Developer related information is contained in the developers.markdown file. The normal readme.markdown file now contains information about basic command line usage. |
||
|---|---|---|
| .gitignore | ||
| babel.babel | ||
| babel.nim | ||
| babel.nimrod.cfg | ||
| common.nim | ||
| developers.markdown | ||
| download.nim | ||
| license.txt | ||
| packageinfo.nim | ||
| readme.markdown | ||
| todo.markdown | ||
| tools.nim | ||
| version.nim | ||
Babel
Babel is a beta-grade package manager for the Nimrod programming language.
Installation
You will need the latest Nimrod compiler from github to compile babel (version 0.9.2 may work).
Once you have the latest Nimrod compiler you can compile babel by executing:
nimrod c -d:release babel. Then simply install babel by executing ./babel install. You should then add ~/.babel/bin to your $PATH.
Note: On Windows you must rename babel.exe to babel1.exe and
subsequently run babel1.exe install. This is because Windows will lock
the process which is being run.
Babel's folder structure and packages
Babel stores everything that has been installed in ~/.babel on Unix systems
and in your $home/.babel on Windows. Libraries are stored in
$babelDir/pkgs, and binaries are stored in $babelDir/bin. Most Babel
packages will provide .nim files and some documentation. The Nimrod
compiler is aware of Babel and will automatically find the modules so you can
import modulename and have that working without additional setup.
However, some Babel packages can provide additional tools or commands. If you
don't add their location ($babelDir/bin) to your $PATH they will not
work properly and you won't be able to run them.
Babel usage
Once you have Babel installed on your system you can run the babel command
to obtain a list of available commands.
babel update
The update command is used to fetch and update the list of Babel packages
(see below). There is no automatic update mechanism, so you need to run this
yourself if you need to refresh your local list of known available Babel
packages. Example:
$ babel update
Downloading package list from https://.../packages.json
Done.
Some commands may remind you to run babel update or will run it for you if
they fail.
babel install
The install command will download and install a package. You need to pass
the name of the package (or packages) you want to install. If any of the
packages depends on other Babel packages Babel will also fetch them for you.
Example:
$ babel install nake
Downloading nake into /tmp/babel/nake...
Executing git...
...
nake installed successfully
Babel always fetches and installs the latest version of a package. If you already have that version installed it will ask to overwrite your local copy.
If you don't specify a parameter and there is a package.babel file in your
current working directory Babel will ask if you want to install that. This can
be useful for developers who are testing locally their .babel files before
submitting them. See developers.markdown for more info
on this.
babel build
The build command is mostly used by developers who want to test building
their .babel package. The install command calls build implicitly,
so there is rarely any reason to use this command directly.
babel list
The list command will display the known list of packages available for
Babel.
babel search
If you don't want to go through the whole output of the list command you
can use the search command specifying as parameters the package name and/or
tags you want to filter. Babel will look into the known list of available
packages and display only those that match the specified keywords (which can be
substrings). Example:
$ babel search math
linagl:
url: https://bitbucket.org/BitPuffin/linagl (hg)
tags: library, opengl, math, game
description: OpenGL math library
license: CC0
extmath:
url: git://github.com/achesak/extmath.nim (git)
tags: library, math, trigonometry
description: Nimrod math library
license: MIT
babel path
The babel path command will shows the absolute path to the installed
packages matching the specified parameters. Since there can be many versions of
the same package installed, the path command will always use the latest
version. Example:
$ babel path argument_parser
/home/user/.babel/pkgs/argument_parser-0.1.2
Under Unix you can use backticks to quickly access the directory of a package, which can be useful to read the bundled documentation. Example:
$ pwd
/usr/local/bin
$ cd `babel path argument_parser`
$ less README.md
Packages
Babel works on git repositories as its primary source of packages. Its list of
packages is stored in a JSON file which is freely accessible in the
nimrod-code/packages repository.
This JSON file provides babel with the required Git URL to clone the package
and install it. Installation and build instructions are contained inside a
ini-style file with the .babel file extension. The babel file shares the
package's name.
Contribution
If you would like to help, feel free to fork and make any additions you see fit and then send a pull request. If you are a developer willing to produce new Babel packages please read the developers.markdown file for detailed information.
If you have any questions about the project you can ask me directly on github, ask on the nimrod forum, or ask on Freenode in the #nimrod channel.
About
Babel has been written by Dominik Picheta and is licensed under the BSD license (Look at license.txt for more info).