I was surprised to see regex. Turns out it is due to our use of libedit
(rather than readline). There may be a reasonable workaround for this.
Having this dependency just for the use of regex in line recall seem a
high price.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Oleg Kobchenko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Programming forum" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, February 19, 2007 10:38 AM
Subject: Re: [Jprogramming] CGI
regexec is the only dependency that is shown on GLIBC_2.3.4
using readelf, which shows fairly detailed external dependecies.
For full details, try
$ readelf -a jconsole | less
It may be that either of ncurses, readline, termcaps, etc.
is using regex internally.
Usually, when building a library, it is possible to
specify configuration. Or maybe the whole build has
to be done on an earlier version of Linux if the
configuration is self-discoverable only.
An earlier system can be hosted with now free
Microsoft Virtual PC.
The problem with libc is that it's not updatable,
as any usual library, only as vendor update or
an install of a new system. Typically, users are
stuck with Red-Hat Linux, which abruptly became
Enterprise with subscription; it's not clear if
there is a clean in-place upgrade to Fedora.
Maybe methods like this with Yum:
http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/~vschmidt/notes/redhat2fedora/index.htm
http://www.brandonhutchinson.com/Upgrading_Red_Hat_Linux_with_yum.html
http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/release-notes/fc4/
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/DistributionUpgrades
--- Eric Iverson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Ahh. Oleg's message reminded me that the problem is probably glibc.
This
is much harder to work around. I don't understand his comments about
regexec and think the dependency is more complicated than his notes
indicate.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Joey K Tuttle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Programming forum" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2007 11:55 PM
Subject: Re: [Jprogramming] CGI
> At 14:59 -0800 2007/02/18, Oleg Kobchenko wrote:
>>Yes, you need to make sure that Apache is installed
>>and enabled on UNIX. Navigate to the default page, like
>> http://localhost/
>>
>>Then find the config files for Apache and see how either
>>local or global cgi-bin folder is configured. Then using
>>a simple bash script cgi, test if CGI is working.
>>
>>Then follow the installation and configuration instructions
>>in the JHP configuration. The link to them is at
>> http://www.jsoftware.com/jwiki/JHP
>>
>>Report back with any problems or questions.
>>
>
> Oleg,
>
> I would like to run JHP on my Linux server, but it is
> j504 (the Linux version doesn't support j601 - sigh)
>
> I downloaded jhp-0.09.zip which I am assuming is the
> current specific file described in the Installation >>
> General "Download web_jhp_x.y.z_plat.zip" In the
> resulting directory there is a j504 folder -- but it
> doesn't seem to have all the ingredients of the j601
> stuff. Is it a reasonable stragegy to replace x and y
> with x. and y. etc. in the 601 folder and try it in 504?
>
> - joey
>
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> http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
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