NOTE: this port (as of 0.4.1) does not compile into a Symbian OS GUI application, but instead it results in a Symbian DLL. The DLL includes a C++ class called CPerlBase, which one can then (derive from and) use to embed Perl into applications, see symbian/README.
The base port of Perl to Symbian only implements the basic POSIX-like functionality; it does not implement any further Symbian or Series 60, Series 80, or UIQ bindings for Perl.
It is also possible to generate Symbian executables for ``miniperl'' and ``perl'', but since there is no standard command line interface for Symbian (nor full keyboards in the devices), these are useful mainly as demonstrations.
These instructions have been tested under various Nokia Series 60 Symbian SDKs (1.2 to 2.6, 2.8 should also work, 1.2 compiles but does not work), Series 80 2.0, and Nokia 7710 (Series 90) SDK. You can get the SDKs from Forum Nokia (http://www.forum.nokia.com/). A very rough port ("it compiles") to UIQ 2.1 has also been made. A prerequisite for any of the SDKs is to install ActivePerl from ActiveState, http://www.activestate.com/Products/ActivePerl/ Having the SDK installed also means that you need to have either the Metrowerks CodeWarrior installed (2.8 and 3.0 were used in testing) or the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 installed (SP3 minimum, SP5 recommended). Note that for example the Series 60 2.0 VC SDK installation talks about ActivePerl build 518, which does no more (as of mid-2005) exist at the ActiveState website. The ActivePerl 5.8.4 build 810 was used successfully for compiling Perl on Symbian. The 5.6.x ActivePerls do not work. Other SDKs or compilers like Visual.NET, command-line-only Visual.NET, Borland, GnuPoc, or sdk2unix have not been tried. These instructions almost certainly won't work with older Symbian releases or other SDKs. Patches to get this port running in other releases, SDKs, compilers, platforms, or devices are naturally welcome.
(1) Get a Perl source code distribution (for example the file
perl-5.9.2.tar.gz is fine) from http://www.cpan.org/src/
and unpack it in your the C:/Symbian directory of your Windows
system.
(2) Change to the perl source directory.
cd c:\Symbian\perl-5.x.x
(3) Run the following script using the perl coming with the SDK
perl symbian\config.pl You must use the cmd.exe, the Cygwin shell will not work. The PATH must include the SDK tools, including a Perl, which should be the case under cmd.exe. If you do not have that, see the end of symbian\sdk.pl for notes of how your environment should be set up for Symbian compiles.
(4) Build the project, either by
make all in cmd.exe or by using either the Metrowerks CodeWarrior or the Visual C++ 6.0, or the Visual Studio 8 (the Visual C++ 2005 Express Edition works fine). If you use the VC IDE, you will have to run F<symbian\config.pl> first using the cmd.exe, and then run 'make win.mf vc6.mf' to generate the VC6 makefiles and workspaces. "make vc6" will compile for the VC6, and "make cw" for the CodeWarrior. The following SDK and compiler configurations and Nokia phones were tested at some point in time (+ = compiled and PerlApp run, - = not), both for Perl 5.8.x and 5.9.x: SDK | VC | CW | --------+----+----+--- S60 1.2 | + | + | 3650 (*) S60 2.0 | + | + | 6600 S60 2.1 | - | + | 6670 S60 2.6 | + | + | 6630 S60 2.8 | + | + | (not tested in a device) S80 2.6 | - | + | 9300 S90 1.1 | + | - | 7710 UIQ 2.1 | - | + | (not tested in a device) (*) Compiles but does not work, unfortunately, a problem with Symbian. If you are using the 'make' directly, it is the GNU make from the SDKs, and it will invoke the right make commands for the Windows emulator build and the Arm target builds ('thumb' by default) as necessary. The build scripts assume the 'absolute style' SDK installs under C:, the 'subst style' will not work. If using the VC IDE, to build use for example the File->Open Workspace-> C:\Symbian\8.0a\S60_2nd_FP2\epoc32\build\symbian\perl\perl\wins\perl.dsw The emulator binaries will appear in the same directory. If using the VC IDE, you will a lot of warnings in the beginning of the build because a lot of headers