d: (fixed in 0.8.1.5)
-27:
- Sometimes (SB-EXT:QUIT) fails with
- Argh! maximum interrupt nesting depth (4096) exceeded, exiting
- Process inferior-lisp exited abnormally with code 1
- I haven't noticed a repeatable case of this yet.
-
33:
And as long as we're wishing, it would be awfully nice if INSPECT could
also report on closures, telling about the values of the bound variables.
e-mail on cmucl-help@cons.org on 2001-01-16 and 2001-01-17 from WHN
and Pierre Mai.)
+ (Actually this has changed changed since, and types as above are
+ now supported. This may be a bug.)
+
83:
RANDOM-INTEGER-EXTRA-BITS=10 may not be large enough for the RANDOM
RNG to be high quality near RANDOM-FIXNUM-MAX; it looks as though
comfortable merging the patches in the CVS version of SBCL.
108:
- (TIME (ROOM T)) reports more than 200 Mbytes consed even for
- a clean, just-started SBCL system. And it seems to be right:
- (ROOM T) can bring a small computer to its knees for a *long*
- time trying to GC afterwards. Surely there's some more economical
- way to implement (ROOM T).
-
- Daniel Barlow doesn't know what fixed this, but observes that it
- doesn't seem to be the case in 0.8.7.3 any more. Instead, (ROOM T)
- in a fresh SBCL causes
+ ROOM issues:
- debugger invoked on a SB-INT:BUG in thread 5911:
- failed AVER: "(SAP= CURRENT END)"
+ a) ROOM works by walking over the heap linearly, instead of
+ following the object graph. Hence, it report garbage objects that
+ are unreachable. (Maybe this is a feature and not a bug?)
- unless a GC has happened beforehand.
+ b) ROOM uses MAP-ALLOCATED-OBJECTS to walk the heap, which doesn't
+ check all pointers as well as it should, and can hence become
+ confused, leading to aver failures. As of 1.0.13.21 these (the
+ SAP= aver in particular) should be mostly under control, but push
+ ROOM hard enough and it still might croak.
117:
When the compiler inline expands functions, it may be that different
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)))
+ b. (fixed at some point before 1.0.4.10)
c. (lambda (x)
(declare (optimize (debug 0)))
283: Thread safety: libc functions
There are places that we call unsafe-for-threading libc functions
that we should find alternatives for, or put locks around. Known or
- strongly suspected problems, as of 0.8.3.10: please update this
+ strongly suspected problems, as of 1.0.3.13: please update this
bug instead of creating new ones
- gethostbyname, gethostbyaddr in sb-bsd-sockets
-
284: Thread safety: special variables
There are lots of special variables in SBCL, and I feel sure that at
least some of them are indicative of potentially thread-unsafe
tries to find and remove a method with an incompatible lambda list
from the unrelated generic function.
-381: incautious calls to EQUAL in fasl dumping
- Compiling
- (frob #(#1=(a #1#)))
- (frob #(#1=(b #1#)))
- (frob #(#1=(a #1#)))
- in sbcl-0.9.0 causes CONTROL-STACK-EXHAUSTED. My (WHN) impression
- is that this follows from the use of (MAKE-HASH-TABLE :TEST 'EQUAL)
- to detect sharing, in which case fixing it might require either
- getting less ambitious about detecting shared list structure, or
- implementing the moral equivalent of EQUAL hash tables in a
- cycle-tolerant way.
-
382: externalization unexpectedly changes array simplicity
COMPILE-FILE and LOAD
(defun foo ()
For some more details see comments for (define-alien-type-method
(c-string :deport-gen) ...) in host-c-call.lisp.
-402: "DECLAIM DECLARATION does not inform the PCL code-walker"
- reported by Vincent Arkesteijn:
-
- (declaim (declaration foo))
- (defgeneric bar (x))
- (defmethod bar (x)
- (declare (foo x))
- x)
-
- ==> WARNING: The declaration FOO is not understood by
- SB-PCL::SPLIT-DECLARATIONS.
- Please put FOO on one of the lists SB-PCL::*NON-VAR-DECLARATIONS*,
- SB-PCL::*VAR-DECLARATIONS-WITH-ARG*, or
- SB-PCL::*VAR-DECLARATIONS-WITHOUT-ARG*.
- (Assuming it is a variable declaration without argument).
-
403: FORMAT/PPRINT-LOGICAL-BLOCK of CONDITIONs ignoring *PRINT-CIRCLE*
In sbcl-0.9.13.34,
(defparameter *c*
2: (SB-KERNEL:%SINGLE-FLOAT ...)
3: (SB-C::BOUND-FUNC ...)
4: (SB-C::%SINGLE-FLOAT-DERIVE-TYPE-AUX ...)
+
+408: SUBTYPEP confusion re. OR of SATISFIES of not-yet-defined predicate
+ As reported by Levente M\'{e}sz\'{a}ros sbcl-devel 2006-02-20,
+ (aver (equal (multiple-value-list
+ (subtypep '(or (satisfies x) string)
+ '(or (satisfies x) integer)))
+ '(nil nil)))
+ fails. Also, beneath that failure lurks another failure,
+ (aver (equal (multiple-value-list
+ (subtypep 'string
+ '(or (satisfies x) integer)))
+ '(nil nil)))
+ Having looked at this for an hour or so in sbcl-1.0.2, and
+ specifically having looked at the output from
+ laptop$ sbcl
+ * (let ((x 'string)
+ (y '(or (satisfies x) integer)))
+ (trace sb-kernel::union-complex-subtypep-arg2
+ sb-kernel::invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method
+ sb-kernel::type-union
+ sb-kernel::type-intersection
+ sb-kernel::type=)
+ (subtypep x y))
+ my (WHN) impression is that the problem is that the semantics of TYPE=
+ are wrong for what the UNION-COMPLEX-SUBTYPEP-ARG2 code is trying
+ to use it for. The comments on the definition of TYPE= probably
+ date back to CMU CL and seem to define it as a confusing thing:
+ its primary value is something like "certainly equal," and its
+ secondary value is something like "certain about that certainty."
+ I'm left uncertain how to fix UNION-COMPLEX-SUBTYPEP-ARG2 without
+ reducing its generality by removing the TYPE= cleverness. Possibly
+ the tempting TYPE/= relative defined next to it might be a
+ suitable replacement for the purpose. Probably, though, it would
+ be best to start by reverse engineering exactly what TYPE= and
+ TYPE/= do, and writing an explanation which is so clear that one
+ can see immediately what it's supposed to mean in odd cases like
+ (TYPE= '(SATISFIES X) 'INTEGER) when X isn't defined yet.
+
+409: MORE TYPE SYSTEM PROBLEMS
+ Found while investigating an optimization failure for extended
+ sequences. The extended sequence type implementation was altered to
+ work around the problem, but the fundamental problem remains, to wit:
+ (sb-kernel:type= (sb-kernel:specifier-type '(or float ratio))
+ (sb-kernel:specifier-type 'single-float))
+ returns NIL, NIL on sbcl-1.0.3.
+ (probably related to bug #408)
+
+410: read circularities and type declarations
+ Consider the definition
+ (defstruct foo (a 0 :type (not symbol)))
+ followed by
+ (setf *print-circle* t) ; just in case
+ (read-from-string "#1=#s(foo :a #1#)")
+ This gives a type error (#:G1 is not a (NOT SYMBOL)) because of the
+ implementation of read circularity, using a symbol as a marker for
+ the previously-referenced object.
+
+415: Issues creating large arrays on x86-64/Linux and x86/Darwin
+
+ (make-array (1- array-dimension-limit))
+
+ causes a GC invariant violation on x86-64/Linux, and
+ an unhandled SIGILL on x86/Darwin.
+
+416: backtrace confusion
+
+ (defun foo (x)
+ (let ((v "foo"))
+ (flet ((bar (z)
+ (oops v z)
+ (oops z v)))
+ (bar x)
+ (bar v))))
+ (foo 13)
+
+ gives the correct error, but the backtrace shows
+ 1: (SB-KERNEL:FDEFINITION-OBJECT 13 NIL)
+ as the second frame.
+
+418: SUBSEQ on lists doesn't support bignum indexes
+
+ LIST-SUBSEQ* now has all the works necessary to support bignum indexes,
+ but it needs to be verified that changing the DEFKNOWN doesn't kill
+ performance elsewhere.
+
+ Other generic sequence functions have this problem as well.
+
+419: stack-allocated indirect closure variables are not popped
+
+ (locally (declare (optimize speed (safety 0)))
+ (defun bug419 (x)
+ (multiple-value-call #'list
+ (eval '(values 1 2 3))
+ (let ((x x))
+ (declare (dynamic-extent x))
+ (flet ((mget (y)
+ (+ x y))
+ (mset (z)
+ (incf x z)))
+ (declare (dynamic-extent #'mget #'mset))
+ ((lambda (f g) (eval `(progn ,f ,g (values 4 5 6)))) #'mget #'mset))))))
+
+ (ASSERT (EQUAL (BUG419) '(1 2 3 4 5 6))) => failure
+
+420: The MISC.556 test from gcl/ansi-tests/misc.lsp fails hard.
+
+In sbcl-1.0.13 on Linux/x86, executing
+ (FUNCALL
+ (COMPILE NIL
+ '(LAMBDA (P1 P2)
+ (DECLARE
+ (OPTIMIZE (SPEED 1) (SAFETY 0) (DEBUG 0) (SPACE 0))
+ (TYPE (MEMBER 8174.8604) P1) (TYPE (MEMBER -95195347) P2))
+ (FLOOR P1 P2)))
+ 8174.8604 -95195347)
+interactively causes
+ SB-SYS:MEMORY-FAULT-ERROR: Unhandled memory fault at #x8.
+The gcl/ansi-tests/doit.lisp program terminates prematurely shortly after
+MISC.556 by falling into gdb with
+ fatal error encountered in SBCL pid 2827: Unhandled SIGILL
+unless the MISC.556 test is commented out.
+
+Analysis: + and a number of other arithmetic functions exhibit the
+same behaviour. Here's the underlying problem: On x86 we perform
+single-float + integer normally using double-precision, and then
+coerce the result back to single-float. (The FILD instruction always
+gives us a double-float, and unless we do MOVE-FROM-SINGLE it remains
+one. Or so it seems to me, and that would also explain the observed
+behaviour below.)
+
+During IR1 we derive the types for both
+
+ (+ <single> <integer>) ; uses double-precision
+ (+ <single> (FLOAT <integer> <single>)) ; uses single-precision
+
+and get a mismatch for a number of unlucky arguments. This leads to
+derived result type NIL, and ends up flushing the whole whole
+operation -- and finally we generate code without a return sequence,
+and fall through to whatever.
+
+The use of double-precision in the first case appears to be an
+(un)happy accident -- interval arithmetic gives us the
+double-precision result because that's what the backend does.
+
+ (+ 8172.0 (coerce -95195347 'single-float)) ; => -9.518717e7
+ (+ 8172.0 -95195347) ; => -9.5187176e7
+ (coerce (+ 8172.0 (coerce -95195347 'double-float)) 'single-float)
+ ; => -9.5187176e7
+
+Which should be fixed, the IR1, or the backend?
+
+421: READ-CHAR-NO-HANG misbehaviour on Windows Console:
+
+ It seems that on Windows READ-CHAR-NO-HANG hangs if the user
+ has pressed a key, but not yet enter (ie. SYSREAD-MAY-BLOCK-P
+ seems to lie if the OS is buffering input for us on Console.)
+
+ reported by Elliot Slaughter on sbcl-devel 2008/1/10.
+
+422: out-of-extent return not checked in safe code
+
+ (declaim (optimize safety))
+ (funcall (catch 't (block nil (throw 't (lambda () (return))))))
+
+behaves ...erratically. Reported by Kevin Reid on sbcl-devel
+2007-07-06. (We don't _have_ to check things like this, but we
+generally try to check returns in safe code, so we should here too.)