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Emacs Lisp (Elisp) is the Lisp dialect used by the Emacs text editor family. GNU Emacs can currently execute Elisp code either interpreted or byte-interpreted after it has been compiled to byte-code. In this work we discuss the implementation of an optimizing compiler approach for Elisp targeting native code. The native compiler employs the byte-compiler’s internal representation as input and exploits libgccjit to achieve code generation using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) infrastructure. Generated executables are stored as binary files and can be loaded and unloaded dynamically. Most of the functionality of the compiler is written in Elisp itself, including several optimization passes, paired with a C back-end to interface with the GNU Emacs core and libgccjit. Though still a work in progress, our implementation is able to bootstrap a functional Emacs and compile all lexically scoped Elisp files, including the whole GNU Emacs Lisp Package Archive (ELPA). Native-compiled Elisp shows an increase of performance ranging from 2.3x up to 42x with respect to the equivalent byte-code, measured over a set of small benchmarks.

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    It has been merged to master now, and it seems to be working quite well.

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      can’t wait for it to become part of the standard distros’ packaging!

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        Mickey Petersen has a nice recipe for how to build it yourself:

        https://www.masteringemacs.org/article/speed-up-emacs-libjansson-native-elisp-compilation

        But you don’t need to check out the native-comp branch as he does, because it’s in master, as I mentioned. Also, I didn’t need the ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/ppa for gcc-10 on Ubuntu 20.04.

        The rest of it looks good.