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Thien-Thi Nguyen 1b5132c4ab Mention AUTHORS maintenance in two places: for contributors
and for maintainers (who may also be contributors :-).
2001-07-06 20:04:48 +00:00

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Guile Hacking Guide
Copyright (c) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001 Free software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies
of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the
copyright notice and permission notice are preserved,
and that the distributor grants the recipient permission
for further redistribution as permitted by this notice.
Permission is granted to distribute modified versions
of this document, or of portions of it,
under the above conditions, provided also that they
carry prominent notices stating who last changed them,
and that any new or changed statements about the activities
of the Free Software Foundation are approved by the Foundation.
What to Hack =========================================================
You can hack whatever you want, thank GNU.
However, to see what others have indicated as their interest (and avoid
potential wasteful duplication of effort), see file TODO. Note that
the version you find may be out of date; a CVS checkout is recommended
(see also file SNAPSHOTS).
It's also a good idea to join the guile-devel@gnu.org mailing list.
See http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/mail/mail.html for more info.
Hacking It Yourself ==================================================
As distributed, Guile needs only an ANSI C compiler and a Unix system
to compile. However, Guile's makefiles, configuration scripts, and a
few other files are automatically generated, not written by hand. If
you want to make changes to the system (which we encourage!) you will
find it helpful to have the tools we use to develop Guile. They
are the following:
Autoconf 2.50 --- a system for automatically generating `configure'
scripts from templates which list the non-portable features a
program would like to use. Available in
"ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/autoconf"
Automake 1.4-p2 --- a system for automatically generating Makefiles that
conform to the (rather Byzantine) GNU coding standards. The
nice thing is that it takes care of hairy targets like 'make
dist' and 'make distclean', and automatically generates
Makefile dependencies. Automake is available in
"ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/automake"
Before using automake, you may need to copy `threads.m4' and
`guile.m4' from the top directory of the Guile core disty to
`/usr/local/share/aclocal.
libtool 1.4 --- a system for managing the zillion hairy options needed
on various systems to produce shared libraries. Available in
"ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/libtool"
flex 2.5.4 (or newer) --- a scanner generator. earlier versions will
most probably work too.
You are lost in a little maze of automatically generated files, all
different.
Contributing Your Changes ============================================
- If you have put together a change that meets the coding standards
described below, we encourage you to submit it to Guile. The best
place to post it is guile-devel@gnu.org. Please don't send it
directly to me; I often don't have time to look things over. If you
have tested your change, then you don't need to be shy.
- Please submit patches using either context or unified diffs (diff -c
or diff -u). Don't include a patch for ChangeLog; such patches don't
apply cleanly, since we've probably changed the top of ChangeLog too.
Instead, provide the unaltered text at the top of your patch.
- For proper credit, also make sure you update the AUTHORS file.
Please don't include patches for generated files like configure,
aclocal.m4, or any Makefile.in. Such patches are often large, and
we're just going to regenerate those files anyway.
CVS conventions ======================================================
- We use CVS to manage the Guile sources. The repository lives on
subversions.gnu.org, in /cvs; you will need an
account on that machine to access the repository. Also, for security
reasons, subversions presently only supports CVS connections via the SSH
protocol, so you must first install the SSH client. Then, you should
set your CVS_RSH environment variable to ssh, and use the following as
your CVS root:
:ext:USER@subversions.gnu.org:/cvs
Either set your CVSROOT environment variable to that, or give it as
the value of the global -d option to CVS when you check out a working
directory.
For more information on SSH, see http://www.cs.hut.fi/ssh.
The Guile sources live in several modules:
- guile-core --- the interpreter, QuickThreads, and ice-9
- guile-tcltk --- the Guile/Tk interface
- guile-tk --- the new Guile/Tk interface, based on STk's modified Tk
- guile-rgx-ctax --- the Guile/Rx interface, and the ctax implementation
- guile-scsh --- the port of SCSH to guile, talk to Gary Houston
- guile-www --- A Guile module for making HTTP requests.
There is a mailing list for CVS commit messages; see README for details.
