X-Git-Url: http://git.kpe.io/?a=blobdiff_plain;ds=inline;f=doc%2Fintro.xml;h=f9e05c60eff8d1fb0bbfdeb12cf37c5b1b7e25dc;hb=c8d044ecb8a0181cf45b36f00984ecd487d44c62;hp=8478b8ce34704af298350e70eefe82836f0ba94a;hpb=466148daa2e13a529e7338aeaf83cdc49c47ddbb;p=uffi.git
diff --git a/doc/intro.xml b/doc/intro.xml
index 8478b8c..f9e05c6 100644
--- a/doc/intro.xml
+++ b/doc/intro.xml
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
-
+
+"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd" [
+
%myents;
]>
@@ -9,9 +9,10 @@
Introduction
Purpose
- This reference guide describes
- &uffi;, a package that provides a cross-implementation
- interface from Common Lisp to C-language compatible libraries.
+
+ This reference guide describes &uffi;, a package that provides a
+ cross-implementation interface from Common Lisp to C-language
+ compatible libraries.
@@ -19,20 +20,19 @@
Background
- Every Common Lisp implementation has
- a method for interfacing to C-language compatible
- libraries. These methods are often termed a
- Foreign Function Library Interface
- (&ffi;). Unfortunately, these methods vary widely
- amongst
- implementations, thus preventing the writing of a portable FFI to a
-particular C-library.
+ Every Common Lisp implementation has a method for interfacing to
+ C-language compatible libraries. These methods are often termed
+ a Foreign Function Library Interface
+ (&ffi;). Unfortunately, these methods vary widely amongst
+ implementations, thus preventing the writing of a portable FFI
+ to a particular C-library.
- &uffi; gathers a common subset of functionality between Common Lisp
- implementations. &uffi; wraps this common subset of functionality with
- it's own syntax and provides macro translation of uffi functions into
- the specific syntax of supported Common Lisp implementations.
+ &uffi; gathers a common subset of functionality between Common
+ Lisp implementations. &uffi; wraps this common subset of
+ functionality with it's own syntax and provides macro
+ translation of uffi functions into the specific syntax of
+ supported Common Lisp implementations.
Developers who use &uffi; to interface with C libraries will
@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ particular C-library.
&acl; v6.2 on Debian GNU/Linux
-FreeBSD 4.5, Solaris v2.8, and Microsoft Windows XP.
+ FreeBSD 4.5, Solaris v2.8, and Microsoft Windows XP.
&lw; v4.2 on Debian GNU/Linux and Microsoft Windows XP.
&cmucl; 18d on Debian GNU/Linux, FreeBSD 4.5, and Solaris 2.8
&sbcl; 0.7.8 on Debian GNU/Linux
@@ -61,53 +61,53 @@ FreeBSD 4.5, Solaris v2.8, and Microsoft Windows XP.
-
- Design
-
- Overview
-
- &uffi; was designed as a cross-implementation
- compatible Foreign Function Interface.
- Necessarily,
- only a common subset of functionality can be
- provided. Likewise, not every optimization for that a specific
- implementation provides can be supported. Wherever possible,
- though, implementation-specific optimizations are invoked.
-
-
+
+ Design
+
+ Overview
+
+ &uffi; was designed as a cross-implementation
+ compatible Foreign Function Interface.
+ Necessarily,
+ only a common subset of functionality can be
+ provided. Likewise, not every optimization for that a specific
+ implementation provides can be supported. Wherever possible,
+ though, implementation-specific optimizations are invoked.
+
+
-
- Priorities
-
- The design of &uffi; is dictated by the order of these priorities:
-
-
-
-
- Code using &uffi; must operate correctly on all
- supported implementations.
-
-
-
-
- Take advantage of implementation-specific optimizations. Ideally,
- there will not a situation where an implementation-specific
- &ffi; will be chosen due to lack of optimizations in &uffi;.
-
-
-
- Provide a simple interface to developers using
-&uffi;. This priority is quite a bit lower than the above priorities.
-This lower priority is manifest by programmers having to pass types in
-pointer and array dereferencing, needing to use
-cstring wrapper functions, and the use of
-ensure-char-character and ensure-char-integer functions. My hope is
-that the developer inconvenience will be outweighed by the generation
-of optimized code that is cross-implementation compatible.
-
-
-
-
-
+
+ Priorities
+
+ The design of &uffi; is dictated by the order of these priorities:
+
+
+
+
+ Code using &uffi; must operate correctly on all
+ supported implementations.
+
+
+
+
+ Take advantage of implementation-specific optimizations. Ideally,
+ there will not a situation where an implementation-specific
+ &ffi; will be chosen due to lack of optimizations in &uffi;.
+
+
+
+ Provide a simple interface to developers using
+ &uffi;. This priority is quite a bit lower than the above priorities.
+ This lower priority is manifest by programmers having to pass types in
+ pointer and array dereferencing, needing to use
+ cstring wrapper functions, and the use of
+ ensure-char-character and ensure-char-integer functions. My hope is
+ that the developer inconvenience will be outweighed by the generation
+ of optimized code that is cross-implementation compatible.
+
+
+
+
+