Skip to content
GitLab
Explore
Sign in
Primary navigation
Search or go to…
Project
T
TLMSP curl
Manage
Activity
Members
Labels
Plan
Issues
Issue boards
Milestones
Wiki
Code
Merge requests
Repository
Branches
Commits
Tags
Repository graph
Compare revisions
Snippets
Build
Pipelines
Jobs
Pipeline schedules
Artifacts
Deploy
Releases
Package registry
Container Registry
Model registry
Operate
Environments
Terraform modules
Monitor
Incidents
Analyze
Value stream analytics
Contributor analytics
CI/CD analytics
Repository analytics
Model experiments
Help
Help
Support
GitLab documentation
Compare GitLab plans
Community forum
Contribute to GitLab
Provide feedback
Keyboard shortcuts
?
Snippets
Groups
Projects
Show more breadcrumbs
CYBER - Cyber Security
TS 103 523 MSP
TLMSP
TLMSP curl
Commits
1b2f4031
Commit
1b2f4031
authored
23 years ago
by
Daniel Stenberg
Browse files
Options
Downloads
Patches
Plain Diff
Nico's notes about porting to VMS
parent
64822958
No related branches found
Branches containing commit
No related tags found
Tags containing commit
No related merge requests found
Changes
1
Hide whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
1 changed file
docs/INSTALL
+76
-6
76 additions, 6 deletions
docs/INSTALL
with
76 additions
and
6 deletions
docs/INSTALL
+
76
−
6
View file @
1b2f4031
...
...
@@ -6,12 +6,10 @@
How To Compile
Curl has been compiled and built on numerous different operating systems. The
way to proceed is mainly divided in two different ways: the unix way or the
windows way.
Curl has been compiled and built on numerous different operating systems.
If you're using Windows (95/98/NT/ME/2000 or whatever)
or OS/2, you should
continue reading from
the Win32 or OS/2 header
s further down. All other
If you're using Windows (95/98/NT/ME/2000 or whatever)
, VMS, RISC OS or OS/2,
you should
continue reading from
one the paragraph
s further down. All other
systems should be capable of being installed as described below.
UNIX
...
...
@@ -255,6 +253,78 @@ IBM OS/2
If you're getting huge binaries, probably your makefiles have the -g in
CFLAGS.
VMS
===
(The VMS section is in whole contributed by the friendly Nico Baggus)
This is the first attempt at porting cURL to VMS.
Curl seems to work with FTP & HTTP other protocols are not tested. (the
perl http/ftp testing server supplied as testing too cannot work on VMS
because vms has no concept of fork(). [ I tried to give it a whack, but
thats of no use.
SSL stuff has not been ported.
Telnet has about the same issues as for Win32. When the changes for Win32
are clear maybe they'l work for VMS too. The basic problem is that select
ONLY works for sockets.
Marked instances of fopen/[f]stat that might become a problem, especially
for non stream files. In this regard, the files opened for writing will be
created stream/lf and will thus be safe. Just keep in mind that non-binary
read/wring from/to files will have a records size limit of 32767 bytes
imposed.
Stat to get the size of the files is again only safe for stream files &
fixed record files without implied CC.
-- My guess is that only allowing access to stream files is the quickest
way to get around the most issues. Therefore all files need to to be
checked to be sure they will be stream/lf before processing them. This is
the easiest way out, I know. The reason for this is that code that needs to
report the filesize will become a pain in the ass otherwise.
Exit status.... Well we needed something done here,
VMS has a structured exist status:
| 3 | 2 | 1 | 0|
|1098|765432109876|5432109876543|210|
+----+------------+-------------+---+
|Ctrl| Facility | Error code |sev|
+----+------------+-------------+---+
With the Ctrl-bits an application can tell if part or the whole message has
allready been printed from the program, DCL doesn't need to print it again.
Facility - basicaly the program ID. A code assigned to the program
the name can be fetched from external or internal message libraries
Errorcode - the errodes assigned by the application
Sev. - severity: Even = error, off = non error
0 = Warning
1 = Success
2 = Error
3 = Information
4 = Fatal
<5-7> reserved.
This all presents itself with:
%<FACILITY>-<SeV>-<Errorname>, <Error message>
See also the src/curlmsg.msg file, it has the source for the messages In
src/main.c a section is devoted to message status values, the globalvalues
create symbols with certain values, referenced from a compiled message
file. Have all exit function use a exit status derived from a translation
table with the compiled message codes.
This was all compiled with:
Compaq C V6.2-003 on OpenVMS Alpha V7.1-1H2
So far for porting notes as of:
13-jul-2001
N. Baggus
PORTS
=====
This is a probably incomplete list of known hardware and operating systems
...
...
@@ -268,7 +338,6 @@ PORTS
- Alpha Linux 2.2.16
- Alpha OpenVMS V7.1-1H2
- Alpha Tru64 v5.0 5.1
- ARM RISC OS
- HP-PA HP-UX 9.X 10.X 11.X
- MIPS IRIX 6.2, 6.5
- Power AIX 4.2, 4.3.1, 4.3.2
...
...
@@ -291,6 +360,7 @@ PORTS
- m68k AmigaOS 3
- m68k OpenBSD
- StrongARM NetBSD 1.4.1
- StrongARM (and other ARM) RISC OS 3.1, 4.02
OpenSSL
=======
...
...
This diff is collapsed.
Click to expand it.
Preview
0%
Loading
Try again
or
attach a new file
.
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Save comment
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment