Perhaps any number of such consecutive lines ought to turn into a
single "compiling top-level forms:" line.
-10:
- The way that the compiler munges types with arguments together
- with types with no arguments (in e.g. TYPE-EXPAND) leads to
- weirdness visible to the user:
- (DEFTYPE FOO () 'FIXNUM)
- (TYPEP 11 'FOO) => T
- (TYPEP 11 '(FOO)) => T, which seems weird
- (TYPEP 11 'FIXNUM) => T
- (TYPEP 11 '(FIXNUM)) signals an error, as it should
- The situation is complicated by the presence of Common Lisp types
- like UNSIGNED-BYTE (which can either be used in list form or alone)
- so I'm not 100% sure that the behavior above is actually illegal.
- But I'm 90+% sure, and the following related behavior,
- (TYPEP 11 'AND) => T
- treating the bare symbol AND as equivalent to '(AND), is specifically
- forbidden (by the ANSI specification of the AND type).
-
11:
It would be nice if the
caught ERROR:
so they could be supported after all. Very likely
SIGCONTEXT-FLOATING-POINT-MODES could now be supported, too.
-43:
- (as discussed by Douglas Crosher on the cmucl-imp mailing list ca.
- Aug. 10, 2000): CMUCL currently interprets 'member as '(member); same
- issue with 'union, 'and, 'or etc. So even though according to the
- ANSI spec, bare 'MEMBER, 'AND, and 'OR are not legal types, CMUCL
- (and now SBCL) interpret them as legal types.
-
45:
a slew of floating-point-related errors reported by Peter Van Eynde
on July 25, 2000:
then requesting a BACKTRACE at the debugger prompt gives no information
about where in the user program the problem occurred.
-63:
- Paul Werkowski wrote on cmucl-imp@cons.org 2000-11-15
- I am looking into this problem that showed up on the cmucl-help
- list. It seems to me that the "implementation specific environment
- hacking functions" found in pcl/walker.lisp are completely messed
- up. The good thing is that they appear to be barely used within
- PCL and the munged environment object is passed to cmucl only
- in calls to macroexpand-1, which is probably why this case fails.
- SBCL uses essentially the same code, so if the environment hacking
- is screwed up, it affects us too.
-
64:
Using the pretty-printer from the command prompt gives funny
results, apparently because the pretty-printer doesn't know
As a workaround for the problem, #'(SETF FOO) expressions can
be replaced with (EFFICIENT-SETF-FUNCTION FOO), where
(defmacro efficient-setf-function (place-function-name)
- (or #+sbcl (and (sb-impl::info :function :accessor-for place-function-name)
+ (or #+sbcl (and (sb-int:info :function :accessor-for place-function-name)
;; a workaround for the problem, encouraging the
;; inline expansion of the structure accessor, so
;; that the compiler can optimize its type test
under OpenBSD 2.9 on my X86 laptop. Do be patient when you try it:
it took more than two minutes (but less than five) for me.
-144:
- (This was once known as IR1-4, but it lived on even after the
- IR1 interpreter went to the big bit bucket in the sky.)
- The system accepts DECLAIM in most places where DECLARE would be
- accepted, without even issuing a warning. ANSI allows this, but since
- it's fairly easy to mistype DECLAIM instead of DECLARE, and the
- meaning is rather different, and it's unlikely that the user
- has a good reason for doing DECLAIM not at top level, it would be
- good to issue a STYLE-WARNING when this happens. A possible
- fix would be to issue STYLE-WARNINGs for DECLAIMs not at top level,
- or perhaps to issue STYLE-WARNINGs for any EVAL-WHEN not at top level.
- [This is considered an IR1-interpreter-related bug because until
- EVAL-WHEN is rewritten, which won't happen until after the IR1
- interpreter is gone, the system's notion of what's a top-level form
- and what's not will remain too confused to fix this problem.]
-
145:
ANSI allows types `(COMPLEX ,FOO) to use very hairy values for
FOO, e.g. (COMPLEX (AND REAL (SATISFIES ODDP))). The old CMU CL
:ACCRUED-EXCEPTIONS (:INEXACT)
:FAST-MODE NIL)
-187: "type inference confusion around DEFTRANSFORM time"
- (reported even more verbosely on sbcl-devel 2002-06-28 as "strange
- bug in DEFTRANSFORM")
- After the file below is compiled and loaded in sbcl-0.7.5, executing
- (TCX (MAKE-ARRAY 4 :FILL-POINTER 2) 0)
- at the REPL returns an adjustable vector, which is wrong. Presumably
- somehow the DERIVE-TYPE information for the output values of %WAD is
- being mispropagated as a type constraint on the input values of %WAD,
- and so causing the type test to be optimized away. It's unclear how
- hand-expanding the DEFTRANSFORM would change this, but it suggests
- the DEFTRANSFORM machinery (or at least the way DEFTRANSFORMs are
- invoked at a particular phase) is involved.
- (cl:in-package :sb-c)
- (eval-when (:compile-toplevel)
- ;;; standin for %DATA-VECTOR-AND-INDEX
- (defknown %dvai (array index)
- (values t t)
- (foldable flushable))
- (deftransform %dvai ((array index)
- (vector t)
- *
- :important t)
- (let* ((atype (continuation-type array))
- (eltype (array-type-specialized-element-type atype)))
- (when (eq eltype *wild-type*)
- (give-up-ir1-transform
- "specialized array element type not known at compile-time"))
- (when (not (array-type-complexp atype))
- (give-up-ir1-transform "SIMPLE array!"))
- `(if (array-header-p array)
- (%wad array index nil)
- (values array index))))
- ;;; standin for %WITH-ARRAY-DATA
- (defknown %wad (array index (or index null))
- (values (simple-array * (*)) index index index)
- (foldable flushable))
- ;;; (Commenting out this optimizer causes the bug to go away.)
- (defoptimizer (%wad derive-type) ((array start end))
- (let ((atype (continuation-type array)))
- (when (array-type-p atype)
- (values-specifier-type
- `(values (simple-array ,(type-specifier
- (array-type-specialized-element-type atype))
- (*))
- index index index)))))
- ) ; EVAL-WHEN
- (defun %wad (array start end)
- (format t "~&in %WAD~%")
- (%with-array-data array start end))
- (cl:in-package :cl-user)
- (defun tcx (v i)
- (declare (type (vector t) v))
- (declare (notinline sb-kernel::%with-array-data))
- ;; (Hand-expending DEFTRANSFORM %DVAI here also causes the bug to
- ;; go away.)
- (sb-c::%dvai v i))
-
188: "compiler performance fiasco involving type inference and UNION-TYPE"
- (In sbcl-0.7.6.10, DEFTRANSFORM CONCATENATE was commented out until this
- bug could be fixed properly, so you won't see the bug unless you restore
- the DEFTRANSFORM by hand.) In sbcl-0.7.5.11 on a 700 MHz Pentium III,
- (time (compile
- nil
- '(lambda ()
- (declare (optimize (safety 3)))
- (declare (optimize (compilation-speed 2)))
- (declare (optimize (speed 1) (debug 1) (space 1)))
- (let ((fn "if-this-file-exists-the-universe-is-strange"))
- (load fn :if-does-not-exist nil)
- (load (concatenate 'string fn ".lisp") :if-does-not-exist nil)
- (load (concatenate 'string fn ".fasl") :if-does-not-exist nil)
- (load (concatenate 'string fn ".misc-garbage")
- :if-does-not-exist nil)))))
- reports
- 134.552 seconds of real time
- 133.35156 seconds of user run time
- 0.03125 seconds of system run time
- [Run times include 2.787 seconds GC run time.]
- 0 page faults and
- 246883368 bytes consed.
- BACKTRACE from Ctrl-C in the compilation shows that the compiler is
- thinking about type relationships involving types like
- #<UNION-TYPE
- (OR (INTEGER 576 576)
- (INTEGER 1192 1192)
- (INTEGER 2536 2536)
- (INTEGER 1816 1816)
- (INTEGER 2752 2752)
- (INTEGER 1600 1600)
- (INTEGER 2640 2640)
- (INTEGER 1808 1808)
- (INTEGER 1296 1296)
- ...)>)[:EXTERNAL]
-
- In recent SBCL the following example also illustrates this bug:
-
(time (compile
nil
'(lambda ()
a. On X86 an immediate operand for IMUL is printed incorrectly.
b. On X86 operand size prefix is not recognized.
-246: "NTH-VALUE scaling problem"
- NTH-VALUE's current implementation for constant integers scales in
- compile-time as O(n^4), as indeed must the optional dispatch
- mechanism on which it is implemented. While it is unlikely to
- matter in real user code, it's still unpleasant to observe that
- (NTH-VALUE 1000 (VALUES-LIST (MAKE-LIST 1001))) takes several hours
- to compile.
-
248: "reporting errors in type specifier syntax"
(TYPEP 1 '(SYMBOL NIL)) says something about "unknown type
specifier".
does not cause a warning. (BTW: old SBCL issued a warning, but for a
function, which was never called!)
+256:
+ Compiler does not emit warnings for
+
+ a. (lambda () (svref (make-array 8 :adjustable t) 1))
+
+ b. (lambda (x)
+ (list (let ((y (the real x)))
+ (unless (floatp y) (error ""))
+ y)
+ (integer-length x)))
+
+ c. (lambda (x)
+ (declare (optimize (debug 0)))
+ (declare (type vector x))
+ (list (fill-pointer x)
+ (svref x 1)))
+
+257:
+ Complex array type does not have corresponding type specifier.
+
DEFUNCT CATEGORIES OF BUGS
IR1-#:
These labels were used for bugs related to the old IR1 interpreter.