X-Git-Url: http://repo.macrolet.net/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=NEWS;h=c09f34ae2bf6275fd83cb545f456e946f4827a37;hb=f68d0f59fa6f9c448b3a147b5940937af03f940a;hp=8d491e75b384b489042164c85105b2f33cc25133;hpb=a02c31dc76ffa8ae4f014cd01be7ffe9e47113be;p=sbcl.git diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS index 8d491e7..c09f34a 100644 --- a/NEWS +++ b/NEWS @@ -1,5 +1,71 @@ ;;;; -*- coding: utf-8; -*- -changes in sbcl-0.9.19 (1.0.0?) relative to sbcl-0.9.18: +changes in sbcl-1.0.2 relative to sbcl-1.0.1: + * improvement: experimental support for mach exception handling on + x86/macos. requires building with :MACH-EXCEPTION-HANDLER feature + to use. + * improvement: support for GBK external format. + (thanks to Chun Tian (binghe)) + * improvement: the debugger now displays variables that have been closed + over, in code compiled with (DEBUG 2) or higher + * improvement: support for executable cores on NetBSD (thanks to + Richard Kreuter) + * new feature: added a RESTART-FRAME debugger command + * optimization: the function call overhead in code compiled with + a high DEBUG optimization setting is significantly + * bug fix: an error is signaled for attempts to use READ-SEQUENCE + for a (SIGNED-BYTE 8) stream and (UNSIGNED-BYTE 8) vector, or vice versa. + (thanks to Tony Martinez) + * bug fix: the initforms for DEFMETHOD &AUX parameters are only + evaluated once (reported by Kevin Reid) + +changes in sbcl-1.0.1 relative to sbcl-1.0: + * new platform: FreeBSD/x86-64, including support for threading. + * new feature: the compiler stores cross-referencing information + abount function calls (who-calls), macroexpansion (who-macroexpands) + and special variables (who-binds, who-sets, who-references) for code + compiled with (< SPACE 3). This information is available through the + sb-introspect contrib. + * new feature: users may subclass SEQUENCE, and have instances of + these classes interoperate with standard Common Lisp functions if + a number of methods are defined. (This feature is experimental + and the interface subject to change based on feedback from SBCL + users and the general community) + * improvement: sb-sprof traces call stacks to an arbitrary depth on + x86/x86-64, rather than the previous fixed depth of 8 + * improvement: another pthread back-end of mutex "pthread-futex". + * bug fix: non-ascii command-line arguments are processed correctly + (thanks to Yaroslav Kavenchuk) + * bug fix: non-required arguments were not passed correctly when a method + defined using DEFMETHOD was called from a mop-generated method using + CALL-NEXT-METHOD (reported by Pascal Costanza) + * bug fix: recursion is now permitted in accessors through + SLOT-UNBOUND. (reported by Pascal Costanza) + * bug fix: an error was signaled at startup if the HOME environment + variable was defined, but had an empty value (reported by Peter Van Eynde) + * bug fix: non ordinary lambda-list keyword in ordinary lambda lists + signal a PROGRAM-ERROR, not a BUG. + * bug fix: SB-POSIX:READDIR works when built with large file support. + * bug fix: ENOUGH-NAMESTRING works relative to #p"/" as well. (thanks + to Marco Monteiro) + * enhancement: DESTRUCTURING-BIND lambda-list uses &BODY instead of &REST + for better automatic indentation support. (thanks to Matt Pillsbury) + * optimization: loading generic functions no longer takes O(n^2) time, + proportional to the amount of methods in the generic function + (reported by Todd Sabin and Jeremy Brown) + * optimization: the FIND and POSITION family of sequence functions + are significantly faster on arrays whose element types have been + declared. + * improvements to the Windows port: + ** Intermittent heap corruption problems have been fixed. (thanks + to Alastair Bridgewater) + ** TRACE :ENCAPSULATE NIL (and function end breakpoints) + work on Windows. + ** Lisp is able to unwind foreign exception frames from alien + callbacks. (thanks to Alastair Bridgewater) + +changes in sbcl-1.0 relative to sbcl-0.9.18: + * improvement: experimental support for threading on FreeBSD/x86. + (thanks to NIIMI Satoshi) * improvement: runtime option --dynamic-space-size can be used to set the size of the dynamic space reserved on startup. * improvement: floating point modes in effect are now saved in @@ -10,8 +76,16 @@ changes in sbcl-0.9.19 (1.0.0?) relative to sbcl-0.9.18: threads are not running after *SAVE-HOOKS* have run. * improvement: writes to CLOS instance slots are type-checked in code compiled with (SAFETY 3) - * improvement: floating-point exception handling should work on all - POSIX platforms (thanks to NIIMI Satoshi) + * improvement: floating-point exception handling on FreeBSD (thanks to + NIIMI Satoshi) + * improvement: SB-POSIX supports time(2), utime(2) and utimes(2) + (thanks to Zach Beane) + * improvement: support for files larger than 2GB for CL streams and SB-POSIX + on Linux/x86 + * improvement: added support for the Shift-JIS external format. + (contributed by NIIMI Satoshi) + * improvement: callbacks are supported on Linux/PPC. (thanks to + Joshua Ross) * bug fix: compiler bug triggered by a (non-standard) VALUES declaration in a LET* was fixed. (reported by Kaersten Poeck) * bug fix: file compiler no longer confuses validated and already @@ -26,6 +100,17 @@ changes in sbcl-0.9.19 (1.0.0?) relative to sbcl-0.9.18: for sequences" or "The value 1 is not of type FIXNUM") * bug fix: version components are handled correctly in TRANSLATE-PATHNAME (reported by Josip Gracin) + * bug fix: an error is signaled for attempts to displace arrays with + incompatible element types (thanks to Mario Mommer) + * bug fix: more correct handling of wide characters in debug info + (bug reported by Attila Lendvai and fixed by Juho Snellman) + * optimization: method calls with &OPTIONAL or &KEY arguments are faster + and don't cause extra consing + * optimization: MAP and MAP-INTO are significantly faster on vectors + whose elements types have been declared. + * Improvements to SB-SPROF: + ** Support for allocation profiling + ** Reduced profiling overhead, especially for long profiling runs * Improvements to the Windows port: ** floating point exceptions are now reported correctly. ** stack exhaustion detection works partially.