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-rw-r--r--HOWTO/BENCHMARKS.md73
-rw-r--r--HOWTO/BOOTSTRAP.md61
-rw-r--r--HOWTO/DTRACE.md392
-rw-r--r--HOWTO/INSTALL-CROSS.md556
-rw-r--r--HOWTO/INSTALL-WIN32.md1047
-rw-r--r--HOWTO/INSTALL.md843
-rw-r--r--HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md266
-rw-r--r--HOWTO/SYSTEMTAP.md75
-rw-r--r--HOWTO/TESTING.md150
9 files changed, 3463 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/HOWTO/BENCHMARKS.md b/HOWTO/BENCHMARKS.md
new file mode 100644
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+++ b/HOWTO/BENCHMARKS.md
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+Benchmarking Erlang/OTP
+=======================
+
+The Erlang/OTP source tree contains a number of benchmarks. The same framework
+is used to run these benchmarks as is used to run tests. Therefore in order to
+run benchmarks you have to [release the tests][] just as you normally would.
+
+Note that many of these benchmarks were developed to test a specific feature
+under a specific setting. We strive to keep the benchmarks up-to-date, but alas
+time is not an endless resource so some benchmarks will be outdated and
+irrelevant.
+
+Running the benchmarks
+----------------------
+
+As with testing, `ts` is used to run the benchmarks. Before running any
+benchmarks you have to [install the tests][]. To get a listing of all
+benchmarks you have available call `ts:benchmarks()`.
+
+To run all benchmarks call `ts:bench()`. This will run all benchmarks using
+the emulator which is in you `$PATH` (Note that this does not have to be the
+same as from which the benchmarks were built from). All the results of the
+benchmarks are put in a folder in `$TESTROOT/test_server/` called
+`YYYY_MO_DDTHH_MI_SS`.
+
+Each benchmark is run multiple times and the data for all runs is collected in
+the files within the benchmark folder. All benchmarks are written so that a
+higher values are better.
+
+Writing benchmarks
+------------------
+
+Benchmarks are just normal testcases in Common Test suites. They are marked as
+benchmarks by being included in the `AppName_bench.spec` which is located in
+`lib/AppName/test/` for the applications which have benchmarks. Note that you
+might want to add a skip clause to `AppName.spec` for the benchmarks if you do
+not want them to be run in the nightly tests.
+
+Results of benchmarks are sent using the ct_event mechanism and automatically
+collected and formatted by ts.
+
+ ct_event:notify(
+ #event{name = benchmark_data,
+ data = [{value,TPS}]}).
+
+The application, suite and testcase associated with the value is automatically
+detected. If you want to supply your own you can include `suite` andor `name`
+with the data. i.e.
+
+ ct_event:notify(
+ #event{name = benchmark_data,
+ data = [{suite,"erts_bench"},
+ {name,"ets_transactions_per_sec"},
+ {value,TPS}]}).
+
+The reason for using the internal ct_event and not ct is because the benchmark
+code has to be backwards compatible with at least R14.
+
+The value which is reported should be as raw as possible. i.e. you should not
+do any averaging of the value before reporting. The tools we use to collect the
+benchmark data over time will do averages, means, stddev and more with the data.
+So the more data which is sent using `ct_event` the better.
+
+Viewing benchmarks
+------------------
+
+At the moment of writing this HOWTO the tool for viewing benchmark results is
+not available as opensource. This will hopefully change in the near future.
+
+
+ [release the tests]: TESTING.md#releasing-tests
+ [install the tests]: TESTING.md#configuring-the-test-environment
+
diff --git a/HOWTO/BOOTSTRAP.md b/HOWTO/BOOTSTRAP.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..59e31165cf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HOWTO/BOOTSTRAP.md
@@ -0,0 +1,61 @@
+Notes about prebuilt beam files under version control
+=====================================================
+
+This information applies mostly to developers, some parts only
+to developers of the main branch i.e. Ericsson and HiPE personel.
+
+There are two types of derived code under version control, namely:
+
+primary bootstrap - Resides in the `$ERL_TOP/bootstrap/{lib,bin}` directories.
+preloaded code - Resides in the `$ERL_TOP/erts/preloaded` directory.
+
+Primary bootstrap
+-----------------
+
+The two types of version controlled code are fundamentally
+different. The primary bootstrap is code compiled from source files in
+the lib/{kernel,stdlib,compiler} (and header files from
+lib/orber/include. They are checked in in the version control system
+to make it possible to build directly from the code base tree without
+the need for an earlier version of the compiler. When a new version of
+OTP is released, these files are updated manually (or rather, by using
+the `$ERL_TOP/otp_build` script) and checked in. The files can also be
+updated due to changes in the compiler during the development
+process. The primary bootstrap is always updated as a separate
+deliberate process, never during a normal development build.
+
+If a prebuilt open source version of erlang is used, the directory
+bootstrap initially does not contain any beam files, the directory is
+instead populated by copying beam files from the
+`$ERL_TOP/lib/{kernel,stdlib,compiler}/ebin` directories. This
+construction is to save space in the distribution, but the result
+would be the same. Open source developers need not provide patches for
+the precompiled beam files in the primary bootstrap, the bootstrap
+update is always performed by the main developers.
+
+Preloaded code
+--------------
+
+The directory `$ERL_TOP/preloaded` contains both src and ebin
+subdirectories. The preloaded code is compiled into the virtual
+machine and always present. When compiling the virtual machine, those
+beam files need to be present and they are considered a part of the
+virtual machine rather than a part of the kernel application. When
+preloaded files are to be updated, the source code is built using a
+special Makefile in the `$ERL_TOP/preloaded/src` directory, which
+creates beam files in the same directory. When they seem to compile
+successfully, they can be used in an emulator build by being copied
+to the ebin directory. `otp_build update_preloaded` can be used to
+ease the process (there are also similar targets in the
+`$ERL_TOP/preloaded/src/Makefile`).
+
+In prebuilt open source distributions, these beam files are also
+present, but to update them one might need to change permission on the
+`$ERL_TOP/preloaded/ebin` directory, then build and then manually copy
+the beam files from the source directory to ../ebin. If patches are
+created that involve the source files used to build preloaded code,
+always note this specially as the preloaded/ebin directory needs
+updating, or provide the new derived files in the patch or as complete
+binaries.
+
+/Patrik, OTP
diff --git a/HOWTO/DTRACE.md b/HOWTO/DTRACE.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b719c68c59
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HOWTO/DTRACE.md
@@ -0,0 +1,392 @@
+DTrace and Erlang/OTP
+=====================
+
+History
+-------
+
+The first implementation of DTrace probes for the Erlang virtual
+machine was presented at the [2008 Erlang User Conference] [1]. That
+work, based on the Erlang/OTP R12 release, was discontinued due to
+what appears to be miscommunication with the original developers.
+
+Several users have created Erlang port drivers, linked-in drivers, or
+NIFs that allow Erlang code to try to activate a probe,
+e.g. `foo_module:dtrace_probe("message goes here!")`.
+
+Goals
+-----
+
+* Annotate as much of the Erlang VM as is practical.
+ * The initial goal is to trace file I/O operations.
+* Support all platforms that implement DTrace: OS X, Solaris,
+ and (I hope) FreeBSD and NetBSD.
+* To the extent that it's practical, support SystemTap on Linux
+ via DTrace provider compatibility.
+* Allow Erlang code to supply annotations.
+
+Supported platforms
+-------------------
+
+* OS X 10.6.x / Snow Leopard. It should also work for 10.7 / Lion,
+ but I haven't personally tested it.
+* Solaris 10. I have done limited testing on Solaris 11 and
+ OpenIndiana release 151a, and both appear to work.
+* FreeBSD 9.0, though please see the "FreeBSD 9.0 Release Notes"
+ section below!
+* Linux via SystemTap compatibility. Please see
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/SYSTEMTAP.md][] for more details.
+
+Just add the `--with-dynamic-trace=dtrace` option to your command when you
+run the `configure` script. If you are using systemtap, the configure option
+is `--with-dynamic-trace=systemtap`
+
+Status
+------
+
+As of R15B01, the dynamic trace code is included in the OTP source distribution,
+although it's considered experimental. The main development of the dtrace code
+still happens outside of Ericsson, but there is no need to fetch a patched
+version of the OTP source to get the basic funtionality.
+
+Implementation summary
+----------------------
+
+So far, most effort has been focused on the `efile_drv.c` code,
+which implements most file I/O on behalf of the Erlang virtual
+machine. This driver also presents a big challenge: its use of an I/O
+worker pool (enabled by using the `erl +A 8` flag, for example) makes
+it much more difficult to trace I/O activity because each of the
+following may be executed in a different Pthread:
+
+* I/O initiation (Erlang code)
+* I/O proxy process handling, e.g. read/write when file is not opened
+ in `raw` mode, operations executed by the code & file server processes.
+ (Erlang code)
+* `efile_drv` command setup (C code)
+* `efile_drv` command execution (C code)
+* `efile_drv` status return (C code)
+
+Example output from `lib/runtime_tools/examples/efile_drv.d` while executing
+`file:rename("old-name", "new-name")`:
+
+ efile_drv enter tag={3,84} user tag some-user-tag | RENAME (12) | args: old-name new-name , 0 0 (port #Port<0.59>)
+ async I/O worker tag={3,83} | RENAME (12) | efile_drv-int_entry
+ async I/O worker tag={3,83} | RENAME (12) | efile_drv-int_return
+ efile_drv return tag={3,83} user tag | RENAME (12) | errno 2
+
+... where the following key can help decipher the output:
+
+* `{3,83}` is the Erlang scheduler thread number (3) and operation
+ counter number (83) assigned to this I/O operation. Together,
+ these two numbers form a unique ID for the I/O operation.
+* `12` is the command number for the rename operation. See the
+ definition for `FILE_RENAME` in the source code file `efile_drv.c`
+ or the `BEGIN` section of the D script `lib/runtime_tools/examples/efile_drv.d`.
+* `old-name` and `new-name` are the two string arguments for the
+ source and destination of the `rename(2)` system call.
+ The two integer arguments are unused; the simple formatting code
+ prints the arguments anyway, 0 and 0.
+* The worker pool code was called on behalf of Erlang port `#Port<0.59>`.
+* The system call failed with a POSIX errno value of 2: `ENOENT`,
+ because the path `old-name` does not exist.
+* The `efile_drv-int_entry` and `efile_drv_int_return` probes are
+ provided in case the user is
+ interested in measuring only the latency of code executed by
+ `efile_drv` asynchronous functions by I/O worker pool threads
+ and the OS system call that they encapsulate.
+
+So, where does the `some-user-tag` string come from?
+
+At the moment, the user tag comes from code like the following:
+
+ dyntrace:put_tag("some-user-tag"),
+ file:rename("old-name", "new-name"),
+
+This method of tagging I/O at the Erlang level is subject to change.
+
+Example DTrace probe specification
+----------------------------------
+
+ /**
+ * Fired when a message is sent from one local process to another.
+ *
+ * NOTE: The 'size' parameter is in machine-dependent words and
+ * that the actual size of any binary terms in the message
+ * are not included.
+ *
+ * @param sender the PID (string form) of the sender
+ * @param receiver the PID (string form) of the receiver
+ * @param size the size of the message being delivered (words)
+ * @param token_label for the sender's sequential trace token
+ * @param token_previous count for the sender's sequential trace token
+ * @param token_current count for the sender's sequential trace token
+ */
+ probe message__send(char *sender, char *receiver, uint32_t size,
+ int token_label, int token_previous, int token_current);
+
+ /**
+ * Fired when a message is sent from a local process to a remote process.
+ *
+ * NOTE: The 'size' parameter is in machine-dependent words and
+ * that the actual size of any binary terms in the message
+ * are not included.
+ *
+ * @param sender the PID (string form) of the sender
+ * @param node_name the Erlang node name (string form) of the receiver
+ * @param receiver the PID/name (string form) of the receiver
+ * @param size the size of the message being delivered (words)
+ * @param token_label for the sender's sequential trace token
+ * @param token_previous count for the sender's sequential trace token
+ * @param token_current count for the sender's sequential trace token
+ */
+ probe message__send__remote(char *sender, char *node_name, char *receiver,
+ uint32_t size,
+ int token_label, int token_previous, int token_current);
+
+ /**
+ * Fired when a message is queued to a local process. This probe
+ * will not fire if the sender's pid == receiver's pid.
+ *
+ * NOTE: The 'size' parameter is in machine-dependent words and
+ * that the actual size of any binary terms in the message
+ * are not included.
+ *
+ * @param receiver the PID (string form) of the receiver
+ * @param size the size of the message being delivered (words)
+ * @param queue_len length of the queue of the receiving process
+ * @param token_label for the sender's sequential trace token
+ * @param token_previous count for the sender's sequential trace token
+ * @param token_current count for the sender's sequential trace token
+ */
+ probe message__queued(char *receiver, uint32_t size, uint32_t queue_len,
+ int token_label, int token_previous, int token_current);
+
+ /**
+ * Fired when a message is 'receive'd by a local process and removed
+ * from its mailbox.
+ *
+ * NOTE: The 'size' parameter is in machine-dependent words and
+ * that the actual size of any binary terms in the message
+ * are not included.
+ *
+ * @param receiver the PID (string form) of the receiver
+ * @param size the size of the message being delivered (words)
+ * @param queue_len length of the queue of the receiving process
+ * @param token_label for the sender's sequential trace token
+ * @param token_previous count for the sender's sequential trace token
+ * @param token_current count for the sender's sequential trace token
+ */
+ probe message__receive(char *receiver, uint32_t size, uint32_t queue_len,
+ int token_label, int token_previous, int token_current);
+
+ /* ... */
+
+ /* Async driver pool */
+
+ /**
+ * Show the post-add length of the async driver thread pool member's queue.
+ *
+ * NOTE: The port name is not available: additional lock(s) must
+ * be acquired in order to get the port name safely in an SMP
+ * environment. The same is true for the aio__pool_get probe.
+ *
+ * @param port the Port (string form)
+ * @param new queue length
+ */
+ probe aio_pool__add(char *, int);
+
+ /**
+ * Show the post-get length of the async driver thread pool member's queue.
+ *
+ * @param port the Port (string form)
+ * @param new queue length
+ */
+ probe aio_pool__get(char *, int);
+
+ /* Probes for efile_drv.c */
+
+ /**
+ * Entry into the efile_drv.c file I/O driver
+ *
+ * For a list of command numbers used by this driver, see the section
+ * "Guide to probe arguments" in ../../../README.md. That section
+ * also contains explanation of the various integer and string
+ * arguments that may be present when any particular probe fires.
+ *
+ * TODO: Adding the port string, args[10], is a pain. Making that
+ * port string available to all the other efile_drv.c probes
+ * will be more pain. Is the pain worth it? If yes, then
+ * add them everywhere else and grit our teeth. If no, then
+ * rip it out.
+ *
+ * @param thread-id number of the scheduler Pthread arg0
+ * @param tag number: {thread-id, tag} uniquely names a driver operation
+ * @param user-tag string arg2
+ * @param command number arg3
+ * @param string argument 1 arg4
+ * @param string argument 2 arg5
+ * @param integer argument 1 arg6
+ * @param integer argument 2 arg7
+ * @param integer argument 3 arg8
+ * @param integer argument 4 arg9
+ * @param port the port ID of the busy port args[10]
+ */
+ probe efile_drv__entry(int, int, char *, int, char *, char *,
+ int64_t, int64_t, int64_t, int64_t, char *);
+
+ /**
+ * Entry into the driver's internal work function. Computation here
+ * is performed by a async worker pool Pthread.
+ *
+ * @param thread-id number
+ * @param tag number
+ * @param command number
+ */
+ probe efile_drv__int_entry(int, int, int);
+
+ /**
+ * Return from the driver's internal work function.
