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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, 2006, 2010, 2011, |
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@c 2012, 2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
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@c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions. |
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@raisesections |
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@node Hello Guile! |
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@section Hello Guile! |
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This chapter presents a quick tour of all the ways that Guile can be |
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used. There are additional examples in the @file{examples/} |
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directory in the Guile source distribution. It also explains how best to report |
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any problems that you find. |
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The following examples assume that Guile has been installed in |
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@code{/usr/local/}. |
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@menu |
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* Running Guile Interactively:: |
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* Running Guile Scripts:: |
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* Linking Guile into Programs:: |
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* Writing Guile Extensions:: |
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* Using the Guile Module System:: |
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* Reporting Bugs:: |
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@end menu |
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@node Running Guile Interactively |
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@subsection Running Guile Interactively |
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In its simplest form, Guile acts as an interactive interpreter for the |
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Scheme programming language, reading and evaluating Scheme expressions |
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the user enters from the terminal. Here is a sample interaction between |
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Guile and a user; the user's input appears after the @code{$} and |
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@code{scheme@@(guile-user)>} prompts: |
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@example |
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$ guile |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (+ 1 2 3) ; add some numbers |
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$1 = 6 |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (define (factorial n) ; define a function |
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(if (zero? n) 1 (* n (factorial (- n 1))))) |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (factorial 20) |
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$2 = 2432902008176640000 |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (getpwnam "root") ; look in /etc/passwd |
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$3 = #("root" "x" 0 0 "root" "/root" "/bin/bash") |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> @kbd{C-d} |
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$ |
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@end example |
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@node Running Guile Scripts |
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@subsection Running Guile Scripts |
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Like AWK, Perl, or any shell, Guile can interpret script files. A Guile |
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script is simply a file of Scheme code with some extra information at |
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the beginning which tells the operating system how to invoke Guile, and |
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then tells Guile how to handle the Scheme code. |
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Here is a trivial Guile script. @xref{Guile Scripting}, for more details. |
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@example |
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#!/usr/local/bin/guile -s |
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!# |
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(display "Hello, world!") |
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(newline) |
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@end example |
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@node Linking Guile into Programs |
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@subsection Linking Guile into Programs |
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The Guile interpreter is available as an object library, to be linked |
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into applications using Scheme as a configuration or extension |
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language. |
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Here is @file{simple-guile.c}, source code for a program that will |
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produce a complete Guile interpreter. In addition to all usual |
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functions provided by Guile, it will also offer the function |
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@code{my-hostname}. |
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@example |
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#include <stdlib.h> |
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#include <libguile.h> |
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static SCM |
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my_hostname (void) |
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@{ |
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char *s = getenv ("HOSTNAME"); |
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if (s == NULL) |
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return SCM_BOOL_F; |
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else |
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return scm_from_locale_string (s); |
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@} |
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static void |
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inner_main (void *data, int argc, char **argv) |
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@{ |
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scm_c_define_gsubr ("my-hostname", 0, 0, 0, my_hostname); |
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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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When Guile is correctly installed on your system, the above program |
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can be compiled and linked like this: |
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@example |
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$ gcc -o simple-guile simple-guile.c \ |
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`pkg-config --cflags --libs guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}` |
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@end example |
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When it is run, it behaves just like the @code{guile} program except |
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that you can also call the new @code{my-hostname} function. |
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@example |
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$ ./simple-guile |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (+ 1 2 3) |
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$1 = 6 |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (my-hostname) |
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"burns" |
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@end example |
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@node Writing Guile Extensions |
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@subsection Writing Guile Extensions |
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You can link Guile into your program and make Scheme available to the |
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users of your program. You can also link your library into Guile and |
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make its functionality available to all users of Guile. |
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A library that is linked into Guile is called an @dfn{extension}, but it |
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really just is an ordinary object library. |
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The following example shows how to write a simple extension for Guile |
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that makes the @code{j0} function available to Scheme code. |
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@smallexample |
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#include <math.h> |
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#include <libguile.h> |
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SCM |
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j0_wrapper (SCM x) |
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@{ |
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return scm_from_double (j0 (scm_to_double (x))); |
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@} |
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void |
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init_bessel () |
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@{ |
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scm_c_define_gsubr ("j0", 1, 0, 0, j0_wrapper); |
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@} |
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@end smallexample |
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This C source file needs to be compiled into a shared library. Here is |
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how to do it on GNU/Linux: |
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@smallexample |
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gcc `pkg-config --cflags guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}` \ |
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-shared -o libguile-bessel.so -fPIC bessel.c |
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@end smallexample |
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For creating shared libraries portably, we recommend the use of GNU |
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Libtool (@pxref{Top, , Introduction, libtool, GNU Libtool}). |
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A shared library can be loaded into a running Guile process with the |
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function @code{load-extension}. The @code{j0} is then immediately |
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available: |
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@smallexample |
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$ guile |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (load-extension "./libguile-bessel" "init_bessel") |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (j0 2) |
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$1 = 0.223890779141236 |
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@end smallexample |
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For more on how to install your extension, @pxref{Installing Site |
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Packages}. |
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@node Using the Guile Module System |
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@subsection Using the Guile Module System |
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Guile has support for dividing a program into @dfn{modules}. By using |
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modules, you can group related code together and manage the |
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composition of complete programs from largely independent parts. |
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For more details on the module system beyond this introductory material, |
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@xref{Modules}. |
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@menu |
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* Using Modules:: |
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* Writing new Modules:: |
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* Putting Extensions into Modules:: |
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@end menu |
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@node Using Modules |
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@subsubsection Using Modules |
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Guile comes with a lot of useful modules, for example for string |
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processing or command line parsing. Additionally, there exist many |
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Guile modules written by other Guile hackers, but which have to be |
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installed manually. |
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Here is a sample interactive session that shows how to use the |
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@code{(ice-9 popen)} module which provides the means for communicating |
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with other processes over pipes together with the @code{(ice-9 |
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rdelim)} module that provides the function @code{read-line}. |
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@smallexample |
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$ guile |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (use-modules (ice-9 popen)) |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (use-modules (ice-9 rdelim)) |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (define p (open-input-pipe "ls -l")) |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (read-line p) |
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$1 = "total 30" |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (read-line p) |
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$2 = "drwxr-sr-x 2 mgrabmue mgrabmue 1024 Mar 29 19:57 CVS" |
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@end smallexample |
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@node Writing new Modules |
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@subsubsection Writing new Modules |
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You can create new modules using the syntactic form |
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@code{define-module}. All definitions following this form until the |
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next @code{define-module} are placed into the new module. |
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One module is usually placed into one file, and that file is installed |
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in a location where Guile can automatically find it. The following |
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session shows a simple example. |
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@smallexample |
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$ cat /usr/local/share/guile/site/foo/bar.scm |
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(define-module (foo bar) |
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#:export (frob)) |
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(define (frob x) (* 2 x)) |
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$ guile |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (use-modules (foo bar)) |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (frob 12) |
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$1 = 24 |
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@end smallexample |
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For more on how to install your module, @pxref{Installing Site |
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Packages}. |
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@node Putting Extensions into Modules |
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@subsubsection Putting Extensions into Modules |
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In addition to Scheme code you can also put things that are defined in |
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C into a module. |
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You do this by writing a small Scheme file that defines the module and |
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call @code{load-extension} directly in the body of the module. |
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@smallexample |
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$ cat /usr/local/share/guile/site/math/bessel.scm |
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(define-module (math bessel) |
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#:export (j0)) |
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(load-extension "libguile-bessel" "init_bessel") |
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$ file /usr/local/lib/guile/@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}/extensions/libguile-bessel.so |
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@dots{} ELF 32-bit LSB shared object @dots{} |
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$ guile |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (use-modules (math bessel)) |
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scheme@@(guile-user)> (j0 2) |
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$1 = 0.223890779141236 |
