testfilestem=${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/sbcl-foreign-test-$$
-# FIXME: At least on OpenBSD, the "make $testfilestem.o" puts the
-# output file into the current directory, instead of the
-# target directory. E.g. "make /tmp/foo.o" causes "./foo.o" to be
-# created (!). Since OpenBSD doesn't support LOAD-FOREIGN, this
-# doesn't matter much, since it punts with UNSUPPORTED-OPERATOR
-# instead of not finding the file. But it'd be nice to straighten
-# this out, if only so that sbcl-foreign-test-*.o clutter
-# doesn't pile up in this directory. Maybe some time when I have
-# several test machines at hand to check the behavior of different
-# versions of "make"...
+# Make a little shared object file to test with.
echo 'int summish(int x, int y) { return 1 + x + y; }' > $testfilestem.c
-make $testfilestem.o
+cc -c $testfilestem.c -o $testfilestem.o
ld -shared -o $testfilestem.so $testfilestem.o
+# Test interaction with the shared object file.
${SBCL:-sbcl} <<EOF
+ (define-alien-variable environ (* c-string))
+ (defvar *environ* environ)
(handler-case
(load-foreign '("$testfilestem.so"))
(sb-int:unsupported-operator ()
;; on every OS. In that case, there's nothing to test, and we
;; can just fall through to success.
(sb-ext:quit :unix-status 52))) ; success convention for Lisp program
+ ;; Test that loading an object file didn't screw up our records
+ ;; of variables visible in runtime. (This was a bug until
+ ;; Nikodemus Siivola's patch in sbcl-0.8.5.50.)
+ (assert (= (sb-sys:sap-int (alien-sap *environ*))
+ (sb-sys:sap-int (alien-sap environ))))
(define-alien-routine summish int (x int) (y int))
(assert (= (summish 10 20) 31))
(sb-ext:quit :unix-status 52) ; success convention for Lisp program