X-Git-Url: http://repo.macrolet.net/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;ds=sidebyside;f=src%2Fruntime%2Fruntime.h;h=0e8f623c112fa82e221e57e7c379a409e3ba5557;hb=1e4629723d19f96d752235ffde34fe58431431ae;hp=6d9d40703a96fc843674149cc696faf892a5379b;hpb=a4d2556c02207a7b04ec497155f52e4f21d2795c;p=sbcl.git diff --git a/src/runtime/runtime.h b/src/runtime/runtime.h index 6d9d407..0e8f623 100644 --- a/src/runtime/runtime.h +++ b/src/runtime/runtime.h @@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ #ifndef _SBCL_RUNTIME_H_ #define _SBCL_RUNTIME_H_ -#define QSHOW 1 /* Enable low-level debugging output? */ +#define QSHOW 0 /* Enable low-level debugging output? */ #if QSHOW #define FSHOW(args) fprintf args #define SHOW(string) FSHOW((stderr, "/%s\n", string)) @@ -30,52 +30,65 @@ * signal handling.) * * Note: It may be that doing this is fundamentally unsound, since it - * causes output from signal handlers, the i/o libraries aren't + * causes output from signal handlers, and the i/o libraries aren't * necessarily reentrant. But it can still be very convenient for * figuring out what's going on when you have a signal handling * problem.. */ -#define QSHOW_SIGNALS 1 +#define QSHOW_SIGNALS 0 -/* FIXME: There seems to be no reason that LowtagOf can't be defined - * as a (possibly inline) function instead of a macro. It would also - * be reasonable to rename the constants in ALL CAPS. */ +#define N_LOWTAG_BITS 3 +#define LOWTAG_MASK ((1<> N_WIDETAG_BITS)) -#define TypeOf(obj) ((obj)&type_Mask) -#define HeaderValue(obj) ((unsigned long) ((obj)>>type_Bits)) - -#define Pointerp(obj) ((obj) & 0x01) -#define PTR(obj) ((unsigned long)((obj)&~lowtag_Mask)) - -#define CONS(obj) ((struct cons *)((obj)-type_ListPointer)) -#define SYMBOL(obj) ((struct symbol *)((obj)-type_OtherPointer)) -#define FDEFN(obj) ((struct fdefn *)((obj)-type_OtherPointer)) +#define CONS(obj) ((struct cons *)((obj)-LIST_POINTER_LOWTAG)) +#define SYMBOL(obj) ((struct symbol *)((obj)-OTHER_POINTER_LOWTAG)) +#define FDEFN(obj) ((struct fdefn *)((obj)-OTHER_POINTER_LOWTAG)) /* KLUDGE: These are in theory machine-dependent and OS-dependent, but * in practice the "foo int" definitions work for all the machines * that SBCL runs on as of 0.6.7. If we port to the Alpha or some * other non-32-bit machine we'll probably need real machine-dependent * and OS-dependent definitions again. */ -#if ((defined alpha) && !(defined linux)) -#error No u32,s32 definitions for this platform. Write some. -#else -/* int happens to be 4 bytes on linux/alpha. long is longer. */ +/* even on alpha, int happens to be 4 bytes. long is longer. */ typedef unsigned int u32; typedef signed int s32; #define LOW_WORD(c) ((long)(c) & 0xFFFFFFFFL) -#endif + typedef u32 lispobj; +static inline int +lowtag_of(lispobj obj) { + return obj & LOWTAG_MASK; +} + +static inline int +widetag_of(lispobj obj) { + return obj & WIDETAG_MASK; +} + +/* Is the Lisp object obj something with pointer nature (as opposed to + * e.g. a fixnum or character or unbound marker)? */ +static inline int +is_lisp_pointer(lispobj obj) +{ + return obj & 1; +} + +/* Convert from a lispobj with type bits to a native (ordinary + * C/assembly) pointer to the beginning of the object. */ +static inline lispobj +native_pointer(lispobj obj) +{ + return obj & ~LOWTAG_MASK; +} + /* FIXME: There seems to be no reason that make_fixnum and fixnum_value * can't be implemented as (possibly inline) functions. */ #define make_fixnum(n) ((lispobj)((n)<<2)) @@ -89,21 +102,21 @@ typedef int boolean; * instead of macros. */ #define SymbolValue(sym) \ - (((struct symbol *)((sym)-type_OtherPointer))->value) + (((struct symbol *)((sym)-OTHER_POINTER_LOWTAG))->value) #define SetSymbolValue(sym,val) \ - (((struct symbol *)((sym)-type_OtherPointer))->value = (val)) + (((struct symbol *)((sym)-OTHER_POINTER_LOWTAG))->value = (val)) /* This only works for static symbols. */ /* FIXME: should be called StaticSymbolFunction, right? */ #define SymbolFunction(sym) \ - (((struct fdefn *)(SymbolValue(sym)-type_OtherPointer))->function) + (((struct fdefn *)(SymbolValue(sym)-OTHER_POINTER_LOWTAG))->fun) /* KLUDGE: As far as I can tell there's no ANSI C way of saying * "this function never returns". This is the way that you do it * in GCC later than version 2.7 or so. If you are using some * compiler that doesn't understand this, you could could just * change it to "typedef void never_returns" and nothing would - * break, you might just get a few more bytes of compiled code or + * break, though you might get a few more bytes of compiled code or * a few more compiler warnings. -- WHN 2000-10-21 */ typedef volatile void never_returns;