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- Berkeley DB Reference Guide:
- Building Berkeley DB for UNIX systems
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Solaris
- I can't compile and run multithreaded applications.
Special compile-time flags and additional libraries are required when
compiling threaded applications on Solaris. If you are compiling a
threaded application, you must compile with the D_REENTRANT flag and link
with the libpthread.a or libthread.a libraries:
cc -mt ...
cc -D_REENTRANT ... -lthread
cc -D_REENTRANT ... -lpthread
The Berkeley DB library will automatically build with the correct options.
- I've installed gcc on my Solaris system, but configuration
fails because the compiler doesn't work.
On some versions of Solaris, there is a cc executable in the user's path,
but all it does is display an error message and fail:
% which cc
/usr/ucb/cc
% cc
/usr/ucb/cc: language optional software package not installed
Because Berkeley DB always uses the native compiler in preference to gcc, this
is a fatal error. If the error message you are seeing is the following,
then this may be the problem:
checking whether the C compiler (cc -O) works... no
configure: error: installation or configuration problem: C compiler cannot create executables.
The simplest workaround is to set your CC environment variable to the
system compiler and reconfigure; for example:
env CC=gcc ../dist/configure
If you are using the --configure-cxx option, you may also want to specify
a C++ compiler, for example the following:
env CC=gcc CCC=g++ ../dist/configure
- I see the error
"libc internal error: _rmutex_unlock: rmutex not held", followed by a core
dump when running threaded or JAVA programs.
This is a known bug in Solaris 2.5 and it is fixed by Sun patch 103187-25.
- I see error reports of nonexistent files, corrupted metadata
pages and core dumps.
Solaris 7 contains a bug in the threading libraries (-lpthread,
-lthread), which causes the wrong version of the pwrite routine to be
linked into the application if the thread library is linked in after
the C library. The result will be that the pwrite function is called
rather than the pwrite64. To work around the problem, use an explicit
link order when creating your application.
Sun Microsystems is tracking this problem with Bug Id's 4291109 and 4267207,
and patch 106980-09 to Solaris 7 fixes the problem:
Bug Id: 4291109
Duplicate of: 4267207
Category: library
Subcategory: libthread
State: closed
Synopsis: pwrite64 mapped to pwrite
Description:
When libthread is linked after libc, there is a table of functions in
libthread that gets "wired into" libc via _libc_threads_interface().
The table in libthread is wrong in both Solaris 7 and on28_35 for the
TI_PWRITE64 row (see near the end).
- I see corrupted databases when doing hot backups or creating
a hot failover archive.
The Solaris cp utility is implemented using the mmap system call, and
so writes are not blocked when it reads database pages. See
Berkeley DB recoverability for more
information.
- I see errors about "open64" when building C++ applications.
In some releases of Solaris, include files redefine "open" when big-file
support (the HAVE_FILE_OFFSET_BITS and _FILE_OFFSET_BITS #defines) is
enabled. This causes problems when compiling for C++, where "open" is
a legal identifier used in the Berkeley DB C++ API. To work around this
problem, avoid including those include files in C++ files which also
include Berkeley DB include files and call into the Berkeley DB API, or specify the
--disable-largefile configuration option and then rebuild.
Copyright Sleepycat Software
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