From: Jarkko Hietaniemi Date: Tue, 18 Dec 2001 14:05:26 +0000 (+0000) Subject: README.aix updates from Jens-Uwe Mager. X-Git-Tag: accepted/trunk/20130322.191538~28768 X-Git-Url: http://review.tizen.org/git/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=8218ea5d24f5de0a37393f19671aa5631c088be7;p=platform%2Fupstream%2Fperl.git README.aix updates from Jens-Uwe Mager. p4raw-id: //depot/perl@13755 --- diff --git a/README.aix b/README.aix index b58b668..a4134a0 100644 --- a/README.aix +++ b/README.aix @@ -57,17 +57,22 @@ show the base, but is not always complete: =head2 Building Dynamic Extensions on AIX -AIX supports dynamically loadable libraries (shared libraries). -Shared libraries end with the suffix .a, which is a bit misleading, -because *all* libraries are shared ;-). - -Note that starting from Perl 5.7.2 (and consequently 5.8.0) and AIX -4.3 or newer Perl uses the AIX native dynamic loading interface -instead of the emulated interface that was used in Perl releases 5.6.1 -and earlier or, for AIX releases 4.2 and earlier. This change will -probably break backward compatibility with compiled modules. -The change was made to make Perl more compliant with other applications -like modperl which are using the AIX native interface. +AIX supports dynamically loadable objects as well as shared libraries. +Shared libraries by convention end with the suffix .a, which is a bit +misleading, as an archive can contain static as well as dynamic members. +For perl dynamically loaded objects we use the .so suffix also used on +many other platforms. + +Note that starting from Perl 5.7.2 (and consequently 5.8.0) and AIX 4.3 +or newer Perl uses the AIX native dynamic loading interface in the so +called runtime linking mode instead of the emulated interface that was +used in Perl releases 5.6.1 and earlier or, for AIX releases 4.2 and +earlier. This change does break backward compatibility with compiled +modules from earlier perl releases. The change was made to make Perl +more compliant with other applications like Apache/modperl which are +using the AIX native interface. This change also enables the use of C++ +code with static constructors and destructors in perl extensions, which +was not possible using the emulated interface. =head2 The IBM ANSI C Compiler