>'s C<FILE> structure. This will
  4556. be used to define the macro FILE_ptr(fp).
  4557. =item C<stdio_stream_array>
  4558. From F<stdio_streams.U>:
  4559. This variable tells the name of the array holding the stdio streams.
  4560. Usual values include _iob, __iob, and __sF.
  4561. =item C<strings>
  4562. From F<i_string.U>:
  4563. This variable holds the full path of the string header that will be
  4564. used. Typically F</usr/include/string.h> or F</usr/include/strings.h>.
  4565. =item C<submit>
  4566. From F<Loc.U>:
  4567. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4568. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4569. =item C<subversion>
  4570. From F<patchlevel.U>:
  4571. The subversion level of this package.
  4572. The value of subversion comes from the F<patchlevel.h> file.
  4573. In a version number such as 5.6.1, this is the C<1>.
  4574. In F<patchlevel.h>, this is referred to as C<PERL_SUBVERSION>.
  4575. This is unique to perl.
  4576. =item C<sysman>
  4577. From F<sysman.U>:
  4578. This variable holds the place where the manual is located on this
  4579. system. It is not the place where the user wants to put his manual
  4580. pages. Rather it is the place where Configure may look to find manual
  4581. for unix commands (section 1 of the manual usually). See mansrc.
  4582. =back
  4583. =head2 t
  4584. =over
  4585. =item C<tail>
  4586. From F<Loc.U>:
  4587. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4588. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4589. =item C<tar>
  4590. From F<Loc.U>:
  4591. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4592. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4593. =item C<tbl>
  4594. From F<Loc.U>:
  4595. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4596. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4597. =item C<tee>
  4598. From F<Loc.U>:
  4599. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4600. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4601. =item C<test>
  4602. From F<Loc.U>:
  4603. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4604. full pathname (if any) of the test program. After Configure runs,
  4605. the value is reset to a plain C<test> and is not useful.
  4606. =item C<timeincl>
  4607. From F<i_time.U>:
  4608. This variable holds the full path of the included time header(s).
  4609. =item C<timetype>
  4610. From F<d_time.U>:
  4611. This variable holds the type returned by time(). It can be long,
  4612. or time_t on C<BSD> sites (in which case <sys/types.h> should be
  4613. included). Anyway, the type Time_t should be used.
  4614. =item C<touch>
  4615. From F<Loc.U>:
  4616. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4617. full pathname (if any) of the touch program. After Configure runs,
  4618. the value is reset to a plain C<touch> and is not useful.
  4619. =item C<tr>
  4620. From F<Loc.U>:
  4621. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4622. full pathname (if any) of the tr program. After Configure runs,
  4623. the value is reset to a plain C<tr> and is not useful.
  4624. =item C<trnl>
  4625. From F<trnl.U>:
  4626. This variable contains the value to be passed to the tr(1)
  4627. command to transliterate a newline. Typical values are
  4628. C<\012> and C<\n>. This is needed for C<EBCDIC> systems where
  4629. newline is not necessarily C<\012>.
  4630. =item C<troff>
  4631. From F<Loc.U>:
  4632. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4633. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4634. =back
  4635. =head2 u
  4636. =over
  4637. =item C<u16size>
  4638. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4639. This variable is the size of an U16 in bytes.
  4640. =item C<u16type>
  4641. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4642. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's U16.
  4643. =item C<u32size>
  4644. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4645. This variable is the size of an U32 in bytes.
  4646. =item C<u32type>
  4647. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4648. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's U32.
  4649. =item C<u64size>
  4650. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4651. This variable is the size of an U64 in bytes.
  4652. =item C<u64type>
  4653. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4654. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's U64.
  4655. =item C<u8size>
  4656. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4657. This variable is the size of an U8 in bytes.
  4658. =item C<u8type>
  4659. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4660. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's U8.
  4661. =item C<uidformat>
  4662. From F<uidf.U>:
  4663. This variable contains the format string used for printing a Uid_t.
  4664. =item C<uidsign>
  4665. From F<uidsign.U>:
  4666. This variable contains the signedness of a uidtype.
  4667. 1 for unsigned, -1 for signed.
  4668. =item C<uidsize>
  4669. From F<uidsize.U>:
  4670. This variable contains the size of a uidtype in bytes.
  4671. =item C<uidtype>
  4672. From F<uidtype.U>:
  4673. This variable defines Uid_t to be something like uid_t, int,
  4674. ushort, or whatever type is used to declare user ids in the kernel.
