The idea is to introduce `gsubrs' whose arity is encoded in their type
(more precisely in the sizeof (void *) - 8 MSBs). This removes the
indirection introduced by cclos and simplifies the code.
* libguile/__scm.h (CCLO): Remove.
* libguile/debug.c (scm_procedure_source, scm_procedure_environment):
Remove references to `scm_tc7_cclo'.
* libguile/eval.c (scm_trampoline_0, scm_trampoline_1,
scm_trampoline_2): Replace `scm_tc7_cclo' with `scm_tc7_gsubr'.
* libguile/eval.i.c (CEVAL): Likewise. No longer make PROC the first
argument. Directly invoke `scm_gsubr_apply ()' instead of jump to the
`evap(N+1)' label or call to `SCM_APPLY ()'.
* libguile/evalext.c (scm_self_evaluating_p): Remove reference to
`scm_tc7_cclo'.
* libguile/gc-card.c (scm_i_sweep_card, scm_i_tag_name): Likewise.
* libguile/gc-mark.c (scm_gc_mark_dependencies): Likewise.
* libguile/goops.c (scm_class_of): Likewise.
* libguile/print.c (iprin1): Likewise.
* libguile/gsubr.c (create_gsubr): Use `unsigned int's for REQ, OPT and
RST. Use `scm_tc7_gsubr' instead of `scm_makcclo ()' in the default
case.
(scm_gsubr_apply): Remove calls to `SCM_GSUBR_PROC ()'.
(scm_f_gsubr_apply): Remove.
* libguile/gsubr.h (SCM_GSUBR_TYPE): New definition.
(SCM_GSUBR_MAX): Changed to 33.
(SCM_SET_GSUBR_TYPE, SCM_GSUBR_PROC, SCM_SET_GSUBR_PROC,
scm_f_gsubr_apply): Remove.
* libguile/procprop.c (scm_i_procedure_arity): Remove reference to
`scm_tc7_cclo'; add proper handling of `scm_tc7_gsubr'.
* libguile/procs.c (scm_makcclo, scm_make_cclo): Remove.
(scm_procedure_p): Remove reference to `scm_tc7_cclo'.
(scm_thunk_p): Likewise, plus add proper `scm_tc7_gsubr' handling.
* libguile/procs.h (SCM_CCLO_LENGTH, SCM_MAKE_CCLO_TAG,
SCM_SET_CCLO_LENGTH, SCM_CCLO_BASE, SCM_SET_CCLO_BASE, SCM_CCLO_REF,
SCM_CCLO_SET, SCM_CCLO_SUBR, SCM_SET_CCLO_SUBR, scm_makcclo,
scm_make_cclo): Remove.
* libguile/stacks.c (read_frames): Remove reference to `scm_f_gsubr_apply'.
* libguile/tags.h (scm_tc7_cclo): Remove.
(scm_tc7_gsubr): New.
(scm_tcs_subrs): Add `scm_tc7_gsubr'.
* libguile/goops.c (scm_make): In the pre-inst `make', default
`procedure' to #f, and read a `make-procedure' instead of
`compile-env'.
* libguile/goops.h (scm_si_make_procedure): This instead of
scm_si_compile_env.
* module/oop/goops.scm (make-method): Remove this unused function. Users
should use (make <method> ...) directly.
(method): Capture `make-procedure' instead of `procedure' in the case
that the body calls a next-method. Allows for the kind of
"recompilation" that we were using before, but with closures instead of
re-entering the compiler. Type-specific compilation is still
interesting, but probably should be implemented in another way.
(initialize): Default #:procedure to #f, and
s/compile-env/make-procedure/.
* module/oop/goops/compile.scm (code-table-lookup): Just return the
cmethod, not the entry -- since the entry is now just (append types
cmethod).
(compile-make-procedure): New procedure, returns a form that, when
evaluated/compiled, will yield a procedure of one argument, the
next-method. When called with a next-method, the procedure returns an
actual method implementation. compile-make-procedure returns #f if the
body doesn't call next-method.
