* files for more information.
*/
+#include "sbcl.h"
+
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
+#include <libgen.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
+#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/file.h>
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
+#include <signal.h>
+#include <sched.h>
+#include <errno.h>
+#include <locale.h>
#if defined(SVR4) || defined(__linux__)
#include <time.h>
#include "signal.h"
#include "runtime.h"
-#include "sbcl.h"
#include "alloc.h"
#include "vars.h"
#include "globals.h"
#include "core.h"
#include "save.h"
#include "lispregs.h"
+#include "thread.h"
+
+#include "genesis/static-symbols.h"
+#include "genesis/symbol.h"
+
#ifdef irix
#include <string.h>
#include "interr.h"
#endif
+
+#ifndef SBCL_HOME
+#define SBCL_HOME "/usr/local/lib/sbcl/"
+#endif
+
\f
/* SIGINT handler that invokes the monitor (for when Lisp isn't up to it) */
static void
sigint_handler(int signal, siginfo_t *info, void *void_context)
{
- lose("\nSIGINT hit at 0x%08lX\n",
- (unsigned long) *os_context_pc_addr(void_context));
+ lose("\nSIGINT hit at 0x%08lX\n",
+ (unsigned long) *os_context_pc_addr(void_context));
}
/* (This is not static, because we want to be able to call it from
{
void* result = malloc(size);
if (0 == result) {
- lose("malloc failure");
+ lose("malloc failure");
} else {
- return result;
+ return result;
}
return (void *) NULL; /* dummy value: return something ... */
}
{
struct stat filename_stat;
if (stat(filename, &filename_stat)) { /* if failure */
- return 0;
+ return 0;
} else {
return copied_string(filename);
}
}
/* Convert a null-terminated array of null-terminated strings (e.g.
- * argv or envp) into a Lisp list of Lisp strings. */
+ * argv or envp) into a Lisp list of Lisp base-strings. */
static lispobj
-alloc_string_list(char *array_ptr[])
+alloc_base_string_list(char *array_ptr[])
{
if (*array_ptr) {
- return alloc_cons(alloc_string(*array_ptr),
- alloc_string_list(1 + array_ptr));
+ return alloc_cons(alloc_base_string(*array_ptr),
+ alloc_base_string_list(1 + array_ptr));
} else {
- return NIL;
+ return NIL;
}
}
\f
+/* miscellaneous chattiness */
+
+void
+print_help()
+{
+ puts(
+"SBCL is a Common Lisp programming environment. Ordinarily you shouldn't\n\
+need command line options when you invoke it interactively: you can just\n\
+start it and work with the customary Lisp READ-EVAL-PRINT loop.\n\
+\n\
+One option idiom which is sometimes useful interactively (e.g. when\n\
+exercising a test case for a bug report) is\n\
+ sbcl --sysinit /dev/null --userinit /dev/null\n\
+to keep SBCL from reading any initialization files at startup. And some\n\
+people like to suppress the default startup message:\n\
+ sbcl --noinform\n\
+\n\
+Other options can be useful when you're running SBCL noninteractively,\n\
+e.g. from a script, or if you have a strange system configuration, so\n\
+that SBCL can't by default find one of the files it needs. For\n\
+information on such options, see the sbcl(1) man page.\n\
+\n\
+More information on SBCL can be found on its man page, or at\n\
+<http://sbcl.sf.net/>.\n");
+}
+
+void
+print_version()
+{
+ printf("SBCL %s\n", SBCL_VERSION_STRING);
+}
+
+void
+print_banner()
+{
+ printf(
+"This is SBCL %s, an implementation of ANSI Common Lisp.\n\
+More information about SBCL is available at <http://www.sbcl.org/>.\n\
+\n\
+SBCL is free software, provided as is, with absolutely no warranty.\n\
+It is mostly in the public domain; some portions are provided under\n\
+BSD-style licenses. See the CREDITS and COPYING files in the\n\
+distribution for more information.\n\
+", SBCL_VERSION_STRING);
+}
+
+\f
int
main(int argc, char *argv[], char *envp[])
{
/* the name of the core file we're to execute. Note that this is
* a malloc'ed string which should be freed eventually. */
char *core = 0;
+ char **sbcl_argv = 0;
/* other command line options */
boolean noinform = 0;
lispobj initial_function;
+ setlocale(LC_ALL, "");
+
/* KLUDGE: os_vm_page_size is set by os_init(), and on some
* systems (e.g. Alpha) arch_init() needs need os_vm_page_size, so
* it must follow os_init(). -- WHN 2000-01-26 */
/* Parse our part of the command line (aka "runtime options"),
* stripping out those options that we handle. */
{
- int argi = 1;
- while (argi < argc) {
- char *arg = argv[argi];
- if (0 == strcmp(arg, "--noinform")) {
- noinform = 1;
- ++argi;
- } else if (0 == strcmp(arg, "--core")) {
- if (core) {
- lose("more than one core file specified");
- } else {
- ++argi;
- core = copied_string(argv[argi]);
- if (argi >= argc) {
- lose("missing filename for --core argument");
- }
- ++argi;
- }
- } else if (0 == strcmp(arg, "--end-runtime-options")) {
- end_runtime_options = 1;
- ++argi;
- break;
- } else {
- /* This option was unrecognized as a runtime option,
- * so it must be a toplevel option or a user option,
- * so we must be past the end of the runtime option
- * section. */
- break;
- }
- }
- /* This is where we strip out those options that we handle. We
- * also take this opportunity to make sure that we don't find
- * an out-of-place "--end-runtime-options" option. */
- {
- char *argi0 = argv[argi];
- int argj = 1;
- while (argi < argc) {
- char *arg = argv[argi++];
- /* If we encounter --end-runtime-options for the first
- * time after the point where we had to give up on
- * runtime options, then the point where we had to
- * give up on runtime options must've been a user
- * error. */
- if (!end_runtime_options &&
- 0 == strcmp(arg, "--end-runtime-options")) {
- lose("bad runtime option \"%s\"", argi0);
- }
- argv[argj++] = arg;
- }
- argv[argj] = 0;
- argc = argj;
- }
+ int argi = 1;
+ while (argi < argc) {
+ char *arg = argv[argi];
+ if (0 == strcmp(arg, "--noinform")) {
+ noinform = 1;
+ ++argi;
+ } else if (0 == strcmp(arg, "--core")) {
+ if (core) {
+ lose("more than one core file specified");
+ } else {
+ ++argi;
+ if (argi >= argc) {
+ lose("missing filename for --core argument");
+ }
+ core = copied_string(argv[argi]);
+ ++argi;
+ }
+ } else if (0 == strcmp(arg, "--help")) {
+ /* I think this is the (or a) usual convention: upon
+ * seeing "--help" we immediately print our help
+ * string and exit, ignoring everything else. */
+ print_help();
+ exit(0);
+ } else if (0 == strcmp(arg, "--version")) {
+ /* As in "--help" case, I think this is expected. */
+ print_version();
+ exit(0);
+ } else if (0 == strcmp(arg, "--end-runtime-options")) {
+ end_runtime_options = 1;
+ ++argi;
+ break;
+ } else {
+ /* This option was unrecognized as a runtime option,
+ * so it must be a toplevel option or a user option,
+ * so we must be past the end of the runtime option
+ * section. */
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+ /* This is where we strip out those options that we handle. We
+ * also take this opportunity to make sure that we don't find
+ * an out-of-place "--end-runtime-options" option. */
+ {
+ char *argi0 = argv[argi];
+ int argj = 1;
+ /* (argc - argi) for the arguments, one for the binary,
+ and one for the terminating NULL. */
+ sbcl_argv = successful_malloc((2 + argc - argi) * sizeof(char *));
+ sbcl_argv[0] = argv[0];
+ while (argi < argc) {
+ char *arg = argv[argi++];
+ /* If we encounter --end-runtime-options for the first
+ * time after the point where we had to give up on
+ * runtime options, then the point where we had to
+ * give up on runtime options must've been a user
+ * error. */
+ if (!end_runtime_options &&
+ 0 == strcmp(arg, "--end-runtime-options")) {
+ lose("bad runtime option \"%s\"", argi0);
+ }
+ sbcl_argv[argj++] = arg;
+ }
+ sbcl_argv[argj] = 0;
+ }
}
/* If no core file was specified, look for one. */
if (!core) {
- char *sbcl_home = getenv("SBCL_HOME");
- if (sbcl_home) {
- char *lookhere;
- char *stem = "/sbcl.core";
- lookhere = (char *) calloc(strlen(sbcl_home) +
- strlen(stem) +
