ExtUtils::Liblist - determine libraries to use and how to use them
require ExtUtils::Liblist;
ExtUtils::Liblist::ext;
This utility takes a list of libraries in the form -llib1 -llib2
-llib3
and prints out lines suitable for inclusion in an extension Makefile. Extra
library paths may be included with the form
-L/another/path
this will affect the searches for all subsequent libraries.
It returns an array of four scalar values:
EXTRALIBS,
BSLOADLIBS,
LDLOADLIBS, and
LD_RUN_PATH.
Dependent libraries can be linked in one of three ways:
List of libraries that need to be linked with when linking a perl binary
which includes this extension Only those libraries that actually exist are
included. These are written to a file and used when linking perl.
List of those libraries which can or must be linked into the shared library when created using ld. These may be static or dynamic libraries.
LD_RUN_PATH is a colon separated list of the directories in
LDLOADLIBS. It is passed as an environment variable to the process that links the shared library.
List of those libraries that are needed but can be linked in dynamically at run time on this platform. SunOS/Solaris does not need this because ld records the information (from
LDLOADLIBS) into the object file. This list is used to create a .bs (bootstrap) file.
This module deals with a lot of system dependencies and has quite a few
architecture specific ifs in the code.
The version of ext
which is executed under
VMS differs from the Unix-OS/2 version in several
respects:
-
Input library and path specifications are accepted with or without the
-l
and -L
prefices used by Unix linkers. If neither prefix is present, a token is considered a directory to search if it is in fact a directory, and a library to search for otherwise. Authors who wish their extensions to be portable to Unix or
OS/2 should use the Unix prefixes, since the Unix-OS/2 version of ext
requires them.
-
Wherever possible, shareable images are preferred to object libraries, and object libraries to plain object files. In accordance with
VMS naming conventions,
ext
looks for files named
libshr and librtl; it also looks for liblib and liblib to accomodate Unix conventions used in some ported software.
-
For each library that is found, an appropriate directive for a linker
options file is generated. The return values are space-separated strings of
these directives, rather than elements used on the linker command line.
-
LDLOADLIBS and
EXTRALIBS are always identical under
VMS, and
BSLOADLIBS and
LD_RIN_PATH are always empty.
In addition, an attempt is made to recognize several common Unix library names, and filter them out or convert them to their
VMS equivalents, as appropriate.
In general, the
VMS version of ext
should properly handle input from extensions originally designed for a Unix or
VMS environment. If you encounter problems, or discover cases where the search could be improved, please let us know.
MakeMaker