From: Rob MacLachlan
Subject: CMU CL 15b now on beta release
Date: 
Message-ID: <1991Nov04.232954.119871@cs.cmu.edu>
This message announces the general beta release of CMU Common Lisp 15b for
SPARCstation or Sun4 machines running SunOS.  15b contains only minor Hemlock
bug-fixes, and people who already  have 15a probably shouldn't bother with this
stopgap release.  The changes from 15a are:
 -- It contains the correct revisions of several Hemlock files (containing some
    changes in the previous release notes.)
 -- It fixes an error in a FORMAT string of one of these changes.

[Note: there seem to be some problems with the OpenLook and Hemlock.  The
standard focuslenience resource annotation seems to help, but we're working on
a proper fix.]

We are making this release mainly to make the external SunOS release identical
to the local CMU release.  In about a week, there will be a bug-fix release
incorporating fixes to recently reported bugs.  Keep those cards and letters
coming...

The rest of this message is derived from the cmucl(1) man page and README file.

  Robert A. MacLachlan (···@cs.cmu.edu)

________________________________________________________________________

Sun Release 4.1                                                 1

CMUCL(1)                 USER COMMANDS                   CMUCL(1)

NAME
     CMU Common Lisp

DESCRIPTION
     CMU Common Lisp is public domain "industrial strength"  Com-
     mon Lisp programming environment.  Many of the X3j13 changes
     have been incorporated into CMU CL.  Wherever possible, this
     has  been  done  so  as to transparently allow use of either
     CLtL1 or proposed ANSI CL.  Probably the new  features  most
     interesting  to users are SETF functions, LOOP and the WITH-
     COMPILATION-UNIT macro.

HARDWARE REQUIREMENTS
     CMU CL is currently available for Sparcstations and  DECsta-
     tions (pmaxes) running Mach (or OSF/1).  We are beta-testing
     a SunOS SPARC version and an IBM RT Mach version.  At  least
     16  megabytes  of  memory and 25 megabytes of disk space are
     recommended.  As usual, more is better.

SUPPORT
     Bug reports should be sent to ··········@cs.cmu.edu.  Please
     consult your local CMU CL maintainer or Common Lisp expert
     to verify that the problem really is a bug before sending to
     this list.

     We have insufficient staffing to provide extensive support
     to people outside of CMU.  We are looking for university and
     industrial affiliates to help us with porting and mainte-
     nance for hardware and software that is not widely used at
     CMU.

OVERVIEW
     When compared other Common  Lisp  implementations  (such  as
     Allegro), CMU CL has two broad advantages:

     -- The new CMU CL compiler (Python) is more sophisticated
        than other Common Lisp compilers.  It both produces
        better code and is easier to use.

     -- The programming environment based on the Hemlock editor
        is better integrated than gnu-emacs based environments.
        (Though you can still use GNU if you want.)

     CMU CL also has significant non-technical advantages:

     -- It has good local support for  CMU  users,  and  is  well
        integrated with the CMU CS environment.

     -- It is public domain, and is freely available  to  non-CMU
        sites  that  aren't  able  to afford a site-license for a
        commercial Lisp.

COMPILER FEATURES
     The `Advanced Compiler' chapter of the User's manual  exten-
     sively  discusses  Python's  optimization  capabilities (See
     DOCUMENTATION below.)  Here are a few high points:

     -- Good efficiency and type-checking at the same time.  Com-
        piling code safe gives a 2x speed reduction at worst.

     -- In safe code, type declarations  are  verified,  allowing
        declarations to be debugged in safe code.  When you go to
        compile unsafe, you know the declarations are right.

     -- Full source level debugging of compiled  code,  including
        display of the exact call that got an error.

     -- Good efficiency notes that  tell  you  why  an  operation
        can't  be open coded or where you are number-consing, and
        that provide unprecedented source context

     -- Block compilation, partial evaluation, lightweight  func-
        tions  and  proper  tail-recursion  allow low-cost use of
        function call abstraction.

___________________________________________________________________________

This software is "as is", and has no warranty of any kind.  CMU and the
authors assume no responsibility for the consequences of any use of this
software.

This is a general beta release, meaning that anyone can FTP it, but we won't
be very sympathetic about catastrophes resulting from your dependence on CMU
CL.  After the bug reports die down, we will announce a full release, and will
then try to be sympathetic toward desperate users.

See "man cmucl" (man/cmucl.1) for other general information.

Distribution:

CMU Common Lisp is only available via anonymous FTP.  We don't have the
manpower to make tapes.  All of our files are in the AFS file system.  Here
are some suggested gateway machines:
    lisp-rt1.slisp.cs.cmu.edu
    lisp-rt2.slisp.cs.cmu.edu

Log in with the user "anonymous" and your real userid as password.  Due to the
way anonymous FTP access control is done, it is important to "cd" to the
source directory with a single command, and then do a "get" operation.  If you
have any trouble with FTP access, please send mail to ·····@cs.cmu.edu.

The binary release area is /afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/clisp/release.  This
directory holds compressed tar files with names of the form:
    <version>-<machine>_<os>.tar.Z

FTP compressed tar archives in binary mode.  To extract, "cd" to the
directory that is to be the root of the tree, then type:
    uncompress <file.tar.Z | tar xf - .

The latest SunOS Sparc release is:
    -rw-r--r--  1 wlott     9330285 Nov  1 17:35 15b-sun4c_41.tar.Z

The resulting tree is 23 megabytes.

Major release announcements will be made to comp.lang.lisp until there is
enough volume to warrant a comp.lang.lisp.cmu.

SunOS credit:

The SunOS support was written by Miles Bader and Ted Dunning.

SPARC Notes:

We have not done any SPARC-specific tuning yet.  Performance will improve from
10-30% when we add instruction scheduling and register windows.

Source availability:

Lisp and documentation sources are available via anonymous FTP.  [See the
README file.]  All CMU written code is public domain, but CMU CL also makes
use of several imported packages: PCL, CLX and XP.  Although these packages
are copyrighted, they may be freely distributed without any licensing
agreement or fee.

Also in /afs/cs/project/clisp/release:

-rw-r--r--  1 ram       3257791 Oct 19 19:50 15b-sun4-source.tar.Z
	Image of all ".lisp" source files used to build version 15b for SPARC
	machines.  Probably more interesting to most people than the RCS
        distribution. 

-rw-r--r--  1 ram       7267593 Oct 16 16:42 10-16-91-cmucl-master.tar.Z
	The project/clisp/master subtree: the RCS source (,v) files for all of
	CMU CL.