Is SBCL or CMUCL garbage collector available in Lisp implementation?
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1Your question does not make sense. Lisp is a GC'd language. Please rephrase your question.– Matt BallFeb 14, 2011 at 14:53
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3Makes sense to me. The GC in CMUCL (inherited by SBCL) is written in C. As far as I know, there is no Lisp implementation of it.– XachFeb 14, 2011 at 15:48
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1I think you would need a non-garbage-collected Lisp system as a basis for a Lisp implementation of a garbage collector to make sense.– SvanteFeb 14, 2011 at 16:07
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@Svante: wouldn't it be enough if the Lisp-based GC reclaims more memory than it conses?– Rainer JoswigFeb 15, 2011 at 0:56
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1Why would you need a non-GC Lisp for this to make sense? The code generator (IIRC) is in Lisp, so once you've bootstrapped, if you've got primitives that can generate the opcodes which represent your GC, it's just as possible to implement the GC in Lisp as in C. Maybe not as easy or straightforward, though. :-)– KenFeb 15, 2011 at 19:30
3 Answers
SBCL exposes some of its GC functionality: http://john.freml.in/sbcl-optimise-gc
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1+1 Even though the question is not very well formed, this article is very interesting and related.– whoplispJul 5, 2011 at 9:03
Both of them provide garbage collection.
See this for CMUCL and this for SBCL.
Quote from Wikipedia:
Garbage collection was invented by John McCarthy around 1959 to solve problems in Lisp.
Every Common Lisp implementation, must have garbage collection defined, since any standard implementation must comply to Common Lisp ANSI standard.
Both of them have GC available.
Like with any conformant Common Lisp implementation, you can do (gc :full t)
to instruct garbage collector to collect all your unreachable objects.
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@Flux It's not. The SBCL manual says this is not specified by ANSI: sbcl.org/manual/index.html#Garbage-Collection Apr 15, 2023 at 18:49