Mike Gran <spk...@yahoo.com> writes: > In the "Garbage Collection" of the manual in both 1.8 and 2.0, > it says that in 1.8, that "global variables of type SCM ... can be made > visible to the garbage collector by calling the functions scm_gc_protect". > (That's a typo I guess. It should say scm_gc_protect_object, I > think.)
Indeed, good catch! Fixed in 4c5788d1ab14550afd86117e96f91164fbe04a72. > The implication is that if I do not call scm_gc_protect_object, my > global is still "invisible" and thus can't be freed by the GC. But my > "invisible" global in 1.8 is being freed and in 2.0 it is not freed. Here's the crux of the confusion: it's not the global variable that is being freed here. The variable only holds a *reference* to the heap-allocated string. That may seem pedantic, but it's a crucial distinction here. Anything in the heap that is not referenced from somewhere visible to the GC is freed. Would it help to replace all uses of the term "scan" with "mark", in connection with garbage collection? In the papers I've read on GC, "mark" is the word I usually see, and it seems much clearer to me, because anyone who knows the basics of GC knows that "marking" is needed to prevent an object from being freed, whereas "scanning" could mean anything. If you have other ideas of how to make this more clear, I'm open to suggestions. Thanks! Mark