0.pre7.71:
[sbcl/lichteblau.git] / make.sh
blob5672219a30cc3f842af67403bce56c5dbc6d76c7
1 \#!/bin/sh
3 # "When we build software, it's a good idea to have a reliable method
4 # for getting an executable from it. We want any two reconstructions
5 # starting from the same source to end up in the same result. That's
6 # just a basic intellectual premise."
7 # -- Christian Queinnec, in _Lisp In Small Pieces_, p. 313
9 # This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
10 # more information.
12 # This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was
13 # written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the
14 # public domain. The software is in the public domain and is
15 # provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS
16 # files for more information.
18 # The value of SBCL_XC_HOST should be a command to invoke the
19 # cross-compilation Lisp system in such a way that it reads commands
20 # from standard input, and terminates when it reaches end of file on
21 # standard input. Some suitable values are:
22 # "sbcl" to use an existing SBCL binary as a cross-compilation host
23 # "sbcl --sysinit /dev/null --userinit /dev/null"
24 # to use an existing SBCL binary as a cross-compilation host
25 # even though you have stuff in your initialization files
26 # which makes it behave in such a non-standard way that
27 # it keeps the build from working
28 # "sbcl --noprogrammer"
29 # to use an existing SBCL binary as a cross-compilation host
30 # and tell it to handle errors as best it can by itself,
31 # without trying to use *DEBUG-IO* to ask for help from
32 # the programmer
33 # "lisp -batch" to use an existing CMU CL binary as a cross-compilation host
34 # "lisp -noinit -batch"
35 # to use an existing CMU CL binary as a cross-compilation host
36 # when you have weird things in your .cmucl-init file
38 # FIXME: Make a more sophisticated command line parser, probably
39 # accepting "sh make.sh --xc-host foolisp" instead of the
40 # the present "sh make.sh foolisp".
41 # FIXME: Tweak this script, and the rest of the system, to support
42 # a second bootstrapping pass in which the cross-compilation host is
43 # known to be SBCL itself, so that the cross-compiler can do some
44 # optimizations (especially specializable arrays) that it doesn't
45 # know how to implement how in a portable way. (Or maybe that wouldn't
46 # require a second pass, just testing at build-the-cross-compiler time
47 # whether the cross-compilation host returns suitable values from
48 # UPGRADED-ARRAY-ELEMENT-TYPE?)
49 export SBCL_XC_HOST="${1:-sbcl --noprogrammer}"
50 echo //SBCL_XC_HOST=\"$SBCL_XC_HOST\"
52 # If you're cross-compiling, you should probably just walk through the
53 # make-config.sh script by hand doing the right thing on both the host
54 # and target machines.
55 sh make-config.sh || exit 1
57 # The make-host-*.sh scripts are run on the cross-compilation host,
58 # and the make-target-*.sh scripts are run on the target machine. In
59 # ordinary compilation, we just do these phases consecutively on the
60 # same machine, but if you wanted to cross-compile from one machine
61 # which supports Common Lisp to another which does not (yet:-) support
62 # Common Lisp, you could do something like this:
63 # Create copies of the source tree on both the host and the target.
64 # Read the make-config.sh script carefully and emulate it by hand
65 # on both machines (e.g. creating "target"-named symlinks to
66 # identify the target architecture).
67 # On the host system:
68 # SBCL_XC_HOST=<whatever> sh make-host-1.sh
69 # Copy src/runtime/sbcl.h from the host system to the target system.
70 # On the target system:
71 # sh make-target-1.sh
72 # Copy src/runtime/sbcl.nm from the target system to the host system.
73 # On the host system:
74 # SBCL_XC_HOST=<whatever> sh make-host-2.sh
75 # Copy output/cold-sbcl.core from the host system to the target system.
76 # On the target system:
77 # sh make-host-2.sh
78 sh make-host-1.sh || exit 1
79 sh make-target-1.sh || exit 1
80 sh make-host-2.sh || exit 1
81 sh make-target-2.sh || exit 1
82 date