6.2 KiB
nim-workspace
A Nimble-based environment for working on one or more Status Nim projects.
Prerequisites
Please install the standard C/C++ toolchain for your operating system
(e.g. sudo apt install build-essentials
).
The scripts in this repo will automatically take care of installing the
right version of Nim and Nimble for you. To enable the automation, please
install direnv
from your distro's package manager or by following the
instructions here:
https://github.com/direnv/direnv
Lock files workflow
Using lock files provides a convenient way to fix the versions of the dependencies(and nim itself after 1017 is in). Here it is a guide on how to perform the typical dev tasks.
Building the project
Building the project typically happens using the nimble build
which will
download and install the versions that are in the nimble.lock
file. For
multiple build targets when nim
is used directly in the nimble
file,
nimble
will call the nim
from the lock file.
nim
in command line and integration with the tooling
Using lock files allows using vanilla nim
. This can be achieved utilizing
nimble.paths
file which can be generated using nimble setup
command. Here it
is a excerpt how that file looks like:
--noNimblePath
--path:"/home/yyoncho/.nimble/pkgs2/news-0.5-a5f1789bf650822156712fd3bdec1bf6ab4ac42e"
--path:"/home/yyoncho/.nimble/pkgs2/protobuf_serialization-0.2.0-9418459027d0d5eb30a974649dc615a76e8e4aca"
...
The paths file will be used by nimsuggest
/nimlangserver
as well.
Bumping dependency and testing against dev version of a dependency
When you want to bump and test a version of a depednecy, then you have to use
add-project
or use nimble develop <dep-name>
. This will clone the dependency
and then you can switch to the version you want to use. Then nimble lock
will
update the dependency in the lock file.
Staying up to date with changes from your team mates
Once you pull up the changes and if there are changes in the lock file then
nimble sync
should be called. This will download the proper versions of the
dependencies and it will sync the version of the develop mode dependencies if
any.
VScode
For VScode you have to install the following extension
Development workflows
Configuring your IDE/editor
Once you have direnv
installed you can fire up your editor from the terminal.
Note for the editors that have support for direnv
you don't need to start the
editor from the terminal.
Here it is sample configuration for the nim-codex
project VScode
(it should
be placed in nim-workspace/.vscode/settings.json
).
{
"nim.provider": "lsp", // force using lsp over nimsuggest integration
"nim.lintOnSave": false, // disable nim-check
"nim.autoCheckProject": true, // you might want to set that to false for big projects. It will disable project compilation after saving a file.
"nim.projectMapping": [{
"projectFile": "nim-codex/codex.nim",
"fileRegex": ".*\\.nim$" // force all files to be opened with once nimsuggest instance
}],
"nim.workingDirectoryMapping": [{
"projectFile": "nim-codex/codex.nim",
"directory": "nim-codex" // start nimsuggest for nim-codex/codex.nim in nim-codex folder
}]
}
Where:
nim.provider: "lsp"
- force using lsp over nimsuggest integrationnim.lintOnSave: false
- disablenim check
in vscodenim.autoCheckProject: true
- you might want to set that tofalse
for big projects. It will disable project compilation after saving a file. In case this is disabled you may force that usingC-S-p Source Actions RET
and pickCompile project
.nim.projectMapping
: configure hownimsuggest
instances can be started. The value in the sample section will force all nim files to be opened with the samenimsuggest
instance.nim.workingDirectoryMapping
- the mapping is used to determine which directory to startnimsuggest
(typically it is the actual project root, butnimlangserver
can't guess that).
NB: make sure that you have imported the whole nim-workspace
as a Workspace
folder in VScode
. if you don't do that you have to adjust the values in the
settings file to strip the project name (i. e. nim-codex
).
Commands
add-project <project-name>
Clones a Status project you intend to work on. An interactive script will ask you whether you also want to clone each of the transitive dependencies of the project. All dependencies that were not cloned for development will be installed in the Nimble cache.
Projects can be removed from the workspace by just deleting the respective
directory. This will result in Nimble installing the project's package in
the global cache during the next nimble build
.
add-all-vendor-projects
This script must be executed within a repository using a vendor
forder. It
will try to add all vendored submodules as folders in the workspace.
sync-vendor-revisions-to-workspace
This script must be executed within a repository using a vendor
folder. It
will copy the current revisions of submodules in the vendor folder to the
matching folder in the workspace if present. Typically, the script is executed
after pulling git revisions from other team members that have bumped vendor
sumbodules without also bumping the same packages in the Nimble lock file.
To resolve the arising discrepancy, the developer would execute the following
commands:
# Pull the project files as usual
cd top-level-project
git pull
make update # or git submodule update --init --recursive
# Fix the lock file
sync-vendor-revisions-to-workspace
nimble lock
git add nimble.lock
git commit -m "Update the lock file"
git push
sync-workspace-revisions-to-vendor
This script must be executed within a repository using a vendor
folder. It
will copy the revisions from the current workspace folders to the matching
submodules in the vendor folder. When you use a workspace and make changes
to the lockfile (by changing any of the dependencies) you must execute this
script before commiting to reflect the same change in the vendor folder, so
the respective project can continue building properly without Nimble.