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This minor release contains various bug fixes and improvements.
Invoking Links with either --help
or --h
option causes a help message to be printed to standard out. The help message describes the usage format and lists some typical options with their default values.
usage: links.exe [options] [source-files [-- arguments]]
Options are:
--config=<file> Initialises Links according to the given configuration file (default: /home/links/.opam/4.09.0/etc/links/config)
-d, --debug Prints internal debugging information (development) (default: false)
--enable-handlers Enables the effect handlers extension (default: false)
-e, --evaluate=<expression> Evaluates an expression
-h, --help Print help message and exit
--path=<dir[,dir']...> Search paths for Links modules (default: .)
--measure_performance Instruments the server-side runtime to measure various performance characteristics (default: false)
-r, --rlwrap Selects whether to use the native readline support in REPL mode (default: true)
--optimise Optimises the generated code (default: false)
--print-keywords Print keywords and exit
--session-exceptions Enables the session exceptions extension (default: false)
--set=<setting=value> Sets the value of a particular setting via the commandline
-v, --version Print version and exit
-w, --web-mode Start Links in web mode (default: false)
The --set
option provides a lightweight means for setting the value of some setting at invocation of time of Links. The command line options are lexically scoped, meaning the effect of later options may shadow the effect of earlier options. For example using the options --set=debug=false --set=debug=true
will cause Links to start in debug mode.
The command line interface also supports enabling of transitive dependencies, meaning that is no longer necessary to pass --enable-handlers
at the same time as --session-exceptions
. Simply passing --session-exceptions
starts Links with the effect handlers runtime.
Modules are now a core feature and therefore enabled by default. The command line option -m
and setting modules
have been removed.
The Links MVU library now supports commands. Commands allow side-effecting computations to be performed inside the MVU event loop. A particularly important side-effect is to spawn a computation which evaluates asynchronously, returning a message when it is complete.
Key changes:
Command(Message)
which describes a computation which will produce a message of type Message(Message, Model) ~> Model
to (Message, Model) ~> (Model, Command(Message))
You can see the gist of the new functionality in the examples/mvu/commands.links example, which spawns an expensive computation asynchronously and awaits the result.
It is now possible to specify whether a query should be treated as flat or shredded. The query syntax has been extended as follows:
query [range] policy {
...
}
where policy
is either plain
, nested
, or omitted. If plain
is used, then the query will evaluated using the default evaluator, and if nested
is used, then the query will be shredded. If the policy is omitted, then the shredding
setting is used to decide, as before.
The Relational Lenses extension now supports postgresql serial type columns. In Links, the serial type is encoded as a variant type Serial
with three constructors:
Key(Int)
which indicates a known key value retrieved from the database.NewKey
which indicates that a value should be chosen by the database server.NewKeyMapped(Int)
which is similar to NewKey
, except that it allows multiple entries to refer to the same key (e.g. in the case of a table join, where two new entries are inserted referring to the same right table).log10
and exp
functions to the standard library.Version 0.9 (Burghmuirhead) presents multiple major new features, bugfixes, as well as significant changes and improvements to the Links internals.
Links now includes a Model-View-Update library for writing client code, as pioneered by the Elm programming langauge. More can be found on the Wiki page.
The implementation of relational lenses has been extended to support dynamic predicates in select
queries. Additionally, much work has been done in order to allow better typechecking of relational lenses.
Mutually-recursive functions and types should now be enclosed in a mutual
block:
mutual {
typename Even = [| Z | SuccE:Odd |];
typename Odd = [| SuccO:Even |];
sig three : () -> Odd
fun three() {
SuccO(SuccE(SuccO(Z)))
}
}
This leads to significant improvements with the performance of the typechecker when considering mutually-recursive types, simplifies the code, and solves multiple bugs.
FreezeML is a new approach to integrating first-class, System F-style polymorphism with ML-style type inference. The system relies on not guessing polymorphism, and the ability to "freeze" variables in order to suppress instantiation. See the TyDe abstract for more details.
Version 0.9 includes an implementation of FreezeML:
~e
~fun f(x) { x }
$(fun(x) { x }
and produces a term of type forall a::Any,b::Row. (a) -b-> a
@
The previous work on "explicit quantification" has been removed.
If the effect_sugar
flag is set, there are many improvements which decrease the number of times where explicit effect variables are required.
map : ((a) -e-> b, [a]) -e-> [b]
can be written as map : ((a) -> b, [a]) -> [b]
.typename Comp(a) = () ~> a
can be written insetad of Comp(a, e::Eff) = () ~e~> a, and
forever : Comp(()) ~> ()can be written instead of
forever : Comp((), e) ~e~> ()`Presence variables can be omitted from effects. As an example, we can write
sig evalState : (s) ->
(Comp(a, {Get:s,Put:(s) {}-> () |_})) ->
Comp(a, { |_})
instead of
sig evalState : (s) ->
(Comp(a, {Get:s,Put:(s) {}-> () |_})) ->
Comp(a, {Get{_},Put{_} |_})
Much work on 0.9 has concentrated on significant non-user-visible changes. In particular:
import
is now used to allow a module to be used in the current file, whereas open
brings it into the global scope. To get the previous behaviour, use open import X
for a module X
. (breaking change)select
queries now printed when debugging enabledEnd
session type is now linear, and must be eliminated using close
. This solves a class of memory leaks with session-typed applications.var hello = "hi"; (hello = hello, world="universe")
, it is now possible to write var hello = "hi"; (=hello, world="universe")
.lines
, unlines
, partition
, and span
added to preludex'
are now allowedcoerce_null_integers
setting is set to true
, then null_integer
(default -1) will be used instead of crashing at runtime.Links 0.8 introduces support for Incremental Relational Lenses. See the paper for details.
