d: (fixed in 0.8.1.5)
-7:
- The "compiling top-level form:" output ought to be condensed.
- Perhaps any number of such consecutive lines ought to turn into a
- single "compiling top-level forms:" line.
-
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.
-32:
- The printer doesn't report closures very well. This is true in
- CMU CL 18b as well:
- (defstruct foo bar)
- (print #'foo-bar)
- gives
- #<FUNCTION "CLOSURE" {406974D5}>
- It would be nice to make closures have a settable name slot,
- and make things like DEFSTRUCT and FLET, which create closures,
- set helpful values into this slot.
-
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.
+ Currently INSPECT and DESCRIBE do show the values, but showing the
+ names of the bindings would be even nicer.
+
35:
The compiler assumes that any time a function of declared FTYPE
doesn't signal an error, its arguments were of the declared type.
so they could be supported after all. Very likely
SIGCONTEXT-FLOATING-POINT-MODES could now be supported, too.
-60:
- The debugger LIST-LOCATIONS command doesn't work properly.
- (How should it work properly?)
-
61:
Compiling and loading
(DEFUN FAIL (X) (THROW 'FAIL-TAG X))
holding... * is not equivalent to T in many cases, such as
(VECTOR *) /= (VECTOR T).
-95:
- The facility for dumping a running Lisp image to disk gets confused
- when run without the PURIFY option, and creates an unnecessarily large
- core file (apparently representing memory usage up to the previous
- high-water mark). Moreover, when the file is loaded, it confuses the
- GC, so that thereafter memory usage can never be reduced below that
- level.
-
- (As of 0.8.7.3 it's likely that the latter half of this bug is fixed.
- The interaction between gencgc and the variables used by
- save-lisp-and-die is still nonoptimal, though, so no respite from
- big core files yet)
-
98:
In sbcl-0.6.11.41 (and in all earlier SBCL, and in CMU
CL), out-of-line structure slot setters are horribly inefficient
211: "keywords processing"
a. :ALLOW-OTHER-KEYS T should allow a function to receive an odd
number of keyword arguments.
- e. Compiling
-
- (flet ((foo (&key y) (list y)))
- (list (foo :y 1 :y 2)))
-
- issues confusing message
-
- ; in: LAMBDA NIL
- ; (FOO :Y 1 :Y 2)
- ;
- ; caught STYLE-WARNING:
- ; The variable #:G15 is defined but never used.
212: "Sequence functions and circular arguments"
COERCE, MERGE and CONCATENATE go into an infinite loop when given
(In 0.7.9.1 the result type is (FUNCTION * *), so Python does not
produce invalid code, but type checking is not accurate.)
-233: bugs in constraint propagation
- b.
- (declaim (optimize (speed 2) (safety 3)))
- (defun foo (x y)
- (if (typep (prog1 x (setq x y)) 'double-float)
- (+ x 1d0)
- (+ x 2)))
- (foo 1d0 5) => segmentation violation
-
235: "type system and inline expansion"
a.
(declaim (ftype (function (cons) number) acc))
(UNSIGNED-BYTE 8) will write to the stream one byte at a time,
rather than writing the sequence in one go, leading to severe
performance degradation.
+ As of sbcl-0.9.0.36, this is solved for fd-streams, so is less of a
+ problem in practice. (Fully fixing this would require adding a
+ ansi-stream-n-bout slot and associated methods to write a byte
+ sequence to ansi-stream, similar to the existing ansi-stream-sout
+ slot/functions.)
243: "STYLE-WARNING overenthusiasm for unused variables"
(observed from clx compilation)
(fixed in 0.8.2.51, but a test case would be good)
-278:
- a.
- (defun foo ()
- (declare (optimize speed))
- (loop for i of-type (integer 0) from 0 by 2 below 10
- collect i))
-
- uses generic arithmetic.
-
- b. (fixed in 0.8.3.6)
+276:
+ b. The same as in a., but using MULTIPLE-VALUE-SETQ instead of SETQ.
+ c. (defvar *faa*)
+ (defmethod faa ((*faa* double-float))
+ (set '*faa* (when (< *faa* 0) (- *faa*)))
+ (1+ *faa*))
+ (faa 1d0) => type error
279: type propagation error -- correctly inferred type goes astray?
In sbcl-0.8.3 and sbcl-0.8.1.47, the warning
(see also bug 117)
-281: COMPUTE-EFFECTIVE-METHOD error signalling.
- (slightly obscured by a non-0 default value for
- SB-PCL::*MAX-EMF-PRECOMPUTE-METHODS*)
- It would be natural for COMPUTE-EFFECTIVE-METHOD to signal errors
- when it finds a method with invalid qualifiers. However, it
- shouldn't signal errors when any such methods are not applicable to
- the particular call being evaluated, and certainly it shouldn't when
- simply precomputing effective methods that may never be called.
- (setf sb-pcl::*max-emf-precompute-methods* 0)
- (defgeneric foo (x)
- (:method-combination +)
- (:method ((x symbol)) 1)
- (:method + ((x number)) x))
- (foo 1) -> ERROR, but should simply return 1
-
- The issue seems to be that construction of a discriminating function
- calls COMPUTE-EFFECTIVE-METHOD with methods that are not all applicable.
-
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
bug instead of creating new ones
- localtime() - called for timezone calculations in code/time.lisp
+ 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
the control word; however, this clobbers any change the user might
have made.
-296:
- (reported by Adam Warner, sbcl-devel 2003-09-23)
-
- The --load toplevel argument does not perform any sanitization of its
- argument. As a result, files with Lisp pathname pattern characters
- (#\* or #\?, for instance) or quotation marks can cause the system
- to perform arbitrary behaviour.
-
297:
LOOP with non-constant arithmetic step clauses suffers from overzealous
type constraint: code of the form
The problem is that both EVALs sequentially write to the same LVAR.
-305:
- (Reported by Dave Roberts.)
- Local INLINE/NOTINLINE declaration removes local FTYPE declaration:
-
- (defun quux (x)
- (declare (ftype (function () (integer 0 10)) fee)
- (inline fee))
- (1+ (fee)))
-
- uses generic arithmetic with INLINE and fixnum without.
-
306: "Imprecise unions of array types"
a.(defun foo (x)
(declare (optimize speed)
around the same time regarding a call to LIST on sparc with 1000
arguments) and other implementation limit constants.
-311: "Tokeniser not thread-safe"
- (see also Robert Marlow sbcl-help "Multi threaded read chucking a
- spak" 2004-04-19)
- The tokenizer's use of *read-buffer* and *read-buffer-length* causes
- spurious errors should two threads attempt to tokenise at the same
- time.
-
314: "LOOP :INITIALLY clauses and scope of initializers"
reported by Bruno Haible sbcl-devel "various SBCL bugs" from CLISP
test suite, originally by Thomas F. Burdick.
#(1 2 ((SB-IMPL::|,|) + 2 2) 4)
which probably isn't intentional.
-323: "REPLACE, BIT-BASH and large strings"
- The transform for REPLACE on simple-base-strings uses BIT-BASH, which
- at present has an upper limit in size. Consequently, in sbcl-0.8.10
- (defun foo ()
- (declare (optimize speed (safety 1)))
- (let ((x (make-string 140000000))
- (y (make-string 140000000)))
- (length (replace x y))))
- (foo)
- gives
- debugger invoked on a TYPE-ERROR in thread 2412:
- The value 1120000000 is not of type (MOD 536870911).
- (see also "more and better sequence transforms" sbcl-devel 2004-05-10)
-
324: "STREAMs and :ELEMENT-TYPE with large bytesize"
In theory, (open foo :element-type '(unsigned-byte <x>)) should work
for all positive integral <x>. At present, it only works for <x> up
method is applicable, and yet matches neither of the method group
qualifier patterns.
-341: PPRINT-LOGICAL-BLOCK / PPRINT-FILL / PPRINT-LINEAR sharing detection.
- (from Paul Dietz' test suite)
-
- CLHS on PPRINT-LINEAR and PPRINT-FILL (and PPRINT-TABULAR, though
- that's slightly different) states that these functions perform
- circular and shared structure detection on their object. Therefore,
-
- a.(let ((*print-circle* t))
- (pprint-linear *standard-output* (let ((x '(a))) (list x x))))
- should print "(#1=(A) #1#)"
-
- b.(let ((*print-circle* t))
- (pprint-linear *standard-output*
- (let ((x (cons nil nil))) (setf (cdr x) x) x)))
- should print "#1=(NIL . #1#)"
-
- (it is likely that the fault lies in PPRINT-LOGICAL-BLOCK, as
- suggested by the suggested implementation of PPRINT-TABULAR)
-
343: MOP:COMPUTE-DISCRIMINATING-FUNCTION overriding causes error
Even the simplest possible overriding of
COMPUTE-DISCRIMINATING-FUNCTION, suggested in the PCL implementation
(used on non-x86 platforms) being a more complete solution then what
is done on x86.
+ On x86/linux large portions of tests/debug.impure.lisp have been commented
+ out as failures. The probable culprit for these problems is in x86-call-context
+ (things work fine on x86/freebsd).
+
More generally, the debugger internals suffer from excessive x86/non-x86
conditionalization and OAOOMization: refactoring the common parts would
be good.
Has the XEP for TEST in the backtrace, not the TEST frame itself.
(sparc and x86 at least)
+ Since SBCL 0.8.20.1 this is hidden unless *SHOW-ENTRY-POINT-DETAILS*
+ is true (instead there appear two TEST frames at least on ppc). The
+ underlying cause seems to be that SB-C::TAIL-ANNOTATE will not merge
+ the tail-call for the XEP, since Python has by that time proved that
+ the function can never return; same happens if the function holds an
+ unconditional call to ERROR.
+
355: change-class of generic-function
(reported by Bruno Haible)
The MOP doesn't support change-class on a generic-function. However, SBCL
point control word state and then returning the relevant float
(most-positive-short-float or short-float-infinity) or signalling an
error immediately would seem to make more sense.
+
+372: floating-point overflow not signalled on ppc/darwin
+ The following assertions in float.pure.lisp fail on ppc/darwin
+ (Mac OS X version 10.3.7):
+ (assert (raises-error? (scale-float 1.0 most-positive-fixnum)
+ floating-point-overflow))
+ (assert (raises-error? (scale-float 1.0d0 (1+ most-positive-fixnum))
+ floating-point-overflow)))
+ as the SCALE-FLOAT just returns
+ #.SB-EXT:SINGLE/DOUBLE-FLOAT-POSITIVE-INFINITY. These tests have been
+ disabled on Darwin for now.
+
+377: Memory fault error reporting
+ On those architectures where :C-STACK-IS-CONTROL-STACK is in
+ *FEATURES*, we handle SIG_MEMORY_FAULT (SEGV or BUS) on an altstack,
+ so we cannot handle the signal directly (as in interrupt_handle_now())
+ in the case when the signal comes from some external agent (the user
+ using kill(1), or a fault in some foreign code, for instance). As
+ of sbcl-0.8.20.20, this is fixed by calling
+ arrange_return_to_lisp_function() to a new error-signalling
+ function, but as a result the error reporting is poor: we cannot
+ even tell the user at which address the fault occurred. We should
+ arrange such that arguments can be passed to the function called from
+ arrange_return_to_lisp_function(), but this looked hard to do in
+ general without suffering from memory leaks.
+
+379: TRACE :ENCAPSULATE NIL broken on ppc/darwin
+ See commented-out test-case in debug.impure.lisp.
+
+380: Accessor redefinition fails because of old accessor name
+ When redefining an accessor, SB-PCL::FIX-SLOT-ACCESSORS may try to
+ find the generic function named by the old accessor name using
+ ENSURE-GENERIC-FUNCTION and then remove the old accessor's method in
+ the GF. If the old name does not name a function, or if the old name
+ does not name a generic function, no attempt to find the GF or remove
+ any methods is made.
+
+ However, if an unrelated GF with an incompatible lambda list exists,
+ the class redefinition will fail when SB-PCL::REMOVE-READER-METHOD
+ 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 ()
+ (let ((x #.(make-array 4 :fill-pointer 0)))
+ (values (eval `(typep ',x 'simple-array))
+ (typep x 'simple-array))))
+ then (FOO) => T, NIL.
+
+ Similar problems exist with SIMPLE-ARRAY-P, ARRAY-HEADER accessors
+ and all array dimension functions.
+
+383: ASH'ing non-constant zeros
+ Compiling
+ (lambda (b)
+ (declare (type (integer -2 14) b))
+ (declare (ignorable b))
+ (ash (imagpart b) 57))
+ on PPC (and other platforms, presumably) gives an error during the
+ emission of FASH-ASH-LEFT/FIXNUM=>FIXNUM as the assembler attempts to
+ stuff a too-large constant into the immediate field of a PPC
+ instruction. Either the VOP should be fixed or the compiler should be
+ taught how to transform this case away, paying particular attention
+ to side-effects that might occur in the arguments to ASH.
+
+384: Compiler runaway on very large character types
+
+ (compile nil '(lambda (x)
+ (declare (type (member #\a 1) x))
+ (the (member 1 nil) x)))
+
+ The types apparently normalize into a very large type, and the compiler
+ gets lost in REMOVE-DUPLICATES. Perhaps the latter should use
+ a better algorithm (one based on hash tables, say) on very long lists
+ when :TEST has its default value?
+
+ A simpler example:
+
+ (compile nil '(lambda (x) (the (not (eql #\a)) x)))
+
+ (partially fixed in 0.9.3.1, but a better representation for these
+ types is needed.)
+
+385:
+ (format nil "~4,1F" 0.001) => "0.00" (should be " 0.0");
+ (format nil "~4,1@F" 0.001) => "+.00" (should be "+0.0").
+
+386: SunOS/x86 stack exhaustion handling broken
+ According to <http://alfa.s145.xrea.com/sbcl/solaris-x86.html>, the
+ stack exhaustion checking (implemented with a write-protected guard
+ page) does not work on SunOS/x86.
+
+387:
+ 12:10 < jsnell> the package-lock test is basically due to a change in the test
+ behaviour when you install a handler for error around it. I
+ thought I'd disabled the test for now, but apparently that was
+ my imagination
+ 12:19 < Xophe> jsnell: ah, I see the problem in the package-locks stuff
+ 12:19 < Xophe> it's the same problem as we had with compiler-error conditions
+ 12:19 < Xophe> the thing that's signalled up and down the stack is a subtype of
+ ERROR, where it probably shouldn't be
+
+388:
+ (found by Dmitry Bogomolov)
+
+ (defclass foo () ((x :type (unsigned-byte 8))))
+ (defclass bar () ((x :type symbol)))
+ (defclass baz (foo bar) ())
+
+ causes error
+
+ SB-PCL::SPECIALIZER-APPLICABLE-USING-TYPE-P cannot handle the second argument
+ (UNSIGNED-BYTE 8).
+
+389:
+ (reported several times on sbcl-devel, by Rick Taube, Brian Rowe and
+ others)
+
+ ROUND-NUMERIC-BOUND assumes that float types always have a FORMAT
+ specifying whether they're SINGLE or DOUBLE. This is true for types
+ computed by the type system itself, but the compiler type derivation
+ short-circuits this and constructs non-canonical types. A temporary
+ fix was made to ROUND-NUMERIC-BOUND for the sbcl-0.9.6 release, but
+ the right fix is to remove the abstraction violation in the
+ compiler's type deriver.
+
+393: Wrong error from methodless generic function
+ (DEFGENERIC FOO (X))
+ (FOO 1 2)
+ gives NO-APPLICABLE-METHOD rather than an argument count error.
+
+394: (SETF CLASS-NAME)/REINITIALIZE-INSTANCE bug
+ (found by PFD ansi-tests)
+ in sbcl-0.9.7.15, (SETF (CLASS-NAME <class>) 'NIL) causes
+ (FIND-CLASS NIL) to return a #<STANDARD-CLASS NIL>.
+
+395: Unicode and streams
+ One of the remaining problems in SBCL's Unicode support is the lack
+ of generality in certain streams.
+ a. FILL-POINTER-STREAMs: SBCL refuses to write (e.g. using FORMAT)
+ to streams made from strings that aren't character strings with
+ fill-pointers:
+ (let ((v (make-array 5 :fill-pointer 0 :element-type 'standard-char)))
+ (format v "foo")
+ v)
+ should return a non-simple base string containing "foo" but
+ instead errors.
+
+ (reported on sbcl-help by "tichy")
+
+396: block-compilation bug
+ (let ((x 1))
+ (dotimes (y 10)
+ (let ((y y))
+ (when (funcall (eval #'(lambda (x) (eql x 2))) y)
+ (defun foo (z)
+ (incf x (incf y z))))))
+ (defun bar (z)
+ (foo z)
+ (values x)))
+ (bar 1) => 11, should be 4.
+
+397: SLEEP accuracy
+ The more interrupts arrive the less accurate SLEEP's timing gets.
+ (time (sb-thread:terminate-thread
+ (prog1 (sb-thread:make-thread (lambda ()
+ (loop
+ (princ #\!)
+ (force-output)
+ (sb-ext:gc))))
+ (sleep 1))))
+
+398: GC-unsafe SB-ALIEN string deporting
+ Translating a Lisp string to an alien string by taking a SAP to it
+ as done by the :DEPORT-GEN methods for C-STRING and UTF8-STRING
+ is not safe, since the Lisp string can move. For example the
+ following code will fail quickly on both cheneygc and pre-0.9.8.19
+ GENCGC:
+
+ (setf (bytes-consed-between-gcs) 4096)
+ (define-alien-routine "strcmp" int (s1 c-string) (s2 c-string))
+
+ (loop
+ (let ((string "hello, world"))
+ (assert (zerop (strcmp string string)))))
+
+ (This will appear to work on post-0.9.8.19 GENCGC, since
+ the GC no longer zeroes memory immediately after releasing
+ it after a minor GC. Either enabling the READ_PROTECT_FREE_PAGES
+ #define in gencgc.c or modifying the example so that a major
+ GC will occasionally be triggered would unmask the bug.)
+
+ On cheneygc the only solution would seem to be allocating some alien
+ memory, copying the data over, and arranging that it's freed once we
+ return. For GENCGC we could instead try to arrange that the string
+ from which the SAP is taken is always pinned.
+
+ 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*
+ (make-condition 'simple-error
+ :format-control "ow... ~S"
+ :format-arguments '(#1=(#1#))))
+ (setf *print-circle* t *print-level* 4)
+ (format nil "~@<~A~:@>" *c*)
+ gives
+ "ow... (((#)))"
+ where I (WHN) believe the correct result is "ow... #1=(#1#)",
+ like the result from (PRINC-TO-STRING *C*). The question of
+ what the correct result is is complicated by the hairy text in
+ the Hyperspec "22.3.5.2 Tilde Less-Than-Sign: Logical Block",
+ Other than the difference in its argument, ~@<...~:> is
+ exactly the same as ~<...~:> except that circularity detection
+ is not applied if ~@<...~:> is encountered at top level in a
+ format string.
+ But because the odd behavior happens even without the at-sign,
+ (format nil "~<~A~:@>" (list *c*)) ; => "ow... (((#)))"
+ and because something seemingly similar can happen even in
+ PPRINT-LOGICAL-BLOCK invoked directly without FORMAT,
+ (pprint-logical-block (*standard-output* '(some nonempty list))
+ (format *standard-output* "~A" '#1=(#1#)))
+ (which prints "(((#)))" to *STANDARD-OUTPUT*), I don't think
+ that the 22.3.5.2 trickiness is fundamental to the problem.
+
+ My guess is that the problem is related to the logic around the MODE
+ argument to CHECK-FOR-CIRCULARITY, but I haven't reverse-engineered
+ enough of the intended meaning of the different MODE values to be
+ confident of this.
+
+404: nonstandard DWIMness in LOOP with unportably-ordered clauses
+ In sbcl-0.9.13, the code
+ (loop with stack = (make-array 2 :fill-pointer 2 :initial-element t)
+ for length = (length stack)
+ while (plusp length)
+ for element = (vector-pop stack)
+ collect element)
+ compiles without error or warning and returns (T T). Unfortunately,
+ it is inconsistent with the ANSI definition of the LOOP macro,
+ because it mixes up VARIABLE-CLAUSEs with MAIN-CLAUSEs. Furthermore,
+ SBCL's interpretation of the intended meaning is only one possible,
+ unportable interpretation of the noncompliant code; in CLISP 2.33.2,
+ the code compiles with a warning
+ LOOP: FOR clauses should occur before the loop's main body
+ and then fails at runtime with
+ VECTOR-POP: #() has length zero
+ perhaps because CLISP has shuffled the clauses into an
+ ANSI-compliant order before proceeding.