| | Introduction |
| | ============ |
| |
|
| | This is the Gnu Readline library, version 8.2. |
| |
|
| | The Readline library provides a set of functions for use by applications |
| | that allow users to edit command lines as they are typed in. Both |
| | Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The Readline library includes |
| | additional functions to maintain a list of previously-entered command |
| | lines, to recall and perhaps reedit those lines, and perform csh-like |
| | history expansion on previous commands. |
| |
|
| | The history facilities are also placed into a separate library, the |
| | History library, as part of the build process. The History library |
| | may be used without Readline in applications which desire its |
| | capabilities. |
| |
|
| | The Readline library is free software, distributed under the terms of |
| | the [GNU] General Public License as published by the Free Software |
| | Foundation, version 3 of the License. For more information, see the |
| | file COPYING. |
| |
|
| | To build the library, try typing `./configure', then `make'. The |
| | configuration process is automated, so no further intervention should |
| | be necessary. Readline builds with `gcc' by default if it is |
| | available. If you want to use `cc' instead, type |
| |
|
| | CC=cc ./configure |
| |
|
| | if you are using a Bourne-style shell. If you are not, the following |
| | may work: |
| |
|
| | env CC=cc ./configure |
| |
|
| | Read the file INSTALL in this directory for more information about how |
| | to customize and control the build process. |
| |
|
| | The file rlconf.h contains C preprocessor defines that enable and disable |
| | certain Readline features. |
| |
|
| | The special make target `everything' will build the static and shared |
| | libraries (if the target platform supports them) and the examples. |
| |
|
| | Examples |
| | ======== |
| |
|
| | There are several example programs that use Readline features in the |
| | examples directory. The `rl' program is of particular interest. It |
| | is a command-line interface to Readline, suitable for use in shell |
| | scripts in place of `read'. |
| |
|
| | Shared Libraries |
| | ================ |
| |
|
| | There is skeletal support for building shared versions of the |
| | Readline and History libraries. The configure script creates |
| | a Makefile in the `shlib' subdirectory, and typing `make shared' |
| | will cause shared versions of the Readline and History libraries |
| | to be built on supported platforms. |
| |
|
| | If `configure' is given the `--enable-shared' option, it will attempt |
| | to build the shared libraries by default on supported platforms. |
| |
|
| | Configure calls the script support/shobj-conf to test whether or |
| | not shared library creation is supported and to generate the values |
| | of variables that are substituted into shlib/Makefile. If you |
| | try to build shared libraries on an unsupported platform, `make' |
| | will display a message asking you to update support/shobj-conf for |
| | your platform. |
| |
|
| | If you need to update support/shobj-conf, you will need to create |
| | a `stanza' for your operating system and compiler. The script uses |
| | the value of host_os and ${CC} as determined by configure. For |
| | instance, FreeBSD 4.2 with any version of gcc is identified as |
| | `freebsd4.2-gcc*'. |
| |
|
| | In the stanza for your operating system-compiler pair, you will need to |
| | define several variables. They are: |
| |
|
| | SHOBJ_CC The C compiler used to compile source files into shareable |
| | object files. This is normally set to the value of ${CC} |
| | by configure, and should not need to be changed. |
| |
|
| | SHOBJ_CFLAGS Flags to pass to the C compiler ($SHOBJ_CC) to create |
| | position-independent code. If you are using gcc, this |
| | should probably be set to `-fpic'. |
| |
|
| | SHOBJ_LD The link editor to be used to create the shared library from |
| | the object files created by $SHOBJ_CC. If you are using |
| | gcc, a value of `gcc' will probably work. |
| |
|
| | SHOBJ_LDFLAGS Flags to pass to SHOBJ_LD to enable shared object creation. |
| | If you are using gcc, `-shared' may be all that is necessary. |
| | These should be the flags needed for generic shared object |
| | creation. |
| |
|
| | SHLIB_XLDFLAGS Additional flags to pass to SHOBJ_LD for shared library |
