ALIRE: Ada LIbrary REpository.
A catalog of ready-to-use Ada libraries plus a command-line tool (alr
) to
obtain, build, and incorporate them into your own projects. It aims to fulfill
a similar role to Rust's cargo
or OCaml's opam
.
Documentation at this time is a work in progress. Expect further efforts in this direction until this warning is removed. Check the latest information at https://alire.ada.dev/
Available for Linux/macOS/Windows/FreeBSD/OpenBSD.
Download the latest stable version from the Releases page. See the Getting Started guide for binary downloads.
If, instead, you want to test the latest development version, see Building from sources or, if you already have a recent alr
in your system, Building with alr
.
See the Getting Started guide.
The build process of alr
is straighforward and depends only on a recent GNAT Ada 2012 compiler. All dependencies are included as submodules. A project file (alr_env.gpr
) is provided to drive the build with all necessary configuration (which is also valid for editing with GNAT Studio).
The ALIRE_OS environment variable must be set to the OS for which alr
is being build, taking one of the values in freebsd
, openbsd
, linux
, macos
, windows
.
Follow these steps:
- Clone the repository:
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/alire-project/alire.git
- Enter the cloned repository folder.
- Build the executable:
- if you have Bash on your system:
dev/build.sh
- if you don't have Bash on your system:
ALIRE_OS=<one of: freebsd, openbsd, linux, macos, windows> gprbuild -j0 -p -P alr_env
- if you have Bash on your system:
The binary will be found at bin/alr
. You can run alr version
to see version and diagnostics information.
Sourcing the scripts/alr-completion.bash
file will provide Bash tab autocompletion.
If you already have a recent enough alr
binary, you can alternatively build
alr
by simply running alr build
at the root of the repository. This command
will retrieve all necessary dependencies prior to launching the build and
configure the environment.
The master branch should normally be able to build itself in this fashion, as this is one of our integration tests.
alr is tailored to userspace, in a similar way to Python's virtualenv. A project or workspace will contain all its dependencies.
Some crates benefit from using platform packages. In this case the user
will be asked to authorize a sudo
installation through the platform package
manager.
Properties and dependencies of projects are managed through a TOML file
(alire.toml
, found at the root of Alire workspaces). This file exists locally
for working copies of projects, and the Alire community index stores the files
corresponding to its projects.
The complete build environment is automatically set up by setting the
GPR_PROJECT_PATH environment variable before running gprbuild
, thus freeing
the user from concerns about installation paths. The user simply adds the used
projects to its own project GPR file with their simple name. You can check the
environment alr
is using with alr printenv
.
Alire can be built on Linux, macOS, Windows, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD.
Alire requires a recent Ada 2012 compiler. In practice, this currently means the latest GNAT Community or a somewhat recent GNAT FSF. Continuous integration is run against the Windows and macOS Github Actions images, and a suite of Linux docker images that includes at least Debian stable, Ubuntu LTS, CentOS, Arch and Fedora. The packaged GNAT is used when available from the distribution.
Note that platform-provided Ada libraries (such as Debian's GtkAda) require the use of the platform Ada compiler. Otherwise these libraries will be unavailable, potentially making dependent crates unavailable too.