- 1,
- sizeof(char));
- sprintf(lookhere, "%s%s", sbcl_home, stem);
- core = copied_existing_filename_or_null(lookhere);
- free(lookhere);
- } else {
- core = copied_existing_filename_or_null("/usr/lib/sbcl.core");
- if (!core) {
- core =
- copied_existing_filename_or_null("/usr/local/lib/sbcl.core");
- }
- }
- if (!core) {
- lose("can't find core file");
- }
+ char *sbcl_home = getenv("SBCL_HOME");
+ char *lookhere;
+ char *stem = "/sbcl.core";
+ if(!sbcl_home) sbcl_home = SBCL_HOME;
+ lookhere = (char *) calloc(strlen(sbcl_home) +
+ strlen(stem) +
+ 1,
+ sizeof(char));
+ sprintf(lookhere, "%s%s", sbcl_home, stem);
+ core = copied_existing_filename_or_null(lookhere);
+ free(lookhere);
+ if (!core) {
+ lose("can't find core file");
+ }
+ }
+ /* Make sure that SBCL_HOME is set, no matter where the core was
+ * found */
+ if (!getenv("SBCL_HOME")) {
+ char *envstring, *copied_core, *dir;
+ char *stem = "SBCL_HOME=";
+ copied_core = copied_string(core);
+ dir = dirname(copied_core);
+ envstring = (char *) calloc(strlen(stem) +
+ strlen(dir) +
+ 1,
+ sizeof(char));
+ sprintf(envstring, "%s%s", stem, dir);
+ putenv(envstring);
+ free(copied_core);
}
if (!noinform) {
- printf(
-"This is SBCL %s, an implementation of ANSI Common Lisp.\n\
-\n\
-SBCL is derived from the CMU CL system created at Carnegie Mellon University.\n\
-Besides software and documentation originally created at Carnegie Mellon\n\
-University, SBCL contains some software originally from the Massachusetts\n\
-Institute of Technology, Symbolics Incorporated, and Xerox Corporation, and\n\
-material contributed by volunteers since the release of CMU CL into the\n\
-public domain. See the CREDITS file in the distribution for more information.\n\
-\n\
-SBCL is a free software system, provided as is, with absolutely no warranty.\n\
-It is mostly in the public domain, but also includes some software copyrighted\n\
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1986;\n\
- Symbolics, Inc., 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992; and\n\
- Xerox Corporation, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990\n\
-used under BSD-style licenses allowing copying only under certain conditions.\n\
-See the COPYING file in the distribution for more information.\n\
-\n\
-More information about SBCL is available at <http://sbcl.sourceforge.net/>.\n\
-", SBCL_VERSION_STRING);
- fflush(stdout);
+ print_banner();
+ fflush(stdout);
}
-#ifdef MACH
- mach_init();
-#endif
#if defined(SVR4) || defined(__linux__)
tzset();
#endif
initial_function = load_core_file(core);
if (initial_function == NIL) {
- lose("couldn't find initial function");
+ lose("couldn't find initial function");
}
SHOW("freeing core");
free(core);
gc_initialize_pointers();
-#ifdef BINDING_STACK_POINTER
- SetSymbolValue(BINDING_STACK_POINTER, BINDING_STACK_START);
-#endif
-
interrupt_init();
-
arch_install_interrupt_handlers();
os_install_interrupt_handlers();
-#ifdef PSEUDO_ATOMIC_ATOMIC
- /* Turn on pseudo atomic for when we call into Lisp. */
- SHOW("turning on pseudo atomic");
- SetSymbolValue(PSEUDO_ATOMIC_ATOMIC, make_fixnum(1));
- SetSymbolValue(PSEUDO_ATOMIC_INTERRUPTED, make_fixnum(0));
-#endif
-
/* Convert remaining argv values to something that Lisp can grok. */
SHOW("setting POSIX-ARGV symbol value");
- SetSymbolValue(POSIX_ARGV, alloc_string_list(argv));
+ SetSymbolValue(POSIX_ARGV, alloc_base_string_list(sbcl_argv),0);
+ free(sbcl_argv);
/* Install a handler to pick off SIGINT until the Lisp system gets
* far enough along to install its own handler. */
sigint_init();
FSHOW((stderr, "/funcalling initial_function=0x%lx\n", initial_function));
- funcall0(initial_function);
-
- /* initial_function() is not supposed to return. */
- lose("Lisp initial_function gave up control.");
- return 0; /* dummy value: return something */
+ create_initial_thread(initial_function);
+ lose("CATS. CATS ARE NICE.");
+ return 0;
}
-