#!/bin/sh
+set -e
# "When we build software, it's a good idea to have a reliable method
# for getting an executable from it. We want any two reconstructions
# even though you have stuff in your initialization files
# which makes it behave in such a non-standard way that
# it keeps the build from working
-# "sbcl --noprogrammer"
+# "sbcl --disable-debugger"
# to use an existing SBCL binary as a cross-compilation host
-# and tell it to handle errors as best it can by itself,
-# without trying to use *DEBUG-IO* to ask for help from
-# the programmer
+# and tell it to handle errors as best it can by itself
+# (probably by dying with an error code) instead of waiting
+# endlessly for a programmer to help it out with input
+# on *DEBUG-IO*
# "lisp -batch" to use an existing CMU CL binary as a cross-compilation host
-# "lisp -noinit -batch"
+# "lisp -noinit -batch"
# to use an existing CMU CL binary as a cross-compilation host
# when you have weird things in your .cmucl-init file
-# Someday CLISP should work
+# "openmcl --batch"
+# to use an OpenMCL binary as a cross-compilation host
# "clisp"
-# but as of sbcl-0.7.1.17, it still doesn't. (SBCL's fault: too much
-# unportable code!)
+# to use a CLISP binary as a cross-compilation host
#
# FIXME: Make a more sophisticated command line parser, probably
# accepting "sh make.sh --xc-host foolisp" instead of the
# optimizations (especially specializable arrays) that it doesn't
# know how to implement how in a portable way. (Or maybe that wouldn't
# require a second pass, just testing at build-the-cross-compiler time
-# whether the cross-compilation host returns suitable values from
+# whether the cross-compilation host returns suitable values from
# UPGRADED-ARRAY-ELEMENT-TYPE?)
-export SBCL_XC_HOST="${1:-sbcl --noprogrammer}"
+
+LANG=C
+LC_ALL=C
+export LANG LC_ALL
+
+build_started=`date`
+echo "//starting build: $build_started"
+
+if [ "$OSTYPE" = "cygwin" -o "$OSTYPE" = "msys" ] ; then
+ DEVNULL=NUL
+else
+ DEVNULL=/dev/null
+fi
+# The classic form here was to use --userinit $DEVNULL --sysinit
+# $DEVNULL, but that doesn't work on Win32 because SBCL doesn't handle
+# device names properly. We still need $DEVNULL to be NUL on Win32
+# because it's used elsewhere (such as canonicalize-whitespace), so we
+# need an alternate solution for the init file overrides. It turns
+# out that version.lisp-expr has no side effects from evaluation, so
+# we may as well use that.
+SBCL_XC_HOST="${1:-sbcl --disable-debugger --userinit version.lisp-expr --sysinit version.lisp-expr}"
+export DEVNULL
+export SBCL_XC_HOST
echo //SBCL_XC_HOST=\"$SBCL_XC_HOST\"
+. ./find-gnumake.sh
+find_gnumake
+
# If you're cross-compiling, you should probably just walk through the
# make-config.sh script by hand doing the right thing on both the host
# and target machines.
-sh make-config.sh || exit 1
+sh make-config.sh
+
+# Enforce the source policy for no bogus whitespace
+tools-for-build/canonicalize-whitespace
# The make-host-*.sh scripts are run on the cross-compilation host,
# and the make-target-*.sh scripts are run on the target machine. In
# identify the target architecture).
# On the host system:
# SBCL_XC_HOST=<whatever> sh make-host-1.sh
-# Copy src/runtime/sbcl.h from the host system to the target system.
+# Copy src/runtime/genesis/*.h from the host system to the target
+# system.
# On the target system:
# sh make-target-1.sh
-# Copy src/runtime/sbcl.nm from the target system to the host system.
+# Copy src/runtime/sbcl.nm and output/stuff-groveled-from-headers.lisp
+# from the target system to the host system.
# On the host system:
# SBCL_XC_HOST=<whatever> sh make-host-2.sh
# Copy output/cold-sbcl.core from the host system to the target system.
# On the target system:
-# sh make-host-2.sh
-sh make-host-1.sh || exit 1
-sh make-target-1.sh || exit 1
-sh make-host-2.sh || exit 1
-sh make-target-2.sh || exit 1
-date
+# sh make-target-2.sh
+# sh make-target-contrib.sh
+# Or, if you can set up the files somewhere shared (with NFS, AFS, or
+# whatever) between the host machine and the target machine, the basic
+# procedure above should still work, but you can skip the "copy" steps.
+time sh make-host-1.sh
+time sh make-target-1.sh
+time sh make-host-2.sh
+time sh make-target-2.sh
+time sh make-target-contrib.sh
+
+NCONTRIBS=`find contrib -name Makefile -print | wc -l`
+NPASSED=`find contrib -name test-passed -print | wc -l`
+echo
+echo "The build seems to have finished successfully, including $NPASSED (out of $NCONTRIBS)"
+echo "contributed modules. If you would like to run more extensive tests on"
+echo "the new SBCL, you can try:"
+echo
+echo " cd tests && sh ./run-tests.sh"
+echo
+echo " (All tests should pass on x86/Linux, x86/FreeBSD4, and ppc/Darwin. On"
+echo " other platforms some failures are currently expected; patches welcome"
+echo " as always.)"
+echo
+echo "To build documentation:"
+echo
+echo " cd doc/manual && make"
+echo
+echo "To install SBCL (more information in INSTALL):"
+echo
+echo " sh install.sh"
+
+build_finished=`date`
+echo
+echo "//build started: $build_started"
+echo "//build finished: $build_finished"