- We check Makefile.am and configure.in files into CVS, but the
"autogen.sh" script must be run from the top-level to generate the
actual "configure" script that then must be run to create the various
Makefile-s to build guile. The general rule is that you should be able
to check out a working directory of Guile from CVS, and then type
"./autogen.sh", then "configure", and finally "make". No
automatically generated files should be checked into the CVS
repository.
- The .cvsignore file is contained in the repository, to provide a
reasonable list of auto-generated files that should not be checked in.
This, however, prohibits one from having local additions to the
.cvsignore file (yes, you can modify it and never check it in, but
that doesn't seem to be a good solution to me). To get around this
problem, you might want to patch your cvs program so that it uses a
.cvsignore-local file (say) instead of the one from the repository. A
patch for this can be found at the very end of this file.
- (Automake 1.4 only) Be sure to run automake at the top of the tree
with no arguments. Do not use `automake Makefile' to regenerate
specific Makefile.in files, and do not trust the Makefile rules to
rebuild them when they are out of date. Automake 1.4 will add
extraneous rules to the top-level Makefile if you specify specific
Makefiles to rebuild on the command line. Running the command
`autoreconf --force' should take care of everything correctly.
- Make sure your changes compile and work, at least on your own
machine, before checking them into the main branch of the Guile
repository. If you really need to check in untested changes, make a
branch.
- Include each log entry in both the ChangeLog and in the CVS logs.
If you're using Emacs, the pcl-cvs interface to CVS has features to
make this easier; it checks the ChangeLog, and generates good default
CVS log entries from that.
Coding standards =====================================================
- Before contributing larger amounts of code to Guile, please read the
documents in `guile-core/devel/policy' in the CVS source tree.
- As for any part of Project GNU, changes to Guile should follow the
GNU coding standards. The standards are available via anonymous FTP
from prep.ai.mit.edu, as /pub/gnu/standards/standards.texi and
make-stds.texi.
- The Guile tree should compile without warnings under the following
GCC switches, which are the default in the current configure script:
-O2 -Wall -Wpointer-arith -Wmissing-prototypes
Note that the warnings generated vary from one version of GCC to the
next, and from one architecture to the next (apparently). To provide
a concrete common standard, Guile should compile without warnings from
GCC 2.7.2.3 in a Red Hat 5.2 i386 Linux machine. Furthermore, each
developer should pursue any additional warnings noted by on their
compiler. This means that people using more stringent compilers will
have more work to do, and assures that everyone won't switch to the
most lenient compiler they can find. :)
Note also that EGCS (as of November 3 1998) doesn't handle the
`noreturn' attribute properly, so it doesn't understand that functions
like scm_error won't return. This may lead to some silly warnings
about uninitialized variables. You should look into these warnings to
make sure they are indeed spurious, but you needn't correct warnings
caused by this EGCS bug.
- If you add code which uses functions or other features that are not
entirely portable, please make sure the rest of Guile will still
function properly on systems where they are missing. This usually
entails adding a test to configure.in, and then adding #ifdefs to your
code to disable it if the system's features are missing.
- The normal way of removing a function, macro or variable is to mark
it as "deprecated", keep it for a while, and remove it in a later
release. If a function or macro is marked as "deprecated" it
indicates that people shouldn't use it in new programs, and should try
to remove it in old. Make sure that an alternative exists unless it
is our purpose to remove functionality. Don't deprecate definitions
if it is unclear when they will be removed. (This is to ensure that a
valid way of implementing some functionality always exists.)
When deprecating a definition, always follow this procedure:
1. Mark the definition using
#if (SCM_DEBUG_DEPRECATED == 0)
...
#endif
or, for Scheme code, wrap it using
(begin-deprecated
...)
2. Make the deprecated code issue a warning when it is used, by using
scm_c_issue_deprecation_warning (in C) or issue-deprecation-warning
(in Scheme).
3. Write a comment at the definition explaining how a programmer can
manage without the deprecated definition.
4. Add an entry that the definition has been deprecated in NEWS and
explain what do do instead.
