# @(#)README 8.6 (Berkeley) 6/20/94
This is the area for building the libdb library. There are a number
of porting directories, for various architecture/OS combinations. Pick
the one that's closest to yours and try "make". For the rest of this
file, I'll use "MACH" as a fake architecture/OS name.
To PORT to a new system, create the following subdirectories and
symbolic links.
mkdir MACH (for example: mkdir sunos.4.0)
cd MACH
cp ../Makefile .
chmod 664 Makefile
ln -s ../clib .
mkdir include
ln -s include sys
cd include
ln -s ../../include/*.h .
rm compat.h
cp ../../include/compat.h .
chmod 664 compat.h
cd ..
The basic idea is that you now have a local area that you can modify.
In particular, you have local copies of the Makefile and the include
file compat.h. Read through the Makefile and compat.h and make whatever
changes are appropriate to your system. If there's an architecture
that's close to yours, you probably should diff the Makefile and
compat.h in that tree against the standard ones and see what changes
were necessary, as they're probably necessary for you as well. Then,
enter "make" and see what happens!
There are several subroutines that are found in POSIX 1003.2, ANSI
C, or 4.4BSD that you may not have. Once you get libdb.a to compile,
go through the list of undefined routines and add entries to the MISC
line in the Makefile as necessary.
If you have to add some functions that are missing (and which aren't
in the PORT/clib directory), please don't add them in the PORT/clib
directory. Add them in a MACH/local directory, and add lines of the
form:
function.o: local/function.o
${CL} -Ilocal local/function.o
to your local Makefile.
Hopefully, over time, we'll develop a set of system directories that
are known to work. If you send me the changes that were necessary to
make your system work, this will happen much more quickly.
In some of the system directories, you'll see a file named OTHER_PATCHES.
This is a set of patches which you'll have to make from the top-level db
directory to get libdb.a to run on this system:
cd ..
patch < PORT/MACH/OTHER_PATCHES
If patch prompts you for the name of the file to modify (some versions
of patch don't figure it out on their own) use the file name which patch
displays.
Some knobs you may have to turn:
In include/db.h:
Before attempting to build libdb, you should look through the
db.h file, and adjust it as necessary for your system. The
only adjustments that you should need to make are for the
fixed sized typedef's at the top of the file. Make sure they're
right for your system.
In include/compat.h:
Before attempting to build libdb, you should look through the
compat.h file, and adjust it as necessary for your system.
It's possible to use the #ifndef construct to figure out if a
#ifdef has been set, but C provides no similar method to figure
out if a typedef has been done. Your compile errors should
give you a good indication of which ones you need.
You may see warning messages about illegal pointer combinations. You may
also see lots of warning messages about #define's being redefined. These
can mostly be ignored. I usually ignore warning messages until something
doesn't work. Some systems produce thousands of lines of useless warnings,
bless their little hearts.
The other parts of the PORT directory are as follows:
The directory PORT/clib is a set of functions that the 4.4BSD
C library had and which your system may not have. They are
added to the MISC line of the Makefile if they aren't defined
when you try and load libdb.a.
The directory PORT/include is header files that the 4.4BSD
system had which your system may not have. There is also
one really important extra one, named compat.h, which is a
set of compatibility work-arounds that you'll almost certainly
have to copy and modify for a new system.
The symbolic link PORT/sys points to the PORT/include directory
so that includes of the form <sys/include.h> work.
Some of the more common portability problems:
If you don't have:
memmove(3): add memmove.o
mkstemp(3): add mktemp.o
... to the MISC line in the Makefile.
If you don't have snprintf/vsnprintf(3), add snprintf.o to the
MISC line in the Makefile. This workaround depends on your
system having vsprintf(3) -- if you don't, there's no workaround
other than changing the source code to not use the snprintf calls.
If you have to make that change, check to see if your vsprintf
returns a length or a char *; if it's the latter, make sure you
set VSPRINTF_CHARSTAR in the MACH/include/compat.h file.
Installing the DB library:
The Makefile builds a C library named libdb.a. This file needs
to be installed in a place where the loader will automatically
look for it (or, if you're building it for a single project,
wherever that project's Makefile loads it from).
In addition, the header file PORT/include/db.h must be copied to
a directory (often /usr/include/) where programs that use the
db package can include it in their source. (If you intend to use
the ndbm interface to libdb, you'll need to copy the header file
PORT/include/ndbm.h as well.)