ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | Download File
/cvs/App-Staticperl/staticperl.pod
Revision: 1.18
Committed: Fri Dec 10 02:35:54 2010 UTC (13 years, 6 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.17: +128 -23 lines
Log Message:
*** empty log message ***

File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 staticperl - perl, libc, 100 modules, all in one 500kb file
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 staticperl help # print the embedded documentation
8 staticperl fetch # fetch and unpack perl sources
9 staticperl configure # fetch and then configure perl
10 staticperl build # configure and then build perl
11 staticperl install # build and then install perl
12 staticperl clean # clean most intermediate files (restart at configure)
13 staticperl distclean # delete everything installed by this script
14 staticperl cpan # invoke CPAN shell
15 staticperl instmod path... # install unpacked modules
16 staticperl instcpan modulename... # install modules from CPAN
17 staticperl mkbundle <bundle-args...> # see documentation
18 staticperl mkperl <bundle-args...> # see documentation
19 staticperl mkapp appname <bundle-args...> # see documentation
20
21 Typical Examples:
22
23 staticperl install # fetch, configure, build and install perl
24 staticperl cpan # run interactive cpan shell
25 staticperl mkperl -M '"Config_heavy.pl"' # build a perl that supports -V
26 staticperl mkperl -MAnyEvent::Impl::Perl -MAnyEvent::HTTPD -MURI -MURI::http
27 # build a perl with the above modules linked in
28 staticperl mkapp myapp --boot mainprog mymodules
29 # build a binary "myapp" from mainprog and mymodules
30
31 =head1 DESCRIPTION
32
33 This script helps you to create single-file perl interpreters
34 or applications, or embedding a perl interpreter in your
35 applications. Single-file means that it is fully self-contained - no
36 separate shared objects, no autoload fragments, no .pm or .pl files are
37 needed. And when linking statically, you can create (or embed) a single
38 file that contains perl interpreter, libc, all the modules you need, all
39 the libraries you need and of course your actual program.
40
41 With F<uClibc> and F<upx> on x86, you can create a single 500kb binary
42 that contains perl and 100 modules such as POSIX, AnyEvent, EV, IO::AIO,
43 Coro and so on. Or any other choice of modules.
44
45 The created files do not need write access to the file system (like PAR
46 does). In fact, since this script is in many ways similar to PAR::Packer,
47 here are the differences:
48
49 =over 4
50
51 =item * The generated executables are much smaller than PAR created ones.
52
53 Shared objects and the perl binary contain a lot of extra info, while
54 the static nature of F<staticperl> allows the linker to remove all
55 functionality and meta-info not required by the final executable. Even
56 extensions statically compiled into perl at build time will only be
57 present in the final executable when needed.
58
59 In addition, F<staticperl> can strip perl sources much more effectively
60 than PAR.
61
62 =item * The generated executables start much faster.
63
64 There is no need to unpack files, or even to parse Zip archives (which is
65 slow and memory-consuming business).
66
67 =item * The generated executables don't need a writable filesystem.
68
69 F<staticperl> loads all required files directly from memory. There is no
70 need to unpack files into a temporary directory.
71
72 =item * More control over included files, more burden.
73
74 PAR tries to be maintenance and hassle-free - it tries to include more
75 files than necessary to make sure everything works out of the box. It
76 mostly succeeds at this, but he extra files (such as the unicode database)
77 can take substantial amounts of memory and file size.
78
79 With F<staticperl>, the burden is mostly with the developer - only direct
80 compile-time dependencies and L<AutoLoader> are handled automatically.
81 This means the modules to include often need to be tweaked manually.
82
83 All this does not preclude more permissive modes to be implemented in
84 the future, but right now, you have to resolve state hidden dependencies
85 manually.
86
87 =item * PAR works out of the box, F<staticperl> does not.
88
89 Maintaining your own custom perl build can be a pain in the ass, and while
90 F<staticperl> tries to make this easy, it still requires a custom perl
91 build and possibly fiddling with some modules. PAR is likely to produce
92 results faster.
93
94 Ok, PAR never has worked for me out of the box, and for some people,
95 F<staticperl> does work out of the box, as they don't count "fiddling with
96 module use lists" against it, but nevertheless, F<staticperl> is certainly
97 a bit more difficult to use.
98
99 =back
100
101 =head1 HOW DOES IT WORK?
102
103 Simple: F<staticperl> downloads, compile and installs a perl version of
104 your choice in F<~/.staticperl>. You can add extra modules either by
105 letting F<staticperl> install them for you automatically, or by using CPAN
106 and doing it interactively. This usually takes 5-10 minutes, depending on
107 the speed of your computer and your internet connection.
