1 ;;;; stuff related to the toplevel read-eval-print loop, plus some
2 ;;;; other miscellaneous functions that we don't have any better place
5 ;;;; This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
8 ;;;; This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was
9 ;;;; written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the
10 ;;;; public domain. The software is in the public domain and is
11 ;;;; provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS
12 ;;;; files for more information.
14 (in-package "SB!IMPL")
16 ;;;; magic specials initialized by GENESIS
18 ;;; FIXME: The DEFVAR here is redundant with the (DECLAIM (SPECIAL ..))
19 ;;; of all static symbols in early-impl.lisp.
21 (defvar *current-catch-block*)
22 (defvar *current-unwind-protect-block*)
23 (defvar *free-interrupt-context-index*))
25 ;;; specials initialized by !COLD-INIT
27 ;;; FIXME: These could be converted to DEFVARs.
28 (declaim (special *gc-inhibit* *need-to-collect-garbage*
30 *before-gc-hooks* *after-gc-hooks*
31 #!+x86 *pseudo-atomic-atomic*
32 #!+x86 *pseudo-atomic-interrupted*
33 sb!unix::*interrupts-enabled*
34 sb!unix::*interrupt-pending*
35 *type-system-initialized*))
37 (defvar *cold-init-complete-p*)
39 ;;; counts of nested errors (with internal errors double-counted)
40 (defvar *maximum-error-depth*)
41 (defvar *current-error-depth*)
43 ;;;; miscellaneous utilities for working with with TOPLEVEL
45 ;;; Execute BODY in a context where any %END-OF-THE-WORLD (thrown e.g.
46 ;;; by QUIT) is caught and any final processing and return codes are
47 ;;; handled appropriately.
48 (defmacro handling-end-of-the-world (&body body)
49 (with-unique-names (caught)
50 `(let ((,caught (catch '%end-of-the-world
51 (/show0 "inside CATCH '%END-OF-THE-WORLD")
53 (/show0 "back from CATCH '%END-OF-THE-WORLD, flushing output")
54 (flush-standard-output-streams)
55 (/show0 "calling UNIX-EXIT")
56 (sb!unix:unix-exit ,caught))))
58 ;;;; working with *CURRENT-ERROR-DEPTH* and *MAXIMUM-ERROR-DEPTH*
60 ;;; INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECT is used by ERROR and friends to keep us out
62 (defmacro infinite-error-protect (&rest forms)
63 `(unless (infinite-error-protector)
64 (/show0 "back from INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECTOR")
65 (let ((*current-error-depth* (1+ *current-error-depth*)))
66 (/show0 "in INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECT, incremented error depth")
67 ;; arbitrary truncation
68 #!+sb-show (sb!debug:backtrace 8)
71 ;;; a helper function for INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECT
72 (defun infinite-error-protector ()
73 (/show0 "entering INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECTOR, *CURRENT-ERROR-DEPTH*=..")
74 (/hexstr *current-error-depth*)
75 (cond ((not *cold-init-complete-p*)
76 (%primitive print "Argh! error in cold init, halting")
77 (%primitive sb!c:halt))
78 ((or (not (boundp '*current-error-depth*))
79 (not (realp *current-error-depth*))
80 (not (boundp '*maximum-error-depth*))
81 (not (realp *maximum-error-depth*)))
82 (%primitive print "Argh! corrupted error depth, halting")
83 (%primitive sb!c:halt))
84 ((> *current-error-depth* *maximum-error-depth*)
85 (/show0 "*MAXIMUM-ERROR-DEPTH*=..")
86 (/hexstr *maximum-error-depth*)
87 (/show0 "in INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECTOR, calling ERROR-ERROR")
91 "KERNEL:*MAXIMUM-ERROR-DEPTH* exceeded.")
94 (/show0 "returning normally from INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECTOR")
97 ;;; FIXME: I had a badly broken version of INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECTOR at
98 ;;; one point (shown below), and SBCL cross-compiled it without
99 ;;; warning about FORMS being undefined. Check whether that problem
100 ;;; (missing warning) is repeatable in the final system and if so, fix
103 (defun infinite-error-protector ()
104 `(cond ((not *cold-init-complete-p*)
105 (%primitive print "Argh! error in cold init, halting")
106 (%primitive sb!c:halt))
107 ((or (not (boundp '*current-error-depth*))
108 (not (realp *current-error-depth*))
109 (not (boundp '*maximum-error-depth*))
110 (not (realp *maximum-error-depth*)))
111 (%primitive print "Argh! corrupted error depth, halting")
112 (%primitive sb!c:halt))
113 ((> *current-error-depth* *maximum-error-depth*)
114 (/show0 "in INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECTOR, calling ERROR-ERROR")
115 (error-error "Help! "
116 *current-error-depth*
118 "KERNEL:*MAXIMUM-ERROR-DEPTH* exceeded.")
122 (/show0 "in INFINITE-ERROR-PROTECTOR, returning normally")
126 ;;;; miscellaneous external functions
130 "This function causes execution to be suspended for N seconds. N may
131 be any non-negative, non-complex number."
132 (when (or (not (realp n))
134 (error 'simple-type-error
135 :format-control "invalid argument to SLEEP: ~S"
136 :format-arguments (list n)
138 :expected-type '(real 0)))
139 (multiple-value-bind (sec usec)
142 (multiple-value-bind (sec frac)
144 (values sec (truncate frac 1e-6))))
145 (sb!unix:unix-select 0 0 0 0 sec usec))
148 ;;;; SCRUB-CONTROL-STACK
150 (defconstant bytes-per-scrub-unit 2048)
152 ;;; Zero the unused portion of the control stack so that old objects
153 ;;; are not kept alive because of uninitialized stack variables.
155 ;;; "To summarize the problem, since not all allocated stack frame
156 ;;; slots are guaranteed to be written by the time you call an another
157 ;;; function or GC, there may be garbage pointers retained in your
158 ;;; dead stack locations. The stack scrubbing only affects the part
159 ;;; of the stack from the SP to the end of the allocated stack."
160 ;;; - ram, on cmucl-imp, Tue, 25 Sep 2001
162 ;;; So, as an (admittedly lame) workaround, from time to time we call
163 ;;; scrub-control-stack to zero out all the unused portion. This is
164 ;;; supposed to happen when the stack is mostly empty, so that we have
165 ;;; a chance of clearing more of it: callers are currently (2002.07.18)
168 (defun scrub-control-stack ()
169 (declare (optimize (speed 3) (safety 0))
170 (values (unsigned-byte 20))) ; FIXME: DECLARE VALUES?
172 #!-stack-grows-downward-not-upward
173 (let* ((csp (sap-int (sb!c::control-stack-pointer-sap)))
174 (initial-offset (logand csp (1- bytes-per-scrub-unit)))
176 (- (sb!vm:fixnumize sb!vm:*control-stack-end*)
177 sb!c:*backend-page-size*)))
179 ((scrub (ptr offset count)
180 (declare (type system-area-pointer ptr)
181 (type (unsigned-byte 16) offset)
182 (type (unsigned-byte 20) count)
183 (values (unsigned-byte 20)))
184 (cond ((>= (sap-int ptr) end-of-stack) 0)
185 ((= offset bytes-per-scrub-unit)
186 (look (sap+ ptr bytes-per-scrub-unit) 0 count))
188 (setf (sap-ref-32 ptr offset) 0)
189 (scrub ptr (+ offset sb!vm:n-word-bytes) count))))
190 (look (ptr offset count)
191 (declare (type system-area-pointer ptr)
192 (type (unsigned-byte 16) offset)
193 (type (unsigned-byte 20) count)
194 (values (unsigned-byte 20)))
195 (cond ((>= (sap-int ptr) end-of-stack) 0)
196 ((= offset bytes-per-scrub-unit)
198 ((zerop (sap-ref-32 ptr offset))
199 (look ptr (+ offset sb!vm:n-word-bytes) count))
201 (scrub ptr offset (+ count sb!vm:n-word-bytes))))))
202 (declare (type (unsigned-byte 32) csp))
203 (scrub (int-sap (- csp initial-offset))
204 (* (floor initial-offset sb!vm:n-word-bytes) sb!vm:n-word-bytes)
207 #!+stack-grows-downward-not-upward
208 (let* ((csp (sap-int (sb!c::control-stack-pointer-sap)))
209 (end-of-stack (+ (sb!vm:fixnumize sb!vm:*control-stack-start*)
210 sb!c:*backend-page-size*))
211 (initial-offset (logand csp (1- bytes-per-scrub-unit))))
213 ((scrub (ptr offset count)
214 (declare (type system-area-pointer ptr)
215 (type (unsigned-byte 16) offset)
216 (type (unsigned-byte 20) count)
217 (values (unsigned-byte 20)))
218 (let ((loc (int-sap (- (sap-int ptr) (+ offset sb!vm:n-word-bytes)))))
219 (cond ((< (sap-int loc) end-of-stack) 0)
220 ((= offset bytes-per-scrub-unit)
221 (look (int-sap (- (sap-int ptr) bytes-per-scrub-unit))
223 (t ;; need to fix bug in %SET-STACK-REF
224 (setf (sap-ref-32 loc 0) 0)
225 (scrub ptr (+ offset sb!vm:n-word-bytes) count)))))
226 (look (ptr offset count)
227 (declare (type system-area-pointer ptr)
228 (type (unsigned-byte 16) offset)
229 (type (unsigned-byte 20) count)
230 (values (unsigned-byte 20)))
231 (let ((loc (int-sap (- (sap-int ptr) offset))))
232 (cond ((< (sap-int loc) end-of-stack) 0)
233 ((= offset bytes-per-scrub-unit)
235 ((zerop (sb!kernel::get-lisp-obj-address (stack-ref loc 0)))
236 (look ptr (+ offset sb!vm:n-word-bytes) count))
238 (scrub ptr offset (+ count sb!vm:n-word-bytes)))))))
239 (declare (type (unsigned-byte 32) csp))
240 (scrub (int-sap (+ csp initial-offset))
241 (* (floor initial-offset sb!vm:n-word-bytes) sb!vm:n-word-bytes)
244 ;;;; the default toplevel function
248 "a list of all the values returned by the most recent top level EVAL")
249 (defvar // nil #!+sb-doc "the previous value of /")
250 (defvar /// nil #!+sb-doc "the previous value of //")
251 (defvar * nil #!+sb-doc "the value of the most recent top level EVAL")
252 (defvar ** nil #!+sb-doc "the previous value of *")
253 (defvar *** nil #!+sb-doc "the previous value of **")
254 (defvar + nil #!+sb-doc "the value of the most recent top level READ")
255 (defvar ++ nil #!+sb-doc "the previous value of +")
256 (defvar +++ nil #!+sb-doc "the previous value of ++")
257 (defvar - nil #!+sb-doc "the form currently being evaluated")
259 (defun interactive-eval (form)
260 "Evaluate FORM, returning whatever it returns and adjusting ***, **, *,
261 +++, ++, +, ///, //, /, and -."
266 (make-null-interactive-lexenv)))))
277 ;; The bogon returned an unbound marker.
278 ;; FIXME: It would be safer to check every one of the values in RESULTS,
279 ;; instead of just the first one.
281 (cerror "Go on with * set to NIL."
282 "EVAL returned an unbound marker."))
285 ;;; Flush anything waiting on one of the ANSI Common Lisp standard
286 ;;; output streams before proceeding.
287 (defun flush-standard-output-streams ()
288 (dolist (name '(*debug-io*
293 (finish-output (symbol-value name)))
296 ;;; the default system top level function
297 (defun toplevel-init ()
299 (/show0 "entering TOPLEVEL-INIT")
300 (setf sb!thread::*session-lock* (sb!thread:make-mutex :name "the terminal"))
301 (sb!thread::get-foreground)
302 (let (;; value of --sysinit option
304 ;; value of --userinit option
306 ;; values of --eval options, in reverse order; and also any
307 ;; other options (like --load) which're translated into --eval
309 ;; The values are stored as strings, so that they can be
310 ;; passed to READ only after their predecessors have been
311 ;; EVALed, so that things work when e.g. REQUIRE in one EVAL
312 ;; form creates a package referred to in the next EVAL form.
314 ;; Has a --noprint option been seen?
316 ;; everything in *POSIX-ARGV* except for argv[0]=programname
317 (options (rest *posix-argv*)))
319 (declare (type list options))
321 (/show0 "done with outer LET in TOPLEVEL-INIT")
323 ;; FIXME: There are lots of ways for errors to happen around here
324 ;; (e.g. bad command line syntax, or READ-ERROR while trying to
325 ;; READ an --eval string). Make sure that they're handled
326 ;; reasonably. Also, perhaps all errors while parsing the command
327 ;; line should cause the system to QUIT, instead of trying to go
328 ;; into the Lisp debugger, since trying to go into the debugger
329 ;; gets into various annoying issues of where we should go after
330 ;; the user tries to return from the debugger.