mentioned by the source cannot be found, but this is not serious since those headers are not used. The Metrowerks will give a lot of warnings about unused variables and empty declarations, you can ignore those. When the Windows and Arm DLLs are built do not be scared by a very long messages whizzing by: it is the "export freeze" phase where the whole (rather large) API of Perl is listed. Once the build is completed you need to create the DLL SIS file by make perldll.sis which will create the file perlXYZ.sis (the XYZ being the Perl version) which you can then install into your Symbian device: an easy way to do this is to send them via Bluetooth or infrared and just open the messages. Since the total size of all Perl SIS files once installed is over 2 MB, it is recommended to do the installation into a memory card (drive E:) instead of the C: drive. The size of the perlXYZ.SIS is about 370 kB but once it is in the device it is about one 750 kB (according to the application manager). The perlXYZ.sis includes only the Perl DLL: to create an additional SIS file which includes some of the standard (pure) Perl libraries, issue the command make perllib.sis Some of the standard Perl libraries are included, but not all: see L</HISTORY> or F<symbian\install.cfg> for more details (250 kB -> 700 kB). Some of the standard Perl XS extensions (see L</HISTORY> are also available: make perlext.sis which will create perlXYZext.sis (290 kB -> 770 kB). To compile the demonstration application PerlApp you need first to install the Perl headers under the SDK. To install the Perl headers and the class CPerlBase documentation so that you no more need the Perl sources around to compile Perl applications using the SDK: make sdkinstall The destination directory is C:\Symbian\perl\X.Y.Z. For more details, see F<symbian\PerlBase.pod>. Once the headers have been installed, you can create a SIS for the PerlApp: make perlapp.sis The perlapp.sis (11 kB -> 16 kB) will be built in the symbian subdirectory, but a copy will also be made to the main directory. If you want to package the Perl DLLs (one for WINS, one for ARMI), the headers, and the documentation: make perlsdk.zip which will create perlXYZsdk.zip that can be used in another Windows system with the SDK, without having to compile Perl in that system. If you want to package the PerlApp sources: make perlapp.zip If you want to package the perl.exe and miniperl.exe, you can use the perlexe.sis and miniperlexe.sis make targets. You also probably want the perllib.sis for the libraries and maybe even the perlapp.sis for the recognizer. The make target 'allsis' combines all the above SIS targets. To clean up after compilation you can use either of make clean make distclean depending on how clean you want to be.
cat makefile.sh >makefile 'cat' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file.
it means you need to (re)run the symbian\config.pl.
If you get the error
'perl' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file.
you may need to reinstall the ActivePerl.
If you see this
ren makedef.pl nomakedef.pl The system cannot find the file specified. C:\Symbian\...\make.exe: [rename_makedef] Error 1 (ignored)
please ignore it since it is nothing serious (the build process of renames the Perl makedef.pl as nomakedef.pl to avoid confusing it with a makedef.pl of the SDK).
The PerlApp also is started when the ``Perl recognizer'' (also included and installed) detects a Perl file being activated througg the GUI, and offers either to install it under \Perl (if the Perl file is in the inbox of the messaging application) or to run it (if the Perl file is under \Perl).
The Perl port has been done for the most part using the Symbian standard POSIX-ish STDLIB library. It is a reasonably complete library, but certain corners of such emulation libraries that tend to be left unimplemented on non-UNIX platforms have been left unimplemented also this time: fork(), signals(), user/group ids, select() working for sockets, non-blocking sockets, and so forth. See the file symbian/config.sh and look for 'undef' to find the unsupported APIs (or from Perl use Config).
