1 Building PCRE without using autotools 2 ------------------------------------- 3 4 This document contains the following sections: 5 6 General 7 Generic instructions for the PCRE C library 8 The C++ wrapper functions 9 Building for virtual Pascal 10 Stack size in Windows environments 11 Linking programs in Windows environments 12 Calling conventions in Windows environments 13 Comments about Win32 builds 14 Building PCRE on Windows with CMake 15 Use of relative paths with CMake on Windows 16 Testing with RunTest.bat 17 Building under Windows CE with Visual Studio 200x 18 Building under Windows with BCC5.5 19 Building using Borland C++ Builder 2007 (CB2007) and higher 20 Building PCRE on OpenVMS 21 Building PCRE on Stratus OpenVOS 22 Building PCRE on native z/OS and z/VM 23 24 25 GENERAL 26 27 I (Philip Hazel) have no experience of Windows or VMS sytems and how their 28 libraries work. The items in the PCRE distribution and Makefile that relate to 29 anything other than Linux systems are untested by me. 30 31 There are some other comments and files (including some documentation in CHM 32 format) in the Contrib directory on the FTP site: 33 34 ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/Contrib 35 36 The basic PCRE library consists entirely of code written in Standard C, and so 37 should compile successfully on any system that has a Standard C compiler and 38 library. The C++ wrapper functions are a separate issue (see below). 39 40 The PCRE distribution includes a "configure" file for use by the configure/make 41 (autotools) build system, as found in many Unix-like environments. The README 42 file contains information about the options for "configure". 43 44 There is also support for CMake, which some users prefer, especially in Windows 45 environments, though it can also be run in Unix-like environments. See the 46 section entitled "Building PCRE on Windows with CMake" below. 47 48 Versions of config.h and pcre.h are distributed in the PCRE tarballs under the 49 names config.h.generic and pcre.h.generic. These are provided for those who 50 build PCRE without using "configure" or CMake. If you use "configure" or CMake, 51 the .generic versions are not used. 52 53 54 GENERIC INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE PCRE C LIBRARY 55 56 The following are generic instructions for building the PCRE C library "by 57 hand". If you are going to use CMake, this section does not apply to you; you 58 can skip ahead to the CMake section. 59 60 (1) Copy or rename the file config.h.generic as config.h, and edit the macro 61 settings that it contains to whatever is appropriate for your environment. 62 63 In particular, you can alter the definition of the NEWLINE macro to 64 specify what character(s) you want to be interpreted as line terminators. 65 In an EBCDIC environment, you MUST change NEWLINE, because its default 66 value is 10, an ASCII LF. The usual EBCDIC newline character is 21 (0x15, 67 NL), though in some cases it may be 37 (0x25). 68 69 When you compile any of the PCRE modules, you must specify -DHAVE_CONFIG_H 70 to your compiler so that config.h is included in the sources. 71 72 An alternative approach is not to edit config.h, but to use -D on the 73 compiler command line to make any changes that you need to the 74 configuration options. In this case -DHAVE_CONFIG_H must not be set. 75 76 NOTE: There have been occasions when the way in which certain parameters 77 in config.h are used has changed between releases. (In the configure/make 78 world, this is handled automatically.) When upgrading to a new release, 79 you are strongly advised to review config.h.generic before re-using what 80 you had previously. 