406 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
406 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
.Go 13 "VERSIONS"
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.PP
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\*E currently works under BSD UNIX, AT&T System-V UNIX, SCO XENIX,
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Minix, Coherent, MS-DOS, Atari TOS, OS9/68k, VAX/VMS, and AmigaDos.
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This section of the manual provides special information that applies to each
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particular version of \*E.
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.PP
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For all versions except MS-DOS and VMS,
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the file "Makefile.mix" should be copied to "Makefile",
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and then edited to select the correct set of options for your system.
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There is more information about this embedded in the file itself.
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.NH 2
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BSD UNIX
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.PP
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Temporary files are stored in /tmp.
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.PP
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You should modify /etc/rc so that
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the temp files are preserved when the system is rebooted.
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Find a line in /etc/rc which reads
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.sp
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.ti +0.5i
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ex4.3preserve /tmp
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.LP
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or something like that, and append the following line:
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.sp
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.ti +0.5i
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elvprsv /tmp/elv*
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.PP
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If you do not have permission to modify /etc/rc, don't fret.
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The above modification is only needed to allow you to recover your changes
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after a system crash.
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You can still run \*E without that modification,
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and you can still recover your changes when \*E crashes
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or when your dialup modem looses the carrier signal, or something like that.
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Only a system crash or power failure could hurt you.
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.PP
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Both \*E and the real Vi
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read initialization commands from a file called ".exrc",
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but the commands in that file might work on one editor but not the other.
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For example, "set keywordprg=man" will work for \*E,
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but Vi will complain because it doesn't have a "keywordprg" option.
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If the warning messages annoy you, then you can edit the CFLAGS setting
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in the Makefile and add -DEXRC=\\".elvisrc\\".
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.PP
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If you use X windows, you may wish to add "-DCS_LATIN1" to CFLAGS.
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This will cause the digraph table and the flipcase option to have default
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values that are appropriate for the LATIN-1 character set.
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That's the standard character set for X.
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.PP
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The default mailer used notify users when text is preserver is "mail".
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You may wish to change this to "Mail" (with an uppercase 'M').
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See the description of "MAILER" in the CFLAGS section of this manual.
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.PP
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The default keyboard macro time-out value is larger for BSD than it is for
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some other systems, because I've had trouble running \*E via rlogin or Xterm.
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I guess it takes a while for those keystokes to squirt through the net.
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.NH 2
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System-V UNIX
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.PP
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Most SysV UNIX systems use terminfo instead of termcap,
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but the terminfo library doesn't seem to have a standard name.
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As shipped, \*E' Makefile.mix is configured with "LIBS=-ltermcap".
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You may need to change it to "LIBS=-lterm" or "LIBS=-lterminfo"
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or even "LIBS=-lcurses".
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.PP
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The /etc/rc file (or its equivelent) should be modified as described
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for BSD systems, above.
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There's a pretty good chance that "make install" will do this for you;
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it knows how to create an editor recovery file in the /etc/rc2.d directory,
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which is where most modern SysV systems store initialization commands.
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You only need to do it manually for older SysV systems.
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.PP
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The potential trouble with ".exrc" described above for BSD UNIX applies
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to System-V UNIX as well.
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.PP
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The default mailer used notify users when text is preserver is "mail".
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You may wish to change this to "mailx".
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See the description of "MAILER" in the CFLAGS section of this manual.
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.PP
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\*E uses control-C as the interrupt key, not Delete.
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This was done so that the <Del> key could be used for character deletion.
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.NH 2
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SCO Xenix
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.PP
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For Xenix-386, you can use the generic System-V settings.
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You may wish to add "-DCS_IBMPC" to CFLAGS, to have the digraph table and
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flipcase option start up in a mode that is appropriate for the console.
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Also, note that there is a separate group of settings for use with Xenix-286.
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It already has "-DCS_IBMPC" in CFLAGS.
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.PP
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Because Xenix is so similar to System-V, everything I said earlier about
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System-V applies to the Xenix version too, except that editor recovery
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might belong in a directory called /etc/rc.d/8 instead.
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.NH 2
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Minix
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.PP
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There are separate settings in Makefile.mix for Minix-PC and Minix-68k.
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The differences between these two are that
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the 68k version uses ".o" for the object file extension where
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the PC version uses ".s", and
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the PC version has some extra flags in CFLAGS to reduce the size of \*E.
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The PC version also uses tinytcap (instead of the full termcap)
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to make it smaller.
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.PP
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Minix-PC users should read the CFLAGS section of this manual very carefully.
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You have some choices to make...
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.PP
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The temporary files are stored in /usr/tmp.
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The /usr/tmp directory must exist before you run \*E,
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and it must be readable & writable by everybody.
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We use /usr/tmp instead of /tmp because
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after a system crash or power failure,
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you can recover the altered version of a file from the temporary file
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in /usr/tmp.
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If it was stored in /tmp, though, then it would be lost because /tmp is
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normally located on the RAM disk.
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Also, you'll need a /usr/preserve directory which is readable & writable
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by root;
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this directory is used to store text files that have been preserved after a
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crash.
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The "make install" script will create it if necessary.
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.PP
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\*E uses control-C as the interrupt key, not Delete.
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.NH 2
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Coherent
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.PP
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\*E was ported to Coherent by Esa Ahola.
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.PP
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\*E is too large to run under Coherent unless you eliminate some
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features via the CFLAGS setting.
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The recommended settings, in Makefile.mix, produce a working version
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of \*E which emulates Vi faithfully, but lacks most of the extensions.
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You should read the CFLAGS section of this manual carefully.
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.PP
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You can probably reduce the size of \*E by using tinytcap.c instead of -lterm.
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This would allow you to keep most features of \*E,
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at the expense of terminal independence.
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(Tinytcap.c has ANSI escape sequences hard-coded into it.)
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To use tinytcap, just add "tinytcap.o" to the "EXTRA=" line in the Makefile,
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and remove "-lterm" from the "LIBS=" line.
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.PP
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The temporary files are stored in /tmp.
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Preserved files are stored in /usr/preserve.
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You should modify your /etc/rc file to support file file preservation;
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add the line...
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.sp
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/usr/bin/elvprsv /tmp/*
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.sp
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... just before the first "/bin/rm" line.
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.NH 2
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MS-DOS
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.PP
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\*E was ported to MS-DOS by Guntram Blohm and Martin Patzel.
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Willett Kempton added support for the DEC Rainbow.
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.PP
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Ideally, \*E should be compiled with Microsoft C 5.10 and the standard
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Microsoft Make utility,
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via the command "make elvis.mak".
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This will compile \*E and all related utilities.
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.PP
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With Microsoft C 6.00, you may have trouble compiling regexp.c.
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If so, try compiling it without optimization.
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.PP
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The "Makefile.mix" file contains a set of suggested settings for compiling
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\*E with Turbo-C or Borland C.
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(If you have Turbo-C, but not the Make utility,
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then you can \fIalmost\fR use the "\*E.prj" file to compile \*E,
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but you must explicitly force Turbo-C to compile it with the "medium" memory model.
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Most of the related programs [ctags, ref, virec, refont, and wildcard] are
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only one file long, so you should have no trouble compiling them.)
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The "alias.c" file is meant to be compiled once into an executable named
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"ex.exe".
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You should then copy "ex.exe" to "vi.exe" and "view.exe".
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.PP
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\*E stores its temporary files in C:\\tmp.
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If this is not satisfactory, then you should edit the CFLAGS line of
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your Makefile to change TMPDIR to something else before compiling.
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You can also control the name of the temp directory via an environment
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variable named TMP or TEMP.
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The directory must exist before you can run \*E.
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.PP
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The TERM environment variable determines how \*E will write to the screen.
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It can be set to any one of the following values:
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.LD
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.ta 1.5i 2.5i
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pcbios Use BIOS calls on an IBM-PC clone.
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rainbow Use DEC Rainbow interface.
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ansi Use ANSI.SYS driver.
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nansi User faster NANSI.SYS driver.
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.DE
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.PP
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If the TERM variable isn't set, then \*E will automatically select either
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the "rainbow" interface (when run on a Rainbow) or "pcbios" (on an IBM clone).
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.PP
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You may prefer to use NANSI.SYS for speed;
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or you may NEED to use ANSI.SYS for a non-clone, such as a lap-top.
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If so, you should
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install one of these drivers by adding "driver = nansi.sys" (or whatever)
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to your CONFIG.SYS file,
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and then you should define TERM to be "nansi" (or whatever) by adding
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"set TERM=nansi" to your AUTOEXEC.BAT file.
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You must then reboot for these changes to take effect.
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After that, \*E will notice the "TERM" setting and use the driver.
