read: Accept "\|" in string literals.
[bpt/guile.git] / doc / ref / libguile-linking.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Guile Reference Manual.
097a793b 3@c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2010, 2011
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4@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5@c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions.
6
7@node Linking Programs With Guile
8@section Linking Programs With Guile
9
10This section covers the mechanics of linking your program with Guile
11on a typical POSIX system.
12
13The header file @code{<libguile.h>} provides declarations for all of
14Guile's functions and constants. You should @code{#include} it at the
15head of any C source file that uses identifiers described in this
16manual. Once you've compiled your source files, you need to link them
17against the Guile object code library, @code{libguile}.
18
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19As noted in the previous section, @code{<libguile.h>} is not in the
20default search path for headers. The following command lines give
21respectively the C compilation and link flags needed to build programs
22using Guile @value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}:
23
24@example
25pkg-config guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION} --cflags
26pkg-config guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION} --libs
27@end example
097a793b 28
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29@menu
30* Guile Initialization Functions:: What to call first.
31* A Sample Guile Main Program:: Sources and makefiles.
32@end menu
33
34
35@node Guile Initialization Functions
36@subsection Guile Initialization Functions
37
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38To initialize Guile, you can use one of several functions. The first,
39@code{scm_with_guile}, is the most portable way to initialize Guile. It
40will initialize Guile when necessary and then call a function that you
41can specify. Multiple threads can call @code{scm_with_guile}
42concurrently and it can also be called more than once in a given thread.
43The global state of Guile will survive from one call of
44@code{scm_with_guile} to the next. Your function is called from within
45@code{scm_with_guile} since the garbage collector of Guile needs to know
46where the stack of each thread is.
47
48A second function, @code{scm_init_guile}, initializes Guile for the
49current thread. When it returns, you can use the Guile API in the
50current thread. This function employs some non-portable magic to learn
51about stack bounds and might thus not be available on all platforms.
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52
53One common way to use Guile is to write a set of C functions which
54perform some useful task, make them callable from Scheme, and then link
55the program with Guile. This yields a Scheme interpreter just like
56@code{guile}, but augmented with extra functions for some specific
57application --- a special-purpose scripting language.
58
59In this situation, the application should probably process its
60command-line arguments in the same manner as the stock Guile
61interpreter. To make that straightforward, Guile provides the
beac6039 62@code{scm_boot_guile} and @code{scm_shell} function.
3229f68b 63
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64For more about these functions, see @ref{Initialization}.
65
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66@node A Sample Guile Main Program
67@subsection A Sample Guile Main Program
68
69Here is @file{simple-guile.c}, source code for a @code{main} and an
70@code{inner_main} function that will produce a complete Guile
71interpreter.
72
73@example
74/* simple-guile.c --- how to start up the Guile
75 interpreter from C code. */
76
77/* Get declarations for all the scm_ functions. */
78#include <libguile.h>
79
80static void
81inner_main (void *closure, int argc, char **argv)
82@{
83 /* module initializations would go here */
84 scm_shell (argc, argv);
85@}
86
87int
88main (int argc, char **argv)
89@{
90 scm_boot_guile (argc, argv, inner_main, 0);
91 return 0; /* never reached */
92@}
93@end example
94
95The @code{main} function calls @code{scm_boot_guile} to initialize
96Guile, passing it @code{inner_main}. Once @code{scm_boot_guile} is
97ready, it invokes @code{inner_main}, which calls @code{scm_shell} to
98process the command-line arguments in the usual way.
99
100Here is a Makefile which you can use to compile the above program. It
097a793b 101uses @code{pkg-config} to learn about the necessary compiler and
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102linker flags.
103@example
104# Use GCC, if you have it installed.
105CC=gcc
106
107# Tell the C compiler where to find <libguile.h>
097a793b 108CFLAGS=`pkg-config --cflags guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}`
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109
110# Tell the linker what libraries to use and where to find them.
097a793b 111LIBS=`pkg-config --libs guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}`
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112
113simple-guile: simple-guile.o
114 $@{CC@} simple-guile.o $@{LIBS@} -o simple-guile
115
116simple-guile.o: simple-guile.c
117 $@{CC@} -c $@{CFLAGS@} simple-guile.c
118@end example
119
120If you are using the GNU Autoconf package to make your application more
121portable, Autoconf will settle many of the details in the Makefile above
122automatically, making it much simpler and more portable; we recommend
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123using Autoconf with Guile. Here is a @file{configure.ac} file for
124@code{simple-guile} that uses the standard @code{PKG_CHECK_MODULES}
125macro to check for Guile. Autoconf will process this file into a
126@code{configure} script. We recommend invoking Autoconf via the
127@code{autoreconf} utility.
39067a9f 128
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129@example
130AC_INIT(simple-guile.c)
131
132# Find a C compiler.
133AC_PROG_CC
134
135# Check for Guile
0e8a11c4 136PKG_CHECK_MODULES([GUILE], [guile-@value{EFFECTIVE-VERSION}])
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137
138# Generate a Makefile, based on the results.
139AC_OUTPUT(Makefile)
140@end example
141
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142Run @code{autoreconf -vif} to generate @code{configure}.
143
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144Here is a @code{Makefile.in} template, from which the @code{configure}
145script produces a Makefile customized for the host system:
146@example
147# The configure script fills in these values.
148CC=@@CC@@
149CFLAGS=@@GUILE_CFLAGS@@
0e8a11c4 150LIBS=@@GUILE_LIBS@@
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151
152simple-guile: simple-guile.o
153 $@{CC@} simple-guile.o $@{LIBS@} -o simple-guile
154simple-guile.o: simple-guile.c
155 $@{CC@} -c $@{CFLAGS@} simple-guile.c
156@end example
157
158The developer should use Autoconf to generate the @file{configure}
0e8a11c4 159script from the @file{configure.ac} template, and distribute
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160@file{configure} with the application. Here's how a user might go about
161building the application:
162
163@example
164$ ls
0e8a11c4 165Makefile.in configure* configure.ac simple-guile.c
3229f68b 166$ ./configure
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167checking for gcc... ccache gcc
168checking whether the C compiler works... yes
169checking for C compiler default output file name... a.out
170checking for suffix of executables...
171checking whether we are cross compiling... no
172checking for suffix of object files... o
173checking whether we are using the GNU C compiler... yes
174checking whether ccache gcc accepts -g... yes
175checking for ccache gcc option to accept ISO C89... none needed
176checking for pkg-config... /usr/bin/pkg-config
177checking pkg-config is at least version 0.9.0... yes
178checking for GUILE... yes
179configure: creating ./config.status
180config.status: creating Makefile
3229f68b 181$ make
1ea8aa7d 182[...]
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183$ ./simple-guile
184guile> (+ 1 2 3)
1856
186guile> (getpwnam "jimb")
187#("jimb" "83Z7d75W2tyJQ" 4008 10 "Jim Blandy" "/u/jimb"
188 "/usr/local/bin/bash")
189guile> (exit)
190$
191@end example
192
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193
194@c Local Variables:
195@c TeX-master: "guile.texi"
196@c End: