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- This is version 3.0 of Guile, Project GNU's extension language library.
- Guile is an implementation of the Scheme programming language, packaged
- as a library that can be linked into applications to give them their own
- extension language. Guile supports other languages as well, giving
- users of Guile-based applications a choice of languages.
- Please send bug reports to bug-guile@gnu.org.
- See the LICENSE file for the specific terms that apply to Guile. Note
- that for any copyright year range specified as YYYY-ZZZZ in this
- package, the range specifies every single year in that closed interval.
- Additional INSTALL instructions ===========================================
- Generic instructions for configuring and compiling Guile can be found
- in the INSTALL file. Guile specific information and configure options
- can be found below, including instructions for installing SLIB.
- Guile depends on the following external libraries.
- - libgmp
- - libiconv
- - libintl
- - libltdl
- - libunistring
- - libgc
- - libffi
- It will also use the libreadline library if it is available.
- There is a corresponding `--with-XXX-prefix' option for each of these
- libraries (except for libgc and libffi which use `pkg-config', see
- below) that you can use when invoking ./configure, if you have these
- libraries installed in a location other than the standard places (/usr
- and /usr/local).
- These options are provided by the Gnulib `havelib' module, and details
- of how they work are documented in `Searching for Libraries' in the
- Gnulib manual (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnulib/manual). The extent
- to which they work on a given OS depends on whether that OS supports
- encoding full library path names in executables (aka `rpath'). Also
- note that using these options, and hence hardcoding full library path
- names (where that is supported), makes it impossible to later move the
- built executables and libraries to an installation location other than
- the one that was specified at build time.
- Another possible approach is to set CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS on the
- configure command-line, so that they include -I options for all the
- non-standard places where you have installed header files and -L
- options for all the non-standard places where you have installed
- libraries. This will allow configure and make to find those headers
- and libraries during the build. E.g.:
- ../configure [...] CPPFLAGS='-I/my/include' LDFLAGS='-L/my/lib'
- The locations found will not be hardcoded into the build executables and
- libraries, so with this approach you will probably also need to set
- LD_LIBRARY_PATH correspondingly, to allow Guile to find the necessary
- libraries again at runtime.
- Required External Packages ================================================
- Guile requires the following external packages:
- - GNU MP, at least version 4.2
- GNU MP is used for bignum arithmetic. It is available from
- http://gmplib.org/ .
- - libltdl from GNU Libtool, at least version 1.5.6
- libltdl is used for loading extensions at run-time. It is
- available from http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/ .
- - GNU libunistring, at least version 0.9.3
- libunistring is used for Unicode string operations, such as the
- `utf*->string' procedures. It is available from
- http://www.gnu.org/software/libunistring/ .
- - libgc, at least version 7.2
- libgc (aka. the Boehm-Demers-Weiser garbage collector) is the
- conservative garbage collector used by Guile. It is available
- from http://www.hboehm.info/gc/ .
- - libffi
- libffi provides a "foreign function interface", used by the
- `(system foreign)' module. It is available from
- http://sourceware.org/libffi/ .
- - pkg-config
- Guile's ./configure script uses pkg-config to discover the correct
- compile and link options for libgc and libffi. For this to work,
- the `PKG_CONFIG_PATH' environment variable must be set to point to
- the places where libgc's and libffi's `.pc' files can be found:
- PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/path/to/libgc/lib/pkgconfig:/path/to/libffi/lib/pkgconfig
- Alternatively, when pkg-config is not installed, you can work around
- this by setting some variables as part of the configure
- command-line:
- - PKG_CONFIG=true
- - BDW_GC_CFLAGS=<compile flags for picking up libgc headers>
- - BDW_GC_LIBS=<linker flags for picking up the libgc library>
- Note that because you're bypassing all pkg-config checks, you will
- also have to specify libffi flags as well:
- - LIBFFI_CFLAGS=<compile flags for picking up libffi headers>
- - LIBFFI_LIBS=<linker flags for picking up the libffi library>
- When building from a Git checkout, these additional packages are needed:
- - GNU Autoconf
- - GNU Automake
- - GNU Libtool
- - Flex
- - GNU Gettext
- - GNU Texinfo
- - GNU Gperf
- If you use GNU Guix, you can obtain a shell for development with all the
- dependencies by running the following command from the top directory of
- the checkout:
- guix shell
- You can also build Guile by running:
- guix build -f guix.scm
- Special Instructions For Some Systems =====================================
- We would like Guile to build on all systems using the simple
- instructions above, but it seems that a few systems still need special
- treatment. If you can send us fixes for these problems, we'd be
- grateful.
- FreeBSD 11.0:
- For a build supporting threads, please `pkg install' the following
- - pkgconf : provides pkg-config
- - gmake : /usr/bin/make does not work
- - boehm-gc-threaded : needed for threaded support
- Configure as:
- ./configure --with-bdw-gc=bdw-gc-threaded
- Alternately if you want a Guile without threads, then install boehm-gc
- and configure as:
- ./configure --without-threads
- Guile specific flags Accepted by Configure =================================
- If you run the configure script with no arguments, it should examine
- your system and set things up appropriately. However, there are a few
- switches specific to Guile you may find useful in some circumstances.
- --without-threads --- Build without thread support
- Build a Guile executable and library that supports multi-threading.
- The default is to enable threading support when your operating
- system offers 'POSIX threads'. When you do not want threading, use
- `--without-threads'.
- --enable-deprecated=LEVEL
- Guile may contain features that are `deprecated'. When a feature is
- deprecated, it means that it is still there, but that there is a
- better way of achieving the same thing, and we'd rather have you use
- this better way. This allows us to eventually remove the old
- implementation and helps to keep Guile reasonably clean of historic
- baggage.
- See the file NEWS for a list of features that are currently
- deprecated. Each entry will also tell you what you should replace
- your code with.
- To give you some help with this process, and to encourage (OK,
- nudge) people to switch to the newer methods, Guile can emit
- warnings or errors when you use a deprecated feature. There is
- quite a range of possibilities, from being completely silent to
- giving errors at link time. What exactly happens is determined both
- by the value of the `--enable-deprecated' configuration option when
- Guile was built, and by the GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED environment
- variable.
- It works like this:
- When Guile has been configured with `--enable-deprecated=no' (or,
- equivalently, with `--disable-deprecated') then all deprecated
- features are omitted from Guile. You will get "undefined
- reference", "variable unbound" or similar errors when you try to
- use them.
- When `--enable-deprecated=LEVEL' has been specified (for LEVEL not
- "no"), LEVEL will be used as the default value of the environment
- variable GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED. A value of "yes" is changed to
- "summary" and "shutup" is changed to "no", however.
- When GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED has the value "no", nothing special
- will happen when a deprecated feature is used.
- When GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED has the value "summary", and a
- deprecated feature has been used, Guile will print this message at
- exit:
- Some deprecated features have been used. Set the environment
- variable GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED to "detailed" and rerun the
- program to get more information. Set it to "no" to suppress
- this message.
- When GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED has the value "detailed", a detailed
- warning is emitted immediatly for the first use of a deprecated
- feature.
- The default is `--enable-deprecated=yes'.
- In addition to setting GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED in the environment, you
- can also use (debug-enable 'warn-deprecated) and (debug-disable
- 'warn-deprecated) to enable and disable the detailed messaged at run
- time.
- Additionally, if your toolchain is new enough, you will receive
- warnings at link time if you have a Guile extension that uses
- deprecated functions provided by Guile.
- --disable-shared --- Do not build shared libraries.
- --disable-static --- Do not build static libraries.
- Normally, both static and shared libraries will be built if your
- system supports them.
- --enable-debug-freelist --- Enable freelist debugging.
- This enables a debugging version of scm_cell and scm_double_cell,
- and also registers an extra primitive, the setter
- `gc-set-debug-check-freelist!'.
- Configure with the --enable-debug-freelist option to enable the
- gc-set-debug-check-freelist! primitive, and then use:
- (gc-set-debug-check-freelist! #t) # turn on checking of the freelist
- (gc-set-debug-check-freelist! #f) # turn off checking
- Checking of the freelist forces a traversal of the freelist and a
- garbage collection before each allocation of a cell. This can slow
- down the interpreter dramatically, so the setter should be used to
- turn on this extra processing only when necessary.
- --enable-debug-malloc --- Enable malloc debugging.
- Include code for debugging of calls to scm_malloc, scm_realloc, etc.
- It records the number of allocated objects of each kind. This is
- useful when searching for memory leaks.
- A Guile compiled with this option provides the primitive
- `malloc-stats' which returns an alist with pairs of kind and the
- number of objects of that kind.
- --enable-guile-debug --- Include internal debugging functions
- --disable-posix --- omit posix interfaces
- --disable-networking --- omit networking interfaces
- --disable-regex --- omit regular expression interfaces
- Cross building Guile =====================================================
- As of Guile 3.0.x, the build process produces a library, libguile-3.0,
- along with Guile "object files" containing bytecode to be interpreted by
- Guile's virtual machine. The bytecode format depends on the endianness
- and word size of the host CPU.
- Thus, when cross building Guile, you first need to configure, build and
- install it for your build host.
- Then, you may configure Guile for cross building:
- ./configure --host=i686-pc-cygwin --disable-shared
- A C compiler for the build system is required. If that doesn't suit it
- can be specified with the CC_FOR_BUILD variable in the usual way, for
- instance:
- ./configure --host=m68k-unknown-linux-gnu CC_FOR_BUILD=/my/local/gcc
- Guile for the build system can be specified similarly with the
- GUILE_FOR_BUILD variable, which defaults to whatever `guile' executable
- is found in $PATH. It must have the exact same version has the Guile
- that you intend to cross-build.
- Using Guile Without Installing It =========================================
- The "meta/" subdirectory of the Guile sources contains a script called
- "guile" that can be used to run the Guile that has just been built. Note
- that this is not the same "guile" as the one that is installed; this
- "guile" is a wrapper script that sets up the environment appropriately,
- then invokes the Guile binary.
- You may also build external packages against an uninstalled Guile build
- tree. The "uninstalled-env" script in the "meta/" subdirectory will set
- up an environment with a path including "meta/", a modified dynamic
- linker path, a modified PKG_CONFIG_PATH, etc.
- For example, you can enter this environment via invoking
- meta/uninstalled-env bash
- Within that shell, other packages should be able to build against
- uninstalled Guile.
- Installing SLIB ===========================================================
- In order to use SLIB from Guile you basically only need to put the
- `slib' directory _in_ one of the directories on Guile's load path.
- The standard installation is:
- 1. Obtain slib from http://www-swiss.ai.mit.edu/~jaffer/SLIB.html
- 2. Put it in Guile's data directory, that is the directory printed when
- you type
- guile-config info pkgdatadir
- at the shell prompt. This is normally `/usr/local/share/guile', so the
- directory will normally have full path `/usr/local/share/guile/slib'.
- 3. Start guile as a user with write access to the data directory and type
- (use-modules (ice-9 slib))
- at the Guile prompt. This will generate the slibcat catalog next to
- the slib directory.
- SLIB's `require' is provided by the Guile module (ice-9 slib).
- Example:
- (use-modules (ice-9 slib))
- (require 'primes)
- (prime? 7)
- Guile Documentation ==================================================
- The Guile Reference Manual (guile.info) is the primary documentation for
- Guile. A copy of the R5RS Scheme specification is included too
- (r5rs.info).
- Info format versions of this documentation are installed as part of
- the normal build process. The texinfo sources are under the doc
- directory, and other formats like Postscript, PDF, DVI or HTML can be
- generated from them with Tex and Texinfo tools.
- The doc directory also includes an example-smob subdirectory which has
- the example code from the "Defining New Types (Smobs)" chapter of the
- reference manual.
- The Guile WWW page is at
- http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/guile.html
- It contains a link to the Guile FAQ.
- About This Distribution ==============================================
- Interesting files include:
- - LICENSE, which contains the exact terms of the Guile license.
- - COPYING.LESSER, which contains the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License.
- - COPYING, which contains the terms of the GNU General Public License.
- - INSTALL, which contains general instructions for building/installing Guile.
- - NEWS, which describes user-visible changes since the last release of Guile.
- Files are usually installed according to the prefix specified to
- configure, /usr/local by default. Building and installing gives you:
- Executables, in ${prefix}/bin:
- guile --- a stand-alone interpreter for Guile. With no arguments, this
- is a simple interactive Scheme interpreter. It can also be used
- as an interpreter for script files; see the NEWS file for details.
- guile-config --- a Guile script which provides the information necessary
- to link your programs against the Guile library.
- guile-snarf --- a script to parse declarations in your C code for
- Scheme-visible C functions, Scheme objects to be used by C code,
- etc.
- Libraries, in ${prefix}/lib. Depending on the platform and options
- given to configure, you may get shared libraries in addition
- to or instead of these static libraries:
- libguile.a --- an object library containing the Guile interpreter,
- You can use Guile in your own programs by linking against this.
- libguilereadline.a --- an object library containing glue code for the
- GNU readline library.
- libguile-srfi-*.a --- various SRFI support libraries
- Header files, in ${prefix}/include:
- libguile.h, guile/gh.h, libguile/*.h --- for libguile.
- guile-readline/readline.h --- for guile-readline.
- Support files, in ${prefix}/share/guile/<version>:
- ice-9/* --- run-time support for Guile: the module system,
- read-eval-print loop, some R4RS code and other infrastructure.
- oop/* --- the Guile Object-Oriented Programming System (GOOPS)
- scripts/* --- executable modules, i.e., scheme programs that can be both
- called as an executable from the shell, and loaded and used as a
- module from scheme code. See scripts/README for more info.
- srfi/* --- SRFI support modules. See srfi/README for more info.
- Automake macros, in ${prefix}/share/aclocal:
- guile.m4
- Documentation in Info format, in ${prefix}/info:
- guile --- Guile reference manual.
- GOOPS --- GOOPS reference manual.
- r5rs --- Revised(5) Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme.
- The Guile source tree is laid out as follows:
- libguile:
- The Guile Scheme interpreter --- both the object library
- for you to link with your programs, and the executable you can run.
- module: Scheme libraries included with Guile.
- guile-readline:
- The glue code for using GNU readline with Guile. This
- will be build when configure can find a recent enough readline
- library on your system.
- doc: Documentation (see above).
- Git Repository Access ================================================
- Guile's source code is stored in a Git repository at Savannah. Anyone
- can access it using `git-clone' from one of the following URLs:
- git://git.savannah.gnu.org/guile.git
- https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guile.git
- Developers with a Savannah SSH account can also access it from:
- ssh://git.sv.gnu.org/srv/git/guile.git
- The repository can also be browsed on-line at the following address:
- https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guile.git/
- For more information on Git, please see:
- https://git-scm.com
- Please send problem reports to <bug-guile@gnu.org>.
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