swipl(1)
NAME
swipl - SWI-Prolog 5.10.1
SYNOPSIS
swipl [--help|--version|--arch|--dump-runtime-variables] swipl [options] swipl [options] [-o output] -c file ... swipl [options] [-o output] -b initfile ...
DESCRIPTION
SWI-Prolog is an ISO compatible Prolog compiler. It has a good collection of built-in predicates, a large set of which it shares with Edinburgh C-Prolog, Quintus Prolog and SICStus Prolog. Among its features
are a very fast compiler, a Quintus-like module system, library
autoloading, garbage collection, atom garbage collection, fast bidirectional C interface, true C++ interface, execution profiling and
many more.
Add-on packages provide graphics (XPCE), TCP/IP, process controll,
SGML/XML/HTML/RDF support and many more. In addition, XPCE provides a
development environment, consisting of hypertext help-system, sourcelevel debugger, integrated editor and many navigation tools.
This manual page only lists the commandline options. Full documentation is available on-line as well as in HTML and PDF format from the
WWW home page.
LICENSE INFORMATION
SWI-Prolog is distributed under the LGPL (Lesser Gnu Public License) for maximal compatibility with the Free Software movement, while allowing for use with proprietary software components. See the SWI-Prolog home page at http://www.swi-prolog.org for details.
OPTIONS
--help Gives a summary of the most important options.
- --version
- Displays version and architecture information.
- --arch Prints the architecture identifier.
- --dump-runtime-variables[=format]
- Dump information that is generally useful for installation scripts in a form defined by format. Defines formats are sh (default, bourne shell) and cmd (Windows CMD). This option is used by swipl-ld (1) to fetch necessary information about Prolog. It is normally invoked as eval `swipl -dump-runtime-variables`, which assigns the following shell variables:
- CC The C- compiler used to compile SWI-Prolog.
- PLBASE The home directory of SWI-Prolog. This is the same value
as returned by the current_prolog_flag home.
- PLARCH The architecture identifier used. Together with PLBASE
this defines the location of various components. For example, the library for embedding is in $PLBASE/lib/$PLARCH/libswipl.a
- PLLIBS The required libraries for linking libswipl.a
- PLCFLAGS
Flags that need to be passed to the C-compiler to generate compatible code.
- PLLDFLAGS
Flags that need to be passed to the C-linker for linking embedded executables.
- PLSOEXT
Extension used by the hosting operating system for shared objects. On most Unix systems this is "so"; on MS-Windows it is "dll". AIX uses "o", HPUX "sl".
- PLVERSION
Numeric representation of the SWI-Prolog version.
- PLSHARED
Has the value yes if Prolog supports linking shared libraries using load_foreign_library/[1,2] and no otherwise.
- PLTHREADS
Has the value yes if Prolog was compiled for multithreading and no otherwise.
- -Gsize[kmg]
- Sets the global stack size to size. The default is 4 Mbytes. The global stack is used to store compound terms, floating point numbers, big integers and strings. See also the -L option.
- -Lsize[kmg]
- Sets the local stack size to size. The default unit is Kbytes. The local stack is used to store environment frames, choicepoints and foreign-language term-references. Note that SWI-Prolog does last-call optimisation to minimize the local stack requirements. If the argument ends in m , the argument is interpreted in Mbytes. A g suffix is interpreted in Gbytes (64-bit machines only). This flag sets the maximum value to which the stack is allowed to grow (default 2048). A maximum is useful to prevent buggy programs from claiming all the memory resources. -L0 sets the limit to the highest possible value.
- -O Optimised compilation. See set_prolog_flag/3 in the SWI-Prolog
- Reference Manual.
- -Tsize[kmg]
- Sets the trail stack size to size K bytes. The default is 4096. See -L for more details.
- -b initfile ... -c file ...
- Boot compilation. initfile ... are compiled by the C written bootstrap compiler, file ... by the normal Prolog compiler into an intermediate code file. This option is for system maintenance and is given for reference only.
- -c file ...
- Compiles file ... into an intermediate code file.
- -d level
- Set debug level to level. This option is for system maintenance and is given for reference only.
- -f file
- Use file as initialisation file instead of `.plrc'. `-f none' stops SWI-Prolog from searching for an initialisation file.
- -F file
- Select startup script from the SWI-Prolog home directory. file Specifies the base-name of the script. The extension is .rc. The default script is deduced from the basename of the executable, taking all leading alphanumerical (letters, digits and underscore) from the program name. Thus if the program is named swi-2.0 it will try to load the file swi.rc from the SWI-Prolog home directory. If the file does not exist, or the user has no read-access to it, the script is silently not loaded.
- -s file
- Load file as a script. This option may be used from the shell to make Prolog load a file before entering the toplevel. It is also used to turn a file into an executable Prolog script on Unix systems using the following first line
- #!/usr/bin/swipl option ... -s
- --quiet -q
- Operate silently. This option suppresses all informational messages, such as for compiling files.
- -g goal
- Goal is executed just before entering the top level. The default is a predicate which prints the welcome message. The welcome message can thus be suppressed by giving -g true. goal can be a complex term. In this case, quotes are normally needed to protect it from being expanded by the Unix shell.
- -o output
- Used in combination with -b or -c to determine the output file for compilation.
- -p alias=pathlist
- Define a path alias for file_search_path/2. pathlist is a "`":"'" separated list of values for the alias. See file_search_path/2 in the SWI-Prolog Reference Manual.
- -t goal
- Use goal as an interactive top level instead of the default goal prolog/0. goal can be a complex term. If the top level goal succeeds, SWI-Prolog exits with status 0. If it fails, the exit status is 1. This flag also determines the goal started by break/0 and abort/0. If you want to stop the user from entering interactive mode, start the application with `-g goal' and give `halt' as the top level.
- -x bootfile
- Start from an intermediate code file resulting from a Prolog compilation using the -b or -c option, or created using qsave_program/[1,2].
- [+|-]tty
- Switches tty control (using ioctl(2)) on (+tty) or off (-tty). Normally tty control is switched on. This default depends on the installation. You may wish to switch tty control off if SWI-Prolog is used from an editor such as GNU Emacs. If switched off, get_single_char/1 and the tracer will wait for a carriage return.
- --nosignals
- Disable handling of signals. Often used if SWI-Prolog is embedded in another application on Unix systems.
- -- Stops scanning for more arguments.
ON-LINE HELP
SWI-Prolog has on-line help. This provides a fast lookup and browsing
facility to the SWI-Prolog Reference manual. The on-line manual can
show predicate definitions as well as entire sections of the manual.
help Equivalent to help(help/1).
- help(+What)
- Show a specified part of the manual. What is one of:
- Name/Arity
give help on the specified predicate
- Name give help on the named predicate with any arity or a C
interface function with that name.
- Section
display the specified section of the SWI-Prolog Reference Manual. Section numbers are dash separated numbers: e.g. 2-3 refers to section 2.3 of the manual.
- If Prolog is used together with the GUI tool XPCE, these predicates start a graphical interface, providing a coherent interface to help/1, apropos/1 and explain/1.
FILES
This installation of SWI-Prolog has been configured using the configure
option --prefix=/usr. If the files listed below are not at the indicated place, the installation has probably been moved. Use
?- current_prolog_flag(home, Home).
to find the local installation directory of SWI-Prolog.
.plrc
- ~/.plrc
- Personal initialisation files consulted by SWI-Prolog on startup. If both exist .plrc is used.
- /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/bin/amd64/
- Location for the executables.
- /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/include/
- Location for the include files. If writable, SWI-Prolog.h is also copied to /usr/include/SWI-Prolog.h.
- /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/library/
- SWI-Prolog user libraries.
- /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/boot/
- SWI-Prolog kernel parts written in Prolog. The startup file /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/boot32.prc may be recreated using the command from the directory /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1:
- bin/amd64/swipl -O -o boot32.prc -b boot/init.pl
- /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/doc/packages
- HTML and/or PDF documentation on the installed add-ons.
- /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/boot32.prc
- Default startup file. This is a `intermediate code' file containing precompiled code from the boot directory. The -xbootfile option may be used to select a different file.
- /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/runtime/amd64/libpl.a
- SWI-Prolog library for embedding. See also plld(1).
SEE ALSO
The SWI-Prolog web-home at http://www.swi-prolog.org
Jan Wielemaker SWI-Prolog Reference Manualat http://www.swi-prolog.org/pldoc/index.html
Documentation on the add-on packages in /usr/lib/swipl-5.10.1/boot/doc
William F. Clocksin & Christopher S. Mellish, Programming in Prolog,
fourth edition, Springer Verlag, Berlin 1994.
plrc(1) and plld(1) and xpce(1)
WARRANTY
The software is provided as is, without warranty of any kind, express
or implied, including but not limited to the warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and non infringement. In
no event shall the author or his employer be liable for any claim, damages or other liability, whether in an action of contract, tort or otherwise, arising from, out of or in connection with the software or the
use or other dealings in the software.
COPYING
SWI-Prolog is distributed under the LGPL (Lesser GNU Public Licence).
The license terms are in the file COPYING or on the GNU website at
http://www.gnu.org.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1986-2009 University of Amsterdam.
AUTHOR
- Jan Wielemaker