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authorBruce Momjian2005-07-30 03:39:27 +0000
committerBruce Momjian2005-07-30 03:39:27 +0000
commitb6af0dc49ea64e5a6e5eed661133dec4ccf29292 (patch)
tree876853610eb313f17a5ee098cc1c76b8616c218c /doc/FAQ_AIX
parentaa8290be996b7d6c53fdfb1d60925f7fee46a1a2 (diff)
Update AIX FAQ.
Chris Browne
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/FAQ_AIX')
-rw-r--r--doc/FAQ_AIX78
1 files changed, 77 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/FAQ_AIX b/doc/FAQ_AIX
index 16b70f18c96..a121af31c52 100644
--- a/doc/FAQ_AIX
+++ b/doc/FAQ_AIX
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
From: Zeugswetter Andreas <[email protected]>
-$Date: 2002/11/12 20:02:32 $
+$Date: 2005/07/30 03:39:27 $
On AIX 4.3.2 PostgreSQL compiled with the native IBM compiler xlc
(vac.C 5.0.1) passes all regression tests. Other versions of OS and
@@ -18,3 +18,79 @@ Compiling PostgreSQL with gcc (2.95.3) on AIX also works.
You need libm.a that is in the fileset bos.adt.libm. (Try the
following command.)
$ lslpp -l bos.adt.libm
+
+
+---
+From: Christopher Browne <[email protected]>
+Date: 2005-07-15
+
+On AIX 5.3, there have been some problems getting PostgreSQL to
+compile and run using GCC.
+
+1. You will want to use a version of GCC subsequent to 3.3.2,
+ particularly if you use a prepackaged version. We had good
+ success with 4.0.1.
+
+ Problems with earlier versions seem to have more to do with the
+ way IBM packaged GCC than with actual issues with GCC, so that if
+ you compile GCC yourself, you might well have success with an
+ earlier version of GCC.
+
+2. AIX 5.3 has a problem where sockadr_storage is not defined to be
+ large enough. In version 5.3, IBM increased the size of
+ sockaddr_un, the address structure for UNIX Domain Sockets, but
+ did not correspondingly increase the size of sockadr_storage.
+
+ The result of this is that attempts to use UDS with PostgreSQL
+ lead to libpq overflowing the data structure. TCP/IP connections
+ work OK, but not UDS, which prevents the regression tests from
+ working.
+
+ The nonconformance may be readily demonstrated by compiling and
+ running the following C program which calculates and compares the
+ sizes of the various structures:
+
+test_size.c
+------------
+
+---------- snip here - test_size.c ----------------------------
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include <sys/un.h>
+#include <sys/socket.h>
+int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
+ struct sockaddr_storage a;
+ struct sockaddr_un b;
+ printf("Size of sockadr_storage: %d\n", sizeof(a));
+ printf ("Size of sockaddr_un:%d\n", sizeof(b));
+
+ if (sizeof(a) >= sizeof(b))
+ printf ("Conformant to RFC 3493\n");
+ else
+ printf ("Non-conformant to RFC 3493\n");
+}
+---------- snip here - test_size.c ----------------------------
+
+
+The problem was reported to IBM, and is recorded as bug report
+PMR29657.
+
+An immediate resolution is to alter _SS_MAXSIZE to = 1025 in
+/usr/include/sys/socket.h, which will resolve the immediate problem.
+
+It appears that the "final" resolution will be to alter _SS_MAXSIZE to
+1280, making the size nicely align with page boundaries.
+
+IBM will be providing a fix in the next maintenance release (expected
+in October 2005) with an updated socket.h.
+---
+From: Christopher Browne <[email protected]>
+Date: 2005-07-15
+
+Some of the AIX tools may be "a little different" from what you may be
+accustomed to on other platforms. If you are looking for a version of
+ldd, useful for determining what object code depends on what
+libraries, the following URLs may help you...
+
+http://www.faqs.org/faqs/aix-faq/part4/section-22.html
+
+http://www.han.de/~jum/aix/ldd.c \ No newline at end of file