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This is version 2.0 of Guile, Project GNU's extension language library. Guile is an implementation of the Scheme programming language, packaged as a library that can be linked into applications to give them their own extension language. Guile supports other languages as well, giving users of Guile-based applications a choice of languages. Please send bug reports to [email protected]. See the LICENSE file for the specific terms that apply to Guile. Note that for any copyright year range specified as YYYY-ZZZZ in this package, the range specifies every single year in that closed interval. Additional INSTALL instructions =========================================== Generic instructions for configuring and compiling Guile can be found in the INSTALL file. Guile specific information and configure options can be found below, including instructions for installing SLIB. Guile depends on the following external libraries. - libgmp - libiconv - libintl - libltdl - libunistring - libgc - libffi It will also use the libreadline library if it is available. There is a corresponding `--with-XXX-prefix' option for each of these libraries (except for libgc and libffi which use `pkg-config', see below) that you can use when invoking ./configure, if you have these libraries installed in a location other than the standard places (/usr and /usr/local). These options are provided by the Gnulib `havelib' module, and details of how they work are documented in `Searching for Libraries' in the Gnulib manual (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnulib/manual). The extent to which they work on a given OS depends on whether that OS supports encoding full library path names in executables (aka `rpath'). Also note that using these options, and hence hardcoding full library path names (where that is supported), makes it impossible to later move the built executables and libraries to an installation location other than the one that was specified at build time. Another possible approach is to set CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS on the configure command-line, so that they include -I options for all the non-standard places where you have installed header files and -L options for all the non-standard places where you have installed libraries. This will allow configure and make to find those headers and libraries during the build. E.g.: ../configure [...] CPPFLAGS='-I/my/include' LDFLAGS='-L/my/lib' The locations found will not be hardcoded into the build executables and libraries, so with this approach you will probably also need to set LD_LIBRARY_PATH correspondingly, to allow Guile to find the necessary libraries again at runtime. Required External Packages ================================================ Guile requires the following external packages: - GNU MP, at least version 4.2 GNU MP is used for bignum arithmetic. It is available from http://gmplib.org/ . - libltdl from GNU Libtool, at least version 1.5.6 libltdl is used for loading extensions at run-time. It is available from http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/ . - GNU libunistring, at least version 0.9.3 libunistring is used for Unicode string operations, such as the `utf*->string' procedures. It is available from http://www.gnu.org/software/libunistring/ . - libgc, at least version 7.0 libgc (aka. the Boehm-Demers-Weiser garbage collector) is the conservative garbage collector used by Guile. It is available from http://www.hboehm.info/gc/ . - libffi libffi provides a "foreign function interface", used by the `(system foreign)' module. It is available from http://sourceware.org/libffi/ . - pkg-config Guile's ./configure script uses pkg-config to discover the correct compile and link options for libgc and libffi. For this to work, the `PKG_CONFIG_PATH' environment variable must be set to point to the places where libgc's and libffi's `.pc' files can be found: PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/path/to/libgc/lib/pkgconfig:/path/to/libffi/lib/pkgconfig Alternatively, when pkg-config is not installed, you can work around this by setting some variables as part of the configure command-line: - PKG_CONFIG=true - BDW_GC_CFLAGS=<compile flags for picking up libgc headers> - BDW_GC_LIBS=<linker flags for picking up the libgc library> Note that because you're bypassing all pkg-config checks, you will also have to specify libffi flags as well: - LIBFFI_CFLAGS=<compile flags for picking up libffi headers> - LIBFFI_LIBS=<linker flags for picking up the libffi library> Special Instructions For Some Systems ===================================== We would like Guile to build on all systems using the simple instructions above, but it seems that a few systems still need special treatment. If you can send us fixes for these problems, we'd be grateful. <none yet listed> Guile specific flags Accepted by Configure ================================= If you run the configure script with no arguments, it should examine your system and set things up appropriately. However, there are a few switches specific to Guile you may find useful in some circumstances. --without-threads --- Build without thread support Build a Guile executable and library that supports multi-threading. The default is to enable threading support when your operating system offsers 'POSIX threads'. When you do not want threading, use `--without-threads'. --enable-deprecated=LEVEL Guile may contain features that are `deprecated'. When a feature is deprecated, it means that it is still