domSetAttributeFromRef
, domSetPropertyFromRef
, and domSetStyleAttrFromRef
.getValue
in jslib
.domGetChildrenFromRef
to return only DOM elements instead of whitespacesThis minor release contains various bug fixes and improves the dynamic loading facility for database drivers that was introduced in the previous release.
The loading of present database drivers is now deferred until an actual attempt to connect to a database is made.
Version 0.7.2 contains mainly behind-the-scenes improvements, however they may have a large impact on performance.
Links now uses JBuilder as its build system. In particular, this means that there are now multiple Links packages:
links
contains the executablelinks-core
exposes the Links source as a librarylinks-postgresql
is a dynamic loadable database driver for PostgreSQL.Additionally, links-mysql
and links-sqlite
are dynamically-loadable database drivers for MySQL and SQLite3 respectively, but while present in the source, are not formally released or officially supported.
A recent draft paper describes an exception handling mechanism which works in the presence of session types. This is included in 0.7.2. You can find out more on the wiki.
Fixes some issues with configuration files, and allows better navigation on the examples pages.
Version 0.7 of Links brings many new features (some of which have been in the works for over two years!)
Algebraic effects abstractly specify operations, which are given meaning by handlers. These provide a powerful mechanism for designing effectful code.
Read more in Hillerström & Lindley's Liberating Effects with Rows and Handlers and in examples/handlers
.
Whereas before, communication using session types and actor-style processes was limited to processes on the same concurrency runtime, Dalry provides the infrastructure to use these concurrency primitives across concurrency runtimes. See more in examples/distribution
.
Dalry brings support for natively calling JavaScript functions from Links client code. You can read more on the wiki page.
Links now has support for a standard library. We are hoping to gradually move things out of the more monolithic prelude, and support more data structures and algorithms out of the box. For now, we have included a minimal node-indexed binary tree library, which you can load with open BinaryTree
.
Links now supports the ability to create XML from variants, and variants from XML. These are implemented in the xmlToVariant
and variantToXml
functions.
-r
flag.Version 0.7 of Links brings many new features (some of which have been in the works for over two years!)
Algebraic effects abstractly specify operations, which are given meaning by handlers. These provide a powerful mechanism for designing effectful code.
Read more in Hillerström & Lindley's Liberating Effects with Rows and Handlers and in examples/handlers
.
Whereas before, communication using session types and actor-style processes was limited to processes on the same concurrency runtime, Dalry provides the infrastructure to use these concurrency primitives across concurrency runtimes. See more in examples/distribution
.
Dalry brings support for natively calling JavaScript functions from Links client code. You can read more on the wiki page.
Links now has support for a standard library. We are hoping to gradually move things out of the more monolithic prelude, and support more data structures and algorithms out of the box. For now, we have included a minimal node-indexed binary tree library, which you can load with open BinaryTree
.
Links now supports the ability to create XML from variants, and variants from XML. These are implemented in the xmlToVariant
and variantToXml
functions.
-r
flag.Bugfix release:
Version 0.6 of Links brings many changes.
Session types are a type system for communication channels, allowing conformance to communication protocols to be checked at compile-time. Links supports session types natively; for more information, see the examples/sessions directory.
Links now implements message-passing concurrency on the server-side using OCaml's light-weight threading (Lwt) library.
A major addition in the Gorgie release is the ability to run Links applications using a standalone web server, as opposed to using Links as a CGI interpreter. This allows Links to be set up more quickly, and for the easier development of applications where state must persist over multiple requests. For more information, see the examples/webserver directory.
Links now supports an experimental simple modules system, allowing the development of modular code over multiple files. To enable modules, either run Links with the -m flag, or set the "modules" setting to true in the configuration file.
To see examples of modules in action, check examples/webserver/examples.links.
Recursive types can now be written without explicitly writing recursive type variables. For example, whereas before a list could be defined as:
It is now possible to write:
Previously Links offered two web modes: server mode and client mode. In server mode web pages were built on the server and it was not possible to generate any JavaScript in the web page. In client mode a stub was generated on the server. The stub contained JavaScript which generated the actual content of the web page dynamically using the DOM API.
Now, web pages are always generated on the server, but they may contain JavaScript. In particular, they may include embedded event handlers implemented by processes which are spawned on the server, serialised, and sent to the server along with the body of the web page.
In order to spawn a process on the server that needs to run on the client, use the spawnClient keyword in place of spawn. This is the primary change that needs to be made when adapting old code to work with the realpages feature.
Links now includes experimental support for query shredding. This allows queries with nested result types to be written. A nested query is guaranteed to translate to at most n SQL queries, where n is the nesting depth of the source query. It currently only works for the postgresql database back end. The shredding extension is enabled by configuring the shredding setting to the value true.