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Re: gcl-2.6.13 released [stable]
From: |
Camm Maguire |
Subject: |
Re: gcl-2.6.13 released [stable] |
Date: |
Wed, 21 Dec 2022 17:19:06 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/27.1 (gnu/linux) |
Greetings, and thanks so much as always for your feedback!
Curious about clang -- would love to see the whole build log. I just
did a successful build on debian unstable with clang 1:14.0-55.3.
Take care,
Raymond Toy <toy.raymond@gmail.com> writes:
> On Wed, Dec 21, 2022 at 12:37 PM Raymond Toy <toy.raymond@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Dec 21, 2022 at 9:23 AM Camm Maguire <camm@maguirefamily.org> wrote:
>
> Greetings, and thanks so much for your feedback!
>
> My strong guess is that you are using gcc-12. There is a known bug
> therein preventing gcl from using it until fixed. I anticipate this
> won't take too long, so have not put any configure checks etc. in the
> way.
>
> Good guess! gcc 12.2.1 on two of my linux boxes. Do you think building
> with clang (14.0.5 or 15.0.4) would work better?
>
> To answer my own question, no clang does not work. I get many warnings like:
>
> ./../h/../h/att_ext.h:623:8: warning: a function declaration without a
> prototype is deprecated in all versions of C and is not supported in C2x
> [-Wdeprecated-non-prototype]
> object fLrow_major_aref();
> ^
> ./../h/../h/new_decl.h:268:14: note: conflicting prototype is here
> EXTER object fLrow_major_aref (object x,fixnum i);
>
> Then when gcl is loading up all the parts, I get:
>
> COMPILER>
> Error: PROGRAM-ERROR "HEAP-REPORT [or a callee] requires less than three
> arguments."
> Signalled by HEAP-REPORT.
>
> PROGRAM-ERROR "HEAP-REPORT [or a callee] requires less than three arguments."
>
> Broken at SYSTEM::DO-BREAK-LEVEL. Type :H for Help.
> 1 Return to top level.
>
> https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1023756
>
> Please let me know if problems persist with gcc <= 11. You should be
> able to do CC=gcc-11 ./configure .... when building gcl and that will
> take care of it.
>
> Take care,
>
> Raymond Toy <toy.raymond@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > On Tue, Dec 20, 2022 at 10:58 AM Camm Maguire
> <camm@transcendence.maguirefamily.org> wrote:
> >
> > Greetings! The GCL team is happy to announce the release of version
> > 2.6.13, the latest achievement in the 'stable' (as opposed to
> > 'development') series. Please see http://www.gnu.org/software/gcl for
> > downloading information.
> >
> > This release consolidates several years of work on GCL internals,
> > performance and ansi compliance.
> >
> > I got the release from git and built it without problems. Built maxima
> too, but I get memory corruption errors and a fatal segfault runnint the
> testsuite. I'm using the current maxima HEAD, not your cleanup banch. (Which
> looks really nice, BTW.)
> >
> > Garbage collection has been overhauled and significantly accelerated.
> > Contiguous block handling is now as fast as or perhaps faster than
> > relblock handling, leading to the now implemented promotion of relblock
> > data to contiguous after a surviving a number of gc calls. Relblock is
> > only written once during gc. Heap allocation is fully dynamic at
> > runtime and controllable with environment variables without
> > recompilation. While SGC is supported, it is found in practice to be
> > less useful with modern large memory cores and is off by default. </p>
> >
> > GCC on several platforms defaults to code which must lie within a common
> > 2Gb space, now an issue with heaps routinely larger than this. Error
> > protection for code address overflow is in place on most machines. The
> > variable si::*code-block-reserve* can be set to a static array of
> > element type 'character to preallocate a code block early within an
> > acceptable range. On amd64, compile-file takes a :large-memory-model-p
> > keyword (with compiler::*default-large-memory-model-p*) to compile
> > somewhat slower code which can be loaded at an arbitrary address.
> >
> > The COMMON-LISP package is fixed to the ansi standard. A CLTL1-COMPAT
> > package is defined to support earlier applications, and is used in
> > non-ansi builds.
> >
> > GCL can optionally manage a single heap load across multiple processes
> > via the GCL_MULTIPROCESS_MEMORY_POOL environment variable. GCL can
> > compile gprof profiling code in non-profiling images using the :prof-p
> > keyword to compile, causing '(si::gprof-start)(...)(si::gprof-quit)' to
> > only report calls to such code. GCL supports riscv4, and 64bit cygwin
> > on Windows in addition to the previous 21 architectures. GCL has
> > extensive support for hardware floating point exception handling via the
> > #'si::break-on-floating-point-exceptions function, taking the floating
> > point errors as keyword arguments.
> >
> > Several ANSI compliance errors have been fixed, most particularly in
> > pathnames and restarts. Hashtables have been accelerated, supporting
> > caching, static allocation, and 'equalp tests.
> >
> > Circle detection and handling has been greatly accelerated, using the gc
> > marking algorithm for a copy-less implementation.
> >
> > The compiler no longer writes data files reordering
> > "package-operations", changing the data file format to one loadable on
> > object file initialization.
> >
> > Floating point reading and writing has been made more precise. Inf/nan
> > handling matches IEEE specifications.
> >
> > Here are the compressed sources and a GPG detached signature:
> > https://www.gnu.org/software/gcl//gcl-2.6.13.tar.gz
> > https://www.gnu.org/software/gcl//gcl-2.6.13.tar.gz.sig
> >
> > Use a mirror for higher download bandwidth:
> > https://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html
> >
> > Here are the SHA1 and SHA256 checksums:
> >
> > 15b99ce0a0274ea1487866593d1262b0ce0051fa gcl-2.6.13.tar.gz
> > 8OnPPf67vS3iJo9GC49W/ItKGRRBs2IAF+RLJcmssY4 gcl-2.6.13.tar.gz
> >
> > The SHA256 checksum is base64 encoded, instead of the
> > hexadecimal encoding that most checksum tools default to.
> >
> > Use a .sig file to verify that the corresponding file (without the
> > .sig suffix) is intact. First, be sure to download both the .sig file
> > and the corresponding tarball. Then, run a command like this:
> >
> > gpg --verify gcl-2.6.13.tar.gz.sig
> >
> > The signature should match the fingerprint of the following key:
> >
> > pub dsa1024 2002-08-23 [SCA]
> > F1B0 68F9 933A AC36 2A30 A795 7331 B5C0 57F0 45DC
> > uid [ unknown] Camm Maguire <camm@debian.org>
> > uid [ unknown] Camm Maguire <camm@enhanced.com>
> >
> > If that command fails because you don't have the required public key,
> > or that public key has expired, try the following commands to retrieve
> > or refresh it, and then rerun the 'gpg --verify' command.
> >
> > gpg --recv-keys F1B068F9933AAC362A30A7957331B5C057F045DC
> >
> > As a last resort to find the key, you can try the official GNU
> > keyring:
> >
> > wget -q https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnu-keyring.gpg
> > gpg --keyring gnu-keyring.gpg --verify gcl-2.6.13.tar.gz.sig
> > --
> > Camm Maguire camm@maguirefamily.org
> > ==========================================================================
> > "The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens." -- Baha'u'llah
>
> --
> Camm Maguire camm@maguirefamily.org
> ==========================================================================
> "The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens." -- Baha'u'llah
>
> --
> Ray
--
Camm Maguire camm@maguirefamily.org
==========================================================================
"The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens." -- Baha'u'llah
- gcl-2.6.13 released [stable], Camm Maguire, 2022/12/20
- Re: gcl-2.6.13 released [stable], Andrey G. Grozin, 2022/12/21
- Re: gcl-2.6.13 released [stable], Jerry James, 2022/12/23
- Re: gcl-2.6.13 released [stable], Jerry James, 2022/12/23
- Re: gcl-2.6.13 released [stable], Jerry James, 2022/12/23
Re: gcl-2.6.13 released [stable], Jean Louis, 2022/12/22