there, but that there is a better way of achieving the same thing, and we'd rather have you use this better way. This allows us to eventually remove the old implementation and helps to keep Guile reasonably clean of historic baggage. See the file NEWS for a list of features that are currently deprecated. Each entry will also tell you what you should replace your code with. To give you some help with this process, and to encourage (OK, nudge) people to switch to the newer methods, Guile can emit warnings or errors when you use a deprecated feature. There is quite a range of possibilities, from being completely silent to giving errors at link time. What exactly happens is determined both by the value of the `--enable-deprecated' configuration option when Guile was built, and by the GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED environment variable. It works like this: When Guile has been configured with `--enable-deprecated=no' (or, equivalently, with `--disable-deprecated') then all deprecated features are omitted from Guile. You will get "undefined reference", "variable unbound" or similar errors when you try to use them. When `--enable-deprecated=LEVEL' has been specified (for LEVEL not "no"), LEVEL will be used as the default value of the environment variable GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED. A value of "yes" is changed to "summary" and "shutup" is changed to "no", however. When GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED has the value "no", nothing special will happen when a deprecated feature is used. When GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED has the value "summary", and a deprecated feature has been used, Guile will print this message at exit: Some deprecated features have been used. Set the environment variable GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED to "detailed" and rerun the program to get more information. Set it to "no" to suppress this message. When GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED has the value "detailed", a detailed warning is emitted immediatly for the first use of a deprecated feature. The default is `--enable-deprecated=yes'. In addition to setting GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED in the environment, you can also use (debug-enable 'warn-deprecated) and (debug-disable 'warn-deprecated) to enable and disable the detailed messaged at run time. Additionally, if your toolchain is new enough, you will receive warnings at link time if you have a Guile extension that uses deprecated functions provided by Guile. --disable-shared --- Do not build shared libraries. --disable-static --- Do not build static libraries. Normally, both static and shared libraries will be built if your system supports them. --enable-debug-freelist --- Enable freelist debugging. This enables a debugging version of scm_cell and scm_double_cell, and also registers an extra primitive, the setter `gc-set-debug-check-freelist!'. Configure with the --enable-debug-freelist option to enable the gc-set-debug-check-freelist! primitive, and then use: (gc-set-debug-check-freelist! #t) # turn on checking of the freelist (gc-set-debug-check-freelist! #f) # turn off checking Checking of the freelist forces a traversal of the freelist and a garbage collection before each allocation of a cell. This can slow down the interpreter dramatically, so the setter should be used to turn on this extra processing only when necessary. --enable-debug-malloc --- Enable malloc debugging. Include code for debugging of calls to scm_malloc, scm_realloc, etc. It records the number of allocated objects of each kind. This is useful when searching for memory leaks. A Guile compiled with this option provides the primitive `malloc-stats' which returns an alist with pairs of kind and the number of objects of that kind. --enable-guile-debug --- Include internal debugging functions --disable-posix --- omit posix interfaces --disable-networking --- omit networking interfaces --disable-regex --- omit regular expression interfaces Cross building Guile ===================================================== As of Guile 2.0.x, the build process produces a library, libguile-2.0, along with Guile "object files" containing bytecode to be interpreted by Guile's virtual machine. The bytecode format depends on the endianness and word size of the host CPU. Thus, when cross building Guile, you first need to configure, build and install it for your build host. Then, you may configure Guile for cross building: ./configure --host=i686-pc-cygwin --disable-shared A C compiler for the build system is required. If that doesn't suit it can be specified with the CC_FOR_BUILD variable in the usual way, for instance: ./configure --host=m68k-unknown-linux-gnu CC_FOR_BUILD=/my/local/gcc Guile for the build system can be specified similarly with the GUILE_FOR_BUILD variable, which defaults to whatever `guile' executable is found in $PATH. It must have the exact same version has the Guile that you intend to cross-build. Using Guile Without Installing It ========================================= The "meta/" subdirectory of the Guile sources contains a script called "guile" that can be used to run the Guile that has just been built. Note that this is not the same "guile" as the one that is installed; this "guile" is a wrapper script that sets up the environment appropriately, then invokes the Guile binary. You may also build external packages against an uninstalled Guile build tree. The "uninstalled-env" script in the "meta/" subdirectory