5. In file TODO, there is a list of releases with reminders about what
to do at each release. Add a reminder about the removal of the
deprecated defintion at the appropriate release.
- When you make a user-visible change (i.e. one that should be
documented, and appear in NEWS, put an asterisk in column zero of the
start of the ChangeLog entry, like so:
Sat Aug 3 01:27:14 1996 Gary Houston <ghouston@actrix.gen.nz>
* * fports.c (scm_open_file): don't return #f, throw error.
When you've written a NEWS entry and updated the documentation, go
ahead and remove the asterisk. I will use the asterisks to find and
document changes that haven't been dealt with before a release.
- Please write log entries for functions written in C under the
functions' C names, and write log entries for functions written in
Scheme under the functions' Scheme names. Please don't do this:
* procs.c, procs.h (procedure-documentation): Moved from eval.c.
Entries like this make it harder to search the ChangeLogs, because you
can never tell which name the entry will refer to. Instead, write this:
* procs.c, procs.h (scm_procedure_documentation): Moved from eval.c.
Changes like adding this line are special:
SCM_PROC (s_map_in_order, "map-in-order", 2, 0, 1, scm_map);
Since the change here is about the name itself --- we're adding a new
alias for scm_map that guarantees the order in which we process list
elements, but we're not changing scm_map at all --- it's appropriate
to use the Scheme name in the log entry.
- There's no need to keep a change log for documentation files. This
is because documentation is not susceptible to bugs that are hard to
fix. Documentation does not consist of parts that must interact in a
precisely engineered fashion; to correct an error, you need not know
the history of the erroneous passage. (This is copied from the GNU
coding standards.)
- Make sure you have papers from people before integrating their
changes or contributions. This is very frustrating, but very
important to do right. From maintain.texi, "Information for
Maintainers of GNU Software":
When incorporating changes from other people, make sure to follow the
correct procedures. Doing this ensures that the FSF has the legal
right to distribute and defend GNU software.
For the sake of registering the copyright on later versions ofthe
software you need to keep track of each person who makes significant
changes. A change of ten lines or so, or a few such changes, in a
large program is not significant.
*Before* incorporating significant changes, make sure that the person
has signed copyright papers, and that the Free Software Foundation has
received them.
If you receive contributions you want to use from someone, let me know
and I'll take care of the administrivia. Put the contributions aside
until we have the necessary papers.
Once you accept a contribution, be sure to keep the files AUTHORS and
THANKS uptodate. Feel free to remove authorship info from source files.
- When you make substantial changes to a file, add the current year to
the list of years in the copyright notice at the top of the file.
- When you get bug reports or patches from people, be sure to list
them in THANKS.
Naming conventions =================================================
We use certain naming conventions to structure the considerable number
of global identifiers. All identifiers should be either all lower
case or all upper case. Syllables are separated by underscores `_'.
All non-static identifiers should start with scm_ or SCM_. Then might
follow zero or more syllables giving the category of the identifier.
The currently used category identifiers are
t - type name
c,C - something with a interface suited for C use. This is used
to name functions that behave like Scheme primitives but
have a more C friendly calling convention.
i,I - internal to libguile. It is global, but not considered part
of the libguile API.
f - a SCM variable pointing to a Scheme function object.
F - a bit mask for a flag.
m - a macro transformer procedure
n,N - a count of something
s - a constant C string
k - a SCM variable pointing to a keyword.
sym - a SCM variable pointing to a symbol.
var - a SCM variable pointing to a variable object.
The follwing syllables also have a technical meaning:
str - this denotes a zero terminated C string
mem - a C string with an explicit count
See also the file `devel/names.text'.
Helpful hints ========================================================
- [From Mikael Djurfeldt] When working on the Guile internals, it is
quite often practical to implement a scheme-level procedure which
helps you examine the feature you're working on.
Examples of such procedures are: pt-size, debug-hand and
current-pstate.
I've now put #ifdef GUILE_DEBUG around all such procedures, so that
they are not compiled into the "normal" Guile library. Please do the
same when you add new procedures/C functions for debugging purpose.
