This reverts commit 8e1e40d75b3ab15c194b6bf9570f3edc46e2de58. This reverts commit f073c490f9fd7c5abc033af4857df92229877de7. This reverts commit f187d2d7e01a54823f3e979af9bbd148b398e7e9. This reverts commit bc272862a73cfce1b118586ca39d3a377d841f1b. Conflicts: urb/urbit.pill
8.8 KiB
XX The CLI is under heavy development with, with pieces being folded
into the "window manager" sole
and the new cli dojo
. Don't expect
any of the following to work as described.
This guide is intended to get you oriented in the Arvo command prompt
and give you a tour of some basic utilities. The command prompt comes in
two flavors, in a web browser and in a terminal. For the most part
they're the same, except that in a browser you can evaluate tall-form
Hoon expressions but you can't run readline apps, such as :talk
.
Every Arvo command prompt is also a Hoon REPL. The command line is a
great place to test out your hoon knowledge. In this guide we're just
going to talk about some basic system utilities and get comfortable
moving around in %clay
. If you'd just like to see a list of
command-line utilities, you can find the Arvo man pages
here.
This rudimentary tour should work well in both places.
1
Move around %clay
After finishing the setup instructions you should have an Arvo prompt that looks like this:
~talsur-todres/try=>
The path at the beginning of your prompt is actually a path in the
global filesystem of Urbit, called %clay
. Since %clay
is universal
across all of Urbit, each full path starts with a ship name. %clay
is
also versioned on a per-desk basis. Desks are the top-level directories
in your pier.
Moving around %clay
is simple. There is no equivalent of cd
.
Instead, just type a valid path name at the prompt to move to that
directory. Here we'll move to our starting root path in the try desk,
/try=
to the main
desk:
~talsur-todres/try=> /=main=
=% /~talsur-todres/main/0
~talsur-todres/main=>
We have two shortcuts in %clay
that are worth noting, =
and %
.
=
copies in some corresponding part of our current path. In the second
line above you can see how the =
in /=main=
pull in the
~talsur-todres
and 0
in from our starting directory,
/~talsur-todres/try/0
. It's important to note that our full prompt to
start is /~talsur-todres/try=
, where the trailing =
indicates the
current revision. In the shell, revision 0
never exists — it's used as
a pointer to the head.
%
is similar to .
in unix:
~talsur-todres/main=> %
=% /~talsur-todres/main/0
~talsur-todres/main=> %%
[~.~talsur-todres ~.main ~]
~talsur-todres/main=> %%%
[~.~talsur-todres ~]
~talsur-todres/main=> %%%%
~
When using %
to move around in %clay
you need to make sure to use
leading and trailing /
to ensure your path is interpolted correctly:
~talsur-todres/main=> /%%%/try=
=% /~talsur-todres/try/0
~talsur-todres/try=>
2
Create some revisions
Let's use :into
, our simple utility for writing text to a file, to
create a new file:
~talsur-todres/try=> :into %/helo/txt 'helo mars'
written
~talsur-todres/try=>
To confirm that our file was written, we can use :ls
. :ls
prints a
list of directory contents, but requires that you specify a path. %
will suffice for the current path:
~talsur-todres/try=> :ls %
readme helo
~talsur-todres/try=>
Let's quickly switch back to a unix command prompt to see a few things
about both how files are synced between %clay
and unix, and where your
apps live.
my-pier/talsur-todres/$ ls try
helo.txt readme.md
my-pier/talsur-todres/$ cat try/helo.txt
helo mars
Here you can see that our files are synced back to unix as they are
changed in urbit, and vice-versa. As you change files in unix you'll see
those changes appear in %clay
.
my-pier/talsur-todres/$ ls base/app/
bang grep peek solid tweet
began helm poke sync twit
begin hi pope talk twitter-auth
cat into reboot tease twitter-feed
code label reload terminal type
cp ls reset test unsync
curl matrix rm ticket verb
dojo mv shell time wipe
gnab nop sole tree ye
my-pier/talsur-todres/$ cat base/app/ls/core.hook
:: ConCATenate file listings
::
:::: /hook/core/cat/app
::
/+ sh-utils
// /%%%/ls/subdir
!:
::::
::
|_ [hid=hide ~]
++ peer ,_`.
++ poke--args
%+ args-into-gate .
|= [arg=(list path)]
=- tang/(zing -)
%+ turn arg
|= pax=path
^- tang
=+ ark=;;(arch .^(%cy pax))
?^ q.ark
:- leaf/(spud pax)
%+ turn (lore ;;(@t .^(%cx pax)))
|=(a=cord leaf/(trip a))
?- r.ark :: handle ambiguity
~
[rose/[" " `~]^~[leaf/"~" (smyt pax)]]~
[[@t ~] ~ ~]
$(pax (welp pax /[p.n.r.ark]))
*
=- [palm/[": " ``~]^-]~
:~ rose/[" " `~]^~[leaf/"*" (smyt pax)]
`tank`(subdir pax r.ark)
==
==
--
Here you can see that /base/app
is the main location where our apps
are stored, and the contents of the :ls
app. urbit applications are of
course written in hoon, our naitive programming language. Don't worry
about the contents of the file for now. Since changes in unix are synced
back in to urbit, we can develop urbit programs by simply editing them
in our favorite editor and saving them.
For the time being let's switch back to urbit and update our file with
some new content, so we can see how %clay
stores revisions.
~talsur-todres/try=> :into %/helo/txt 'gbye mars'
written
~talsur-todres/try=> :ls /=try/1
readme helo
~talsur-todres/try=> :cat /=try/1/helo/txt
/~talsur-todres/try/9/helo/txt
helo mars
~talsur-todres/try=> :cat /=try/2/helo/txt
/~talsur-todres/try/10/helo/txt
gbye mars
~talsur-todres/try=> :cat /=try=/helo/txt
/~talsur-todres/try/~2014.11.26..01.06.33..c93a/helo/txt
gbye mars
~talsur-todres/try=>
Here we use :ls
to investigate the filesystem across versions. You can
see that our helo
file exists in our first revision. Using the simple
:cat
command we can print the contents of /=try/helo/txt
in its two
separate, versioned states.
We can even move to a different version of our desk and look around:
~talsur-todres/try=> /=try/1
=% /~talsur-todres/try/1
~talsur-todres/try/1> :ls %
readme helo
~talsur-todres/try/1>
This is sort of like being in a detached HEAD in git.
3
Start a yacht
Each Urbit destroyer can delegate around four billion yachts. Yachts are
also urbit ships, but are pegged to their parent identity, and are set
up to mirror their filesystem. We can generate a [ship: ticket]
pair
for a yacht by using the :ticket
utility:
~talsur-todres/try=> :ticket ~talsur-todres-talsur-todres
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres: ~figpem-fapmyl-wacsud-racwyd
Every yacht for a particular destroyer ends in the same ship-name
, and
has every possible destroyer prefix. For example,
~tasfyn-partyv-talsur-todres
is also a valid yacht from
~talsur-todres
.
Start up a new vere
process with something like bin/vere -c yacht
.
Then run :begin
and enter the [ship: ticket]
pair you just generated
when prompted. When the process is complete you should get a
; ~talsur-todres-talsur-todres :y1: is your neighbor
message on your
destroyer. To confirm that everything is working properly, you can use
:hi
to send a message:
~talsur-todres/try=> :hi ~talsur-todres-talsur-todres "whats up"
hi ~talsur-todres-talsur-todres successful
~talsur-todres/try=>
Which will appear on your new yacht:
< ~talsur-todres: whats up
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=>
You should also see the contents of your /try
desk mirrored on your
yacht:
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=> :ls %
readme helo
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=>
Making another change on your destroyer should automatically propagate down to your yacht:
~talsur-todres/try=> :into %/helo/txt 'back to mars'
written
~talsur-todres/try=>
[%merge-fine ~talsur-todres %try]
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=> :cat %/helo/txt
back to mars
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=>
4
Move files around
Another familiar command line utility is :mv
:
~talsur-todres/try=> :mv %/helo/txt %/test/helo/txt
moved
~talsur-todres/try=>
[%merge-fine ~talsur-todres %try]
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=> :cat %/test/helo/txt
back to mars
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=>
In %clay
we don't use file extensions or folders. A path either does
or does not have anything in it. There's no need to do the equivalent of
mkdir
before moving something.
We also implement the familiar :rm
:
~talsur-todres/try=> :rm %/test/helo/txt
removed
~talsur-todres/try=> :cat %/test/helo/txt
file /~talsur-todres/try/~2014.11.26..16.49.52..3f5e/test/helo/txt not available
~talsur-todres/try=>
[%merge-fine ~talsur-todres %try]
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=> :cat %/test/helo/txt
file /~tasfyn-partyv-talsur-todres/try/~2014.11.26..16.50.15..556b/test/helo/txt not available
~talsur-todres-talsur-todres/try=>