332 ;; Parse command line options.
333 (loop while options do
334 (/show0 "at head of LOOP WHILE OPTIONS DO in TOPLEVEL-INIT")
335 (let ((option (first options)))
336 (flet ((pop-option ()
339 (error "unexpected end of command line options"))))
340 (cond ((string= option "--sysinit")
343 (error "multiple --sysinit options")
344 (setf sysinit (pop-option))))
345 ((string= option "--userinit")
348 (error "multiple --userinit options")
349 (setf userinit (pop-option))))
350 ((string= option "--eval")
352 (push (pop-option) reversed-evals))
353 ((string= option "--load")
355 (push (concatenate 'string "(LOAD \"" (pop-option) "\")")
357 ((string= option "--noprint")
360 ;; FIXME: --noprogrammer was deprecated in 0.7.5, and
361 ;; in a year or so this backwards compatibility can
363 ((string= option "--noprogrammer")
364 (warn "treating deprecated --noprogrammer as --disable-debugger")
366 (push "(DISABLE-DEBUGGER)" reversed-evals))
367 ((string= option "--disable-debugger")
369 (push "(DISABLE-DEBUGGER)" reversed-evals))
370 ((string= option "--end-toplevel-options")
374 ;; Anything we don't recognize as a toplevel
375 ;; option must be the start of user-level
376 ;; options.. except that if we encounter
377 ;; "--end-toplevel-options" after we gave up
378 ;; because we didn't recognize an option as a
379 ;; toplevel option, then the option we gave up on
380 ;; must have been an error. (E.g. in
381 ;; "sbcl --eval '(a)' --eval'(b)' --end-toplevel-options"
382 ;; this test will let us detect that the string
383 ;; "--eval(b)" is an error.)
384 (if (find "--end-toplevel-options" options
386 (error "bad toplevel option: ~S" (first options))
388 (/show0 "done with LOOP WHILE OPTIONS DO in TOPLEVEL-INIT")
390 ;; Delete all the options that we processed, so that only
391 ;; user-level options are left visible to user code.
392 (setf (rest *posix-argv*) options)
394 ;; Handle initialization files.
395 (/show0 "handling initialization files in TOPLEVEL-INIT")
396 (flet (;; If any of POSSIBLE-INIT-FILE-NAMES names a real file,
397 ;; return its truename.
398 (probe-init-files (&rest possible-init-file-names)
399 (declare (type list possible-init-file-names))
400 (/show0 "entering PROBE-INIT-FILES")
403 (and (stringp x) (probe-file x)))
404 possible-init-file-names)
405 (/show0 "leaving PROBE-INIT-FILES"))))
406 (let* ((sbcl-home (posix-getenv "SBCL_HOME"))
407 (sysinit-truename (if sbcl-home
408 (probe-init-files sysinit
412 (probe-init-files sysinit
414 "/usr/local/etc/sbclrc")))
415 (user-home (or (posix-getenv "HOME")
416 (error "The HOME environment variable is unbound, ~
417 so user init file can't be found.")))
418 (userinit-truename (probe-init-files userinit
423 ;; We wrap all the pre-REPL user/system customized startup code
426 ;; (Why not wrap everything, even the stuff above, in this
427 ;; restart? Errors above here are basically command line or
428 ;; Unix environment errors, e.g. a missing file or a typo on
429 ;; the Unix command line, and you don't need to get into Lisp
430 ;; to debug them, you should just start over and do it right
431 ;; at the Unix level. Errors below here are generally errors
432 ;; in user Lisp code, and it might be helpful to let the user
433 ;; reach the REPL in order to help figure out what's going
437 (flet ((process-init-file (truename)
439 (unless (load truename)
440 (error "~S was not successfully loaded." truename))
441 (flush-standard-output-streams))))
442 (process-init-file sysinit-truename)
443 (process-init-file userinit-truename))
445 ;; Process --eval options.
446 (/show0 "handling --eval options in TOPLEVEL-INIT")
447 (dolist (expr-as-string (reverse reversed-evals))
448 (/show0 "handling one --eval option in TOPLEVEL-INIT")
449 (let ((expr (with-input-from-string (eval-stream
451 (let* ((eof-marker (cons :eof :eof))
452 (result (read eval-stream nil eof-marker))
453 (eof (read eval-stream nil eof-marker)))
454 (cond ((eq result eof-marker)
455 (error "unable to parse ~S"
457 ((not (eq eof eof-marker))
458 (error "more than one expression in ~S"
463 (flush-standard-output-streams))))
466 "Continue anyway (skipping to toplevel read/eval/print loop)."
467 (/show0 "CONTINUEing from pre-REPL RESTART-CASE")
468 (values)) ; (no-op, just fall through)
470 :report "Quit SBCL (calling #'QUIT, killing the process)."
471 (/show0 "falling through to QUIT from pre-REPL RESTART-CASE")
474 ;; one more time for good measure, in case we fell out of the
475 ;; RESTART-CASE above before one of the flushes in the ordinary
476 ;; flow of control had a chance to operate
477 (flush-standard-output-streams)
479 (/show0 "falling into TOPLEVEL-REPL from TOPLEVEL-INIT")
480 (toplevel-repl noprint)
481 ;; (classic CMU CL error message: "You're certainly a clever child.":-)
482 (critically-unreachable "after TOPLEVEL-REPL"))))
484 ;;; halt-on-failures and prompt-on-failures modes, suitable for
485 ;;; noninteractive and interactive use respectively
486 (defun disable-debugger ()
487 (setf *debugger-hook* 'noprogrammer-debugger-hook-fun
488 *debug-io* *error-output*))
489 (defun enable-debugger ()
490 (setf *debugger-hook* nil
491 *debug-io* *query-io*))
493 ;;; read-eval-print loop for the default system toplevel
494 (defun toplevel-repl (noprint)
495 (/show0 "entering TOPLEVEL-REPL")
496 (let ((* nil) (** nil) (*** nil)
498 (+ nil) (++ nil) (+++ nil)
499 (/// nil) (// nil) (/ nil))
500 ;; WITH-SIMPLE-RESTART doesn't actually restart its body as some
501 ;; (like WHN for an embarrassingly long time ca. 2001-12-07) might
502 ;; think, but instead drops control back out at the end. So when a
503 ;; TOPLEVEL or outermost-ABORT restart happens, we need this outer
504 ;; LOOP wrapper to grab control and start over again. (And it also
505 ;; wraps CATCH 'TOPLEVEL-CATCHER for similar reasons.)
507 (/show0 "about to set up restarts in TOPLEVEL-REPL")
508 ;; There should only be one TOPLEVEL restart, and it's here, so
509 ;; restarting at TOPLEVEL always bounces you all the way out here.
510 (with-simple-restart (toplevel
511 "Restart at toplevel READ/EVAL/PRINT loop.")
512 ;; We add a new ABORT restart for every debugger level, so
513 ;; restarting at ABORT in a nested debugger gets you out to the
514 ;; innermost enclosing debugger, and only when you're in the
515 ;; outermost, unnested debugger level does restarting at ABORT
516 ;; get you out to here.
519 "~@<Reduce debugger level (leaving debugger, returning to toplevel).~@:>")
520 (catch 'toplevel-catcher
521 #!-sunos (sb!unix:unix-sigsetmask 0) ; FIXME: What is this for?
522 ;; in the event of a control-stack-exhausted-error, we should
523 ;; have unwound enough stack by the time we get here that this
525 (sb!kernel::protect-control-stack-guard-page 1)
526 (funcall *repl-fun* noprint)
527 (critically-unreachable "after REPL")))))))
529 ;;; Our default REPL prompt is the minimal traditional one.
530 (defun repl-prompt-fun (stream)
532 (write-string "* " stream)) ; arbitrary but customary REPL prompt
534 ;;; Our default form reader does relatively little magic, but does
535 ;;; handle the Unix-style EOF-is-end-of-process convention.
536 (defun repl-read-form-fun (in out)
537 (declare (type stream in out) (ignore out))
538 (let* ((eof-marker (cons nil nil))
539 (form (read in nil eof-marker)))
540 (if (eq form eof-marker)
544 ;;; hooks to support customized toplevels like ACL-style toplevel
545 ;;; from KMR on sbcl-devel 2002-12-21
546 (defvar *repl-read-form-fun* #'repl-read-form-fun
547 "a function of two stream arguments IN and OUT for the toplevel REPL to
548 call: Return the next Lisp form to evaluate (possibly handling other
549 magic -- like ACL-style keyword commands -- which precede the next
550 Lisp form). The OUT stream is there to support magic which requires
551 issuing new prompts.")
