Without -m32, 'unsigned long long' may not be valid at all.
How are you checking whether the upper 32 bits have been discarded? Your code works perfectly fine here, I suspect the way you're printing them is truncating it. This is how I print it:
Hi All,
I am having a code written in C++.First I build this code on SUN 5.10.It was built successfully.Following is the log when build was successful.
-L/apps/compilers/SUNWspro/lib -lm -lsunmath \
-o App
ld: warning: symbol `clog' has differing types:
(file... (0 Replies)
What I want my script to do is to run a command in Terminal and close that same Terminal window when the process is complete.
Of course I could ad a delay of 6 seconds to complete the process, but it may not be enough every time.
To simplify my question, this is what I want to achieve.... (9 Replies)
hello. this is the code
#!/bin/sh
total1024=0
total2048=0
total8192=0
if ; then
if ; then
while read variable
do
if ; then
total1024=$(( $total1024 + 1 ))
fi
if ; then
total2048=$((... (4 Replies)
Hi there can anyone help me
here is my code
echo "Type in a positive number"
read X
I=2
while
do
if
then
echo "It is not prime"
break
else
if
then
echo "It is prime"
break
else
I=$(( $I + 1))
fi
fi (4 Replies)
This may be a dumb question, but googling is not giving me an answer. I'm trying to figure out how to refer to an input file in my code.
Lets say i run a script in bash:
"sh shellscript.sh inputfile"
(Inputfile will be variable...whatever file i run the script on)
I wanted to make... (5 Replies)
I am more of a newbie, but wanted to post this in this forum as I was afraid no one would look at it in unix forums as it concerns shell scripting. I have a shell script that now runs fine with the exclusion of one line:
x=`su nbadmin -c "ssh -t servery /usr/openv/netbackup/bin/bplist -C... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
I currently have the following problem:
In an awk script, I am calling a predifend function from the END{} and handing over a command string. This string arrives flawless and is executed like this:
function send_msg( cmd_str )
{
... (7 Replies)
Hi guys,
I am still learning awk and much apprecated to shed some light on the following: the questions asked is below!
{
total = i = 0
do {
++i
total += $i
} while ( total <= 100 )
print i, ":", total
}
File used:
cat test.do
45 25 60 20
10 105 50 40
33 5 9 67
108 3 5 4 (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Apollo
2 Replies
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perlcc
PERLCC(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide PERLCC(1)NAME
perlcc - generate executables from Perl programs
SYNOPSIS
$ perlcc hello # Compiles into executable 'a.out'
$ perlcc -o hello hello.pl # Compiles into executable 'hello'
$ perlcc -O file # Compiles using the optimised C backend
$ perlcc -B file # Compiles using the bytecode backend
$ perlcc -c file # Creates a C file, 'file.c'
$ perlcc -S -o hello file # Creates a C file, 'file.c',
# then compiles it to executable 'hello'
$ perlcc -c out.c file # Creates a C file, 'out.c' from 'file'
$ perlcc -e 'print q//' # Compiles a one-liner into 'a.out'
$ perlcc -c -e 'print q//' # Creates a C file 'a.out.c'
$ perlcc -I /foo hello # extra headers (notice the space after -I)
$ perlcc -L /foo hello # extra libraries (notice the space after -L)
$ perlcc -r hello # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out', runs 'a.out'.
$ perlcc -r hello a b c # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out', runs 'a.out'.
# with arguments 'a b c'
$ perlcc hello -log c # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out' logs compile
# log into 'c'.
DESCRIPTION
perlcc creates standalone executables from Perl programs, using the code generators provided by the B module. At present, you may either
create executable Perl bytecode, using the "-B" option, or generate and compile C files using the standard and 'optimised' C backends.
The code generated in this way is not guaranteed to work. The whole codegen suite ("perlcc" included) should be considered very experimen-
tal. Use for production purposes is strongly discouraged.
OPTIONS -Llibrary directories
Adds the given directories to the library search path when C code is passed to your C compiler.
-Iinclude directories
Adds the given directories to the include file search path when C code is passed to your C compiler; when using the Perl bytecode
option, adds the given directories to Perl's include path.
-o output file name
Specifies the file name for the final compiled executable.
-c C file name
Create C code only; do not compile to a standalone binary.
-e perl code
Compile a one-liner, much the same as "perl -e '...'"
-S Do not delete generated C code after compilation.
-B Use the Perl bytecode code generator.
-O Use the 'optimised' C code generator. This is more experimental than everything else put together, and the code created is not guaran-
teed to compile in finite time and memory, or indeed, at all.
-v Increase verbosity of output; can be repeated for more verbose output.
-r Run the resulting compiled script after compiling it.
-log
Log the output of compiling to a file rather than to stdout.
perl v5.8.9 2009-06-25 PERLCC(1)