NAME

DBD::Oracle::Troubleshooting::Hpux - Tips and Hints to Troubleshoot DBD::Oracle on HP-UX

VERSION

version 1.90

INTRODUCTION

Building a working dynamically linked version of the Oracle DBD driver on HP-UX (11.00) has been a challenge for many. For months after taking a new job, where HP-UX was the standard database server environment, I had only been able to build a statically linked version of Perl and the DBD-Oracle module on HP-UX 11.00.

Then Roger Foskett posted instructions for what turned out to be dynamic build. Rogers's post got me further than I had previously gotten. In fact, after resolving some undefined symbol errors, I succeeded where for I had previously despaired of finding the time to hack out the right incantation.

This document describes the combined knowledge of a number of folks who invested many hours discovering a working set of build options. The instructions in this file, which include building Perl from source, will produce a working dynamically linked DBD-Oracle that can be used with mod_perl and Apache.

See APPENDICES for exact build configurations used by me an others.

For HPUX 11 on Itanium see also http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.dbi.users/23840

First things First: Introduction

The reason you are even reading this file is because you want to connect to an Oracle database from your perl program using the DBD::Oracle DBI driver. So before you start, install (at least the Oracle client software) (SQL*Net, Pro*C, SQL*Plus) upon the machine you intend to install Perl/DBI/DBD-Oracle. You do not, I repeat, do not need to build a database on this machine.

After you have installed the Oracle client software, test it!. Make sure you can connect to the target database using SQL*Plus (or any other Oracle supplied tool). The (gory) details of the install are beyond the scope of this document, some information can be found in the section "Compiling on a Client Machine", or see your friendly Oracle DBA.

One final remark, 3 years after this was first written. This has been updated numerous times over the years. And some of the new build recipe's see simpler than some of the original instructions in this file.

I think one reason the recipe is getting simpler may be that the build hints, in the base perl build have gotten more right, as we have moved from perl 5.6.1 to the 5.8.8 (now the stable version).

Someday, if I ever find myself building on HP again I should probably update as many of these recipes (that I can test) by trying to remove more of the special case stuff I have in my build scripts now. Gram Ludlows's build for the default bundled C compiler shows that a lot of this may no longer be necessary.

On the other hand, it would be bad if we deleted information that others might need, so I err on the side of too much, in the hope that the person who really needs the information, will not have to look beyond this file.

-- Lincoln

Build your own Perl

HP's default Perl is no good (and antique).

By default, HP-UX 11.00 delivered Perl 5.00503 until September 2001. Others tell me that the default is a threaded GNUpro build of 5.6.1. This is not what I found on our systems, and it probably depends on which packages you install. In any case, this version of Perl delivered by HP will in all likelihood not work. Before you check, be sure to prevent the perl4 located in /usr/contrib/bin from being the first Perl version found in your $PATH.

As of application release September 2001, HP-UX 11.00 is shipped with Perl-5.6.1 in /opt/perl. The first occurrence is on CD 5012-7954. The build is a portable hppa-1.1 multithread build that supports large files compiled with gcc-2.9-hppa-991112. When you have a modern system with a hppa-2.0 architecture (PA8xxx processor) and/or the HP C-ANSI-C compiler consider building your own Perl, which will surely outperform this version.

If you are reading this, you have probably discovered that something did not work. To get a working version of the DBD-Oracle driver, we have to start with a Perl that as been built with the correct compiler flags and shared libraries. This means that you must build your own version of Perl from source.

The instructions below have been used for building a dynamically linked working DBD-Oracle driver that works with mod_perl and Apache. These instructions are based on Perl 5.6.0 and 5.6.1, and 5.8.0. To this author's knowledge, they have not be tested on earlier versions of Perl.

Note that is important to build a non-threaded Perl, but linked with -lcl and -lpthread. Since Oracle on HP uses libpthread, everything that dynamically loads it (such as DBD-Oracle) must be built/linked with '-lpthread -lcl'. (When used with Apache, it and any associated modules must also be built this way - otherwise all it does is core dump when loading DBD::Oracle).

