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                             Vicare Scheme
                             =============


Topics
------

  1. Introduction
  2. License
  3. Install
  4. Testing
  A. Credits
  B. Bug reports
  C. Resources
  D. On boot images
  E. Automatically building dependencies


1. Introduction
---------------

Scheme is a statically scoped and properly tail-recursive dialect of the
Lisp programming language  invented by Guy Lewis Steele  Jr.  and Gerald
Jay Sussman.  It was designed to  have an exceptionally clear and simple
semantics and few different ways to form expressions.

  The  "Revised^6 Report  on the  Algorithmic Language  Scheme"  gives a
defining description of the  programming language Scheme.  The report is
the work  of many  people in the  course of  many years; revision  6 was
edited by Michael  Sperber, R. Kent Dybvig, Matthew  Flatt and Anton Van
Straaten.

  Ikarus Scheme is an almost R6RS compliant implementation of the Scheme
programming language;  it is  the creation  of Abdulaziz  Ghuloum, which
retired from  development in 2010.   Vicare Scheme is an  R6RS compliant
fork of Ikarus Scheme, aiming to  become a native compiler for R6 Scheme
producing  single threaded  programs  running on  Intel  x86 32-bit  and
64-bit processors.   It is tested only  on GNU+Linux; it should  work on
POSIX platforms, but not on Cygwin.

  "Vicare" is pronounced  the etruscan way.  The logo of  the project is
the greek capital letter Upsilon (U+03D2).

  Vicare offers arbitrary precision integers through GMP.  It implements
an optionally included foreign-functions interface based on Libffi.  The
last time  the maintainer updated  this paragraph, it had  tested Libffi
version 3.0.11.

  A port to R6RS of the SRFI libraries is included in the distribution.

  Current official maintainers are:

Marco Maggi <marco.maggi-ipsu@poste.it>


2. License
----------

Copyright (c) 2011-2016 Marco Maggi <marco.maggi-ipsu@poste.it>
Copyright (c) 2006-2010 Abdulaziz Ghuloum <aghuloum@cs.indiana.edu>
Modified by the Vicare contributors.

This program is free software:  you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the  terms of the GNU  General Public License as  published by the
Free Software Foundation,  either version 3 of the  License, or (at your
option) any later version.

This program  is distributed  in the  hope that it  will be  useful, but
WITHOUT   ANY   WARRANTY;  without   even   the   implied  warranty   of
MERCHANTABILITY  or  FITNESS FOR  A  PARTICULAR  PURPOSE.   See the  GNU
General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy  of the GNU General Public License along
with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.


3. Install
----------

3.1 Install Vicare
------------------

See the INSTALL file for  installation instructions for generic packages
using the GNU Autotools.  To install Vicare Scheme from a proper release
tarball, we must unpack the archive then do:

   $ cd vicare-scheme-0.4.0
   $ ./configure
   $ make
   $ make install

  To run the test suite we do:

   $ make check

  The Makefile is designed to allow parallel builds, so we can do:

   $ make -j4 all && make -j4 check

which,  on  a  4-core  CPU,   should  speed  up  building  and  checking
significantly.

  By default  only compiled Scheme  libraries are installed;  to install
also the source libraries we must configure with:

   $ ./configure --enable-sources-installation ...

  If, instead,  we have checked out  a revision from the  repository, we
will have  to first build the  infrastructure by running a  Bourne shell
script from the top source directory:

   $ cd vicare-scheme
   $ sh autogen.sh

notice  that  "autogen.sh"  will   run  the  programs  "autoreconf"  and
"libtoolize"; the  latter is  selected through the  environment variable
"LIBTOOLIZE",  whose  value  can  be  customised;  for  example  to  run
"glibtoolize" rather than "libtoolize" we do:

   $ LIBTOOLIZE=glibtoolize sh autogen.sh

GNU Libtool is not directly needed by Vicare Scheme, but it is needed to
correctly link libraries (like GNU Libiconv) which make use of it.

  After this the  procedure is the same  as the one for  building from a
proper release tarball, but we  must enable maintainer mode when running
the "configure" script:

   $ ./configure --enable-maintainer-mode
   $ make
   $ make install

again to run the test suite we do:

   $ make check

  To make use  of the POSIX semaphore functions, we  need to include the
pthread library using the option:

   $ ./configure --with-pthread [... other options ...]

by default pthread is linked to the executable if found on the host.

  A  bare build  (without  support for  optional  features and  external
libraries) can be obtained with:

   $ ./configure \
         --disable-posix	\
	 --disable-glibc	\
	 --disable-linux	\
         --without-pthread	\
         --without-libffi	\
         --without-libiconv	\
         --without-readline

  To test what a rule will do use the "-n" option; example:

   $ make install -n

  The "Makefile" supports the  "DESTDIR" environment variable to install
the files under a temporary location; example:

   $ make install DESTDIR=/tmp/vicare

  By default, the Scheme libraries are installed under the directory:

			$(libdir)/vicare-scheme

we should  arrange the  package configuration  to install  32-bit binary
libraries under:

		      $(prefix)/lib/vicare-scheme

and 64-bit binary libraries under:

		     $(prefix)/lib64/vicare-scheme

by configuring, for example, with:

   $ ./configure --libdir=/usr/local/lib64 ...

  The variable VFLAGS is available  to the user when running "configure"
and "make" to add command line options to the execution of "vicare" when
compiling libraries and running tests; for example:

   $ make VFLAGS="-g -O2 --print-loaded-libraries"


3.2 Special make rules
----------------------

There are  special makefile rules  to rebuild source code  files, mostly
lexer and parser tables:

ip-address-tables	- rebuild the tables for the net libraries
silex-test		- rebuild the tests for the SILex lexer
lalr-test		- rebuild the tests for the LALR parser

and the  following DANGEROUS  rule, use  only if you  know what  you are
doing:

silex-internals		- rebuild the internal tables of SILex itself


4. Testing
----------

Test  files  are  located  in  the "tests"  directory;  the  files  with
extension  ".sps" are  Scheme  programs.  They  are  partitioned in  two
families: the files whose name  start with "long-test" need some time to
be executed  by a  powerless computer; the  files whose name  start with
"test" can  be run in  reasonable time on  any system.  The  files whose
name contains "r6rs" are R6RS compliance tests by Matthew Flatt.

  The command "make  check" will run all the tests,  quick and long; the
commands "make test" and "make tests" run the same set of "quick" tests;
the commands "make long-test" and "make  long-tests" run the same set of
time-consuming  tests.    The  "check"   rule  uses  the   GNU  Automake
infrastructure (parallel test harness,  see Automake's documentation for
details).  After  package installation: we  can run the tests  using the
"make installcheck" rule which will load the installed libraries.

  It  is possible  to select  a  single test  file by  using the  "file"
variable on the command line of "make"; for example:

   $ make test file=equal-hash

will  run  the   program  "test-issue-001-equal-hash.sps".   The  "file"
variable  is  used   to  expand  a  file  name  with   wildcards  as  in
"test-*$(file)*.sps".

  It  is possible to  run "vicare"  from the  build directory  with user
selected command line arguments doing:

   $ make test-run VFLAGS='...'

where the  contents of the "VLAGS"  variable are placed directly  on the
command line.

  Some  test  files need  a  usable  directory  pathname in  the  TMPDIR
environment variable.

  The  test files  acting on  networking sockets  expect "localhost"  to
resolve to the IPv4 address "127.0.0.1", which is usually the case.

  The  file "test-vicare-posix-sockets.sps"  contains tests  for network
sockets which  are normally disabled  because the firewall rules  on the
hosting machine must allow TCP and UDP connections on 127.0.0.1:8080 and
127.0.0.1:8081; to  enable these tests  run "make" with  the environment
variable RUN_INET_TESTS set to something:

   $ make test file=vicare-posix-sockets RUN_INET_TESTS=1


A. Credits
----------

The  original Ikarus  Scheme  code  is the  work  of Abdulaziz  Ghuloum.
Vicare Scheme  is a fork  driven by  Marco Maggi.  See  the CONTRIBUTORS
file for the list of contributors to Ikarus Scheme and Vicare Scheme.

