@page @node Options and Config @chapter Runtime Options and Configuration Guile's behaviour can be modified by setting options. For example, is the language that Guile accepts case sensitive, or should the debugger automatically show a backtrace on error? Guile has two levels of interface for managing options: a low-level control interface, and a user-level interface which allows the enabling or disabling of options. Moreover, the options are classified in groups according to whether they configure @emph{reading}, @emph{printing}, @emph{debugging} or @emph{evaluating}. @menu * General option interface:: * Reader options:: * Printing options:: * Debugger options:: * Evaluator options:: * Evaluator trap options:: * Examples of option use:: * Install Config:: Installation and configuration data. * Feature Tracking:: Available features in the Guile process. @end menu @node General option interface @section General option interface We will use the expression @code{} to represent @code{read}, @code{print}, @code{debug} or @code{evaluator}. @subheading Low level @c NJFIXME @deffn {Scheme Procedure} -options-interface @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} read-options-interface [SOME-INT] @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} print-options-interface [SOME-INT] @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} evaluator-traps-interface [SOME-INT] @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} read-options-interface [SOME-INT] [FIXME: I have just taken the comments for C routine scm_options that implements all of these. It needs to be presented better.] If scm_options is called without arguments, the current option setting is returned. If the argument is an option setting, options are altered and the old setting is returned. If the argument isn't a list, a list of sublists is returned, where each sublist contains option name, value and documentation string. @end deffn @subheading User level @c @deftp {Data type} scm_option @c @code{scm_option} is used to represent run time options. It can be a @c @emph{boolean} type, in which case the option will be set by the strings @c @code{"yes"} and @code{"no"}. It can be a @c @end deftp @c NJFIXME @deffn {Scheme Procedure} -options [arg] @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} read-options [arg] @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} print-options [arg] @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} debug-options [arg] @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} traps [arg] These functions list the options in their group. The optional argument @var{arg} is a symbol which modifies the form in which the options are presented. With no arguments, @code{-options} returns the values of the options in that particular group. If @var{arg} is @code{'help}, a description of each option is given. If @var{arg} is @code{'full}, programmers' options are also shown. @var{arg} can also be a list representing the state of all options. In this case, the list contains single symbols (for enabled boolean options) and symbols followed by values. @end deffn [FIXME: I don't think 'full is ever any different from 'help. What's up?] @c NJFIXME @deffn {Scheme Procedure} -enable option-symbol @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} read-enable option-symbol @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} print-enable option-symbol @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} debug-enable option-symbol @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} trap-enable option-symbol These functions set the specified @var{option-symbol} in their options group. They only work if the option is boolean, and throw an error otherwise. @end deffn @c NJFIXME @deffn {Scheme Procedure} -disable option-symbol @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} read-disable option-symbol @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} print-disable option-symbol @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} debug-disable option-symbol @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} trap-disable option-symbol These functions turn off the specified @var{option-symbol} in their options group. They only work if the option is boolean, and throw an error otherwise. @end deffn @c NJFIXME @deffn syntax -set! option-symbol value @deffnx syntax read-set! option-symbol value @deffnx syntax print-set! option-symbol value @deffnx syntax debug-set! option-symbol value @deffnx syntax trap-set! option-symbol value These functions set a non-boolean @var{option-symbol} to the specified @var{value}. @end deffn @node Reader options @section Reader options @cindex options - read @cindex read options Here is the list of reader options generated by typing @code{(read-options 'full)} in Guile. You can also see the default values. @smalllisp keywords #f Style of keyword recognition: #f or 'prefix case-insensitive no Convert symbols to lower case. positions yes Record positions of source code expressions. copy no Copy source code expressions. @end smalllisp Notice that while Standard Scheme is case insensitive, to ease translation of other Lisp dialects, notably Emacs Lisp, into Guile, Guile is case-sensitive by default. To make Guile case insensitive, you can type @smalllisp (read-enable 'case-insensitive) @end smalllisp @node Printing options @section Printing options