1. Adds the `--log-level LOG_LEVEL` flag to the CLI. This flag can be
given `error`, `warn`, `info`, `progress`, `debug` as argument to filter
the logged messages.
2. Removes the `--only-errors` flag.
3. Adds the `--ide-end-error-char CHAR`, which receives a character as
an argument, which is appended to the end of error messages. This is
handy to facilitate parsing of errors messages from the ide. This
functionality was previously embeded in the old `--only-errors` flag.
1. Adds the command `just format check`, which checks that all Haskell
files are formatted.
2. In CI, we use install ormolu from stackage and run it. This will
facilitate consistency between CI and local setups.
---------
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <git@paulcadman.dev>
* Closes#2781
* This PR only implements the Rust runtime. The Rust backend / code
generation need to be implemented in a separate PR.
* The tests are unit tests for different modules and tests with
"manually" compiled Juvix programs.
* Adds building & testing of the Rust runtime to the CI.
Adds annotations to cells to indicate that it is a call to the stdlib
and might be evaluated faster in the Haskell evaluator.
The syntax for stdlib calls is as follows:
```
[stdlib@add args@<args-term> <left-term> <right-term>]
```
where `add` is the name of the function being called, `<args-term>` is a
nockma term that points to the position of the arguments, and
`<left-term>` and `<right-term>` are the actual components of the cell.
Adds a new version of the lock file that stores the hash (sha256 digest)
of the package file (Package.juvix, juvix.yaml) it was generated from as
a field:
```
# This file was autogenerated by Juvix version 0.5.4.
# Do not edit this file manually.
version: 2
checksum: d05940a4d3dc0e15451d02e1294819c875ba486ee54e26865ba8d190ac7c27c3
dependencies:
- git:
name: stdlib
ref: f68b0614ad695eaa13ead42f3466e0a78219f826
url: https://github.com/anoma/juvix-stdlib.git
dependencies: []
```
The lock file is regenerated when the hash of the package file doesn't
match the value of the `checksum` field, i.e when the user updates the
package file.
Existing lock files are automatically migrated to version 2.
* Closes https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/2464
## Overview
This PR makes the compiler pipeline thread-safe so that the test suite
can be run in parallel.
This is achieved by:
* Removing use of `{get, set, with}CurrentDir` functions.
* Adding locking around shared file resources like the the
global-project and internal build directory.
NB: **Locking is disabled for the main compiler target**, as it is
single threaded they are not required.
## Run test suite in parallel
To run the test suite in parallel you must add `--ta '+RTS -N -RTS'` to
your stack test arguments. For example:
```
stack test --fast --ta '+RTS -N -RTS'
```
The `-N` instructs the Haskell runtime to choose the number of threads
to use based on how many processors there are on your machine. You can
use `-Nn` to see the number of threads to `n`.
These flags are already [set in the
Makefile](e6dca22cfd/Makefile (L26))
when you or CI uses `stack test`.
## Locking
The Haskell package
[filelock](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/filelock) is used for
locking. File locks are used instead of MVars because Juvix code does
not control when new threads are created, they are created by the test
suite. This means that MVars created by Juvix code will have no effect,
because they are created independently on each test-suite thread.
Additionally the resources we're locking live on the filesystem and so
can be conveniently tagged by path.
### FileLock
The filelock library is wrapped in a FileLock effect:
e6dca22cfd/src/Juvix/Data/Effect/FileLock/Base.hs (L6-L8)
There is an [IO
interpreter](e6dca22cfd/src/Juvix/Data/Effect/FileLock/IO.hs (L8))
that uses filelock and an [no-op
interpreter](e6dca22cfd/src/Juvix/Data/Effect/FileLock/Permissive.hs (L7))
that just runs actions unconditionally.
### TaggedLock
To make the file locks simpler to use a TaggedLock effect is introduced:
e6dca22cfd/src/Juvix/Data/Effect/TaggedLock/Base.hs (L5-L11)
And convenience function:
e6dca22cfd/src/Juvix/Data/Effect/TaggedLock.hs (L28)
This allows an action to be locked, tagged by a directory that may or
may not exist. For example in the following code, an action is performed
on a directory `root` that may delete the directory before repopulating
the files. So the lockfile cannot be stored in the `root` itself.
e6dca22cfd/src/Juvix/Extra/Files.hs (L55-L60)
## Pipeline
As noted above, we only use locking in the test suite. The main app
target pipeline is single threaded and so locking is unnecessary. So the
interpretation of locks is parameterised so that locking can be disabled
e6dca22cfd/src/Juvix/Compiler/Pipeline/Run.hs (L64)
We can run `juvix format` on a whole juvix packages instead of
individual files.
This reduces the total time for `make check-format-juvix-files` from 10m
to 3m on my machine.
- Closes#2060
- Closes#2189
- This pr adds support for the syntax described in #2189. It does not
drop support for the old syntax.
It is possible to automatically translate juvix files to the new syntax
by using the formatter with the `--new-function-syntax` flag. E.g.
```
juvix format --in-place --new-function-syntax
```
# Syntax changes
Type signatures follow this pattern:
```
f (a1 : Expr) .. (an : Expr) : Expr
```
where each `ai` is a non-empty list of symbols. Braces are used instead
of parentheses when the argument is implicit.
Then, we have these variants:
1. Simple body. After the signature we have `:= Expr;`.
2. Clauses. The function signature is followed by a non-empty sequence
of clauses. Each clause has the form:
```
| atomPat .. atomPat := Expr
```
# Mutual recursion
Now identifiers **do not need to be defined before they are used**,
making it possible to define mutually recursive functions/types without
any special syntax.
There are some exceptions to this. We cannot forward reference a symbol
`f` in some statement `s` if between `s` and the definition of `f` there
is one of the following statements:
1. Local module
2. Import statement
3. Open statement
I think it should be possible to drop the restriction for local modules
and import statements
This PR resolves a few bugs in the Makefile targets for formatting and
type checking Juvix files, which were preventing the capture of type
checking errors for our examples and bad formatting for all the Juvix
files in the repository. With this PR, our code should now be clean, and
we can expect every file to be properly formatted and type checked.
Changes made:
- [x] Updated `make format-juvix-files`
- [x] Updated `make check-format-juvix-files`
- [x] Formatted all Juvix files
- [x] Comment a fragment in `examples/milestone/Bank/Bank.juvix`
In the future, we will drastically simplify the Makefile once we improve
the `format` and the `type check` command for example posted here:
- #2066
- #2087
Related:
- #2063
- #2040 (due to some typechecking errors we're not capturing before)
- #2105
- https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/2059
This PR fixes the broken links that refer to Juvix Examples in the
documentation. Ideally, this wouldn't occur since we utilize a link
checker, but this tool only works well for relative links, which was not
the case for the links of the examples. Additionally, I slightly
modified the CI workflow by generating the HTML for the examples first,
followed by the entire book.
- Closes #2001
- Check the output using this: https://jonaprieto.github.io/juvix/
This PR adds initial syntax highlighting for juvix code blocks and REPL
sessions in Markdown files rendered by mdbook. After this PR, only two
themes would be supported to ease maintenance: Light and Dark (Ayu).
The implementation is a specifically tailored version of
- https://github.com/anoma/highlightjs-juvix (plugin for
HighlightJS,v11.7).
to be compatible with the infamous HighlightJS 10.1.1, to be used just
for MdBook.
The output can be seen here (make sure the CI finished to check the last
version, otherwise run the website locally):
- https://jonaprieto.github.io/juvix/tutorials/learn.html
This PR adds `juvix format` that can be used to format either a single
Juvix file or all files in a Juvix project.
## Usage
```
$ juvix format --help
Usage: juvix format JUVIX_FILE_OR_PROJECT [--check] [--in-place]
Format a Juvix file or Juvix project
When the command is run with an unformatted file it prints the reformatted source to standard output.
When the command is run with a project directory it prints a list of unformatted files in the project.
Available options:
JUVIX_FILE_OR_PROJECT Path to a .juvix file or to a directory containing a
Juvix project.
--check Do not print reformatted sources or unformatted file
paths to standard output.
--in-place Do not print reformatted sources to standard output.
Overwrite the target's contents with the formatted
version if the formatted version differs from the
original content.
-h,--help Show this help text
```
## Location of main implementation
The implementation is split into two components:
* The src API: `format` and `formatProject`
73952ba15c/src/Juvix/Formatter.hs
* The CLI interface:
73952ba15c/app/Commands/Format.hs
## in-place uses polysemy Resource effect
The `--in-place` option makes a backup of the target file and restores
it if there's an error during processing to avoid data loss. The
implementation of this uses the polysemy [Resource
effect](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/polysemy-1.9.0.0/docs/Polysemy-Resource.html).
The recommended way to interpret the resource effect is to use
`resourceToIOFinal` which makes it necessary to change the effects
interpretation in main to use `Final IO`:
73952ba15c/app/Main.hs (L15)
## Format input is `FilePath`
The format options uses `FilePath` instead of `AppFile f` for the input
file/directory used by other commands. This is because we cannot
determine if the input string is a file or directory in the CLI parser
(we require IO). I discussed some ideas with @janmasrovira on how to
improve this in a way that would also solve other issues with CLI input
file/parsing but I want to defer this to a separate PR as this one is
already quite large.
One consequence of Format using `FilePath` as the input option is that
the code that changes the working directory to the root of the project
containing the CLI input file is changed to work with `FilePath`:
f715ef6a53/app/TopCommand/Options.hs (L33)
## New dependencies
This PR adds new dependencies on `temporary` and `polysemy-zoo`.
`temporary` is used for `emptySystemTempFile` in the implementation of
the TempFile interpreter for IO:
73952ba15c/src/Juvix/Data/Effect/Files/IO.hs (L49)
`polysemy-zoo` is used for the `Fresh` effect and `absorbMonadThrow` in
the implementation of the pure TempFile interpreter:
73952ba15c/src/Juvix/Data/Effect/Files/Pure.hs (L91)
NB: The pure TempFile interpreter is not used, but it seemed a good idea
to include it while it's fresh in my mind.
* Closes https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/1777
---------
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Cubides <jonathan.cubides@uib.no>
In this PR, I have updated the README file to reflect the new goals of
the project and highlight related products to Juvix. The ORG files have
been replaced with Markdown for better readability and maintainability.
Additionally, I have added a couple of files to fine-tune the mdbook
settings. These changes, I believe, will make it easier for users to
understand and contribute to the project.🤞
- Closes#1878
- New pre-commit hook to format md, yaml, js, CSS files.
To check the website generation, I have deployed the result here:
Work in progress.
- https://jonaprieto.github.io/juvix
- https://github.com/jonaprieto/juvix
---------
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <pcadman@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Christopher Goes <cwgoes@pluranimity.org>
Co-authored-by: Jan Mas Rovira <janmasrovira@gmail.com>
* Depends on PR #1824
* Closes#1556
* Closes#1825
* Closes#1843
* Closes#1729
* Closes#1596
* Closes#1343
* Closes#1382
* Closes#1867
* Closes#1876
* Changes the `juvix compile` command to use the new pipeline.
* Removes the `juvix dev minic` command and the `BackendC` tests.
* Adds the `juvix eval` command.
* Fixes bugs in the Nat-to-integer conversion.
* Fixes bugs in the Internal-to-Core and Core-to-Core.Stripped
translations.
* Fixes bugs in the RemoveTypeArgs transformation.
* Fixes bugs in lambda-lifting (incorrect de Bruijn indices in the types
of added binders).
* Fixes several other bugs in the compilation pipeline.
* Adds a separate EtaExpandApps transformation to avoid quadratic
runtime in the Internal-to-Core translation due to repeated calls to
etaExpandApps.
* Changes Internal-to-Core to avoid generating matches on values which
don't have an inductive type.
---------
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <git@paulcadman.dev>
Co-authored-by: janmasrovira <janmasrovira@gmail.com>
This PR introduces an evaluator for the Geb STLC interface/fragment and
other related commands, including a REPL to interact with his backend.
-
https://github.com/anoma/geb/blob/mariari/binaries/src/specs/lambda.lisp
We have included a REPL and support for commands such as read and eval
here. Check out:
```
juvix dev geb --help
```
- [x] Add Geb evaluator with the two basic eval strategies.
- [x] Add quasi quoter: return morphisms from typed geb values.
- [x] Add type/object inference for morphisms.
- [x] All combined: morphisms-eval-to-morphisms
- [x] Parse and pretty printer Geb values (without quoting them)
- [x] Parse files containing Geb terms:
- [x] Saved in a .lisp file according to anoma/geb example (typed
object).
- [x] Store in a .geb file simple as simple lisp expression.
- [x] Add related commands to the CLI for `dev geb`:
- [x] Subcommand: eval
- [x] Subcommand: read
- [x] Subcommand: infer
- [x] Subcommand: repl
- [x] Subcommand: check
- [x] Minor changes `hom` by `!->` in the Geb prettyprinter
- [x] Add tests for:
- [x] New subcommand (smoke tests)
- [x] Eval
Issues to solve after merging this PR:
- Add location to Geb ast for proper error location.
- Add tests for all related subcommands, e.g. check, and infer.
- Check compilation from Core to Geb: (run inferObject with the type
provided by the core node).
- [x] Update the vs code-plugin to load Geb repl and eval.
(31994c8684)
Juvix now provides an intial and functional formatting tool by calling
the command `juvix dev scope file --with-comments` .
This PR adds a new Makefile target `juvix-format` to format all the
Juvix programs we showcase in the documentation as Juvix-projects, i.e.,
files from the `examples` directory. Note the corresponding target in
the Makefile also calls the typechecker to ensure the programs do not
have type errors introduced by the formatter, considering also that all
the Juvix files in the `examples` directory type-checked before this PR.
Thus, we should preserve that state. Finally, I included `juvix-format`
as part of the `check` target, so we widen the testing of the compiler.
The formatter is not perfect yet, so we need to fix some formatting
issues manually.
For example, the end of the line is modified by the formatting. We can
fix this by calling after
`make pre-commit`.
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>
* Closes#1597
* Closes#1624
* Closes#1633
The tutorial uses syntax which has not been implemented yet: it depends
on
- #1637,
- #1716,
- #1639,
- #1638.
The tutorial also assumes the following issues are done:
- #1720, and
- #1701.
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Cubides <jonathan.cubides@uib.no>
This PR redefines the `html` command unifying our previous subcommands
for the HTML backend. You should use the command in the following way to
obtain the same results as before:
- `juvix html src.juvix` -> `juvix html src.juvix --only-source`
- `juvix dev doc src.juvix` -> `juvix html src.juvix`
- Other fixes here include the flag `--non-recursive`, which replaces
the previous behavior in that we now generate all the HTML recursively
by default.
- The flag `--no-print-metadata` is now called `--no-footer`
- Also, another change introduced by this PR is asset handling; for
example, with our canonical Juvix program,
the new output is organized as follows.
```
juvix html HelloWorld.juvix --only-source && tree html/
Copying assets files to test/html/assets
Writing HelloWorld.html
html/
├── assets
│ ├── css
│ │ ├── linuwial.css
│ │ ├── source-ayu-light.css
│ │ └── source-nord.css
│ ├── images
│ │ ├── tara-magicien.png
│ │ ├── tara-seating.svg
│ │ ├── tara-smiling.png
│ │ ├── tara-smiling.svg
│ │ ├── tara-teaching.png
│ │ └── tara-teaching.svg
│ └── js
│ ├── highlight.js
│ └── tex-chtml.js
└── HelloWorld.html
├── Stdlib.Data.Bool.html
├── Stdlib.Data.List.html
├── Stdlib.Data.Maybe.html
├── Stdlib.Data.Nat.html
├── Stdlib.Data.Ord.html
├── Stdlib.Data.Product.html
├── Stdlib.Data.String.html
├── Stdlib.Function.html
├── Stdlib.Prelude.html
└── Stdlib.System.IO.html
```
In addition, for the vscode-plugin, this PR adds two flags,
`--prefix-assets` and `--prefix-url`, for which one provides input to
help vscode find resource locations and Juvix files.
PS. Make sure to run `make clean` the first time you run `make install`
for the first time.
This PR adds smoke tests using [Smoke
tool](https://github.com/SamirTalwar/smoke) for all the shell tests we
have. One reason for adopting Smoke instead of the previous tool,
`shelltestrunner`, is that tests are declared cleanly and simply using
Smoke Yaml syntax compared to shelltestrunner's syntax.
To add a new smoke test, create a file with the suffix ".smoke.yaml" in
the `tests/smoke` folder. In such a folder, you can also find examples
of how to test the CLI.
* Fixes#1678.
* Adds the `clean-juvix-build` Makefile target, which removes all
`.juvix-build` directories in the project (necessary to do after
changing the standard library).
* Depends on PR #1688. The tests go through without merging this PR, but
it's a bug. The present PR requires the possibility to use the
`terminating` keyword with the `div` built-in, which possibility is
provided by PR #1688.
`juvix` CLI invocations now read/write/delete the standard library in
the project's `.juvix-build/stdlib` directory.
When shelltest runs in threaded mode, two tests may run conflicting IO
operations on the same `.juvix-build/stdlib` directory.