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$Id: README,v 1.39 2006/08/21 10:52:32 crhodes Exp $ -*- Text -*- |
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The canonical documentation for asdf is in the file asdf.texinfo. |
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The significant overlap between this file and that will one day be |
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resolved by deleting text from this file; in the meantime, please look |
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there before here. |
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asdf: another system definition facility |
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======================================== |
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* Getting the latest version |
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0) Decide which version you want. HEAD is the newest version and |
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usually OK, whereas RELEASE is for cautious people (e.g. who already |
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have systems using asdf that they don't want broken), a slightly older |
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version about which none of the HEAD users have complained. |
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1) Check it out from sourceforge cCLan CVS: |
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1a) cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.cclan.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/cclan login |
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(no password: just press Enter) |
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1a.1) cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.cclan.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/cclan |
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co -r RELEASE asdf |
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or for the bleeding edge, instead |
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1a.2) cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.cclan.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/cclan |
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co -A asdf |
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If you are tracking the bleeding edge, you may want to subscribe to |
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the cclan-commits mailing list (see |
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<URL:http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=28536>) to receive commit |
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messages and diffs whenever changes are made. |
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For more CVS information, look at http://sourceforge.net/cvs/?group_id=28536 |
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* Getting started |
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- The single file asdf.lisp is all you need to use asdf normally. For |
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maximum convenience you want to have it loaded whenever you start your |
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Lisp implementation, by loading it from the startup script, or dumping |
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a custom core, or something. |
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- The variable asdf:*central-registry* is a list of system directory |
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designators. A system directory designator is a form which will be |
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evaluated whenever a system is to be found, and must evaluate to a |
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directory to look in. For example, you might have |
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(*default-pathname-defaults* "/home/me/cl/systems/" |
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"/usr/share/common-lisp/systems/") |
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(When we say "directory" here, we mean "designator for a pathname |
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with a supplied DIRECTORY component") |
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It is possible to customize the system definition file search. |
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That's considered advanced use, and covered later: search forward |
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for *system-definition-search-functions* |
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- To compile and load a system 'foo', you need to (1) ensure that |
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foo.asd is in one of the directories in *central-registry* (a |
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symlink to the real location of foo.asd is preferred), (2) execute |
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``(asdf:operate 'asdf:load-op 'foo)'' |
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$ cd /home/me/cl/systems/ |
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$ ln -s ~/src/foo/foo.asd . |
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$ lisp |
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* (asdf:operate 'asdf:load-op 'foo) |
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- To write your own system definitions, look at the test systems in |
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test/ , and read the rest of this. Ignore systems/ which is old |
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and may go away when next I clean up |
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- Syntax is similar to mk-defsystem 3 for straightforward systems, you |
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may only need to remove the :source-pathname option (and replace it |
