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ExtUtils::Liblist(3)					  ExtUtils::Liblist(3)


NAME    [Toc]    [Back]

     ExtUtils::Liblist - determine libraries to	use and	how to use them

SYNOPSIS    [Toc]    [Back]

     require ExtUtils::Liblist;

     ExtUtils::Liblist::ext($self, $potential_libs, $verbose);

DESCRIPTION    [Toc]    [Back]

     This utility takes	a list of libraries in the form	-llib1 -llib2 -llib3
     and prints	out lines suitable for inclusion in an extension Makefile.
     Extra library paths may be	included with the form -L/another/path this
     will affect the searches for all subsequent libraries.

     It	returns	an array of four scalar	values:	EXTRALIBS, BSLOADLIBS,
     LDLOADLIBS, and LD_RUN_PATH.  Some	of these don't mean anything on	VMS
     and Win32.	 See the details about those platform specifics	below.

     Dependent libraries can be	linked in one of three ways:

     o For static extensions
       by the ld command when the perl binary is linked	with the extension
       library.	See EXTRALIBS below.

     o For dynamic extensions
       by the ld command when the shared object	is built/linked. See
       LDLOADLIBS below.

     o For dynamic extensions
       by the DynaLoader when the shared object	is loaded. See BSLOADLIBS
       below.

     EXTRALIBS    [Toc]    [Back]

     List of libraries that need to be linked with when	linking	a perl binary
     which includes this extension Only	those libraries	that actually exist
     are included.  These are written to a file	and used when linking perl.

     LDLOADLIBS	and LD_RUN_PATH

     List of those libraries which can or must be linked into the shared
     library when created using	ld. These may be static	or dynamic libraries.
     LD_RUN_PATH is a colon separated list of the directories in LDLOADLIBS.
     It	is passed as an	environment variable to	the process that links the
     shared library.

     BSLOADLIBS    [Toc]    [Back]

     List of those libraries that are needed but can be	linked in dynamically
     at	run time on this platform.  SunOS/Solaris does not need	this because
     ld	records	the information	(from LDLOADLIBS) into the object file.	 This
     list is used to create a .bs (bootstrap) file.



									Page 1






ExtUtils::Liblist(3)					  ExtUtils::Liblist(3)


PORTABILITY    [Toc]    [Back]

     This module deals with a lot of system dependencies and has quite a few
     architecture specific ifs in the code.

     VMS implementation    [Toc]    [Back]

     The version of ext() which	is executed under VMS differs from the UnixOS/2
 version in several respects:

     o Input library and path specifications are accepted with or without the
       -l and -L prefices used by Unix linkers.	 If neither prefix is present,
       a token is considered a directory to search if it is in fact a
       directory, and a	library	to search for otherwise.  Authors who wish
       their extensions	to be portable to Unix or OS/2 should use the Unix
       prefixes, since the Unix-OS/2 version of	ext() requires them.

     o Wherever	possible, shareable images are preferred to object libraries,
       and object libraries to plain object files.  In accordance with VMS
       naming conventions, ext() looks for files named libshr and librtl; it
       also looks for liblib and liblib	to accomodate Unix conventions used in
       some ported software.

     o For each	library	that is	found, an appropriate directive	for a linker
       options file is generated.  The return values are space-separated
       strings of these	directives, rather than	elements used on the linker
       command line.

     o LDLOADLIBS and EXTRALIBS	are always identical under VMS,	and BSLOADLIBS
       and LD_RIN_PATH are always empty.

     In	addition, an attempt is	made to	recognize several common Unix library
     names, and	filter them out	or convert them	to their VMS equivalents, as
     appropriate.

     In	general, the VMS version of ext() should properly handle input from
     extensions	originally designed for	a Unix or VMS environment.  If you
     encounter problems, or discover cases where the search could be improved,
     please let	us know.

     Win32 implementation    [Toc]    [Back]

     The version of ext() which	is executed under Win32	differs	from the
     Unix-OS/2 version in several respects:

     o Input library and path specifications are accepted with or without the
       -l and -L prefices used by Unix linkers.	 -lfoo specifies the library
       foo.lib and -Ls:ome\dir specifies a directory to	look for the libraries
       that follow.  If	neither	prefix is present, a token is considered a
       directory to search if it is in fact a directory, and a library to
       search for otherwise.  The $Config{lib_ext} suffix will be appended to
       any entries that	are not	directories and	don't already have the suffix.
       Authors who wish	their extensions to be portable	to Unix	or OS/2	should



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ExtUtils::Liblist(3)					  ExtUtils::Liblist(3)



       use the Unix prefixes, since the	Unix-OS/2 version of ext() requires
       them.

     o Entries cannot be plain object files, as	many Win32 compilers will not
       handle object files in the place	of libraries.

     o If $potential_libs is empty, the	return value will be empty.
       Otherwise, the libraries	specified by $Config{libs} (see	Config.pm)
       will be appended	to the list of $potential_libs.	 The libraries will be
       searched	for in the directories specified in $potential_libs as well as
       in $Config{libpth}. For each library that is found,  a space-separated
       list of fully qualified library pathnames is generated.	You may
       specify an entry	that matches /:nodefault/i in $potential_libs to
       disable the appending of	default	libraries found	in $Config{libs} (this
       should be only needed very rarely).

     o The libraries specified may be a	mixture	of static libraries and	import
       libraries (to link with DLLs).  Since both kinds	are used pretty
       transparently on	the win32 platform, we do not attempt to distinguish
       between them.

     o LDLOADLIBS and EXTRALIBS	are always identical under Win32, and
       BSLOADLIBS and LD_RUN_PATH are always empty (this may change in
       future).

SEE ALSO    [Toc]    [Back]

      
      
     the ExtUtils::MakeMaker manpage


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