1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
|
# @(#)README 8.24 (Berkeley) 6/20/96
Nvi uses the GNU autoconf program for configuration and compilation. You
should enter:
configure
make
and nvi will configure the system and build one or two binaries: nvi and
tknvi. You can use any path to the configure script, e.g., to build for
an x86 architecture, I suggest that you do:
mkdir build.x86
cd build.x86
../build/configure
make
There are options that you can specify to the configure command. See
the next section for a description of these options.
If you want to rebuild or reconfigure nvi, for example, because you change
your mind as to the curses library that you want to use, create a new
directory and reconfigure it using "configure" and whatever options you
choose, don't try to selectively edit the files.
By default, nvi is installed as "vi", with hard links to "ex" and "view".
To install them using different names, use the configure program options.
For example, to install them as "nvi", "nex" and "nview", use:
configure --program-prefix=n
See the section below on installation for details.
Note, if you're building nvi on a LynxOS system, you should read the
README.LynxOS file in this directory for additional build instructions
that are specific to that operating system.
If you have trouble with this procedure, send email to the addresses
listed in ../README. In that email, please provide a complete script
of the output for all of the above commands that you entered.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=
NVI'S OPTIONS TO THE CONFIGURE PROGRAM
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
There are many options that you can enter to the configuration program.
To see a complete list of the options, enter "configure --help". Only
a few of them are nvi specific. These options are as follows:
--disable-curses DON'T use the nvi-provided curses routines.
--disable-db DON'T use the nvi-provided DB routines.
--disable-re DON'T use the nvi-provided RE routines.
--enable-debug Build a debugging version.
--enable-perlinterp Include a Perl interpreter in vi.
--enable-tclinterp Include a Tk/Tcl interpreter in vi.
--enable-tknvi Build a Tk/Tcl front-end for vi.
disable-curses:
By default, nvi loads its own implementation of the curses
routines (which are a stripped-down version of the 4.4BSD curses
library). If you have your own curses library implementation and
you want to use it instead, enter:
--disable-curses
as an argument to configure, and the curses routines will be taken
from whatever libraries you load. Note: System V based curses
implementations are usually broken. See the last section of this
README for further information about nvi and the curses library.
disable-db:
By default, nvi loads its own versions of the Berkeley DB routines
(which are a stripped-down version of DB 1.85). If you have your
own version of the Berkeley DB routines and you want to use them
instead, enter:
--disable-db
as an argument to configure, and the DB routines will be taken
from whatever libraries you load. Make sure that the DB routines
you use are at least version 1.85 or later.
disable-re:
By default, nvi loads its own versions of the POSIX 1003.2 Regular
Expression routines (which are Henry Spencer's implementation).
If your C library contains an implementation of the POSIX 1003.2
RE routines (note, this is NOT the same as the historic UNIX RE
routines), and you want to use them instead, enter:
--disable-re
as an argument to configure, and the RE routines will be taken
from whatever libraries you load. Please ensure that your RE
routines implement Henry Spencer's extensions for doing vi-style
"word" searches.
enable-debug:
If you want to build nvi with no optimization (i.e. without -O
as a compiler flag), with -g as a compiler flag, and with DEBUG
defined during compilation, enter:
--enable-debug
as an argument to configure.
enable-perlinterp:
If you have the Perl 5 libraries and you want to compile in the
Perl interpreter, enter:
--enable-perlinterp
as an argument to configure. (Note: this is NOT possible with
Perl 4, or even with Perl 5 versions earlier than 5.002.)
enable-tclinterp:
If you have the Tk/Tcl libraries and you want to compile in the
Tcl/Tk interpreter, enter:
--enable-tclinterp
as an argument to configure. If your Tk/Tcl include files and
libraries aren't in the standard library and include locations,
see the next section of this README file for more information.
enable-tknvi:
If you have the Tk/Tcl libraries and you want to build the Tcl/Tk
nvi front-end, enter:
--enable-tknvi
as an argument to configure. If your Tk/Tcl include files and
libraries aren't in the standard library and include locations,
see the next section of this README file for more information.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=
ADDING OR CHANGING COMPILERS, OR COMPILE OR LOAD LINE FLAGS
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
If you want to use a specific compiler, specify the CC environment
variable before running configure. For example:
env CC=gcc configure
Using anything other than the native compiler will almost certainly
mean that you'll want to check the compile and load line flags, too.
If you want to specify additional load line flags, specify the ADDLDFLAGS
environment variable before running configure. For example:
env ADDLDFLAGS="-Q" configure
would specify the -Q flag in the load line when the nvi programs are
loaded.
If you don't want configure to use the default load line flags for the
system, specify the LDFLAGS environment variable before running configure.
For example:
env LDFLAGS="-32" configure
will cause configure to set the load line flags to "-32", and not set
them based on the current system.
If you want to specify additional compile line flags, specify the
ADDCPPFLAGS environment variable before running configure. For example:
env ADDCPPFLAGS="-I../foo" configure
would cause the compiler to be passed the -I../foo flag when compiling
test programs during configuration as well as when building nvi object
files.
If you don't want configure to use the default compile line flags for the
system, specify the CPPFLAGS environment variable before running configure.
For example:
env CPPFLAGS="-I.." configure
will cause configure to use "-I.." as the compile line flags instead of
the default values.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=
ADDING LIBRARIES AND INCLUDE FILES
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
If the Tk/Tcl or any other include files or libraries are in non-standard
places on your system, you will need to specify the directory path where
they can be found.
If you want to specify additional library paths, set the ADDLIBS environment
variable before running configure. For example:
env ADDLIBS="-L/a/b -L/e/f -ldb" configure
would specify two additional directories to search for libraries, /a/b
and /e/f, and one additional library to load, "db".
If you want to specify additional include paths, specify the ADDCPPFLAGS
environment variable before running configure. For example:
env ADDCPPFLAGS="-I/usr/local/include" LIBS="-ldb" configure
would search /usr/local/include for include files, as well as load the db
library as described above.
As a final example, let's say that you've downloaded ncurses from the net
and you've built it in a directory named ncurses which is at the same
level in the filesystem hierarchy as nvi. You would enter something like:
env ADDCPPFLAGS="-I../../ncurses/include" \
ADDLIBS="-L../../ncurses/libraries" configure
to cause nvi to look for the curses include files and the curses library
in the ncurses environment.
Notes:
Make sure that you prepend -L to any library directory names, and
that you prepend -I to any include file directory names! Also,
make sure that you quote the paths as shown above, i.e. with
single or double quotes around the values you're specifying for
ADDCPPFLAGS and ADDLIBS.
=-=-=-=-=-=
You should NOT need to add any libraries or include files to load
the Perl5 interpreter. The configure script will obtain that
information directly from the Perl5 program. This means that the
configure script must be able to find perl in its path. It looks
for "perl5" first, and then "perl". If you're building a Perl
interpreter and neither is found, it's a fatal error.
=-=-=-=-=-=
You do not need to specify additional libraries to load Tk/Tcl,
Perl or curses, as the nvi configuration script adds the
appropriate libraries to the load line whenever you specify
--enable-tknvi or other Perl or Tk/Tcl related option, or build
the Tk/Tcl or curses version of nvi. The library names that are
automatically loaded are as follows:
for Perl: -lperl
for Tk/Tcl: -ltk -ltcl -lm
for curses: -lcurses
In addition, the configure script loads:
... the X libraries when loading the Tk/Tcl libraries,
if they exist.
... the -ltermcap or -ltermlib libraries when loading
any curses library, if they exist.
=-=-=-=-=-=
The env command is available on most systems, and simply sets one
or more environment variables before running a command. If the
env command is not available to you, you can set the environment
variables in your shell before running configure. For example,
in sh or ksh, you could do:
ADDLIBS="-L/a/b -L/e/f -ldb" configure
and in csh or tcsh, you could do:
setenv ADDLIBS "-L/a/b -L/e/f -ldb"
configure
See your shell manual page for further information.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=
INSTALLING NVI
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Nvi installs the following files into the following locations, with
the following default values:
File(s): Location
Default Location
----------------------------------------
vi $(exec_prefix)/$(bindir)/vi
/usr/local/bin/vi
vi.0 $(prefix)/$(mandir)/cat1/vi.0
/usr/local/man/cat1/vi.0
Message Catalogs $(prefix)/$(datadir)/vi/catalog/
/usr/local/share/vi/catalog/
Perl5 scripts $(prefix)/$(datadir)/vi/perl/
/usr/local/share/vi/perl/
Tcl scripts $(prefix)/$(datadir)/vi/tcl/
/usr/local/share/vi/tcl/
Notes:
There are two hard links to the vi program, named ex and view.
Similarly, there are two hard links to the vi manual page, named
ex.0 and view.0. These links are created when the program and
man pages are installed.
If you want to install vi, ex, view and the man pages as nvi, nex,
nview, use the configure option --program-prefix=n. Other, more
complex transformations are possible -- use configure --help to
see more options.
The default value for both "exec_prefix" and "prefix" is the
directory /usr/local. The default values for "bindir", "datadir"
and "mandir" are bin, share and man, respectively.
To move the entire installation tree somewhere besides /usr/local,
change the value of both "exec_prefix" and "prefix". To move the
binaries to a different place in the "exec_prefix" directory tree,
change the value of "bindir". Similarly, to put the datafiles
(the message catalogs, Perl5 and Tcl scripts) or the man pages in
a different place in the "prefix" directory tree, change the value
of "datadir" or "mandir". These values can be changed as part of
configuration:
configure --exec_prefix=/usr/contrib --prefix=/usr/share
or when doing the install itself:
make exec_prefix=/usr/contrib prefix=/usr/contrib install
The datafile directory (e.g., /usr/local/share/vi by default) is
completely removed and then recreated as part of the installation
process.
The mandir directory must have another directory named "cat1"
beneath it for the man pages to successfully install.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=
NVI AND THE CURSES LIBRARY
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
The major portability problem for nvi is selecting a curses library.
Unfortunately, it is common to find broken versions of curses -- the
original System V curses was broken, resulting in all vendors whose
implementations are derived from System V having broken implementations
in turn.
For this reason, BY DEFAULT, nvi uses the stripped-down curses library
that's included in its distribution. Of course, it would be preferable
to use the vendor's curses library, or one of the newer implementations
of curses, e.g., ncurses.
To use the vendor's curses library, specify the:
--disable-curses
argument to the configure command. If you use the vendor's or other
curses library, and you see any of the following symptoms:
+ Core dumps in curses routines.
+ Missing routines when compiling.
+ Repainting the wrong characters on the screen.
+ Displaying inverse video in the wrong places.
+ Failure to reset your terminal to the correct modes on exit.
you have a broken curses implementation, and you should reconfigure nvi
to use another curses library or the curses library provided with nvi.
There are two alternative sources for curses libraries:
#1: Compile the 4BSD curses library from any of the recent BSD
releases: FreeBSD, NetBSD or 4.4BSD-Lite release 2. These
libraries should be able to support nvi.
#2: Retrieve and build the ncurses library. This library is not
recommended unreservedly, at least for now, for two reasons.
First, it can't be built on any system where the compiler
doesn't support function prototypes. Second, it currently has
a few bugs in its support for nvi. It mostly works, but it's
still not quite right.
One final note. If you see the following symptoms:
+ Line-by-line screen repainting instead of scrolling.
it usually means that your termcap or terminfo information is insufficient
for the terminal.
|