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.PP
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Since ".exrc" is not a valid DOS filename,
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the name of the initialization file has been changed to "elvis.rc".
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\*E will look for an "elvis.rc" file first in your home directory.
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If it exists, and contains ":set exrc", then \*E will check for
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another "elvis.rc" in the current directory.
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By default, the directory where ELVIS.EXE resides is taken to be your
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home directory.
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You can override this default by setting an environment variable named
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"HOME" to the full pathname of your home directory.
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To set "HOME", you would typically add the following line to your
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AUTOEXEC.BAT file:
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.br
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.ti +0.5i
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set HOME c:\\
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.PP
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An extra program, called "wildcard", is needed for MS-DOS.
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It expands wildcard characters in file names.
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If \*E flashes a "Bad command or filename" message when it starts,
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then you've probably lost the WILDCARD.EXE program somehow.
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.PP
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\*E can run under Windows, but you may have trouble with TEMP.
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Windows uses an environment variable called TEMP which interferes with
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\*E' usage of TEMP;
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to work around this, you can simply set an environment variable named
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TMP (with no 'E') to the name of \*E' temporary directory.
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When TEMP and TMP are both set, \*E uses TMP and ignored TEMP.
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.NH 2
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Atari TOS
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.PP
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\*E was ported to Atari TOS by Guntram Blohm and Martin Patzel.
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It is very similar to the MS-DOS version.
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It has been tested with the Mark Williams C compiler and also GNU-C.
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.PP
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The TERM environment variable is ignored;
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the ST port always assumes that TERM=vt52.
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The SHELL (not COMSPEC!) variable should be set to
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the name of a line-oriented shell.
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.PP
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A simple shell in included with \*E.
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Its source is in "shell.c", and the name of the executable is "shell.ttp".
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The file "profile.sh" should contain a set of instructions to be executed
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when the shell first starts up.
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An example of this file is included, but you will almost certainly want to
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edit it right away to match your configuration.
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(If you already have a command-line shell,
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then you'll probably want to continue using it.
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The shell that comes with \*E is very limited.)
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.PP
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Currently, character attributes cannot be displayed on the screen.
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.PP
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\*E runs under MiNT (a free multi-tasking extension to TOS)
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but it can be a CPU hog because of the way that \*E reads from the
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keyboard with timeout.
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Also, \*E doesn't use any of the special features of MiNT.
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I have received a set of patches that optimize \*E for MiNT,
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but they arrived too late to integrate into this release.
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.NH 2
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OS9/68k
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.PP
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\*E was ported to OS9/68k by Peter Reinig.
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.PP
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The Makefile is currently configured to install \*E and the related
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programs in /dd/usr/cmds
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If this this is unacceptable, then you should change the BIN setting
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to some other directory.
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Similarly, it expects the source code to reside in /dd/usr/src/elvis;
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the ODIR setting is used to control this.
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.PP
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Temporary files are stored in the /dd/tmp directory.
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Your /dd/startup file may need to be modified
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to prevent it from deleting \*E' temporary files;
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make /dd/startup run the \fIelvprsv\fR program before it wipes out /dd/tmp.
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.PP
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The program in alias.c is linked repeatedly to produce the
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"vi", "view", and "input" aliases for \*E.
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Sadly, the "ex" alias is impossible to implement under OS9
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because the shell has a built-in command by that name.
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.PP
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For some purposes,
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you must give `make' the "-b" option.
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Specifically, you need this for "make -b clean" and "make -b install".
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.NH 2
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VAX/VMS
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.PP
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John Campbell ported \*E to VAX/VMS.
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.PP
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A heavily laden VAX can take half an hour to compile \*E.
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This is normal.
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Don't panic.
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.PP
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While running, \*E will create temporary files in SYS$SCRATCH.
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Enter SHOW LOGICAL SYS$SCRATCH to see what actual directory you are using.
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Many sites have SYS$SCRATCH equivalenced to SYS$LOGIN.
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The \*E temporary files look like the following on VMS while \*E is running:
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.br
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.ti 0.75i
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ELV_1123A.1;1 ELV_1123A.2;1 SO070202.;1
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.PP
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Also, filtering commands (like !!dir and !}fmt) should work on VMS.
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This assumes, however, that you can create temporary mailboxes and that
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your mailbox quota (a sysgen parameter) is at least 256 bytes for a
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single write to the mailbox.
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This is the default sysgen parameter,
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so there should be few people who experience filter problems.
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.PP
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Additionally, an attempt was made to support the standard terminals on VMS:
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"vt52", "vt100", "vt200", "vt300", "vt101", "vt102".
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Non-standard terminals could be supported by setting your terminal type to
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UNKNOWN (by entering SET TERM/UNKNOWN)
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and defining the logical name ELVIS_TERM.
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Whatever ELVIS_TERM translates to, however, will have to be included in
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tinytcap.c.
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Note that the upper/lowercase distinctions are significant,
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and that DCL will upshift characters that are not quoted strings, so
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enter DEFINE ELVIS_TERM "hp2621a".
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As distributed, it would probably not be a good idea to have more than the
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standard terminals in tinytcap.c (else it wouldn't be tiny, would it?).
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Changes here, of course, would require a recompilation to take effect.
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.PP
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If you have a version of the "termcap" library and database on your system,
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then you may wish to replace tinytcap with the real termcap.
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.NH 2
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AmigaDOS
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.PP
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Mike Rieser and Dale Rahn ported \*E to AmigaDOS.
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.PP
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The port was done using Manx Aztec C version 5.2b.
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\*E uses about as much space as it can and still be small code and data.
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\*E should also compile under DICE, though there may be a little trouble with
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signed versus unsigned chars.
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.PP
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The port has been done so the same binary will run under both versions of AmigaDOS.
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Under AmigaDOS 2.04, \*E supports all the documented features.
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It also uses an external program ref to do tag lookup.
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So, the accompanying programs: ref and ctags are recommended.
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Under AmigaDOS 1.2/1.3 \*E works, buts lacks the more advanced features.
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.PP
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For the port to AmigaDOS 2.04, we tried to use as many Native AmigaDOS
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calls as we could.
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This should increase \*E's chances at being compiled with other compilers.
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DICE seems to have a different default char type.
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You may need to use the UCHAR() macro in tio.c.
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To test it, try the :map command; if it looks right, things are cool.
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.PP
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For the port to AmigaDOS 1.3, we tried to make sure the program was at
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least usable.
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Many features are missing, most notably running commands in subshells.
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Also, what we could get working, we used Aztec functions to support them,
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so this part is little more compiler dependent.
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.PP
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Aztec is compatible with the SAS libcall #pragma.
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I personally prefer using the includes that come from Commodore over the ones
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supplied with Aztec, but for people with a straight Aztec installation,
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I went with the default names for the Aztec pragmas.
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.PP
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One include you'll need is <sys/types.h>.
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It's a common include when porting software just make yourself one.
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It's a two line file that saves a lot of hassle especially in the \*E source.
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So, make a directory where your includes are located called `sys'
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and in a file below that type:
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.br
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.ti +0.8i
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/* sys/types.h */
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.br
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.ti +0.8i
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#include <exec/types.h>
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.PP
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When setting environment variables (either local or global) for
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variables that specify a directory, make sure the variable ends in `:'
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or `/'.
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This saved from having to change much of the way \*E works.
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The default temporary directory (if TEMP and TMP aren't specified) is "T:".
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The default if HOME directory (if no HOME environment variable is set) is "S:".
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.PP
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To avoid conlict with other uses, \*E uses elvis.rc instead of .exrc or
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where it looks for macros.
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.NH 2
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Other Systems
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.PP
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For SunOS and Solaris 1.x, use the BSD settings;
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for Solaris 2.x, use the SysV settings.
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Earlier versions of \*E didn't link correctly due to a quirk in Sun's
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version of the "make" utility, but this version of \*E has a work-around
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for that quirk so you should have no trouble at all.
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.PP
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For Linux, use the SysV settings.
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You can probably just remove the "-lterm" from the "LIBS= -lterm" line,
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since linux keeps the termcap functions in the standard C library.
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.PP
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For other UNIXoid systems, I suggest you start with the Minix-68k settings
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and then grow from that.
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Minix is a nice starting point because it is a clone of Version 7 UNIX,
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which was the last common ancestor of BSD UNIX and SysV UNIX.
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Any Operating System which claims any UNIX compatibility what so ever
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will therefore support V7/Minix code.
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You may need to fiddle with #include directives or something, though.
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Minix-68k is a better starting point than Minix-PC because the PC compiler
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has some severe quirks.
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.PP
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If you're thinking of porting \*E to some non-UNIX system,
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I suggest you begin by studying the "INTERNALS" section of this manual.
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