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Special Notes for Sun Solaris
=============================

Recent versions of Solaris ship with a libintl that is mostly compatible
with GNU gettext.  Even the plural handling functions (ngettext, 
dngettext, dcngettext, ...) and output character conversion functions
(bind_textdomain_codeset) are included. 

On my test system, the behavior of the Solaris version differs in one
important point from the pure Perl version or the GNU gettext version:
In a locale environment that is a regional variant of another locale
(for example "fr_CA" is a regional variant of "fr"), both the pure Perl 
version from libintl-perl and the C version from GNU gettext will fall
back to translations for the superordinate message catalog ("fr") if
no special translation for the selected locale ("fr_CA") can be found.
This fallback mechanism is missing in the Solaris implementation.

This could be considered harmless, because Solaris users are probably
used to this behavior.  On the other hand, the pure Perl version of
gettext in libintl-perl aims to be as compatible as possible to the
GNU gettext implementation.  Furthermore, if the pure Perl and the 
C/XS version behave differently, users may be unnecessarily confused.

If you think you can live with that little inconsistence, you are not
completely lost: Edit the toplevel Makefile.PL, in the function
WriteMakefile(), change the value for the hash slot "DIR" from 
the value depending on "$result" to simply "['gettext_xs']".  If you
have a look at the source code of Makefile.PL, you will see that this
has already been prepared.

If you do this, the test suite will fail, because the above described
behavior ("fr_CA" vs. "fr" ...) is checked by the tests.  In this case,
expect the following failures:

Failed Test                    Stat Wstat Total Fail  Failed  List of Failed
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
./tests/03bind_textdomain_codeset_xs.t        9    2  22.22%  5 9
./tests/03dcgettext_xs.t                      9    2  22.22%  3 7
./tests/03dcngettext_xs.t                    83   51  61.45%  22-31 43-83
./tests/03dgettext_xs.t                       9    2  22.22%  3 7
./tests/03dngettext_xs.t                     83   51  61.45%  22-31 43-83
./tests/03gettext_xs.t                        6    1  16.67%  3
./tests/03ngettext_xs.t                      85   51  60.00%  23-32 45-85

But even if you have installed GNU gettext, you may run into this error
when trying to compile the XS version:

"gettext_xs.xs", line 32: #error: "<libintl.h> is not GNU gettext.  Maybe you have to adjust your include path."
cc: acomp failed for gettext_xs.c
make[1]: *** [gettext_xs.o] Error 2
make[1]: Leaving directory `/root/libintl-perl-1.15/gettext_xs'
make: *** [subdirs] Error 2

What has happened here?  Have a look at the source code of <libintl.h>
that ships with GNU gettext:

/* We define an additional symbol to signal that we use the GNU
   implementation of gettext.  */
#define __USE_GNU_GETTEXT 1

...

/* We redirect the functions to those prefixed with "libintl_".  This is
   necessary, because some systems define gettext/textdomain/... in the C
   library (namely, Solaris 2.4 and newer, and GNU libc 2.0 and newer).
   If we used the unprefixed names, there would be cases where the
   definition in the C library would override the one in the libintl.so
   shared library.  Recall that on ELF systems, the symbols are looked
   up in the following order:
     1. in the executable,
     2. in the shared libraries specified on the link command line, in order,
     3. in the dependencies of the shared libraries specified on the link
        command line,
     4. in the dlopen()ed shared libraries, in the order in which they were
        dlopen()ed.
   The definition in the C library would override the one in libintl.so if
   either
     * -lc is given on the link command line and -lintl isn't, or
     * -lc is given on the link command line before -lintl, or
     * libintl.so is a dependency of a dlopen()ed shared library but not
       linked to the executable at link time.
   Since Solaris gettext() behaves differently than GNU gettext(), this
   would be unacceptable.

   The redirection happens by default through macros in C, so that &gettext
   is independent of the compilation unit, but through inline functions in
   C++, in order not to interfere with the name mangling of class fields or
   class methods called 'gettext'.  */

In brief: The GNU libraries libintl.so and libintl.a prefix all functions
with "libintl_" in order to avoid symbol name conflicts with the vanilla
Solaris verssion.  These precautions still give room to a popular
misconfiguration: If you install GNU gettext with the default prefix
"/usr/local", libraries will get installed in "/usr/local/lib", the
header files - notably <libintl.h> - will get installed in 
"/usr/local/include", so far so good.  Now set the environment variable
LD_LIBRARY_PATH to "/usr/local/lib", so that the GNU version of libintl.so
will be found by the dynamic loader at runtime.  Yet, if 
"/usr/local/include" comes after "/usr/include" in your C compiler's
include path, the above described trick does not work, the functions
like "gettext", "dgettext" etc. will not get re-defined to "libintl_gettext",
"libintl_dgettext" and so on.  Remember, the preprocessor trick used by
GNU gettext will change every reference to the function gettext() into
a reference to libintl_gettext() for gettext() into a definition for 
libintl_gettext().  If your C compiler includes the "wrong" include file 
(/usr/include/libintl.h) instead of the "correct" one 
(/usr/local/include/libintl.h), your C sources will still reference
gettext() instead of libintl_gettext().  At run-time, even if the dynamic
loader considers the GNU version of libintl.so (in "/usr/local/lib"), it
will not use it, because it looks for the "wrong" symbol gettext() 
instead of libintl_gettext().

Too complicated? Okay: The order for C header files for the C compiler
(actually the preprocessor) differs from the inclusion order for 
libraries and this must lead to trouble.  If you understand WHY, you
will find a way to fix it.  If not, ignore the problem: Do not 
build the problem, and be assured, that the pure Perl version is 
fast enough.  It is very, very unlikely that using the pure Perl
instead of the XS version of will be the bottleneck of any application
you use.

Life is complicated under the sun, ain't it? ;-)

Guido