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CONTENTS

NAME

perlsynology - Perl 5 on Synology DSM systems

DESCRIPTION

Synology manufactures a vast number of Network Attached Storage (NAS) devices that are very popular in large organisations as well as small businesses and homes.

The NAS systems are equipped with Synology Disk Storage Manager (DSM), which is a trimmed-down Linux system enhanced with several tools for managing the NAS. There are several flavours of hardware: Marvell Armada (ARMv5tel, ARMv7l), Intel Atom (i686, x86_64), Freescale QorIQ (PPC), and more. For a full list see the Synology FAQ.

Since it is based on Linux, the NAS can run many popular Linux software packages, including Perl. In fact, Synology provides a ready-to-install package for Perl, depending on the version of DSM the installed perl ranges from 5.8.6 on DSM-4.3 to 5.18.4 on DSM-5.1.

There is an active user community that provides many software packages for the Synology DSM systems; at the time of writing this document they provide Perl version 5.18.4.

This document describes various features of Synology DSM operating system that will affect how Perl 5 (hereafter just Perl) is configured, compiled and/or runs. It has been compiled and verified by Johan Vromans for the Synology DS413 (QorIQ), with feedback from H.Merijn Brand (DS213, ARMv5tel).

Setting up the build environment

As DSM is a trimmed-down Linux system, it lacks many of the tools and libraries commonly found on Linux. The basic tools like sh, cp, rm, etc. are implemented using BusyBox.

The next step is to add some symlinks to system libraries. For example, the development software expect a library libm.so that normally is a symlink to libm.so.6. Synology only provides the latter and not the symlink.

Here the actual architecture of the Synology system matters. You have to find out where the gcc libraries have been installed. Look in /opt for a directory similar to arm-none-linux-gnueab or powerpc-linux-gnuspe. In the instructions below I'll use powerpc-linux-gnuspe as an example.

WARNING: When you perform a system software upgrade, these links will disappear and need to be re-established.

Compiling Perl 5

When the build environment has been set up, building and testing Perl is straightforward. The only thing you need to do is download the sources as usual, and add a file Policy.sh as follows:

# Administrivia.
perladmin="your.email@goes.here"

# Install Perl in a tree in /opt/perl instead of /opt/bin.
prefix=/opt/perl

# Select the compiler. Note that there is no 'cc' alias or link.
cc=gcc

# Build flags.
ccflags="-DDEBUGGING"

# Library and include paths.
libpth="/lib"
locincpth="/opt/include"
loclibpth="/lib"

You may want to create the destination directory and give it the right permissions before installing, thus eliminating the need to build Perl as a super user.

In the directory where you unpacked the sources, issue the familiar commands:

./Configure -des
make
make test
make install

Known problems

Configure

No known problems yet

Build

Error message "No error definitions found".

This error is generated when it is not possible to find the local definitions for error codes, due to the uncommon structure of the Synology file system.

This error was fixed in the Perl development git for version 5.19, commit 7a8f1212e5482613c8a5b0402528e3105b26ff24.

Failing tests

ext/DynaLoader/t/DynaLoader.t

One subtest fails due to the uncommon structure of the Synology file system. The file /lib/glibc.so is missing.

WARNING: Do not symlink /lib/glibc.so.6 to /lib/glibc.so or some system components will start to fail.

Smoke testing Perl 5

If building completes successfully, you can set up smoke testing as described in the Test::Smoke documentation.

For smoke testing you need a running Perl. You can either install the Synology supplied package for Perl 5.8.6, or build and install your own, much more recent version.

Note that I could not run successful smokes when initiated by the Synology Task Scheduler. I resorted to initiating the smokes via a cron job run on another system, using ssh:

ssh nas1 wrk/Test-Smoke/smoke/smokecurrent.sh

Local patches

When local patches are applied with smoke testing, the test driver will automatically request regeneration of certain tables after the patches are applied. The Synology supplied Perl 5.8.6 (at least on the DS413) is NOT capable of generating these tables. It will generate opcodes with bogus values, causing the build to fail.

You can prevent regeneration by adding the setting

'flags' => 0,

to the smoke config, or by adding another patch that inserts

exit 0 if $] == 5.008006;

in the beginning of the regen.pl program.

Adding libraries

The above procedure describes a basic environment and hence results in a basic Perl. If you want to add additional libraries to Perl, you may need some extra settings.

For example, the basic Perl does not have any of the DB libraries (db, dbm, ndbm, gdsm). You can add these using iPKGui, however, you need to set environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH to the appropriate value:

LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/lib:/opt/lib
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH

This setting needs to be in effect while Perl is built, but also when the programs are run.

REVISION

March 2015, for Synology DSM 5.1.5022.

AUTHOR

Johan Vromans <jvromans@squirrel.nl> H. Merijn Brand <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl>