I'm not 100% sure, but I don't believe that ITS/Tops-20/TENEX Emacs 
quite does this.? It is built on top of TECO, which you will recall as a 
language that is so terse that it looks like line noise.? I don't think 
it's a very big stretch to compare it a byte code interpreter.
I do not recall that the EMACS libraries that are loaded are not /quite/ 
compiled.? They have all the comments and unnecessary white space 
stripped out, which would, of course speed execution.
gnuEmacs does a similar thing for the LISP code; it's still interpreted 
as I recall.
On 11/12/21 10:59 AM, Johnny Billquist wrote:
  RMS kept the idea alive in Emacs, where even today you
fire up the 
 core system, load all kind of libraries, and then you do a memory 
 dump, which is the runnable Emacs image.
 ? JOhnny
 On 2021-11-12 16:06, Thomas DeBellis wrote:
  It's not uncommon or it least it didn't
used to be.? Here are three 
 examples:
 First, I believe early versions of Smalltalk did exactly this.
 Second, at WPI, we implemented two commands called freeze and thaw, 
 which would take all the information in the currently running job 
 (AC's, PC, open files, Etc.) and write them into a file.? You could 
 ^C, freeze, come back later, thaw the .ICE file (frozen job, get it?) 
 and be right where you were.? One common use was when a dial up was 
 abruptly disconnected by call waiting.? The monitor would notice you 
 were detached and perform a freeze on your behalf, thus both freeing 
 up the job slot and not losing your work.? Saved me a bunch of 
 TECO'ing.? It could have been extended to batch jobs running out of 
 processor time, but I don't remember if it was.
 I liked it so much that I tried to implement it at Columbia for 
 Tops-20.? Tried...? I think the problem I ran into was that I 
 couldn't find out timers and get the same fork handles.? Or one of 
 the problems.? Another was security, which I'll discuss below.
 Third, at Columbia, it was used extensively in our chronically CPU 
 starved environment:
 ? * The EXEC could save the PCL environment (but I think this originally
 ??? was part of the CMU implementation)
 ? * The mailing system keeps a binary file of forwarding bindings.? If
 ??? you edit the text source, the newer write date is noticed and the
 ??? binary is 'recompiled'
 ? * I lifted the feature for LPTSPL's LPFORM.INI parser when I realized
 ??? how often it was getting reparsed (basically after any idle period
 ??? between jobs)
 ?From the information security standpoint, you have to consider the 
 usage of these kinds of files.? Obviously, you wouldn't want to thaw 
 something with JACCT set unless the existing job had the ability to 
 get that, was [1,2] without some fairly careful checking.? Ditto 
 Tops-20, if the fork had capabilities.? I mean, if somebody could get 
 write access to the binary, then they could potentially compromise 
 system security with a little strategic FILDDT'ing (or EXAMINE and 
 DEPOSIT, if it came to that).
 A 'legitimately' corrupt binary could also crash the fork on start 
 up, but I don't recall as we ever fully addressed that.? I think a 
 checksum would have been the obvious start, but I guess we didn't 
 want to spend the cycles.
 In these days of multi-gigahertz processors, I don't see the children 
 discussing it much at all.
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
>
> On 11/12/21 9:24 AM, Paul Koning wrote:
>
> That's a bit like how RSX-11/D and IAS boot -- by reloading the 
> image of memory when you issued the SAV command. Pretty clever: you 
> set things up the way you want them to be, and then you make that 
> state persistent.
> ????paul
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
>>
>>
>> On Nov 11, 2021, at 6:22 PM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> 
>> wrote: I must admit that I hadn't considered the possibility of 
>> just saving the core. Which of course can accomplish the same thing 
>> in a neat way.
>>