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authorTomas Volf <~@wolfsden.cz>2024-01-24 17:48:04 +0100
committerLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2024-01-29 14:28:56 +0100
commit0933791c49e7ede0f2d9bcf5e27acb573f7e04e7 (patch)
tree8f25e2e930287e244d765f8ece33a104ade01f7f
parent49f24d2bf569821d110d8e603467eb3892a29862 (diff)
Add more detailed instructions into the HACKING file.
Until now, the ./meta/guile was not mentioned anywhere, and therefore it was not obvious how to run the locally compiled Guile without installing it. While modifying the file, I took the liberty to also mention a bit about compiling Guile using Guix. Finally, the header lines where cleaned up, ensuring all of them end at 70 and have a leading space. * HACKING (Hacking It Yourself): Add Guix instructions. Add a note about meta/guile script. (Sample GDB Initialization File), (Naming conventions): Clean up the header line. Signed-off-by: Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>
-rw-r--r--HACKING38
1 files changed, 36 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/HACKING b/HACKING
index 387643bf7..94fba199c 100644
--- a/HACKING
+++ b/HACKING
@@ -26,6 +26,40 @@ http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/mail/mail.html for more info.
Hacking It Yourself ==================================================
+You can spawn a shell with all the required dependencies using GNU Guix
+by running the following command:
+
+ guix shell -D -f guix.scm --pure
+
+In this way, you can effortlessly compile Guile from the Git checkout
+with just these three lines:
+
+ guix shell -CP -D -f guix.scm -- ./autogen.sh
+ guix shell -CP -D -f guix.scm -- ./configure \
+ --enable-mini-gmp --disable-static
+ guix shell -CP -D -f guix.scm -- make
+
+Disabling of the static libraries is optional, but it does speed up the
+builds, and you are unlikely to need them for local development.
+
+ Note: Currently JIT causes Guile to crash in obscure ways on GNU Hurd,
+ so on that platform you want to also pass the --disable-jit flag
+ to the configure script.
+
+ Note: On any i*86 architecture, you also need to pass in the compiler
+ flag -fexcess-precision=standard in order to get the test suite
+ to pass. That can be done by passing an additional argument to
+ the configure script:
+ CFLAGS='-g -O2 -fexcess-precision=standard'
+
+Once that finishes, you can execute your newly compiled Guile using the
+./meta/guile script:
+
+ $ guix shell -CP -D -f guix.scm -- ./meta/guile -v | head -n1
+ guile (GNU Guile) 3.0.9.139-d7cf5-dirty
+
+For more manual approach, read on.
+
When Guile is obtained from Git, a few extra steps must be taken
before the usual configure, make, make install. You will need to have
up-to-date versions of the tools as listed below, correctly installed.
@@ -73,7 +107,7 @@ Here is the authoritative list of tool/version/platform tuples that
have been known to cause problems, and a short description of the problem.
-Sample GDB Initialization File=========================================
+Sample GDB Initialization File =======================================
In GDB, you probably want to load the gdbinit file included with Guile,
which defines a number of GDB helpers to inspect Scheme values.
@@ -215,7 +249,7 @@ The goal is to reduce (and over time, eliminate) spurious diffs.
For Emacs users:
(add-hook 'before-save-hook 'delete-trailing-whitespace)
-Naming conventions =================================================
+Naming conventions ===================================================
We use certain naming conventions to structure the considerable number
of global identifiers. All identifiers should be either all lower