| | creation. Many systems use the -R option to the link |
| | editor to embed a path within the library for run-time |
| | library searches. A reasonable value for such systems would |
| | be `-R$(libdir)'. |
| |
|
| | SHLIB_LIBS Any additional libraries that shared libraries should be |
| | linked against when they are created. |
| |
|
| | SHLIB_LIBPREF The prefix to use when generating the filename of the shared |
| | library. The default is `lib'; Cygwin uses `cyg'. |
| |
|
| | SHLIB_LIBSUFF The suffix to add to `libreadline' and `libhistory' when |
| | generating the filename of the shared library. Many systems |
| | use `so'; HP-UX uses `sl'. |
| |
|
| | SHLIB_LIBVERSION The string to append to the filename to indicate the version |
| | of the shared library. It should begin with $(SHLIB_LIBSUFF), |
| | and possibly include version information that allows the |
| | run-time loader to load the version of the shared library |
| | appropriate for a particular program. Systems using shared |
| | libraries similar to SunOS 4.x use major and minor library |
| | version numbers; for those systems a value of |
| | `$(SHLIB_LIBSUFF).$(SHLIB_MAJOR)$(SHLIB_MINOR)' is appropriate. |
| | Systems based on System V Release 4 don't use minor version |
| | numbers; use `$(SHLIB_LIBSUFF).$(SHLIB_MAJOR)' on those systems. |
| | Other Unix versions use different schemes. |
| |
|
| | SHLIB_DLLVERSION The version number for shared libraries that determines API |
| | compatibility between readline versions and the underlying |
| | system. Used only on Cygwin. Defaults to $SHLIB_MAJOR, but |
| | can be overridden at configuration time by defining DLLVERSION |
| | in the environment. |
| |
|
| | SHLIB_DOT The character used to separate the name of the shared library |
| | from the suffix and version information. The default is `.'; |
| | systems like Cygwin which don't separate version information |
| | from the library name should set this to the empty string. |
| |
|
| | SHLIB_STATUS Set this to `supported' when you have defined the other |
| | necessary variables. Make uses this to determine whether |
| | or not shared library creation should be attempted. |
| |
|
| | You should look at the existing stanzas in support/shobj-conf for ideas. |
| |
|
| | Once you have updated support/shobj-conf, re-run configure and type |
| | `make shared'. The shared libraries will be created in the shlib |
| | subdirectory. |
| |
|
| | If shared libraries are created, `make install' will install them. |
| | You may install only the shared libraries by running `make |
| | install-shared' from the top-level build directory. Running `make |
| | install' in the shlib subdirectory will also work. If you don't want |
| | to install any created shared libraries, run `make install-static'. |
| |
|
| | Documentation |
| | ============= |
| |
|
| | The documentation for the Readline and History libraries appears in |
| | the `doc' subdirectory. There are three texinfo files and a |
| | Unix-style manual page describing the facilities available in the |
| | Readline library. The texinfo files include both user and |
| | programmer's manuals. HTML versions of the manuals appear in the |
| | `doc' subdirectory as well. |
| |
|
| | Usage |
| | ===== |
| |
|
| | Our position on the use of Readline through a shared-library linking |
| | mechanism is that there is no legal difference between shared-library |
| | linking and static linking--either kind of linking combines various |
| | modules into a single larger work. The conditions for using Readline |
| | in a larger work are stated in section 3 of the GNU GPL. |
| |
|
| | Reporting Bugs |
| | ============== |
| |
|
| | Bug reports for Readline should be sent to: |
| |
|
| | bug-readline@gnu.org |
| |
|
| | When reporting a bug, please include the following information: |
| |
|
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | appropriate |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| |
|
| | If you would like to contact the Readline maintainer directly, send mail |
| | to bash-maintainers@gnu.org. |
| |
|
| | Since Readline is developed along with bash, the bug-bash@gnu.org mailing |
| | list (mirrored to the Usenet newsgroup gnu.bash.bug) often contains |
| | Readline bug reports and fixes. |
| |
|
| | Chet Ramey |
| | chet.ramey@case.edu |
| |
|