108
109 It is possible to do program development at this stage, too.
110
111 Afterwards, you create a list of files and modules you want to include,
112 and then either build a new perl binary (that acts just like a normal perl
113 except everything is compiled in), or you create bundle files (basically C
114 sources you can use to embed all files into your project).
115
116 This step is very fast (a few seconds if PPI is not used for stripping, or
117 the stripped files are in the cache), and can be tweaked and repeated as
118 often as necessary.
119
120 =head1 THE F<STATICPERL> SCRIPT
121
122 This module installs a script called F<staticperl> into your perl
123 binary directory. The script is fully self-contained, and can be used
124 without perl (for example, in an uClibc chroot environment). In fact,
125 it can be extracted from the C<App::Staticperl> distribution tarball as
126 F<bin/staticperl>, without any installation.
127
128 F<staticperl> interprets the first argument as a command to execute,
129 optionally followed by any parameters.
130
131 There are two command categories: the "phase 1" commands which deal with
132 installing perl and perl modules, and the "phase 2" commands, which deal
133 with creating binaries and bundle files.
134
135 =head2 PHASE 1 COMMANDS: INSTALLING PERL
136
137 The most important command is F<install>, which does basically
138 everything. The default is to download and install perl 5.12.2 and a few
139 modules required by F<staticperl> itself, but all this can (and should) be
140 changed - see L<CONFIGURATION>, below.
141
142 The command
143
144 staticperl install
145
146 Is normally all you need: It installs the perl interpreter in
147 F<~/.staticperl/perl>. It downloads, configures, builds and installs the
148 perl interpreter if required.
149
150 Most of the following commands simply run one or more steps of this
151 sequence.
152
153 To force recompilation or reinstallation, you need to run F<staticperl
154 distclean> first.
155
156 =over 4
157
158 =item F<staticperl fetch>
159
160 Runs only the download and unpack phase, unless this has already happened.
161
162 =item F<staticperl configure>
163
164 Configures the unpacked perl sources, potentially after downloading them first.
165
166 =item F<staticperl build>
167
168 Builds the configured perl sources, potentially after automatically
169 configuring them.
170
171 =item F<staticperl install>
172
173 Wipes the perl installation directory (usually F<~/.staticperl/perl>) and
174 installs the perl distribution, potentially after building it first.
175
176 =item F<staticperl cpan> [args...]
177
178 Starts an interactive CPAN shell that you can use to install further
179 modules. Installs the perl first if necessary, but apart from that,
180 no magic is involved: you could just as well run it manually via
181 F<~/.staticperl/perl/bin/cpan>.
182
183 Any additional arguments are simply passed to the F<cpan> command.
184
185 =item F<staticperl instcpan> module...
186
187 Tries to install all the modules given and their dependencies, using CPAN.
188
189 Example:
190
191 staticperl instcpan EV AnyEvent::HTTPD Coro
192
193 =item F<staticperl instsrc> directory...
194
195 In the unlikely case that you have unpacked perl modules around and want
196 to install from these instead of from CPAN, you can do this using this
197 command by specifying all the directories with modules in them that you
198 want to have built.
199
200 =item F<staticperl clean>
201
202 Deletes the perl source directory (and potentially cleans up other
203 intermediate files). This can be used to clean up files only needed for
204 building perl, without removing the installed perl interpreter, or to
205 force a re-build from scratch.
206
207 At the moment, it doesn't delete downloaded tarballs.
208
209 =item F<staticperl distclean>
210
211 This wipes your complete F<~/.staticperl> directory. Be careful with this,
212 it nukes your perl download, perl sources, perl distribution and any
213 installed modules. It is useful if you wish to start over "from scratch"
214 or when you want to uninstall F<staticperl>.
215
216 =back
217
218 =head2 PHASE 2 COMMANDS: BUILDING PERL BUNDLES
219
220 Building (linking) a new F<perl> binary is handled by a separate
221 script. To make it easy to use F<staticperl> from a F<chroot>, the script
222 is embedded into F<staticperl>, which will write it out and call for you
223 with any arguments you pass:
224
225 staticperl mkbundle mkbundle-args...
226
227 In the oh so unlikely case of something not working here, you
228 can run the script manually as well (by default it is written to
229 F<~/.staticperl/mkbundle>).
230
231 F<mkbundle> is a more conventional command and expect the argument
232 syntax commonly used on UNIX clones. For example, this command builds
233 a new F<perl> binary and includes F<Config.pm> (for F<perl -V>),
234 F<AnyEvent::HTTPD>, F<URI> and a custom F<httpd> script (from F<eg/httpd>
235 in this distribution):
236
237 # first make sure we have perl and the required modules
238 staticperl instcpan AnyEvent::HTTPD
239
240 # now build the perl
241 staticperl mkperl -M'"Config_heavy.pl"' -MAnyEvent::Impl::Perl \
242 -MAnyEvent::HTTPD -MURI::http \
243 --add 'eg/httpd httpd.pm'
244
245 # finally, invoke it
246 ./perl -Mhttpd
247
248 As you can see, things are not quite as trivial: the L<Config> module has
249 a hidden dependency which is not even a perl module (F<Config_heavy.pl>),
250 L<AnyEvent> needs at least one event loop backend that we have to
251 specify manually (here L<AnyEvent::Impl::Perl>), and the F<URI> module
252 (required by L<AnyEvent::HTTPD>) implements various URI schemes as extra
253 modules - since L<AnyEvent::HTTPD> only needs C<http> URIs, we only need
254 to include that module. I found out about these dependencies by carefully
255 watching any error messages about missing modules...
256
257 Instead of building a new perl binary, you can also build a standalone
258 application:
259
260 # build the app
261 staticperl mkapp app --boot eg/httpd \
262 -MAnyEvent::Impl::Perl -MAnyEvent::HTTPD -MURI::http
263
264 # run it
265 ./app
266
267 =head3 OPTION PROCESSING
268
269 All options can be given as arguments on the command line (typically
270 using long (e.g. C<--verbose>) or short option (e.g. C<-v>) style). Since
271 specifying a lot of modules can make the command line very cumbersome,
272 you can put all long options into a "bundle specification file" (with or
273 without C<--> prefix) and specify this bundle file instead.
274
275 For example, the command given earlier could also look like this:
276
277 staticperl mkperl httpd.bundle
278
279 And all options could be in F<httpd.bundle>:
280
281 use "Config_heavy.pl"
282 use AnyEvent::Impl::Perl
283 use AnyEvent::HTTPD
284 use URI::http
285 add eg/httpd httpd.pm
286
287 All options that specify modules or files to be added are processed in the
288 order given on the command line (that affects the C<--use> and C<--eval>
289 options at the moment).
290
291 =head3 MKBUNDLE OPTIONS
292
293 =over 4
294
295 =item --verbose | -v
296
297 Increases the verbosity level by one (the default is C<1>).
298
299 =item --quiet | -q
300
301 Decreases the verbosity level by one.
302
303 =item --strip none|pod|ppi
304
305 Specify the stripping method applied to reduce the file of the perl
306 sources included.
307
308 The default is C<pod>, which uses the L<Pod::Strip> module to remove all
309 pod documentation, which is very fast and reduces file size a lot.
310
311 The C<ppi> method uses L<PPI> to parse and condense the perl sources. This
312 saves a lot more than just L<Pod::Strip>, and is generally safer,
313 but is also a lot slower (some files take almost a minute to strip -
314 F<staticperl> maintains a cache of stripped files to speed up subsequent
315 runs for this reason). Note that this method doesn't optimise for raw file
316 size, but for best compression (that means that the uncompressed file size
317 is a bit larger, but the files compress better, e.g. with F<upx>).
318
319 Last not least, if you need accurate line numbers in error messages,
320 or in the unlikely case where C<pod> is too slow, or some module gets
321 mistreated, you can specify C<none> to not mangle included perl sources in
322 any way.
323
324 =item --perl
325
326 After writing out the bundle files, try to link a new perl interpreter. It
327 will be called F<perl> and will be left in the current working
328 directory. The bundle files will be removed.
329
330 This switch is automatically used when F<staticperl> is invoked with the
331 C<mkperl> command (instead of C<mkbundle>):
332
333 # build a new ./perl with only common::sense in it - very small :)
334 staticperl mkperl -Mcommon::sense
335
336 =item --app name
337
338 After writing out the bundle files, try to link a new standalone
339 program. It will be called C<name>, and the bundle files get removed after
340 linking it.
341
342 The difference to the (mutually exclusive) C<--perl> option is that the
343 binary created by this option will not try to act as a perl interpreter -
344 instead it will simply initialise the perl interpreter, clean it up and
345 exit.
346
347 This switch is automatically used when F<staticperl> is invoked with the
348 C<mkapp> command (instead of C<mkbundle>):
349
350 To let it do something useful you I<must> add some boot code, e.g. with
351 the C<--boot> option.
352
353 Example: create a standalone perl binary that will execute F<appfile> when
354 it is started.
355
356 staticperl mkbundle --app myexe --boot appfile
357
358 =item --use module | -Mmodule
359
360 Include the named module and all direct dependencies. This is done by
361 C<require>'ing the module in a subprocess and tracing which other modules
362 and files it actually loads. If the module uses L<AutoLoader>, then all
363 splitfiles will be included as well.
