| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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`CoqProject_file` uses the feedback system, however this is not very
convenient in some scenarios such as `coqdep` that has to be run very
early in the build process [and thus in "boot" mode].
We thus make the warning function a paramater.
Should fix #8913.
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Allow for new goals that don't map to old goals
Include background_goals in all_goals return value
Fix incorrect change to raw diffs in shorten_diff_span
Fixes #8922
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This has been in OCaml since 4.04.
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We make `config` into a properly library. This is more uniform and
useful for some clients. This also matches what was done in Dune.
Next step would be to push dependencies on `Coq_config` upwards, only
the actual toplevel binaries should depend on it.
We also remove the stale `camlp5.dbg` and refactor the dbg files a
bit, isolating the bits that are specific to the plugin / lib building
method used by makefile.
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- `CString.strip -> String.trim`
- `CString.split -> String.split_on_char`
As noted by @ppedrot there are some small differences on semantics:
> OCaml's `trim` also takes line feeds (LF) into account. Similarly,
> OCaml's `split` never returns an empty list whereas Coq's `split`
> does on the empty string.
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Lintian found some spelling errors in the Debian packaging for coq. Fix
them most places they appear in the current source. (Don't change
documentation anchor names, as that would invalidate external
deeplinks.)
This also fixes a bug in coqdoc: prior to this commit, coqdoc would
highlight `instanciate` but not `instantiate`.
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A few of them will be of help for future cleanups. We have spared the
stuff in `Names` due to bad organization of this module following the
split from `Term`, which really difficult things removing the
constructors.
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Mostly via `dev/tools/update-compat.py --cur-version=8.9`
We just remove test-suite/success/FunindExtraction_compat86.v because,
except for the `Extraction iszero.` line at the bottom, it is a
duplicate of `test-suite/success/Funind.v` (except with `-compat 8.6`).
We also manually update a number of test-suite files to pre-emptively
remove compatibility notations (which used to be compat 8.6, but are now
compat 8.7).
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The relevant logic is already in `Envars`, so it makes sense to make
it private and don't expose the low-level implementation of the logic.
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These functions are unused, and configure should suffice for this
purpose.
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Instead of rolling our own, we use the standard one that works well
when binaries are symlinked.
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We build the `@doc` target in the `dune` job:
- The documentation can be found in `_build/default/_doc/`
- We had to fix a couple of quoting problems.
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In #7860 `Sys.executable_name` was introduced to locate coq private
binaries; however, this breaks use cases with symlinks, such as Dune.
In order to fix this, we adopt a simpler strategy; we will always
adapt the name originally provided by the user, and only add a
directory if it was originally present.
This should work (hopefully) in all cases.
This fixes `coqide` not working on Dune builds.
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[Dune](https://github.com/ocaml/dune) is a compositional declarative
build system for OCaml. It provides automatic generation of
`version.ml`, `.merlin`, `META`, `opam`, API documentation; install
management; easy integration with external libraries, test runners,
and modular builds.
In particular, Dune uniformly handles components regardless whether
they live in, or out-of-tree. This greatly simplifies cases where a
plugin [or CoqIde] is checked out in the current working copy but then
distributed separately [and vice-versa]. Dune can thus be used as a
more flexible `coq_makefile` replacement.
For now we provide experimental support for a Dune build. In order to
build Coq + the standard library with Dune type:
```
$ make -f Makefile.dune world
```
This PR includes a preliminary, developer-only preview of Dune for
Coq. There is still ongoing work, see
https://github.com/coq/coq/issues/8052 for tracking status towards
full support.
## Technical description.
Dune works out of the box with Coq, once we have fixed some modularity
issues. The main remaining challenge was to support `.vo` files.
As Dune doesn't support custom build rules yet, to properly build
`.vo` files we provide a small helper script `tools/coq_dune.ml`. The
script will scan the Coq library directories and generate the
corresponding rules for `.v -> .vo` and `.ml4 -> .ml` builds. The
script uses `coqdep` as to correctly output the dependencies of
`.v` files. `coq_dune` is akin to `coq_makefile` and should be able to
be used to build Coq projects in the future.
Due to this pitfall, the build process has to proceed in three stages:
1) build `coqdep` and `coq_dune`; 2) generate `dune` files for
`theories` and `plugins`; 3) perform a regular build with all
targets are in scope.
## FAQ
### Why Dune?
Coq has a moderately complex build system and it is not a secret that
many developer-hours have been spent fighting with `make`.
In particular, the current `make`-based system does offer poor support
to verify that the current build rules and variables are coherent, and
requires significant manual, error-prone. Many variables must be
passed by hand, duplicated, etc... Additionally, our make system
offers poor integration with now standard OCaml ecosystem tools such
as `opam`, `ocamlfind` or `odoc`. Another critical point is build
compositionality. Coq is rich in 3rd party contributions, and a big
shortcoming of the current make system is that it cannot be used to
build these projects; requiring us to maintain a custom tool,
`coq_makefile`, with the corresponding cost.
In the past, there has been some efforts to migrate Coq to more
specialized build systems, however these stalled due to a variety of
reasons. Dune, is a declarative, OCaml-specific build tool that is on
the path to become the standard build system for the OCaml ecosystem.