81 82 (2) Copy or rename the file pcre.h.generic as pcre.h. 83 84 (3) EITHER: 85 Copy or rename file pcre_chartables.c.dist as pcre_chartables.c. 86 87 OR: 88 Compile dftables.c as a stand-alone program (using -DHAVE_CONFIG_H if 89 you have set up config.h), and then run it with the single argument 90 "pcre_chartables.c". This generates a set of standard character tables 91 and writes them to that file. The tables are generated using the default 92 C locale for your system. If you want to use a locale that is specified 93 by LC_xxx environment variables, add the -L option to the dftables 94 command. You must use this method if you are building on a system that 95 uses EBCDIC code. 96 97 The tables in pcre_chartables.c are defaults. The caller of PCRE can 98 specify alternative tables at run time. 99 100 (4) Ensure that you have the following header files: 101 102 pcre_internal.h 103 ucp.h 104 105 (5) For an 8-bit library, compile the following source files, setting 106 -DHAVE_CONFIG_H as a compiler option if you have set up config.h with your 107 configuration, or else use other -D settings to change the configuration 108 as required. 109 110 pcre_byte_order.c 111 pcre_chartables.c 112 pcre_compile.c 113 pcre_config.c 114 pcre_dfa_exec.c 115 pcre_exec.c 116 pcre_fullinfo.c 117 pcre_get.c 118 pcre_globals.c 119 pcre_jit_compile.c 120 pcre_maketables.c 121 pcre_newline.c 122 pcre_ord2utf8.c 123 pcre_refcount.c 124 pcre_string_utils.c 125 pcre_study.c 126 pcre_tables.c 127 pcre_ucd.c 128 pcre_valid_utf8.c 129 pcre_version.c 130 pcre_xclass.c 131 132 Make sure that you include -I. in the compiler command (or equivalent for 133 an unusual compiler) so that all included PCRE header files are first 134 sought in the current directory. Otherwise you run the risk of picking up 135 a previously-installed file from somewhere else. 136 137 Note that you must still compile pcre_jit_compile.c, even if you have not 138 defined SUPPORT_JIT in config.h, because when JIT support is not 139 configured, dummy functions are compiled. When JIT support IS configured, 140 pcre_jit_compile.c #includes sources from the sljit subdirectory, where 141 there should be 16 files, all of whose names begin with "sljit". 142 143 (6) Now link all the compiled code into an object library in whichever form 144 your system keeps such libraries. This is the basic PCRE C 8-bit library. 145 If your system has static and shared libraries, you may have to do this 146 once for each type. 147 148 (7) If you want to build a 16-bit library (as well as, or instead of the 8-bit 149 or 32-bit libraries) repeat steps 5-6 with the following files: 150 151 pcre16_byte_order.c 152 pcre16_chartables.c 153 pcre16_compile.c 154 pcre16_config.c 155 pcre16_dfa_exec.c 156 pcre16_exec.c 157 pcre16_fullinfo.c 158 pcre16_get.c 159 pcre16_globals.c 160 pcre16_jit_compile.c 161 pcre16_maketables.c 162 pcre16_newline.c 163 pcre16_ord2utf16.c 164 pcre16_refcount.c 165 pcre16_string_utils.c 166 pcre16_study.c 167 pcre16_tables.c 168 pcre16_ucd.c 169 pcre16_utf16_utils.c 170 pcre16_valid_utf16.c 171 pcre16_version.c 172 pcre16_xclass.c 173 174 (8) If you want to build a 32-bit library (as well as, or instead of the 8-bit 175 or 16-bit libraries) repeat steps 5-6 with the following files: 176 177 pcre32_byte_order.c 178 pcre32_chartables.c 179 pcre32_compile.c 180 pcre32_config.c 181 pcre32_dfa_exec.c 182 pcre32_exec.c 183 pcre32_fullinfo.c 184 pcre32_get.c 185 pcre32_globals.c 186 pcre32_jit_compile.c 187 pcre32_maketables.c 188 pcre32_newline.c 189 pcre32_ord2utf32.c 190 pcre32_refcount.c 191 pcre32_string_utils.c 192 pcre32_study.c 193 pcre32_tables.c 194 pcre32_ucd.c 195 pcre32_utf32_utils.c 196 pcre32_valid_utf32.c 197 pcre32_version.c 198 pcre32_xclass.c 199 200 (9) If you want to build the POSIX wrapper functions (which apply only to the 201 8-bit library), ensure that you have the pcreposix.h file and then compile 202 pcreposix.c (remembering -DHAVE_CONFIG_H if necessary). Link the result 203 (on its own) as the pcreposix library. 204 205 (10) The pcretest program can be linked with any combination of the 8-bit, 206 16-bit and 32-bit libraries (depending on what you selected in config.h). 207 Compile pcretest.c and pcre_printint.c (again, don't forget 208 -DHAVE_CONFIG_H) and link them together with the appropriate library/ies. 209 If you compiled an 8-bit library, pcretest also needs the pcreposix 210 wrapper library unless you compiled it with -DNOPOSIX. 211 212 (11) Run pcretest on the testinput files in the testdata directory, and check 213 that the output matches the corresponding testoutput files. There are 214 comments about what each test does in the section entitled "Testing PCRE" 215 in the README file. If you compiled more than one of the 8-bit, 16-bit and 216 32-bit libraries, you need to run pcretest with the -16 option to do 217 16-bit tests and with the -32 option to do 32-bit tests. 218 219 Some tests are relevant only when certain build-time options are selected. 220 For example, test 4 is for UTF-8/UTF-16/UTF-32 support, and will not run 221 if you have built PCRE without it. See the comments at the start of each 222 testinput file. If you have a suitable Unix-like shell, the RunTest script 223 will run the appropriate tests for you. The command "RunTest list" will 224 output a list of all the tests. 225 226 Note that the supplied files are in Unix format, with just LF characters 227 as line terminators. You may need to edit them to change this if your 228 system uses a different convention. If you are using Windows, you probably 229 should use the wintestinput3 file instead of testinput3 (and the 230 corresponding output file). This is a locale test; wintestinput3 sets the 231 locale to "french" rather than "fr_FR", and there some minor output 232 differences. 233 234 (12) If you have built PCRE with SUPPORT_JIT, the JIT features will be tested 235 by the testdata files. However, you might also like to build and run 236 the freestanding JIT test program, pcre_jit_test.c. 237 238 (13) If you want to use the pcregrep command, compile and link pcregrep.c; it 239 uses only the basic 8-bit PCRE library (it does not need the pcreposix 240 library). 241 242 243 THE C++ WRAPPER FUNCTIONS 244 245 The PCRE distribution also contains some C++ wrapper functions and tests, 246 applicable to the 8-bit library, which were contributed by Google Inc. On a 247 system that can use "configure" and "make", the functions are automatically 248 built into a library called pcrecpp. It should be straightforward to compile 249 the .cc files manually on other systems. The files called xxx_unittest.cc are 250 test programs for each of the corresponding xxx.cc files. 251 252 253 BUILDING FOR VIRTUAL PASCAL 254 255 A script for building PCRE using Borland's C++ compiler for use with VPASCAL 256 was contributed by Alexander Tokarev. Stefan Weber updated the script and added 257 additional files. The following files in the distribution are for building PCRE 258 for use with VP/Borland: makevp_c.txt, makevp_l.txt, makevp.bat, pcregexp.pas. 259 260 261 STACK SIZE IN WINDOWS ENVIRONMENTS 262 263 The default processor stack size of 1Mb in some Windows environments is too 264 small for matching patterns that need much recursion. In particular, test 2 may 265 fail because of this. Normally, running out of stack causes a crash, but there 266 have been cases where the test program has just died silently. See your linker 267 documentation for how to increase stack size if you experience problems. The 268 Linux default of 8Mb is a reasonable choice for the stack, though even that can 269 be too small for some pattern/subject combinations. 270 271 PCRE has a compile configuration option to disable the use of stack for 272 recursion so that heap is used instead. However, pattern matching is 273 significantly slower when this is done. There is more about stack usage in the 274 "pcrestack" documentation. 275 276 277 LINKING PROGRAMS IN WINDOWS ENVIRONMENTS 278 279 If you want to statically link a program against a PCRE library in the form of 280 a non-dll .a file, you must define PCRE_STATIC before including pcre.h or 281 pcrecpp.h, otherwise the pcre_malloc() and pcre_free() exported functions will 282 be declared __declspec(dllimport), with unwanted results. 283 284 285 CALLING CONVENTIONS IN WINDOWS ENVIRONMENTS 286 287 It is possible to compile programs to use different calling conventions using 288 MSVC. Search the web for "calling conventions" for more information. To make it 289 easier to change the calling convention for the exported functions in the 290 PCRE library, the macro PCRE_CALL_CONVENTION is present in all the external 291 definitions. It can be set externally when compiling (e.g. in CFLAGS). If it is 292 not set, it defaults to empty; the default calling convention is then used 293 (which is what is wanted most of the time). 294 295 296 COMMENTS ABOUT WIN32 BUILDS (see also "BUILDING PCRE ON WINDOWS WITH CMAKE") 297 298 There are two ways of building PCRE using the "configure, make, make install" 299 paradigm on Windows systems: using MinGW or using Cygwin. These are not at all 300 the same thing; they are completely different from each other. There is also 301 support for building using CMake, which some users find a more straightforward 302 way of building PCRE under Windows. 303 304 The MinGW home page (http://www.mingw.org/) says this: 305 306 MinGW: A collection of freely available and freely distributable Windows 307 specific header files and import libraries combined with GNU toolsets that 308 allow one to produce native Windows programs that do not rely on any 309 3rd-party C runtime DLLs. 310 311 The Cygwin home page (http://www.cygwin.com/) says this: 312 313 Cygwin is a Linux-like environment for Windows. It consists of two parts: 314 315 . A DLL (cygwin1.dll) which acts as a Linux API emulation layer providing 316 substantial Linux API functionality 317 318 . A collection of tools which provide Linux look and feel. 319 320 The Cygwin DLL currently works with all recent, commercially released x86 32 321 bit and 64 bit versions of Windows, with the exception of Windows CE. 322 323 On both MinGW and Cygwin, PCRE should build correctly using: 324 325 ./configure && make && make install 326 327 This should create two libraries called libpcre and libpcreposix, and, if you 328 have enabled building the C++ wrapper, a third one called libpcrecpp. These are 329 independent libraries: when you link with libpcreposix or libpcrecpp you must 330 also link with libpcre, which contains the basic functions. (Some earlier 331 releases of PCRE included the basic libpcre functions in libpcreposix. This no 332 longer happens.) 333 334 A user submitted a special-purpose patch that makes it easy to create 335 "pcre.dll" under mingw32 using the "msys" environment. It provides "pcre.dll" 336 as a special target. If you use this target, no other files are built, and in 337 particular, the pcretest and pcregrep programs are not built. An example of how 338 this might be used is: 339 340 ./configure --enable-utf --disable-cpp CFLAGS="-03 -s"; make pcre.dll 341 342 Using Cygwin's compiler generates libraries and executables that depend on 343 cygwin1.dll. If a library that is generated this way is distributed, 344 cygwin1.dll has to be distributed as well. Since cygwin1.dll is under the GPL 345 licence, this forces not only PCRE to be under the GPL, but also the entire 346 application. A distributor who wants to keep their own code proprietary must 347 purchase an appropriate Cygwin licence. 348 349 MinGW has no such restrictions. The MinGW compiler generates a library or 350 executable that can run standalone on Windows without any third party dll or 351 licensing issues. 352 353 But there is more complication: 354 355 If a Cygwin user uses the -mno-cygwin Cygwin gcc flag, what that really does is 356 to tell Cygwin's gcc to use the MinGW gcc. Cygwin's gcc is only acting as a 357 front end to MinGW's gcc (if you install Cygwin's gcc, you get both Cygwin's 358 gcc and MinGW's gcc). So, a user can: 359 360 . Build native binaries by using MinGW or by getting Cygwin and using 361 -mno-cygwin. 362 363 . Build binaries that depend on cygwin1.dll by using Cygwin with the normal 364 compiler flags. 365 366 The test files that are supplied with PCRE are in UNIX format, with LF 367 characters as line terminators. Unless your PCRE library uses a default newline 368 option that includes LF as a valid newline, it may be necessary to change the 369 line terminators in the test files to get some of the tests to work. 370 371 372 BUILDING PCRE ON WINDOWS WITH CMAKE 373 374 CMake is an alternative configuration facility that can be used instead of 375 "configure". CMake creates project files (make files, solution files, etc.) 376 tailored to numerous development environments, including Visual Studio, 377 Borland, Msys, MinGW, NMake, and Unix. If possible, use short paths with no 378 spaces in the names for your CMake installation and your PCRE source and build 379 directories. 380 381 The following instructions were contributed by a PCRE user. If they are not 382 followed exactly, errors may occur. In the event that errors do occur, it is 383 recommended that you delete the CMake cache before attempting to repeat the 384 CMake build process. In the CMake GUI, the cache can be deleted by selecting 385 "File > Delete Cache". 386 387 1. Install the latest CMake version available from http://www.cmake.org/, and 388 ensure that cmake\bin is on your path. 389 390 2. Unzip (retaining folder structure) the PCRE source tree into a source 391 directory such as C:\pcre. You should ensure your local date and time 392 is not earlier than the file dates in your source dir if the release is 393 very new. 394 395 3. Create a new, empty build directory, preferably a subdirectory of the 396 source dir. For example, C:\pcre\pcre-xx\build. 397 398 4. Run cmake-gui from the Shell envirornment of your build tool, for example, 399 Msys for Msys/MinGW or Visual Studio Command Prompt for VC/VC++. Do not try 400 to start Cmake from the Windows Start menu, as this can lead to errors. 401 402 5. Enter C:\pcre\pcre-xx and C:\pcre\pcre-xx\build for the source and build 403 directories, respectively. 404 405 6. Hit the "Configure" button. 406 407 7. Select the particular IDE / build tool that you are using (Visual 408 Studio, MSYS makefiles, MinGW makefiles, etc.) 409 410 8. The GUI will then list several configuration options. This is where 411 you can enable UTF-8 support or other PCRE optional features. 412 413 9. Hit "Configure" again. The adjacent "Generate" button should now be 414 active. 415 416 10. Hit "Generate". 417 418 11. The build directory should now contain a usable build system, be it a 419 solution file for Visual Studio, makefiles for MinGW, etc. Exit from 420 cmake-gui and use the generated build system with your compiler or IDE. 421 E.g., for MinGW you can run "make", or for Visual Studio, open the PCRE 422 solution, select the desired configuration (Debug, or Release, etc.) and 423 build the ALL_BUILD project. 424 425 12. If during configuration with cmake-gui you've elected to build the test 426 programs, you can execute them by building the test project. E.g., for 427 MinGW: "make test"; for Visual Studio build the RUN_TESTS project. The 428 most recent build configuration is targeted by the tests. A summary of 429 test results is presented. Complete test output is subsequently 430 available for review in Testing\Temporary under your build dir. 431 432 433 USE OF RELATIVE PATHS WITH CMAKE ON WINDOWS 434 435 A PCRE user comments as follows: I thought that others may want to know the 436 current state of CMAKE_USE_RELATIVE_PATHS support on Windows. Here it is: 437 438 -- AdditionalIncludeDirectories is only partially modified (only the 439 first path - see below) 440 -- Only some of the contained file paths are modified - shown below for 441 pcre.vcproj 442 -- It properly modifies 443 444 I am sure CMake people can fix that if they want to. Until then one will 445 need to replace existing absolute paths in project files with relative 446 paths manually (e.g. from VS) - relative to project file location. I did 447 just that before being told to try CMAKE_USE_RELATIVE_PATHS. Not a big 448 deal. 449 450 AdditionalIncludeDirectories="E:\builds\pcre\build;E:\builds\pcre\pcre-7.5;" 451 AdditionalIncludeDirectories=".;E:\builds\pcre\pcre-7.5;" 452 453 RelativePath="pcre.h" 454 RelativePath="pcre_chartables.c" 455 RelativePath="pcre_chartables.c.rule" 456 457 458 TESTING WITH RUNTEST.BAT 459 460 If configured with CMake, building the test project ("make test" or building 461 ALL_TESTS in Visual Studio) creates (and runs) pcre_test.bat (and depending 462 on your configuration options, possibly other test programs) in the build 463 directory. Pcre_test.bat runs RunTest.Bat with correct source and exe paths. 