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with :pathname if the asd file is not in the same place as the |
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system sources) |
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- Join cclan-list@lists.sf.net for discussion, bug reports, questions, etc |
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- cclan.asd and the source files listed therein contain useful extensions |
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for maintainers of systems in the cCLan. If this isn't you, you |
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don't need them - although you may want to look at them anyway |
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- For systems that do complicated things (e.g. compiling C files to |
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load as foreign code), the packages in vn-cclan may provide some |
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guidance. db-sockets, for example, is known to do outlandish things |
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with preprocessors |
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http://ww.telent.net/cliki/vn-cclan |
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* Concepts |
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This system definition utility talks in terms of 'components' and |
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'operations'. |
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Components form systems: a component represents a source file, or a |
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collection of components. A system is therefore a component, |
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recursively formed of a tree of subcomponents. |
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Operations are instantiated then performed on the nodes of a tree to |
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do things like |
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- compile all its files |
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- load the files into a running lisp environment |
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- copy its source files somewhere else |
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Operations can be invoked directly, or examined to see what their |
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effects would be without performing them. There are a bunch of |
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methods specialised on operation and component type which actually do |
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the grunt work. |
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asdf is extensible to new operations and to new component types. This |
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allows the addition of behaviours: for example, a new component could |
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be added for Java JAR archives, and methods specialised on compile-op |
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added for it that would accomplish the relevant actions. Users |
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defining their own operations and component types should inherit from |
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the asdf base classes asdf:operation and asdf:component respectively. |
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* Inspiration |
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** mk-defsystem (defsystem-3.x) |
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We aim to solve basically the same problems as mk-defsystem does. |
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However, our architecture for extensibility better exploits CL |
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language features (and is documented), and we intend to be portable |
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rather than just widely-ported. No slight on the mk-defsystem authors |
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and maintainers is intended here; that implementation has the |
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unenviable task of supporting non-ANSI implementations, which I |
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propose to ignore. |
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The surface defsystem syntax of asdf is more-or-less compatible with |
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mk-defsystem |
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The mk-defsystem code for topologically sorting a module's dependency |
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list was very useful. |
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** defsystem-4 proposal |
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Marco and Peter's proposal for defsystem 4 served as the driver for |
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many of the features in here. Notable differences are |
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- we don't specify output files or output file extensions as part of |
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the system |
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If you want to find out what files an operation would create, ask |
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the operation |
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- we don't deal with CL packages |
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If you want to compile in a particular package, use an in-package |
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form in that file (ilisp will like you more if you do this anyway) |
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- there is no proposal here that defsystem does version control. |
