17 KiB
ZeroMQ on z/OS UNIX System Services
ZeroMQ has been successfully built on z/OS, using z/OS UNIX System Services, a certified UNIX environment for the IBM z-series. The build is possible with the shell scripts in this directory, as described below.
Tested build combinations:
-
ZeroMQ 4.0.4, using IBM XL C/C++ compiler, as XPLINK in ILP32 mode
-
ZeroMQ 4.0.4, using IBM XL C/C++ compiler, as XPLINK in LP64 mode
-
ZeroMQ 4.1-git, using IBM XL C/C++ compiler, as XPLINK in ILP32 mode
Other combinations are likely to work, possibly with minor changes, but have not been tested. Both static library and DLL modes have been tested.
There are some minor limitations (detailed below), but all core functionality tests run successfully.
Quickstart: building ZeroMQ on z/OS UNIX System Services
Assuming z/OS UNIX System Services is installed, and the z/OS XL C/C++ compiler suite is installed, ZeroMQ can be built as follows:
-
Download and extract ZeroMQ tar file
-
Ensure contents of this directory are present at
builds/zos
within that extracted diretory (eg,zeromq-VERSION/builds/zos/
; copy these files in, if not already present, and make sure the shell scripts are executable) -
(Optional) set ZCXXFLAGS for additional compile flags (see below)
-
Build
libzmq.a
static library andlibzmq.so
dynamic library, with:cd zeromq-VERSION builds/zos/makelibzmq
or to skip the
libzmq.so
dynamic library (only buildinglibzmq.a
):cd zeromq-VERSION BUILD_DLL=false export BUILD_DLL builds/zos/makelibzmq
-
(Optional, but recommended) build and run the core tests with:
cd zeromq-VERSION builds/zos/maketests builds/zos/runtests
-
To remove built files, to start again (eg, rebuild with different compile/link flags):
cd zeromq-VERSION builds/zos/makeclean
There are details on specifying alternative compilation flags below.
Quickstart: using ZeroMQ on z/OS UNIX System Services
Static linking
Install include/*.h
somewhere on your compiler include path.
Install src/libzmq.a
somewhere on your library search path.
Compile and link application with:
c++ -Wc,xplink -Wl,xplink ... -+ -o myprog myprog.cpp -lzmq
Run with:
./myprog
Dynamic linking
Install include/*.h
somewhere on your compiler include path.
Install src/libzmq.so
somewhere on your LIBPATH.
Install src/libzmq.x
somewhere you can reference for import linking.
Compile and link application:
c++ -Wc,xplink -Wc,dll ... -+ -c -o myprog.o myprog.cpp
c++ -Wl,xplink -o myprog myprog.o /PATH/TO/libzmq.x
Run with:
LIBPATH=/DIR/OF/LIBZMQ.SO:/lib:/usr/lib:... # if not in default path
export LIBPATH
./myprog
ZeroMQ on z/OS UNIX System Services: Application considerations
z/0S UNIX System Services does not provide a way to block the
SIGPIPE
signal being generated when a thread writes to a closed socket
(compare with other platforms that support the SO_NOSIGPIPE
socket
option, and/or the MSG_NOSIGNAL
flag on send()
; z/OS UNIX System
Services supports neither).
As a result, applications using ZeroMQ on z/OS UNIX System Services
have to expect to encounter SIGPIPE
at various times during the use
of the library, if sockets are unexpectedly disconnected. Normally
SIGPIPE
will terminate the application.
A simple solution, if SIGPIPE
is not required for normal operation
of the application (eg, it is not part of a unix pipeline, the
traditional use of SIGPIPE
), is to set SIGPIPE
to be ignored
with code like:
#include <signal.h>
...
signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN);
near the start of the application (eg, before initialising the ZeroMQ library).
If SIGPIPE
is required for normal operation it is recommended that
the application install a signal handler that flags the signal was
received, and allows the application main loop to determine if it
was received for one of its own file descriptors -- and ignores it if it
none of the applications own file descriptors seems to have changed.
Linking to the libzmq.a
static library will pull in substantially
all of the library code, which will add about 4MB to the application
size (per executable statically linked with ZeroMQ). If this is a
significant consideration, use of the DLL version is recommended.
See also ZeroMQ test status on z/OS UNIX System Services below for other caveats.
Setting other compilation flags
Optimisation
To build with optimisation:
- set
ZCXXFLAGS
to "-O2
" before starting build process above
Full debugging symbols
To build with debugging symbols:
- set
ZCXXFLAGS
to "-g
" before starting build process above
64-bit mode (LP64/amode=64)
To build in 64-bit mode:
The default build is ILP32, the default for the IBM XL C/C++ compiler. To build in LP64 mode (64-bit):
- set
ZCXXFLAGS
to "-Wc,lp64 -Wl,lp64
" before starting build
(64-bit mode can be combined with optimisation or debug symbols.)
Combining compilation flags
Other build flags can be used in ZXCCFLAGS
if desired. Beware that
they are passed through (Bourne) shell expansion, and passed to both
the compile and link stages; some experimentation of argument quoting
may be required (and arguments requiring parenthesis are particularly
complicated).