+ *
+ * @param thread-id number
+ * @param tag number
+ * @param command number
+ */
+ probe efile_drv__int_return(int, int, int);
+
+ /**
+ * Return from the efile_drv.c file I/O driver
+ *
+ * @param thread-id number arg0
+ * @param tag number arg1
+ * @param user-tag string arg2
+ * @param command number arg3
+ * @param Success? 1 is success, 0 is failure arg4
+ * @param If failure, the errno of the error. arg5
+ */
+ probe efile_drv__return(int, int, char *, int, int, int);
+
+Guide to efile_drv.c probe arguments
+------------------------------------
+
+ /* Driver op code: used by efile_drv-entry arg3 */
+ /* used by efile_drv-int_entry arg3 */
+ /* used by efile_drv-int_return arg3 */
+ /* used by efile_drv-return arg3 */
+
+ #define FILE_OPEN 1 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = flags;
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_READ 2 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = flags;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = size;
+
+ #define FILE_LSEEK 3 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = offset;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = origin;
+
+ #define FILE_WRITE 4 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = flags;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = size;
+
+ #define FILE_FSTAT 5 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+
+ #define FILE_PWD 6 (probe arg3)
+ none
+
+ #define FILE_READDIR 7 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_CHDIR 8 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_FSYNC 9 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+
+ #define FILE_MKDIR 10 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_DELETE 11 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_RENAME 12 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = old_name;
+ probe arg5 = C driver dt_s2 = new_name;
+
+ #define FILE_RMDIR 13 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_TRUNCATE 14 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = flags;
+
+ #define FILE_READ_FILE 15 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_WRITE_INFO 16 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = mode;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = uid;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = gid;
+
+ #define FILE_LSTAT 19 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_READLINK 20 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_LINK 21 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = existing_path;
+ probe arg5 = C driver dt_s2 = new_path;
+
+ #define FILE_SYMLINK 22 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = existing_path;
+ probe arg5 = C driver dt_s2 = new_path;
+
+ #define FILE_CLOSE 23 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = flags;
+
+ #define FILE_PWRITEV 24 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = flags;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = size;
+
+ #define FILE_PREADV 25 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = flags;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = size;
+
+ #define FILE_SETOPT 26 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = opt_name;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = opt_specific_value;
+
+ #define FILE_IPREAD 27 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = flags;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = offsets[0];
+ probe arg9 = C driver dt_i4 = size;
+
+ #define FILE_ALTNAME 28 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg4 = C driver dt_s1 = path;
+
+ #define FILE_READ_LINE 29 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = flags;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = read_offset;
+ probe arg9 = C driver dt_i4 = read_ahead;
+
+ #define FILE_FDATASYNC 30 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+
+ #define FILE_FADVISE 31 (probe arg3)
+ probe arg6 = C driver dt_i1 = fd;
+ probe arg7 = C driver dt_i2 = offset;
+ probe arg8 = C driver dt_i3 = length;
+ probe arg9 = C driver dt_i4 = advise_type;
+
+ [1]: http://www.erlang.org/euc/08/
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/SYSTEMTAP.md]: SYSTEMTAP.md
diff --git a/HOWTO/INSTALL-CROSS.md b/HOWTO/INSTALL-CROSS.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..95264a82eb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HOWTO/INSTALL-CROSS.md
@@ -0,0 +1,556 @@
+Cross Compiling Erlang/OTP
+==========================
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+This document describes how to cross compile Erlang/OTP-%OTP-REL%. Note that
+the support for cross compiling Erlang/OTP should be considered as
+experimental. As far as we know, the %OTP-REL% release should cross compile
+fine, but since we currently have a very limited set of cross compilation
+environments to test with we cannot be sure. The cross compilation support
+will remain in an experimental state until we get a lot more cross compilation
+environments to test with.
+
+You are advised to read the whole document before attempting to cross
+compile Erlang/OTP. However, before reading this document, you should read
+the [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL.md][] document which describes building and installing
+Erlang/OTP in general. `$ERL_TOP` is the top directory in the source tree.
+
+### otp\_build Versus configure/make ###
+
+Building Erlang/OTP can be done either by using the `$ERL_TOP/otp_build`
+script, or by invoking `$ERL_TOP/configure` and `make` directly. Building using
+`otp_build` is easier since it involves fewer steps, but the `otp_build` build
+procedure is not as flexible as the `configure`/`make` build procedure. Note
+that `otp_build configure` will produce a default configuration that differs
+from what `configure` will produce by default. For example, currently
+`--disable-dynamic-ssl-lib` is added to the `configure` command line arguments
+unless `--enable-dynamic-ssl-lib` has been explicitly passed. The binary
+releases that we deliver are built using `otp_build`. The defaults used by
+`otp_build configure` may change at any time without prior notice.
+
+### Cross Configuration ###
+
+The `$ERL_TOP/xcomp/erl-xcomp.conf.template` file contains all available cross
+configuration variables and can be used as a template when creating a cross
+compilation configuration. All [cross configuration variables][] are also
+listed at the end of this document. For examples of working cross
+configurations see the `$ERL_TOP/xcomp/erl-xcomp-TileraMDE2.0-tilepro.conf`
+file and the `$ERL_TOP/xcomp/erl-xcomp-x86_64-saf-linux-gnu.conf` file. If the
+default behavior of a variable is satisfactory, the variable does not need to
+be set. However, the `configure` script will issue a warning when a default
+value is used. When a variable has been set, no warning will be issued.
+
+A cross configuration file can be passed to `otp_build configure` using the
+`--xcomp-conf` command line argument. Note that `configure` does not accept
+this command line argument. When using the `configure` script directly, pass
+the configuration variables as arguments to `configure` using a
+`<VARIABLE>=<VALUE>` syntax. Variables can also be passed as environment
+variables to `configure`. However, if you pass the configuration in the
+environment, make sure to unset all of these environment variables before
+invoking `make`; otherwise, the environment variables might set make variables
+in some applications, or parts of some applications, and you may end up with
+an erroneously configured build.
+
+### What can be Cross Compiled? ###
+
+All Erlang/OTP applications except the `wx` application can be cross compiled.
+The build of the `wx` driver will currently be automatically disabled when
+cross compiling.
+
+### Compatibility ###
+
+The build system, including cross compilation configuration variables used,
+may be subject to non backward compatible changes without prior notice.
+Current cross build system has been tested when cross compiling some Linux/GNU
+systems, but has only been partly tested for more esoteric platforms. The
+VxWorks example file is highly dependent on our environment and is here more
+or less only for internal use.
+
+### Patches ###
+
+Please submit any patches for cross compiling in a way consistent with this
+system. All input is welcome as we have a very limited set of cross compiling
+environments to test with. If a new configuration variable is needed, add it
+to `$ERL_TOP/xcomp/erl-xcomp.conf.template`, and use it in `configure.in`.
+Other files that might need to be updated are:
+
+- `$ERL_TOP/xcomp/erl-xcomp-vars.sh`
+- `$ERL_TOP/erl-build-tool-vars.sh`
+- `$ERL_TOP/erts/aclocal.m4`
+- `$ERL_TOP/xcomp/README.md`
+- `$ERL_TOP/xcomp/erl-xcomp-*.conf`
+
+Note that this might be an incomplete list of files that need to be updated.
+
+General information on how to submit patches can be found at:
+ <http://wiki.github.com/erlang/otp/submitting-patches>
+
+Build and Install Procedure
+---------------------------
+
+If you are building in Git, you want to read the [Building in Git][] section
+of [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL.md][] before proceeding.
+
+We will first go through the `configure`/`make` build procedure which people
+probably are most familiar with.
+
+### Building With configure/make Directly ###
+
+ (1)
+
+Change directory into the top directory of the Erlang/OTP source tree.
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+
+In order to compile Erlang code, a small Erlang bootstrap system has to be
+built, or an Erlang/OTP system of the same release as the one being built
+has to be provided in the `$PATH`. The Erlang/OTP for the target system will
+be built using this Erlang system, together with the cross compilation tools
+provided.
+
+If you want to build the documentation out of the same source tree as you are
+cross compiling in, you currently need a full Erlang/OTP system of the same
+release as the one being built for the build machine. If this is the case,
+build and install one for the build machine (or use one already built) and add
+it to the `$PATH` before cross building, and building the documentation. See
+the [How to Build the Documentation][] section in the [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL.md][]
+document for information on how to build the documentation.
+
+If you want to build using a compatible Erlang/OTP system in the `$PATH`,
+jump to (3).
+
+#### Building a Bootstrap System ####
+
+ (2)
+
+ $ ./configure --enable-bootstrap-only
+ $ make
+
+The `--enable-bootstrap-only` argument to `configure` isn't strictly necessary,
+but will speed things up. It will only run `configure` in applications
+necessary for the bootstrap, and will disable a lot of things not needed by
+the bootstrap system. If you run `configure` without `--enable-boostrap-only`
+you also have to run make as `make bootstrap`; otherwise, the whole system will
+be built.
+
+#### Cross Building the System ####
+
+ (3)
+
+ $ ./configure --host=<HOST> --build=<BUILD> [Other Config Args]
+ $ make
+
+`<HOST>` is the host/target system that you build for. It does not have to be
+a full `CPU-VENDOR-OS` triplet, but can be. The full `CPU-VENDOR-OS` triplet
+will be created by executing `$ERL_TOP/erts/autoconf/config.sub <HOST>`. If
+`config.sub` fails, you need to be more specific.
+
+`<BUILD>` should equal the `CPU-VENDOR-OS` triplet of the system that you
+build on. If you execute `$ERL_TOP/erts/autoconf/config.guess`, it will in
+most cases print the triplet you want to use for this.
+
+Pass the cross compilation variables as command line arguments to `configure`
+using a `<VARIABLE>=<VALUE>` syntax.
+
+> *NOTE*: You can *not* pass a configuration file using the `--xcomp-conf`
+> argument when you invoke `configure` directly. The `--xcomp-conf` argument
+> can only be passed to `otp_build configure`.
+
+`make` will verify that the Erlang/OTP system used when building is of the
+same release as the system being built, and will fail if this is not the case.
+It is possible, however not recommended, to force the cross compilation even
+though the wrong Erlang/OTP system is used. This by invoking `make` like this:
+`make ERL_XCOMP_FORCE_DIFFERENT_OTP=yes`.
+
+> *WARNING*: Invoking `make ERL_XCOMP_FORCE_DIFFERENT_OTP=yes` might fail,
+> silently produce suboptimal code, or silently produce erroneous code.
+
+#### Installing ####
+
+You can either install using the installation paths determined by `configure`
+(4), or install manually using (5).
+
+##### Installing Using Paths Determined by configure #####
+
+ (4)
+
+ $ make install DESTDIR=<TEMPORARY_PREFIX>
+
+`make install` will install at a location specified when doing `configure`.
+`configure` arguments specifying where the installation should reside are for
+example: `--prefix`, `--exec-prefix`, `--libdir`, `--bindir`, etc. By default
+it will install under `/usr/local`. You typically do not want to install your
+cross build under `/usr/local` on your build machine. Using [DESTDIR][]
+will cause the installation paths to be prefixed by `$DESTDIR`. This makes it
+possible to install and package the installation on the build machine without
+having to place the installation in the same directory on the build machine as
+it should be executed from on the target machine.
+
+When `make install` has finished, change directory into `$DESTDIR`, package
+the system, move it to the target machine, and unpack it. Note that the
+installation will only be working on the target machine at the location
+determined by `configure`.
+
+##### Installing Manually #####
+
+ (5)
+
+ $ make release RELEASE_ROOT=<RELEASE_DIR>
+
+`make release` will copy what you have built for the target machine to
+`<RELEASE_DIR>`. The `Install` script will not be run. The content of
+`<RELEASE_DIR>` is what by default ends up in `/usr/local/lib/erlang`.
+
+The `Install` script used when installing Erlang/OTP requires common Unix
+tools such as `sed` to be present in your `$PATH`. If your target system
+does not have such tools, you need to run the `Install` script on your
+build machine before packaging Erlang/OTP. The `Install` script should
+currently be invoked as follows in the directory where it resides
+(the top directory):
+
+ $ ./Install [-cross] [-minimal|-sasl] <ERL_ROOT>
+
+where:
+
+* `-minimal` Creates an installation that starts up a minimal amount
+ of applications, i.e., only `kernel` and `stdlib` are started. The
+ minimal system is normally enough, and is what `make install` uses.
+* `-sasl` Creates an installation that also starts up the `sasl`
+ application.
+* `-cross` For cross compilation. Informs the install script that it
+ is run on the build machine.
+* `<ERL_ROOT>` - The absolute path to the Erlang installation to use
+ at run time. This is often the same as the current working directory,
+ but does not have to be. It can follow any other path through the file
+ system to the same directory.
+
+If neither `-minimal`, nor `-sasl` is passed as argument you will be
+prompted.
+
+You can now either do:
+
+ (6)
+
+* Decide where the installation should be located on the target machine,
+ run the `Install` script on the build machine, and package the installed
+ installation. The installation just need to be unpacked at the right
+ location on the target machine:
+
+ $ cd <RELEASE_DIR>
+ $ ./Install -cross [-minimal|-sasl] <ABSOLUTE_INSTALL_DIR_ON_TARGET>
+
+or:
+
+ (7)
+
+* Package the installation in `<RELEASE_DIR>`, place it wherever you want
+ on your target machine, and run the `Install` script on your target
+ machine:
+
+ $ cd <ABSOLUTE_INSTALL_DIR_ON_TARGET>
+ $ ./Install [-minimal|-sasl] <ABSOLUTE_INSTALL_DIR_ON_TARGET>
+
+### Building With the otp\_build Script ###
+
+ (8)
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+
+ (9)
+
+ $ ./otp_build configure --xcomp-conf=<FILE> [Other Config Args]
+
+alternatively:
+
+ $ ./otp_build configure --host=<HOST> --build=<BUILD> [Other Config Args]
+
+If you have your cross compilation configuration in a file, pass it using the
+`--xcomp-conf=<FILE>` command line argument. If not, pass `--host=<HOST>`,
+`--build=<BUILD>`, and the configuration variables using a `<VARIABLE>=<VALUE>`
+syntax on the command line (same as in (3)). Note that `<HOST>` and `<BUILD>`
+have to be passed one way or the other; either by using `erl_xcomp_host=<HOST>`
+and `erl_xcomp_build=<BUILD>` in the configuration file, or by using the
+`--host=<HOST>`, and `--build=<BUILD>` command line arguments.
+
+`otp_build configure` will configure both for the boostrap system on the
+build machine and the cross host system.
+
+ (10)
+
+ $ ./otp_build boot -a
+
+`otp_build boot -a` will first build a bootstrap system for the build machine
+and then do the cross build of the system.
+
+ (11)
+
+ $ ./otp_build release -a <RELEASE_DIR>
+
+`otp_build release -a` will do the same as (5), and you will after this have
+to do a manual install either by doing (6), or (7).
+
+Testing the cross compiled system
+---------------------------------
+Some of the tests that come with erlang use native code to test. This means
+that when cross compiling erlang you also have to cross compile test suites
+in order to run tests on the target host. To do this you first have to release
+the tests as usual.
+
+ $ make release_tests
+
+or
+
+ $ ./otp_build tests
+
+The tests will be released into `$ERL_TOP/release/tests`. After releasing the
+tests you have to install the tests on the build machine. You supply the same
+xcomp file as to `./otp_build` in (9).
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP/release/tests/test_server/
+ $ $ERL_TOP/bootstrap/bin/erl -eval 'ts:install([{xcomp,"<FILE>"}])' -s ts compile_testcases -s init stop
+
+You should get a lot of printouts as the testcases are compiled. Once done you
+should copy the entire `$ERL_TOP/release/tests` folder to the cross host system.
+
+Then go to the cross host system and setup the erlang installed in (4) or (5)
+to be in your `$PATH`. Then go to what previously was
+`$ERL_TOP/release/tests/test_server` and issue the following command.
+
+ $ erl -s ts install -s ts run all_tests -s init stop
+
+The configure should be skipped and all tests should hopefully pass. For more
+details about how to use ts run `erl -s ts help -s init stop`
+
+Currently Used Configuration Variables
+--------------------------------------
+
+Note that you cannot define arbitrary variables in a cross compilation
+configuration file. Only the ones listed below will be guaranteed to be
+visible throughout the whole execution of all `configure` scripts. Other
+variables needs to be defined as arguments to `configure` or exported in
+the environment.
+
+### Variables for otp\_build Only ###
+
+Variables in this section are only used, when configuring Erlang/OTP for
+cross compilation using `$ERL_TOP/otp_build configure`.
+
+> *NOTE*: These variables currently have *no* effect if you configure using
+> the `configure` script directly.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_build` - The build system used. This value will be passed as
+ `--build=$erl_xcomp_build` argument to the `configure` script. It does
+ not have to be a full `CPU-VENDOR-OS` triplet, but can be. The full
+ `CPU-VENDOR-OS` triplet will be created by
+ `$ERL_TOP/erts/autoconf/config.sub $erl_xcomp_build`. If set to `guess`,
+ the build system will be guessed using
+ `$ERL_TOP/erts/autoconf/config.guess`.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_host` - Cross host/target system to build for. This value will
+ be passed as `--host=$erl_xcomp_host` argument to the `configure` script.
+ It does not have to be a full `CPU-VENDOR-OS` triplet, but can be. The
+ full `CPU-VENDOR-OS` triplet will be created by
+ `$ERL_TOP/erts/autoconf/config.sub $erl_xcomp_host`.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_configure_flags` - Extra configure flags to pass to the
+ `configure` script.
+
+### Cross Compiler and Other Tools ###
+
+If the cross compilation tools are prefixed by `<HOST>-` you probably do
+not need to set these variables (where `<HOST>` is what has been passed as
+`--host=<HOST>` argument to `configure`).
+
+All variables in this section can also be used when native compiling.
+
+* `CC` - C compiler.
+
+* `CFLAGS` - C compiler flags.
+
+* `STATIC_CFLAGS` - Static C compiler flags.
+
+* `CFLAG_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_PATH` - This flag should set runtime library
+ search path for the shared libraries. Note that this actually is a
+ linker flag, but it needs to be passed via the compiler.
+
+* `CPP` - C pre-processor.
+
+* `CPPFLAGS` - C pre-processor flags.
+
+* `CXX` - C++ compiler.
+
+* `CXXFLAGS` - C++ compiler flags.
+
+* `LD` - Linker.
+
+* `LDFLAGS` - Linker flags.
+
+* `LIBS` - Libraries.
+
+#### Dynamic Erlang Driver Linking ####
+
+> *NOTE*: Either set all or none of the `DED_LD*` variables.
+
+* `DED_LD` - Linker for Dynamically loaded Erlang Drivers.
+
+* `DED_LDFLAGS` - Linker flags to use with `DED_LD`.
+
+* `DED_LD_FLAG_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_PATH` - This flag should set runtime library
+ search path for shared libraries when linking with `DED_LD`.
+
+#### Large File Support ####
+
+> *NOTE*: Either set all or none of the `LFS_*` variables.
+
+* `LFS_CFLAGS` - Large file support C compiler flags.
+
+* `LFS_LDFLAGS` - Large file support linker flags.
+
+* `LFS_LIBS` - Large file support libraries.
+
+#### Other Tools ####
+
+* `RANLIB` - `ranlib` archive index tool.
+
+* `AR` - `ar` archiving tool.
+
+* `GETCONF` - `getconf` system configuration inspection tool. `getconf` is
+ currently used for finding out large file support flags to use, and
+ on Linux systems for finding out if we have an NPTL thread library or
+ not.
+
+### Cross System Root Locations ###
+
+* `erl_xcomp_sysroot` - The absolute path to the system root of the cross
+ compilation environment. Currently, the `crypto`, `odbc`, `ssh` and
+ `ssl` applications need the system root. These applications will be
+ skipped if the system root has not been set. The system root might be
+ needed for other things too. If this is the case and the system root
+ has not been set, `configure` will fail and request you to set it.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_isysroot` - The absolute path to the system root for includes
+ of the cross compilation environment. If not set, this value defaults
+ to `$erl_xcomp_sysroot`, i.e., only set this value if the include system
+ root path is not the same as the system root path.
+
+### Optional Feature, and Bug Tests ###
+
+These tests cannot (always) be done automatically when cross compiling. You
+usually do not need to set these variables.
+
+> *WARNING*: Setting these variables wrong may cause hard to detect
+> runtime errors. If you need to change these values, *really* make sure
+> that the values are correct.
+
+> *NOTE*: Some of these values will override results of tests performed
+> by `configure`, and some will not be used until `configure` is sure that
+> it cannot figure the result out.
+
+The `configure` script will issue a warning when a default value is used.
+When a variable has been set, no warning will be issued.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_after_morecore_hook` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no`. If `yes`,
+ the target system must have a working `__after_morecore_hook` that can be
+ used for tracking used `malloc()` implementations core memory usage.
+ This is currently only used by unsupported features.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_bigendian` - `yes|no`. No default. If `yes`, the target system
+ must be big endian. If `no`, little endian. This can often be
+ automatically detected, but not always. If not automatically detected,
+ `configure` will fail unless this variable is set. Since no default
+ value is used, `configure` will try to figure this out automatically.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_clock_gettime_cpu_time` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no`. If `yes`,
+ the target system must have a working `clock_gettime()` implementation
+ that can be used for retrieving process CPU time.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_getaddrinfo` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no`. If `yes`, the target
+ system must have a working `getaddrinfo()` implementation that can
+ handle both IPv4 and IPv6.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_gethrvtime_procfs_ioctl` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no`. If `yes`,
+ the target system must have a working `gethrvtime()` implementation and
+ is used with procfs `ioctl()`.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_dlsym_brk_wrappers` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no`. If `yes`, the
+ target system must have a working `dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, <S>)` implementation
+ that can be used on `brk` and `sbrk` symbols used by the `malloc()`
+ implementation in use, and by this track the `malloc()` implementations
+ core memory usage. This is currently only used by unsupported features.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_kqueue` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no`. If `yes`, the target
+ system must have a working `kqueue()` implementation that returns a file
+ descriptor which can be used by `poll()` and/or `select()`. If `no` and
+ the target system has not got `epoll()` or `/dev/poll`, the kernel-poll
+ feature will be disabled.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_linux_clock_gettime_correction` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `yes` on
+ Linux; otherwise, `no`. If `yes`, `clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, _)` on
+ the target system must work. This variable is recommended to be set to
+ `no` on Linux systems with kernel versions less than 2.6.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_linux_nptl` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `yes` on Linux; otherwise,
+ `no`. If `yes`, the target system must have NPTL (Native POSIX Thread
+ Library). Older Linux systems have LinuxThreads instead of NPTL (Linux
+ kernel versions typically less than 2.6).
+
+* `erl_xcomp_linux_usable_sigaltstack` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `yes` on Linux;
+ otherwise, `no`. If `yes`, `sigaltstack()` must be usable on the target
+ system. `sigaltstack()` on Linux kernel versions less than 2.4 are
+ broken.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_linux_usable_sigusrx` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `yes`. If `yes`,
+ the `SIGUSR1` and `SIGUSR2` signals must be usable by the ERTS. Old
+ LinuxThreads thread libraries (Linux kernel versions typically less than
+ 2.2) used these signals and made them unusable by the ERTS.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_poll` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no` on Darwin/MacOSX; otherwise,
+ `yes`. If `yes`, the target system must have a working `poll()`
+ implementation that also can handle devices. If `no`, `select()` will be
+ used instead of `poll()`.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_putenv_copy` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no`. If `yes`, the target
+ system must have a `putenv()` implementation that stores a copy of the
+ key/value pair.
+
+* `erl_xcomp_reliable_fpe` - `yes|no`. Defaults to `no`. If `yes`, the target
+ system must have reliable floating point exceptions.
+
+Copyright and License
+---------------------
+
+%CopyrightBegin%
+
+Copyright Ericsson AB 2009-2010. All Rights Reserved.
+
+The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
+Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
+compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
+Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
+retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+
+Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
+basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
+the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
+under the License.
+
+%CopyrightEnd%
+
+Modifying This Document
+-----------------------
+
+Before modifying this document you need to have a look at the
+[$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md][] document.
+
+
+
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL.md]: INSTALL.md
+ [Building in Git]: INSTALL.md#How-to-Build-and-Install-ErlangOTP_Building-in-Git
+ [How to Build the Documentation]: INSTALL.md#The-ErlangOTP-Documentation_How-to-Build-the-Documentation
+ [cross configuration variables]: #Currently-Used-Configuration-Variables
+ [DESTDIR]: http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/DESTDIR.html
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md]: MARKDOWN.md
+
+ [?TOC]: true
diff --git a/HOWTO/INSTALL-WIN32.md b/HOWTO/INSTALL-WIN32.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..94d3688f23
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HOWTO/INSTALL-WIN32.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1047 @@
+How to Build Erlang/OTP on Windows
+==================================
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+This file describes how to build the Erlang emulator and the OTP
+libraries on Windows. The instructions apply to versions of Windows
+supporting the Cygwin emulated gnuish environment for Windows or the
+Msys ditto. We've built on the following platforms: Windows 2003
+server, Windows XP Home/Professional, Windows Vista and Windows 7 (32
+and 64 bit). You can probably build on Windows 2000, but you will not
+be able to install the latest Microsoft SDK, so you have to go back to
+some earlier compiler. Any Windows95'ish platform will surely get you
+into trouble, what I'm not sure of, but it certainly will...
+
+The procedure described uses either Cygwin or Msys as a build
+environment, you run the bash shell in Cygwin/Msys and use gnu
+make/configure/autoconf etc to do the build. The emulator C-source
+code is, however, mostly compiled with Microsoft Visual C++â„¢,
+producing a native Windows binary. This is the same procedure as we
+use to build the pre-built binaries. The fact that we use VC++ and not
+gcc is explained further in the FAQ section.
+
+I describe the build procedure to make it possible for open source
+customers to build the emulator, given that they have the needed
+tools. The binary Windows releases is still a preferred alternative if
+one does not have Microsoft's development tools and/or don't want to
+install Cygwin or Msys.
+
+To use Cygwin/Msys, one needs basic experience from a Unix environment, if
+one does not know how to set environment variables, run programs etc
+in a Unix environment, one will be quite lost in the Cygwin os Msys
+ditto. I can unfortunately not teach all the world how to use
+Cygwin and bash, neither how to install Cygwin nor perform basic tasks
+on a computer. Please refer to other documentation on the net for
+help, or use the binary release instead if you have problems using the
+tools.
+
+However, if you feel comfortable with the environment and build
+system, and have all the necessary tools, you have a great opportunity
+to make the Erlang/OTP distribution for Windows better. Please submit
+any suggestions and patches to the appropriate [mailing lists] [1] to let
+them find their way into the next version of Erlang. If making changes
+to the build system (like makefiles etc) please bear in mind that the
+same makefiles are used on Unix/VxWorks, so that your changes
+don't break other platforms. That of course goes for C-code too, system
+specific code resides in the `$ERL_TOP/erts/emulator/sys/win32` and
+`$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32` directories mostly. The
+`$ERL_TOP/erts/emulator/beam` directory is for common code.
+
+Before the R9C release of Erlang/OTP, the Windows release was built
+partly on a Unix (Solaris) box and partly on a Windows box, using Perl
+hacks to communicate and sync between the two machines. R9C was the
+first release ever built solely on Windows, where no Unix machine is
+needed at all. Now we've used this build procedure for a couple of
+releases, and it has worked fine for us. Still, there might be all
+sorts of troubles on different machines and with different
+setups. I'll try to give hints wherever I've encountered difficulties,
+but please share your experiences by using the [erlang-questions] [1]
+mailing list. I cannot of course help everyone with all
+their problems, please try to solve the problems and submit
+solutions/workarounds. Remember, it's all about sharing, not about
+demanding...
+
+Starting with R15B, our build system runs both on Cygwin and Msys
+(MinGW's fork of an early cygwin version). Msys is a smaller package
+to install and may on some machines run slightly faster. If Cygwin
+gives you trouble, try Msys instead, and v.v. Beginning with R15B
+there is also a native 64bit version of Erlang for 64bit Windows 7
+(only). These instructions apply to both the 32bit VM and the 64bit
+ditto.
+
+Note that even if you build a 64bit VM, most of the directories and
+files involved are still named win32. You can view the name win32 as
+meaning any windows version not beeing 16bit. A few occurences of the
+name Win64 are however present in the system, for example the
+installation file for a 64 bit windows version of Erlang is by default
+named `otp_win64_<version>.exe`.
+
+Lets go then, I'll start with a little FAQ, based on in house questions
+and misunderstandings.
+
+
+Frequently Asked Questions
+--------------------------
+
+* Q: So, now I can build Erlang using GCC on Windows?
+
+ A: No, unfortunately not. You'll need Microsoft's Visual C++
+ still, a Bourne-shell script (cc.sh) wraps the Visual C++ compiler
+ and runs it from within the Cygwin environment. All other tools
+ needed to build Erlang are free-ware/open source, but not the C
+ compiler. The Windows SDK is however enough to build Erlang, you
+ do not need to buy Visual C++, just download the SDK (SDK version
+ 7.1 == Visual studio 2010).
+
+* Q: Why haven't you got rid of VC++ then, you \*\*\*\*\*\*?
+
+ A: Well, partly because it's a good compiler - really! Actually it's
+ been possible in late R11-releases to build using mingw instead of
+ visual C++ (you might see the remnants of that in some scripts and
+ directories). Unfortunately the development of the SMP version for
+ Windows broke the mingw build and we chose to focus on the VC++ build
+ as the performance has been much better in the VC++ versions. The
+ mingw build will possibly be back, but as long as VC++ gives better
+ performance, the commercial build will be a VC++ one.
+
+* Q: OK, you need VC++, but now you've started to demand a very recent
+ (and expensive) version of Visual studio, not the old and stable VC++
+ 6.0 that was used in earlier versions. Why?
+
+ A: Well, it's not expensive, it's free (as in free beer). Just
+ download and install the latest Windows SDK from Microsoft and all
+ the tools you need are there. The included debugger (WinDbg) is
+ also quite usable, it's what I used when porting Erlang to 64bit
+ Windows. Another reason to use the latest Microsoft compilers is
+ DLL compatibility. DLL's using a new version of the standard
+ library might not load if the VM is compiled with an old VC++
+ version, why we should aim to use the latest freely available SDK
+ and compiler.
+
+* Q: Can/will I build a Cygwin binary with the procedure you describe?
+
+ A: No, the result will be a pure Windows binary, and as far as I know,
+ it's not possible to make a Cygwin binary yet. That is of course
+ something desirable, but there are still some problems with the
+ dynamic linking (dynamic Erlang driver loading) as well as the TCP/IP
+ emulation in Cygwin, which, I'm sure of, will improve, but still has
+ some problems. Fixing those problems might be easy or might be hard.
+ I suggest you try yourself and share your experience. No one would be
+ happier if a simple `./configure && make` would produce a fully fledged
+ Cygwin binary. Ericsson does however not pay me to do a Cygwin port, so
+ such a port would have to happen in spare time, which is a limited
+ resource...
+
+* Q: Hah, I saw you, you used GCC even though you said you didn't!
+
+ A: OK, I admit, one of the files is compiled using Cygwin's or
+ MinGW's GCC and the resulting object code is then converted to MS
+ VC++ compatible coff using a small C hack. It's because that
+ particular file, `beam_emu.c` benefits immensely from being able
+ to use the GCC labels-as-values extension, which boosts emulator
+ performance by up to 50%. That does unfortunately not (yet) mean
+ that all of OTP could be compiled using GCC, that particular
+ source code does not do anything system specific and actually is
+ adopted to the fact that GCC is used to compile it on Windows.
+
+* Q: So now there's a MS VC++ project file somewhere and I can build OTP
+ using the nifty VC++ GUI?
+
+ A: No, never. The hassle of keeping the project files up to date and
+ do all the steps that constitute an OTP build from within the VC++ GUI
+ is simply not worth it, maybe even impossible. A VC++ project
+ file for Erlang/OTP will never happen, at least I will never make
+ one. Clicking around in super-multi-tab'd dialogs to add a file or
+ compiler option when it's so much easier in a makefile is simply not
+ my style.
+
+* Q: So how does it all work then?
+
+ A: Cygwin or Msys is the environment, which closely resembles the
+ environments found on any Unix machine. It's almost like you had a
+ virtual Unix machine inside Windows. Configure, given certain
+ parameters, then creates makefiles that are used by the
+ Cygwin/Msys gnu-make to built the system. Most of the actual
+ compilers etc are not, however, Cygwin/Msys tools, so I've written
+ a couple of wrappers (Bourne-shell scripts), which reside in
+ `$ERL_TOP/etc/win32/cygwin_tools` and
+ `$ERL_TOP/etc/win32/msys_tools`. They all do conversion of
+ parameters and switches common in the Unix environment to fit the
+ native Windows tools. Most notable is of course the paths, which
+ in Cygwin/Msys are Unix-like paths with "forward slashes" (/) and
+ no drive letters, the Cygwin specific command `cygpath` is used
+ for most of the path conversions in a Cygwin environment, other
+ tools are used (when needed) in the corresponding Msys
+ environment. Luckily most compilers accept forward slashes instead
+ of backslashes as path separators, but one still have to get the drive
+ letters etc right, though. The wrapper scripts are not general in
+ the sense that, for example, cc.sh would understand and translates
+ every possible gcc option and passes correct options to
+ cl.exe. The principle is that the scripts are powerful enough to
+ allow building of Erlang/OTP, no more, no less. They might need
+ extensions to cope with changes during the development of Erlang,
+ that's one of the reasons I made them into shell-scripts and not
+ Perl-scripts, I believe they are easier to understand and change
+ that way. I might be wrong though, cause another reason I didn't
+ write them in Perl is because I've never liked Perl and my Perl
+ code is no pleasant reading...
+
+ In `$ERL_TOP`, there is a script called `otp_build`. That script handles
+ the hassle of giving all the right parameters to `configure`/`make` and
+ also helps you set up the correct environment variables to work with
+ the Erlang source under Cygwin.
+
+* Q: You use and need Cygwin, but then you haven't taken the time to
+ port Erlang to the Cygwin environment but instead focus on your
+ commercial release, is that really ethical?
+
+ A: No, not really, but see this as a step in the right direction. I'm
+ aiming at GCC compiled emulators and a Cygwin version, but I really
+ need to do other things as well... In time, but don't hold your
+ breath...
+
+* Q: Can I build something that looks exactly as the commercial release?
+
+ A: Yes, we use the exactly same build procedure.
+
+* Q: Which version of Cygwin/Msys and other tools do you use then?
+
+ A: For Cygwin and Msys alike, we try to use the latest releases
+ available when building. What versions you use shouldn't really
+ matter, I try to include workarounds for the bugs I've found in
+ different Cygwin/Msys releases, please help me add workarounds
+ for new Cygwin/Msys-related bugs as soon as you encounter
+ them. Also please do submit bug reports to the appropriate Cygwin
+ and/or Msys developers. The GCC we used for %OTP-REL% was version
+ 4.7.0 (MinGW 64bit) and 4.3.4 (Cygwin 32bit). We used VC++ 10.0
+ (i.e. Visual studio 2010), Sun's JDK 1.5.0\_17 (32bit) and Sun's
+ JDK 1.7.0\_1 (64bit), NSIS 2.46, and Win32 OpenSSL 0.9.8r. Please
+ read the next section for details on what you need.
+
+* Q: Can you help me setup X in Cygwin?
+
+ A: No, unfortunately I haven't got time to help with Cygwin related
+ user problems, please read Cygwin related web sites, newsgroups and
+ mailing lists.
+
+* Q: Why is the instruction so long? Is it really that complicated?
+
+ A: Partly it's long because I babble too much, partly because I've
+ described as much as I could about the installation of the needed
+ tools. Once the tools are installed, building is quite easy. I also
+ have tried to make this instruction understandable for people with
+ limited Unix experience. Cygwin/Msys is a whole new environment to some
+ Windows users, why careful explanation of environment variables etc
+ seemed to be in place. The short story, for the experienced and
+ impatient is:
+
+ * Get and install complete Cygwin (latest) or complete MinGW with msys
+
+ * Install Microsofts Windows SDK 7.1 (and .Net 4)
+
+ * Get and install Sun's JDK 1.5.0 or higher
+
+ * Get and install NSIS 2.01 or higher (up to 2.46 tried and working)
+
+ * Get, build and install OpenSSL 0.9.8r or higher (up to 1.0.0a
+ tried & working) with static libs.
+
+ * Get the Erlang source distribution (from
+ <http://www.erlang.org/download.html>) and unpack with Cygwin's `tar`.
+
+ * Set `ERL_TOP` to where you unpacked the source distribution
+
+ * `$ cd $ERL_TOP`
+
+ * Get (from <http://www.erlang.org/download/tcltk85_win32_bin.tar.gz>)
+ and unpack the prebuilt TCL/TK binaries for windows with cygwin tar,
+ standing in `$ERL_TOP`
+
+ * Modify PATH and other environment variables so that all these tools
+ are runnable from a bash shell. Still standing in `$ERL_TOP`, issue
+ the following commands:
+
+ $ eval `./otp_build env_win32`
+ $ ./otp_build autoconf
+ $ ./otp_build configure
+ $ ./otp_build boot -a
+ $ ./otp_build release -a
+ $ ./otp_build installer_win32
+ $ release/win32/otp_win32_%OTP-REL% /S
+
+ Voila! `Start->Programs->Erlang OTP %OTP-REL%->Erlang` starts the Erlang
+ Windows shell.
+
+
+Tools you Need and Their Environment
+------------------------------------
+
+You need some tools to be able to build Erlang/OTP on Windows. Most
+notably you'll need Cygwin or Msys and Microsofts Windows SDK, but
+you also might want a Java compiler, the NSIS install system and
+OpenSSL. Well' here's the list:
+
+* Cygwin, the very latest is usually best. Get all the development
+ tools and of course all the basic ditto. In fact getting the complete
+ package might be a good idea, as you'll start to love Cygwin after a
+ while if you're accustomed to Unix. Make sure to get jar and also make
+ sure *not* to install a Cygwin'ish Java... The Cygwin jar command is
+ used but Sun's Java compiler and virtual machine...
+
+ If you are going to build a 64bit Windows version, you should make
+ sure to get MinGW's 64bit gcc installed with cygwin. It's in one of
+ the development packages.
+
+ URL: <http://www.cygwin.com>
+
+ Get the installer from the web site and use that to install
+ Cygwin. Be sure to have fair privileges. If you're on a NT domain you
+ should consider running `mkpasswd -d` and `mkgroup -d` after the
+ installation to get the user databases correct. See their respective
+ manual pages.
+
+ When you start you first bash shell, you will get an awful prompt. You
+ might also have a `PATH` environment variable that contains backslashes
+ and such. Edit `$HOME/.profile` and `$HOME/.bashrc` to set fair prompts
+ and set a correct PATH. Also do a `export SHELL` in `.profile`. For some
+ non-obvious reason the environment variable `$SHELL` is not exported in
+ bash. Also note that `.profile` is run at login time and `.bashrc` when
+ sub shells are created. You'll need to explicitly source `.bashrc` from
+ `.profile` if you want the commands there to be run at login time (like
+ setting up aliases, shell functions and the like). I personally
+ usually do like this at the end of `.profile`:
+
+ ENV=$HOME/.bashrc
+ export ENV
+ . $ENV
+
+ You might also, if you're a hard core type of person at least, want to
+ setup X-windows (XFree86), that might be as easy as running startx
+ from the command prompt and it might be much harder. Use Google to
+ find help...
+
+ If you don't use X-windows, you might want to setup the Windows
+ console window by selecting properties in the console system menu
+ (upper left corner of the window, the Cygwin icon in the title
+ bar). Especially setting a larger screen buffer size (lines) is useful
+ as it gets you a scrollbar so you can see whatever error messages
+ that might appear...
+
+ If you want to use (t)csh instead of bash you're on your own, I
+ haven't tried and know of no one that has. I expect
+ that you use bash in all shell examples.
+
+* Alternatively you download MinGW and Msys. You'll find the latest
+ installer at:
+
+ URL: <http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/Installer/mingw-get-inst/>
+
+ Make sure to install everything they've got.
+
+ To be able to build the 64bit VM, you will also need the 64bit
+ MinGW compiler from:
+
+ URL: <http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw-w64/files/Toolchains%20targetting%20Win64/Automated%20Builds/>
+
+ The latest version should do it. Make sure you download the
+ `mingw-w64-bin_i686-mingw_<something>.zip`, not a linux
+ version. You unzip the package on top of your MinGW installation
+ (`c:\MinGW`) and that's it.
+
+ Setting up your environment in Msys is similar to setting it up in
+ Cygwin.
+
+* Microsofts Windows SDK version 7.1 (corresponding to VC++ 10.0 and
+ Visual Studio 2010). You'll find it here:
+
+ URL: <http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=8279>
+
+ but before you install that, you need to have .Net 4 installed,
+ you'll find that here:
+
+ URL: <http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=17851>
+
+ Use the web installer for the SDK, at least when I tried
+ downloading the whole package as an image, I got SDK 7.0 instead,
+ which is not what you want...
+
+ There will be a Windows command file in `%PROGRAMFILES%\Mirosoft
+ SDKs\Windows\v7.1\Bin\SetEnv.cmd` that set's the appropriate
+ environment for a Windows command prompt. This is not appropriate
+ for bash, so you'll need to convert it to bash-style environments
+ by editing your `.bash_profile`. In my case, where the SDK is
+ installed in the default directory and `%PROGRAMFILES%` is
+ `C:\Program Files`, the commands for setting up a 32bit build
+ environment (on a 64bit or 32bit machine) look like this (in cygwin):
+
+ # Some common paths
+ C_DRV=/cygdrive/c
+ PRG_FLS=$C_DRV/Program\ Files
+
+ # nsis
+ NSIS_BIN=$PRG_FLS/NSIS
+ # java
+ JAVA_BIN=$PRG_FLS/Java/jdk1.6.0_16/bin
+
+ ##
+ ## MS SDK
+ ##
+
+ CYGWIN=nowinsymlinks
+ MVS10="$PRG_FILES/Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0"
+ WIN_MVS10="C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0"
+ SDK10="$PRG_FILES/Microsoft SDKs/Windows/v7.1"
+ WIN_SDK10="C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft SDKs\\Windows\\v7.1"
+
+ PATH="$NSIS_BIN:\
+ $MVS10/Common7/IDE:\
+ $MVS10/Common7/Tools:\
+ $MVS10/VC/Bin:\
+ $MVS10/VC/Bin/VCPackages:\
+ $SDK10/Bin/NETFX 4.0 Tools:\
+ $SDK10/Bin:\
+ /usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:\
+ /cygdrive/c/WINDOWS/system32:/cygdrive/c/WINDOWS:\
+ /cygdrive/c/WINDOWS/system32/Wbem:\
+ $JAVA_BIN"
+
+ LIBPATH="$WIN_MVS10\\VC\\LIB"
+
+ LIB="$WIN_MVS10\\VC\\LIB;$WIN_SDK10\\LIB"
+
+ INCLUDE="$WIN_MVS10\\VC\\INCLUDE;$WIN_SDK10\\INCLUDE;$WIN_SDK10\\INCLUDE\\gl"
+
+ export CYGWIN PATH LIBPATH LIB INCLUDE
+
+ If you're using Msys instead, the only thing you need to change is
+ the `C_DRV` setting, which would read:
+
+ C_DRV=/c
+
+ And of course you might need to change `C:\Program Files` etc if
+ you're using a non-english version of Windows (XP). Note that in
+ later versions of Windows, the national adoptions of the program
+ files directories etc are not on the file system but only in the
+ explorer, so even if explorer says that your programs reside in
+ e.g. `C:\Program`, they might still reside in `C:\Program Files`
+ in reality...
+
+ If you are building a 64 bit version of Erlang, you should set up
+ PATHs etc a little differently. I use the following script to
+ make things work in both Cygwin and Msys:
+
+ make_winpath()
+ {
+ P=$1
+ if [ "$IN_CYGWIN" = "true" ]; then
+ cygpath -d "$P"
+ else
+ (cd "$P" && /bin/cmd //C "for %i in (".") do @echo %~fsi")
+ fi
+ }
+
+ make_upath()
+ {
+ P=$1
+ if [ "$IN_CYGWIN" = "true" ]; then
+ cygpath "$P"
+ else
+ echo "$P" | /bin/sed 's,^\([a-zA-Z]\):\\,/\L\1/,;s,\\,/,g'
+ fi
+ }
+
+ # Some common paths
+ if [ -x /usr/bin/msysinfo ]; then
+ # Without this the path conversion won't work
+ COMSPEC='C:\Windows\SysWOW64\cmd.exe'
+ MSYSTEM=MINGW32
+ export MSYSTEM COMSPEC
+ IN_CYGWIN=false
+ else
+ CYGWIN=nowinsymlinks
+ export CYGWIN
+ IN_CYGWIN=true
+ fi
+
+ if [ "$IN_CYGWIN" = "true" ]; then
+ PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin:\
+ /cygdrive/c/windows/system32:/cygdrive/c/windows:/cygdrive/c/windows/system32/Wbem
+ else
+ PATH=/usr/local/bin:/mingw/bin:/bin:/c/Windows/system32:/c/Windows:\
+ /c/Windows/System32/Wbem
+ fi
+
+ if [ "$IN_CYGWIN" = "true" ]; then
+ C_DRV=/cygdrive/c
+ else
+ C_DRV=/c
+ fi
+
+ PRG_FLS64=$C_DRV/Program\ Files
+ PRG_FLS32=$C_DRV/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)
+ VISUAL_STUDIO_ROOT32=$PRG_FLS32/Microsoft\ Visual\ Studio\ 10.0
+ MS_SDK_ROOT64=$PRG_FLS64/Microsoft\ SDKs/Windows/v7.1
+
+ # Okay, now mangle the paths and get rid of spaces by using short names
+ WIN_VCROOT32=`make_winpath "$VISUAL_STUDIO_ROOT32"`
+ VCROOT32=`make_upath $WIN_VCROOT32`
+ WIN_SDKROOT64=`make_winpath "$MS_SDK_ROOT64"`
+ SDKROOT64=`make_upath $WIN_SDKROOT64`
+ WIN_PROGRAMFILES32=`make_winpath "$PRG_FLS32"`
+ PROGRAMFILES32=`make_upath $WIN_PROGRAMFILES32`
+
+ WIN_PROGRAMFILES64=`make_winpath "$PRG_FLS64"`
+ PROGRAMFILES64=`make_upath $WIN_PROGRAMFILES64`
+
+ # nsis
+ NSIS_BIN=$PROGRAMFILES32/NSIS
+ # java
+ JAVA_BIN=$PROGRAMFILES64/Java/jdk1.7.0_01/bin
+
+ ## The PATH variable should be Unix'ish
+ VCPATH=$VCROOT32/Common7/IDE:$VCROOT32/VC/BIN/amd64:$VCROOT32/Common7/Tools:\
+ $VCROOT32/VC/VCPackages:$SDKROOT64/bin/NETFX4~1.0TO/x64:$SDKROOT64/bin/x64:\
+ $SDKROOT64/bin
+
+ ## Microsoft SDK libs
+
+ LIBPATH=$WIN_VCROOT32\\VC\\LIB\\amd64
+ LIB=$WIN_VCROOT32\\VC\\LIB\\amd64\;$WIN_SDKROOT64\\LIB\\X64
+ INCLUDE=$WIN_VCROOT32\\VC\\INCLUDE\;$WIN_SDKROOT64\\include\;\
+ $WIN_SDKROOT64\\include\\gl
+
+ # Put nsis, c compiler and java in path
+ PATH=$NSIS_BIN:$VCPATH:$PATH:$JAVA_BIN
+
+ # Make sure LIB and INCLUDE is available for others
+ export PATH LIBPATH LIB INCLUDE
+
+ All this is derived from the SetEnv.cmd command file mentioned
+ earlier. The bottom line is to set the PATH so that NSIS and
+ Microsoft SDK is found before the Msys/Cygwin tools and that Java
+ is last in the PATH.
+
+ Make a simple hello world (maybe one that prints out
+ `sizeof(void *)`) and try to compile it with the `cl` command from within
+ bash. If that does not work, your environment needs fixing. Also
+ remember to fix up the PATH environment, especially old Erlang
+ installations might have inserted quoted paths that Cygwin/Msys
+ does not understand. Remove or correct such paths. There should be
+ no backslashes in your path environment variable in Cygwin bash,
+ but LIB and INCLUDE should contain Windows style paths with
+ semicolon, drive letters and backslashes.
+
+* Sun's Java JDK 1.5.0 or higher. Our Java code (jinterface, ic) is
+ written for JDK 1.5.0. Get it for Windows and install it, the JRE is
+ not enough. If you don't care about Java, you can skip this step, the
+ result will be that jinterface is not built.
+
+ URL: <http://java.sun.com>
+
+ Add javac *LAST* to your path environment in bash, in my case this means:
+
+ `PATH="$PATH:/cygdrive/c/Program Files/Java/jdk1.5.0_17/bin"`
+
+ No `CLASSPATH` or anything is needed. Type `javac` at the bash prompt
+ and you should get a list of available Java options. Make sure by
+ typing `type java` that you use the Java you installed. Note however that
+ Cygwin's `jar.exe` is used, that's why the JDK bin-directory should be
+ added last in the `PATH`.
+
+* Nullsoft NSIS installer system. You need this to build the self
+ installing package. It's a free open source installer that's much
+ nicer to use than the commercial Wise and Install shield
+ installers. This is the installer we use for commercial releases as
+ well from R9C an on.
+
+ URL: <http://www.nullsoft.com/free/nsis>
+
+ Install the lot, especially the modern user interface components, as
+ it's definitely needed. Put `makensis` in your path, in my case:
+
+ PATH=/cygdrive/c/Program\ Files/NSIS:$PATH
+
+ type makensis at the bash prompt and you should get a list of options
+ if everything is OK.
+
+* OpenSSL. This is if you want the SSL and crypto applications to
+ compile (and run). There are prebuilt binaries available, but I
+ strongly recommend building this yourself. It's quite easy.
+
+ First get the source from
+
+ URL: <http://openssl.org/source/>
+
+ I would recommend using 0.9.8r.
+
+ Download the tar file and unpack it (using your bash prompt) into
+ a directory of your choise.
+
+ You will need a Windowish Perl for the build. ActiveState has one:
+
+ URL: <http://www.activestate.com/activeperl/downloads>
+
+ Download and install that. Disable options to associate it with
+ the .pl suffix and/or adding things to PATH, they are not needed.
+
+ Now fire up the Microsoft Windows SDK command prompt in RELEASE
+ mode for the architecture you are going to build. The easiest is
+ to copy the shortcut from the SDKs start menu item and edit the
+ command line in the shortcut (Right click->Properties) to end with
+ `/Release`. Make sure the banner when you double click your
+ shortcut (the text in the resulting command window) says
+ `Targeting Windows XP x64 Release` if you are going to do a 64 bit
+ build and `Targeting Windows XP x86 Release` if you are building a
+ 32 bit version.
+
+ Now cd to where you unpacked the OpenSSL source using your Release
+ Windows command prompt (it should be on the same drive as where
+ you are going to install it if everything is to work smothly).
