GENERAL INFORMATION =================== Armed Bear Common Lisp is an implementation of ANSI Common Lisp that runs in a Java virtual machine. It compiles its code to Java byte code. LICENSE ======= Armed Bear Common Lisp is distributed under the GNU General Public License with classpath exception (described below). A copy of GNU General Public License (GPL) is included in this distribution, in the file COPYING. Linking this software statically or dynamically with other modules is making a combined work based on this software. Thus, the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License cover the whole combination. As a special exception, the copyright holders of this software give you permission to link this software with independent modules to produce an executable, regardless of the license terms of these independent modules, and to copy and distribute the resulting executable under terms of your choice, provided that you also meet, for each linked independent module, the terms and conditions of the license of that module. An independent module is a module which is not derived from or based on this software. If you modify this software, you may extend this exception to your version of the software, but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this exception statement from your version. BUILDING ======== If you want to build ABCL, you have 3 options. The first option applies when you come from a lisp background. The second and thirds options are more appropriate when you come from Java development: I) Bootstrap ABCL using a Common Lisp implementation Supported implementations for this process: SBCL, CMUCL, OpenMCL, Allegro CL, LispWorks or CLISP. II) Use the Ant make-like build tool for Java environments The tested lowest working version is Ant 1.7.0. III) Use the Netbeans 6.x IDE to open ABCL as a project. In both cases you need a supported JDK version (1.5 and 1.6 have been tested). Just the JRE isn't enough. I. Lisp-based build ------------------- Copy the file 'customizations.lisp.in' to customization.lisp', in the directory containing this README file, editing to suit your situation, paying attention to the comments in the file. Use ./build-from-lisp.sh , e.g. ./build-from-lisp.sh sbcl Use abcl.bat on Windows or ./abcl on Unix to start ABCL. Note: abcl.bat and abcl contain absolute paths, so you'll need to edit them if you move things around after the build. If you're developing on ABCL, you may want to use ./build-from-lisp.sh --clean=nil to not do a full rebuild. In case of failure in the javac stage, you might try this: ./build-from-lisp.sh --full=t --clean=t --batch=nil This invokes javac separately for each .java file, which avoids running into limitations on command line length (but is a lot slower). II. Ant-based build ------------------- With Ant in your path, executing ant -find build.xml abcl.wrapper from the directory containing this README file will create an executable wrapper ('abcl' under UNIX, 'abcl.bat' under Windows). Use this wrapper to start the ABCL Java program. III. Netbeans-based build ------------------------- One should be able to open the project as a project in Netbeans 6.x. BUGS ==== A lot of (renewed) energy has been spent to make ABCL a compliant and practically useable Common Lisp implementation. Because of this, ABCL 0.0.11 now fails only 47 out of 21702 tests in the ANSI CL test suite. Next to that, the fail count of the Maxima test suite has been reduced from over 1400 in 0.0.10 to little more than 600 in 0.0.11. ABCL's CLOS does not handle on-the-fly redefinition of classes correctly, and in any event is intolerably slow. There is no support for the long form of DEFINE-METHOD-COMBINATION, and certain other required CLOS features are also missing. Enough CLOS is there to run ASDF and CL-PPCRE, if you're in no hurry. There is no MOP worth mentioning. Since this is a early public release, there might be build problems as well as runtime bugs. Please report problems to the j-devel mailing list: armedbear-j-devel@lists.sourceforge.net Have fun! On behalf of all ABCL development team and contributors, Erik Huelsmann October 18, 2008