  4675. =item C<uname>
  4676. From F<Loc.U>:
  4677. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4678. full pathname (if any) of the uname program. After Configure runs,
  4679. the value is reset to a plain C<uname> and is not useful.
  4680. =item C<uniq>
  4681. From F<Loc.U>:
  4682. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4683. full pathname (if any) of the uniq program. After Configure runs,
  4684. the value is reset to a plain C<uniq> and is not useful.
  4685. =item C<uquadtype>
  4686. From F<quadtype.U>:
  4687. This variable defines Uquad_t to be something like unsigned long,
  4688. unsigned int, unsigned long long, uint64_t, or whatever type is
  4689. used for 64-bit integers.
  4690. =item C<use5005threads>
  4691. From F<usethreads.U>:
  4692. This variable conditionally defines the USE_5005THREADS symbol,
  4693. and indicates that Perl should be built to use the 5.005-based
  4694. threading implementation.
  4695. =item C<use64bitall>
  4696. From F<use64bits.U>:
  4697. This variable conditionally defines the USE_64_BIT_ALL symbol,
  4698. and indicates that 64-bit integer types should be used
  4699. when available. The maximal possible
  4700. 64-bitness is employed: LP64 or ILP64, meaning that you will
  4701. be able to use more than 2 gigabytes of memory. This mode is
  4702. even more binary incompatible than USE_64_BIT_INT. You may not
  4703. be able to run the resulting executable in a 32-bit C<CPU> at all or
  4704. you may need at least to reboot your C<OS> to 64-bit mode.
  4705. =item C<use64bitint>
  4706. From F<use64bits.U>:
  4707. This variable conditionally defines the USE_64_BIT_INT symbol,
  4708. and indicates that 64-bit integer types should be used
  4709. when available. The minimal possible 64-bitness
  4710. is employed, just enough to get 64-bit integers into Perl.
  4711. This may mean using for example "long longs", while your memory
  4712. may still be limited to 2 gigabytes.
  4713. =item C<usedl>
  4714. From F<dlsrc.U>:
  4715. This variable indicates if the system supports dynamic
  4716. loading of some sort. See also dlsrc and dlobj.
  4717. =item C<useithreads>
  4718. From F<usethreads.U>:
  4719. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_ITHREADS> symbol,
  4720. and indicates that Perl should be built to use the interpreter-based
  4721. threading implementation.
  4722. =item C<uselargefiles>
  4723. From F<uselfs.U>:
  4724. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_LARGE_FILES> symbol,
  4725. and indicates that large file interfaces should be used when
  4726. available.
  4727. =item C<uselongdouble>
  4728. From F<uselongdbl.U>:
  4729. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_LONG_DOUBLE> symbol,
  4730. and indicates that long doubles should be used when available.
  4731. =item C<usemorebits>
  4732. From F<usemorebits.U>:
  4733. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_MORE_BITS> symbol,
  4734. and indicates that explicit 64-bit interfaces and long doubles
  4735. should be used when available.
  4736. =item C<usemultiplicity>
  4737. From F<usemultiplicity.U>:
  4738. This variable conditionally defines the C<MULTIPLICITY> symbol,
  4739. and indicates that Perl should be built to use multiplicity.
  4740. =item C<usemymalloc>
  4741. From F<mallocsrc.U>:
  4742. This variable contains y if the malloc that comes with this package
  4743. is desired over the system's version of malloc. People often include
  4744. special versions of malloc for effiency, but such versions are often
  4745. less portable. See also mallocsrc and mallocobj.
  4746. If this is C<y>, then -lmalloc is removed from $libs.
  4747. =item C<usenm>
  4748. From F<usenm.U>:
  4749. This variable contains C<true> or C<false> depending whether the
  4750. nm extraction is wanted or not.
  4751. =item C<useopcode>
  4752. From F<Extensions.U>:
  4753. This variable holds either C<true> or C<false> to indicate
  4754. whether the Opcode extension should be used. The sole
  4755. use for this currently is to allow an easy mechanism
  4756. for users to skip the Opcode extension from the Configure
  4757. command line.
  4758. =item C<useperlio>
  4759. From F<useperlio.U>:
  4760. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_PERLIO> symbol,
  4761. and indicates that the PerlIO abstraction should be
  4762. used throughout.
