When file was created with file/popen, the current optimization
of using fseek on windows fails due to windows not properly returning
and error code and just returning 0. Windows :(.
The new RNG wraps up state for random number generation, so
one can have many rngs and even marshal and unmarshal them.
Adds math/rng, math/rng-uniform, and math/rng-int.
Also introduce `in` and change semantics for
indexing out of range. This commit enforces stricter
invariants on keys when indexing via a function call
on the data structure, or the new `in` function.
The `get` function is now more lax about keys, and will
not throw an error when a bad key is used for a data structure, instead
returning the default value.
Flychecking will now work correctly with arity checking, and
will better handle imports. Well structured modules should interact
cleanly with the flychecker in a mostly safe manner, but maliciously
crafted modules can execute arbitrary code. As such, the flychecker is
not a good way to validate completely untrusted modules.
We also extend run-context with an :evaluator option to replace
:compile-only. This is more flexible and allows users to create their
own flychecker like functionality.
This allows some more optimizations when printing to
buffers or when output is disabled. It also makes printf
more consistent with print and prin (Same with eprintf).
The print family of functions now writes output
to an optional buffer instead of a file bound to :out.
This means output can be more easily captured an redirected.
This should help catch a number of errors, but it
is a very shallow implementation of type checking. It will
catch some common misuses of functions at compile time
rather than runtime.
This will prevent these functions from being run
with empty strings, which usually produces useless
output, as the internal string search algorithm will
never "find" empty strings. This is by design, as it is
not always obvious which empty strings should be found in
the search text.
This should be friendlier to most users. It does, however, mean
we lose range information. However, range information could be
recovered by re-parsing, as janet's grammar is simple enough to do this.
Also adds the janet_lengthv API call. This is
needed because janet_length returns a 32 bit integer, where
as lengthv lets us return larger values (useful for typed arrays).
janet_mcall is an api function that should make it easier to call
a janet method from C code. It shares a similar signature with
janet_call.
Remove the multiple caching tables we were using
and use the grammar table for caching. This works
well because we can use raw_get for checking the local cache, and normal
get fro checking the global cache.
A keyword reference only counts as visited if we have
it as cached in the memoized->table, and we know it was
originally referenced from the same grammar table. If these
two conditions are true, then compilation must work correctly.
Also add janet_table_get_ex.
(backmatch [tag?]) is similar to a back reference in regular expressions
(NOT to backwards capture in a peg). It only matches a pattern if
it exactly matches the text of the last capture. It does not consume
or push any captures to the capture stack.
We normally only track memory allocated with janet_gcalloc, but
if only a few very large normal memory blocks are allocated, the GC
will never run. Se simply need to increment a count when we allocate
memory so that the next time we enter the VM, we will be able to
run a collection if needed.
Mostly changes to cook and jpm. Also some
code for file associations in the windows installer, and
adding the :linux value from os/which (instead of just :posix).
This allows better stacktraces when manually intercepting
signals to clean up resources. Also allows functionality
from Common Lisp's unwind-protect, such as calling cleanup code
while unwindinding the stack, restarting on certain signals, and
just in general having more control over signal and signal propagation.
Also fix a bug encountered while implementing with-resource in the
compiler. Desturcturing arguments that were not the last argument
would often result in bad code generation, as slots used to destructure
the earlier arguments would invalidate the later parameters. This is
fixed by allocating all named parameters before doing any destructuring.
This will allow some one constructing an abstract to
only make it visible to the garbage collector after it
is in a valid state. If code in the constructing cfunction
panics before janet_abstract_end is called, the GC will not try
to mark the incomplete abstract type. This is often not needed through
careful programming, but should work well.
Before, if Janet paniced without calling table_deinit
on a table created via table_init, Janet leaked memory.
This changes tables so that tables created via table_init
us scratch memory for auto cleanup instead of normal
malloc/free.
These functions made it very easy to create memory
leaks, and are better replaced with functions in vector.h or
simply using non-stack allocated arrays.
This makes it easier to document functions that
take keyword arguments and also prevents some allocations
with these functions. Before, this was possible via normal
variadic functions but created an intermediate tuple, and
the generated docstrings did not document the keys.
This should help address #81. Also hide janet_exit
and janet_assert, as they are really meant for internal usage.
I have not verified that this yet actually works with Rust's
bindgen.
64 bit nanboxing is kind of sketchy on non x86 architectures.
32 bit architectures seem to work better as the 32 implementation
doesn't rely on the format of the address space and layout of
double's in memory.
- Allow passing a table to fibers, which make fiber level scope easier.
- Add fiber/getenv, fiber/setenv, dyn, and setdyn
- Remove meta, *env*, and *doc-width*
- Some functions changed dignatures, and no longer take an env
janet_vm_return_reg should only be set when janet_continue
is called. Otherwise, a panic may dump it's error message in
the wrong place, resulting in undefined behavior (often showing
the last return value or worse, segfaulting).
By holding on a reference to argv for a long time, we
may trigger a use after free bug if the stack is resized. In
janet c function, argv is only vvalid up until the next stack operation
on the fiber. We could say that this is the dynamic lifetime of
argv.
To fix this, we copy extra arguments into a tuple, which is properly
garbage collected.
Some peg grammars could not capture values based on their position in a
larger grammar. This is a design limitation inheritted from LPeg, but no
longer needed as the replace mode is superseded by the accumulator mode,
which is more general if slightly harder to use.
Allows getting more information about files. This
is really useful for writing software that needs to inspect
the file system (like a static site generator). We still need
a way to iterate directories though.
Rather than edit the Makefile or the janet.h header yourself, use
janetconf.h to configure builds. This has the benefit of making it
easier to configure janet in a persitent but easy way.
A lot of refactoring larger integer types. Fix a number
of casting errors, but mostly rename things. Also try to
limit use of template-like macros as they bloat the binary
if not used in moderation. We were able to reduce the size of
typed array code as well by using a single view types.
We moved the literals true and false into one tag
type, so we an extra tag for raw pointer types
(light userdata). These can be used from the C API via
janet_wrap_pointer and janet_unwrap_pointer.
If -p flag is not set, we should bail on all three kinds
of errors, not just runtime errors. This includes
parse and compile errors. Before, parse and compile errors
were not properly affected by the :exit parameter to require, which
in turn caused scripts to not bail on parse or compile errors.
Using the new break special form, the loop
macro was cleaned up. Loop bindings are also
able to be used immediately after declaration, so
forms like (loop [x :range [0 10] :while (< x 5)] (print x)) will
now compile correctly.
The break special form can break out of both loops
and functions with an early (nil) return. Mainly useful
for generated code in macros, and should probably be discouraged
in user written code.
Allow overriding functions in the core libray to provide better
functionality on startup. Used to include our getline function in
the repl but use a simpler version in the core library.
Instead of a int32_t as the length argument, use
size_t to match up better with typearray.c and probably
most idiomatic C libraries.
Janet uses int32_t for length internally for consistency, space
efficiency, ability to fit int32_t in double, and various
other reasons.
Typed arrays used size_t in serialization: C APIs will
also often use it, so it makes sense to add first class support
for it rather than assume it will will fint into an integer.
These changes should quiet some visual studio warnings.
Also make some spacing more consistent.
Leave in issues with calling memcpy with size=0. If these
become a problem, will probably add a janet_memcpy as memcpy
is used so much in the code without 0 checks.
If a comment is not followed by a newline character, then
we got a false parse error. This is because the comment
state is left on the parse stack when we finished parsing, and
since the parse stack was not emtpy, we assumed an error.
This commit adds the parser/eof function, which lets the parser know
that an eof was reached. Before, we simply added a fake newline
character in some cases, and in the case of reading a file, we did
nothing, hence the bug.
Before, we used a local setjmp/longjmp for error handling.
Using janet_panic means errors can be more easily expressive and
code can be smaller.
However, we still need to make vector memory get gc collected, as
panics can cause the runtime to skip janet_v_frees.