These instructions allow for the compilation and successful testing of
DBD::Oracle on MacOS X 10.2.4 and higher, using Oracle 9iR2 DR
(Release 9.2.0.1.0) or the 10g Instant Client release (10.1.0.3 at the
time of writing).
MacOS X DBD::Oracle has been tested (and used) under Jaguar (10.2.x)
and Panther (10.3.x). Jaguar comes with a Perl version of 5.6.0.,
which I can report to work with DBD::Oracle 1.14 and higher once you
take certain steps (see below). You may want to install a later perl,
e.g., Perl 5.8.x. Please refer to:
Installing Perl 5.8 on Jaguar
http://developer.apple.com/internet/macosx/perl.html
for Perl 5.8.0 installation instructions.
DBD::Oracle is likely to not install out of the box on MacOS X
10.2. nor on 10.3. Manual but different changes will most likely be
required on both versions.
The key problem on 10.2. (Jaguar) is a symbol clash (caused by a
function poll() named identically) between the IO library in at least
Perl 5.6.0 (which is the version that comes with 10.2) and the Oracle
client library in 9iR2 developer's release for MacOS X. The symptom is
that your build appears to compile fine but then fails in the link
stage. If you are running a (possibly self-installed) version of Perl
other than 5.6.0, there's a chance that you are not affected by the
symbol clash. So, try to build first without any special measures, and
only resort to the instructions below if your build fails in the link
stage with a duplicate symbol error. Note: if it fails to even
compile, solve that problem first since it is not due to the symbol
clash.
The key problem on 10.3 (Panther) is that the default perl that comes
with the system is compiled with multi-threading turned on, which at
least with the 9iR2 developer's release exposes a memory leak. Your
DBD::Oracle build will compile, test, and install fine, but if you
execute the same prepared statement multiple times, the process will
quickly run up hundreds of megabytes of RAM, and depending on how much
memory you have it will die sooner or later.
Oracle recently released an "Instant Client" for MacOSX 10.3
(Panther), which as far as I can attest has none of the problems
above. Since it is also a very compact download (actually, a series of
downloads) I highly recommend you install and use the Instant Client
if you are on 10.3 (Panther) and you do not intend to run the Oracle
database server on your MacOSX box. See below (Instructions for
10.3.x) for details.
======================================================================
Instructions for 10.2.x (Jaguar)
1) Install Oracle exactly per Oracle documentation. If you change
install locations, then you'll need to modify paths accordingly.
2) There are two ways to remedy the symbol clash. Either edit the
symbol table of the Oracle client library
$ORACLE_HOME/lib/libclntsh.dylib.9.0 such that the symbol _poll is no
longer exported. Alternatively, download, patch, and re-install the
perl IO modules. I could not successfully repeat the report for the
former, but I did succeed by doing the latter. Instructions for both
follow nonetheless.
2a) SKIP IF YOU WANT TO OR HAVE SUCCESSFULLY TRIED 2b). Make a
backup copy of the $ORACLE_HOME/lib/libclntsh.dylib.9.0 file, or
the file this name points to, since we're about to modify that
library. Note that the ".9.0" suffix of the file name is version
dependent, and that you want to work with the file pointed to
through one or a series of symbolic links rather than any of the
symbolic links (e.g., one will be called libclntsh.dylib).
As user 'oracle' execute the following command to fix namespace
collisions in Oracle's dynamic libraries.
nmedit -R ./hints/macos_lib.syms $ORACLE_HOME/lib/libclntsh.dylib.9.0
*** Recall the above caveats regarding the file name.
The problem with this is that the version of nm that comes with
Jaguar doesn't support the -R flag. I'd be grateful to anyone who
can suggest how to edit the symbol table of libraries on MacOS X.
2b) SKIP IF YOU WANT TO OR HAVE SUCCESSFULLY TRIED 2a). In this
variant, we will patch the Perl IO modules to change the name of
the poll() function, as that is where it is defined. In this case,
we do not need to do anything with the Oracle libraries. Follow
these steps:
- Download the module IO (IO.pm) from CPAN and unpack it. Check
the documentation as to whether the version is compatible with
your version of Perl; I used v1.20 with Perl 5.6.0 and had
success.
- The files IO.xs, poll.c, and poll.h need to be patched. Apply
the following patches, e.g., by cutting and pasting the marked
section into a file perlio.patch and using that file as input
for patch:
$ patch -p0 < perlio.patch
The patch will basically rename the C implementation of poll()
to io_poll(). The other patches were necessary to make v1.20
compile with Perl 5.6.0; they may not be necessary with other
versions of IO and Perl, respectively.
+=+=+=+=+=+=+= Cut after this line
diff -c ../IO-orig/IO-1.20/IO.xs ./IO.xs
*** ../IO-orig/IO-1.20/IO.xs Mon Jul 13 23:36:24 1998
--- ./IO.xs Sat May 10 15:20:02 2003
***************
*** 205,211 ****
ST(0) = sv_2mortal(newSVpv((char*)&pos, sizeof(Fpos_t)));
}
else {
! ST(0) = &sv_undef;
errno = EINVAL;
}
--- 205,211 ----
ST(0) = sv_2mortal(newSVpv((char*)&pos, sizeof(Fpos_t)));
}
else {
! ST(0) = &PL_sv_undef;
errno = EINVAL;
}
***************
*** 249,255 ****
SvREFCNT_dec(gv); /* undo increment in newRV() */
}
else {
! ST(0) = &sv_undef;
SvREFCNT_dec(gv);
}
--- 249,255 ----
SvREFCNT_dec(gv); /* undo increment in newRV() */
}
else {
! ST(0) = &PL_sv_undef;
SvREFCNT_dec(gv);
}
***************
*** 272,278 ****
i++;
fds[j].revents = 0;
}
! if((ret = poll(fds,nfd,timeout)) >= 0) {
for(i=1, j=0 ; j < nfd ; j++) {
sv_setiv(ST(i), fds[j].fd); i++;
sv_setiv(ST(i), fds[j].revents); i++;
--- 272,278 ----
i++;
fds[j].revents = 0;
}
! if((ret = io_poll(fds,nfd,timeout)) >= 0) {
for(i=1, j=0 ; j < nfd ; j++) {
sv_setiv(ST(i), fds[j].fd); i++;
sv_setiv(ST(i), fds[j].revents); i++;
diff -c ../IO-orig/IO-1.20/poll.c ./poll.c
*** ../IO-orig/IO-1.20/poll.c Wed Mar 18 21:34:00 1998
--- ./poll.c Sat May 10 14:28:22 2003
***************
*** 35,41 ****
# define POLL_EVENTS_MASK (POLL_CAN_READ | POLL_CAN_WRITE | POLL_HAS_EXCP)
int
! poll(fds, nfds, timeout)
struct pollfd *fds;
unsigned long nfds;
int timeout;
--- 35,41 ----
# define POLL_EVENTS_MASK (POLL_CAN_READ | POLL_CAN_WRITE | POLL_HAS_EXCP)
int
! io_poll(fds, nfds, timeout)
struct pollfd *fds;
unsigned long nfds;
int timeout;
diff -c ../IO-orig/IO-1.20/poll.h ./poll.h
*** ../IO-orig/IO-1.20/poll.h Wed Apr 15 20:33:02 1998
--- ./poll.h Sat May 10 14:29:11 2003
***************
*** 44,50 ****
#define POLLHUP 0x0010
#define POLLNVAL 0x0020
! int poll _((struct pollfd *, unsigned long, int));
#ifndef HAS_POLL
# define HAS_POLL
--- 44,50 ----
#define POLLHUP 0x0010
#define POLLNVAL 0x0020
! int io_poll _((struct pollfd *, unsigned long, int));
#ifndef HAS_POLL
# define HAS_POLL
+=+=+=+=+=+=+= Cut to the previous line
- compile and install as you usually would, making sure that
existing but conflicting modules get removed:
$ perl Makefile.PL
$ make
$ make test
$ make install UNINST=1
- You are done. Continue with 3).
3) Install the module DBI as per its instructions, if you haven't
already done so.
4) Install the DBD::Oracle module.
$ perl Makefile.PL
$ make
$ make test
$ make install
======================================================================
Instructions for 10.3.x (Panther)
I highly recommend you install and use the Oracle 10g Instant Client
for MacOSX 10.3. Compared to traditional Oracle client installations
it is a very compact download, and it has the memory leak problem
fixed. As an added benefit, you will be able to seamlessly connect to
10g databases. Even if you do want to run the database server included
in the 9iR2 Developer's Release, I'd still use the Instant Client for
compiling OCI applications or drivers like DBD::Oracle.
If you still decide to use the full 9iR2 DR client, and if all you use
DBD::Oracle for on MacOSX is development and test scripts that don't
involve running the same query multiple times or many queries within
the same perl process, then note that the memory leak will most likely
never affect you in a serious way. In this case you may not need to
bother and instead just go ahead, build and install DBD::Oracle
straightforwardly without any special measures.
That said, here are the details.
0) (If you decided for the 9iR2 DR client, skip to 1.) If you decided
to use the 10g Instant Client, make sure you download and install
all parts. (Given that this is perl land you may not need the JDBC
driver, but why bother sorting out the 25% you may or may not ever
need.) Follow the Oracle instructions and copy the contents of each
part into the same destination directory. Change to this
destination directory and create a symlink lib pointing to '.'
(without the quotes):
$ cd </path/to/my/oracle/instantclient>
$ ln -s lib .
Also, set the environment variable ORACLE_HOME to the path to your
instantclient destination directory. Makefile.PL needs it.
Now return to your DBD::Oracle download. If the version is 1.16 or
less you will need to patch Makefile.PL; in later versions this may
be fixed already. Apply the following patch, e.g., by cutting and
pasting into a file Makefile.PL.patch and then executing
$ patch -p0 < Makefile.PL.patch
Here is the patch:
+=+=+=+=+=+=+= Cut after this line
*** Makefile.PL.orig Fri Oct 22 02:07:04 2004
--- Makefile.PL Fri May 13 14:28:53 2005
***************
*** 1252,1257 ****
--- 1252,1258 ----
print "Found $dir/$_\n" if $::opt_d;
}, "$OH/rdbms",
"$OH/plsql", # oratypes.h sometimes here (eg HPUX 11.23 Itanium Oracle 9.2.0)
+ "$OH/sdk", # Oracle Instant Client default location (10g)
);
@h_dir = keys %h_dir;
print "Found header files in @h_dir.\n" if @h_dir;
***************
*** 1286,1292 ****
--- 1287,1297 ----
open FH, ">define.sql" or warn "Can't create define.sql: $!";
print FH "DEFINE _SQLPLUS_RELEASE\nQUIT\n";
close FH;
+ # we need to temporarily disable login sql scripts
+ my $sqlpath = $ENV{SQLPATH};
+ delete $ENV{SQLPATH};
my $sqlplus_release = `$sqlplus_exe -S /nolog \@define.sql 2>&1`;
+ $ENV{SQLPATH} = $sqlpath if $sqlpath;
unlink "define.sql";
print $sqlplus_release;
if ($sqlplus_release =~ /^DEFINE _SQLPLUS_RELEASE = "(\d?\d)(\d\d)(\d\d)(\d\d)(\d\d)"/) {
+=+=+=+=+=+=+= Cut to the previous line
The first hunk allows Makefile.PL to find the header files which
are in a subdirectory sdk, and the second temporarily disables any
global and local login.sql scripts which may make the sqlplus call
fail. If you don't have a local login.sql script you will most
likely be fine without the second hunk.
Now run Makefile.PL and make sure you provide the -l flag:
$ perl Makefile.PL -l
If you receive some ugly error message stating that some *.mk file
couldn't be found you forgot to add the -l flag.
The continue the standard build process by running make. In
DBD::Oracle versions 1.16 and earlier this will end in an error due
to a failed execution of nmedit -R. Ignore this error. Move on to
running the tests, making sure the test scripts can log in to your
database (e.g., by setting ORACLE_USERID). Note that by default the
Instant Client does not have a network/admin/tnsnames.ora
installed. Either install a suitable one, or point TNS_ADMIN to the
directory where you keep your tnsnames.ora, or include the full
SQLNET connection string in ORACLE_USERID. All three options are
documented by Oracle in the README_IC.htm file that comes with the
Instant Client, so be sure you read it if you don't understand what
I'm writing here.
All tests should succeed. Complete by make install. You are done!
Skip the other steps below, they do NOT apply to the Instant
Client. (Although of course you may still install a later version
of perl if you have the need.)
1) Until the reason for the memory leak has been found and fixed, you
need to remove the condition that exposes it. Apparently, this is
multi-threading being enabled in Perl. The Perl 5.8.1RC3 that comes
with Panther was compiled with multi-threading enabled, and AFAIK
it cannot be turned off at runtime. Note that the problem is
independent of whether you run multiple concurrent threads or not.
Therefore, the solution is to build your own perl. I leave it up to
you whether you want to replace the system perl or not. At least
Perl 5.8.x comes with instructions as to how to replace the system
perl on MacOS X, and what the caveats and risks are. I used 5.8.4,
installed in /usr/local, and it worked perfectly fine.
The key when configuring your custom build of perl is to disable
multi-threading (usethreads, useithreads, and usemultiplicity
options). More precisely, do not enable them, as they are disabled
by default, at least up to version 5.8.5. You can check whether
threads are enabled or not by passing -V to ther Perl interpreter:
$ /path/to/your/perl -V | grep usethreads
You need to see a line saying, among other things,
usethreads=undef. If you see usethreads=define then multi-threading
is enabled.
2) If you choose not to replace the system perl, make sure that when
you build DBI and DBD::Oracle you provide the full path to your own
perl when running Makefile.PL, like so (assuming you installed in
/usr/local, which is the default):
$ /usr/local/bin/perl Makefile.PL
Also, every time you run a DBD::Oracle script, you must use the
full path too, unless your custom-built perl comes before the
system perl in the PATH environment. The easiest way to ensure you
are using the right perl is to uninstall DBI from the system perl
if you did install it under that as well.
3) Continue with 3) as in instructions for Jaguar (making path
substitutions for perl as discussed in 2).
======================================================================
If you have any problems then follow the instructions in the
README. Please post details of any problems (or changes you needed to
make) to dbi-users@perl.org and CC them to brooksch@mac.com on MacOSX
specific problems. Rewrite of part of this readme, Panther
instructions, and the Perl IO patch is credit to Hilmar Lapp, hlapp at
gmx.net.
Earlier and original instructions thanks to:
Andy Lester <andy@petdance.com>
Steve Sapovits <sapovitss@gsicommerce.com>
Tom Mornini <tmornini@infomania.com>
Date: Tue, 15 Apr 2003 16:02:17 +1000
Subject: Compilation bug in DBI on OSX with threaded Perl 5.8.0
From: Danial Pearce <danial@infoxchange.net.au>
To: <dbi-users@perl.org>
Message-ID: <BAC1DD89.E5E1%danial@infoxchange.net.au>
In regards to a previous message on this list:
http://archive.develooper.com/dbi-users@perl.org/msg16365.html
I have some more info:
I have compiled and installed Perl just fine with threads enabled:
./Configure -de -Dusethreads -Dprefix=/usr
make
make test
sudo make install
I have then successfully installed Apache and mod_perl as well.
When I try to compile and install DBI, I get a bus error, just like the
people on this list have previously discussed on the thread above.
If I unpack the DBI, and run perl Makefile.pl, then alter the created
Makefile so that it uses gcc2 rather than just "cc" then it compiles,
installs and runs just fine.
The issue here is that Apple have just recently release 10.2.4, which
updates /usr/bin/{gcc3,gcc2,g++3,g++2} and /usr/bin/cc is a symlink to
/usr/bin/gcc3, so compilation of DBI under Apple's gcc3 does not work. It
works find with gcc2 however.
I had the same problem with DBD::Pg, and was able to compile and install
that using the same fix.
I am unsure if this is a problem with Apple's version of gcc, or a problem
with the DBI/DBD code itself. Given that all my other open source
applications are compiling and installing fine, I am thinking there isn't
anything Apple are going to do about it.
cheers
Danial
PS: Personal replies please, I have not subscribed to this list.