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Config(3p)	Perl Programmers Reference Guide       Config(3p)

NAME
     Config - access Perl configuration information

SYNOPSIS
	 use Config;
	 if ($Config{usethreads}) {
	     print "has thread support\n"
	 }

	 use Config qw(myconfig config_sh config_vars config_re);

	 print myconfig();

	 print config_sh();

	 print config_re();

	 config_vars(qw(osname archname));

DESCRIPTION
     The Config module contains all the information that was
     available to the "Configure" program at Perl build time
     (over 900 values).

     Shell variables from the config.sh file (written by Config-
     ure) are stored in the readonly-variable %Config, indexed by
     their names.

     Values stored in config.sh as 'undef' are returned as unde-
     fined values.  The perl "exists" function can be used to
     check if a named variable exists.

     myconfig()
	 Returns a textual summary of the major perl configura-
	 tion values. See also "-V" in "Switches" in perlrun.

     config_sh()
	 Returns the entire perl configuration information in the
	 form of the original config.sh shell variable assignment
	 script.

     config_re($regex)
	 Like config_sh() but returns, as a list, only the config
	 entries who's names match the $regex.

     ames)@u-3p config_vars(@names)
	 Prints to STDOUT the values of the named configuration
	 variable. Each is printed on a separate line in the
	 form:

	   name='value';

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	 Names which are unknown are output as "name='UNKNOWN';".
	 See also "-V:name" in "Switches" in perlrun.

EXAMPLE
     Here's a more sophisticated example of using %Config:

	 use Config;
	 use strict;

	 my %sig_num;
	 my @sig_name;
	 unless($Config{sig_name} && $Config{sig_num}) {
	     die "No sigs?";
	 } else {
	     my @names = split ' ', $Config{sig_name};
	     @sig_num{@names} = split ' ', $Config{sig_num};
	     foreach (@names) {
		 $sig_name[$sig_num{$_}] ||= $_;
	     }
	 }

	 print "signal #17 = $sig_name[17]\n";
	 if ($sig_num{ALRM}) {
	     print "SIGALRM is $sig_num{ALRM}\n";
	 }

WARNING
     Because this information is not stored within the perl exe-
     cutable itself it is possible (but unlikely) that the infor-
     mation does not relate to the actual perl binary which is
     being used to access it.

     The Config module is installed into the architecture and
     version specific library directory ($Config{installarchlib})
     and it checks the perl version number when loaded.

     The values stored in config.sh may be either single-quoted
     or double-quoted. Double-quoted strings are handy for those
     cases where you need to include escape sequences in the
     strings. To avoid runtime variable interpolation, any "$"
     and "@" characters are replaced by "\$" and "\@", respec-
     tively. This isn't foolproof, of course, so don't embed "\$"
     or "\@" in double-quoted strings unless you're willing to
     deal with the consequences. (The slashes will end up escaped
     and the "$" or "@" will trigger variable interpolation)

GLOSSARY
     Most "Config" variables are determined by the "Configure"
     script on platforms supported by it (which is most UNIX
     platforms).  Some platforms have custom-made "Config" vari-
     ables, and may thus not have some of the variables described
     below, or may have extraneous variables specific to that

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     particular port.  See the port specific documentation in
     such cases.

     _

     "_a"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This variable defines the extension used for ordinary
	 library files. For unix, it is .a.  The . is included.
	 Other possible values include .lib.

     "_exe"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This variable defines the extension used for executable
	 files. "DJGPP", Cygwin and OS/2 use .exe.  Stratus "VOS"
	 uses .pm. On operating systems which do not require a
	 specific extension for executable files, this variable
	 is empty.

     "_o"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This variable defines the extension used for object
	 files. For unix, it is .o.  The . is included.	 Other
	 possible values include .obj.

     a

     "afs"
	 From afs.U:

	 This variable is set to "true" if "AFS" (Andrew File
	 System) is used on the system, "false" otherwise.  It is
	 possible to override this with a hint value or command
	 line option, but you'd better know what you are doing.

     "afsroot"
	 From afs.U:

	 This variable is by default set to /afs. In the unlikely
	 case this is not the correct root, it is possible to
	 override this with a hint value or command line option.
	 This will be used in subsequent tests for AFSness in the
	 Perl configure and test process.

     "alignbytes"
	 From alignbytes.U:

	 This variable holds the number of bytes required to
	 align a double-- or a long double when applicable. Usual

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	 values are 2, 4 and 8.	 The default is eight, for
	 safety.

     "ansi2knr"
	 From ansi2knr.U:

	 This variable is set if the user needs to run ansi2knr.
	 Currently, this is not supported, so we just abort.

     "aphostname"
	 From d_gethname.U:

	 This variable contains the command which can be used to
	 compute the host name. The command is fully qualified by
	 its absolute path, to make it safe when used by a pro-
	 cess with super-user privileges.

     "api_revision"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 The three variables, api_revision, api_version, and
	 api_subversion, specify the version of the oldest perl
	 binary compatible with the present perl.  In a full ver-
	 sion string such as 5.6.1, api_revision is the 5. Prior
	 to 5.5.640, the format was a floating point number, like
	 5.00563.

	 perl.c:incpush() and lib/lib.pm will automatically
	 search in $sitelib/.. for older directories back to the
	 limit specified by these api_ variables.  This is only
	 useful if you have a perl library directory tree struc-
	 tured like the default one. See "INSTALL" for how this
	 works.	 The versioned site_perl directory was introduced
	 in 5.005, so that is the lowest possible value.  The
	 version list appropriate for the current system is
	 determined in inc_version_list.U.

	 "XXX" To do:  Since compatibility can depend on compile
	 time options (such as bincompat, longlong, etc.) it
	 should (perhaps) be set by Configure, but currently it
	 isn't. Currently, we read a hard-wired value from
	 patchlevel.h. Perhaps what we ought to do is take the
	 hard-wired value from patchlevel.h but then modify it if
	 the current Configure options warrant.	 patchlevel.h
	 then would use an #ifdef guard.

     "api_subversion"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 The three variables, api_revision, api_version, and
	 api_subversion, specify the version of the oldest perl
	 binary compatible with the present perl.  In a full

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	 version string such as 5.6.1, api_subversion is the 1.
	 See api_revision for full details.

     "api_version"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 The three variables, api_revision, api_version, and
	 api_subversion, specify the version of the oldest perl
	 binary compatible with the present perl.  In a full ver-
	 sion string such as 5.6.1, api_version is the 6.  See
	 api_revision for full details.	 As a special case, 5.5.0
	 is rendered in the old-style as 5.005.	 (In the 5.005_0x
	 maintenance series, this was the only versioned direc-
	 tory in $sitelib.)

     "api_versionstring"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 This variable combines api_revision, api_version, and
	 api_subversion in a format such as 5.6.1 (or 5_6_1)
	 suitable for use as a directory name.	This is filesys-
	 tem dependent.

     "ar"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the ar program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain "ar"
	 and is not useful.

     "archlib"
	 From archlib.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the directory in which
	 the user wants to put architecture-dependent public
	 library files for $package. It is most often a local
	 directory such as /usr/local/lib. Programs using this
	 variable must be prepared to deal with filename expan-
	 sion.

     "archlibexp"
	 From archlib.U:

	 This variable is the same as the archlib variable, but
	 is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use.

     "archname64"
	 From use64bits.U:

	 This variable is used for the 64-bitness part of

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	 $archname.

     "archname"
	 From archname.U:

	 This variable is a short name to characterize the
	 current architecture.	It is used mainly to construct
	 the default archlib.

     "archobjs"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This variable defines any additional objects that must
	 be linked in with the program on this architecture.  On
	 unix, it is usually empty.  It is typically used to
	 include emulations of unix calls or other facilities.
	 For perl on OS/2, for example, this would include
	 os2/os2.obj.

     "asctime_r_proto"
	 From d_asctime_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of asctime_r. It is
	 zero if d_asctime_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_asctime_r is defined.

     "awk"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the awk program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "awk" and is not useful.

     b

     "baserev"
	 From baserev.U:

	 The base revision level of this package, from the .pack-
	 age file.

     "bash"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "bin"
	 From bin.U:

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	 This variable holds the name of the directory in which
	 the user wants to put publicly executable images for the
	 package in question.  It is most often a local directory
	 such as /usr/local/bin. Programs using this variable
	 must be prepared to deal with ~name substitution.

     "binexp"
	 From bin.U:

	 This is the same as the bin variable, but is filename
	 expanded at configuration time, for use in your
	 makefiles.

     "bison"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the bison program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "bison" and is not useful.

     "byacc"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the byacc program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "byacc" and is not useful.

     "byteorder"
	 From byteorder.U:

	 This variable holds the byte order in a "UV". In the
	 following, larger digits indicate more significance.
	 The variable byteorder is either 4321 on a big-endian
	 machine, or 1234 on a little-endian, or 87654321 on a
	 Cray ... or 3412 with weird order !

     c

     "c" From n.U:

	 This variable contains the \c string if that is what
	 causes the echo command to suppress newline.  Otherwise
	 it is null.  Correct usage is $echo $n "prompt for a
	 question: $c".

     "castflags"
	 From d_castneg.U:

	 This variable contains a flag that precise difficulties
	 the compiler has casting odd floating values to unsigned

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	 long: 0 = ok 1 = couldn't cast < 0 2 = couldn't cast >=
	 0x80000000 4 = couldn't cast in argument expression list

     "cat"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the cat program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "cat" and is not useful.

     "cc"
	 From cc.U:

	 This variable holds the name of a command to execute a C
	 compiler which can resolve multiple global references
	 that happen to have the same name.  Usual values are
	 "cc" and "gcc". Fervent "ANSI" compilers may be called
	 "c89".	 "AIX" has xlc.

     "cccdlflags"
	 From dlsrc.U:

	 This variable contains any special flags that might need
	 to be passed with "cc -c" to compile modules to be used
	 to create a shared library that will be used for dynamic
	 loading.  For hpux, this should be +z.	 It is up to the
	 makefile to use it.

     "ccdlflags"
	 From dlsrc.U:

	 This variable contains any special flags that might need
	 to be passed to cc to link with a shared library for
	 dynamic loading. It is up to the makefile to use it.
	 For sunos 4.1, it should be empty.

     "ccflags"
	 From ccflags.U:

	 This variable contains any additional C compiler flags
	 desired by the user.  It is up to the Makefile to use
	 this.

     "ccflags_uselargefiles"
	 From uselfs.U:

	 This variable contains the compiler flags needed by
	 large file builds and added to ccflags by hints files.

     "ccname"
	 From Checkcc.U:

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	 This can set either by hints files or by Configure.  If
	 using gcc, this is gcc, and if not, usually equal to cc,
	 unimpressive, no? Some platforms, however, make good use
	 of this by storing the flavor of the C compiler being
	 used here.  For example if using the Sun WorkShop suite,
	 ccname will be "workshop".

     "ccsymbols"
	 From Cppsym.U:

	 The variable contains the symbols defined by the C com-
	 piler alone. The symbols defined by cpp or by cc when it
	 calls cpp are not in this list, see cppsymbols and
	 cppccsymbols. The list is a space-separated list of
	 symbol=value tokens.

     "ccversion"
	 From Checkcc.U:

	 This can set either by hints files or by Configure.  If
	 using a (non-gcc) vendor cc, this variable may contain a
	 version for the compiler.

     "cf_by"
	 From cf_who.U:

	 Login name of the person who ran the Configure script
	 and answered the questions. This is used to tag both
	 config.sh and config_h.SH.

     "cf_email"
	 From cf_email.U:

	 Electronic mail address of the person who ran Configure.
	 This can be used by units that require the user's
	 e-mail, like MailList.U.

     "cf_time"
	 From cf_who.U:

	 Holds the output of the "date" command when the confi-
	 guration file was produced. This is used to tag both
	 config.sh and config_h.SH.

     "charsize"
	 From charsize.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the "CHARSIZE" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program how many bytes
	 there are in a character.

     "chgrp"

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	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "chmod"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the chmod program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "chmod" and is not useful.

     "chown"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "clocktype"
	 From d_times.U:

	 This variable holds the type returned by times(). It can
	 be long, or clock_t on "BSD" sites (in which case
	 <sys/types.h> should be included).

     "comm"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the comm program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "comm" and is not useful.

     "compress"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "contains"
	 From contains.U:

	 This variable holds the command to do a grep with a
	 proper return status.	On most sane systems it is simply
	 "grep".  On insane systems it is a grep followed by a
	 cat followed by a test.  This variable is primarily for
	 the use of other Configure units.

     "cp"
	 From Loc.U:

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	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the cp program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain "cp"
	 and is not useful.

     "cpio"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "cpp"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the cpp program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "cpp" and is not useful.

     "cpp_stuff"
	 From cpp_stuff.U:

	 This variable contains an identification of the concate-
	 nation mechanism used by the C preprocessor.

     "cppccsymbols"
	 From Cppsym.U:

	 The variable contains the symbols defined by the C com-
	 piler when it calls cpp.  The symbols defined by the cc
	 alone or cpp alone are not in this list, see ccsymbols
	 and cppsymbols. The list is a space-separated list of
	 symbol=value tokens.

     "cppflags"
	 From ccflags.U:

	 This variable holds the flags that will be passed to the
	 C pre- processor. It is up to the Makefile to use it.

     "cpplast"
	 From cppstdin.U:

	 This variable has the same functionality as cppminus,
	 only it applies to cpprun and not cppstdin.

     "cppminus"
	 From cppstdin.U:

	 This variable contains the second part of the string
	 which will invoke the C preprocessor on the standard
	 input and produce to standard output.	This variable

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	 will have the value "-" if cppstdin needs a minus to
	 specify standard input, otherwise the value is "".

     "cpprun"
	 From cppstdin.U:

	 This variable contains the command which will invoke a C
	 preprocessor on standard input and put the output to
	 stdout. It is guaranteed not to be a wrapper and may be
	 a null string if no preprocessor can be made directly
	 available. This preprocessor might be different from the
	 one used by the C compiler. Don't forget to append
	 cpplast after the preprocessor options.

     "cppstdin"
	 From cppstdin.U:

	 This variable contains the command which will invoke the
	 C preprocessor on standard input and put the output to
	 stdout. It is primarily used by other Configure units
	 that ask about preprocessor symbols.

     "cppsymbols"
	 From Cppsym.U:

	 The variable contains the symbols defined by the C
	 preprocessor alone.  The symbols defined by cc or by cc
	 when it calls cpp are not in this list, see ccsymbols
	 and cppccsymbols. The list is a space-separated list of
	 symbol=value tokens.

     "crypt_r_proto"
	 From d_crypt_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of crypt_r. It is
	 zero if d_crypt_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if d_crypt_r
	 is defined.

     "cryptlib"
	 From d_crypt.U:

	 This variable holds -lcrypt or the path to a libcrypt.a
	 archive if the crypt() function is not defined in the
	 standard C library. It is up to the Makefile to use
	 this.

     "csh"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the csh program.

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	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "csh" and is not useful.

     "ctermid_r_proto"
	 From d_ctermid_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of ctermid_r. It is
	 zero if d_ctermid_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_ctermid_r is defined.

     "ctime_r_proto"
	 From d_ctime_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of ctime_r. It is
	 zero if d_ctime_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if d_ctime_r
	 is defined.

     d

     "d__fwalk"
	 From d__fwalk.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS__FWALK" if
	 _fwalk() is available to apply a function to all the
	 file handles.

     "d_access"
	 From d_access.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_ACCESS" if the
	 access() system call is available to check for access
	 permissions using real IDs.

     "d_accessx"
	 From d_accessx.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ACCESSX"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 accessx() routine is available.

     "d_aintl"
	 From d_aintl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_AINTL" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the aintl()
	 routine is available. If copysignl is also present we
	 can emulate modfl.

     "d_alarm"
	 From d_alarm.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ALARM" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the alarm()
	 routine is available.

     "d_archlib"
	 From archlib.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "ARCHLIB" to hold
	 the pathname of architecture-dependent library files for
	 $package.  If $archlib is the same as $privlib, then
	 this is set to undef.

     "d_asctime_r"
	 From d_asctime_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ASCTIME_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 asctime_r() routine is available.

     "d_atolf"
	 From atolf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ATOLF" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the atolf()
	 routine is available.

     "d_atoll"
	 From atoll.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ATOLL" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the atoll()
	 routine is available.

     "d_attribute_format"
	 From d_attribut_format.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "HASATTRIBUTE_FORMAT", which indicates the C compiler
	 can check for printf-like formats.

     "d_attribute_malloc"
	 From d_attribute_malloc.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "HASATTRIBUTE_MALLOC", which indicates the C compiler
	 can understand functions as having malloc-like seman-
	 tics.

     "d_attribute_nonnull"
	 From d_attribute_nonnull.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines

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	 "HASATTRIBUTE_NONNULL", which indicates that the C com-
	 piler can know that certain arguments must not be
	 "NULL", and will check accordingly at compile time.

     "d_attribute_noreturn"
	 From d_attribute_noreturn.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "HASATTRIBUTE_NORETURN", which indicates that the C com-
	 piler can know that certain functions are guaranteed
	 never to return.

     "d_attribute_pure"
	 From d_attribute_pure.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HASATTRIBUTE_PURE",
	 which indicates that the C compiler can know that cer-
	 tain functions are "pure" functions, meaning that they
	 have no side effects, and only rely on function input
	 and/or global data for their results.

     "d_attribute_unused"
	 From d_attribute_unused.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "HASATTRIBUTE_UNUSED", which indicates that the C com-
	 piler can know that certain variables and arguments may
	 not always be used, and to not throw warnings if they
	 don't get used.

     "d_attribute_warn_unused_result"
	 From d_attribute_warn_unused_result.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "HASATTRIBUTE_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT", which indicates that
	 the C compiler can know that certain functions have a
	 return values that must not be ignored, such as malloc()
	 or open().

     "d_bcmp"
	 From d_bcmp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_BCMP" sym-
	 bol if the bcmp() routine is available to compare
	 strings.

     "d_bcopy"
	 From d_bcopy.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_BCOPY" sym-
	 bol if the bcopy() routine is available to copy strings.

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     "d_bsd"
	 From Guess.U:

	 This symbol conditionally defines the symbol "BSD" when
	 running on a "BSD" system.

     "d_bsdgetpgrp"
	 From d_getpgrp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "USE_BSD_GETPGRP" if
	 getpgrp needs one arguments whereas "USG" one needs
	 none.

     "d_bsdsetpgrp"
	 From d_setpgrp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "USE_BSD_SETPGRP" if
	 setpgrp needs two arguments whereas "USG" one needs
	 none. See also d_setpgid for a "POSIX" interface.

     "d_bzero"
	 From d_bzero.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_BZERO" sym-
	 bol if the bzero() routine is available to set memory to
	 0.

     "d_casti32"
	 From d_casti32.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines CASTI32, which indi-
	 cates whether the C compiler can cast large floats to
	 32-bit ints.

     "d_castneg"
	 From d_castneg.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "CASTNEG", which
	 indicates wether the C compiler can cast negative float
	 to unsigned.

     "d_charvspr"
	 From d_vprintf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "CHARVSPRINTF" if
	 this system has vsprintf returning type (char*).  The
	 trend seems to be to declare it as "int vsprintf()".

     "d_chown"
	 From d_chown.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_CHOWN"

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	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 chown() routine is available.

     "d_chroot"
	 From d_chroot.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_CHROOT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 chroot() routine is available.

     "d_chsize"
	 From d_chsize.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "CHSIZE" symbol,
	 which indicates to the C program that the chsize() rou-
	 tine is available to truncate files.  You might need a
	 -lx to get this routine.

     "d_class"
	 From d_class.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_CLASS" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the class()
	 routine is available.

     "d_clearenv"
	 From d_clearenv.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_CLEARENV"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 clearenv () routine is available.

     "d_closedir"
	 From d_closedir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_CLOSEDIR" if
	 closedir() is available.

     "d_cmsghdr_s"
	 From d_cmsghdr_s.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_STRUCT_CMSGHDR" symbol, which indicates that the
	 struct cmsghdr is supported.

     "d_const"
	 From d_const.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HASCONST" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that this C com-
	 piler knows about the const type.

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     "d_copysignl"
	 From d_copysignl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_COPYSIGNL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the copy-
	 signl() routine is available. If aintl is also present
	 we can emulate modfl.

     "d_crypt"
	 From d_crypt.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "CRYPT" symbol,
	 which indicates to the C program that the crypt() rou-
	 tine is available to encrypt passwords and the like.

     "d_crypt_r"
	 From d_crypt_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_CRYPT_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 crypt_r() routine is available.

     "d_csh"
	 From d_csh.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "CSH" symbol,
	 which indicates to the C program that the C-shell
	 exists.

     "d_ctermid_r"
	 From d_ctermid_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_CTERMID_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 ctermid_r() routine is available.

     "d_ctime_r"
	 From d_ctime_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_CTIME_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 ctime_r() routine is available.

     "d_cuserid"
	 From d_cuserid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_CUSERID"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 cuserid() routine is available to get character login
	 names.

     "d_dbl_dig"

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	 From d_dbl_dig.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines d_dbl_dig if this
	 system's header files provide "DBL_DIG", which is the
	 number of significant digits in a double precision
	 number.

     "d_dbminitproto"
	 From d_dbminitproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_DBMINIT_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the system provides a prototype for the
	 dbminit() function.  Otherwise, it is up to the program
	 to supply one.

     "d_difftime"
	 From d_difftime.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_DIFFTIME"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the diff-
	 time() routine is available.

     "d_dirfd"
	 From d_dirfd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_DIRFD" con-
	 stant, which indicates to the C program that dirfd() is
	 available to return the file descriptor of a directory
	 stream.

     "d_dirnamlen"
	 From i_dirent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "DIRNAMLEN", which
	 indicates to the C program that the length of directory
	 entry names is provided by a d_namelen field.

     "d_dlerror"
	 From d_dlerror.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_DLERROR"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the dler-
	 ror() routine is available.

     "d_dlopen"
	 From d_dlopen.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_DLOPEN"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the dlo-
	 pen() routine is available.

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     "d_dlsymun"
	 From d_dlsymun.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "DLSYM_NEEDS_UNDERSCORE", which indicates that we need
	 to prepend an underscore to the symbol name before cal-
	 ling dlsym().

     "d_dosuid"
	 From d_dosuid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the symbol "DOSUID",
	 which tells the C program that it should insert setuid
	 emulation code on hosts which have setuid #! scripts
	 disabled.

     "d_drand48_r"
	 From d_drand48_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the HAS_DRAND48_R
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 drand48_r() routine is available.

     "d_drand48proto"
	 From d_drand48proto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 HAS_DRAND48_PROTO symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the system provides a prototype for the
	 drand48() function.  Otherwise, it is up to the program
	 to supply one.

     "d_dup2"
	 From d_dup2.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines HAS_DUP2 if dup2()
	 is available to duplicate file descriptors.

     "d_eaccess"
	 From d_eaccess.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_EACCESS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the eac-
	 cess() routine is available.

     "d_endgrent"
	 From d_endgrent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ENDGRENT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 endgrent() routine is available for sequential access of
	 the group database.

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     "d_endgrent_r"
	 From d_endgrent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ENDGRENT_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 endgrent_r() routine is available.

     "d_endhent"
	 From d_endhent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_ENDHOSTENT" if
	 endhostent() is available to close whatever was being
	 used for host queries.

     "d_endhostent_r"
	 From d_endhostent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_ENDHOSTENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the endhostent_r() routine is available.

     "d_endnent"
	 From d_endnent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_ENDNETENT" if
	 endnetent() is available to close whatever was being
	 used for network queries.

     "d_endnetent_r"
	 From d_endnetent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_ENDNETENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the endnetent_r() routine is available.

     "d_endpent"
	 From d_endpent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_ENDPROTOENT" if
	 endprotoent() is available to close whatever was being
	 used for protocol queries.

     "d_endprotoent_r"
	 From d_endprotoent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_ENDPROTOENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the endprotoent_r() routine is available.

     "d_endpwent"
	 From d_endpwent.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ENDPWENT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 endpwent() routine is available for sequential access of
	 the passwd database.

     "d_endpwent_r"
	 From d_endpwent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ENDPWENT_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 endpwent_r() routine is available.

     "d_endsent"
	 From d_endsent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_ENDSERVENT" if
	 endservent() is available to close whatever was being
	 used for service queries.

     "d_endservent_r"
	 From d_endservent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_ENDSERVENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the endservent_r() routine is available.

     "d_eofnblk"
	 From nblock_io.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "EOF_NONBLOCK" if
	 "EOF" can be seen when reading from a non-blocking I/O
	 source.

     "d_eunice"
	 From Guess.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the symbols "EUNICE"
	 and "VAX", which alerts the C program that it must deal
	 with ideosyncracies of "VMS".

     "d_faststdio"
	 From d_faststdio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FAST_STDIO"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the "fast
	 stdio" is available to manipulate the stdio buffers
	 directly.

     "d_fchdir"
	 From d_fchdir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FCHDIR"

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	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fchdir() routine is available.

     "d_fchmod"
	 From d_fchmod.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FCHMOD"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fchmod() routine is available to change mode of opened
	 files.

     "d_fchown"
	 From d_fchown.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FCHOWN"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fchown() routine is available to change ownership of
	 opened files.

     "d_fcntl"
	 From d_fcntl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FCNTL" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether the fcntl() function exists

     "d_fcntl_can_lock"
	 From d_fcntl_can_lock.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "FCNTL_CAN_LOCK"
	 symbol and indicates whether file locking with fcntl()
	 works.

     "d_fd_macros"
	 From d_fd_set.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the
	 "HAS_FD_MACROS" symbol, which indicates if your C com-
	 piler knows about the macros which manipulate an fd_set.

     "d_fd_set"
	 From d_fd_set.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the
	 "HAS_FD_SET" symbol, which indicates if your C compiler
	 knows about the fd_set typedef.

     "d_fds_bits"
	 From d_fd_set.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the
	 "HAS_FDS_BITS" symbol, which indicates if your fd_set
	 typedef contains the fds_bits member. If you have an

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	 fd_set typedef, but the dweebs who installed it did a
	 half-fast job and neglected to provide the macros to
	 manipulate an fd_set, "HAS_FDS_BITS" will let us know
	 how to fix the gaffe.

     "d_fgetpos"
	 From d_fgetpos.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_FGETPOS" if
	 fgetpos() is available to get the file position indica-
	 tor.

     "d_finite"
	 From d_finite.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FINITE"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the fin-
	 ite() routine is available.

     "d_finitel"
	 From d_finitel.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FINITEL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the fini-
	 tel() routine is available.

     "d_flexfnam"
	 From d_flexfnam.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "FLEXFILENAMES"
	 symbol, which indicates that the system supports
	 filenames longer than 14 characters.

     "d_flock"
	 From d_flock.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_FLOCK" if
	 flock() is available to do file locking.

     "d_flockproto"
	 From d_flockproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_FLOCK_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the system provides a prototype for the
	 flock() function.  Otherwise, it is up to the program to
	 supply one.

     "d_fork"
	 From d_fork.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FORK"

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	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the fork()
	 routine is available.

     "d_fp_class"
	 From d_fp_class.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FP_CLASS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fp_class() routine is available.

     "d_fpathconf"
	 From d_pathconf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FPATHCONF"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the path-
	 conf() routine is available to determine file-system
	 related limits and options associated with a given open
	 file descriptor.

     "d_fpclass"
	 From d_fpclass.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FPCLASS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fpclass() routine is available.

     "d_fpclassify"
	 From d_fpclassify.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FPCLASSIFY"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fpclassify() routine is available.

     "d_fpclassl"
	 From d_fpclassl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FPCLASSL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fpclassl() routine is available.

     "d_fpos64_t"
	 From d_fpos64_t.U:

	 This symbol will be defined if the C compiler supports
	 fpos64_t.

     "d_frexpl"
	 From d_frexpl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FREXPL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 frexpl() routine is available.

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     "d_fs_data_s"
	 From d_fs_data_s.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_STRUCT_FS_DATA" symbol, which indicates that the
	 struct fs_data is supported.

     "d_fseeko"
	 From d_fseeko.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FSEEKO"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fseeko() routine is available.

     "d_fsetpos"
	 From d_fsetpos.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_FSETPOS" if
	 fsetpos() is available to set the file position indica-
	 tor.

     "d_fstatfs"
	 From d_fstatfs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FSTATFS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fstatfs() routine is available.

     "d_fstatvfs"
	 From d_statvfs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FSTATVFS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 fstatvfs() routine is available.

     "d_fsync"
	 From d_fsync.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FSYNC" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the fsync()
	 routine is available.

     "d_ftello"
	 From d_ftello.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FTELLO"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 ftello() routine is available.

     "d_ftime"
	 From d_ftime.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FTIME" sym-
	 bol, which indicates that the ftime() routine exists.
	 The ftime() routine is basically a sub-second accuracy
	 clock.

     "d_futimes"
	 From f_futimes.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_FUTIMES"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 futimes() routine is available.

     "d_Gconvert"
	 From d_gconvert.U:

	 This variable holds what Gconvert is defined as to con-
	 vert floating point numbers into strings.  By default,
	 Configure sets "this" macro to use the first of gcon-
	 vert, gcvt, or sprintf that pass sprintf-%g-like
	 behaviour tests.  If perl is using long doubles, the
	 macro uses the first of the following functions that
	 pass Configure's tests: qgcvt, sprintf (if Configure
	 knows how to make sprintf format long doubles--see
	 sPRIgldbl), gconvert, gcvt, and sprintf (casting to dou-
	 ble). The gconvert_preference and gconvert_ld_preference
	 variables can be used to alter Configure's preferences,
	 for doubles and long doubles, respectively.  If present,
	 they contain a space-separated list of one or more of
	 the above function names in the order they should be
	 tried.

	 d_Gconvert may be set to override Configure with a plat-
	 form- specific function.  If this function expects a
	 double, a different value may need to be set by the
	 uselongdouble.cbu call-back unit so that long doubles
	 can be formatted without loss of precision.

     "d_getcwd"
	 From d_getcwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETCWD"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getcwd() routine is available to get the current working
	 directory.

     "d_getespwnam"
	 From d_getespwnam.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETESPWNAM" if
	 getespwnam() is available to retrieve enchanced (shadow)
	 password entries by name.

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     "d_getfsstat"
	 From d_getfsstat.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETFSSTAT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getfsstat() routine is available.

     "d_getgrent"
	 From d_getgrent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETGRENT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the get-
	 grent() routine is available for sequential access of
	 the group database.

     "d_getgrent_r"
	 From d_getgrent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETGRENT_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getgrent_r() routine is available.

     "d_getgrgid_r"
	 From d_getgrgid_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETGRGID_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getgrgid_r() routine is available.

     "d_getgrnam_r"
	 From d_getgrnam_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETGRNAM_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getgrnam_r() routine is available.

     "d_getgrps"
	 From d_getgrps.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETGROUPS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the get-
	 groups() routine is available to get the list of process
	 groups.

     "d_gethbyaddr"
	 From d_gethbyad.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETHOSTBYADDR" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the gethostbyaddr() routine is available to
	 look up hosts by their "IP" addresses.

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     "d_gethbyname"
	 From d_gethbynm.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETHOSTBYNAME" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the gethostbyname() routine is available to
	 look up host names in some data base or other.

     "d_gethent"
	 From d_gethent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETHOSTENT" if
	 gethostent() is available to look up host names in some
	 data base or another.

     "d_gethname"
	 From d_gethname.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETHOSTNAME" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the gethostname() routine may be used to
	 derive the host name.

     "d_gethostbyaddr_r"
	 From d_gethostbyaddr_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETHOSTBYADDR_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the gethostbyaddr_r() routine is available.

     "d_gethostbyname_r"
	 From d_gethostbyname_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETHOSTBYNAME_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the gethostbyname_r() routine is available.

     "d_gethostent_r"
	 From d_gethostent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETHOSTENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the gethostent_r() routine is available.

     "d_gethostprotos"
	 From d_gethostprotos.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETHOST_PROTOS" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that <netdb.h> supplies prototypes for the vari-
	 ous gethost*() functions. See also netdbtype.U for prob-
	 ing for various netdb types.

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     "d_getitimer"
	 From d_getitimer.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETITIMER"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the geti-
	 timer() routine is available.

     "d_getlogin"
	 From d_getlogin.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETLOGIN"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the getlo-
	 gin() routine is available to get the login name.

     "d_getlogin_r"
	 From d_getlogin_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETLOGIN_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getlogin_r() routine is available.

     "d_getmnt"
	 From d_getmnt.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETMNT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getmnt() routine is available to retrieve one or more
	 mount info blocks by filename.

     "d_getmntent"
	 From d_getmntent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETMNTENT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getmntent() routine is available to iterate through
	 mounted files to get their mount info.

     "d_getnbyaddr"
	 From d_getnbyad.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETNETBYADDR" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the getnetbyaddr() routine is available to
	 look up networks by their "IP" addresses.

     "d_getnbyname"
	 From d_getnbynm.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETNETBYNAME" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the getnetbyname() routine is available to
	 look up networks by their names.

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     "d_getnent"
	 From d_getnent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETNETENT" if
	 getnetent() is available to look up network names in
	 some data base or another.

     "d_getnetbyaddr_r"
	 From d_getnetbyaddr_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETNETBYADDR_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getnetbyaddr_r() routine is available.

     "d_getnetbyname_r"
	 From d_getnetbyname_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETNETBYNAME_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getnetbyname_r() routine is available.

     "d_getnetent_r"
	 From d_getnetent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETNETENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the getnetent_r() routine is available.

     "d_getnetprotos"
	 From d_getnetprotos.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETNET_PROTOS" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that <netdb.h> supplies prototypes for the vari-
	 ous getnet*() functions. See also netdbtype.U for prob-
	 ing for various netdb types.

     "d_getpagsz"
	 From d_getpagsz.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETPAGESIZE" if
	 getpagesize() is available to get the system page size.

     "d_getpbyname"
	 From d_getprotby.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETPROTOBYNAME" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getprotobyname() routine is available
	 to look up protocols by their name.

     "d_getpbynumber"

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	 From d_getprotby.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETPROTOBYNUMBER" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getprotobynumber() routine is available
	 to look up protocols by their number.

     "d_getpent"
	 From d_getpent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETPROTOENT" if
	 getprotoent() is available to look up protocols in some
	 data base or another.

     "d_getpgid"
	 From d_getpgid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETPGID"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getpgid(pid) function is available to get the process
	 group id.

     "d_getpgrp2"
	 From d_getpgrp2.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the HAS_GETPGRP2
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getpgrp2() (as in DG/"UX") routine is available to get
	 the current process group.

     "d_getpgrp"
	 From d_getpgrp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETPGRP" if
	 getpgrp() is available to get the current process group.

     "d_getppid"
	 From d_getppid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETPPID"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getppid() routine is available to get the parent process
	 "ID".

     "d_getprior"
	 From d_getprior.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETPRIORITY" if
	 getpriority() is available to get a process's priority.

     "d_getprotobyname_r"
	 From d_getprotobyname_r.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETPROTOBYNAME_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getprotobyname_r() routine is avail-
	 able.

     "d_getprotobynumber_r"
	 From d_getprotobynumber_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETPROTOBYNUMBER_R" symbol, which indicates to the
	 C program that the getprotobynumber_r() routine is
	 available.

     "d_getprotoent_r"
	 From d_getprotoent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETPROTOENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getprotoent_r() routine is available.

     "d_getprotoprotos"
	 From d_getprotoprotos.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETPROTO_PROTOS" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that <netdb.h> supplies prototypes for the vari-
	 ous getproto*() functions. See also netdbtype.U for
	 probing for various netdb types.

     "d_getprpwnam"
	 From d_getprpwnam.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETPRPWNAM" if
	 getprpwnam() is available to retrieve protected (shadow)
	 password entries by name.

     "d_getpwent"
	 From d_getpwent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETPWENT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getpwent() routine is available for sequential access of
	 the passwd database.

     "d_getpwent_r"
	 From d_getpwent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETPWENT_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getpwent_r() routine is available.

     "d_getpwnam_r"

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	 From d_getpwnam_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETPWNAM_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getpwnam_r() routine is available.

     "d_getpwuid_r"
	 From d_getpwuid_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETPWUID_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getpwuid_r() routine is available.

     "d_getsbyname"
	 From d_getsrvby.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETSERVBYNAME" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getservbyname() routine is available to
	 look up services by their name.

     "d_getsbyport"
	 From d_getsrvby.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETSERVBYPORT" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getservbyport() routine is available to
	 look up services by their port.

     "d_getsent"
	 From d_getsent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETSERVENT" if
	 getservent() is available to look up network services in
	 some data base or another.

     "d_getservbyname_r"
	 From d_getservbyname_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETSERVBYNAME_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getservbyname_r() routine is available.

     "d_getservbyport_r"
	 From d_getservbyport_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETSERVBYPORT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the getservbyport_r() routine is available.

     "d_getservent_r"
	 From d_getservent_r.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETSERVENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the getservent_r() routine is available.

     "d_getservprotos"
	 From d_getservprotos.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETSERV_PROTOS" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that <netdb.h> supplies prototypes for the vari-
	 ous getserv*() functions. See also netdbtype.U for prob-
	 ing for various netdb types.

     "d_getspnam"
	 From d_getspnam.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_GETSPNAM" if
	 getspnam() is available to retrieve SysV shadow password
	 entries by name.

     "d_getspnam_r"
	 From d_getspnam_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GETSPNAM_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 getspnam_r() routine is available.

     "d_gettimeod"
	 From d_ftime.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_GETTIMEOFDAY" symbol, which indicates that the get-
	 timeofday() system call exists (to obtain a sub-second
	 accuracy clock). You should probably include
	 <sys/resource.h>.

     "d_gmtime_r"
	 From d_gmtime_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_GMTIME_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 gmtime_r() routine is available.

     "d_gnulibc"
	 From d_gnulibc.U:

	 Defined if we're dealing with the "GNU" C Library.

     "d_grpasswd"
	 From i_grp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "GRPASSWD", which

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	 indicates that struct group in <grp.h> contains
	 gr_passwd.

     "d_hasmntopt"
	 From d_hasmntopt.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_HASMNTOPT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 hasmntopt() routine is available to query the mount
	 options of file systems.

     "d_htonl"
	 From d_htonl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_HTONL" if
	 htonl() and its friends are available to do network
	 order byte swapping.

     "d_ilogbl"
	 From d_ilogbl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ILOGBL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 ilogbl() routine is available. If scalbnl is also
	 present we can emulate frexpl.

     "d_index"
	 From d_strchr.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_INDEX" if
	 index() and rindex() are available for string searching.

     "d_inetaton"
	 From d_inetaton.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_INET_ATON"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 inet_aton() function is available to parse "IP" address
	 "dotted-quad" strings.

     "d_int64_t"
	 From d_int64_t.U:

	 This symbol will be defined if the C compiler supports
	 int64_t.

     "d_isascii"
	 From d_isascii.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ISASCII"
	 constant, which indicates to the C program that
	 isascii() is available.

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     "d_isfinite"
	 From d_isfinite.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ISFINITE"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the isfin-
	 ite() routine is available.

     "d_isinf"
	 From d_isinf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ISINF" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the isinf()
	 routine is available.

     "d_isnan"
	 From d_isnan.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ISNAN" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the isnan()
	 routine is available.

     "d_isnanl"
	 From d_isnanl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_ISNANL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 isnanl() routine is available.

     "d_killpg"
	 From d_killpg.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_KILLPG"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 killpg() routine is available to kill process groups.

     "d_lchown"
	 From d_lchown.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_LCHOWN"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 lchown() routine is available to operate on a symbolic
	 link (instead of following the link).

     "d_ldbl_dig"
	 From d_ldbl_dig.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines d_ldbl_dig if this
	 system's header files provide "LDBL_DIG", which is the
	 number of significant digits in a long double precision
	 number.

     "d_link"

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	 From d_link.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_LINK" if link()
	 is available to create hard links.

     "d_localtime_r"
	 From d_localtime_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_LOCALTIME_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the localtime_r() routine is available.

     "d_locconv"
	 From d_locconv.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_LOCALECONV" if
	 localeconv() is available for numeric and monetary for-
	 matting conventions.

     "d_lockf"
	 From d_lockf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_LOCKF" if
	 lockf() is available to do file locking.

     "d_longdbl"
	 From d_longdbl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_LONG_DOUBLE" if
	 the long double type is supported.

     "d_longlong"
	 From d_longlong.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_LONG_LONG" if
	 the long long type is supported.

     "d_lseekproto"
	 From d_lseekproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_LSEEK_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the system provides a prototype for the
	 lseek() function.  Otherwise, it is up to the program to
	 supply one.

     "d_lstat"
	 From d_lstat.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_LSTAT" if
	 lstat() is available to do file stats on symbolic links.

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     "d_madvise"
	 From d_madvise.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_MADVISE" if
	 madvise() is available to map a file into memory.

     "d_malloc_size"
	 From d_malloc_size.U:

	 This symbol, if defined, indicates that the malloc_size
	 routine is available for use.

     "d_malloc_good_size"
	 From d_malloc_good_size.U:

	 This symbol, if defined, indicates that the
	 malloc_good_size routine is available for use.

     "d_mblen"
	 From d_mblen.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MBLEN" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the mblen()
	 routine is available to find the number of bytes in a
	 multibye character.

     "d_mbstowcs"
	 From d_mbstowcs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MBSTOWCS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 mbstowcs() routine is available to convert a multibyte
	 string into a wide character string.

     "d_mbtowc"
	 From d_mbtowc.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MBTOWC"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 mbtowc() routine is available to convert multibyte to a
	 wide character.

     "d_memchr"
	 From d_memchr.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MEMCHR"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 memchr() routine is available to locate characters
	 within a C string.

     "d_memcmp"
	 From d_memcmp.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MEMCMP"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 memcmp() routine is available to compare blocks of
	 memory.

     "d_memcpy"
	 From d_memcpy.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MEMCPY"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 memcpy() routine is available to copy blocks of memory.

     "d_memmove"
	 From d_memmove.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MEMMOVE"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the mem-
	 move() routine is available to copy potentatially over-
	 lapping blocks of memory.

     "d_memset"
	 From d_memset.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MEMSET"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the mem-
	 set() routine is available to set blocks of memory.

     "d_mkdir"
	 From d_mkdir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MKDIR" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the mkdir()
	 routine is available to create directories..

     "d_mkdtemp"
	 From d_mkdtemp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MKDTEMP"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 mkdtemp() routine is available to exclusively create a
	 uniquely named temporary directory.

     "d_mkfifo"
	 From d_mkfifo.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MKFIFO"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 mkfifo() routine is available.

     "d_mkstemp"
	 From d_mkstemp.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MKSTEMP"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 mkstemp() routine is available to exclusively create and
	 open a uniquely named temporary file.

     "d_mkstemps"
	 From d_mkstemps.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MKSTEMPS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 mkstemps() routine is available to exclusively create
	 and open a uniquely named (with a suffix) temporary
	 file.

     "d_mktime"
	 From d_mktime.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MKTIME"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 mktime() routine is available.

     "d_mmap"
	 From d_mmap.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_MMAP" if mmap()
	 is available to map a file into memory.

     "d_modfl"
	 From d_modfl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MODFL" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the modfl()
	 routine is available.

     "d_modfl_pow32_bug"
	 From d_modfl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 HAS_MODFL_POW32_BUG symbol, which indicates that modfl()
	 is broken for long doubles >= pow(2, 32). For example
	 from 4294967303.150000 one would get 4294967302.000000
	 and 1.150000.	The bug has been seen in certain versions
	 of glibc, release 2.2.2 is known to be okay.

     "d_modflproto"
	 From d_modfl.U:

	 This symbol, if defined, indicates that the system pro-
	 vides a prototype for the modfl() function.  Otherwise,
	 it is up to the program to supply one.	 C99 says it
	 should be long double modfl(long double, long double *);

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     "d_mprotect"
	 From d_mprotect.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_MPROTECT" if
	 mprotect() is available to modify the access protection
	 of a memory mapped file.

     "d_msg"
	 From d_msg.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSG" sym-
	 bol, which indicates that the entire msg*(2) library is
	 present.

     "d_msg_ctrunc"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSG_CTRUNC"
	 symbol, which indicates that the "MSG_CTRUNC" is avail-
	 able.	#ifdef is not enough because it may be an enum,
	 glibc has been known to do this.

     "d_msg_dontroute"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_MSG_DONTROUTE" symbol, which indicates that the
	 "MSG_DONTROUTE" is available.	#ifdef is not enough
	 because it may be an enum, glibc has been known to do
	 this.

     "d_msg_oob"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSG_OOB"
	 symbol, which indicates that the "MSG_OOB" is available.
	 #ifdef is not enough because it may be an enum, glibc
	 has been known to do this.

     "d_msg_peek"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSG_PEEK"
	 symbol, which indicates that the "MSG_PEEK" is avail-
	 able.	#ifdef is not enough because it may be an enum,
	 glibc has been known to do this.

     "d_msg_proxy"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSG_PROXY"
	 symbol, which indicates that the "MSG_PROXY" is

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	 available.  #ifdef is not enough because it may be an
	 enum, glibc has been known to do this.

     "d_msgctl"
	 From d_msgctl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSGCTL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 msgctl() routine is available.

     "d_msgget"
	 From d_msgget.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSGGET"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 msgget() routine is available.

     "d_msghdr_s"
	 From d_msghdr_s.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_STRUCT_MSGHDR" symbol, which indicates that the
	 struct msghdr is supported.

     "d_msgrcv"
	 From d_msgrcv.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSGRCV"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 msgrcv() routine is available.

     "d_msgsnd"
	 From d_msgsnd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_MSGSND"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 msgsnd() routine is available.

     "d_msync"
	 From d_msync.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_MSYNC" if
	 msync() is available to synchronize a mapped file.

     "d_munmap"
	 From d_munmap.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_MUNMAP" if mun-
	 map() is available to unmap a region mapped by mmap().

     "d_mymalloc"
	 From mallocsrc.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines "MYMALLOC" in case
	 other parts of the source want to take special action if
	 "MYMALLOC" is used. This may include different sorts of
	 profiling or error detection.

     "d_nanosleep"
	 From d_nanosleep.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_NANOSLEEP" if
	 nanosleep() is available to sleep with 1E-9 sec accu-
	 racy.

     "d_nice"
	 From d_nice.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_NICE" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the nice()
	 routine is available.

     "d_nl_langinfo"
	 From d_nl_langinfo.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_NL_LANGINFO" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the nl_langinfo() routine is available.

     "d_nv_preserves_uv"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable indicates whether a variable of type
	 nvtype can preserve all the bits a variable of type
	 uvtype.

     "d_nv_zero_is_allbits_zero"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable indicates whether a variable of type
	 nvtype stores 0.0 in memory as all bits zero.

     "d_off64_t"
	 From d_off64_t.U:

	 This symbol will be defined if the C compiler supports
	 off64_t.

     "d_old_pthread_create_joinable"
	 From d_pthrattrj.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 pthread_create_joinable. undef if pthread.h defines
	 "PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE".

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     "d_oldpthreads"
	 From usethreads.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "OLD_PTHREADS_API" symbol, and indicates that Perl
	 should be built to use the old draft "POSIX" threads
	 "API".	 This is only potentially meaningful if
	 usethreads is set.

     "d_oldsock"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "OLDSOCKET" sym-
	 bol, which indicates that the "BSD" socket interface is
	 based on 4.1c and not 4.2.

     "d_open3"
	 From d_open3.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the HAS_OPEN3 mani-
	 fest constant, which indicates to the C program that the
	 3 argument version of the open(2) function is available.

     "d_pathconf"
	 From d_pathconf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_PATHCONF"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the path-
	 conf() routine is available to determine file-system
	 related limits and options associated with a given
	 filename.

     "d_pause"
	 From d_pause.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_PAUSE" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the pause()
	 routine is available to suspend a process until a signal
	 is received.

     "d_perl_otherlibdirs"
	 From otherlibdirs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PERL_OTHERLIBDIRS",
	 which contains a colon-separated set of paths for the
	 perl binary to include in @"INC".  See also otherlib-
	 dirs.

     "d_phostname"
	 From d_gethname.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_PHOSTNAME"

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	 symbol, which contains the shell command which, when fed
	 to popen(), may be used to derive the host name.

     "d_pipe"
	 From d_pipe.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_PIPE" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the pipe()
	 routine is available to create an inter-process channel.

     "d_poll"
	 From d_poll.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_POLL" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the poll()
	 routine is available to poll active file descriptors.

     "d_portable"
	 From d_portable.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "PORTABLE" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that it should not
	 assume that it is running on the machine it was compiled
	 on.

     "d_PRId64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRId64 sym-
	 bol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print
	 64-bit decimal numbers.

     "d_PRIeldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl
	 symbol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to
	 print long doubles.

     "d_PRIEUldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl
	 symbol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to
	 print long doubles. The "U" in the name is to separate
	 this from d_PRIeldbl so that even case-blind systems can
	 see the difference.

     "d_PRIfldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl

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	 symbol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to
	 print long doubles.

     "d_PRIFUldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl
	 symbol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to
	 print long doubles. The "U" in the name is to separate
	 this from d_PRIfldbl so that even case-blind systems can
	 see the difference.

     "d_PRIgldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl
	 symbol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to
	 print long doubles.

     "d_PRIGUldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl
	 symbol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to
	 print long doubles. The "U" in the name is to separate
	 this from d_PRIgldbl so that even case-blind systems can
	 see the difference.

     "d_PRIi64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIi64 sym-
	 bol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print
	 64-bit decimal numbers.

     "d_PRIo64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIo64 sym-
	 bol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print
	 64-bit octal numbers.

     "d_PRIu64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIu64 sym-
	 bol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print
	 64-bit unsigned decimal numbers.

     "d_PRIx64"
	 From quadfio.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIx64 sym-
	 bol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to print
	 64-bit hexadecimal numbers.

     "d_PRIXU64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIXU64
	 symbol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to
	 print 64-bit hExADECimAl numbers. The "U" in the name is
	 to separate this from d_PRIx64 so that even case-blind
	 systems can see the difference.

     "d_procselfexe"
	 From d_procselfexe.U:

	 Defined if $procselfexe is symlink to the absolute path-
	 name of the executing program.

     "d_pthread_atfork"
	 From d_pthread_atfork.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_PTHREAD_ATFORK" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the pthread_atfork() routine is available.

     "d_pthread_attr_setscope"
	 From d_pthread_attr_ss.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "HAS_PTHREAD_ATTR_SETSCOPE" if pthread_attr_setscope()
	 is available to set the contention scope attribute of a
	 thread attribute object.

     "d_pthread_yield"
	 From d_pthread_y.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_PTHREAD_YIELD" symbol if the pthread_yield routine
	 is available to yield the execution of the current
	 thread.

     "d_pwage"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PWAGE", which indi-
	 cates that struct passwd contains pw_age.

     "d_pwchange"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PWCHANGE", which

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	 indicates that struct passwd contains pw_change.

     "d_pwclass"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PWCLASS", which
	 indicates that struct passwd contains pw_class.

     "d_pwcomment"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PWCOMMENT", which
	 indicates that struct passwd contains pw_comment.

     "d_pwexpire"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PWEXPIRE", which
	 indicates that struct passwd contains pw_expire.

     "d_pwgecos"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PWGECOS", which
	 indicates that struct passwd contains pw_gecos.

     "d_pwpasswd"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PWPASSWD", which
	 indicates that struct passwd contains pw_passwd.

     "d_pwquota"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PWQUOTA", which
	 indicates that struct passwd contains pw_quota.

     "d_qgcvt"
	 From d_qgcvt.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_QGCVT" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the qgcvt()
	 routine is available.

     "d_quad"
	 From quadtype.U:

	 This variable, if defined, tells that there's a 64-bit
	 integer type, quadtype.

     "d_random_r"

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	 From d_random_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_RANDOM_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 random_r() routine is available.

     "d_readdir64_r"
	 From d_readdir64_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the HAS_READDIR64_R
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 readdir64_r() routine is available.

     "d_readdir"
	 From d_readdir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_READDIR" if
	 readdir() is available to read directory entries.

     "d_readdir_r"
	 From d_readdir_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_READDIR_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 readdir_r() routine is available.

     "d_readlink"
	 From d_readlink.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_READLINK"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 readlink() routine is available to read the value of a
	 symbolic link.

     "d_readv"
	 From d_readv.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_READV" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the readv()
	 routine is available.

     "d_recvmsg"
	 From d_recvmsg.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_RECVMSG"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 recvmsg() routine is available.

     "d_rename"
	 From d_rename.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_RENAME"

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	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 rename() routine is available to rename files.

     "d_rewinddir"
	 From d_readdir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_REWINDDIR" if
	 rewinddir() is available.

     "d_rmdir"
	 From d_rmdir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_RMDIR" if
	 rmdir() is available to remove directories.

     "d_safebcpy"
	 From d_safebcpy.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SAFE_BCOPY"
	 symbol if the bcopy() routine can do overlapping copies.
	 Normally, you should probably use memmove().

     "d_safemcpy"
	 From d_safemcpy.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SAFE_MEMCPY" symbol if the memcpy() routine can do
	 overlapping copies. For overlapping copies, memmove()
	 should be used, if available.

     "d_sanemcmp"
	 From d_sanemcmp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SANE_MEMCMP" symbol if the memcpy() routine is
	 available and can be used to compare relative magnitudes
	 of chars with their high bits set.

     "d_sbrkproto"
	 From d_sbrkproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SBRK_PROTO"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the system
	 provides a prototype for the sbrk() function.	Other-
	 wise, it is up to the program to supply one.

     "d_scalbnl"
	 From d_scalbnl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SCALBNL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 scalbnl() routine is available. If ilogbl is also

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	 present we can emulate frexpl.

     "d_sched_yield"
	 From d_pthread_y.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SCHED_YIELD" symbol if the sched_yield routine is
	 available to yield the execution of the current thread.

     "d_scm_rights"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SCM_RIGHTS"
	 symbol, which indicates that the "SCM_RIGHTS" is avail-
	 able.	#ifdef is not enough because it may be an enum,
	 glibc has been known to do this.

     "d_SCNfldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the PERL_PRIfldbl
	 symbol, which indiciates that stdio has a symbol to scan
	 long doubles.

     "d_seekdir"
	 From d_readdir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SEEKDIR" if
	 seekdir() is available.

     "d_select"
	 From d_select.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SELECT" if
	 select() is available to select active file descriptors.
	 A <sys/time.h> inclusion may be necessary for the
	 timeout field.

     "d_sem"
	 From d_sem.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SEM" sym-
	 bol, which indicates that the entire sem*(2) library is
	 present.

     "d_semctl"
	 From d_semctl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SEMCTL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 semctl() routine is available.

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     "d_semctl_semid_ds"
	 From d_union_semun.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "USE_SEMCTL_SEMID_DS", which indicates that struct
	 semid_ds * is to be used for semctl "IPC_STAT".

     "d_semctl_semun"
	 From d_union_semun.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "USE_SEMCTL_SEMUN",
	 which indicates that union semun is to be used for
	 semctl "IPC_STAT".

     "d_semget"
	 From d_semget.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SEMGET"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 semget() routine is available.

     "d_semop"
	 From d_semop.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SEMOP" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the semop()
	 routine is available.

     "d_sendmsg"
	 From d_sendmsg.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SENDMSG"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 sendmsg() routine is available.

     "d_setegid"
	 From d_setegid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETEGID"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 setegid() routine is available to change the effective
	 gid of the current program.

     "d_seteuid"
	 From d_seteuid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETEUID"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 seteuid() routine is available to change the effective
	 uid of the current program.

     "d_setgrent"

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	 From d_setgrent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETGRENT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the set-
	 grent() routine is available for initializing sequential
	 access to the group database.

     "d_setgrent_r"
	 From d_setgrent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETGRENT_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 setgrent_r() routine is available.

     "d_setgrps"
	 From d_setgrps.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETGROUPS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the set-
	 groups() routine is available to set the list of process
	 groups.

     "d_sethent"
	 From d_sethent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETHOSTENT" if
	 sethostent() is available.

     "d_sethostent_r"
	 From d_sethostent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SETHOSTENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the sethostent_r() routine is available.

     "d_setitimer"
	 From d_setitimer.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETITIMER"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the seti-
	 timer() routine is available.

     "d_setlinebuf"
	 From d_setlnbuf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETLINEBUF"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the set-
	 linebuf() routine is available to change stderr or
	 stdout from block-buffered or unbuffered to a line-
	 buffered mode.

     "d_setlocale"

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	 From d_setlocale.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETLOCALE" if
	 setlocale() is available to handle locale-specific ctype
	 implementations.

     "d_setlocale_r"
	 From d_setlocale_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SETLOCALE_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the setlocale_r() routine is available.

     "d_setnent"
	 From d_setnent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETNETENT" if
	 setnetent() is available.

     "d_setnetent_r"
	 From d_setnetent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SETNETENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the setnetent_r() routine is available.

     "d_setpent"
	 From d_setpent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETPROTOENT" if
	 setprotoent() is available.

     "d_setpgid"
	 From d_setpgid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETPGID"
	 symbol if the setpgid(pid, gpid) function is available
	 to set process group "ID".

     "d_setpgrp2"
	 From d_setpgrp2.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the HAS_SETPGRP2
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 setpgrp2() (as in DG/"UX") routine is available to set
	 the current process group.

     "d_setpgrp"
	 From d_setpgrp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETPGRP" if
	 setpgrp() is available to set the current process group.

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     "d_setprior"
	 From d_setprior.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETPRIORITY" if
	 setpriority() is available to set a process's priority.

     "d_setproctitle"
	 From d_setproctitle.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SETPROCTITLE" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the setproctitle() routine is available.

     "d_setprotoent_r"
	 From d_setprotoent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SETPROTOENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the setprotoent_r() routine is available.

     "d_setpwent"
	 From d_setpwent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETPWENT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 setpwent() routine is available for initializing sequen-
	 tial access to the passwd database.

     "d_setpwent_r"
	 From d_setpwent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETPWENT_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 setpwent_r() routine is available.

     "d_setregid"
	 From d_setregid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETREGID" if
	 setregid() is available to change the real and effective
	 gid of the current process.

     "d_setresgid"
	 From d_setregid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETRESGID" if
	 setresgid() is available to change the real, effective
	 and saved gid of the current process.

     "d_setresuid"
	 From d_setreuid.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETREUID" if
	 setresuid() is available to change the real, effective
	 and saved uid of the current process.

     "d_setreuid"
	 From d_setreuid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETREUID" if
	 setreuid() is available to change the real and effective
	 uid of the current process.

     "d_setrgid"
	 From d_setrgid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETRGID"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 setrgid() routine is available to change the real gid of
	 the current program.

     "d_setruid"
	 From d_setruid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETRUID"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 setruid() routine is available to change the real uid of
	 the current program.

     "d_setsent"
	 From d_setsent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETSERVENT" if
	 setservent() is available.

     "d_setservent_r"
	 From d_setservent_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SETSERVENT_R" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the setservent_r() routine is available.

     "d_setsid"
	 From d_setsid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SETSID" if set-
	 sid() is available to set the process group "ID".

     "d_setvbuf"
	 From d_setvbuf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SETVBUF"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 setvbuf() routine is available to change buffering on an

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	 open stdio stream.

     "d_sfio"
	 From d_sfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "USE_SFIO" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether sfio is available (and should
	 be used).

     "d_shm"
	 From d_shm.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SHM" sym-
	 bol, which indicates that the entire shm*(2) library is
	 present.

     "d_shmat"
	 From d_shmat.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SHMAT" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the shmat()
	 routine is available.

     "d_shmatprototype"
	 From d_shmat.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SHMAT_PROTOTYPE" symbol, which indicates that
	 sys/shm.h has a prototype for shmat.

     "d_shmctl"
	 From d_shmctl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SHMCTL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 shmctl() routine is available.

     "d_shmdt"
	 From d_shmdt.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SHMDT" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the shmdt()
	 routine is available.

     "d_shmget"
	 From d_shmget.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SHMGET"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 shmget() routine is available.

     "d_sigaction"

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	 From d_sigaction.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SIGACTION"
	 symbol, which indicates that the Vr4 sigaction() routine
	 is available.

     "d_sigprocmask"
	 From d_sigprocmask.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SIGPROCMASK" if
	 sigprocmask() is available to examine or change the sig-
	 nal mask of the calling process.

     "d_sigsetjmp"
	 From d_sigsetjmp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SIGSETJMP"
	 symbol, which indicates that the sigsetjmp() routine is
	 available to call setjmp() and optionally save the
	 process's signal mask.

     "d_sockatmark"
	 From d_sockatmark.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SOCKATMARK"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 sockatmark() routine is available.

     "d_sockatmarkproto"
	 From d_sockatmarkproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SOCKATMARK_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the system provides a prototype for the
	 sockatmark() function.	 Otherwise, it is up to the pro-
	 gram to supply one.

     "d_socket"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SOCKET", which
	 indicates that the "BSD" socket interface is supported.

     "d_socklen_t"
	 From d_socklen_t.U:

	 This symbol will be defined if the C compiler supports
	 socklen_t.

     "d_sockpair"
	 From d_socket.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SOCKETPAIR"
	 symbol, which indicates that the "BSD" socketpair() is
	 supported.

     "d_socks5_init"
	 From d_socks5_init.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the HAS_SOCKS5_INIT
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 socks5_init() routine is available.

     "d_sprintf_returns_strlen"
	 From d_sprintf_returns_strlen.U:

	 This variable defines whether sprintf returns the length
	 of the string (as per the "ANSI" spec). Some C libraries
	 retain compatibility with pre-"ANSI" C and return a
	 pointer to the passed in buffer; for these this variable
	 will be undef.

     "d_sqrtl"
	 From d_sqrtl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SQRTL" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the sqrtl()
	 routine is available.

     "d_srand48_r"
	 From d_srand48_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the HAS_SRAND48_R
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 srand48_r() routine is available.

     "d_srandom_r"
	 From d_srandom_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SRANDOM_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 srandom_r() routine is available.

     "d_sresgproto"
	 From d_sresgproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SETRESGID_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the system provides a prototype for the
	 setresgid() function.	Otherwise, it is up to the pro-
	 gram to supply one.

     "d_sresuproto"
	 From d_sresuproto.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SETRESUID_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the system provides a prototype for the
	 setresuid() function.	Otherwise, it is up to the pro-
	 gram to supply one.

     "d_statblks"
	 From d_statblks.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "USE_STAT_BLOCKS" if
	 this system has a stat structure declaring st_blksize
	 and st_blocks.

     "d_statfs_f_flags"
	 From d_statfs_f_flags.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_STRUCT_STATFS_F_FLAGS" symbol, which indicates to
	 struct statfs from has f_flags member. This kind of
	 struct statfs is coming from sys/mount.h ("BSD"), not
	 from sys/statfs.h ("SYSV").

     "d_statfs_s"
	 From d_statfs_s.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_STRUCT_STATFS" symbol, which indicates that the
	 struct statfs is supported.

     "d_statvfs"
	 From d_statvfs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STATVFS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 statvfs() routine is available.

     "d_stdio_cnt_lval"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "STDIO_CNT_LVALUE"
	 if the "FILE_cnt" macro can be used as an lvalue.

     "d_stdio_ptr_lval"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "STDIO_PTR_LVALUE"
	 if the "FILE_ptr" macro can be used as an lvalue.

     "d_stdio_ptr_lval_nochange_cnt"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This symbol is defined if using the "FILE_ptr" macro as

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	 an lvalue to increase the pointer by n leaves
	 File_cnt(fp) unchanged.

     "d_stdio_ptr_lval_sets_cnt"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This symbol is defined if using the "FILE_ptr" macro as
	 an lvalue to increase the pointer by n has the side
	 effect of decreasing the value of File_cnt(fp) by n.

     "d_stdio_stream_array"
	 From stdio_streams.U:

	 This variable tells whether there is an array holding
	 the stdio streams.

     "d_stdiobase"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "USE_STDIO_BASE" if
	 this system has a "FILE" structure declaring a usable
	 _base field (or equivalent) in stdio.h.

     "d_stdstdio"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "USE_STDIO_PTR" if
	 this system has a "FILE" structure declaring usable _ptr
	 and _cnt fields (or equivalent) in stdio.h.

     "d_strchr"
	 From d_strchr.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_STRCHR" if
	 strchr() and strrchr() are available for string search-
	 ing.

     "d_strcoll"
	 From d_strcoll.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_STRCOLL" if
	 strcoll() is available to compare strings using collat-
	 ing information.

     "d_strctcpy"
	 From d_strctcpy.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "USE_STRUCT_COPY" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that this C compiler knows how to copy structures.

     "d_strerrm"

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	 From d_strerror.U:

	 This variable holds what Strerrr is defined as to
	 translate an error code condition into an error message
	 string. It could be "strerror" or a more "complex" macro
	 emulating strrror with sys_errlist[], or the "unknown"
	 string when both strerror and sys_errlist are missing.

     "d_strerror"
	 From d_strerror.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_STRERROR" if
	 strerror() is available to translate error numbers to
	 strings.

     "d_strerror_r"
	 From d_strerror_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRERROR_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strerror_r() routine is available.

     "d_strftime"
	 From d_strftime.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRFTIME"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strftime() routine is available.

     "d_strlcat"
	 From d_strlcat.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRLCAT"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strlcat () routine is available.

     "d_strlcpy"
	 From d_strlcpy.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRLCPY"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strlcpy () routine is available.

     "d_strtod"
	 From d_strtod.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRTOD"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strtod() routine is available to provide better numeric
	 string conversion than atof().

     "d_strtol"

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	 From d_strtol.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRTOL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strtol() routine is available to provide better numeric
	 string conversion than atoi() and friends.

     "d_strtold"
	 From d_strtold.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRTOLD"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strtold() routine is available.

     "d_strtoll"
	 From d_strtoll.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRTOLL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strtoll() routine is available.

     "d_strtoq"
	 From d_strtoq.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRTOQ"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strtoq() routine is available.

     "d_strtoul"
	 From d_strtoul.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRTOUL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strtoul() routine is available to provide conversion of
	 strings to unsigned long.

     "d_strtoull"
	 From d_strtoull.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRTOULL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strtoull() routine is available.

     "d_strtouq"
	 From d_strtouq.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_STRTOUQ"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 strtouq() routine is available.

     "d_strxfrm"
	 From d_strxfrm.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_STRXFRM" if
	 strxfrm() is available to transform strings.

     "d_suidsafe"
	 From d_dosuid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines
	 "SETUID_SCRIPTS_ARE_SECURE_NOW" if setuid scripts can be
	 secure.  This test looks in /dev/fd/.

     "d_symlink"
	 From d_symlink.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SYMLINK"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the sym-
	 link() routine is available to create symbolic links.

     "d_syscall"
	 From d_syscall.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SYSCALL" if
	 syscall() is available call arbitrary system calls.

     "d_syscallproto"
	 From d_syscallproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_SYSCALL_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the system provides a prototype for the
	 syscall() function.  Otherwise, it is up to the program
	 to supply one.

     "d_sysconf"
	 From d_sysconf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_SYSCONF"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the sys-
	 conf() routine is available to determine system related
	 limits and options.

     "d_sysernlst"
	 From d_strerror.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SYS_ERRNOLIST"
	 if sys_errnolist[] is available to translate error
	 numbers to the symbolic name.

     "d_syserrlst"
	 From d_strerror.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SYS_ERRLIST" if
	 sys_errlist[] is available to translate error numbers to

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	 strings.

     "d_system"
	 From d_system.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_SYSTEM" if sys-
	 tem() is available to issue a shell command.

     "d_tcgetpgrp"
	 From d_tcgtpgrp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_TCGETPGRP"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 tcgetpgrp() routine is available. to get foreground pro-
	 cess group "ID".

     "d_tcsetpgrp"
	 From d_tcstpgrp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_TCSETPGRP"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 tcsetpgrp() routine is available to set foreground pro-
	 cess group "ID".

     "d_telldir"
	 From d_readdir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_TELLDIR" if
	 telldir() is available.

     "d_telldirproto"
	 From d_telldirproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_TELLDIR_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C
	 program that the system provides a prototype for the
	 telldir() function.  Otherwise, it is up to the program
	 to supply one.

     "d_time"
	 From d_time.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_TIME" sym-
	 bol, which indicates that the time() routine exists.
	 The time() routine is normaly provided on "UNIX" sys-
	 tems.

     "d_times"
	 From d_times.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_TIMES" sym-
	 bol, which indicates that the times() routine exists.

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	 The times() routine is normaly provided on "UNIX" sys-
	 tems. You may have to include <sys/times.h>.

     "d_tm_tm_gmtoff"
	 From i_time.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_TM_TM_GMTOFF",
	 which indicates indicates to the C program that the
	 struct tm has the tm_gmtoff field.

     "d_tm_tm_zone"
	 From i_time.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_TM_TM_ZONE",
	 which indicates indicates to the C program that the
	 struct tm has the tm_zone field.

     "d_tmpnam_r"
	 From d_tmpnam_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_TMPNAM_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 tmpnam_r() routine is available.

     "d_truncate"
	 From d_truncate.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_TRUNCATE" if
	 truncate() is available to truncate files.

     "d_ttyname_r"
	 From d_ttyname_r.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_TTYNAME_R"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 ttyname_r() routine is available.

     "d_tzname"
	 From d_tzname.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_TZNAME" if
	 tzname[] is available to access timezone names.

     "d_u32align"
	 From d_u32align.U:

	 This variable tells whether you must access character
	 data through U32-aligned pointers.

     "d_ualarm"
	 From d_ualarm.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_UALARM"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 ualarm() routine is available.

     "d_umask"
	 From d_umask.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_UMASK" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the umask()
	 routine is available. to set and get the value of the
	 file creation mask.

     "d_uname"
	 From d_gethname.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_UNAME" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the uname()
	 routine may be used to derive the host name.

     "d_union_semun"
	 From d_union_semun.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_UNION_SEMUN" if
	 the union semun is defined by including <sys/sem.h>.

     "d_unordered"
	 From d_unordered.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_UNORDERED"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the unor-
	 dered() routine is available.

     "d_unsetenv"
	 From d_unsetenv.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_UNSETENV"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 unsetenv () routine is available.

     "d_usleep"
	 From d_usleep.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_USLEEP" if
	 usleep() is available to do high granularity sleeps.

     "d_usleepproto"
	 From d_usleepproto.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "HAS_USLEEP_PROTO" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram that the system provides a prototype for the
	 usleep() function.  Otherwise, it is up to the program

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	 to supply one.

     "d_ustat"
	 From d_ustat.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_USTAT" if
	 ustat() is available to query file system statistics by
	 dev_t.

     "d_vendorarch"
	 From vendorarch.U:

	 This variable conditionally defined "PERL_VENDORARCH".

     "d_vendorbin"
	 From vendorbin.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PERL_VENDORBIN".

     "d_vendorlib"
	 From vendorlib.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PERL_VENDORLIB".

     "d_vendorscript"
	 From vendorscript.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "PERL_VENDORSCRIPT".

     "d_vfork"
	 From d_vfork.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_VFORK" sym-
	 bol, which indicates the vfork() routine is available.

     "d_void_closedir"
	 From d_closedir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "VOID_CLOSEDIR" if
	 closedir() does not return a value.

     "d_voidsig"
	 From d_voidsig.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "VOIDSIG" if this
	 system declares "void (*signal(...))()" in signal.h.
	 The old way was to declare it as "int (*signal(...))()".

     "d_voidtty"
	 From i_sysioctl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "USE_IOCNOTTY" to

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	 indicate that the ioctl() call with "TIOCNOTTY" should
	 be used to void tty association. Otherwise (on "USG"
	 probably), it is enough to close the standard file
	 decriptors and do a setpgrp().

     "d_volatile"
	 From d_volatile.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HASVOLATILE"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that this C
	 compiler knows about the volatile declaration.

     "d_vprintf"
	 From d_vprintf.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_VPRINTF"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 vprintf() routine is available to printf with a pointer
	 to an argument list.

     "d_wait4"
	 From d_wait4.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the HAS_WAIT4 sym-
	 bol, which indicates the wait4() routine is available.

     "d_waitpid"
	 From d_waitpid.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "HAS_WAITPID" if
	 waitpid() is available to wait for child process.

     "d_wcstombs"
	 From d_wcstombs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_WCSTOMBS"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 wcstombs() routine is available to convert wide charac-
	 ter strings to multibyte strings.

     "d_wctomb"
	 From d_wctomb.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_WCTOMB"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the
	 wctomb() routine is available to convert a wide charac-
	 ter to a multibyte.

     "d_writev"
	 From d_writev.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "HAS_WRITEV"

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	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that the wri-
	 tev() routine is available.

     "d_xenix"
	 From Guess.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the symbol "XENIX",
	 which alerts the C program that it runs under Xenix.

     "date"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the date program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "date" and is not useful.

     "db_hashtype"
	 From i_db.U:

	 This variable contains the type of the hash structure
	 element in the <db.h> header file.  In older versions of
	 "DB", it was int, while in newer ones it is u_int32_t.

     "db_prefixtype"
	 From i_db.U:

	 This variable contains the type of the prefix structure
	 element in the <db.h> header file.  In older versions of
	 "DB", it was int, while in newer ones it is size_t.

     "db_version_major"
	 From i_db.U:

	 This variable contains the major version number of
	 Berkeley "DB" found in the <db.h> header file.

     "db_version_minor"
	 From i_db.U:

	 This variable contains the minor version number of
	 Berkeley "DB" found in the <db.h> header file. For "DB"
	 version 1 this is always 0.

     "db_version_patch"
	 From i_db.U:

	 This variable contains the patch version number of
	 Berkeley "DB" found in the <db.h> header file. For "DB"
	 version 1 this is always 0.

     "defvoidused"

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	 From voidflags.U:

	 This variable contains the default value of the
	 "VOIDUSED" symbol (15).

     "direntrytype"
	 From i_dirent.U:

	 This symbol is set to "struct direct" or "struct dirent"
	 depending on whether dirent is available or not. You
	 should use this pseudo type to portably declare your
	 directory entries.

     "dlext"
	 From dlext.U:

	 This variable contains the extension that is to be used
	 for the dynamically loaded modules that perl generaties.

     "dlsrc"
	 From dlsrc.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the dynamic loading
	 file that will be used with the package.

     "doublesize"
	 From doublesize.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the "DOUBLESIZE"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program how many bytes
	 there are in a double.

     "drand01"
	 From randfunc.U:

	 Indicates the macro to be used to generate normalized
	 random numbers.  Uses randfunc, often divided by (dou-
	 ble) (((unsigned long) 1 << randbits)) in order to nor-
	 malize the result. In C programs, the macro "Drand01" is
	 mapped to drand01.

     "drand48_r_proto"
	 From d_drand48_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of drand48_r. It is
	 zero if d_drand48_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_drand48_r is defined.

     "dynamic_ext"
	 From Extensions.U:

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	 This variable holds a list of "XS" extension files we
	 want to link dynamically into the package.  It is used
	 by Makefile.

     e

     "eagain"
	 From nblock_io.U:

	 This variable bears the symbolic errno code set by
	 read() when no data is present on the file and non-
	 blocking I/O was enabled (otherwise, read() blocks
	 naturally).

     "ebcdic"
	 From ebcdic.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "EBCDIC" if this
	 system uses "EBCDIC" encoding.	 Among other things, this
	 means that the character ranges are not contiguous. See
	 trnl.U

     "echo"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the echo program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "echo" and is not useful.

     "egrep"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the egrep program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "egrep" and is not useful.

     "emacs"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "endgrent_r_proto"
	 From d_endgrent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of endgrent_r. It is
	 zero if d_endgrent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_endgrent_r is defined.

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     "endhostent_r_proto"
	 From d_endhostent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of endhostent_r. It
	 is zero if d_endhostent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_endhostent_r is defined.

     "endnetent_r_proto"
	 From d_endnetent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of endnetent_r. It
	 is zero if d_endnetent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_endnetent_r is defined.

     "endprotoent_r_proto"
	 From d_endprotoent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of endprotoent_r. It
	 is zero if d_endprotoent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_endprotoent_r is defined.

     "endpwent_r_proto"
	 From d_endpwent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of endpwent_r. It is
	 zero if d_endpwent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_endpwent_r is defined.

     "endservent_r_proto"
	 From d_endservent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of endservent_r. It
	 is zero if d_endservent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_endservent_r is defined.

     "eunicefix"
	 From Init.U:

	 When running under Eunice this variable contains a com-
	 mand which will convert a shell script to the proper
	 form of text file for it to be executable by the shell.
	 On other systems it is a no-op.

     "exe_ext"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This is an old synonym for _exe.

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     "expr"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the expr program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "expr" and is not useful.

     "extensions"
	 From Extensions.U:

	 This variable holds a list of all extension files (both
	 "XS" and non-xs linked into the package.  It is pro-
	 pagated to Config.pm and is typically used to test
	 whether a particular extesion is available.

     "extras"
	 From Extras.U:

	 This variable holds a list of extra modules to install.

     f

     "fflushall"
	 From fflushall.U:

	 This symbol, if defined, tells that to flush all pending
	 stdio output one must loop through all the stdio file
	 handles stored in an array and fflush them. Note that if
	 fflushNULL is defined, fflushall will not even be probed
	 for and will be left undefined.

     "fflushNULL"
	 From fflushall.U:

	 This symbol, if defined, tells that fflush("NULL") does
	 flush all pending stdio output.

     "find"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "firstmakefile"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This variable defines the first file searched by make.
	 On unix, it is makefile (then Makefile).  On case-
	 insensitive systems, it might be something else.  This
	 is only used to deal with convoluted make depend tricks.

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     "flex"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "fpossize"
	 From fpossize.U:

	 This variable contains the size of a fpostype in bytes.

     "fpostype"
	 From fpostype.U:

	 This variable defines Fpos_t to be something like
	 fpos_t, long, uint, or whatever type is used to declare
	 file positions in libc.

     "freetype"
	 From mallocsrc.U:

	 This variable contains the return type of free().  It is
	 usually void, but occasionally int.

     "from"
	 From Cross.U:

	 This variable contains the command used by Configure to
	 copy files from the target host.  Useful and available
	 only during Perl build. The string ":" if not
	 cross-compiling.

     "full_ar"
	 From Loc_ar.U:

	 This variable contains the full pathname to "ar",
	 whether or not the user has specified "portability".
	 This is only used in the Makefile.SH.

     "full_csh"
	 From d_csh.U:

	 This variable contains the full pathname to "csh",
	 whether or not the user has specified "portability".
	 This is only used in the compiled C program, and we
	 assume that all systems which can share this executable
	 will have the same full pathname to csh.

     "full_sed"
	 From Loc_sed.U:

	 This variable contains the full pathname to "sed",

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	 whether or not the user has specified "portability".
	 This is only used in the compiled C program, and we
	 assume that all systems which can share this executable
	 will have the same full pathname to sed.

     g

     "gccansipedantic"
	 From gccvers.U:

	 If "GNU" cc (gcc) is used, this variable will enable (if
	 set) the -ansi and -pedantic ccflags for building core
	 files (through cflags script). (See Porting/pumpkin.pod
	 for full description).

     "gccosandvers"
	 From gccvers.U:

	 If "GNU" cc (gcc) is used, this variable holds the
	 operating system and version used to compile gcc.  It is
	 set to '' if not gcc, or if nothing useful can be parsed
	 as the os version.

     "gccversion"
	 From gccvers.U:

	 If "GNU" cc (gcc) is used, this variable holds 1 or 2 to
	 indicate whether the compiler is version 1 or 2.  This
	 is used in setting some of the default cflags.	 It is
	 set to '' if not gcc.

     "getgrent_r_proto"
	 From d_getgrent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getgrent_r. It is
	 zero if d_getgrent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getgrent_r is defined.

     "getgrgid_r_proto"
	 From d_getgrgid_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getgrgid_r. It is
	 zero if d_getgrgid_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getgrgid_r is defined.

     "getgrnam_r_proto"
	 From d_getgrnam_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getgrnam_r. It is
	 zero if d_getgrnam_r is undef, and one of the

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	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getgrnam_r is defined.

     "gethostbyaddr_r_proto"
	 From d_gethostbyaddr_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of gethostbyaddr_r.
	 It is zero if d_gethostbyaddr_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_gethostbyaddr_r is defined.

     "gethostbyname_r_proto"
	 From d_gethostbyname_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of gethostbyname_r.
	 It is zero if d_gethostbyname_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_gethostbyname_r is defined.

     "gethostent_r_proto"
	 From d_gethostent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of gethostent_r. It
	 is zero if d_gethostent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_gethostent_r is defined.

     "getlogin_r_proto"
	 From d_getlogin_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getlogin_r. It is
	 zero if d_getlogin_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getlogin_r is defined.

     "getnetbyaddr_r_proto"
	 From d_getnetbyaddr_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getnetbyaddr_r.
	 It is zero if d_getnetbyaddr_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getnetbyaddr_r is defined.

     "getnetbyname_r_proto"
	 From d_getnetbyname_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getnetbyname_r.
	 It is zero if d_getnetbyname_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getnetbyname_r is defined.

     "getnetent_r_proto"

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	 From d_getnetent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getnetent_r. It
	 is zero if d_getnetent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getnetent_r is defined.

     "getprotobyname_r_proto"
	 From d_getprotobyname_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getprotobyname_r.
	 It is zero if d_getprotobyname_r is undef, and one of
	 the "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getprotobyname_r is defined.

     "getprotobynumber_r_proto"
	 From d_getprotobynumber_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of
	 getprotobynumber_r. It is zero if d_getprotobynumber_r
	 is undef, and one of the "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros
	 of reentr.h if d_getprotobynumber_r is defined.

     "getprotoent_r_proto"
	 From d_getprotoent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getprotoent_r. It
	 is zero if d_getprotoent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getprotoent_r is defined.

     "getpwent_r_proto"
	 From d_getpwent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getpwent_r. It is
	 zero if d_getpwent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getpwent_r is defined.

     "getpwnam_r_proto"
	 From d_getpwnam_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getpwnam_r. It is
	 zero if d_getpwnam_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getpwnam_r is defined.

     "getpwuid_r_proto"
	 From d_getpwuid_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getpwuid_r. It is
	 zero if d_getpwuid_r is undef, and one of the

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	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getpwuid_r is defined.

     "getservbyname_r_proto"
	 From d_getservbyname_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getservbyname_r.
	 It is zero if d_getservbyname_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getservbyname_r is defined.

     "getservbyport_r_proto"
	 From d_getservbyport_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getservbyport_r.
	 It is zero if d_getservbyport_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getservbyport_r is defined.

     "getservent_r_proto"
	 From d_getservent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getservent_r. It
	 is zero if d_getservent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getservent_r is defined.

     "getspnam_r_proto"
	 From d_getspnam_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of getspnam_r. It is
	 zero if d_getspnam_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_getspnam_r is defined.

     "gidformat"
	 From gidf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Gid_t.

     "gidsign"
	 From gidsign.U:

	 This variable contains the signedness of a gidtype. 1
	 for unsigned, -1 for signed.

     "gidsize"
	 From gidsize.U:

	 This variable contains the size of a gidtype in bytes.

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     "gidtype"
	 From gidtype.U:

	 This variable defines Gid_t to be something like gid_t,
	 int, ushort, or whatever type is used to declare the
	 return type of getgid().  Typically, it is the type of
	 group ids in the kernel.

     "glibpth"
	 From libpth.U:

	 This variable holds the general path (space-separated)
	 used to find libraries.  It may contain directories that
	 do not exist on this platform, libpth is the cleaned-up
	 version.

     "gmake"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the gmake program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "gmake" and is not useful.

     "gmtime_r_proto"
	 From d_gmtime_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of gmtime_r. It is
	 zero if d_gmtime_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if d_gmtime_r
	 is defined.

     "gnulibc_version"
	 From d_gnulibc.U:

	 This variable contains the version number of the "GNU" C
	 library. It is usually something like 2.2.5.  It is a
	 plain '' if this is not the "GNU" C library, or if the
	 version is unknown.

     "grep"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the grep program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "grep" and is not useful.

     "groupcat"
	 From nis.U:

	 This variable contains a command that produces the text

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	 of the /etc/group file.  This is normally "cat
	 /etc/group", but can be "ypcat group" when "NIS" is
	 used. On some systems, such as os390, there may be no
	 equivalent command, in which case this variable is
	 unset.

     "groupstype"
	 From groupstype.U:

	 This variable defines Groups_t to be something like
	 gid_t, int, ushort, or whatever type is used for the
	 second argument to getgroups() and setgroups().  Usu-
	 ally, this is the same as gidtype (gid_t), but sometimes
	 it isn't.

     "gzip"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the gzip program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "gzip" and is not useful.

     h

     "h_fcntl"
	 From h_fcntl.U:

	 This is variable gets set in various places to tell
	 i_fcntl that <fcntl.h> should be included.

     "h_sysfile"
	 From h_sysfile.U:

	 This is variable gets set in various places to tell
	 i_sys_file that <sys/file.h> should be included.

     "hint"
	 From Oldconfig.U:

	 Gives the type of hints used for previous answers. May
	 be one of "default", "recommended" or "previous".

     "hostcat"
	 From nis.U:

	 This variable contains a command that produces the text
	 of the /etc/hosts file.  This is normally "cat
	 /etc/hosts", but can be "ypcat hosts" when "NIS" is
	 used. On some systems, such as os390, there may be no
	 equivalent command, in which case this variable is
	 unset.

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     "html1dir"
	 From html1dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory in
	 which html source pages are to be put.	 This directory
	 is for pages that describe whole programs, not libraries
	 or modules.  It is intended to correspond roughly to
	 section 1 of the Unix manuals.

     "html1direxp"
	 From html1dir.U:

	 This variable is the same as the html1dir variable, but
	 is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use in makefiles.

     "html3dir"
	 From html3dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory in
	 which html source pages are to be put.	 This directory
	 is for pages that describe libraries or modules.  It is
	 intended to correspond roughly to section 3 of the Unix
	 manuals.

     "html3direxp"
	 From html3dir.U:

	 This variable is the same as the html3dir variable, but
	 is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use in makefiles.

     i

     "i16size"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an I16 in bytes.

     "i16type"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's I16.

     "i32size"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an I32 in bytes.

     "i32type"
	 From perlxv.U:

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	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's I32.

     "i64size"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an I64 in bytes.

     "i64type"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's I64.

     "i8size"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an I8 in bytes.

     "i8type"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's I8.

     "i_arpainet"
	 From i_arpainet.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_ARPA_INET"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <arpa/inet.h>.

     "i_bsdioctl"
	 From i_sysioctl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_BSDIOCTL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that
	 <sys/bsdioctl.h> exists and should be included.

     "i_crypt"
	 From i_crypt.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_CRYPT" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <crypt.h>.

     "i_db"
	 From i_db.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_DB" symbol,
	 and indicates whether a C program may include Berkeley's
	 "DB" include file <db.h>.

     "i_dbm"
	 From i_dbm.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_DBM" symbol,
	 which indicates to the C program that <dbm.h> exists and
	 should be included.

     "i_dirent"
	 From i_dirent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_DIRENT", which
	 indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <dirent.h>.

     "i_dld"
	 From i_dld.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_DLD" symbol,
	 which indicates to the C program that <dld.h> ("GNU"
	 dynamic loading) exists and should be included.

     "i_dlfcn"
	 From i_dlfcn.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_DLFCN" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that <dlfcn.h>
	 exists and should be included.

     "i_fcntl"
	 From i_fcntl.U:

	 This variable controls the value of "I_FCNTL" (which
	 tells the C program to include <fcntl.h>).

     "i_float"
	 From i_float.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_FLOAT" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program may include
	 <float.h> to get symbols like "DBL_MAX" or "DBL_MIN",
	 i.e. machine dependent floating point values.

     "i_fp"
	 From i_fp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_FP" symbol,
	 and indicates whether a C program should include <fp.h>.

     "i_fp_class"
	 From i_fp_class.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_FP_CLASS"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <fp_class.h>.

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     "i_gdbm"
	 From i_gdbm.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_GDBM" symbol,
	 which indicates to the C program that <gdbm.h> exists
	 and should be included.

     "i_grp"
	 From i_grp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_GRP" symbol,
	 and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <grp.h>.

     "i_ieeefp"
	 From i_ieeefp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_IEEEFP" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <ieeefp.h>.

     "i_inttypes"
	 From i_inttypes.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_INTTYPES"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <inttypes.h>.

     "i_langinfo"
	 From i_langinfo.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_LANGINFO"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <langinfo.h>.

     "i_libutil"
	 From i_libutil.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_LIBUTIL" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <libutil.h>.

     "i_limits"
	 From i_limits.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_LIMITS" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program may include
	 <limits.h> to get symbols like "WORD_BIT" and friends.

     "i_locale"
	 From i_locale.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_LOCALE" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <locale.h>.

     "i_machcthr"
	 From i_machcthr.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "I_MACH_CTHREADS" symbol, and indicates whether a C pro-
	 gram should include <mach/cthreads.h>.

     "i_malloc"
	 From i_malloc.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_MALLOC" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <malloc.h>.

     "i_math"
	 From i_math.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_MATH" symbol,
	 and indicates whether a C program may include <math.h>.

     "i_memory"
	 From i_memory.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_MEMORY" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <memory.h>.

     "i_mntent"
	 From i_mntent.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_MNTENT" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <mntent.h>.

     "i_ndbm"
	 From i_ndbm.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_NDBM" symbol,
	 which indicates to the C program that <ndbm.h> exists
	 and should be included.

     "i_netdb"
	 From i_netdb.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_NETDB" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <netdb.h>.

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     "i_neterrno"
	 From i_neterrno.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_NET_ERRNO"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that
	 <net/errno.h> exists and should be included.

     "i_netinettcp"
	 From i_netinettcp.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_NETINET_TCP"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <netinet/tcp.h>.

     "i_niin"
	 From i_niin.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_NETINET_IN",
	 which indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <netinet/in.h>. Otherwise, you may try <sys/in.h>.

     "i_poll"
	 From i_poll.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_POLL" symbol,
	 and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <poll.h>.

     "i_prot"
	 From i_prot.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_PROT" symbol,
	 and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <prot.h>.

     "i_pthread"
	 From i_pthread.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_PTHREAD" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <pthread.h>.

     "i_pwd"
	 From i_pwd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_PWD", which indi-
	 cates to the C program that it should include <pwd.h>.

     "i_rpcsvcdbm"
	 From i_dbm.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_RPCSVC_DBM"

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	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that
	 <rpcsvc/dbm.h> exists and should be included.	Some Sys-
	 tem V systems might need this instead of <dbm.h>.

     "i_sfio"
	 From i_sfio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SFIO" symbol,
	 and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sfio.h>.

     "i_sgtty"
	 From i_termio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SGTTY" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that it should
	 include <sgtty.h> rather than <termio.h>.

     "i_shadow"
	 From i_shadow.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SHADOW" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <shadow.h>.

     "i_socks"
	 From i_socks.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SOCKS" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <socks.h>.

     "i_stdarg"
	 From i_varhdr.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_STDARG" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that <stdarg.h>
	 exists and should be included.

     "i_stddef"
	 From i_stddef.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_STDDEF" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that <stddef.h>
	 exists and should be included.

     "i_stdlib"
	 From i_stdlib.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_STDLIB" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that <stdlib.h>
	 exists and should be included.

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     "i_string"
	 From i_string.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_STRING" sym-
	 bol, which indicates that <string.h> should be included
	 rather than <strings.h>.

     "i_sunmath"
	 From i_sunmath.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SUNMATH" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sunmath.h>.

     "i_sysaccess"
	 From i_sysaccess.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_ACCESS"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/access.h>.

     "i_sysdir"
	 From i_sysdir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_DIR" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/dir.h>.

     "i_sysfile"
	 From i_sysfile.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_FILE"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/file.h> to get "R_OK" and friends.

     "i_sysfilio"
	 From i_sysioctl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_FILIO"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that
	 <sys/filio.h> exists and should be included in prefer-
	 ence to <sys/ioctl.h>.

     "i_sysin"
	 From i_niin.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_SYS_IN", which
	 indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <sys/in.h> instead of <netinet/in.h>.

     "i_sysioctl"
	 From i_sysioctl.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_IOCTL"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program that
	 <sys/ioctl.h> exists and should be included.

     "i_syslog"
	 From i_syslog.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYSLOG" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <syslog.h>.

     "i_sysmman"
	 From i_sysmman.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_MMAN"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/mman.h>.

     "i_sysmode"
	 From i_sysmode.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYSMODE" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/mode.h>.

     "i_sysmount"
	 From i_sysmount.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYSMOUNT"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/mount.h>.

     "i_sysndir"
	 From i_sysndir.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_NDIR"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/ndir.h>.

     "i_sysparam"
	 From i_sysparam.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_PARAM"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/param.h>.

     "i_sysresrc"
	 From i_sysresrc.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_RESOURCE"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/resource.h>.

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     "i_syssecrt"
	 From i_syssecrt.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_SECURITY"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/security.h>.

     "i_sysselct"
	 From i_sysselct.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_SYS_SELECT",
	 which indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <sys/select.h> in order to get the definition of struct
	 timeval.

     "i_syssockio"
	 From i_sysioctl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_SYS_SOCKIO" to
	 indicate to the C program that socket ioctl codes may be
	 found in <sys/sockio.h> instead of <sys/ioctl.h>.

     "i_sysstat"
	 From i_sysstat.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_STAT"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/stat.h>.

     "i_sysstatfs"
	 From i_sysstatfs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYSSTATFS"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/statfs.h>.

     "i_sysstatvfs"
	 From i_sysstatvfs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYSSTATVFS"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/statvfs.h>.

     "i_systime"
	 From i_time.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_SYS_TIME", which
	 indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <sys/time.h>.

     "i_systimek"
	 From i_time.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines "I_SYS_TIME_KERNEL",
	 which indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <sys/time.h> with "KERNEL" defined.

     "i_systimes"
	 From i_systimes.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_TIMES"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/times.h>.

     "i_systypes"
	 From i_systypes.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYS_TYPES"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/types.h>.

     "i_sysuio"
	 From i_sysuio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYSUIO" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/uio.h>.

     "i_sysun"
	 From i_sysun.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_SYS_UN", which
	 indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <sys/un.h> to get "UNIX" domain socket definitions.

     "i_sysutsname"
	 From i_sysutsname.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYSUTSNAME"
	 symbol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/utsname.h>.

     "i_sysvfs"
	 From i_sysvfs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_SYSVFS" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <sys/vfs.h>.

     "i_syswait"
	 From i_syswait.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_SYS_WAIT", which
	 indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <sys/wait.h>.

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     "i_termio"
	 From i_termio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_TERMIO" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that it should
	 include <termio.h> rather than <sgtty.h>.

     "i_termios"
	 From i_termio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_TERMIOS" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program that the "POSIX"
	 <termios.h> file is to be included.

     "i_time"
	 From i_time.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "I_TIME", which
	 indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <time.h>.

     "i_unistd"
	 From i_unistd.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_UNISTD" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <unistd.h>.

     "i_ustat"
	 From i_ustat.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_USTAT" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <ustat.h>.

     "i_utime"
	 From i_utime.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_UTIME" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 <utime.h>.

     "i_values"
	 From i_values.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_VALUES" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program may include
	 <values.h> to get symbols like "MAXLONG" and friends.

     "i_varargs"
	 From i_varhdr.U:

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	 This variable conditionally defines "I_VARARGS", which
	 indicates to the C program that it should include
	 <varargs.h>.

     "i_varhdr"
	 From i_varhdr.U:

	 Contains the name of the header to be included to get
	 va_dcl definition. Typically one of varargs.h or
	 stdarg.h.

     "i_vfork"
	 From i_vfork.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "I_VFORK" sym-
	 bol, and indicates whether a C program should include
	 vfork.h.

     "ignore_versioned_solibs"
	 From libs.U:

	 This variable should be non-empty if non-versioned
	 shared libraries (libfoo.so.x.y) are to be ignored
	 (because they cannot be linked against).

     "inc_version_list"
	 From inc_version_list.U:

	 This variable specifies the list of subdirectories in
	 over which perl.c:incpush() and lib/lib.pm will automat-
	 ically search when adding directories to @"INC".  The
	 elements in the list are separated by spaces.	This is
	 only useful if you have a perl library directory tree
	 structured like the default one.  See "INSTALL" for how
	 this works.  The versioned site_perl directory was
	 introduced in 5.005, so that is the lowest possible
	 value.

     "inc_version_list_init"
	 From inc_version_list.U:

	 This variable holds the same list as inc_version_list,
	 but each item is enclosed in double quotes and separated
	 by commas, suitable for use in the
	 "PERL_INC_VERSION_LIST" initialization.

     "incpath"
	 From usrinc.U:

	 This variable must preceed the normal include path to
	 get hte right one, as in $incpath/usr/include or
	 $incpath/usr/lib. Value can be "" or /bsd43 on mips.

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     "inews"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "installarchlib"
	 From archlib.U:

	 This variable is really the same as archlibexp but may
	 differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra portabil-
	 ity, only this variable should be used in makefiles.

     "installbin"
	 From bin.U:

	 This variable is the same as binexp unless "AFS" is run-
	 ning in which case the user is explicitely prompted for
	 it. This variable should always be used in your
	 makefiles for maximum portability.

     "installhtml1dir"
	 From html1dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as html1direxp, unless
	 you are using a different installprefix.  For extra por-
	 tability, you should only use this variable within your
	 makefiles.

     "installhtml3dir"
	 From html3dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as html3direxp, unless
	 you are using a different installprefix.  For extra por-
	 tability, you should only use this variable within your
	 makefiles.

     "installman1dir"
	 From man1dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as man1direxp, unless
	 you are using "AFS" in which case it points to the
	 read/write location whereas man1direxp only points to
	 the read-only access location. For extra portability,
	 you should only use this variable within your makefiles.

     "installman3dir"
	 From man3dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as man3direxp, unless
	 you are using "AFS" in which case it points to the
	 read/write location whereas man3direxp only points to

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	 the read-only access location. For extra portability,
	 you should only use this variable within your makefiles.

     "installprefix"
	 From installprefix.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the directory below
	 which "make install" will install the package.	 For most
	 users, this is the same as prefix.  However, it is use-
	 ful for installing the software into a different (usu-
	 ally temporary) location after which it can be bundled
	 up and moved somehow to the final location specified by
	 prefix.

     "installprefixexp"
	 From installprefix.U:

	 This variable holds the full absolute path of
	 installprefix with all ~-expansion done.

     "installprivlib"
	 From privlib.U:

	 This variable is really the same as privlibexp but may
	 differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra portabil-
	 ity, only this variable should be used in makefiles.

     "installscript"
	 From scriptdir.U:

	 This variable is usually the same as scriptdirexp,
	 unless you are on a system running "AFS", in which case
	 they may differ slightly. You should always use this
	 variable within your makefiles for portability.

     "installsitearch"
	 From sitearch.U:

	 This variable is really the same as sitearchexp but may
	 differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra portabil-
	 ity, only this variable should be used in makefiles.

     "installsitebin"
	 From sitebin.U:

	 This variable is usually the same as sitebinexp, unless
	 you are on a system running "AFS", in which case they
	 may differ slightly. You should always use this variable
	 within your makefiles for portability.

     "installsitehtml1dir"
	 From sitehtml1dir.U:

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	 This variable is really the same as sitehtml1direxp,
	 unless you are using "AFS" in which case it points to
	 the read/write location whereas html1direxp only points
	 to the read-only access location. For extra portability,
	 you should only use this variable within your makefiles.

     "installsitehtml3dir"
	 From sitehtml3dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as sitehtml3direxp,
	 unless you are using "AFS" in which case it points to
	 the read/write location whereas html3direxp only points
	 to the read-only access location. For extra portability,
	 you should only use this variable within your makefiles.

     "installsitelib"
	 From sitelib.U:

	 This variable is really the same as sitelibexp but may
	 differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra portabil-
	 ity, only this variable should be used in makefiles.

     "installsiteman1dir"
	 From siteman1dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as siteman1direxp,
	 unless you are using "AFS" in which case it points to
	 the read/write location whereas man1direxp only points
	 to the read-only access location. For extra portability,
	 you should only use this variable within your makefiles.

     "installsiteman3dir"
	 From siteman3dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as siteman3direxp,
	 unless you are using "AFS" in which case it points to
	 the read/write location whereas man3direxp only points
	 to the read-only access location. For extra portability,
	 you should only use this variable within your makefiles.

     "installsitescript"
	 From sitescript.U:

	 This variable is usually the same as sitescriptexp,
	 unless you are on a system running "AFS", in which case
	 they may differ slightly. You should always use this
	 variable within your makefiles for portability.

     "installstyle"
	 From installstyle.U:

	 This variable describes the "style" of the perl

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	 installation. This is intended to be useful for tools
	 that need to manipulate entire perl distributions.  Perl
	 itself doesn't use this to find its libraries -- the
	 library directories are stored directly in Config.pm.
	 Currently, there are only two styles:	"lib" and
	 lib/perl5.  The default library locations (e.g. privlib,
	 sitelib) are either $prefix/lib or $prefix/lib/perl5.
	 The former is useful if $prefix is a directory dedicated
	 to perl (e.g. /opt/perl), while the latter is useful if
	 $prefix is shared by many packages, e.g. if
	 $prefix=/usr/local.

	 Unfortunately, while this "style" variable is used to
	 set defaults for all three directory hierarchies (core,
	 vendor, and site), there is no guarantee that the same
	 style is actually appropriate for all those directories.
	 For example, $prefix might be /opt/perl, but $siteprefix
	 might be /usr/local. (Perhaps, in retrospect, the "lib"
	 style should never have been supported, but it did seem
	 like a nice idea at the time.)

	 The situation is even less clear for tools such as Mak-
	 eMaker that can be used to install additional modules
	 into non-standard places.  For example, if a user
	 intends to install a module into a private directory
	 (perhaps by setting "PREFIX" on the Makefile.PL command
	 line), then there is no reason to assume that the
	 Configure-time $installstyle setting will be relevant
	 for that "PREFIX".

	 This may later be extended to include other information,
	 so be careful with pattern-matching on the results.

	 For compatibility with perl5.005 and earlier, the
	 default setting is based on whether or not $prefix con-
	 tains the string "perl".

     "installusrbinperl"
	 From instubperl.U:

	 This variable tells whether Perl should be installed
	 also as /usr/bin/perl in addition to $installbin/perl

     "installvendorarch"
	 From vendorarch.U:

	 This variable is really the same as vendorarchexp but
	 may differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra por-
	 tability, only this variable should be used in
	 makefiles.

     "installvendorbin"

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	 From vendorbin.U:

	 This variable is really the same as vendorbinexp but may
	 differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra portabil-
	 ity, only this variable should be used in makefiles.

     "installvendorhtml1dir"
	 From vendorhtml1dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as vendorhtml1direxp
	 but may differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra
	 portability, only this variable should be used in
	 makefiles.

     "installvendorhtml3dir"
	 From vendorhtml3dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as vendorhtml3direxp
	 but may differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra
	 portability, only this variable should be used in
	 makefiles.

     "installvendorlib"
	 From vendorlib.U:

	 This variable is really the same as vendorlibexp but may
	 differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra portabil-
	 ity, only this variable should be used in makefiles.

     "installvendorman1dir"
	 From vendorman1dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as vendorman1direxp but
	 may differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra por-
	 tability, only this variable should be used in
	 makefiles.

     "installvendorman3dir"
	 From vendorman3dir.U:

	 This variable is really the same as vendorman3direxp but
	 may differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra por-
	 tability, only this variable should be used in
	 makefiles.

     "installvendorscript"
	 From vendorscript.U:

	 This variable is really the same as vendorscriptexp but
	 may differ on those systems using "AFS". For extra por-
	 tability, only this variable should be used in
	 makefiles.

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     "intsize"
	 From intsize.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the "INTSIZE" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program how many bytes
	 there are in an int.

     "issymlink"
	 From issymlink.U:

	 This variable holds the test command to test for a sym-
	 bolic link (if they are supported).  Typical values
	 include "test -h" and "test -L".

     "ivdformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "IV" as a signed decimal integer.

     "ivsize"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an "IV" in bytes.

     "ivtype"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's "IV".

     k

     "known_extensions"
	 From Extensions.U:

	 This variable holds a list of all "XS" extensions
	 included in the package.

     "ksh"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     l

     "ld"
	 From dlsrc.U:

	 This variable indicates the program to be used to link
	 libraries for dynamic loading.	 On some systems, it is
	 "ld". On "ELF" systems, it should be $cc.  Mostly, we'll

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	 try to respect the hint file setting.

     "lddlflags"
	 From dlsrc.U:

	 This variable contains any special flags that might need
	 to be passed to $ld to create a shared library suitable
	 for dynamic loading.  It is up to the makefile to use
	 it.  For hpux, it should be "-b".  For sunos 4.1, it is
	 empty.

     "ldflags"
	 From ccflags.U:

	 This variable contains any additional C loader flags
	 desired by the user.  It is up to the Makefile to use
	 this.

     "ldflags_uselargefiles"
	 From uselfs.U:

	 This variable contains the loader flags needed by large
	 file builds and added to ldflags by hints files.

     "ldlibpthname"
	 From libperl.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the shared library
	 search path, often "LD_LIBRARY_PATH".	To get an empty
	 string, the hints file must set this to "none".

     "less"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the less program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "less" and is not useful.

     "lib_ext"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This is an old synonym for _a.

     "libc"
	 From libc.U:

	 This variable contains the location of the C library.

     "libperl"
	 From libperl.U:

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	 The perl executable is obtained by linking perlmain.c
	 with libperl, any static extensions (usually just
	 DynaLoader), and any other libraries needed on this sys-
	 tem.  libperl is usually libperl.a, but can also be
	 libperl.so.xxx if the user wishes to build a perl exe-
	 cutable with a shared library.

     "libpth"
	 From libpth.U:

	 This variable holds the general path (space-separated)
	 used to find libraries. It is intended to be used by
	 other units.

     "libs"
	 From libs.U:

	 This variable holds the additional libraries we want to
	 use. It is up to the Makefile to deal with it.	 The list
	 can be empty.

     "libsdirs"
	 From libs.U:

	 This variable holds the directory names aka dirnames of
	 the libraries we found and accepted, duplicates are
	 removed.

     "libsfiles"
	 From libs.U:

	 This variable holds the filenames aka basenames of the
	 libraries we found and accepted.

     "libsfound"
	 From libs.U:

	 This variable holds the full pathnames of the libraries
	 we found and accepted.

     "libspath"
	 From libs.U:

	 This variable holds the directory names probed for
	 libraries.

     "libswanted"
	 From Myinit.U:

	 This variable holds a list of all the libraries we want
	 to search.  The order is chosen to pick up the c library
	 ahead of ucb or bsd libraries for SVR4.

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     "libswanted_uselargefiles"
	 From uselfs.U:

	 This variable contains the libraries needed by large
	 file builds and added to ldflags by hints files.  It is
	 a space separated list of the library names without the
	 "lib" prefix or any suffix, just like libswanted..

     "line"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "lint"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "lkflags"
	 From ccflags.U:

	 This variable contains any additional C partial linker
	 flags desired by the user.  It is up to the Makefile to
	 use this.

     "ln"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the ln program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain "ln"
	 and is not useful.

     "lns"
	 From lns.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the command to make sym-
	 bolic links (if they are supported).  It can be used in
	 the Makefile. It is either "ln -s" or "ln"

     "localtime_r_proto"
	 From d_localtime_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of localtime_r. It
	 is zero if d_localtime_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_localtime_r is defined.

     "locincpth"
	 From ccflags.U:

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	 This variable contains a list of additional directories
	 to be searched by the compiler.  The appropriate "-I"
	 directives will be added to ccflags.  This is intended
	 to simplify setting local directories from the Configure
	 command line. It's not much, but it parallels the
	 loclibpth stuff in libpth.U.

     "loclibpth"
	 From libpth.U:

	 This variable holds the paths (space-separated) used to
	 find local libraries.	It is prepended to libpth, and is
	 intended to be easily set from the command line.

     "longdblsize"
	 From d_longdbl.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the
	 "LONG_DOUBLESIZE" symbol, which indicates to the C pro-
	 gram how many bytes there are in a long double, if this
	 system supports long doubles.

     "longlongsize"
	 From d_longlong.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the "LONGLONGSIZE"
	 symbol, which indicates to the C program how many bytes
	 there are in a long long, if this system supports long
	 long.

     "longsize"
	 From intsize.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the "LONGSIZE" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program how many bytes
	 there are in a long.

     "lp"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "lpr"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "ls"
	 From Loc.U:

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	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the ls program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain "ls"
	 and is not useful.

     "lseeksize"
	 From lseektype.U:

	 This variable defines lseektype to be something like
	 off_t, long, or whatever type is used to declare lseek
	 offset's type in the kernel (which also appears to be
	 lseek's return type).

     "lseektype"
	 From lseektype.U:

	 This variable defines lseektype to be something like
	 off_t, long, or whatever type is used to declare lseek
	 offset's type in the kernel (which also appears to be
	 lseek's return type).

     m

     "mail"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "mailx"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "make"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the make program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "make" and is not useful.

     "make_set_make"
	 From make.U:

	 Some versions of "make" set the variable "MAKE".  Others
	 do not. This variable contains the string to be included
	 in Makefile.SH so that "MAKE" is set if needed, and not
	 if not needed. Possible values are:

	 make_set_make="#"	  # If your make program handles

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	 this for you,

	 make_set_make="MAKE=$make"    # if it doesn't.

	 This uses a comment character to distinguish a "set"
	 value (from a previous config.sh or Configure "-D"
	 option) from an uncomputed value.

     "mallocobj"
	 From mallocsrc.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the malloc.o that
	 this package generates, if that malloc.o is preferred
	 over the system malloc. Otherwise the value is null.
	 This variable is intended for generating Makefiles.  See
	 mallocsrc.

     "mallocsrc"
	 From mallocsrc.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the malloc.c that
	 comes with the package, if that malloc.c is preferred
	 over the system malloc. Otherwise the value is null.
	 This variable is intended for generating Makefiles.

     "malloctype"
	 From mallocsrc.U:

	 This variable contains the kind of ptr returned by mal-
	 loc and realloc.

     "man1dir"
	 From man1dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory in
	 which manual source pages are to be put.  It is the
	 responsibility of the Makefile.SH to get the value of
	 this into the proper command. You must be prepared to do
	 the ~name expansion yourself.

     "man1direxp"
	 From man1dir.U:

	 This variable is the same as the man1dir variable, but
	 is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use in makefiles.

     "man1ext"
	 From man1dir.U:

	 This variable contains the extension that the manual
	 page should have: one of "n", "l", or 1.  The Makefile

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	 must supply the .. See man1dir.

     "man3dir"
	 From man3dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory in
	 which manual source pages are to be put.  It is the
	 responsibility of the Makefile.SH to get the value of
	 this into the proper command. You must be prepared to do
	 the ~name expansion yourself.

     "man3direxp"
	 From man3dir.U:

	 This variable is the same as the man3dir variable, but
	 is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use in makefiles.

     "man3ext"
	 From man3dir.U:

	 This variable contains the extension that the manual
	 page should have: one of "n", "l", or 3.  The Makefile
	 must supply the .. See man3dir.

     M

     "Mcc"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the Mcc program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "Mcc" and is not useful.

     "mips_type"
	 From usrinc.U:

	 This variable holds the environment type for the mips
	 system. Possible values are "BSD 4.3" and "System V".

     "mistrustnm"
	 From Csym.U:

	 This variable can be used to establish a fallthrough for
	 the cases where nm fails to find a symbol.  If usenm is
	 false or usenm is true and mistrustnm is false, this
	 variable has no effect.  If usenm is true and mistrustnm
	 is "compile", a test program will be compiled to try to
	 find any symbol that can't be located via nm lookup.  If
	 mistrustnm is "run", the test program will be run as
	 well as being compiled.

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     "mkdir"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the mkdir program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "mkdir" and is not useful.

     "mmaptype"
	 From d_mmap.U:

	 This symbol contains the type of pointer returned by
	 mmap() (and simultaneously the type of the first argu-
	 ment). It can be "void *" or "caddr_t".

     "modetype"
	 From modetype.U:

	 This variable defines modetype to be something like
	 mode_t, int, unsigned short, or whatever type is used to
	 declare file modes for system calls.

     "more"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the more program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "more" and is not useful.

     "multiarch"
	 From multiarch.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "MULTIARCH" sym-
	 bol which signifies the presence of multiplatform files.
	 This is normally set by hints files.

     "mv"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "myarchname"
	 From archname.U:

	 This variable holds the architecture name computed by
	 Configure in a previous run. It is not intended to be
	 perused by any user and should never be set in a hint
	 file.

     "mydomain"

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	 From myhostname.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the
	 "MYDOMAIN" symbol, which is the domain of the host the
	 program is going to run on. The domain must be appended
	 to myhostname to form a complete host name. The dot
	 comes with mydomain, and need not be supplied by the
	 program.

     "myhostname"
	 From myhostname.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the
	 "MYHOSTNAME" symbol, which is the name of the host the
	 program is going to run on. The domain is not kept with
	 hostname, but must be gotten from mydomain. The dot
	 comes with mydomain, and need not be supplied by the
	 program.

     "myuname"
	 From Oldconfig.U:

	 The output of "uname -a" if available, otherwise the
	 hostname. On Xenix, pseudo variables assignments in the
	 output are stripped, thank you. The whole thing is then
	 lower-cased.

     n

     "n" From n.U:

	 This variable contains the "-n" flag if that is what
	 causes the echo command to suppress newline.  Otherwise
	 it is null.  Correct usage is $echo $n "prompt for a
	 question: $c".

     "need_va_copy"
	 From need_va_copy.U:

	 This symbol, if defined, indicates that the system
	 stores the variable argument list datatype, va_list, in
	 a format that cannot be copied by simple assignment, so
	 that some other means must be used when copying is
	 required. As such systems vary in their provision (or
	 non-provision) of copying mechanisms, handy.h defines a
	 platform- "independent" macro, Perl_va_copy(src, dst),
	 to do the job.

     "netdb_hlen_type"
	 From netdbtype.U:

	 This variable holds the type used for the 2nd argument

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	 to gethostbyaddr().  Usually, this is int or size_t or
	 unsigned. This is only useful if you have gethost-
	 byaddr(), naturally.

     "netdb_host_type"
	 From netdbtype.U:

	 This variable holds the type used for the 1st argument
	 to gethostbyaddr().  Usually, this is char * or void *,
	 possibly with or without a const prefix. This is only
	 useful if you have gethostbyaddr(), naturally.

     "netdb_name_type"
	 From netdbtype.U:

	 This variable holds the type used for the argument to
	 gethostbyname().  Usually, this is char * or const char
	 *. This is only useful if you have gethostbyname(),
	 naturally.

     "netdb_net_type"
	 From netdbtype.U:

	 This variable holds the type used for the 1st argument
	 to getnetbyaddr().  Usually, this is int or long. This
	 is only useful if you have getnetbyaddr(), naturally.

     "nm"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the nm program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain "nm"
	 and is not useful.

     "nm_opt"
	 From usenm.U:

	 This variable holds the options that may be necessary
	 for nm.

     "nm_so_opt"
	 From usenm.U:

	 This variable holds the options that may be necessary
	 for nm to work on a shared library but that can not be
	 used on an archive library.  Currently, this is only
	 used by Linux, where nm --dynamic is *required* to get
	 symbols from an "ELF" library which has been stripped,
	 but nm --dynamic is *fatal* on an archive library. Maybe
	 Linux should just always set usenm=false.

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     "nonxs_ext"
	 From Extensions.U:

	 This variable holds a list of all non-xs extensions
	 included in the package.  All of them will be built.

     "nroff"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the nroff program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "nroff" and is not useful.

     "nv_preserves_uv_bits"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable indicates how many of bits type uvtype a
	 variable nvtype can preserve.

     "nveformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "NV" using %e-ish floating point format.

     "nvEUformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "NV" using %E-ish floating point format.

     "nvfformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable confains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "NV" using %f-ish floating point format.

     "nvFUformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable confains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "NV" using %F-ish floating point format.

     "nvgformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "NV" using %g-ish floating point format.

     "nvGUformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

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	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "NV" using %G-ish floating point format.

     "nvsize"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an "NV" in bytes.

     "nvtype"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's "NV".

     o

     "o_nonblock"
	 From nblock_io.U:

	 This variable bears the symbol value to be used during
	 open() or fcntl() to turn on non-blocking I/O for a file
	 descriptor. If you wish to switch between blocking and
	 non-blocking, you may try ioctl("FIOSNBIO") instead, but
	 that is only supported by some devices.

     "obj_ext"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This is an old synonym for _o.

     "old_pthread_create_joinable"
	 From d_pthrattrj.U:

	 This variable defines the constant to use for creating
	 joinable (aka undetached) pthreads.  Unused if pthread.h
	 defines "PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE".  If used, possible
	 values are "PTHREAD_CREATE_UNDETACHED" and "__UNDE-
	 TACHED".

     "optimize"
	 From ccflags.U:

	 This variable contains any optimizer/debugger flag that
	 should be used. It is up to the Makefile to use it.

     "orderlib"
	 From orderlib.U:

	 This variable is "true" if the components of libraries
	 must be ordered (with `lorder $* | tsort`) before plac-
	 ing them in an archive.  Set to "false" if ranlib or ar
	 can generate random libraries.

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     "osname"
	 From Oldconfig.U:

	 This variable contains the operating system name (e.g.
	 sunos, solaris, hpux, etc.).  It can be useful later on
	 for setting defaults.	Any spaces are replaced with
	 underscores.  It is set to a null string if we can't
	 figure it out.

     "osvers"
	 From Oldconfig.U:

	 This variable contains the operating system version
	 (e.g. 4.1.3, 5.2, etc.).  It is primarily used for help-
	 ing select an appropriate hints file, but might be use-
	 ful elsewhere for setting defaults.  It is set to '' if
	 we can't figure it out. We try to be flexible about how
	 much of the version number to keep, e.g. if 4.1.1,
	 4.1.2, and 4.1.3 are essentially the same for this pack-
	 age, hints files might just be os_4.0 or os_4.1, etc.,
	 not keeping separate files for each little release.

     "otherlibdirs"
	 From otherlibdirs.U:

	 This variable contains a colon-separated set of paths
	 for the perl binary to search for additional library
	 files or modules. These directories will be tacked to
	 the end of @"INC". Perl will automatically search below
	 each path for version- and architecture-specific direc-
	 tories.  See inc_version_list for more details. A value
	 of " " means "none" and is used to preserve this value
	 for the next run through Configure.

     p

     "package"
	 From package.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the package being
	 constructed. It is primarily intended for the use of
	 later Configure units.

     "pager"
	 From pager.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the preferred pager
	 on the system. Usual values are (the full pathnames of)
	 more, less, pg, or cat.

     "passcat"
	 From nis.U:

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	 This variable contains a command that produces the text
	 of the /etc/passwd file.  This is normally "cat
	 /etc/passwd", but can be "ypcat passwd" when "NIS" is
	 used. On some systems, such as os390, there may be no
	 equivalent command, in which case this variable is
	 unset.

     "patchlevel"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 The patchlevel level of this package. The value of
	 patchlevel comes from the patchlevel.h file. In a ver-
	 sion number such as 5.6.1, this is the 6. In
	 patchlevel.h, this is referred to as "PERL_VERSION".

     "path_sep"
	 From Unix.U:

	 This is an old synonym for p_ in Head.U, the character
	 used to separate elements in the command shell search
	 "PATH".

     "perl5"
	 From perl5.U:

	 This variable contains the full path (if any) to a pre-
	 viously installed perl5.005 or later suitable for run-
	 ning the script to determine inc_version_list.

     "perl"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "perl_patchlevel"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 This is the Perl patch level, a numeric change identif-
	 ier, as defined by whichever source code maintenance
	 system is used to maintain the patches; currently Per-
	 force. It does not correlate with the Perl version
	 numbers or the maintenance versus development dichotomy
	 except by also being increasing.

     P

     "PERL_REVISION"
	 From Oldsyms.U:

	 In a Perl version number such as 5.6.2, this is the 5.
	 This value is manually set in patchlevel.h

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     "PERL_SUBVERSION"
	 From Oldsyms.U:

	 In a Perl version number such as 5.6.2, this is the 2.
	 Values greater than 50 represent potentially unstable
	 development subversions. This value is manually set in
	 patchlevel.h

     "PERL_VERSION"
	 From Oldsyms.U:

	 In a Perl version number such as 5.6.2, this is the 6.
	 This value is manually set in patchlevel.h

     "perladmin"
	 From perladmin.U:

	 Electronic mail address of the perl5 administrator.

     "perllibs"
	 From End.U:

	 The list of libraries needed by Perl only (any libraries
	 needed by extensions only will by dropped, if using
	 dynamic loading).

     "perlpath"
	 From perlpath.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the "PERL-
	 PATH" symbol, which contains the name of the perl inter-
	 preter to be used in shell scripts and in the "eval
	 "exec"" idiom.	 This variable is not necessarily the
	 pathname of the file containing the perl interpreter;
	 you must append the executable extension (_exe) if it is
	 not already present.  Note that Perl code that runs dur-
	 ing the Perl build process cannot reference this vari-
	 able, as Perl may not have been installed, or even if
	 installed, may be a different version of Perl.

     "pg"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the pg program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain "pg"
	 and is not useful.

     "phostname"
	 From myhostname.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the

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	 "PHOSTNAME" symbol, which is a command that can be fed
	 to popen() to get the host name. The program should
	 probably not presume that the domain is or isn't there
	 already.

     "pidtype"
	 From pidtype.U:

	 This variable defines "PIDTYPE" to be something like
	 pid_t, int, ushort, or whatever type is used to declare
	 process ids in the kernel.

     "plibpth"
	 From libpth.U:

	 Holds the private path used by Configure to find out the
	 libraries. Its value is prepend to libpth. This variable
	 takes care of special machines, like the mips.	 Usually,
	 it should be empty.

     "pmake"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "pr"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "prefix"
	 From prefix.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the directory below
	 which the user will install the package.  Usually, this
	 is /usr/local, and executables go in /usr/local/bin,
	 library stuff in /usr/local/lib, man pages in
	 /usr/local/man, etc.  It is only used to set defaults
	 for things in bin.U, mansrc.U, privlib.U, or
	 scriptdir.U.

     "prefixexp"
	 From prefix.U:

	 This variable holds the full absolute path of the direc-
	 tory below which the user will install the package.
	 Derived from prefix.

     "privlib"
	 From privlib.U:

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	 This variable contains the eventual value of the
	 "PRIVLIB" symbol, which is the name of the private
	 library for this package.  It may have a ~ on the front.
	 It is up to the makefile to eventually create this
	 directory while performing installation (with ~ substi-
	 tution).

     "privlibexp"
	 From privlib.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of privlib,
	 so that you may use it directly in Makefiles or shell
	 scripts.

     "procselfexe"
	 From d_procselfexe.U:

	 If d_procselfexe is defined, $procselfexe is the
	 filename of the symbolic link pointing to the absolute
	 pathname of the executing program.

     "prototype"
	 From prototype.U:

	 This variable holds the eventual value of
	 "CAN_PROTOTYPE", which indicates the C compiler can han-
	 dle funciton prototypes.

     "ptrsize"
	 From ptrsize.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the "PTRSIZE" sym-
	 bol, which indicates to the C program how many bytes
	 there are in a pointer.

     q

     "quadkind"
	 From quadtype.U:

	 This variable, if defined, encodes the type of a quad: 1
	 = int, 2 = long, 3 = long long, 4 = int64_t.

     "quadtype"
	 From quadtype.U:

	 This variable defines Quad_t to be something like long,
	 int, long long, int64_t, or whatever type is used for
	 64-bit integers.

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     r

     "randbits"
	 From randfunc.U:

	 Indicates how many bits are produced by the function
	 used to generate normalized random numbers.

     "randfunc"
	 From randfunc.U:

	 Indicates the name of the random number function to use.
	 Values include drand48, random, and rand. In C programs,
	 the "Drand01" macro is defined to generate uniformly
	 distributed random numbers over the range [0., 1.[ (see
	 drand01 and nrand).

     "random_r_proto"
	 From d_random_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of random_r. It is
	 zero if d_random_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if d_random_r
	 is defined.

     "randseedtype"
	 From randfunc.U:

	 Indicates the type of the argument of the seedfunc.

     "ranlib"
	 From orderlib.U:

	 This variable is set to the pathname of the ranlib pro-
	 gram, if it is needed to generate random libraries.  Set
	 to ":" if ar can generate random libraries or if random
	 libraries are not supported

     "rd_nodata"
	 From nblock_io.U:

	 This variable holds the return code from read() when no
	 data is present. It should be -1, but some systems
	 return 0 when "O_NDELAY" is used, which is a shame
	 because you cannot make the difference between no data
	 and an EOF.. Sigh!

     "readdir64_r_proto"
	 From d_readdir64_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of readdir64_r. It
	 is zero if d_readdir64_r is undef, and one of the

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	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_readdir64_r is defined.

     "readdir_r_proto"
	 From d_readdir_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of readdir_r. It is
	 zero if d_readdir_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_readdir_r is defined.

     "revision"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 The value of revision comes from the patchlevel.h file.
	 In a version number such as 5.6.1, this is the 5. In
	 patchlevel.h, this is referred to as "PERL_REVISION".

     "rm"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the rm program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain "rm"
	 and is not useful.

     "rmail"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "run"
	 From Cross.U:

	 This variable contains the command used by Configure to
	 copy and execute a cross-compiled executable in the tar-
	 get host.  Useful and available only during Perl build.
	 Empty string '' if not cross-compiling.

     "runnm"
	 From usenm.U:

	 This variable contains "true" or "false" depending
	 whether the nm extraction should be performed or not,
	 according to the value of usenm and the flags on the
	 Configure command line.

     s

     "sched_yield"
	 From d_pthread_y.U:

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	 This variable defines the way to yield the execution of
	 the current thread.

     "scriptdir"
	 From scriptdir.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the directory in which
	 the user wants to put publicly scripts for the package
	 in question.  It is either the same directory as for
	 binaries, or a special one that can be mounted across
	 different architectures, like /usr/share. Programs must
	 be prepared to deal with ~name expansion.

     "scriptdirexp"
	 From scriptdir.U:

	 This variable is the same as scriptdir, but is filename
	 expanded at configuration time, for programs not wanting
	 to bother with it.

     "sed"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the sed program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "sed" and is not useful.

     "seedfunc"
	 From randfunc.U:

	 Indicates the random number generating seed function.
	 Values include srand48, srandom, and srand.

     "selectminbits"
	 From selectminbits.U:

	 This variable holds the minimum number of bits operated
	 by select. That is, if you do select(n, ...), how many
	 bits at least will be cleared in the masks if some
	 activity is detected.	Usually this is either n or
	 32*ceil(n/32), especially many little-endians do the
	 latter.  This is only useful if you have select(),
	 naturally.

     "selecttype"
	 From selecttype.U:

	 This variable holds the type used for the 2nd, 3rd, and
	 4th arguments to select.  Usually, this is "fd_set *",
	 if "HAS_FD_SET" is defined, and "int *" otherwise.  This
	 is only useful if you have select(), naturally.

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     "sendmail"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "setgrent_r_proto"
	 From d_setgrent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of setgrent_r. It is
	 zero if d_setgrent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_setgrent_r is defined.

     "sethostent_r_proto"
	 From d_sethostent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of sethostent_r. It
	 is zero if d_sethostent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_sethostent_r is defined.

     "setlocale_r_proto"
	 From d_setlocale_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of setlocale_r. It
	 is zero if d_setlocale_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_setlocale_r is defined.

     "setnetent_r_proto"
	 From d_setnetent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of setnetent_r. It
	 is zero if d_setnetent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_setnetent_r is defined.

     "setprotoent_r_proto"
	 From d_setprotoent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of setprotoent_r. It
	 is zero if d_setprotoent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_setprotoent_r is defined.

     "setpwent_r_proto"
	 From d_setpwent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of setpwent_r. It is
	 zero if d_setpwent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if

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	 d_setpwent_r is defined.

     "setservent_r_proto"
	 From d_setservent_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of setservent_r. It
	 is zero if d_setservent_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_setservent_r is defined.

     "sh"
	 From sh.U:

	 This variable contains the full pathname of the shell
	 used on this system to execute Bourne shell scripts.
	 Usually, this will be /bin/sh, though it's possible that
	 some systems will have /bin/ksh, /bin/pdksh, /bin/ash,
	 /bin/bash, or even something such as D:/bin/sh.exe. This
	 unit comes before Options.U, so you can't set sh with a
	 "-D" option, though you can override this (and startsh)
	 with "-O -Dsh=/bin/whatever -Dstartsh=whatever"

     "shar"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "sharpbang"
	 From spitshell.U:

	 This variable contains the string #! if this system sup-
	 ports that construct.

     "shmattype"
	 From d_shmat.U:

	 This symbol contains the type of pointer returned by
	 shmat(). It can be "void *" or "char *".

     "shortsize"
	 From intsize.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the "SHORTSIZE" sym-
	 bol which indicates to the C program how many bytes
	 there are in a short.

     "shrpenv"
	 From libperl.U:

	 If the user builds a shared libperl.so, then we need to
	 tell the "perl" executable where it will be able to find

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	 the installed libperl.so. One way to do this on some
	 systems is to set the environment variable "LD_RUN_PATH"
	 to the directory that will be the final location of the
	 shared libperl.so.  The makefile can use this with some-
	 thing like $shrpenv $("CC") -o perl perlmain.o $libperl
	 $libs Typical values are shrpenv="env
	 "LD_RUN_PATH"=$archlibexp/"CORE"" or shrpenv='' See the
	 main perl Makefile.SH for actual working usage. Alterna-
	 tively, we might be able to use a command line option
	 such as -R $archlibexp/"CORE" (Solaris) or -Wl,-rpath
	 $archlibexp/"CORE" (Linux).

     "shsharp"
	 From spitshell.U:

	 This variable tells further Configure units whether your
	 sh can handle # comments.

     "sig_count"
	 From sig_name.U:

	 This variable holds a number larger than the largest
	 valid signal number.  This is usually the same as the
	 "NSIG" macro.

     "sig_name"
	 From sig_name.U:

	 This variable holds the signal names, space separated.
	 The leading "SIG" in signal name is removed.  A "ZERO"
	 is prepended to the list. This is currently not used,
	 sig_name_init is used instead.

     "sig_name_init"
	 From sig_name.U:

	 This variable holds the signal names, enclosed in double
	 quotes and separated by commas, suitable for use in the
	 "SIG_NAME" definition below.  A "ZERO" is prepended to
	 the list, and the list is terminated with a plain 0.
	 The leading "SIG" in signal names is removed. See
	 sig_num.

     "sig_num"
	 From sig_name.U:

	 This variable holds the signal numbers, space separated.
	 A "ZERO" is prepended to the list (corresponding to the
	 fake "SIGZERO"). Those numbers correspond to  the value
	 of the signal listed in the same place within the
	 sig_name list. This is currently not used, sig_num_init
	 is used instead.

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     "sig_num_init"
	 From sig_name.U:

	 This variable holds the signal numbers, enclosed in dou-
	 ble quotes and separated by commas, suitable for use in
	 the "SIG_NUM" definition below.  A "ZERO" is prepended
	 to the list, and the list is terminated with a plain 0.

     "sig_size"
	 From sig_name.U:

	 This variable contains the number of elements of the
	 sig_name and sig_num arrays.

     "signal_t"
	 From d_voidsig.U:

	 This variable holds the type of the signal handler (void
	 or int).

     "sitearch"
	 From sitearch.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the
	 "SITEARCH" symbol, which is the name of the private
	 library for this package.  It may have a ~ on the front.
	 It is up to the makefile to eventually create this
	 directory while performing installation (with ~ substi-
	 tution). The standard distribution will put nothing in
	 this directory. After perl has been installed, users may
	 install their own local architecture-dependent modules
	 in this directory with MakeMaker Makefile.PL or
	 equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for details.

     "sitearchexp"
	 From sitearch.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of sitearch,
	 so that you may use it directly in Makefiles or shell
	 scripts.

     "sitebin"
	 From sitebin.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the directory in which
	 the user wants to put add-on publicly executable files
	 for the package in question.  It is most often a local
	 directory such as /usr/local/bin. Programs using this
	 variable must be prepared to deal with ~name substitu-
	 tion. The standard distribution will put nothing in this
	 directory. After perl has been installed, users may
	 install their own local executables in this directory

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	 with MakeMaker Makefile.PL or equivalent.  See "INSTALL"
	 for details.

     "sitebinexp"
	 From sitebin.U:

	 This is the same as the sitebin variable, but is
	 filename expanded at configuration time, for use in your
	 makefiles.

     "sitehtml1dir"
	 From sitehtml1dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory in
	 which site-specific html source pages are to be put.  It
	 is the responsibility of the Makefile.SH to get the
	 value of this into the proper command. You must be
	 prepared to do the ~name expansion yourself. The stan-
	 dard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
	 After perl has been installed, users may install their
	 own local html pages in this directory with MakeMaker
	 Makefile.PL or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for details.

     "sitehtml1direxp"
	 From sitehtml1dir.U:

	 This variable is the same as the sitehtml1dir variable,
	 but is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use in makefiles.

     "sitehtml3dir"
	 From sitehtml3dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory in
	 which site-specific library html source pages are to be
	 put.  It is the responsibility of the Makefile.SH to get
	 the value of this into the proper command. You must be
	 prepared to do the ~name expansion yourself. The stan-
	 dard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
	 After perl has been installed, users may install their
	 own local library html pages in this directory with Mak-
	 eMaker Makefile.PL or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for
	 details.

     "sitehtml3direxp"
	 From sitehtml3dir.U:

	 This variable is the same as the sitehtml3dir variable,
	 but is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use in makefiles.

     "sitelib"

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	 From sitelib.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the
	 "SITELIB" symbol, which is the name of the private
	 library for this package.  It may have a ~ on the front.
	 It is up to the makefile to eventually create this
	 directory while performing installation (with ~ substi-
	 tution). The standard distribution will put nothing in
	 this directory. After perl has been installed, users may
	 install their own local architecture-independent modules
	 in this directory with MakeMaker Makefile.PL or
	 equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for details.

     "sitelib_stem"
	 From sitelib.U:

	 This variable is $sitelibexp with any trailing version-
	 specific component removed.  The elements in
	 inc_version_list (inc_version_list.U) can be tacked onto
	 this variable to generate a list of directories to
	 search.

     "sitelibexp"
	 From sitelib.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of sitelib,
	 so that you may use it directly in Makefiles or shell
	 scripts.

     "siteman1dir"
	 From siteman1dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory in
	 which site-specific manual source pages are to be put.
	 It is the responsibility of the Makefile.SH to get the
	 value of this into the proper command. You must be
	 prepared to do the ~name expansion yourself. The stan-
	 dard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
	 After perl has been installed, users may install their
	 own local man1 pages in this directory with MakeMaker
	 Makefile.PL or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for details.

     "siteman1direxp"
	 From siteman1dir.U:

	 This variable is the same as the siteman1dir variable,
	 but is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use in makefiles.

     "siteman3dir"
	 From siteman3dir.U:

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	 This variable contains the name of the directory in
	 which site-specific library man source pages are to be
	 put.  It is the responsibility of the Makefile.SH to get
	 the value of this into the proper command. You must be
	 prepared to do the ~name expansion yourself. The stan-
	 dard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
	 After perl has been installed, users may install their
	 own local man3 pages in this directory with MakeMaker
	 Makefile.PL or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for details.

     "siteman3direxp"
	 From siteman3dir.U:

	 This variable is the same as the siteman3dir variable,
	 but is filename expanded at configuration time, for con-
	 venient use in makefiles.

     "siteprefix"
	 From siteprefix.U:

	 This variable holds the full absolute path of the direc-
	 tory below which the user will install add-on packages.
	 See "INSTALL" for usage and examples.

     "siteprefixexp"
	 From siteprefix.U:

	 This variable holds the full absolute path of the direc-
	 tory below which the user will install add-on packages.
	 Derived from siteprefix.

     "sitescript"
	 From sitescript.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the directory in which
	 the user wants to put add-on publicly executable files
	 for the package in question.  It is most often a local
	 directory such as /usr/local/bin. Programs using this
	 variable must be prepared to deal with ~name substitu-
	 tion. The standard distribution will put nothing in this
	 directory. After perl has been installed, users may
	 install their own local scripts in this directory with
	 MakeMaker Makefile.PL or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for
	 details.

     "sitescriptexp"
	 From sitescript.U:

	 This is the same as the sitescript variable, but is
	 filename expanded at configuration time, for use in your
	 makefiles.

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     "sizesize"
	 From sizesize.U:

	 This variable contains the size of a sizetype in bytes.

     "sizetype"
	 From sizetype.U:

	 This variable defines sizetype to be something like
	 size_t, unsigned long, or whatever type is used to
	 declare length parameters for string functions.

     "sleep"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "smail"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "so"
	 From so.U:

	 This variable holds the extension used to identify
	 shared libraries (also known as shared objects) on the
	 system. Usually set to "so".

     "sockethdr"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable has any cpp "-I" flags needed for socket
	 support.

     "socketlib"
	 From d_socket.U:

	 This variable has the names of any libraries needed for
	 socket support.

     "socksizetype"
	 From socksizetype.U:

	 This variable holds the type used for the size argument
	 for various socket calls like accept.	Usual values
	 include socklen_t, size_t, and int.

     "sort"
	 From Loc.U:

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	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the sort program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "sort" and is not useful.

     "spackage"
	 From package.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the package being
	 constructed, with the first letter uppercased, i.e.
	 suitable for starting sentences.

     "spitshell"
	 From spitshell.U:

	 This variable contains the command necessary to spit out
	 a runnable shell on this system.  It is either cat or a
	 grep "-v" for # comments.

     "sPRId64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format 64-bit decimal numbers (format "d") for
	 output.

     "sPRIeldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format long doubles (format "e") for output.

     "sPRIEUldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format long doubles (format "E") for output.
	 The "U" in the name is to separate this from sPRIeldbl
	 so that even case-blind systems can see the difference.

     "sPRIfldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format long doubles (format "f") for output.

     "sPRIFUldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format long doubles (format "F") for output.
	 The "U" in the name is to separate this from sPRIfldbl

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	 so that even case-blind systems can see the difference.

     "sPRIgldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format long doubles (format "g") for output.

     "sPRIGUldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format long doubles (format "G") for output.
	 The "U" in the name is to separate this from sPRIgldbl
	 so that even case-blind systems can see the difference.

     "sPRIi64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format 64-bit decimal numbers (format "i") for
	 output.

     "sPRIo64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format 64-bit octal numbers (format "o") for
	 output.

     "sPRIu64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format 64-bit unsigned decimal numbers (format
	 "u") for output.

     "sPRIx64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format 64-bit hexadecimal numbers (format "x")
	 for output.

     "sPRIXU64"
	 From quadfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format 64-bit hExADECimAl numbers (format "X")
	 for output. The "U" in the name is to separate this from
	 sPRIx64 so that even case-blind systems can see the
	 difference.

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     "srand48_r_proto"
	 From d_srand48_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of srand48_r. It is
	 zero if d_srand48_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_srand48_r is defined.

     "srandom_r_proto"
	 From d_srandom_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of srandom_r. It is
	 zero if d_srandom_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_srandom_r is defined.

     "src"
	 From src.U:

	 This variable holds the path to the package source. It
	 is up to the Makefile to use this variable and set
	 "VPATH" accordingly to find the sources remotely.

     "sSCNfldbl"
	 From longdblfio.U:

	 This variable, if defined, contains the string used by
	 stdio to format long doubles (format "f") for input.

     "ssizetype"
	 From ssizetype.U:

	 This variable defines ssizetype to be something like
	 ssize_t, long or int.	It is used by functions that
	 return a count of bytes or an error condition.	 It must
	 be a signed type. We will pick a type such that
	 sizeof(SSize_t) == sizeof(Size_t).

     "startperl"
	 From startperl.U:

	 This variable contains the string to put on the front of
	 a perl script to make sure (hopefully) that it runs with
	 perl and not some shell. Of course, that leading line
	 must be followed by the classical perl idiom: eval 'exec
	 perl -S $0 ${1+$@}' if $running_under_some_shell; to
	 guarantee perl startup should the shell execute the
	 script. Note that this magic incatation is not under-
	 stood by csh.

     "startsh"
	 From startsh.U:

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	 This variable contains the string to put on the front of
	 a shell script to make sure (hopefully) that it runs
	 with sh and not some other shell.

     "static_ext"
	 From Extensions.U:

	 This variable holds a list of "XS" extension files we
	 want to link statically into the package.  It is used by
	 Makefile.

     "stdchar"
	 From stdchar.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines "STDCHAR" to be the
	 type of char used in stdio.h.	It has the values
	 "unsigned char" or "char".

     "stdio_base"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This variable defines how, given a "FILE" pointer, fp,
	 to access the _base field (or equivalent) of stdio.h's
	 "FILE" structure.  This will be used to define the macro
	 FILE_base(fp).

     "stdio_bufsiz"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This variable defines how, given a "FILE" pointer, fp,
	 to determine the number of bytes store in the I/O buffer
	 pointer to by the _base field (or equivalent) of
	 stdio.h's "FILE" structure.  This will be used to define
	 the macro FILE_bufsiz(fp).

     "stdio_cnt"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This variable defines how, given a "FILE" pointer, fp,
	 to access the _cnt field (or equivalent) of stdio.h's
	 "FILE" structure.  This will be used to define the macro
	 FILE_cnt(fp).

     "stdio_filbuf"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

	 This variable defines how, given a "FILE" pointer, fp,
	 to tell stdio to refill its internal buffers (?).  This
	 will be used to define the macro FILE_filbuf(fp).

     "stdio_ptr"
	 From d_stdstdio.U:

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	 This variable defines how, given a "FILE" pointer, fp,
	 to access the _ptr field (or equivalent) of stdio.h's
	 "FILE" structure.  This will be used to define the macro
	 FILE_ptr(fp).

     "stdio_stream_array"
	 From stdio_streams.U:

	 This variable tells the name of the array holding the
	 stdio streams. Usual values include _iob, __iob, and
	 __sF.

     "strerror_r_proto"
	 From d_strerror_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of strerror_r. It is
	 zero if d_strerror_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_strerror_r is defined.

     "strings"
	 From i_string.U:

	 This variable holds the full path of the string header
	 that will be used. Typically /usr/include/string.h or
	 /usr/include/strings.h.

     "submit"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "subversion"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 The subversion level of this package. The value of
	 subversion comes from the patchlevel.h file. In a ver-
	 sion number such as 5.6.1, this is the 1. In
	 patchlevel.h, this is referred to as "PERL_SUBVERSION".
	 This is unique to perl.

     "sysman"
	 From sysman.U:

	 This variable holds the place where the manual is
	 located on this system. It is not the place where the
	 user wants to put his manual pages. Rather it is the
	 place where Configure may look to find manual for unix
	 commands (section 1 of the manual usually). See mansrc.

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     t

     "tail"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "tar"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "targetarch"
	 From Cross.U:

	 If cross-compiling, this variable contains the target
	 architecture. If not, this will be empty.

     "tbl"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "tee"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "test"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the test program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "test" and is not useful.

     "timeincl"
	 From i_time.U:

	 This variable holds the full path of the included time
	 header(s).

     "timetype"
	 From d_time.U:

	 This variable holds the type returned by time(). It can
	 be long, or time_t on "BSD" sites (in which case
	 <sys/types.h> should be included). Anyway, the type

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	 Time_t should be used.

     "tmpnam_r_proto"
	 From d_tmpnam_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of tmpnam_r. It is
	 zero if d_tmpnam_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if d_tmpnam_r
	 is defined.

     "to"
	 From Cross.U:

	 This variable contains the command used by Configure to
	 copy to from the target host.	Useful and available only
	 during Perl build. The string ":" if not
	 cross-compiling.

     "touch"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the touch program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "touch" and is not useful.

     "tr"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the tr program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain "tr"
	 and is not useful.

     "trnl"
	 From trnl.U:

	 This variable contains the value to be passed to the
	 tr(1) command to transliterate a newline.  Typical
	 values are "\012" and "\n".  This is needed for "EBCDIC"
	 systems where newline is not necessarily "\012".

     "troff"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "ttyname_r_proto"
	 From d_ttyname_r.U:

	 This variable encodes the prototype of ttyname_r. It is

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	 zero if d_ttyname_r is undef, and one of the
	 "REENTRANT_PROTO_T_ABC" macros of reentr.h if
	 d_ttyname_r is defined.

     u

     "u16size"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an U16 in bytes.

     "u16type"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's U16.

     "u32size"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an U32 in bytes.

     "u32type"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's U32.

     "u64size"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an U64 in bytes.

     "u64type"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's U64.

     "u8size"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of an U8 in bytes.

     "u8type"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's U8.

     "uidformat"
	 From uidf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Uid_t.

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     "uidsign"
	 From uidsign.U:

	 This variable contains the signedness of a uidtype. 1
	 for unsigned, -1 for signed.

     "uidsize"
	 From uidsize.U:

	 This variable contains the size of a uidtype in bytes.

     "uidtype"
	 From uidtype.U:

	 This variable defines Uid_t to be something like uid_t,
	 int, ushort, or whatever type is used to declare user
	 ids in the kernel.

     "uname"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the uname program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "uname" and is not useful.

     "uniq"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the uniq program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "uniq" and is not useful.

     "uquadtype"
	 From quadtype.U:

	 This variable defines Uquad_t to be something like
	 unsigned long, unsigned int, unsigned long long,
	 uint64_t, or whatever type is used for 64-bit integers.

     "use5005threads"
	 From usethreads.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the USE_5005THREADS
	 symbol, and indicates that Perl should be built to use
	 the 5.005-based threading implementation.

     "use64bitall"
	 From use64bits.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the USE_64_BIT_ALL

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	 symbol, and indicates that 64-bit integer types should
	 be used when available.  The maximal possible 64-bitness
	 is employed: LP64 or ILP64, meaning that you will be
	 able to use more than 2 gigabytes of memory.  This mode
	 is even more binary incompatible than USE_64_BIT_INT.
	 You may not be able to run the resulting executable in a
	 32-bit "CPU" at all or you may need at least to reboot
	 your "OS" to 64-bit mode.

     "use64bitint"
	 From use64bits.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the USE_64_BIT_INT
	 symbol, and indicates that 64-bit integer types should
	 be used when available.  The minimal possible 64-bitness
	 is employed, just enough to get 64-bit integers into
	 Perl. This may mean using for example "long longs",
	 while your memory may still be limited to 2 gigabytes.

     "usecrosscompile"
	 From Cross.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "USE_CROSS_COMPILE" symbol, and indicates that Perl has
	 been cross-compiled.

     "usedl"
	 From dlsrc.U:

	 This variable indicates if the system supports dynamic
	 loading of some sort.	See also dlsrc and dlobj.

     "usefaststdio"
	 From usefaststdio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "USE_FAST_STDIO"
	 symbol, and indicates that Perl should be built to use
	 "fast stdio". Defaults to define in Perls 5.8 and ear-
	 lier, to undef later.

     "useithreads"
	 From usethreads.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "USE_ITHREADS"
	 symbol, and indicates that Perl should be built to use
	 the interpreter-based threading implementation.

     "uselargefiles"
	 From uselfs.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "USE_LARGE_FILES" symbol, and indicates that large file

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	 interfaces should be used when available.

     "uselongdouble"
	 From uselongdbl.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "USE_LONG_DOUBLE" symbol, and indicates that long dou-
	 bles should be used when available.

     "usemallocwrap"
	 From mallocsrc.U:

	 This variable contains y if we are wrapping malloc to
	 prevent integer overflow during size calculations.

     "usemorebits"
	 From usemorebits.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "USE_MORE_BITS"
	 symbol, and indicates that explicit 64-bit interfaces
	 and long doubles should be used when available.

     "usemultiplicity"
	 From usemultiplicity.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "MULTIPLICITY"
	 symbol, and indicates that Perl should be built to use
	 multiplicity.

     "usemymalloc"
	 From mallocsrc.U:

	 This variable contains y if the malloc that comes with
	 this package is desired over the system's version of
	 malloc.  People often include special versions of malloc
	 for effiency, but such versions are often less portable.
	 See also mallocsrc and mallocobj. If this is "y", then
	 -lmalloc is removed from $libs.

     "usenm"
	 From usenm.U:

	 This variable contains "true" or "false" depending
	 whether the nm extraction is wanted or not.

     "useopcode"
	 From Extensions.U:

	 This variable holds either "true" or "false" to indicate
	 whether the Opcode extension should be used.  The sole
	 use for this currently is to allow an easy mechanism for
	 users to skip the Opcode extension from the Configure

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	 command line.

     "useperlio"
	 From useperlio.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "USE_PERLIO"
	 symbol, and indicates that the PerlIO abstraction should
	 be used throughout.

     "useposix"
	 From Extensions.U:

	 This variable holds either "true" or "false" to indicate
	 whether the "POSIX" extension should be used.	The sole
	 use for this currently is to allow an easy mechanism for
	 hints files to indicate that "POSIX" will not compile on
	 a particular system.

     "usereentrant"
	 From usethreads.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the
	 "USE_REENTRANT_API" symbol, which indicates that the
	 thread code may try to use the various _r versions of
	 library functions.  This is only potentially meaningful
	 if usethreads is set and is very experimental, it is not
	 even prompted for.

     "usesfio"
	 From d_sfio.U:

	 This variable is set to true when the user agrees to use
	 sfio. It is set to false when sfio is not available or
	 when the user explicitely requests not to use sfio.  It
	 is here primarily so that command-line settings can
	 override the auto-detection of d_sfio without running
	 into a "WHOA THERE".

     "useshrplib"
	 From libperl.U:

	 This variable is set to "true" if the user wishes to
	 build a shared libperl, and "false" otherwise.

     "usesocks"
	 From usesocks.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "USE_SOCKS" sym-
	 bol, and indicates that Perl should be built to use
	 "SOCKS".

     "usethreads"

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	 From usethreads.U:

	 This variable conditionally defines the "USE_THREADS"
	 symbol, and indicates that Perl should be built to use
	 threads.

     "usevendorprefix"
	 From vendorprefix.U:

	 This variable tells whether the vendorprefix and conse-
	 quently other vendor* paths are in use.

     "usevfork"
	 From d_vfork.U:

	 This variable is set to true when the user accepts to
	 use vfork. It is set to false when no vfork is available
	 or when the user explicitely requests not to use vfork.

     "usrinc"
	 From usrinc.U:

	 This variable holds the path of the include files, which
	 is usually /usr/include. It is mainly used by other Con-
	 figure units.

     "uuname"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "uvoformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "UV" as an unsigned octal integer.

     "uvsize"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable is the size of a "UV" in bytes.

     "uvtype"
	 From perlxv.U:

	 This variable contains the C type used for Perl's "UV".

     "uvuformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for

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	 printing a Perl "UV" as an unsigned decimal integer.

     "uvxformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "UV" as an unsigned hexadecimal integer in
	 lowercase abcdef.

     "uvXUformat"
	 From perlxvf.U:

	 This variable contains the format string used for print-
	 ing a Perl "UV" as an unsigned hexadecimal integer in
	 uppercase "ABCDEF".

     v

     "vendorarch"
	 From vendorarch.U:

	 This variable contains the value of the
	 "PERL_VENDORARCH" symbol. It may have a ~ on the front.
	 The standard distribution will put nothing in this
	 directory. Vendors who distribute perl may wish to place
	 their own architecture-dependent modules and extensions
	 in this directory with MakeMaker Makefile.PL
	 "INSTALLDIRS"=vendor or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for
	 details.

     "vendorarchexp"
	 From vendorarch.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of ven-
	 dorarch, so that you may use it directly in Makefiles or
	 shell scripts.

     "vendorbin"
	 From vendorbin.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the "VEN-
	 DORBIN" symbol. It may have a ~ on the front. The stan-
	 dard distribution will put nothing in this directory.
	 Vendors who distribute perl may wish to place additional
	 binaries in this directory with MakeMaker Makefile.PL
	 "INSTALLDIRS"=vendor or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for
	 details.

     "vendorbinexp"
	 From vendorbin.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of

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	 vendorbin, so that you may use it directly in Makefiles
	 or shell scripts.

     "vendorhtml1dir"
	 From vendorhtml1dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory for
	 html pages.  It may have a ~ on the front. The standard
	 distribution will put nothing in this directory. Vendors
	 who distribute perl may wish to place their own html
	 pages in this directory with MakeMaker Makefile.PL
	 "INSTALLDIRS"=vendor or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for
	 details.

     "vendorhtml1direxp"
	 From vendorhtml1dir.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of
	 vendorhtml1dir, so that you may use it directly in
	 Makefiles or shell scripts.

     "vendorhtml3dir"
	 From vendorhtml3dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory for
	 html library pages.  It may have a ~ on the front. The
	 standard distribution will put nothing in this direc-
	 tory. Vendors who distribute perl may wish to place
	 their own html pages for modules and extensions in this
	 directory with MakeMaker Makefile.PL
	 "INSTALLDIRS"=vendor or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for
	 details.

     "vendorhtml3direxp"
	 From vendorhtml3dir.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of
	 vendorhtml3dir, so that you may use it directly in
	 Makefiles or shell scripts.

     "vendorlib"
	 From vendorlib.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the "VEN-
	 DORLIB" symbol, which is the name of the private library
	 for this package. The standard distribution will put
	 nothing in this directory. Vendors who distribute perl
	 may wish to place their own modules in this directory
	 with MakeMaker Makefile.PL "INSTALLDIRS"=vendor or
	 equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for details.

     "vendorlib_stem"

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	 From vendorlib.U:

	 This variable is $vendorlibexp with any trailing
	 version-specific component removed.  The elements in
	 inc_version_list (inc_version_list.U) can be tacked onto
	 this variable to generate a list of directories to
	 search.

     "vendorlibexp"
	 From vendorlib.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of vendor-
	 lib, so that you may use it directly in Makefiles or
	 shell scripts.

     "vendorman1dir"
	 From vendorman1dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory for
	 man1 pages.  It may have a ~ on the front. The standard
	 distribution will put nothing in this directory. Vendors
	 who distribute perl may wish to place their own man1
	 pages in this directory with MakeMaker Makefile.PL
	 "INSTALLDIRS"=vendor or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for
	 details.

     "vendorman1direxp"
	 From vendorman1dir.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of
	 vendorman1dir, so that you may use it directly in
	 Makefiles or shell scripts.

     "vendorman3dir"
	 From vendorman3dir.U:

	 This variable contains the name of the directory for
	 man3 pages.  It may have a ~ on the front. The standard
	 distribution will put nothing in this directory. Vendors
	 who distribute perl may wish to place their own man3
	 pages in this directory with MakeMaker Makefile.PL
	 "INSTALLDIRS"=vendor or equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for
	 details.

     "vendorman3direxp"
	 From vendorman3dir.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of
	 vendorman3dir, so that you may use it directly in
	 Makefiles or shell scripts.

     "vendorprefix"

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	 From vendorprefix.U:

	 This variable holds the full absolute path of the direc-
	 tory below which the vendor will install add-on pack-
	 ages. See "INSTALL" for usage and examples.

     "vendorprefixexp"
	 From vendorprefix.U:

	 This variable holds the full absolute path of the direc-
	 tory below which the vendor will install add-on pack-
	 ages.	Derived from vendorprefix.

     "vendorscript"
	 From vendorscript.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the "VEN-
	 DORSCRIPT" symbol. It may have a ~ on the front. The
	 standard distribution will put nothing in this direc-
	 tory. Vendors who distribute perl may wish to place
	 additional executable scripts in this directory with
	 MakeMaker Makefile.PL "INSTALLDIRS"=vendor or
	 equivalent.  See "INSTALL" for details.

     "vendorscriptexp"
	 From vendorscript.U:

	 This variable is the ~name expanded version of ven-
	 dorscript, so that you may use it directly in Makefiles
	 or shell scripts.

     "version"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 The full version number of this package, such as 5.6.1
	 (or 5_6_1). This combines revision, patchlevel, and
	 subversion to get the full version number, including any
	 possible subversions. This is suitable for use as a
	 directory name, and hence is filesystem dependent.

     "version_patchlevel_string"
	 From patchlevel.U:

	 This is a string combining version, subversion and
	 perl_patchlevel (if perl_patchlevel is non-zero). It is
	 typically something like 'version 7 subversion 1'  or
	 'version 7 subversion 1 patchlevel 11224' It is computed
	 here to avoid duplication of code in myconfig.SH and
	 lib/Config.pm.

     "versiononly"
	 From versiononly.U:

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	 If set, this symbol indicates that only the version-
	 specific components of a perl installation should be
	 installed. This may be useful for making a test instal-
	 lation of a new version without disturbing the existing
	 installation. Setting versiononly is equivalent to set-
	 ting installperl's -v option. In particular, the non-
	 versioned scripts and programs such as a2p, c2ph, h2xs,
	 pod2*, and perldoc are not installed (see "INSTALL" for
	 a more complete list).	 Nor are the man pages installed.
	 Usually, this is undef.

     "vi"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "voidflags"
	 From voidflags.U:

	 This variable contains the eventual value of the "VOID-
	 FLAGS" symbol, which indicates how much support of the
	 void type is given by this compiler.  See "VOIDFLAGS"
	 for more info.

     x

     "xlibpth"
	 From libpth.U:

	 This variable holds extra path (space-separated) used to
	 find libraries on this platform, for example
	 "CPU"-specific libraries (on multi-"CPU" platforms) may
	 be listed here.

     y

     "yacc"
	 From yacc.U:

	 This variable holds the name of the compiler compiler we
	 want to use in the Makefile. It can be yacc, byacc, or
	 bison -y.

     "yaccflags"
	 From yacc.U:

	 This variable contains any additional yacc flags desired
	 by the user.  It is up to the Makefile to use this.

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     z

     "zcat"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is defined but not used by Configure. The
	 value is a plain '' and is not useful.

     "zip"
	 From Loc.U:

	 This variable is used internally by Configure to deter-
	 mine the full pathname (if any) of the zip program.
	 After Configure runs, the value is reset to a plain
	 "zip" and is not useful.

NOTE
     This module contains a good example of how to use tie to
     implement a cache and an example of how to make a tied vari-
     able readonly to those outside of it.

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