Here is the list of print options generated by typing @code{(print-options 'full)} in Guile. You can also see the default values. @smallexample source no Print closures with source. closure-hook #f Hook for printing closures. @end smallexample @node Evaluator options @section Evaluator options These are the evaluator options with their default values, as they are printed by typing @code{(eval-options 'full)} in Guile. @smallexample stack 22000 Size of thread stacks (in machine words). @end smallexample @node Evaluator trap options @section Evaluator trap options [FIXME: These flags, together with their corresponding handlers, are not user level options. Probably this entire section should be moved to the documentation about the low-level programmer debugging interface.] Here is the list of evaluator trap options generated by typing @code{(traps 'full)} in Guile. You can also see the default values. @smallexample exit-frame no Trap when exiting eval or apply. apply-frame no Trap when entering apply. enter-frame no Trap when eval enters new frame. traps yes Enable evaluator traps. @end smallexample @deffn apply-frame-handler key cont tailp Called when a procedure is being applied. Called if: @itemize @bullet @item evaluator traps are enabled [traps interface], and @item either @itemize @minus @item @code{apply-frame} is enabled [traps interface], or @item trace mode is on [debug-options interface], and the procedure being called has the trace property enabled. @end itemize @end itemize If cheap traps are enabled [debug-options interface], @var{cont} is a debug object, otherwise it is a restartable continuation. @var{tailp} is true if this is a tail call @end deffn @deffn exit-frame-handler key cont retval Called when a value is returned from a procedure. Called if: @itemize @bullet @item evaluator traps are enabled [traps interface], and @item either @itemize @minus @item @code{exit-frame} is enabled [traps interface], or @item trace mode is on [debug-options interface], and the procedure being called has the trace property enabled. @end itemize @end itemize If cheap traps are enabled [debug-options interface], @var{cont} is a debug object, otherwise it is a restartable continuation. @var{retval} is the return value. @end deffn @node Debugger options @section Debugger options Here is the list of print options generated by typing @code{(debug-options 'full)} in Guile. You can also see the default values. @smallexample stack 20000 Stack size limit (0 = no check). debug yes Use the debugging evaluator. backtrace no Show backtrace on error. depth 20 Maximal length of printed backtrace. maxdepth 1000 Maximal number of stored backtrace frames. frames 3 Maximum number of tail-recursive frames in backtrace. indent 10 Maximal indentation in backtrace. backwards no Display backtrace in anti-chronological order. procnames yes Record procedure names at definition. trace no *Trace mode. breakpoints no *Check for breakpoints. cheap yes *Flyweight representation of the stack at traps. @end smallexample @subsection Stack overflow @cindex overflow, stack @cindex stack overflow Stack overflow errors are caused by a computation trying to use more stack space than has been enabled by the @code{stack} option. They are reported like this: @lisp (non-tail-recursive-factorial 500) @print{} ERROR: Stack overflow ABORT: (stack-overflow) @end lisp If you get an error like this, you can either try rewriting your code to use less stack space, or increase the maximum stack size. To increase the maximum stack size, use @code{debug-set!}, for example: @lisp (debug-set! stack 200000) @result{} (show-file-name #t stack 200000 debug backtrace depth 20 maxdepth 1000 frames 3 indent 10 width 79 procnames cheap) (non-tail-recursive-factorial 500) @result{} 122013682599111006870123878542304692625357434@dots{} @end lisp If you prefer to try rewriting your code, you may be able to save stack space by making some of your procedures @dfn{tail recursive}. For a description of what this means, see @ref{Proper tail recursion,,,r5rs,The Revised^5 Report on Scheme}. @node Examples of option use @section Examples of option use Here is an example of a session in which some read and debug option handling procedures are used. In this example, the user @enumerate @item Notices that the symbols @code{abc} and @code{aBc} are not the same @item Examines the @code{read-options}, and sees that @code{case-insensitive} is set to ``no''. @item Enables @code{case-insensitive} @item Verifies that now @code{aBc} and @code{abc} are the same @item Disables @code{case-insensitive} and enables debugging @code{backtrace} @item Reproduces the error of displaying @code{aBc} with backtracing enabled [FIXME: this last example is lame because there is no depth in the backtrace. Need to give a better example, possibly putting debugging option examples in a separate session.] @end enumerate @smalllisp guile> (define abc "hello") guile> abc "hello" guile> aBc ERROR: In expression aBc: ERROR: Unbound variable: aBc ABORT: (misc-error) Type "(backtrace)" to get more information. guile> (read-options 'help) keywords #f Style of keyword recognition: #f or 'prefix case-insensitive no Convert symbols to lower case. positions yes Record positions of source code expressions. copy no Copy source code expressions. guile> (debug-options 'help) stack 20000 Stack size limit (0 = no