OCaml Changelog

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Read the latest releases and updates from the OCaml ecosystem.

Dune 3.13.0

We're happy to announce that Dune 3.13.0 is now available. This feature is packed with fixes and new features that you can find in the changelog.

There are a few new features that we would like to specially highlight.

Generate Conflicts File for Menhir Grammars (#9512, @nojb)

When menhir is used to generate code from .mly files, there are sometimes issues with the grammar itself, such as shift-reduce conflicts.

Menhir has an option to generate a "conflicts" file using its --explain flag, but until now this was not exposed by Dune. Starting from this version, this file will be generated automatically to help developers debug their grammars.

Cached Directory Targets (#9535, @rleshchinskiy)

Dune's global cache is a way to save the result of intermediate build results, even across projects. Previously, it would only work with file targets. With this change, it now supports Dune's experimental directory targets.

Dynamic Module List (#9578, @nojb)

In several places in the Dune language, it is possible to pass a list of modules. For example in a (library) stanza, if for some reason the default of picking all the source files in the current directory is not the right thing to do, it is possible to pass (module A B C) to only attach these modules to the library.

An important limitation has been that the list of modules needed to be static: written as is in the dune file. This limitation has now been lifted and it is possible to use (:include) or %{read-lines:file} in this field and similar ones.

LexiFi's use case is a system of static plug-ins: a program is extended by selecting which modules are linked to the application core. This list of modules can now be emitted by a generator that reads a configuration file.

Previously, this required using OCaml syntax for the dune file, which has several issues, including incompatibility with features like (include_subdirs) and poor performance because Dune does not know the dependencies of the generator and needs to re-run the build more times than necessary.

See full changelog

Added

  • Add command dune cache clear to completely delete all traces of the Dune cache. (#8975, @nojb)

  • Allow to disable Coq 0.8 deprecation warning (#9439, @ejgallego)

  • Allow OCAMLFIND_TOOLCHAIN to be set per context in the workspace file through the env stanza. (#9449, @rgrinberg)

  • Menhir: generate .conflicts file by default. Add new field to the (menhir) stanza to control the generation of this file: (explain <blang expression>). Introduce (menhir (flags ...) (explain ...)) field in the (env) stanza, delete (menhir_flags) field. All changes are guarded under a new version of the Menhir extension, 3.0. (#9512, @nojb)

  • Directory targets can now be cached. (#9535, @rleshchinskiy)

  • It is now possible to use special forms such as (:include) and variables %{read-lines:} in (modules) and similar fields. Note that the dependencies introduced in this way (i.e., the files being read) must live in a different directory than the stanza making use of them. (#9578, @nojb)

  • Remove warning 30 from default set for projects where dune lang is at least 3.13 (#9568, @gasche)

  • Add coqdoc_flags field to coq field of env stanza, allowing the setting of workspace-wide defaults for coqdoc_flags. (#9280, fixes #9139, @Alizter)

  • ctypes: fix an error where (ctypes) with no (function_description) would cause an error trying refer to a nonexistent _stubs.a dependency (#9302, fix #9300, @emillon)

Changed

  • Check that package names in (depends) and related fields in dune-project are well-formed. (#9472, fixes #9270, @ElectreAAS)

Fixed

  • Do not ignore (formatting ..) settings in context or workspace files (#8447, @rgrinberg)

  • Fixed a bug where Dune was incorrectly parsing the output of coqdep when it was escaped, as is the case on Windows. (#9231, fixes #9218, @Alizter)

  • Copying mode for sandboxes will now follow symbolic links (#9282, @rgrinberg)

  • Forbid the empty (binaries ..) field in the env stanza in the workspace file unless language version is at least 3.2. (#9309, @rgrinberg)

  • [Coq] Fix bug in computation of flags when composed with boot theories. (#9347, fixes #7909, @ejgallego)

  • Fixed a bug where the (select) field of the (libraries) field of the (test) stanza wasn't working properly. (#9387, fixes #9365, @Alizter)

  • Fix handling of the PATH argument to dune init proj NAME PATH. An intermediate directory called NAME is no longer created if PATH is supplied, so dune init proj my_project . will now initialize a project in the current working directory. (#9447, fixes #9209, @shonfeder)

  • Experimental doc rules: Correctly handle the case when a package depends upon its own sublibraries (#9461, fixes #9456, @jonludlam)

  • Resolve various public binaries to their build location, rather than to where they're copied in the _build/install directory (#9496, fixes #7908, @rgrinberg).

  • Correctly ignore warning flags in vendored projects (#9515, @rgrinberg)

  • Use watch exclusions in watch mode on MacOS (#9643, fixes #9517, @PoorlyDefinedBehaviour)

  • Fix Merlin configuration for (include_subdirs qualified) modules (#9659, fixes #8297, @rgrinberg)

  • Fix handling of enabled_if in binary install stanzas. Previously, we'd ignore the result of enabled_if when evaluating %{bin:..} (#9707, @rgrinberg)

Dune 3.12.2

We just released version 3.12.2 with 2 bugfixes.

See full changelog

Fixed

  • Fix version check in runtest_alias for cram stanza (#9454, @emillon)

  • Fix stack overflow when a (run) action can not be parsed. (#9530, fixes #9529, @gridbugs)

We are pleased to announce the release of OCaml LSP 1.17.0. This version comes packed with fixes and new features.

Notable features that come in this release include:

  • Compatibility with Odoc 2.3.0: This version is fully compatible with Odoc 2.3.0, introducing support for the latest syntax features like tables and "codeblock output."
  • New Actions for Code Cleanup: You can now mark or remove unused elements such as 'open', types, for loop indexes, modules, match cases, 'rec', and constructors, making your code cleaner and more efficient.
  • Auto-completion for 'in' Keyword: To address the long standing issue of the in keyword completing to other terms in the editor, we've added auto-completion for this keyword in OCaml LSP. Typing in will now only suggest auto completion for the in keyword.
See full changelog

Fixes

  • Fix missing super & subscripts in markdown documentation. (#1170)
  • Do not invoke dune at all if --fallback-read-dot-merlin flag is on. (#1173)
  • Fix semantic highlighting of infix operators that contain '.'. (#1186)
  • Disable highlighting unit as an enum member to fix comment highlighting bug. (#1185)
  • Improve type-on-hover and type-annotate efficiency by only formatting the type of the first enclosing. (#1191, #1196)
  • Fix the encoding of URI's to match how vscode does it (#1197)
  • Fix parsing of completion prefixes (#1181)

Features

  • Compatibility with Odoc 2.3.0, with support for the introduced syntax: tables, and "codeblock output" (#1184)
  • Display text of references in doc strings (#1166)
  • Add mark/remove unused actions for open, types, for loop indexes, modules, match cases, rec, and constructors (#1141)
  • Offer auto-completion for the keyword in (#1217)

Odoc 2.4.0

The odoc team is delighted to announce the release of odoc 2.4.0. It mainly contains support for search engines. There are of course bugfixes and smaller new features.

🌟 Spotlight Feature of Odoc 2.4.0 : Search

Odoc now support searching in the documentation ! The search is made to run in the browser, so that you do not need a server to enable search: you can have search on your documentation hosted on github pages or even locally on your machine.

No search engine is shipped with, you need to provide one, but all the facilities to make use of one are present. We adapted @art-w 's sherlodoc for seamless integration with odoc, alongside with new features. It is not yet released on opam, but we hope it will be soon.

You can already test sherlodoc and play with it on your own projects, there are instructions in its readme. Sherlodoc has fuzzy typed-based search like hoogle in the haskell world, and is made to work best for OCaml (unlike a general purpose search engine like elastic search).

Check the results on odoc's own online documentation : ocaml.github.io/odoc.

🀝 Join The Mission

While we are dedicated to developing the best tooling to generate and serve documentation on OCaml.org, creating a well-documented library ecosystem can only be a collective effort. Package authors: we’re working hard to give you great tools, but we’ll need all your help to create an ecosystem of well-documented libraries for OCaml!

If you find that writing documentation for your library isn’t as straightforward as you would like, please do share your feedback with us.

See full changelog

Added

  • Add support for external search engines (@panglesd, @EmileTrotignon, #972) This includes the generation of an index and the display of the results in the UI (HTML only).
  • Display 'private' keyword for private type extensions (@gpetiot, #1019)
  • Allow to omit parent type in constructor reference (@panglesd, @EmileTrotignon, #933)

Fixed

  • Warn and exit when table(s) is not closed (@lubegasimon, #1050)
  • Hint when list(s) is not closed (@lubegasimon, #1050)
  • Fix crash on functors returning an alias (@Julow, #1046)
  • Fix rendering of polymorphic variants (@wikku, @panglesd, #971)
  • Add references to extension declarations (@gpetiot, @panglesd, #949)

Changed

  • Style: Adjusted line height in the TOC to improve readability (@sorawee, #1045)
  • Style: Remove font fallback to Helvetica, Arial (@Julow, #1028)
  • Style: Preformatted elements fallback to UA monospace (@toastal, #967)
  • Style: Sidebar is now stuck to the left of the content instead of the left of the viewport (@EmileTrotignon, #999)

We're happy to announce the release of Merlin 4.13. This release comes with a number of bug fixes to the Merlin binary.

It also introduces a new -cache-lifespan flag that can be used to set cache invalidation periods. This flag allows for fine-tuning of cache invalidation periods, enabling users to customize Merlin's internal configurations for optimal performance in various project contexts.

Additionally, this release includes several improvements in editor modes. For more details, we encourage you to delve into the full changelog.

See full changelog
  • merlin binary
    • Fix a follow-up issue to the preference of non-ghost nodes introduced in #1660 (#1690, fixes #1689)
    • Add -cache-lifespan flag, that sets cache invalidation period. (#1698, #1705)
    • Fix Merlin locate not fallbacking on the correct file in case of ambiguity (@goldfirere, #1699)
    • Fix Merlin reporting errors provoked by the recovery itself (#1709, fixes #1704)
  • editor modes
    • vim: load merlin when Vim is compiled with +python3/dyn (e.g. MacVim)
    • emacs: highlight only first error line by default (#1693, fixes #1663)

Dune 3.12.1

We're pleased to announce the release of Dune 3.12!

Note that due to a mistake during the release process, version 3.12.0 was not published to opam and should not be used.

This version contains many fixes but we would like to highlight the following features:

  • dune ocaml doc is a new command that will build the docs of your package, and open them in a web browser directly.
  • a new set of odoc rules will build documentation for the whole switch. It can be invoked by dune build @doc-new. Note that this is still experimental.
  • Dune can now be built and installed on Haiku.
See full changelog

Added

  • Introduce $ dune ocaml doc to open and browse documentation. (#7262, fixes #6831, @EmileTrotignon)

  • dune cache trim now accepts binary byte units: KiB, MiB, etc. (#8618, @Alizter)

  • Introduce the runtest_alias field to the cram stanza. This allows removing default runtest alias from tests. (@rgrinberg, #8887)

  • Display cache location in Dune log (#8974, @nojb)

  • Dune can now be built and installed on Haiku (#8795, fix #8551, @Alizter)

  • Mark installed directories in dune-package files. This fixes (package) dependencies against packages that contain such directories. (#8953, fixes #8915, @emillon)

  • Introduce new experimental odoc rules (#8803, @jonjudlam)

Changed

  • dune-build-info: when version="" is found in a META file, we now return None as a version string (#9177, @emillon)

  • No longer force colors for OCaml 4.03 and 4.04 (#8778, @rgrinberg)

  • Dependencies in the copying sandbox are now writeable (#8920, @rgrinberg)

  • Rules that only use internal dune actions (write-file, echo, etc.) can now be sandboxed. (#9041, fixes #8854, @rgrinberg)

  • Add test_ prefix to default test name in dune init project (#9257, fixes #9131, @9sako6)

Fixed

  • Do not ignore libraries named bigarray when they are defined in conjunction with OCaml 5.0 (#8902, fixes #8901, @rgrinberg)

  • Correctly ignore bigarray on recent versions of OCaml (#9076, @rgrinberg)

  • Absent packages shouldn't prevent all rules from being loaded (#8948, fixes #8630, @rgrinberg)

  • Correctly determine the stanza of menhir modules when (include_subdirs qualified) is enabled (@rgrinberg, #8949, fixes #7610)

  • Re-run actions whenever (expand_aliases_in_sandbox) changes (#8990, @rgrinberg)

  • Do not re-run rules when their location changes (#9052, @rgrinberg)

  • [coq rules] Be more tolerant when coqc --print-version / --config don't work properly, and fallback to a reasonable default. This fixes problems when building Coq projects with (stdlib no) and likely other cases. (#8966, fix #8958, @Alizter, reported by Lasse Blaauwbroek)

  • Dune will now run at a lower framerate of 15 fps rather than 60 when INSIDE_EMACS. (#8812, @Alizter)

Feedback on this post is welcomed on Discuss!

We are happy to announce the third alpha release of opam 2.2.0. It contains some fixes and a new feature for Windows. You can view the full list in the release note.

This version is an alpha, we invite users to test it to spot previously unnoticed bugs as we head towards the stable release.

Major change: Environment variables handling on Windows

opam files now support a new x-env-path-rewrite field which specifies rewriting rules for the environment variable updates defined in the setenv and build-env fields. This field allows greater control over the separator character used for PATH-like fields (i.e. ; vs :), conversion of slashes to backslashes, and even conversion from Windows native path format (C:\cygwin64\home\dra\.opam) to Cygwin format (/home/dra/.opam).

The rewriting rules allow opam directory-like variables (e.g. the %{lib}% directory of a switch) to be used in setenv and build-env fields in a portable way.

For example, given:

setenv: [
  [PKG_CONFIG_PATH += "%{lib}%/pkgconfig"]
  [PATH += "%{share}%/bin"]
]
x-env-path-rewrite: [
  [ PKG_CONFIG_PATH ":" "host" ]
  [ PATH (":" {os != "win32"} | ";" {os = "win32"}) ("target" {os != "win32"} | "target-quoted" {os = "win32"}) ]
]

the environment variable changes given by opam env on Windows would be:

PKG_CONFIG_PATH='/cygdrive/c/Users/DRA/AppData/Local/opam/default/lib/pkgconfig[:<rest-of-PKG_CONFIG_PATH, if given>]'
PATH='C:\Users\DRA\AppData\Local\opam\default\share\bin;C:\Users\DRA\AppData\Local\opam\default\bin;<rest-of-PATH>'

with the following interesting parts for Windows users:

  • PKG_CONFIG_PATH, which is consumed by a Cygwin-tool, has the directory given in Unix-like syntax, and opam's share variable was automatically converted
  • The correct separator is used for each (: for PKG_CONFIG_PATH, ; for PATH is used when adding entries)
  • In the PATH update, /bin was converted to \bin

Note that the specification for PATH is opam's default behaviour, so it's not actually necessary to have this formula for PATH in the x-env-path-rewrite field.

The full syntax is described in full in the manual.

Opam files carrying this new field are still compatible with the opam 2.0 syntax as it is an extension field, however its effect is only available with opam 2.2.0~alpha3 and above. If you want to make sure users of the package containing it have a compatible opam, you can use the available field to that end:

available: opam-version >= "2.2.0~alpha3"

or, if the change is Windows-specific:

available: opam-version >= "2.2.0~alpha3" | os != "win32"

Other noteworthy changes

  • Sandbox: /tmp is now writable again, restoring POSIX compliance
  • opam tree: opam tree package.version is now supported, displaying the dependency tree of a specific version of a package
  • opam tree: --recurse and --subpath are supported for directory arguments
  • opam admin: new add-extrafiles command to add/check/update the extra-files: field according to the files present in the files/ directory
  • opam lint: new syntax allow marking a set of warnings as errors e.g. -W @1..9
  • Releases: Pre-built binaries now include ppc64le and s390x

Miscellaneous changes

  • A handful of issues related to the compilation of opam on Windows were fixed
  • Bugs in the handling of the OPAMCURL, OPAMFETCH and OPAMVERBOSE environment variables were fixed
  • Bugs in the handling of the --assume-built argument were fixed
  • Sporadic crashes and segfaults during shell detection on Windows were fixed

Various other improvements were made and bugs were fixed. API changes are denoted in the release note linked above. This release also includes a handful of PRs improving the documentation and more than a dozen PRs improving and extending the tests.

Windows Support

The main opam-repository Windows compliance is still a work in progress, we recommend to use existing compatible repository (originally from @fdopen) and 32/64 bit mingw-w64 packages (by @dra27).

How to Test opam on Windows

If you're feeling adventurous, you can use the experimental pre-built binary for Windows available here. It should work but since it's our first public pre-built binary for Windows please use at your own risk.

Otherwise you can compile opam yourself using the following steps:

This alpha requires a preexisting Cygwin installation for compiling opam.

  1. Check that you have all dependencies installed:
  • autoconf, make, patch, curl
  • MinGW compilers: mingw64-x86_64-gcc-g++, mingw64-i686-gcc-g++
  • Or if you want to use the MSVC port of OCaml, you'll need to install Visual Studio or Visual Studio Build Tools
  1. Download & extract the opam archive
  2. In the directory:
  • if you are using MSVC: launch make cold
  • if you are using MinGW: make sure the path to the libc dlls are in your PATH and launch make cold. For instance: export PATH='C:\cygwin64\usr\x86_64-w64-mingw32\sys-root\mingw\bin':$PATH && make cold. Don’t forget to update PATH accordingly or place the opam binary in the same directory as the libc dlls if you want to move the resulting opam binary.
  • alternatively, if you're using MinGW: make cold CONFIGURE_ARGS=--with-private-runtime. If you change the location of the resulting opam binary, don't forget to copy Opam.Runtime.amd64 directory (or Opam.Runtime.i386) in the same directory.
  1. A coffee later, you now have an opam executable!
  2. Start your preferred Windows terminal (cmd or PowerShell), and initialise opam with the Windows sunset repository:
  • opam init git+https://github.com/ocaml-opam/opam-repository-mingw

From here, you can try to install the sunset repository packages. If you find any bugs, please submit an issue. It will help opam-repository maintainers to add Windows repository packages into the main repository.

Try it!

In case you plan a possible rollback, you may want to first backup your ~/.opam directory.

The upgrade instructions are unchanged:

  1. Either from binaries: run

    bash -c "sh <(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ocaml/opam/master/shell/install.sh) --version 2.2.0~alpha3"
    

    or download manually from the Github "Releases" page to your PATH.

  2. Or from source, manually: see the instructions in the README.

You should then run:

opam init --reinit -ni

Please report any issues to the bug-tracker.

Thanks for trying this new release out, and we hope you will enjoy the new features!

We’re pleased to announce the release of opam-publish 2.3.0.

This release, apart from a couple of light improvements, mainly consists of the following new option:

  • You can now use opam-publish with the --no-confirmation argument for use in automated pipeline. Use this option with extreme caution if you do use it.

The full changelog is available below.

Enjoy, The opam team

See full changelog
  • Add a new --no-confirmation argument for use in automated pipeline [#158 @AltGr - fix #132]
  • Improve the error message when a file expected to be an opam file is given as argument [#150 @kit-ty-kate - partially fix #149]
  • Adopt the OCaml Code of Conduct [#151 @rikusilvola]
  • Changes the makefile to make sure the standard "make && make install" works [#157 @kit-ty-kate]

Odoc 2.3.1

Following the release of odoc 2.3.0, we're releasing a patch release with odoc 2.3.1 that fixes support for OCaml 5.1.

See full changelog

After giving space for feedback and objections by the community, we have deprecated ocaml-migrate-parsetree (aka OMP). It is superseded by Ppxlib.

There are four major differences between OMP and Ppxlib, which all go hand in hand.

The first major difference is in the library and therefore impacts how to write PPXs. With OMP, each PPX author had to choose a parsetree version to define their PPX against. There was no version agreement between different PPXs. With Ppxlib, each PPX author uses the same parsetree version.

The second major difference is about compatibility with new compiler syntax. While with OMP, each PPX was on its own parsetree version, Ppxlib keeps them all on the version of the latest stably released compiler. That makes using any PPX compatible with using the latest compiler syntax features!

The third major difference is in the philosophy of PPXs. With OMP, all PPX transformations were global transformations, i.e., transformations of the whole parsetree. Ppxlib has introduced the concept of "context-free" transformations, i.e., transformations that transform only one parsetree node. By restricting their scope of action, context-free PPXs are a lot more predictable and less dangerous! Also, Ppxlib merges all context-free PPXs into one parsetree pass, defining clear semantics of PPX composition.

The fourth major difference is in the driver, i.e., the binary that drives the application of all used PPXs in a project. The Ppxlib driver is significantly more performant than the OMP driver used to be. That's partly because it does a lot fewer parsetree migrations and partly thanks to merging all context-free PPXs into one parsetree pass.

As a consequence of the deprecation, OMP will be incompatible with any new compiler version. The first incompatible compiler version is OCaml 5.1.

Thanks a lot to everyone involved in OCaml's transition from OMP to Ppxlib, for example by porting their PPX!

Dune 3.11.1

Following the release of Dune 3.11.0 a few days ago, we've just released version 3.11.1 with a couple of bug fixes:

  • Fix the dune rpc status command that was incorrectly showing that there were no RPC servers running on Windows.
  • Fix a bogus error when no inline test was declared in a library using (inline_tests).
See full changelog

Fixed

  • Fix dune rpc commands on Windows (#8806, fixes #8799, @nojb)

  • Fix inline_tests when the partition list is empty (#8849, fixes #8848, @hhugo)

We're happy to announce the release of Ppxlib 0.31.0. Shortly after OCaml 5.1.0 has been released, this Ppxlib release fixes a bug in the support of OCaml 5.1.0. Before that bug fix, the warnings about a generative/applicative mismatch between a functor creation and its application introduced by OCaml 5.1.0 were also triggered when that mismatch didn't exist.

Furthermore, the release contains a couple of bug fixes in the context of attributes.

We're also excited about two main enhancements. One allows authors of extension node rewriters to add a path argument to the extension node. That's excellent for hygiene since it allows the PPX to be explicit about modules rather than depending on its scope.

The other main enhancement allows an opt-in for compiler warnings about unused code generated by derivers (warnings w32 and w60). That opting in needs to happen on both sides of the deriver, the writer side and the user side. Opting in to those code warnings will help to clean up unused code, leading to performance improvements in compilation and editor support.

See full changelog
  • Fix support for OCaml 5.1: migrated code preserves generative functor warnings, without creating more. Locations are better preserved. (#432, @pitag-ha, @panglesd)

  • Driver: Add -unused-code-warnings command-line flag. (#444, @ceastlund)

  • Add ?warning flag to Deriving.Generator.make. (#440, @jacksonzou123 via @ceastlund)

  • Restore the path_arg functionality in the V3 API. (#431, @ELLIOTTCABLE)

  • Expose migration/copying/etc. functions for all AST types needed by Pprintast. (#454, @antalsz)

  • Preserve quoted attributes on antiquotes in metaquot. (#441, @ncik-roberts)

  • Attribute namespaces: Fix semantics of reserving multi-component namespaces. (#443, @ncik-roberts)

Dune 3.11.0

We're pleased to announce the release of Dune 3.11!

Here are some highlights from this release.

Dune Terminal User Interface (TUI)

The biggest highlight in this release is the introduction of the new Terminal User Interface (TUI) display mode.

You can now run dune build --display tui to open a TUI. We recommend using it in conjunction with Dune watch mode (dune build -w --display tui).

From the TUI, you will be able to navigate messages from Dune build, scroll through them, or click to minimize them. Press ? to show the help screen.

Installing Source Directories

Another exciting feature in this release is the new (source_trees ..) field added to the (install ..) stanzas to add every files in a directory to the installation. For instance, to add your manual to the installation, you can use:

(install
 (section doc)
 (source_trees manual))

Let us know what you think about these features, and don't hesistate to open issues on Dune's bug tracker if you encounter any issue.

See full changelog

Added

  • enabled_if now supports arch_sixtyfour variable (#8023, fixes #7997, @Alizter)

  • Experimental: Added a $ dune monitor command that can connect to a running dune build in watch mode and display the errors and progress. (#8152, @Alizter)

  • The progress RPC procedure now has an extra field for the In_progress constructor for the number of failed jobs. (#8212, @Alizter)

  • Add a --preview flag to dune fmt which causes it to print out the changes it would make without applying them (#8289, @gridbugs)

  • Introduce (source_trees ..) to the install stanza to allow installing entire source trees. (#8349, @rgrinberg)

  • Add --stop-on-first-error option to dune build which will terminate the build when the first error is encountered. (#8400, @pmwhite and @Alizter)

  • Dune now displays the number of errors when waiting for changes in watch mode. (#8408, fixes #6889, @Alizter)

  • Add with_prefix keyword for changing the prefix of the destination of installed files matched by globs. (#8416, @gridbugs)

  • Added experimental --display tui option for Dune that opens an interactive Terminal User Interface (TUI) when Dune is running. Press '?' to open up a help screen when running for more information. (#8429, @Alizter and @rgrinberg)

  • Add a warnings field to dune-project files as a unified mechanism to enable or disable dune warnings (@rgrinberg, 8448)

  • dune exec: support syntax like %{bin:program}. This can appear anywhere in the command line, so things like dune exec time %{bin:program} now work. (#6035, #8474, fixes #2691, @emillon, @Leonidas-from-XIV)

  • Add a new alias @doc-json to build odoc documentation in JSON format. This output can be consumed by external tools. (#8178, @emillon)

Changed and Fixed

  • Use posix_spawn instead of fork on MacOS. This gives us a performance boost and allows us to re-enable thread. (#8090, @rgrinberg)

  • Modules that were declared in (modules_without_implementation), (private_modules) or (virtual_modules) but not declared in (modules) will raise an error. (#7674, @Alizter)

  • No longer emit linkopts(javascript) in META files (#8168, @hhugo)

  • RPC message styles are now serialised meaning that RPC diagnostics keep their ANSI styling. (#8516, fixes #6921, @Alizter)

  • Truncate output from actions that produce too much output (@tov, #8351)

  • Allow libraries to shadow OCaml built-in libraries. Previously, built-in libraries would always take precedence. (@rgrinberg, #8558)

  • dune utop no longer links utop in "custom" mode, which should make this command considerably faster. (#8631, fixes #6894, @nojb)

  • Ensure that package names in dune-project are valid opam package names. (#8331, @emillon)

  • init: check that module names are valid (#8644, fixes #8252, @emillon)

  • dune init: parse --public as a public name (#8603, fixes #7108, @emillon)

  • Stop signing source files with substitutions. Sign only binaries instead (#8361, fixes #8360, @anmonteiro)

  • Make copy sandbox support directory targets. (#8705, fixes #7724, @emillon)

Deprecated and Removed

  • Deprecate install destination paths beginning with ".." to prevent packages escaping their designated installation directories. (#8350, @gridbugs)

  • Remove warning against .dune files generated by pre Dune 2.0 (#8611, @rgrinberg)

  • Remove versions 0.1 and 0.2 of the experimental ctypes extension. (#8293, @emillon)

Odoc 2.3.0

We are thrilled to announce the release of odoc 2.3.0! πŸŽ‰ This release is the result of almost a year of diligent work from the odoc team since the last major release of odoc 2.2.0, it comes packed with significant new features and improvements!

🌟 Spotlight Features of Odoc 2.3.0

Here are a couple of the new features introduced in Odoc 2.3.0 that we'd like to highlight.

Table Support

Table support is the last addition to the odoc language, and comes with two syntax flavours: a light one, and a heavy one. The light markup is similar to markdown's markup for table, producing tables that are readable in the source file as well.

However, this markup has some limitation, since it only allows inline content in cells. It can also be difficult to read and mantain for big tables, without a proper editor support. For this reason, Odoc also provides a "heavy" markup, closer to the html one, with fewer limitations!

Here is a table in heavy, light, and rendered form:

{t
Table | support
------|--------
is    | cool!
}
{table
{tr {th Table} {th support}}
{tr {td is} {td cool!}}
}

Table | support ------|-------- is | cool!

Source Code Rendering

Source code rendering is an extremely exciting new feature. Not only odoc is now able to generate a rendering of the source files (and source hierarchy) of a project, but it is also able to create direct links from the documentation to the implementation!

This puts the documentation browsing to a new level, by helping to quickly answer any implementation-related question!

The source code rendering is also tailored to OCaml, for instance with links from variables to their definition, something missing from traditional html-based source viewing such as github!

Using this features in odoc’s driver will require some work, but you can already have a preview of the feature by going to the odoc API website, which was built with the feature enabled. For instance, the Odoc_html 19 module is now populated with many Source links, jumping right into the implementation file 5! Directory pages to browser the implementation are also included 8 :smiley:

πŸ—ΊοΈ Background & Roadmap

Some background on our roadmap and what comes next.

The lack of access to comprehensive documentation for OCaml libraries is one of the biggest pain points reported by the OCaml community, as highlighted in the 2022 OCaml survey (c.f. Q50).

This motivated the odoc and OCaml.org teams to jointly work on a centralised package documentation, that went live in April 2022, as part of the new version of OCaml.org.

With documentation for OCaml libraries readily available on OCaml.org, we now turn our focus on making sure that library authors have the tooling they need to create high-quality documentation.

Our roadmap highlights some features we believe will make the generated documentation significantly better for readers, and documentation-writing much more pleasant and rewarding.

This release is a significant milestone in implementing the features on our roadmap and is the precursor to a series of upcoming releases. Odoc 2.4.0 will follow shortly and will bring support for search. Stay tuned and follow our progress through the OCaml Platform newsletter!

🀝 Join Our Mission

While we are dedicated to developing the best tooling to generate and serve documentation on OCaml.org, creating a well-documented library ecosystem can only be a collective effort. Package authors: we're working hard to give you great tools, but we'll need all your help to create an ecosystem of well-documented libraries for OCaml!

If you find that writing documentation for your library isn't as straightforward as you would like, please do share your feedback with us.

See full changelog

Additions

  • Source code rendering (@Julow, @panglesd, @jonludlam #909, #996, #993, #982)
  • Handle tables markup (@panglesd, @gpetiot, #893)
  • Initial support for assets (@trefis, #975)
  • odoc-parser remerged (@jonludlam, #973) This includes table support (@gpetiot, @panglesd, ocaml-doc/odoc-parser#11 ocaml-doc/odoc-parser#14) and delimited code blocks with optional output (@jonludlam, ocaml-doc/odoc-parser#17)
  • Add a tooltip to references with text (@Julow, #945)
  • Add emoji to alerts in CSS (@yawaramin, #928)
  • Add common language in shipped highlightjs (@Julow, #953)

Bugfixes

  • Fix --hidden not always taken into account (@panglesd, #940)
  • Syntax highlight labels in function arguments (@panglesd, #990)
  • Ensure generated html ends with a newline (@3Rafal, #954)
  • Warn against tags in pages (@Julow, #948)
  • Remove unhelpful 'Unresolved_apply' errors (@gpetiot, #946)
  • Allow links and references in headings (@EmileTrotignon, @panglesd, #942)
  • Fix rendering of method types (@zoggy, #935)
  • Fix section labelling with submodules (@EmileTrotignon, @panglesd, #931)
  • LaTeX backend fixes (@Octachron, #921 #920)
  • html: Remove extra space in class declarations (@Julow, #936)
  • Fix rendering of unresolved references (@Julow, #957)

MDX 2.3.1

We are happy to announce the release of MDX 2.3.1! This is the first release of MDX to be compatible with OCaml 5.1.

We've also vendored the odoc-parser library, eliminating the need to have it as a dependency. MDX can now be installed independently of the odoc version you're using.

See full changelog

Added

  • Add os_type label to enable/disable based on Sys.os_type (#433, @polytypic)

  • Make MDX compatible with OCaml 5.1 (#435, @polytypic and @kit-ty-kate)

Changed

  • Vendored the odoc-parser library, removing the need to have it as a dependency. (#430, @jonludlam)

Merlin 4.12 is a small patch release fixing regressions introduced in previous versions.

See full changelog
  • merlin binary
    • Fix issue with let operators and tuples (ocaml/merlin#1684, fixes ocaml/merlin#1683, fixes ocaml/ocaml-lsp#1182)
    • Fix an issue causing Merlin locate queries to hang (ocaml/merlin#1686, fixes ocaml/ocaml-lsp#1192)

We are pleased to announce the release of Merlin 4.11 for OCaml 4.14.1, 5.0, and 5.1.

This release brings official support for OCaml 5.1 and introduces some changes to Emacs' default bindings proposed by the community:

  • Unbind C-c C-r (to avoid shadowing tuareg-eval-region) and bind C-c C-v instead to merlin-error-check;
  • Rebind C-c C-d to merlin-document and bind C-c M-d and C-c | instead to merlin-destruct;
  • Bind C-u C-c C-t to merlin-type-expr.

Thanks to everyone involved!

See full changelog
  • Merlin binary
    • Improve error messages for missing configuration reader (ocaml/merlin#1669)
    • Fix regression causing crash when using PPXs under Windows (ocaml/merlin#1673)
    • Fix confusion between aliased modules and module types (ocaml/merlin#1676, fixes ocaml/merlin#1667)
    • Ignore hidden branches when listing occurrences (ocaml/merlin#1677, fixes ocaml/merlin#1671)
  • Editor modes
    • Emacs: fix/improve keybindings (ocaml/merlin#1668, fixes ocaml/merlin#1386): Unbind C-c C-r (to avoid shadowing tuareg-eval-region) and bind C-c C-v instead to merlin-error-check; rebind C-c C-d to merlin-document and bind C-c M-d and C-c | instead to merlin-destruct; bind C-u C-c C-t to merlin-type-expr.
    • Emacs: remove use of obsolete defadvice macro (ocaml/merlin#1675)

We are pleased to announce the release of OCamlFormat 0.26.1!

This is the first OCamlFormat release to be compatible with OCaml 5.1.

We highlight notable formatting improvements below:

  1. Removal of extra breaks in constructor declarations
 type t =                               
   | Foo
   | (* Redirect (None, lib) looks up lib in the same database *)
-    Redirect of
-      db option * (Loc.t * Lib_name.t)
+    Redirect of db option * (Loc.t * Lib_name.t)
+    
  1. Consistent formatting for arrow class types, and consistent indentation of the object keyword
module type S = sig                    
-  class tttttttttttt : aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa:int -> bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb:float ->
+  class tttttttttttt :
+    aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa:int ->
+    bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb:float ->
    cccccccccccccccccccc
end

class type ct =
  let open M in
-  object
+object
  val x : t
end

We've also fixed a few bugs. Attributes that were previously skipped are not preserved, and we fixed a crash that occured in the presence of nested modules.

Have a look at the full changelog to see the list of improvements, and don’t hesitate to share your feedback on this release on OCaml Discuss.

See full changelog

Changed

  • Compatible with OCaml 5.1.0 (#2412, @Julow) The syntax of let-bindings changed sligthly in this version.
  • Improved ocp-indent compatibility (#2428, @Julow)
  • * Removed extra break in constructor declaration with comment (#2429, @Julow)
  • * De-indent the object keyword in class types (#2425, @Julow)
  • * Consistent formatting of arrows in class types (#2422, @Julow)

Fixed

  • Fix dropped attributes on a begin-end in a match case (#2421, @Julow)
  • Fix dropped attributes on begin-end in an if-then-else branch (#2436, @gpetiot)
  • Fix non-stabilizing comments before a functor type argument (#2420, @Julow)
  • Fix crash caused by module types with nested with module (#2419, @Julow)
  • Fix ';;' formatting between doc-comments and toplevel directives (#2432, @gpetiot)

We're thrilled to announce the release of Merlin 4.10, which comes with many bug fixes and improvements.

One of the standout features of this release is the significantly enhanced support for binding operators like let+ and and+. You'll find that the results from type-enclosing on expressions that contain let bindings are now more precise.

See full changelog
  • merlin binary
    • Constrain socket path buffer size to avoid build warnings (#1631)
    • Handle concurrent server start (#1622)
    • Omit module prefixes for constructors and record fields in the construct command (#1618). Prefixes are still produced when warning 42 (disambiguated name) is active.
    • Correctly invalidate PPX cache when pipeline ran partially (#1650, fixes #1647)
    • Prevent short-path from looping in some cases related to recursive type definitions (#1645)
    • Support parsing negative numbers in sexps (#1655)
    • Fix construct not working with inline records (#1658)
    • Improve behavior of type-enclosing on let/and operators (#1653)
    • Fix occurrences of extension constructors (#1662)
    • Improve node selection when ghosts are present (#1664, fixes #1660)
  • editor modes
    • emacs: call merlin-client-logger with "interrupted" if the merlin binary itself is interrupted, not just the parsing of the result (#1626).
    • emacs: merlin-construct, with a prefix argument, now includes local values in the completion options. Alternatively, this behavior can be enabled permanently by customizing merlin-construct-with-local-values (#1644)
    • emacs: add support for opam-switch-mode (#1654, fixes #1591). See https://github.com/ProofGeneral/opam-switch-mode

Odoc 2.2.1

As OCaml 5.1 is on the horizon, we're excited to announce the release of odoc 2.2.1. This latest version brings compatibility with the upcoming OCaml 5.1 release.

See full changelog

Additions

  • OCaml 5.1.0 compatibility (@Octachron, #956)

Dune 3.9.3

The fix to sendfile in 3.9.2 was not quite enough so here is the last part of the fix. It brings compatibility with filesystems where sendfile is not available, in particular when ecryptfs is used.

See full changelog

Fixes

  • Fix flushing when using sendfile fallback (#8288, fixes #8284, @alan-j-hu)

Dune 3.10.0

We're happy to announce the release of Dune 3.10.0. It comes with some internal fixes as well as some interesting features:

  • some changes in dune describe that will allow a better implementation of opam-dune-lint to check the consistency between library and package dependencies
  • more commands made available under dune show for a more consistent command line interface
See full changelog

Added

  • Add dune show rules as alias of the dune rules command. (#8000, @Alizter)

  • Add dune show installed-libraries as an alias of the dune installed-libraries command. (#8135, @Alizter)

  • Add dune build --dump-gc-stats FILE argument to dump garbage collection stats to a named file. (#8072, @Alizter)

  • Add dune describe package-entries to print all package entries (#7480, @moyodiallo)

Fixed

  • Fix %{deps} to expand properly in (cat ...) when containing 2 or more items. (#8196, @Alizter)

  • Fix the severity of error messages sent over RPC which was missing. (#8193, @Alizter)

  • Fix bug with ppx and Reason syntax due to missing dependency in sandboxed action (#7932, fixes #7930, @Alizter)

Changed

  • Improve dune describe external-lib-deps by adding the internal dependencies for more information. (#7478, @moyodiallo)

  • Re-enable background file digests on Windows. The files are now open in a way that prevents race condition around deletion. (#8262, fixes #8268, @emillon)

Feedback on this post is welcomed on Discuss!

We are happy to announce the second alpha release of opam 2.2.0. It contains some fixes and a new feature for Windows. You can view the full list in the release note.

This version is an alpha. so we invite users to test it for previously unnoticed bugs to head towards the stable release.

