A (defmethod m …) where m is :refer'd from another ns passed the bare symbol to
defmethod-setup, which resolved it in the current ns and created a shadow multifn
— the method never reached the real one. Resolve an unqualified name through the
refer table (then current ns) so it lands on the referred multifn.
The AOT build strips the ns form, so the refer table is empty in a binary; emit
chez-register-refer!/-refer-all! per app ns alongside the existing alias
registrations. build-app's fixture gains a defmethod on a referred multifn.
The source loader sets the current ns and registers :as aliases per file. The
build flattened every app namespace into one image with no such markers, so all
app forms ran under the last-set ns ("user"). Two breakages followed, both only
in a built binary:
- defmulti/defmethod resolve their target var through chez-current-ns, so they
registered the multifn under "user" while compiled var-derefs used the baked
ns — the multifn the app saw was uninitialized ("not a fn nil" on dispatch).
- a quoted alias-qualified symbol (a (defmethod ig/foo …) on an aliased multifn)
resolves its ns through chez-resolve-alias, but the stripped (ns …) form left
the alias table empty, so it landed in ns "ig".
bld-ns-prelude now emits (set-chez-ns! ns) plus chez-register-alias! for each
ns's :as aliases before that ns's forms, in both the normal and tree-shake emit
paths. The build-app fixture gains a :default multimethod and an aliased cross-ns
defmethod so buildsmoke covers both across all build modes.
A built binary dropped its deps.edn :jolt/native declarations and its
resource roots, so an FFI+resources app (ring-app) failed at runtime:
sockets/sqlite gave 'no entry for socket' and io/resource returned nil.
The buildsmoke fixture is pure compute, so neither path was exercised.
The launcher now loads required + :process native libs before the app's
top-level forms (a library's defcfn resolves its foreign-procedure symbols
at top-level eval during startup, so the libs must be loaded first);
optional libs load in the scheme-start launcher, where a missing lib is
caught rather than aborting the heap build.
deps.edn :jolt/build {:embed [dirs]} bakes those dirs' files into the heap
(register-embedded-resource! at heap build), so io/resource serves them with
no files on disk. Non-embedded resources resolve at runtime against JOLT_PWD,
and io/file reads (e.g. config.edn) stay external.
build-binary now takes the encoded natives, embed dirs, and project paths
from cmd-build; deps/resolve-project surfaces them. Buildsmoke fixture grows
an embedded resource + a :process native to cover both paths.
Restores the standalone-binary capability the Janet host had. `bin/joltc build
-m NS -o OUT` AOT-compiles an app into a single self-contained executable — the
whole runtime, clojure.core, stdlib and compiler embedded, no Chez install or
jolt source needed at runtime.
Pipeline (host/chez/build.ss, host primitive jolt.host/build-binary driven by
jolt.main's build command): resolve deps, load the entry namespace recording the
app namespaces in dependency order, re-emit each to Scheme, textually inline the
cli.ss runtime load sequence into one flat source + the app + a launcher, then
compile-file -> make-boot-file -> embed the boot as C bytes -> cc-link against
libkernel.a.
Two non-obvious bits: the compile pass runs in a fresh Chez, not the loaded
runtime (regex.ss shadows top-level `error`, which otherwise bakes a broken
reference into the boot); and the launcher installs scheme-start rather than
running -main at top level, since boot top-level forms execute during heap build
before argv is set, so args only reach -main through scheme-start.
Loader: a require of an in-memory namespace with no source file now no-ops, so
AOT'd app namespaces satisfy require in a built binary.
Mode flags (--opt/--dev, default release) are plumbed; the optimization passes
they gate come in a later stage. RFC 0007 has the design. Gated by `make
buildsmoke`.