X-Git-Url: http://repo.macrolet.net/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=BUGS;h=409cdf8d03081fc18cab46fa5ff5d4d657b7fd58;hb=d202a453b45430e04671b966c01bc067c2667442;hp=59f42794340a6a8c55846d7ab1fc4c5f78d0a3df;hpb=403f7a15776928c7bea7bdbd42ff0f586217fbda;p=sbcl.git diff --git a/BUGS b/BUGS index 59f4279..409cdf8 100644 --- a/BUGS +++ b/BUGS @@ -142,37 +142,12 @@ WORKAROUND: DTC's recommended workaround from the mailing list 3 Mar 2000: (setf (pcl::find-class 'ccc1) (pcl::find-class 'ccc)) -22: - The ANSI spec, in section "22.3.5.2 Tilde Less-Than-Sign: Logical Block", - says that an error is signalled if ~W, ~_, ~<...~:>, ~I, or ~:T is used - inside "~<..~>" (without the colon modifier on the closing syntax). - However, SBCL doesn't do this: - * (FORMAT T "~" 12) - munge12egnum - NIL - 27: Sometimes (SB-EXT:QUIT) fails with Argh! maximum interrupt nesting depth (4096) exceeded, exiting Process inferior-lisp exited abnormally with code 1 I haven't noticed a repeatable case of this yet. -31: - In some cases the compiler believes type declarations on array - elements without checking them, e.g. - (DECLAIM (OPTIMIZE (SAFETY 3) (SPEED 1) (SPACE 1))) - (DEFSTRUCT FOO A B) - (DEFUN BAR (X) - (DECLARE (TYPE (SIMPLE-ARRAY CONS 1) X)) - (WHEN (CONSP (AREF X 0)) - (PRINT (AREF X 0)))) - (BAR (VECTOR (MAKE-FOO :A 11 :B 12))) - prints - #S(FOO :A 11 :B 12) - in SBCL 0.6.5 (and also in CMU CL 18b). This does not happen for - all cases, e.g. the type assumption *is* checked if the array - elements are declared to be of some structure type instead of CONS. - 32: The printer doesn't report closures very well. This is true in CMU CL 18b as well: @@ -285,9 +260,6 @@ WORKAROUND: MERGE also have the same problem. c: (COERCE 'AND 'FUNCTION) returns something related to (MACRO-FUNCTION 'AND), but ANSI says it should raise an error. - f: (FLOAT-RADIX 2/3) should signal an error instead of - returning 2. - g: (LOAD "*.lsp") should signal FILE-ERROR. h: (MAKE-CONCATENATED-STREAM (MAKE-STRING-OUTPUT-STREAM)) should signal TYPE-ERROR. i: MAKE-TWO-WAY-STREAM doesn't check that its arguments can @@ -295,10 +267,6 @@ WORKAROUND: TYPE-ERROR when handed e.g. the results of MAKE-STRING-INPUT-STREAM or MAKE-STRING-OUTPUT-STREAM in the inappropriate positions, but doesn't. - j: (PARSE-NAMESTRING (COERCE (LIST #\f #\o #\o (CODE-CHAR 0) #\4 #\8) - (QUOTE STRING))) - should probably signal an error instead of making a pathname with - a null byte in it. k: READ-BYTE is supposed to signal TYPE-ERROR when its argument is not a binary input stream, but instead cheerfully reads from character streams, e.g. (MAKE-STRING-INPUT-STREAM "abc"). @@ -683,7 +651,7 @@ WORKAROUND: but SBCL doesn't do this. (Also as reported by AL in the same message, SBCL depended on this nonconforming behavior to build itself, because of the way that **CURRENT-SEGMENT** was implemented. - As of sbcl-0.6.12.x, this dependence on the nonconforming behavior + As of sbcl-0.7.3.x, this dependence on the nonconforming behavior has been fixed, but the nonconforming behavior remains.) 