You can define the GUILE_DEBUG flag by passing --enable-guile-debug to
the configure script.
- You'll see uses of the macro SCM_P scattered throughout the code;
those are vestiges of a time when Guile was meant to compile on
pre-ANSI compilers. Guile now requires ANSI C, so when you write new
functions, feel free to use ANSI declarations, and please provide
prototypes for everything. You don't need to use SCM_P in new code.
Jim Blandy, and others
Patches ===========================================================
This one makes cvs-1.10 consider the file $CVSDOTIGNORE instead of
.cvsignore when that environment variable is set.
=== patch start ===
diff -r -u cvs-1.10/src/cvs.h cvs-1.10.ignore-hack/src/cvs.h
--- cvs-1.10/src/cvs.h Mon Jul 27 04:54:11 1998
+++ cvs-1.10.ignore-hack/src/cvs.h Sun Jan 23 12:58:09 2000
@@ -516,7 +516,7 @@
extern int ign_name PROTO ((char *name));
void ign_add PROTO((char *ign, int hold));
-void ign_add_file PROTO((char *file, int hold));
+int ign_add_file PROTO((char *file, int hold));
void ign_setup PROTO((void));
void ign_dir_add PROTO((char *name));
int ignore_directory PROTO((char *name));
diff -r -u cvs-1.10/src/ignore.c cvs-1.10.ignore-hack/src/ignore.c
--- cvs-1.10/src/ignore.c Mon Sep 8 01:04:15 1997
+++ cvs-1.10.ignore-hack/src/ignore.c Sun Jan 23 12:57:50 2000
@@ -99,9 +99,9 @@
/*
* Open a file and read lines, feeding each line to a line parser. Arrange
* for keeping a temporary list of wildcards at the end, if the "hold"
- * argument is set.
+ * argument is set. Return true when the file exists and has been handled.
*/
-void
+int
ign_add_file (file, hold)
char *file;
int hold;
@@ -149,8 +149,8 @@
if (fp == NULL)
{
if (! existence_error (errno))
- error (0, errno, "cannot open %s", file);
- return;
+ error (0, errno, "cannot open %s", file);
+ return 0;
}
while (getline (&line, &line_allocated, fp) >= 0)
ign_add (line, hold);
@@ -159,6 +159,7 @@
if (fclose (fp) < 0)
error (0, errno, "cannot close %s", file);
free (line);
+ return 1;
}
/* Parse a line of space-separated wildcards and add them to the list. */
@@ -375,6 +376,7 @@
struct stat sb;
char *file;
char *xdir;
+ char *cvsdotignore;
/* Set SUBDIRS if we have subdirectory information in ENTRIES. */
if (entries == NULL)
@@ -397,7 +399,10 @@
if (dirp == NULL)
return;
- ign_add_file (CVSDOTIGNORE, 1);
+ cvsdotignore = getenv("CVSDOTIGNORE");
+ if (cvsdotignore == NULL || !ign_add_file (cvsdotignore, 1))
+ ign_add_file (CVSDOTIGNORE, 1);
+
wrap_add_file (CVSDOTWRAPPER, 1);
while ((dp = readdir (dirp)) != NULL)
=== patch end ===
This one is for pcl-cvs-2.9.2, so that `i' adds to the local
.cvsignore file.
=== patch start ===
--- pcl-cvs.el~ Mon Nov 1 12:33:46 1999
+++ pcl-cvs.el Tue Jan 25 21:46:27 2000
@@ -1177,7 +1177,10 @@
"Append the file in FILEINFO to the .cvsignore file.
Can only be used in the *cvs* buffer."
(save-window-excursion
- (set-buffer (find-file-noselect (expand-file-name ".cvsignore" dir)))
+ (set-buffer (find-file-noselect
+ (expand-file-name (or (getenv "CVSDOTIGNORE")
+ ".cvsignore")
+ dir)))
(goto-char (point-max))
(unless (zerop (current-column)) (insert "\n"))
(insert str "\n")
=== patch end ===