I Approve. I have a few questions, though: How portable is it? Some of the stuff sounds familiar to me. I know that most lisps have an environment variable facility, and also some functionality to deal with directory deletion/creation. What are the differences to what PORT (from cclan) offers? Regards, Mario. Nikodemus Siivola <nikodemus@random-state.net> writes:
I'm applying for project hosting for Osicat:
Osicat is a lightweight operating system interface for Common Lisp. It is intended to augment the facilities provided by CL on POSIX-like platforms, but does not try to provide a comprehensive API.
Features in 0.1:
* Directory iteration and deletion * Environment variables * Symbolic links * File permissions * File kind (regular, directory, pipe, etc.) identification
Osicat is under MIT-style licence and relies on UFFI for foreign bindings.
The current version is at:
http://random-state.net/files/osicat_0.1.tar.gz
Cheers,
-- Nikodemus _______________________________________________ Admin mailing list Admin@common-lisp.net http://common-lisp.net/mailman/listinfo/admin