Compress::Zlib

                                  Version 1.37

                                 12 August 2005

          Copyright (c) 1995-2005 Paul Marquess. All rights reserved.
         This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
                 modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

      The directory zlib-src contains a subset of the source files copied 
        directly from zlib version 1.2.3.  These files are Copyright(C) 
                   1995-2005 Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler.
                Full source for the zlib library is available at 
                              http://www.zlib.org


DESCRIPTION
-----------

This module provides a Perl interface to most of the zlib compression
library.  For more details see the pod documentation embedded in the
file Zlib.pm.

If you have downloaded this module in the expectation of manipulating the
contents of .zip files, you will need to fetch and build the Archive::Zip
module below once you have installed this one.

    http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Archive/Archive-Zip-*.tar.gz


PREREQUISITES
-------------

Before you can build Compress::Zlib you need to have the following
installed on your system:

    * A C compiler

    * Perl 5.004 or better. 

By default, Compress::Zlib will build its own private copy of the zlib
library. If you want to use a different version of zlib, follow the
instructions in the section called "Controlling the version of zlib used
by Compress::Zlib" later in this document.


BUILDING THE MODULE
-------------------

Assuming you have met all the prerequisites, the module can now be built
using this sequence of commands:

    perl Makefile.PL
    make
    make test



INSTALLATION
------------

To install Compress::Zlib, run the command below:

    make install

UPDATES
-------
 
The most recent version of Compress::Zlib is always available at
 
    http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Compress/



Controlling the version of zlib used by Compress::Zlib
-----------------------------------------------------

Compress::Zlib interfaces to the zlib compression library. There are
three options available to control which version/instance of the zlib
library is used:

    1. Build a private copy of the zlib library using the zlib library
       source that is included with this module.
       This is the default and recommended option.

    2. Build a private copy of the zlib library using a standard zlib
       source distribution.

    3. Use a pre-built zlib library.

Note that if you intend to use either Option 2 or 3, you need to have
zlib version 1.0.6 or better. Although this module can build with old
versions of zlib, it is strongly recommended that you use the most recent
version of zlib available.


The contents of the file config.in are used to control which of the
three options is actually used. This file is used during the

    perl Makefile.PL 

step of the build, so remember to make any required changes to config.in
before building this module.



  Option 1
  --------
  
  For option 1, edit the file config.in and set the variables in it
  as follows:
  
      BUILD_ZLIB = True
      INCLUDE    = ./zlib-src
      LIB        = ./zlib-src
      OLD_ZLIB   = False
  
  
  Option 2
  --------
  
  For option 2, fetch a copy of the zlib source distribution from
  http://www.zlib.org and unpack it into the Compress::Zlib source
  directory. Assuming you have fetched zlib 1.1.4, it will create a
  directory called zlib-1.1.4. 
  
  Now set the variables in the file config.in as follows (if the version
  you have fetched isn't 1.1.4, change the INCLUDE and LIB variables
  appropriately):
  
      BUILD_ZLIB = True
      INCLUDE    = ./zlib-1.1.4
      LIB        = ./zlib-1.1.4
      OLD_ZLIB   = False
  
  
  Option 3
  --------
  
  For option 3, you need to find out where zlib is stored on your system.
  There are two parts to this.

  First, find the directory where the zlib library is stored (some common
  names for the library are libz.a and libz.so). Set the LIB variable in
  the config.in file to that directory.
  
  Secondly, find the directory where the file zlib.h is stored. Now set
  the INCLUDE variable in the config.in file to that directory.
  
  Next set BUILD_ZLIB to False
  
  Finally, if you are running zlib 1.0.5 or older, set the OLD_ZLIB
  variable to True. Otherwise set it to False.

  As an example, if the zlib library on your system is in /usr/local/lib,
  zlib.h is in /usr/local/include and zlib is more older than version
  1.0.5, the variables in config.in should be set as follows:

      BUILD_ZLIB = False
      INCLUDE    = /usr/local/include
      LIB        = /usr/local/lib
      OLD_ZLIB   = True
  



TROUBLESHOOTING
---------------

Undefined Symbol gzsetparams
----------------------------

If you get the error shown below when you run the Compress::Zlib test
harness it probably means you are running a copy of zlib that is version
1.0.5 or older.

t/01version.........Can't load 'blib/arch/auto/Compress/Zlib/Zlib.so' for 
                    module Compress::Zlib: blib/arch/auto/Compress/Zlib/Zlib.so:
                    undefined symbol: gzsetparams at ...

There are two ways to fix this problem:

    1. Upgrade to the latest version of zlib.

    2. Edit config.in and set the OLD_ZLIB variable to True.



Test Harness 01version fails
----------------------------
If the 01version test harness fails, and the problem isn't covered by
the scenario above, it probably means that you have two versions of zlib
installed on your system.

Run the command below to see if this is indeed the case

    make test TEST_VERBOSE=1 TEST_FILES=t/01version.t 

Try removing the one you don't want to use and rebuild.   




Solaris build fails with "language optional software package not installed"
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

If you are trying to build this module under Solaris and you get an
error message like this

    /usr/ucb/cc: language optional software package not installed

it means that Perl cannot find the C compiler on your system. The cryptic
message is just Sun's way of telling you that you haven't bought their
C compiler.

When you build a Perl module that needs a C compiler, the Perl build
system tries to use the same C compiler that was used to build perl
itself. In this case your Perl binary was built with a C compiler that
lived in /usr/ucb.

To continue with building this module, you need to get a C compiler,
or tell Perl where your C compiler is, if you already have one.

Assuming you have now got a C compiler, what you do next will be dependant
on what C compiler you have installed. If you have just installed Sun's
C compiler, you shouldn't have to do anything. Just try rebuilding
this module.

If you have installed another C compiler, say gcc, you have to tell perl
how to use it instead of /usr/ucb/cc.

This set of options seems to work if you want to use gcc. Your mileage
may vary.

    perl Makefile.PL CC=gcc CCCDLFLAGS=-fPIC OPTIMIZE=" "
    make test

If that doesn't work for you, it's time to make changes to the Makefile
by hand. Good luck!




Solaris build fails with "gcc: unrecognized option `-KPIC'"
-----------------------------------------------------------

You are running Solaris and you get an error like this when you try to
build this Perl module

    gcc: unrecognized option `-KPIC'

This symptom usually means that you are using a Perl binary that has been
built with the Sun C compiler, but you are using gcc to build this module.

When Perl builds modules that need a C compiler, it will attempt to use
the same C compiler and command line options that was used to build perl
itself. In this case "-KPIC" is a valid option for the Sun C compiler,
but not for gcc. The equivalent option for gcc is "-fPIC".

The solution is either:

    1. Build both Perl and this module with the same C compiler, either
       by using the Sun C compiler for both or gcc for both.

    2. Try generating the Makefile for this module like this perl

           perl Makefile.PL CC=gcc CCCDLFLAGS=-fPIC OPTIMIZE=" " LD=gcc
           make test

       This second option seems to work when mixing a Perl binary built
       with the Sun C compiler and this module built with gcc. Your
       mileage may vary.



HP-UX Notes
-----------

I've had a report that when building Compress::Zlib under HP-UX that it
is necessary to have first built the zlib library with the -fpic option.



Linux Notes
-----------

Although most Linux distributions already come with zlib, some people
report getting this error when they try to build this module:

$ make
cp Zlib.pm blib/lib/Compress/Zlib.pm
AutoSplitting blib/lib/Compress/Zlib.pm (blib/lib/auto/Compress/Zlib)
/usr/bin/perl -I/usr/lib/perl5/5.6.1/i386-linux -I/usr/lib/perl5/5.6.1 /usr/lib/perl5/5.6.1/ExtUtils/xsubpp  -typemap /usr/lib/perl5/5.6.1/ExtUtils/typemap -typemap typemap Zlib.xs > Zlib.xsc && mv Zlib.xsc Zlib.c
gcc -c -I/usr/local/include -fno-strict-aliasing -I/usr/local/include -O2 -march=i386 -mcpu=i686   -DVERSION=\"1.16\" -DXS_VERSION=\"1.16\" -fPIC -I/usr/lib/perl5/5.6.1/i386-linux/CORE  Zlib.c
Zlib.xs:25:19: zlib.h: No such file or directory
make: *** [Zlib.o] Error 1

This usually means that you have not installed the development RPM
for zlib. Check for an RPM that start with "zlib-devel" in your Linux
distribution.




Win32 Notes
-----------

If you are running Activestate Perl (from http://www.activestate.com),
it ships with a pre-compiled version of Compress::Zlib. To check if a
newer version of Compress::Zlib is available run this from the command
prompt

    C:\> ppm verify -upgrade Compress-Zlib


If you are not running Activestate Perl and you don't have access
to a C compiler, you will not be able to build and install this module.




Win32 & Cygwin Notes
--------------------

It is not possible to install Compress::Zlib using the CPAN shell.
This is because the Compress::Zlib DLL is itself used by the CPAN shell
and it is impossible to remove a DLL while it is already loaded under
Windows.

The workaround is to install Compress::Zlib manually using the
instructions given at the start of this file.



Mac OX X Notes
--------------

Some versions of Mac OS X are failing a number of the tests in the
06gzdopen.t test harness.

The functionality being exercised in these tests is checking that it is
possible to call gzopen with an existing Perl filehandle instead of a
filename. For some reason it does not seem possible to extract a
numeric file descriptor (using fileno) from a FILE* and then make use
of it.

If you happen to now how to fix for this, I would like to hear from you.

In the meantime, a workaround that has been reported to me is to use fink,
available at http://fink.sourceforge.net



FEEDBACK
--------

How to report a problem with Compress::Zlib.

To help me help you, I need all of the following information:

 1. The *complete* output from running this
 
        perl -V
 
    Do not edit the output in any way.
    Note, I want you to run "perl -V" and NOT "perl -v".
 
    If your perl does not understand the "-V" option it is too
    old. This module needs Perl version 5.004 or better.     

 2. The version of Compress::Zlib you have. 
    If you have successfully installed Compress::Zlib, this one-liner
    will tell you:

       perl -MCompress::Zlib -e 'print qq[ver $Compress::Zlib::VERSION\n]'

    If you are running windows use this

       perl -MCompress::Zlib -e "print qq[ver $Compress::Zlib::VERSION\n]"

    If you haven't installed Compress::Zlib then search Compress::Zlib.pm
    for a line like this:

      $VERSION = "1.05" ;

 3. The version of zlib you have installed.
    If you have successfully installed Compress::Zlib, this one-liner
    will tell you:

      perl -MCompress::Zlib -e "print q[zlib ver ]. Compress::Zlib::ZLIB_VERSION.qq[\n]" 


    If not, look at the beginning of the file zlib.h. 

 4. If you are having problems building Compress::Zlib, send me a
    complete log of what happened. Start by unpacking the Compress:Zlib
    module into a fresh directory and keep a log of all the steps

        [edit config.in, if necessary]
        perl Makefile.PL
        make
        make test TEST_VERBOSE=1          


Paul Marquess <pmqs@cpan.org>