This manual describes asdf, a system definition facility for Common Lisp programs and libraries.
asdf Copyright © 2001-2004 Daniel Barlow and contributors
This manual Copyright © 2001-2004 Daniel Barlow and contributors
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
--- The Detailed Node Listing ---
Defining systems with defsystem
The object model of asdf
Operations
Components
properties
This chapter describes how to use asdf to compile and load ready-made Lisp programs and libraries.
Some Lisp implementations (such as SBCL and OpenMCL) come with asdf included already, so you don't need to download it separately. Consult your Lisp system's documentation. If you need to download asdf and install it by hand, the canonical source is the cCLan CVS repository at http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/cclan/asdf/.
The single file asdf.lisp is all you need to use asdf normally. Once you load it in a running Lisp, you're ready to use asdf. For maximum convenience you might want to have asdf loaded whenever you start your Lisp implementation, for example by loading it from the startup script or dumping a custom core – check your Lisp implementation's manual for details.
The variable asdf:*central-registry*
is a list of “system
directory designators”1. A system directory designator is a form which
will be evaluated whenever a system is to be found, and must evaluate
to a directory to look in. You might want to set or augment
*central-registry*
in your Lisp init file, for example:
(setf asdf:*central-registry* (list* '*default-pathname-defaults* #p"/home/me/cl/systems/" #p"/usr/share/common-lisp/systems/" asdf:*central-registry*))
To compile and load a system, you need to ensure that a symbolic link to its
system definition is in one of the directories in
*central-registry*
2.
For example, if #p"/home/me/cl/systems/"
(note the trailing
slash) is a member of *central-registry*
, you would set up a
system foo that is stored in a directory
/home/me/src/foo/ for loading with asdf with the following
commands at the shell (this has to be done only once):
$ cd /home/me/cl/systems/ $ ln -s ~/src/foo/foo.asd .
The system foo is loaded (and compiled, if necessary) by evaluating the following form in your Lisp implementation:
(asdf:operate 'asdf:load-op 'foo)
That's all you need to know to use asdf to load systems written by others. The rest of this manual deals with writing system definitions for Lisp software you write yourself.
This chapter describes how to use asdf to define systems and develop software.
Systems can be constructed programmatically by instantiating
components using make-instance. Most of the time, however, it is much
more practical to use a static defsystem
form. This section
begins with an example of a system definition, then gives the full
grammar of defsystem
.
Let's look at a simple system. This is a complete file that would usually be saved as hello-lisp.asd:
(defpackage hello-lisp-system (:use :common-lisp :asdf)) (in-package :hello-lisp-system) (defsystem "hello-lisp" :description "hello-lisp: a sample Lisp system." :version "0.2" :author "Joe User <joe@example.com>" :licence "Public Domain" :components ((:file "packages") (:file "macros" :depends-on ("packages")) (:file "hello" :depends-on ("macros"))))
Some notes about this example:
defpackage
and in-package
forms to
make and use a package expressly for defining this system in. This
package is named by taking the system name and suffixing
-system
- note that it is not the same package as you
will use for the application code.
This is not absolutely required by asdf, but helps avoid namespace pollution and so is considered good form.
Let's illustrate some more involved uses of defsystem
via a
slightly convoluted example:
(defsystem "foo" :version "1.0" :components ((:module "foo" :components ((:file "bar") (:file"baz") (:file "quux")) :perform (compile-op :after (op c) (do-something c)) :explain (compile-op :after (op c) (explain-something c))) (:file "blah")))
The method-form tokens need explaining: essentially, this part:
:perform (compile-op :after (op c) (do-something c)) :explain (compile-op :after (op c) (explain-something c))
has the effect of
(defmethod perform :after ((op compile-op) (c (eql ...))) (do-something c)) (defmethod explain :after ((op compile-op) (c (eql ...))) (explain-something c))
where ...
is the component in question; note that although this
also supports :before
methods, they may not do what you want
them to – a :before
method on perform ((op compile-op) (c
(eql ...)))
will run after all the dependencies and sub-components
have been processed, but before the component in question has been
compiled.
system-definition := ( defsystem system-designator {option}* ) option := :components component-list | :pathname pathname | :default-component-class | :perform method-form | :explain method-form | :output-files method-form | :operation-done-p method-form | :depends-on ( {simple-component-name}* ) | :serial [ t | nil ] | :in-order-to ( {dependency}+ ) component-list := ( {component-def}* ) component-def := simple-component-name | ( component-type name {option}* ) component-type := :module | :file | :system | other-component-type dependency := (dependent-op {requirement}+) requirement := (required-op {required-component}+) | (feature feature-name) dependent-op := operation-name required-op := operation-name | feature
If the :serial t
option is specified for a module, asdf will add
dependencies for each each child component, on all the children
textually preceding it. This is done as if by :depends-on
.
:components ((:file "a") (:file "b") (:file "c")) :serial t
is equivalent to
:components ((:file "a") (:file "b" :depends-on ("a")) (:file "c" :depends-on ("a" "b")))
The :pathname
option is optional in all cases for systems
defined via defsystem
, and in the usual case the user is
recommended not to supply it.
Instead, asdf follows a hairy set of rules that are designed so that
find-system
will load a system from disk and have its pathname
default to the right place
*default-pathname-defaults*
(which could be
somewhere else altogether) if the user loads up the .asd file
into his editor and interactively re-evaluates that form.
If a system is being loaded for the first time, its top-level pathname will be set to:
*load-truename*
, if it is bound
*default-pathname-defaults*
, otherwise
If a system is being redefined, the top-level pathname will be
*load-truename*
(so that an updated source location is
reflected in the system definition)
*default-pathname-defaults*
*load-truename*
and *load-truename*
is currently
unbound (so that a developer can evaluate a defsystem
form from
within an editor without clobbering its source location)
asdf is designed in an object-oriented way from the ground up. Both a
system's structure and the operations that can be performed on systems
follow a protocol. asdf is extensible to new operations and to new
component types. This allows the addition of behaviours: for example,
a new component could be added for Java JAR archives, and methods
specialised on compile-op
added for it that would accomplish the
relevant actions.
This chapter deals with components, the building blocks of a system, and operations, the actions that can be performed on a system.
An operation object of the appropriate type is instantiated whenever the user wants to do something with a system like
Operations can be invoked directly, or examined to see what their effects would be without performing them. FIXME: document how! There are a bunch of methods specialised on operation and component type that actually do the grunt work.
The operation object contains whatever state is relevant for this purpose (perhaps a list of visited nodes, for example) but primarily is a nice thing to specialise operation methods on and easier than having them all be EQL methods.
Operations are invoked on systems via operate
.
operate
invokes operation on system.oos
is a synonym foroperate
.operation is a symbol that is passed, along with the supplied initargs, to
make-instance
to create the operation object. system is a system designator.The initargs are passed to the
make-instance
call when creating the operation object. Note that dependencies may cause the operation to invoke other operations on the system or its components: the new operations will be created with the same initargs as the original one.
All the operations described in this section are in the asdf
package. They are invoked via the operate
generic function.
(asdf:operate 'asdf:operation-name 'system-name {operation-options ...})
This operation compiles the specified component. If proclamations are supplied, they will be proclaimed. This is a good place to specify optimization settings.
When creating a new component type, you should provide methods for
compile-op
.When
compile-op
is invoked, component dependencies often cause some parts of the system to be loaded as well as compiled. Invokingcompile-op
does not necessarily load all the parts of the system, though; useload-op
to load a system.
This operation loads a system.
The default methods for
load-op
compile files before loading them. For parity, your own methods on new component types should probably do so too.
This operation will load the source for the files in a module even if the source files have been compiled. Systems sometimes have knotty dependencies which require that sources are loaded before they can be compiled. This is how you do that.
If you are creating a component type, you need to implement this operation - at least, where meaningful.
Asks the system whether it satisfies a version requirement.
The default method accepts a string, which is expected to contain of a number of integers separated by #\. characters. The method is not recursive. The component satisfies the version dependency if it has the same major number as required and each of its sub-versions is greater than or equal to the sub-version number required.
(defun version-satisfies (x y) (labels ((bigger (x y) (cond ((not y) t) ((not x) nil) ((> (car x) (car y)) t) ((= (car x) (car y)) (bigger (cdr x) (cdr y)))))) (and (= (car x) (car y)) (or (not (cdr y)) (bigger (cdr x) (cdr y))))))If that doesn't work for your system, you can override it. I hope you have as much fun writing the new method as #lisp did reimplementing this one.
An instance of
feature-dependent-op
will ignore any components which have afeatures
attribute, unless the feature combination it designates is satisfied by*features*
. This operation is not intended to be instantiated directly, but other operations may inherit from it.
asdf was designed to be extensible in an object-oriented fashion. To
teach asdf new tricks, a programmer can implement the behaviour he
wants by creating a subclass of operation
.
asdf's pre-defined operations are in no way “privileged”, but it is
requested that developers never use the asdf
package for
operations they develop themselves. The rationale for this rule is
that we don't want to establish a “global asdf operation name
registry”, but also want to avoid name clashes.
An operation must provide methods for the following generic functions
when invoked with an object of type source-file
: FIXME describe
this better
output-files
perform
The perform
method must call output-files
to find out
where to put its files, because the user is allowed to override
output-files
for local policy explain
operation-done-p
, if you don't like the default one
A component represents a source file or (recursively) a
collection of components. A system is (roughly speaking) a
top-level component that can be found via find-system
.
A system designator is a string or symbol and behaves just like any other component name (including with regard to the case conversion rules for component names).
Given a system designator,
find-system
finds and returns a system. If no system is found, an error of typemissing-component
is thrown, ornil
is returned iferror-p
is false.To find and update systems,
find-system
funcalls each element in the*system-definition-search-functions*
list, expecting a pathname to be returned. The resulting pathname is loaded if either of the following conditions is true:
- there is no system of that name in memory
- the file's last-modified time exceeds the last-modified time of the system in memory
When system definitions are loaded from .asd files, a new scratch package is created for them to load into, so that different systems do not overwrite each others operations. The user may also wish to (and is recommended to) include
defpackage
andin-package
forms in his system definition files, however, so that they can be loaded manually if need be.The default value of
*system-definition-search-functions*
is a function that looks in each of the directories given by evaluating members of*central-registry*
for a file whose name is the name of the system and whose type is asd. The first such file is returned, whether or not it turns out to actually define the appropriate system. Hence, it is strongly advised to define a system foo in the corresponding file foo.asd.
All components, regardless of type, have the following attributes.
All attributes except name
are optional.
A component name is a string or a symbol. If a symbol, its name is
taken and lowercased. The name must be a suitable value for the
:name
initarg to make-pathname
in whatever filesystem
the system is to be found.
The lower-casing-symbols behaviour is unconventional, but was selected
after some consideration. Observations suggest that the type of
systems we want to support either have lowercase as customary case
(Unix, Mac, windows) or silently convert lowercase to uppercase
(lpns), so this makes more sense than attempting to use :case
:common
as argument to make-pathname
, which is reported not to
work on some implementations
This optional attribute is used by the test-system-version operation. See Predefined operations of asdf. For the default method of test-system-version, the version should be a string of intergers separated by dots, for example `1.0.11'.
Traditionally defsystem users have used reader conditionals to include or exclude specific per-implementation files. This means that any single implementation cannot read the entire system, which becomes a problem if it doesn't wish to compile it, but instead for example to create an archive file containing all the sources, as it will omit to process the system-dependent sources for other systems.
Each component in an asdf system may therefore specify features using
the same syntax as #+ does, and it will (somehow) be ignored for
certain operations unless the feature conditional is a member of
*features*
.
This attribute specifies dependencies of the component on its siblings. It is optional but often necessary.
There is an excitingly complicated relationship between the initarg and the method that you use to ask about dependencies
Dependencies are between (operation component) pairs. In your initargs for the component, you can say
:in-order-to ((compile-op (load-op "a" "b") (compile-op "c")) (load-op (load-op "foo")))
This means the following things:
load-op
, we have to load foo
The syntax is approximately
(this-op {(other-op required-components)}+) required-components := component-name | (required-components required-components) component-name := string | (:version string minimum-version-object)
Side note:
This is on a par with what ACL defsystem does. mk-defsystem is less general: it has an implied dependency
for all x, (load x) depends on (compile x)
and using a :depends-on
argument to say that b depends on
a actually means that
(compile b) depends on (load a)
This is insufficient for e.g. the McCLIM system, which requires that all the files are loaded before any of them can be compiled ]
End side note
In asdf, the dependency information for a given component and
operation can be queried using (component-depends-on operation
component)
, which returns a list
((load-op "a") (load-op "b") (compile-op "c") ...)
component-depends-on
can be subclassed for more specific
component/operation types: these need to (call-next-method)
and
append the answer to their dependency, unless they have a good reason
for completely overriding the default dependencies
(If it weren't for CLISP, we'd be using a LIST
method
combination to do this transparently. But, we need to support CLISP.
If you have the time for some CLISP hacking, I'm sure they'd welcome
your fixes)
This attribute is optional and if absent will be inferred from the component's name, type (the subclass of source-file), and the location of its parent.
The rules for this inference are:
(for source-files)
(source-file-type component system)
:local
(for modules)
NIL
(:relative component-name)
:local
Note that the DEFSYSTEM operator (used to create a “top-level” system) does additional processing to set the filesystem location of the top component in that system. This is detailed elsewhere, See Defining systems with defsystem.
The answer to the frequently asked question "how do I create a system definition where all the source files have a .cl extension" is thus
(defmethod source-file-type ((c cl-source-file) (s (eql (find-system 'my-sys)))) "cl")
This attribute is optional.
Packaging systems often require information about files or systems in addition to that specified by asdf's pre-defined component attributes. Programs that create vendor packages out of asdf systems therefore have to create “placeholder” information to satisfy these systems. Sometimes the creator of an asdf system may know the additional information and wish to provide it directly.
(component-property component property-name) and associated setf
method will allow the programmatic update of this information.
Property names are compared as if by EQL
, so use symbols or
keywords or something.
A source file is any file that the system does not know how to generate from other components of the system.
Note that this is not necessarily the same thing as “a file containing data that is typically fed to a compiler”. If a file is generated by some pre-processor stage (e.g. a .h file from .h.in by autoconf) then it is not, by this definition, a source file. Conversely, we might have a graphic file that cannot be automatically regenerated, or a proprietary shared library that we received as a binary: these do count as source files for our purposes.
Subclasses of source-file exist for various languages. FIXME: describe these.
A module is a collection of sub-components.
A module component has the following extra initargs:
:components
the components contained in this module:default-component-class
All child components which don't specify their class explicitly are inferred to be of this type.:if-component-dep-fails
This attribute takes one of the values:fail
,:try-next
,:ignore
, its default value is:fail
. The other values can be used for implementing conditional compilation based on implementation*features*
, for the case where it is not necessary for all files in a module to be compiled.:serial
When this attribute is set, each subcomponent of this component is assumed to depend on all subcomponents before it in the list given to:components
, i.e. all of them are loaded before a compile or load operation is performed on it.The default operation knows how to traverse a module, so most operations will not need to provide methods specialised on modules.
module
may be subclassed to represent components such as foreign-language linked libraries or archive files.
system
is a subclass ofmodule
.A system is a module with a few extra attributes for documentation purposes; these are given elsewhere. See The defsystem grammar.
Users can create new classes for their systems: the default
defsystem
macro takes a:classs
keyword argument.
New component types are defined by subclassing one of the existing component classes and specializing methods on the new component class.
FIXME: this should perhaps be explained more throughly, not only by example ...
As an example, suppose we have some implementation-dependent
functionality that we want to isolate in one subdirectory per Lisp
implementation our system supports. We create a subclass of
cl-source-file
:
(defclass unportable-cl-source-file (cl-source-file) ())
A hypothetical function system-dependent-dirname
gives us the
name of the subdirectory. All that's left is to define how to
calculate the pathname of an unportable-cl-source-file
.
(defmethod component-pathname ((component unportable-cl-source-file)) (let ((pathname (call-next-method)) (name (string-downcase (system-dependent-dirname)))) (merge-pathnames (make-pathname :directory (list :relative name)) pathname)))
The new component type is used in a defsystem
form in this way:
(defsystem :foo :components ((:file "packages") ... (:unportable-cl-source-file "threads" :depends-on ("packages" ...)) ... )
It is an error to define a system incorrectly: an implementation may
detect this and signal a generalised instance of
SYSTEM-DEFINITION-ERROR
.
Operations may go wrong (for example when source files contain
errors). These are signalled using generalised instances of
OPERATION-ERROR
.
ASDF checks for warnings and errors when a file is compiled. The
variables *compile-file-warnings-behaviour*
and
*compile-file-errors-behavior*
controls the handling of any
such events. The valid values for these variables are :error
,
:warn
, and :ignore
.
cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.cclan.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/cclan login
(no password: just press <Enter>)
cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.cclan.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/cclan co -r RELEASE asdf
or for the bleeding edge, instead
cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.cclan.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/cclan co -A asdf
If you are tracking the bleeding edge, you may want to subscribe to the cclan-commits mailing list (see http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=28536) to receive commit messages and diffs whenever changes are made.
For more CVS information, look at http://sourceforge.net/cvs/?group_id=28536.
* Outstanding spec questions, things to add
** packaging systems
*** manual page component?
** style guide for .asd files
You should either use keywords or be careful with the package that you evaluate defsystem forms in. Otherwise (defsystem partition ...) being read in the cl-user package will intern a cl-user:partition symbol, which will then collide with the partition:partition symbol.
Actually there's a hairier packages problem to think about too. in-order-to is not a keyword: if you read defsystem forms in a package that doesn't use ASDF, odd things might happen
** extending defsystem with new options
You might not want to write a whole parser, but just to add options to the existing syntax. Reinstate parse-option or something akin
** document all the error classes
** what to do with compile-file failure
Should check the primary return value from compile-file and see if that gets us any closer to a sensible error handling strategy
** foreign files
lift unix-dso stuff from db-sockets
** Diagnostics
A “dry run” of an operation can be made with the following form:
(traverse (make-instance '<operation-name>) (find-system <system-name>) 'explain)
This uses unexported symbols. What would be a nice interface for this functionality?
** all of the above
** reuse the same scratch package whenever a system is reloaded from disk
** rules for system pathname defaulting are not yet implemented properly
** proclamations probably aren't
** when a system is reloaded with fewer components than it previously had, odd things happen
we should do something inventive when processing a defsystem form, like take the list of kids and setf the slot to nil, then transfer children from old to new list as they're found
** traverse may become a normal function
If you're defining methods on traverse, speak up.
** a lot of load-op methods can be rewritten to use input-files
so should be.
** (stuff that might happen later)
*** david lichteblau's patch for symlink resolution?
*** Propagation of the :force option. “I notice that
(oos 'compile-op :araneida :force t)
also forces compilation of every other system the :araneida system
depends on. This is rarely useful to me; usually, when I want to force
recompilation of something more than a single source file, I want to
recompile only one system. So it would be more useful to have
make-sub-operation refuse to propagate :force t
to other systems, and
propagate only something like :force :recursively
.
Ideally what we actually want is some kind of criterion that says to
which systems (and which operations) a :force
switch will
propagate.
The problem is perhaps that `force' is a pretty meaningless concept.
How obvious is it that load :force t
should force
compilation? But we don't really have the right dependency
setup for the user to compile :force t
and expect it to work
(files will not be loaded after compilation, so the compile
environment for subsequent files will be emptier than it needs to be)
What does the user actually want to do when he forces? Usually, for me, update for use with a new version of the lisp compiler. Perhaps for recovery when he suspects that something has gone wrong. Or else when he's changed compilation options or configuration in some way that's not reflected in the dependency graph.
Other possible interface: have a 'revert' function akin to 'make clean'
(asdf:revert 'asdf:compile-op 'araneida)
would delete any files produced by 'compile-op 'araneida. Of course, it wouldn't be able to do much about stuff in the image itself.
How would this work?
traverse
There's a difference between a module's dependencies (peers) and its
components (children). Perhaps there's a similar difference in
operations? For example, (load "use") depends-on (load "macros")
is a
peer, whereas (load "use") depends-on (compile "use")
is more of a
`subservient' relationship.
We aim to solve basically the same problems as mk-defsystem does. However, our architecture for extensibility better exploits CL language features (and is documented), and we intend to be portable rather than just widely-ported. No slight on the mk-defsystem authors and maintainers is intended here; that implementation has the unenviable task of supporting pre-ANSI implementations, which is no longer necessary.
The surface defsystem syntax of asdf is more-or-less compatible with
mk-defsystem, except that we do not support the source-foo
and
binary-foo
prefixes for separating source and binary files, and
we advise the removal of all options to specify pathnames.
The mk-defsystem code for topologically sorting a module's dependency list was very useful.
Marco and Peter's proposal for defsystem 4 served as the driver for many of the features in here. Notable differences are:
If you want to find out what files an operation would create, ask the operation.
If you want to compile in a particular package, use an in-package form in that file (ilisp / SLIME will like you more if you do this anyway)
A system has a given version which can be used to check dependencies, but that's all.
The defsystem 4 proposal tends to look more at the external features, whereas this one centres on a protocol for system introspection.
Available in updated-for-CL form on the web at http://world.std.com/~pitman/Papers/Large-Systems.html
In our implementation we borrow kmp's overall PROCESS-OPTIONS and concept to deal with creating component trees from defsystem surface syntax. [ this is not true right now, though it used to be and probably will be again soon ]
compile-op
: Predefined operations of asdffeature-dependent-op
: Predefined operations of asdffind-system
: Componentsload-op
: Predefined operations of asdfload-source-op
: Predefined operations of asdfmodule
: Pre-defined subclasses of componentoos
: Operationsoperate
: OperationsOPERATION-ERROR
: Error handlingsource-file
: Pre-defined subclasses of componentsystem
: Pre-defined subclasses of componentSYSTEM-DEFINITION-ERROR
: Error handlingtest-system-version
: Predefined operations of asdf*central-registry*
: Using asdf to load systems*compile-file-errors-behavior*
: Compilation error and warning handling*compile-file-warnings-behaviour*
: Compilation error and warning handling*system-definition-search-functions*
: Components[1] When we say “directory” here, we mean “designator for a pathname with a supplied DIRECTORY component”.
[2] It is possible to customize the
system definition file search. That's considered advanced use, and
covered later: search forward for
*system-definition-search-functions*
. See Defining systems with defsystem.
[3] It is possible, though almost never necessary, to override this behaviour.