From: Elliott S. <ell...@gm...> - 2008-05-19 05:19:21
|
On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 2:58 AM, Nikodemus Siivola <nik...@ra...> wrote: > On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 2:54 AM, Elliott Slaughter > <ell...@gm...> wrote: >> Unfortunately it still seems to be broken (stops right after compiling >> cross-make-load-from.lisp). >> >> ; compiling file >> "C:\\Bin\\MSYS1.0\\sbcl-1.0.16.37\\src\\code\\cross-make-load-form.lisp" >> (written 14 JUL 2005 09:30:14 AM): >> [... compilation of file seems to complete (with warnings) ...] >> ; C:\Bin\MSYS1.0\sbcl-1.0.16.37\obj\from-host\src\code\cross-make-load-form.lisp-obj-tmp >> written >> ; compilation finished in 0:00:00 >> >> debugger invoked on a SIMPLE-ERROR: >> FAILURE-P was set when creating >> "obj/from-host/src/code/cross-make-load-form.lisp-obj". > > The important bits are the "caught WARNING" and "caught ERROR" > messages earlier in the scrollback. FAILURE-P here means that > COMPILE-FILE returned a tertiary return value of true. Here are the warnings immediately before what I posted previously. (There are style warnings before this, but since they seem to be even distributed throughout the build I didn't want to post too much. Let me know if you would like more.) ; compiling file "C:\\Bin\\MSYS1.0\\sbcl-1.0.16.37\\src\\code\\cross-make-load-form.lisp" (written 14 JUL 2005 09:30:14 AM): ; compiling (IN-PACKAGE "SB!INT"); ; caught WARNING: ; Found non-STANDARD-CHAR in "MAKE-LOAD-FORM-SAVING-SLOTS ~ ; called with :SLOT-NAMES argument during cross-compilation" ; compiling (DEFUN SB-XC:MAKE-LOAD-FORM-SAVING-SLOTS ...) ; file: C:\Bin\MSYS1.0\sbcl-1.0.16.37\src\code\cross-make-load-form.lisp ; in: DEFUN SB-XC:MAKE-LOAD-FORM-SAVING-SLOTS ; (SB!INT:BUG "MAKE-LOAD-FORM-SAVING-SLOTS ~ ; called with :SLOT-NAMES argument during cross-compilation") ; ; caught STYLE-WARNING: ; undefined function: BUG ; ; caught STYLE-WARNING: ; This function is undefined: ; BUG ; ; compilation unit finished ; caught 1 WARNING condition ; caught 2 STYLE-WARNING conditions -- Elliott Slaughter "Any road followed precisely to its end leads precisely nowhere." - Frank Herbert |