552 (defvar *repl-prompt-fun* #'repl-prompt-fun
553 "a function of one argument STREAM for the toplevel REPL to call: Prompt
554 the user for input.")
555 (defvar *repl-fun* #'repl-fun
556 "a function of one argument NOPRINT that provides the REPL for the system.
557 Assumes that *standard-input* and *standard-output* are setup.")
559 (defun repl-fun (noprint)
560 (/show0 "entering REPL")
562 ;; (See comment preceding the definition of SCRUB-CONTROL-STACK.)
563 (scrub-control-stack)
565 (funcall *repl-prompt-fun* *standard-output*)
566 ;; (Should *REPL-PROMPT-FUN* be responsible for doing its own
567 ;; FORCE-OUTPUT? I can't imagine a valid reason for it not to
568 ;; be done here, so leaving it up to *REPL-PROMPT-FUN* seems
569 ;; odd. But maybe there *is* a valid reason in some
570 ;; circumstances? perhaps some deadlock issue when being driven
571 ;; by another process or something...)
572 (force-output *standard-output*))
573 (let* ((form (funcall *repl-read-form-fun*
576 (results (multiple-value-list (interactive-eval form))))
578 (dolist (result results)
582 ;;; suitable value for *DEBUGGER-HOOK* for a noninteractive Unix-y program
583 (defun noprogrammer-debugger-hook-fun (condition old-debugger-hook)
584 (declare (ignore old-debugger-hook))
585 (flet ((failure-quit (&key recklessly-p)
586 (/show0 "in FAILURE-QUIT (in --disable-debugger debugger hook)")
587 (quit :unix-status 1 :recklessly-p recklessly-p)))
588 ;; This HANDLER-CASE is here mostly to stop output immediately
589 ;; (and fall through to QUIT) when there's an I/O error. Thus,
590 ;; when we're run under a shell script or something, we can die
591 ;; cleanly when the script dies (and our pipes are cut), instead
592 ;; of falling into ldb or something messy like that.
595 (format *error-output*
596 "~&~@<unhandled condition (of type ~S): ~2I~_~A~:>~2%"
599 ;; Flush *ERROR-OUTPUT* even before the BACKTRACE, so that
600 ;; even if we hit an error within BACKTRACE (e.g. a bug in
601 ;; the debugger's own frame-walking code, or a bug in a user
602 ;; PRINT-OBJECT method) we'll at least have the CONDITION
603 ;; printed out before we die.
604 (finish-output *error-output*)
605 ;; (Where to truncate the BACKTRACE is of course arbitrary, but
606 ;; it seems as though we should at least truncate it somewhere.)
607 (sb!debug:backtrace 128 *error-output*)
610 "~%unhandled condition in --disable-debugger mode, quitting~%")
611 (finish-output *error-output*)
614 ;; We IGNORE-ERRORS here because even %PRIMITIVE PRINT can
615 ;; fail when our output streams are blown away, as e.g. when
616 ;; we're running under a Unix shell script and it dies somehow
617 ;; (e.g. because of a SIGINT). In that case, we might as well
618 ;; just give it up for a bad job, and stop trying to notify
619 ;; the user of anything.
621 ;; Actually, the only way I've run across to exercise the
622 ;; problem is to have more than one layer of shell script.
623 ;; I have a shell script which does
624 ;; time nice -10 sh make.sh "$1" 2>&1 | tee make.tmp
625 ;; and the problem occurs when I interrupt this with Ctrl-C
626 ;; under Linux 2.2.14-5.0 and GNU bash, version 1.14.7(1).
627 ;; I haven't figured out whether it's bash, time, tee, Linux, or
628 ;; what that is responsible, but that it's possible at all
629 ;; means that we should IGNORE-ERRORS here. -- WHN 2001-04-24
632 "Argh! error within --disable-debugger error handling"))
633 (failure-quit :recklessly-p t)))))
635 ;;; a convenient way to get into the assembly-level debugger
637 (%primitive sb!c:halt))