check). debug yes Use the debugging evaluator. backtrace no Show backtrace on error. depth 20 Maximal length of printed backtrace. maxdepth 1000 Maximal number of stored backtrace frames. frames 3 Maximum number of tail-recursive frames in backtrace. indent 10 Maximal indentation in backtrace. backwards no Display backtrace in anti-chronological order. procnames yes Record procedure names at definition. trace no *Trace mode. breakpoints no *Check for breakpoints. cheap yes *Flyweight representation of the stack at traps. guile> (read-enable 'case-insensitive) (keywords #f case-insensitive positions) guile> aBc "hello" guile> (read-disable 'case-insensitive) (keywords #f positions) guile> (debug-enable 'backtrace) (stack 20000 debug backtrace depth 20 maxdepth 1000 frames 3 indent 10 procnames cheap) guile> aBc Backtrace: 0* aBc ERROR: In expression aBc: ERROR: Unbound variable: aBc ABORT: (misc-error) guile> @end smalllisp @node Install Config @section Installation and Configuration Data It is often useful to have site-specific information about the current Guile installation. This chapter describes how to find out about Guile's configuration at run time. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} version @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} major-version @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} minor-version @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} micro-version @deffnx {C Function} scm_version () @deffnx {C Function} scm_major_version () @deffnx {C Function} scm_minor_version () @deffnx {C Function} scm_micro_version () Return a string describing Guile's version number, or its major, minor or micro version number, respectively. @lisp (version) @result{} "1.6.0" (major-version) @result{} "1" (minor-version) @result{} "6" (micro-version) @result{} "0" @end lisp @end deffn @c NJFIXME not in libguile! @deffn {Scheme Procedure} libguile-config-stamp Return a string describing the date on which @code{libguile} was configured. This is used to determine whether the Guile core interpreter and the ice-9 runtime have grown out of date with one another. @end deffn @deffn {Scheme Procedure} %package-data-dir @deffnx {C Function} scm_sys_package_data_dir () Return the name of the directory where Scheme packages, modules and libraries are kept. On most Unix systems, this will be @samp{/usr/local/share/guile}. @end deffn @deffn {Scheme Procedure} %library-dir @deffnx {C Function} scm_sys_library_dir () Return the directory where the Guile Scheme library files are installed. E.g., may return "/usr/share/guile/1.3.5". @end deffn @deffn {Scheme Procedure} %site-dir @deffnx {C Function} scm_sys_site_dir () Return the directory where the Guile site files are installed. E.g., may return "/usr/share/guile/site". @end deffn @deffn {Scheme Procedure} parse-path path [tail] @deffnx {C Function} scm_parse_path (path, tail) Parse @var{path}, which is expected to be a colon-separated string, into a list and return the resulting list with @var{tail} appended. If @var{path} is @code{#f}, @var{tail} is returned. @end deffn @deffn {Scheme Procedure} search-path path filename [extensions] @deffnx {C Function} scm_search_path (path, filename, extensions) Search @var{path} for a directory containing a file named @var{filename}. The file must be readable, and not a directory. If we find one, return its full filename; otherwise, return @code{#f}. If @var{filename} is absolute, return it unchanged. If given, @var{extensions} is a list of strings; for each directory in @var{path}, we search for @var{filename} concatenated with each @var{extension}. @end deffn @defvar %load-path List of directories which should be searched for Scheme modules and libraries. @end defvar @defvar %guile-build-info Alist of information collected during the building of a particular @code{guile} program. Entries can be grouped into one of several categories: directories, env vars, and versioning info. Briefly, here are the keys in @code{%guile-build-info}, by group: @itemize @bullet @item directories srcdir, top_srcdir, prefix, exec_prefix, bindir, sbindir, libexecdir, datadir, sysconfdir, sharedstatedir, localstatedir, libdir, infodir, mandir, includedir, pkgdatadir, pkglibdir, pkgincludedir @item env vars LIBS @item versioning info guileversion, libguileinterface, buildstamp @end itemize Values are all strings. The value for @code{LIBS} is typically found also as a part of "guile-config link" output. The value for @code{guileversion} has form X.Y.Z, and should be the same as returned by @code{version}. The value for @code{libguileinterface} is libtool compatible and has form CURRENT:REVISION:AGE. The value for @code{buildstamp} is the output of the date(1) command. In the source, @code{%guile-build-info} is initialized from libguile/libpath.h, which is completely generated, so deleting this file before a build guarantees up-to-date values for that build. @end defvar @node Feature Tracking @section Feature Tracking Guile has a Scheme level variable @code{*features*} that keeps track to some extent of the features that are available in a running Guile. @code{*features*} is a list of symbols, for example @code{threads}, each of which describes a feature of the running Guile process. @defvar *features* A list of symbols describing available features of the Guile process. @end defvar You shouldn't modify the @code{*features*} variable directly using @code{set!}. Instead, see the procedures that are provided for this purpose in the following subsection. @menu * Feature Manipulation:: Checking for and advertising features. * Common Feature Symbols:: Commonly available features. @end menu @node Feature Manipulation @subsection Feature Manipulation To check whether a particular feature is available, use the @code{provided?} procedure: @deffn {Scheme Procedure} provided? feature @deffnx {Deprecated Scheme Procedure} feature? feature Return @code{#t} if the specified @var{feature} is available, otherwise @code{#f}. @end deffn To advertise a feature from your own Scheme code, you can use the @code{provide} procedure: @deffn {Scheme Procedure} provide feature Add @var{feature} to the list of available features in this Guile process. @end deffn For C code, the equivalent function takes its feature name as a @code{char *} argument for convenience: @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_add_feature (const char *str) Add a symbol with name @var{str} to the list of available features in this Guile process. @end deftypefn @node Common Feature Symbols @subsection Common Feature Symbols In general, a particular feature may be available for one of two reasons. Either because the Guile library was configured and compiled with that feature enabled --- i.e. the feature is built into the library on your system. Or because some C or Scheme code that was dynamically loaded by Guile has added that feature to the list. In the first category, here are the features that the current version of Guile may define (depending on how it is built), and what they mean. @table @code @item array Indicates support for arrays (@pxref{Arrays}). @item array-for-each Indicates availability of @code{array-for-each} and other array mapping procedures (@pxref{Array Mapping}). @item char-ready? Indicates that the @code{char-ready?} function is available (@pxref{Reading}). @item complex Indicates support for complex numbers. @item current-time Indicates availability of time-related functions: @code{times}, @code{get-internal-run-time} and so on (@pxref{Time}). @item debug-extensions Indicates that the debugging evaluator is available, together with the options for controlling it. @item delay Indicates support for promises (@pxref{Delayed Evaluation}). @item EIDs Indicates that the @code{geteuid} and @code{getegid} really return effective user and group IDs (@pxref{Processes}). @item inexact Indicates support for inexact numbers. @item i/o-extensions Indicates availability of the following extended I/O procedures: @code{ftell}, @code{redirect-port}, @code{dup->fdes}, @code{dup2}, @code{fileno}, @code{isatty?}, @code{fdopen}, @code{primitive-move->fdes} and @code{fdes->ports} (@pxref{Ports and File Descriptors}). @item net-db Indicates availability of network database functions: @code{scm_gethost}, @code{scm_getnet}, @code{scm_getproto}, @code{scm_getserv}, @code{scm_sethost}, @code{scm_setnet}, @code{scm_setproto}, @code{scm_setserv}, and their `byXXX' variants (@pxref{Network Databases}). @item posix Indicates support for POSIX functions: @code{pipe}, @code{getgroups}, @code{kill}, @code{execl} and so on (@pxref{POSIX}). @item random Indicates availability of random number generation functions: @code{random}, @code{copy-random-state}, @code{random-uniform} and so on (@pxref{Random}). @item reckless Indicates that Guile was built with important checks omitted --- you should never see this! @item regex Indicates support for POSIX regular expressions using @code{make-regexp}, @code{regexp-exec} and friends (@pxref{Regexp Functions}). @item socket Indicates availability of socket-related functions: @code{socket}, @code{bind}, @code{connect} and so on (@pxref{Network Sockets and Communication}). @item sort Indicates availability of sorting and merging functions (@pxref{Sorting}). @item system Indicates that the @code{system} function is available (@pxref{Processes}). @item threads Indicates support for multithreading (@pxref{Threads}). @item values Indicates support for multiple return values using @code{values} and @code{call-with-values} (@pxref{Multiple Values}). @end table Available features in the second category depend, by definition, on what additional code your Guile process has loaded in. The following table lists features that you might encounter for this reason. @table @code @item defmacro Indicates that the @code{defmacro} macro is available (@pxref{Macros}). @item describe Indicates that the @code{(oop goops describe)} module has been loaded, which provides a procedure for describing the contents of GOOPS instances. @item readline Indicates that Guile has loaded in Readline support, for command line editing (@pxref{Readline Support}). @item record Indicates support for record definition using @code{make-record-type} and friends (@pxref{Records}). @end table Although these tables may seem exhaustive, it is probably unwise in practice to rely on them, as the correspondences between feature symbols and available procedures/behaviour are not strictly defined. If you are writing code that needs to check for the existence of some procedure, it is probably safer to do so directly using the @code{defined?} procedure than to test for the corresponding feature using @code{feature?}. @c Local Variables: @c TeX-master: "guile.texi" @c End: