Compiling PCRE on non-Unix systems ---------------------------------- If you want to compile PCRE for a non-Unix system, note that it consists entirely of code written in Standard C, and so should compile successfully on any machine with a Standard C compiler and library, using normal compiling commands to do the following: (1) Copy or rename the file config.in as config.h, and change the macros that define HAVE_STRERROR and HAVE_MEMMOVE to define them as 1 rather than 0. Unfortunately, because of the way Unix autoconf works, the default setting has to be 0. (2) Copy or rename the file pcre.in as pcre.h, and change the macro definitions for PCRE_MAJOR, PCRE_MINOR, and PCRE_DATE near its start to the values set in configure.in. (3) Compile dftables.c as a stand-alone program, and then run it with the standard output sent to chartables.c. This generates a set of standard character tables. (4) Compile maketables.c, get.c, study.c and pcre.c and link them all together into an object library in whichever form your system keeps such libraries. This is the pcre library (chartables.c gets included by means of an #include directive). (5) Similarly, compile pcreposix.c and link it as the pcreposix library. (6) Compile the test program pcretest.c. This needs the functions in the pcre and pcreposix libraries when linking. (7) Run pcretest on the testinput files in the testdata directory, and check that the output matches the corresponding testoutput files. You must use the -i option when checking testinput2. If you have a system without "configure" but where you can use a Makefile, edit Makefile.in to create Makefile, substituting suitable values for the variables at the head of the file. Some help in building a Win32 DLL of PCRE in GnuWin32 environments was contributed by Paul.Sokolovsky@technologist.com. These environments are Mingw32 (http://www.xraylith.wisc.edu/~khan/software/gnu-win32/) and CygWin (http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/). Paul comments: For CygWin, set CFLAGS=-mno-cygwin, and do 'make dll'. You'll get pcre.dll (containing pcreposix also), libpcre.dll.a, and dynamically linked pgrep and pcretest. If you have /bin/sh, run RunTest (three main test go ok, locale not supported). ****