view READMEdir/README_os390.txt @ 34441:84a5cafeb34c v9.1.0140

patch 9.1.0140: cursor on wrong row after 1 char 'below' virtual text when EOL is shown Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/da0c9137d1ec96f4d79b818502d2f921a21f710e Author: Dylan Thacker-Smith <dylan.ah.smith@gmail.com> Date: Tue Feb 27 20:25:10 2024 +0100 patch 9.1.0140: cursor on wrong row after 1 char 'below' virtual text when EOL is shown Problem: The cursor screen row was incorrectly being calculated when the cursor follows a 1 character text_align 'below' virtual text line, resulting in the cursor being shown on the wrong line. This was caused by a cell size of 2 instead of 1 being used for the EOL character, which propagated to the calculation of space for putting the 'below' virtual text on its own line. (rickhowe) Solution: Fix the size used for the EOL character in calculating the cursor's screen position (Dylan Thacker-Smith) fixes: #11959 related: #12028 closes: #14096 Signed-off-by: Dylan Thacker-Smith <dylan.ah.smith@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
date Tue, 27 Feb 2024 20:30:03 +0100
parents 4635e43f2c6f
children
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README_os390.txt for version 9.1 of Vim: Vi IMproved.

This readme explains how to build Vim on z/OS.  Formerly called OS/390.
See "README.txt" for general information about Vim.

Most likely there are not many users out there using Vim on z/OS. So chances
are good, that some bugs are still undiscovered.

Getting the source to z/OS:
==========================

First get the source code in one big tar file and ftp it a binary to z/OS. If
the tar file is initially compressed with gzip (tar.gz) or bzip2 (tar.bz2)
uncompress it on your PC, as these tools are (most likely) not available on
the mainframe.

To reduce the size of the tar file you might compress it into a zip file. On
z/OS Unix you might have the command "jar" from java to uncompress a zip. Use:
        jar xvf <zip file name>

Unpack the tar file on z/OS with 
        pax -o from=ISO8859-1,to=IBM-1047 -rf vim.tar

Note: The Vim source contains a few bitmaps etc which will be destroyed by
this command, but these files are not needed on zOS (at least not for the
console version).


Compiling:
==========

Vim can be compiled with or without GUI support. For 7.4 only the compilation
without GUI was tested. Below is a section about compiling with X11 but this
is from an earlier version of Vim.

Console only:
-------------

If you build VIM without X11 support, compiling and building is nearly
straightforward. 

Change to the vim directory and do:

    # Don't use c89!
    # Allow intermixing of compiler options and files.

    $ export CC=cc
    $ export _CC_CCMODE=1
    $./configure --with-features=normal --without-x --enable-gui=no
    $ cd src
    $ make

      There may be warnings:
        - include files not found (libc, sys/param.h, ...)
        - Redeclaration of ... differs from ...
        -- just ignore them.

    $ make test

      This will produce lots of garbage on your screen (including error
      messages). Don't worry.

      If the test stops at one point in vim (might happen in test 11), just
      press :q!

      Expected test failures:
        11: If you don't have gzip installed
        24: test of backslash sequences in regexp are ASCII dependent
        42: Multibyte is not supported on z/OS
        55: ASCII<->EBCDIC sorting
        57: ASCII<->EBCDIC sorting
        58: Spell checking is not supported with EBCDIC
        71: Blowfish encryption doesn't work

    $ make install


With X11:
---------

WARNING: This instruction was not tested with Vim 7.4 or later.

There are two ways for building VIM with X11 support. The first way is simple
and results in a big executable (~13 Mb), the second needs a few additional
steps and results in a much smaller executable (~4.5 Mb). These examples
assume you want Motif.

  The easy way:
    $ export CC=cc
    $ export _CC_CCMODE=1
    $ ./configure --enable-max-features --enable-gui=motif
    $ cd src
    $ make

    With this VIM is linked statically with the X11 libraries.

  The smarter way:
    Make VIM as described above. Then create a file named 'link.sed' with the
    following content (see src/link.390):

	s/-lXext  *//g
	s/-lXmu  *//g
	s/-lXm	*/\/usr\/lib\/Xm.x /g
	s/-lX11  */\/usr\/lib\/X11.x /g
	s/-lXt	*//g
	s/-lSM	*/\/usr\/lib\/SM.x /g
	s/-lICE  */\/usr\/lib\/ICE.x /g

    Then do:
    $ rm vim
    $ make

    Now Vim is linked with the X11-DLLs.

    See the Makefile and the file link.sh on how link.sed is used.