464 465 For manual testing with RunTest.bat, provided the build dir is a subdirectory 466 of the source directory: Open command shell window. Chdir to the location 467 of your pcretest.exe and pcregrep.exe programs. Call RunTest.bat with 468 "..\RunTest.Bat" or "..\..\RunTest.bat" as appropriate. 469 470 To run only a particular test with RunTest.Bat provide a test number argument. 471 472 Otherwise: 473 474 1. Copy RunTest.bat into the directory where pcretest.exe and pcregrep.exe 475 have been created. 476 477 2. Edit RunTest.bat to indentify the full or relative location of 478 the pcre source (wherein which the testdata folder resides), e.g.: 479 480 set srcdir=C:\pcre\pcre-8.20 481 482 3. In a Windows command environment, chdir to the location of your bat and 483 exe programs. 484 485 4. Run RunTest.bat. Test outputs will automatically be compared to expected 486 results, and discrepancies will be identified in the console output. 487 488 To independently test the just-in-time compiler, run pcre_jit_test.exe. 489 To test pcrecpp, run pcrecpp_unittest.exe, pcre_stringpiece_unittest.exe and 490 pcre_scanner_unittest.exe. 491 492 493 BUILDING UNDER WINDOWS CE WITH VISUAL STUDIO 200x 494 495 Vincent Richomme sent a zip archive of files to help with this process. They 496 can be found in the file "pcre-vsbuild.zip" in the Contrib directory of the FTP 497 site. 498 499 500 BUILDING UNDER WINDOWS WITH BCC5.5 501 502 Michael Roy sent these comments about building PCRE under Windows with BCC5.5: 503 504 Some of the core BCC libraries have a version of PCRE from 1998 built in, which 505 can lead to pcre_exec() giving an erroneous PCRE_ERROR_NULL from a version 506 mismatch. I'm including an easy workaround below, if you'd like to include it 507 in the non-unix instructions: 508 509 When linking a project with BCC5.5, pcre.lib must be included before any of the 510 libraries cw32.lib, cw32i.lib, cw32mt.lib, and cw32mti.lib on the command line. 511 512 513 BUILDING USING BORLAND C++ BUILDER 2007 (CB2007) AND HIGHER 514 515 A PCRE user sent these comments about this environment (see also the comment 516 from another user that follows them): 517 518 The XE versions of C++ Builder come with a RegularExpressionsCore class which 519 contain a version of TPerlRegEx. However, direct use of the C PCRE library may 520 be desirable. 521 522 The default makevp.bat, however, supplied with PCRE builds a version of PCRE 523 that is not usable with any version of C++ Builder because the compiler ships 524 with an embedded version of PCRE, version 2.01 from 1998! [See also the note 525 about BCC5.5 above.] If you want to use PCRE you'll need to rename the 526 functions (pcre_compile to pcre_compile_bcc, etc) or do as I have done and just 527 use the 16 bit versions. I'm using std::wstring everywhere anyway. Since the 528 embedded version of PCRE does not have the 16 bit function names, there is no 529 conflict. 530 531 Building PCRE using a C++ Builder static library project file (recommended): 532 533 1. Rename or remove pcre.h, pcreposi.h, and pcreposix.h from your C++ Builder 534 original include path. 535 536 2. Download PCRE from pcre.org and extract to a directory. 537 538 3. Rename pcre_chartables.c.dist to pcre_chartables.c, pcre.h.generic to 539 pcre.h, and config.h.generic to config.h. 540 541 4. Edit pcre.h and pcre_config.c so that they include config.h. 542 543 5. Edit config.h like so: 544 545 Comment out the following lines: 546 #define PACKAGE "pcre" 547 #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "" 548 #define PACKAGE_NAME "PCRE" 549 #define PACKAGE_STRING "PCRE 8.32" 550 #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "pcre" 551 #define PACKAGE_URL "" 552 #define PACKAGE_VERSION "8.32" 553 554 Add the following lines: 555 #ifndef SUPPORT_UTF 556 #define SUPPORT_UTF 100 // any value is fine 557 #endif 558 559 #ifndef SUPPORT_UCP 560 #define SUPPORT_UCP 101 // any value is fine 561 #endif 562 563 #ifndef SUPPORT_UCP 564 #define SUPPORT_PCRE16 102 // any value is fine 565 #endif 566 567 #ifndef SUPPORT_UTF8 568 #define SUPPORT_UTF8 103 // any value is fine 569 #endif 570 571 6. Build a C++ Builder project using the IDE. Go to File / New / Other and 572 choose Static Library. You can name it pcre.cbproj or whatever. Now set your 573 paths by going to Project / Options. Set the Include path. Do this from the 574 "Base" option to apply to both Release and Debug builds. Now add the following 575 files to the project: 576 577 pcre.h 578 pcre16_byte_order.c 579 pcre16_chartables.c 580 pcre16_compile.c 581 pcre16_config.c 582 pcre16_dfa_exec.c 583 pcre16_exec.c 584 pcre16_fullinfo.c 585 pcre16_get.c 586 pcre16_globals.c 587 pcre16_maketables.c 588 pcre16_newline.c 589 pcre16_ord2utf16.c 590 pcre16_printint.c 591 pcre16_refcount.c 592 pcre16_string_utils.c 593 pcre16_study.c 594 pcre16_tables.c 595 pcre16_ucd.c 596 pcre16_utf16_utils.c 597 pcre16_valid_utf16.c 598 pcre16_version.c 599 pcre16_xclass.c 600 601 //Optional 602 pcre_version.c 603 604 7. After compiling the .lib file, copy the .lib and header files to a project 605 you want to use PCRE with. Enjoy. 606 607 Optional ... Building PCRE using the makevp.bat file: 608 609 1. Edit makevp_c.txt and makevp_l.txt and change all the names to the 16 bit 610 versions. 611 612 2. Edit makevp.bat and set the path to C++ Builder. Run makevp.bat. 613 614 Another PCRE user added this comment: 615 616 Another approach I successfully used for some years with BCB 5 and 6 was to 617 make sure that include and library paths of PCRE are configured before the 618 default paths of the IDE in the dialogs where one can manage those paths. 619 Afterwards one can open the project files using a text editor and manually add 620 the self created library for pcre itself, pcrecpp doesn't ship with the IDE, in 621 the library nodes where the IDE manages its own libraries to link against in 622 front of the IDE-own libraries. This way one can use the default PCRE function 623 names without getting access violations on runtime. 624 625 <ALLLIB value="libpcre.lib $(LIBFILES) $(LIBRARIES) import32.lib cp32mt.lib"/> 626 627 628 BUILDING PCRE ON OPENVMS 629 630 Stephen Hoffman sent the following, in December 2012: 631 632 "Here <http://labs.hoffmanlabs.com/node/1847> is a very short write-up on the 633 OpenVMS port and here 634 635 <http://labs.hoffmanlabs.com/labsnotes/pcre-vms-8_32.zip> 636 637 is a zip with the OpenVMS files, and with one modified testing-related PCRE 638 file." This is a port of PCRE 8.32. 639 640 Earlier, Dan Mooney sent the following comments about building PCRE on OpenVMS. 641 They relate to an older version of PCRE that used fewer source files, so the 642 exact commands will need changing. See the current list of source files above. 643 644 "It was quite easy to compile and link the library. I don't have a formal 645 make file but the attached file [reproduced below] contains the OpenVMS DCL 646 commands I used to build the library. I had to add #define 647 POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD 10 to pcre.h since it was not defined anywhere. 648 649 The library was built on: 650 O/S: HP OpenVMS v7.3-1 651 Compiler: Compaq C v6.5-001-48BCD 652 Linker: vA13-01 653 654 The test results did not match 100% due to the issues you mention in your 655 documentation regarding isprint(), iscntrl(), isgraph() and ispunct(). I 656 modified some of the character tables temporarily and was able to get the 657 results to match. Tests using the fr locale did not match since I don't have 658 that locale loaded. The study size was always reported to be 3 less than the 659 value in the standard test output files." 660 661 ========================= 662 $! This DCL procedure builds PCRE on OpenVMS 663 $! 