GF Developers Guide 2018-07-26 %!options(html): --toc == Before you start == This guide is intended for people who want to contribute to the development of the GF compiler or the Resource Grammar Library. If you are a GF user who just wants to download and install GF (e.g to develop your own grammars), the simpler guide on [the GF download page ../download/index.html] should be sufficient. == Setting up your system for building GF == To build GF from source you need to install some tools on your system: the Haskell Tool Stack, //Git// and the //Haskeline library//. **On Linux** the best option is to install the tools via the standard software distribution channels, i.e. by using the //Software Center// in Ubuntu or the corresponding tool in other popular Linux distributions. If the Haskell Tool Stack is already installed, enter the following command in a Terminal: - On Ubuntu: ``sudo apt-get install git libghc6-haskeline-dev`` - On Fedora: ``sudo dnf install git ghc-haskeline-devel`` **On Mac OS and Windows**, the tools can be downloaded from their respective web sites, as described below. === Stack === The primary installation method is via ``stack``. To install [stack https://docs.haskellstack.org/en/stable/README/] - **On Mac and other Unix**, do either ``` curl -sSL https://get.haskellstack.org/ | sh ``` **OR** ``` wget -qO- https://get.haskellstack.org/ | sh ``` - **On Windows and other operating systems** :check out the install and [upgrade guide https://docs.haskellstack.org/en/stable/install_and_upgrade] If you already have stack installed, upgrade it to the latest version by running: ``stack upgrade`` === Git === To get the GF source code, you also need //Git//. //Git// is a distributed version control system, see https://git-scm.com/downloads for more information. If you've entered the command above, it incudes git installation. === The haskeline library === GF uses //haskeline// to enable command line editing in the GF shell. This should work automatically on Mac OS and Windows, but on Linux one extra step is needed to make sure the C libraries (terminfo) required by //haskeline// are installed. Here is one way to do this: - On Ubuntu: ``sudo apt-get install libghc-haskeline-dev`` - On Fedora: ``sudo dnf install ghc-haskeline-devel`` == Getting the source == Once you have all tools in place you can get the GF source code from [GitHub https://github.com/GrammaticalFramework/gf-core]. === Read-only access: clone the main repository === If you only want to compile and use GF, you can just clone the repository as follows: ``` $ git clone https://github.com/GrammaticalFramework/gf-core.git ``` To get new updates, run the following anywhere in your local copy of the repository: ``` $ git pull ``` === Contribute your changes: create a fork === If you want the possibility to contribute your changes, you should [create your own fork https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/quickstart/fork-a-repo] of the repository, and then clone that. ``` $ git clone https://github.com//gf-core.git ``` **Updating your copy —** Once you have cloned your fork, you need to set up the main GrammaticalFramework repository as a remote: ``` $ git remote add upstream https://github.com/GrammaticalFramework/gf-core.git ``` Then you can get the latest updates by running the following: ``` $ git pull upstream master ``` **Recording local changes —** If you are new to Git, we recommend to read a tutorial on how to [record and push your changes https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Recording-Changes-to-the-Repository] to your fork. **Pull request —** When you want to contribute your changes to the main gf-core repository, [create a pull request https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-pull-requests/proposing-changes-to-your-work-with-pull-requests/creating-a-pull-request] from your fork. == Compilation from source with Stack == Assuming you have the Haskell Tool Stack, Git, and Haskeline installed, entering ``` $ stack install ``` into a Terminal will install GF and all necessary libraries, including Alex and Happy. == Compilation from source with Cabal == The build system of GF is based on //Cabal//, which is part of the Haskell Platform, so no extra steps are needed to install it. In the simplest case, all you need to do to compile and install GF, after downloading the source code as described above, is ``` $ cabal install ``` //The old (partially outdated) instructions for Cabal are moved to a [separate page ../doc/gf-developers-old-cabal.html]. If you run into trouble with ``cabal install``, you may want to take a look.// %=== SDist === % %You can use the command: % %% This does *NOT* include everything that is needed // TH 2012-08-06 %``` %$ cabal sdist %``` % %to prepare archive with all source codes needed to compile GF. === Known problems with Cabal === Some versions of Cabal (at least version 1.16) seem to have a bug that can cause the following error: ``` Configuring gf-3.x... setup: Distribution/Simple/PackageIndex.hs:124:8-13: Assertion failed ``` The exact cause of this problem is unclear, but it seems to happen during the configure phase if the same version of GF is already installed, so a workaround is to remove the existing installation with ``` ghc-pkg unregister gf ``` You can check with ``ghc-pkg list gf`` that it is gone. == Compilation with make == If you feel more comfortable with Makefiles then there is a thin Makefile wrapper arround Cabal for you. If you just type: ``` $ make ``` the configuration phase will be run automatically if needed and after that the sources will be compiled. %% cabal build rgl-none does not work with recent versions of Cabal %If you don't want to compile the resource library %every time then you can use: %``` %$ make gf %``` For installation use: ``` $ make install ``` For cleaning: ``` $ make clean ``` %and to build source distribution archive run: %``` %$ make sdist %``` == Compiling GF with C run-time system support == The C run-time system is a separate implementation of the PGF run-time services. It makes it possible to work with very large, ambiguous grammars, using probabilistic models to obtain probable parses. The C run-time system might also be easier to use than the Haskell run-time system on certain platforms, e.g. Android and iOS. To install the C run-time system, go to the ``src/runtime/c`` directory %and follow the instructions in the ``INSTALL`` file. and use the ``install.sh`` script: ``` bash setup.sh configure bash setup.sh build bash setup.sh install ``` This will install the C header files and libraries need to write C programs that use PGF grammars. % Some example C programs are included in the ``utils`` subdirectory, e.g. ``pgf-translate.c``. Depending on what you want to do with the C runtime, you can follow one or more of the following steps. === 1. Use the C runtime from another programming language === % **If you just want to use the C runtime from Python, Java, or Haskell, you don't need to change your GF installation.** ==== What ==== **This is the most common use case for the C runtime:** compile your GF grammars into PGF with the standard GF executable, and manipulate the PGFs from another programming language, using the bindings to the C runtime. ==== How ==== The Python, Java and Haskell bindings are found in the ``src/runtime/{python,java,haskell-bind}`` directories, respecively. Compile them by following the instructions in the ``INSTALL`` or ``README`` files in those directories. The Python library can also be installed from PyPI using ``pip install pgf``. (If you are on Mac and get an error about ``clang`` version, you can try some of [these solutions https://stackoverflow.com/questions/63972113/big-sur-clang-invalid-version-error-due-to-macosx-deployment-target]—but be careful before removing any existing installations.) === 2. Use GF shell with C runtime support === ==== What ==== If you want to use the GF shell with C runtime functionalities, then you need to (re)compile GF with special flags. The GF shell can be started with ``gf -cshell`` or ``gf -crun`` to use the C run-time system instead of the Haskell run-time system. Only limited functionality is available when running the shell in these modes (use the ``help`` command in the shell for details). (Re)compiling your GF with these flags will also give you Haskell bindings to the C runtime, as a library called ``PGF2``, but if you want Python or Java bindings, you need to do step 1. % ``PGF2``: a module to import in Haskell programs, providing a binding to the C run-time system. ==== How ==== If you use cabal, run the following command: ``` cabal install -fc-runtime ``` from the top directory. If you use stack, uncomment the following lines in the ``stack.yaml`` file: ``` flags: gf: c-runtime: true extra-lib-dirs: - /usr/local/lib ``` First you will need to install the following libraries if not already installed: autoconf, automake, libtool, make On Ubuntu ``apt-get install autotools-dev`` On Fedora ``dnf install autoconf automake libtool`` and then run ``stack install``, also from the top directory. If you get an error ``error while loading shared libraries`` when trying to run gf with C runtime, remember to declare your LD_LIBRARY_PATH. Add ``export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/usr/local/lib"`` to either your .bashrc or .profile. You should now be able to start GF with C runtime. === 3. Use GF server mode with C runtime === ==== What ==== With this feature, ``gf -server`` mode is extended with new requests to call the C run-time system, e.g. ``c-parse``, ``c-linearize`` and ``c-translate``. ==== How ==== If you use cabal, run the following command: ``` cabal install -fc-runtime -fserver ``` from the top directory. If you use stack, add the following lines in the If you use stack, uncomment the following lines in the ``stack.yaml`` file: ``` flags: gf: c-runtime: true server: true extra-lib-dirs: - /usr/local/lib ``` and then run ``stack install``, also from the top directory. == Compilation of RGL == As of 2018-07-26, the RGL is distributed separately from the GF compiler and runtimes. === Simple === To install the RGL, you can use the following commands from within the ``gf-rgl`` repository: ``` $ make install ``` There is also ``make build``, ``make copy`` and ``make clean`` which do what you might expect. === Advanced === For advanced build options, call the Haskell build script directly: ``` $ runghc Setup.hs ... ``` For more details see the [README https://github.com/GrammaticalFramework/gf-rgl/blob/master/README.md]. === Haskell-free === If you do not have Haskell installed, you can use the simple build script ``Setup.sh`` (or ``Setup.bat`` for Windows). == Creating binary distribution packages == The binaries are generated with Github Actions. More details can be viewed here: https://github.com/GrammaticalFramework/gf-core/actions/workflows/build-binary-packages.yml === Creating .deb packages for Ubuntu === This was tested on Ubuntu 14.04 for the release of GF 3.6, and the resulting ``.deb`` packages appears to work on Ubuntu 12.04, 13.10 and 14.04. For the release of GF 3.7, we generated ``.deb`` packages on Ubuntu 15.04 and tested them on Ubuntu 12.04 and 14.04. Under Ubuntu, Haskell executables are statically linked against other Haskell libraries, so the .deb packages are fairly self-contained. ==== Preparations ==== ``` sudo apt-get install dpkg-dev debhelper ``` ==== Creating the package ==== Make sure the ``debian/changelog`` starts with an entry that describes the version you are building. Then run ``` make deb ``` If get error messages about missing dependencies (e.g. ``autoconf``, ``automake``, ``libtool-bin``, ``python-dev``, ``java-sdk``, ``txt2tags``) use ``apt-get intall`` to install them, then try again. === Creating OS X Installer packages === Run ``` make pkg ``` === Creating binary tar distributions === Run ``` make bintar ``` === Creating .rpm packages for Fedora === This is possible, but the procedure has not been automated. It involves using the cabal-rpm tool, ``` sudo dnf install cabal-rpm ``` and following the Fedora guide [How to create an RPM package http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_create_an_RPM_package]. Under Fedora, Haskell executables are dynamically linked against other Haskell libraries, so ``.rpm`` packages for all Haskell libraries that GF depends on are required. Most of them are already available in the Fedora distribution, but a few of them might have to be built and distributed along with the GF ``.rpm`` package. When building ``.rpm`` packages for GF 3.4, we also had to build ``.rpm``s for ``fst`` and ``httpd-shed``. == Running the test suite == The GF test suite is run with one of the following commands from the top directory: ``` $ cabal test ``` or ``` $ stack test ``` The testsuite architecture for GF is very simple but still very flexible. GF by itself is an interpreter and could execute commands in batch mode. This is everything that we need to organize a testsuite. The root of the testsuite is the ``testsuite/`` directory. It contains subdirectories which themselves contain GF batch files (with extension ``.gfs``). The above command searches the subdirectories of the ``testsuite/`` directory for files with extension ``.gfs`` and when it finds one, it is executed with the GF interpreter. The output of the script is stored in file with extension ``.out`` and is compared with the content of the corresponding file with extension ``.gold``, if there is one. Every time when you make some changes to GF that have to be tested, instead of writing the commands by hand in the GF shell, add them to one ``.gfs`` file in the testsuite subdirectory where its ``.gf`` file resides and run the test. In this way you can use the same test later and we will be sure that we will not accidentally break your code later. **Test Outcome - Passed:** If the contents of the files with the ``.out`` extension are identical to their correspondingly-named files with the extension ``.gold``, the command will report that the tests passed successfully, e.g. ``` Running 1 test suites... Test suite gf-tests: RUNNING... Test suite gf-tests: PASS 1 of 1 test suites (1 of 1 test cases) passed. ``` **Test Outcome - Failed:** If there is a contents mismatch between the files with the ``.out`` extension and their corresponding files with the extension ``.gold``, the test diagnostics will show a fail and the areas that failed. e.g. ``` testsuite/compiler/compute/Records.gfs: OK testsuite/compiler/compute/Variants.gfs: FAIL testsuite/compiler/params/params.gfs: OK Test suite gf-tests: FAIL 0 of 1 test suites (0 of 1 test cases) passed. ``` The fail results overview is available in gf-tests.html which shows 4 columns: + //Results// - only areas that fail will appear. (Note: There are 3 failures in the gf-tests.html which are labelled as (expected). These failures should be ignored.) + //Input// - which is the test written in the .gfs file + //Gold// - the expected output from running the test set out in the .gfs file. This column refers to the contents from the .gold extension files. + //Output// - This column refers to the contents from the .out extension files which are generated as test output. After fixing the areas which fail, rerun the test command. Repeat the entire process of fix-and-test until the test suite passes before submitting a pull request to include your changes.