+
+ C:\> cd <some dir>
+
+ Add ActiveState (or some other windows perl, not cygwins) to your PATH:
+
+ C:\...\> set PATH=C:\Perl\bin;%PATH%
+
+ Or if you installed the 64bit perl:
+
+ C:\...\> set PATH=C:\Perl64\bin;%PATH%
+
+ Configure OpenSSL for 32 bit:
+
+ C:\...\> perl Configure VC-WIN32 --prefix=/OpenSSL
+
+ Or for 64 bit:
+
+ C:\...\> perl Configure VC-WIN64A --prefix=/OpenSSL-Win64
+
+ Do some setup (for 32 bit):
+
+ C:\...\> ms\do_ms
+
+ The same for 64 bit:
+
+ C:\...\> ms\do_win64a
+
+ Then build static libraries and install:
+
+ C:\...\> nmake -f ms\nt.mak
+ C:\...\> nmake -f ms\nt.mak install
+
+ That's it - you now have your perfectly consistent static build of
+ openssl. If you want to get rid of any possibly patented
+ algorithms in the lib, just read up on the OpenSSL FAQ and follow
+ the instructions.
+
+ The installation locations chosen are where configure will look
+ for OpenSSL, so try to keep them as is.
+
+* Building with wxWidgets. Download wxWidgets-2.8.9 or higher patch
+ release (2.9.\* is a developer release which currently does not work
+ with wxErlang).
+
+ Install or unpack it to `DRIVE:/PATH/cygwin/opt/local/pgm`.
+
+ edit: `C:\cygwin\opt\local\pgm\wxMSW-2.8.11\include\wx\msw\setup.h`
+ enable `wxUSE_GLCANVAS`, `wxUSE_POSTSCRIPT` and `wxUSE_GRAPHICS_CONTEXT`
+
+ build: From a command prompt with the VC tools available (See the
+ instructions for OpenSSL build above for help on starting the
+ proper command prompt in RELEASE mode):
+
+ C:\...\> cd C:\cygwin\opt\local\pgm\wxMSW-2.8.11\build\msw
+ C:\...\> nmake BUILD=release SHARED=0 UNICODE=1 USE_OPENGL=1 USE_GDIPLUS=1 DIR_SUFFIX_CPU= -f makefile.vc
+ C:\...\> cd C:\cygwin\opt\local\pgm\wxMSW-2.8.11\contrib\build\stc
+ C:\...\> nmake BUILD=release SHARED=0 UNICODE=1 USE_OPENGL=1 USE_GDIPLUS=1 DIR_SUFFIX_CPU= -f makefile.vc
+
+ Or - if building a 64bit version:
+
+ C:\...\> cd C:\cygwin\opt\local\pgm\wxMSW-2.8.11\build\msw
+ C:\...\> nmake TARGET_CPU=amd64 BUILD=release SHARED=0 UNICODE=1 USE_OPENGL=1 USE_GDIPLUS=1 DIR_SUFFIX_CPU= -f makefile.vc
+ C:\...\> cd C:\cygwin\opt\local\pgm\wxMSW-2.8.11\contrib\build\stc
+ C:\...\> nmake TARGET_CPU=amd64 BUILD=release SHARED=0 UNICODE=1 USE_OPENGL=1 USE_GDIPLUS=1 DIR_SUFFIX_CPU= -f makefile.vc
+
+* The Erlang source distribution (from <http://www.erlang.org/download.html>).
+ The same as for Unix platforms. Preferably use tar from within Cygwin to
+ unpack the source tar.gz (`tar zxf otp_src_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz`).
+
+ set the environment `ERL_TOP` to point to the root directory of the
+ source distribution. Let's say I stood in `$HOME/src` and unpacked
+ `otp_src_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz`, I then add the following to `.profile`:
+
+ ERL_TOP=$HOME/src/otp_src_%OTP-REL%
+ export $ERL_TOP
+
+* The TCL/TK binaries. You could compile Tcl/Tk for windows yourself,
+ but you can get a stripped down version from our website which is
+ suitable to include in the final binary package. If you want to supply
+ tcl/tk yourself, read the instructions about how the tcl/tk tar file
+ used in the build is constructed under `$ERL_TOP/lib/gs/tcl`. The easy
+ way is to download <http://www.erlang.org/download/tcltk85_win32_bin.tar.gz>
+ and unpack it standing in the `$ERL_TOP` directory. This will create the
+ file `win32.tar.gz` in `$ERL_TOP/lib/gs/tcl/binaries`.
+
+ One last alternative is to create a file named `SKIP` in the
+ `$ERL_TOP/lib/gs/` after configure is run, but that will give you an
+ erlang system without gs (which might be okay as you probably will use
+ wx anyway).
+
+ Note that there is no special 64bit version of TCL/TK needed, you
+ can use the 32bit program even for a 64bit build.
+
+The Shell Environment
+---------------------
+
+So, if you have followed the instructions above, when you start a bash
+shell, you should have an INCLUDE environment with a Windows style
+path, a LIB environment variable also in Windows style, and finally a
+PATH that let's you reach cl, makensis, javac etc from the
+command prompt (use `which cl` etc to verify from bash).
+
+You should also have an `ERL_TOP` environment variable that is *Cygwin
+style*, and points to a directory containing, among other files, the
+script `otp_build`.
+
+A final massage of the environment is needed, and that is done by
+the script `$ERL_TOP/otp_build`. Start bash and do the following, note
+the "back-ticks" (\`), can be quite hard to get on some keyboards, but
+pressing the back-tick key followed by the space bar might do it...
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+ $ eval `./otp_build env_win32`
+
+If you're unable to produce back-ticks on your keyboard, you can use
+the ksh variant:
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+ $ eval $(./otp_build env_win32)
+
+If you are building a 64 bit version, you supply `otp_build` with an architecture parameter:
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+ $ eval `./otp_build env_win32 x64`
+
+
+This should do the final touch to the environment and building should
+be easy after this. You could run `./otp_build env_win32` without
+`eval` just to see what it does, and to see that the environment it
+sets seems OK. The path is cleaned of spaces if possible (using DOS
+style short names instead), the variables `OVERRIDE_TARGET`, `CC`, `CXX`,
+`AR` and `RANLIB` are set to their respective wrappers and the directories
+`$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32/cygwin_tools/vc` and
+`$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32/cygwin_tool` are added first in the PATH.
+
+Try now a `type erlc`. That should result in the erlc wrapper script
+(which does not have the .sh extension, for reasons best kept
+untold...). It should reside in `$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32/cygwin_tools`
+or `$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32/msys_tools`. You could also try `which
+cc.sh`, which `ar.sh` etc.
+
+Now you're ready to build...
+
+
+Building and Installing
+-----------------------
+
+Now it's assumed that you have executed `` eval `./otp_build env_win32` `` or
+`` eval `./otp_build env_win32 x64` `` for this particular shell...
+
+Building is easiest using the `otp_build` script. That script takes care
+of running configure, bootstrapping etc on Windows in a simple
+way. The `otp_build` script is the utility we use ourselves to build on
+different platforms and it therefore contains code for all sorts of
+platforms. The principle is, however, that for non-Unix platforms, one
+uses `./otp_build env_<target>` to set up environment and then the
+script knows how to build on the platform "by itself". You've already
+run `./otp_build env_win32` in the step above, so now it's mostly like
+we build on any platform. OK, here are then steps; Assuming you will
+want to build a full installation executable with NSIS, you can omit
+`<installation directory>` and the release will be copied to
+`$ERL_TOP/release/win32`: and there is where the packed self installing
+executable will reside too.
+
+ $ ./otp_build autoconf # Ignore the warning blob about versions of autoconf
+ $ ./otp_build configure <optional configure options>
+ $ ./otp_build boot -a
+ $ ./otp_build release -a <installation directory>
+ $ ./otp_build installer_win32 <installation directory> # optional
+
+Now you will have a file called `otp_win32_R12B.exe` in the
+`<installation directory>`, i.e. `$ERL_TOP/release/win32`.
+
+Lets get into more detail:
+
+1. `$ ./otp_build autoconf` - This step rebuilds the configure scripts
+ to work correctly in the cygwin environment. In an ideal world, this
+ would not be needed, but alas, we have encountered several
+ incompatibilities between our distributed configure scripts (generated
+ on a Linux platform) and the cygwin environment over the
+ years. Running autoconf on cygwin ensures that the configure scripts
+ are generated in a cygwin-compatible way and that they will work well
+ in the next step.
+
+2. `$ ./otp_build configure` - This runs the newly generated configure
+ scripts with options making configure behave nicely. The target machine
+ type is plainly `win32`, so a lot of the configure-scripts recognize
+ this awkward target name and behave accordingly. The CC variable also
+ makes the compiler be `cc.sh`, which wraps MSVC++, so all configure
+ tests regarding the C compiler gets to run the right compiler. A lot of
+ the tests are not needed on Windows, but I thought it best to run the
+ whole configure anyway. The only configure option you might want to
+ supply is `--with-ssl`, which might be needed if you have built your
+ own OpenSSL distribution. The Shining Lights distribution should be
+ found automatically by `configure`, if that fails, add a
+ `--with-ssl=<dir>` that specifies the root directory of your OpenSSL
+ installation.
+
+3. `$ ./otp_build boot -a` - This uses the bootstrap directory (shipped
+ with the source, `$ERL_TOP/bootstrap`) to build a complete OTP
+ system. It first builds an emulator and sets up a minimal OTP system
+ under `$ERL_TOP/bootstrap`, then starts to compile the different OTP
+ compilers to make the `$ERL_TOP/bootstrap` system potent enough to be
+ able to compile all Erlang code in OTP. Then, all Erlang and C code
+ under `$ERL_TOP/lib` is built using the bootstrap system, giving a
+ complete OTP system (although not installed). When this is done, one
+ can run Erlang from within the source tree, just type `$ERL_TOP/bin/erl`
+ and you should have a prompt. If you omit the -a flag, you'll get a
+ smaller system, that might be useful during development. Now
+ exit from Erlang and start making a release of the thing:
+
+4. `$ ./otp_build release -a` - Builds a commercial release tree from the
+ source tree, default is to put it in `$ERL_TOP/release/win32`, you can
+ give any directory as parameter (Cygwin style), but it doesn't really
+ matter if you're going to build a self extracting installer too. You
+ could of course build release to the final directory and then run
+ `./Install.exe` standing in the directory where the release was put,
+ that will create a fully functional OTP installation. But let's make
+ the nifty installer:
+
+5. `$ ./otp_build installer_win32` - Create the self extracting installer
+ executable. The executable `otp_win32_%OTP-REL%.exe` will be placed
+ in the top directory of the release created in the previous step. If
+ no release directory is specified, the release is expected to have
+ been built to `$ERL_TOP/release/win32`, which also will be the place
+ where the installer executable will be placed. If you specified some
+ other directory for the release (i.e. `./otp_build release -a
+ /tmp/erl_release`), you're expected to give the same parameter here,
+ (i.e. `./otp_build installer_win32 /tmp/erl_release`). You need to have
+ a full NSIS installation and `makensis.exe` in your path for this to
+ work of course. Once you have created the installer, you can run it to
+ install Erlang/OTP in the regular way, just run the executable and
+ follow the steps in the installation wizard. To get all default settings
+ in the installation without any questions asked, you run the executable
+ with the parameter `/S` (capital S) like in:
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+ $ release/win32/otp_win32_%OTP-REL% /S
+ ...
+
+ or
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+ $ release/win32/otp_win64_%OTP-REL% /S
+ ...
+
+
+ and after a while Erlang/OTP-%OTP-REL% will have been installed in
+ `C:\Program Files\erl%ERTS-VSN%\`, with shortcuts in the menu etc.
+
+ The necessary setup of an Erlang installation is actually done by the
+ program `Install.exe`, which resides in the release top. That program
+ creates `.ini`-files and copies the correct boot scripts. If one has
+ the correct directory tree (like after a `./otp_build release -a`), only
+ the running of `Install.exe` is necessary to get a fully functional
+ OTP. What the self extracting installer adds is (of course) the
+ possibility to distribute the binary easily, together with adding
+ shortcuts to the Windows start menu. There is also some adding of
+ entries in the registry, to associate `.erl` and `.beam` files with
+ Erlang and get nifty icons, but that's not something you'll really need
+ to run Erlang. The registry is also used to store uninstall information,
+ but if one has not used the self extracting installer, one cannot
+ (need not) do any uninstall, one just scratches the release directory
+ and everything is gone. Erlang/OTP does not *need* to put anything
+ in the Windows registry at all, and does not if you don't use the self
+ extracting installer. In other words the installer is pure cosmetics.
+
+> *NOTE*: Beginning with R9C, the Windows installer does *not* add Erlang
+> to the system wide path. If one wants to have Erlang in the path, one
+> has to add it by hand.
+
+Development
+-----------
+
+Once the system is built, you might want to change it. Having a test
+release in some nice directory might be useful, but you also can run
+Erlang from within the source tree. The target `local_setup`, makes
+the program `$ERL_TOP/bin/erl.exe` usable and it also uses all the OTP
+libraries in the source tree.
+
+If you hack the emulator, you can then build the emulator executable
+by standing in `$ERL_TOP/erts/emulator` and do a simple
+
+ $ make opt
+
+Note that you need to have run ``(cd $ERL_TOP && eval `./otp_build env_win32`)``
+in the particular shell before building anything on Windows. After
+doing a make opt you can test your result by running `$ERL_TOP/bin/erl`.
+If you want to copy the result to a release directory (say
+`/tmp/erl_release`), you do this (still in `$ERL_TOP/erts/emulator`)
+
+ $ make TESTROOT=/tmp/erl_release release
+
+That will copy the emulator executables.
+
+To make a debug build of the emulator, you need to recompile both
+`beam.dll` (the actual runtime system) and `erlexec.dll`. Do like this
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+ $ rm bin/win32/erlexec.dll
+ $ cd erts/emulator
+ $ make debug
+ $ cd ../etc
+ $ make debug
+
+and sometimes
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+ $ make local_setup
+
+So now when you run `$ERL_TOP/erl.exe`, you should have a debug compiled
+emulator, which you will see if you do a:
+
+ 1> erlang:system_info(system_version).
+
+in the erlang shell. If the returned string contains `[debug]`, you
+got a debug compiled emulator.
+
+To hack the erlang libraries, you simply do a `make opt` in the
+specific "applications" directory, like:
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP/lib/stdlib
+ $ make opt
+
+or even in the source directory...
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP/lib/stdlib/src
+ $ make opt
+
+Note that you're expected o have a fresh Erlang in your path when
+doing this, preferably the plain %OTP-REL% you have built in the previous
+steps. You could also add `$ERL_TOP/bootstrap/bin` to your `PATH` before
+rebuilding specific libraries, that would give you a good enough
+Erlang system to compile any OTP erlang code. Setting up the path
+correctly is a little bit tricky, you still need to have
+`$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32/cygwin_tools/vc` and
+`$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32/cygwin_tools` *before* the actual emulator
+in the path. A typical setting of the path for using the bootstrap
+compiler would be:
+
+ $ export PATH=$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32/cygwin_tools/vc\
+ :$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32/cygwin_tools:$ERL_TOP/bootstrap/bin:$PATH
+
+That should make it possible to rebuild any library without hassle...
+
+If you want to copy a library (an application) newly built, to a
+release area, you do like with the emulator:
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP/lib/stdlib
+ $ make TESTROOT=/tmp/erlang_release release
+
+Remember that:
+
+* Windows specific C-code goes in the `$ERL_TOP/erts/emulator/sys/win32`,
+ `$ERL_TOP/erts/emulator/drivers/win32` or `$ERL_TOP/erts/etc/win32`.
+
+* Windows specific erlang code should be used conditionally and the
+ host OS tested in *runtime*, the exactly same beam files should be
+ distributed for every platform! So write code like:
+
+ case os:type() of
+ {win32,_} ->
+ do_windows_specific();
+ Other ->
+ do_fallback_or_exit()
+ end,
+
+That's basically all you need to get going.
+
+Using GIT
+---------
+
+You might want to check out versions of the source code from GitHUB. That is possible directly in cygwin, but not in Msys. There is a project MsysGIT:
+
+URL:<http://code.google.com/p/msysgit/>
+
+that makes a nice Git port. The msys prompt you get from MsysGIT is
+however not compatible with the full version from MinGW, so you will
+need to check out files using MsysGIT's command prompt and then switch
+to a common Msys command prompt for building. Also all test suites
+cannot be built as MsysGIT/Msys does not handle symbolic links. To
+build test suites on Windows, you will need Cygwin for now. Hopefully
+all symbolic links will disappear from our repository soon and this
+issue will disappear.
+
+Final Words
+-----------
+My hope is that the possibility to build the whole system on Windows
+will open up for free development on this platform too. There are many
+things one might want to do better in the Windows version, like the
+window-style command prompt as well as pure Cygwin porting. Although i
+realize it's a much larger step to start building on Windows (with all
+the software you need) than for instance on Linux, I sincerely hope
+that some of you will make the effort and start submitting Windows
+friendly patches.
+
+The first build system for Erlang using Cygwin on Windows was created
+by Per Bergkvist. I haven't used his build system, but it's rumored to
+be good. The idea to do this came from his work, so credit is well
+deserved.
+
+Of course this would have been completely impossible without the
+excellent Cygwin. The guys at Cygnus solutions and
+Redhat deserve a huge THANKS! as well as all the other people in the
+free software community who have helped in creating the magnificent
+software that constitutes Cygwin.
+
+Also the people developing the alternative command prompt Msys and
+the MinGW compiler are worth huge THANKS! The 64bit port would have
+been impossible without the 64bit MinGW compiler.
+
+Good luck and Happy Hacking,
+Patrik, OTP
+
+Copyright and License
+---------------------
+
+%CopyrightBegin%
+
+Copyright Ericsson AB 2003-2012. All Rights Reserved.
+
+The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
+Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
+compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
+Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
+retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+
+Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
+basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
+the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
+under the License.
+
+%CopyrightEnd%
+
+Modifying This Document
+-----------------------
+
+Before modifying this document you need to have a look at the
+[$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md][] document.
+
+
+
+ [1]: http://www.erlang.org/faq.html "mailing lists"
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md]: MARKDOWN.md
+
+ [?TOC]: true
diff --git a/HOWTO/INSTALL.md b/HOWTO/INSTALL.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..4f7c317a47
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HOWTO/INSTALL.md
@@ -0,0 +1,843 @@
+Building and Installing Erlang/OTP
+==================================
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+This document describes how to build and install Erlang/OTP-%OTP-REL%. You
+are advised to read the whole document before attempting to build and install
+Erlang/OTP. You can find more information about Open Source Erlang/OTP at:
+
+ <http://www.erlang.org/>
+
+The source code for Erlang/OTP can also be found in a Git repository:
+
+ <http://github.com/erlang/otp>
+
+Erlang/OTP should be possible to build from source on any Unix system,
+including Mac OS X. This document describes how to native compile Erlang/OTP
+on Unix. For detailed instructions on how to
+
+* cross compile Erlang/OTP, see the [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL-CROSS.md][]
+ document.
+
+* build Erlang/OTP on Windows, see the [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL-WIN32.md][]
+ document.
+
+ Binary releases for Windows can be found at
+ <http://www.erlang.org/download.html>.
+
+Before reading the above mentioned documents you are in any case advised to
+read this document first, since it covers building Erlang/OTP in general as
+well as other important information.
+
+Daily Build and Test
+--------------------
+At Ericsson we have a "Daily Build and Test" that runs on:
+
+* Solaris 8, 9
+ * Sparc32
+ * Sparc64
+* Solaris 10
+ * Sparc32
+ * Sparc64
+ * x86
+* SuSE Linux/GNU 9.4, 10.1
+ * x86
+* SuSE Linux/GNU 10.0, 10.1, 11.0
+ * x86
+ * x86\_64
+* openSuSE 11.4 (Celadon)
+ * x86\_64 (valgrind)
+* Fedora 7
+ * PowerPC
+* Fedora 14
+ * x86\_64
+* Gentoo Linux/GNU 1.12.11.1
+ * x86
+* Ubuntu Linux/GNU 7.04, 10.04, 10.10, 11.0
+ * x86\_64
+* MontaVista Linux/GNU 4.0.1
+ * PowerPC
+* FreeBSD 8.2
+ * x86
+* OpenBSD 5.0
+ * x86\_64
+* Mac OS X 10.5.8 (Leopard), 10.6.0 (Snow Leopard), 10.7.3 (Lion)
+ * x86
+* Windows XP SP3, 2003, Vista, 7
+ * x86
+* Windows 7
+ * x86\_64
+
+We also have the following "Daily Cross Builds":
+
+* SuSE Linux/GNU 10.1 x86 -> SuSE Linux/GNU 10.1 x86\_64
+* SuSE Linux/GNU 10.1 x86\_64 -> Linux/GNU TILEPro64
+
+and the following "Daily Cross Build Tests":
+
+* SuSE Linux/GNU 10.1 x86\_64
+
+Versions Known NOT to Work
+--------------------------
+
+* Suse linux 9.1 is shipped with a patched GCC version 3.3.3, having the
+ rpm named `gcc-3.3.3-41`. That version has a serious optimization bug
+ that makes it unusable for building the Erlang emulator. Please
+ upgrade GCC to a newer version before building on Suse 9.1. Suse Linux
+ Enterprise edition 9 (SLES9) has `gcc-3.3.3-43` and is not affected.
+
+* `gcc-4.3.0` has a serious optimizer bug. It produces an Erlang emulator
+ that will crash immediately. The bug is supposed to be fixed in
+ `gcc-4.3.1`.
+
+* FreeBSD had a bug which caused `kqueue`/`poll`/`select` to fail to detect
+ that a `writev()` on a pipe has been made. This bug should have been fixed
+ in FreeBSD 6.3 and FreeBSD 7.0. NetBSD and DragonFlyBSD probably have or
+ have had the same bug. More information can be found at:
+
+ * <http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/kern/sys_pipe.c>
+ * <http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2007-September/006790.html>
+
+* `getcwd()` on Solaris 9 can cause an emulator crash. If you have
+ async-threads enabled you can increase the stack size of the
+ async-threads as a temporary workaround. See the `+a` command-line
+ argument in the documentation of `erl(1)`. Without async-threads the
+ emulator is not as vulnerable to this bug, but if you hit it without
+ async-threads the only workaround available is to enable async-threads
+ and increase the stack size of the async-threads. Sun has however
+ released patches that fixes the issue:
+
+ > Problem Description: 6448300 large mnttab can cause stack overrun
+ > during Solaris 9 getcwd
+
+ More information can be found at:
+
+ * <http://sunsolve.sun.com/search/document.do?assetkey=1-21-112874-40-1&searchclause=6448300>
+ * <http://sunsolve.sun.com/search/document.do?assetkey=1-21-114432-29-1&searchclause=6448300>
+
+Required Utilities
+------------------
+
+These are the tools you will need in order to unpack and build Erlang/OTP.
+
+### Unpacking ###
+
+* GNU unzip, or a modern uncompress.
+* A TAR program that understands the GNU TAR format for long filenames
+ (such as GNU TAR).
+
+### Building ###
+
+* GNU `make`
+* `gcc` -- GNU C compiler
+* Perl 5
+* GNU `m4` -- If HiPE (native code) support is enabled. HiPE can be
+ disabled using `--disable-hipe`
+* `ncurses`, `termcap`, or `termlib` -- The development headers and
+ libraries are needed, often known as `ncurses-devel`. Use
+ `--without-termcap` to build without any of these libraries. Note that
+ in this case only the old shell (without any line editing) can be used.
+* OpenSSL -- Optional, but needed for building the Erlang/OTP applications
+ `ssl` and `crypto`. You need the "development package" of OpenSSL, i.e.
+ including the header files. For building the application `ssl` the OpenSSL
+ binary command program `openssl` is also needed. At least version 0.9.8
+ of OpenSSL is required. Can be downloaded from <http://www.openssl.org>.
+* Sun Java jdk-1.5.0 or higher -- Optional but needed for building the
+ Erlang/OTP application `jinterface` and parts of `ic` and `orber`. Can
+ be downloaded from <http://java.sun.com>. We have also tested IBM's
+ JDK 1.5.0.
+* X Windows -- Optional, but development headers and libraries are needed
+ to build the Erlang/OTP application `gs` on Unix/Linux.
+* `sed` -- There seem to be some problems with some of the `sed` version on
+ Solaris. Make sure `/bin/sed` or `/usr/bin/sed` is used on the Solaris
+ platform.
+* `flex` -- Optional, headers and libraries are needed to build the `flex`
+ scanner for the `megaco` application on Unix/Linux.
+
+#### Building Documentation ####
+
+* `xsltproc` -- XSLT processor. A tool for applying XSLT stylesheets
+ to XML documents. Can be downloaded from
+ <http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/xsltproc2.html>.
+* `fop` -- Apache FOP print formatter (requires Java). Can be downloaded
+ from <http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop>.
+
+#### Building in Git ####
+
+* GNU `autoconf` of at least version 2.59. Note that `autoconf` is not
+ needed when building an unmodified version of the released source.
+
+### Installing ###
+
+* An `install` program that can take multiple file names.
+
+How to Build and Install Erlang/OTP
+-----------------------------------
+
+The following instructions are for building [the released source tar ball][].
+
+The variable `$ERL_TOP` will be mentioned a lot of times. It refers to
+the top directory in the source tree. More information about `$ERL_TOP`
+can be found in the [make and $ERL_TOP][] section below. If you are
+building in git you probably want to take a look at the [Building in Git][]
+section below before proceeding.
+
+### Unpacking ###
+
+Step 1: Start by unpacking the Erlang/OTP distribution file with your GNU
+compatible TAR program.
+
+ $ gunzip -c otp_src_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz | tar xf -
+
+alternatively:
+
+ $ zcat otp_src_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz | tar xf -
+
+
+Step 2: Now cd into the base directory (`$ERL_TOP`).
+
+ $ cd otp_src_%OTP-REL%
+
+### Configuring ###
+
+Step 3: On some platforms Perl may behave strangely if certain locales are
+set, so optionally you may need to set the LANG variable:
+
+ # Bourne shell
+ $ LANG=C; export LANG
+
+or
+
+ # C-Shell
+ $ setenv LANG C
+
+Step 4: Run the following commands to configure the build:
+
+ $ ./configure [ options ]
+
+By default, Erlang/OTP will be installed in `/usr/local/{bin,lib/erlang}`.
+To instead install in `<BaseDir>/{bin,lib/erlang}`, use the
+`--prefix=<BaseDir>` option.
+
+If you upgraded the source with some patch you may need to clean up
+from previous builds before the new build. Before doing a `make clean`,
+be sure to read the [Pre-built Source Release][] section below.
+
+### Building ###
+
+Step 5: Build the Erlang/OTP package.
+
+ $ make
+
+### Installing ###
+
+Step 6: Install then Erlang/OTP package
+
+ $ make install
+
+### A Closer Look at the individual Steps ###
+
+Let us go through them in some detail.
+
+#### Configuring ####
+
+Step 4 runs a configuration script created by the GNU autoconf utility, which
+checks for system specific features and then creates a number of makefiles.
+
+The configure script allows you to customize a number of parameters;
+type `./configure --help` or `./configure --help=recursive` for details.
+`./configure --help=recursive` will give help for all `configure` scripts in
+all applications.
+
+One of the things you can specify is where Erlang/OTP should be installed. By
+default Erlang/OTP will be installed in `/usr/local/{bin,lib/erlang}`.
+To keep the same structure but install in a different place, `<Dir>` say,
+use the `--prefix` argument like this: `./configure --prefix=<Dir>`.
+
+Some of the available `configure` options are:
+
+* `--prefix=PATH` - Specify installation prefix.
+* `--{enable,disable}-threads` - Thread support (enabled by default if
+ possible)
+* `--{enable,disable}-smp-support` - SMP support (enabled by default if
+ possible)
+* `--{enable,disable}-kernel-poll` - Kernel poll support (enabled by
+ default if possible)
+* `--{enable,disable}-hipe` - HiPE support (enabled by default on supported
+ platforms)
+* `--enable-darwin-universal` - Build universal binaries on darwin i386.
+* `--enable-darwin-64bit` - Build 64-bit binaries on darwin
+* `--enable-m64-build` - Build 64-bit binaries using the `-m64` flag to
+ `(g)cc`
+* `--enable-m32-build` - Build 32-bit binaries using the `-m32` flag to
+ `(g)cc`
+* `--{with,without}-termcap` - termcap (without implies that only the old
+ Erlang shell can be used)
+* `--with-javac=JAVAC` - Specify Java compiler to use
+* `--{with,without}-javac` - Java compiler (without implies that the
+ `jinterface` application won't be built)
+* `--{enable,disable}-dynamic-ssl-lib` - Dynamic OpenSSL libraries
+* `--{enable,disable}-shared-zlib` - Shared zlib library
+* `--with-ssl=PATH` - Specify location of OpenSSL include and lib
+* `--{with,without}-ssl` - OpenSSL (without implies that the `crypto`,
+ `ssh`, and `ssl` won't be built)
+* `--with-libatomic_ops=PATH` - Use the `libatomic_ops` library for atomic
+ memory accesses. If `configure` should inform you about no native atomic
+ implementation available, you typically want to try using the
+ `libatomic_ops` library. It can be downloaded from
+ <http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/linux/atomic_ops/>.
+
+If you or your system has special requirements please read the `Makefile` for
+additional configuration information.
+
+#### Building ####
+
+Step 5 builds the Erlang/OTP system. On a fast computer, this will take about
+5 minutes. After completion of this step, you should have a working
+Erlang/OTP system which you can try by typing `bin/erl`. This should start
+up Erlang/OTP and give you a prompt:
+
+ $ bin/erl
+ Erlang %OTP-REL% (erts-%ERTS-VSN%) [source] [smp:4:4] [rq:4] [async-threads:0] [kernel-poll:false]
+
+ Eshell V%ERTS-VSN% (abort with ^G)
+ 1> _
+
+#### Installing ####
+
+Step 6 is optional. It installs Erlang/OTP at a standardized location (if you
+change your mind about where you wish to install you can rerun step 4,
+without having to do step 5 again).
+
+##### Alternative Installation Procedures #####
+
+* Staged install using [DESTDIR][]. You can perform the install
+ phase in a temporary directory and later move the installation into
+ its correct location by use of the `DESTDIR` variable:
+
+ $ make DESTDIR=<tmp install dir> install
+
+ The installation will be created in a location prefixed by `$DESTDIR`.
+ It can, however, not be run from there. It needs to be moved into the
+ correct location before it can be run. If `DESTDIR` have not been set
+ but `INSTALL_PREFIX` has been set, `DESTDIR` will be set to
+ `INSTALL_PREFIX`. Note that `INSTALL_PREFIX` in pre R13B04 was buggy
+ and behaved as `EXTRA_PREFIX` (see below). There are lots of areas of
+ use for an installation procedure using `DESTDIR`, e.g. when creating
+ a package, cross compiling, etc. Here is an example where the
+ installation should be located under `/opt/local`:
+
+ $ ./configure --prefix=/opt/local
+ $ make
+ $ make DESTDIR=/tmp/erlang-build install
+ $ cd /tmp/erlang-build/opt/local
+ $ # gnu-tar is used in this example
+ $ tar -zcf /home/me/my-erlang-build.tgz *
+ $ su -
+ Password: *****
+ $ cd /opt/local
+ $ tar -zxf /home/me/my-erlang-build.tgz
+
+* Install using the `release` target. Instead of doing `make install` you
+ can create the installation in whatever directory you like using the
+ `release` target and run the `Install` script yourself. `RELEASE_ROOT`
+ is used for specifying the directory where the installation should be
+ created. This is what by default ends up under `/usr/local/lib/erlang`
+ if you do the install using `make install`. All installation paths
+ provided in the `configure` phase are ignored, as well as `DESTDIR`,
+ and `INSTALL_PREFIX`. If you want links from a specific `bin` directory
+ to the installation you have to set those up yourself. An example where
+ Erlang/OTP should be located at `/home/me/OTP`:
+
+ $ ./configure
+ $ make
+ $ make RELEASE_ROOT=/home/me/OTP release
+ $ cd /home/me/OTP
+ $ ./Install -minimal /home/me/OTP
+ $ mkdir -p /home/me/bin
+ $ cd /home/me/bin
+ $ ln -s /home/me/OTP/bin/erl erl
+ $ ln -s /home/me/OTP/bin/erlc erlc
+ $ ln -s /home/me/OTP/bin/escript escript
+ ...
+
+ The `Install` script should currently be invoked as follows in the
+ directory where it resides (the top directory):
+
+ $ ./Install [-cross] [-minimal|-sasl] <ERL_ROOT>
+
+ where:
+
+ * `-minimal` Creates an installation that starts up a minimal amount
+ of applications, i.e., only `kernel` and `stdlib` are started. The
+ minimal system is normally enough, and is what `make install` uses.
+ * `-sasl` Creates an installation that also starts up the `sasl`
+ application.
+ * `-cross` For cross compilation. Informs the install script that it
+ is run on the build machine.
+ * `<ERL_ROOT>` - The absolute path to the Erlang installation to use
+ at run time. This is often the same as the current working directory,
+ but does not have to be. It can follow any other path through the
+ file system to the same directory.
+
+ If neither `-minimal`, nor `-sasl` is passed as argument you will be
+ prompted.
+
+* Test install using `EXTRA_PREFIX`. The content of the `EXTRA_PREFIX`
+ variable will prefix all installation paths when doing `make install`.
+ Note that `EXTRA_PREFIX` is similar to `DESTDIR`, but it does *not* have
+ the same effect as `DESTDIR`. The installation can and have to be run
+ from the location specified by `EXTRA_PREFIX`. That is, it can be useful
+ if you want to try the system out, running test suites, etc, before doing
+ the real install without `EXTRA_PREFIX`.
+
+### Symbolic Links in --bindir ###
+
+When doing `make install` and the default installation prefix is used,
+relative symbolic links will be created from `/usr/local/bin` to all public
+Erlang/OTP executables in `/usr/local/lib/erlang/bin`. The installation phase
+will try to create relative symbolic links as long as `--bindir` and the
+Erlang bin directory, located under `--libdir`, both have `--exec-prefix` as
+prefix. Where `--exec-prefix` defaults to `--prefix`. `--prefix`,
+`--exec-prefix`, `--bindir`, and `--libdir` are all arguments that can be
+passed to `configure`. One can force relative, or absolute links by passing
+`BINDIR_SYMLINKS=relative|absolute` as arguments to `make` during the install
+phase. Note that such a request might cause a failure if the request cannot
+be satisfied.
+
+### Pre-built Source Release ###
+
+The source release is delivered with a lot of platform independent
+build results already pre-built. If you want to remove these pre-built
+files, invoke `./otp_build remove_prebuilt_files` from the `$ERL_TOP`
+directory. After you have done this, you can build exactly the same way
+as before, but the build process will take a much longer time.
+
+> *WARNING*: Doing `make clean` in an arbitrary directory of the source
+> tree, may remove files needed for bootstrapping the build.
+>
+> Doing `./otp_build save_bootstrap` from the `$ERL_TOP` directory before
+> doing `make clean` will ensure that it will be possible to build after
+> doing `make clean`. `./otp_build save_bootstrap` will be invoked
+> automatically when `make` is invoked from `$ERL_TOP` with either the
+> `clean` target, or the default target. It is also automatically invoked
+> if `./otp_build remove_prebuilt_files` is invoked.
+
+### Building in Git ###
+
+When building in a Git working directory you also have to have a GNU `autoconf`
+of at least version 2.59 on your system, because you need to generate the
+`configure` scripts before you can start building.
+
+The `configure` scripts are generated by invoking `./otp_build autoconf` in
+the `$ERL_TOP` directory. The `configure` scripts also have to be regenerated
+when a `configure.in` or `aclocal.m4` file has been modified. Note that when
+checking out a branch a `configure.in` or `aclocal.m4` file may change
+content, and you may therefore have to regenerate the `configure` scripts
+when checking out a branch. Regenerated `configure` scripts imply that you
+have to run `configure` and build again.
+
+> *NOTE*: Running `./otp_build autoconf` is **not** needed when building
+> an unmodified version of the released source.
+
+Other useful information can be found at our github wiki:
+<http://wiki.github.com/erlang/otp>
+
+### make and $ERL\_TOP ###
+
+All the makefiles in the entire directory tree use the environment
+variable `ERL_TOP` to find the absolute path of the installation. The
+`configure` script will figure this out and set it in the top level
+Makefile (which, when building, it will pass on). However, when
+developing it is sometimes convenient to be able to run make in a
+subdirectory. To do this you must set the `ERL_TOP` variable
+before you run make.
+
+For example, assume your GNU make program is called `make` and you
+want to rebuild the application `STDLIB`, then you could do:
+
+ $ cd lib/stdlib; env ERL_TOP=<Dir> make
+
+where `<Dir>` would be what you find `ERL_TOP` is set to in the top level
+Makefile.
+
+The Erlang/OTP Documentation
+----------------------------
+
+### How to Build the Documentation ###
+
+ $ cd $ERL_TOP
+
+If you have just built Erlang/OTP in the current source tree, you have
+already ran `configure` and do not need to do this again; otherwise, run
+`configure`.
+
+ $ ./configure [Configure Args]
+
+When building the documentation you need a full Erlang/OTP-%OTP-REL% system in
+the `$PATH`.
+
+ $ export PATH=<Erlang/OTP-%OTP-REL% bin dir>:$PATH # Assuming bash/sh
+
+Build the documentation.
+
+ $ make docs
+
+The documentation can be installed either using the `install-docs` target,
+or using the `release_docs` target.
+
+* If you have installed Erlang/OTP using the `install` target, install
+ the documentation using the `install-docs` target. Install locations
+ determined by `configure` will be used. `$DESTDIR` can be used the
+ same way as when doing `make install`.
+
+ $ make install-docs
+
+* If you have installed Erlang/OTP using the `release` target, install
+ the documentation using the `release_docs` target. You typically want
+ to use the same `RELEASE_ROOT` as when invoking `make release`.
+
+ $ make release_docs RELEASE_ROOT=<release dir>
+
+#### Build Issues ####
+
+We have sometimes experienced problems with Sun's `java` running out of
+memory when running `fop`. Increasing the amount of memory available
+as follows has in our case solved the problem.
+
+ $ export FOP_OPTS="-Xmx<Installed amount of RAM in MB>m"
+
+More information can be found at
+<http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/0.95/running.html#memory>.
+
+### How to Install the Pre-formatted Documentation ###
+
+Pre-formatted [html documentation][] and [man pages][] can be downloaded at
+<http://www.erlang.org/download.html>.
+
+For some graphical tools to find the on-line help you have to install
+the HTML documentation on top of the installed OTP applications, i.e.
+
+ $ cd <ReleaseDir>
+ $ gunzip -c otp_html_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz | tar xf -
+
+For `erl -man <page>` to work the Unix manual pages have to be
+installed in the same way, i.e.
+
+ $ cd <ReleaseDir>
+ $ gunzip -c otp_man_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz | tar xf -
+
+Where `<ReleaseDir>` is
+
+* `<PrefixDir>/lib/erlang` if you have installed Erlang/OTP using
+ `make install`.
+* `$DESTDIR<PrefixDir>/lib/erlang` if you have installed Erlang/OTP
+ using `make install DESTDIR=<TmpInstallDir>`.
+* `RELEASE_ROOT` if you have installed using
+ `make release RELEASE_ROOT=<ReleaseDir>`.
+
+Support for SMP (Symmetric Multi Processing)
+--------------------------------------------
+
+An emulator with SMP support will be built by default on most platforms
+if a usable POSIX thread library or native Windows threads is found.
+
+You can force building of an SMP emulator, by using
+`./configure --enable-smp-support`. However, if configure does not
+automatically enable SMP support, the build is very likely to fail.
+
+Use `./configure --disable-smp-support` if you for some reason do not
+want to have the emulator with SMP support built.
+
+If SMP support is enabled, support for threaded I/O will also be turned on
+(also in the emulator without SMP support).
+
+The `erl` command will automatically start the SMP emulator if the
+computer has more than one logical processor. You can force a start
+of the emulator with SMP support by passing `-smp enable` as
+command line arguments to erl, and you can force a start of the
+emulator without SMP support by passing `-smp disable`.
+
+GS (Graphic System)
+-------------------
+
+GS now Tcl/Tk 8.4. It will be searched for when starting GS.
+
+Using HiPE
+----------
+
+HiPE supports the following system configurations:
+
+* x86: All 32-bit and 64-bit mode processors should work.
+
+ * Linux: Fedora Core is supported. Both 32-bit and 64-bit modes are
+ supported.
+
+ NPTL glibc is strongly preferred, or a LinuxThreads
+ glibc configured for "floating stacks". Old non-floating
+ stacks glibcs have a fundamental problem that makes HiPE
+ support and threads support mutually exclusive.
+
+ * Solaris: Solaris 10 (32-bit and 64-bit) and 9 (32-bit) are supported.
+ The build requires a version of the GNU C compiler (gcc)
+ that has been configured to use the GNU assembler (gas).
+ Sun's x86 assembler is emphatically **not** supported.
+
+ * FreeBSD: FreeBSD 6.1 and 6.2 in 32-bit and 64-bit modes should work.
+
+ * MacOSX/Darwin: Darwin 9.8.0 in 32-bit mode should work.
+
+* PowerPC: All 32-bit 6xx/7xx(G3)/74xx(G4) processors should work. 32-bit
+ mode on 970 (G5) and POWER5 processors should work.
+
+ * Linux (Yellow Dog) and Mac OSX 10.4 are supported.
+
+* SPARC: All UltraSPARC processors running 32-bit user code should work.
+
+ * Solaris 9 is supported. The build requires a `gcc` that has been
+ configured to use Sun's assembler and linker. Using the GNU assembler
+ but Sun's linker has been known to cause problems.
+
+ * Linux (Aurora) is supported.
+
+* ARM: ARMv5TE (i.e. XScale) processors should work. Both big-endian and
+ little-endian modes are supported.
+
+ * Linux is supported.
+
+HiPE is automatically enabled on the following systems:
+
+* x86 in 32-bit mode: Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD
+* x86 in 64-bit mode: Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD
+* PowerPC: Linux, MacOSX
+* SPARC: Linux
+* ARM: Linux
+
+On other supported systems you need to `./configure --enable-hipe`.
+
+If you are running on a platform supporting HiPE and if you have not disabled
+HiPE, you can compile a module into native code like this from the Erlang
+shell:
+
+ 1> c(Module, native).
+
+or
+
+ 1> c(Module, [native|OtherOptions]).
+
+Using the erlc program, write like this:
+
+ $ erlc +native Module.erl
+
+The native code will be placed into the beam file and automatically loaded
+when the beam file is loaded.
+
+To add hipe options, write like this from the Erlang shell:
+
+ 1> c(Module, [native,{hipe,HipeOptions}|MoreOptions]).
+
+Use `hipe:help_options/0` to print out the available options.
+
+ 1> hipe:help_options().
+
+Mac OS X (Darwin)
+-----------------
+
+Make sure that the command `hostname` returns a valid fully qualified host
+name (this is configured in `/etc/hostconfig`).
+
+If you develop linked-in drivers (shared library) you need to link using
+`gcc` and the flags `-bundle -flat_namespace -undefined suppress`. You also
+include `-fno-common` in `CFLAGS` when compiling. Use `.so` as the library
+suffix.
+
+Use the `--enable-darwin-64bit` configure flag to build a 64-bit
+binaries on Mac OS X.
+
+Building universal binaries on Mac OS X (obsolete information)
+--------------------------------------------------------------
+
+(This information was written when Mac OS X Leopard was the current
+release. It may no longer work.)
+
+Universal 32bit binaries can be built on an Intel Mac using the
+`--enable-darwin-universal` configure option. There still may occur
+problems with certain applications using this option, but the base
+system should run smoothly.
+
+When building universal binaries on a PowerPC Mac (at least on Tiger),
+you must point out a suitable SDK that contains universal binaries.
+For instance, to build universal binaries for Tiger (10.4):
+
+ $ CFLAGS="-isysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk" \
+ LDFLAGS="-isysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk" \
+ ./configure --enable-darwin-universal
+
+Also, if you run Leopard, but want to build for Tiger, you must do by
+setting the `MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET` environmental variable.
+
+ $ export MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.4
+
+Experimental support for 64bit x86 darwin binaries can be enabled
+using the `--enable-darwin-64bit` configure flag. The 64bit binaries are
+best built and run on Leopard, but most of the system also works on
+Tiger (Tiger's 64bit libraries are, however, limited; therefore e.g. `odbc`,
+`crypto`, `ssl` etc. are not supported in Tiger). 64bit PPC binaries are not
+supported and we have no plans to add such support (no machines to
+test on).
+
+Universal binaries and 64bit binaries are mutually exclusive options.
+
+Building a fast Erlang VM on Mac OS Lion
+----------------------------------------
+
+Starting with Xcode 4.2, Apple no longer includes a "real" `gcc`
+compiler (not based on the LLVM). Building with `llvm-gcc` or `clang`
+will work, but the performance of the Erlang run-time system will not
+be the best possible.
+
+Note that if you have `gcc-4.2` installed and included in `PATH`
+(from a previous version of Xcode), `configure` will automatically
+make sure that `gcc-4.2` will be used to compile `beam_emu.c`
+(the source file most in need of `gcc`).
+
+If you don't have `gcc-4.2.` and want to build a run-time system with
+the best possible performance, do like this:
+
+Install Xcode from the AppStore if it is not already installed.
+
+If you have Xcode 4.3, or later, you will also need to download
+"Command Line Tools" via the Downloads preference pane in Xcode.
+
+Some tools may still be lacking or out-of-date, we recommend using
+[Homebrew](https://github.com/mxcl/homebrew/wiki/installation) or
+Macports to update those tools.
+
+Install MacPorts (<http://www.macports.org/>). Then:
+
+ $ sudo port selfupdate
+ $ sudo port install gcc45 +universal
+
+### Building with wxErlang ###
+
+If you want to build the `wx` application, you will need to get wxMac-2.8.12
+(`wxMac-2.8.12.tar.gz` from
+<http://sourceforge.net/projects/wxwindows/files/2.8.12/>) and install it.
+
+Export the path for MacOSX10.6.sdk:
+
+ $ export SDK=/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.6.sdk
+
+In Xcode 4.3 the path has changed so use the following instead,
+
+ $ export SDK=/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.6.sdk
+
+Then configure and build wxMac:
+
+ $ arch_flags="-arch i386" ./configure CFLAGS="$arch_flags" CXXFLAGS="$arch_flags" CPPFLAGS="$arch_flags" LDFLAGS="$arch_flags" OBJCFLAGS="$arch_flags" OBJCXXFLAGS="$arch_flags" --prefix=/usr/local --with-macosx-sdk="$SDK" --with-macosx-version-min=10.6 --enable-unicode --with-opengl --disable-shared
+ $ make
+ $ sudo make install
+
+To link wx properly you will also need to build and install `wxStyledTextCtrl`:
+
+ $ cd contrib/src/stc
+ $ make
+ $ sudo make install
+
+### Finish up ###
+
+Build Erlang with the MacPorts GCC as the main compiler (using `clang`
+for the Objective-C Cocoa code in the `wx` application):
+
+ $ PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH CC=/opt/local/bin/gcc-mp-4.5 CXX=/opt/local/bin/g++-mp-4.5 ./configure --enable-m32-build make
+ $ sudo make install
+
+
+How to Build a Debug Enabled Erlang RunTime System
+--------------------------------------------------
+
+After completing all the normal building steps described above a debug
+enabled runtime system can be built. To do this you have to change
+directory to `$ERL_TOP/erts/emulator`.
+
+In this directory execute:
+
+ $ make debug FLAVOR=$FLAVOR
+
+where `$FLAVOR` is either `plain` or `smp`. The flavor options will
+produce a beam.debug and beam.smp.debug executable respectively. The
+files are installed along side with the normal (opt) versions `beam.smp`
+and `beam`.
+
+To start the debug enabled runtime system execute:
+
+ $ $ERL_TOP/bin/cerl -debug
+
+The debug enabled runtime system features lock violation checking,
+assert checking and various sanity checks to help a developer ensure
+correctness. Some of these features can be enabled on a normal beam
+using appropriate configure options.
+
+There are other types of runtime systems that can be built as well
+using the similar steps just described.
+
+ $ make $TYPE FLAVOR=$FLAVOR
+
+where `$TYPE` is `opt`, `gcov`, `gprof`, `debug`, `valgrind`, or `lcnt`.
+These different beam types are useful for debugging and profiling
+purposes.
+
+Authors
+-------
+
+Authors are mostly listed in the application's `AUTHORS` files,
+that is `$ERL_TOP/lib/*/AUTHORS` and `$ERL_TOP/erts/AUTHORS`,
+not in the individual source files.
+
+Copyright and License
+---------------------
+
+%CopyrightBegin%
+
+Copyright Ericsson AB 1998-2012. All Rights Reserved.
+
+The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
+Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
+compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
+Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
+retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+
+Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
+basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
+the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
+under the License.
+
+%CopyrightEnd%
+
+More Information
+----------------
+
+More information can be found at <http://www.erlang.org>.
+
+Modifying This Document
+-----------------------
+
+Before modifying this document you need to have a look at the
+[$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md][] document.
+
+
+
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL-CROSS.md]: INSTALL-CROSS.md
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL-WIN32.md]: INSTALL-WIN32.md
+ [DESTDIR]: http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/DESTDIR.html
+ [Building in Git]: #How-to-Build-and-Install-ErlangOTP_Building-in-Git
+ [Pre-built Source Release]: #How-to-Build-and-Install-ErlangOTP_Prebuilt-Source-Release
+ [make and $ERL_TOP]: #How-to-Build-and-Install-ErlangOTP_make-and-ERLTOP
+ [html documentation]: http://www.erlang.org/download/otp_doc_html_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz
+ [man pages]: http://www.erlang.org/download/otp_doc_man_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz
+ [the released source tar ball]: http://www.erlang.org/download/otp_src_%OTP-REL%.tar.gz
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md]: MARKDOWN.md
+
+ [?TOC]: true
diff --git a/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md b/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..42045fb10c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HOWTO/MARKDOWN.md
@@ -0,0 +1,266 @@
+Erlangish Markdown Text Files
+=============================
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+If you are looking for information on how to build and install Erlang/OTP you
+want to read the [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL.md][] document instead of this document
+(where `$ERL_TOP` is the top source directory in the source tree).