104: @@ -928,9 +896,6 @@ WORKAROUND: Evidently Python thinks of the lambda as a code transformation so much that it forgets that it's also an object. -126: - (fixed in 0.pre7.41) - 127: The DEFSTRUCT section of the ANSI spec, in the :CONC-NAME section, specifies a precedence rule for name collisions between slot accessors of @@ -1034,36 +999,6 @@ WORKAROUND: still some functions named "hairy arg processor" and "SB-INT:&MORE processor". -140: - (reported by Alexey Dejneka sbcl-devel 2002-01-03) - - SUBTYPEP does not work well with redefined classes: - --- - * (defclass a () ()) - # - * (defclass b () ()) - # - * (subtypep 'b 'a) - NIL - T - * (defclass b (a) ()) - # - * (subtypep 'b 'a) - T - T - * (defclass b () ()) - # - - ;;; And now... - * (subtypep 'b 'a) - T - T - - This is probably due to underzealous clearing of the type caches; a - brute-force solution in that case would be to make a defclass expand - into something that included a call to SB-KERNEL::CLEAR-TYPE-CACHES, - but there may be a better solution. - 141: Pretty-printing nested backquotes doesn't work right, as reported by Alexey Dejneka sbcl-devel 2002-01-13: @@ -1134,54 +1069,6 @@ WORKAROUND: It should be possible to be much more specific (overflow, division by zero, etc.) and of course the "How can this be?" should be fixable. -147: - (reported by Alexey Dejneka sbcl-devel 2002-01-28) - Compiling a file containing - (deftype digit () '(member #\1)) - (defun parse-num (string ind) - (flet ((digs () - (let (old-index) - (if (and (< ind ind) - (typep (char string ind) 'digit)) - nil)))))) - in sbcl-0.7.1 causes the compiler to fail with - internal error, failed AVER: "(= (LENGTH (BLOCK-SUCC CALL-BLOCK)) 1)" - This problem seems to have been introduced by the sbcl-0.pre7.* compiler - changes, since 0.pre7.73 and 0.6.13 don't suffer from it. A related - test case is - (defun parse-num (index) - (let (num x) - (flet ((digs () - (setq num index)) - (z () - (let () - (setq x nil)))) - (when (and (digs) (digs)) x)))) - In sbcl-0.7.1, this second test case failed with the same - internal error, failed AVER: "(= (LENGTH (BLOCK-SUCC CALL-BLOCK)) 1)" - After the APD patches in sbcl-0.7.1.2 (new consistency check in - TARGET-IF-DESIRABLE, plus a fix in meta-vmdef.lisp to keep the - new consistency check from failing routinely) this second test case - failed in FIND-IN-PHYSENV instead. Fixes in sbcl-0.7.1.3 (not - closing over unreferenced variables) made this second test case - compile without error, but the original test case still fails. - - Another way to get rid of the DEFTYPE without changing the symptom - of the bug is - (defvar *ch*) - (defun parse-num (string ind) - (flet ((digs () - (let () - (if (and (< ind ind) - (sb-int:memq *ch* '(#\1))) - nil)))))) - In sbcl-0.7.1.3, this fails with - internal error, failed AVER: "(= (LENGTH (BLOCK-SUCC CALL-BLOCK)) 1)" - The problem occurs while the inline expansion of MEMQ, - # - is being LET-converted after having its second REF deleted, leaving - it with only one entry in LEAF-REFS. - 148: In sbcl-0.7.1.3 on x86, COMPILE-FILE on the file (in-package :cl-user) @@ -1239,9 +1126,6 @@ WORKAROUND: but it has happened in more complicated cases (which I haven't figured out how to reproduce). -155: - (fixed in sbcl-0.7.2.9) - 156: FUNCTION-LAMBDA-EXPRESSION doesn't work right in 0.7.0 or 0.7.2.9: * (function-lambda-expression #'(lambda (x) x)) @@ -1254,16 +1138,6 @@ WORKAROUND: UPGRADED-COMPLEX-PART-TYPE should have an optional environment argument. (reported by Alexey Dejneka sbcl-devel 2002-04-12) -158: - Compiling the following code causes SBCL 0.7.2 to bug. This only - happens with optimization enabled, and only when the loop variable is - being incremented by more than 1. - (defun foo (array) - (declare (optimize (safety 