issues were cleaned up. As of sbcl-0.7.1.9, it occurs in
NODE-BLOCK called by LAMBDA-COMPONENT called by IR2-CONVERT-CLOSURE.
-149:
- (reported by Stig E Sandoe sbcl-devel 2002-02-02)
- In sbcl-0.7.1.13, compiling a DEFCLASS FOO form isn't enough to make
- the class known to the compiler for other forms compiled in the same
- file, so bogus warnings "undefined type: FOO" are generated, e.g.
- when compiling
- (in-package :cl-user)
- (defclass foo () ())
- (defun bar (x)
- (typep x 'foo))
-
150:
In sbcl-0.7.1.15, compiling this code
(let* ()
(error "not ~S" '(eql (lo foomax 3.2))))
(values))))
+151:
+ From the ANSI description of GET-DISPATCH-MACRO-CHARACTER, it
+ should return NIL when there is no definition, e.g.
+ (GET-DISPATCH-MACRO-CHARACTER #\# #\{) => NIL
+ Instead, in sbcl-0.7.1.17 it returns
+ #<FUNCTION "top level local call SB!IMPL::DISPATCH-CHAR-ERROR">
+
+152:
+ Undefined functions are supposed to be reported as UNDEFINED-FUNCTION
+ conditions, inheriting from CELL-ERROR. Instead sbcl-0.7.1.19 reports
+ them as TYPE-ERRORs (reporting the problem as something not being
+ coerceable to a function).
+
+153:
+ (essentially the same problem as a CMU CL bug reported by Martin
+ Cracauer on cmucl-imp 2002-02-19)
+ There is a hole in structure slot type checking. Compiling and LOADing
+ (declaim (optimize safety))
+ (defstruct foo
+ (bla 0 :type fixnum))
+ (defun f ()
+ (let ((foo (make-foo)))
+ (setf (foo-bla foo) '(1 . 1))
+ (format t "Is ~a of type ~a a cons? => ~a~%"
+ (foo-bla foo)
+ (type-of (foo-bla foo))
+ (consp (foo-bla foo)))))
+ (f)
+ should signal an error, but in sbcl-0.7.1.21 instead gives the output
+ Is (1 . 1) of type CONS a cons? => NIL
+ without signalling an error.
+
+
DEFUNCT CATEGORIES OF BUGS
IR1-#:
- These labels were used for bugs related to the old IR1
- interpreter. The # values reached 6 before the category
- was closed down.
\ No newline at end of file
+ These labels were used for bugs related to the old IR1 interpreter.
+ The # values reached 6 before the category was closed down.