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-rw-r--r--doc/context/documents/general/qrcs/setup-cs.pdfbin882515 -> 882759 bytes
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-rw-r--r--doc/context/documents/general/qrcs/setup-mapping-cs.pdfbin349365 -> 349507 bytes
-rw-r--r--doc/context/documents/general/qrcs/setup-mapping-de.pdfbin434894 -> 434767 bytes
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-rw-r--r--doc/context/documents/general/qrcs/setup-mapping-fr.pdfbin349707 -> 350140 bytes
-rw-r--r--doc/context/documents/general/qrcs/setup-mapping-it.pdfbin348766 -> 348859 bytes
-rw-r--r--doc/context/documents/general/qrcs/setup-mapping-nl.pdfbin347816 -> 347894 bytes
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-rw-r--r--doc/context/documents/general/qrcs/setup-nl.pdfbin876246 -> 876652 bytes
-rw-r--r--doc/context/documents/general/qrcs/setup-ro.pdfbin880676 -> 881019 bytes
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-bitmaps.tex189
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-cleanup.tex332
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-compilation.tex84
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-contents.tex11
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-directions.tex778
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-evolution.tex373
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-feedback.tex306
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-introduction.tex104
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-logging.tex58
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-lua.tex151
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-mp.tex166
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-performance.tex107
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-rejected.tex83
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-retrospect.tex188
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-stripping.tex369
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-stubs.tex262
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-style.tex66
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-tex.tex125
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-titlepage.tex58
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-whatsits.tex78
-rw-r--r--doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup.tex34
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diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-bitmaps.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-bitmaps.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..cf74c0cad
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-bitmaps.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,189 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-bitmaps
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Bitmap images}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+In \TEX\ image inclusion is traditionally handled by specials. Think of a signal
+added someplace in the page stream that says:
+
+\starttyping
+\special{image: foo.png 2000 3000}
+\stoptyping
+
+Here the number for instance indicate a scale factor to be divided by 1000.
+Because \TEX\ has no floating point numbers, normally one uses an integer and the
+magic multiplier 1000 representing 1.000. Such a special is called a \quote
+{whatsit} and is one reason why \TEX\ is so flexible and adaptive.
+
+In \PDFTEX\ instead of a \type {\special} the command \type {\pdfximage} and its
+companions are used. In \LUATEX\ this concept has been generalized to \type
+{\useimageresource} which internally is not a so called whatsit (an extension
+node) but a special kind of rule. This makes for nicer code as now we don't need
+to check if a certain whatsit node is actually one with dimensions, while rules
+already are part of calculating box dimensions, so no extra overhead in checking
+for whatsits is added. In retrospect this was one of the more interesting
+conceptual changes in \LUATEX.
+
+In \LUAMETATEX\ we don't have such primitives but we do have these special rule
+nodes; we're talking of subtypes and the frontend doesn't look at those details.
+Depending on what the backend needs one can easily define a scanner that
+implements a primitive. We already did that in \CONTEXT. More important is that
+inclusion is not handled by the engine simply because there is no backend. This
+means that we need to do it ourselves. There are two steps involved in this that
+we will discuss below.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Identifying}]
+
+There is only a handful of image formats that makes sense in a typesetting
+workflow. Because \PDF\ inclusion is supported (but not discussed here) one can
+actually take any format as long as it converts to \PDF, and tools like graphic
+magic do a decent job on that. \footnote {Although one really need to check a
+converted image. When we moved to pplib, I found out that lots of converted
+images in a project had invalid \PDF\ objects, but apart from a warning nothing
+bad resulted from this because those objects were not used.} The main bitmap
+formats that we care about are \JPEG, \JPEG2000, and \PNG. We could deal with
+\JBIG\ files but I never encountered them so let's forget about them for now.
+
+One of the problems with a built|-|in analyzer (and embedder) is that it can
+crash or just abort the engine. The main reason is that when the used libraries
+run into some issue, the engine is not always able to recover from it: a
+converter just aborts which then cleans up (potentially messed up) memory. In
+\LUATEX\ we also abort, simply because we have no clue to what extend further on
+the libraries are still working as expected. We play safe. For the average user
+this is quite ok as it signals that an image has to be fixed.
+
+In a workflow that runs unattended on a server and where users push images to a
+resource tree, there is a good change that a \TEX\ job fails because of some
+problem with images. A crash is not really an option then. This is one reason why
+converting bitmaps to \PDF\ makes much sense. Another reason is that some color
+profiling might be involved. Runtime manipulations make no sense, unless there is
+only one typesetting run.
+
+Because in \LMTX\ we do the analyzing ourselves \footnote {Actually, in \MKIV\
+this was also possible but not widely advertised, but we now exclusively keep
+this for \LMTX.} we can recover much easier. The main reason is of course that
+because we use \LUA, memory management and garbage collection happens pretty well
+controlled. And crashing \LUA\ code can easily be intercepted by a \type {pcall}.
+
+Most (extensible) file formats are based on tables that gets accessed from an
+index of names and offsets into the file. This means that filtering for instance
+metadata like dimensions and resolutions is no big deal (we always did that). I
+can extend analyzing when needed without a substantial change in the engine that
+can affect other macro packages. And \LUA\ is fast enough (and often faster) for
+such tasks.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Embeding}]
+
+Once identified the frontend can use that information for scaling and (if needed)
+reuse of the same image. Embedding of the image resource happens when a page is
+shipped out. For \JPEG\ images this is actually quite simple: we only need to
+create a dictionary with the right information and push the bitmap itself into
+the associated stream.
+
+For \PNG\ images it's a bit different. Unfortunately \PDF\ only supports certain
+formats, for instance masks are separated and transparency needs to be resolved.
+This means that there are two routes: either pass the bitmap blob to the stream,
+or convert it to a suitable format supported by \PDF. In \LUATEX\ that is
+normally done by the backend code, which uses a library for this. It is a typical
+example of a dependency of something much larger than actually needed. In
+\LUATEX\ the original poppler library used for filtering objects from a \PDF\
+file as well as the \PNG\ library also have tons of code on board that relates to
+manipulating (writing) data. But we don't need those features. As a side note:
+this is something rather general. You decide to use a small library for a simple
+task only to find out after a decade that it has grown a lot offering features
+and having extra dependencies that you really don't want. Even worse: you end up
+with constant updates due to fixed security (read: bug) fixes.
+
+Passing the \PNG\ blob unchanged in itself to the \PDF\ file is trivial, but
+massaging it into an acceptable form when it doesn't suit the \PDF\ specification
+takes a bit more code. In fact, \PDF\ does not really support \PNG\ as format,
+but it supports \PNG\ compression (aka filters).
+
+Trying to support more complex \PNG\ files is a nice way to test if you can
+transform a public specification into a program as for instance happens with
+\PDF, \OPENTYPE, and font embedding in \CONTEXT. So this again was a nice
+exercise in coding. After a while I was able to process the \PNG\ test suite
+using \LUA. Optimizing the code came with understanding the specification.
+However, for large images, especially interlaced ones, runtime was definitely not
+to be ignored. It all depended on the tasks at hand:
+
+\startitemize
+
+\startitem
+ A \PNG\ blob is compressed with \ZIP\ compression, so first it needs to be
+ decompressed. This takes a bit of time (and in the process we found out that
+ the \type {zlib} library used in \LUATEX\ had a bug that surfaced when a
+ mostly zero byte image was uncompressed and we can then hit a filled up
+ buffer condition.
+\stopitem
+
+\startitem
+ The resulting uncompressed stream is itself compressed with a so called
+ filter. Each row starts with a filter byte that indicates how to convert
+ bytes into other bytes. The most commonly used methods are deltas with
+ preceding pixels and/or pixels on a previous row. When done the filter bytes
+ can go away.
+\stopitem
+
+\startitem
+ Sometimes an image uses 1, 2 or 4 bits per pixel, in which case the rows
+ needs to be expanded. This can involve a multiplication factor per pixel (it
+ can also be an index in a palette).
+\stopitem
+
+\startitem
+ An image can be interlaced which means that there are seven parts of the
+ image that stepwise build up the whole. In professional workflows with high
+ res images interlacing makes no sense as transfer over the internet is not an
+ issue and the overhead due to reassembling the image and the potentially
+ larger file size (due to independent compression of the seven parts) are not
+ what we want either.
+\stopitem
+
+\startitem
+ There can be an image mask that needs to be separated from the main blob. A
+ single byte gray scale image then has two bytes per pixel, and a double byte
+ pixel has four bytes of information. An \RGB\ image has three bytes per pixel
+ plus an alpha byte, and in the case of double byte pixels we get eight bytes
+ per pixel.
+\stopitem
+
+\startitem
+ Finally the resulting blob has to be compressed again. The current amount of
+ time involved in that suggests that there is room for improvement.
+\stopitem
+
+\stopitemize
+
+The process is controlled by number of rows and columns, the number of bytes per
+pixel (one or two) and the color space which effectively means one or three
+bytes. These numbers get fed into the filter, deinterlacer, expander and|/|or
+mask separator. In order to speed up the embedding these basic operations can be
+assisted by a helpers written in \CCODE. Because \LUA\ is quite good with
+strings, we pass strings and get back strings. So, most of the logic stays at the
+\LUA\ end.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title=Conclusion]
+
+Going for a library|-|less solution for bitmap inclusion is quite doable and in
+most cases as efficient. Because we have a pure \LUA\ implementation for testing
+and an optimized variant for production, we can experiment as we like. A positive
+side effect is that we can more robustly intercept bad images and inject a
+placeholder instead.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-cleanup.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-cleanup.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..7dcb3b3b1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-cleanup.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,332 @@
+% language=us
+
+% Youtube: TheLucs play with Jacob Collier // Don't stop til you get enough
+
+\startcomponent followingup-cleanup
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\logo [ALGOL] {Algol}
+\logo [FORTRAN] {FORTRAN}
+\logo [SPSS] {SPSS}
+\logo [DEC] {DEC}
+\logo [VAX] {VAX}
+\logo [AMIGA] {Amiga}
+
+\startchapter[title={Cleanup}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+Original \TEX\ is a literate program, which means that code and documentation are
+mixed. This mix, called a \WEB, is split into a source file and a \TEX\ file and
+both parts are processed independently into a program (binary) and a typeset
+document. The evolution of \TEX\ went through stages but in the end a \PASCAL\
+\WEB\ file was the result. This fact has lead to the more or less standard \WEBC\
+compilation infrastructure which is the basis for \TEXLIVE.
+
+% My programming experience started with programming a micro processor kit (using
+% an 1802 processor), but at the university I went from \ALGOL\ to \PASCAL\ (okay,
+% I also remember lots of \SPSS\ kind|-|of|-|\FORTRAN\ programming. The \PASCAL\
+% was the one provided on \DEC\ and \VAX\ machines and it was a bit beyond standard
+% \PASCAL. Later I did quite some programming in \MODULA 2 in (for a while an
+% \AMIGA) but mostly on personal computers. The reason that I mention this it that
+% it still determines the way I look at programs. For instance that code goes
+% through a couple if stepwise improvements (and that it can always be done
+% better). That you need to keep an eye on memory consumption (can be a nice
+% challenge). That a properly formatted source code is important (at least for me).
+%
+% When into \PASCAL, I ran into the \TEX\ series and as it looked familiar it ended
+% up on my bookshelf. However, I could not really get an idea what it was about,
+% simply because I had no access to the \TEX\ program. But the magic stayed with
+% me. The fact that \LUA\ resembles \PASCAL, made it a good candidate for extending
+% \TEX\ (there were other reasons as well). When decades later, after using \TEX\
+% in practice, I ended up looking at the source, it was the \LUATEX\ source.
+
+So, \TEX\ is a woven program and this is also true for the starting point of
+\LUATEX: \PDFTEX. But, because we wanted to open up the internals, and because
+\LUA\ is written in \CCODE, already in an early stage Taco decided to start from
+the \CCODE\ translated from \PASCAL. A permanent conversion was achieved using
+additional scripts and the original documentation stayed in the source. The one
+large file was split into more logical smaller parts and combined with snippets
+from \ALEPH .
+
+After we released version 1.0 I went through the documentation parts of the code
+and normalized that a bit. The at that moment still sort of simple \WEB\ files
+became regular \CCODE\ files, and the idea was (and is) that at some point it
+should be possible to process the documentation (using \CONTEXT).
+
+Over time the \CCODE\ code evolved and functions ended up in places that at that
+made most sense at that moment. After the previously described stripping process,
+I decided to go through the files and see if a bit of reshuffling made sense,
+mostly because that would make documenting easier. (I'm not literate enough to
+turn it into a proper literate program.) It was also a good moment to get rid of
+unused code (not that much) and unused macros (some more than expected). It also
+made sense to change a few names (for instance to avoid potential future clashes
+with \type {lua_} core functions). However, all this takes quite some careful
+checking and compilation runs, so I expect that after this first cleanup, for
+quite some time stepwise improvements can happen (especially in adding comments).
+\footnote {This is and will be an ongoing effort. It probably doesn't show, but
+getting the code base in the state it is in now, took quite some time. It
+probably won't take away complaints and nagging but I've decided no longer to pay
+attention to those on the sideline.} \footnote {In the end not much \PDFTEX\ and
+\ALEPH\ code is present in \LUAMETATEX , but these were useful intermediate
+steps. No matter how lean \LUAMETATEX\ becomes, I have a weak spot for \PDFTEX\
+as it always served us well and without it \TEX\ would be less present today.}
+
+One of the things that I keep in mind when doing this, is that we use \LUA. This
+component compiles on most relevant platforms and as such we can assume that
+\LUAMETATEX\ also should (and can be) made a bit less dependent on old mechanisms
+that are used in stock \LUATEX. For instance, we don't come from \PASCAL\ any
+longer but there are traces of that transition still present. We also don't use
+specific operating system features, and those that we use are also used in \LUA.
+And, as we try to share code we can also delegate some (more) to \LUA. For
+instance file related code is not dependent on other components in the \TEX\
+infrastructure, but maybe at some point the runtime loadable \KPSE\ library can
+kick in. So, basically the idea is to sort of go bare bone first and later see
+how with the help of \LUA\ we can get bring some back. For the record: this is
+not needed for \CONTEXT\ as it already has this interface to \TDS. \footnote
+{This has been removed from my agenda.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Motivation}]
+
+The \LUATEX\ project started as an experiment of adding \LUA\ to \PDFTEX, which
+was done by Hartmut and in order to avoid confusion we named it \LUATEX. When we
+figured out that there this had possibilities we decided to go further and Taco
+took the challenge to rework the code base. Part of that work was sponsored by
+Idris' Oriental \TEX\ project. I have fond memory of the intensive and rapid
+development cycles: online discussions, binaries going my directions,
+experimental \CONTEXT\ code going the other way. When we had reached a sort of
+stable state but at some point, read: usage in \CONTEXT\ had become crucial, a
+steady further development started, where Taco redid \METAPOST\ into \MPLIB,
+funded by user groups. At some point Luigi took over from Taco the task of
+integration of components (also into \TEX Live), introduced \LUAJIT\ into the
+binary, conducted the (again partially funded) swiglib project, followed by
+support for \FFI. A while later I myself started messing around in the code base
+directly and continued extending the engine and \LUA\ interfaces.
+
+I could work on this because I have quite some freedom at the place where I work.
+We use (part of) \CONTEXT\ for some projects and especially in dealing with \XML\
+we could benefit from \LUATEX. It must be said that (long running) projects like
+these never pay off (on the contrary, they cost a lot in terms of money and
+energy) so it's quite safe to conclude that \LUATEX\ development is to a large
+extend a (many man years) work of love for the subject. I guess that no sane
+company will do (permit) such a thing. It is also for that reason that I keep
+spending time on it, and as a simplification of the code base was always one of
+my dreams, this is what I spend my time on now. After all, \LUATEX\ is just
+juggling bytes and as it is written in \CCODE, and has no graphical user
+interface or complex dependencies, it should be possible to have a relative
+simple setup in terms of code files and compilation. Of course this is also made
+possible by the fact that I can use \LUA. It's also why I decided to
+\quotation {Just do it}, and then \quotation {Let's see where I end up}. No
+matter how it turns out, it makes a good vehicle for further development and
+years of fun.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Files}]
+
+After a decade of adding and moving around code it's about time to reorganize the
+code a bit, but we do so without deviating too much from the original setup. For
+instance we started out with a small number of \LUA\ interface macros and these
+were collected in a few files, and defined in one \type {h} file, but it made
+sense to have header files alongside the libraries that implement helpers. This
+is a rather tedious job but with music videos or video casts on a second screen
+it is bearable.
+
+When I reached a state where we only needed the \LUATEX\ files plus the minimal
+set of libraries I tried to get rid of directories in the source tree that were
+placeholders, but with \type {automake} files, like those for \PDFTEX\ and
+\XETEX. After a couple of attempts I gave up on that because the build setup is
+rather hard coded for checking them. Also, there were some (puzzling)
+dependencies in the configuring on \OMEGA\ files as well as some \DVI\ related
+tools. So, that bit is for later to sort out. \footnote {Of course later the
+decision was made to forget about using \type {autotools} and go for an as simple
+as possible \type {cmake} solution.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Command line arguments}]
+
+As we need to set up a backend and deal with font loading in \LUA, we can as well
+delegate some of the command line handling to \LUA\ as well. Therefore, only the
+a limited set of options is dealt with: those that determine the startup and \LUA\
+behavior. In principle we can even get rid of all and always use a startup script
+but for now it makes sense to not deviate too much from a regular \TEX\ run.
+
+At the time of this writing some code is still in place that is a candidate for
+removal. For instance, using the \type {&} to define a format file has long be
+replaced by \type {--fmt}. There are sentimental reasons for keeping it but at
+the same time we need to realize that shells use these special characters too. A
+for me unknown (or forgotten) feature of prefixing a jobname with a \type {*}
+will be removed as it makes no sense. There is some \MSWINDOWS\ specific last
+resort code that probably will go too, unless I can figure out why it is needed
+in the first place. \footnote {Intercepting these symbols has been dropped in
+favor of the command line flags.}
+
+Now left with a very simple set of command line options it also makes sense to
+use a simple option analyzer, so that was a next step as it rid us of a
+dependency and produces less code.
+
+So, the option parser has now been replaced by a simple variant that is more in
+tune with what will happen when you deal with options in \LUA: no magic. One
+problem is that \TEX's first input file is moved from the command line to the
+input buffer and a an interactive session is emulated. As mentioned before, there
+is some extra \type {&}, \type {*} and \type {\\} parsing involved. One can
+wonder if this still makes sense in a situation where one has to specify a format
+and \LUA\ file (using \type {--fmt} and \type {--ini}) so that might as well be
+redone a bit some day. \footnote {In the end only these explicit command line
+options were supported.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Platforms}]
+
+When going through the code I noticed conditional sections for long obsolete
+platforms: \type {amiga}, \type {dos} and \type {djgpp}, \type {os/2}, \type
+{aix}, \type {solaris}, etc. Also, with 64 bit becoming the standard, it makes
+sense to assume that users will use a modern 64 platform (intel or arm combined
+with \MSWINDOWS\ or some popular \UNIX\ variant). We don't need large and complex
+code management for obscure platforms and architectures simply because we want to
+proof that \LUAMETATEX\ runs everywhere. With respect to \MSWINDOWS\ we use a
+cross compiler (\type {mingw}) as reference but native compilation should be no
+big deal eventually. We can cross that bridge when we have a simplified
+compilation set up. Right now it doesn't make sense to waste time on a native
+\MICROSOFT\ compilation as it would also pollute the code with conditional
+sections. We'll see what happens when I'm bored. \footnote {In the meantime no
+effort is made to let the source compile otherwise than with the cross compiler.
+Best is to keep the code as clean as possible with respect to conditional code
+sections. So don't bother me with patches.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Stubs}]
+
+A \CONTEXT\ run is managed by \MTXRUN\ in combination with a specific script
+
+\starttyping
+mtxrun --script context
+\stoptyping
+
+On windows, we use a stub because using a \type {cmd} file create an indirectness
+that is not seen as executable and therefore in other command files needs to
+be called in a special way to guarantee continuation. So, there we have a small
+binary:
+
+\starttyping
+mtxrun.exe ...
+\stoptyping
+
+that will call:
+
+\starttyping
+luatex --luaonly mtxrun.lua ...
+\stoptyping
+
+And when the stub has a different name than \type {mtxrun}, say:
+
+\starttyping
+context.exe ...
