Common Lisp the Language, 2nd Edition


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11.8. Modules

A module is a Common Lisp subsystem that is loaded from one or more files. A module is normally loaded as a single unit, regardless of how many files are involved. A module may consist of one package or several packages. The file-loading process is necessarily implementation-dependent, but Common Lisp provides some very simple portable machinery for naming modules, for keeping track of which modules have been loaded, and for loading modules as a unit.

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X3J13 voted in January 1989 (REQUIRE-PATHNAME-DEFAULTS)   to eliminate the entire module facility from the language; that is, the variable *modules* and the functions provide and require are deleted. X3J13 commented that the file-loading feature of require is not portable, and that the remaining functionality is easily implemented by user code. (I will add that in any case the specification of require is so vague that different implementations are likely to have differing behavior.)
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[Variable]
*modules*

The variable *modules* is a list of names of the modules that have been loaded into the Lisp system so far. This list is used by the functions provide and require.


[Function]
provide module-name
require module-name &optional pathname

Each module has a unique name (a string). The provide and require functions accept either a string or a symbol as the module-name argument. If a symbol is provided, its print name is used as the module name. If the module consists of a single package, it is customary for the package and module names to be the same.

The provide function adds a new module name to the list of modules maintained in the variable *modules*, thereby indicating that the module in question has been loaded.

The require function tests whether a module is already present (using a case-sensitive comparison); if the module is not present, require proceeds to load the appropriate file or set of files. The pathname argument, if present, is a single pathname or a list of pathnames whose files are to be loaded in order, left to right. If the pathname argument is nil or is not provided, the system will attempt to determine, in some system-dependent manner, which files to load. This will typically involve some central registry of module names and the associated file lists.

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X3J13 voted in March 1988 not to permit symbols as pathnames (PATHNAME-SYMBOL)   and to specify exactly which streams may be used as pathnames (PATHNAME-STREAM)   (see section 23.1.6). Of course, this is moot if require is not in the language.

X3J13 voted in January 1989 (RETURN-VALUES-UNSPECIFIED)   to specify that the values returned by provide and require are implementation-dependent. Of course, this is moot if provide and require are not in the language.
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Implementation note: One way to implement such a registry on many operating systems is simply to use a distinguished ``library'' directory within the file system, where the name of each file is the same as the module it contains.



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