view release on metacpan or search on metacpan
DESCRIPTION
Every now and then someone will ask me why thus and such Alien thing
doesn't work with a dynamic library error. My usual response is can you
make it work with static libraries? The reason for this is that
building dynamic libraries for an Alien share install introduce a
number of challenges, and honestly I don't see the point of using them,
if you can avoid it. So far I haven't actually seen a situation where
it couldn't be avoided. Just to be clear: dynamic libraries are fine
for Alien, and in fact desirable when you are using the system provided
libraries. You get the patches and security fixes supplied by your
operating system.
Okay, so why not build a dynamic library for a share install?
For this discussion, say you have an alienized library Alien::libfoo
and an XS module that uses it called Foo::XS (as illustrated in the
synopsis above).
Your Alien becomes a run-time dependency.
Lots. In summary:
Your Alien is a run-time dependency and you will annoy system
integrators
Your XS can be broken by upgrades to your Alien
Your platform may not be supported
Also, this module should start with the caveat section and then go from
there. Most modules I write are not like that.
These platforms seem to work: Linux, OS X, Windows, Cygwin, FreeBSD,
NetBSD, OpenBSD, Debian kFreeBSD.
Currently has Alien::Autotools as a prerequisite. I hope to remove that
prereq asap.
SEE ALSO
corpus/libpalindrome/config.guess view on Meta::CPAN
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
# General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
#
# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you
# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a
# configuration script generated by Autoconf, you may include it under
# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that
# program. This Exception is an additional permission under section 7
# of the GNU General Public License, version 3 ("GPLv3").
#
# Originally written by Per Bothner; maintained since 2000 by Ben Elliston.
#
# You can get the latest version of this script from:
# http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=config.git;a=blob_plain;f=config.guess
#
# Please send patches to <config-patches@gnu.org>.
corpus/libpalindrome/config.guess view on Meta::CPAN
# use `HOST_CC' if defined, but it is deprecated.
# Portable tmp directory creation inspired by the Autoconf team.
set_cc_for_build='
trap "exitcode=\$?; (rm -f \$tmpfiles 2>/dev/null; rmdir \$tmp 2>/dev/null) && exit \$exitcode" 0 ;
trap "rm -f \$tmpfiles 2>/dev/null; rmdir \$tmp 2>/dev/null; exit 1" 1 2 13 15 ;
: ${TMPDIR=/tmp} ;
{ tmp=`(umask 077 && mktemp -d "$TMPDIR/cgXXXXXX") 2>/dev/null` && test -n "$tmp" && test -d "$tmp" ; } ||
{ test -n "$RANDOM" && tmp=$TMPDIR/cg$$-$RANDOM && (umask 077 && mkdir $tmp) ; } ||
{ tmp=$TMPDIR/cg-$$ && (umask 077 && mkdir $tmp) && echo "Warning: creating insecure temp directory" >&2 ; } ||
{ echo "$me: cannot create a temporary directory in $TMPDIR" >&2 ; exit 1 ; } ;
dummy=$tmp/dummy ;
tmpfiles="$dummy.c $dummy.o $dummy.rel $dummy" ;
case $CC_FOR_BUILD,$HOST_CC,$CC in
,,) echo "int x;" > $dummy.c ;
for c in cc gcc c89 c99 ; do
if ($c -c -o $dummy.o $dummy.c) >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
CC_FOR_BUILD="$c"; break ;
fi ;
done ;
corpus/libpalindrome/config.sub view on Meta::CPAN
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
# General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
#
# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you
# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a
# configuration script generated by Autoconf, you may include it under
# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that
# program. This Exception is an additional permission under section 7
# of the GNU General Public License, version 3 ("GPLv3").
# Please send patches to <config-patches@gnu.org>.
#
# Configuration subroutine to validate and canonicalize a configuration type.
# Supply the specified configuration type as an argument.
# If it is invalid, we print an error message on stderr and exit with code 1.
# Otherwise, we print the canonical config type on stdout and succeed.
corpus/libpalindrome/configure view on Meta::CPAN
# certainly right.
break;;
*.* )
if test "${ac_cv_exeext+set}" = set && test "$ac_cv_exeext" != no;
then :; else
ac_cv_exeext=`expr "$ac_file" : '[^.]*\(\..*\)'`
fi
# We set ac_cv_exeext here because the later test for it is not
# safe: cross compilers may not add the suffix if given an `-o'
# argument, so we may need to know it at that point already.
# Even if this section looks crufty: it has the advantage of
# actually working.
break;;
* )
break;;
esac
done
test "$ac_cv_exeext" = no && ac_cv_exeext=
else
ac_file=''
corpus/libpalindrome/configure view on Meta::CPAN
# Transform symcode, sympat, and symprfx into a raw symbol and a C symbol.
symxfrm="\\1 $ac_symprfx\\2 \\2"
# Write the raw and C identifiers.
if test "$lt_cv_nm_interface" = "MS dumpbin"; then
# Fake it for dumpbin and say T for any non-static function,
# D for any global variable and I for any imported variable.
# Also find C++ and __fastcall symbols from MSVC++,
# which start with @ or ?.
lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe="$AWK '"\
" {last_section=section; section=\$ 3};"\
" /^COFF SYMBOL TABLE/{for(i in hide) delete hide[i]};"\
" /Section length .*#relocs.*(pick any)/{hide[last_section]=1};"\
" /^ *Symbol name *: /{split(\$ 0,sn,\":\"); si=substr(sn[2],2)};"\
" /^ *Type *: code/{print \"T\",si,substr(si,length(prfx))};"\
" /^ *Type *: data/{print \"I\",si,substr(si,length(prfx))};"\
" \$ 0!~/External *\|/{next};"\
" / 0+ UNDEF /{next}; / UNDEF \([^|]\)*()/{next};"\
" {if(hide[section]) next};"\
" {f=\"D\"}; \$ 0~/\(\).*\|/{f=\"T\"};"\
" {split(\$ 0,a,/\||\r/); split(a[2],s)};"\
" s[1]~/^[@?]/{print f,s[1],s[1]; next};"\
" s[1]~prfx {split(s[1],t,\"@\"); print f,t[1],substr(t[1],length(prfx))}"\
" ' prfx=^$ac_symprfx"
else
lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe="sed -n -e 's/^.*[ ]\($symcode$symcode*\)[ ][ ]*$ac_symprfx$sympat$opt_cr$/$symxfrm/p'"
fi
lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe="$lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe | sed '/ __gnu_lto/d'"
corpus/libpalindrome/configure view on Meta::CPAN
*** Warning: Releases of the GNU linker prior to 2.16.91.0.3 cannot
*** reliably create shared libraries on SCO systems. Therefore, libtool
*** is disabling shared libraries support. We urge you to upgrade GNU
*** binutils to release 2.16.91.0.3 or newer. Another option is to modify
*** your PATH or compiler configuration so that the native linker is
*** used, and then restart.
_LT_EOF
;;
*)
# For security reasons, it is highly recommended that you always
# use absolute paths for naming shared libraries, and exclude the
# DT_RUNPATH tag from executables and libraries. But doing so
# requires that you compile everything twice, which is a pain.
if $LD --help 2>&1 | $GREP ': supported targets:.* elf' > /dev/null; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='$wl-rpath $wl$libdir'
archive_cmds='$CC -shared $libobjs $deplibs $compiler_flags $wl-soname $wl$soname -o $lib'
archive_expsym_cmds='$CC -shared $libobjs $deplibs $compiler_flags $wl-soname $wl$soname $wl-retain-symbols-file $wl$export_symbols -o $lib'
else
ld_shlibs=no
fi
corpus/libpalindrome/configure view on Meta::CPAN
whole_archive_flag_spec='-z allextract$convenience -z defaultextract'
fi
;;
esac
link_all_deplibs=yes
;;
sunos4*)
if test sequent = "$host_vendor"; then
# Use $CC to link under sequent, because it throws in some extra .o
# files that make .init and .fini sections work.
archive_cmds='$CC -G $wl-h $soname -o $lib $libobjs $deplibs $compiler_flags'
else
archive_cmds='$LD -assert pure-text -Bstatic -o $lib $libobjs $deplibs $linker_flags'
fi
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
hardcode_direct=yes
hardcode_minus_L=yes
hardcode_shlibpath_var=no
;;
corpus/libpalindrome/configure view on Meta::CPAN
# after its creation but before its name has been assigned to `$tmp'.
$debug ||
{
tmp= ac_tmp=
trap 'exit_status=$?
: "${ac_tmp:=$tmp}"
{ test ! -d "$ac_tmp" || rm -fr "$ac_tmp"; } && exit $exit_status
' 0
trap 'as_fn_exit 1' 1 2 13 15
}
# Create a (secure) tmp directory for tmp files.
{
tmp=`(umask 077 && mktemp -d "./confXXXXXX") 2>/dev/null` &&
test -d "$tmp"
} ||
{
tmp=./conf$$-$RANDOM
(umask 077 && mkdir "$tmp")
} || as_fn_error $? "cannot create a temporary directory in ." "$LINENO" 5
ac_tmp=$tmp
# Set up the scripts for CONFIG_FILES section.
# No need to generate them if there are no CONFIG_FILES.
# This happens for instance with `./config.status config.h'.
if test -n "$CONFIG_FILES"; then
ac_cr=`echo X | tr X '\015'`
# On cygwin, bash can eat \r inside `` if the user requested igncr.
# But we know of no other shell where ac_cr would be empty at this
# point, so we can use a bashism as a fallback.
if test "x$ac_cr" = x; then
corpus/libpalindrome/configure view on Meta::CPAN
s/\(=[ ]*\).*/\1/
G
s/\n//
s/^[^=]*=[ ]*$//
}'
fi
cat >>$CONFIG_STATUS <<\_ACEOF || ac_write_fail=1
fi # test -n "$CONFIG_FILES"
# Set up the scripts for CONFIG_HEADERS section.
# No need to generate them if there are no CONFIG_HEADERS.
# This happens for instance with `./config.status Makefile'.
if test -n "$CONFIG_HEADERS"; then
cat >"$ac_tmp/defines.awk" <<\_ACAWK ||
BEGIN {
_ACEOF
# Transform confdefs.h into an awk script `defines.awk', embedded as
# here-document in config.status, that substitutes the proper values into
# config.h.in to produce config.h.
corpus/libpalindrome/depcomp view on Meta::CPAN
gccflag=-MD,
fi
"$@" -Wp,"$gccflag$tmpdepfile"
stat=$?
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
rm -f "$depfile"
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
# The second -e expression handles DOS-style file names with drive
# letters.
sed -e 's/^[^:]*: / /' \
-e 's/^['$alpha']:\/[^:]*: / /' < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
## This next piece of magic avoids the "deleted header file" problem.
## The problem is that when a header file which appears in a .P file
## is deleted, the dependency causes make to die (because there is
## typically no way to rebuild the header). We avoid this by adding
## dummy dependencies for each header file. Too bad gcc doesn't do
## this for us directly.
## Some versions of gcc put a space before the ':'. On the theory
corpus/libpalindrome/depcomp view on Meta::CPAN
# Clip off the initial element (the dependent). Don't try to be
# clever and replace this with sed code, as IRIX sed won't handle
# lines with more than a fixed number of characters (4096 in
# IRIX 6.2 sed, 8192 in IRIX 6.5). We also remove comment lines;
# the IRIX cc adds comments like '#:fec' to the end of the
# dependency line.
tr ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
| sed -e 's/^.*\.o://' -e 's/#.*$//' -e '/^$/ d' \
| tr "$nl" ' ' >> "$depfile"
echo >> "$depfile"
# The second pass generates a dummy entry for each header file.
tr ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
| sed -e 's/^.*\.o://' -e 's/#.*$//' -e '/^$/ d' -e 's/$/:/' \
>> "$depfile"
else
make_dummy_depfile
fi
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
xlc)
corpus/libpalindrome/depcomp view on Meta::CPAN
"$@" -MD -MF "$tmpdepfile"
stat=$?
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
rm -f "$depfile"
# Each non-empty line is of the form 'foo.o : \' or ' dep.h \'.
# We have to change lines of the first kind to '$object: \'.
sed -e "s|.*:|$object :|" < "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
# And for each line of the second kind, we have to emit a 'dep.h:'
# dummy dependency, to avoid the deleted-header problem.
sed -n -e 's|^ *\(.*\) *\\$|\1:|p' < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
## The order of this option in the case statement is important, since the
## shell code in configure will try each of these formats in the order
## listed in this file. A plain '-MD' option would be understood by many
## compilers, so we must ensure this comes after the gcc and icc options.
pgcc)
corpus/libpalindrome/depcomp view on Meta::CPAN
"$@" $showIncludes > "$tmpdepfile"
stat=$?
grep -v '^Note: including file: ' "$tmpdepfile"
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
rm -f "$depfile"
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
# The first sed program below extracts the file names and escapes
# backslashes for cygpath. The second sed program outputs the file
# name when reading, but also accumulates all include files in the
# hold buffer in order to output them again at the end. This only
# works with sed implementations that can handle large buffers.
sed < "$tmpdepfile" -n '
/^Note: including file: *\(.*\)/ {
s//\1/
s/\\/\\\\/g
p
}' | $cygpath_u | sort -u | sed -n '
s/ /\\ /g
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
s/\\([^$_G_bs]\\)$_G_bs2$_G_dollar/\\1$_G_bs2$_G_bs$_G_dollar/g
s/\n//g"
## ----------------- ##
## Global variables. ##
## ----------------- ##
# Except for the global variables explicitly listed below, the following
# functions in the '^func_' namespace, and the '^require_' namespace
# variables initialised in the 'Resource management' section, sourcing
# this file will not pollute your global namespace with anything
# else. There's no portable way to scope variables in Bourne shell
# though, so actually running these functions will sometimes place
# results into a variable named after the function, and often use
# temporary variables in the '^_G_' namespace. If you are careful to
# avoid using those namespaces casually in your sourcing script, things
# should continue to work as you expect. And, of course, you can freely
# overwrite any of the functions or variables defined here before
# calling anything to customize them.
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# Set to 'all' to display all warnings, 'none' to suppress all
# warnings, or a space delimited list of some subset of
# 'warning_categories' to display only the listed warnings.
opt_warning_types=all
## -------------------- ##
## Resource management. ##
## -------------------- ##
# This section contains definitions for functions that each ensure a
# particular resource (a file, or a non-empty configuration variable for
# example) is available, and if appropriate to extract default values
# from pertinent package files. Call them using their associated
# 'require_*' variable to ensure that they are executed, at most, once.
#
# It's entirely deliberate that calling these functions can set
# variables that don't obey the namespace limitations obeyed by the rest
# of this file, in order that that they be as useful as possible to
# callers.
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
}
require_term_colors=:
}
## ----------------- ##
## Function library. ##
## ----------------- ##
# This section contains a variety of useful functions to call in your
# scripts. Take note of the portable wrappers for features provided by
# some modern shells, which will fall back to slower equivalents on
# less featureful shells.
# func_append VAR VALUE
# ---------------------
# Append VALUE onto the existing contents of VAR.
# We should try to minimise forks, especially on Windows where they are
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# func_append_uniq VAR VALUE
# --------------------------
# Append unique VALUE onto the existing contents of VAR, assuming
# entries are delimited by the first character of VALUE. For example:
#
# func_append_uniq options " --another-option option-argument"
#
# will only append to $options if " --another-option option-argument "
# is not already present somewhere in $options already (note spaces at
# each end implied by leading space in second argument).
func_append_uniq ()
{
$debug_cmd
eval _G_current_value='`$ECHO $'$1'`'
_G_delim=`expr "$2" : '\(.\)'`
case $_G_delim$_G_current_value$_G_delim in
*"$2$_G_delim"*) ;;
*) func_append "$@" ;;
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# description of your script's purpose in a comment directly above the
# '# Written by ' line, like the one at the top of this file.
#
# The default options also support '--debug', which will turn on shell
# execution tracing (see the comment above debug_cmd below for another
# use), and '--verbose' and the func_verbose function to allow your script
# to display verbose messages only when your user has specified
# '--verbose'.
#
# After sourcing this file, you can plug processing for additional
# options by amending the variables from the 'Configuration' section
# below, and following the instructions in the 'Option parsing'
# section further down.
## -------------- ##
## Configuration. ##
## -------------- ##
# You should override these variables in your script after sourcing this
# file so that they reflect the customisations you have added to the
# option parser.
# The usage line for option parsing errors and the start of '-h' and
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# Help message printed before fatal option parsing errors.
fatal_help="Try '\$progname --help' for more information."
## ------------------------- ##
## Hook function management. ##
## ------------------------- ##
# This section contains functions for adding, removing, and running hooks
# to the main code. A hook is just a named list of of function, that can
# be run in order later on.
# func_hookable FUNC_NAME
# -----------------------
# Declare that FUNC_NAME will run hooks added with
# 'func_add_hook FUNC_NAME ...'.
func_hookable ()
{
$debug_cmd
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# save modified positional parameters for caller
func_validate_options_result=$func_run_hooks_result
}
## ----------------- ##
## Helper functions. ##
## ----------------- ##
# This section contains the helper functions used by the rest of the
# hookable option parser framework in ascii-betical order.
# func_fatal_help ARG...
# ----------------------
# Echo program name prefixed message to standard error, followed by
# a help hint, and exit.
func_fatal_help ()
{
$debug_cmd
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# not support -o with -c
if test no = "$compiler_c_o"; then
output_obj=`$ECHO "$srcfile" | $SED 's%^.*/%%; s%\.[^.]*$%%'`.$objext
lockfile=$output_obj.lock
else
output_obj=
need_locks=no
lockfile=
fi
# Lock this critical section if it is needed
# We use this script file to make the link, it avoids creating a new file
if test yes = "$need_locks"; then
until $opt_dry_run || ln "$progpath" "$lockfile" 2>/dev/null; do
func_echo "Waiting for $lockfile to be removed"
sleep 2
done
elif test warn = "$need_locks"; then
if test -f "$lockfile"; then
$ECHO "\
*** ERROR, $lockfile exists and contains:
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# Just move the object if needed
if test -n "$output_obj" && test "X$output_obj" != "X$obj"; then
func_show_eval '$MV "$output_obj" "$obj"' \
'error=$?; $opt_dry_run || $RM $removelist; exit $error'
fi
fi
$opt_dry_run || {
func_write_libtool_object "$libobj" "$objdir/$objname" "$objname"
# Unlock the critical section if it was locked
if test no != "$need_locks"; then
removelist=$lockfile
$RM "$lockfile"
fi
}
exit $EXIT_SUCCESS
}
$opt_help || {
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# SECTION_NAME is either .idata$6 or .idata$7, depending
# on the platform and compiler that created the implib.
#
# Echos the name of the DLL associated with the
# specified import library.
func_cygming_dll_for_implib_fallback_core ()
{
$debug_cmd
match_literal=`$ECHO "$1" | $SED "$sed_make_literal_regex"`
$OBJDUMP -s --section "$1" "$2" 2>/dev/null |
$SED '/^Contents of section '"$match_literal"':/{
# Place marker at beginning of archive member dllname section
s/.*/====MARK====/
p
d
}
# These lines can sometimes be longer than 43 characters, but
# are always uninteresting
/:[ ]*file format pe[i]\{,1\}-/d
/^In archive [^:]*:/d
# Ensure marker is printed
/^====MARK====/p
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
:para
x
s/\n//g
# Remove the marker
s/^====MARK====//
# Remove trailing dots and whitespace
s/[\. \t]*$//
# Print
/./p' |
# we now have a list, one entry per line, of the stringified
# contents of the appropriate section of all members of the
# archive that possess that section. Heuristic: eliminate
# all those that have a first or second character that is
# a '.' (that is, objdump's representation of an unprintable
# character.) This should work for all archives with less than
# 0x302f exports -- but will fail for DLLs whose name actually
# begins with a literal '.' or a single character followed by
# a '.'.
#
# Of those that remain, print the first one.
$SED -e '/^\./d;/^.\./d;q'
}
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
"
fi
# Export our shlibpath_var if we have one.
if test yes = "$shlibpath_overrides_runpath" && test -n "$shlibpath_var" && test -n "$temp_rpath"; then
$ECHO "\
# Add our own library path to $shlibpath_var
$shlibpath_var=\"$temp_rpath\$$shlibpath_var\"
# Some systems cannot cope with colon-terminated $shlibpath_var
# The second colon is a workaround for a bug in BeOS R4 sed
$shlibpath_var=\`\$ECHO \"\$$shlibpath_var\" | $SED 's/::*\$//'\`
export $shlibpath_var
"
fi
$ECHO "\
if test \"\$libtool_execute_magic\" != \"$magic\"; then
# Run the actual program with our arguments.
func_exec_program \${1+\"\$@\"}
corpus/libpalindrome/m4/libtool.m4 view on Meta::CPAN
[1], [_libtool_name=$lt_[]$1],
[2], [_libtool_name=$lt_[]$1],
[_libtool_name=lt_dict_fetch([lt_decl_dict], [$1], [value])])[]dnl
m4_ifval([$2], [_$2])[]m4_popdef([_libtool_name])[]dnl
])
# _LT_LIBTOOL_CONFIG_VARS
# -----------------------
# Produce commented declarations of non-tagged libtool config variables
# suitable for insertion in the LIBTOOL CONFIG section of the 'libtool'
# script. Tagged libtool config variables (even for the LIBTOOL CONFIG
# section) are produced by _LT_LIBTOOL_TAG_VARS.
m4_defun([_LT_LIBTOOL_CONFIG_VARS],
[m4_foreach([_lt_var],
m4_quote(_lt_decl_filter([tagged?], [no], [], lt_decl_varnames)),
[m4_n([_LT_LIBTOOL_DECLARE(_lt_var)])])])
# _LT_LIBTOOL_TAG_VARS(TAG)
# -------------------------
m4_define([_LT_LIBTOOL_TAG_VARS],
[m4_foreach([_lt_var], m4_quote(lt_decl_tag_varnames),
corpus/libpalindrome/m4/libtool.m4 view on Meta::CPAN
AC_CACHE_VAL(lt_cv_path_MAGIC_CMD,
[case $MAGIC_CMD in
[[\\/*] | ?:[\\/]*])
lt_cv_path_MAGIC_CMD=$MAGIC_CMD # Let the user override the test with a path.
;;
*)
lt_save_MAGIC_CMD=$MAGIC_CMD
lt_save_ifs=$IFS; IFS=$PATH_SEPARATOR
dnl $ac_dummy forces splitting on constant user-supplied paths.
dnl POSIX.2 word splitting is done only on the output of word expansions,
dnl not every word. This closes a longstanding sh security hole.
ac_dummy="m4_if([$2], , $PATH, [$2])"
for ac_dir in $ac_dummy; do
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
test -z "$ac_dir" && ac_dir=.
if test -f "$ac_dir/$1"; then
lt_cv_path_MAGIC_CMD=$ac_dir/"$1"
if test -n "$file_magic_test_file"; then
case $deplibs_check_method in
"file_magic "*)
file_magic_regex=`expr "$deplibs_check_method" : "file_magic \(.*\)"`
corpus/libpalindrome/m4/libtool.m4 view on Meta::CPAN
# Transform symcode, sympat, and symprfx into a raw symbol and a C symbol.
symxfrm="\\1 $ac_symprfx\\2 \\2"
# Write the raw and C identifiers.
if test "$lt_cv_nm_interface" = "MS dumpbin"; then
# Fake it for dumpbin and say T for any non-static function,
# D for any global variable and I for any imported variable.
# Also find C++ and __fastcall symbols from MSVC++,
# which start with @ or ?.
lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe="$AWK ['"\
" {last_section=section; section=\$ 3};"\
" /^COFF SYMBOL TABLE/{for(i in hide) delete hide[i]};"\
" /Section length .*#relocs.*(pick any)/{hide[last_section]=1};"\
" /^ *Symbol name *: /{split(\$ 0,sn,\":\"); si=substr(sn[2],2)};"\
" /^ *Type *: code/{print \"T\",si,substr(si,length(prfx))};"\
" /^ *Type *: data/{print \"I\",si,substr(si,length(prfx))};"\
" \$ 0!~/External *\|/{next};"\
" / 0+ UNDEF /{next}; / UNDEF \([^|]\)*()/{next};"\
" {if(hide[section]) next};"\
" {f=\"D\"}; \$ 0~/\(\).*\|/{f=\"T\"};"\
" {split(\$ 0,a,/\||\r/); split(a[2],s)};"\
" s[1]~/^[@?]/{print f,s[1],s[1]; next};"\
" s[1]~prfx {split(s[1],t,\"@\"); print f,t[1],substr(t[1],length(prfx))}"\
" ' prfx=^$ac_symprfx]"
else
lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe="sed -n -e 's/^.*[[ ]]\($symcode$symcode*\)[[ ]][[ ]]*$ac_symprfx$sympat$opt_cr$/$symxfrm/p'"
fi
lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe="$lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe | sed '/ __gnu_lto/d'"
corpus/libpalindrome/m4/libtool.m4 view on Meta::CPAN
*** Warning: Releases of the GNU linker prior to 2.16.91.0.3 cannot
*** reliably create shared libraries on SCO systems. Therefore, libtool
*** is disabling shared libraries support. We urge you to upgrade GNU
*** binutils to release 2.16.91.0.3 or newer. Another option is to modify
*** your PATH or compiler configuration so that the native linker is
*** used, and then restart.
_LT_EOF
;;
*)
# For security reasons, it is highly recommended that you always
# use absolute paths for naming shared libraries, and exclude the
# DT_RUNPATH tag from executables and libraries. But doing so
# requires that you compile everything twice, which is a pain.
if $LD --help 2>&1 | $GREP ': supported targets:.* elf' > /dev/null; then
_LT_TAGVAR(hardcode_libdir_flag_spec, $1)='$wl-rpath $wl$libdir'
_LT_TAGVAR(archive_cmds, $1)='$CC -shared $libobjs $deplibs $compiler_flags $wl-soname $wl$soname -o $lib'
_LT_TAGVAR(archive_expsym_cmds, $1)='$CC -shared $libobjs $deplibs $compiler_flags $wl-soname $wl$soname $wl-retain-symbols-file $wl$export_symbols -o $lib'
else
_LT_TAGVAR(ld_shlibs, $1)=no
fi
corpus/libpalindrome/m4/libtool.m4 view on Meta::CPAN
_LT_TAGVAR(whole_archive_flag_spec, $1)='-z allextract$convenience -z defaultextract'
fi
;;
esac
_LT_TAGVAR(link_all_deplibs, $1)=yes
;;
sunos4*)
if test sequent = "$host_vendor"; then
# Use $CC to link under sequent, because it throws in some extra .o
# files that make .init and .fini sections work.
_LT_TAGVAR(archive_cmds, $1)='$CC -G $wl-h $soname -o $lib $libobjs $deplibs $compiler_flags'
else
_LT_TAGVAR(archive_cmds, $1)='$LD -assert pure-text -Bstatic -o $lib $libobjs $deplibs $linker_flags'
fi
_LT_TAGVAR(hardcode_libdir_flag_spec, $1)='-L$libdir'
_LT_TAGVAR(hardcode_direct, $1)=yes
_LT_TAGVAR(hardcode_minus_L, $1)=yes
_LT_TAGVAR(hardcode_shlibpath_var, $1)=no
;;
corpus/libpalindrome/man/libpalindrome.3 view on Meta::CPAN
. ds R" ''
. ds C`
. ds C'
'br\}
.\"
.\" Escape single quotes in literal strings from groff's Unicode transform.
.ie \n(.g .ds Aq \(aq
.el .ds Aq '
.\"
.\" If the F register is >0, we'll generate index entries on stderr for
.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.SS), items (.Ip), and index
.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the
.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion.
.\"
.\" Avoid warning from groff about undefined register 'F'.
.de IX
..
.if !\nF .nr F 0
.if \nF>0 \{\
. de IX
. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2"
corpus/libpalindrome/man/palx.1 view on Meta::CPAN
. ds R" ''
. ds C`
. ds C'
'br\}
.\"
.\" Escape single quotes in literal strings from groff's Unicode transform.
.ie \n(.g .ds Aq \(aq
.el .ds Aq '
.\"
.\" If the F register is >0, we'll generate index entries on stderr for
.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.SS), items (.Ip), and index
.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the
.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion.
.\"
.\" Avoid warning from groff about undefined register 'F'.
.de IX
..
.if !\nF .nr F 0
.if \nF>0 \{\
. de IX
. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2"
lib/Alien/Base/Dino.pm view on Meta::CPAN
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Every now and then someone will ask me why thus and such L<Alien> thing
doesn't work with a dynamic library error. My usual response is can you
make it work with static libraries? The reason for this is that
B<building> dynamic libraries for an L<Alien> B<share> install introduce
a number of challenges, and honestly I don't see the point of using
them, if you can avoid it. So far I haven't actually seen a situation
where it couldn't be avoided. Just to be clear: dynamic libraries are
fine for Alien, and in fact desirable when you are using the system
provided libraries. You get the patches and security fixes supplied by
your operating system.
Okay, so why not build a dynamic library for a B<share> install?
For this discussion, say you have an alienized library C<Alien::libfoo>
and an XS module that uses it called C<Foo::XS> (as illustrated in the
synopsis above).
=over 4
lib/Alien/Base/Dino.pm view on Meta::CPAN
=over 4
=item Your Alien is a run-time dependency and you will annoy system integrators
=item Your XS can be broken by upgrades to your Alien
=item Your platform may not be supported
=back
Also, this module should start with the caveat section and then go from
there. Most modules I write are not like that.
These platforms seem to work: Linux, OS X, Windows, Cygwin, FreeBSD,
NetBSD, OpenBSD, Debian kFreeBSD.
Currently has L<Alien::Autotools> as a prerequisite. I hope to remove that prereq
asap.
=head1 SEE ALSO