PERLIVP

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
OPTIONS
DIAGNOSTICS
AUTHOR

NAME

perlivp − Perl Installation Verification Procedure

SYNOPSIS

perlivp [−a] [−p] [−v] [−h]

DESCRIPTION

The perlivp program is set up at Perl source code build time to test the Perl version it was built under. It can be used after running:

    make install

(or your platform’s equivalent procedure) to verify that perl and its libraries have been installed correctly. A correct installation is verified by output that looks like:

    ok 1
    ok 2

etc.

OPTIONS

−h help

Prints out a brief help message.

−a run all tests

Normally tests for optional features are skipped. With −a all tests are executed.

−p print preface

Gives a description of each test prior to performing it.

−v verbose

Gives more detailed information about each test, after it has been performed. Note that any failed tests ought to print out some extra information whether or not −v is thrown.

DIAGNOSTICS

print "# Perl binary ‘$perlpath’ does not appear executable.\n";

Likely to occur for a perl binary that was not properly installed. Correct by conducting a proper installation.

print "# Perl version ‘$]’ installed, expected $ivp_VERSION.\n";

Likely to occur for a perl that was not properly installed. Correct by conducting a proper installation.

print "# Perl \@INC directory ‘$_’ does not appear to exist.\n";

Likely to occur for a perl library tree that was not properly installed. Correct by conducting a proper installation.

print "# Needed module ‘$_’ does not appear to be properly installed.\n";

One of the two modules that is used by perlivp was not present in the installation. This is a serious error since it adversely affects perlivp’s ability to function. You may be able to correct this by performing a proper perl installation.

print "# Required module ‘$_’ does not appear to be properly installed.\n";

An attempt to "eval "require $module"" failed, even though the list of extensions indicated that it should succeed. Correct by conducting a proper installation.

print "# Unnecessary module ‘bLuRfle’ appears to be installed.\n";

This test not coming out ok could indicate that you have in fact installed a bLuRfle.pm module or that the "eval " require \"$module_name.pm\"; "" test may give misleading results with your installation of perl. If yours is the latter case then please let the author know.

print "# file",+($#missing == 0) ? ’’ : ’s’," missing from installation:\n";

One or more files turned up missing according to a run of "ExtUtils::Installed −> validate()" over your installation. Correct by conducting a proper installation.

print "# Perl header ‘$_’ does not appear to be properly installed.\n";

Correct by running h2ph over your system’s C header files. If necessary, edit the resulting *.ph files to eliminate perl syntax errors.

For further information on how to conduct a proper installation consult the INSTALL file that comes with the perl source and the README file for your platform.

AUTHOR

Peter Prymmer