Liberty Eiffel Programming Environment FAQ

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Is there a SmartEiffel mailing list?

Yes! SmartEiffel users and developers can share their experiences and ideas by subscribing to the SmartEiffel official mailing list.

Is it possible to have the complete Eiffel source code of SmartEiffel?

Since it is the GNU Eiffel Compiler, the complete source code of SmartEiffel is of course in the distribution. The source code for additional libraries is also provided.

Is it possible to use SmartEiffel for large/commercial applications?

It is indeed possible to use SmartEiffel for a large application. An Eiffel compiler is a really big project and SmartEiffel itself is fully written in Eiffel. SmartEiffel is completely free and any private company can use SmartEiffel freely, and distribute (or sell) freely the products made with it. They do not have to pay royalties.

Also note that only classes which are closely related to the compiler itself are under GPL (actually, only the classes of directory SmartEiffel/tools and install.e are under GPL). The other classes are not under GPL in order to let people completely free (i.e. all classes of SmartEiffel/lib).

Always keep in mind that SmartEiffel doesn't come with any warranty (please read the COPYING file in the distribution). As explained in the header of non-GPL files, the only important thing is to kept the header unaltered when the corresponding source file is provided in your product. For extended support, donations as well as consulting, see here.

What is SmallEiffel compared to SmartEiffel?

SmallEiffel is the former name of the SmartEiffel project. We changed because we thought the compiler had become smart enough ;)

For a list of changes between the last version of SmallEiffel and the first one of SmartEiffel, have a look there.

How can I help?

The best way to help SmartEiffel and its users is probably to pick up some area you're interested in, and develop with SmartEiffel your own library, application, tool, extension, etc., releasing it to other users.

To avoid duplicate efforts, we suggest you have a look to what other people are already doing around SmartEiffel and help them if something that's of interest to you is already under work. There are actually very good things in there, some we were not even aware of, when they were under development ! :)

You may have a look to the future plans and have a look into the bugs database (access via the bug report page.

Finally, you may also consider funding the development of particular features you would like to have.

Another very good way to help us is to follow the bug report guidelines when you find some problem with SmartEiffel.

Why don't you change this and add that?! It would be much better/cooler/whatever!

People must understand that we can't always do everything. We simply can't. Because we don't have the time. Whether we like it or not, we also have other things to do than provide free stuff, modify our compiler and/or libraries to please everybody. We do as much as we can, but we don't do miracles, sorry.

Since SmartEiffel is free of charge and open-source, people who do need things we don't provide can always implement them and have them benefit everybody. A good way to do this is to start working on it, and ask other people (i.e. not the SmartEiffel team ;) ) to join and help. See the How can I help? question.

Alternatively, someone or some company who does need us to implement something may always consider funding a bit the development of SmartEiffel... After all, we've even heard that some people were selling software and making a bit of money with it... ;)))

How do I keep informed about SmartEiffel?

The best way is to keep an eye on our web pages, more especially on the What's New? page and the History of Changes.

People who want detailed information may also decide to stay tuned to the SmartEiffel mailing-list or even look at the bug-tracking system.

What documentation is provided with SmartEiffel?

The documentation provided with SmartEiffel is a transcript of what

you can find on the original SmartEiffel Web site, at <A HREF="http://SmartEiffel.loria.fr">http://SmartEiffel.loria.fr</A>. It is related only to the use and internals of SmartEiffel (yes, we know we still have to improve it ;) ).
For information and documentation about the Eiffel language, check the links on our <A HREF="../general/resources.html"> Internet resources page</A>. Note that we are not aware of any complete Eiffel language manual freely available on the Web (yet?).

Why don't you post more messages in newsgroups and/or mailing lists?

First, because we strongly believe that too much information kills information.

Scientists call this "cognitive overload". :)
Second, because we don't have the time. It takes an awful amount of time to follow discussions, whatever their quality. We try to do that. But it's even more time-consuming to be part of them. So, we often have to choose between posting/mailing, and working directly on SmartEiffel. Since our mailboxes tend to overflood, we generally choose the latter :)

Is it possible to do incremental compilation with SmartEiffel?

Because of the SmartEiffel type inference mechanism, SmartEiffel always produces all needed C files from scratch. As old C files are automatically saved, only modified C files are recompiled.

See <A HREF="../man/compile.html">man/compile</A> for details. 

Is there a mechanism to pre-compile libraries?

No, there is no such mechanism in SmartEiffel. But if you're concerned

about compilation speed, don't worry, pre-computed libraries are not the only way to be fast ! Just try SmartEiffel, and you'll see :)

What is the semantics (meaning) of a manifest string?

Bertrand Meyer clearly explains the semantics of manifest strings in section 18.5 on page 653 (and previous sections for background) of Object-Oriented Software Construction (Second Edition). A manifest string expression (in declaration) is not a constant but a reference to a shared object. A variable initialised with a manifest string is equivalent to a once function, so the string may change! For example:

   Message: STRING is "abc"

is equivalent to

   Message: STRING is
     once
       !!Result.make (3)
       Result.append_character ('a')
       Result.append_character ('b')
       Result.append_character ('c')
     end

SmartEiffel implements manifest strings in this way.