364
365 Example: include AnyEvent and AnyEvent::Impl::Perl.
366
367 staticperl mkbundle --use AnyEvent --use AnyEvent::Impl::Perl
368
369 Sometimes you want to load old-style "perl libraries" (F<.pl> files), or
370 maybe other weirdly named files. To do that, you need to quote the name in
371 single or double quotes. When given on the command line, you probably need
372 to quote once more to avoid your shell interpreting it. Common cases that
373 need this are F<Config_heavy.pl> and F<utf8_heavy.pl>.
374
375 Example: include the required files for F<perl -V> to work in all its
376 glory (F<Config.pm> is included automatically by this).
377
378 # bourne shell
379 staticperl mkbundle --use '"Config_heavy.pl"'
380
381 # bundle specification file
382 use "Config_heavy.pl"
383
384 The C<-Mmodule> syntax is included as an alias that might be easier to
385 remember than C<use>. Or maybe it confuses people. Time will tell. Or
386 maybe not. Argh.
387
388 =item --eval "perl code" | -e "perl code"
389
390 Sometimes it is easier (or necessary) to specify dependencies using perl
391 code, or maybe one of the modules you use need a special use statement. In
392 that case, you can use C<eval> to execute some perl snippet or set some
393 variables or whatever you need. All files C<require>'d or C<use>'d in the
394 script are included in the final bundle.
395
396 Keep in mind that F<mkbundle> will only C<require> the modules named
397 by the C<--use> option, so do not expect the symbols from modules you
398 C<--use>'d earlier on the command line to be available.
399
400 Example: force L<AnyEvent> to detect a backend and therefore include it
401 in the final bundle.
402
403 staticperl mkbundle --eval 'use AnyEvent; AnyEvent::detect'
404
405 # or like this
406 staticperl mkbundle -MAnyEvent --eval 'use AnyEvent; AnyEvent::detect'
407
408 Example: use a separate "bootstrap" script that C<use>'s lots of modules
409 and include this in the final bundle, to be executed automatically.
410
411 staticperl mkbundle --eval 'do "bootstrap"' --boot bootstrap
412
413 =item --boot filename
414
415 Include the given file in the bundle and arrange for it to be executed
416 (using a C<require>) before anything else when the new perl is
417 initialised. This can be used to modify C<@INC> or anything else before
418 the perl interpreter executes scripts given on the command line (or via
419 C<-e>). This works even in an embedded interpreter.
420
421 =item --incglob pattern
422
423 This goes through all library directories and tries to match any F<.pm>
424 and F<.pl> files against the extended glob pattern (see below). If a file
425 matches, it is added. This switch will automatically detect L<AutoLoader>
426 files and the required link libraries for XS modules, but it will I<not>
427 scan the file for dependencies (at the moment).
428
429 This is mainly useful to include "everything":
430
431 --incglob '*'
432
433 Or to include perl libraries, or trees of those, such as the unicode
434 database files needed by many other modules:
435
436 --incglob '/unicore/**.pl'
437
438 =item --add file | --add "file alias"
439
440 Adds the given (perl) file into the bundle (and optionally call it
441 "alias"). This is useful to include any custom files into the bundle.
442
443 Example: embed the file F<httpd> as F<httpd.pm> when creating the bundle.
444
445 staticperl mkperl --add "httpd httpd.pm"
446
447 It is also a great way to add any custom modules:
448
449 # specification file
450 add file1 myfiles/file1
451 add file2 myfiles/file2
452 add file3 myfiles/file3
453
454 =item --binadd file | --add "file alias"
455
456 Just like C<--add>, except that it treats the file as binary and adds it
457 without any processing.
458
459 You should probably add a C</> prefix to avoid clashing with embedded
460 perl files (whose paths do not start with C</>), and/or use a special
461 directory, such as C</res/name>.
462
463 You can later get a copy of these files by calling C<staticperl::find
464 "alias">.
465
466 =item --include pattern | -i pattern | --exclude pattern | -x pattern
467
468 These two options define an include/exclude filter that is used after all
469 files selected by the other options have been found. Each include/exclude
470 is applied to all files found so far - an include makes sure that the
471 given files will be part of the resulting file set, an exclude will
472 exclude files. The patterns are "extended glob patterns" (see below).
473
474 For example, to include everything, except C<Devel> modules, but still
475 include F<Devel::PPPort>, you could use this:
476
477 --incglob '*' -i '/Devel/PPPort.pm' -x '/Devel/**'
478
479 =item --static
480
481 When C<--perl> is also given, link statically instead of dynamically. The
482 default is to link the new perl interpreter fully dynamic (that means all
483 perl modules are linked statically, but all external libraries are still
484 referenced dynamically).
485
486 Keep in mind that Solaris doesn't support static linking at all, and
487 systems based on GNU libc don't really support it in a usable fashion
488 either. Try uClibc if you want to create fully statically linked
489 executables, or try the C<--staticlibs> option to link only some libraries
490 statically.
491
492 =item --staticlib libname
493
494 When not linking fully statically, this option allows you to link specific
495 libraries statically. What it does is simply replace all occurances of
496 C<-llibname> with the GCC-specific C<-Wl,-Bstatic -llibname -Wl,-Bdynamic>
497 option.
498
499 This will have no effect unless the library is actually linked against,
500 specifically, C<--staticlib> will not link against the named library
501 unless it would be linked against anyway.
502
503 Example: link libcrypt statically into the binary.
504
505 staticperl mkperl -MIO::AIO --staticlib crypt
506
507 # ldopts might nwo contain:
508 # -lm -Wl,-Bstatic -lcrypt -Wl,-Bdynamic -lpthread
509
510 =item any other argument
511
512 Any other argument is interpreted as a bundle specification file, which
513 supports most long options (without extra quoting), one option per line.
514
515 =back
516
517 =head3 EXTENDED GLOB PATTERNS
518
519 Some options of F<staticperl mkbundle> expect an I<extended glob
520 pattern>. This is neither a normal shell glob nor a regex, but something
521 in between. The idea has been copied from rsync, and there are the current
522 matching rules:
523
524 =over 4
525
526 =item Patterns starting with F</> will be a anchored at the root of the library tree.
527
528 That is, F</unicore> will match the F<unicore> directory in C<@INC>, but
529 nothing inside, and neither any other file or directory called F<unicore>
530 anywhere else in the hierarchy.
531
532 =item Patterns not starting with F</> will be anchored at the end of the path.
533
534 That is, F<idna.pl> will match any file called F<idna.pl> anywhere in the
535 hierarchy, but not any directories of the same name.
536
537 =item A F<*> matches any single component.
538
539 That is, F</unicore/*.pl> would match all F<.pl> files directly inside
540 C</unicore>, not any deeper level F<.pl> files. Or in other words, F<*>
541 will not match slashes.
542
543 =item A F<**> matches anything.
544
545 That is, F</unicore/**.pl> would match all F<.pl> files under F</unicore>,
546 no matter how deeply nested they are inside subdirectories.
547
548 =item A F<?> matches a single character within a component.
549
550 That is, F</Encode/??.pm> matches F</Encode/JP.pm>, but not the
551 hypothetical F</Encode/J/.pm>, as F<?> does not match F</>.
552
553 =back
554
555 =head2 F<STATICPERL> CONFIGURATION AND HOOKS
556
557 During (each) startup, F<staticperl> tries to source the following shell
558 files in order:
559
560 /etc/staticperlrc
561 ~/.staticperlrc
562 $STATICPERL/rc
563
564 They can be used to override shell variables, or define functions to be
565 called at specific phases.
566
567 Note that the last file is erased during F<staticperl distclean>, so
568 generally should not be used.
569
570 =head3 CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
571
572 =head4 Variables you I<should> override
573
574 =over 4
575
576 =item C<EMAIL>
577
578 The e-mail address of the person who built this binary. Has no good
579 default, so should be specified by you.
580
581 =item C<CPAN>
582
583 The URL of the CPAN mirror to use (e.g. L<http://mirror.netcologne.de/cpan/>).
584
585 =item C<EXTRA_MODULES>
586
587 Additional modules installed during F<staticperl install>. Here you can
588 set which modules you want have to installed from CPAN.
589
590 Example: I really really need EV, AnyEvent, Coro and AnyEvent::AIO.
591
592 EXTRA_MODULES="EV AnyEvent Coro AnyEvent::AIO"
593
594 Note that you can also use a C<postinstall> hook to achieve this, and
595 more.
596
597 =back
598
599 =head4 Variables you might I<want> to override
600
601 =over 4
602
603 =item C<STATICPERL>
604
605 The directory where staticperl stores all its files
606 (default: F<~/.staticperl>).
607
608 =item C<PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT>, C<EV_EXTRA_DEFS>, ...
609
610 Usually set to C<1> to make modules "less inquisitive" during their
611 installation, you can set any environment variable you want - some modules
612 (such as L<Coro> or L<EV>) use environment variables for further tweaking.
613
614 =item C<PERL_VERSION>
615
616 The perl version to install - default is currently C<5.12.2>, but C<5.8.9>
617 is also a good choice (5.8.9 is much smaller than 5.12.2, while 5.10.1 is
618 about as big as 5.12.2).
619
620 =item C<PERL_PREFIX>
621
622 The prefix where perl gets installed (default: F<$STATICPERL/perl>),
623 i.e. where the F<bin> and F<lib> subdirectories will end up.
624
625 =item C<PERL_CONFIGURE>
626
627 Additional Configure options - these are simply passed to the perl
628 Configure script. For example, if you wanted to enable dynamic loading,
629 you could pass C<-Dusedl>. To enable ithreads (Why would you want that
630 insanity? Don't! Use L<forks> instead!) you would pass C<-Duseithreads>
631 and so on.
632
633 More commonly, you would either activate 64 bit integer support
634 (C<-Duse64bitint>), or disable large files support (-Uuselargefiles), to
635 reduce filesize further.
636
637 =item C<PERL_CPPFLAGS>, C<PERL_OPTIMIZE>, C<PERL_LDFLAGS>, C<PERL_LIBS>
638
639 These flags are passed to perl's F<Configure> script, and are generally
640 optimised for small size (at the cost of performance). Since they also
641 contain subtle workarounds around various build issues, changing these
642 usually requires understanding their default values - best look at the top
643 of the F<staticperl> script for more info on these.
644
645 =back
646
647 =head4 Variables you probably I<do not want> to override
648
649 =over 4
650
651 =item C<MKBUNDLE>
652
653 Where F<staticperl> writes the C<mkbundle> command to
654 (default: F<$STATICPERL/mkbundle>).
655
656 =item C<STATICPERL_MODULES>
657
658 Additional modules needed by C<mkbundle> - should therefore not be changed
659 unless you know what you are doing.
660
661 =back
662
663 =head3 OVERRIDABLE HOOKS
664
665 In addition to environment variables, it is possible to provide some
666 shell functions that are called at specific times. To provide your own
667 commands, just define the corresponding function.
668
669 Example: install extra modules from CPAN and from some directories
670 at F<staticperl install> time.
671
672 postinstall() {
673 rm -rf lib/threads* # weg mit Schaden
674 instcpan IO::AIO EV
675 instsrc ~/src/AnyEvent
676 instsrc ~/src/XML-Sablotron-1.0100001
677 instcpan Anyevent::AIO AnyEvent::HTTPD
678 }
679
680 =over 4
681
682 =item preconfigure
683
684 Called just before running F<./Configur> in the perl source
685 directory. Current working directory is the perl source directory.
686
687 This can be used to set any C<PERL_xxx> variables, which might be costly
688 to compute.
689
690 =item postconfigure
691
692 Called after configuring, but before building perl. Current working
693 directory is the perl source directory.
694
695 Could be used to tailor/patch config.sh (followed by F<sh Configure -S>)
696 or do any other modifications.
697
698 =item postbuild
699
700 Called after building, but before installing perl. Current working
701 directory is the perl source directory.
702
703 I have no clue what this could be used for - tell me.
704
705 =item postinstall
706
707 Called after perl and any extra modules have been installed in C<$PREFIX>,
708 but before setting the "installation O.K." flag.
709
710 The current working directory is C<$PREFIX>, but maybe you should not rely
711 on that.
712
713 This hook is most useful to customise the installation, by deleting files,
714 or installing extra modules using the C<instcpan> or C<instsrc> functions.
715
716 The script must return with a zero exit status, or the installation will
717 fail.
718
719 =back
720
721 =head1 ANATOMY OF A BUNDLE
722
723 When not building a new perl binary, C<mkbundle> will leave a number of
724 files in the current working directory, which can be used to embed a perl
725 interpreter in your program.
726
727 Intimate knowledge of L<perlembed> and preferably some experience with
728 embedding perl is highly recommended.
729
730 C<mkperl> (or the C<--perl> option) basically does this to link the new
731 interpreter (it also adds a main program to F<bundle.>):
732
733 $Config{cc} $(cat bundle.ccopts) -o perl bundle.c $(cat bundle.ldopts)
734
735 =over 4
736
737 =item bundle.h
738
739 A header file that contains the prototypes of the few symbols "exported"
740 by bundle.c, and also exposes the perl headers to the application.
741
742 =over 4
743
744 =item staticperl_init ()
745
746 Initialises the perl interpreter. You can use the normal perl functions
747 after calling this function, for example, to define extra functions or
748 to load a .pm file that contains some initialisation code, or the main
749 program function:
750
751 XS (xsfunction)
752 {
753 dXSARGS;
754
755 // now we have items, ST(i) etc.
756 }
757
758 static void
759 run_myapp(void)
760 {
761 staticperl_init ();
762 newXSproto ("myapp::xsfunction", xsfunction, __FILE__, "$$;$");
763 eval_pv ("require myapp::main", 1); // executes "myapp/main.pm"
764 }
765
766 =item staticperl_xs_init (pTHX)
767
768 Sometimes you need direct control over C<perl_parse> and C<perl_run>, in
769 which case you do not want to use C<staticperl_init> but call them on your
770 own.
771
772 Then you need this function - either pass it directly as the C<xs_init>
773 function to C<perl_parse>, or call it from your own C<xs_init> function.
774
775 =item staticperl_cleanup ()
776
777 In the unlikely case that you want to destroy the perl interpreter, here
778 is the corresponding function.
779
780 =item PerlInterpreter *staticperl
781
782 The perl interpreter pointer used by staticperl. Not normally so useful,
783 but there it is.
784
785 =back
786
787 =item bundle.ccopts
788
789 Contains the compiler options required to compile at least F<bundle.c> and
790 any file that includes F<bundle.h> - you should probably use it in your
791 C<CFLAGS>.
792
793 =item bundle.ldopts
794
795 The linker options needed to link the final program.
796
797 =back
798
799 =head1 RUNTIME FUNCTIONALITY
800
801 Binaries created with C<mkbundle>/C<mkperl> contain extra functions, which
802 are required to access the bundled perl sources, but might be useful for
803 other purposes.
804
805 In addition, for the embedded loading of perl files to work, F<staticperl>
806 overrides the C<@INC> array.
807
808 =over 4
809
810 =item $file = staticperl::find $path
811
812 Returns the data associated with the given C<$path>
813 (e.g. C<Digest/MD5.pm>, C<auto/POSIX/autosplit.ix>), which is basically
814 the UNIX path relative to the perl library directory.
815
816 Returns C<undef> if the file isn't embedded.
817
818 =item @paths = staticperl::list
819
820 Returns the list of all paths embedded in this binary.
821
822 =back
823
824 =head1 FULLY STATIC BINARIES - BUILDROOT
825
826 To make truly static (Linux-) libraries, you might want to have a look at
827 buildroot (L<http://buildroot.uclibc.org/>).
828
829 Buildroot is primarily meant to set up a cross-compile environment (which
830 is not so useful as perl doesn't quite like cross compiles), but it can also compile
831 a chroot environment where you can use F<staticperl>.
832
833 To do so, download buildroot, and enable "Build options => development
834 files in target filesystem" and optionally "Build options => gcc
835 optimization level (optimize for size)". At the time of writing, I had
836 good experiences with GCC 4.4.x but not GCC 4.5.
837
838 To minimise code size, I used C<-pipe -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections
839 -finline-limit=8 -fno-builtin-strlen -mtune=i386>. The C<-mtune=i386>
840 doesn't decrease codesize much, but it makes the file much more
841 compressible.
842
843 If you don't need Coro or threads, you can go with "linuxthreads.old" (or
844 no thread support). For Coro, it is highly recommended to switch to a
845 uClibc newer than 0.9.31 (at the time of this writing, I used the 20101201
846 snapshot) and enable NPTL, otherwise Coro needs to be configured with the
847 ultra-slow pthreads backend to work around linuxthreads bugs (it also uses
848 twice the address space needed for stacks).
849
850 If you use C<linuxthreads.old>, then you should also be aware that
851 uClibc shares C<errno> between all threads when statically linking. See
852 L<http://lists.uclibc.org/pipermail/uclibc/2010-June/044157.html> for a
853 workaround (And L<https://bugs.uclibc.org/2089> for discussion).
854
855 C<ccache> support is also recommended, especially if you want
856 to play around with buildroot options. Enabling the C<miniperl>
857 package will probably enable all options required for a successful
858 perl build. F<staticperl> itself additionally needs either C<wget>
859 (recommended, for CPAN) or C<curl>.
860
861 As for shells, busybox should provide all that is needed, but the default
862 busybox configuration doesn't include F<comm> which is needed by perl -
863 either make a custom busybox config, or compile coreutils.
864
865 For the latter route, you might find that bash has some bugs that keep
866 it from working properly in a chroot - either use dash (and link it to
867 F</bin/sh> inside the chroot) or link busybox to F</bin/sh>, using it's
868 built-in ash shell.
869
870 Finally, you need F</dev/null> inside the chroot for many scripts to work
871 - F<cp /dev/null output/target/dev> or bind-mounting your F</dev> will
872 both provide this.
873
874 After you have compiled and set up your buildroot target, you can copy
875 F<staticperl> from the C<App::Staticperl> distribution or from your
876 perl f<bin> directory (if you installed it) into the F<output/target>
877 filesystem, chroot inside and run it.
878
879 =head1 RECIPES / SPECIFIC MODULES
880
881 This section contains some common(?) recipes and information about
882 problems with some common modules or perl constructs that require extra
883 files to be included.
884
885 =head2 MODULES
886
887 =over 4
888
889 =item utf8
890
891 Some functionality in the utf8 module, such as swash handling (used
892 for unicode character ranges in regexes) is implemented in the
893 C<"utf8_heavy.pl"> library:
894
895 -M'"utf8_heavy.pl"'
896
897 Many Unicode properties in turn are defined in separate modules,
898 such as C<"unicore/Heavy.pl"> and more specific data tables such as
899 C<"unicore/To/Digit.pl"> or C<"unicore/lib/Perl/Word.pl">. These tables
900 are big (7MB uncompressed, although F<staticperl> contains special
901 handling for those files), so including them on demand by your application
902 only might pay off.
903
904 To simply include the whole unicode database, use:
905
906 --incglob '/unicore/*.pl'
907
908 =item AnyEvent
909
910 AnyEvent needs a backend implementation that it will load in a delayed
911 fashion. The L<AnyEvent::Impl::Perl> backend is the default choice
912 for AnyEvent if it can't find anything else, and is usually a safe
913 fallback. If you plan to use e.g. L<EV> (L<POE>...), then you need to
914 include the L<AnyEvent::Impl::EV> (L<AnyEvent::Impl::POE>...) backend as
915 well.
916
917 If you want to handle IRIs or IDNs (L<AnyEvent::Util> punycode and idn
918 functions), you also need to include C<"AnyEvent/Util/idna.pl"> and
919 C<"AnyEvent/Util/uts46data.pl">.
920
921 =item Carp
922
923 Carp had (in older versions of perl) a dependency on L<Carp::Heavy>. As of
924 perl 5.12.2 (maybe earlier), this dependency no longer exists.
925
926 =item Config
927
928 The F<perl -V> switch (as well as many modules) needs L<Config>, which in
929 turn might need L<"Config_heavy.pl">. Including the latter gives you
930 both.
931
932 =item Term::ReadLine::Perl
933
934 Also needs L<Term::ReadLine::readline>.
935
936 =item URI
937
938 URI implements schemes as separate modules - the generic URL scheme is
939 implemented in L<URI::_generic>, HTTP is implemented in L<URI::http>. If
940 you need to use any of these schemes, you should include these manually.
941
942 =back
943
944 =head2 RECIPES
945
946 =over 4
947
948 =item Linking everything in
949
950 To link just about everything installed in the perl library into a new
951 perl, try this:
952
953 staticperl mkperl --strip ppi --incglob '*'
954
955 =item Getting rid of netdb function
956
957 The perl core has lots of netdb functions (C<getnetbyname>, C<getgrent>
958 and so on) that few applications use. You can avoid compiling them in by
959 putting the following fragment into a C<preconfigure> hook:
960
961 preconfigure() {
962 for sym in \
963 d_getgrnam_r d_endgrent d_endgrent_r d_endhent \
964 d_endhostent_r d_endnent d_endnetent_r d_endpent \
965 d_endprotoent_r d_endpwent d_endpwent_r d_endsent \
966 d_endservent_r d_getgrent d_getgrent_r d_getgrgid_r \
967 d_getgrnam_r d_gethbyaddr d_gethent d_getsbyport \
968 d_gethostbyaddr_r d_gethostbyname_r d_gethostent_r \
969 d_getlogin_r d_getnbyaddr d_getnbyname d_getnent \
970 d_getnetbyaddr_r d_getnetbyname_r d_getnetent_r \
971 d_getpent d_getpbyname d_getpbynumber d_getprotobyname_r \
972 d_getprotobynumber_r d_getprotoent_r d_getpwent \
973 d_getpwent_r d_getpwnam_r d_getpwuid_r d_getsent \
974 d_getservbyname_r d_getservbyport_r d_getservent_r \
975 d_getspnam_r d_getsbyname
976 # d_gethbyname
977 do
978 PERL_CONFIGURE="$PERL_CONFIGURE -U$sym"
979 done
980 }
981
982 This mostly gains space when linking staticaly, as the functions will
983 liekly not be linked in. The gain for dynamically-linked binaries is
984 smaller.
985
986 Also, this leaves C<gethostbyname> in - not only is it actually used
987 often, the L<Socket> module also exposes it, so leaving it out usually
988 gains little. Why Socket exposes a C function that is in the core already
989 is anybody's guess.
990
991 =back
992
993 =head1 AUTHOR
994
995 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
996 http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/staticperl.html