ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | Download File
/cvs/EV/Makefile.PL
(Generate patch)

Comparing EV/Makefile.PL (file contents):
Revision 1.13 by root, Thu Nov 1 17:45:30 2007 UTC vs.
Revision 1.59 by root, Sat Jun 22 16:43:05 2019 UTC

1use 5.006; 1use strict qw(vars subs);
2 2use Canary::Stability EV => 1, 5.008002;
3use Config; 3use Config;
4use ExtUtils::MakeMaker; 4use ExtUtils::MakeMaker;
5 5
6sub have_inc($) {
7 scalar grep -r "$_/$_[0]", $Config{usrinc}, split / /, $Config{incpth}
8}
9
10my $DEFINE;
6 11
7unless (-e "libev/ev_epoll.c") { 12unless (-e "libev/ev_epoll.c") {
8 print <<EOF; 13 print <<EOF;
9 14
10*** 15***
17 exit 1; 22 exit 1;
18} 23}
19 24
20print <<EOF; 25print <<EOF;
21 26
22
23*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** 27*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
28
24 29
25Welcome to EV configuration. If you are in a hurry, just press return here 30Welcome to EV configuration. If you are in a hurry, just press return here
26and hope for the best. The defaults should usually do. 31and hope for the best. The defaults should usually do.
27 32
28EOF 33EOF
31 $ENV{PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT} = 1; 36 $ENV{PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT} = 1;
32} 37}
33 38
34print <<EOF; 39print <<EOF;
35 40
36
37*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** 41*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
38 42
43
39POSIX optionally offers support for a monotonic clock source. EV can 44POSIX optionally offers support for a monotonic clock source. EV
40take advantage of this clock source to detect time jumps reliably. This 45can take advantage of this clock source to detect time jumps more
41will usually slow down EV a tiny amount, but this is usually
42well-invested. Unfortunately, some systems are bound to be broken, so 46reliably. Unfortunately, some systems are bound to be broken, so you can
43you can disable this here. Whatever your reasons, you can completely 47disable this here: you can completely disable the detection and use of
44disable the detection and use of this monotonic clock by answering 'n' 48the monotonic clock by answering 'n' here. Support for this clock type
45here. Support for this clock type will otherwise be autodetected at both 49will otherwise be autodetected at both compile- and runtime. (this setting
46compile- and runtime. 50currently affects the use of nanosleep over select as well).
47 51
48EOF 52EOF
49 53
50if (prompt ("Enable optional support for CLOCK_MONOTONIC (y/n)?", "y") =~ /[yY]/) { 54unless (prompt ("Enable optional support for CLOCK_MONOTONIC (y/n)?", "y") =~ /[yY]/) {
51 $DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_MONOTONIC"; 55 $DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_MONOTONIC=0";
52} 56}
53 57
54print <<EOF; 58print <<EOF;
55 59
56
57*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** 60*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
61
58 62
59POSIX optionally offers support for a (potentially) high-resolution 63POSIX optionally offers support for a (potentially) high-resolution
60realtime clock interface. In a good implementation, using it is faster 64realtime clock interface. In a good implementation, using it is faster
61than the normal method of using gettimeofday. Unfortunately, this option 65than the normal method of using gettimeofday. Unfortunately, this option
62is also bound to be broken on some systems, so you can disable use and 66is also bound to be broken on some systems, and current EV versions do not
63probing of this feature altogether here. Otherwise support for this clock 67actually call gettimeofday very often, so it defaults to no.
64type will be autodetected at compiletime.
65 68
66EOF 69EOF
67 70
68if (prompt ("Prefer clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME) over gettimeofday (y/n)?", "y") !~ /[yY]/) { 71$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_REALTIME=" . (0 + (prompt ("Prefer clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME) over gettimeofday (y/n)?", "n") =~ /[yY]/));
72
73print <<EOF;
74
75*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
76
77
78EV can use various backends with various portability issues. The select
79backend is the most portable and makes for a good fallback, but it can be
80limited to a low number of file descriptors and/or might not compile. If
81you have problems with compiling ev_select.c, you might try to play around
82with disabling it here, or forcing it to use the fd_set provided by your
83OS, via the next question. I highly recommend keeping it in.
84
85EOF
86
87if (prompt ("Enable select backend (y/n)?", "y") =~ /[yY]/) {
69 $DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_REALTIME=0"; 88 $DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_SELECT=1";
70}
71 89
72print <<EOF; 90 print <<EOF;
73 91
74
75*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** 92*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
93
94
95The select backend can operate in two modes. One uses the system-provided
96fd_set and is usually limited to 1024 file descriptors (64 on windows),
97the other requires your header files to define NFDBITS and declare a
98suitable fd_mask type. If you run into problems compiling ev_select.c, you
99can try forcing the use of the system fd_set here.
100
101EOF
102
103 if (prompt ("Force use of system fd_set for select backend (y/n)?", "n") =~ /[yY]/) {
104 $DEFINE .= " -DEV_SELECT_USE_FD_SET";
105 }
106} else {
107 $DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_SELECT=0";
108}
109
110print <<EOF;
111
112*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
113
114
115The second very portable backend is poll(2). It does not exist on windows
116and various versions of Mac OS X (and on the other versions it simply
117doesn't work), but works basically everywhere else. It is recommended to use
118the default here unless you run into compile problems in ev_poll.c.
119
120EOF
121
122$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_POLL=" . (0 + (prompt ("Enable poll backend (y/n)?", (have_inc "poll.h") ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/));
123
124print <<EOF;
125
126*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
127
128
129Select and poll make it hard to write efficient servers, especially if the
130number of active connections is much lower than the watched ones. GNU/Linux
131systems have a more scalable method called "epoll", which EV can use. For
132this to work, both your kernel and glibc have to support epoll, but if you
133can compile it, the detection will be done at runtime, and EV will safely
134fall back to using select when epoll isn't available. If unsure, accept
135the default.
136
137EOF
138
139my $can_epoll = have_inc "sys/epoll.h";
140$can_epoll = $ENV{EV_EPOLL} if exists $ENV{EV_EPOLL};
141$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_EPOLL=" . (0 + (prompt ("Enable epoll backend (y/n)?", $can_epoll ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/));
142
143print <<EOF;
144
145*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
146
147
148Linux 4.18 introduced another event polling interface, this time using
149the Linux AIO API. While this API is far superior to epoll and almost
150rivals kqueue, it also suffers from the same issues as kqueue typically
151does: only a subset of file types are supported (as of 4.19, I have seen
152eventfd, pipes, sockets files and some devices, but no ttys). It also
153is subject arbitrary system-wide limits imposed on it. Therefore, this
154backend is not used by default, even when it is compiled in, and you have
155to request it explicitly, e.g. with LIBEV_FLAGS=64. If unsure, accept the
156default.
157
158EOF
159
160my $can_linuxaio = have_inc "linux/aio_abi.h";
161$can_linuxaio = $ENV{EV_LINUXAIO} if exists $ENV{EV_LINUXAIO};
162$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_LINUXAIO=" . (0 + (prompt ("Enable linux aio backend (y/n)?", $can_linuxaio ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/));
163
164print <<EOF;
165
166*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
167
168
169Similarly to the epoll backend above, EV can take advantage of kqueue on
170many BSD systems. Support for kqueue will be detected at runtime, with a
171safe fallback to other methods when it cannot be used.
172
173Note that kqueue is broken on most operating systems, so by default it
174won't be used on many platforms, but you can still create your own event
175loop with kqueue backend if you ask specifically for it.
176
177Here is what we know:
178
179NetBSD: partially working in at least 3.1 and later. Yeah! :)
180FreeBSD: broken on at least 6.2-STABLE, spotty in later versions,
181 sockets *likely* work, ptys definitely don't.
182OpenBSD: reports indicate that it likely doesn't work
183 (similar problems as on FreeBSD).
184OS X: completely, utterly broken on at least <= 10.6.
185
186EOF
187
188my $can_kqueue = have_inc "sys/event.h";
189$can_kqueue = $ENV{EV_KQUEUE} if exists $ENV{EV_KQUEUE};
190$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_KQUEUE=" . (0 + (prompt ("Enable kqueue backend (y/n)?", $can_kqueue ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/));
191
192print <<EOF;
193
194*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
195
196
197Similarly to the kqueue backend above, EV can take advantage of the
198solaris 10 event port interface. Support for event ports will be detected
199at runtime, with a safe fallback to other methods when it cannot be used.
