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NAME

s9 - Scheme Interpreter

USAGE

s9 [-h?] [-i name] [-gnqv] [-m size[m]] [-f prog [args]] [-l prog] [-t count] [-d image] [-- [args]]

DESCRIPTION

Scheme 9 from Empty Space is an interpreter for R4RS Scheme with some additional procedures for accessing typical Unix system calls and Unix and Curses library functions (if compiled-in). The s9 command starts the interpreter.

OPTIONS

-h or -?
Display a brief summary of options.
-i name
Load alternative image file ` name.image'. When no image file can be found, try to load ` name.scm'. The file will be searched in the entire S9FES_LIBRARY_PATH (see below). When this option is used, it must be the first one of the s9 command.
 
When `-' is specified as name, no heap image will be loaded, and the core library will be read from the source file `s9.scm'.
-d file
Dump heap image to file and exit.
-f program [arguments]
Run program and exit (implies -q). When there are any arguments, they are passed to the program, where they can be extracted using the command-line procedure.
-g
Print GC summaries ( -gg = more verbose).
-n
Do not load $HOME/.s9fes/rc file, if any.
-l program
Load program before entering the REPL or processing -f (may be repeated).
-m N[m]
Set memory limit to N kilo (or mega) nodes ( -m 0 means no limit; use with care!).
-q
Be quiet: skip banners and prompts, exit on errors.
-t count
Display count procedures at most in call traces.
-v
Display version and exit.
-- [argument ...]
Arguments following -- are not interpreted by S9fES, but passed to the command-line procedure instead (requires the unix extension).

ONLINE HELP

When the interpreter is running and the default heap image is loaded, just type (help) or ,h to invoke the online help system. When the online help system is not loaded, you will have to run the following command first:
(load-from-library "help.scm")

META COMMANDS

In order to facilitate the invocation of frequently-used top-level procedures, s9 provides the following "meta commands" (they work only when entered directly at the s9 prompt):

,a text  =  (apropos "text")
,h text  =  (help "text")
,l file  =  (load-from-library "file")
,q       =  (sys:exit)

The arguments of ,a and ,h are optional.

ADDITIONS

S9fES supports nestable block comments of the form

#| comment ... |#.

Square brackets may be used in the places of parentheses:

(cond [(foo) (bar)]).

The same type of bracket must be used on both ends of a list.
These S9fES procedures are not in R4RS:
(argv integer) ==> string | #f
Retrieve the value of the given command line argument. Return #f, if there are less than integer+1 arguments. Arguments start at 0.
(bit-op integer1 integer2 integer3 ...) ==> integer | #f
Implement a variety of bitwise operations. See the bit-op help page for details.
(delete-file string) ==> unspecific
Delete the file specified in the string argument. If the file does not exist or cannot be deleted, report an error.
(dump-image string) ==> unspecific
Write a heap image to the file given in the string argument. If the file already exists, report an error.
(environ string) ==> string | #f
Retrieve the value of the given environment variable. Return #f, if the variable is undefined.
(error string) ==> undefined
 
(error string object) ==> undefined
Print an error message of the form error: string: object and terminate program execution.
(eval object1) ==> object
 
(eval object1 object2) ==> object
Evaluate object1 in the current environment and return its normal form. If object2 is also specified, it is ignored.
(exponent real) ==> integer
Extract the exponent part from a real number.
(file-exists? string) ==> boolean
Return #t if the file specified in the string argument exists and otherwise #f.
(fold-left proc base list ...) ==> object
Combine the elements of the lists using proc. Combine elements left-associatively. Base is the leftmost element.
(fold-right proc base list ...) ==> object
Combine the elements of the lists using proc. Combine elements right-associatively. Base is the rightmost element.
(gensym) ==> symbol
 
(gensym symbol) ==> symbol
 
(gensym string) ==> symbol
Return a fresh symbol. When a string or symbol argument is given, use it as prefix for the fresh symbol.
(load-from-library string) ==> unspecific
Attempt to load the file string from each directory of S9FES_LIBRARY_PATH.
(locate-file string) ==> string | #f
Search for the file string in each directory of S9FES_LIBRARY_PATH in sequence. When the file can be located, return its full path, else return #f.
(macro-expand object) ==> object
 
(macro-expand-1 object) ==> object
If object is a list resembling a macro application, return the expanded form, else return the object. Macro-expand-1 expands macros only once while macro-expand expands them recursively.
(mantissa real) ==> integer
Extract the mantissa part from a real number.
(print object ...) ==> unspecific
Write multiple objects separated by spaces.
(require-extension name ...) ==> unspecific
Require the named extensions to be compiled-in. Signal an error if not all of the required extensions are present.
(reverse! list) ==> list
Reverse list destructively and return the reverse list.
(set-input-port! input-port) ==> unspecific
Destructively set the current input port.
(set-output-port! output-port) ==> unspecific
Destructively set the current output port.
(stats form) ==> form
Evaluate the given form and return a list containing its normal form plus a summary of the resources used to compute that normal form:

- reduction steps
- conses allocated
- total nodes allocated
- garbage collections

Each resource count will be returned as a group of integers representing ones, thousands, millions, etc. Note that form must be quoted or it will be evaluated before passing it to stats.
(symbols) ==> list
Return a list of all defined symbols.
(system string) ==> number
Run the given shell command and return its exit code.
(trace symbol ...) ==> list | #t
 
(trace #t) ==> list | #t
Trace the procedure or syntax object bound to the given symbols. When #t is passed to trace, trace all procedures and syntax objects ( expect lots of output!). When no arguments are passed to it, disable tracing. Trace returns the symbols that were being traced before its invocation.
(vector-append vector ...) ==> vector
Return a fresh vector containing the concatenation of the given vectors.
(vector-copy vector) ==> vector
 
(vector-copy vector integer) ==> vector
 
(vector-copy vector integer1 integer2) ==> vector
 
(vector-copy vector integer1 integer2 object) ==> vector
Return a copy of the given vector. When integer1 is specified, skip the given number of elements. When integer2 is also specified, copy elements from integer1 up to, but not including, integer2. When integer2 exceeds the size of the original vector, add unspecific slots to the copy. When an object argument is given, fill extra slots with that argument.
(void) ==> unspecific
Return an unspecific value.
Refer to the help pages for descriptions of the Scheme 9 extension procedures.

SPECIAL VARIABLES

These variables are predefined in the dynamic top-level scope of the interpreter.
** (form)
The normal form of the expression most recently evaluated at the top level.
*extensions* (list of symbols)
Compiled-in extensions.
*library-path* (string)
A verbatim copy of the S9FES_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable (see below).
*loading* (boolean)
Set to #t when loading a file, else #f.

MACROS

A macro is a procedure that is applied to its unevaluated arguments. The macro application is replaced with the value returned by the procedure. This happens before the expression containing the macro application is evaluated, so a macro rewrites its own application:
(define-syntax (when p . c)
  `(if ,p (begin ,@c)))
(macro-expand '(when (= 1 1) (display "true") (newline) #t))
  ==>  (if (= 1 1)
           (begin (display "true")
                  (newline)
                  #t))
(when (= 1 1) 1 2 3)  ==>  3
The define-syntax form introduces a new macro:
(define-syntax name procedure) ==> unspecific
 
(define-syntax (name args ...) body) ==> unspecific
Both of these forms introduce the keyword name and bind it to a procedure. The first form requires the second argument to be a procedure. Like in define forms the second variant implies a procedure definition.
Macros may contain applications of macros that were defined earlier. Macros may not recurse directly, but they may implement recursion internally using letrec or by rewriting their own applications. The following macro, for example, does not work, because d is undefined in the body of d:
(define-syntax (d x) (and (pair? x) (d (cdr x)))) ; wrong
The following version does work, though:
(define-syntax (d x) (and (pair? x) `(d ,(cdr x)))) ; OK
The body of define-syntax may be a syntax-rules transformer, as described in R4RS, if the syntax-rules extension has been loaded.

TECHNICAL DETAILS

S9fES is a tree-walking interpreter using deep binding and hashed environments. It employs an extremely reliable[1] constant-space mark and sweep garbage collector with in-situ string and vector pool compaction. Memory pools grow on demand. The interpreter uses arbitrary-precision integer arithmetics and (optional) decimal-based real number arithmetics.

INTERPRETER START-UP

When the s9 interpreter is started, the following steps will be performed in this order:
Load library.
The interpreter searches its library path (either built-in or specified in the S9FES_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable) for a heap image file or the library source code. The heap image file is the name of the interpreter with a .image suffix appended. An alternative name can be specified with the -i option (see OPTIONS). The default library source code is named s9.scm. The first directory containing either a heap image or the library source code is used. When the directory contains both an image and the library sources, the image is loaded.
Initialize extensions.
Any extensions compiled into the interpreter are initialized by calling the nullary procedure ext:ext (where ext is the name of the extension). The procedures are optional. The first `extension' being initialized is S9 itself, so when a procedure named s9:s9 exists, it will be called at this point.
Evaluate command line options.
When a -l file option is found, the program contained in the given file will be loaded. When a -f file args option is found, the program contained in the file will be run and then S9 will exit. Args will be passed to the program.
Load rc file.
If an `rc file' ( $HOME/.s9fes/rc) exists, it will be loaded at this point as if its name was passed to the load procedure. (Unless the -n option was specified.)
Enter REPL.
Interactive mode is only entered, when no -f option was specified.

ALLOCATION STRATEGY

The S9fES memory pool grows exponentially until the memory limit is reached. When the limit is reached, the current computation is aborted. A memory limit can be specified using the -m command line option. The limit is specified in units of 1024 nodes (or in units of 1024*1024 nodes by appending an m suffix).
Note that computations may abort before the limit is reached due to the way the pool grows. Use the -g command line option to experiment with pool sizes.
 
Specifying a limit of zero disables the memory limit completely and the interpreter will allocate as much memory as it can get. This option should be used with care.

LIMITATIONS

These parts of R4RS are not implemented:
I/O: char-ready? (this is in the sys-unix extension).
 
Transcripts: transcript-off, transcript-on.
 
Rational and complex numbers and related procedures.

BUGS

You may not quasiquote quasiquote unless in unquote (e.g.: ``x does not work, but `,`x does).
 
Syntax-rules is not fully hygienic.
 
Call/cc must be the only argument when used in lambda (or derived binding syntax, such as let). Not observing this rule will break the interpreter.

FILES

$HOME/.s9fes/rc
If present, this file is loaded when the interpreter starts in interactive mode.
/usr/share/scheme9
The S9fES procedure library (source code).
/usr/lib/scheme9/contrib
Contributions to the procedure library (source code).
/usr/lib/scheme9/s9.image
The interpreter heap image.
*.scm
Scheme source code.

ENVIRONMENT

S9FES_LIBRARY_PATH
A colon-separated list of directories which will be searched for the s9 library when the interpreter is launched. The same directories will be searched by the locate-file procedure.
 
Default: .:~/.s9fes:/usr/lib/scheme9:/usr/share/scheme9

SIGNALS

These work only if POSIX signal handling was enabled at compile time.
SIGINT
Abort input or terminate program execution.
SIGQUIT
Terminate the interpreter process (emergency exit).
SIGTERM
Silently terminate the interpreter process.

FOOTNOTES

[1] See comp.lang.scheme Usenet message
<vhtzl9lupyp.fsf@maharal.csail.mit.edu>
 
(Thu, 27 Aug 2009 13:27:42 -0400) and its follow-ups.

REFERENCES

The Revised^4 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme.
http://www-swiss.ai.mit.edu/~jaffer/r4rs_toc.html
Scheme 9 from Empty Space -- A Guide to Implementing Scheme in C.
Available at Lulu.com, see http://www.t3x.org

AUTHOR

Nils M Holm
August 9, 2018