internal representation of (OR ..) types to accommodate the new
support for (AND ..) types, among other things)
+changes in sbcl-0.6.13 relative to sbcl-0.6.12:
+* a port to the Alpha CPU, thanks to Dan Barlow
+* Martin Atzmueller ported Tim Moore's marvellous CMU CL DISASSEMBLE
+ patch, so that DISASSEMBLE output is much nicer.
+* better error handling in CLOS method combination, thanks to
+ Martin Atzmueller porting Pierre Mai's CMU CL patches
+* Pathnames are much more ANSI-compliant, thanks to various fixes
+ and tests from Dan Barlow.
+* Hash tables can be printed readably, as inspired by CMU CL code
+ of Eric Marsden and SBCL code of Martin Atzmueller.
+* Compiler trace output (the :TRACE-FILE option to COMPILE-FILE)
+ is now a supported extension again, since the consensus is that
+ it can be useful for ordinary development work, not just for
+ debugging SBCL itself.
+?? more overflow fixes for >16Mbyte i/o buffers
+* There's a new slam.sh hack to shorten the edit/compile/debug
+ cycle for low-level changes to SBCL itself, and a new
+ :SB-AFTER-XC-CORE target feature to control the generation of
+ the after-xc.core file needed by slam.sh.
+* minor incompatible change: The ENTRY-POINTS &KEY argument to
+ COMPILE-FILE is no longer supported, so that now every function
+ gets an entry point, so that block compilation looks a little
+ more like the plain vanilla ANSI section 3.2.2.3 scheme.
+* Fasl file version numbers are now independent of the target CPU,
+ since historically most system changes which required version
+ number changes have affected all CPUs equally. Similarly,
+ the byte fasl file version is now equal to the ordinary
+ fasl file version.
+?? minor incompatible change: SB-EXT:GET-BYTES-CONSED now
+ returns the number of bytes consed since the system started,
+ rather than the number consed since the first time the function
+ was called. (The new definition parallels ANSI functions like
+ CL:GET-INTERNAL-RUN-TIME.)
+
planned incompatible changes in 0.7.x:
* The debugger prompt sequence now goes "5]", "5[2]", "5[3]", etc.
as you get deeper into recursive calls to the debugger command loop,
instead of the old "5]", "5]]", "5]]]" sequence. (I was motivated
- to do this when ILISP and SBCL got into arguments which left me
- deeply nested in the debugger.)
-* When the profiling interface settles down, it might impact TRACE.
- They both encapsulate functions, and it's not clear yet how
- e.g. UNPROFILE will interact with TRACE and UNTRACE. (This shouldn't
- matter, though, unless you are using profiling. If you never
- profile anything, TRACE should continue to behave as before.)
+ to do this when squabbles between ILISP and SBCL left me
+ very deeply nested in the debugger.)
* The fasl file extension may change, perhaps to ".fasl".
* The default output representation for unprintable ASCII characters
which, unlike e.g. #\Newline, don't have names defined in the
ANSI Common Lisp standard, may change to their ASCII symbolic
names: #\Nul, #\Soh, #\Stx, etc.
* INTERNAL-TIME-UNITS-PER-SECOND might increase, e.g. to 1000.
+* FASL file extensions change to ".fasl", instead of the various
+ CPU-dependent values (".x86f", ".axpf", etc.) inherited from CMU CL.
* MAYBE-INLINE will probably go away at some point, maybe 0.7.x,
maybe later, in favor of the ANSI-recommended idiom for making
a function optionally inline.
-* FASL file extensions change to ".fasl", instead of the various
- CPU-dependent values (".x86f" etc.) inherited from CMU CL.
+* When the profiling interface settles down, maybe in 0.7.x, maybe
+ later, it might impact TRACE. They both encapsulate functions, and
+ it's not clear yet how e.g. UNPROFILE will interact with TRACE
+ and UNTRACE. (This shouldn't matter, though, unless you are
+ using profiling. If you never profile anything, TRACE should
+ continue to behave as before.)
+* The BYTE-COMPILE &KEY argument for COMPILE-FILE is deprecated,
+ since this behavior can be controlled by (DECLAIM (OPTIMIZE (SPEED 0))).
+ ("An ounce of orthogonality is worth a pound of features.")