Skip to content
Snippets Groups Projects
FAQ_HPUX 5 KiB
Newer Older
=======================================================
Peter Eisentraut's avatar
Peter Eisentraut committed
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for PostgreSQL 7.1
HP-UX Specific
TO BE READ IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE NORMAL FAQ
=======================================================
last updated:           $Date: 2001/04/30 23:55:26 $

current maintainer:     Tom Lane (tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us)
original author:        Tom Lane (tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us)


Questions covered here:
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
1.1)	What do I need to install PostgreSQL on HP-UX?
1.2)	Anything special about the build/install procedure?
1.3)	yacc dies trying to process src/backend/parser/gram.y.
1.4)	Linking the main postgres executable fails, complaining that
	there's no "alloca" function. 
1.5)	OK, it seemed to build and install, but the regression test fails.


----------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1:      Installing PostgreSQL
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
1.1)	What do I need to install PostgreSQL on HP-UX?
PostgreSQL 7.1 should work on Series 700/800 machines running HPUX 9.*,
10.*, or 11.*, given appropriate system patch levels and build tools.
At least one developer routinely tests on HPUX 10.20, and we have reports
of successful install on HPUX 11.  Releases before 7.1 were tested on
HPUX 9.03 and 9.05; 7.1 should still work there although no recent tests
have been reported.
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
Aside from the PostgreSQL source distribution, you will need GNU make
(HP's make will not do), and either GNU gcc or HP's full ANSI C compiler.
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
If you intend to build from CVS sources rather than a distribution tarball,
you will also need flex (GNU lex) and bison (GNU yacc).

I'd also recommend making sure you are fairly up-to-date on HP patches,
particularly if you are using HPUX 9.  At a minimum, if you are on HPUX 9,
you *must* have PHSS_4630 (libm update) or a successor patch; otherwise
Postgres' date/time functions will misbehave.  On general principles you
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
should be current on libc and ld/dld patches, as well as compiler patches
if you are using HP's C compiler.  (The only other presently known failure
from out-of-date system libraries is that on HPUX 10.10, the backend will
crash after the second error message in a session unless you have upgraded
libc to PHCO_16722 or later.)

See HP's support websites, such as http://us-support.external.hp.com/,
for free copies of their latest patches.


Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
1.2)	Anything special about the build/install procedure?
Peter Eisentraut's avatar
Peter Eisentraut committed
If you have both HP's C compiler and GCC's, then you might want to
explicitly select the compiler to use when you run `configure':
	CC=cc ./configure
for HP's C compiler, or
Peter Eisentraut's avatar
Peter Eisentraut committed
	CC=gcc ./configure
for GCC.  If you omit this setting, then configure will pick gcc
if it has a choice.

The default install target location is /usr/local/pgsql, which
you might want to change to something under /opt.  If so, use
the --prefix switch to configure.
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
1.3)	yacc dies trying to process src/backend/parser/gram.y.

HP's yacc doesn't create its tables large enough to handle the Postgres
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
grammar (a lot of other vendors' yaccs have this problem too).  The
preferred solution is to use GNU bison instead.  If you don't want to
do that for some reason, it's possible to increase yacc's table sizes
enough to cope.  With a pre-6.4 PostgreSQL grammar, I was able to get
HPUX 9's yacc to work by setting YFLAGS to
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
	-d -Np2000 -Ns3000 -Nm100000 -Nl2000 -Na30000 -Nc10000
(You can edit YFLAGS either in the template file before running
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
configure, or in src/Makefile.global afterwards.)  Later PostgreSQL
releases might require even larger tables, but this should do for
a starting point.

Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
Note that this shouldn't affect you if you are using a distribution
tarball, but it does matter if you pull the sources from the CVS server.
The CVS server does not store prebuilt yacc output files.
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
1.4)	Linking the main postgres executable fails, complaining that
	there's no "alloca" function. 
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
You're using an old version of GNU bison.  Update to 1.28 or later,
and re-make the bison output files.  Or build with gcc, or update to
HPUX 10, either of which will provide support for alloca.
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
1.5)	OK, it seemed to build and install, but the regression test fails.

There are several "expected failures" due to differences between HPUX
and the regression test reference platform used by the PostgreSQL group.
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed
All of these should be compensated for by the regression test comparison
mechanism, with the possible exception of some low-order-digit differences
in the geometry tests (depending on which compiler and math library
versions you use).

Any other error is cause for suspicion.  In particular, if you see
failures in the datetime test on HPUX 9, you probably forgot to
install the libm patch PHSS_4630 --- see item 1.1 above.
Bruce Momjian's avatar
Bruce Momjian committed

The parallel regression test script (gmake check) is known to lock up
when run under HP's default Bourne shell, at least in HPUX 10.20.  This
appears to be a shell bug, not the fault of the script.  If you see that
the tests have stopped making progress and only a shell process is
consuming CPU, kill the shell and start over with
	gmake SHELL=/bin/ksh check
to use ksh instead.