<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.3//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.3/docbookx.dtd" [ <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent"> %general-entities; ]> <sect1 id="ch-system-flex" xreflabel="Flex" role="wrap"> <title>Flex-&flex-version;</title> <?dbhtml filename="flex.html"?> <indexterm zone="ch-system-flex"><primary sortas="a-Flex">Flex</primary></indexterm> <sect2 role="package"><title/> <para>The Flex package contains a utility for generating programs that recognize patterns in text.</para> <segmentedlist> <segtitle>&buildtime;</segtitle> <segtitle>&diskspace;</segtitle> <seglistitem><seg>0.1 SBU</seg><seg>3.4 MB</seg></seglistitem> </segmentedlist> <segmentedlist> <segtitle>Flex installation depends on</segtitle> <seglistitem><seg>Bash, Binutils, Bison, Coreutils, Diffutils, GCC, Gettext, Glibc, Grep, M4, Make, Sed</seg></seglistitem> </segmentedlist> </sect2> <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of Flex</title> <para>Flex contains several known bugs. Fix these with the following patch:</para> <screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../flex-&flex-version;-debian_fixes-2.patch</userinput></screen> <para>The GNU autotools detects that the Flex source code has been modified by the patch, and tries to update the man pages to include those changes, but this breaks on many systems, and the default pages are fine, so make sure they don't get renegerated:</para> <screen><userinput>touch doc/*.1</userinput></screen> <para>Now prepare Flex for compilation:</para> <screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr</userinput></screen> <para>Compile the package:</para> <screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen> <para>To test the results, issue: <userinput>make check</userinput>.</para> <para>Now install the package:</para> <screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen> <para>There are some packages that expect to find the <emphasis>lex</emphasis> library in <filename>/usr/lib</filename>. Create a symlink to account for this:</para> <screen><userinput>ln -s libfl.a /usr/lib/libl.a</userinput></screen> <para>A few programs don't know about <command>flex</command> yet and try to run its predecessor <command>lex</command>. To support those programs, create a wrapper script named <filename>lex</filename> that calls <command>flex</command> in <emphasis>lex</emphasis> emulation mode:</para> <screen><userinput>cat > /usr/bin/lex << "EOF"</userinput> #!/bin/sh # Begin /usr/bin/lex exec /usr/bin/flex -l "$@" # End /usr/bin/lex <userinput>EOF chmod 755 /usr/bin/lex</userinput></screen> </sect2> <sect2 id="contents-flex" role="content"><title>Contents of Flex</title> <segmentedlist> <segtitle>Installed programs</segtitle> <segtitle>Installed library</segtitle> <seglistitem><seg>flex, flex++ (link to flex) and lex</seg> <seg>libfl.a</seg></seglistitem> </segmentedlist> <variablelist><title>Short descriptions</title> <varlistentry id="flex"> <term><command>flex</command></term> <listitem> <indexterm zone="ch-system-flex flex"><primary sortas="b-flex">flex</primary></indexterm> <para>is a tool for generating programs that recognize patterns in text. Pattern recognition is useful in many applications. From a set of rules on what to look for, <command>flex</command> makes a program that looks for those patterns. The reason to use <command>flex</command> is that it is much easier to specify the rules for a pattern-finding program than to write the program.</para> </listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry id="flex-"> <term><command>flex++</command></term> <listitem> <indexterm zone="ch-system-flex flex-"><primary sortas="b-flex++">flex++</primary></indexterm> <para>invokes a version of <command>flex</command> that is used exclusively for C++ scanners.</para> </listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry id="libfl.a"> <term><filename class="libraryfile">libfl.a</filename></term> <listitem> <indexterm zone="ch-system-flex libfl.a"><primary sortas="c-libfl.a">libfl.a</primary></indexterm> <para>is the flex library.</para> </listitem> </varlistentry> </variablelist> </sect2> </sect1>