The filesystem of Symbian devices uses DOSish syntax, ``drives'' separated from paths by a colon, and backslashes for the path. The exact assignment of the drives probably varies between platforms, but for example in Series 60 you might see C: as the (flash) main memory, D: as the RAM drive, E: as the memory card (MMC), Z: as the ROM. In Series 80 D: is the memory card. As far the devices go the NUL: is the bit bucket, the COMx: are the serial lines, IRCOMx: are the IR ports, TMP: might be C:\System\Temp. Remember to double those backslashes in doublequoted strings.
The Perl DLL is installed in \System\Libs\. The Perl libraries and extension DLLs are installed in \System\Libs\Perl\X.Y.Z\. The PerlApp is installed in \System\Apps\, and the SIS also installs a couple of demo scripts in \Perl\ (C:\Mydocs\Perl\ on Nokia 7710).
Note that the Symbian filesystem is very picky: it strongly prefers the \ instead of the /.
When doing XS / Symbian C++ programming include first the Symbian headers, then any standard C/POSIX headers, then Perl headers, and finally any application headers.
New() and Copy() are unfortunately used by both Symbian and Perl code so you'll have to play cpp games if you need them. PerlBase.h undefines the Perl definitions and redefines them as PerlNew() and PerlCopy().
Nokia is a registered trademark of Nokia Corporation. Nokia's product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of Nokia. Other product and company names mentioned herein may be trademarks or trade names of their respective owners.
Copyright (c) 2006-2007 Jarkko Hietaniemi.
(This will show as ``0.01'' in the Symbian Installer.)
- The console window is a very simple console indeed: one can get the newline with "000" and the "C" button is a backspace. Do not expect a terminal capable of vt100 or ANSI sequences. The console is also "ASCII", you cannot input e.g. any accented letters. Because of obvious physical constraints the console is also very small: (in Nokia 6600) 22 columns, 17 rows. - The following libraries are available: AnyDBM_File AutoLoader base Carp Config Cwd constant DynaLoader Exporter File::Spec integer lib strict Symbol vars warnings XSLoader - The following extensions are available: attrs Compress::Zlib Cwd Data::Dumper Devel::Peek Digest::MD5 DynaLoader Fcntl File::Glob Filter::Util::Call IO List::Util MIME::Base64 PerlIO::scalar PerlIO::via SDBM_File Socket Storable Time::HiRes - The following extensions are missing for various technical reasons: B ByteLoader Devel::DProf Devel::PPPort Encode GDBM_File I18N::Langinfo IPC::SysV NDBM_File Opcode PerlIO::encoding POSIX re Safe Sys::Hostname Sys::Syslog threads threads::shared Unicode::Normalize - Using MakeMaker or the Module::* to build and install modules is not supported. - Building XS other than the ones in the core is not supported.
Since this is 0.something release, any future releases are almost guaranteed to be binary incompatible. As a sign of this the Symbian symbol exports are kept unfrozen and the .def files fully rebuilt every time.
- Perl 5.9.3 (patch level 25741) - Compress::Zlib and IO::Zlib supported - sisify.pl added
We maintain the binary incompatibility.
- Perl 5.9.3 (patch level 25911) - Series 80 2.0 and UIQ 2.1 support
We maintain the binary incompatibility.
- Perl 5.9.3 (patch level 26052) - adding a sample Symbian extension
We maintain the binary incompatibility.
- Perl 5.9.5-to-be (patch level 30002) - added extensions: Compress/Raw/Zlib, Digest/SHA, Hash/Util, Math/BigInt/FastCalc, Text/Soundex, Time/Piece - port to S90 1.1 by alexander smishlajev
We maintain the binary incompatibility.
- catchup with Perl 5.9.5-to-be (patch level 30812) - tested to build with Microsoft Visual C++ 2005 Express Edition (which uses Microsoft Visual C 8, instead of the old VC6), SDK used for testing S60_2nd_FP3 aka 8.1a
We maintain the binary incompatibility.