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authorGuido van Rossum <guido@python.org>1994-01-01 17:32:24 (GMT)
committerGuido van Rossum <guido@python.org>1994-01-01 17:32:24 (GMT)
commitfbee23e55b01b7de20ae19e0bbaa0f150bdd86c3 (patch)
treec87cee6fc690dbe9862570ab9a730e3a5e21a201 /Doc
parente30cb84ed2e7de876de160de2bd97575150fa747 (diff)
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Documented the fact that IRIX 5.x also supports Sun style shared
libraries.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r--Doc/ext.tex21
-rw-r--r--Doc/ext/ext.tex21
2 files changed, 20 insertions, 22 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/ext.tex b/Doc/ext.tex
index 18c8015..6eeaacf 100644
--- a/Doc/ext.tex
+++ b/Doc/ext.tex
@@ -764,15 +764,15 @@ on some systems you have to use static loading), and dynamically
loading a module that was compiled for a different version of Python
(e.g., with a different representation of objects) may dump core.
-{\bf NEW:} Under SunOS, dynamic loading now uses SunOS shared
-libraries and is always configured. See at the end of this chapter
-for how to create a dynamically loadable module.
+{\bf NEW:} Under SunOS (all versions) and IRIX 5.x, dynamic loading
+now uses shared libraries and is always configured. See at the
+end of this chapter for how to create a dynamically loadable module.
\section{Configuring and building the interpreter for dynamic loading}
-(Ignore this section for SunOS --- on SunOS dynamic loading is always
-configured.)
+(Ignore this section for SunOS and IRIX 5.x --- on these systems
+dynamic loading is always configured.)
Dynamic loading is a little complicated to configure, since its
implementation is extremely system dependent, and there are no
@@ -812,8 +812,7 @@ with \samp{\#DL_}, but you must also edit some of the lines to choose
which version of dl_loadmod to use, and fill in the pathname of the dld
library if you use it. And, of course, you must first build
dl_loadmod and dld, if used. (This is now done through the Configure
-script. For SunOS, everything is now automatic as long as the
-architecture type is \code{sun4}.)
+script. For SunOS and IRIX 5.x, everything is now automatic.)
\section{Building a dynamically loadable module}
@@ -853,9 +852,9 @@ On SGI Irix, the compiler flag \samp{-G0} (or \samp{-G 0}) must be passed.
IF THIS IS NOT DONE THE RESULTING CODE WILL NOT WORK.
\item
-{\bf NEW:} On SunOS, you must create a shared library from your \samp{.o}
-file using the following command (assuming your module is called
-\code{foo}):
+{\bf NEW:} On SunOS and IRIX 5.x, you must create a shared library
+from your \samp{.o} file using the following command (assuming your
+module is called \code{foo}):
\begin{verbatim}
ld -o foomodule.so foomodule.o <any other libraries needed>
@@ -863,7 +862,7 @@ file using the following command (assuming your module is called
and place the resulting \samp{.so} file in the Python search path (not
the \samp{.o} file). Note: on Solaris, you need to pass \samp{-G} to
-the loader.
+the loader; on IRIX 5.x, you need to pass \samp{-shared}. Sigh...
\end{itemize}
diff --git a/Doc/ext/ext.tex b/Doc/ext/ext.tex
index 18c8015..6eeaacf 100644
--- a/Doc/ext/ext.tex
+++ b/Doc/ext/ext.tex
@@ -764,15 +764,15 @@ on some systems you have to use static loading), and dynamically
loading a module that was compiled for a different version of Python
(e.g., with a different representation of objects) may dump core.
-{\bf NEW:} Under SunOS, dynamic loading now uses SunOS shared
-libraries and is always configured. See at the end of this chapter
-for how to create a dynamically loadable module.
+{\bf NEW:} Under SunOS (all versions) and IRIX 5.x, dynamic loading
+now uses shared libraries and is always configured. See at the
+end of this chapter for how to create a dynamically loadable module.
\section{Configuring and building the interpreter for dynamic loading}
-(Ignore this section for SunOS --- on SunOS dynamic loading is always
-configured.)
+(Ignore this section for SunOS and IRIX 5.x --- on these systems
+dynamic loading is always configured.)
Dynamic loading is a little complicated to configure, since its
implementation is extremely system dependent, and there are no
@@ -812,8 +812,7 @@ with \samp{\#DL_}, but you must also edit some of the lines to choose
which version of dl_loadmod to use, and fill in the pathname of the dld
library if you use it. And, of course, you must first build
dl_loadmod and dld, if used. (This is now done through the Configure
-script. For SunOS, everything is now automatic as long as the
-architecture type is \code{sun4}.)
+script. For SunOS and IRIX 5.x, everything is now automatic.)
\section{Building a dynamically loadable module}
@@ -853,9 +852,9 @@ On SGI Irix, the compiler flag \samp{-G0} (or \samp{-G 0}) must be passed.
IF THIS IS NOT DONE THE RESULTING CODE WILL NOT WORK.
\item
-{\bf NEW:} On SunOS, you must create a shared library from your \samp{.o}
-file using the following command (assuming your module is called
-\code{foo}):
+{\bf NEW:} On SunOS and IRIX 5.x, you must create a shared library
+from your \samp{.o} file using the following command (assuming your
+module is called \code{foo}):
\begin{verbatim}
ld -o foomodule.so foomodule.o <any other libraries needed>
@@ -863,7 +862,7 @@ file using the following command (assuming your module is called
and place the resulting \samp{.so} file in the Python search path (not
the \samp{.o} file). Note: on Solaris, you need to pass \samp{-G} to
-the loader.
+the loader; on IRIX 5.x, you need to pass \samp{-shared}. Sigh...
\end{itemize}