- Closes#1993
This pr makes it possible to use `~`, `..` and environment variables in
the `juvix.yaml` and all flags / input of the cli.
In the CLI, the shell will be responsible for replacing environment
variables with their value, so the usual syntax can be used. For the
`dependencies` field, I have implemented a parser that has some
restrictions:
1. Environment variables are given with the makefile-like syntax
`$(VAR)`
2. The three characters `$` `(` `)` are reserved for the environment
variables syntax.
They cannot be part of the path.
3. `~` is reserved for `$(HOME)`. I.e. the prepath `~~` will expand to
`$HOME$HOME`.
4. Nested environment variables are not allowed.
Thanks @paulcadman for the feedback. I think we are ready to merge this
nightmarish pr 👻
---------
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <git@paulcadman.dev>
- Fixes#1723
- It refactors parsing/scoping so that the scoper does not need to read
files or parse any module. Instead, the parser takes care of parsing all
the imported modules transitively.
This PR adds some maintenance at different levels to the CI config, the
Make file, and formatting.
- Most of the actions used by the CI related to haskell, ormolu, hlint
and pre-commit have been updated because Github requires NodeJS 16. This
change removes all the old warnings related to nodeJs.
In the case of ormolu, the new version makes us format some files that
were not formatted before, similarly with hlint.
- The CI has been updated to use the latest version of the Smoke testing
framework, which introduced installation of the dependencies for Linux
(libicu66) and macOS (icu4c) in the CI. In the case of macOS, the CI
uses a binary for smoke. For Linux, we use stack to build smoke from the
source. The source here is in a fork of [the official Smoke
repo](https://github.com/SamirTalwar/smoke). Such includes some
features/changes that are not yet in the official repo.
- The Makefile runs the ormolu and hlint targets using as a path for the
binaries the environment variables ORMOLU and HLINT. Thus, export those
variables in your environment before running `make check,` `make format`
or `make hlint`. Otherwise, the Makefile will use the binaries provided
by `stack`.
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <git@paulcadman.dev>