;;; bytecomp-runtime.el --- byte-compiler support for inlining ;; Copyright (C) 1992, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Author: Jamie Zawinski ;; Author: Hallvard Furuseth ;; Maintainer: XEmacs Development Team ;; Keywords: internal, dumped ;; This file is part of XEmacs. ;; XEmacs 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 2, or (at your option) ;; any later version. ;; XEmacs 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 XEmacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the ;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, ;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. ;;; Synched up with: FSF 19.30. ;;; Commentary: ;; This file is dumped with XEmacs. ;; The code in this file should always be loaded, because it defines things ;; like "defsubst" which should work interpreted as well. The code in ;; bytecomp.el and byte-optimize.el can be loaded as needed. ;; interface to selectively inlining functions. ;; This only happens when source-code optimization is turned on. ;;; Code: ;; Redefined in byte-optimize.el. ;; This is not documented--it's not clear that we should promote it. (fset 'inline 'progn) (put 'inline 'lisp-indent-hook 0) ;;; Interface to inline functions. ;; FSF comments the next two out, but I see no reason to do so. --ben (defmacro proclaim-inline (&rest fns) "Cause the named functions to be open-coded when called from compiled code. They will only be compiled open-coded when `byte-optimize' is true." (cons 'eval-and-compile (apply 'nconc (mapcar #'(lambda (x) `((or (memq (get ',x 'byte-optimizer) '(nil byte-compile-inline-expand)) (error "%s already has a byte-optimizer, can't make it inline" ',x)) (put ',x 'byte-optimizer 'byte-compile-inline-expand))) fns)))) (defmacro proclaim-notinline (&rest fns) "Cause the named functions to no longer be open-coded." (cons 'eval-and-compile (apply 'nconc (mapcar #'(lambda (x) `((if (eq (get ',x 'byte-optimizer) 'byte-compile-inline-expand) (put ',x 'byte-optimizer nil)))) fns)))) ;; This has a special byte-hunk-handler in bytecomp.el. (defmacro defsubst (name arglist &rest body) "Define an inline function. The syntax is just like that of `defun'." (or (memq (get name 'byte-optimizer) '(nil byte-compile-inline-expand)) (error "`%s' is a primitive" name)) (list 'prog1 (cons 'defun (cons name (cons arglist body))) (list 'proclaim-inline name))) ; Instead of the above line, FSF has this: ; (list 'eval-and-compile ; (list 'put (list 'quote name) ; ''byte-optimizer ''byte-compile-inline-expand)))) (defun make-obsolete (fn new &optional when) "Make the byte-compiler warn that function FN is obsolete. The warning will say that NEW should be used instead. If NEW is a string, that is the `use instead' message. If provided, WHEN should be a string indicating when the function was first made obsolete, for example a date or a release number." (interactive "aMake function obsolete: \nxObsoletion replacement: ") (let ((handler (get fn 'byte-compile))) (if (eq 'byte-compile-obsolete handler) (setcar (get fn 'byte-obsolete-info) new) (put fn 'byte-obsolete-info (cons new handler)) (put fn 'byte-compile 'byte-compile-obsolete))) fn) (defun make-obsolete-variable (var new &optional when) "Make the byte-compiler warn that variable VAR is obsolete, and NEW should be used instead. If NEW is a string, then that is the `use instead' message. If provided, WHEN should be a string indicating when the variable was first made obsolete, for example a date or a release number." (interactive (list (let ((str (completing-read "Make variable obsolete: " obarray 'boundp t))) (if (equal str "") (error "")) (intern str)) (car (read-from-string (read-string "Obsoletion replacement: "))))) (put var 'byte-obsolete-variable new) var) ;; By overwhelming demand, we separate out truly obsolete symbols from ;; those that are present for GNU Emacs compatibility. (defun make-compatible (fn new) "Make the byte-compiler know that function FN is provided for compatibility. The warning will say that NEW should be used instead. If NEW is a string, that is the `use instead' message." (interactive "aMake function compatible: \nxCompatible replacement: ") (let ((handler (get fn 'byte-compile))) (if (eq 'byte-compile-compatible handler) (setcar (get fn 'byte-compatible-info) new) (put fn 'byte-compatible-info (cons new handler)) (put fn 'byte-compile 'byte-compile-compatible))) fn) (defun make-compatible-variable (var new) "Make the byte-compiler know that variable VAR is provided for compatibility, and NEW should be used instead. If NEW is a string, then that is the `use instead' message." (interactive (list (let ((str (completing-read "Make variable compatible: " obarray 'boundp t))) (if (equal str "") (error "")) (intern str)) (car (read-from-string (read-string "Compatible replacement: "))))) (put var 'byte-compatible-variable new) var) (put 'dont-compile 'lisp-indent-hook 0) (defmacro dont-compile (&rest body) "Like `progn', but the body always runs interpreted (not compiled). If you think you need this, you're probably making a mistake somewhere." (list 'eval (list 'quote (if (cdr body) (cons 'progn body) (car body))))) ;;; interface to evaluating things at compile time and/or load time ;;; these macro must come after any uses of them in this file, as their ;;; definition in the file overrides the magic definitions on the ;;; byte-compile-macro-environment. (put 'eval-when-compile 'lisp-indent-hook 0) (defmacro eval-when-compile (&rest body) "Like `progn', but evaluates the body at compile time. The result of the body appears to the compiler as a quoted constant." ;; Not necessary because we have it in b-c-initial-macro-environment ;; (list 'quote (eval (cons 'progn body))) (cons 'progn body)) (put 'eval-and-compile 'lisp-indent-hook 0) (defmacro eval-and-compile (&rest body) "Like `progn', but evaluates the body at compile time and at load time." ;; Remember, it's magic. (cons 'progn body)) ;;; From Emacs 20. (put 'eval-when-feature 'lisp-indent-hook 1) (defmacro eval-when-feature (feature &rest body) "Run the body forms when FEATURE is featurep, be it now or later. Called (eval-when-feature (FEATURE [. FILENAME]) BODYFORMS...). If (featurep 'FEATURE), evals now; otherwise adds an elt to `after-load-alist' (which see), using FEATURE as filename if FILENAME is nil." (let ((file (or (cdr feature) (symbol-name (car feature))))) `(let ((bodythunk #'(lambda () ,@body))) (if (featurep ',(car feature)) (funcall bodythunk) (setq after-load-alist (cons '(,file . (list 'lambda '() bodythunk)) after-load-alist)))))) ;;; Interface to file-local byte-compiler parameters. ;;; Redefined in bytecomp.el. ;;; The great RMS speaketh: ;;; ;;; I nuked this because it's not a good idea for users to think of ;;; using it. These options are a matter of installation preference, ;;; and have nothing to do with particular source files; it's a ;;; mistake to suggest to users that they should associate these with ;;; particular source files. There is hardly any reason to change ;;; these parameters, anyway. --rms. ;;; ;;; But I'll leave this stuff alone. --ben (put 'byte-compiler-options 'lisp-indent-hook 0) (defmacro byte-compiler-options (&rest args) "Set some compilation-parameters for this file. This will affect only the file in which it appears; this does nothing when evaluated, or when loaded from a .el file. Each argument to this macro must be a list of a key and a value. Keys: Values: Corresponding variable: verbose t, nil byte-compile-verbose optimize t, nil, source, byte byte-optimize warnings list of warnings byte-compile-warnings file-format emacs19, emacs20 byte-compile-emacs19-compatibility The value specified with the `warnings' option must be a list, containing some subset of the following flags: free-vars references to variables not in the current lexical scope. unused-vars references to non-global variables bound but not referenced. unresolved calls to unknown functions. callargs lambda calls with args that don't match the definition. redefine function cell redefined from a macro to a lambda or vice versa, or redefined to take a different number of arguments. If the first element if the list is `+' or `-' then the specified elements are added to or removed from the current set of warnings, instead of the entire set of warnings being overwritten. For example, something like this might appear at the top of a source file: (byte-compiler-options (optimize t) (warnings (- callargs)) ; Don't warn about arglist mismatch (warnings (+ unused-vars)) ; Do warn about unused bindings (file-format emacs19))" nil) ;;; bytecomp-runtime.el ends here