-*- Mode: Indented-text; -*- Don't worry if the ".notify" target fails. Its only purpose is to send a message to scheme-48-notifications@martigny.ai.mit.edu, so that we can get a rough idea of how much Scheme 48 is being used. ----- Customizing the installation 0. If you don't believe in configure scripts, or don't have a /bin/sh that can handle the configure script, you can make sysdep.h and Makefile manually from sysdep.h.in and Makefile.in. The technique is fairly obvious. 1. If you definitely won't be installing Scheme 48, you should set libdir to the distribution directory (e.g. "make libdir=`pwd`"). This will make the ,open and ,load-package commands work for the library packages defined in more-packages.scm. 2. If desired, customize the contents of the development environment heap image by editing the definitions of USUAL-COMMANDS and/or USUAL-FEATURES in more-packages.scm; see below. 3. If you're using a DEC MIPS, and want to use the foreign function interface, specify LDFLAGS=-N (with e.g. "make LDFLAGS=-N"). ----- Customizing scheme48.image By default, the image consists of a core Scheme system (Revised^4 Scheme plus a very minimal read-eval-print loop) together with a standard set of "options" (command processor, debugging commands, inspector, disassembler, generic arithmetic). The set of options is controlled by the definitions of USUAL-COMMANDS and USUAL-FEATURES in more-packages.scm. If you make the (open ...) clause empty, then "make scheme48.image" will create a Scheme system without any extras (such as error recovery), and the image will be smaller. The files are listed in approximate order of decreasing desirability; you'll probably want at least these: package-commands, build - necessary for the scheme48.image script to work debuginfo, disclosers - necessary if you want error messages to be at all helpful debugging - defines important debugging commands such as ,preview and ,trace After editing the definition of usual-features, simply make scheme48.image to rebuild the image. Deeper changes to the system -- for example, edits to most of the files in the rts/ directory -- will require use of the static linker. After you have a working scheme48.image, you can create a linker image with make linker after which you can say make image to get the linker to build a new initial.image and initial.debug; scheme48.image will then be built from those. ----- Editor support We recommend interacting with the Scheme 48 command processor using the emacs/scheme interface written by Olin Shivers at CMU. Copies of the relevant .el files, together with a "cmuscheme48.el", are in the emacs/ subdirectory of the release. Usage information is in doc/user-guide.txt. You will probably want to byte-compile the .el files to get .elc files. Use M-x byte-compile-file to do this. ----- Performance If you don't have a C compiler that optimizes as well as gcc does, then performance may suffer. Take a look at the automatically generated code in scheme48vm.c to find out why. With a good register allocator, all those variables (including some of the virtual machine's virtual registers) get allocated to hardware registers, and it really flies. Without one, performance can be pretty bad. The configure script automatically sets the Makefile variable CFLAGS to -O2 -g if gcc is available, or to -O if it isn't. This can be overriden by specifying a different CFLAGS, e.g. "make CFLAGS=-g" for no optimization. Even if you do have a good compiler, you should be able to improve overall performance even more, maybe about 6-10%, by removing the range check from the interpreter's instruction dispatch. To do this, use the -S flag to get assembly code for scheme48vm.c, then find the instructions in scheme48vm.s corresponding to the big dispatch in Interpret(): START: { unsigned char b_111X; b_111X = *((unsigned char *) RScode_pointerS); RScode_pointerS = (1L + RScode_pointerS); switch (b_111X) { ... } There will be one or two comparison instructions to see whether b_113X is in range; just remove them. For the 68000 I use a "sed" script /cmpl #158,d0/ N /cmpl #158,d0\n jhi L/ d but of course the constant will probably have to change when a new release comes along. See the user's guide for information on the ,bench command, which makes programs run faster. ----- filenames.make is "include"d by the Makefile, but is automatically generated from the module dependencies laid out in the various configuration files (*-packages.scm). If you edit any of these .scm files, you may want to do a "make filenames.make" before you do any further "make"s in order to update the depedencies. This step isn't necessary if you're using Gnu make, because Gnu make will make included files automatically.