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Daniel Kochmański c8b3f2d53b Merge branch 'musl' into 'develop'
contrib: sockets: Add defaults for NETDB_{INTERNAL,SUCESS}.

NETDB_INTERNAL and NETDB_SUCCESS are not defined by POSIX, so some
libc implementations (such as musl) do not have them. When compiling
sockets contrib, check if these are defined and, if not, define them to
be zero.

Tested by compiling on Alpine Linux and there are no unexpected failures
in the test suite.

See merge request !17
2016-02-25 06:52:08 +00:00
contrib Add defaults for NETDB_{INTERNAL,SUCESS}. 2016-02-24 21:48:57 -05:00
doc doc: update random-sates section 2015-09-21 19:38:30 +02:00
examples android/example: add .gitignore 2015-10-28 19:59:24 +01:00
msvc Merge branch 'signals' into develop 2016-02-03 15:14:33 +01:00
src defsetf: refine documentation 2016-02-10 18:07:14 +01:00
.gitignore gitignore: ignore tgz archives. 2015-03-14 19:16:05 +01:00
CHANGELOG fix: si:open-unix-socket-stream accepts both string and base-string 2016-01-28 11:47:48 +01:00
configure Preserve quoting when passing the arguments to the build directory 2008-08-27 09:50:44 +02:00
INSTALL android: move android.cross_config to src/util 2015-10-28 19:57:35 +01:00
LGPL Initial revision 2001-06-26 17:14:44 +00:00
LICENSE cosmetic: changelog whitechars 2015-11-09 21:27:39 +01:00
Makefile.in Makefile.in: slight cleanup 2015-06-19 13:05:00 +02:00
README.md update readme (typos) 2015-08-31 08:22:52 +00:00

ECL stands for Embeddable Common-Lisp. The ECL project aims to produce an implementation of the Common-Lisp language which complies to the ANSI X3J13 definition of the language.

The term embeddable refers to the fact that ECL includes a Lisp to C compiler, which produces libraries (static or dynamic) that can be called from C programs. Furthermore, ECL can produce standalone executables from Lisp code and can itself be linked to your programs as a shared library. It also features an interpreter for situations when a C compiler isn't available.

ECL supports the operating systems Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly BSD, OpenBSD, Solaris (at least v. 9), Microsoft Windows (MSVC, MinGW and Cygwin) and OSX, running on top of the Intel, Sparc, Alpha, ARM and PowerPC processors. Porting to other architectures should be rather easy.