196 lines
7.6 KiB
Plaintext
196 lines
7.6 KiB
Plaintext
$XFree86: xc/programs/xedit/lisp/README,v 1.12 2002/11/23 08:26:47 paulo Exp $
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LAST UPDATED: $Date: 2006/11/25 20:34:53 $
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SUMMARY
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This is a small lisp interpreter for xedit. It implements a subset of
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Common Lisp and the xedit package implements several of the basic Emacs
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lisp functions.
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(shared modules not broken, but needs a redesign for better performance,
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but won't be made available in the default build probably for a long time,
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it would be really better to generate the interface dinamically, and/or just
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link agains't the required libraries and use a ffi interface)
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------
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| It has a very simple method for loading shared modules, slightly based on
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| the XFree86 loader code, that is currently disabled by default. To enable it,
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| edit lisp.cf and change BuildSharedLispModules to YES.
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| Assuming you have built it with BuildSharedLispModules enabled, you can build
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| a small test application can be built in this directory running "make lsp".
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| Two lisp programs are available in the test directory. To test the programs
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| run "./lsp test/hello.lsp" or "./lsp test/widgets.lsp".
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Currently, it should be used as an helper and/or a small calculator embedded
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in xedit. For the future it should be possible to write entire interfaces
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in the xedit text buffers.
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USAGE SUMMARY
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To evaluate lisp expressions, put the text cursor just after the
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lisp expression and press:
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C-x,C-e - will evaluate it, and print the result to the message window
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C-j - will evaluate it, and print the result to the edit window, any
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errors are printed to the message window.
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C-g - will send an SIGINT to the lisp process, and that process will
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stop whatever it was processing and jump to the toplevel,
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to wait for more input.
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Note that C-j will only work in the *scratch* buffer.
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NOTES
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The improvements to xedit including the several possibilites to extend
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the editor using Lisp are expected to allow making of xedit a versatile
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text editor for programming, but there is code being (slowly) developed
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that should also make it useable as a small word processor, for things
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like WYSIWYG html, etc.
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The xedit development is being done very slowly, maybe it will get
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somewhere someday, but it is a pet/hobby project, there is no intention
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of making of it an end user editor (the idea is to make it an useful
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development tool).
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In some aspects the development is trying to mimic several Emacs
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features, but there is no intention of competition (if xedit ever get
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something better than Emacs, I hope that it serves as a motivation to
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make of Emacs an even better editor), actually it is expected to explore
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different areas and use alternate solutions for the implementation.
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Most work in a computer is done in a text editor and the more the editor
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can help the user the better.
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(debugger is broken and very slow, no prevision for fixing it, but is
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expected to work correctly for interpreted only code)
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------
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| DEBUGGER
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| There is a, currently, very simple debugger implement in the interpreter.
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| The debugger is now optional, and off by default. To make it available,
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| you need to recompile with -DDEBUGGER.
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| To use the debugger, run the lsp sample program as "./lsp -d", and optionally
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| pass a second parameter, for the file to be interpreted. Once the debugger
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| prompt is visible, type "help" for a summary of options. To leave the debugger
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| type "continue".
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| Note that the debugger is still very simple, it won't work from xedit, and
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| won't drop to the debugger on "fatal errors". It allows adding breakpoints to
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| functions and watchpoints to variables. Support for changing data and going to
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| the debugger on fatal errors should be added at some time.
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------
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COMPILER
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Now there is a very simple bytecode compiler. It is far from finished, but
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for simple code can show significant better performance.
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There is not yet an interface to compile entire files and no interface to
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store the generated bytecode in disk. There is an interface to bytecode
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compile toplevel forms as a LAMBDA NIL, but it is not yet exported.
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If your code needs to call GO/RETURN/RETURN-FROM as the result of an EVAL,
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it must jump to code in the interpreter, after compiling all calls to
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GO/RETURN/RETURN-FROM are just stack adjusting and jumps in the bytecode.
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CATCH/THROW and UNWIND-PROTECT are running as interpreted code for now, so it
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is safe to use these, but code in such blocks is not compiled/optimized
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(not even macro expansion is done, as it understands that while not compiled,
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everything is candidate to redefinition at any time).
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To compile the code, just write a function, and compile it, example:
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(defun fact (n)
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(if (< n 2)
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1
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(* n (fact (1- n)))
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)
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)
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FACT
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(compile 'fact)
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FACT
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NIL
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NIL
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(disassemble 'fact)
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Function FACT:
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1 required argument: N
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0 optional arguments
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0 keyword parameters
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No rest argument
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Bytecode header:
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1 element used in the stack
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2 elements used in the builtin stack
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0 elements used in the protected stack
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Constant 0 = 1
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Constant 1 = (2)
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Symbol 0 = N
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Builtin 0 = *
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Builtin 1 = 1-
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Builtin 2 = <
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Initial stack:
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0 = N
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Bytecode stream:
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0 LOAD&PUSH (0)
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2 LOADCON&PUSH [1] ; (2)
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4 CALL 2 [2] ; <
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7 JUMPNIL 8
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10 LOADCON [0] ; 1
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12 NOOP
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13 JUMP 19
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16 LOAD&PUSH (0)
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18 LOAD&PUSH (0)
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20 CALL 1 [1] ; 1-
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23 LET* [0] ; N
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25 LETREC 1
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27 UNLET 1
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29 BCONS1
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30 CALL 1 [0] ; *
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33 RETURN
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FACT
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There are several optimizations that should be done at some time, I don't
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think adding NOOP opcodes will help everywhere to make aligned memory reads
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of shorts and ints.
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It should have explicitly visible registers, not the abstraction of "the
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current value", so the code generator can choose register allocation for
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loop control variables, commonly used variables, etc, for example. Jumps
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should have 3 types: byte relative, 2 bytes relative and 4 bytes relative.
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For now there is only 2 byte relative jumps, byte relative jumps
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can show a significant performance increase, but they are disable until
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it is decided how inlined functions will work, if it just updates the bytecode
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header and cut&past the bytecode, jumps must be updated, and some jumps
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may not fit anymore in a byte.
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OPTIMIZATION
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There are plenty of possibilities to make the interpreter run faster. Some
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optimizations that can make it run quite faster in certain cases are:
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o Better object memory layout and gc. The current memory allocation code
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is very bad, it try to keep 3 times more free objects than the currently
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used number, this can consume a lot of memory. The reason is to reduce
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the gc time cost so that it will in average miss only one in every 4
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collect tries.
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o Implement real vectors, currently they are just a list, so it cannot
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just deference a given index, and gc time is very long also.
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o Most lists are never changed once created, it could somehow add an index
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field in the cons cell, so that NTH/NTHCDR/LENGTH like code could just
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deference the correct object, instead of traversing the CDR of every
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cons. This would probably require implementing lists as vectors, while
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making it easy to deference would make life harder when deleting/inserting
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sublists in a list. It should also better be done in a way that does
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not require a lot of objects allocated linearly.
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HELPING
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Send comments and code to me (paulo@XFree86.Org) or to the XFree86
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mailing/patch lists.
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--
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Paulo
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