1995-10-13 23:34:21 -04:00
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-*- Mode: Indented-text; -*-
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Here are some remarks to complement what's in the INSTALL file.
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-----
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When running "make", don't worry if the ".notify" target fails. Its
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only purpose is to send an email message to
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1999-08-10 14:18:00 -04:00
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scheme-48-notifications@zurich.ai.mit.edu, so that we can get a
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1995-10-13 23:34:21 -04:00
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rough idea of how much Scheme 48 is being used and by whom. We
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promise not to use your name or email address for any commercial
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purpose. If you don't want us to know, just do "make -t .notify"
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first.
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-----
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Customizing the installation
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1. If you don't believe in configure scripts, or don't have a
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/bin/sh that can handle the configure script, you can make
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sysdep.h and Makefile manually from sysdep.h.in and Makefile.in.
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The technique is fairly obvious. For Makefile, just give
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reasonable values for all of the variables at the top that are
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defined as "foo = @foo@", e.g. srcdir=., CC=cc, LIBS=-lm,
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INSTALL=cp, etc. For sysdep.h, read the comments. If your OS
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is Posix compliant and you don't care whether char-ready? works,
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you can copy sysdep.h.in to sysdep.h unmodified and everything
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should work.
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2. If you definitely won't be installing Scheme 48, you should set
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libdir to the distribution directory (e.g. "make libdir=`pwd`").
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This will make the ,open and ,load-package commands work for the
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library packages defined in more-packages.scm.
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3. If desired, customize the contents of the development environment
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heap image by editing the definitions of USUAL-COMMANDS and/or
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USUAL-FEATURES in more-packages.scm; see below.
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4. If you're using a DEC MIPS, and want to use the foreign function
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interface, specify LDFLAGS=-N (with e.g. "make LDFLAGS=-N").
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5. To make sure that char-ready? works, do the following:
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- Configure Makefile and sysdep.h as above
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- make vm
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- Run the VM on the initial image, and try these two
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(char-ready?) tests: (eof to exit)
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./scheme48vm -i initial.image
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(begin (read-char) (char-ready?))
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(char-ready?)0
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If either of the two tests gives a warning, then char-ready?
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doesn't work, and you'll need to go in and hack file unix.c if
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you want it to. (Char-ready? isn't essential in order for the
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Scheme system itself to generally work.) See the comments for
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function char_ready_p().
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-----
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Customizing scheme48.image
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By default, the image consists of a core Scheme system (Revised^4
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Scheme plus a very minimal read-eval-print loop) together with a
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standard set of "options" (command processor, debugging commands,
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inspector, disassembler, generic arithmetic). The set of options is
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controlled by the definitions of USUAL-COMMANDS and USUAL-FEATURES in
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more-packages.scm. If you make the (open ...) clause empty, then
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"make scheme48.image" will create a Scheme system without any extras
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(such as error recovery), and the image will be smaller. The files
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are listed in approximate order of decreasing desirability; you'll
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probably want at least these:
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package-commands, build
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- necessary for the scheme48.image script to work
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debuginfo, disclosers
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- necessary if you want error messages to be at all helpful
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debugging
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- defines important debugging commands such as ,preview and ,trace
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After editing the definition of usual-features, simply
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make scheme48.image
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to rebuild the image.
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-----
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Deeper changes to the system -- for example, edits to most of the
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files in the rts/ directory -- will require using the static linker to
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make a new initial.image. After you have a working scheme48.image
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(perhaps a previous version of Scheme 48), you can create a linker
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image with
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make linker
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after which you can say
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make image
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to get the linker to build a new initial.image and initial.debug.
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scheme48.image will then be built from those.
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You might think that "make scheme48.image" ought to do this, but the
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circular dependencies
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scheme48.image on initial.image
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initial.image on link/linker.image
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link/linker.image on scheme48.image
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needs to be broken somewhere, or else make will (justifiably) barf. I
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chose to break the cycle by making scheme48.image not depend on
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initial.image, since this is most robust for installation purposes.
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-----
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Editor support
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We recommend interacting with the Scheme 48 command processor using the
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emacs/scheme interface written by Olin Shivers at CMU. Copies of the
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relevant .el files, together with a "cmuscheme48.el", are in the
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emacs/ subdirectory of the release. Usage information is in
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doc/user-guide.txt.
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You will probably want to byte-compile the .el files to get .elc
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files. Use M-x byte-compile-file to do this.
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-----
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Performance
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If you don't have a C compiler that optimizes as well as gcc does,
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then performance may suffer. Take a look at the automatically
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generated code in scheme48vm.c to find out why. With a good register
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allocator, all those variables (including some of the virtual
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machine's virtual registers) get allocated to hardware registers, and
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it really flies. Without one, performance can be pretty bad.
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The configure script automatically sets the Makefile variable CFLAGS
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to -O2 -g if gcc is available, or to -O if it isn't. This can be
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overriden by specifying a different CFLAGS, e.g. "make CFLAGS=-g" for
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no optimization.
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Even if you do have a good compiler, you should be able to improve
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overall performance even more, maybe about 6-10%, by removing the
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range check from the interpreter's instruction dispatch. To do this,
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use the -S flag to get assembly code for scheme48vm.c, then find the
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instructions in scheme48vm.s corresponding to the big dispatch in
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Tinterpret():
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START: {
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b_111X = *((unsigned char*) RScode_pointerS);
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RScode_pointerS = (1 + RScode_pointerS);
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switch (b_111X) {
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... }
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There will be one or two comparison instructions to see whether b_113X
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is in range; just remove them. For the 68000 I use a "sed" script
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/cmpl #137,d0/ N
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/cmpl #137,d0\n jhi L/ d
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but of course the constant will probably have to change when a new
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release comes along.
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See the user's guide for information on the ,bench command, which
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makes programs run faster.
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-----
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filenames.make is "include"d by the Makefile, but is automatically
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generated from the module dependencies laid out in the various
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configuration files (*-packages.scm). If you edit any of these .scm
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files, you may want to do a "make filenames.make" before you do any
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further "make"s in order to update the depedencies. This step isn't
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necessary if you're using Gnu make, because Gnu make will make
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included files automatically.
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