200
201EOF
202
203$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_PORT=" . (0 + (prompt ("Enable event port backend (y/n)?", (have_inc "sys/port.h") ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/));
204
205print <<EOF;
206
207*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
208
76 209
77EV needs the functions pthread_atfork and clock_gettime. On most systems 210EV needs the functions pthread_atfork and clock_gettime. On most systems
78you need some special libraries for this (such as -lrt and -lpthread). You can 211you need some special libraries for this (such as -lrt and -lpthread). You
79specify additional libraries to provide these calls now, or accept the default. 212can specify additional libraries to provide these calls (and any other
213required by EV) now, or accept the default.
80 214
81EOF 215On GNU/Linux systems, EV uses the LSB 3.1 __register_atfork function
216to avoid the dependency on libpthread, and directly uses the clock_gettime
217syscall to avoid a dependency on librt.
82 218
219EOF
220
221my $solaris_libs = $^O =~ /solaris/i ? "-lsocket -lnsl" : "";
222my $librt = $^O =~ /linux/i ? "" : "-lpthread -lrt";
223my $LIBS = exists $ENV{EV_LIBS} ? $ENV{EV_LIBS} : "$librt $solaris_libs";
83$LIBS = prompt "Extra libraries for pthread_atfork and clock_gettime?", "-lpthread -lrt"; 224$LIBS = prompt "Extra libraries for pthread_atfork and clock_gettime?", $LIBS;
84 225
85 226
86print <<EOF; 227print <<EOF;
87 228
88
89*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** 229*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
90 230
91EV needs the functions pthread_atfork and clock_gettime. On most systems
92you need some special libraries for this (such as -lrt and -lpthread). You can
93specify additional libraries to provide these calls now, or accept the default.
94 231
95EOF 232A backend of a different kind is the Linux inotify(7) interface, which can
233be used to speed up (and reduce resource consumption) of stat watchers. If
234you have the include file and libc support for it, it is usually a good
235idea to enable it, as kernel availability is detected at runtime.
96 236
97if (prompt ("Enable epoll backend (y/n)?", (-e "/usr/include/sys/epoll.h") ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/) {
98 $DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_EPOLL";
99}
100
101print <<EOF;
102
103
104*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
105
106EOF 237EOF
238
239my $can_inotify = have_inc "sys/inotify.h";
240$can_inotify = $ENV{EV_INOTIFY} if exists $ENV{EV_INOTIFY};
241$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_INOTIFY=" . (0 + (prompt ("Enable inotify support (y/n)?", $can_inotify ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/));
242
243print <<EOF;
244
245*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
246
247
248Another useful bit of functionality is the Linux eventfd, which is useful
249for faster signal handling (don't care) and intra-thread communications
250(more relevant). Kernel support for this will be probed at runtime, but
251your libc must contain the necessary wrapper. Glibc 2.7 and later should
252have this wrapper.
253
254EOF
255
256my $can_eventfd = have_inc "sys/eventfd.h";
257$can_eventfd = $ENV{EV_EVENTFD} if exists $ENV{EV_EVENTFD};
258$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_EVENTFD=" . (0 + (prompt ("Enable linux eventfd support (y/n)?", $can_eventfd ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/));
259
260print <<EOF;
261
262*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
263
264
265Another sometimes useful bit of functionality is the Linux signalfd, which
266is useful for faster signal handling (don't care). Kernel support for
267this will be probed at runtime, but your libc must contain the necessary
268wrapper. Glibc 2.7 and later should have this wrapper.
269
270EOF
271
272my $can_signalfd = have_inc "sys/signalfd.h";
273$can_signalfd = $ENV{EV_SIGNALFD} if exists $ENV{EV_SIGNALFD};
274$DEFINE .= " -DEV_USE_SIGNALFD=" . (0 + (prompt ("Enable linux signalfd support (y/n)?", $can_signalfd ? "y" : "n") =~ /[yY]/));
275
276print <<EOF;
277
278*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
279
280
281Very rarely, people want to tweak EV even more, e.g. to exclude
282or include certain watcher types or backends. This can be done by adding
283extra -D options here, or via the EV_EXTRA_DEFS environment variable.
