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KL1 is a programming language from the 1980s Japanese 5th Generation project. It's a committed-choice logic programming language derived from Prolog, but (perhaps fatally) not particularly compatible with Prolog.
Nevertheless, I find it very academically interesting. So I was pleased to see that it has been revived for modern systems. Especially, I thought it was limited to 32-bit machines but today I succeeded in getting it working on a 64-bit M1 Mac.
The first step is to configure the release tarball:
1. You should start by copying config.sh.macOS-ARM64 below to config.sh
2. You'll need to slightly modify Configure with the below patch. On modern macOS, there is no simple C library to run "nm" against.
3. Then run ./Configure
4. Then you'll need to regenerate lock.s because the current version is for ARM7 (Raspberry Pi I assume). "cd runtime/config/shm/ARM; gcc -S spinlock.c; cp spinlock.s lock.s"
Some details on the macOS dyld shared cache
Now the sequence of "gmake all", "gmake tests", "gmake disttests" and "gmake install" should all succeed. And you can compile and run your own code too.
I think I still prefer Mercury, I like the option of running on Windows. But a bit like Emacs, it's impressive how KLIC's initial design made maintenance feasible over this timespan.