Library
Module
Module type
Parameter
Class
Class type
Build configuration.
val conv :
?docv:string ->
(string -> 'a result) ->
(Stdlib.Format.formatter -> 'a -> unit) ->
'a conv
conv ~docv parse print
is a configuration value converter parsing values with parse
and printing them with print
. docv
is a documentation meta-variable used in the documentation to stand for the configuration value, defaults to "VALUE"
.
val bool : bool conv
bool
is a converter for booleans.
val int : int conv
int
is a converter for integers.
val string : string conv
string
is a converter for strings.
some conv
is like conv
but wraps the parsed value in Some
. none
is the string printed for None
by the converter printer, defaults to ""
.
Warning. Configuration keys must be created before the call to Pkg.describe
. Yes you are right, that's a little bit dirty.
The type for configuration keys whose lookup value is of type 'a
.
A configuration key has a name and represents a value of type 'a
in a build configuration. If "name"
is the name of the key then its value can be specified on the command line using --name v
where v
is the value of the key and is parsed according to the key's value converter.
There are a few predefined key, see the configuration section.
key name conv ~absent ~env ~doc ~docv
is a configuration key with name name
parsed from the command line with conv
. absent
is used if the value is not specified on the command line. If env
is specified and exists in the process environment, the value of the variable is parsed with conv
and used instead of absent
when needed.
doc
is a documentation string for the key. docv
is a documentation meta-variable to stand for the key value, defaulting to the docv
of conv
. In doc
, occurences of the substring "$(docv)"
are replaced by the value of docv
.
val discovered_key :
?docv:string ->
?doc:string ->
?env:string ->
string ->
'a conv ->
absent:(unit -> 'a result) ->
'a key
discovered_key
is like key
but the absent value is discovered, if needed, with absent
.
val with_pkg : ?default:bool -> string -> bool key
with_pkg ~default pkg
is a boolean configuration key named (strf "with-%s" pkg)
to assert existence of opam packages. If absent defaults to default
.
Usually specified in opam build instructions with:
"--with-thatpkg" thatpkg:installed
along with an entry in the depopt field of the opam file.
Warning. Only use this combinator for denoting opam package existence, the resulting key may switch to a discovery process in the future.
val pkg_name : t -> string
pkg_name c
is either the value of the package name as given to Pkg.describe
or the value of a predefined key --pkg-name
which overrides the package name. This defines the name of the generated opam install file. Used to handle multiple opam packages.
build_dir c
is either the value of build directory as given to Pkg.describe
via build
or the value of a predefined key --build-dir
which overrides the package definition.
val vcs : t -> bool
vcs c
is the value of a predefined key --vcs
. It is true
if the package directory is VCS managed. Usually should not be specified manually: if absent it is determined automatically by using Topkg.Vcs.find
and used to determine the build_context
.
val dev_pkg : t -> bool
dev_pkg c
is the value of a predefined key --dev-pkg
. It is true
if the build is initiated by an installer like opam and the package sources are a checkout from a VCS rather than a distribution archive. Usually specified in opam build instruction with either:
"--dev-pkg" "%{dev}%" # for opam >= 2.0
"--dev-pkg" "%{pinned}%" # < 2.0
val pinned : t -> bool
val jobs : t -> int
jobs c
is the value of a predefined key --jobs
. If absent it is determined from the build context as follows.
`Dev
builds default to number of CPU cores, or 4 if it cannot be determined.The type for build contexts. See build_context
for semantics.
val build_context : t -> [ `Dev | `Distrib | `Pin ]
build_context c
is the build context of c
. This is derived from vcs
and dev_pkg
(or the deprecated pinned
) as follows.
`Distrib
iff not (vcs c)
. No VCS is present, this is a build from a distribution. If there are configuration bits they should be setup according to the build configuration.`Dev
iff vcs c && not (dev_pkg c || pinned c)
. This is a development build invoked manually in a source repository. The repository checkout should likely not be touched and configuration bits not be setup. This is happening for example if the developer is testing the package description in her working source repository by invoking pkg/pkg.ml
or topkg build
.`Pin
iff vcs c && (dev_pkg c || pinned c)
. This is a package manager development build. In this case the repository checkout may need to be massaged into a pseudo-distribution for the package to be installed. This means that distribution watermarking and massaging should be performed, see distrib
and the prepare_on_pin
argument of build
. Besides exisiting configuration bits should be setup according to the build environment. Note. This is called `Pin
due to a blind spot, a more approriate name would be something like `Dev_pkg
build.val build_tests : t -> bool
build_tests c
is the value of a predefined key --tests
that indicates if the tests should be built. If absent the value depends on the build_context
, it is true
in the `Dev
context and false
in the other contexts.
val debug : t -> bool
debug c
is the value of a predefined key --debug
that indicates if the build should include debugging information in the build artefacts. If absent the value is true
or the value of the environment variable TOPKG_CONF_DEBUG if specified.
val debugger_support : t -> bool
debugger_support c
is the value of a predefined key --debugger-support
that indicates if build artefacts needed for source level debuggers should be built and installed. If absent the value is false
or the value of the environment variable TOPKG_CONF_DEBUGGER_SUPPORT if specified.
val profile : t -> bool
profile c
is the value of a predefined key --profile
that indicates if the build artefacts include run-time profiling support. If absent the value is false
or the value of the environment variable TOPKG_CONF_PROFILE if specified.
val toolchain : t -> string option
toolchain c
is the value of a predefined key --toolchain
that specifies the ocamlbuild toolchain. If absent the value is None
or the value of the environment variable TOPKG_CONF_TOOLCHAIN if specified.
val dump : Stdlib.Format.formatter -> t -> unit
dump ppf c
formats an unspecified representation of c
on ppf
.
If your package description needs to run tools (e.g. in the pre and post build hooks, see build
) it should get the tool to invoke with the following function. This allows to control the executable being run which is useful for cross-compilation scenarios.
The type for operating systems.
`Build_os
is the build OS, the OS on which the package is built.`Host_os
is the host OS, the OS on which the package is hosted and runs.tool ~conf cmd os
is a command cmd
which can be run on the build OS which produces output suitable for the OS os
, taking into account configuration conf
.
The actual command returned depends on the following lookup procedure, here exemplified on the invocation tool "mytool" `Host_os
(resp. `Build_os
).
Cmd.v "cmd"
, if the environment variable HOST_OS_MYTOOL (resp. BUILD_OS_MYTOOL) is set to "cmd"
Cmd.v (Fpath.append path "mytool")
, if the environment variable HOST_OS_XBIN (resp. BUILD_OS_BIN) is set to path
.Cmd.v ("mytool" ^ "suff")
, if the environment variable HOST_OS_SUFF (resp. BUILD_OS_SUFF).Cmd.(v "ocamlfind" % "-toolchain" % "toolchain" % "mytool")
if "mytool"
is part of the OCaml tools that can be invoked through ocamlfind, toolchain conf
is not None
, and os
is `Host_os
.Cmd.(v "ocamlfind" % "mytool")
if "mytool"
is part of the OCaml tools that can be invoked through ocamlfind.Cmd.v "mytool"
otherwise.module OCaml : sig ... end
OCaml configuration.