  4763. =item C<useposix>
  4764. From F<Extensions.U>:
  4765. This variable holds either C<true> or C<false> to indicate
  4766. whether the C<POSIX> extension should be used. The sole
  4767. use for this currently is to allow an easy mechanism
  4768. for hints files to indicate that C<POSIX> will not compile
  4769. on a particular system.
  4770. =item C<usesfio>
  4771. From F<d_sfio.U>:
  4772. This variable is set to true when the user agrees to use sfio.
  4773. It is set to false when sfio is not available or when the user
  4774. explicitely requests not to use sfio. It is here primarily so
  4775. that command-line settings can override the auto-detection of
  4776. d_sfio without running into a "WHOA THERE".
  4777. =item C<useshrplib>
  4778. From F<libperl.U>:
  4779. This variable is set to C<yes> if the user wishes
  4780. to build a shared libperl, and C<no> otherwise.
  4781. =item C<usesocks>
  4782. From F<usesocks.U>:
  4783. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_SOCKS> symbol,
  4784. and indicates that Perl should be built to use C<SOCKS>.
  4785. =item C<usethreads>
  4786. From F<usethreads.U>:
  4787. This variable conditionally defines the C<USE_THREADS> symbol,
  4788. and indicates that Perl should be built to use threads.
  4789. =item C<usevendorprefix>
  4790. From F<vendorprefix.U>:
  4791. This variable tells whether the vendorprefix
  4792. and consequently other vendor* paths are in use.
  4793. =item C<usevfork>
  4794. From F<d_vfork.U>:
  4795. This variable is set to true when the user accepts to use vfork.
  4796. It is set to false when no vfork is available or when the user
  4797. explicitely requests not to use vfork.
  4798. =item C<usrinc>
  4799. From F<usrinc.U>:
  4800. This variable holds the path of the include files, which is
  4801. usually F</usr/include>. It is mainly used by other Configure units.
  4802. =item C<uuname>
  4803. From F<Loc.U>:
  4804. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4805. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4806. =item C<uvoformat>
  4807. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  4808. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  4809. a Perl C<UV> as an unsigned octal integer.
  4810. =item C<uvsize>
  4811. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4812. This variable is the size of a C<UV> in bytes.
  4813. =item C<uvtype>
  4814. From F<perlxv.U>:
  4815. This variable contains the C type used for Perl's C<UV>.
  4816. =item C<uvuformat>
  4817. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  4818. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  4819. a Perl C<UV> as an unsigned decimal integer.
  4820. =item C<uvxformat>
  4821. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  4822. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  4823. a Perl C<UV> as an unsigned hexadecimal integer in lowercase abcdef.
  4824. =item C<uvXUformat>
  4825. From F<perlxvf.U>:
  4826. This variable contains the format string used for printing
  4827. a Perl C<UV> as an unsigned hexadecimal integer in uppercase C<ABCDEF>.
  4828. =back
  4829. =head2 v
  4830. =over
  4831. =item C<vendorarch>
  4832. From F<vendorarch.U>:
  4833. This variable contains the value of the C<PERL_VENDORARCH> symbol.
  4834. It may have a F<~> on the front.
  4835. The standard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
  4836. Vendors who distribute perl may wish to place their own
  4837. architecture-dependent modules and extensions in this directory with
  4838. MakeMaker F<Makefile.PL> C<INSTALLDIRS>=vendor
  4839. or equivalent. See C<INSTALL> for details.
  4840. =item C<vendorarchexp>
  4841. From F<vendorarch.U>:
  4842. This variable is the F<~name> expanded version of vendorarch, so that you
  4843. may use it directly in Makefiles or shell scripts.
  4844. =item C<vendorbin>
  4845. From F<vendorbin.U>:
  4846. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<VENDORBIN> symbol.
  4847. It may have a F<~> on the front.
  4848. The standard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
  4849. Vendors who distribute perl may wish to place additional
  4850. binaries in this directory with
  4851. MakeMaker F<Makefile.PL> C<INSTALLDIRS>=vendor
  4852. or equivalent. See C<INSTALL> for details.
  4853. =item C<vendorbinexp>
  4854. From F<vendorbin.U>:
  4855. This variable is the F<~name> expanded version of vendorbin, so that you
  4856. may use it directly in Makefiles or shell scripts.
  4857. =item C<vendorlib>
  4858. From F<vendorlib.U>:
  4859. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<VENDORLIB> symbol,
  4860. which is the name of the private library for this package.
