Use
package.json
to automatically configure libraries and executables built with Dune.
pesy
: Creates a new project in the current directory.esy
: Builds the current project (just like every other esy
project).esy pesy
: Updates your build config from package.json
(run this any time
you change package.json
).pesy
(Create New Project)pesy
global command creates esy
projects instantly inside of any directory.
npm install -g pesy
cd my-project
pesy # Hit enter to accept default name
This creates:
package.json
with useful dependencies/compilers..gitignore
and README.md
with instructions for new contributors..circleci
continuous integration with cache configured for ultra-fast pull
requests.library/
, executable/
and test/
directory with starter modules.esy
(Build The Project)Just like with any esy
project, running esy
from the project directory will
build it and fetch/install any dependencies you might need.
esy
Your project's
esy.build
field is set topesy
, which will runpesy
to verify that all your build config is up to date before invoking the Dune build. It will let you know if you need to runesy pesy
to update your build config from new changes topackage.json
.
esy pesy
: (Update Build Config Based On package.json
)esy pesy
If you change your buildDirs
config in package.json
, run this command to
update build configuration based on your latest package.json
. If you forget
to run this command and try to build (by running esy
) without first running
esy pesy
, the build will remind you.
Configure your package.json
's buildDirs
field for multiple libraries and
executables.
buildDirs.DirectoryName
means that a library or executable will be located at
./DirectoryName
. The buildDirs.DirectoryName.name
field determines the
public name of the library or executable. a name
ending in .exe
is
automatically configured as an executable, and a name of the form
packageName.anything
is automatically configured to be a library with the
public name of packageName.anything
.
"buildDirs": {
"MyLibrary": {
"name": "packageNameMyLibrary",
"namespace": "MyLibrary",
"require": ["console.lib"]
},
"Tests": {
"name": "Tests.exe",
"description": "Runs all the tests natively",
"flags": ["-linkall"],
"require": ["console.lib", "packageNameMyLibrary""]
}
}
Not all config is supported. This is just a proof of concept. If you'd like to add support for more config fields, PRs are welcomed.
Binaries
Field | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
string |
The name of the binary that must end with .exe . |
main |
string |
The name of the module that serves as the main entrypoint of the binary. |
modes |
list(string) |
Advanced linking modes. Each string should be of the form "(<compilation-mode> <binary-kind>)" where <compilation-mode> is one byte , native or best and <binary-kind> is one of c , exe , object , shared_object . |
Libraries
Field | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
string |
The name of the library |
modes |
list("byte"\|"native"\|"best") |
Mode which should be built by default. Useful for disabling native compilation for some libraries. |
cNames |
list(string) |
List of strings to use as C stubs (filenames without the .c extension). |
virtualModules |
list(string) |
List of modules within the library that will have interfaces but no implementation, causing this library to be considered "virtual". Another library can then claim to "implement" this library by including "implements": "yourLibName" . See Virtual Libraries |
implements |
list(string) |
List of virtual library names that this library implements. |
wrapped |
true|false |
Default true , and it's a good idea to keep it that way. Setting to false will put all your library modules in the global namespace. |
Both Libraries And Binaries
Field | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
require |
list(string) |
Public library names you want to be able to use. |
flags |
list(string) |
List of strings to pass to both native and bytecode compilers. |
ocamlcFlags |
list(string) |
List of flags to pass to ocamlc |
ocamloptFlags |
list(string) |
List of flags to pass to ocamlopt |
jsooFlags |
list(string) |
List of flags passed to jsoo |
preprocess |
list(string) |
List of preprocess options to enable. Primarily used to enable PPX |
ignoredSubdirs |
list(string) |
Subdirectory names to ignore (This feature is soon to be deprecated). |
includeSubdirs |
"no"\|"unqualified" |
Default is "no" , and changing to "unqualified" will compile modules at deeper directories than the place where the dune file is generated. See Dune docs |
rawBuildConfig |
list(string) |
Raw build config to be injected into the build config for this target. |
rawBuildConfigFooter |
list(string) |
Raw build config to be injected into the footer of the build config. |
Add dependencies to dependencies
in package.json
.
Add the name of that new dependencies library to package.json
's
buildDirs
section that you want to use the library within. For example, if
your project builds a library in the exampleLib/
directory, and you want it
to depend on a library named bos.top
from an opam package named bos
,
change the package.json
to look like this:
{
"name": "my-package",
"dependencies": {
"@opam/bos": "*"
},
"buildDirs": {
"exampleLib": {
"namespace": "Examples",
"name": "my-package.example-lib",
"require": [ "bos.top" ]
}
}
}
Then run:
esy install # Fetch dependency sources
esy pesy # Configure the build based on package.json
esy build # Do the build
Note: After adding/building a new dependency you can use
esy ls-libs
to see which named libraries become available to you by adding the package dependency.
esy-pesy
is good for rapidly making new small executables/libraries. Once they
grow, you'll want to "eject out" of esy-pesy
and begin customizing using a more
advanced build system.
pesy
to an existing project.You probably don't need pesy
if you have an existing project that is working
well, but to add pesy
to an existing project, follow these steps:
1. Add a dependency on pesy
, and configure buildDirs
:
{
"name": "my-package",
"dependencies": {
"pesy": "*"
},
"buildDirs": {
"exampleLib": {
"namespace": "Examples",
"name": "my-package.example-lib",
"require": [ "bos.top" ]
},
"bin": {
"name": "my-package.exe",
"require": [
"my-package.lib"
]
}
}
}
2.Install and Build:
esy install
esy pesy # Generate the project build config from json
esy build
The next major version of pesy
is getting even simpler and better, and has
undergone a full native rewrite.
Follow the work in its new repo: https://github.com/esy/pesy.
version 0.4.3 (6/20/2019)
Moved pesy
to a devDependency
of all newly created projects.
Also did the same for refmterr
. This causes fewer package conflicts.
version 0.4.2 (6/16/2019)
Make new projects pin to ocaml 4.7.1004
so that it compiles with Reason,
since we're still waiting on Reason to work with 4.8
.
version 0.4.0 (12/21/2018)
buildDirs
to contain deeper directories such as "path/to/my-lib": {...}"
.wrapped
property on libraries.virtualModules
and implements
- properties for Dune
virtual libraries. (This will only be supported if you mark your project as
Dune 1.7 - not yet released).ignore_subdirs
in new projects, instead using
(dirs (:standard \ _esy))
which only works in Dune 1.6.0+
, so made new
projects have a lower bound of Dune 1.6.0
.rawBuildConfig
which will be inserted at the bottom
of the target being configured (library/executable).
rawBuildConfigFooter
which will be inserted at the
bottom of the entire Dune file for the target being configured.
modes
for binaries and libraries list(string)
.