2017-03-23 12:28:17 +00:00
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Running YAP {#run}
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2016-12-10 09:13:43 +00:00
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===========
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We next describe how to invoke YAP in Unix systems.
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2017-03-23 12:28:17 +00:00
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[TOC]
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### Running YAP Interactively {#Running_YAP_Interactively}
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2016-12-10 09:13:43 +00:00
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Most often you will want to use YAP in interactive mode. Assuming that
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YAP is in the user's search path, the top-level can be invoked under
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Unix with the following command:
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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yap [-s n] [-h n] [-a n] [-c IP_HOST port ] [filename]
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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All the arguments and flags are optional and have the following meaning:
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+ -?
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print a short error message.
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+ -s _Size_
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allocate _Size_ KBytes for local and global stacks. The user may
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specify <tt>M</tt> bytes.
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+ -h _Size_
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allocate _Size_ KBytes for heap and auxiliary stacks
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+ -t _Size_
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allocate _Size_ KBytes for the trail stack
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+ -L _Size_
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SWI-compatible option to allocate _Size_ K bytes for local and global stacks, the local stack
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cannot be expanded. To avoid confusion with the load option, _Size_
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must immediately follow the letter `L`.
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+ -G _Size_
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SWI-compatible option to allocate _Size_ K bytes for local and global stacks; the global
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stack cannot be expanded
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+ -T _Size_
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SWI-compatible option to allocate _Size_ K bytes for the trail stack; the trail cannot be expanded.
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+ -l _YAP_FILE_
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compile the Prolog file _YAP_FILE_ before entering the top-level.
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+ -L _YAP_FILE_
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compile the Prolog file _YAP_FILE_ and then halt. This option is
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useful for implementing scripts.
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+ -g _Goal_
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run the goal _Goal_ before top-level. The goal is converted from
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an atom to a Prolog term.
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+ -z _Goal_
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run the goal _Goal_ as top-level. The goal is converted from
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an atom to a Prolog term.
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+ -b _BOOT_FILE_
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boot code is in Prolog file _BOOT_FILE_. The filename must define
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the predicate `'$live'/0`.
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+ -c <tt>IP_HOST</tt> <tt>port</tt>
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connect standard streams to host <tt>IP_HOST</tt> at port <tt>port</tt>
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+ filename
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restore state saved in the given file
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+ -f
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do not consult initial files
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+ -q
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do not print informational messages
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+ --
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separator for arguments to Prolog code. These arguments are visible
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through the unix/1 built-in predicate.
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Note that YAP will output an error message on the following conditions:
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+
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a file name was given but the file does not exist or is not a saved
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YAP state;
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+
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the necessary amount of memory could not be allocated;
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+
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the allocated memory is not enough to restore the state.
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When restoring a saved state, YAP will allocate the
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same amount of memory as that in use when the state was saved, unless a
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different amount is specified by flags in the command line. By default,
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YAP restores the file startup.yss from the current directory or from
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the YAP library.
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+
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YAP usually boots from a saved state. The saved state will use the default
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installation directory to search for the YAP binary unless you define
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the environment variable YAPBINDIR.
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+
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YAP always tries to find saved states from the current directory
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first. If it cannot it will use the environment variable YAPLIBDIR, if
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defined, or search the default library directory.
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2017-03-23 12:28:17 +00:00
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2016-12-10 09:13:43 +00:00
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YAP will try to find library files from the YAPSHAREDIR/library
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directory.
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2017-03-23 12:28:17 +00:00
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### Running Prolog Files {#Running_Prolog_Files}
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2016-12-10 09:13:43 +00:00
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YAP can also be used to run Prolog files as scripts, at least in
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Unix-like environments. A simple example is shown next (do not forget
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that the shell comments are very important):
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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#!/usr/local/bin/yap -L --
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#
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# Hello World script file using YAP
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#
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# put a dot because of syntax errors .
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:- write('Hello World'), nl.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The `#!` characters specify that the script should call the binary
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file YAP. Notice that many systems will require the complete path to the
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YAP binary. The `-L` flag indicates that YAP should consult the
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current file when booting and then halt. The remaining arguments are
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then passed to YAP. Note that YAP will skip the first lines if they
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start with `#` (the comment sign for Unix's shell). YAP will
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consult the file and execute any commands.
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A slightly more sophisticated example is:
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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#!/usr/bin/yap -L --
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#
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# Hello World script file using YAP
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# .
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:- initialization(main).
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main :- write('Hello World'), nl.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The `initialization` directive tells YAP to execute the goal main
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after consulting the file. Source code is thus compiled and `main`
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executed at the end. The `.` is useful while debugging the script
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as a Prolog program: it guarantees that the syntax error will not
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propagate to the Prolog code.
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Notice that the `--` is required so that the shell passes the extra
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arguments to YAP. As an example, consider the following script
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`dump_args`:
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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#!/usr/bin/yap -L --
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#.
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main( [] ).
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main( [H|T] ) :-
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write( H ), nl,
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main( T ).
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:- unix( argv(AllArgs) ), main( AllArgs ).
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you this run this script with the arguments:
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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./dump_args -s 10000
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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the script will start an YAP process with stack size `10MB`, and
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the list of arguments to the process will be empty.
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Often one wants to run the script as any other program, and for this it
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is convenient to ignore arguments to YAP. This is possible by using
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`L --` as in the next version of `dump_args`:
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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#!/usr/bin/yap -L --
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main( [] ).
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main( [H|T] ) :-
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write( H ), nl,
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main( T ).
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:- unix( argv(AllArgs) ), main( AllArgs ).
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The `--` indicates the next arguments are not for YAP. Instead,
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they must be sent directly to the argv built-in. Hence, running
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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./dump_args test
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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will write `test` on the standard output.
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