X-Git-Url: http://repo.macrolet.net/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=INSTALL;h=f98725901a2292a93bf68334f70efabb3bc80f59;hb=69cd16d7335a7f66985752b84f78d18e45f9783e;hp=728f6db24f298496359c20f45f0c33f96027af52;hpb=6d9ecc45cb21a1208deb8c4d128adc04aa289c9d;p=sbcl.git diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL index 728f6db..f987259 100644 --- a/INSTALL +++ b/INSTALL @@ -48,11 +48,22 @@ This software has been built successfully on these systems: os = FreeBSD 3.4 or 4.0 host lisp = CMU CL host lisp = SBCL itself - os = OpenBSD 2.6 + os = OpenBSD 2.6, 2.7, 2.8, 2.9, and 3.0 host lisp = SBCL itself -It is known not to build under CLISP, because CLISP doesn't support -MAKE-LOAD-FORM. Reports of other systems that it works on, or help in -making it run on more systems, would be appreciated. + cpu = sparc + os = Debian GNU/Linux 2.2 with libc >= 2.2 + host lisp = SBCL itself + os = Solaris 8 + host lisp = SBCL itself +It is known not to build under CLISP because of (as of early June 2002) +bugs in the CLISP garbage collector, and it is known not to build under +other systems like OpenMCL because of (as of early June 2002) remaining +dependencies of SBCL bootstrapping on CMUCLisms like the representation +of BYTE. + +Reports of other systems that it works on (or doesn't work on, for +that matter), or help in making it run on more systems, would be +appreciated. CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION SBCL, like CMU CL, overcommits memory. That is, it @@ -94,16 +105,21 @@ To build the system binaries: per the CAUTION note above. (As of version 0.6.0, the most memory-intensive operation in make.sh is the second call to GENESIS, which makes the Lisp image grow to nearly 128 Mb RAM+swap. - This will probably be reduced somewhat in some later version - by allowing cold load of byte-compiled files, so that the cold - image can be smaller.) 2. If the GNU make command is not available under the name "gmake", then define the environment variable GNUMAKE to a name where it can be found. - 3. If you like, you can edit the base-target-features.lisp-expr file - to customize the resulting Lisp system. By enabling or disabling - features in this file, you can create a smaller system, or one - with extra code for debugging output or error-checking or other things. + 3. If you like, you can tweak the *FEATURES* set for the resulting + Lisp system, enabling or disabling features like documentation + strings or extra debugging code. The preferred way to do this is + by creating a file "customize-target-features.lisp", containing + a lambda expression which is applied to the default *FEATURES* + set and which returns the new *FEATURES* set, e.g. + (LAMBDA (LIST) + (ADJOIN :SB-SHOW + (REMOVE :SB-DOC + LIST))) + (This is the preferred way because it lets local changes interact + cleanly with CVS changes to the main, global source tree.) 4. Run "sh make.sh" in the same directory where you unpacked the tarball. If you don't already have a SBCL binary installed as "sbcl" in your path, you'll need to tell make.sh what Lisp