Updating to PCRE 8.33 or Higher

The extension Scribunto requires PCRE 8.33 or higher. PCRE 8.33 was released in May 2013. Thus this page is only relevant for ancient systems.

The process below describes how to update to PCRE 8.33 on an Ubuntu virtual server (instance) running on an Amazon AWS.

As of this date, the Ubuntu server will install PCRE 8.31. To update to 8.33 you will need to install a number of library packages necessary to compile new code. You will also need to know how to login as the root user.

If you don't want to compile things, Ondřej Surý's PHP PPA may also work.

Using PPA ondrej/php edit

Ondřej Surý happens to be the Debian maintainer for PHP, so this is a reasonably high-quality PPA.

As of January 2018, it carries PCRE 8.41. This worked to upgrade PCRE on Ubuntu 14.04.

Caution: This PPA installs a lot of other stuff if you let it. Keep an eye on what it installs, be prepared to revert if something goes wrong. But it'll probably be just fine.

Log In to Your Server edit

You will, of course, need to follow the Amazon AWS instructions for connecting with the server. One option is to download and install Git Bash and log-in to the server using your key.

If your Key.pem is in KeyDirectory those commands may look something like:

cd KeyDirectory

chmod 400 Key.pem

ssh -i "Key.pem" ubuntu@ec2-52-223-93-123.compute-1.amazonaws.com

If you successfully login, the prompt will show your path followed by $

Install Packages Needed to Compile PCRE 8.33 edit

Do not try to go to the root directory to run the following commands. Run them from the default directory where your permissions are already set up right.

Cut and paste the following lines. They will all run in sequence. If there are any errors, you may need to run each install separately, as is done with the first three:

apt-get install build-essential

apt-get install checkinstall

apt-get install automake

apt-get install libbz2-1.0 libbz2-dev libbz2-ocaml libbz2-ocaml-dev

apt-get install libreadline-dev

Download PCRE 8.33 or Higher edit

You can search for the latest package address, which may be higher than 8.33. The steps below include the address for the package as of this date, Make any required changes for a different version or package

wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/pcre/pcre-8.33.tar.gz

tar -xvzf pcre-8.33.tar.gz

If the package extracts properly, you will see all the new contents in the directory pcre-8.33. To see directories, type in the command line: ls

Now Compile and Check the Code for PCRE 8.33 edit

cd pcre-8.33
./configure --prefix=/usr \
  --docdir=/usr/share/doc/pcre-8.33 \
  --enable-utf \
  --enable-unicode-properties \
  --enable-pcre16 \
  --enable-pcre32 \
  --enable-pcregrep-libz \
  --enable-pcregrep-libbz2 \
  --enable-pcretest-libreadline \
  --disable-static &&
make

Now test the make, with the command:

make check

Now finish up the libraries with this command:

sudo make install

Sudo priviliges are required for the final make.

sudo make install
sudo mv -v /usr/lib/libpcre.so.* /lib 
sudo ln -sfv ../../lib/$(readlink /usr/lib/libpcre.so) /usr/lib/libpcre.so

Then restart the server:

sudo service apache2 restart

Test it edit

pcretest -C

The above command should indicate how things are going.

Run the phpinfo.php page on your server (lookup how to make one, if you don't) and check what is listed for PCRE.

In my case, it still shows 8.31 installed, event though pcretest shows 8.33. Go figure! I don't know what to make of it at this time...nor can I tell if it is still causing problems with Scribunto.

But I hope this helps!

Login as Root User edit

According to this source, I made a mistake compiling as root user, since that messes up privileges. But I'm leaving this section to explain how to Login as Root User, just in case it helps someone.


  • Enter the command:
    sudo passwd root
    
    .
  • This will prompt you to create a password for your root account. Make sure you don't forget it.
  • Enter the command
    sudo -i
    
    . You will be asked for your root password.
  • Your prompt will change from $ to #, indicating you have root access.
  • Enter the command
    cd ..
    
    to move to the root directory
  • Enter the command
    ls
    
    this should show you the directories and files in the root directory, including the new directory pcre-8.33

NOTE: To disable root access, enter the command sudo passwd -dl root

Reference Pages edit

http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/view/7.4/general/pcre.html http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12212079/pcre-libraries-version-is-too-old