Open Dylan is a compiler and a set of libraries for the Dylan programming language. If you're interested in working on the compiler and core libraries then you've come to the right place. If you want to write your own Dylan libraries and use the compiler then you should download a binary release and then read the Getting Started guide.
Open Dylan is written in Dylan, thus a Dylan compiler is needed to bootstrap it. Binary releases are available from http://opendylan.org/download/.
Verify that the downloaded version is working correctly by building a hello-world binary:
make-dylan-app hello-world cd hello-world dylan-compiler -build hello-world _build/bin/hello-world
Note: If there is no _build directory already, dylan-compiler will create it and build all used libraries. Subsequent builds will be much faster.
Clone the git repository:
git clone git://github.com/dylan-lang/opendylan.git --recursive
It does not work to download a ZIP file of the repository from github because it doesn't include git submodules.
Please note that on 64 bit Linux the default stack is too small for
Open Dylan so it must be increased with ulimit -s
. It's usually
safe to double its value.
Install a garbage collector for your platform. The Memory Pool System (MPS) is only integrated with the HARP back-end, which itself only works on 32-bit x86 platforms. All 64-bit platforms and macOS must use the Boehm Demers Weiser conservative GC (or just Boehm GC) with the LLVM or C back-end.
- 32-bit x86 Windows/Linux/FreeBSD (HARP back-end) -> MPS 1.114
- 64-bit systems and macOS (LLVM or C back-end) -> boehm-gc
The libunwind
library is an optional dependency on Linux and
FreeBSD. If available, it is used to display stack traces for
unhandled error conditions. (The libunwind
API is built-in on
macOS.)
On macOS, you may find it easiest to install Homebrew and install the following:
brew install autoconf automake bdw-gc --universal
You will also need to install the command line build tools available from
Apple. If your installation of bdw-gc
is not universal (doesn't contain
both i386 and x86_64 code), you will need to uninstall it and install again
with the --universal
flag.
On Ubuntu, Debian, etc, you can install the necessary dependencies with:
apt-get install autoconf automake clang-7 gcc libgc-dev libunwind-dev
To build dylan-compiler
, make-dylan-app
, and several tools:
export PATH=$(dirname $(which dylan-compiler)):$PATH ./autogen.sh ./configure --prefix=/opt/opendylan-current # (but see note below) make sudo make install
The build process attempts to select the correct garbage collector implementation based on your platform.
If you are on x86-linux
or x86-freebsd
you must add a flag to
configure
to point it at the MPS sources, using --with-mps
:
./configure --prefix=/opt/opendylan-current --with-mps=/path/to/mps
/path/to/mps
should point to the root directory of the MPS
distribution, for example --with-mps=/opt/mps-kit-1.114.0
.
On other platforms, the Boehm GC will be used. If you have installed
the Boehm GC via your operating system package manager, you may not
need to specify its location; it will be found automatically if it is
in /usr
or /usr/local
. If you have installed the Boehm GC into
a non-standard location or the configure script cannot find it, you
can point it in the right direction by using --with-gc
:
./configure --prefix=/opt/opendylan-current --with-gc=/path/to/boehm
By default, this will build a fully bootstrapped compiler with the
first generation in Bootstrap.1/bin/dylan-compiler
, the second
generation in Bootstrap.2/bin/dylan-compiler
, and the third in
Bootstrap.3/bin/dylan-compiler
. The third generation will then be
installed as /opt/opendylan-current/bin/dylan-compiler
.
There is an extensive set of tests which can be run once the build is complete:
make check
This runs the tests for the core language implementation as well as for many bundled libraries. However, there are currently many test failures which need to be fixed. Most of the test failures are minor issues or are due to unimplemented tests rather than major bugs. Help is welcome in improving our test suites.
Get MPS 1.108. Be sure that you have the older 1.108 release and not the newer 1.114 release.
Make sure to have required tools installed: namely Debugging tools for Windows, a C compiler (PellesC or VC6) and Microsoft Platform SDK.
Open a shell (windows command processor) and set the environment variable SDK4MEMORY_POOL_SYSTEM to <where you unpacked MPS>.
Please keep in mind that paths with whitespaces are not well supported.
cd into build\windows and run:
build-release.bat <target-dir> /sources <git-checkout>\sources /internal
This will do a 4-stage bootstrap. In the end there will be a complete IDE in <target-dir>.
- Building an installer:
- Get NSIS from http://nsis.sf.net and the HTML help workshop (from Microsoft, to generate the chm).
- Go to packages\win32-nsis, read Build.txt and follow the instructions. Make sure you are using the same command shell as used for building Open Dylan (to retain environment variables).