will set up an environment with a path including "meta/", a modified dynamic linker path, a modified PKG_CONFIG_PATH, etc. For example, you can enter this environment via invoking meta/uninstalled-env bash Within that shell, other packages should be able to build against uninstalled Guile. Installing SLIB =========================================================== In order to use SLIB from Guile you basically only need to put the `slib' directory _in_ one of the directories on Guile's load path. The standard installation is: 1. Obtain slib from http://www-swiss.ai.mit.edu/~jaffer/SLIB.html 2. Put it in Guile's data directory, that is the directory printed when you type guile-config info pkgdatadir at the shell prompt. This is normally `/usr/local/share/guile', so the directory will normally have full path `/usr/local/share/guile/slib'. 3. Start guile as a user with write access to the data directory and type (use-modules (ice-9 slib)) at the Guile prompt. This will generate the slibcat catalog next to the slib directory. SLIB's `require' is provided by the Guile module (ice-9 slib). Example: (use-modules (ice-9 slib)) (require 'primes) (prime? 7) Guile Documentation ================================================== The Guile Reference Manual (guile.info) is the primary documentation for Guile. A copy of the R5RS Scheme specification is included too (r5rs.info). Info format versions of this documentation are installed as part of the normal build process. The texinfo sources are under the doc directory, and other formats like Postscript, PDF, DVI or HTML can be generated from them with Tex and Texinfo tools. The doc directory also includes an example-smob subdirectory which has the example code from the "Defining New Types (Smobs)" chapter of the reference manual. The Guile WWW page is at http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/guile.html It contains a link to the Guile FAQ. About This Distribution ============================================== Interesting files include: - LICENSE, which contains the exact terms of the Guile license. - COPYING.LESSER, which contains the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License. - COPYING, which contains the terms of the GNU General Public License. - INSTALL, which contains general instructions for building/installing Guile. - NEWS, which describes user-visible changes since the last release of Guile. Files are usually installed according to the prefix specified to configure, /usr/local by default. Building and installing gives you: Executables, in ${prefix}/bin: guile --- a stand-alone interpreter for Guile. With no arguments, this is a simple interactive Scheme interpreter. It can also be used as an interpreter for script files; see the NEWS file for details. guile-config --- a Guile script which provides the information necessary to link your programs against the Guile library. guile-snarf --- a script to parse declarations in your C code for Scheme-visible C functions, Scheme objects to be used by C code, etc. Libraries, in ${prefix}/lib. Depending on the platform and options given to configure, you may get shared libraries in addition to or instead of these static libraries: libguile.a --- an object library containing the Guile interpreter, You can use Guile in your own programs by linking against this. libguilereadline.a --- an object library containing glue code for the GNU readline library. libguile-srfi-*.a --- various SRFI support libraries Header files, in ${prefix}/include: libguile.h, guile/gh.h, libguile/*.h --- for libguile. guile-readline/readline.h --- for guile-readline. Support files, in ${prefix}/share/guile/<version>: ice-9/* --- run-time support for Guile: the module system, read-eval-print loop, some R4RS code and other infrastructure. oop/* --- the Guile Object-Oriented Programming System (GOOPS) scripts/* --- executable modules, i.e., scheme programs that can be both called as an executable from the shell, and loaded and used as a module from scheme code. See scripts/README for more info. srfi/* --- SRFI support modules. See srfi/README for more info. Automake macros, in ${prefix}/share/aclocal: guile.m4 Documentation in Info format, in ${prefix}/info: guile --- Guile reference manual. guile-tut --- Guile tutorial. GOOPS --- GOOPS reference manual. r5rs --- Revised(5) Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme. The Guile source tree is laid out as follows: libguile: The Guile Scheme interpreter --- both the object library for you to link with your programs, and the executable you can run. ice-9: Guile's module system, initialization code, and other infrastructure. guile-config: Source for the guile-config script. guile-readline: The glue code for using GNU readline with Guile. This will be build when configure can find a recent enough readline library on your system. doc: Documentation (see above). Git Repository Access ================================================ Guile's source code is stored in a Git repository at Savannah. Anyone can access it using `git-clone' from one of the following URLs: git://git.sv.gnu.org/guile.git http://git.sv.gnu.org/r/guile.git Developers with a Savannah SSH account can also access it from: ssh://git.sv.gnu.org/srv/git/guile.git The repository can also be browsed on-line at the following address: http://git.sv.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=guile.git For more information on Git, please see: http://git.or.cz/ Please send problem reports to <[email protected]>.
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