664 $! I followed the instructions in the non-unix-use file in the distribution. 665 $! 666 $ COMPILE == "CC/LIST/NOMEMBER_ALIGNMENT/PREFIX_LIBRARY_ENTRIES=ALL_ENTRIES 667 $ COMPILE DFTABLES.C 668 $ LINK/EXE=DFTABLES.EXE DFTABLES.OBJ 669 $ RUN DFTABLES.EXE/OUTPUT=CHARTABLES.C 670 $ COMPILE MAKETABLES.C 671 $ COMPILE GET.C 672 $ COMPILE STUDY.C 673 $! I had to set POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD to 10 in PCRE.H since the symbol 674 $! did not seem to be defined anywhere. 675 $! I edited pcre.h and added #DEFINE SUPPORT_UTF8 to enable UTF8 support. 676 $ COMPILE PCRE.C 677 $ LIB/CREATE PCRE MAKETABLES.OBJ, GET.OBJ, STUDY.OBJ, PCRE.OBJ 678 $! I had to set POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD to 10 in PCRE.H since the symbol 679 $! did not seem to be defined anywhere. 680 $ COMPILE PCREPOSIX.C 681 $ LIB/CREATE PCREPOSIX PCREPOSIX.OBJ 682 $ COMPILE PCRETEST.C 683 $ LINK/EXE=PCRETEST.EXE PCRETEST.OBJ, PCRE/LIB, PCREPOSIX/LIB 684 $! C programs that want access to command line arguments must be 685 $! defined as a symbol 686 $ PCRETEST :== "$ SYS$ROADSUSERS:[DMOONEY.REGEXP]PCRETEST.EXE" 687 $! Arguments must be enclosed in quotes. 688 $ PCRETEST "-C" 689 $! Test results: 690 $! 691 $! The test results did not match 100%. The functions isprint(), iscntrl(), 692 $! isgraph() and ispunct() on OpenVMS must not produce the same results 693 $! as the system that built the test output files provided with the 694 $! distribution. 695 $! 696 $! The study size did not match and was always 3 less on OpenVMS. 697 $! 698 $! Locale could not be set to fr 699 $! 700 ========================= 701 702 703 BUILDING PCRE ON STRATUS OPENVOS 704 705 These notes on the port of PCRE to VOS (lightly edited) were supplied by 706 Ashutosh Warikoo, whose email address has the local part awarikoo and the 707 domain nse.co.in. The port was for version 7.9 in August 2009. 708 709 1. Building PCRE 710 711 I built pcre on OpenVOS Release 17.0.1at using GNU Tools 3.4a without any 712 problems. I used the following packages to build PCRE: 713 714 ftp://ftp.stratus.com/pub/vos/posix/ga/posix.save.evf.gz 715 716 Please read and follow the instructions that come with these packages. To start 717 the build of pcre, from the root of the package type: 718 719 ./build.sh 720 721 2. Installing PCRE 722 723 Once you have successfully built PCRE, login to the SysAdmin group, switch to 724 the root user, and type 725 726 [ !create_dir (master_disk)>usr --if needed ] 727 [ !create_dir (master_disk)>usr>local --if needed ] 728 !gmake install 729 730 This installs PCRE and its man pages into /usr/local. You can add 731 (master_disk)>usr>local>bin to your command search paths, or if you are in 732 BASH, add /usr/local/bin to the PATH environment variable. 733 734 4. Restrictions 735 736 This port requires readline library optionally. However during the build I 737 faced some yet unexplored errors while linking with readline. As it was an 738 optional component I chose to disable it. 739 740 5. Known Problems 741 742 I ran the test suite, but you will have to be your own judge of whether this 743 command, and this port, suits your purposes. If you find any problems that 744 appear to be related to the port itself, please let me know. Please see the 745 build.log file in the root of the package also. 746 747 748 BUILDING PCRE ON NATIVE Z/OS AND Z/VM 749 750 z/OS and z/VM are operating systems for mainframe computers, produced by IBM. 751 The character code used is EBCDIC, not ASCII or Unicode. In z/OS, UNIX APIs and 752 applications can be supported through UNIX System Services, and in such an 753 environment PCRE can be built in the same way as in other systems. However, in 754 native z/OS (without UNIX System Services) and in z/VM, special ports are 755 required. For details, please see this web site: 756 757 http://www.zaconsultants.net 758 759 There is also a mirror here: 760 761 http://www.vsoft-software.com/downloads.html 762 763 ========================== 764 Last Updated: 14 May 2013 765