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@end smallexample |
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@xref{Foreign Extensions}, for more information. |
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@lowersections |
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@node Reporting Bugs |
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@section Reporting Bugs |
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Any problems with the installation should be reported to |
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@email{bug-guile@@gnu.org}. |
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If you find a bug in Guile, please report it to the Guile developers, so |
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they can fix it. They may also be able to suggest workarounds when it |
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is not possible for you to apply the bug-fix or install a new version of |
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Guile yourself. |
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Before sending in bug reports, please check with the following list that |
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you really have found a bug. |
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@itemize @bullet |
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@item |
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Whenever documentation and actual behavior differ, you have certainly |
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found a bug, either in the documentation or in the program. |
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@item |
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When Guile crashes, it is a bug. |
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@item |
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When Guile hangs or takes forever to complete a task, it is a bug. |
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@item |
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When calculations produce wrong results, it is a bug. |
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@item |
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When Guile signals an error for valid Scheme programs, it is a bug. |
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@item |
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When Guile does not signal an error for invalid Scheme programs, it may |
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be a bug, unless this is explicitly documented. |
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@item |
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When some part of the documentation is not clear and does not make sense |
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to you even after re-reading the section, it is a bug. |
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@end itemize |
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Before reporting the bug, check whether any programs you have loaded |
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into Guile, including your @file{.guile} file, set any variables that |
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may affect the functioning of Guile. Also, see whether the problem |
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happens in a freshly started Guile without loading your @file{.guile} |
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file (start Guile with the @code{-q} switch to prevent loading the init |
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file). If the problem does @emph{not} occur then, you must report the |
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precise contents of any programs that you must load into Guile in order |
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to cause the problem to occur. |
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When you write a bug report, please make sure to include as much of the |
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information described below in the report. If you can't figure out some |
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of the items, it is not a problem, but the more information we get, the |
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more likely we can diagnose and fix the bug. |
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@itemize @bullet |
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@item |
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The version number of Guile. You can get this information from invoking |
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@samp{guile --version} at your shell, or calling @code{(version)} from |
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within Guile. |
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@item |
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Your machine type, as determined by the @code{config.guess} shell |
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script. If you have a Guile checkout, this file is located in |
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@code{build-aux}; otherwise you can fetch the latest version from |
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@uref{http: |
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@example |
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$ build-aux/config.guess |
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x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu |
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@end example |
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@item |
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If you installed Guile from a binary package, the version of that |
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package. On systems that use RPM, use @code{rpm -qa | grep guile}. On systems |
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that use DPKG, @code{dpkg -l | grep guile}. |
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@item |
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If you built Guile yourself, the build configuration that you used: |
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@example |
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$ ./config.status --config |
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'--enable-error-on-warning' '--disable-deprecated'... |
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@end example |
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@item |
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A complete description of how to reproduce the bug. |
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If you have a Scheme program that produces the bug, please include it in |
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the bug report. If your program is too big to include, please try to |
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reduce your code to a minimal test case. |
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If you can reproduce your problem at the REPL, that is best. Give a |
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transcript of the expressions you typed at the REPL. |
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@item |
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A description of the incorrect behavior. For example, "The Guile |
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process gets a fatal signal," or, "The resulting output is as follows, |
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which I think is wrong." |
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If the manifestation of the bug is a Guile error message, it is |
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important to report the precise text of the error message, and a |
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backtrace showing how the Scheme program arrived at the error. This can |
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be done using the @code{,backtrace} command in Guile's debugger. |
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@end itemize |
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If your bug causes Guile to crash, additional information from a |
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low-level debugger such as GDB might be helpful. If you have built Guile |
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yourself, you can run Guile under GDB via the |
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@code{meta/gdb-uninstalled-guile} script. Instead of invoking Guile as |
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usual, invoke the wrapper script, type @code{run} to start the process, |
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then @code{backtrace} when the crash comes. Include that backtrace in |
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your report. |
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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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