Thanks for the reply. But I don't quite understand what it means. I was doing something similar to https://chriskohlhepp.wordpress.com/embedding-lisp-in-cplusplus-a-recipe/ . When I hit C-c in the console, I drop into the top-level REPL. I typed:
(swank:create-server :port 4005)
;; Swank started at port: 4005.
Then I connect to swank server with SLIME, inside which I put something wrong there:
CL-USER> asdf Debugger received error of type: UNBOUND-VARIABLE The variable ASDF; Evaluation aborted on #<a UNBOUND-VARIABLE>.
After that, swank server stops. And I'm dropped back to top level. I wonder why this happens.
Thanks, Bruce
2015-09-01 9:34 GMT-04:00 Daniel Kochmański <daniel@turtleware.eu>:
Hello,
if you call lisp forms from C code (after cl_boot), then you have no set handler, so if your code signals a condition, then it goes uncought. If that's a case, you could do something, what toplevel does (setting handlers etc), or set si::*break-level* to 1 and call tpl:
(let ((si::*break-level* 1)) (si::tpl))
this should spawn toplevel console and won't exit. If you want to set proper handler consult src/lsp/tpl.lsp file in ECL sourcecode.
Regards, Daniel
bruce li writes:
Hi, there, I'm pretty new to ECL. I'm currently considering embedding ECL in a game engine. When I interactively interrupt the program and drop into the repl, I load up swank with quicklisp and create swank server with (swank:create-server :port 4005). I can connect to it from SLIME. But any error in the statement, either by deliberately typing sth wrong, will cause swank server to close instead of dropping into the debugging environment. I have no idea why this happens. It turns out that if I start swank on a different thread with mp:process-run-function, it goes well. But since the game engine is based on OpenGL, multithreading rendering isn't an option. I wonder if there is any way to get around the swank server and enable its debugger when it encounters error.
Thanks, Bruce
-- Daniel Kochmański | Poznań, Poland ;; aka jackdaniel
"Be the change that you wish to see in the world." - Mahatma Gandhi