A good link that explains thread local storage problems is http://my1.itrc.hp.com/cm/QuestionAnswer/1,1150,0x0d0a6d96588ad4118fef0090279cd0f9!0,00.html

One more note, it would appear that the README.hpux in the Perl 5.8.0 directory, is somewhat out of date, but is up-to-date in versions 5.8.3 and up. H.Merijn Brand points out that Perl is 64bit compliant when the -Duse64bitall flag is used to Configure. While Perl will be built in a pure LP64 environment via the +DD64 flag is used, the +DA2.0w flag is preferred on PA-RISC, and when an incantation can be concocted that eliminates the noisy warnings the produces at link time, this will probably become the default. Older 64bit versions of GCC, are known to be unable to build a good LP64 perl. And these flags will cause gcc to barf. On HP-UX 11i (11.11), gcc-3.4.4 or gcc-3.4.5 is preferred over gcc-4.0.2 (or older gcc-4 versions) as 64bit builds on PA-RISC with that versions of the compiler are unreliable.

Compilers

HP Softbench Compiler

Both Roger Foskett, I and most others have been using the HP Softbench C compiler normally installed in:

/opt/softbench/bin/cc.

While the DBD-Oracle Makefile.PL checks for some of the conditions which, when met, we know will produce a working build, there are many variations of Oracle installations and features. Not all of these can be tested by any one of us, if you discover a way to make a variation which did not previously work, please submit patches to the Makefile.PL to Tim Bunce, and patches to this README to me, and I will incorporate them into the next README.

The instructions herein, have compiled, linked cleanly, and tested cleanly using the HP softbench compiler, and Oracle 8.0.5 (32bit), and Oracle 8.1.6, 8.1.7 (64 bit). Oracle 8.1.5 will probably work as well.

Oracle 8.1.7.4 (32bit) with DBI-1.35 and DBD-Oracle-1.13 has been proven to work on HP-UX 11.00 (64bit) with Perl 5.6.1, Perl 5.8.x using the guidelines in this document for both HP-C-ANSI-C and gcc-3.2. Later versions have been proven to work as well. Current DBI-1.42 and DBD-Oracle-1.16 have been proven to work. This Oracle 9.2 client (at least) should be used if you plan to do work with Unicode. See the DBD-Oracle POD/Man documentation.

gcc Compiler

As of gcc-3.4, perl-5.8.3 and up should build out-of-the box when Configure is invoked with -Dcc=gcc. Please read README.hpux carefully for the differences with HP C-ANSI-C. Once built, tested and installed, both DBI and DBD-Oracle should be able to build against that perl without trouble.

In the past, Waldemar Zurowski and Michael Schuh sent useful information about builds of Perl with DBD-Oracle using gcc on HP-UX. Both were able to get working executables, and their explanations shed much light on the issues.

Waldemar's build is described in "Appendix A", and Michael's is described in "Appendix C".

While I have not reproduced either of these configurations, I believe the information is complete enough (particularly in the aggregate) to be helpful to others who might wish to replicate it.

The "default" built in compiler 64bit build (/usr/bin/cc)

And now, at long last, we have a recipe for building perl and DBD-Oracle using the default bundled C compiler. Please see the "Appendix B" build instructions provided by Gram Ludlow, using the default /usr/bin/cc bundled compiler. Please note that perl itself will NOT build using that compiler.

Configure (doing it manually)

Once you have downloaded and unpacked the Perl sources (version 5.8.8 assumed here), you must configure Perl. For those of you new to building Perl from source, the Configure program will ask you a series of questions about how to build Perl. You may supply default answers to the questions when you invoke the Configure program by command line flags.

