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@c -*-texinfo-*- |
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@c This is part of the GNU Guile Reference Manual. |
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@c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2010, 2011 |
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@c Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
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@c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions. |
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@node Linking Programs With Guile |
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@section Linking Programs With Guile |
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This section covers the mechanics of linking your program with Guile |
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on a typical POSIX system. |
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The header file @code{<libguile.h>} provides declarations for all of |
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Guile's functions and constants. You should @code{#include} it at the |
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head of any C source file that uses identifiers described in this |
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manual. Once you've compiled your source files, you need to link them |
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against the Guile object code library, @code{libguile}. |
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As noted in the previous section, @code{<libguile.h>} is not in the |
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default search path for headers. The following command lines give |
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respectively the C compilation and link flags needed to build programs |
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using Guile @value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}: |
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@example |
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pkg-config guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION} |
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pkg-config guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION} |
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@end example |
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@menu |
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* Guile Initialization Functions:: What to call first. |
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* A Sample Guile Main Program:: Sources and makefiles. |
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@end menu |
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@node Guile Initialization Functions |
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@subsection Guile Initialization Functions |
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To initialize Guile, you can use one of several functions. The first, |
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@code{scm_with_guile}, is the most portable way to initialize Guile. It |
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will initialize Guile when necessary and then call a function that you |
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can specify. Multiple threads can call @code{scm_with_guile} |
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concurrently and it can also be called more than once in a given thread. |
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The global state of Guile will survive from one call of |
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@code{scm_with_guile} to the next. Your function is called from within |
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@code{scm_with_guile} since the garbage collector of Guile needs to know |
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where the stack of each thread is. |
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A second function, @code{scm_init_guile}, initializes Guile for the |
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current thread. When it returns, you can use the Guile API in the |
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current thread. This function employs some non-portable magic to learn |
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about stack bounds and might thus not be available on all platforms. |
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One common way to use Guile is to write a set of C functions which |
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perform some useful task, make them callable from Scheme, and then link |
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the program with Guile. This yields a Scheme interpreter just like |
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@code{guile}, but augmented with extra functions for some specific |
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application |
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In this situation, the application should probably process its |
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command-line arguments in the same manner as the stock Guile |
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interpreter. To make that straightforward, Guile provides the |
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@code{scm_boot_guile} and @code{scm_shell} function. |
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For more about these functions, see @ref{Initialization}. |
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@node A Sample Guile Main Program |
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@subsection A Sample Guile Main Program |
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Here is @file{simple-guile.c}, source code for a @code{main} and an |
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@code{inner_main} function that will produce a complete Guile |
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interpreter. |
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@example |
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#include <libguile.h> |
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static void |
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inner_main (void *closure, int argc, char **argv) |
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@{ |
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scm_shell (argc, argv); |
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@} |
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int |
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main (int argc, char **argv) |
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@{ |
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scm_boot_guile (argc, argv, inner_main, 0); |
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return 0; |
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@} |
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@end example |
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The @code{main} function calls @code{scm_boot_guile} to initialize |
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Guile, passing it @code{inner_main}. Once @code{scm_boot_guile} is |
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ready, it invokes @code{inner_main}, which calls @code{scm_shell} to |
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process the command-line arguments in the usual way. |
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@subsection Building the Example with Make |
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Here is a Makefile which you can use to compile the example program. It |
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uses @code{pkg-config} to learn about the necessary compiler and |
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linker flags. |
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@example |
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# Use GCC, if you have it installed. |
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CC=gcc |
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# Tell the C compiler where to find <libguile.h> |
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CFLAGS=`pkg-config |
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# Tell the linker what libraries to use and where to find them. |
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LIBS=`pkg-config |
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simple-guile: simple-guile.o |
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$@{CC@} simple-guile.o $@{LIBS@} -o simple-guile |
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simple-guile.o: simple-guile.c |
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$@{CC@} -c $@{CFLAGS@} simple-guile.c |
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@end example |
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@subsection Building the Example with Autoconf |
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If you are using the GNU Autoconf package to make your application more |
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portable, Autoconf will settle many of the details in the Makefile |
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automatically, making it much simpler and more portable; we recommend |
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using Autoconf with Guile. Here is a @file{configure.ac} file for |
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@code{simple-guile} that uses the standard @code{PKG_CHECK_MODULES} |
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macro to check for Guile. Autoconf will process this file into a |
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@code{configure} script. We recommend invoking Autoconf via the |
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@code{autoreconf} utility. |
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@example |
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AC_INIT(simple-guile.c) |
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# Find a C compiler. |
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AC_PROG_CC |
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# Check for Guile |
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PKG_CHECK_MODULES([GUILE], [guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}]) |
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# Generate a Makefile, based on the results. |
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AC_OUTPUT(Makefile) |
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@end example |
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Run @code{autoreconf -vif} to generate @code{configure}. |
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Here is a @code{Makefile.in} template, from which the @code{configure} |
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script produces a Makefile customized for the host system: |
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@example |
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# The configure script fills in these values. |
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CC=@@CC@@ |
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CFLAGS=@@GUILE_CFLAGS@@ |
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LIBS=@@GUILE_LIBS@@ |
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simple-guile: simple-guile.o |
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$@{CC@} simple-guile.o $@{LIBS@} -o simple-guile |
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simple-guile.o: simple-guile.c |
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$@{CC@} -c $@{CFLAGS@} simple-guile.c |
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@end example |
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The developer should use Autoconf to generate the @file{configure} |
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script from the @file{configure.ac} template, and distribute |
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@file{configure} with the application. Here's how a user might go about |
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building the application: |
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@example |
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$ ls |
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Makefile.in configure* configure.ac simple-guile.c |
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$ ./configure |
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checking for gcc... ccache gcc |
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checking whether the C compiler works... yes |
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checking for C compiler default output file name... a.out |
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checking for suffix of executables... |
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checking whether we are cross compiling... no |
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checking for suffix of object files... o |
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checking whether we are using the GNU C compiler... yes |
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checking whether ccache gcc accepts -g... yes |
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checking for ccache gcc option to accept ISO C89... none needed |
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checking for pkg-config... /usr/bin/pkg-config |
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checking pkg-config is at least version 0.9.0... yes |
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checking for GUILE... yes |
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configure: creating ./config.status |
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config.status: creating Makefile |
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$ make |
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[...] |
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$ ./simple-guile |
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guile> (+ 1 2 3) |
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6 |
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guile> (getpwnam "jimb") |
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#("jimb" "83Z7d75W2tyJQ" 4008 10 "Jim Blandy" "/u/jimb" |
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"/usr/local/bin/bash") |
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guile> (exit) |
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$ |
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@end example |
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@c Local Variables: |
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@c TeX-master: "guile.texi" |
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@c End: |
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