  4861. The standard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
  4862. Vendors who distribute perl may wish to place their own
  4863. modules in this directory with
  4864. MakeMaker F<Makefile.PL> C<INSTALLDIRS>=vendor
  4865. or equivalent. See C<INSTALL> for details.
  4866. =item C<vendorlib_stem>
  4867. From F<vendorlib.U>:
  4868. This variable is $vendorlibexp with any trailing version-specific component
  4869. removed. The elements in inc_version_list (F<inc_version_list.U>) can
  4870. be tacked onto this variable to generate a list of directories to search.
  4871. =item C<vendorlibexp>
  4872. From F<vendorlib.U>:
  4873. This variable is the F<~name> expanded version of vendorlib, so that you
  4874. may use it directly in Makefiles or shell scripts.
  4875. =item C<vendorprefix>
  4876. From F<vendorprefix.U>:
  4877. This variable holds the full absolute path of the directory below
  4878. which the vendor will install add-on packages.
  4879. See C<INSTALL> for usage and examples.
  4880. =item C<vendorprefixexp>
  4881. From F<vendorprefix.U>:
  4882. This variable holds the full absolute path of the directory below
  4883. which the vendor will install add-on packages. Derived from vendorprefix.
  4884. =item C<version>
  4885. From F<patchlevel.U>:
  4886. The full version number of this package, such as 5.6.1 (or 5_6_1).
  4887. This combines revision, patchlevel, and subversion to get the
  4888. full version number, including any possible subversions.
  4889. This is suitable for use as a directory name, and hence is
  4890. filesystem dependent.
  4891. =item C<versiononly>
  4892. From F<versiononly.U>:
  4893. If set, this symbol indicates that only the version-specific
  4894. components of a perl installation should be installed.
  4895. This may be useful for making a test installation of a new
  4896. version without disturbing the existing installation.
  4897. Setting versiononly is equivalent to setting installperl's -v option.
  4898. In particular, the non-versioned scripts and programs such as
  4899. a2p, c2ph, h2xs, pod2*, and perldoc are not installed
  4900. (see C<INSTALL> for a more complete list). Nor are the man
  4901. pages installed.
  4902. Usually, this is undef.
  4903. =item C<vi>
  4904. From F<Loc.U>:
  4905. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4906. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4907. =item C<voidflags>
  4908. From F<voidflags.U>:
  4909. This variable contains the eventual value of the C<VOIDFLAGS> symbol,
  4910. which indicates how much support of the void type is given by this
  4911. compiler. See C<VOIDFLAGS> for more info.
  4912. =back
  4913. =head2 x
  4914. =over
  4915. =item C<xlibpth>
  4916. From F<libpth.U>:
  4917. This variable holds extra path (space-separated) used to find
  4918. libraries on this platform, for example C<CPU>-specific libraries
  4919. (on multi-C<CPU> platforms) may be listed here.
  4920. =item C<xs_apiversion>
  4921. From F<xs_apiversion.U>:
  4922. This variable contains the version of the oldest perl binary
  4923. compatible with the present perl. F<perl.c>:incpush() and
  4924. F<lib/lib.pm> will automatically search in $sitearch for older
  4925. directories across major versions back to xs_apiversion.
  4926. This is only useful if you have a perl library directory tree
  4927. structured like the default one.
  4928. See C<INSTALL> for how this works.
  4929. The versioned site_perl directory was introduced in 5.005,
  4930. so that is the lowest possible value.
  4931. Since this can depend on compile time options (such as
  4932. bincompat) it is set by Configure. Other non-default sources
  4933. of potential incompatibility, such as multiplicity, threads,
  4934. debugging, 64bits, sfio, F<etc.>, are not checked for currently,
  4935. though in principle we could go snooping around in old
  4936. F<Config.pm> files.
  4937. =back
  4938. =head2 z
  4939. =over
  4940. =item C<zcat>
  4941. From F<Loc.U>:
  4942. This variable is defined but not used by Configure.
  4943. The value is a plain '' and is not useful.
  4944. =item C<zip>
  4945. From F<Loc.U>:
  4946. This variable is used internally by Configure to determine the
  4947. full pathname (if any) of the zip program. After Configure runs,
  4948. the value is reset to a plain C<zip> and is not useful.
  4949. =back
  4950. =head1 NOTE
  4951. This module contains a good example of how to use tie to implement a
  4952. cache and an example of how to make a tied variable readonly to those
  4953. outside of it.
  4954. =cut