  IrRegex is adapted  from the original distribution by  Alex Shinn, see
the file "LICENSE.irregex".

  Pregexp is adapted from the original library by Dorai Sitaram, see the
file "LICENSE.pregexp".

  The libraries  in the  hierarchy (vicare  containers strings  ---) are
derived from the reference implementation of SRFI 13 by Olin Shivers.

  The libraries  in the  hierarchy (vicare  containers vectors  ---) are
derived from the reference implementation of SRFI 13 by Olin Shivers.

  The library (vicare containers knuth-morris-pratt) is derived from the
reference implementation of SRFI 13 by Olin Shivers.

  The library (vicare containers strings rabin-karp) is derived from the
implementation at:

    <http://algs4.cs.princeton.edu/53substring/RabinKarp.java.html>

  The library  (vicare containers levenshtein)  is derived from  code by
Neil Van Dyke.

  The library (vicare language-extensions  streams) is derived from code
by Philip L. Bewig.

  The library (vicare language-extensions loops) is derived from code by
Sebastian Egner.

  The library  (vicare language-extensions comparisons) is  derived from
code by Sebastian Egner and Jens Axel Soegaard.

  The libraries in the hierarchy (vicare crypto randomisations ---) have
many authors, please see the headers of the individual files.

  Some libraries  in the  hierarchy (vicare containers  bytevectors ---)
are derived from the SRFI 13 reference implementation by Olin Shivers.

  The library  (vicare formations) is derived  from: "format.scm" Common
LISP  text  output  formatter  for  SLIB.   Written  1992-1994  by  Dirk
Lutzebaeck.  Authors of the original  version (<1.4) were Ken Dickey and
Aubrey Jaffer.  Assimilated into Guile  May 1999.  Ported to R6RS Scheme
and Vicare by Marco Maggi.

  The SILex libraries are a port to  R6RS Scheme of SILex version 1.0 by
Danny Dube'.  Copyright (C) 2001, 2009 Danny Dube'.

  The LALR libraries are a port  to R6RS Scheme of Lalr-scm by Dominique
Boucher.  Copyright (c) 2005-2008 Dominique Boucher.


B. Bug reports
--------------

Bug reports  are appreciated, register  them using the issue  tracker at
Vicare's GitHub site:

	      <http://github.com/marcomaggi/vicare/issues>


C. Resources
------------

The latest version of this package can be downloaded from:

       <https://bitbucket.org/marcomaggi/vicare-scheme/downloads>

the home page of the Vicare project is at:

	       <http://marcomaggi.github.io/vicare.html>

development takes place at:

		 <http://github.com/marcomaggi/vicare/>

and as backup at:

	   <https://bitbucket.org/marcomaggi/vicare-scheme/>

  The library Libffi can be found at:

		    <http://sourceware.org/libffi/>

  The GMP library is available at:

			  <http://gmplib.org/>

  The home page of the R6RS standard is at:

			 <http://www.r6rs.org>


D. On boot images
-----------------

Vicare comes with 2 prebuilt boot images:

    $(top_srcdir)/boot/vicare.boot.4.prebuilt
    $(top_srcdir)/boot/vicare.boot.8.prebuilt

one for 32-bit systems (4) and one for 64-bit systems (8).  The prebuilt
images do not contain the latest version of the code.

  When executing "make all" a new boot image is built:

    $(builddir)/vicare.boot

and this image is then installed  on the system by "make install".  This
new boot image is the one containing the latest version of the code.


E. Automatically building dependencies
--------------------------------------

The  Makefile   dependency  rules   to  compile  Scheme   libraries  are
automatically generated by the script:

   $(top_srcdir)/scripts/build-makefile-rules.sps

which reads the file:

   $(top_srcdir)/lib/libraries.scm

the dependency rules are re-created automatically by doing:

   $ make dependencies

which will rebuild the file:

   $(top_srcdir)/lib/dependencies.make


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