-This is a nightly snapshot of Guile, the GNU extension language
-library. Please send bug reports to bug-guile@prep.ai.mit.edu.
-
-IMPORTANT FACTS ABOUT SNAPSHOTS:
-
- Please keep in mind that these sources are strictly experimental;
- they will usually not be well-tested, and may not even compile on
- some systems. They may contain interfaces which will change.
- They will usually not be of sufficient quality for use by people
- not comfortable hacking the innards of Guile. Caveat!
-
- However, we're providing them anyway for several reasons. We'd like
- to encourage people to get involved in developing Guile. People
- willing to use the bleeding edge of development can get earlier access
- to new, experimental features. Patches submitted relative to recent
- snapshots will be easier for us to evaluate and install, since the
- patch's original sources will be closer to what we're working with.
- And it allows us to start testing features earlier.
-
-The Guile snapshots are available via anonymous FTP from
-alpha.gnu.ai.mit.edu, as /gnu/guile-snap.tar.gz.
-
-Guile is a portable, embeddable Scheme implementation written in C.
-Guile provides a machine independent execution platform that can be
-linked in as a library when building extensible programs.
-
-Guile is derived from SCM, by Aubrey Jaffer and others. Tom Lord
-librarified SCM, yielding Guile. He wrote Guile's operating system,
-Ice-9, connected Guile to Tcl/Tk and the `rx' regular expression
-matcher, and took care of a lot of miscellany.
-
-Interesting files include:
-- INSTALL, which contains instructions on building and installing Guile.
-- NEWS, which describes user-visible changes since the last release of Guile.
-- COPYING, which describes the terms under which you may redistribute
- Guile, and explains that there is no warranty.
-
-The Guile source tree is laid out as follows:
-
-doc: Documentation for Guile, in Texinfo form.
-libguile:
- The Guile Scheme interpreter, packaged as an object library
- for you to link with your programs.
-guile: An interactive front end for the Guile Scheme interpreter.
-rx: A regular expression matching library, interfaced to Guile.
-ice-9: Guile's module system, initialization code, and other infrastructure.
-lang: A Guile module of tools for writing lexical analyzers and parsers.
-ctax: A Guile module providing a C-like syntax for Scheme.
-gtcltk-lib:
- Glue code for talking to tcl/tk from Guile. The Tcl/Tk
- developers have big plans for the next major release of Tcl/Tk
- which will make possible a clean, direct interface between
- Guile and Tk, so we're providing this very simple-minded
- interface until that's ready.
-
-
-The mailing list `guile@prep.ai.mit.edu' carries discussions,
-questions, and often answers, about Guile. To subscribe, send mail to
-guile-request@prep.ai.mit.edu. Of course, please send bug reports
-(and fixes!) to bug-guile@prep.ai.mit.edu.
+This is a nightly snapshot of Guile, a portable, embeddable Scheme
+implementation written in C. Guile provides a machine independent
+execution platform that can be linked in as a library when building
+extensible programs.
+
+Please send bug reports to bug-guile@gnu.org.
+
+About Snapshots ======================================================
+
+
+Each night, we make the current Guile sources available via anonymous
+FTP. Please keep in mind that these sources are strictly
+experimental; they will usually not be well-tested, and may not even
+compile on some systems. They may contain interfaces which will
+change. They will usually not be of sufficient quality for use by
+people not comfortable hacking the innards of Guile. Caveat!
+
+However, we're providing them anyway for several reasons. We'd like
+to encourage people to get involved in developing Guile. People
+willing to use the bleeding edge of development can get earlier access
+to new, experimental features. Patches submitted relative to recent
+snapshots will be easier for us to evaluate and install, since the
+patch's original sources will be closer to what we're working with.
+And it allows us to start testing features earlier.
+
+Nightly snapshots of the Guile development sources are available via
+anonymous FTP from ftp.red-bean.com, as /pub/guile/guile-core-snap.tar.gz.
+
+Via the web, that's: ftp://ftp.red-bean.com/pub/guile/guile-core-snap.tar.gz
+For getit, that's: ftp.red-bean.com:/pub/guile/guile-core-snap.tar.gz
+
+The snapshot FTP site is mirrored at the following locations:
+ Austria: ftp://ftp.aec.at/pub/guile
+ Japan: ftp://ftp.jaist.ac.jp/pub/lang/scheme/guile
+
+
+About This Distribution ==============================================
+
+Building and installing this distribution gives you:
+guile --- a stand-alone interpreter for Guile, usually installed in
+ /usr/local/bin. With no arguments, this is a simple
+ interactive Scheme interpreter. It can also be used as an
+ interpreter for script files; see the NEWS file for details.
+libguile.a --- an object library containing the Guile interpreter,
+ usually installed in /usr/local/lib. You can use Guile in
+ your own programs by linking against this.
+libqt.a --- an object library containing the QuickThreads primitives.
+ If you enabled thread support when you configured Guile, you
+ will need to link your code against this too.
+<libguile.h>, <libguile/*.h> --- header files for libguile.a, usually
+ installed in /usr/local/include.
+ice-9, ice-9/*.scm --- run-time support for Guile: the module
+ system, read-eval-print loop, some R4RS code and other
+ infrastructure. Usually installed in
+ /usr/local/share/guile/<version>.
+
+Interesting files include:
+- INSTALL, which contains instructions on building and installing Guile.
+- NEWS, which describes user-visible changes since the last release of Guile.
+- COPYING, which describes the terms under which you may redistribute
+ Guile, and explains that there is no warranty.
+
+The Guile source tree is laid out as follows:
+
+libguile:
+ The Guile Scheme interpreter --- both the object library
+ for you to link with your programs, and the executable you can run.
+ice-9: Guile's module system, initialization code, and other infrastructure.
+
+qt: A cooperative threads package from Washington University,
+ which Guile can use. If you configure Guile with the
+ --with-threads flag, you will need to link against the -lqt
+ library, found in this directory. Qt is under a separate
+ copyright; see `qt/README' for more details.
+
+(The present release doesn't include any documentation; the Guile
+manual is incomplete, and is currently being revised.)
+
+
+Hacking It Yourself ==================================================
+
+As distributed, Guile needs only an ANSI C compiler and a Unix system
+to compile. However, Guile's makefiles, configuration scripts, and a
+few other files are automatically generated, not written by hand. If
+you want to make changes to the system (which we encourage!) you will
+find it helpful to have the tools we use to develop Guile. They
+are the following:
+
+Autoconf 2.12 --- a system for automatically generating `configure'
+ scripts from templates which list the non-portable features a
+ program would like to use. Available in
+ "ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu".
+
+Automake 1.3 --- a system for automatically generating Makefiles that
+ conform to the (rather Byzantine) GNU coding standards. The
+ nice thing is that it takes care of hairy targets like 'make
+ dist' and 'make distclean', and automatically generates
+ Makefile dependencies. Automake is available in
+ "ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu".
+
+ Before using automake, you may need to copy `threads.m4' and
+ `guile.m4' from the top directory of the Guile core disty to
+ `/usr/local/share/aclocal.
+
+libtool 1.2 --- a system for managing the zillion hairy options needed
+ on various systems to produce shared libraries. Available in
+ "ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu".
+
+You are lost in a little maze of automatically generated files, all
+different.
+>
+
+
+Obtaining Guile ======================================================
+
+The latest official Guile release is available via anonymous FTP from
+prep.ai.mit.edu, as /pub/gnu/guile-1.2.tar.gz.
+
+Via the web, that's: ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/guile-1.2.tar.gz
+For getit, that's: prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu/guile-1.2.tar.gz
+
+The mailing list `guile@cygnus.com' carries discussions, questions,
+and often answers, about Guile. To subscribe, send mail to
+guile-request@cygnus.com. Of course, please send bug reports (and
+fixes!) to bug-guile@gnu.org.
+
+
+Authors And Contributors =============================================
+
+Many people have generously contributed to Guile. However, any errors
+are the responsibility of the primary Guile maintainer, Jim Blandy.
+
+Mikael Djurfeldt designed and implemented:
+* the source-level debugging support (although the debugger's user
+ interface is not yet complete)
+* stack overflow detection,
+* the GDB patches to support debugging mixed Scheme/C code,
+* the original implementation of weak hash tables,
+* enhancements to the `threads' interface (based on Anthony Green's
+ work), and
+* detection of circular references during printing.
+
+Mark Galassi contributed the Guile high-level functions (gh_*), and
+wrote the guile-programmer and guile-user manuals. (These are in the
+process of revision.)
+
+Anthony Green wrote the original version of `threads', the interface
+between Guile and qt.
+
+Gary Houston wrote much of the Unix system call support, including the
+socket support, and did a lot of work on the error handling code.
+
+Tom Lord librarified SCM, yielding Guile. He wrote Guile's operating
+system, Ice-9, and connected Guile to Tcl/Tk and the `rx' regular
+expression matcher.
+
+Aubrey Jaffer is the author of SCM upon which Guile is based. Guile
+started from SCM version 4e1 in November -94 and is still largely
+composed of the original SCM code.
+
+George Carrette wrote SIOD, a stand-alone scheme interpreter.
+Although most of this code as been rewritten or replaced over time,
+the garbage collector from SIOD is still an important part of Guile.