772 lines
31 KiB
TeX
772 lines
31 KiB
TeX
%&latex -*- latex -*-
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\chapter{Running scsh}
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\label{chapt:running}
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Scsh is currently implemented on top of {\scm}, a freely-available
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{\Scheme} implementation written by Jonathan Rees and Richard Kelsey.
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{\scm} uses a byte-code interpreter for good code density, portability
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and medium efficiency. It is {\R4RS}.
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It also has a module system designed by Jonathan Rees.
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Scsh's design is not {\scm} specific, although the current implementation
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is necessarily so.
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Scsh is intended to be implementable in other {\Scheme} implementations.
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The {\scm} virtual machine that scsh uses is a specially modified version;
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standard {\scm} virtual machines cannot be used with the scsh heap image.
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There are several different ways to invoke scsh.
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You can run it as an interactive Scheme system, with a standard
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read-eval-print interaction loop.
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Scsh can also be invoked as the interpreter for a shell script by putting
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a ``\verb|#!/usr/local/bin/scsh -s|'' line at the top of the shell script.
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Descending a level, it is also possible to invoke the underlying virtual
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machine byte-code interpreter directly on dumped heap images.
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Scsh programs can be pre-compiled to byte-codes and dumped as raw,
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binary heap images.
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Writing heap images strips out unused portions of the scsh runtime
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(such as the compiler, the debugger, and other complex subsystems),
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reducing memory demands and saving loading and compilation times.
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The heap image format allows for an initial \verb|#!/usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm| trigger
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on the first line of the image, making heap images directly executable as
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another kind of shell script.
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Finally, scsh's static linker system allows dumped heap images to be compiled
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to a raw Unix a.out(5) format, which can be linked into the text section
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of the vm binary.
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This produces a true Unix executable binary file.
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Since the byte codes comprising the program are in the file's text section,
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they are not traced or copied by the garbage collector, do not occupy space
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in the vm's heap, and do not need to be loaded and linked at startup time.
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This reduces the program's startup time, memory requirements,
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and paging overhead.
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This chapter will cover these various ways of invoking scsh programs.
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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\section{Scsh command-line switches}
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When the scsh top-level starts up, it scans the command line
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for switches that control its behaviour.
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These arguments are removed from the command line;
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the remaining arguments can be accessed as the value of
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the scsh variable \ex{command-line-arguments}.
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\subsection{Scripts and programs}
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The scsh command-line switches provide sophisticated support for
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the authors of shell scripts and programs;
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they also allow the programmer to write programs
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that use the {\scm} module system.
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There is a difference between a \emph{script}, which performs its action
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\emph{as it is loaded}, and a \emph{program}, which is loaded/linked,
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and then performs its action by having control transferred to an entry point
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(\eg, the \ex{main()} function in C programs) that was defined by the
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load/link operation.
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A \emph{script}, by the above definition, cannot be compiled by the simple
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mechanism of loading it into a scsh process and dumping out a heap image---it
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executes as it loads. It does not have a top-level \ex{main()}-type entry
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point.
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It is more flexible and useful to implement a system
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as a program than as a script.
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Programs can be compiled straightforwardly;
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they can also export procedural interfaces for use by other Scheme packages.
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However, scsh supports both the script and the program style of programming.
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\subsection{Inserting interpreter triggers into scsh programs}
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When Unix tries to execute an executable file whose first 16 bits are
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the character pair ``\ex{\#!}'', it treats the file not as machine-code
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to be directly executed by the native processor, but as source code to
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be executed by some interpreter.
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The interpreter to use is specified immediately after the ``\ex{\#!}''
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sequence on the first line of the source file
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(along with one optional initial argument).
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The kernel reads in the name of the interpreter, and executes that instead.
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The interpreter is passed the source filename as its first argument, with
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the original arguments following.
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Consult the Unix man page for the \ex{exec} system call for more information.
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Scsh allows Scheme programs to have these triggers placed on
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their first line.
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Scsh treats the character sequence ``\ex{\#!}'' as a block-comment sequence,%
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\footnote{Why a block-comment instead of an end-of-line delimited comment?
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See the section on meta-args.}
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and skips all following characters until it reads the comment-terminating
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sequence newline/exclamation-point/sharp-sign/newline (\ie, the
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sequence ``\ex{!\#}'' occurring on its own line).
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In this way, the programmer can arrange for an initial
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\begin{code}
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#!/usr/local/bin/scsh -s
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!#\end{code}
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header appearing in a Scheme program
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to be ignored when the program is loaded into scsh.
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\subsection{Module system}
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Scsh uses the {\scm} module system, which defines
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\emph{packages}, \emph{structures}, and \emph{interfaces}.
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%
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\begin{description}
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\item [Package] A package is an environment---that is, a set of
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variable/value bindings.
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You can evaluate Scheme forms inside a package, or load a file into a package.
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Packages export sets of bindings; these sets are called \emph{structures}.
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\item [Structure] A structure is a named view on a package---a set of
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bindings. Other packages can \emph{open} the structure, importing its
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bindings into their environment. Packages can provide more than one
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structure, revealing different portions of the package's environment.
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\item [Interface] An interface is the ``type'' of a structure. An
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interface is the set of names exported by a structure. These names
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can also be marked with other static information (\eg, advisory type
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declarations, or syntax information).
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\end{description}
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More information on the the {\scm} module system can be found in the
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file \ex{module.ps} in the \ex{doc} directory of the {\scm} and scsh releases.
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Programming Scheme with a module system is different from programming
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in older Scheme implementations,
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and the associated development problems are consequently different.
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In Schemes that lack modular abstraction mechanisms,
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everything is accessible; the major problem is preventing name-space conflicts.
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In Scheme 48, name-space conflicts vanish; the major problem is that not
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all bindings are accessible from every place.
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It takes a little extra work to specify what packages export which values.
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It may take you a little while to get used to the new style of program
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development.
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Although scsh can be used without referring to the module system at
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all, we recommend taking the time to learn and use it.
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The effort will pay off in the construction of modular, factorable programs.
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\subsection{Switches}
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\label{sec:scsh-switches}
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The scsh top-level takes command-line switches in the following format:
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%
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\codex{scsh [\var{meta-arg}] [\vari{switch}i {\ldots}]
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[\var{end-option} \vari{arg}1 {\ldots} \vari{arg}n]}
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where
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\begin{inset}
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\begin{flushleft}
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\begin{tabular}{ll@{\qquad}l}
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\var{meta-arg:} & \verb|\| \var{script-file-name} \\
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\\
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\var{switch:} & \ex{-e} \var{entry-point}
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& Specify top-level entry-point. \\
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& \ex{-o} \var{structure}
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& Open structure in current package. \\
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& \ex{-m} \var{structure}
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& Switch to package. \\
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& \ex{-n} \var{new-package}
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& Switch to new package. \\ \\
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& \ex{-lm} \var{module-file-name}
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& Load module into config package. \\
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& \ex{-l} \var{file-name}
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& Load file into current package. \\
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& \ex{-dm} & Do script module. \\
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& \ex{-ds} & Do script. \\
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\\
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\var{end-option:} & \ex{-s} \var{script} \\
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& \ex{-c} \var{exp} \\
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& \ex{--}
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\end{tabular}
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\end{flushleft}
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\end{inset}
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%
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These command-line switches
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essentially provide a little linker language for linking a shell script or a
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program together with {\scm} modules.
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The command-line processor serially opens structures and loads code into a
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given package.
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Switches that side-effect a package operate on a particular ``current''
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package; there are switches to change this package.
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(These switches provide functionality equivalent to the interactive
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\ex{,open} \ex{,load} \ex{,in} and \ex{,new} commands.)
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Except where indicated, switches specify actions that are executed in a
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left-to-right order.
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The initial current package is the user package, which is completely
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empty and opens (imports the bindings of) the R4RS and scsh structures.
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If the Scheme process is started up in an interactive mode, then the current
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package in force at the end of switch scanning is the one inside which
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the interactive read-eval-print loop is started.
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The command-line switch processor works in two passes:
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it first parses the switches, building a list of actions to perform,
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then the actions are performed serially.
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The switch list is terminated by one of the \var{end-option} switches.
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The \vari{arg}{i} arguments occurring after an end-option switch are
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passed to the scsh program as the value of \ex{command-line-arguments}
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and the tail of the list returned by \ex{(command-line)}.
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That is, an \var{end-option} switch separates switches that control
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the scsh ``machine'' from the actual arguments being passed to the scsh
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program that runs on that machine.
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The following switches and end options are defined:
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\begin{itemize}
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\def\Item#1{\item{\ex{#1}}\\}
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\Item{-o \var{struct}}
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Open the structure in the current package.
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\Item{-n \var{package}}
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Make and enter a new package. The package has an associated structure
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named \var{package} with an empty export list.
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If \var{package} is the string ``\ex{\#f}'',
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the new package is anonmyous, with no associated named structure.
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The new package initially opens no other structures,
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not even the R4RS bindings. You must follow a ``\ex{-n foo}''
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switch with ``\ex{-o scheme}'' to access the standard identifiers such
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as \ex{car} and \ex{define}.
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\Item{-m \var{struct}}
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Change the current package to the package underlying
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structure \var{struct}.
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(The \ex{-m} stands for ``module.'')
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\Item{-lm \var{module-file-name}}
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Load the specified file into scsh's config package --- the file
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must contain source written in the Scheme 48 module language
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(``load module''). Does not alter the current package.
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\Item{-l \var{file-name}}
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Load the specified file into the current package.
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\Item{-c \var{exp}}
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Evaluate expression \var{exp} in the current package and exit.
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This is called \ex{-c} after a common shell convention (see sh and csh).
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The expression is evaluated in the the current package (and hence is
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affected by \ex{-m}'s and \ex{-n}'s.)
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When the scsh top-level constructs the scsh command-line in this case,
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it takes \ex{"scsh"} to be the program name.
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This switch terminates argument scanning; following args become
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the tail of the command-line list.
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\Item{-e \var{entry-point}}
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Specify an entry point for a program. The \var{entry-point} is
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a variable that is taken from the current package in force at the end
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of switch evaluation. The entry point does not have to be exported
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by the package in a structure; it can be internal to the package.
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The top level passes control to the entry point by applying it to
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the command-line list (so programs executing in private
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packages can reference their command-line arguments without opening
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the \ex{scsh} package to access the \ex{(command-line)} procedure).
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Note that, like the list returned by the \ex{(command-line)} procedure,
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the list passed to the entry point includes the name
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of the program being executed (as the first element of the list),
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not just the arguments to the program.
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A \ex{-e} switch can occur anywhere in the switch list, but it is the
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\emph{last} action performed by switch scanning if it occurs.
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(We violate ordering here as the shell-script \ex{\#!} mechanism
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prevents you from putting the \emph{-e} switch last, where it belongs.)
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\Item{-s \var{script}}
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Specify a file to load.
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A \ex{-ds} (do-script) or \ex{-dm} (do-module) switch occurring earlier in
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the switch list gives the place where the script should be loaded. If
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there is no \ex{-ds} or \ex{-dm} switch, then the script is loaded at the
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end of switch scanning, into the module that is current at the end of
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switch scanning.
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We use the \ex{-ds} switch to violate left-to-right switch execution order
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as the \ex{-s} switch is \emph{required} to be last
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(because of the \ex{\#!} machinery),
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independent of when/where in the switch-processing order
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it should be loaded.
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When the scsh top-level constructs the scsh command-line in this case,
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it takes \var{script} to be the program name.
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This switch terminates switch parsing; following args are ignored
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by the switch-scanner and are passed through to the program as
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the tail of the command-line list.
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\Item{--}
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Terminate argument scanning and start up scsh in interactive mode.
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If the argument list just runs out, without either a terminating
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\ex{-s} or \ex{--} arg, then scsh also starts up in interactive mode,
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with an empty \ex{command-line-arguments} list
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(for example, simply entering \ex{scsh} at a shell prompt with no
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args at all).
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When the scsh top-level constructs the scsh command-line in this case,
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it takes \ex{"scsh"} to be the program name.
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This switch terminates switch parsing; following args are ignored
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by the switch-scanner and are passed through to the program as
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the tail of the command-line list.
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\Item{-ds}
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Specify when to load the script (``do-script''). If this switch occurs,
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the switch list \emph{must} be terminated by a \ex{-s \var{script}}
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switch. The script is loaded into the package that is current at the
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\ex{-ds} switch.
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\Item{-dm}
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As above, but the current module is ignored. The script is loaded into the
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\ex{config} package (``do-module''), and hence must be written in the
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{\scm} module language.
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This switch doesn't affect the current module---after executing this
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switch, the current module is the same as as it was before.
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This switch is provided to make it easy to write shell scripts in the
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{\scm} module language.
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\end{itemize}
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\subsection{The meta argument}
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\label{sec:meta-arg}
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The scsh switch parser takes a special command-line switch,
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a single backslash called the ``meta-argument,'' which is useful for
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shell scripts.
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If the initial command-line argument is a ``\verb|\|''
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argument, followed by a filename argument \var{fname}, scsh will open the file
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\var{fname} and read more arguments from the second line of this file.
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This list of arguments will then replace the ``\verb|\|'' argument---\ie,
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the new arguments are inserted in front of \var{fname},
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and the argument parser resumes argument scanning.
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This is used to overcome a limitation of the \ex{\#!} feature:
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the \ex{\#!} line can only specify a single argument after the interpreter.
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For example, we might hope the following scsh script, \ex{ekko},
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would implement a simple-minded version of the Unix \ex{echo} program:
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\begin{code}
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#!/usr/local/bin/scsh -e main -s
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!#
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(define (main args)
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(map (\l{arg} (display arg) (display " "))
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(cdr args))
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(newline))\end{code}
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%
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The idea would be that the command
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\codex{ekko Hi there.}
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would by expanded by the \ex{exec(2)} kernel call into
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%
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\begin{code}
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/usr/local/bin/scsh -e main -s ekko Hi there.\end{code}
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%
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In theory, this would cause scsh to start up, load in file \ex{ekko},
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call the entry point on the command-line list
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\codex{(main '("ekko" "Hi" "there."))}
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and exit.
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Unfortunately, the {\Unix} \ex{exec(2)} syscall's support for scripts is
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not very general or well-designed.
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It will not handle multiple arguments;
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the \ex{\#!} line is usually required to contain no more than 32 characters;
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it is not recursive.
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If these restrictions are violated, most Unix systems will not provide accurate
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error reporting, but either fail silently, or simply incorrectly implement
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the desired functionality.
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These are the facts of Unix life.
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In the \ex{ekko} example above, our \ex{\#!} trigger line has three
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arguments (``\ex{-e}'', ``\ex{main}'', and ``\ex{-s}''), so it will not
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work.
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The meta-argument is how we work around this problem.
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We must instead invoke the scsh interpreter with the single \cd{\\} argument,
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and put the rest of the arguments on line two of the program.
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Here's the correct program:
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%
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\begin{code}
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#!/usr/local/bin/scsh \\
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-e main -s
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!#
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(define (main args)
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(map (\l{arg} (display arg) (display " "))
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(cdr args))
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(newline))\end{code}
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%
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Now, the invocation starts as
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\codex{ekko Hi there.}
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and is expanded by exec(2) into
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\begin{code}
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/usr/local/bin/scsh \\ ekko Hi there.\end{code}
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When scsh starts up, it expands the ``\cd{\\}'' argument into the arguments
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read from line two of \ex{ekko}, producing this argument list:
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\begin{code}\cddollar
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\underline{-e main -s ekko} Hi there.
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$\uparrow$
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{\rm{}Expanded from} \cd{\\} ekko\end{code}
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%
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With this argument list, processing proceeds as we intended.
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\subsubsection{Secondary argument syntax}
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Scsh uses a very simple grammar to encode the extra arguments on
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the second line of the scsh script.
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The only special characters are space, tab, newline, and backslash.
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\begin{itemize}
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\item Each space character terminates an argument.
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This means that two spaces in a row introduce an empty-string argument.
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\item The tab character is not permitted
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(unless you quote it with the backslash character described below).
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This is to prevent the insidious bug where you believe you have
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six space characters, but you really have a tab character,
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and \emph{vice-versa}.
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\item The newline character terminates the sequence of arguments,
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and will also terminate a final non-empty argument.
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(However, a newline following a space does not introduce a final
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empty-string argument; it only terminates the argument list.)
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\item The backslash character is the escape character.
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It escapes backslash, space, tab, and newline, turning off their
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special functions, and allowing them to be included in arguments.
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The {\Ansi} C escape sequences, such as \verb|\n| and \verb|\t| are
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also supported; these also produce argument-constituents---\verb|\n|
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doesn't act like a terminating newline.
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The escape sequence \verb|\|\emph{nnn} for \emph{exactly} three
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octal digits reads as the character whose {\Ascii} code is \emph{nnn}.
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It is an error if backslash is followed by just one or two octal digits:
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\verb|\3Q| is an error.
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Octal escapes are always constituent chars.
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Backslash followed by other chars is not allowed
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(so we can extend the escape-code space later if we like).
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\end{itemize}
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You have to construct these line-two argument lines carefully.
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In particular, beware of trailing spaces at the end of the line---they'll
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give you extra trailing empty-string arguments.
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Here's an example:
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%
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\begin{inset}
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\begin{verbatim}
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#!/bin/interpreter \
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foo bar quux\ yow\end{verbatim}
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\end{inset}
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%
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would produce the arguments
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%
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\codex{("foo" "bar" "" "quux yow")}
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\subsection{Examples}
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\def\Item#1{\item{\ex{#1}}\\}
|
|
\def\progItem#1{\item{Program \ex{#1}}\\}
|
|
|
|
\Item{scsh -dm -m myprog -e top -s myprog.scm}
|
|
Load \ex{myprog.scm} into the \ex{config} package, then shift to the
|
|
\ex{myprog} package and call \ex{(top '("myprog.scm"))}, then exit.
|
|
This sort of invocation is typically used in \ex{\#!} script lines
|
|
(see below).
|
|
|
|
\Item{scsh -c '(display "Hello, world.")'}
|
|
A simple program.
|
|
|
|
\Item{scsh -o bigscheme}
|
|
Start up interactively in the user package after opening
|
|
structure \ex{bigscheme}.
|
|
|
|
\Item{scsh -o bigscheme -- Three args passed}
|
|
Start up interactively in the user package after opening \ex{bigscheme}.
|
|
The \ex{command-line-args} variable in the scsh package is bound to the
|
|
list \ex{("Three" "args" "passed")}, and the \ex{(command-line)}
|
|
procedure returns the list \ex{("scsh" "Three" "args" "passed")}.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\progItem{ekko}
|
|
This shell script, called \ex{ekko}, implements a version of
|
|
the Unix \ex{echo} program:
|
|
\begin{code}
|
|
#!/usr/local/bin/scsh -s
|
|
!#
|
|
(for-each (\l{arg} (display arg) (display " "))
|
|
command-line-args)\end{code}
|
|
|
|
Note this short program is an example of a \emph{script}---it
|
|
executes as it loads.
|
|
The Unix rule for executing \ex{\#!} shell scripts causes
|
|
\codex{ekko Hello, world.}
|
|
to expand as
|
|
\codex{/usr/local/bin/scsh -s ekko Hello, world.}
|
|
|
|
\progItem{ekko}
|
|
This is the same program, \emph{not} as a script.
|
|
Writing it this way makes it possible to compile the program
|
|
(and then, for instance, dump it out as a heap image).
|
|
%
|
|
\begin{code}
|
|
#!/usr/local/bin/scsh \\
|
|
-e top -s
|
|
!#
|
|
(define (top args)
|
|
(for-each (\l{arg} (display arg) (display " "))
|
|
(cdr args)))\end{code}
|
|
%
|
|
The \ex{exec(2)} expansion of the \ex{\#!} line together with
|
|
the scsh expansion of the ``\verb|\ ekko|'' meta-argument
|
|
(see section~\ref{sec:meta-arg}) gives the following command-line expansion:
|
|
\begin{code}
|
|
ekko Hello, world.
|
|
{\evalto} /usr/local/bin/scsh \\ ekko Hello, world.
|
|
{\evalto} /usr/local/bin/scsh -e top -s ekko Hello, world.\end{code}
|
|
|
|
\progItem{sort}
|
|
This is a program to replace the Unix \ex{sort} utility---sorting lines
|
|
read from stdin, and printing the results on stdout.
|
|
Note that the source code defines a general sorting package,
|
|
which is useful (1) as a Scheme module exporting sort procedures
|
|
to other Scheme code, and (2) as a standalone program invoked from
|
|
the \ex{top} procedure.
|
|
\begin{code}
|
|
#!/usr/local/bin/scsh \\
|
|
-dm -m sort-toplevel -e top -s
|
|
!#
|
|
|
|
;;; This is a sorting module. TOP procedure exports
|
|
;;; the functionality as a Unix program akin to sort(1).
|
|
(define-structures ((sort-struct (export sort-list
|
|
sort-vector!))
|
|
(sort-toplevel (export top)))
|
|
(open scheme)
|
|
|
|
(begin (define (sort-list elts <=) {\ldots})
|
|
(define (sort-vec! vec <=) {\ldots})
|
|
|
|
;; Parse the command line and
|
|
;; sort stdin to stdout.
|
|
(define (top args)
|
|
{\ldots})))\end{code}
|
|
|
|
The expansion below shows how the command-line scanner
|
|
(1) loads the config file \ex{sort} (written in the {\scm} module language),
|
|
(2) switches to the package underlying the \ex{sort-toplevel} structure,
|
|
(3) calls \ex{(top '("sort" "foo" "bar"))} in the package, and finally
|
|
(4) exits.
|
|
%
|
|
{\small
|
|
\begin{centercode}
|
|
sort foo bar
|
|
{\evalto} /usr/local/bin/scsh \\ sort foo bar
|
|
{\evalto} /usr/local/bin/scsh -dm -m sort-toplevel -e top -s sort foo bar\end{centercode}}
|
|
|
|
An alternate method would have used a \ex{-n -o sort-toplevel}
|
|
sequence of switches to specify a top-level package.
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
Note that the sort example can be compiled into a Unix program by
|
|
loading the file into an scsh process, and dumping a heap with top-level
|
|
\ex{top}. Even if we don't want to export the sort's functionality as a
|
|
subroutine library, it is still useful to write the sort program with the
|
|
module language. The command line design allows us to run this program as
|
|
either an interpreted script (given the \ex{\#!} args in the header) or as a
|
|
compiled heap image.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Process exit values}
|
|
Scsh ignores the value produced by its top-level computation when determining
|
|
its exit status code.
|
|
If the top-level computation completed with no errors,
|
|
scsh dies with exit code 0.
|
|
For example, a scsh process whose top-level is specified by a \ex{-c \var{exp}}
|
|
or a \ex{-e \var{entry}} entry point ignores the value produced
|
|
by evaluating \var{exp} and calling \var{entry}, respectively.
|
|
If these computations terminate with no errors, the scsh process
|
|
exits with an exit code of 0.
|
|
|
|
To return a specific exit status, use the \ex{exit} procedure explicitly, \eg,
|
|
\codex{scsh -c "(exit (run (| (fmt) (mail shivers@lcs.mit.edu))))"}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{The scsh virtual machine}
|
|
To run the {\scm} implementation of scsh, you run a specially modified
|
|
copy of the {\scm} virtual machine with a scsh heap image.
|
|
The scsh binary is actually nothing but a small cover program that invokes the
|
|
byte-code interpreter on the scsh heap image for you.
|
|
This allows you to simply start up an interactive scsh from a command
|
|
line, as well as write shell scripts that begin with the simple trigger
|
|
\codex{\#!/usr/local/bin/scsh -s}
|
|
|
|
You can also directly execute the virtual machine,
|
|
which takes its own set of command-line switches..
|
|
For example,
|
|
this command starts the vm up with a 1Mword heap (split into two semispaces):
|
|
\codex{scshvm -o scshvm -h 1000000 -i scsh.image arg1 arg2 \ldots}
|
|
The vm peels off initial vm arguments
|
|
up to the \ex{-i} heap image argument, which terminates vm argument parsing.
|
|
The rest of the arguments are passed off to the scsh top-level.
|
|
Scsh's top-level removes scsh switches, as discussed in the previous section;
|
|
the rest show up as the value of \ex{command-line-arguments}.
|
|
|
|
Directly executing the vm can be useful to specify non-standard switches, or
|
|
invoke the virtual machine on special heap images, which can contain
|
|
pre-compiled scsh programs with their own top-level procedures.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{VM arguments}
|
|
\label{sec:vm-args}
|
|
|
|
The vm takes arguments in the following form:
|
|
\codex{scshvm [\var{meta-arg}] [\var{vm-options}\+] [\var{end-option} \var{scheme-args}]}
|
|
where
|
|
\begin{inset}
|
|
\begin{tabular}{ll}
|
|
\var{meta-arg:} & \verb|\ |\var{filename} \\
|
|
\\
|
|
\var{vm-option}: & \ex{-h }\var{heap-size-in-words} \\
|
|
& \ex{-s }\var{stack-size-in-words} \\
|
|
& \ex{-o }\var{object-file-name} \\
|
|
\\
|
|
\var{end-option:} & \ex{-i }\var{image-file-name} \\
|
|
& \ex{--}
|
|
\end{tabular}
|
|
\end{inset}
|
|
|
|
The vm's meta-switch ``\verb|\ |\var{filename}'' is handled the same
|
|
as scsh's meta-switch, and serves the same purpose.
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{VM options}
|
|
The \ex{-o \var{object-file-name}} switch tells the vm where to find
|
|
relocation information for its foreign-function calls.
|
|
Scsh will use a pre-compiled default if it is not specified.
|
|
Scsh \emph{must} have this information to run,
|
|
since scsh's syscall interfaces are done with foreign-function calls.
|
|
|
|
The \ex{-h} and \ex{-s} options tell the vm how much space to allocate
|
|
for the heap and stack.
|
|
The heap size value is the total number of words allocated for the heap;
|
|
this space is then split into two semi-spaces for {\scm}'s stop-and-copy
|
|
collector.
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{End options}
|
|
End options terminate argument parsing.
|
|
The \ex{-i} switch is followed by the name of a heap image for the
|
|
vm to execute.
|
|
The \var{image-file-name} string is also taken to be the name of the program
|
|
being executed by the VM; this name becomes the head of the argument
|
|
list passed to the heap image's top-level entry point.
|
|
The tail of the argument list is constructed from all following arguments.
|
|
|
|
The \ex{--} switch terminates argument parsing without giving
|
|
a specific heap image; the vm will start up using a default
|
|
heap (whose location is compiled into the vm).
|
|
All the following arguments comprise the tail of the list passed off to
|
|
the heap image's top-level procedure.
|
|
|
|
Notice that you are not allowed to pass arguments to the heap image's
|
|
top-level procedure (\eg, scsh) without delimiting them with \ex{-i}
|
|
or \ex{--} flags.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Inserting interpreter triggers into heap images}
|
|
{\scm}'s heap image format allows for an informational header:
|
|
when the vm loads in a heap image, it ignores all data occurring before
|
|
the first control-L character (\textsc{Ascii} 12).
|
|
This means that you can insert a ``\ex{\#!}'' trigger line into a
|
|
heap image, making it a form of executable ``shell script.''
|
|
Since the vm requires multiple arguments to be given on the command
|
|
line, you must use the meta-switch.
|
|
Here's an example heap-image header:
|
|
\begin{code}
|
|
#!/usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm \\
|
|
-o /usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm -i
|
|
{\ldots} \textnormal{\emph{Your heap image goes here}} \ldots\end{code}
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Inserting a double-level trigger into Scheme programs}
|
|
If you're a nerd, you may enjoy doing a double-level machine shift
|
|
in the trigger line of your Scheme programs with the following magic:
|
|
\begin{code}\small
|
|
#!/usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm \\
|
|
-o /usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm -i /usr/local/lib/scsh/scsh.image -s
|
|
!#
|
|
{\ldots} \textnormal{\emph{Your Scheme program goes here}} \ldots\end{code}
|
|
|
|
\section{Compiling scsh programs}
|
|
Scsh allows you to create a heap image with your own top-level procedure.
|
|
Adding the pair of lines
|
|
\begin{code}
|
|
#!/usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm \\
|
|
-o /usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm -i\end{code}
|
|
to the top of the heap image will turn it into an executable {\Unix} file.
|
|
|
|
You can create heap images with the following two procedures.
|
|
|
|
\defun{dump-scsh-program}{main fname}{\undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This procedure writes out a scsh heap image. When the
|
|
heap image is executed by the {\scm} vm, it will call
|
|
the \var{main} procedure, passing it the vm's argument list.
|
|
When \ex{main} returns an integer value $i$, the vm exits with
|
|
exit status $i$.
|
|
The {\Scheme} vm will parse command-line switches as
|
|
described in section~\ref{sec:vm-args}; remaining arguments
|
|
form the tail of the command-line list that is passed to \ex{main}.
|
|
(The head of the list is the name of the program being executed
|
|
by the vm.)
|
|
Further argument parsing
|
|
(as described for scsh in section~\ref{sec:scsh-switches})
|
|
is not performed.
|
|
|
|
The heap image created by \ex{dump-scsh-program} has unused
|
|
code and data pruned out, so small programs compile to much smaller
|
|
heap images.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{dump-scsh}{fname}{\undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This procedure writes out a heap image with the standard
|
|
scsh top-level.
|
|
When the image is resumed by the vm, it will parse and
|
|
execute scsh command-line switches as described in section
|
|
\ref{sec:scsh-switches}.
|
|
|
|
You can use this procedure to write out custom scsh heap images
|
|
that have specific packages preloaded and start up in specific
|
|
packages.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, {\scm} does not support separate compilation of
|
|
Scheme files or Scheme modules.
|
|
The only way to compile is to load source and then dump out a
|
|
heap image.
|
|
One occasionally hears rumours that this is being addressed
|
|
by the {\scm} development team.
|
|
|
|
\section{Statically linking heap images}
|
|
Brian Carlstrom has written code to process {\scm} heap images
|
|
into \ex{.o} files that can be linked with a virtual machine
|
|
binary to produce a standalone machine-code executable.
|
|
|
|
The source code comes with the current distribution, but it has not been
|
|
integrated into the system or documented in time for this
|
|
release.
|
|
|
|
%Either he integrates it into the system and documents it for release
|
|
%0.4, or his body will soon be occupying a shallow grave behind Tech Square.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Standard file locations}
|
|
Because the scshvm binary is intended to be used for writing shell
|
|
scripts, it is important that the binary be installed in a standard
|
|
place, so that shell scripts can dependably refer to it.
|
|
The standard directory for the scsh tree should be \ex{/usr/local/lib/scsh/}.
|
|
Whenever possible, the vm should be located in
|
|
\codex{/usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm}
|
|
and a scsh heap image should be located in
|
|
\codex{/usr/local/lib/scsh/scsh.image}
|
|
The top-level scsh program should be located in
|
|
\codex{/usr/local/lib/scsh/scsh}
|
|
with a symbolic link to it from
|
|
\codex{/usr/local/bin/scsh}
|
|
|
|
The {\scm} image format allows heap images to have \ex{\#!} triggers,
|
|
so \ex{scsh.image} should have a \ex{\#!} trigger of the following form:
|
|
\begin{code}
|
|
#!/usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm \\
|
|
-o /usr/local/lib/scsh/scshvm -i
|
|
{\ldots} \textnormal{\emph{heap image goes here}} \ldots\end{code}
|
|
|