284
285For example, if you run into compile problems because of missing memory
286fences (or you just want extra performance), you can tell EV to not support
287smp and threads via -DEV_NO_THREADS.
288
289Normal persons just press enter.
290
291EOF
292
293$DEFINE .= " " . prompt "Any extra -D options?", "$ENV{EV_EXTRA_DEFS}";
294
295print <<EOF;
296
297*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
298
299
300EOF
301
302my @anyevent = eval { require AnyEvent; $AnyEvent::VERSION < 5.29 } ? (AnyEvent => 5.29) : ();
107 303
108WriteMakefile( 304WriteMakefile(
109 dist => { 305 dist => {
110 PREOP => 'pod2text EV.pm | tee README >$(DISTVNAME)/README; chmod -R u=rwX,go=rX . ;', 306 PREOP => 'pod2text EV.pm | tee README >$(DISTVNAME)/README; chmod -R u=rwX,go=rX . ;',
111 COMPRESS => 'gzip -9v', 307 COMPRESS => 'gzip -9v',
112 SUFFIX => '.gz', 308 SUFFIX => '.gz',
113 }, 309 },
114 depend => { 310 depend => {
115 "EV.c" => "EV/EVAPI.h " 311 "EV.c" => "EV/EVAPI.h "
116 . "libev/ev.c libev/ev.h libev/ev_epoll.c libev/ev_select.c " 312 . "libev/ev.c libev/ev.h libev/ev_epoll.c libev/ev_select.c libev/ev_kqueue.c libev/ev_poll.c "
117 . "libev/event.h libev/event.c libev/evdns.h libev/evdns.c", 313 . "libev/ev_vars.h libev/ev_wrap.h",
118 }, 314 },
119 INC => "-Ilibev", 315 INC => "-Ilibev",
120 DEFINE => "$DEFINE", 316 DEFINE => "$DEFINE",
121 NAME => "EV", 317 NAME => "EV",
122 LIBS => [$LIBS], 318 LIBS => [$LIBS],
319 PREREQ_PM => {
320 @anyevent,
321 "common::sense" => 0,
322 },
323 CONFIGURE_REQUIRES => { "ExtUtils::MakeMaker" => 6.52, "Canary::Stability" => 0 },
123 VERSION_FROM => "EV.pm", 324 VERSION_FROM => "EV.pm",
124 PM => { 325 PM => {
125 'EV.pm' => '$(INST_LIBDIR)/EV.pm', 326 'EV.pm' => '$(INST_LIB)/EV.pm',
126 'EV/AnyEvent.pm' => '$(INST_LIBDIR)/EV/AnyEvent.pm',
127 'EV/DNS.pm' => '$(INST_LIBDIR)/EV/DNS.pm',
128 'EV/EVAPI.h' => '$(INST_LIBDIR)/EV/EVAPI.h', 327 'EV/EVAPI.h' => '$(INST_LIB)/EV/EVAPI.h',
129 'EV/MakeMaker.pm' => '$(INST_LIBDIR)/EV/MakeMaker.pm', 328 'EV/MakeMaker.pm' => '$(INST_LIB)/EV/MakeMaker.pm',
130 'libev/ev.h' => '$(INST_LIBDIR)/EV/ev.h', 329 'libev/ev.h' => '$(INST_LIB)/EV/ev.h',
330 'libev/ev.pod' => '$(INST_LIB)/EV/libev.pod',
131 }, 331 },
332 MAN3PODS => {
333 'EV.pm' => '$(INST_MAN3DIR)/EV.$(MAN3EXT)',
334 'EV/MakeMaker.pm' => '$(INST_MAN3DIR)/EV::MakeMaker.$(MAN3EXT)',
335 'libev/ev.pod' => '$(INST_MAN3DIR)/EV::libev.$(MAN3EXT)',
336 },
132); 337);
133 338
134 339

Diff Legend

Removed lines
+ Added lines
< Changed lines
> Changed lines