:element-type 'compact-info-entry))
(sorted (sort (names)
#+sb-xc-host #'<
- ;; (This MAKE-FIXNUM hack implements
- ;; pointer comparison, as explained above.)
+ ;; POINTER-HASH hack implements pointer
+ ;; comparison, as explained above.
#-sb-xc-host (lambda (x y)
- (< (%primitive make-fixnum x)
- (%primitive make-fixnum y))))))
+ (< (pointer-hash x)
+ (pointer-hash y))))))
(/show0 "done making/sorting vectors in COMPACT-INFO-ENVIRONMENT")
(let ((entries-idx 0))
(dolist (types sorted)
new-value)
#!-sb-fluid
(progn
+ ;; Not all xc hosts are happy about SETF compiler macros: CMUCL 19
+ ;; does not accept them at all, and older SBCLs give a full warning.
+ ;; So the easy thing is to hide this optimization from all xc hosts.
#-sb-xc-host
(define-compiler-macro (setf info) (&whole whole
new-value
class
type
name
- &optional (env-list nil env-list-p))
+ &optional (env-list nil
+ env-list-p))
;; Constant CLASS and TYPE is an overwhelmingly common special case,
;; and we can resolve it much more efficiently than the general
;; case.
:default
#+sb-xc-host (specifier-type 'function)
#-sb-xc-host (if (fboundp name)
- (extract-fun-type (fdefinition name))
+ (specifier-type (sb!impl::%fun-type (fdefinition name)))
(specifier-type 'function)))
;;; the ASSUMED-TYPE for this function, if we have to infer the type
;;; where this information came from:
;;; :ASSUMED = from uses of the object
;;; :DEFINED = from examination of the definition
+;;; :DEFINED-METHOD = implicit, incremental declaration by CLOS.
;;; :DECLARED = from a declaration
-;;; :DEFINED trumps :ASSUMED, and :DECLARED trumps :DEFINED.
+;;; :DEFINED trumps :ASSUMED, :DEFINED-METHOD trumps :DEFINED,
+;;; and :DECLARED trumps :DEFINED-METHOD.
;;; :DEFINED and :ASSUMED are useful for issuing compile-time warnings,
-;;; and :DECLARED is useful for ANSIly specializing code which
-;;; implements the function, or which uses the function's return values.
+;;; :DEFINED-METHOD and :DECLARED are useful for ANSIly specializing
+;;; code which implements the function, or which uses the function's
+;;; return values.
(define-info-type
:class :function
:type :where-from
- :type-spec (member :declared :assumed :defined)
+ :type-spec (member :declared :defined-method :assumed :defined)
:default
;; Again (as in DEFINE-INFO-TYPE :CLASS :FUNCTION :TYPE :KIND) it's
;; not clear how to generalize the FBOUNDP expression to the
:type :definition
:type-spec (or fdefn null)
:default nil)
+
+(define-info-type
+ :class :function
+ :type :structure-accessor
+ :type-spec (or defstruct-description null)
+ :default nil)
\f
;;;; definitions for other miscellaneous information
:class :variable
:type :kind
:type-spec (member :special :constant :macro :global :alien)
- :default (if (symbol-self-evaluating-p name)
+ :default (if (typep name '(or boolean keyword))
:constant
:global))
:type-spec (member :declared :assumed :defined)
:default :assumed)
-;;; the Lisp object which is the value of this constant, if known
+;;; We only need a mechanism different from the
+;;; usual SYMBOL-VALUE for the cross compiler.
+#+sb-xc-host
(define-info-type
:class :variable
- :type :constant-value
+ :type :xc-constant-value
:type-spec t
- ;; CMU CL used to return two values for (INFO :VARIABLE :CONSTANT-VALUE ..).
- ;; Now we don't: it was the last remaining multiple-value return from
- ;; the INFO system, and bringing it down to one value lets us simplify
- ;; things, especially simplifying the declaration of return types.
- ;; Software which used to check the second value (for "is it defined
- ;; as a constant?") should check (EQL (INFO :VARIABLE :KIND ..) :CONSTANT)
- ;; instead.
- :default (if (symbol-self-evaluating-p name)
- name
- (bug "constant lookup of nonconstant ~S" name)))
+ :default nil)
;;; the macro-expansion for symbol-macros
(define-info-type
:type-spec (or ctype null)
:default nil)
-;;; If this is a class name, then the value is a cons (NAME . CLASS),
-;;; where CLASS may be null if the class hasn't been defined yet. Note
-;;; that for built-in classes, the kind may be :PRIMITIVE and not
-;;; :INSTANCE. The name is in the cons so that we can signal a
-;;; meaningful error if we only have the cons.
-(define-info-type
- :class :type
- :type :classoid
- :type-spec (or sb!kernel::classoid-cell null)
- :default nil)
-
;;; layout for this type being used by the compiler
(define-info-type
:class :type