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89 lines
2.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
89 lines
2.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _sect-execs:
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************************
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Compiling to Executables
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************************
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.. note::
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The documentation for Idris has been published under the Creative
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Commons CC0 License. As such to the extent possible under law, *The
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Idris Community* has waived all copyright and related or neighboring
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rights to Documentation for Idris.
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More information concerning the CC0 can be found online at: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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Idris 2 (the language) is designed to be independent of any specific code
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generator. Still, since the point of writing a program is to be able to run it,
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it's important to know how to do so! By default, Idris compiles to executables
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via `Chez Scheme <https://www.scheme.com/>`_.
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You can compile to an executable as follows, at the REPL:
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::
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Main> :c execname expr
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...where ``execname`` is the name of the executable file to generate, and
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``expr`` is the Idris expression which will be executed. ``expr`` must have
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type ``IO ()``. This will result in an executable file ``execname``, in a
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directory ``build/exec``, relative to the current working directory.
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You can also execute expressions directly:
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::
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Main> :exec expr
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Again, ``expr`` must have type ``IO ()``.
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Finally, you can compile to an executable from the command line by adding
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the ``-o <output file>`` option:
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::
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$ idris2 hello.idr -o hello
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This will compile the expression ``Main.main``, generating an executable
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``hello`` (with an extension depending on the code generator) in the
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``build/exec`` directory.
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By default, Idris 2 is a whole program compiler - that is, it finds all the
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necessary function definitions and compiles them only when you build an
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executable. This gives plenty of optimisation opportunities, but can also
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be slow for rebuilding. However, if the backend supports it, you can build
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modules and executables *incrementally*:
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.. toctree::
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:maxdepth: 1
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incremental
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If the backend supports it, you can generate profiling data by setting
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the ``profile`` flag, either by starting Idris with ``--profile``, or
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running ``:set profile`` at the REPL. The profile data generated will depend
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on the back end you are using. Currently, the Chez and Racket back ends
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support generating profile data.
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There are five code generators provided in Idris 2, and (later) there will be
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a system for plugging in new code generators for a variety of targets. The
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default is to compile via Chez Scheme, with an alternative via Racket or Gambit.
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You can set the code generator at the REPL with the `:set codegen` command,
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or via the `IDRIS2_CG` environment variable.
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.. toctree::
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:maxdepth: 1
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chez
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racket
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gambit
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javascript
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refc
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custom
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backend-cookbook
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There are also external code generators that aren't part of the main Idris 2
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repository and can be found on Idris 2 wiki:
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`External backends <https://github.com/idris-lang/Idris2/wiki/External-backends>`_
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