+\stoptyping
+
+it effectively becomes:
+
+\starttyping
+luatex --luaonly mtxrun.lua --script context ...
+\stoptyping
+
+Because the stripped down version assumes some kind of initializations anyway a
+small extension made it possible to use \LUAMETATEX\ as stub too. So, when we
+rename \type {luametatex.exe} to \type {mtxrun.exe} (on \UNIX\ we don't use a
+suffix) it will start up as \LUA\ interpreter when it finds a script with the
+name \type {mtxrun.lua} in the same path. When we rename it to \type
+{context.exe} it will search for \type {context.lua} and all that that script has
+to do is this:
+
+\starttyping
+arg[0] = "mtxrun"
+
+table.insert(arg,1,"mtx-context")
+table.insert(arg,1,"--script")
+
+dofile(os.selfpath .. "/" .. "mtxrun.lua")
+\stoptyping
+
+So, it basically becomes a call to \type {mtxrun}, but we stay in \LUAMETATEX.
+Because we want an isolated run this will launch \LUAMETATEX\ again with the
+right command line arguments. This sounds inefficient but because we have a small
+binary this is no real issue, and as that run is isolated, it cannot influence
+the caller. The overhead is really small: on my somewhat older laptop it's .2
+seconds, but we had that management overhead already for decades, so no one
+bothers about it. On all platforms using symbolic links works ok too.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Global variables}]
+
+There are quite a bit global variables and function in the code base, but in the
+process of opening up I got rid of some. The cleanup turned some more into
+locals which saved executable bytes (keep in mind that we also use the engine as
+\LUA\ interpreter so, the smaller, the more friendly). \footnote {Later the
+global variables were collected in so called \CCODE\ structs.} This is work
+in progress.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Memory usage}]
+
+By going over all the code a couple of times, I was able to decrease the amount
+of used memory a bit as well as avoid some memory allocations. This has no
+consequences for performance but is nicer when multiple runs at the same time
+(e.g.\ on virtual machines) have to compete for resources. \footnote {I will
+probably have to spend some more time on this in order to reach a state that I'm
+satisfied with.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={\METAPOST}]
+
+The current code base doesn't have that many files. We can imagine that, when
+\LUA\ can be compiled on a platform, that compiling \LUAMETATEX\ is also no that
+complicated. However, the rather complex build infrastructure demonstrates the
+opposite. One of the complications is that \MPLIB\ is codes in \CWEB\ and that
+needs some juggling to get \CCODE. The process has quite some dependencies. There
+are some upstream patches needed, but for now occasionally checking with the
+upstream sources used for compiling \MPLIB\ in \LUATEX\ works okay. \footnote
+{Later I decided to cleanup the \MPLIB\ code: unused font related code was
+removed, the \POSTSCRIPT\ backend was untangled, the translation from \CWEB\ to
+\CCODE\ got done by a \LUA\ script, aspects like error reporting and \IO\ were
+redone, and in the end some new extensions were added. Some of that might trickle
+back to th original, as long as it doesn't harm compatibility; after all
+\METAPOST\ (the program) is standardized and considered functionally stable.}
+
+As \LUAMETATEX\ is also used for experiments we use a copy of the \LUA\ library
+interface. That way we don't interfere with the stable \LUATEX\ situation. When
+we play with extensions, we can always decide to backport them, once they are
+found useful and in good working order. But, as that interface was just \CCODE\
+this was trivial.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Files}]
+
+In a relative late stage I decided to cleanup some of the filename handling.
+First I got rid of the \type {area}, \type {name} and \type {ext} decomposition
+and optional recomposition. In the original engine that goes through the string
+pool and although there is some recovery in the end, with many files and fonts
+being used, the pool can get exhausted. For instance when you have hundreds of
+thousands of \typ {\font \foo = bar} kind of definitions, each definition wipes
+out the previous entry in the hash, but its font name is kept in the string pool.
+I got rid of that side effect by reusing strings but in the end decided to avoid
+the pool altogether. It was then a small step to also do that for other
+filenames. In the process I also decided that it made no sense to keep the code
+around that reads a filename from the console: we now just quit. Restarting the
+program with a proper filename is no big deal today. I might do some more cleanup
+there. In the end we can best use a callback for handling input from the console.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-compilation.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-compilation.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..a0e67d4be
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-compilation.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,84 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-compilation
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Compilation}]
+
+Compiling \LUATEX\ is possible because after all it's what I do on my machine.
+The \LUATEX\ source tree is part of a larger infrastructure: \TEX Live. Managing
+that one is work for specialists and the current build system is the work of
+experts over a quite long period of time. When you only compile \LUATEX\ it goes
+unnoticed that there are many dependencies, some of which are actually unrelated
+to \LUATEX\ itself but are a side effect of the complexity of the build
+structure.
+
+When going from \LUATEX\ to \LUAMETATEX\ many dependencies were removed and I
+eventually ended up with a simpler setup. The source tree went down to less than
+30 MB and zipped to around 4 MB. That makes it possible to consider adding the
+code to the regular \CONTEXT\ distribution.
+
+One reason for doing that is that one keeps the current version of the engine
+packaged with the current version of \CONTEXT. But a more important one is that
+it fulfils a demand. Some time ago we were asked by some teachers participating
+in a (basically free) math method for technical education what guarantees there
+are that the tools used are available forever. Now, even with \LUAMETATEX\ one
+has to set up a compiler but it is much easier than installing the whole \TEX
+Live infrastructure for that. A third reason is that it gives me a comfortable
+feeling that I myself can compile it anywhere as can \CONTEXT\ users who want to
+do that.
+
+The source tree traditionally has libs in a separate directory (lua, luajit, zlib
+and zziplib). However, it is more practical to have them alongside our normal
+source. These are relative small collections of files that never change so there
+is no reason not to do it. \footnote {If I ever decide to add more libraries,
+only the minimal interfaces needed will be provided, but at this moment there are
+no such plans.}
+
+Another assumption we're going to make is that we use 64 bit binaries. There is
+no need to support obsolete platforms either. As a start we make sure it compiles
+on the platforms used by \CONTEXT\ users. Basically we make a kind of utility.
+For now I can compile the \WINDOWS\ 32 bit binaries that my colleague needs in
+half a minute anyway, but in the long run we will settle for 64 bits.
+
+I spent about a week figuring out why the compilation is so complex (by
+selectively removing components). At some point compilation on \OSX\ stopped
+working. When the minimum was reached I decided to abandon the automake tool
+chain and see if \type {cmake} could be used (after all, Mojca challenged that).
+In retrospect I should have done that sooner because in a day I could get all
+relevant platforms working. Flattening the source tree was a next step and so
+there is no way back now. What baffled me (and Alan, who at some point joined in
+testing \OSX) is the speed of compilation. My pretty old laptop needed about half
+a minute to get the job done and even on a raspberry pi with only a flash card
+just a few minutes were needed. At that point, as we could remove more make
+related files, the compressed 11 MB archive (\type {tar.xz}) shrunk to just over
+2~MB. Interesting is that compiling \MPLIB\ takes most time, and when one compiles
+in parallel (on more cores) that one finishes last.
+
+For the record: I do all this on a laptop running \MSWINDOWS\ 10 using the Linux
+subsystem. When that came around, Luigi made me a working setup for cross
+compilation but in the meantime with GCC 8.2 all works out of the box. I edit the
+files at the \MSWINDOWS\ end (using \SCITE), compile at the \LINUX\ end, and test
+everything on \MSWINDOWS. It is a pretty convenient setup.
+
+When compilation got faster it became also more convenient to do some more code
+reshuffling. This time I decided to pack the global variables into structures,
+more or less organized the way the header files were organized. It gives a bit
+more verbosity but also has the side effects that (at least in principle) the
+\CPU\ cache can perform better because neighboring variables are often cached as
+part of the deal. Now it might be imagination, but in the process I did notice
+that mid March processing the manual went down to below 11.7 seconds while before
+it stayed around 12.1 seconds. Of course this is not that relevant currently, but
+I might make a difference on less capable processors (as in a low power setup).
+It anyway didn't hurt.
+
+In the meantime some of the constants used in the program got prefixes or
+suffixes to make them more unique and for instance the use of \type {normal} as
+equivalent for zero was made a bit more distinctive as we now have more subtypes.
+That is: all the subtypes were collected in enumerations instead of \CCODE\
+defines. Back to the basics.
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-contents.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-contents.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..bd6af6d81
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-contents.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+\startcomponent followingup-titlepage
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\starttitle[title={Table of contents}]
+
+ \placelist[chapter]
+
+\stoptitle
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-directions.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-directions.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..244baff90
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-directions.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,778 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-directions
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Directions}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+In \LUATEX\ the directional model taken from \OMEGA\ has been upgraded a bit. For
+instance in addition to the \type {\*dir} commands we have \type {\*direction}
+commands that take a number instead of a keyword. This is a bit more efficient and
+consistent as using these keywords was kind of un|-|\TEX. Internally direction
+related nodes (text directions) are not whatsits but first class nodes. We also
+use a subtype that indicates the push or pop state.
+
+The \LUATEX\ directional model provides four directions which is a subset of the
+many that \OMEGA\ provided, indicated by three letters, like \type {TRT} and
+\type {LTT}. In the beginning we had them all fixed\footnote {This was doen by
+Hartmut by rigorously checking all possible combinations} and thereby implemented
+but being in doubt about their usefulness we dropped most of them, just four were
+kept. However, in practice only right|-|to|-|left makes sense. Going from top to
+bottom in Japanese or Mongolian can also involve glyph rotation, which actually
+is not implemented in the engine at all. Spacing and inter|-|character breaks
+have to be implemented and in the end one has to combine the results into a
+page body. So, in practice you end up with juggling node list and macro magic in
+the page builder. The \type {LTL} (number~2) and \type {RTT} (number~3)
+directions are not used for serious work. Therefore, in \LUAMETATEX\ the model
+has been adapted. In the end, it was not entirely clear anyway what the three
+letters were indicating in each direction property (page, body, par, text, math)
+as most had no real meaning.
+
+As a side note: if you leave the (not really working well) vertical directions
+out of the picture, directional typesetting is not that hard to deal with and has
+hardly any consequences for the code. This is because horizontal dimensions are
+not affected by direction, only the final ship out is: when a run (wrapped in an
+hbox) goes the other way, the backend effectively has to skip the width and then
+with each component goes back. Not much more is involved. This means that a
+bidirectional engine is rather simple. The complications are more in the way a
+macro package deals with it, in relation to the input as well as the layout. The
+backend has to do the real work. \footnote {Of course when one hooks in \LUA\
+code taking care of direction can be needed!}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title=Two directions]
+
+We now have only two directions left: the default left|-|to|-|right (l2r) and
+right|-|to|-|left (r2l). They work the same as before and in the backend we can
+get rid of the fuzzy parallel and rotation (which actually was just stacking
+nodes) heuristics.
+
+Reducing the lot to two directions simplifies some code in the engine. This is
+because when calculating dimensions a change in horizontal direction doesn't
+influence the width, height and depth in an orthogonal way. Because there are no
+longer top|-|down items we don't need to swap the height and or depth with the
+width. This also means that we don't need to keep much track of direction
+changes. Technically an hpack doesn't need to know its own direction and we can
+set it to any value afterwards if we want because the calculation are not
+influenced by it; so that also simplified matters.
+
+The \type {\bodydir} and \type {\pagedir} already didn't make much sense, and in
+\CONTEXT\ we actually intercepted them, so now they are removed. The body
+direction is always left|-|to|-|right and the page direction was only consulted
+in the backend code which we no longer have. Another side effect of going with
+only two directions is that rules no longer need to carry the direction property:
+there is no flipping of width with height and depth needed.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title=Four orientations]
+
+Instead of the top|-|bottom variants we now have four orientations plus a bunch
+of anchoring options. Of course one could use the backend save, restore and
+matrix whatsits but a natural feature makes more sense. Let's start with what
+happens normally:
+
+\startbuffer[1]
+This is a \LUAMETATEX\ goodie.
+\stopbuffer
+
+\startbuffer[2]
+\hbox orientation 2{This is a \LUAMETATEX\ goodie.}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\startbuffer[3]
+This is a \hbox orientation 2{\LUAMETATEX} goodie.
+\stopbuffer
+
+\startbuffer[4]
+\hbox orientation 2{This is a \hbox orientation 002{\LUAMETATEX} goodie.}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\blank{\showstruts\strut}\quad\ruledhbox{\inlinebuffer[1]}\quad{\showstruts\strut}\blank
+
+This line has height and depth. We can rotate this sentence by 180 degrees around
+the baseline in which case the depth and height are flipped.
+
+\blank{\showstruts\strut}\quad\ruledhbox{\inlinebuffer[2]}\quad{\showstruts\strut}\blank
+
+or we flip part:
+
+\blank{\showstruts\strut}\quad\ruledhbox{\inlinebuffer[3]}\quad{\showstruts\strut}\blank
+
+or flip nested:
+
+\blank{\showstruts\strut}\quad\ruledhbox{\inlinebuffer[4]}\quad{\showstruts\strut}\blank
+
+but we're talking boxes, so the above examples are defined as:
+
+\typebuffer[1,2,3,4]
+
+The \type {orientation} keyword does the magic here. There are four such
+orientations with zero being the default. We saw that two rotates over 180
+degrees, so one and three are left for up and down.
+
+\startbuffer[5]
+\hbox orientation 0 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation 1 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation 2 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation 3 {\TEX}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\blank{\showstruts\strut}\quad\ruledhbox{\inlinebuffer[5]}\quad{\showstruts\strut}\blank
+
+This is codes as:
+
+\typebuffer[5]
+
+The landscape and seascape variants both sit on top of the baseline while the
+flipped variant has its depth swapped with the height. Although this would be
+enough a bit more control is possible. The number is actually a three byte hex
+number:
+
+\starttyping
+0x<X><Y><O>
+\stoptyping
+
+or in \TEX\ syntax
+
+\starttyping
+"<X><Y><O>
+\stoptyping
+
+We saw that the last byte regulates the orientation. The first and second one
+deal with anchoring horizontally and vertically. The vertical options of the
+horizontal variants anchor on the baseline, lower corner, upper corner or center.
+
+\startbuffer[6]
+\hbox orientation "002 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "012 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "022 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "032 {\TEX}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[6]
+
+\blank{\showstruts\strut}\quad\ruledhbox{\inlinebuffer[6]}\quad{\showstruts\strut}\blank
+
+\startbuffer[7]
+\hbox orientation "002 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "102 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "202 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "302 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "402 {\TEX}
+\stopbuffer
+
+The horizontal options of the horizontal variants anchor in the center, left, right,
+halfway left and halfway right.
+
+\typebuffer[7]
+
+\blank{\showstruts\strut}\quad\ruledhbox{\inlinebuffer[7]}\quad{\showstruts\strut}\blank
+
+All combinations will be shown on the next pages, so we suffice with telling that
+for the vertical variants we can vertically anchor on the baseline, top, bottom
+or center, while horizontally we center, hang left or right, halfway left or
+right, and in addition align on the (rotated) baseline left or right.
+
+The orientation has consequences for the dimensions so they are dealt with in the
+expected way in constructing lines, paragraphs and pages, but the anchoring is
+virtual. As a bonus, we have two extra variants for orientation zero: on top of
+baseline or below, with dimensions taken into account.
+
+\startbuffer[8]
+\hbox orientation "000 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "004 {\TEX} and
+\hbox orientation "005 {\TEX}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[8]
+
+\blank{\showstruts\strut}\quad\ruledhbox{\inlinebuffer[8]}\quad{\showstruts\strut}\blank
+
+\definecolor[brcolorh][r=1,t=.5,a=1]
+\definecolor[brcolord][b=1,t=.5,a=1]
+\definecolor[brcolorm][g=1,t=.5,a=1]
+
+\starttexdefinition ShowAnchor
+ \blackrule[width=2pt,height=1pt,depth=1pt,color=darkgray]
+\stoptexdefinition
+
+\starttexdefinition DemoRule#1#2#3
+ \ShowAnchor
+ \ruledhbox {
+ \hbox orientation "#1#2#3 {
+ \blackrule[height=6mm,depth=0mm,width=8mm,color=brcolorh]\kern-8mm\relax
+ \blackrule[height=0mm,depth=3mm,width=8mm,color=brcolord]\kern-8mm\relax
+ \blackrule[height=2mm,depth=-1mm,width=8mm,color=brcolorm]
+ }
+ }
+ \ShowAnchor
+\stoptexdefinition
+
+\starttexdefinition DemoText#1#2#3
+ \ShowAnchor
+ \ruledhbox{\hbox orientation "#1#2#3 {\red\TEX}}
+ \ShowAnchor
+\stoptexdefinition
+
+\starttexdefinition DemoSet #1#2
+ \startcombination[nx=4,ny=7,width=10cm]
+ {#200#1}{\ttxx 0x00#1} {#201#1}{\ttxx 0x01#1} {#202#1}{\ttxx 0x02#1} {#203#1}{\ttxx 0x03#1}
+ {#210#1}{\ttxx 0x10#1} {#211#1}{\ttxx 0x11#1} {#212#1}{\ttxx 0x12#1} {#213#1}{\ttxx 0x13#1}
+ {#220#1}{\ttxx 0x20#1} {#221#1}{\ttxx 0x21#1} {#222#1}{\ttxx 0x22#1} {#223#1}{\ttxx 0x23#1}
+ {#230#1}{\ttxx 0x30#1} {#231#1}{\ttxx 0x31#1} {#232#1}{\ttxx 0x32#1} {#233#1}{\ttxx 0x33#1}
+ {#240#1}{\ttxx 0x40#1} {#241#1}{\ttxx 0x41#1} {#242#1}{\ttxx 0x42#1} {#243#1}{\ttxx 0x43#1}
+ {#250#1}{\ttxx 0x50#1} {#251#1}{\ttxx 0x51#1} {#252#1}{\ttxx 0x52#1} {#253#1}{\ttxx 0x53#1}
+ {#260#1}{\ttxx 0x60#1} {#261#1}{\ttxx 0x61#1} {#262#1}{\ttxx 0x62#1} {#263#1}{\ttxx 0x63#1}
+ \stopcombination
+\stoptexdefinition
+
+\startplacefigure[title={orientation 0}]\scale[width=\textwidth]{\framed[offset=1cm]{\DemoSet0\DemoRule}}\stopplacefigure
+\startplacefigure[title={orientation 1}]\scale[width=\textwidth]{\framed[offset=1cm]{\DemoSet1\DemoRule}}\stopplacefigure
+\startplacefigure[title={orientation 2}]\scale[width=\textwidth]{\framed[offset=1cm]{\DemoSet2\DemoRule}}\stopplacefigure
+\startplacefigure[title={orientation 3}]\scale[width=\textwidth]{\framed[offset=1cm]{\DemoSet3\DemoRule}}\stopplacefigure
+
+\startplacefigure[title={orientation 0}]\scale[width=\textwidth]{\framed[offset=1cm]{\DemoSet0\DemoText}}\stopplacefigure
+\startplacefigure[title={orientation 1}]\scale[width=\textwidth]{\framed[offset=1cm]{\DemoSet1\DemoText}}\stopplacefigure
+\startplacefigure[title={orientation 2}]\scale[width=\textwidth]{\framed[offset=1cm]{\DemoSet2\DemoText}}\stopplacefigure
+\startplacefigure[title={orientation 3}]\scale[width=\textwidth]{\framed[offset=1cm]{\DemoSet3\DemoText}}\stopplacefigure
+
+% \page
+
+The anchoring can look somewhat confusing but you need to keep in mind that it is
+normally only used in very controlled circumstances and not in running text.
+Wrapped in macros users don't see the details. We're talking boxes here, so or
+instance:
+
+\startbuffer
+test\quad
+\hbox orientation 3 \bgroup
+ \strut test\hbox orientation "002 \bgroup\strut test\egroup test%
+\egroup \quad
+\hbox orientation 3 \bgroup
+ \strut test\hbox orientation "002 \bgroup\strut test\egroup test%
+\egroup \quad
+\hbox orientation 3 \bgroup
+ \strut test\hbox orientation "012 \bgroup\strut test\egroup test%
+\egroup \quad
+\hbox orientation 3 \bgroup
+ \strut test\hbox orientation "022 \bgroup\strut test\egroup test%
+\egroup \quad
+\hbox orientation 3 \bgroup
+ \strut test\hbox orientation "032 \bgroup\strut test\egroup test%
+\egroup \quad
+\hbox orientation 3 \bgroup
+ \strut test\hbox orientation "042 \bgroup\strut test\egroup test%
+\egroup
+\quad test
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer
+
+gives:
+
+\startlinecorrection[blank]
+\ruledhbox\bgroup \showcolorstruts \showboxes \inlinebuffer \egroup
+\stoplinecorrection
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Right|-|to|-|left typesetting}]
+
+Another aspect to keep in mind when we transform is the already mentioned
+right|-|to|-|left direction. We show some examples where we do things like this:
+
+\starttyping
+\hbox{\hbox
+ orientation #1
+ {\strut abcd}}
+\hbox{\hbox
+ orientation #1
+ to 15mm
+ {\strut abcd}}
+\hbox{\hbox
+ orientation #1
+ direction 1
+ {\righttoleft\strut abcd}}
+\hbox{\hbox
+ orientation #1
+ direction 1
+ to 15mm {\righttoleft\strut abcd}}
+\stoptyping
+
+\starttexdefinition TestH #1
+ \dontcomplain
+ \setbox\scratchbox\hbox{abcd}%
+ x\ruledhbox{\hbox orientation #1 to \wd\scratchbox {\strut abcd}}x\quad
+ x\ruledhbox{\hbox orientation #1 to 15mm {\strut abcd}}x\quad
+ x\ruledhbox{\hbox orientation #1 direction 1 to \wd\scratchbox {\righttoleft\strut abcd}}x\quad
+ x\ruledhbox{\hbox orientation #1 direction 1 to 15mm {\righttoleft\strut abcd}}x%
+\stoptexdefinition
+
+\starttexdefinition TestV #1
+ \dontcomplain
+ \setbox\scratchbox\hbox{abcd}%
+ x\ruledvbox{\vbox orientation #1 {\hsize \wd\scratchbox\strut abcd}}x\quad
+ x\ruledvbox{\vbox orientation #1 {\hsize 15mm\strut abcd}}x\quad
+ x\ruledvbox{\vbox orientation #1 {\righttoleft\hsize \wd\scratchbox\strut abcd}}x\quad
+ x\ruledvbox{\vbox orientation #1 {\righttoleft\hsize 15mm\strut abcd}}x%
+\stoptexdefinition
+
+\startplacefigure[title={Horizontal boxes.}]
+ \startcombination[nx=2,ny=2]
+ {\TestH 0} {orientation 0}
+ {\TestH 2} {orientation 2}
+ {\TestH 1} {orientation 1}
+ {\TestH 3} {orientation 3}
+ \stopcombination
+\stopplacefigure
+
+\startplacefigure[title={Vertical boxes.}]
+ \startcombination[nx=2,ny=2]
+ {\TestV 0} {orientation 0}
+ {\TestV 2} {orientation 2}
+ {\TestV 1} {orientation 1}
+ {\TestV 3} {orientation 3}
+ \stopcombination
+\stopplacefigure
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Vertical typesetting}]
+
+I'm no expert on vertical typesetting and have no application for it either. But
+from what I've seen vertically positioned glyphs are normally used in rather
+straightforward situations. Here I will just give some examples of how
+transformations can be used to achieve certain effects. It is no big deal to make
+macros or use \LUA\ to apply magic to node lists but it is beyond this description
+to discuss that.
+
+Before we fine tune this example we have to discuss another feature. When a \typ
+{orientation} keyword is given optionally \type {xoffset} and \type {yoffset} can
+be specified. These offsets are {\em not} taken into account when calculating
+dimensions. This is different from the offsets (at the \LUA\ end) used in glyphs
+because there the vertical offset is taken into account. Here are some examples
+of offsets in packaged lists:
+
+\startbuffer
+\hbox
+ {test 1}
+\hbox
+ orientation 0
+ yoffset 15pt
+ xoffset 150pt
+ {test}
+\vbox
+ orientation 0
+ {\hbox{test}}
+\vbox
+ orientation 0
+ yoffset -5pt
+ xoffset 130pt
+ {\hbox{test}}
+\vbox
+ orientation 0
+ yoffset 2pt
+ {\hbox{test}}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer
+
+\startlinecorrection[blank]
+ \start \showboxes \bfd \getbuffer \stop
+\stoplinecorrection
+
+In order to demonstrate some hacking, we first define a font that supports
+chinese glyphs:
+
+\startbuffer
+\definefont[NotoCJK][NotoSansCJKtc-Regular*default @ 24pt]
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer \getbuffer
+
+We put some text in a horizontal box; it doesn't show up in verbatim but you
+get the idea nevertheless:
+
+\startbuffer
+\hbox{\NotoCJK 通用规范汉字表}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer
+
+\startlinecorrection[blank]
+ \start \showboxes \getbuffer \stop
+\stoplinecorrection
+
+Let's now rotate this line of text:
+
+\startbuffer[1]
+\hbox orientation 1 {\NotoCJK 通用规范汉字表}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[1]
+
+The result is shown in a while. Because we also need to rotate the glyphs we
+deconstruct the box.
+
+\startbuffer[2]
+\hbox orientation 1 \bgroup \NotoCJK %
+ \vbox {\hbox {通}}%
+ \vbox {\hbox {用}}%
+ \vbox {\hbox {规}}%
+ \vbox {\hbox {test}}%
+ \vbox {\hbox {范}}%
+ \vbox {\hbox {汉}}%
+ \vbox {\hbox {å­—}}%
+ \vbox {\hbox {表}}%
+\egroup
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[2]
+
+Next we rotate the glyphs.
+
+\startbuffer[3]
+\hbox orientation 1 \bgroup \NotoCJK %
+ \vbox orientation 3 {\hbox {通}}%
+ \vbox orientation 3 {\hbox {用}}%
+ \vbox orientation 3 {\hbox {规}}%
+ \vbox orientation 0 {\hbox {test}}%
+ \vbox orientation 3 {\hbox {范}}%
+ \vbox orientation 3 {\hbox {汉}}%
+ \vbox orientation 3 {\hbox {å­—}}%
+ \vbox orientation 3 {\hbox {表}}%
+\egroup
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[3]
+
+This still looks bad so we kick in some offsets and glue:
+
+\startbuffer[4]
+\dontleavehmode\hbox orientation 1 \bgroup \NotoCJK
+ \vbox
+ orientation 0 yoffset -.1ex
+ {\hbox orientation 3 {通}}\hskip.2ex
+ \vbox
+ orientation 0 yoffset -.1ex
+ {\hbox orientation 3 {用}}\hskip.2ex
+ \vbox
+ orientation 0 yoffset -.1ex
+ {\hbox orientation 3 {规}}\hskip.6ex
+ \vbox
+ {\hbox {test}}\hskip.2ex
+ \vbox
+ orientation 0 yoffset -.1ex
+ {\hbox orientation 3 {范}}\hskip.2ex
+ \vbox
+ orientation 0 yoffset -.1ex
+ {\hbox orientation 3 {汉}}\hskip.2ex
+ \vbox
+ orientation 0 yoffset -.1ex
+ {\hbox orientation 3 {å­—}}\hskip.2ex
+ \vbox
+ orientation 0 yoffset -.1ex
+ {\hbox orientation 3 {表}}\hskip.2ex
+\egroup
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[4]
+
+Now we're ready to compare the results
+
+\startlinecorrection[blank]
+ \startcombination[9*1]
+ {\showboxes \getbuffer[1]} {1}
+ {\showboxes \getbuffer[2]} {2}
+ {\showboxes \getbuffer[3]} {3}
+ {\showboxes \getbuffer[4]} {4}
+ {\quad}{}
+ {\getbuffer[1]} {1}
+ {\getbuffer[2]} {2}
+ {\getbuffer[3]} {3}
+ {\getbuffer[4]} {4}
+ \stopcombination
+\stoplinecorrection
+
+This could of course also be done with traditional kerns, raising and|/|or
+lowering and messing around with dimensions. It's just that when manipulating
+such rather complex constructs a little help (and efficiency) makes a difference,
+also at the \LUA\ end. Of course one can argue the result but all is
+programmable in the end.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Considerations}]
+
+Just in case you wonder if using these offsets is better than using normal kerning
+and shifting, in practice offsets are not more efficient. Let's compare the
+alternatives. We go from most to least efficient.
+
+\starttyping
+\setbox\scratchbox\hpack{}
+\boxxoffset\scratchbox\scratchdimen
+\boxyoffset\scratchbox\scratchdimen
+\stoptyping
+
+This sets the offsets and by setting them we also trigger the transform. Scanning
+is fast and so is setting them. One million times expanding this takes (as
+reference) 0.73 seconds on my current machine.
+
+\starttyping
+\setbox\scratchbox\hpack
+ orientation \zerocount
+ xoffset \scratchdimen
+ yoffset \scratchdimen
+ {}
+\stoptyping
+
+This takes a bit more time, 1.11 seconds, because the keywords have to be scanned
+which happens on a token by token base.
+
+\starttyping
+\setbox\scratchbox\hpack{}
+\scratchheight\ht\scratchbox
+\scratchdepth\dp\scratchbox
+\setbox\scratchbox\hpack
+ {\kern\scratchdimen
+ \raise\scratchdimen\box\scratchbox
+ \kern\scratchdimen}
+\ht\scratchbox\scratchheight
+\dp\scratchbox\scratchdepth
+\stoptyping
+
+Now we're up to 1.69 seconds for the million expansions. Not only do we have some
+parsing going on, but we also have assignments and extra packing, which means
+calculations taking place.
+
+\starttyping
+\setbox\scratchbox\hpack{}
+\scratchwidth\wd\scratchbox
+\scratchheight\ht\scratchbox
+\scratchdepth\dp\scratchbox
+\setbox\scratchbox\hpack
+ {\kern\scratchdimen
+ \raise\scratchdimen\box\scratchbox}
+\wd\scratchbox\scratchwidth
+\ht\scratchbox\scratchheight
+\dp\scratchbox\scratchdepth
+\stoptyping
+
+This variant is about as fast, as I measured 1.72 seconds. So, compared to the
+0.73 seconds for the first variant, is this better? Does it help when we look at
+our existing macros and adapt them?
+
+Normally we don't have an empty box and normally we use \type {\hbox} because we
+want the content to be processed. And a million times building a list and
+processing content (which means runs over the list) will make the differences
+in timing become noise. Add to that garbage collection (in \LUA) and memory
+management (in \TEX) and it even becomes unpredictable. Seeing differences of
+a factor two in such timings is no exception.
+
+Another aspect is the parsing. When these commands are wrapped in macros we're
+talking expanding tokens which is pretty fast. When it comes from the input file
+a conversion to tokens has to happen too. And we will never see millions of such
+sequences in a source file.
+
+The backend also plays a role. Handling a kern or shift is more efficient than
+analyzing transforms (and offsets) especially in a \LUA\ variant. But on the
+other hand, we don't have an extra wrapping in a box so that actually saves work.
+
+So, before a \CONTEXT\ user thinks \quotation {Let's update macros and change
+policy.}, just consider staying with proven good old \TEX\ approaches. These
+features are mostly meant for efficient low level manipulations as discussed in
+relation to for instance handling scripts. In the rather large \CONTEXT\ code
+base there are really only a few places where it will make code look nicer, but
+there I don't expect an impact on performance.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Integration}]
+
+How these mechanisms are used depends on ones needs and the macro package used.
+It makes no sense to cook up generic solutions because integration in a macro
+package is too different. But anyhow we'll give an example of some (definitely
+non optimized) \LUA\ magic.
+
+\startbuffer
+\startluacode
+local glyph_id = node.id("glyph")
+local fontdata = fonts.hashes.identifiers -- assumes generic font loader
+
+local function is_vertical(c)
+ -- more ranges matter but this will do here
+ return c >= 0x04E00 and c <= 0x09FFF
+end
+
+function document.go_vertical(boxnumber)
+ local box = tex.getbox(boxnumber)
+ local n = box.list
+ while n do
+ if n.id == glyph_id and is_vertical(n.char) then
+ local o = .2 * fontdata[n.font].parameters.xheight
+ local prev, next = n.prev, n.next
+ n.next, n.prev = nil, nil
+ local l = nodes.new("hlist")
+ l.list = n
+ local w, h, d = n.width, n.height, n.depth
+ if prev then
+ prev.next, l.prev = l, prev
+ else
+ box.list = l
+ end
+ if next then
+ l.next, next.prev = next, l
+ end
+ l.width, l.height, l.depth = h + d + o, w, 0
+ l.orientation = 0x003
+ l.xoffset, l.yoffset = o/2, -o/2
+ l.hoffset, l.doffset = h, d - o
+ n = next
+ else
+ n = n.next
+ end
+ end
+end
+\stopluacode
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer \getbuffer
+
+We will use some other magic that we won't discuss here which relates to handling
+scripts. For Hangul one needs to inject breakpoints and if needed also glue
+between characters. The script environment does this. We also need to bump the
+interline spacing. First we define a regular text helper and an auxiliary box.
+
+\startbuffer[1]
+\unexpanded\def\stripe#1%
+ {\hbox orientation 0 yoffset .2\exheight{\strut #1}}
+
+\newbox\MyVerticalBox
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[1]
+
+Next we fill that box with some mix of text (I have no clue what, as I just
+copied it from some web page).
+
+\startbuffer[2a]
+\setbox\MyVerticalBox\hbox \bgroup
+ \NotoCJK
+ \startscript[hangul]%
+ \dorecurse{20}{通用规范汉字表 \stripe{test #1} }%
+ \unskip % remove last space
+ \stopscript
+\egroup
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[2a]
+
+We then apply the \LUA\ magic to the result:
+
+\startbuffer[3a]
+\ctxlua{document.go_vertical(\number\MyVerticalBox)}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[3a]
+
+and finally assemble the result:
+
+\startbuffer[4a]
+\ruledvbox orientation 1 to \textwidth \bgroup
+ \setupinterlinespace[40pt]
+ \hsize .95\textheight
+ \unhbox\MyVerticalBox
+ \vfill
+\egroup
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[4a]
+
+The result is shown in \in {figure} [fig:verticalmagic-1]. Of course this
+approach is not that user friendly but it just serves as example. In \CONTEXT\ we
+can follow a different route. First we define a new font feature. It is probably
+clear that we need some code elsewhere that does something useful with this
+information, but I will nos show this as it is rather \CONTEXT\ dependent.
+
+\startbuffer[2b]
+\definefontfeature
+ [vertical]
+ [vertical={%
+ orientation=3,%
+ down=.1,%
+ right=.1,%
+ ranges={%
+ cjkcompatibility,%
+ cjkcompatibilityforms,%
+ cjkcompatibilityideographs,%
+ cjkcompatibilityideographssupplement,%
+ cjkradicalssupplement,%
+ % cjkstrokes,%
+ cjksymbolsandpunctuation,%
+ cjkunifiedideographs,%
+ cjkunifiedideographsextensiona,%
+ cjkunifiedideographsextensionb,%
+ cjkunifiedideographsextensionc,%
+ cjkunifiedideographsextensiond,%
+ cjkunifiedideographsextensione,%
+ cjkunifiedideographsextensionf,%
+ }%
+ }]
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[2b]
+
+We apply this feature to a font:
+
+\startbuffer[3b]
+\definefont
+ [NotoCJKvertical]
+ [NotoSansCJKtc-Regular*default,vertical @ 24pt]
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[3b]
+
+\startbuffer[4b]
+\setbox\MyVerticalBox\hbox\bgroup
+ \NotoCJKvertical
+ \startscript[hangul]%
+ \dorecurse{20}{通用规范汉字表 \stripe{test #1} }%
+ \unskip
+ \stopscript
+\egroup
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[4b]
+
+\startbuffer[5b]
+\ruledvbox orientation 1 to \textwidth \bgroup
+ \setupinterlinespace[40pt]
+ \hsize .95\textheight
+ \unhbox\MyVerticalBox
+ \vfill
+\egroup
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[5b]
+
+The result is shown in \in {figure} [fig:verticalmagic-2]. Again this approach is
+not that user friendly but it already is a bit easier.
+
+\startplacefigure[reference=fig:verticalmagic-1,title={Some vertical magic using manipulations.}]
+ \getbuffer[1,2a,3a,4a]
+\stopplacefigure
+
+\startplacefigure[reference=fig:verticalmagic-2,title={Some vertical magic using fonts.}]
+ \getbuffer[1,2b,3b,4b,5b]
+\stopplacefigure
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-evolution.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-evolution.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..730f4cc1b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-evolution.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,373 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-evolution
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+% Yes, music is still evolving in qualitive ways ...
+%
+% Home Is - Jacob Collier with VOCES8
+%
+% and as long as there's interesting new music to run into I keep
+% doing thse kind of things.
+
+\startchapter[title={Evolution}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+The original idea behind \TEX\ is that of a relatively small kernel with (either
+or not system dependent) extensions. One such extension is the \DVI\ backend, and
+later \PDFTEX\ added a \PDF\ backend. Other extensions are \quote {writing to
+files} and \quote {writing to the output medium} using so called specials. This
+extension mechanism permits \TEX\ to support, for instance, color and image
+inclusion.
+
+The \LUATEX\ project started from \PDFTEX, including its extensions like font
+expansion, and combined that with (bi|)|directional typesetting from the, at that
+moment, stable \OMEGA\ variant \ALEPH. During the more than a decade development
+we integrated expansion in a more efficient way and limited directions to the
+four that made sense. The assumption that \UNICODE\ has the future lead to \UTF8
+being used all over the place.
+
+The \LUATEX\ variant opens up the internals using the \LUA\ extension language.
+The idea was (and still is) that instead if adding more and more hard coded
+solutions, one can use \LUA\ to do it on demand. So, for instance \OPENTYPE\
+fonts are supported by providing a font file reader but the implementation of
+features is up to \LUA. From \PDFTEX\ the graphic inclusions were inherited but
+an image and \PDF\ reading library provided a few more possibilities, for
+instance for querying properties. An important integral part of \LUATEX\ is the
+\METAPOST\ library, but apart from that one, the amount of libraries is kept at a
+minimum. That way we're free of dependencies and compilation hassles.
+
+With version 1.0 the functionality became official and with version 1.1 the
+functionality became more of less frozen. The main reason for this is that
+further extensions would violate the principle of using \LUA\ instead of hard
+coding solutions. Another reason is that at some point you have to provide a
+stable machinery for macro packages so that backward as well as forward
+compatibility over a longer period is possible. Also, because one can use \TEX\
+in (unattended) workflows sudden changes become undesirable.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={What next?}]
+
+Does it stop here? We have reached a reasonable stable state with \CONTEXT\
+\MKIV\ and can basically do what we want to do. However, during the more than a
+decade development of this \MKII\ follow up, the idea surfaced that we can go
+more minimal in the engine. Basically we can go back to where \TEX\ started: a
+core plus extension mechanism. What does that mean? First of all, there is the
+very efficient frontend: scanning macros, expanding them and constructing node
+lists, all within a powerful grouping mechanism. There is no reason to reconsider
+that. The core of the interface is also well documented, for instance in the
+\TEX\ book. We added some primitives to \LUATEX, but most of them are of no real
+importance to users; they make more sense to macro package writers.
+
+Original \TEX\ has a \DVI\ backend which is a simple representation of a page:
+characters and rules positioned on some grid. A separate program has to convert
+that into something for a printer. There is a basic extension mechanism that
+permits injection of so called specials that get passed to the external program
+so that for instance an image can be included. Given that \LUATEX\ is mostly used
+to generate \PDF, using so called wide fonts in a \UNICODE\ universe, a \DVI\
+backend is not that useful. In fact, one can then better use the faster \PDFTEX\
+program or just \ETEX\ or \TEX: use the best tool available for the job.
+
+The backend however can be left out and can be implemented in \LUA\ instead. In
+fact, most of the backend related code in \CONTEXT\ doesn't really use the
+\LUATEX\ backend features at all. The backend is only used to convert the page
+stream to a \PDF\ content stream, include images, include fonts and manage low
+level objects. Everything specific to \PDF\ is already done in \LUA. Of course
+this has a performance penalty but given the overhead already present in
+\CONTEXT\ it is bearable.
+
+Alongside the frontend the \METAPOST\ library plays an important role in
+\CONTEXT: integration between \TEX, \METAPOST\ and \LUA\ is pretty tight and a
+unique property of \CONTEXT. But, for instance the font reader library is no
+longer used. Also the interfacing to the \TEX\ Directory Structure was done in
+\LUA, originally for performance reasons as it reduced startup time by more that
+a second. For some of the frontend code (like hyphenation and par building) we
+can kick in \LUA\ variants too but there is not much to gain there. (I know that
+some users use them with success.)
+
+So, traditional \TEX\ can be summarized as:
+
+\starttyping
+tex core + dvi backend + tex extensions
+\stoptyping
+
+where the extension interface provide a few goodies. If we would have to summarize
+\LUATEX\ we could say:
+
+\starttyping
+tex core + dvi & pdf backend + tex extensions + lua callbacks
+\stoptyping
+
+The core interprets the input and does the typesetting. In order to be able to
+typeset \TEX\ only needs the dimensions of characters and information about
+spacing (which in principle are sort of independent) in math mode a few more
+properties are needed, like snippets that make large symbols. In text mode
+ligature and kerning information can be used too. However, in \LUATEX, where
+normally \OPENTYPE\ fonts are used, that information is provided from \LUA. This
+means that one can also think of:
+
+\starttyping
+tex core + basic font data + tex extensions + lua callbacks
+\stoptyping
+
+Compared to regular \TEX\ this is not that different, and it's what \CONTEXT\ can
+do with. So, it will be no surprise that when I wondered what \LUATEX\ 2.0 could
+be that a more minimalistic approach was considered: back to the basics.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Roadmap}]
+
+Before I continue it is good to mention the following. One of the burdens that
+\CONTEXT\ users (and developers) carry is that the outside world likes putting
+labels on \CONTEXT, like \quotation {A macro package depending on \PDFTEX} in a
+time that we supported \DVI\ at the same level using a more of less generic
+driver model. The same is true for \MKIV, e.g.\ \quotation {\CONTEXT\ uses a lot
+of \LUA\ and moves away from \TEX} while in fact we provide a hybrid tool: you
+can use \TEX\ input (which most users do) but also \LUA\ (which can be handy) or
+\XML\ (which some publishers demand and definitely seems to be used by some
+\CONTEXT\ power users). A special one is \quotation {\CONTEXT\ is kind of plain
+\TEX, so you have to program all yourself.} Reality is that \CONTEXT\ is an
+integrated system, where \TEX\ and \METAPOST\ work together to provide a lot of
+integrated functionality. Because of \LUATEX\ development and the relation
+between an updated engine and the beta version of \CONTEXT, the impression can be
+that we have an unstable system. This strategy of parallel adaptation is the only
+way to really test of things work as expected. Because we have a rather fast
+update cycle normally users don't suffer that much from it.
+
+The core of whatever we follow up with is and remains \TEX, just because I like
+it. So, when I talk about a small core, I actually still talk about \TEX. The
+main reason is that it's way easier (and readable) to code some solutions in this
+hybrid fashion. A pure \LUA\ solution is no fun, maybe even a pain, and I have no
+use for it, but a pure \TEX\ solution can be cumbersome too. And \TEX\ input is
+just very convenient and for that one needs a \TEX\ interpreter. I would already
+have dropped out when \TEX\ was not part of the game: an intriguing, puzzling and
+powerful toy. And \METAPOST\ and \LUA\ add even more fun. So, I settle for a mix
+between three interesting languages. And, because I seldom run into professional
+demand for \LUATEX\ related support (or high end, high performance rendering),
+the fun factor has always been the driving force.
+
+All that said, for practical reasons, when we explore a follow up in the
+perspective of \CONTEXT, we will use the working title \LUAMETATEX\ instead.
+\LUAMETATEX\ has the current \LUATEX\ frontend, some \LUA\ libraries, but no
+backend. Gone are the font reader, image inclusion, \DVI\ and \PDF\ backend
+(including font inclusion) and the interface to the \TDS. Can that work? As
+mentioned, the font reader was already not used in \CONTEXT\ for quite a while. An
+alternative page stream builder was also in good working condition in \CONTEXT\
+when \LUATEX\ 1.08 was released and around \LUATEX\ 1.09 image inclusion was
+replaced (\PDF\ inclusion was already accompanied for a while by a \LUA\
+variant). Currently (fall 2018) \CONTEXT\ is able to completely construct the
+\PDF\ file which also meant font inclusion. However, it didn't make much sense to
+release that code yet because after all, there was minimal gain when using it
+with a full blown \LUATEX. Also, switching to this variant involved some runtime
+adaption of code which might confuse users. But above all, it needed more
+testing, and releasing something before an upcoming \TEX Live code freeze is a
+bad idea.
+
+During \LUATEX\ development a few times we got suggestions for additional
+features but merely looking at them already made clear that what works for
+someone in a particular case, can introduce side effects that make (for instance)
+\CONTEXT\ fail. And, how many folks keep \CONTEXT\ in mind? So, when \LUATEX\
+goes into maintenance mode, specific distributions could accept patches outside
+our control, which has the danger that a binary (suggesting to be \LUATEX)
+doesn't work with \CONTEXT. Of course we cannot change something ourselves either
+without looking around. And I'm not even bringing possible negative side effects
+on performance into the discussion here.
+
+When developing \LUATEX\ some ideas were dropped or delayed and these can now be
+explored without the danger of messing up the stable version. It has always been
+relatively easy to adapt \CONTEXT\ to changes so an (at least for now)
+experimental follow up can be dealt with too, but this time the concept of \quote
+{experimental} is really bound to \CONTEXT. When something is found useful (or
+can be improved) it can always (after testing it for a while) be fed back into
+\LUATEX, as long as it doesn't break something. I'll decide on that later.
+
+In the documentation of \TEX, when discussing the extension mechanism, Donald
+Knuth says:
+
+\startquotation
+The goal of a \TEX\ extender should be to minimize alterations to the standard
+parts of the program, and to avoid them completely if possible. He or she should
+also be quite sure that there's no easy way to accomplish the desired goals with
+the standard features that \TEX\ already has. \quotation {Think thrice before
+extending}, because that may save a lot of work, and it will also keep
+incompatible extensions of \TEX\ from proliferating.
+\stopquotation
+
+With the in the next chapters discussed reduction of backend and some frontend
+code, combined with hooks that can trigger callbacks, we try to come close to
+this objective. Now, the last sentence of this quote relates to stability and
+this is also a reason why we enter this new thread: the smaller the core is, the
+less subjected we are to change. Think of this: I haven't used \CONTEXT\ \MKII\
+in over a decade. A \PDFTEX\ format still gets generated but I have no clue if
+the engine has been changed in ways that make some code behave differently (it
+could also be the ecosystem related to that engine), but I assume it's still
+behaving the same. The same has to become true for stock \LUATEX\ and \MKIV\ and
+for \CONTEXT\ it can even become more true with \LUAMETATEX. We'll see.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Experiments}]
+
+This (still sort of) prototype of what \LUAMETATEX\ could be boils down to a much
+smaller binary, and not that much more \LUA\ code on top of what we already have.
+There are no longer dependencies on third party code, apart from \LUA\ (\type
+{pplib} is tuned for \LUATEX\ and permanent part of the code base). Performance
+wise the backend of the experimental version makes a run upto 5\% slower than
+when using a native backend (on processing the \LUATEX\ manual) but history has
+learned that we can gain some of that back in due time. Performance also depends
+a bit on the properties of the document. Interesting is that better control over
+the output showed that \PDF\ output of the mentioned manual was a bit smaller
+(but that might change). \footnote {In the meantime the experimental version can
+process the \LUATEX\ manual 5\endash10\% faster and the result is still smaller.}
+
+The experiments actually started already years ago with no longer using the font
+loader. It sort of went this way:
+
+\startitemize
+\startitem
+ Stepwise \CONTEXT\ functionality started using a combination of \TEX\ and
+ \LUA\ code and we got an idea of what was needed. The most demanding part
+ was support for fonts.
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ Font handling was done in \LUA\ because it's flexible which is what \TEX ies
+ are accustomed to. The \OPENTYPE\ and \PDF\ standards would not be called
+ standards if some implementation was impossible and so far we're ok. (Some
+ more script support will be provided in future versions.)
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ We stopped using the fontforge font loader but use one written in \LUA\
+ instead. One reason for this was that when variable fonts showed up we wanted
+ to support it in \CONTEXT\ right from the start (not that there has been much
+ demand). The same is true for fonts using color (like emoji). Also, fighting
+ the built|-|in \FONTFORGE\ heuristics was hard.
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ The (large and dependent on \CPLUSPLUS) poppler library used for \PDF\
+ embedding has been replaced by a small lightweight library in pure \CCODE.
+ This was triggered at a chat during a bacho\TEX\ meeting.
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ The hard coded \PDF\ inclusion can be swapped with a \LUA\ based one so that
+ we can for instance filter the page stream. We already had a hybrid solution
+ in \CONTEXT\ anyway for other reasons (merging annotations, layers,
+ bookmarks, etc.).
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ The page stream constructor got a (shipout and xforms) by a \LUA\ variant,
+ but I decided not to make that an independent option in stock \LUATEX\ with
+ \CONTEXT\ \MKIV, although for a while I had the option \type {--lmtx} for
+ activating that experimental code.
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ Then of course bitmap image inclusion had to be done by \LUA\ code, in order
+ to see if we can get rid of another external dependency as some of these
+ libraries get frequent updates while in practice we only use a very small
+ subset of functionality. Indeed this was possible. \footnote {I have a pure
+ \LUA\ parser for \PDF\ too, so at some point that might get included in the
+ \CONTEXT\ code base.}
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ With some effort (deciphering specs and such) the font inclusion could also
+ be done by a \LUA. This was made possible by the fact that we already had
+ support for variable fonts. More tricks are possible and will be explored.
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ Finally the \PDF\ file construction and \PDF\ object management had to be
+ implemented. This was actually the easiest part.
+\stopitem
+\stopitemize
+
+Performance wise the \LUA\ font loader is faster than the built in one. The same
+is true for \PDF\ inclusion but in practice that is unnoticeable. Bitmap
+inclusion is currently slower for interlaced images (seldom used in print) and
+just as efficient for other types. The page stream constructor is definitely
+slower but this is compensated by the faster font inclusion and \PDF\ file
+construction. Of course it all depends on the kind of content, but these are the
+observation as of fall 2018. Anyway, they were enough reason to continue this
+experiment.
+
+One thing to keep in mind is that the smaller the binary and the less code paths
+we have, the better future performance might be. Computers are not becoming much
+faster for single thread processes like \TEX, so the less we jump around code
+space (memory) the better it probably is for \CPU\ caching (as caches are not
+growing much either).
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Conclusion}]
+
+Normally when writing this kind of code I make sure that I can enable such new
+mechanisms on top of others but at some point one has to decide how to really
+integrate them. For instance, we can do font inclusion independent of \PDF\
+generation or page stream construction independent of \PDF\ generation and|/|or
+font inclusion but in the end that doesn't make sense and makes the code base a
+bit of a mess. So, this is how it will go.
+
+Stock \LUATEX\ with \MKIV\ will use the normal backend but probably there might
+be an option to overload the built|-|in image inclusion so that one can avoid the
+abortion of a run in case of problematic images. Complete \PDF\ file
+construction, which then also includes page stream construction, font embedding
+and object management might be available as option for \MKIV\ with \LUATEX\ 1.10
+(for a while) but will be default when using \LUAMETATEX. When we move on \LMTX\
+support might evolve in more sophisticated trickery. \footnote {A few months
+later I decided that this made no sense, and that it was cleaner to just leave
+that approach for \LMTX\ only. So, now both engines use different code
+exclusively.}
+
+Once tested a bit in real documents experimental code will end up in the
+distribution. That code can then be turned into production code (read: cleaned up
+and reshuffled a bit). We can streamline the engine code base: strip the
+components that are not needed any more, remove some obsolete features, optimize
+the code, strip some functions from \LUA\ libraries, rename some helpers, and
+finally add some documentation. There are some plans to extend \METAPOST\ so also
+things can get added. Concerning the \LUA\ interface it means that \type
+{slunicode} is removed, the embedded socket related \LUA\ code goes external (but
+the library stays), the font loader gets removed, the \type {img} library goes
+away, no longer \PNG\ libraries are embedded, synctex is stripped out (but the
+fields in nodes stay or get extended). \footnote {Much later I also decided to
+remove the zip file reader library.} The resulting binary will be much smaller
+and the code base more independent and smaller too. In the process \LUAJIT\
+support might be dropped as well, simply because it no longer is in sync with
+stock \LUA, but that also depends on how complex long term maintenance becomes.
+\footnote {As we will see in following chapters, indeed support for \LUAJIT\ has
+been dropped while \LUA\ got upgraded to 5.4.}
+
+Because such a stripped down binary is no longer what got presented as \LUATEX\
+version~1, it will basically become \LUATEX\ version 2, but then we have the
+problem that its binary name clashes with the original. This is why it will be
+run as \typ {luametatex}. For \CONTEXT\ it's not that relevant as it will run on
+both \LUATEX\ 1.10 and its lean and mean successor. I might also provide a plain
+\TEX\ (read: generic) version but that is to be decided because it probably
+doesn't make much sense to spend time on it. As usual we will test this within
+the \CONTEXT\ beta program. The good thing is that it doesn't interact with
+\LUATEX, so that other macro packages are not affected. Another side effect can
+be that we uncover issues with \LUATEX\ 1.10 and that we can experiment with some
+improvements that we feed back into the parent.
+
+At the \CONTEXT\ end of this there are some plans to extend the export, maybe
+improve already present \PDF\ tagging (if found useful), add some more input
+(xml) manipulations, and maybe extend (virtual) font handling a bit, now that we
+no longer are bound to the currently used packet model. Contrary to what one
+might expect this is not really dependent on the engine.
+
+How do we proceed? As with the transition from \MKII\ to \MKIV, it will all
+happen stepwise. This means that for a while the code base will be a bit hybrid
+but at some point it might be partially split to make things cleaner, not that I
+expect many fundamental differences (certainly not in the front|-|end). This
+dualistic approach means more work but also makes that we keep a working
+\CONTEXT. We also need to keep an eye on for instance generic commands as used in
+tikz: we can't drop them so we emulate them (so far with success). As the time of
+this writing, begin November 2018, the \CONTEXT\ test suite can be processed in
+\LMTX\ mode without problems so I'm confident that it will work out ok. The next
+chapter describes the results of how we did the above in more detail.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-feedback.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-feedback.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..d77ef302c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-feedback.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,306 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-feedback
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\logo [AMD] {AMD}
+\logo [INTEL] {Intel}
+
+\startchapter[title={Feedback}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+As \LUATEX\ 1.10 is basically frozen in terms of functionality not much can or
+will be added. But it made sense to some of the (small) improvements that were
+made in \LUAMETATEX\ got feedback to \LUATEX\ (or will be at some point). Because
+we are also experimenting, there can be a delay. \footnote {Later chapters
+mention a few more possible extensions.}
+
+Of course the question is \quotation {Should we feedback (retrofit) at all?}. I'm
+still not sure about it. There should be a good reason to do it because it can
+harm stability of the original. At some point \CONTEXT\ can default to the follow
+up in which case testing the original becomes more difficult for specific
+features. I never ran into (useful) demands for extensions so retrofit can have a
+low priority.
+
+Another factor is that when distributions start adding stuff to stock \LUATEX\ on
+top of what is our default (after all isn't that what happens with open source
+projects), it makes not much sense to look back and retrofit new functionality,
+because there is not much change that we will use such a variant ourselves and we
+could introduce errors in the process. Providing bloatware is not our objective.
+
+Related to this is the question if we should always go into \LMTX\ mode and I'm
+no longer sure if we shouldn't do that. We can use plain \TEX\ with the regular
+\LUATEX\ backend and just forget about some generic framework. The danger of it
+backfiring is just too large. It is a waste of time and will keep us back.
+
+One reason for a dual mode is that it made possible some timings in order to
+determine bottlenecks. I did some rough tests and that is enough to get the
+picture. Take this document:
+
+\starttyping
+\starttext
+ \dorecurse
+ {1000}
+ {\samplefile{sapolsky} {\bf\samplefile{sapolsky}}\par}
+\stoptext
+\stoptyping
+
+Using regular \LUATEX\ this takes on an \INTEL\ i7-3840 mobile processor about
+9.3 seconds while \LUAMETATEX\ needs 11.2 seconds, so we loose time. This is
+because we have only text so the native backend wins on piping out the page
+stream. On my domotica fitlet with an low power \AMD\ A10 processor running
+\LINUX\ the runtime goes from 25.4 seconds to 27.8 seconds, so again a slow down.
+
+But this is not a typical document! Add a bit more spice and the numbers reverse.
+For processing the \LUATEX\ manual stock \LUATEX\ takes 12.6 seconds on the
+\INTEL\ and \LUAMETATEX\ needs 12.4 seconds. On the \AMD\ runtime goes from 35.1
+seconds down to 32.8 seconds. So here we win some.
+
+These are rough timings and a few weeks later we go these timings on the \INTEL:
+\footnote {On the more modern gaming laptop of a nephew we measured half these
+numbers.}
+
+\starttabulate[|l|c|c|c|]
+\BC engine \BC backend \BC runtime \BC \LUAJIT\ vm \BC \NR
+\HL
+\NC \LUATEX\ 1.10 \NC normal \NC 12.4 \NC 9.9 \NC \NR
+\NC \LUATEX\ 1.10 \NC lmtx \NC 12.7 \NC 9.8 \NC \NR
+\NC \LUAMETATEX\ 2.00 \NC lmtx \NC 12.2 \NC 9.3 \NC \NR
+\stoptabulate
+
+Because we have more \LUA\ code active, we pay a price with \LMTX\ but not on
+\LUAMETATEX\ (as of now, later we will see a performance bump). The gain when
+using the \LUAJIT\ virtual machine is more noticeable. And, there is probably
+some more to gain. In case you wonder why this matters: think of the low power
+\AMD\ processor. When we have to replace computers we can consider using low
+power ones, with weaker processors, less memory, and less cache. For the record:
+I use cross compiled \MINGW\ binaries on windows (they are quite a bit faster
+than native windows binaries). And the binaries are less than 3MB (small files
+and less resources are nice when running on remote file systems).
+
+This all indicates that we have no real reason to stick to a mixed approach: if we
+want we can just switch to always \LMTX\ and never look back.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Expressions}]
+
+When writing an article that involved using a \type {\numexpr} it struck me that
+we should have a proper integer division. Just compare these:
+
+\startbuffer[1]
+\the\numexpr 13/2\relax
+\stopbuffer
+
+\startbuffer[2]
+\scratchcounter13 \divide\scratchcounter 2 \the\scratchcounter
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[1]
+
+and
+
+\typebuffer[2]
+
+This gives {\bf \inlinebuffer[1]} and {\bf \inlinebuffer[2]}. We now also have:
+
+\startbuffer[3]
+\the\numexpr 13:2\relax
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer[3]
+
+which gives {\bf \inlinebuffer[3]}. I considered using a double slash (as in
+\LUA) but using a colon is easier. Of course those who make that an active
+character are probably toast. This is an easy patch but it's hard to predict
+possible side effects outside \CONTEXT.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Looking ahead}]
+
+Sometimes you want to look ahead and act upon the presence of a specific
+character. Implementing that in pure \TEX\ primitives is no big deal, but
+especially when you want to ignore leading spaces it leads to rather verbose code
+when tracing is enabled. Out of curiosity I played with a primitive that can help
+us out. Although there is also a performance gain, in practice one will not
+notice that unless such a feature is used millions of times, but in that case the
+gain is noise compared to the rest of the run.
+
+\startbuffer
+\def\foo{\futureexpand/\fooyes\foonop}
+\def\fooyes/#1/#2{[#1:#2]}
+\def\foonop #1{(#1)}
+
+\foo/yes/{one}\quad
+\foo {two}
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer
+
+We either expand \type {\fooyes} or \type {\foonop}, depending on the presence
+of a \type {/} after \type {\foo}. So, the result is:
+
+{\tttf\getbuffer}
+
+The next examples demonstrates two variants. The second one doesn't inject spaces
+back into the stream.
+
+\startbuffer
+\def\f<{\futureexpand/\y\n}
+\def\y/#1/{#1}
+\def\n {}
+
+(\f</yes/>)\quad
+(\f< >)
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer
+
+Watch the space in the \type {\n} case.
+
+{\tttf\getbuffer}
+
+\startbuffer
+\def\f<{\futureexpandis/\y\n}
+\def\y/#1/{#1}
+\def\n {}
+
+(\f</yes/>)\quad
+(\f< >)
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer
+
+This time the space is not injected (\type{is} is short for ignore spaces).
+
+{\tttf\getbuffer}
+
+I will probably use this one in \CONTEXT, but as said, not for performance
+reasons but because it reduces code and therefore tracing. \footnote {In the
+\CONTEXT\ code base there are several places where less code takes precedence
+over efficiency. But in all cases extensive tests were done to see if it made a
+dent in practical performance.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Checking numbers an dimensions}]
+
+The \CONTEXT\ user interface often uses parameters that take keywords as well as
+a number or dimension. In practice it has never been an issue to check for that but
+there are a few cases where we'd like to be a bit more flexible.
+
+\startbuffer
+\doifelsenumber{123999999999999999}YN
+\doifelsenumber {123}YN
+\doifelsenumber {A}YN
+\doifelsenumber {\char123}YN
+\doifelsenumber {\toks123}YN
+\doifelsenumber{123\scratchcounter}YN
+
+\doifelsedimension{123999999999999999pt}YN
+\doifelsedimension {123pt}YN
+\doifelsedimension {A}YN
+\doifelsedimension {\char123}YN
+\doifelsedimension {\toks123}YN
+\doifelsedimension {123\scratchdimen}YN
+\stopbuffer
+
+\typebuffer
+
+This typesets:
+
+\startpacked
+\getbuffer
+\stoppacked
+
+especially the \type {123\scratch...} checking is tricky. For that reason we now
+have two new built|-|in checkers. Again, performance is not one of the arguments,
+because these checks are not much faster than what we have already, they are just
+a bit more robust for weird cases. A possible use of the primitives is:
+
+\starttyping
+\ifdimen123\or
+ yes
+\else % or \or
+ no
+\fi
+\stoptyping
+
+and:
+
+\starttyping
+\ifnumber123\or
+ yes
+\else % or \or
+ no
+\fi
+\stoptyping
+
+When a valid number or dimension is gobbled, the value pushed in the branches
+is~1, and when an error is encountered the value~2 is pushed. Deep down we have
+just an \type {\ifcase} and by not using the value zero we nicely skip the
+invalid code. It might look a bit weird but we need a sentinel for the number
+(and the \type {\or} serves as such, without introducing strange new constructs.
+We'll see if we keep it (as testing must prove its usefulness).
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Comparing tokens}]
+
+The following code compares (for instance) two strings:
+
+\starttyping
+\def\thisorthat#1#2%
+ {\edef\one{#1}
+ \edef\two{#2}
+ \ifx\one\two
+ this%
+ \else
+ that%
+ \fi}
+
+\thisorthat{foo}{bar}
+\stoptyping
+
+but this looks a bit cleaner (in a trace):
+
+\starttyping
+\def\thisorthat#1#2%
+ {\iftok{#1}{#2}%
+ this%
+ \else
+ that%
+ \fi}
+
+\thisorthat{foo}{bar}
+\stoptyping
+
+It's not that much faster (unless one uses it a real lot) as similar things have
+to happen to get the test to work. But the nice things of this checker is that it
+works with token registers and macros too. But in order use it in relevant places
+in \CONTEXT\ I would have to adapt quite some code. This could actually be a
+reason for a \MKIV\ freeze and \LMTX\ code base (as with \MKII). The question is:
+does it pay off?
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
+
+% \newbox\mybox \setbox\mybox\ruledhbox{\blackrule[width=3cm,height=1cm]}
+
+% \dontleavehmode\copy\mybox\quad \ruledhbox{\copy\mybox} \blank[3*line]
+% \boxxmove\mybox 10pt
+% \dontleavehmode\copy\mybox\quad \ruledhbox{\copy\mybox} \blank[3*line]
+% \wd\mybox\dimexpr\wd\mybox+10pt\relax
+% \dontleavehmode\copy\mybox\quad \ruledhbox{\copy\mybox} \blank[3*line]
+% \boxymove\mybox 10pt
+% \dontleavehmode\copy\mybox\quad \ruledhbox{\copy\mybox} \blank[3*line]
+% \ht\mybox\dimexpr\ht\mybox+10pt\relax
+% \dontleavehmode\copy\mybox\quad \ruledhbox{\copy\mybox} \blank[3*line]
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-introduction.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-introduction.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..c4a5920bd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-introduction.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,104 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-introduction
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Introduction}]
+
+This document, the fifth in a series, describes the follow up project on
+\CONTEXT\ \MKIV\ & \LUATEX\ which carries the working title \CONTEXT\ \LMTX. This
+four letter acronym represents \LUA, \METAPOST\ and \TEX, and if you want you can
+see the last character representing \XML, as that has been an integral part of
+\CONTEXT\ for a long time. But the \quote {x} can also be found in \quote
+{experimental}, \quote {extreme}, \quote {experience} and \quote {extravagant},
+so take your choice.
+
+Of course \CONTEXT\ is and will be a typesetting system using the \TEX\ language
+and typesetting core, but a rather substantial amount of the functionality is a
+hybrid of \TEX\ macros and \LUA\ code. The built|-|in graphic support is driven
+by \METAPOST, but there we also use \LUA\ as an extension language. The \LUA\
+machinery is used for alternative input and handling data too. The same is true
+for \XML, \SQL, \CSV, \JSON, etc.
+
+The output from \CONTEXT\ is normally \PDF\ and \MKIV\ doesn't even enable \DVI\
+output. Mid 2018 I started experimenting with a backend that no longer used the
+one provided by the engine. After all, we only used page stream building, font
+embedding and bitmap inclusion and all other features were always done in \LUA.
+The experiments also concerned a \METAPOST\ and \LUA\ backend. Those familiar
+with \CONTEXT\ know that there is already an export feature which till now runs
+in parallel with the \CONTEXT\ \PDF\ backend (it started as a kind of joke but in
+the end was seen as relevant and kept and maybe so some point I will rewrite that
+code).
+
+The idea behind \CONTEXT\ \LMTX\ is that we will use a minimalist engine. Being
+minimalist also means that probably only \CONTEXT\ will use it and therefore no
+other package will be affected by further experiments, although at some point a
+sort of general low level layer might be provided. The frontend is mostly the
+same as \LUATEX\ 1.1 but the backend and related code is gone and|/|or different.
+Libraries have (and are) being cleaned up and reorganized too. At least for a
+while, \CONTEXT\ will work on \LUATEX\ 1.1 (stable) as well as its (experimental)
+follow up, where the follow up will evolve over a few years and be tested in the
+usual \CONTEXT\ (garden) beta setting. The next chapters will explain this in
+more detail.
+
+Just to be clear I repeat: \LUATEX\ 1.1 will be supported by \CONTEXT\ and
+maintained as usual, including binaries generated on the \CONTEXT\ garden. We've
+invested many years in it and it serves its purpose well, but our experiments
+will happen in its follow up, so that it doesn't affect stable workflows. Of
+course there have been (and probably are) bugs in \LUATEX\ but the engine could
+be used pretty well right from the start with \CONTEXT. The same will be true for
+the follow up.
+
+One of the ideas of the follow up is to provide a combination of a stable engine
+independent of libraries with a relative simple compilation setup and a macro
+package that has proven to exploit a mix of \TEX, \METAPOST\ and \LUA. As a side
+effect I can explore some postponed ideas. Of course there can be valid reasons
+to move to the successor sooner. In that case we might create a stable snapshot
+of \MKIV\ as was done with \MKII. As to be expected in \CONTEXT, the user
+interfaces won't change nor will the functionality, but there will be two code
+paths, one for \MKIV\ and one for \LMTX. There will also be new functionality in
+\CONTEXT\ that is only available in \LMTX. So, eventually we expect all users to
+migrate.
+
+In the beginning of december 2018 most of the work was done and users involved in
+development could start testing. By the end of the year a reasonable stable state
+was reached. In 2019 the code base was further overhauled and libraries got
+upgraded. The code base became smaller and compilation easier, smoother and much
+faster. Eventually the source code (now some 11MB uncompressed and 3MB
+compressed) will be part of the \CONTEXT\ distribution, so that we have a
+complete package (also in the archival sense).
+
+The next chapters discuss the process and choices that were made. The chapters
+were written in order so later chapters can amend earlier ones. Consider it a
+history, and one cannot cheat by patching history. In some cases footnotes were
+added to earlier chapters when writing later ones. It's not a manual! Reported
+typos (for sure there are many) will be fixed but changes in later versions of
+the follow discussed here will not end up in this document.
+
+This document is dedicated to Wolfgang Schuster, who has been instrumental in the
+transition from \MKII\ to \MKIV, and often baffles me with his knowledge of the
+(even obscure bits) of the \CONTEXT\ internals. Without him checking the code
+base, fundamental changes like those that are and might get introduced in this
+follow up are impossible.
+
+I want to thank Alan Braslau who accompanies me on this journey and patiently
+compiles the lot for some platforms. He, Thomas Schmitz and Aditya Mahajan are
+examples of power users who also are early adopters of something new like this
+and are willing to take the risks. And of course there is Mojca Miklavec without
+whose enthusiasm and optimism developments like this would never take place. In
+the meantime Luigi Scarso made sure that the (frozen) \LUATEX\ code base served
+existing users. It is hard to tell how users experience the transition: there are
+no that many issues reported which can be a good or bad sign. We will see.
+
+\blank[2*big]
+
+\startlines
+Hans Hagen
+PRAGMA ADE, Hasselt NL
+August 2018\enspace\endash\enspace May 2019
+\stoplines
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-logging.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-logging.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..e82df3c04
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-logging.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-logging
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Logging}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+In \CONTEXT\ we have quite some logging enabled by default and even more when
+you enable trackers. Most logging is done with \LUA, which is quite efficient.
+Information from the \TEX\ machinery follows a different path and one reason
+for that is that it often happens on a character (or small strings) basis.
+
+The runtime of a job is, in spite of what one may expect, also dependent on the
+speed of the console: what fonts are used (there can be font features being
+applied), is the output buffered, and with what delays, how large is the history,
+etc. When more complex fonts arrived I found out that on \OSX\ generating a
+format was impacted by seconds. When on \MSWINDOWS\ the normal console was used
+its character|-|by|-|character flushing made it sluggish, and on \LINUX\ it
+depended on the font, kind of console, delays, etc. Lucky me, the \SCITE\ editors
+log pane beats them all. \footnote {I use the \LINUX\ subsystem on \MSWINDOWS\
+for cross compiling \LUATEX, and with the advent of that subsystem the regular
+console was also rewritten so most of the delays are gone now.}
+
+At the \TEX\ end a few decades of coding has made the system also complex.
+\footnote {Interfaces like that are only partly defined by \TEX\ and left to the
+implementation.} Each string goes through a mechanism that checks with line
+ending to apply and where to cut off lines exceeding a preset maximum length,
+where \LUATEX\ also needs to take \UTF\ into account. Some characters can
+(optionally) be escaped with \type {^^} and occasionally the line length gets
+reset by explicit newline commands.
+
+In \CONTEXT\ already for a long time we always used an (at least) 10K line length
+and disabled output escaping. We have consoles that can handle long lines and
+live in an \UTF\ world so escaping makes no sense. And, when \OPENTYPE\ features
+get applied random line breaks can interfere badly. Just in case one wonders what
+happens with so called \type{null} characters: as all goes through \CCODE\
+anyway, such a character just terminates a string. Therefore the line length
+limitations have been removed and the line|-|ending substitution be optimized. In
+principle this gives simpler codes and less overhead.
+
+The log is not always compatible with \LUATEX. For instance we output more details
+about node lists. This is natural because we have more subtypes and these can
+provide additional information (clues) when debugging \TEX\ code.
+
+In \LUATEX\ the error handling is already such that some can be delegated to
+\LUA, and later I will look into more isolation. But, error handling is quite
+interwoven in the code and I don't want to mess up the original concept too much.
+\footnote {Indeed the error handling was redone in such a way that we now have an
+even better isolation.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-lua.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-lua.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..f0f3350a3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-lua.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,151 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-lua
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={\LUA}]
+
+\startsection[title={Move to 5.4}]
+
+Another experiment concerned testing \LUA\ 5.4 which looks like a minor update in
+terms of new functionality but has some consequences. By now the old module model
+is even more deprecated and compatibility mode no longer makes much sense. As a
+consequence we now need to adapt the way libraries are loaded (and we use global
+ones) and a few other low level calls had to be adapted. This is no real issue
+and once that was done, I found out that the bit32 module was even more obsolete
+so I decided to get rid of it. We already have a bit32 replacement in \CONTEXT\
+so I had to enable that. As \CONTEXT\ doesn't need compatibility mode it was no
+problem to drop that too.
+
+The biggest changes in 5.4 are under the hood: some optimized byte code and a new
+generational garbage collector. I did a few runs and a 12.4 seconds run on the
+manual now dropped to around 12.1 and given that we spend (probably) more than
+half the time in \LUA\ that means some 5\% gain in performance. This is still
+more than the 9.6 seconds that \LUAJIT\ needs but it looks like every \LUA\
+release gains a bit and I'm pretty sure that there is more to gain. \footnote {In
+the meantime there are experiments in 5.4 with \type {<const>} directives which
+might have advantages.}
+
+An interesting experiment was to disable the automatic string to number
+conversion when a number is expected but a string is needed. So far I only had to
+adapt two lines of code in the in the meantime considerable amount of \LUA\ code
+that comes with \CONTEXT.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={No more \LUAJIT}]
+
+One thing I had to consider was the future of \LUAJIT. This project is sort of
+stalled and will not follow \LUA\ development. Now, to some extend we can deal
+with this but with the faster \LUA\ 5.4 around the corner, the limitations of
+\LUAJIT\ with respect to loading large tables, as well as the fact that we need a
+patched hash function to get an advantage over regular \LUA\ anyway, it makes
+sense to drop it in \LUAMETATEX. After discussing this with Alan, who crunched
+numbers in order to make impressive graphics with \METAPOST, we came to the
+conclusion that we should not overestimate the benefits. There is still a gain
+but removing the need to support both could also makes it possible to improve
+existing code (although one should not expect too much from that; it's more a
+matter of convenience for me). Also, for as long as have \LUAJITTEX\ that is
+still an option when one has to squeeze out every second.
+
+A valid question is if ditching \LUAJIT\ will harm users. The answer to this
+depends on the kind of documents that you process. Given decent programming, you
+can gain quite a bit of runtime, but on the average the difference is not that
+large. There is for instance always the overhead of callbacks and crossing the so
+called \CCODE\ boundary that has an impact.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Performance}]
+
+At the time of writing this Thomas Schmitz was wondering if there was a
+significant difference in runtime between the table mechanisms and especially
+natural tables and extreme tables. Some test demonstrated that extreme tables
+were best for his case. That case concerned generating about 400 pages of tables
+from \XML\ files, including some juggling of data in \LUA. The bottleneck in that
+document can be roughly simulated with the following test. We assume one pass
+over the table but in practice there are upto four, but only the last one has
+frames. So, the test concerns 80.000 (400 pages with 40 rows of 5 columns) calls
+to \type {\framed}.
+
+% 400 pages : 5 cells * 40 rows = 80000 framed
+
+\starttyping
+1 \hpack{\framed {oeps}}
+2 \hpack{\framed[frame=off] {oeps}}
+3 \setupframed[frame=off] \hpack{\framed {oeps}}
+4 \hpack{\framed[frame=on] {oeps}}
+5 \setupframed[frame=on] \hpack{\framed {oeps}}
+6 \hpack{\framed[frame=closed]{oeps}}
+7 \setupframed[frame=closed] \hpack{\framed {oeps}}
+\stoptyping
+
+\starttabulate[|c|c|c|c|]
+\HL
+\BC sample \BC luatex & mkiv \BC luajittex & mkiv \BC luametatex & lmtx \BC \NR
+\HL
+\NC 1 \NC 17.3 \NC 16.8 \NC 13.5 \NC \NR
+\NC 2 \NC 17.8 \NC 17.2 \NC 14.0 \NC \NR
+\NC 3 \NC 17.3 \NC 16.8 \NC 13.3 \NC \NR
+\NC 4 \NC 17.9 \NC 17.4 \NC 13.7 \NC \NR
+\NC 5 \NC 17.4 \NC 17.1 \NC 13.3 \NC \NR
+\NC 6 \NC 17.4 \NC 16.8 \NC 12.9 \NC \NR
+\NC 7 \NC 16.4 \NC 16.0 \NC 12.6 \NC \NR
+\HL
+\stoptabulate
+
+Even if we add the usual .1 second interval around these values it will be clear
+that we gain enough not to worry about the loss of \LUAJIT, also because the gain
+is not in the \LUA\ part only. A nice consequence of this is that when we replace
+the \CPU's in a server with low power ones that perform 25\% less, we can
+compensate that by using \LMTX. \footnote {There's still room for improvement,
+because mid July 2019 we're at 12.9, 13.2, 12.9, 13.5, 13.0, 12.5 and 12.2
+seconds or less. But don't expect too many miracles.}
+
+When wrapping this up, the \LUATEX\ manual processed with \LMTX\ took slightly
+less than 11.9 seconds, compared to a normal run of 12.6 seconds, so we're
+gaining some there too. And just after I wrote this we went down to 11.7 seconds
+by (as experiment) changing the \LUA\ virtual machine dispatcher, so there is
+still some to gain. In the energy saving fitlet with small amd processor
+processing the manual with stock \LUATEX\ takes about 37 seconds, but 33.5 with
+\LMTX\ so here also we're not off worse.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Modules}]
+
+Right from the start \LUATEX\ had some extra libraries linked in: \type {md5}
+(for hashing), \type {lfs} (for accessing file properties), \type {slunicode}
+(for basic \UTF\ handling), \type {gzip} and \type {zlib} (for zipping files and
+streams), \type {zip} (for accessing zip files) and \type {socket} (for
+communicating other than with files).
+
+In \LUAMETATEX\ the not so useful \type {slunicode} library was removed pretty
+early but the others stayed around. The more backend specific \type {img} and
+\type {pdf} libraries went away too, as did the (already not used) \type
+{fontloader} library. The \type {kpse} library is also gone, as we do those
+things in \LUA. The \type {epdf} library was kept. A couple of libraries were
+added, like \type {sha2}, \type {basexx}, and \type {flate}, plus a few handy
+helper libraries that are still experimental and therefore not mentioned here.
+
+The \type {flate} library is also an experiment but will replace the \type {gzip}
+and \type {zlib} libraries. Currently these use \type {libz} but \type
+{libdeflate} will be the low level replacement once it support streams and is
+already used for \type {flate}. The \type {md5} library has been redone using
+utility code \type {pplib}, as \type {sha2} does. The type {basexx} library also
+falls back on utility code form \type {pplib} (that code is actually
+independent).
+
+The \type {lfs} code has been replaced by a variant that omits features not
+common to the platforms and with a iterator that permits much faster directory
+scans and has a few more helpers. It is not compatible but we kept the name
+because of legacy usage. I might strip the socket code to what is actually used,
+but on the other hand: don't touch what works well. The original code doesn't
+change that much anyway.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-mp.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-mp.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..22e8e8356
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-mp.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,166 @@
+% language=us
+
+\registerctxluafile{mlib-scn}{}
+
+\startcomponent followingup-mp
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={\METAPOST}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+Relatively late in the followup I started wondering about what to do with \MPLIB.
+Alan Braslau is working on the \type {luapost} module and we discuss handy
+extensions written in \LUA\ and \METAPOST\ code but who knows what more is
+needed. Some ideas were put on delay but it looked like a good moment to pick up
+on them. One problem is that when we play with the \MPLIB\ code itself in
+\LUAMETATEX, the question is how to keep in sync with the official library. In
+this chapter I'll discuss both: keeping up with the official code, and keeping
+ahead with ideas.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={The code base}]
+
+The \MPLIB\ code is written in \CWEB\ and lives in files with the suffix \type
+{w}. These files need to be converted to \type {c} and \type {h} files, something
+that is done with the \type {ctangle} program. To avoid that dependency I just
+took the \CCODE\ files from \LUATEX, but I had to apply a few patches (to get rid
+of dependencies). Now, it is a fact that \METAPOST\ doesn't really develop fast and
+in principle a diff could identify the changes easily. So, why shouldn't I also
+start experimenting with \MPLIB\ itself in the follow up? It's easy to merge
+future changes (in both directions).
+
+The first thing I wrote was a \type {w-to-c} script. This was not that hard given
+that I already had written lexers. After a first prototype worked out well, I
+redid the code a bit (so that in the future I can also implement support for
+change files for instance). A complication was that I found out that the regular
+\CWEB\ converter messes around a bit with the code. So, I had to write another
+script to mimmick that to the level that I could compare the results. For
+example, spaces are removed before and after operators and all leading space gets
+removed too. When I got the same output I could get rid of that code and output
+what I want. For instance I'd like to keep the spacing the same because compilers
+can warn about some issues, like missing \type {;} and misleading indentation in
+simple \type {if} and \type {while} constructs where braces are omitted.
+\footnote {This is no problem in for instance \PASCAL\ where we always have a
+\type {begin} and \type {end}.} One can argue that this is not important, but if
+not, then why enable warnings at all. I had to fix half a dozen places in the
+\type {w} file to make the compiler happy, so the price was small.
+
+Once I had a more or less instantaneous conversion \footnote {Conversion of the
+\type {w} files involved took just over half a second at that time, currently it
+takes just over a quarter of a second, on a relatively old machine that is.} I
+got the same feeling as with the rest of the code: experimenting became
+convenient due to the fast edit|-|compile cycle. So, with al this covered I could
+do what I always had wanted to do: remove traces of the backends (including the
+full \POSTSCRIPT\ one), because they are actually to be plug|-|ins, and also get
+rid of internal font handling, which is bound to \TYPEONE\ (rendering) and small
+size \TFM\ (generating). With respect to that export: I wonder if anyone used
+that these days because even the Gust font project always had their own tool
+chain alongside \METAPOST. I could also void the hacks needed to trick the
+library in not being dependent of \type {png.h} and \type {zlib.h} headers, for
+which I had to use dummies. \footnote {The converter can load a file with patches
+to be applied but by now there are no patches.}
+
+It took a few days scripting the converter (most time went into getting identical
+output in order to check the converter which was later dropped), a few days
+stripping unused code, another day cleaning up the remaining code and then I
+could start playing with some new extensions. The binary has shrunk with 200KB
+and the whole \LUAMETATEX\ code base in compressed \type {tar.xz} format is now
+below 1.8MB while before it was above 2MB. Not that it matters much, but it was
+an nice side effect. \footnote {Size matters as we want to code to end up in the
+\CONTEXT\ distribution. It might grow a bit as side effect of adding some more
+features to \MPLIB.}
+
+What new extensions would show up was still open. Because Alan and I play with
+scanners it made sense to look into that. Error handling and logging has also
+been on my radar for a while. In the process some more code might be dropped, but
+actually the current version is still useable as library for a stand alone
+program, given that one reconstructs the \POSTSCRIPT\ driver from the dropped
+code (not that much work). Some configuration options are missing then but that
+could be provided as extensions (after all we can have change files.) On the
+other hand, wrapping code in \CONTEXT, like:
+
+\starttyping
+\starttext
+\startMPpage
+ ........
+\stopMPpage
+\startMPpage
+ ........
+\stopMPpage
+\stoptext
+\stoptyping
+
+will give a \PDF\ file that can be converted to all kinds of formats, and the
+advantage is that one has full font support. There is already a script in the
+distribution that does this anyway.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Communication}]
+
+The first experiment concerns a change in the interfacing between the \METAPOST\
+and \LUA\ end. In the original library all file \IO\ is handled by the library
+itself. The filenames can be resolved via a callback. Once an instance is
+initialized, snippets of code are passed to the instance via the \type {execute}
+call. Log, terminal and error information is collected and returned as part of
+the return value (a table). This means that reporting back to the user has a
+delay: it can be shown {\em after} all code in the buffer has been processed. The
+code given as argument to \type {execute} is passed to the engine as (fake)
+terminal input, which nicely fits in the concept of interactive input, which
+already is part of the \METAPOST\ concept.
+
+In our follow up variant all file \IO\ goes via \LUA. This means that we have a
+bit more control over matters. In \CONTEXT\ we now can use the usual file
+handling code. One defines an \type {open_file} callback that returns a table
+with possible methods \type {close}, \type {reader} and \type {writer}, as in
+similar \LUATEX\ callbacks. A special file, with the name \type {terminal} is
+used for terminal communication. Now, when the \type {execute} command is
+handled, the string that gets passed ends up in the terminal, so the file handler
+has to deal with it: the string gets written to the handle, and the handle has to
+return it as lines on request. In \CONTEXT\ we directly feed the to be executed
+code into the terminal cache.
+
+It's all experimental and subject to changes but as we keep \CONTEXT\ \LMTX\ and
+\LUAMETATEX\ in sync, this is no problem. Users will not use these low level
+interfaces directly. It might take a few years to settle on this.
+
+The reports that come from the \METAPOST\ engine are now passed on to the \type
+{run_logger} callback. That one gets a target and a string passed. Where the
+original library can output stuff twice, once for the log and once for the
+console, in the new situation it gets output once, with the target being
+terminal, log file or both. The nice thing about this callback is that there is no
+delay: the messages come as the code is processed.
+
+We combine this logging with the new \type {halt_on_error} flag, which makes the
+engine abort after one error. This mechanism will be improved as we go. The
+interaction option \type {silent} hides some of the less useful messages.
+
+The overall efficiency of the library doesn't suffer from these changes, and in
+some cases it can perform even better. Anyhow, the user experience is much better
+with synchronous reports.
+
+Although not strictly related to \IO, we already has extended the library with
+the option to support \UTF-8, which is handy for special symbols, as for instance
+used in the \type {luapost} library.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Scanning}]
+
+Another extension is more fundamental in the sense that it can affect the way
+users see \METAFUN: extending the user interface. It is again an example of why
+is having an independent code base has benefits: we can do such experiments for a
+long time, before we decide that (and how) it can end up in the parent (of course
+the same is true for the mentioned \IO\ features). I will not discuss these
+features here. For now it is enough to know that it gets applied in \CONTEXT\ and
+will provide a convenient additional interface. Once it is stable I'll wrap it up
+in writing.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-performance.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-performance.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..40eb1971d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-performance.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-performance
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Performance}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+Those who've read the other documents describing the development of \LUATEX, know
+that performance is always on my radar. A decent performance is a must for a
+useable workflow, especially because typesetting is a multi|-|pass process.
+\footnote {I'm often baffled by reports of (non|-|\CONTEXT) \LUATEX\ users about
+the performance of \LUATEX. It seems easier to blame an engine than ones own
+macros or setup and most of those tests make no sense anyway. Believe it or not,
+but if performance of \CONTEXT\ \MKIV\ was much worse than \MKII\ (using \PDFTEX\
+or \XETEX) it would have backfired and the project would never have taken of.
+Just think of this: would Hans really use \LUATEX\ and continue with development
+if it were that slow?} One page reference changing from two digits to three
+digits can influence whatever follows and we're not only talking of a different
+page break, even a change in line breaks can have consequences. The core engine
+cannot be made much faster. When the (single core) run has the whole cpu
+available not much can be gained. But multiple processes are run at the same
+time, the cache has to be shared and misses can become an issue. So, efficiency
+of code is still important. Occasionally a (tiny) improvement can be made, but
+only the accumulation of such improvements can make a dent. The feeling is that
+over time \LUATEX\ has not become slower but we keep an eye on possible other
+improvements. The memory footprint is also something to keep an eye on. \footnote
+{Of course this is all becoming less relevant now that having e.g. a browser open
+in the background will set you back with a constant 5\endash10\% cpu load and
+slowly accumulating gigabyte memory usage. That actually was something I had to
+keep in mind when running \LUAMETATEX\ benchmarks.}
+
+The more we delegate to \LUA, the less we can benefit from for instance \CPU\
+improvements: in that case the \LUA\ virtual machine is the bottleneck. And there
+is not much we can do about that. This also means that when we delegate more to
+\LUA\ we sacrifice performance. Sometimes things can be done more efficient in
+\LUA, but those are often tasks that are not performed frequently. That said, I'm
+convinced most of the \CONTEXT\ code is quite efficient and not much can be
+gained.
+
+The biggest change in \LUAMETATEX\ is the backend. We gain some efficiency in
+terms of speed, performance and output in some cases, while in other cases we
+loose a bit. On the average the small performance hit is bearable. Because
+\CONTEXT\ users don't complain about performance I think that I have some slack
+here.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={An example}]
+
+There are a few places where \LUATEX\ looks ahead to check something and goes back
+when the condition is not met. Take these:
+
+\starttyping
+\hbox {...}
+\hbox to 10cm {...}
+\hrule width 10cm height 10cm \relax
+\dimen0 =10cm
+\dimen0 10cm
+\mydimen 10cm
+\toks0 {...}
+\toks0 \toks2
+\stoptyping
+
+Spaces and sometimes \type {\relax} after the trigger (\type {\hbox}, \type
+{\dimen}, etc.) are skipped and in some case there can be an optional \type {=}
+sign. So, there are quite some cases where there is first a check for an optional
+equal which itself can be preceded by optional spaces. When there is no equal
+sign the last seen token is pushed back into the scanned which effectively means
+that a temporary token is allocated, and a one token list is pushed on the input
+stack. Then scanning goes on. The same can happen with the open brace in case of
+a token list assignment: it gets pushed back and the content scanned checks it
+again. In the case of keywords something similar takes place, because here
+\LUATEX\ checks explicitly for e.g.\ type {width}, and when it is not found again
+it pushes back consumed tokens and checks for the \type {width}. In the case of
+the specifiers of the box we don't need to check at all when we have an opening
+brace. In the follow up, when the \type {orientation} keyword was added, and the
+\type {dir} and \type {bdir} were replaced by \type {direction} a little bit more
+was optimized.
+
+In \LUATEX\ this code comes from \PDFTEX\ which takes if from \TEX, but in both
+cases some code side effects occur from the transition from \PASCAL\ to \CCODE.
+But, in \LUATEX\ we stick to the \CCODE, so we can try to get rid of these
+artifacts. During the last years, especially when additional keywords were
+introduces (for instance for attributes) already some optimization took place. In
+the follow up again some optimizations were applied, for instance quite often we
+can combine the check for an equal sign with skipping the spaces.
+
+The gain is not spectacular but as all small bits add up eventually it is
+measurable in a complex run. What definitely is true, is that we avoid some
+memory access which in turn might pay back when multiple runs happen in parallel.
+
+Of course one can argue that such optimizations are to be avoided but as long as
+they don't obscure the code, it's okay. After all, just as one optimizes for
+instance a compression algorithm or search routine, there is no reason not to
+mildly optimize some of the critical code in \LUATEX. And in \CONTEXT\ we have
+plenty of opportunities to check if that works out well. At some point some might
+be retrofit into \LUATEX\ 1.2 (or later). \footnote {But it makes less sense now
+that there are variants popping up that might depend on the stable base.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-rejected.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-rejected.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..f357c0ae5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-rejected.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-rejected
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Rejected}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+During the development of \LUATEX\ some extensions were considered but rejected
+after some experiments. I already forgot about some that were tried the last
+decade. I will not discuss what has been added already to \LUATEX.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Conditionals}]
+
+The \LUATEX\ manual describes a few conditional primitives that were added. One
+thing I played with was a native definer, think of \type {\idef} but in the end
+rejected it, because in practice it was seldom needed. Another useful one would
+be \type {\ifnothing} but the current implementation of \type {\ifx} is already
+pretty efficient so there is nothing to gain here. Another rejected one is \type
+{\ifxcase} which takes a token and compares that with a sequence, like
+
+\starttyping
+\ifxcase\foo\alpha
+\or\beta
+\or\gamma
+\else
+\fi
+\stoptyping
+
+As this was never available, in \CONTEXT\ already different strategies were
+followed so I could only find a few places where this could make code more
+readable. But who knows, I might change my mind when I split the code base and can
+adapt code accordingly although it doesn't make much sense for the more high
+level modules because it would only affect a few lines and maintaining duplicate
+files is no fun. \footnote {But playing with extensions that make for better code
+{\em is} fun.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Dimensions}]
+
+A primitive that returns the height plus depth would make sense (\type {hd}) but
+one can easily define one and the gain can be neglected. So, for now this has
+been rejected. Also, one can use the token scanners to implement that kind of
+primitives but of course that then does have a penalty in terms of performance.
+\footnote {Okay, in the end I decided to just add a primitive for this, but only
+as part of a larger set of box related primitives.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={The something}]
+
+I played a bit with intercepting \type {\the} so that we could define commands
+that also respond to this expander. It didn't work out well because full
+expansion happens, even with protected macros:
+
+\starttyping
+\protected\def\foo{...] \the\foo
+\stoptyping
+
+We just have to accept this and it's no big deal.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Primitives}]
+
+Occasionally I'm wondering if we should have a way to flag primitives and macros
+as being frozen but in the end it might not pay off. At some point I decided that
+at least the \type {\primitive} and \type {\ifprimitive} could go away as they
+are not really working as expected. It's better to have nothing than something
+bad. Also, we can easily clone the whole set of primitives in a new namespace
+with \LUA\ if we want. \footnote {But \unknown\ in the end we got something else
+back.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-retrospect.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-retrospect.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..b99185b77
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-retrospect.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,188 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-retrospect
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Retrospect}]
+
+% \startsection[title={Introduction}]
+% \stopsection
+
+At some point in a new development, and \LUAMETATEX\ feels like that, there comes
+a moment when you need to make a decision. In this case the question is if we
+need to make hybrid \MKIV\ and \LMTX\ files or do the same as with the transition
+from \MKII\ to \MKIV: use two variants. For \TEX\ files a conditional section has
+only overhead in the format generation as skipped code doesn't end up in the
+format. With conditional \LUA\ code it's different: the ignored section is still
+present in byte code. But even for \TEX\ code a conditional section is not
+entirely invisible: encountered control sequences are still creating (bogus) hash
+entries. So the question is: do we go lean and mean and do we omit historic
+non|-|\LMTX\ code?
+
+A comparison with the transition from \MKII\ is actually relevant. For instance
+right from the start \CONTEXT\ had an abstract backend layer, and support for
+engines and output formats was loaded on demand. There was never any specific
+code in the core. With \MKIV\ we changed the model but there is still some
+abstraction.
+
+In \MKII\ we also had to deal with encodings and that has consequences for
+font handling, language support and input encodings. In \MKIV\ all that changed:
+internal all is \UTF, as is normally the input (but we can still use encodings),
+and fonts are always mapped to \UNICODE.
+
+Anyhow, much that made sense for \MKII\ was no longer relevant for \MKIV: code
+could be dropped. But some mechanisms were reimplemented using \LUA: code was
+added. The user interface stayed the same but in \MKIV\ uses a conceptually
+different approach deep down. Therefore the code base was split in \MKII\ and
+\MKIV\ files but this transition was made stepwise.
+
+So should the same happen with \LMTX ? There is not that much that needs to be
+added to \MKIV\ in terms of functionality. In the end, for the \TEX\ code the
+differences are not that substantial, so there we can consider loading different
+files. The files involved are rather stable so there is not much danger of
+functionality between \MKIV\ and \LMTX\ getting out of sync. The same is true for
+the \LUA\ files, although synchronization is probably more an issue there.
+
+Another option is to always assume that \LUAMETATEX\ is used. For testing regular
+\LUATEX\ (patches) we can just use a 2019 stable \CONTEXT. But in order for users
+to benefit from developments we then expect them all to move on to \LMTX. Using a
+frozen 2019 version with upcoming \LUATEX\ is no big deal as we've done the same
+with \MKII\ and that worked out okay.
+
+When we started with \CONTEXT\ development in the previous century we were doing
+pretty weird things. I remember getting comments that what we did made no sense
+because it was not what \TEX\ was meant for and some even suggested that it
+disrupted the picture. Highly structured input, a clear separation (and
+abstraction) of front and backend, inheritance and user defined styling,
+integrated support for \XML, embedded \METAPOST, advanced interactive documents,
+handling of fonts en encodings, the list is long. Occasionally some of the things
+that came with \CONTEXT\ were ridiculed, like the fact that a script was used to
+manage the (multiple) run(s), but in the end, look at how many script are around
+now. Some even wondered why we used \TEX\ at all because \TEX\ was meant for
+typesetting math. And who needs \XML\ let alone \MATHML ? Or interactive \PDF\
+features? Much in \CONTEXT\ and its management got smoother over time and the
+\LUAMETATEX\ engine fits nicely into this evolution. It's hard to keep the
+cutting edge but at least we have the instruments.
+
+During \BACHOTEX\ 2019 (end of April, beginning of May) this project was
+presented the first time outside the \CONTEXT\ community. During that meeting
+Mojca Miklavec, one of the driving forces behind \CONTEXT, upgraded the compile
+farm that already was used to compile (intermediate versions of) \LUATEX\ and
+\TEXLIVE\ to also compile \type {pplib} (handy for development) and \LUAMETATEX.
+This permits us to fine|-|tune the \type {cmake} setup which is still work in
+progress. And, also further improvements take place in the code base itself.
+
+One of the properties of open source is that one can build upon an existing code
+base, so when at \BACHOTEX\ Arthur announced that he was going to make a merge of
+\XETEX\ (which he maintains) and \LUATEX\ no one was surprised. But it could be a
+strong argument for a rather strict code freeze: spin|-|offs need stability. I've
+been told that there are now several projects where more libraries (like
+Harfbuzz) get integrated. Those cases don't influence the parent but here
+stability of the original also is expected, unless of course additional features
+go in these engines, which itself creates instability, but that's another matter.
+One could actually argue that the arrival of variants defeats the argument that
+stability is important: if a macro package uses new features, it needs to adapt,
+and naturally (temporary) issues might show up. Such are the dynamics of todays
+software development. History in general shows that not that much is persistent
+(or even accumulative) and programs are probably the least, so maybe the whole
+stability aspect has lost its relevance. \footnote {In a similar way as that the
+argument \quotation {Publishers want this or that, so we as \TEX\ community need
+to provide it.} is no longer that relevant because publishing is now more a
+business model than vocation.} Of course \LUAMETATEX\ is also a follow up, but
+one of the ideas behind it was that I could use it as platform for (independent)
+experiments that could result in code being put into \LUATEX. Also, the changes
+have a limited impact: only \CONTEXT\ will be affected. \footnote {So maybe, in
+the end, stability boils down to \quotation {The engine behaves the same and the
+\CONTEXT\ that comes with it exploits its features as good as possible}.}
+
+It is not feasible to make \CONTEXT\ work with all kind of engines that in
+practice are not used by its users. For instance, after \XETEX\ showed up it went
+through several iterations or font rendering, so we never really spent time on
+the low level features that it provided (there was no demand anyway). One cannot
+simply claim that one method is better than another that replaces it and expect
+constant adaptation (probably for the sake of a few potential users). There
+simply is no \quote {best} engine and no \quote {perfect} solution. Another
+aspect is that when we would adapt \CONTEXT\ to \LUATEX\ variants the
+dependencies on specific functionality that itself depends on the outside world
+is kind of unavoidable. Especially languages and fonts are fluid and for the
+average user there is not that much difference in that department. Should we
+really complicate matters for a few (potential) users? In \CONTEXT\ support like
+that is added on demand, driven by specific needs of users who use \TEX\ for a
+reason and are willing to test.
+
+There's enough huge and complex software around that demonstrates what happens
+when programs are extended, keep growing, their code base becoming more complex.
+Such a process doesn't really fit in my ideas about for \TEX. We positioned 1.10
+as long term stable, with the option to add a few handy things in the long run.
+For sure there are niches to fill and it is a fact that the \TEX\ community can
+deal with variants of engines: just look at the different \CJK\ engines around,
+with prefixes like \type {p}, \type {up}, \type {ep}, etc. But the question is,
+where does that put further \LUATEX\ development? And, more important, what
+consequences does it have for the \CONTEXT\ code base?
+
+The reason I mention this is that I had in mind to eventually backport features
+that work out well in \LUAMETATEX. I also mentioned that in order to support
+stock \LUATEX\ it made no sense to split the \CONTEXT\ code base. After all, a
+few conditional sections could deal with the difference between \LUATEX\ and
+\LUAMETATEX: some differences could be temporary anyway. But, given recent
+developments it actually made sense to split the code base: why spent time on
+backporting when the engine user base is spread over different spinoffs. I can
+better just assume \CONTEXT\ to exclusively use \LUAMETATEX\ and that other macro
+packages use (one or more) \LUATEX\ variants. I can then keep the generic code up
+to date and maybe occasionally add some proven stable features. It is also no big
+deal to keep the minimum subset needed for (plain) font handling compatible,
+assuming \LUATEX\ compatibility, as in the end that engine is the benchmark,
+especially when I strip it a bit from features not needed outside \CONTEXT.
+
+Thoughts like this show how fragile plans and predictions are: within a year one
+has to adapt ideas and assumptions. But it also proves that \LUAMETATEX\ was a
+good choice for \CONTEXT, especially because it is bound to \CONTEXT\
+development, which keep the users independent and isolated from developments that
+don't mind that much the (side) effects on \CONTEXT.
+
+% \footnote {I mentioned stability a few times, but this aspect is somewhat vague:
+% often I see complaints about \LUATEX, or comparisons with other engines, that
+% have nothing to do with the engine per se, but more with misunderstanding and|/|
+% assumptions, strange usage, maybe or even likely bad user code, comparing apples
+% and pears, etc. The term \type {bug} is very popular and often a preferred
+% qualifications, and it sounds even more impressive when it's qualified as a bug
+% one. I guess that a more tight coupling between specific engines and macro
+% packages at least that aspect becomes cleaner.}
+
+Around the \CONTEXT\ meeting (or maybe a bit later) we hope to have the new
+installation infrastructure stable too (currently it is also experimental). By
+that time it will also be clear how we will proceed with the \LMTX\ project. In
+the meantime I have decided so put \LUAMETATEX\ specific files alongside the
+\MKIV\ files, simply because I always need to be able run stock \LUATEX. In order
+to show the close relationship these files are flagged as \MKXL, so we bump from
+\quote {Mark Four} to \quote {Mark Fourty}. The suffixes \type {mkiv}, \type
+{mkvi} and \type {mpiv} get company from \type {mkxl}, \type {mklx} and \type
+{mpxl}. Depending on backporting features, files can come and go. I'm not yet
+sure about the \LUA\ files but the \type {lmt} suffix is already reserved for
+future use. \footnote {This is because \LUA\ 5.4 introduces some new syntax
+elements and where we can get away with the difference between 5.2 (\LUAJITTEX)
+and 5.3 (\LUATEX) such a syntax change is more drastic.} All this is also driven
+by (user) demand.
+
+Consider this (and these thoughts) a snapshot. There will be the usual reports on
+experiments and developments. And in due time there will also be a manual for
+\LUAMETATEX. \footnote {In fact it already lives on my machine but I'm not in
+ready yet for the usual complaints about manuals, so I'm not in that much of a
+hurry.} And yes, at some point I have to make up my mind with respect to
+backporting features that have proven to be useful.
+
+% \footnote {Actually, it seems to come with the Internet: folks wining on whatever
+% platform about lack of documentation (most of the \CONTEXT\ distribution actually
+% is documentation and quite some articles are, have been, and will be written) or
+% possible bug (always huge, even if no bug at all) without exposing much actual
+% research or knowledge about these matters. Write, post and shout before thinking
+% it through, increase the number hits on your profile. It's for sure a way to make
+% something end up at the bottom of my to do list, if at all. A valid response
+% could be: whatever did you contribute to the community that I myself (or
+% \CONTEXT\ users) can benefit from. Quite likely: nothing (or little)! It looks
+% like even the normally friendly \TEX\ community sometimes gets infected by this.}
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-stripping.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-stripping.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..69af6376c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-stripping.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,369 @@
+% language=us
+
+% 2,777,600 / 11,561,471 cont-en.fmt
+
+% Hooverphonic - Live at the Ancienne Belgique (Geike Arnaert)
+
+\startcomponent followingup-stripping
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Stripping}]
+
+\startsection[title={Introduction}]
+
+Normally I need a couple of iterations to reach the implementation that I like
+(an average of three rewrites is rather normal). So, I sat down and started
+stripping the engine and did so a few times in order to get an idea of how to
+proceed. One drawback of going public too soon (and we ran into that with
+\LUATEX) is that as soon as there are more users, one gets stuck into the
+situation that a different approach is not really possible. This is why from now
+on experimental is really experimental, even if that means: it works ok in
+\CONTEXT\ (even for production) but we can change interfaces be better, e.g.\
+more consistent (although we're also stuck with existing \TEX\ terminology).
+Anyway, let's proceed.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={The binary}]
+
+In 2014 the \LUATEX\ binary was some 10.9 MB large. The version 1.09 binary of
+October 2018 was about 6.8MB, and the reduction was due to removing the bitmap
+generation from \MPLIB\ as well as replacing poppler by pplib. As an exercise I
+decided to see how easy it was to make a small version suitable for \CONTEXT\
+\LMTX, and as expected the binary shrunk to below 3MB (plus a \LUA\ and \KPSE\
+dll). This is a reasonable size given what is still present.
+
+There is hardly any file related code left because in practice the backend used
+the most different file types. That also meant that we could remove \KPSE\
+related code and keep all that in the library part. In principle one can load
+that library and hook it into the few callbacks that relate to loading files.
+Once we're stable I'll probably write some code for that. \footnote {In the
+meantime I think it makes not much sense to do that.} Launching the binary with a
+startup script can deal with all matters needed, because the command line
+arguments are available.
+
+We could actually go even smaller by removing the built|-|in \TFM\ and \VF\
+readers. For instance it made not much sense to read and store information that
+is never used anyway, like virtual font data: as long as the backend has access
+to what it needs it's fine. By removing unused code and stripping no longer used
+fields in the internal font tables (which is also good for memory consumption),
+and cleaning up a bit here and there the experimental binary ended up at a bit
+above 2.5MB (plus a \LUA\ dll). \footnote {Mid January we were just below 2.7 MB
+with a static, all inclusive, binary. In March the static ended up at 2.9 MB on
+\MSWINDOWS\ and 2.6 MB in \UNIX.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Functionality}]
+
+There is no real reason to change much in the functionality of the frontend but
+as we have no backend now, some primitives are gone. These have to be implemented
+as part of creating a backend.
+
+\starttyping
+\dviextension \dvivariable \dvifeedback
+\pdfextension \pdfvariable \pdffeedback
+\stoptyping
+
+The already obsolete related dimensions are also removed:
+
+\starttyping
+\pageleftoffset \pagerightoffset
+\pagetopoffset \pagebottomoffset
+\stoptyping
+
+And we no longer need the page dimensions because they are just registers that
+are normally used in the backend. So, we got rid of:
+
+\starttyping
+\pageheight
+\pagewidth
+\stoptyping
+
+Some font related inheritances from \PDFTEX\ have also been dropped:
+
+\starttyping
+\letterspacefont
+\copyfont
+\expandglyphsinfont
+\ignoreligaturesinfont
+\tagcode
+\stoptyping
+
+Internally all backend whatsits are gone, but generic \type {literal}, \type
+{save}, \type {restore} and \type {setmatrix} nodes can still be created. Under
+consideration is to let them be so called user nodes but for testing it made
+sense to keep them around for a while. \footnote {Don't take this as a reference:
+later we will see that more was changed.}
+
+The resource relates primitives are backend dependent so the primitives have been
+removed. As with other backend related primitives, their arguments depend on the
+implementation. So, no more:
+
+\starttyping
+\saveboxresource
+\useboxresource
+\lastsavedboxresourceindex
+\stoptyping
+
+and:
+
+\starttyping
+\saveimageresource
+\useimageresource
+\lastsavedimageresourceindex
+\lastsavedimageresourcepages
+\stoptyping
+
+Of course the rule nodes subtypes are still there, so the typesetting machinery
+will handle them fine. It is no big deal to define a pseudo|-|primitive that
+provides the functionality at the \TEX\ level.
+
+The position related primitives are also backend dependent so again they were
+removed. \footnote {There was some sentimental element in this. Long ago, even
+before \PDFTEX\ showed up, \CONTEXT\ already had a positional mechanism. It
+worked by using specials in combination with a program that calculated the
+positions from the \DVI\ file. At some point that functionality was integrated
+into \PDFTEX. For me it always was a nice example of demonstrating that
+complaints like \quotation {\TEX\ is limited because we don't know the position
+of an element in the text.} make no sense: \TEX\ can do more than one thinks,
+given that one thinks the right way.}
+
+\starttyping
+\savepos
+\lastxpos
+\lastypos
+\stoptyping
+
+We could have kept \type {\savepos} but better is to be consistent. We no longer
+need these:
+
+\starttyping
+\outputmode
+\draftmode
+\synctex
+\stoptyping
+
+These could go because we no longer have a backend and if one needs it it's easy
+to define a meaningful variable and listen to that.
+
+The \type {\shipout} primitive does no ship out but just flushes the content of
+the box, if that hasn't happened already.
+
+Because we have \LUA\ on board, and because we can now use the token scanners to
+implement features, we no longer need the hard coded randomizer extensions. In
+fact, also the \METAPOST\ should now use the \LUA\ randomizer, so that we are
+consistent. Anyway, removed are:
+
+\starttyping
+\randomseed
+\setrandomseed
+\normaldeviate
+\uniformdeviate
+\stoptyping
+
+plus the helpers in the \type {tex} library.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Fonts}]
+
+Fonts are sort of special. We need the data at the \LUA\ end in order to process
+\OPENTYPE\ fonts and the backend code needs the virtual commands. The par builder
+also needs to access font properties, as does the math renderer, but here is no
+real reason to carry virtual font information around (which involves packing and
+unpacking virtual packets). So, in the end it made much sense to also delegate
+the \TFM\ and \VF\ loading to \LUA\ as well. And, as a consequence dumping and
+undumping font information could go away too, which is okay, as we didn't preload
+fonts in \CONTEXT\ anyway. The saving in binary bytes is not impressive but
+keeping unused code around neither. In principle we can get rid of the internal
+representation if we fetch relevant data from the \LUA\ tables but that might be
+unwise from the perspective of performance. By removing the no longer needed
+fields the memory footprint became somewhat smaller and font loading (passing
+from \LUA\ to \TEX) more efficient.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={File IO}]
+
+What came next? A program like \LUATEX\ interacts with its environment and one of
+the nice things about \TEX\ is that it has a standard ecosystem, organized as the
+\quotation {\TEX\ Directory Structure}. There is library that interfaces with
+this structure: \KPSE, but in \CONTEXT\ \MKIV\ we implement its functionality in
+\LUA. The primary reason for this was performance. When we started with \LUATEX\
+the startup on my machine (\MSWINDOWS) and a few servers (\LINUX) of a \TEX\
+engine took seconds and most fo that was due to loading the rather large file
+databases, because a \TEX\ Live installation was a gigabyte adventure. With the
+\LUA\ variant I could bring that down to milliseconds, because I could pre|-|hash
+the database and limit it to files relevant for \CONTEXT\ (still a lot, as fonts
+made up most). Nowadays we have \SSD\ disks and plenty of memory for caching, so
+these things are less urgent, but on network shares it still matters.
+
+So, as we don't use \KPSE, we can remove that library. By doing that we simplify
+compilation a lot as then all dependencies are in the engine's source tree, and
+we're no longer dependent on updates. One can argue that we then sacrifice too
+much, but already for a decade we don't use it and the \LUA\ variant does the job
+well within the \TDS\ ecosystem. Also, in our by now stripped down engine, there
+is not that much lookup going on anyway: we're already in \LUA\ when we do fonts.
+But on the other hand, some generic usage could benefit from the library to be
+present, so we face a choice. The choice is made even more difficult by the fact
+that we can remove all kind of tweaks once we delegate for instance control over
+command execution to \LUA\ completely. But, we might provide \KPSE\ as loadable
+\LUA\ module so that when needed one can use a stub to start the program with a
+\LUA\ script that as first action loads this library that then can take care of
+further file management. As command line arguments are available in \LUA, one can
+also implement the relevant extra switches (and even more if needed).
+
+Now, the interesting thing is that because we have a \LUA\ interface to \KPSE\ we
+can actually drop some hard coded solutions. This means that we can have a binary
+without \KPSE, in which case one has to cook up callbacks that do what this
+library does. But in a version with \KPSE\ embedded one also has to define some
+file related callbacks although they can be rather simple. By keeping a handful
+of file related callbacks the code base could be simplified a lot. In the process
+the recorder option went away (not that we ever used it). It is relatively easy
+to support this in the \quote {find} related callbacks and one has to deal with
+other files (like images and fonts) also, so keeping this feature was a cheat
+anyway.
+
+At this point it is important to notice that while we're dropping some command
+line options, they can still be passed and intercepted at the \LUA\ end. So,
+providing compatible (or alternative solution) is no big deal. For instance,
+execution of (shell) programs is a \LUA\ activity and can be managed from there.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Callbacks}]
+
+Callbacks can be organized in groups. First there are those related to
+\IO. We only have to deal with a few types: all kind of \TEX\ files (data
+files), format files and \LUA\ modules (but these to are on the list of
+potentially dropped files as this can be programmed in \LUA).
+
+\starttyping
+find_write_file
+find_data_file open_data_file read_data_file
+find_format_file find_lua_file find_clua_file
+\stoptyping
+
+The callbacks related to errors stay: \footnote {Some more error handling was
+added later, as was intercepting user input related to it.}
+
+\starttyping
+show_error_hook show_lua_error_hook,
+show_error_message show_warning_message
+\stoptyping
+
+% We kept the buffer handlers but dropped the output handler later anyway, so we
+% have left:
+%
+% \starttyping
+% process_input_buffer
+% \stoptyping
+
+The management hooks were kept (but the edit one might go): \footnote {And
+indeed, that one went away.}
+
+\starttyping
+process_jobname
+call_edit
+start_run stop_run wrapup_run
+pre_dump
+start_file stop_file
+\stoptyping
+
+Of course the typesetting callbacks remain too as they are the backbone of the
+opening up:
+
+\starttyping
+buildpage_filter hpack_filter vpack_filter
+hyphenate ligaturing kerning
+pre_output_filter contribute_filter build_page_insert
+pre_linebreak_filter linebreak_filter post_linebreak_filter
+insert_local_par append_to_vlist_filter new_graf
+hpack_quality vpack_quality
+mlist_to_hlist make_extensible
+\stoptyping
+
+Finally we mention one of the important callbacks:
+
+\starttyping
+define_font
+\stoptyping
+
+Without that one defined not much will happen with respect to typesetting. I
+could actually remove the \type {\font} primitive but that would be a bit weird
+as other font related commands stay. Also, it's one of the fundamental frontend
+primitives, so removal was never really considered.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Bits and pieces}]
+
+In the process some helpers and status queries were removed. From the summary
+above you can deduce that this concerns images, backend, and file management.
+Also not used variables (some inherited from the past and predecessors) were
+removed. These and other changes are the reason why there is a separate manual
+for \LUAMETATEX. \footnote {Relatively late in the project I decided to be more
+selective in what got initialized in \LUA\ only mode.}
+
+One of my objectives was to see how lean and mean the code base could be. But
+even if we don't use that many files, the rather complex build system makes that
+we need to have (make and configure) files in the tree that are not really used
+but even then omitting them aborts a build. I played a bit with that but the
+problem is that it needs to be dealt with upstream in order to prevent repetitive
+work. So, this is something to sort out later. Eventually it would be nice to be
+able to compile with a minimal set of source files, also because other programs
+(all kind of \TEX\ variants) that are checked for but not compiled depend on
+libraries that we don't need (and therefore want) to have in the stripped down
+source tree. \footnote {In the end, the source tree was redesigned completely.}
+
+For now we also brought down the number of catcode tables (to 256) \footnote {As
+with math families, and if more tables are needed one should wonder about the
+\TEX\ code used.}, and the number of languages (to 8192) \footnote {This is
+already a lot and because languages are loaded run time, we can go much lower
+than this.} as that saves some initially allocated memory.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={What's next}]
+
+Basically the experiment ends here. A next step is to create a stable code base,
+make compilation easy and consider the way the code is packages. Then some
+cleanup can take place. Also, as it's a window to the outside world, \type {ffi}
+support will move to the code base and be integral to \LUAMETATEX. And of course
+the decision about \LUAJIT\ support has to be made some day soon. The same is
+true for \LUA\ 5.4: in \LUATEX\ for now we stick to 5.3 but experimenting with
+5.4 in \LUAMETATEX\ can't harm us. \footnote {The choice has been made:
+\LUAMETATEX\ will not have a \LUAJIT\ based companion.}
+
+To what extend the \CONTEXT\ code base will have a special files for \LMTX\ is
+yet to be decided, but we have some ideas about new features that might make that
+desirable from the perspective of maintenance. The main question is: do I want to
+have hybrid files or clean files for each variant (stock \MKIV\ and \LMTX).
+
+For the record: at the time of wrapping this up, processing the \LUATEX\ manual
+of 294 pages took 13.5 seconds using stock \LUATEX\ while using the stripped down
+binary, where \LUA\ takes over some tasks, took 13.9 seconds. \footnote {In the
+meantime we're down to around 11.6MB. These are all rough numbers and mostly
+indicate relative speeds at some point.} The \LUAJITTEX\ variant needed 10.9 and
+10.8 seconds. So, there is no real reason to not explore this route, although
+\unknown\ the \PDF\ file size shrinks from 1.48MB to 1.18MB (and optionally we
+can squeeze out more) but one can wonder if I didn't make big mistakes. It is
+good to realize that there is not much performance to gain in the engine simply
+because most code is already pretty well optimized. The same is true for the
+\CONTEXT\ code: there might be a few places where we can squeeze out a few
+milliseconds but probably it will go unnoticed.
+
+On the todo list went removal of \type {\primitive} which we never use (need) and
+the possible introduction of a way to protect primitives and macros against
+redefinition, but on the other hand, it might impact performance and be not worth
+the trouble. In the end it is a macro package issue anyway and we never really
+ran into users redefining primitives. \footnote {Indeed this primitive has been
+removed.}
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-stubs.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-stubs.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..69d02adc7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-stubs.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,262 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-stubs
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Stubs}]
+
+\startsection[title={Bare bone}]
+
+The most barebone way to process a \CONTEXT\ file is something like:
+
+\starttyping
+luametatex
+ --fmt="<cache path to>/luametatex/cont-en"
+ --lua="<cache path to>/luametatex/cont-en.lui"
+ --jobname="article"
+ "cont-yes.mkiv"
+\stoptyping
+
+We pas extra options, like:
+
+\starttyping
+ --c:autopdf
+ --c:currentrun=1
+ --c:fulljobname="./article.tex"
+ --c:input="./article.tex"
+ --c:kindofrun=1
+ --c:maxnofruns=9
+ --c:texmfbinpath="c:/data/develop/tex-context/tex/texmf-win64/bin"
+\stoptyping
+
+but for what we are going to discuss here it doesn't really matter. The main point is
+that we use a \LUA\ startup file. That one has a minimal amount of code so that the
+format can be loaded as we like it. For instance we need to start up with initial
+memory settings.
+
+The file \type {cont-yes} sets up the way processing content happens. This can be the
+\type {jobname} file but also something different. It is enough to know that this
+startup is quite controlled.
+
+I will explore a different approach to format loading but for now this is how it
+goes. After al, we need to be compatible with \LUATEX\ and normal \MKIV\ runs, at
+least for now.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Management (some history)}]
+
+In \CONTEXT\ we always had a script: \type {texexec}, originally a \MODULA2
+program, later a \PERL\ script, then a \RUBY\ script but now we have \type
+{mtxrun}, a \LUA\ script. All take care of making sure that the file is
+processed enough times to get the cross references, tables of contents, indexes,
+multi|-|pass data stable. It also makes it possible to avoid using these special
+binaries (or links) that trick the engine into thinking it is bound to a format:
+we never had \type {pdfcontext} or \type {luacontext}, just one \type {context}.
+Actually, because we have multiple user interfaces, we would have needed many
+stubs instead. Getting this approach accepted was not easy but in the meantime
+I've seen management scripts for other packages being mentioned occasionally.
+
+The same is true for scripts: for a long time \CONTEXT\ came with quite some
+scripts but when an average \TEX\ distribution started growing, including many
+other scripts, we abandoned this approach and stuck to one management script that
+also launched auxiliary scripts. That way we could be sure that there were no
+clashes in names. If you look at a full \TEX\ installation you see many stubs to
+scripts and more keep coming. How that can work out well without unexpected side
+effects (name clashes) is not entirely clear to me, as a modern computer can have
+large bin paths. Just imagine that all large programs (or ecosystems) would
+introduce hundreds of new \quote {binaries}.
+
+Anyway, in the end a \CONTEXT\ installation using \MKIV\ only needs \type {mtxrun}
+and as bonus \type {context}. The above call is triggered by:
+
+\starttyping
+mtxrun --autogenerate --script context --autopdf article.tex
+\stoptyping
+
+from the editor. Here we create formats when none is found, and start or activate
+the \PDF\ viewer afterwards, so more minimal is:
+
+\starttyping
+mtxrun --script context article.tex
+\stoptyping
+
+Normally there is also a \type {context} stub so this also works:
+
+\starttyping
+context article.tex
+\stoptyping
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={The launch process (more history)}]
+
+In \MKII, when we use \PDFTEX, the actual launch of these script is somewhat
+complex and a bit different per platform. But, on all platforms \KPSE\ does the
+lookup of the script. Already long ago I found out that this startup overhead
+could amount to seconds on a complete \TEX Live installation (imagine running
+over a network) which is why eventually we came up with the minimals. The reason
+is that the file databases have to be loaded: first for looking up, then for the
+stub that also needs that information and finally by the actual program. There
+were no \SSD's then.
+
+The first hurdle we took was to combine the lookup and the runner. Of course this
+is sort of out of our control because an installer can decide to still use a
+lookup approach but at least on \MSWINDOWS\ this was achieved quite easy. Sort
+of:
+
+\starttyping
+texexex -> [lookup] -->
+ texexec.pl -> [lookup] ->
+ pdftex + formats ->
+ [lookup] -> processing
+\stoptyping
+
+The first lookup can be avoided by some fast relative lookup, but for more
+complex management the second one is always there. Over time this mechanism
+became more sophisticated, for instance we use caching, could work over sockets
+using a \KPSE\ server, etc.
+
+When \LUATEX\ came around, it was already decided early that it also would serve
+as script engine for the \CONTEXT\ runner, this time \type {mtxrun}. The way this
+works differs per platform. On \WINDOWS\ there is a small binary, say \type
+{runner.exe}. It gets two copies: \type {mtxrun.exe} and \type {context.exe}. If
+you find more copies on your system, something might be wrong with your
+installation.
+
+\starttyping
+mtxrun.exe -> loads mtxrun.lua in same path
+context.exe -> idem but runs with --script=context
+\stoptyping
+
+The \type {mtxrun.lua} script will load its file database which is very efficient
+and fast. It will then load the given script and execute it. In the case of \type
+{context.exe} the \type {mtx-context.lua} script is loaded, which lives in the
+normal place in the \TEX\ tree (alongside other scripts).
+
+So, a minimal amount of programs and scripts is then:
+
+\starttyping
+texmf-win64/bin/luatex.exe
+texmf-win64/bin/mtxrun.exe
+texmf-win64/bin/mtxrun.lua
+texmf-win64/bin/context.exe
+\stoptyping
+
+with (we also need to font manager):
+
+\starttyping
+texmf-context/scripts/context/lua/mtx-context.lua
+texmf-context/scripts/context/lua/mtx-fonts.lua
+\stoptyping
+
+But \unknown\ there is a catch here: \LUATEX\ has to be started in script mode in
+order to process \type {mtxrun}. So, in fact we see this in distributions.
+
+\starttyping
+texmf-win64/bin/luatex.exe
+texmf-win64/bin/texlua.exe
+texmf-win64/bin/mtxrun.exe
+texmf-win64/bin/mtxrun.lua
+texmf-win64/bin/context.exe
+\stoptyping
+
+The \type {texlua} program is just a copy of \type {luatex} that by its name
+knows that is is supposed to run scripts and not process \TEX\ files. The setup
+can be different using dynamic libraries (more files but a shared engine part)
+but the principles are the same. Nowadays the stub doesn't need the \type
+{texlua.exe} binary any more, so this is the real setup:
+
+\starttyping
+texmf-win64/bin/luatex.exe large program
+texmf-win64/bin/mtxrun.exe small program
+texmf-win64/bin/mtxrun.lua large lua file
+texmf-win64/bin/context.exe small program
+\stoptyping
+
+Just for the record: we cannot really use batch files here because we need to
+know the original command, and when run from a script that is normally not known.
+It works to some extend but for instance when started indirectly from an editor
+it can fail, depending on how that editor is calling programs. Therefore the stub
+is the most robust method.
+
+On a \UNIX\ system the situation differs:
+
+\starttyping
+texmf-linux-64/bin/luatex large program
+texmf-linux-64/bin/texlua symlink to luatex
+texmf-linux-64/bin/mtxrun large lua file
+texmf-linux-64/bin/context shell script that starts mtxrun
+\stoptyping
+
+Here \type {mtxrun.lua} is renamed to \type {mtxrun} with a shebang line that
+triggers loading by \type {texlua} which is a symlink to \type {luatex} because
+shebang lines don't support the \type {--texlua} argument. As on windows, this
+is not really pretty.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={The \LMTX\ way (the present)}]
+
+Now when we move to \LMTX\ we need to make sure that the method that we choose is
+acceptable for distributions but also nicely consistent over platforms. We only
+have one binary \type {luametatex} with all messy logic removed and no second
+face like \type {metaluatex}. When it is copied to another instance (or linked)
+it will load the script with its own name when it finds one. So on \WINDOWS\ we
+now have:
+
+\starttyping
+texmf-win64/bin/luametatex.exe medium program
+texmf-win64/bin/mtxrun.exe copy (or link) of luametatex
+texmf-win64/bin/mtxrun.lua large lua file
+texmf-win64/bin/context.exe copy (or link) of luametatex
+texmf-win64/bin/context.lua small lua file
+\stoptyping
+
+and in \UNIX:
+
+\starttyping
+texmf-linux-64/bin/luametatex mediumprogram
+texmf-linux-64/bin/mtxrun copy (or link) of luametatex
+texmf-linux-64/bin/mtxrun.lua large lua file
+texmf-linux-64/bin/context copy (or link) of luametatex
+texmf-linux-64/bin/context.lua small lua file
+\stoptyping
+
+So, \type {luametatex[.exe]}, \type {mtxrun[.exe]} and \type {context[.exe]} are
+all the same. On both platforms there is \type {mtxrun.lua} (with suffix) and on
+both we also use the same runner approach. The \type {context.lua} script is
+really small and just sets the script command line argument before loading \type
+{mtxrun.lua} from the same path. In the case of copied binaries: keep in mind
+that the three copies together are not (much) larger than the \type {luatex} and
+\type {texlua} pair (especially when you take additional libraries into account).
+
+The disadvantage of using copies is that one can forget to copy with an update,
+but the fact that one can use them might be easier for installers. It's up to
+those who create the installers.
+
+One complication is that the \type {mtxrun.lua} script has to deal with the old
+and the new setup. But, when we release we will assume that one used either
+\LUATEX\ or \LUAMETATEX, not some mix. As \type {mtxrun} and \type {context} know
+what got it started they will then trigger the right engine, unless one passes
+\typ {--engine=luatex}. In that case the \LUAMETATEX\ launcher will trigger a
+\LUATEX\ run. But a mixed installation is unlikely to happen.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Why not \unknown}]
+
+Technically we could use one call for both the runner and \TEX\ processor but
+when multiple runs are needed this would demand an internal engine reset as well
+as macro package reset while keeping some (multi|-|pass) data around. A way
+in|-|between could be to spawn the next run. In the end the gain would be minimal
+(we have now .2 seconds overhead per total run, which can trigger multiple
+passes, due to the management script, to basically we can neglect it. (Triggering
+the viewer takes more time.)
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-style.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-style.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..68b52043c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-style.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
+% \enablelmtx
+% \nopdfcompression
+
+\startenvironment followingup-style
+
+\usemodule[abbreviations-smallcaps]
+
+\logo [LUAMETATEX] {LuaMeta\TeXsuffix}
+
+\setupbodyfont[plex] % not that ok for titling
+
+\setuplayout
+ [width=middle,
+ height=middle,
+ header=0pt,
+ footer=1cm,
+ footerdistance=5mm,
+ backspace=2cm,
+ cutspace=15mm,
+ topspace=2cm,
+ bottomspace=1cm,
+ style=bold,
+ color=maincolor]
+
+\setuppagenumbering
+ [alternative=doublesided]
+
+\setupwhitespace
+ [big]
+
+\setupfootertexts
+ [][{\getmarking[chapter]\quad\pagenumber}]
+ [{\pagenumber\quad\getmarking[chapter]}][]
+
+\definecolor
+ [maincolor]
+ [darkblue]
+
+\setuphead
+ [chapter]
+ [style=\bfc,
+ color=maincolor]
+
+\setuphead
+ [section]
+ [style=\bfa,
+ color=maincolor]
+
+\setuphead
+ [subsection]
+ [style=\bf,
+ color=maincolor]
+
+\setupalign
+ [tolerant,stretch]
+
+\setuptyping
+ [color=maincolor]
+
+\setuptype
+ [color=maincolor]
+
+\setupitemize
+ [color=maincolor]
+
+\stopenvironment
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-tex.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-tex.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..5524baf53
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-tex.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,125 @@
+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-tex
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={\TEX}]
+
+\startsection[title={Prefixes}]
+
+The fact that we merged \ETEX, a bit of \PDFTEX\ and some of \ALEPH\ into
+\LUATEX, already makes it a non|-|standard \TEX\ engine. In \LUAMETATEX\ we go a
+bit further. Completely outsourcing the backend has the side effect that some
+(extension related) primitives have to be implemented explicitly. The fact that
+\LUA\ is integrated has consequences for, for instance, initialization.
+Defaulting to \UTF-8 input makes it different too. And delegating many font
+matters to \LUA\ also doesn't make it behave like good old \TEX.
+
+Here I discuss another difference. One can argue that this definitely makes it
+less \TEX, but in practice this is not that problematic. We're talking prefixes
+here. Traditional \TEX\ has only prefixes:
+
+\startitemize[n]
+\startitem
+ \type {\global}: when used, it will make the next definition a global one.
+ The \type {\globaldefs} parameter can be used to force global or local
+ definitions.
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ \type {\long}: when applied, this will make a macro bark on a \type {\par}
+ (or its equivalent) when grabbing an argument. In \LUATEX\ this check can be
+ disabled. \footnote {In a similar fashion barking about a \type {\par} in
+ math mode can be disabled. Such warnings made much sense when a \TEX\ run
+ took much time and was triggered and traced on relative slow output devices.}
+\stopitem
+\startitem
+ \type {\outer}: when applied the macro can only be used at the outer level.
+\stopitem
+\stopitemize
+
+Multiple prefixes can be given and their effects accumulate. The \ETEX\ extension
+adds another one:
+
+\startitemize[continue]
+\startitem
+ \type {\protected}: this will make a macro unexpandable inside an \type
+ {\edef}, an \type {\xdef} or token list serialization.
+\stopitem
+\stopitemize
+
+In \CONTEXT\ we never use(d) \type {\outer} and I can't even think of a useful
+application in a large macro package. in \MKII\ most interface macros are defined
+as \type {\long}, and because in \MKIV\ we block the complaints, we don't need
+this prefix either. On the other hand, many macros are defined \type
+{\protected}. \footnote {Or in \CONTEXT\ speak, they are defined as \typ
+{\unexpanded}, because we already had \typ {\protected} as well as \typ
+{\unexpanded} before these were introduces as primitives.}
+
+When you look at the implementation, \type {\long} and \type {\outer} are
+properties of the so called command code: we have normal, long, outer and long
+outer macros, and each has a unique command code. For some reason \type
+{\protected} is not implemented with command codes, which would have doubled the
+number to eight, but as special token injected in front of the macro preamble.
+Using a command code would have made more sense as there is no real speed penalty
+in that, while the special token indicating is a macro (body) is protected now
+has to be intercepted in some cases.
+
+Anyhow, already for a while I wondered if I should drop \type {\long} and \type
+{\outer} (making them no|-|ops). I also had on my agenda to promote \type
+{\protected} to a normal command code. And, already for a long time I wanted to
+play with a new prefix: \footnote {This is a typical example of a feature that I
+like playing with, before deciding if it will stay (as such).}
+
+\startitemize[continue]
+\startitem
+ \type {\frozen}: this will protect a macro (for now only a macro) against
+ redefinition, which provides a bit of protection for a user.
+\stopitem
+\stopitemize
+
+Promoting \type {\protected} brings the set of call commands from four to eight,
+and a \type {\frozen} property would bump it to sixteen. This is still okay, but
+in some places it would involve mode testing. However, dropping \type {\long} and
+\type {\outer} would not only keep the set small (just four) but also rid it of
+some tests. There is no performance penalty either (even a bit of gain in case of
+many protected macros as we no longer need to skip the special signal token) and
+it even saves some memory (but not that much).
+
+As a bonus there are a few more conditionals: \type {\ifprotected}, \type
+{\iffrozen}, and, very experimental, \type {\ifusercmd}, which can be used to
+check if something is user defined (often not a primitive). These probably only
+make sense for diagnostic purposes.
+
+In the end, the implementation was not that hard. In the process I also removed
+the \type {\suppress...} parameters so \type {\par} no longer plays havoc. If this
+new prefix \type {\frozen} stays of will affect more definitions, we'll see.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\startsection[title={Conditionals}]
+
+Another domain where there have been some extensions is conditions. In a previous
+chapter I mentioned \type {\iftok} already. As this is not a manual I will not go
+into details about other new conditionals. For instance we have a few that can be
+used to check for valid dimensions and numbers. This can lead to a bit cleaner
+code, although for instance in \CONTEXT\ we always used support macros for this.
+We seldom needed more than we had but when interfacing with \METAPOST\ it helps a
+little.
+
+Another, maybe interesting one is \type {\ifcondition} which when \TEX\ is in
+jump over branches mode is seen as a valid \type {\if<cmd>} token but when it
+comes to expansion the following macro determines a true or false state. A second
+nice experiment is \type {\orelse} which is to be followed by a valid \type
+{\if<cmd>} token and makes for less nesting which sometimes looks nicer and also
+has some advantages.
+
+I might wrap up these and other extensions in articles once they are considered
+stable and useful. But first I'll test them in real situation, which in practice
+means that \CONTEXT\ users will test them, probably without noticing.
+
+\stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-titlepage.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-titlepage.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..1256c049a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-titlepage.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
+\startcomponent followingup-titlepage
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startluacode
+ function document.graphic()
+ local min, max, random, round = math.min, math.max, math.random, math.round
+
+ local width = 210
+ local height = 297
+
+ local bitmap = graphics.bitmaps.new(width,height,"rgb",1)
+ local data = bitmap.data
+
+ for i=1,height do
+ local d = data[i]
+ for j=1,width do
+ -- d[j] = { 0, 0, random(100,200) }
+ d[j] = { 0, 0, random(128,255) }
+ end
+ end
+
+ graphics.bitmaps.tocontext(bitmap,"210bp","297bp")
+ end
+\stopluacode
+
+\startuseMPgraphic{graphic}
+ StartPage ;
+ % fill Page
+ % withcolor "maincolor" ;
+ draw textext.urt("\bf \WORD{following up}")
+ rotated 90
+ ysized (PaperHeight-10mm)
+ shifted lrcorner Page
+ shifted (-10mm,5mm)
+ withcolor "middlegray" ;
+ draw textext.lft("\bf\strut\ConTeXt")
+ ysized 4.5cm
+ shifted lrcorner Page
+ shifted (-50mm,70mm)
+ withcolor "white" ;
+ draw textext.lft("\bf\strut lm\kern-.1ex tx")
+ ysized 4cm
+ shifted lrcorner Page
+ shifted (-50mm,37.5mm)
+ withcolor "white" ;
+ StopPage ;
+\stopuseMPgraphic
+
+\startpagemakeup[pagestate=stop,doublesdided=no]
+ \startoverlay
+ % {luametatex} % for searching
+ {\scale[width=\paperwidth]{\ctxlua{document.graphic()}}}
+ {\useMPgraphic{graphic}}
+ \stopoverlay
+\stoppagemakeup
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-whatsits.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-whatsits.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..64c817573
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup-whatsits.tex
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+% language=us
+
+\startcomponent followingup-whatsits
+
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\startchapter[title={Whatsits}]
+
+% \startsection[title={...}]
+
+Whatsits provide the natural extension mechanism for \TEX. In \PDFTEX\ there are
+plenty such whatsits, for instance for \PDF\ annotations. In \LUATEX\ this
+mechanism was reorganized so that the code was better isolated. In the first
+versions of \LUAMETATEX\ only a handful was left. Stepwise some were removed and
+in the end we could stick to only one general whatsit because one can implement
+the few needed to be compatible with \TEX.
+
+We started out with this set of whatsits:
+
+\starttabulate[|B|p|]
+\NC open \NC open a file for writing (delayed) \NC \NR
+\NC write \NC write to an open file (or terminal otherwise) \NC \NR
+\NC close \NC close an opened file \NC \NR
+\NC special \NC write some literal \PDF\ code to the output file \NC \NR
+\NC user \NC store and retrieve data in a node \NC \NR
+\NC latelua \NC execute code delayed (in the backend) \NC \NR
+\NC literal \NC write some literal \PDF\ code to the output file, controlled by a mode \NC \NR
+\NC save \NC push the transformation state \NC \NR
+\NC restore \NC pop the transformation state \NC \NR
+\NC matrix \NC apply a transformation (\type {rx sx sy ry}) \NC \NR
+\NC savepos \NC register a position to be queried afterwards (\type {x y}) \NC \NR
+\stoptabulate
+
+The \type {\openout}, \type {\write} and \type {\closeout} primitives relate to
+the first three but they can be prefixed with \type {\immediate} in which case
+they don't end up as whatsits but are applied directly. The \type {special} is
+actually meant for \DVI\ while the \type {\(pdf)literal} is for \PDF\ output. The
+first four are available in regular \TEX.
+
+The last four are dealt with exclusively in the backend and by removing the
+backend they basically became no|-|ops. I kept them for a while but in the end
+decided to kick them out. Instead a generic whatsit was introduced that could be
+used as signal with the same function. That simple whatsit only has a subtype
+(and of course optionally attributes). And, as \CONTEXT\ has its own backend, we
+can intercept them as we like. The saving in code is not spectacular but keeping
+it around (basically doing nothing) neither. The impact on \CONTEXT\ was not that
+large because for instance saving positions is done differently and
+transformations are encapsulated in a few helpers that could easily be adapted.
+
+From there it was a small step to also remove the literal whatsit, so then we had
+five whatsits left, plus the generic one. I then entered sentimental mode: should
+we keep the first four or not. Of course we want to be \TEX\ compatible but we
+can remove the code and provide a compatible replacement using macros and our own
+simple whatsit nodes. That keeps all the housekeeping at the \LUA\ end,
+simplifies the \CCODE, and we're still \TEX.
+
+Of course, once we remove these and only have the delayed \LUA\ whatsit and user
+whatsits left, we can as well replace these too. In \LUATEX\ user nodes are
+actually not dealt with in the backend. One can create them at the \LUA\ end and
+query them in callbacks. The \TEX\ machinery just ignores them, like any whatsit.
+In retrospect they could have been first class nodes, but making them whatsits
+was wise because that way they can be ignored consistently when needed.
+
+So, in the end all we need is a simple whatsit. As I removed the subtypes
+stepwise there was an intermediate mix of code to recognize simple whatsits from
+core whatsits but that distinction went away. Doing this kind of refactoring is
+best done stepwise because that way I can compile some large documents and see if
+things break. As a consequence again some code could be simplified as we
+basically no longer have extensions. Of course at the \CONTEXT\ end the removed
+primitives had to be added but that didn't take much effort. The binary shrunk
+some 30K but (a small amount of) \LUA\ code was added to provide a compatible
+functionality (not that we use it).
+
+% \stopsection
+
+\stopchapter
+
+\stopcomponent
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup.tex
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..a9aaaf71c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/followingup/followingup.tex
@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
+\environment followingup-style
+
+\dontcomplain
+
+\startdocument
+
+ \component followingup-titlepage
+
+ \startfrontmatter
+ \component followingup-contents
+ \stopfrontmatter
+
+ \startbodymatter
+ \component followingup-introduction
+ \component followingup-evolution
+ \component followingup-stripping
+ \component followingup-bitmaps
+ \component followingup-logging
+ \component followingup-directions
+ \component followingup-performance
+ \component followingup-cleanup
+ \component followingup-rejected
+ \component followingup-whatsits
+ \component followingup-feedback
+ \component followingup-lua
+ \component followingup-compilation
+ \component followingup-stubs
+ \component followingup-mp
+ \component followingup-tex
+ \component followingup-retrospect
+ \stopbodymatter
+
+\stopdocument
+