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81 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
81 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: developer-doc
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title: Sharing Libraries
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category: libraries
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tags: [libraries, editions, sharing]
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order: 3
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---
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# Sharing Libraries
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This document explains how users can share Enso libraries.
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<!-- MarkdownTOC levels="2,3" autolink="true" -->
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- [Sharing Privately](#sharing-privately)
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- [Publishing](#publishing)
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<!-- /MarkdownTOC -->
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## Sharing Privately
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To prepare the project for sharing, make sure that it has a proper `namespace`
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field set in `package.yaml`. It should be set to something unique, like your
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username.
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> **NOTE**: The field `namespace` is a temporary workaround and in the near
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> future it will be deprecated and handled mostly automatically. For now however
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> you need to set it properly.
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To share an Enso library, all you need to do is to package the project into an
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archive (for example ZIP) and share it (through e-mail, cloud drive services
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etc.) with your peers. Now to be able to use the library that was shared with
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you, you need to extract it to the directory
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`~/enso/libraries/<namespace>/<Project_Name>` (where on Windows `~` should be
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interpreted as your user home directory). To make sure that the library is
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extracted correctly, make sure that under the path
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`~/enso/libraries/<namespace>/<Project_Name>/package.yaml` and that its
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`namespace` field has the same value as the name of the `<namespace>` directory.
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Now you need to set up your project properly to be able to use this unpublished
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library. The simplest way to do that is to set `prefer-local-libraries` in your
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project's `package.yaml` to `true`. This will make all libraries from
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`~/enso/libraries` take precedence over published libraries set-up in the
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edition. Alternatively, if you do not want to override all libraries, but only
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some of them, you can add a local library override, by adding a proper entry in
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the `libraries` section of the `edition` in your project's `package.yaml`, like
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shown below:
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```yaml
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edition:
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(...)
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libraries:
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- name: <namespace>.<Project_Name>
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repository: local
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```
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Now, you can use your library by adding a proper import to your project:
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```
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import <namespace>.<Project_Name>
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```
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## Publishing
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To publish a library, first you must obtain the upload URL of the repository, if
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you are hosting the repository locally it will be `http://localhost:8080/upload`
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(or possibly with a different port if that was overridden).
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If the repository requires authentication, it is best to set it up by setting
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the `ENSO_AUTH_TOKEN` environment variable to the value of your secret token.
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Then you can use the Enso CLI to upload the project:
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```bash
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enso publish-library --upload-url <URL> <path to project root>
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```
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The `--upload-url` is optional, if not provided, the library will be uploaded to
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the main Enso library repository. See `enso publish-library --help` for more
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information.
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