A quarter century ago I devised similar machinery for Allegro. It's still in the implementation, and I use it daily for personal scripting tasks:
http://franz.com/support/documentation/current/doc/startup.htm#starting-unix...
Your work is a very useful thing to have, but let me suggest there are additonal issues to consider.
The Allegro machinery allows a compiled file to be included as the application. This eliminates the time necessary to cl:read the source and compile the definition on systems that automatically compile. For many scripting applications none of this matters. For most purposes interpreted executions, and/or the compiler, now require such inconsequential time that one shouldn't care how the deed gets done. But there are situations where it might:
If the script does nontrivial computation, the difference between interpreted and compiled execution might matter. (For implementations that always compile, the compilation cost is fixed, but happens upon each execution.)
If the script is executed with high frequency, perhaps as the implementation of a web page, the cost of launching a heavyweight Lisp image in almost _any_ implementation is likely to be objectionable. A lightweight C a.out has a small footprint in addition to the various .so libraries it uses, which will tend to stay loaded, and requires minimal startup execution overhead. Most Common Lisp applications have a larger startup cost because Lip environments are, shall we say, bigger and more capable.
It would be nice to think further how startup overhead could be reduced with precompiled execution
On Sun, Mar 2, 2014 at 2:56 PM, Faré fahree@gmail.com wrote:
My cl-launch demo:
cl -sp lisp-stripper -i '(print-loc-count "asdf.lisp")'
Source code for lispwc: #!/usr/bin/cl -sp lisp-stripper -E main (defun main (argv) (if argv (map () 'print-loc-count argv) (print-loc-count *standard-input*)))
And of course: for l in sbcl ccl clisp cmucl ecl abcl \ scl allegro lispworks gcl xcl ; do cl-launch -l $l -i \ '(format t "'$l': ~S~%" `#5(1 ,@`(2 3)))' \ 2>&1 | grep "^$l:" # LW, GCL are verbose done
Backstory:
After recent exposure to Python at work, I grew an intense dislike for that language, and realized that I could do everything in CL instead, and that the remaining stumbling blocks to using CL as a "scripting language" were quite small — just missing the ability to put #!/usr/bin/cl in a script, and there you go.
And so, I added just this capability to cl-launch, improved it to have some of the features of buildapp, and made sure it works without a hitch on each of the 11 implementations with a command-line interface. This in turn requires updating ASDF and UIOP, and so here we are with ASDF 3.1.0.86.
Then, I found that I had to take the word out, and started editing that way a paper that I'm preparing a paper for ELS 2014 (or else ILC 2014): ASDF3, or Why Lisp is Now an Acceptable Scripting Language
It's incredible how having to explain the code forces you to make it actually simpler to use. Hence new option -sp in cl-launch, to load a system and change the current package, all in one go. Hence also having cl-launch build software with a sequence of --system --load --eval instead of a single setup file and toplevel system like before: people already understand a sequence of build commands.
Also new in ASDF3: command line argument support was improved with a LispWorks workaround and a new argv0 function; with-input and with-output accept pathnames as designating a file to open; the bundle support was much improved and cleaned up; the upgrade mechanism was slightly improved to cope with the class refactoring; bugs were found and removed in pathname functions; a weird bug in SCL was worked around.
Enjoy!
TODO: I'm considering modifying the default behavior of cl-launch to launch a REPL and/or read commands from stdin, like a Unix shell does when given no script and no commands to run. I'm reserving that for another round of procrastination.
—♯ƒ • François-René ÐVB Rideau •Reflection&Cybernethics• http://fare.tunes.org To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it. — G.K. Chesterton