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A system has a given version which can be used to check |
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dependencies, but that's all. |
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The defsystem 4 proposal tends to look more at the external features, |
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whereas this one centres on a protocol for system introspection. |
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** kmp's "The Description of Large Systems", MIT AI Memu 801 |
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Available in updated-for-CL form on the web at |
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http://world.std.com/~pitman/Papers/Large-Systems.html |
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In our implementation we borrow kmp's overall PROCESS-OPTIONS and |
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concept to deal with creating component trees from defsystem surface |
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syntax. [ this is not true right now, though it used to be and |
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probably will be again soon ] |
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* The Objects |
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** component |
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*** Component Attributes |
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**** A name (required) |
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This is a string or a symbol. If a symbol, its name is taken and |
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lowercased. The name must be a suitable value for the :name initarg |
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to make-pathname in whatever filesystem the system is to be found. |
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The lower-casing-symbols behaviour is unconventional, but was selected |
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after some consideration. Observations suggest that the type of |
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systems we want to support either have lowercase as customary case |
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(Unix, Mac, windows) or silently convert lowercase to uppercase |
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(lpns), so this makes more sense than attempting to use :case :common, |
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which is reported not to work on some implementations |
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**** a version identifier (optional) |
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This is used by the test-system-version operation (see later). |
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**** *features* required |
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Traditionally defsystem users have used reader conditionals to include |
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or exclude specific per-implementation files. This means that any |
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single implementation cannot read the entire system, which becomes a |
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problem if it doesn't wish to compile it, but instead for example to |
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create an archive file containing all the sources, as it will omit to |
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process the system-dependent sources for other systems. |
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Each component in an asdf system may therefore specify features using |
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the same syntax as #+ does, and it will (somehow) be ignored for |
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certain operations unless the feature conditional matches |
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**** dependencies on its siblings (optional but often necessary) |
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There is an excitingly complicated relationship between the initarg |
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and the method that you use to ask about dependencies |
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Dependencies are between (operation component) pairs. In your |
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initargs, you can say |
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:in-order-to ((compile-op (load-op "a" "b") (compile-op "c")) |
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(load-op (load-op "foo"))) |
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- before performing compile-op on this component, we must perform |
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load-op on "a" and "b", and compile-op on c, - before performing |
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load-op, we have to load "foo" |
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The syntax is approximately |
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(this-op {(other-op required-components)}+) |
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required-components := component-name |
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| (required-components required-components) |
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component-name := string |
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| (:version string minimum-version-object) |
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[ This is on a par with what ACL defsystem does. mk-defsystem is less |
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general: it has an implied dependency |
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for all x, (load x) depends on (compile x) |
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and using a :depends-on argument to say that b depends on a _actually_ |