ZeroMQ test status on z/OS UNIX System Services
As of 2014-07-22, 41 of the 43 tests in the core ZeroMQ test suite pass. There are two tests that are expected to fail:
-
test_abstract_ipc
: tests Linux-specific IPC functions, and is expected to fail on non-Linux platforms. -
test_fork
: tests ability to use ZeroMQ both before and after fork (and before exec()); this relies on the ability to use pthreads both before and after fork. On z/OS (and some other UNIX compliant platforms) functions likepthreads_create
(used by ZeroMQ) cannot be used after fork and before exec; on z/OS the call after fork fails withELEMULTITHREADFORK
(errno=257) if ZeroMQ was also used before fork. (On z/OS it appears possible to use z/OS after fork, providing it has not been used before fork -- the problem is the two separate initialisations of the threading library, before and after fork, attempting to mix together.) In practice this is unlikely to affect many real-world programs -- most programs use threads or fork without exec, but not both. -
test_diffserv
: tests ability to set IP_TOS (IP Type of Service, or DiffServ) values on sockets. While z/OS UNIX System Services has the preprocessor defines required, it appears not to support the required functionality (call fails with "EDC8109I Protocol not available.")
These three "expected to fail" tests are listed as XFAIL_TESTS, and
runtests
will still consider the test run successful when they fail
as expected. (builds/zos/runtests
will automatically skip these
"expected to fail" tests if running "all" tests.)
In addition test_security_curve
does not do any meaningful testing,
as a result of the CURVE support not being compiled in; it requires
libsodium
, which has not been
ported to z/OS UNIX System Services yet.
Multicast (via libpgm
) is also not ported or compiled in.
TIPC, a cluster IPC protocol, is only supported on Linux, so it is not compiled into the z/OS UNIX System Services port -- and the tests are automatically skipped if running "all" tests. (However they are not listed in XFAIL_TESTS because without the TIPC support there is no point in even running them, and it would be non-trivial to track them by hand.)
ZeroMQ on z/OS UNIX System Services: Library portability notes
*.cpp
The source code in ZeroMQ is a combination of a C++ core library
(in *.cpp
and *.hpp
files), and a C wrapper (also in *.cpp
files). It is all compiled with the C++ compiler. The IBM XL C/C++
complier (at least the version used for initial porting) insists
that C++ source be in *.C
files (note capital C). To work around
this issue the compile flag -+
is used (specified in the zc++
compiler wrapper), which tells the compiler the file should be
considered C++ despite the file extension.
XPLINK
The library (and tests) are built in
XPLINK mode
with the flags -Wc,xplink -Wl,xplink
(specified in the zc++
compiler wrapper). This is recommended by IBM for C++
code
due to the small functions. (Amongst other things, using XPLINK
enables function calls with some arguments passed in registers.)
long long
ZeroMQ makes use of uint64_t
(which is unsigned long long
in ILP32
mode). To enable this the compile flag -Wc,lang(longlong)
is passed
to enable long long
. This is passed from the zc++
compiler wrapper
in order to be able to specifically quote the argument to protect the
parentheses from shell expansion.
BSD-style sockets, with IPv6 support
ZeroMQ uses BSD-style socket handling, with extensions to support IPv6. BSD-style sockets were merged into SysV-derived UNIX at least a decade ago, and are required as part of the X/Open Portability Guide at least as of XPG 4.2. To access this functionality two feature macros are defined:
_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED=1
_OPEN_SYS_SOCK_IPV6
The first enables the XPG 4.2 features (including functionality like
getsockname()
), and the latter exposes IPv6 specific functionality
like sa_family_t
. These flags are defined in the cxxall
script.
(The traditional BSD-sockets API, exposed with _OE_SOCKETS
cannot
be used because it does not support functions like getsockname()
,
nor does it support IPv6 -- and the API definitions prevent compiling
in LP64 mode due to assumptions about long being 32 bits. Using
_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED=1
avoids all these problems.)
pthreads
ZeroMQ uses the pthreads library to create additional threads to handle background communication without blocking the main application. This functionaity is enabled on z/OS UNIX System Services by defining:
_OPEN_THREADS=3
which is done in the cxxall
script. (The "3" value exposes later
pthreads functionality like pthread_atfork
, although ZeroMQ does not
currently use all these features.)
If compiling on a recent version of z/OS UNIX System Services it may be worth compiling with:
_UNIX03_THREADS=1
which enables a later version of the threading support, potentially
including pthread_getschedparam
and pthread_setschedparam`; at
present in the z/OS UNIX System Services port these functions are
hidden and never called. (See IBM z/OS pthread.h
documentation
for details on the differences.)
platform.hpp
on z/OS UNIX System Services
The build (described above) on z/OS UNIX System Services uses a static
pre-built platform.hpp
file. (By default src/platform.hpp
is
dynamically generated as a result of running the ./configure
script.)
The master version of this is in builds/zos/platform.hpp
.
Beware that this file contains the version number for libzmq (usually
included during the configure phase). If taking the platform.hpp
from
an older version to use on a newer libzmq be sure to update the version
information near the top of the file.
The pre-built file is used because z/OS does not have the GNU auto tools
(automake
, autoconf
, libtool
, etc) installed, and particularly the
libtool replacement does not work properly with the IBM XL C/C++
compiler.
The ./configure
script (only supplied in the tarballs); built with
automake
and autoconf
on another platform), with one small edit,
was used to generate the z/OS platform.hpp
and then two small changes
(described below) were made by hand to the generated platform.hpp
.
To be able to run the ./configure script to completion (in tcsh syntax):
-
Edit
./configure
and add:openedition) ;;
immediately before the line:
as_fn_error $? "unsupported system: ${host_os}." "$LINENO" 5
(somewhere around 17637). This avoids the configure script giving up early because
openedition
is not recognised. -
set
CXX
to point that the full path to thebuilds/zos/zc++
wrapper, egsetenv CXX "/u/0mq/zeromq-4.0.4/builds/zos/zc++"
-
set
CPPFLAGS
to for the feature macros required, eg:setenv CPPFLAGS "-D_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED=1 -D_OPEN_THREADS=3 -D_OPEN_SYS_SOCK_IPV6 -DZMQ_HAVE_ZOS"
-
set
CXXFLAGS
to enable XPLINK:setenv CXXFLAGS "-Wc,xplink -Wl,xplink -+"
-
run configure script with
--disable-eventfd
(sys/eventfd.h
does not exist, but the test for its existance has a false positive on z/OS UNIX System Services, apparently due to the way thec++
compiler wrapper passes errors back from the IBM XL C/C++ compiler), and with--with-poller=poll
becausepoll
is the most advanced of the file descriptor status tests available on z/OS. That is:./configure --disable-eventfd --with-poller=poll
All going well several Makefiles, and src/platform.hpp
should be
produced. Two additional changes are required to src/platform.hpp
which can be appended to the end:
/* ---- Special case for z/OS Unix Services: openedition ---- */
#include <pthread.h>
#ifndef NI_MAXHOST
#define NI_MAXHOST 1025
#endif
(many includes require pthreads-related methods or data structures to
be defined, but not all of them include pthread.h
, and the value
NI_MAXHOST
is not defined on z/OS UNIX System Services -- the 1025
value is the conventional value on other platforms).
Having done this the Makefiles can be used to compile individual files if desired, eg:
cd src
make zmq.o
but note:
-
IBM Make will warn of duplicate prerequisites on every run of
make
, and both the generatedsrc/Makefile
andtests/Makefile
have several duplicates. (Forsrc/Makefile
editlibzmq_la_SOURCES
to remove the duplicates.) -
IBM Make does not understand the
@
prefix (eg,@echo
) as a way to avoid echoing the command, resulting in an error and the command being echoed anyway. -
Many of the make targets result in GNU auto tools (
aclocal
, etc) being invoked, which are likely to fail, and most of the library-related targets will invokelibtool
which will cause compile failures (due to differences in expected arguments).
However running ./configure
to regenerate src/platform.hpp
may
be useful for later versions of ZeroMQ which add more feature tests.
Transferring from GitHub to z/OS UNIX System Services
The process of transferring files from GitHub to z/OS UNIX System Services is somewhat convoluted because:
-
There is not a port of git for z/OS UNIX System Services; and
-
z/OS uses the EBCDIC (IBM-1047) character set rather than the ASCII/ISO-8859-1 character set used by the ZeroMQ source code on GitHub
A workable transfer process is:
-
On an ASCII/ISO-8859-1/UTF-8 system with
git
(eg, a Linux system):git clone https://github.com/zeromq/libzmq.git git archive --prefix=libzmq-git/ -o /var/tmp/libzmq-git.tar master
-
On a ASCII/ISO-8859-1/UTF-8 system with
tar
, andpax
, and optionally the GNU auto tools (eg, the same Linux system):mkdir /var/tmp/zos cd /var/tmp/zos tar -xpf /var/tmp/libzmq-git.tar cd libzmq-git ./autogen.sh # Optional: to be able to run ./configure cd .. pax -wf /var/tmp/libzmq-git.pax libzmq-git compress libzmq-git.pax # If available, reduce transfer size
-
Transfer the resulting file (
libzmq-git.pax
orlibzmq-git.pax.Z
) to the z/OS UNIX System Services system. If using FTP be sure to transfer the file inbin
(binary/Image) mode to avoid corruption. -
On the z/OS UNIX System Services system, unpack the
pax
file and convert all the files to EBCDIC with:pax -o from=iso8859-1 -pp -rvf libzmq-git-2014-07-23.pax
or if the file was compressed:
pax -o from=iso8859-1 -pp -rvzf libzmq-git-2014-07-23.pax.Z
The result should be a libzmq-git
directory with the source in
EBCDIC format, on the z/OS UNIX System Services system ready to start
building.
See also the pax
man
page,
some pax
conversion
examples,
and IBM's advice on ASCII to EBCDIC conversion
options