We are pleased to announce GNU Guile release 1.9.11. This may be the last pre-release before the 2.0 release. It provides many new noteworthy features, most notably the addition of a compiler and virtual machine. We encourage you to test them and provide feedback to `guile-devel@gnu.org'. The Guile web page is located at http://gnu.org/software/guile/, and among other things, it contains a link to the Guile FAQ and pointers to the mailing lists. Guile is an implementation of the Scheme programming language, with support for many SRFIs, packaged for use in a wide variety of environments. In addition to implementing the R5RS Scheme standard and a large subset of R6RS, Guile includes a module system, full access to POSIX system calls, networking support, multiple threads, dynamic linking, a foreign function call interface, and powerful string processing. Guile can run interactively, as a script interpreter, and as a Scheme compiler to VM bytecode. It is also packaged as a library so that applications can easily incorporate a complete Scheme interpreter/VM. An application can use Guile as an extension language, a clean and powerful configuration language, or as multi-purpose "glue" to connect primitives provided by the application. It is easy to call Scheme code From C code and vice versa. Applications can add new functions, data types, control structures, and even syntax to Guile, to create a domain-specific language tailored to the task at hand. Here are the compressed sources: ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/guile/guile-1.9.11.tar.gz (5.0MB) Here are the GPG detached signatures[*]: ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/guile/guile-1.9.11.tar.gz.sig To reduce load on the main server, use a mirror listed at: http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html Here are the MD5 and SHA1 checksums: ea62d9590f7c7b2552165b44ba11cc3d guile-1.9.11.tar.gz abd1424a927302db31395db828d4d14fa68d13f9 guile-1.9.11.tar.gz [*] You can use either of the above signature files to verify that the corresponding file (without the .sig suffix) is intact. First, be sure to download both the .sig file and the corresponding tarball. Then, run a command like this: gpg --verify guile-1.9.11.tar.gz.sig If that command fails because you don't have the required public key, then run this command to import it: gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-keys EA52ECF4 and rerun the `gpg --verify' command. This release was bootstrapped with the following tools: Autoconf 2.65 Automake 1.11.1 Libtool 2.2.6b Gnulib v0.0-3955-g8ab5996 This is a new release series with many new features and differences compared to 1.8. The complete list of changes compared to the 1.8.x series is available in the `NEWS' file. Changes since the 1.9.10 pre-release: ** Renamed module: (rnrs bytevectors) This module was called (rnrs bytevector), its name from earlier drafts of the R6RS. Its name has been changed. Users of previous 1.9 preleases may want to search for any stale rnrs/bytevector .go or .scm file, and delete them. ** New module: (sxml match) Guile has incorporated Jim Bender's `sxml-match' library. See "sxml-match' in the manual for more information. Thanks, Jim! ** New module: (srfi srfi-9 gnu) This module adds an extension to srfi-9, `set-record-type-printer!'. See "SRFI-9" in the manual for more information. ** Support for R6RS libraries The `library' and `import' forms from the latest Scheme report have been added to Guile, in such a way that R6RS libraries share a namespace with Guile modules. R6RS modules may import Guile modules, and are available for Guile modules to import via use-modules and all the rest. See "R6RS Libraries" in the manual for more information. ** Implementations of R6RS libraries Guile now has implementations for all of the libraries defined in the R6RS. Thanks to Julian Graham for this excellent hack. See "R6RS Standard Libraries" in the manual for a full list of libraries. ** Partial R6RS compatibility Guile now has enough support for R6RS to run a reasonably large subset of R6RS programs. Guile is not fully R6RS compatible. Many incompatibilities are simply bugs, though some parts of Guile will remain R6RS-incompatible for the foreseeable future. See "R6RS Incompatibilities" in the manual, for more information. Please contact bug-guile@gnu.org if you have found an issue not mentioned in that compatibility list. ** Macro expansion produces structures instead of s-expressions In the olden days, macroexpanding an s-expression would yield another s-expression. Though the lexical variables were renamed, expansions of core forms like `if' and `begin' were still non-hygienic, as they relied on the toplevel definitions of `if' et al being the conventional ones. The solution is to expand to structures instead of s-expressions. There is an `if' structure, a `begin' structure, a `toplevel-ref' structure, etc. The expander already did this for compilation, producing Tree-IL directly; it has been changed now to do so when expanding for the evaluator as well. The real truth is somewhat more involved: Tree-IL doesn't exist until modules have been booted, but we need the expander to boot modules, and additionally we need a boot expander before psyntax is loaded. So a subset of Tree-IL is defined in C, and the boot expander produces these "macroexpanded" structures. Psyntax has been modified to produce those structures as well. When Tree-IL loads, it incorporates those structures directly as part of its language. Finally, the evaluator has been adapted to accept these "expanded" structures, and enhanced to better support the gamut of this subset of Tree-IL, including `lambda*' and `case-lambda'. This was a much-needed harmonization between the compiler, expander, and evaluator. ** Deprecated `scm_badargsp' This function is unused in Guile, but was part of its API. ** `sxml->xml' enhancement `sxml->xml' from `(sxml simple)' can now handle the result of `xml->sxml'. See bug #29260 for more information. ** New module: (system vm coverage) This new module can produce code coverage reports for compiled Scheme code on a line-by-line level. See "Code Coverage" in the manual for more information. ** Faster VM hooks. The frame objects passed to VM hook procedures are now allocated on the stack instead of the heap, making the next-instruction hook practical to use. ** New `eval-when' situation: `expand' Sometimes it's important to cause side-effects while expanding an expression, even in eval mode. This situation is used in `define-module', `use-modules', et al, in order to affect the current module and its set of syntax expanders. ** Better module-level hygiene Instead of attempting to track changes to the current module when expanding toplevel sequences, we instead preserve referential transparency relative to where the macro itself was defined. If the macro should expand to expressions in the context of the new module, it should wrap those expressions in `@@', which has been enhanced to accept generic expressions, not just identifier references. For example, part of the definition of the R6RS `library' form: #'(begin (define-module (name name* ...) #:pure #:version (version ...)) (import ispec) ... (re-export r ...) (export e ...) (@@ (name name* ...) body) ...) In this example the `import' refers to the `import' definition in the module where the `library' macro is defined, not in the new module. ** Module system macros rewritten as hygienic macros `define-module', `use-modules', `export', and other such macros have been rewritten as hygienic macros. This allows the necessary referential transparency for the R6RS `library' to do the right thing. ** Compiler and VM documentation updated The documentation for the compiler and VM had slipped out of date; it has been brought back... to the future! ** Tree-IL field renaming: `vars' -> `gensyms' The `vars' fields of , , , and has been renamed to `gensyms', for clarity, and to match . ** Removed `version' field from Language versions weren't being updated or used in any worthwhile way; they have been removed, for now at least. ** New procedure: `module-export-all!' This procedure exports all current and future bindings from a module. Use as `(module-export-all! (current-module))'. ** Updates to manual The introductory sections of the manual have been reorganized significantly, making it more accessible to new users of Guile. Check it out! ** The module namespace is now separate from the value namespace It was a little-known implementation detail of Guile's module system that it was built on a single hierarchical namespace of values -- that if there was a module named `(foo bar)', then there was a also module named `(foo)' with a binding from `bar' to the `(foo bar)' module. This was a neat trick, but presented a number of problems. One problem was that the bindings in a module were not apparent from the module itself; perhaps the `(foo)' module had a private binding for `bar', and then an external contributor defined `(foo bar)'. In the end there can be only one binding, so one of the two will see the wrong thing, and produce an obtuse error of unclear provenance. Also, the public interface of a module was also bound in the value namespace, as `%module-public-interface'. This was a hack from the early days of Guile's modules. Both of these warts have been fixed by the addition of fields in the `module' data type. Access to modules and their interfaces from the value namespace has been deprecated, and all accessors use the new record accessors appropriately. When Guile is built with support for deprecated code, as is the default, the value namespace is still searched for modules and public interfaces, and a deprecation warning is raised as appropriate. Finally, to support lazy loading of modules as one used to be able to do with module binder procedures, Guile now has submodule binders, called if a given submodule is not found. See boot-9.scm for more information. ** New procedures: module-ref-submodule, module-define-submodule, nested-ref-module, nested-define-module!, local-ref-module, local-define-module These new accessors are like their bare variants, but operate on namespaces instead of values. ** The (app modules) module tree is officially deprecated It used to be that one could access a module named `(foo bar)' via `(nested-ref the-root-module '(app modules foo bar))'. The `(app modules)' bit was a never-used and never-documented abstraction, and has been deprecated. See the following mail for a full discussion: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guile-devel/2010-04/msg00168.html The `%app' binding is also deprecated. ** Deprecated `@bind' syntax `@bind' was part of an older implementation of the Emacs Lisp language, and is no longer used. ** New fluid: `%file-port-name-canonicalization' This fluid parameterizes the file names that are associated with file ports. If %file-port-name-canonicalization is 'absolute, then file names are canonicalized to be absolute paths. If it is 'relative, then the name is canonicalized, but any prefix corresponding to a member of `%load-path' is stripped off. Otherwise the names are passed through unchanged. ** Source file name canonicalization in `compile-file', `compile-and-load' These file-compiling procedures now bind %file-port-name-canonicalization to their `#:canonicalization' keyword argument, which defaults to 'relative. In this way, one might compile "../module/ice-9/boot-9.scm", but the path that gets residualized into the .go is "ice-9/boot-9.scm". ** Deprecate arity access via (procedure-properties proc 'arity) Instead of accessing a procedure's arity as a property, use the new `procedure-minimum-arity' function, which gives the most permissive arity that the the function has, in the same format as the old arity accessor. ** Remove redundant accessors: program-name, program-documentation, program-properties, program-property Instead, just use procedure-name, procedure-documentation, procedure-properties, and procedure-property. ** Enhance documentation for support of Emacs Lisp's `nil' See "Nil" in the manual, for more details. ** Enhance documentation for support of other languages See "Other Languages" in the manual, for more details. ** And of course, the usual collection of bugfixes Interested users should see the ChangeLog for more information. You can follow Guile development in the Git repository and on the Guile mailing lists. Guile builds from the `master' branch of Git have version number 1.9.x. Guile versions with an odd middle number, e.g., 1.9.*, are unstable development versions. Even middle numbers indicate stable versions. This has been the case since the 1.3.* series. Please report bugs to `bug-guile@gnu.org'. We also welcome reports of successful builds, which can be sent to the same email address. Ludovic Courtès, on behalf of the Guile team.