Common Lisp/External libraries/ASDF/Configuring ASDF
Configuring ASDF
[edit | edit source]Most frequently, you will add settings for asdf to the configuration file for your lisp system. For example, sbcl uses ~/.sbclrc
while cmucl uses ~/.cmucl-init
. The most important setting is the central registry described below. Most of the other configuration settings are optional.
asdf:*central-registry*
[edit | edit source]The central-registry is a list of file directories that will be searched for system definition (.asd
) files and is the least you need to know about configuring ASDF. The safest way to modify asdf:*central-registry* is to use pushnew to push a new directory onto the list.
(pushnew "/Path/to/asd/files/" asdf:*central-registry*)
Automatically updating stale fasl files
[edit | edit source]From http://www.cliki.net/asdf
;;; If the fasl was stale, try to recompile and load (once). Since only SBCL
;;; has a separate condition for bogus fasls we retry on any old error
;;; on other lisps. Actually, Allegro has a similar condition, but it's
;;; unexported. Works nicely for the ACL7 upgrade, though.
;;; CMUCL has an invalid-fasl condition as of 19c.
(defmethod asdf:perform :around ((o asdf:load-op) (c asdf:cl-source-file))
(handler-case (call-next-method o c)
(#+sbcl sb-ext:invalid-fasl
#+allegro excl::file-incompatible-fasl-error
#+lispworks conditions:fasl-error
#+cmu ext:invalid-fasl
#-(or sbcl allegro lispworks cmu) error ()
(asdf:perform (make-instance 'asdf:compile-op) c)
(call-next-method))))
Alternative to symlinks, search directories recursively
[edit | edit source]The standard way of adding libraries to ASDF involves either:
- Making a symbolic link for the
.asd
file in a directory listed inasdf:*central-registry*
or - Adding directories to
asdf:*central-registry*
.
The following code snippit shows how to recursively search through subdirectories for asdf packages.
From http://www.cliki.net/asdf
;; An alternative to the standard sysdef search can be defined. This
;; code below can be dropped into your Lisp init files and customized.
;; It will search for all ASDF systems in subdirectories of the
;; specified directories. That lets you simply "drop-in" new packages
;; into one of the specified directories, and it will be available for
;; loading without any further steps.
(in-package #:asdf)
(defvar *subdir-search-registry* '(#p"/my/lisp/libraries/")
"List of directories to search subdirectories within.")
(defvar *subdir-search-wildcard* :wild
"Value of :wild means search only one level of subdirectories; value of :wild-inferiors means search
all levels of subdirectories (I don't advise using this in big directories!)")
(defun sysdef-subdir-search (system)
(let ((latter-path (make-pathname :name (coerce-name system)
:directory (list :relative
*subdir-search-wildcard*)
:type "asd"
:version :newest
:case :local)))
(dolist (d *subdir-search-registry*)
(let* ((wild-path (merge-pathnames latter-path d))
(files (directory wild-path)))
(when files
(return (first files)))))))
(pushnew 'sysdef-subdir-search *system-definition-search-functions*)