We want to build a Perl that understands large files (over 2GB, which is the default for building perl on HP-UX), and that is incompatible with v5.005 Perl scripts (compiling with v5.005 compatibility causes mod_perl to complain about malloc pollution). At the command prompt type:

cd perl-5.8.8
sh ./Configure -A prepend:libswanted='cl pthread ' -des

or, if you need a 64bit build

sh ./Configure -A prepend:libswanted='cl pthread ' -Duse64bitall -des

Do not forget the trailing space inside the single quotes. This is also described by H.Merijn Brand in the README.hpux from the perl core distribution.

When asked:

Any additional cc flags? - Answer by prepending: I<+Z> to enable
position independent code.

For example:
Any additional cc flags? [-D_HP-UX_SOURCE -Aa] -Ae +Z -z

Though this should be the default in more recent perl versions.

Lastly, and this is optional, when asked:

Do you want to install Perl as /usr/bin/perl? [y] n

You may or may not want to install directly in /usr/bin/perl,
many persons on HP install Perl in /opt/perl<version>/bin/perl and
put a symbolic link to /usr/bin/perl.  Furthermore, you can supply
the answer to this question by adding an additional switch to the
invocation of Configure such as: Configure -Dprefix=/opt/perl

After you have answered the above questions, accept the default values for all of the remaining questions. You may press <Enter> for each remaining question, or you may enter "& -d" (good idea) at the next question and the Configure will go into auto-pilot and use the Perl supplied defaults.

BTW: If you add -lcl and -lpthread to the end of the list it will not work. I wasted a day and a half trying to figure out why I had lost the recipe, before I realized that this was the problem. The symptom will be that

make test

of Perl itself will fail to load dynamic libraries.

You can check in the generated 'config.sh' that the options you selected are correct. If not, modify config.sh and then re-run ./Configure with the '-d' option to process the config.sh file.

Build & Install

make
make test
make install

If you are going to build mod_perl and Apache it has been suggested that you modify Config.pm to the change the HP-UX ldflags & ccdlflags in /your/install/prefix/lib/5.6.0/PA-RISC2.0/Config.pm as follows:

ccdlflags=''
cccdlflags='+Z'
ldflags=' -L/usr/local/lib'

This is not necessary if you are not using mod_perl and Apache.

Build and Install DBI

cd DBI-1.50
Perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install

Build and Install DBD-Oracle-1.07 and later

It is critical to setup your Oracle environmental variables. Many people do this incorrectly and spend days trying to get a working version of DBD-Oracle. Below are examples of a local database and a remote database (i.e. the database is on a different machine than your Perl/DBI/DBD installation) environmental variable setup.

Example (local database):

export ORACLE_USERID=<validuser/validpasswd>
export ORACLE_HOME=<path to oracle>
export ORACLE_SID=<a valid instance>
export SHLIB_PATH=$ORACLE_HOME/lib       #for 32bit HP
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$ORACLE_HOME/lib  #for 64bit HP (I defined them both)

Note that HP-UX supports both SHLIB_PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH for all libraries that need to be found, but that each library itself can enable or disable any of the two, and can also set preference for the order they are used, so please set them to the same value.

Example (remote database):

export ORACLE_USERID=<validuser/validpasswd>
export ORACLE_HOME=<path to oracle>
export ORACLE_SID=@<valid tnsnames.ora entry>
export SHLIB_PATH=$ORACLE_HOME/lib       #for 32bit HP
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$ORACLE_HOME/lib  #for 64bit HP (I defined them both)

The standard mantra now works out of the box on HP-UX:

cd DBD-Oracle-1.07  # or more recent version
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install        # if all went smoothly

And with DBD-1.14 and later the following can be used:

cd DBD-Oracle-1.14  # or more recent version
perl Makefile.PL -l # uses a simple link to oracle's main library
make
make test
make install        # if all went smoothly

If you have trouble, see the "Trouble Shooting" instructions below, for hints of what might be wrong... and send me a note, describing your configuration, and what you did to fix it.

Trouble Shooting

"Unresolved symbol"

In general, find the symbols, edit the Makefile, and make test.

You'll have to modify the recipe accordingly, in my case the symbol "LhtStrCreate" was unresolved. (Authors Note: thanks patch suggestions by Jay Strauss this situation which occurs with Oracle 8.1.6 should now be handled in Makefile.PL.)

1) Find the symbols.

a) The following ksh/bash code (courtesy of Roger) will search
   from $ORACLE_HOME and below for Symbols in files in lib directories.
   Save the following to a file called "findSymbol".

>>>>  CUT HERE <<<<<
cd $ORACLE_HOME

echo "\nThis takes a while, grepping a lot of stuff"
echo "   ignore the \"no symbols\" warnings\n"

sym=$1; shift;
libs="*.sl"

for lib in  $(find . -name $libs -print); do
   if nm -p $lib | grep -q $sym; then
      echo "found \"$sym\" in $lib"
   fi
done
>>>>> CUT HERE <<<<

   Note that on Itanium machines (HP-UX 11.23), the shared libraries
   have a .so extension instead of the .sl HP-UX uses on PA-RISC.

b) Run it (replace "LhtStrCreate" with your "Unresolved symbol").
   For example, at my installation, findSymbols produced the
   following output:

   # chmod 755 findSymbols
   # ./findSymbol LhtStrCreate

   found "LhtStrCreate" in ./lib/libagtsh.sl
   found "LhtStrCreate" in ./lib/libclntsh.sl
   found "LhtStrCreate" in ./lib/libwtc8.sl

2) Edit the Makefile

In the previous step your unresolved symbol was found in one or more library files. You will need to edit the OTHERLDFLAGS makefile macro, and add the missing libraries.

When you add those library files to OTHERLDFLAGS you must convert the name from the actual name to the notation that OTHERLDFLAGS uses.

libclntsh.sl         becomes => -lclntsh
libagtsh.sl          becomes => -lagtsh
libwtc8.sl           becomes => -lwtc8

That is, you replace the "lib" in the name to "-l" and remove the ".sl" (or the .so).

You can edit the Makefile in 2 ways:

a) Do this:

   perl -pi -e's/\b(OTHERLDFLAGS.*$)/$1 -lclntsh/' Makefile

b) Using vi, emacs... edit the file, find OTHERLDFLAGS, and add the
   above "-l" entries to the end of the line.

   For example the line:
   OTHERLDFLAGS =  -L/opt/oracle/product/8.1.6/lib/... -lqsmashr

   Becomes:
   OTHERLDFLAGS =  -L/opt/oracle/product/8.1.6/lib/... -lqsmashr -lclntsh

3) make test

Perform a make test, if symbols are still unresolved repeat the editing of the Makefile and make test again.

DBD-Oracle-1.06

You are strongly urged to upgrade. However here is what you may need to know to get it or work, if you insist on using an earlier version.

Check the output that above command produces, to verify that

-Wl,+n
-W1,+s

is b<NOT> present. and that

-lqsmashr

is present.

If the version of Makefile.PL does not include the patch produced at the time of this document, then the above conditions will likely not be met. You can fix this as follows:

perl -pi -e's/-Wl,\+[sn]//' Makefile

Building on a Oracle Client Machine

If you need to build or deliver the DBD-Oracle interface on or to a machine upon which the Oracle database has not been installed you need take the following into consideration:

1) Oracle files are needed for DBD::Oracle to compile
2) Oracle files are needed for the compiled DBD to connect
3) ORACLE_HOME environment variable must be set
4) SHLIB_PATH environment variable must be set

Compiling on a Client Machine

This may seem obvious to some, but the Oracle software has to be present to compile and run DBD-Oracle. The best way to compile and install on a client machine, is to use the oracle installer to install the oracle (client) software locally. Install SQL*Net, Pro*C and SQL*Plus. After this some tests with SQL*Net (tnsping at a minimum) are an good idea. Make sure you can connect to your remote database, and everything works with Oracle before you start bashing your head into the wall trying to get DBD-Oracle to work.

If you do not have the Oracle installer handy, the following hack has been known to work:

Either open an NFS share from the oracle installation directory on the machine that has Oracle and point both of the above-mentioned env vars to that share, or alternatively copy the following four directories from your Oracle installation over to the machine on which you are compiling the DBD:

drwxr-xr-x 3 oracle dba 3072 Jul 3 09:36 lib drwxr-xr-x 13 oracle dba 512 Jul 3 09:38 network drwxr-xr-x 7 oracle dba 512 Jul 2 19:25 plsql drwxr-xr-x 12 oracle dba 512 Jul 3 09:38 rdbms

then point the above-mentioned env vars to the containing directory (good place to put them, if copying locally, might be /usr/lib/oracle, /usr/local/lib/oracle, or /opt/oracle/lib )

In any case, the compiler needs to be able to find files in the above four directories from Oracle in order to get all the source code needed to compile properly.

Required Runtime environment

Again, use the Oracle installer to install the Oracle Client on the machine where your scripts will be running. If the Oracle installer is not available, the following hack should suffice:

For running the compiled DBD in Perl and connecting, you need only the files in the 'lib' folder mentioned above, either connecting to them through an NFS share on the Oracle machine, or having copied them directly onto the local machine, say, in /usr/lib/oracle . Make sure the env variable for ORACLE_HOME = /usr/lib/oracle and LD_LIBRARY_PATH includes /usr/lib/oracle . You can set the env var in your perl script by typing

$ENV{ORACLE_HOME} = '/usr/lib/oracle';

Apache and mod_perl

Nota Bene: these instructions are now more than a year and a half old, you may have to tinker.

If you are not building this version of Perl for Apache you can go on to build what ever other modules you require. The following instructions describe how these modules were built with the Perl/DBD-Oracle built above: The following is what worked for Roger Foskett:

Apache Web server

cd apache_1.3.14/
LDFLAGS_SHLIB_EXPORT="" \
LDFLAGS="-lm -lpthread -lcl" \
CC=/usr/bin/cc \
CFLAGS="-D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64" \
./configure \
    --prefix=/opt/www/apache \
    --enable-shared=max \
    --disable-rule=EXPAT \
    --enable-module=info \
    --enable-rule=SHARED_CORE

The Expat XML parser is disabled as it conflicts with the Perl XML-Parser module causing core dumps. -lcl is needed to ensure that Apache does not coredump complaining about thread local storage

make
make install

Once installed, ensure that the generated httpd.conf is properly configured, change the relevant lines to below (the default user/group caused problems on HP (the user 'www' may need to be created)

User www
Group other
port 80

mod_perl

cd mod_perl-1.24_01/
perl Makefile.PL \
    NO_HTTPD=1 \
    USE_APXS=1 \
    WITH_APXS=/opt/www/apache/bin/apxs \
    EVERYTHING=1
make
make install

htdig intranet search engine

cd htdig-3.1.5/
CC='cc' CPP='aCC' \
./configure \
    --prefix=/opt/www/htdig \
    --with-cgi-bin-dir=/opt/www/htdig/cgi-bin \
    --with-image-dir=/opt/www/htdig/images

CONTRIBUTORS

The following folks contributed to this document:

Lincoln A. Baxter <lab@lincolnbaxter.com.Fix.This>
H.Merijn Brand    <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl>
Jay Strauss       <me@heyjay.com.Fix.This>
Roger Foskett     <Roger.Foskett@icl.com.Fix.This>
Weiguo Sun        <wesun@cisco.com.Fix.This>
Tony Foiani       <anthony_foiani@non.hp.com.Fix.This>
Hugh J. Hitchcock <hugh@hitchco.com.Fix.This>
Heiko Herms  <Heiko.Herms.extern@HypoVereinsbank.de.Fix.This>
Waldemar Zurowski <bilbek0@poczta.onet.pl.Fix.This>
Michael Schuh     <Michael.Schuh@airborne.com.Fix.This>
Gram M. Ludlow    <LUDLOW_GRAM_M@cat.com.Fix.This>

And probably others unknown to me.

AUTHOR

Lincoln A. Baxter <lab@lincolnbaxter.com.Fix.This>
H.Merijn Brand    <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl>

APPENDICES

Appendix A

(gcc build info from Waldemar Zurowski)

This is pretty much verbatim the build information I received from Waldemar Zurowski on building Perl and DBD-Oracle using gcc on HP. Note that this build was on a PA-RISC1.1 machine.

Host

HP-UX hostname B.11.11 U 9000/800 XXXXXXXXX unlimited-user license

Oracle

Oracle 8.1.7

Parameters to build Perl

./Configure -des -Uinstallusrbinperl -Uusethreads -Uuseithreads
-Duselargefiles -Dcc=gcc -Darchname=PA-RISC1.1 -Dprefix=/opt/perl-non-thread
-Dlibs='-lcl -lpthread -L${ORACLE_HOME}/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads
-ljava -lnsl -lnm -lndbm -ldld -lm -lc -lndir -lcrypt -lsec'

-L${ORACLE_HOME}/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads -ljava, was added because DBD::Oracle wants to link with it (probably due to Oracle's own build rules picked up by Makefile.PL)

Set environment variable LDOPTS to '+s' (see ld(1)). This holds extra parameters to HP-UX's ld command, as I don't use GNU ld (does anybody?). This allows you to build an executable, which when run would search for dynamic linked libraries using SHLIB_PATH (for 32-bit executable) and LD_LIBRARY_PATH (for 64-bit executable). Obviously LDOPTS is needed only when building Perl _and_ DBI + DBD::Oracle.

Then, after building Perl + DBI + DBD::Oracle and moving it into production environment it was enough to add to SHLIB_PATH ${ORACLE_HOME}/lib and ${ORACLE_HOME}/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads, for example:

SHLIB_PATH=${ORACLE_HOME}/lib:${ORACLE_HOME}/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads: $SHLIB_PATH

Please note output of ldd command:

$ ldd -s ./perl
 [...]
  find library=/home/ora817/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads/libjava.sl;
required by ./perl
    search path=/home/ora817/lib:/home/ora817/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads
(SHLIB_PATH)
    trying path=/home/ora817/lib/libjava.sl
    trying path=/home/ora817/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads/libjava.sl
        /home/ora817/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads/libjava.sl =>
/home/ora817/JRE/lib/PA_RISC/native_threads/libjava.sl
 [...]

All of this mess is necessary because of weakness of shl_load(3X), explained in this document and in some discussion forums at HP.com site. I have learned, that HP issued patch PHSS_24304 for HP-UX 11.11 and PHSS_24303 for HP-UX 11.00, which introduced variable LD_PRELOAD. I haven't tried it yet, but it seems promising that it would allow you to completely avoid building your own Perl binary, as it would be enough to set LD_PRELOAD to libjava.sl (for example) and all 'Cannot load XXXlibrary' during building of DBD::Oracle should be gone.

The documentation says, that setting this variable should have the same effect as linking binary with this library. Also please note, that this variable is used only when binary is not setuid nor setgid binary (for obvious security reasons).

It seems, that the best way to find out if you already have this patch applied, is to check if 'man 5 dld.sl' says anything about LD_PRELOAD environment variable.

Best regards,

Waldemar Zurowski

Authors Note: Search for references to LD_PRELOAD else where in this document. Using LD_PRELOAD is probably a fragile solution at best. Better to do what Waldemar actually did, which is to include libjava in the extra link options.

Appendix B

(64 bit build with /usr/bin/cc -- bundled C compiler)

Gram M. Ludlow writes:

I recently had a problem with Oracle 9 64-bit on HPUX 11i. We have another application that required SH_LIBRARY_PATH to point to the 64-bit libraries, which "broke" the Oraperl module. So I did some research and successfully recompiled and re-installed with the most recent versions of everything (perl, DBI, DBD) that works with 64-bit shared libraries. This is the error we were getting (basically) "/usr/lib/dld.sl: Bad magic number for shared library: /ora1/app/oracle/product/9.2.0.1.0/lib32"

Here is my step-by-step instructions, pretty much what you have but streamlined for this particular case.

Required software:

HPUX 11.11 (11i) PA-RISC
perl 5.8.4 source
DBI-1.42 source
DBD-Oracle-1.16 source
Oracle 9.2.0.1.0 installation
Step 1: Compiling Perl

This compiles PERL using the default HPUX cc compiler. The important things to note here are the configure parameters. the only non-default option to take is to add "+z" to the additional cc flags step.

gunzip perl-5.8.4.tar.gz
tar -xf perl-5.8.4.tar
cd perl-5.8.4
./Configure -Ubincompat5005 -Duselargefiles -A prepend:libswanted='cl pthread ' -Duse64bitall

Any additional cc flags? Add +z to beginning of list, include all other options.

make; make test

98% of tests should succeed. If less, something is wrong.

Step 2: DBI
gunzip DBI-1.42.tar.gz
tar -xvf DBI-1.42.tar
cd DBI-1.42
perl Makefile.PL
make;make test
make install
Step 3: Install DBD-Oracle

First, set the following environment variables specific you your Oracle installation:

export ORACLE_USERID=user/pass
export ORACLE_HOME=/oracle/product/9.2.0.1.0
export ORACLE_SID=orap1

Then unpack and build:

gunzip DBD-Oracle-1.16.tar.gz
tar -xvf DBD-Oracle-1.16.tar
cd DBD-Oracle-1.16
perl Makefile.PL -l
make;make test
make install

Note from H.Merijn Brand: In more recent perl distributions using HP C-ANSI-C should "just work" (TM), provided your C compiler can be found and used, your database is up and running, and your environment variables are set as noted. Example is for a 64bit build, as Oracle ships Oracle 9 and up for HP-UX only in 64bit builds.

gzip -d <perl-5.8.8.tgz | tar xf -
cd perl-5.8.8
sh ./Configure -Duse64bitall -A prepend:libswanted='cl pthread ' -des
make
make test_harness
make install

gzip -d <DBI-1.50.tgz | tar xf -
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install

gzip -d <DBD-Oracle-1.17.tgz | tar xf -
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install

Appendix C

(Miscellaneous links which might be useful)

Michael Schuh writes:

It was a bit by trial and error and a bit more by following your suggestions (and mapping them to gcc) that I got something that worked.

One of the most significant "mappings" was to take your suggestion under "Configure" to add "+Z" to the ccflags variable and to change that to "-fPIC" (which, I learned from the gcc man page, is different than "-fpic", which is the counterpart for +z). -fPIC (+Z) allows big offsets in the Position Independent Code, where -fpic (+z) only allows small offsets.

I suspect that your hint about adding -lcl and -lpthread were crucial, but (after doing so) I never encountered any problems that were related to them.

One thing that I did was create a shell script to set some variables, as the initial environment for root on the target system didn't work very well. Here is that script, trimmed to remove a bunch of echo statements, etc.:

# -------------------------------------------------------------------
# root.env - sets some environment variables the way I want them...
#
# Mike Schuh, June 2002, July 2002

export CC=/usr/local/bin/gcc

export INSTALL=./install-sh

. appl_setup DDD

export ORACLE_SID="SSS"
export ORACLE_USERID="XXX/YYY"

export PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/ccs/bin:/opt/perl5/bin:/usr/c
ontrib/bin:/opt/nettladm/bin:/opt/fc/bin:/opt/fcms/bin:/opt/pd/bin:/usr/bin/X11:
/usr/contrib/bin/X11:/opt/hparray/bin:/opt/resmon/bin:/usr/sbin/diag/contrib:/op
t/pred/bin:/opt/gnome/bin:/sbin