Be aware that manifest string expression may be written in two ways:

   str := "abc"
This is the standard manifest string expression.

   str := once "abc"
This is the once manifest string expression.
In the first case, new string is allocated each time the line is executed. In the second case you've got a once result like in declaration described above, so the string may have changed. See <A HREF="../man/compile_to_c.html">man/compile_to_c</A> for the flag -manifest_string_trace which help finding memory leaks from non-once manifest strings.

How should I read a file?

In order to read a file, read a character and then use last_character ONLY if if end_of_input has not been reached while reading the character.
Before each read (except the very first), you have to test end_of_input, because all read_* procedures require not end_of_input. But why? This require means that if some previous read failed because end of input has been reached, then it is not valid to try to read again.
Example:
   file: TEXT_FILE_READ

   file.connect_to(file_name)
   if file.is_connected then
      from
         file.read_character
      until
         file.end_of_input
      loop
         io.put_character(file.last_character)
         file.read_character
      end
      file.disconnect
   end

Is it possible to use the Boehm-Demers-Weiser garbage collector with SmartEiffel?

Yes.


You just have to disable the generation of the GC by SmartEiffel (option <IT>-no_gc</IT>) and replace it by the BDW library. Note that the BDW GC can be easily added because SmartEiffel only uses malloc/realloc/calloc.
You can download the BDW library from : 

<A HREF="http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/gc/">http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/gc</A> 

How to integrate the Boehm-Demers-Weiser garbage collector with SmartEiffel (from a message of Dietmar Wolz) : 

  1. Make the gc.a file from the BDW package. Then move this gc.a file to /usr/lib/libgc.a.  
  2. Move gc.h the to working directory and add the following lines: 

  3. #define malloc(n) GC_malloc(n) 
    #define calloc(m,n) GC_malloc((m)*(n)) 
    #define realloc(p,n) GC_realloc((p),(n)) 
    #define free(p) GC_free(p) 
  4. instead of calling 

  5.     "compile -o executable -boost -O root" 
    now call  
        "compile -o executable -boost -O root -no_gc -lgc -include gc.h" 

How to customise the Garbage Collector for a new architecture?

If your architecture need special handling to get the GC working (because the stack is not contiguous, because some registers are not written on the stack on `setjmp'...) then you need to implement function `mark_stack_and_registers' for your system in the file SmartEiffel/sys/runtime/c/gc_lib.c.

If you get some message telling you that the stack direction is wrong, then you should change macro definition to use the other generic code (there is one generic code for each stack order).

In order to check the GC, you should be able to run all files of the SmartEiffel/misc/benchmarks/gc directory.

How is SmartEiffel compiled?

With Eiffel optimisation options -boost and -no_gc. The garbage collector is indeed useless on the SmartEiffel commands: since SmartEiffel did not include a GC in its first versions, we were very careful about memory when we developed it.

With C compilation optimisations turned on (it depends on the C compiler used; we generally use gcc). The resulting executables are stripped.

Can you explain again the difference between conformance and covariance?

Our paper " Conformance of agents in the Eiffel language has a note p.137 that looks surprising.

Note that the previous rules define conformance rules, this has nothing to do with covariance or contravariance.

The concepts are distinct, even though there is a relation between them.

Covariance is defined in terms of conformance. But assignment is also defined in terms of conformance.

That's exactly, and only, what our paper defines: assignment rules. Those rules were not defined anywhere before. It's important: it's not that we disagreed with any earlier position. We just filled a hole in the specification.

Also note that, even if the agent types notation uses square brackets, it's totally unrelated to the generic classes type notation; therefore generic classes rules cannot apply (except if proved otherwise). An agent type is not a generic type, anymore than a tuple type is a generic type. Those are distinct concepts, only with a similar notation.

Conformance is fundamental in any typed language; on the other hand covariance is "just" an Eiffel extra. Important, sure, but not as fundamental as conformance. Our paper never speaks of covariance, except in the note quoted above, and explained further here. Maybe the paper should have explained the subtlety in so many words.

Is it difficult to switch from some commercial Eiffel compiler to SmartEiffel?

If your original Eiffel software only uses simple types like INTEGER, STRING, ARRAY, BOOLEAN, CHARACTER and DOUBLE, it is usually very simple to modify your code in order to use SmartEiffel.

It is a little bit difficult for simple input/output (used with predefined io) because some features have different names. If your original software heavily relies for example on the EiffelBase library, it may be very difficult. For example, one must keep in mind that SmartEiffel.ARRAY inherit SmartEiffel.COLLECTION and that ISE library also have a class COLLECTION. By the way, subclasses of ISE.COLLECTION cannot be used. The ISE.LINKED_LIST can be used in conjunction with SmartEiffel.ARRAY because ISE.LINKED_LIST do not inherit ISE.COLLECTION (no clash).