+
+All files with the `.md` suffix (as well as this file) are ordinary text files
+written using a Markdown like notation, and can be read using an ordinary text
+editor such as for example `emacs`.
+
+This document describes how `*.md` files in the Erlang/OTP source tree should
+be written.
+
+> *NOTE*: Before modifying a `*.md` file read all of this document.
+
+Erlangish Markdown
+------------------
+
+We do not use Markdown straight out of the box. The Markdown syntax we use is
+similar to the original Markdown but with a number of tweaks. The original
+Markdown is documented at <http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/>. You
+should read that documentation as well as this document before modifying any
+Erlangish Markdown files in the Erlang/OTP source tree.
+
+The original Markdown syntax was designed for generating HTML code from an
+"easy to read/easy to write" plain text. Instead of generating HTML we generate
+XML that fits into our documentation, i.e. we generate Erlangish XML from
+Erlangish Markdown.
+
+The `.md` suffix has been chosen since [github][] will generate HTML pages for
+files with the `.md` suffix. Github does however not generate HTML according to
+Erlangish Markdown, so some features do not work. The Erlangish Markdown
+documents viewed at [our github repository][] will typically suffer from broken
+links. The original Markdown script, gitub's Markdown, and our Erlangish
+Markdown script will generate somewhat different results if you do not follow
+indentation rules outlined in the Markdown documentation. You are encouraged to
+try to write using a Markdown syntax that also looks nice on github. However,
+it is *much* more important that the document is formatted correct in the
+Erlang/OTP documentation.
+
+### Differences Between Markdown and Erlangish Markdown ###
+
+#### Missing Features ####
+
+This functionality is missing compared to Markdown version 1.0.1. Do not
+depend on the fact that these features are missing. Some of them might appear
+in the future.
+
+* No inline HTML. Currently no inline XML is allowed either. Inline XML might
+ be allowed in the future, but there is no real need for it since we use
+ Erlangish Markdown for "readme"s that have a main purpose of being readable
+ in plain text.
+
+* Backslash escapes all characters.
+
+* No support for "horizontal rules".
+
+* Links.
+ * No support for the "title" attribute.
+ * Automatic links does not support email addresses.
+
+* Images.
+ * No support for the "title" attribute. Specified "title" will however
+ be used as `<icaption>`.
+ * No support for the "alt" attribute.
+
+* Lists aren't supported inside block quotes.
+
+* Link and image definition names *are* case sensitive.
+
+#### Additional Features ####
+
+* Automatic anchors at each heading.
+
+* Optionally automatically generated table of contents.
+
+* Note blocks.
+
+* Warning blocks.
+
+#### Extra requirements ####
+
+* One and only one level 1 heading is allowed and required.
+
+* The level 1 heading must be the first heading in the document.
+
+* A level `X` heading must have a level `X-1` heading as parent heading.
+
+* Link and image definition names aren't allowed to begin with a
+ question mark (?) character. Names beginning with a question mark have
+ been reserved for other use.
+
+* The encoding of the file containing Erlangish Markdown should be
+ UTF-8.
+
+### Generated XML ###
+
+> *WARNING*: The `emd2exml` script will blindly generate XML code according
+> to the Erlangish Markdown in a file. Successfully generated XML does **not**
+> imply that the generated XML adheres to used DTDs. `emd2exml` does very
+> seldom fail and can easily generate XML that will cause the documentation
+> build to fail. You always have to keep in mind that the XML generated
+> should fit the chapter DTD of Erlang/OTP. Also note that even though HTML
+> generation succeeds the PDF generation might fail, etc.
+>
+> *Always build the Erlang/OTP documentation after modifying an Erlangish
+> Markdown document!*
+
+A note about how we talk about "tags" below. When we say "generate(s) `<X>`
+tags" this also imply that ending `</X>` tags will be generated at appropriate
+places. Appropriate attributes to the `X` tag will also be generated.
+
+* Inline and reference style links will either generate `<seealso>` tags
+ or `<url>` tags. If a "://" character sequence is found in the URL an
+ `<url>` tag will be generated; otherwise, a `<seealso>` tag is generated.
+
+* Automatic links will only generate `<url>` tags. This since a
+ "://" character sequence have to be present in the URL in order
+ for the link to be identified.
+
+* Inline and reference style images will generate a `<image file="...">
+ <icaption>...</icaption> </image>` sequence where the "title" will be
+ placed between `<icaption>` and `</icaption>`.
+
+* Block quotes generate `<blockquote>` tags.
+
+* If the first line of a top level block quote begins with a `> *NOTE*:`
+ character sequence, a `<note>` tag will be generated instead of a
+ `<blockquote>` tag. The note will span the entire block quote.
+
+* If the first line of a top level block quote begins with a `> *WARNING*:`
+ character sequence, a `<warning>` tag will be generated instead of a
+ `<blockquote>` tag. The warning will span the entire block quote.
+
+* Paragraphs will generate `<p>` tags.
+
+* Break line (double trailing white space) will generate `<br/>` tags.
+
+* An unordered list generates a `<list type="bulleted">` tag and `<item>`
+ tags for each item.
+
+* An ordered list generates a `<list type="ordered">` tag and `<item>` tags
+ for each item.
+
+* Code blocks will generate `<code type="none">` tags.
+
+* Code span (backticks) will generate `<c>` tags.
+
+* Emphasis (single `*` or `_`) will generate `<em>` tags.
+
+* Strong emphasis (double `*` or `_`) will generate `<b>` tags.
+
+* The level 1 heading will cause the following to be generated:
+
+ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf8" ?>
+ <!DOCTYPE chapter SYSTEM "chapter.dtd">
+ <chapter>
+ <header>
+ <copyright>
+ ...
+ </copyright>
+ <legalnotice>
+ ...
+ </legalnotice>
+
+ <title>...</title>
+ ...
+ <file>...</file>
+ </header>
+
+ ...
+
+ </chapter>
+
+ The content of copyright section and the legalnotice section will
+ contain information from a \%CopyrightBegin\%, \%CopyrightEnd\% block
+ if such exist (see below).
+
+* A level `X` heading where `1 < X <= 3` will cause the the following
+ to be generated:
+
+ <marker id="..."/>
+ <section>
+ <title>...</title>
+ ...
+ </section>
+
+ The marker id is automatically generated as a combination of all parent
+ headings up to and including level 2 separated by a `_` character. As in
+ `<marker heading 2>_<marker heading 3>_ ... _<current marker heading>`
+ where each "marker heading" is constructed as follows. All characters a-z
+ and A-Z are kept as they are, space and tab characters are replaced by
+ `-` characters, and all other characters are dropped.
+
+ This way it is relatively easy to make sure that all marker ids of a
+ document are unique, but there is of course no guarantee that they are.
+
+ The upside of these auto generated markers is that we wont have to clutter
+ the document with XML or something else while being able to refer into
+ the document. The downside is that if you change a level 2 heading you
+ change a lot of marker ids which may break links into a document from
+ other documents. That is, *be careful* when changing headings in an
+ existing document.
+
+* A level `X` heading where `3 < X` will cause the the following
+ to be generated:
+
+ <marker id="..."/>
+ <p><b>...</b></p>
+ ...
+
+ Current DTD:s used don't support deeper levels of sections, and we
+ therefore simulate a section this way. The marker id is generated as for
+ a true section (see above).
+
+* If a section enclosed by \%CopyrightBegin\% and \%CopyrightEnd\% is
+ encountered, it will be interpreted as an EPL copyright and license,
+ and will be used in the header section of the document. The
+ \%CopyrightBegin\% and \%CopyrightEnd\% "tags" will be removed from
+ the output.
+
+* All occurrences of \%OTP-REL% will be replaced by current release number
+ (e.g. R14A).
+
+* All occurrences of \%ERTS-VSN% will be replaced by current ERTS version
+ (e.g. 5.8).
+
+* Adding a `[?TOC]: true` line (optionally indented with three spaces)
+ anywhere in the document will cause a table of contents to be automatically
+ generated at the beginning of the generated document.
+
+* Unicode characters (encoded in UTF-8) are allowed and will be passed
+ through as is to the output file.
+
+Copyright and License
+---------------------
+
+%CopyrightBegin%
+
+Copyright Ericsson AB 2010. All Rights Reserved.
+
+The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
+Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
+compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
+Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
+retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+
+Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
+basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
+the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
+under the License.
+
+%CopyrightEnd%
+
+
+
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL.md]: INSTALL.md
+ [github]: http://github.com
+ [our github repository]: http://github.com/erlang/otp
+
+
+ [?TOC]: true
diff --git a/HOWTO/SYSTEMTAP.md b/HOWTO/SYSTEMTAP.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..ce9c0b2f0c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HOWTO/SYSTEMTAP.md
@@ -0,0 +1,75 @@
+SystemTap and Erlang/OTP
+========================
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+SystemTap is DTrace for Linux. In fact Erlang's SystemTap support
+is build using SystemTap's DTrace compatibility's layer. For an
+introduction to Erlang DTrace support read [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/DTRACE.md][].
+
+Requisites
+----------
+
+* Linux Kernel with UTRACE support
+
+ check for UTRACE support in your current kernel:
+
+ # grep CONFIG_UTRACE /boot/config-`uname -r`
+ CONFIG_UTRACE=y
+
+ Fedora 16 is known to contain UTRACE, for most other Linux distributions
+ a custom build kernel will be required.
+ Check Fedora's SystemTap documentation for additional required packages
+ (e.g. Kernel Debug Symbols)
+
+* SystemTap > 1.6
+
+ A the time of writing this, the latest released version of SystemTap is
+ version 1.6. Erlang's DTrace support requires a MACRO that was introduced
+ after that release. So either get a newer release or build SystemTap from
+ git yourself (see: http://sourceware.org/systemtap/getinvolved.html)
+
+Building Erlang
+---------------
+
+Configure and build Erlang with SystemTap support:
+
+ # ./configure --with-dynamic-trace=systemtap + whatever args you need
+ # make
+
+Testing
+-------
+
+SystemTap, unlike DTrace, needs to know what binary it is tracing and has to
+be able to read that binary before it starts tracing. Your probe script
+therefor has to reference the correct beam emulator and stap needs to be able
+to find that binary.
+The examples are written for "beam", but other versions such as "beam.smp" or
+"beam.debug.smp" might exist (depending on your configuration). Make sure you
+either specify the full the path of the binary in the probe or your "beam"
+binary is in the search path.
+
+All available probes can be listed like this:
+
+ # stap -L 'process("beam").mark("*")'
+
+or:
+
+ # PATH=/path/to/beam:$PATH stap -L 'process("beam").mark("*")'
+
+
+Probes in the dtrace.so NIF library like this:
+
+ # PATH=/path/to/dtrace/priv/lib:$PATH stap -L 'process("dtrace.so").mark("*")'
+
+Running SystemTap scripts
+-------------------------
+
+Adjust the process("beam") reference to your beam version and attach the script
+to a running "beam" instance:
+
+ # stap /path/to/probe/script/port1.systemtap -x <pid of beam>
+
+
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/DTRACE.md]: DTRACE.md
diff --git a/HOWTO/TESTING.md b/HOWTO/TESTING.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..34eaa68df8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HOWTO/TESTING.md
@@ -0,0 +1,150 @@
+Testing Erlang/OTP
+==================
+
+Before you start testing you need to have the Erlang release which you
+are going to test in your path. See [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL.md][] for
+instructions on how to build an Erlang release.
+
+Short version
+-------------
+Move to the top directory of the Erlang release you want to test, i.e.
+cd /ldisk/work/otp
+
+ export ERL_TOP=`pwd`
+ ./otp_build setup -a
+ export PATH=`pwd`/bin:$PATH
+ ./otp_build tests
+ cd release/tests/test_server
+ erl -s ts install -s ts run all_tests -s init stop
+
+Where are the tests
+-------------------
+
+There are a lot of tests which test Erlang/OTP (as of 2012 about 12000) and
+they are located in different places throughout the source tree. Below is a list
+of the places where you can expect to find tests:
+
+* $ERL_TOP/lib/AppName/test/
+* $ERL_TOP/erts/test/
+* $ERL_TOP/erts/emulator/test/
+* $ERL_TOP/erts/epmd/test/
+
+Writing tests
+-------------
+
+All tests are [common_test][] suites and follow the same pattern as all
+[common_test][] suites. However, a couple of corner cases are
+handled by a test wrapper called `ts`. `ts` allows the test writer to put
+`Makefile.src` and `Makefile.first` files in the [data_dir][] and a special
+directory called `all_SUITE_data`.
+
+`Makefile.first` is run before any other Makefile and is typically used to
+generate .hrl files which are needed by other test suites. At the moment only
+the erl_interface tests use this feature and it should remain that way.
+
+`Makefile.src` is configured to a `Makefile` using the `variables` created when
+[configuring the tests][]. These `Makefile`s are later run by the test suite
+to compile whatever platform specific code the tests need to run.
+
+Releasing tests
+---------------
+
+If you cannot use [ct_run][] in the source tree you have to release the tests
+into a common test directory. The easiest way to do this is to use `otp_build`
+like this:
+
+ export ERL_TOP=`pwd`; ./otp_build tests
+
+This will release all tests in Erlang/OTP to `$ERL_TOP/release/tests/`. If you
+want to change the directory where the tests are released to use the `TESTROOT`
+environmental variable.
+
+In the `$TESTROOT` you should now see *_test folders. These folders contain
+everything needed to test Erlang/OTP and are platform independent; if you are
+testing Erlang on multiple platforms you just have to release on one and copy
+the tests to all other platforms.
+
+### Releasing cross tests
+
+For releasing tests in a cross compilation environment see [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL-CROSS.md][].
+
+Configuring and Running tests
+-----------------------------
+
+Running tests is done by first navigating to the `$TESTROOT/test_server` folder
+created when you released the tests and then start `erl` in that directory. The
+emulator flags specified will be used in the test runs. For example, if you want
+to test using async threads you have to supply `+A 10` to `erl` when you start it.
+
+To configure and run the tests `ts` is used. `ts` is a wrapper module to
+[common_test][] which takes care of configuration and build issues before
+[common_test][] is started.
+
+`ts` has a lot of special options and functions which can be usefull when
+testing Erlang/OTP. For a full listing issue `ts:help()` in the erlang shell.
+
+### Configuring the test environment
+
+Before running released tests you have to install them on the target system.
+Installing the tests is done by calling `ts:install().` in the Erlang shell
+which you intend to test from. `ts:install()` is basically a wrapper to a
+configure script and some Erlang code which figures out what your system looks
+like and what kind of emulator you are testing with. `ts:install()` can also
+take some arguments if necessary, see `ts:help()` for details.
+
+All variables created by `ts:install()` are found in
+`$TESTROOT/test_server/variables`.
+
+### Running the tests
+
+To run all test suites go to `$TESTROOT/test_server` fire up an Erlang shell and type:
+
+ ts:run().
+
+Note that running all tests will require several hours, so you may want to run
+the test cases for a single application
+
+ ts:run(Application, [batch]).
+
+or even part of the test suite for an application, for example
+
+ ts:run(emulator, bs, [batch]).
+
+to run all test suite modules starting with `bs` (i.e. all modules that test
+the bit syntax).
+
+To run a specific test case in a module, the full name of the module and test
+case must be specified:
+
+ ts:run(emulator, bs_bincomp_SUITE, byte_aligned, [batch]).
+
+Run `ts:help().` for more information.
+
+As of R14B02 it is also possibly to start all tests but the erl_interface tests
+by invoking Common Test directly from the released applications test directory,
+i.e.
+
+ cd $TESTROOT/test_server
+ $ERL_TOP/bin/ct_run -suite ../compiler_test/andor_SUITE -case t_orelse
+
+Running [ct_run][] from the command line still requires you to do the
+`ts:install()` step above.
+
+Examining the results
+---------------------
+
+Open the file `release/tests/test_server/index.html` in a web browser. Or open
+`release/tests/test_server/last_test.html` when a test suite is running to
+examine the results so far for the currently executing test suite (in R14B02 and
+later you want to open the `release/tests/test_server/all_runs.html` file to
+get to the currently running test)
+
+ [ct_run]: http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/ct_run.html
+ [ct hook]: http://www.erlang.org/doc/apps/common_test/ct_hooks_chapter.html
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL.md]: INSTALL.md
+ [$ERL_TOP/HOWTO/INSTALL-CROSS.md]: INSTALL-CROSS.md#testing-the-cross-compiled-system
+ [common_test]: http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/ct.html
+ [data_dir]: http://www.erlang.org/doc/apps/common_test/write_test_chapter.html#data_priv_dir
+ [configuring the tests]: #configuring-the-test-environment
+
+ [?TOC]: true