Marco Antoniotti
See file COPYING for licencing and copyright information.
CLAST is a Common Lisp library that can produce an abstract syntax tree of a form. Its main use is for source code analysis and transformation, e.g., extracting the free variables list from a form.
The library relies on a working implementation of the "environment" functions from CLtL1, so, at this point, it does not work on every available implementation. Currently, CLAST works on:
- Allegro at least 11.x.
- Clozure CL at least 1.12.2.
- Lispworks at least 8.x.
- SBCL at least 2.2.9.
Other implementations are in the works: CMUCL and others will be ready soon.
See the file COPYING
for licensing information
CLAST should be available directly from Quicklisp. In
alternative, just download the code from the repository
(or git clone
it). Then you just need to load
the .asd
file (or
the .system
file; your choice) and proceed from there.
CLAST depends only on fiveam
for testing. If you will not use
the test system to run the tests, you will not need fiveam
. I
suggest you load
(or quickload
) fiveam
before loading the
CLAST system file, to minimize interaction with the building
process.
SBCL generates some hairy warnings during
compilation. They apear to be type-checking and optimization related
(plus the usual obnoxious style-warnings
about stuff that should not
flagged as such). There should not be any problems about it.
You can run the tests using fiveam
. The top level suite is called
:parse
.
At the time of this writing there are two expected failures in the
test suite. Also, sbcl
and allegro
produce several warning about
declarations that CLAST generates for defstruct
and defclass
automatic functions. You can ignore them, but a fix would be most
than welcome.
The documentation is produced with
HEΛP
. It is accessible from the
CLAST main site.
Please help extending and fixing this library. You know the drill. Porting to ECL and CLISP should be doable. Porting to ABCL needs... some more work.
Of course you are free to fork the project subject to the current licensing scheme. However, before you do so, I ask you to consider plain old "cooperation" by asking me to become a developer. It helps keeping the entropy level at an acceptable level.