I'm running windows 10. I am evaluating software that was written in cygwin / mysql / python.
I installed cygwin from the mirrors.cs.vt.edu site. According the setup program mysql is installed.
When I try to run mysql I get "-bash: mysql: command not found"
I found a note on stackoverflow that says "OH, just use apt-cyg", but when I do that it says
"-bash: apt-cyg: command not found"
Another note said "Oh, use lynx to install apt-cyg", but it can't find that either.
Dear god, can someone please explain what I have to install? Apparently, it's already in there someplace.
Also can't download and build package X, because it can't find gcc either.
The only that works are ls, pwd, find, python, a few other things.
Related
I have a process that works in the production environment, that I need to get working on my local Windows 10 environment. It is a Perl script that calls mySql stored procedures.
I have installed ActivePerl 5.26.3 (64-Bit) from Active State. When I attempt to execute the script I get an error:
Can't locate DBD/mysql.pm (you may need to install the DBD::mysql module)...
So, I went to https://metacpan.org/release/DBD-mysql and found instructions that indicated I needed to do the following:
perl -MCPAN -e shell
install DBD::mysql
But, when I type the first command I get a message stating:
It looks like you don't have a C compiler and make utility installed. Trying to install dmake and the MinGW gcc compiler using the Perl Package Manager. This may take several minutes....
Then it goes thru what appears to be a successful installation. So I type in the second command. It scrolls by for a while, but ends with:
Failed during this command
DVEEDEN/DBD-mysql-4.050.tar.gz: writemakefile NO 'C:\Perl64\bin\perl.exe MakeFile.PL INSTALLDIRS=site' returned status 512
Not sure how to proceed.
For ActivePerl, use their package manager PPM.
Or, use Strawberry Perl for a more unixy experience. It comes with all the stuff to compile and install modules.
No matter which Perl you use, on Windows or elsewhere, modules typically need to be compiled the same. Mixing compilers (such as Visual Studio and gcc) or options can lead to incompatible binaries. The same might happen across Perl versions too. That means to use the same Perl (and compilation method) for everything in your project).
The cpan utility doesn't figure out those things for you. It does whatever it's configured to do.
For what it's worth, the cpan method to install modules can be simpler:
$ cpan DBD::mysql
While trying to install Perl modules like JSON::XS or YAML::XS, i receive the same error:
XS.xs:1:10: fatal error: 'EXTERN.h' file not found
I use MacBook, xCode is up to date, everything else that could help is up to date too.
Since OS X El Capitan, Apple introduced System Integrity Protection which restricts writing to /usr/lib /usr/bin and other sensitive directories (even to root or sudo user) that are used by the installation of Perl bundled with the Operating System. This can cause issues when it comes to installing new modules and also if trying to install XS modules ( those linked to external C libraries ).
For this reason you should not consider the default Perl installation as a working development environment, especially if you are installing custom modules.
Check out this thread on PM and others. I had since El-Capitan managed to solve this before by manually building from tarball and adding a few params or environment variables to set the paths believing that it would be best to retain use of the system Perl but this is not the way to go. This makes your environment difficult to build but also brittle and sensitive to OS updates that may either break things in many different ways.
The best practice seems to be starting with a Perl using brew install perl and work in this environment, remembering to setup your bash_profile as directed by the installer.
Also worth remembering to do a brew link perl. If you receive warnings about this clobbering what looks like system Perl libraries don't worry - these are likely modules that were installed by you over the top and it will cause you less trouble to link over these. If you have concerns, make a note of which module installs will be cleared and re-install them once your environment is configured ( ie your module installer approach is configured using cpanm or sticking with the old perl -MCPAN -e shell etc)
This new Perl setup from brew eliminates the need to continuing running sudo which adds another layer of things that can go wrong as environment variables don't follow through and permission conflicts arise etc.
Finally to simplify package/module installation I suggest doing a brew install cpanminus. If you had previously already installed this, you can ensure the paths etc are configured by doing a brew reinstall cpanminus
If you want to take it another step further then you can install perlbrew as well which will give you the ability to run multiple versions of Perl as your user and configure these with their own libs and modules which can be very useful particularly if aligning with your production environment for testing etc.
One problem you may face if moving from system Perl to this kind of approach is needing to deal with any hangovers from installing things with sudo. It wis worth taking a little time to get all this set up right though and your issues going forward will be greatly reduced and you won't be left with that nagging feeling that you don't want to change anything for fear of it all breaking.
I have also come across a Perl Blog Article that suggests a fix for XS issues with perlbrew on Mojave
This Gist described updating your cpan shell install root though this shouldn't be necessary unless your cpan is stuck in an old config after taking steps above.
I've also raised this as a new issue on PerlMonks
After reading https://developer.apple.com/documentation/xcode_release_notes/xcode_10_release_notes#3035624 and installing the Additional headers via
sudo installer -pkg /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/Packages/macOS_SDK_headers_for_macOS_10.14.pkg -target /
I successfully compiled without the missing 'EXTERN.h' error
In order to follow the common advice I also tried with Perlbrew to install a dedicated development version of Perl. Especially with the advice in mind First, do not use the system Perl on MacOS. The installed version is for Apple, not for you (see the discussion here: https://www.perlmonks.org/?node_id=1224727).
Unfortunately, the following error occurred:
Test Summary Report
-------------------
porting/libperl.t (Wstat: 65280 Tests: 35 Failed: 0)
Non-zero exit status: 255
Parse errors: No plan found in TAP output
Files=2653, Tests=1217766, 708 wallclock secs (52.74 usr 9.40 sys + 395.38 cusr 49.90 csys = 507.42 CPU)
Result: FAIL
make: *** [test_harness] Error 1
##### Brew Failed #####
Therefore, I decided to install it the following way (and not following the advice due to the error).
Even after having the above mentioned macOS SDK headers already installed on Catalina (macOS 10.15.2) it didn't work for me. I faced the issue during the installation of the Perl module Mac-SystemDirectory-0.13. The following steps (by identifying the missing file in hope of having a more generic approach for more or less equivalent issues) did the trick:
Locate the header file (in this case EXTERN.h)
sudo find /Library -type f -name EXTERN.h
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX10.14.sdk/System/Library/Perl/5.18/darwin-thread-multi-2level/CORE/EXTERN.h
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX10.15.sdk/System/Library/Perl/5.28/darwin-thread-multi-2level/CORE/EXTERN.h
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX10.15.sdk/System/Library/Perl/5.18/darwin-thread-multi-2level/CORE/EXTERN.h
Ensure the installed Perl version (here 5.18) match the header file:
perl -v | grep version
This is perl 5, version 18, subversion 4 (v5.18.4) built for darwin-thread-multi-2level
Export the path for the C-Compiler (note MacOSX10.15.sdk for Catalina and Perl Version 5.18)
export CPATH=/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX10.15.sdk/System/Library/Perl/5.18/darwin-thread-multi-2level/CORE
Invoke the Makefile.PL with perl
perl Makefile.PL
BTW — For anybody who's still struggling with this, my workaround was:
bash% module="Sub::Util" # For example
bash% cpanm --configure-args="INC=-I/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/System/Library/Perl/5.18/darwin-thread-multi-2level/CORE" "$module"
Please try this
CPATH=$(dirname $(find /usr/local/Cellar/ -name EXTERN.h)) cpan JSON::XS
For Big Sur and perl 5.30, EXTERN.h is at /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX11.3.sdk/System/Library/Perl/5.30/darwin-thread-multi-2level/CORE
I'm trying to upgrade CPAN itself and got that error. But I have /usr/bin/cpan and I can't write there so I have to tweak it to write the updated version to /usr/local/bin/cpan.
No promises, but yum install perl-devel worked for me.
As #huyz has helpfully pointed out, if you hit this error on a Mac, you don't have this option, even though this is probably your issue, and you need to follow one of the above methods of getting a version of Perl that isn't missing important chunks, as per other answers.
But if, dear reader, you hit this error on a linux host, as I did, then this might be an option for you.
Building on what E Lisse suggested, you might also have luck looking in
/System/Volumes/Data/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/
For example:
CPATH=$(dirname $(find /System/Volumes/Data/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/ -name EXTERN.h)) cpan JSON::XS
You could also find where EXTERN.h is located and add that to your shell by default, e.g. in your .bashrc or .zshrc file:
export CPATH=/System/Volumes/Data/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX12.sdk/System/Library/Perl/5.18/darwin-thread-multi-2level/CORE/
I have a solaris machine configuration: SunOS indevel07 5.10 Generic_147440-15 sun4v sparc sun4v. I am trying to install expect utility on this. expect utility requires tcl to be installed. I have tried to install that too, but i am getting errors. I have downloaded the tcl-8.5.12-sol10-sparc-local.gz and expect-5.45-sol10-sparc-local.gz from sunfreeware. I have unzipped them and tried to install them like pkgadd -d pkgname. I am getting errors like:
ERROR: attribute verification of </usr/local/man/man3/Tcl_Seek.3> failed
pathname does not exist
There are lots of errors like this. I tried to troubleshoot it by googling but could not find anything about it. I am stuck with my development because of this.
Try building Tcl/Tk and Expect from the source. Here is the instruction - How to Compile Tcl. Expect download - Obtaining Expect for UNIX. That worked for me on Solaris 10 and I did not hit any serious bumps.
For those who want to install tcl please refer this URL. it has got steps to do that. URL: http://www.wellho.net/mouth/1174_Installing-Tcl-and-Expect-on-Solaris-10-a-checklist.html
I want to connect to MySQL from SBCL using CLSQL. I loaded CLSQL using quicklisp (ql:quickload 'clsql). However, when calling (clsql:connect '(...) :database-type :mysql), it said:
Couldn't load foreign libraries "libmysqlclient", "libmysql". (searched CLSQL-SYS:FOREIGN-LIBRARY-SEARCH-PATHS).
I'm on CentOS, and basically what I want to do is
Install mysql client development headers with yum, so UFFI can find it (which I failed to do)
after installing, be able to connect to local MySQL server (I think after 1. is done, it could be working automatically).
I'm currently using:
CentOS 5.7 Final (32 bit)
SBCL 1.0.55
Quicklisp beta
yum repositories: base, epel, extras, updates
I didn't just ask about how to install MySQL development headers on CentOS, because that would solve only part of my problem, I would still need to know what's missing from my machine. I also didn't try to build libmysqlclient/libmysql from source, because I don't know whether clsql would be able then to find it or not. I think not.
I'm really sorry if my question somehow misses the point, but extensive googling didn't yield any results. If anyone told me they couldn't install mysql client development headers on CentOS, I would laugh at them and tell them to use yum search, but I couldn't find it neither with yum neither online.
I know the solution for ubuntu (and debian), because there is a cl-sql package and I can easily find mysql headers there too, but I need it on CentOS.
Thanks in advance.
Somehow, when you try something long enough, it will get done ;)
Here's what I did if anyone needs an answer and stumbles upon this question:
(ql:quickload 'clsql)
;tell clsql where to search for mysql libs
(push #P"/usr/lib/mysql" CLSQL-SYS:*FOREIGN-LIBRARY-SEARCH-PATHS*)
;add mysql libs to clsql library path [apparent from code :]
(clsql:push-library-path "/usr/lib/mysql/")
;directly tell uffi to load mysqlclient shared library
(uffi:load-foreign-library "/usr/lib/mysql/libmysqlclient.so")
Of course, you can replace "/usr/lib/mysql" with a different path for mysql libraries, if needed.
I'm working on OS X 10.6.4. I've been using clbuild to install supporting libraries for SBCL (including clsql), and I do all my work through Aquamacs. I installed MySQL using the excellent instructions over at Hive Logic. But when I call (require 'clsql) -- which seems to work fine -- and then try to execute (clsql:connect '(nil "lisp" "root" "") :database-type :mysql) to connect to my local running database, I get this error message:
erred while invoking #<COMPILE-OP (:VERBOSE NIL) {12096109}> on
#<CLSQL-MYSQL-SOURCE-FILE "clsql_mysql" {1208E071}>
[Condition of type ASDF:OPERATION-ERROR]
From my research of this problem, I think it comes from me not having a compiled version of the libmysqlclient.dylib file, of which I have a copy in /usr/local/mysql/lib/, but I'm not clear on how to go about compiling it. This forum post seems to say that's exactly what I need to do, but there's no make file in that directory.
Nowadays, you should use homebrew for MySQL installation on Snow Leopard. Homebrew installs MySQL 5.5.10 which doesn't have the compiler problem that 5.5.8 had (AFAIK).
I would guess you can download mysql-5.5.8-osx10.6-x86_64.dmg from http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/mysql/#downloads
I would expect that to include the precompiled client libs. I haven't tried it though.
If it really doesn't have the precompiled client libs, you'll probably need to download the MySQL source code from the same place (select "Source Code" from the "Select Platform" dropdown box) and compile it. Even though the description says "Generic Linux" I think mysql-5.5.8.tar.gz should work.
Having previously installed MySQL 5.0 on Leopard, I am sure it came with the client libs, but of course something could have changed. It just seems unlikely they would not provide them.
EDIT:
After installing the version for OS X 10.5, this is what I find in terms of client libs:
/usr/local/mysql-5.5.8-osx10.5-x86_64/lib/libmysqlclient.16.dylib
/usr/local/mysql-5.5.8-osx10.5-x86_64/lib/libmysqlclient.a
/usr/local/mysql-5.5.8-osx10.5-x86_64/lib/libmysqlclient.dylib
/usr/local/mysql-5.5.8-osx10.5-x86_64/lib/libmysqlclient_r.16.dylib
/usr/local/mysql-5.5.8-osx10.5-x86_64/lib/libmysqlclient_r.a
/usr/local/mysql-5.5.8-osx10.5-x86_64/lib/libmysqlclient_r.dylib
so they are indeed installed along with the server.