From 84adefa331c4159d432d22840663c38f155cd4c1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Erlang/OTP Date: Fri, 20 Nov 2009 14:54:40 +0000 Subject: The R13B03 release. --- erts/etc/unix/README | 111 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 111 insertions(+) create mode 100644 erts/etc/unix/README (limited to 'erts/etc/unix/README') diff --git a/erts/etc/unix/README b/erts/etc/unix/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..45b4aec2da --- /dev/null +++ b/erts/etc/unix/README @@ -0,0 +1,111 @@ + + %CopyrightBegin% + + Copyright Ericsson AB 1996-2009. 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% + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +%sunos4 This is Erlang version %VERSION% for SunOS 4. +%solaris2 This is Erlang version %VERSION% for Solaris 2 (SunOS 5). +%isc32 This is Erlang version %VERSION% for Interactive UNIX. +%aix This is Erlang version %VERSION% for AIX. +%hpux This is Erlang version %VERSION% for HP-UX. +%osf This is Erlang version %VERSION% for OSF/1 (currently unsupported). +%linux This is Erlang version %VERSION% for Linux. +%qnx This is Erlang version %VERSION% for QNX. +%freebsd This is Erlang version %VERSION% for FreeBSD. + + +Installation +------------ + +Please refer to the "System Administrator's Guide" for a description +of how to install the Erlang system. Ultra-short summary for the +impatient: Run the 'Install' script in this directory and answer the +questions; defaults (if any) are given in square brackets [] at the +end of each question. + +Note that the Install script will terminate if it detects problems - +you will have to correct them and re-run the script. If everything +goes well, the last printout should be: + +Erlang installation sucessfully completed + +If it isn't, something went wrong - check the printouts to find out +what it was. + +%hpux Note: On HP-UX, it isn't possible to have per-manpage-tree 'whatis' +%hpux files. Thus, 'erl -man -k ' will not work, and it isn't +%hpux recommended to integrate the Erlang man pages into /usr/lib/whatis +%hpux since (as mentioned in the "System Administrator's Guide") there are +%hpux some potential conflicts in naming with standard Unix man pages. +%hpux +%isc32 Note: The release currently includes several files with names longer +%isc32 than 14 characters - this means that you will have problems unpacking +%isc32 it in a standard Interactive S51K (or S52K) filesystem (which you've +%isc32 probably already noticed...). Furthermore, the Erlang filer makes no +%isc32 attempts to deal "intelligently" with such restrictions. The bottom +%isc32 line is that you have to install the Erlang system in an S5L (or +%isc32 possibly NFS) filesystem, unless you have found a way to make the +%isc32 Interactive system silently truncate filenames longer than 14 +%isc32 characters when using S5?K (if so, please tell us about it!). +%isc32 + +Overview of the files/directories in the system +----------------------------------------------- + +README - this file. + +RELNOTES - release notes. + +Install - the main installation script. + +bin - the directory where all code that is to be executed + directly by UNIX is placed during the installation. + +lib - a number of "bundles" included in the release - each + bundle lives in a subdirectory. Most of them are written + entirely in Erlang, but in some cases C programs are also + used (these are copied to the bin directory during + installation). The code server will automatically add the + appropriate directory for each bundle to the search path. + Some of the more noteworthy bundles: + std - this is the standard library, with modules such as + file, io, lists, etc. + compiler - the Erlang compiler (of course) + debugger - the Erlang debugger (ditto) + pxw - the "Primitive X Window interface", which perhaps + isn't so primitive anymore... + For further information on these and the other bundles, + please refer to the man pages. + +doc - The printed documentation in compressed PostScript format, + and some code examples. + +man - Manual pages, best accessed with 'erl -man' - there are + some conflicts with standard Unix manpages if you put + this directory in $MANPATH. + +emulator - The object code for the emulator itself is in the 'obj' + subdirectory, along with a simple Makefile and a couple + of source files that advanced users *may* be interested in + changing - care should be taken, of course, since any + changes may make the system non-functional. Refer to the + "System Adminstrator's Guide" and "Additional Features" + documents for some more information on this. + +misc - Some pieces that don't belong to any particular part of the + system - e.g. the new erl_interface package, and an Erlang + mode for emacs. -- cgit v1.2.3