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means that |
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(compile b) depends on (load a) |
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This is insufficient for e.g. the McCLIM system, which requires that |
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all the files are loaded before any of them can be compiled ] |
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In asdf, the dependency information for a given component and |
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operation can be queried using (component-depends-on operation |
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component), which returns a list |
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((load-op "a") (load-op "b") (compile-op "c") ...) |
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component-depends-on can be subclassed for more specific |
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component/operation types: these need to (call-next-method) and append |
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the answer to their dependency, unless they have a good reason for |
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completely overriding the default dependencies |
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(If it weren't for CLISP, we'd be using a LIST method combination to |
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do this transparently. But, we need to support CLISP. If you have |
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the time for some CLISP hacking, I'm sure they'd welcome your fixes) |
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**** a pathname |
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This is optional and if absent will be inferred from name, type (the |
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subclass of source-file), and the location of parent. |
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The rules for this inference are: |
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(for source-files) |
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- the host is taken from the parent |
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- pathname type is (source-file-type component system) |
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- the pathname case option is :local |
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- the pathname is merged against the parent |
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(for modules) |
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- the host is taken from the parent |
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- the name and type are NIL |
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- the directory is (:relative component-name) |
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- the pathname case option is :local |
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- the pathname is merged against the parent |
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Note that the DEFSYSTEM operator (used to create a "top-level" system) |
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does additional processing to set the filesystem location of the |
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top component in that system. This is detailed elsewhere |
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The answer to the frequently asked question "how do I create a system |
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definition where all the source files have a .cl extension" is thus |
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(defmethod source-file-type ((c cl-source-file) (s (eql (find-system 'my-sys)))) |
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"cl") |
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**** properties (optional) |
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Packaging systems often require information about files or systems |
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additional to that specified here. Programs that create vendor |
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packages out of asdf systems therefore have to create "placeholder" |
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information to satisfy these systems. Sometimes the creator of an |
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asdf system may know the additional information and wish to provide it |
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directly. |
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(component-property component property-name) and associated setf method |
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will allow the programmatic update of this information. Property |
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names are compared as if by EQL, so use symbols or keywords or something |
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** Subclasses of component |
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*** 'source-file' |
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A source file is any file that the system does not know how to |
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generate from other components of the system. |
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(Note that this is not necessarily the same thing as "a file |
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containing data that is typically fed to a compiler". If a file is |
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generated by some pre-processor stage (e.g. a ".h" file from ".h.in" |
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by autoconf) then it is not, by this definition, a source file. |
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Conversely, we might have a graphic file that cannot be automatically |
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regenerated, or a proprietary shared library that we received as a |
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binary: these do count as source files for our purposes. All |
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suggestions for better terminology gratefully received) |
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Subclasses of source-file exist for various languages. |
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*** 'module', a collection of sub-components |
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This has extra slots for |
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:components - the components contained in this module |
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:default-component-class - for child components which don't specify |
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their class explicitly |
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:if-component-dep-fails takes one of the values :fail, :try-next, :ignore |
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(default value is :fail). The other values can be used for implementing |
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conditional compilation based on implementation *features*, where |
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it is not necessary for all files in a module to be compiled |
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The default operation knows how to traverse a module, so most |
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operations will not need to provide methods specialised on modules. |
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The module may be subclassed to represent components such as |
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foreign-language linked libraries or archive files. |
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*** system, subclasses module |
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A system is a module with a few extra attributes for documentation |
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purposes. In behaviour, it's usually identical. |
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Users can create new classes for their systems: the default defsystem |
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macro takes a :classs keyword argument. |
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** operation |
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An operation is instantiated whenever the user asks that an operation |
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be performed, inspected, or etc. The operation object contains |
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whatever state is relevant to this purpose (perhaps a list of visited |
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nodes, for example) but primarily is a nice thing to specialise |
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operation methods on and easier than having them all be EQL methods. |
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There are no differences between standard operations and user-defined |
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operations, except that the user is respectfully requested to keep his |
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(or more importantly, our) package namespace clean |
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*** invoking operations |
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(operate operation system &rest keywords-args) |
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keyword-args are passed to the make-instance call when creating the |
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operation: valid keywords depend on the initargs that the operation is |
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defined to accept. Note that dependencies may cause the operation to |
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invoke other operations on the system or its components: the new |
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operation will be created with the same initargs as the original one. |
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oos is accepted as a synonym for operate |
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*** standard operations |
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**** feature-dependent-op |
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This is not intended to be instantiated directly, but other operations |
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may inherit from it. An instance of feature-dependent-op will ignore |
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any components which have a `features' attribute, unless the feature |
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combination it designates is satisfied by *features* |
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See the earlier explanation about the component features attribute for |
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more information |
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**** compile-op &key proclamations |
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If proclamations are supplied, they will be proclaimed. This is a |
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good place to specify optimization settings |
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When creating a new component, you should provide methods for this. |
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If you invoke compile-op as a user, component dependencies often mean |
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you may get some parts of the system loaded. This may not necessarily |
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be the whole thing, though; for your own sanity it is recommended that |
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you use load-op if you want to load a system. |
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| 405 |
**** load-op &key proclamations |
|---|
| 406 |
|
|---|
| 407 |
The default methods for load-op compile files before loading them. |
|---|
| 408 |
For parity, your own methods on new component types should probably do |
|---|
| 409 |
so too |
|---|
| 410 |
|
|---|
| 411 |
**** load-source-op |
|---|
| 412 |
|
|---|
| 413 |
This method will load the source for the files in a module even if the |
|---|
| 414 |
source files have been compiled. Systems sometimes have knotty |
|---|
| 415 |
dependencies which require that sources are loaded before they can be |
|---|
| 416 |
compiled. This is how you do that. |
|---|
| 417 |
|
|---|
| 418 |
If you are creating a component type, you need to implement this |
|---|
| 419 |
operation - at least, where meaningful. |
|---|
| 420 |
|
|---|
| 421 |
**** test-system-version &key minimum |
|---|
| 422 |
|
|---|
| 423 |
Asks the system whether it satisfies a version requirement. |
|---|
| 424 |
|
|---|
| 425 |
The default method accepts a string, which is expected to contain of a |
|---|
| 426 |
number of integers separated by #\. characters. The method is not |
|---|
| 427 |
recursive. The component satisfies the version dependency if it has |
|---|
| 428 |
the same major number as required and each of its sub-versions is |
|---|
| 429 |
greater than or equal to the sub-version number required. |
|---|
| 430 |
|
|---|
| 431 |
(defun version-satisfies (x y) |
|---|
| 432 |
(labels ((bigger (x y) |
|---|
| 433 |
(cond ((not y) t) |
|---|
| 434 |
((not x) nil) |
|---|
| 435 |
((> (car x) (car y)) t) |
|---|
| 436 |
((= (car x) (car y)) |
|---|
| 437 |
(bigger (cdr x) (cdr y)))))) |
|---|
| 438 |
(and (= (car x) (car y)) |
|---|
| 439 |
(or (not (cdr y)) (bigger (cdr x) (cdr y)))))) |
|---|
| 440 |
|
|---|
| 441 |
If that doesn't work for your system, you can override it. I hope |
|---|
| 442 |
yoyu have as much fun writing the new method as #lisp did |
|---|
| 443 |
reimplementing this one. |
|---|
| 444 |
|
|---|
| 445 |
*** Creating new operations |
|---|
| 446 |
|
|---|
| 447 |
subclass operation, provide methods for source-file for |
|---|
| 448 |
|
|---|
| 449 |
- output-files |
|---|
| 450 |
- perform |
|---|
| 451 |
The perform method must call output-files to find out where to |
|---|
| 452 |
put its files, because the user is allowed to override output-files |
|---|
| 453 |
for local policy |
|---|
| 454 |
- explain |
|---|
| 455 |
- operation-done-p, if you don't like the default one |
|---|
| 456 |
|
|---|
| 457 |
* Writing system definitions |
|---|
| 458 |
|
|---|
| 459 |
** System designators |
|---|
| 460 |
|
|---|
| 461 |
System designators are strings or symbols and behave just like |
|---|
| 462 |
any other component names (including case conversion) |
|---|
| 463 |
|
|---|
| 464 |
** find-system |
|---|
| 465 |
|
|---|
| 466 |
Given a system designator, find-system finds an actual system - either |
|---|
| 467 |
in memory, or in a file on the disk. It funcalls each element in the |
|---|
| 468 |
*system-definition-search-functions* list, expecting a pathname to be |
|---|
| 469 |
returned. |
|---|
| 470 |
|
|---|
| 471 |
If a suitable file exists, it is loaded if |
|---|
| 472 |
|
|---|
| 473 |
- there is no system of that name in memory, |
|---|
| 474 |
- the file's last-modified time exceeds the last-modified time of the |
|---|
| 475 |
system in memory |
|---|
| 476 |
|
|---|
| 477 |
When system definitions are loaded from .asd files, a new scratch |
|---|
| 478 |
package is created for them to load into, so that different systems do |
|---|
| 479 |
not overwrite each others operations. The user may also wish to (and |
|---|
| 480 |
is recommended to) include defpackage and in-package forms in his |
|---|
| 481 |
system definition files, however, so that they can be loaded manually |
|---|
| 482 |
if need be. It is not recommended to use the CL-USER package for this |
|---|
| 483 |
purpose, as definitions made in this package will affect the parsing |
|---|
| 484 |
of asdf systems. |
|---|
| 485 |
|
|---|
| 486 |
For convenience in the normal case, and for backward compatibility |
|---|
| 487 |
with the spirit of mk-defsystem, the default contents of |
|---|
| 488 |
*system-definition-search-functions* is a function called |
|---|
| 489 |
sysdef-central-registry-search. This looks in each of the directories |
|---|
| 490 |
given by evaluating members of *central-registry*, for a file whose |
|---|
| 491 |
name is the name of the system and whose type is "asd". The first |
|---|
| 492 |
such file is returned, whether or not it turns out to actually define |
|---|
| 493 |
the appropriate system |
|---|
| 494 |
|
|---|
| 495 |
|
|---|
| 496 |
|
|---|
| 497 |
** Syntax |
|---|
| 498 |
|
|---|
| 499 |
Systems can always be constructed programmatically by instantiating |
|---|
| 500 |
components using make-instance. For most purposes, however, it is |
|---|
| 501 |
likely that people will want a static defystem form. |
|---|
| 502 |
|
|---|
| 503 |
asdf is based around the principle that components should not have to |
|---|
| 504 |
know defsystem syntax. That is, the initargs that a component accepts |
|---|
| 505 |
are not necessarily related to the defsystem form which creates it. |
|---|
| 506 |
|
|---|
| 507 |
A defsystem parser must implement a `defsystem' macro, which can |
|---|
| 508 |
be named for compatibility with whatever other system definition |
|---|
| 509 |
utility is being emulated. It should instantiate components in |
|---|
| 510 |
accordance with whatever language it accepts, and register the topmost |
|---|
| 511 |
component using REGISTER-SYSTEM |
|---|
| 512 |
|
|---|
| 513 |
*** Native syntax |
|---|
| 514 |
|
|---|
| 515 |
The native syntax is inspired by mk-defsystem, to the extent that it |
|---|
| 516 |
should be possible to take most straightforward mk- system definitions |
|---|
| 517 |
and run them with only light editing. For my convenience, this turns |
|---|
| 518 |
out to be basically the same as the initargs to the various |
|---|
| 519 |
components, with a few extensions for convenience |
|---|
| 520 |
|
|---|
| 521 |
system-definition := ( defsystem system-designator {option}* ) |
|---|
| 522 |
|
|---|
| 523 |
option := :components component-list |
|---|
| 524 |
| :pathname pathname |
|---|
| 525 |
| :default-component-class |
|---|
| 526 |
| :perform method-form |
|---|
| 527 |
| :explain method-form |
|---|
| 528 |
| :output-files method-form |
|---|
| 529 |
| :operation-done-p method-form |
|---|
| 530 |
| :depends-on ( {simple-component-name}* ) |
|---|
| 531 |
| :serial [ t | nil ] |
|---|
| 532 |
| :in-order-to ( {dependency}+ ) |
|---|
| 533 |
|
|---|
| 534 |
component-list := ( {component-def}* ) |
|---|
| 535 |
|
|---|
| 536 |
component-def := simple-component-name |
|---|
| 537 |
| ( component-type name {option}* ) |
|---|
| 538 |
|
|---|
| 539 |
component-type := :module | :file | :system | other-component-type |
|---|
| 540 |
|
|---|
| 541 |
dependency := (dependent-op {requirement}+) |
|---|
| 542 |
requirement := (required-op {required-component}+) |
|---|
| 543 |
| (feature feature-name) |
|---|
| 544 |
dependent-op := operation-name |
|---|
| 545 |
required-op := operation-name | feature |
|---|
| 546 |
|
|---|
| 547 |
For example |
|---|
| 548 |
|
|---|
| 549 |
(defsystem "foo" |
|---|
| 550 |
:version "1.0" |
|---|
| 551 |
:components ((:module "foo" :components ((:file "bar") (:file"baz") |
|---|
| 552 |
(:file "quux")) |
|---|
| 553 |
:perform (compile-op :after (op c) |
|---|
| 554 |
(do-something c)) |
|---|
| 555 |
:explain (compile-op :after (op c) |
|---|
| 556 |
(explain-something c))) |
|---|
| 557 |
(:file "blah"))) |
|---|
| 558 |
|
|---|
| 559 |
|
|---|
| 560 |
The method-form tokens need explaining: esentially, |
|---|
| 561 |
|
|---|
| 562 |
:perform (compile-op :after (op c) |
|---|
| 563 |
(do-something c)) |
|---|
| 564 |
:explain (compile-op :after (op c) |
|---|
| 565 |
(explain-something c))) |
|---|
| 566 |
has the effect of |
|---|
| 567 |
|
|---|
| 568 |
(defmethod perform :after ((op compile-op) (c (eql ...))) |
|---|
| 569 |
(do-something c)) |
|---|
| 570 |
(defmethod explain :after ((op compile-op) (c (eql ...))) |
|---|
| 571 |
(explain-something c)) |
|---|
| 572 |
|
|---|
| 573 |
where ... is the component in question; note that although this also |
|---|
| 574 |
supports :before methods, they may not do what you want them to - a |
|---|
| 575 |
:before method on perform ((op compile-op) (c (eql ...))) will run |
|---|
| 576 |
after all the dependencies and sub-components have been processed, but |
|---|
| 577 |
before the component in question has been compiled. |
|---|
| 578 |
|
|---|
| 579 |
**** Serial dependencies |
|---|
| 580 |
|
|---|
| 581 |
If the `:serial t' option is specified for a module, asdf will add |
|---|
| 582 |
dependencies for each each child component, on all the children |
|---|
| 583 |
textually preceding it. This is done as if by :depends-on |
|---|
| 584 |
|
|---|
| 585 |
:components ((:file "a") (:file "b") (:file "c")) |
|---|
| 586 |
:serial t |
|---|
| 587 |
|
|---|
| 588 |
is equivalent to |
|---|
| 589 |
:components ((:file "a") |
|---|
| 590 |
(:file "b" :depends-on ("a")) |
|---|
| 591 |
(:file "c" :depends-on ("a" "b"))) |
|---|
| 592 |
|
|---|
| 593 |
|
|---|
| 594 |
|
|---|
| 595 |
have all the |
|---|
| 596 |
|
|---|
| 597 |
**** Source location |
|---|
| 598 |
|
|---|
| 599 |
The :pathname option is optional in all cases for native-syntax |
|---|
| 600 |
systems, and in the usual case the user is recommended not to supply |
|---|
| 601 |
it. If it is not supplied for the top-level form, defsystem will set |
|---|
| 602 |
it from |
|---|
| 603 |
|
|---|
| 604 |
- The host/device/directory parts of *load-truename*, if it is bound |
|---|
| 605 |
- *default-pathname-defaults*, otherwise |
|---|
| 606 |
|
|---|
| 607 |
If a system is being redefined, the top-level pathname will be |
|---|
| 608 |
|
|---|
| 609 |
- changed, if explicitly supplied or obtained from *load-truename* |
|---|
| 610 |
- changed if it had previously been set from *default-pathname-defaults* |
|---|
| 611 |
- left as before, if it had previously been set from *load-truename* |
|---|
| 612 |
and *load-truename* is not now bound |
|---|
| 613 |
|
|---|
| 614 |
These rules are designed so that (i) find-system will load a system |
|---|
| 615 |
from disk and have its pathname default to the right place, (ii) |
|---|
| 616 |
this pathname information will not be overwritten with |
|---|
| 617 |
*default-pathname-defaults* (which could be somewhere else altogether) |
|---|
| 618 |
if the user loads up the .asd file into his editor and |
|---|
| 619 |
interactively re-evaluates that form |
|---|
| 620 |
|
|---|
| 621 |
* Error handling |
|---|
| 622 |
|
|---|
| 623 |
It is an error to define a system incorrectly: an implementation may |
|---|
| 624 |
detect this and signal a generalised instance of |
|---|
| 625 |
SYSTEM-DEFINITION-ERROR. |
|---|
| 626 |
|
|---|
| 627 |
Operations may go wrong (for example when source files contain |
|---|
| 628 |
errors). These are signalled using generalised instances of |
|---|
| 629 |
OPERATION-ERROR, with condition readers ERROR-COMPONENT and |
|---|
| 630 |
ERROR-OPERATION for the component and operation which erred. |
|---|
| 631 |
|
|---|
| 632 |
* Compilation error and warning handling |
|---|
| 633 |
|
|---|
| 634 |
ASDF checks for warnings and errors when a file is compiled. The |
|---|
| 635 |
variables *compile-file-warnings-behaviour* and |
|---|
| 636 |
*compile-file-errors-behavior* controls the handling of any such |
|---|
| 637 |
events. The valid values for these variables are :error, :warn, and |
|---|
| 638 |
:ignore. |
|---|
| 639 |
|
|---|
| 640 |
---------------------------------------------------------- |
|---|
| 641 |
TODO List |
|---|
| 642 |
---------------------------------------------------------- |
|---|
| 643 |
|
|---|
| 644 |
* Outstanding spec questions, things to add |
|---|
| 645 |
|
|---|
| 646 |
** packaging systems |
|---|
| 647 |
|
|---|
| 648 |
*** manual page component? |
|---|
| 649 |
|
|---|
| 650 |
** style guide for .asd files |
|---|
| 651 |
|
|---|
| 652 |
You should either use keywords or be careful with the package that you |
|---|
| 653 |
evaluate defsystem forms in. Otherwise (defsystem partition ...) |
|---|
| 654 |
being read in the cl-user package will intern a cl-user:partition |
|---|
| 655 |
symbol, which will then collide with the partition:partition symbol. |
|---|
| 656 |
|
|---|
| 657 |
Actually there's a hairier packages problem to think about too. |
|---|
| 658 |
in-order-to is not a keyword: if you read defsystem forms in a package |
|---|
| 659 |
that doesn't use ASDF, odd things might happen |
|---|
| 660 |
|
|---|
| 661 |
** extending defsystem with new options |
|---|
| 662 |
|
|---|
| 663 |
You might not want to write a whole parser, but just to add options to |
|---|
| 664 |
the existing syntax. Reinstate parse-option or something akin |
|---|
| 665 |
|
|---|
| 666 |
** document all the error classes |
|---|
| 667 |
|
|---|
| 668 |
** what to do with compile-file failure |
|---|
| 669 |
|
|---|
| 670 |
Should check the primary return value from compile-file and see if |
|---|
| 671 |
that gets us any closer to a sensible error handling strategy |
|---|
| 672 |
|
|---|
| 673 |
** foreign files |
|---|
| 674 |
|
|---|
| 675 |
lift unix-dso stuff from db-sockets |
|---|
| 676 |
|
|---|
| 677 |
** Diagnostics |
|---|
| 678 |
|
|---|
| 679 |
A "dry run" of an operation can be made with the following form: |
|---|
| 680 |
|
|---|
| 681 |
(traverse (make-instance '<operation-name>) |
|---|
| 682 |
(find-system <system-name>) |
|---|
| 683 |
'explain) |
|---|
| 684 |
|
|---|
| 685 |
This uses unexported symbols. What would be a nice interface for this |
|---|
| 686 |
functionality? |
|---|
| 687 |
|
|---|
| 688 |
** patches |
|---|
| 689 |
|
|---|
| 690 |
Sometimes one wants to |
|---|
| 691 |
|
|---|
| 692 |
|
|---|
| 693 |
* missing bits in implementation |
|---|
| 694 |
|
|---|
| 695 |
** all of the above |
|---|
| 696 |
** reuse the same scratch package whenever a system is reloaded from disk |
|---|
| 697 |
** rules for system pathname defaulting are not yet implemented properly |
|---|
| 698 |
** proclamations probably aren't |
|---|
| 699 |
** when a system is reloaded with fewer components than it previously |
|---|
| 700 |
had, odd things happen |
|---|
| 701 |
|
|---|
| 702 |
we should do something inventive when processing a defsystem form, |
|---|
| 703 |
like take the list of kids and setf the slot to nil, then transfer |
|---|
| 704 |
children from old to new list as they're found |
|---|
| 705 |
|
|---|
| 706 |
** traverse may become a normal function |
|---|
| 707 |
|
|---|
| 708 |
If you're defining methods on traverse, speak up. |
|---|
| 709 |
|
|---|
| 710 |
|
|---|
| 711 |
** a lot of load-op methods can be rewritten to use input-files |
|---|
| 712 |
|
|---|
| 713 |
so should be. |
|---|
| 714 |
|
|---|
| 715 |
|
|---|
| 716 |
** (stuff that might happen later) |
|---|
| 717 |
|
|---|
| 718 |
*** david lichteblau's patch for symlink resolution? |
|---|
| 719 |
|
|---|
| 720 |
*** Propagation of the :force option. ``I notice that |
|---|
| 721 |
|
|---|
| 722 |
(oos 'compile-op :araneida :force t) |
|---|
| 723 |
|
|---|
| 724 |
also forces compilation of every other system the :araneida system |
|---|
| 725 |
depends on. This is rarely useful to me; usually, when I want to force |
|---|
| 726 |
recompilation of something more than a single source file, I want to |
|---|
| 727 |
recompile only one system. So it would be more useful to have |
|---|
| 728 |
make-sub-operation refuse to propagate ":force t" to other systems, and |
|---|
| 729 |
propagate only something like ":force :recursively". '' |
|---|
| 730 |
|
|---|
| 731 |
Ideally what we actually want is some kind of criterion that says |
|---|
| 732 |
to which systems (and which operations) a :force switch will propagate. |
|---|
| 733 |
|
|---|
| 734 |
The problem is perhaps that 'force' is a pretty meaningless concept. |
|---|
| 735 |
How obvious is it that "load :force t" should force _compilation_? |
|---|
| 736 |
But we don't really have the right dependency setup for the user to |
|---|
| 737 |
compile :force t and expect it to work (files will not be loaded after |
|---|
| 738 |
compilation, so the compile environment for subsequent files will be |
|---|
| 739 |
emptier than it needs to be) |
|---|
| 740 |
|
|---|
| 741 |
What does the user actually want to do when he forces? Usually, for |
|---|
| 742 |
me, update for use with a new version of the lisp compiler. Perhaps |
|---|
| 743 |
for recovery when he suspects that something has gone wrong. Or else |
|---|
| 744 |
when he's changed compilation options or configuration in some way |
|---|
| 745 |
that's not reflected in the dependency graph. |
|---|
| 746 |
|
|---|
| 747 |
Other possible interface: have a 'revert' function akin to 'make clean' |
|---|
| 748 |
|
|---|
| 749 |
(asdf:revert 'asdf:compile-op 'araneida) |
|---|
| 750 |
|
|---|
| 751 |
would delete any files produced by 'compile-op 'araneida. Of course, it |
|---|
| 752 |
wouldn't be able to do much about stuff in the image itself. |
|---|
| 753 |
|
|---|
| 754 |
How would this work? |
|---|
| 755 |
|
|---|
| 756 |
traverse |
|---|
| 757 |
|
|---|
| 758 |
There's a difference between a module's dependencies (peers) and its |
|---|
| 759 |
components (children). Perhaps there's a similar difference in |
|---|
| 760 |
operations? For example, (load "use") depends-on (load "macros") is a |
|---|
| 761 |
peer, whereas (load "use") depends-on (compile "use") is more of a |
|---|
| 762 |
`subservient' relationship. |
|---|