Dune seems to be a good fit for Coq well: it is well-supported, fast,
compositional, and designed for large projects.
### Does Dune replace the make-based build system?
The current, make-based build system is unmodified by this PR and kept
as the default option. However, Dune has the potential
### Is this PR complete? What does it provide?
This PR is ready for developer preview and feedback. The build system
is functional, however, more work is necessary in order to make Dune
the default for Coq.
The main TODOs are tracked at https://github.com/coq/coq/issues/8052
This PR allows developers to use most of the features of Dune today:
- Modular organization of the codebase; each component is built only
against declared dependencies so components are checked for
containment more strictly.
- Hygienic builds; Dune places all artifacts under `_build`.
- Automatic generation of `.install` files, simplified OPAM workflow.
- `utop` support, `-opaque` in developer mode, etc...
- `ml4` files are handled using `coqp5`, a native-code customized
camlp5 executable which brings much faster `ml4 -> ml` processing.
### What dependencies does Dune require?
Dune doesn't depend on any 3rd party package other than the OCaml compiler.
### Some Benchs:
```
$ /usr/bin/time make DUNEOPT="-j 1000" -f Makefile.dune states
59.50user 18.81system 0:29.83elapsed 262%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 302996maxresident)k
0inputs+646632outputs (0major+4893811minor)pagefaults 0swaps
$ /usr/bin/time sh -c "./configure -local -native-compiler no && make -j states"
88.21user 23.65system 0:32.96elapsed 339%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 304992maxresident)k
0inputs+1051680outputs (0major+5300680minor)pagefaults 0swaps
```
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Remove forward reference to lexer.
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Proof General requires minor changes to make the diffs visible, but this code
shouldn't break the existing version of PG.
Diffs are computed for the hypotheses and conclusion of the first goal between
the old and new proofs. Strings are split into tokens using the Coq lexer,
then the list of tokens are diffed using the Myers algorithm. A fixup routine
(Pp_diff.shorten_diff_span) shortens the span of the diff result in some cases.
Diffs can be enabled with the Coq commmand "Set Diffs on|off|removed." or
"-diffs on|off|removed" on the OS command line. The "on" option shows only the
new item with added text, while "removed" shows each modified item twice--once
with the old value showing removed text and once with the new value showing
added text.
The highlights use 4 tags to specify the color and underline/strikeout.
These are "diffs.added", "diffs.removed", "diffs.added.bg" and "diffs.removed.bg".
The first two are for added or removed text; the last two are for
unmodified parts of a modified item.
Diffs that span multiple strings in the Pp are tagged with "start.diff.*" and
"end.diff.*", but only on the first and last strings of the span.
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We use a buffer instead of O(n) appending to a string, and we also
make the parser tail-call.
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When launched through PATH argv.(0) is just the command name.
eg "coqtop -compile foo.v" -> argv.(0) = "coqtop"
Using executable_name also follows symlinks but this isn't tested to
avoid messing with windows. Running Coq through a symlink is not as
important as PATH anyways.
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in CArray
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This has no effect anymore, verbose printing is controlled now by
the regular, common `quiet` flag.
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We turn coqtop "plugins" into standalone executables, which will be
installed in `COQBIN` and located using the standard `PATH`
mechanism. Using dynamic linking for `coqtop` customization didn't
make a lot of sense, given that only one of such "plugins" could be
loaded at a time. This cleans up some code and solves two problems:
- `coqtop` needing to locate plugins,
- dependency issues as plugins in `stm` depended on files in `toplevel`.
In order to implement this, we do some minor cleanup of the toplevel
API, making it functional, and implement uniform build rules. In
particular:
- `stm` and `toplevel` have become library-only directories,
- a new directory, `topbin`, contains the new executables,
- 4 new binaries have been introduced, for coqide and the stm.
- we provide a common and cleaned up way to locate toplevels.
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But indeed we need to split this file, as it is used now from CoqIDE
is incorrect.
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It seems like #7408 will need some potentially intrusive work, so
let's add the low-level hook back so third party developments can work
well with `8.8.1/master` for the moment.
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This removes the Flags.univ_print in the kernel, making it possible to
put the univ printing flag ownership back in Detyping.
The lazyness is because getting an explanation may be costly and we
may discard it without printing.
See benches
- with lazy
https://ci.inria.fr/coq/view/benchmarking/job/benchmark-part-of-the-branch/406/console
- without lazy
https://ci.inria.fr/coq/view/benchmarking/job/benchmark-part-of-the-branch/405/console
Notably without lazy mathcomp odd_order is +1.26% with some lines
showing significant changes, eg PFsection11 line 874 goes from 11.76s
to 13.23s (+12%).
(with lazy the same development has -1% overall and the same line goes
from 11.76s to 11.23s (-4%) which may be within noise range)
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failure in other file
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Instead of the current hack that won't work as soon as we check some
part of the document asynchronously, we make the warning processor
recover a proper location if the warning doesn't have one attached.
This is what CoqIDE does [but it queries it's own document model].
Fixes: #6172
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Recent commits introduced global flags, but these should be
module-specific so relocating.
Global flags are deprecated, and for 8.9 `Lib.Flags` will be reduced
to the truly global stuff.
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I make here a minimal fix, but a lot of cleaning should be done around
Aux_file handling, including removing some code from the kernel.
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