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29 | |
29 | |
30 | autoconf::run_script() |
30 | autoconf::run_script() |
31 | and die "\nconfigure failed, check it's output above and autoconf/config.log\n\n"; |
31 | and die "\nconfigure failed, check it's output above and autoconf/config.log\n\n"; |
32 | } |
32 | } |
33 | |
33 | |
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34 | if ($^O =~ /linux/ && $Config{usemymalloc} eq "y") { |
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35 | print <<EOF; |
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36 | |
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37 | *** |
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38 | *** WARNING: |
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39 | *** |
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40 | *** Your perl uses it's own memory allocator (-Dusemymalloc=y), |
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41 | *** which is known not to be threadsafe on GNU/Linux and probably |
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42 | *** other platforms (even when not used concurrently, it trashes |
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43 | *** the data structures of the system malloc running concurrently), |
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44 | *** for perls up to 5.8.8 and possibly later versions. |
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45 | *** |
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46 | *** If you are unsure wether your perl has been fixed, your system |
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47 | *** is safe for other reasons, or you experience spurious segfaults, |
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48 | *** please compile your perl with -Dusemymalloc=n. |
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49 | *** |
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50 | |
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51 | EOF |
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52 | } |
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53 | |
34 | my $mm = MM->new({ |
54 | my $mm = MM->new({ |
35 | dist => { |
55 | dist => { |
36 | PREOP => 'pod2text AIO.pm | tee README >$(DISTVNAME)/README; chmod -R u=rwX,go=rX . ;', |
56 | PREOP => 'pod2text AIO.pm | tee README >$(DISTVNAME)/README; chmod -R u=rwX,go=rX . ;', |
37 | COMPRESS => 'gzip -9v', |
57 | COMPRESS => 'gzip -9v', |
38 | SUFFIX => '.gz', |
58 | SUFFIX => '.gz', |