0) (space 0) (debug 0) (speed 3))) - (loop for i from 0 to 10 by 2 - do (foo (svref array i))) (svref array (1+ i))) - (reported by Eric Marsden sbcl-devel 2002-04-15) - 162: (reported by Robert E. Brown 2002-04-16) When a function is called with too few arguments, causing the @@ -1284,17 +1158,82 @@ WORKAROUND: isn't too surprising since there are many differences in stack implementation and GC conservatism between the X86 and other ports.) -163: - HOST-NAMESTRING on a Unix pathname returns "Unix", which isn't - treated as a valid host by anything else in the system. (Reported by - Erik Naggum on comp.lang.lisp 2002-04-18) - -164: - The type system still can't quite deal with all useful identities; - for instance, as of sbcl-0.7.2.18, the type specifier '(and (real -1 - 7) (real 4 8)) is a HAIRY-TYPE rather than that which would be hoped - for, viz: '(real 4 7). - +165: + Array types with element-types of some unknown type are falsely being + assumed to be of type (ARRAY T) by the compiler in some cases. The + following code demonstrates the problem: + + (defun foo (x) + (declare (type (vector bar) x)) + (aref x 1)) + (deftype bar () 'single-float) + (foo (make-array 3 :element-type 'bar)) + -> TYPE-ERROR "The value #(0.0 0.0 0.0) is not of type (VECTOR BAR)." + (typep (make-array 3 :element-type 'bar) '(vector bar)) + -> T + + The easy solution is to make the functions which depend on knowing + the upgraded-array-element-type (in compiler/array-tran and + compiler/generic/vm-tran as of sbcl-0.7.3.x) be slightly smarter about + unknown types; an alternative is to have the + specialized-element-type slot in the ARRAY-TYPE structure be + *WILD-TYPE* for UNKNOWN-TYPE element types. + +166: + Compiling + (in-package :cl-user) + (defstruct uustk) + (defmethod permanentize ((uustk uustk)) + (flet ((frob (hash-table test-for-deletion) + ) + (obj-entry.stale? (oe) + (destructuring-bind (key . datum) oe + (declare (type simple-vector key)) + (deny0 (void? datum)) + (some #'stale? key)))) + (declare (inline frob obj-entry.stale?)) + (frob (uustk.args-hash->obj-alist uustk) + #'obj-entry.stale?) + (frob (uustk.hash->memoized-objs-list uustk) + #'objs.stale?)) + (call-next-method)) + in sbcl-0.7.3.11 causes an assertion failure, + failed AVER: + "(NOT +(AND (NULL (BLOCK-SUCC B)) + (NOT (BLOCK-DELETE-P B)) + (NOT (EQ B (COMPONENT-HEAD #)))))" + +167: + In sbcl-0.7.3.11, compiling the (illegal) code + (in-package :cl-user) + (defmethod prove ((uustk uustk)) + (zap ((frob () nil)) + (frob))) + gives the (not terribly clear) error message + ; caught ERROR: + ; (during macroexpansion of (DEFMETHOD PROVE ...)) + ; can't get template for (FROB NIL NIL) + The problem seems to be that the code walker used by the DEFMETHOD + macro is unhappy with the illegal syntax in the method body, and + is giving an unclear error message. + +168: + (reported by Dan Barlow on sbcl-devel 2002-05-10) + In sbcl-0.7.3.12, doing + (defstruct foo bar baz) + (compile nil (lambda (x) (or x (foo-baz x)))) + gives an error + debugger invoked on condition of type SB-INT:BUG: + full call to SB-KERNEL:%INSTANCE-REF + This is probably a bug in SBCL itself. [...] + Since this is a reasonable user error, it shouldn't be reported as + an SBCL bug. + +171: + (reported by Pierre Mai while investigating bug 47): + (DEFCLASS FOO () ((A :SILLY T))) + signals a SIMPLE-ERROR, not a PROGRAM-ERROR. DEFUNCT CATEGORIES OF BUGS IR1-#: