[.courtesy cc of this posting sent to cited author et al. via email]
In comp.lang.perl.misc, Sergei Barbarash <sgt@netmedia.co.il> writes:
:How can I create a lock file on Solaris? When I use flock() function,
:perl tells me:
:
:The flock() function is unimplemented on this machine
:
:However, a flock(3B) C function does exist on Solaris (3B is BSD
:compatibility man section).
If you upgrade to perl5.001m, which is the current stable version,
this is taken care of. At least, flock() will be emulated if need
be. I'm curious though why it isn't finding the normal version in
flock(3B) on Solaris. CC'd to porters for their consideration.
--tom
--
Tom Christiansen Perl Consultant, Gamer, Hiker tchrist@mox.perl.com
Because . doesn't match \n. [\0-\377] is the most efficient way to match
everything currently. Maybe \e should match everything. And \E would
of course match nothing. :-) --Larry Wall in <9847@jpl-devvax.JPL.NASA.GOV>
In comp.lang.perl.misc, Sergei Barbarash <sgt@netmedia.co.il> writes:
:How can I create a lock file on Solaris? When I use flock() function,
:perl tells me:
:
:The flock() function is unimplemented on this machine
:
:However, a flock(3B) C function does exist on Solaris (3B is BSD
:compatibility man section).
If you upgrade to perl5.001m, which is the current stable version,
this is taken care of. At least, flock() will be emulated if need
be. I'm curious though why it isn't finding the normal version in
flock(3B) on Solaris. CC'd to porters for their consideration.
--tom
--
Tom Christiansen Perl Consultant, Gamer, Hiker tchrist@mox.perl.com
Because . doesn't match \n. [\0-\377] is the most efficient way to match
everything currently. Maybe \e should match everything. And \E would
of course match nothing. :-) --Larry Wall in <9847@jpl-devvax.JPL.NASA.GOV>