1 Introduction 2 ============ 3 4 This is the Gnu Readline library, version 8.2. 5 6 The Readline library provides a set of functions for use by applications 7 that allow users to edit command lines as they are typed in. Both 8 Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The Readline library includes 9 additional functions to maintain a list of previously-entered command 10 lines, to recall and perhaps reedit those lines, and perform csh-like 11 history expansion on previous commands. 12 13 The history facilities are also placed into a separate library, the 14 History library, as part of the build process. The History library 15 may be used without Readline in applications which desire its 16 capabilities. 17 18 The Readline library is free software, distributed under the terms of 19 the [GNU] General Public License as published by the Free Software 20 Foundation, version 3 of the License. For more information, see the 21 file COPYING. 22 23 To build the library, try typing `./configure', then `make'. The 24 configuration process is automated, so no further intervention should 25 be necessary. Readline builds with `gcc' by default if it is 26 available. If you want to use `cc' instead, type 27 28 CC=cc ./configure 29 30 if you are using a Bourne-style shell. If you are not, the following 31 may work: 32 33 env CC=cc ./configure 34 35 Read the file INSTALL in this directory for more information about how 36 to customize and control the build process. 37 38 The file rlconf.h contains C preprocessor defines that enable and disable 39 certain Readline features. 40 41 The special make target `everything' will build the static and shared 42 libraries (if the target platform supports them) and the examples. 43 44 Examples 45 ======== 46 47 There are several example programs that use Readline features in the 48 examples directory. The `rl' program is of particular interest. It 49 is a command-line interface to Readline, suitable for use in shell 50 scripts in place of `read'. 51 52 Shared Libraries 53 ================ 54 55 There is skeletal support for building shared versions of the 56 Readline and History libraries. The configure script creates 57 a Makefile in the `shlib' subdirectory, and typing `make shared' 58 will cause shared versions of the Readline and History libraries 59 to be built on supported platforms. 60 61 If `configure' is given the `--enable-shared' option, it will attempt 62 to build the shared libraries by default on supported platforms. 63 64 Configure calls the script support/shobj-conf to test whether or 65 not shared library creation is supported and to generate the values 66 of variables that are substituted into shlib/Makefile. If you 67 try to build shared libraries on an unsupported platform, `make' 68 will display a message asking you to update support/shobj-conf for 69 your platform. 70 71 If you need to update support/shobj-conf, you will need to create 72 a `stanza' for your operating system and compiler. The script uses 73 the value of host_os and ${CC} as determined by configure. For 74 instance, FreeBSD 4.2 with any version of gcc is identified as 75 `freebsd4.2-gcc*'. 76 77 In the stanza for your operating system-compiler pair, you will need to 78 define several variables. They are: 79 80 SHOBJ_CC The C compiler used to compile source files into shareable 81 object files. This is normally set to the value of ${CC} 82 by configure, and should not need to be changed. 83 84 SHOBJ_CFLAGS Flags to pass to the C compiler ($SHOBJ_CC) to create 85 position-independent code. If you are using gcc, this 86 should probably be set to `-fpic'. 87 88 SHOBJ_LD The link editor to be used to create the shared library from 89 the object files created by $SHOBJ_CC. If you are using 90 gcc, a value of `gcc' will probably work. 91 92 SHOBJ_LDFLAGS Flags to pass to SHOBJ_LD to enable shared object creation. 93 If you are using gcc, `-shared' may be all that is necessary. 94 These should be the flags needed for generic shared object 95 creation. 96 97 SHLIB_XLDFLAGS Additional flags to pass to SHOBJ_LD for shared library 98 creation. Many systems use the -R option to the link 99 editor to embed a path within the library for run-time 100 library searches. A reasonable value for such systems would 101 be `-R$(libdir)'. 102 103 SHLIB_LIBS Any additional libraries that shared libraries should be 104 linked against when they are created. 105 106 SHLIB_LIBPREF The prefix to use when generating the filename of the shared 107 library. The default is `lib'; Cygwin uses `cyg'. 108 109 SHLIB_LIBSUFF The suffix to add to `libreadline' and `libhistory' when 110 generating the filename of the shared library. Many systems 111 use `so'; HP-UX uses `sl'. 112 113 SHLIB_LIBVERSION The string to append to the filename to indicate the version 114 of the shared library. It should begin with $(SHLIB_LIBSUFF), 115 and possibly include version information that allows the 116 run-time loader to load the version of the shared library 117 appropriate for a particular program. Systems using shared 118 libraries similar to SunOS 4.x use major and minor library 119 version numbers; for those systems a value of 120 `$(SHLIB_LIBSUFF).$(SHLIB_MAJOR)$(SHLIB_MINOR)' is appropriate. 121 Systems based on System V Release 4 don't use minor version 122 numbers; use `$(SHLIB_LIBSUFF).$(SHLIB_MAJOR)' on those systems. 123 Other Unix versions use different schemes. 124 125 SHLIB_DLLVERSION The version number for shared libraries that determines API 126 compatibility between readline versions and the underlying 127 system. Used only on Cygwin. Defaults to $SHLIB_MAJOR, but 128 can be overridden at configuration time by defining DLLVERSION 129 in the environment. 130 131 SHLIB_DOT The character used to separate the name of the shared library 132 from the suffix and version information. The default is `.'; 133 systems like Cygwin which don't separate version information 134 from the library name should set this to the empty string. 135 136 SHLIB_STATUS Set this to `supported' when you have defined the other 137 necessary variables. Make uses this to determine whether 138 or not shared library creation should be attempted. 139 140 You should look at the existing stanzas in support/shobj-conf for ideas. 141 142 Once you have updated support/shobj-conf, re-run configure and type 143 `make shared'. The shared libraries will be created in the shlib 144 subdirectory. 145 146 If shared libraries are created, `make install' will install them. 147 You may install only the shared libraries by running `make 148 install-shared' from the top-level build directory. Running `make 149 install' in the shlib subdirectory will also work. If you don't want 150 to install any created shared libraries, run `make install-static'. 151 152 Documentation 153 ============= 154 155 The documentation for the Readline and History libraries appears in 156 the `doc' subdirectory. There are three texinfo files and a 157 Unix-style manual page describing the facilities available in the 158 Readline library. The texinfo files include both user and 159 programmer's manuals. HTML versions of the manuals appear in the 160 `doc' subdirectory as well. 161 162 Usage 163 ===== 164 165 Our position on the use of Readline through a shared-library linking 166 mechanism is that there is no legal difference between shared-library 167 linking and static linking--either kind of linking combines various 168 modules into a single larger work. The conditions for using Readline 169 in a larger work are stated in section 3 of the GNU GPL. 170 171 Reporting Bugs 172 ============== 173 174 Bug reports for Readline should be sent to: 175 176 bug-readline (a] gnu.org 177 178 When reporting a bug, please include the following information: 179 180 * the version number and release status of Readline (e.g., 4.2-release) 181 * the machine and OS that it is running on 182 * a list of the compilation flags or the contents of `config.h', if 183 appropriate 184 * a description of the bug 185 * a recipe for recreating the bug reliably 186 * a fix for the bug if you have one! 187 188 If you would like to contact the Readline maintainer directly, send mail 189 to bash-maintainers (a] gnu.org. 190 191 Since Readline is developed along with bash, the bug-bash (a] gnu.org mailing 192 list (mirrored to the Usenet newsgroup gnu.bash.bug) often contains 193 Readline bug reports and fixes. 194 195 Chet Ramey 196 chet.ramey (a] case.edu 197