# end of root.env

The appl_setup sets some Oracle variables (specific to our installation), which I then override for the database that I am working on. The script (which I source) also uses some variables specific to other applications (e.g., Tivoli), mostly to unclutter my debugging. The INSTALL variable is related to building libgdbm.

http://www.mail-archive.com/dbi-users@perl.org/msg18687.html

Garry Ferguson's notes on a successful build using perl 5.8.0, DBI-1.38 and DBD-Oracle-1.14 on HPUX 11.0 ( an L2000 machine ) with Oracle 9.0.1

http://www.sas.com/service/techsup/unotes/SN/001/001875.html

This is a note from the SAS support people documenting the LhtStrInsert() and LhtStrCreate() undefined symbols errors, and how to fix them in the Oracle makefiles.

Appendix D

(Why Dynamic Linking)

Some one posted to the DBI email list the following question:

What are the advantages of building a dynamically linked version?
Being able to use threads? Or something besides that?

The answer is there are too many to count, but here are several big ones:

1 Much smaller executables

Only the code referenced gets loaded... this means faster execution times, and less machine resources (VM) used)

2 Modular addition and updating of modules.

This is HUGE. One does not relink EVERYTHING, EVERY time one changes or updates a module.

3 It eliminates Dynaloader warning (multiply defined).

This occurs with the static build when Perl is run with -w. I fixed this by removing -w from my #! lines, converting the pragam "use warnings;". However, it was annoying, since all my scripts had -w in the #! line.

4 It's the default build

Since almost every OS now supports dynamic linking, I believe that static linking is NOT getting the same level of vetting it maybe used to. Dynamically linking is what you get by default, so its way better tested.

5 It's required for Apache and mod_perl.

Appendix E

(WebLogic Driver for Oracle with the Oracle8i Server Lob Bug)

Michael Fox reported a bug when you are using DBD-Oracle-1.18 or later and when using older Oracle versions. The bug will result in an error report

'Failed to load Oracle extension and/or shared libraries'.

This problem occurs if you use the WebLogic Driver for Oracle with the Oracle8i Server - Enterprise Edition 8.1.7 and the corresponding Oracle Call Interface (OCI). This problem occurs only in Oracle 8.1.7; it is fixed in Oracle 9i.

This link details the problem

http://e-docs.bea.com/platform/suppconfigs/configs70/hptru64unix51_alpha/70sp1.html#88784

The solution from this page is below;

To work around this problem, complete the following procedure:

1 Log in to your Oracle account:
su - oracle
2 In a text editor, open the following file:
$ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/admin/shrept.lst
3 Add the following line:
rdbms:OCILobLocatorAssign
4 (optional) Add the names of any other missing functions needed by applications, other than WebLogic Server 7.0, that you want to execute. Note: The OCILobLocatorAssign function is not the only missing function that WebLogic Server 7.0 should be able to call, but it is the only missing function that WebLogic Server 7.0 requires. Other functions that WebLogic Server should be able to call, such as OCIEnvCreate and OCIerminate, are also missing. If these functions are required by other applications that you plan to run, you must add them to your environment by specifying them, too, in $ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/admin/shrept.lst.
5 Rebuild the shared client library:
$ cd $ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/lib
$ make -f ins_rdbms.mk client_sharedlib

The make command updates the following files in /opt/oracle/product/8.1.7/lib:

clntsh.map
ldap.def libclntsh.so
libclntsh.so.8.0 libclntst8.a
network.def
plsql.def
precomp.def
rdbms.def

Because OCILobLocatorAssign is now visible in libclntsh.so, WebLogic Server can call it.

AUTHORS

  • Tim Bunce <timb@cpan.org>

  • John Scoles <byterock@cpan.org>

  • Yanick Champoux <yanick@cpan.org>

  • Martin J. Evans <mjevans@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021, 2019, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010 by Tim Bunce.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.