1 |
Compiling PCRE on non-Unix systems
|
2 |
----------------------------------
|
3 |
|
4 |
See below for comments on Cygwin or MinGW and OpenVMS usage. I (Philip Hazel)
|
5 |
have no knowledge of Windows or VMS sytems and how their libraries work. The
|
6 |
items in the PCRE Makefile that relate to anything other than Unix-like systems
|
7 |
have been contributed by PCRE users. There are some other comments and files in
|
8 |
the Contrib directory on the ftp site that you may find useful. See
|
9 |
|
10 |
ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/Contrib
|
11 |
|
12 |
If you want to compile PCRE for a non-Unix system (or perhaps, more strictly,
|
13 |
for a system that does not support "configure" and "make" files), note that
|
14 |
PCRE consists entirely of code written in Standard C, and so should compile
|
15 |
successfully on any system that has a Standard C compiler and library.
|
16 |
|
17 |
|
18 |
GENERIC INSTRUCTIONS
|
19 |
|
20 |
The following are generic comments about building PCRE. The interspersed
|
21 |
indented commands are suggestions from Mark Tetrode as to which commands you
|
22 |
might use on a Windows system to build a static library.
|
23 |
|
24 |
(1) Copy or rename the file config.in as config.h, and change the macros that
|
25 |
define HAVE_STRERROR and HAVE_MEMMOVE to define them as 1 rather than 0.
|
26 |
Unfortunately, because of the way Unix autoconf works, the default setting has
|
27 |
to be 0. You may also want to make changes to other macros in config.h. In
|
28 |
particular, if you want to force a specific value for newline, you can define
|
29 |
the NEWLINE macro. The default is to use '\n', thereby using whatever value
|
30 |
your compiler gives to '\n'.
|
31 |
|
32 |
rem Mark Tetrode's commands
|
33 |
copy config.in config.h
|
34 |
rem Use write, because notepad cannot handle UNIX files. Change values.
|
35 |
write config.h
|
36 |
|
37 |
(2) Copy or rename the file pcre.in as pcre.h, and change the macro definitions
|
38 |
for PCRE_MAJOR, PCRE_MINOR, and PCRE_DATE near its start to the values set in
|
39 |
configure.in.
|
40 |
|
41 |
rem Mark Tetrode's commands
|
42 |
copy pcre.in pcre.h
|
43 |
rem Read values from configure.in
|
44 |
write configure.in
|
45 |
rem Change values
|
46 |
write pcre.h
|
47 |
|
48 |
(3) Compile dftables.c as a stand-alone program, and then run it with
|
49 |
the single argument "chartables.c". This generates a set of standard
|
50 |
character tables and writes them to that file.
|
51 |
|
52 |
rem Mark Tetrode's commands
|
53 |
rem Compile & run
|
54 |
cl -DSUPPORT_UTF8 -DSUPPORT_UCP dftables.c
|
55 |
dftables.exe chartables.c
|
56 |
|
57 |
(4) Compile maketables.c, get.c, study.c and pcre.c and link them all
|
58 |
together into an object library in whichever form your system keeps such
|
59 |
libraries. This is the pcre library (chartables.c is included by means of an
|
60 |
#include directive). If your system has static and shared libraries, you may
|
61 |
have to do this once for each type.
|
62 |
|
63 |
rem Mark Tetrode's commands, for a static library
|
64 |
rem Compile & lib
|
65 |
cl -DSUPPORT_UTF8 -DSUPPORT_UCP -DPOSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD=10 /c maketables.c get.c study.c pcre.c
|
66 |
lib /OUT:pcre.lib maketables.obj get.obj study.obj pcre.obj
|
67 |
|
68 |
(5) Similarly, compile pcreposix.c and link it (on its own) as the pcreposix
|
69 |
library.
|
70 |
|
71 |
rem Mark Tetrode's commands, for a static library
|
72 |
rem Compile & lib
|
73 |
cl -DSUPPORT_UTF8 -DSUPPORT_UCP -DPOSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD=10 /c pcreposix.c
|
74 |
lib /OUT:pcreposix.lib pcreposix.obj
|
75 |
|
76 |
(6) Compile the test program pcretest.c. This needs the functions in the
|
77 |
pcre and pcreposix libraries when linking.
|
78 |
|
79 |
rem Mark Tetrode's commands
|
80 |
rem compile & link
|
81 |
cl /F0x400000 pcretest.c pcre.lib pcreposix.lib
|
82 |
|
83 |
(7) Run pcretest on the testinput files in the testdata directory, and check
|
84 |
that the output matches the corresponding testoutput files. You must use the
|
85 |
-i option when checking testinput2. Note that the supplied files are in Unix
|
86 |
format, with just LF characters as line terminators. You may need to edit them
|
87 |
to change this if your system uses a different convention.
|
88 |
|
89 |
rem Mark Tetrode's commands
|
90 |
pcretest testdata\testinput1 testdata\myoutput1
|
91 |
windiff testdata\testoutput1 testdata\myoutput1
|
92 |
pcretest -i testdata\testinput2 testdata\myoutput2
|
93 |
windiff testdata\testoutput2 testdata\myoutput2
|
94 |
pcretest testdata\testinput3 testdata\myoutput3
|
95 |
windiff testdata\testoutput3 testdata\myoutput3
|
96 |
pcretest testdata\testinput4 testdata\myoutput4
|
97 |
windiff testdata\testoutput4 testdata\myoutput4
|
98 |
pcretest testdata\testinput5 testdata\myoutput5
|
99 |
windiff testdata\testoutput5 testdata\myoutput5
|
100 |
pcretest testdata\testinput6 testdata\myoutput6
|
101 |
windiff testdata\testoutput6 testdata\myoutput6
|
102 |
|
103 |
|
104 |
FURTHER REMARKS
|
105 |
|
106 |
If you have a system without "configure" but where you can use a Makefile, edit
|
107 |
Makefile.in to create Makefile, substituting suitable values for the variables
|
108 |
at the head of the file.
|
109 |
|
110 |
Some help in building a Win32 DLL of PCRE in GnuWin32 environments was
|
111 |
contributed by Paul Sokolovsky. These environments are Mingw32
|
112 |
(http://www.xraylith.wisc.edu/~khan/software/gnu-win32/) and CygWin
|
113 |
(http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/). Paul comments:
|
114 |
|
115 |
For CygWin, set CFLAGS=-mno-cygwin, and do 'make dll'. You'll get
|
116 |
pcre.dll (containing pcreposix also), libpcre.dll.a, and dynamically
|
117 |
linked pgrep and pcretest. If you have /bin/sh, run RunTest (three
|
118 |
main test go ok, locale not supported).
|
119 |
|
120 |
Changes to do MinGW with autoconf 2.50 were supplied by Fred Cox
|
121 |
<sailorFred@yahoo.com>, who comments as follows:
|
122 |
|
123 |
If you are using the PCRE DLL, the normal Unix style configure && make &&
|
124 |
make check && make install should just work[*]. If you want to statically
|
125 |
link against the .a file, you must define PCRE_STATIC before including
|
126 |
pcre.h, otherwise the pcre_malloc and pcre_free exported functions will be
|
127 |
declared __declspec(dllimport), with hilarious results. See the configure.in
|
128 |
and pcretest.c for how it is done for the static test.
|
129 |
|
130 |
Also, there will only be a libpcre.la, not a libpcreposix.la, as you
|
131 |
would expect from the Unix version. The single DLL includes the pcreposix
|
132 |
interface.
|
133 |
|
134 |
[*] But note that the supplied test files are in Unix format, with just LF
|
135 |
characters as line terminators. You will have to edit them to change to CR LF
|
136 |
terminators.
|
137 |
|
138 |
A script for building PCRE using Borland's C++ compiler for use with VPASCAL
|
139 |
was contributed by Alexander Tokarev. It is called makevp.bat.
|
140 |
|
141 |
These are some further comments about Win32 builds from Mark Evans. They
|
142 |
were contributed before Fred Cox's changes were made, so it is possible that
|
143 |
they may no longer be relevant.
|
144 |
|
145 |
"The documentation for Win32 builds is a bit shy. Under MSVC6 I
|
146 |
followed their instructions to the letter, but there were still
|
147 |
some things missing.
|
148 |
|
149 |
(1) Must #define STATIC for entire project if linking statically.
|
150 |
(I see no reason to use DLLs for code this compact.) This of
|
151 |
course is a project setting in MSVC under Preprocessor.
|
152 |
|
153 |
(2) Missing some #ifdefs relating to the function pointers
|
154 |
pcre_malloc and pcre_free. See my solution below. (The stubs
|
155 |
may not be mandatory but they made me feel better.)"