(compile-method): Unify to always return procedures. Much cleaner and
*much* faster in the compiled case. In the interpreted case, there
might be a slight slowdown, but if there is one it should be slight.
* module/oop/goops/dispatch.scm (method-cache-install!): Adapt to removal
of compute-entry-with-cmethod.
* libguile/goops.c (scm_c_extend_primitive_generic): Use
`SCM_SET_SUBR_GENERIC ()' instead of using `SCM_SUBR_GENERIC ()' as an
lvalue.
* libguile/procs.c (scm_c_make_subr_with_generic): Use `SCM_SET_SUBR_GENERIC_LOC ()'.
* libguile/procs.h (SCM_SET_SUBR_GENERIC, SCM_SET_SUBR_GENERIC_LOC): New macros.
* libguile/goops.c (scm_port_class): Statically allocate it.
(create_port_classes): Don't use `scm_calloc ()'.
* libguile/goops.h (scm_port_class): Update declaration.
* libguile/ports.c (scm_make_port_type): When checking whether
GOOPS is initialized, check whether the first element of
SCM_PORT_CLASS is non-zero.
* libguile/goops.c (scm_smob_class): Statically allocate it.
(create_smob_classes): Don't malloc(3) `scm_smob_class'.
* libguile/goops.h (scm_smob_class): Update declaration.
* libguile/smob.c (scm_make_smob_type, scm_set_smob_apply): When
checking whether GOOPS is initialized, check whether the first element
of SCM_SMOB_CLASS is non-zero.
* libguile/goops.c (create_smob_classes): Refer to
`SCM_I_MAX_SMOB_TYPE_COUNT' rather than 255 (which is wrong) or 256.
* libguile/smob.c (MAX_SMOB_COUNT): Alias for `SCM_I_MAX_SMOB_TYPE_COUNT'.
* libguile/smob.h (SCM_I_MAX_SMOB_TYPE_COUNT): New macro.
* libguile/goops.c (get_slot_value, set_slot_value): While keeping the
inlined getter/setter dispatch for closures, allow the getters and
setters to be any kind of procedure.
* oop/goops.scm (compute-getters-n-setters): Relax the checks on
getter/setter procedures, so that if a getter is a procedure but not a
closure, we don't try to poke its arity.
* oop/goops/Makefile.am (SOURCES): Compile all the goops submodules!
* oop/goops/old-define-method.scm: Removed, in an act of housekeeping.
* oop/goops/compile.scm:
* oop/goops/dispatch.scm: Break a circular module dependency by making
sure that (oop goops) is loaded when we go to compile submodules.
* oop/goops/compile.scm (compile-method/memoizer)
(compile-method/memoizer+next): Allow a procedure without source
through. This can happen with getter and setter lambdas that were
compiled, and in that case there is no next-method call anyway. Ideally
we should be able to specify compile-method for accessor methods...
* libguile/goops.c (scm_sys_initialize_object): Don't assume that an init
thunk is a closure; just go through scm_call_0 instead.
* oop/goops/compile.scm (make-make-next-method/memoizer): Allow for the
case that the next method is compiled.
* ice-9/boot-9.scm (make-modules-in): Change to make sure that we are
making modules in modules; that is, that a global binding of `compile'
doesn't prevent a module from importing a submodule named `compile'.
(resolve-module): Clean up a bit, and serialize the logic.
* libguile/objects.c (scm_mcache_lookup_cmethod, scm_apply_generic):
* libguile/eval.i.c (CEVAL): Now that cmethod entries can have a program
as their tail instead of a memoized proc, we have to change the halting
condition on the method cache search, in both places: the one that's
inlined into eval.i.c and the one in objects.c. If the cmethod isn't a
pair, apply it.
* libguile/goops.c (make): In the `make' procedure that's used before
GOOPS is booted, bind #:formals, #:body, and #:compile-env on methods.
* oop/goops/compile.scm (compute-entry-with-cmethod): There was a
terrible trick here that involved putting a dummy pair in the cache,
then modifying it in place with the result of memoization. The note
claimed that this was to cut recursion short, or something. I can't see
how it could recurse, given that `methods' is changing each time. Also,
the pair trick doesn't work with byte-compiled methods. So, remove it.
(compile-method): Dispatch to the appropriate method compiler, based on
whether the method was defined with the interpreter or with the
compiler.
(make-next-method): New function, generically computes a `next-method'
procedure, though the caller has to supply the arguments.
(compile-method/vm): Exciting method byte compiler!
(make-make-next-method/memoizer, compile-method/memoizer): Add the
/memoizer suffix, and move all this code to the bottom of the file.
* ice-9/boot-9.scm (compile-time-environment): Return #f instead of
erroring under the interpreter, a bit more sane.
* libguile/goops.c (create_standard_classes):
* libguile/goops.h (scm_si_formals, scm_si_body, scm_si_compile_env):
* oop/goops.scm (method, initialize): Add `formals', `body', and
`compile-env' slots to <method>.
* libguile/goops.c (get_slot_value, set_slot_value): In the struct
allocation case, don't poke the slots array directly -- we should
go through struct-ref/struct-set! code so that we get the
permissions and allocation ('u' versus 'p') correct.
scm_class_char, scm_class_pair, scm_class_procedure,
scm_class_string, scm_class_symbol,
scm_class_procedure_with_setter, scm_class_primitive_generic,
scm_class_vector, scm_class_null, scm_class_real,
scm_class_complex, scm_class_integer, scm_class_fraction,
scm_class_unknown, scm_port_class, scm_smob_class,
scm_no_applicable_method, scm_class_of): Moved from objects to
goops since they are only useable once goops has been loaded.
(scm_classes_initialized): Removed.
(scm_class_of): Do not check it.
(create_standard_classes): Do not set it.
SCM_INUM): Deprecated by reenaming them to SCM_I_INUMP, SCM_I_NINUMP
and SCM_I_INUM, respectively and adding deprecated versions to
deprecated.h and deprecated.c. Changed all uses to either use the
SCM_I_ variants or scm_is_*, scm_to_*, or scm_from_*, as appropriate.
SCM_VALIDATE_BIGINT, SCM_VALIDATE_INUM_MIN,
SCM_VALIDATE_INUM_MIN_COPY,
SCM_VALIDATE_INUM_MIN_DEF_COPY,SCM_VALIDATE_INUM_DEF,
SCM_VALIDATE_INUM_DEF_COPY, SCM_VALIDATE_INUM_RANGE,
SCM_VALIDATE_INUM_RANGE_COPY): Deprecated because they make the
fixnum/bignum distinction visible. Changed all uses to scm_to_size_t
or similar.
SCM_NEGATE_BOOL, SCM_BOOLP): Deprecated by moving into "deprecated.h".
Replaced all uses with scm_is_false, scm_is_true, scm_from_bool, and
scm_is_bool, respectively.
distinguishable from memoizing macros created on the scheme level
or from user provided primitive memoizing macros. The reason is,
that the internal memoizers are the only ones that are allowed to
transform their scheme input into memoizer byte code, while all
other memoizing macros may only transform scheme code into new
scheme code.
To achieve this, a new macro type 'builtin-macro!' is introduced.
Currently, 'builtin-macro!'s are handled as memoizing macros, but
this will change when the memoizer and executor are separated.
* macros.[ch] (scm_i_makbimacro): New.
* macros.h (SCM_BUILTIN_MACRO_P): New.
* macros.c (macro_print, scm_macro_type): Support builtin-macro!s.
* eval.c, goops.c: All of guile's primitive memoizing macros are
primitive builtin-macros now.
* eval.c (scm_macroexp, SCM_CEVAL): Make sure the primitive
builtin-macros are handled equally to memoizing macros.