From: Alan Schmitt <alan.schmitt@polytechnique.org>
To: "lwn" <lwn@lwn.net>, "cwn" <cwn@lists.idyll.org>,
caml-list@inria.fr, comp@lists.orbitalfox.eu
Subject: [Caml-list] Attn: Development Editor, Latest OCaml Weekly News
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2021 10:51:17 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <87tuq3nmcq.fsf@m4x.org> (raw)
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 15261 bytes --]
Hello
Here is the latest OCaml Weekly News, for the week of February 16 to 23,
2021.
Table of Contents
─────────────────
OCamlFormat 0.17.0
Set up OCaml 1.1.8
Set up OCaml 1.1.9
OCaml 4.12.0, first release candidate
Ppxlib.0.22: an update on the state of ppx
OCaml-based trading firm is hiring remote devs
ocamlearlybird 1.0.0 beta1
OCaml for ARM MacOS
Old CWN
OCamlFormat 0.17.0
══════════════════
Archive: <https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ann-ocamlformat-0-17-0/7287/1>
Guillaume Petiot announced
──────────────────────────
On behalf of the OCamlFormat development team I am pleased to announce
the release of [ocamlformat.0.17.0] :tada:.
OCamlformat is an auto-formatter for OCaml code, writing the parse
tree and comments in a consistent style, so that you do not have to
worry about formatting it by hand, and to speed up code review by
focusing on the important parts.
OCamlFormat is beta software. We expect the program to change
considerably before we reach version 1.0.0. In particular, upgrading
the `ocamlformat' package will cause your program to get
reformatted. Sometimes it is relatively pain-free, but sometimes it
will make a diff in almost every file. We are working towards having a
tool that pleases most usecases in the OCaml community, please bear
with us!
To make sure your project uses the last version of ocamlformat, please
set
┌────
│ version=0.17.0
└────
in your `.ocamlformat' file.
Main changes in `ocamlformat.0.17.0' are:
• the `let-open' option, deprecated since 0.16.0, has been removed
• support for OCaml 4.06 and 4.07 has been removed, minimal version
requirement bumped to OCaml 4.08
• the `extension-sugar' option, deprecated since 0.14.0, has been
removed
• the syntax of infix set/get operators is now preserved (`String.get'
and similar calls used to be automatically rewritten to their
corresponding infix form `.()', that was incorrect when using the
`-unsafe' compilation flag. Now the concrete syntax of these calls
is preserved)
• all sugared extension points are now preserved
• injectivity type annotations (OCaml 4.12 feature) are now supported
• various fixes about comments positions
We encourage you to try ocamlformat, that can be installed from opam
directly ( `opam install ocamlformat' ), but please remember that it
is still beta software. We have a [FAQ for new users ] that should
help you decide if ocamlformat is the right choice for you.
[ocamlformat.0.17.0] <https://github.com/ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat>
[FAQ for new users ]
<https://github.com/ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat#faq-for-new-users>
Set up OCaml 1.1.8
══════════════════
Archive: <https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ann-set-up-ocaml-1-1-8/7288/1>
Sora Morimoto announced
───────────────────────
Changed
╌╌╌╌╌╌╌
• The Windows opam wrapper is fractionally less-archaically named
opam.cmd, with no loss in arcaneness.
• Export `CYGWIN_ROOT' on the Windows runners, allowing bash to be
invoked as `%CYGWIN_ROOT%\bin\bash~/~$env:CYGWIN_ROOT\bin\bash' (and
similarly for Cygwin `setup-x86_64.exe').
• The Windows runner no longer prepends `%CYGWIN_ROOT%\bin' to `PATH'.
Fixed
╌╌╌╌╌
• Switches in Unix are now properly initialized before running depext.
<https://github.com/avsm/setup-ocaml/releases/tag/v1.1.8>
Set up OCaml 1.1.9
══════════════════
Archive: <https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ann-set-up-ocaml-1-1-9/7293/1>
Sora Morimoto announced
───────────────────────
Fixed
╌╌╌╌╌
• Further fix to switch initialisation.
<https://github.com/avsm/setup-ocaml/releases/tag/v1.1.9>
OCaml 4.12.0, first release candidate
═════════════════════════════════════
Archive:
<https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ocaml-4-12-0-first-release-candidate/7294/1>
octachron announced
───────────────────
The release of OCaml 4.12.0 is expected next week. We have created a
release candidate that you can test. Most opam packages should work
with this release candidate (without the need for an alpha
repository).
Compared to the last beta, this new release only contains one fix for
Solaris and illumos.
If you find any bugs, please report them here:
<https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/issues>
Happy hacking,
– Florian Angeletti for the OCaml team.
Installation instructions
╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌
The base compiler can be installed as an opam switch with the
following commands
┌────
│ opam update
│ opam switch create 4.12.0~rc1 --repositories=default,beta=git+https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-beta-repository.git
└────
If you want to tweak the configuration of the compiler, you can pick
configuration options with
┌────
│ opam update
│ opam switch create <switch_name> --packages=ocaml-variants.4.12.0~rc1+options,<option_list>
│ --repositories=default,beta=git+https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-beta-repository.git
└────
where `<option_list>' is a comma separated list of ocaml-option-*
packages. For instance, for a flambda and afl enabled switch:
┌────
│ opam switch create 4.12.0~rc1+flambda+afl --packages=ocaml-variants.4.12.0~rc1+options,ocaml-option-flambda,ocaml-option-afl
│ --repositories=default,beta=git+https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-beta-repository.git
└────
All available options can be listed with `opam search ocaml-option'.
The source code is available at these addresses:
• <https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/archive/4.12.0-rc1.tar.gz>
• <https://caml.inria.fr/pub/distrib/ocaml-4.12/ocaml-4.12.0~rc1.tar.gz>
Ppxlib.0.22: an update on the state of ppx
══════════════════════════════════════════
Archive:
<https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ppxlib-0-22-an-update-on-the-state-of-ppx/7296/1>
Nathan Rebours announced
────────────────────────
We're happy to announce the release of ppxlib.0.22.0, the fist release
of ppxlib fully compatible with OCaml 4.12. The main and only feature
of this release is the bump of the internal OCaml AST used by ppxlib
from 4.11 to 4.12, allowing you to use 4.12 language features with
ppxlib and any ppxlib-based ppx. Note that ppxlib was compatible with
the 4.12 compiler since 0.19.0 but that you couldn't use 4.12 language
features until now.
This is the third such AST bump release since we announced our plan to
improve the state of the PPX ecosystem [here] and we though it'd be a
good time to report back to you and tell you how things are going on
this front.
For those of you who aren't familiar with this plan, the goal is to
upstream a minimal, stable, ocaml-migrate-parsetree-like API on top of
the compiler-libs called `Astlib'. It will allow us to keep ppxlib and
any ppx based on ppxlib compatible with OCaml trunk at all time. To
allow better performances and a clear compisition semantic, all the
ppxlib-based ppx-es need to use the same AST (as opposed to
ocaml-migrate-parsetree based ppx-es) so from a certain perspective,
this plan simply moves the breaking API up one step, from
compiler-libs to ppxlib. In order to greatly ease the maintainenance
of ppx-es and to prevent opam-universe splits we decided that
everytime we cut a breaking ppxlib release, we will send patches to
keep the existing ppx-es compatible with the latest version and
therefore with the latest OCaml compilers and language features.
While this seems like a tremendous task and a huge amount of work,
dune and other tools that raised in its wake such as [opam-monorepo]
incredibly simplified this kind of work.
Ahead of OCaml releases, we prepare a branch of ppxlib with the
upgraded AST. We then fetch opam-repository to gather a list of
sensible reverse dependencies (i.e. packages whose latest version
depends on ppxlib and is compatible with ppxlib's latest version) and
assemble a dune workspace with a clone of each of those reverse
dependencies, our ppxlib branch and all of their dependencies thanks
to opam-monorepo. We then use dune to build all the packages we're
interested in and simply follow the compilation errors until
everything builds successfully with the new ppxlib. What remains is
to create PRs on the relevant repositories to upstream those changes,
after which maintainers have everything they need to cut a new
compatible release.
Most of this process is automated using scripts but it still requires
a bit of handiwork. We aim at extracting tools to further improve this
workflow and reduce the time and effort required but it has been
surprisingly smooth. Our experience with the 4.10, 4.11 and 4.12
upgrades so far is that most reverse dependencies don't need an
upgrade and that it's far less demanding for one person to upgrade all
the packages that need it than it would be for each individual
maintainers to understand the changes in the AST and do the upgrade
themselves.
It's worth noting that for this to work well, the ppx-es and all their
dependencies have to build with dune. We do maitain a separate
opam-repository with dune ports of commonly used packages so in
practice most projects fall into this category but a few exceptions
remain and they are therefore not taken into account for this upgrade
process.
We're also trying to improve the tracking of the upgrade's progress
and for the 4.12 compatible release we created a [github project] to
have a list of all the packages we considered and see where they
are. We also keep track of the packages we had to exclude and why.
During this upgrade, we considered 80 opam packages, out of which only
4 needed to be patched and 6 had to be excluded from the process as we
couldn't reasonably get them to build in our workspace.
Once we have a better idea of what makes a package easy to upgrade we
plan on releasing a set of reasonable rules to follow to benefit from
those upgrades, we'll keep you updated on this!
All in all we're pretty happy with this new process and although it
needs to be refined, we're confident it can grow into something
sustainable by creating tools and CI to support it. Hopefully these
will also benefit the wider community and help grow a healthier Opam
universe.
[here] <https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ppx-omp-2-0-0-and-next-steps/6231>
[opam-monorepo] <https://github.com/ocamllabs/opam-monorepo>
[github project] <https://github.com/ocaml-ppx/ppxlib/projects/2>
Jason Nielsen asked
───────────────────
Curious about the current status of `Astlib'. I was closely following
[ppx] at one point but it hasn't seen much activity recently. Thanks
for all your hard work.
[ppx] <https://github.com/ocaml-ppx/ppx>
Jérémie Dimino
──────────────
It's in progress. Not much happened in the past couple of months while
we were finishing the port of a few projects to ppxlib and doing the
4.12 upgrade. But @pitag re-started working `Astlib' as of a week
ago. You can follow our progression via [the public meeting notes].
Note however that the [ppx] project was for our original goal or
providing a "forever stable" API for ppx rewriters. It has been in
pause since August 2020 while were trying the "upgrade the world"
method, which as @NathanReb pointed out is working pretty well
practice. At this point, it's looking more and more likely that we
won't resurect the ppx project.
[the public meeting notes] <https://github.com/ocaml-ppx/ppxlib/wiki>
[ppx] <https://github.com/ocaml-ppx/ppx>
OCaml-based trading firm is hiring remote devs
══════════════════════════════════════════════
Archive:
<https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ocaml-based-trading-firm-is-hiring-remote-devs/7298/1>
Michael Bacarella announced
───────────────────────────
BTG is a trading firm founded by ex-Jane Street devs looking to hire
some more devs.
The role is primarily remote, working with the rest of our mostly
remote team, though we hope to resume regular on-sites in Puerto Rico.
We operate 24/7 and will consider employees anywhere in the world.
Prior experience with OCaml is a plus, though any solid programming
experience with an interest in functional programming and strong
static types is also fine.
Comfort navigating Linux is essential.
Shoot me a message with a copy of your résumé or C.V. to discuss the
opportunity further: [michael.bacarella@gmail.com]
Feel free to re-post this elsewhere.
[michael.bacarella@gmail.com] <mailto:michael.bacarella@gmail.com>
ocamlearlybird 1.0.0 beta1
══════════════════════════
Archive:
<https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ann-ocamlearlybird-1-0-0-beta1/7180/21>
文宇祥 announced
────────────────
Hi, all. All the issues of beta1 have been fixed. Beta2 will be
released soon.
<https://github.com/ocaml/opam-repository/pull/18191>
OCaml for ARM MacOS
═══════════════════
Archive: <https://discuss.ocaml.org/t/ocaml-for-arm-macos/6019/24>
Aaron L. Zeng announced
───────────────────────
I noticed that opam 2.08 is now available for ARM Macs using
[Homebrew], and I was able to confirm on my machine.
`brew install opam' away :)
[Homebrew] <https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/pull/71605>
Old CWN
═══════
If you happen to miss a CWN, you can [send me a message] and I'll mail
it to you, or go take a look at [the archive] or the [RSS feed of the
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If you also wish to receive it every week by mail, you may subscribe
[online].
[Alan Schmitt]
[send me a message] <mailto:alan.schmitt@polytechnique.org>
[the archive] <https://alan.petitepomme.net/cwn/>
[RSS feed of the archives] <https://alan.petitepomme.net/cwn/cwn.rss>
[online] <http://lists.idyll.org/listinfo/caml-news-weekly/>
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