|
156 |
|
157 |
=========================
|
158 |
#ifdef _WIN32
|
159 |
#include <malloc.h>
|
160 |
|
161 |
void* malloc_stub(size_t N)
|
162 |
{ return malloc(N); }
|
163 |
void free_stub(void* p)
|
164 |
{ free(p); }
|
165 |
void *(*pcre_malloc)(size_t) = &malloc_stub;
|
166 |
void (*pcre_free)(void *) = &free_stub;
|
167 |
|
168 |
#else
|
169 |
|
170 |
void *(*pcre_malloc)(size_t) = malloc;
|
171 |
void (*pcre_free)(void *) = free;
|
172 |
|
173 |
#endif
|
174 |
=========================
|
175 |
|
176 |
|
177 |
BUILDING PCRE ON OPENVMS
|
178 |
|
179 |
Dan Mooney sent the following comments about building PCRE on OpenVMS:
|
180 |
|
181 |
"It was quite easy to compile and link the library. I don't have a formal
|
182 |
make file but the attached file [reproduced below] contains the OpenVMS DCL
|
183 |
commands I used to build the library. I had to add #define
|
184 |
POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD 10 to pcre.h since it was not defined anywhere.
|
185 |
|
186 |
The library was built on:
|
187 |
O/S: HP OpenVMS v7.3-1
|
188 |
Compiler: Compaq C v6.5-001-48BCD
|
189 |
Linker: vA13-01
|
190 |
|
191 |
The test results did not match 100% due to the issues you mention in your
|
192 |
documentation regarding isprint(), iscntrl(), isgraph() and ispunct(). I
|
193 |
modified some of the character tables temporarily and was able to get the
|
194 |
results to match. Tests using the fr locale did not match since I don't have
|
195 |
that locale loaded. The study size was always reported to be 3 less than the
|
196 |
value in the standard test output files."
|
197 |
|
198 |
=========================
|
199 |
$! This DCL procedure builds PCRE on OpenVMS
|
200 |
$!
|
201 |
$! I followed the instructions in the non-unix-use file in the distribution.
|
202 |
$!
|
203 |
$ COMPILE == "CC/LIST/NOMEMBER_ALIGNMENT/PREFIX_LIBRARY_ENTRIES=ALL_ENTRIES
|
204 |
$ COMPILE DFTABLES.C
|
205 |
$ LINK/EXE=DFTABLES.EXE DFTABLES.OBJ
|
206 |
$ RUN DFTABLES.EXE/OUTPUT=CHARTABLES.C
|
207 |
$ COMPILE MAKETABLES.C
|
208 |
$ COMPILE GET.C
|
209 |
$ COMPILE STUDY.C
|
210 |
$! I had to set POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD to 10 in PCRE.H since the symbol
|
211 |
$! did not seem to be defined anywhere.
|
212 |
$! I edited pcre.h and added #DEFINE SUPPORT_UTF8 to enable UTF8 support.
|
213 |
$ COMPILE PCRE.C
|
214 |
$ LIB/CREATE PCRE MAKETABLES.OBJ, GET.OBJ, STUDY.OBJ, PCRE.OBJ
|
215 |
$! I had to set POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD to 10 in PCRE.H since the symbol
|
216 |
$! did not seem to be defined anywhere.
|
217 |
$ COMPILE PCREPOSIX.C
|
218 |
$ LIB/CREATE PCREPOSIX PCREPOSIX.OBJ
|
219 |
$ COMPILE PCRETEST.C
|
220 |
$ LINK/EXE=PCRETEST.EXE PCRETEST.OBJ, PCRE/LIB, PCREPOSIX/LIB
|
221 |
$! C programs that want access to command line arguments must be
|
222 |
$! defined as a symbol
|
223 |
$ PCRETEST :== "$ SYS$ROADSUSERS:[DMOONEY.REGEXP]PCRETEST.EXE"
|
224 |
$! Arguments must be enclosed in quotes.
|
225 |
$ PCRETEST "-C"
|
226 |
$! Test results:
|
227 |
$!
|
228 |
$! The test results did not match 100%. The functions isprint(), iscntrl(),
|
229 |
$! isgraph() and ispunct() on OpenVMS must not produce the same results
|
230 |
$! as the system that built the test output files provided with the
|
231 |
$! distribution.
|
232 |
$!
|
233 |
$! The study size did not match and was always 3 less on OpenVMS.
|
234 |
$!
|
235 |
$! Locale could not be set to fr
|
236 |
$!
|
237 |
=========================
|
238 |
|
239 |
****
|