On 7/22/17 12:04, Mark Evenson wrote:
On 7/21/17 00:10, Robert Goldman wrote:
ASDF wraps its compilation process with WITH-COMPILATION-UNIT.
On at least some implementations, this is necessary so that building doesn't emit spurious undefined function (variable, etc.) warnings.
However, on ABCL, using WITH-COMPILATION-UNIT has the side effect of causing warnings to be intercepted and handled by HANDLE-WARNING. Then it seems that *resignal-compiler-warnings* is bound to NIL, and the compiler swallows them, instead of allowing them to flow down the stack to ASDF's handlers.
In turn, this causes at least some of our regression tests to fail, because they check for expected warnings.
This looks to me like a bug, but perhaps it's a feature ;-) Would you please explain and let us know how to handle this
I am not entirely clear about why ABCL seemingly swallows compiler warnings by default. Such behavior may be historical, having something to do with getting an ancient version of SLIME working, but that is just a guess.
I am on a road trip at the moment […]
Seemingly back from my summer break, I can confirm that [Faré's patch][ Fix two tests on ABCL] is the best we can do at the moment.
The generalized boolean JVM:*RESIGNAL-COMPILER-WARNINGS* controls whether the compiler emits diagnostics to the standard reporting stream as text or signals conditions, with the default being not to signal.
[I have patched][compiler signals] ABCL trunk to both document this better as well as exporting the symbol.
[Fix two tests on ABCL]: https://gitlab.common-lisp.net/asdf/asdf/commit/026ceaea53a35bad04a75c13caa3...
[compiler signals doc]: https://gitlab.common-lisp.net/abcl/abcl/commit/56735922d2773d3ab40a5535a09e...