* ocamlbuild `Circular dependencies'
@ 2008-01-24 14:23 Christian Sternagel
2008-01-28 10:23 ` [Caml-list] " Romain Bardou
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Christian Sternagel @ 2008-01-24 14:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
I use the following setting for a project:
Within the root directory of the project there are
two subdirectories A and B containing *.ml, *.mli, and *.mly
files.
additionally there is the file A.mllib in A containing all
modules that are in A and B.mllib containing all
modules that are in B.
ocamlbuild -I A A.cma
works fine.
Now B should also result in a lib where some modules in B
depend on modules in A. When trying
ocamlbuild -lib A -Is A,B B.cma
the compilation terminates unsuccessful indicating
some Circular dependencies. However, the Makefile we
used before works fine and there really are no circular
dependencies.
Am I doing something completely wrong here?
Isn't it possible to compile libraries depending on other
libraries?
cheers
christian
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] ocamlbuild `Circular dependencies'
2008-01-24 14:23 ocamlbuild `Circular dependencies' Christian Sternagel
@ 2008-01-28 10:23 ` Romain Bardou
2008-01-28 10:43 ` Christian Sternagel
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Romain Bardou @ 2008-01-28 10:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
I tried to reproduce a similar set of directories as yours. I couldn't
get the "circular dependency" error, but I had to compile everything in
one command line, otherwise the file a.cma (which is in the _build/A
directory) was deleted before compiling b.cma. The command which I used
and which worked is:
ocamlbuild -Is A,B a.cma b.cma
I don't really understand how the -lib option works though. Where and
when does it look for the library x.cma with the "-lib x" option? How
and what's the semantic of the "+" you can add at the beginning of a
library name?...
--
Romain Bardou
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] ocamlbuild `Circular dependencies'
2008-01-28 10:23 ` [Caml-list] " Romain Bardou
@ 2008-01-28 10:43 ` Christian Sternagel
2008-01-28 11:08 ` Romain Bardou
2008-01-28 14:24 ` Nicolas Pouillard
0 siblings, 2 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Christian Sternagel @ 2008-01-28 10:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
On Mon, Jan 28, 2008 at 11:23:29AM +0100, Romain Bardou wrote:
> I tried to reproduce a similar set of directories as yours. I couldn't
> get the "circular dependency" error, but I had to compile everything in
> one command line, otherwise the file a.cma (which is in the _build/A
Today I found out, that we indeed had a circular dependency:
An interface file B.mli used a type A.t, whereas the implementation
file A.ml uses functions from B. When using ocamldep + a Makefile, no
error occurred. But ocamlbuild refused to compile... I guess that is
the right thing to do =)
> directory) was deleted before compiling b.cma. The command which I used
> and which worked is:
>
> ocamlbuild -Is A,B a.cma b.cma
>
> I don't really understand how the -lib option works though. Where and
> when does it look for the library x.cma with the "-lib x" option? How
> and what's the semantic of the "+" you can add at the beginning of a
> library name?...
As far as I know, a `+' means that the following name should be searched
relative to the standard library.
Still my question remains, how one should configure a project
that consists of several libraries and one binary, together
with ocamlbuild. E.g.,
+- prof.dir/
+-+- A/
| +- a.mllib
| +- a1.ml
| +- ...
| +- aN.ml
|
+-+- B/
| +- b.mllib
| +- b1.ml
| +- ...
| +- bN.ml
|
+-+- Main/
+- main.ml (depending on a.cma and b.cma)
cheers
christian
>
> --
> Romain Bardou
>
> _______________________________________________
> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management:
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> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] ocamlbuild `Circular dependencies'
2008-01-28 10:43 ` Christian Sternagel
@ 2008-01-28 11:08 ` Romain Bardou
2008-01-28 14:24 ` Nicolas Pouillard
1 sibling, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Romain Bardou @ 2008-01-28 11:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
> Still my question remains, how one should configure a project
> that consists of several libraries and one binary, together
> with ocamlbuild. E.g.,
>
> +- prof.dir/
> +-+- A/
> | +- a.mllib
> | +- a1.ml
> | +- ...
> | +- aN.ml
> |
> +-+- B/
> | +- b.mllib
> | +- b1.ml
> | +- ...
> | +- bN.ml
> |
> +-+- Main/
> +- main.ml (depending on a.cma and b.cma)
Well, is it a problem to compile using:
ocamlbuild -Is A,B,Main main.byte
If you really want to build libraries independently then maybe you could
build the cma files, copy them in a "lib" directory which won't be
included by ocamlbuild (because of "sanitization" restrictions) and then
use the "-lib" option to use "lib/a.cma" and "lib/b.cma"...
The script would look like this, supposing B depends on A and Main
depends on A and B (not tested):
#!/bin/sh
ocamlbuild -I A a.cma
cp _build/A/a.cma lib
ocamlbuild -lib lib/a -I B b.cma
cp _build/B/b.cma lib
ocamlbuild -libs lib/a,lib/b -I Main main.byte
--
Romain Bardou
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] ocamlbuild `Circular dependencies'
2008-01-28 10:43 ` Christian Sternagel
2008-01-28 11:08 ` Romain Bardou
@ 2008-01-28 14:24 ` Nicolas Pouillard
1 sibling, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Nicolas Pouillard @ 2008-01-28 14:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: christian.sternagel; +Cc: caml-list
Excerpts from christian.sternagel's message of Mon Jan 28 11:43:09 +0100 2008:
> On Mon, Jan 28, 2008 at 11:23:29AM +0100, Romain Bardou wrote:
> > I tried to reproduce a similar set of directories as yours. I couldn't
> > get the "circular dependency" error, but I had to compile everything in
> > one command line, otherwise the file a.cma (which is in the _build/A
> Today I found out, that we indeed had a circular dependency:
>
> An interface file B.mli used a type A.t, whereas the implementation
> file A.ml uses functions from B. When using ocamldep + a Makefile, no
> error occurred. But ocamlbuild refused to compile... I guess that is
> the right thing to do =)
Yes ocamlbuild treats your module (interface + implementation) as a whole.
Then dependencies are computed for modules, so you are in a case that could
be compiled but ocamlbuild will refuse it. I'm a bit reluctant to change
this, since I think that the right thing to do is to avoid this kind of
semi-cycles.
> > directory) was deleted before compiling b.cma. The command which I used
> > and which worked is:
> >
> > ocamlbuild -Is A,B a.cma b.cma
> >
> > I don't really understand how the -lib option works though. Where and
> > when does it look for the library x.cma with the "-lib x" option? How
> > and what's the semantic of the "+" you can add at the beginning of a
> > library name?...
> As far as I know, a `+' means that the following name should be searched
> relative to the standard library.
All ocamlbuild include directories must be implicit and relative to the
current dir. So dirs like ../foo, /foo, +foo, ./foo are forbidden. You can
make symbolic link to avoid the two first cases. If you really need to give
+foo dir, please use non-interpreted compilation flags like -cflags for the
command line and tags like ["ocaml"; "compile"] for a tag based approach.
> Still my question remains, how one should configure a project
> that consists of several libraries and one binary, together
> with ocamlbuild. E.g.,
>
> +- prof.dir/
> +-+- A/
> | +- a.mllib
> | +- a1.ml
> | +- ...
> | +- aN.ml
> |
> +-+- B/
> | +- b.mllib
> | +- b1.ml
> | +- ...
> | +- bN.ml
> |
> +-+- Main/
> +- main.ml (depending on a.cma and b.cma)
The simplest thing to do is what you've tried (ocamlbuild -Is A,B Main/main.byte).
But here your mllib's are not used.
If you want to use them as libraries you need a small myocamlbuild.ml like:
$ cat myocamlbuild.ml
open Ocamlbuild_plugin;;
dispatch begin function
| After_rules ->
ocaml_lib "A/a";
ocaml_lib "B/b"
| _ -> ()
end
And to tag your files:
$ cat _tags
# tells that main use a and b libs
<Main/main.{byte,native}>: use_a, use_b
# this will avoid the need of command line options to ocamlbuild
"A" or "B": include
$ ocamlbuild Main/main.byte
Cheers,
PS: I've just updated the wiki [1]
[1]: http://brion.inria.fr/gallium/index.php/Using_internal_libraries
--
Nicolas Pouillard aka Ertai
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2008-01-24 14:23 ocamlbuild `Circular dependencies' Christian Sternagel
2008-01-28 10:23 ` [Caml-list] " Romain Bardou
2008-01-28 10:43 ` Christian Sternagel
2008-01-28 11:08 ` Romain Bardou
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