Windows Support

The first alpha came with native Windows compatibility. This second alpha comes with a simpler initialisation for Windows: we no longer rely on an already present Cygwin UNIX-like environment for Windows as a compatibility layer. During initialisation, opam now proposes to embed its own fully managed Cygwin install.

The main opam-repository Windows compliance is still a work in progress. We recommend using an existing, compatible repository (originally from @fdopen) and 32/64 bit mingw-w64 packages (by @dra27).

How to Test opam on Windows

This alpha requires a preexisting Cygwin installation for compiling opam.

  1. Check that you have all dependencies installed:
  • autoconf, make, patch, curl
  • MinGW compilers: mingw64-x86_64-gcc-g++, mingw64-i686-gcc-g++
  • If you want to use the MSVC port of OCaml, you'll need to install Visual Studio or Visual Studio Build Tools
  1. Download & extract the opam archive
  2. In the directory launch make cold
  3. A coffee later, you now have an opam executable!
  4. Start your preferred Windows terminal (cmd or PowerShell), and initialise opam with the Windows sunset repository:
  • opam init https://github.com/ocaml-opam/opam-repository-mingw

From here, you can try to install the sunset repository packages. If you find any bugs, please submit an issue. It will help opam-repository maintainers to add Windows repository packages into the main repository.

Hint: if you use the MinGW compiler, don't forget to add to your PATH the path to libc dlls (usually C:\cygwin64\usr\x86_64-w64-mingw32\sys-root\mingw\bin). You can also compile opam with make cold CONFIGURE_ARGS=--with-private-runtime, and if you change opam's location, don't forget to copy Opam.Runtime.amd64 (or Opam.Runtime.i386) with it.

Updates & Fixes

  • opam var now has a more informative error message in case of package variable
  • opam lint: update Error 29 on package variables on filters to check also conflicts: field
  • opam admin lint cleans output when called not from a terminal
  • configure throws an error if no complementary compiler is found on Windows

Try It!

In case you plan a possible rollback, you may want to first backup your ~/.opam directory.

The upgrade instructions are unchanged:

  1. Either from binaries, run

    bash -c "sh <(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ocaml/opam/master/shell/install.sh) --version 2.2.0~alpha2"
    

    or download manually from the Github "Releases" page to your PATH.

  2. Or from source, manually: see the instructions in the README.

You should then run:

opam init --reinit -ni

Please report any issues to the bug-tracker.

Dune 3.9.2

This bugfix-only release contains two platform-specific changes: one fixes the Dune cache on Windows, and the other one completes the fix on Linux when sendfile is not available. This makes Dune available where user directories are encrypted using ecryptfs for example.

See full changelog

Fixes

  • Disable background digests on Windows. This prevents an issue where unremovable files would make Dune crash when the shared cache is enabled. (#8243, fixes #8228, @emillon)

  • Fix permission errors when sendfile is not available (#8234, fixes #8210, @emillon)

We are thrilled to announce the release of OCamlFormat 0.26.0!

After almost 5 months of intense development, this release comes with a ton of consistency improvements and bug fixes. In particular, the handling of comments should be largely superior!

Have a look at the full changelog to see the list of improvements, and don't hesitate to share your feedback on this release on OCaml Discuss.

See full changelog

Items marked with an asterisk (*) are changes that are likely to format existing code differently from the previous release when using the default profile.

New features

  • Handle short syntax for generative functor types (#2348, @gpetiot)
  • Improved error reporting for unstable or dropped comments (#2292, @gpetiot)

Removed

  • Remove --numeric feature (#2333, #2357, @gpetiot)

Bug fixes

  • Fix crash caused by let f (type a) :> a M.u = .. (#2399, @Julow)
  • Fix crash caused by module T = (val (x : (module S))) (#2370, @Julow)
  • Fix invalid formatting of then begin end (#2369, @Julow)
  • Protect match after fun _ : _ -> (#2352, @Julow)
  • Fix invalid formatting of (::) (#2347, @Julow)
  • Fix indentation of module-expr extensions (#2323, @gpetiot)
  • * Remove double parentheses around tuples in a match (#2308, @Julow)
  • * Remove extra parentheses around module packs (#2305, @Julow, @gpetiot)
  • Fix indentation of trailing double-semicolons (#2295, @gpetiot)
  • Fix formatting of comments in "disable" chunks (#2279, @gpetiot)
  • Fix non-stabilizing comments attached to private/virtual/mutable keywords (#2272, #2307, @gpetiot, @Julow)

Changes

  • Improve formatting of doc-comments (#2338, #2349, #2376, #2377, #2379, #2378, @Julow) Remove unnecessary escaping and preserve empty lines.
  • * Indent as-patterns that have parentheses (#2359, @Julow)
  • Don't print warnings related to odoc code-blocks when '--quiet' is set (#2336, #2373, @gpetiot, @Julow)
  • * Improve formatting of module arguments (#2322, @Julow)
  • * Don't indent attributes after a let/val/external (#2317, @Julow)
  • Consistent indentation of @@ let+ x = ... (#2315, #2396, @Julow) It was formatted differently than @@ let x = ....
  • * Improve formatting of class expressions and signatures (#2301, #2328, #2387, @gpetiot, @Julow)
  • * Consistent indentation of fun (type a) -> following fun x -> (#2294, @Julow)
  • * Restore short-form formatting of record field aliases (#2282, #2388, @gpetiot, @Julow)
  • * Restore short-form for first-class modules: ((module M) : (module S)) is formatted as (module M : S)) (#2280, #2300, @gpetiot, @Julow)
  • * Improve indentation of ~label:(fun ... (#2271, #2291, #2293, #2298, #2398, @Julow) The fun keyword is docked where possible and the arguments are indented to avoid confusion with the body.
  • JaneStreet profile: treat comments as doc-comments (#2261, #2344, #2354, #2365, #2392, @gpetiot, @Julow)
  • Tweaks the JaneStreet profile to be more consistent with ocp-indent (#2214, #2281, #2284, #2289, #2299, #2302, #2309, #2310, #2311, #2313, #2316, #2362, #2363, @gpetiot, @Julow)

Utop 2.13.1

The release of UTop 2.13.0 introduced a regression on Windows. We're releasing UTop 2.13.1 with a patch, and made UTop 2.13.0 unavailable on Windows.

See full changelog
  • Fix unavailable expunge on Windows (#447, @jonahbeckford)

Dune 3.9.1

In Dune 3.9.0, we added a feature that offloads some computations to background threads. Unfortunately, this has a bad interaction on macOS, where we fork processes to implement the RPC server and watch mode.

We marked Dune 3.9.0 unavailable on macOS, and released 3.9.1 with some mitigations: we don't offload these computations on macOS, and we only fork when necessary.

The plan for the next release is to stop forking processes on macOS.

See full changelog

Fixes

  • Disable background operations and threaded console on macOS and other Unixes where we rely on fork. (#8100, #8121, fixes #8083, @rgrinberg, @emillon)

  • Initialize async I/O thread lazily. (#8122, @emillon)

Utop 2.13.0

We're releasing version 2.13.0 of UTop! This version comes with a couple of bug fixes.

It also bumps the minimal required version of OCaml to 4.11.0 and removes deprecated values from the API.

See full changelog
  • Fix behavior of utop -stdin (#434, fixes #433, @tuohy)

  • Handle bounds with Zed.next_error (#442, @tmattio)

  • Load files from XDG directories (the legacy paths still work). (#431, @Skyb0rg007)

  • Remove deprecated values prompt_continue, prompt_comment, smart_accept, new_prompt_hooks, at_new_prompt (#427, @emillon)

  • Require OCaml 4.11.0 or newer. (#444, @emillon)

Feedback on this post is welcomed on Discuss!

We are happy to announce the alpha release of opam 2.2.0. It contains numerous fixes, enhancements, and updates; including much-improved Windows support, addressing one of the most important pain points identified by the OCaml community. You can view the full list of changes in the release note.

This alpha release is a significant milestone, brought together by Raja Boujbel after years of work from the opam dev team (Raja Boujbel, David Allsopp, Kate Deplaix, Louis Gesbert, in a united OCamlPro/Tarides collaboration) with the help of many community contributors. We also thank Jane Street for their continued sponsorship.

This version is an alpha, so we invite users to test it to spot previously unnoticed bugs and work towards a stable release.

Windows Support

Opam 2.2 comes with native Windows compatibility. You can now use opam from your preferred Windows terminal! We rely on the Cygwin UNIX-like environment for Windows as a compatibility layer, but it is possible for a package to generate native executables.

The main opam repository is not Windows compatible at the moment, but existing work on a compatible repository (originally from @fdopen) and 32/64 bit mingw-w64 packages (by @dra27) is in the process of being merged. Before the final release, we expect it to be possible to run opam init and use the main opam-repository for Windows.

How to Test opam on Windows

This alpha requires a preexisting Cygwin installation. Support for full management of a local Cygwin environment inside of opam (so that it's as transparent as possible) is queued already and should be available in 2.2.0~alpha2 as the default option.

  1. Check that you have all dependencies installed:
  • autoconf, make, patch, curl
  • MinGW compilers: mingw64-x86_64-gcc-g++, mingw64-i686-gcc-g++
  • Or if you want to use the MSVC port of OCaml, you'll need to install Visual Studio or Visual Studio Build Tools
  1. Download & extract the opam archive
  2. In the directory launch make cold
  3. A coffee later, you now have an opam executable!
  4. Start your preferred Windows terminal (cmd or PowerShell), and initialise opam with the Windows sunset repository:
  • opam init https://github.com/ocaml-opam/opam-repository-mingw

From here, you can try to install sunset repository packages. If any bug is found, please submit an issue. It will help opam repository maintainers to add Windows repository packages into the main repository.

Hint: if you use the MinGW compiler, don't forget to add to your PATH the path to libc dlls (usually C:\cygwin64\usr\x86_64-w64-mingw32\sys-root\mingw\bin). Or compile opam with make cold CONFIGURE_ARGS=--with-private-runtime, and if you change opam location, don't forget to copy Opam.Runtime.amd64 (or Opam.Runtime.i386) with it.

Recursive Pin

When installing or pinning a package using opam install or opam pin, opam normally only looks for opam files at the root of the installed package. With recursive pinning, you can now instruct opam to also look for .opam files in subdirectories, while maintaining the correct relationship between the .opam files and the package root for versioning and build purposes.

Recursive pinning is used with the following options to opam pin and opam install:

  • With --recursive, opam will look for .opam files recursively in all subdirectories.
  • With --subpath <path>, opam will only look for .opam files in the subdirectory <path>.

The two options can be combined: for instance, if your opam packages are stored as a deep hierarchy in the mylib subdirectory of your project, give opam pin . --recursive --subpath mylib a try!

You can use these options with opam pin, opam install, and opam remove.

$ tree .
.
β”œβ”€β”€ ba
β”‚Β Β  └── z
β”‚Β Β      └── z.opam
β”œβ”€β”€ bar
β”‚Β Β  └── bar.opam
└── foo.opam

$ opam pin . --subpath ba/z --no-action
Package z does not exist, create as a NEW package? [y/n] y
z is now subpath-pinned to directory /ba/z in git+file:///tmp/recpin#master (version 0.1)

$ opam pin --recursive . --no-action
This will pin the following packages: foo, z, bar. Continue? [y/n] y
foo is now pinned to git+file:///tmp/recpin#master (version 0.1)
Package z does not exist, create as a NEW package? [y/n] y
z is now subpath-pinned to directory /ba/z in git+file:///tmp/recpin#master (version 0.1)
Package bar does not exist, create as a NEW package? [y/n] y
bar is now subpath-pinned to directory /bar in file:///tmp/recpin (version 0.1)

$ opam pin
bar.0.1  (uninstalled)  rsync  directory /bar in file:///tmp/recpin
foo.0.1  (uninstalled)  git    git+file:///tmp/recpin#master
z.0.1    (uninstalled)  git    directory /ba/z in git+file:///tmp/recpin#master

$ opam pin . --recursive --subpath ba/ --no-action
Package z does not exist, create as a NEW package? [y/n] y
z is now subpath-pinned to directory /ba/z in git+file:///tmp/recpin#master (version 0.1)

Tree View

opam tree shows packages and their dependencies with a tree view. It is very helpful to determine which packages bring which dependencies in your installed switch.

$ opam tree cppo
cppo.1.6.9
β”œβ”€β”€ base-unix.base
β”œβ”€β”€ dune.3.8.2 (>= 1.10)
β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€ base-threads.base
β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€ base-unix.base [*]
β”‚   └── ocaml.4.14.1 (>= 4.08)
β”‚       β”œβ”€β”€ ocaml-base-compiler.4.14.1 (>= 4.14.1~ & < 4.14.2~)
β”‚       └── ocaml-config.2 (>= 2)
β”‚           └── ocaml-base-compiler.4.14.1 (>= 4.12.0~) [*]
└── ocaml.4.14.1 (>= 4.02.3) [*]

It can also display a reverse-dependency tree (through opam why, which is an alias to opam tree --rev-deps). This is useful to examine how dependency versions get constrained.

$ opam why cmdliner
cmdliner.1.2.0
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 1.1.0) b0.0.0.5
β”‚   └── (= 0.0.5) odig.0.0.9
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 1.1.0) ocp-browser.1.3.4
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 1.0.0) ocp-indent.1.8.1
β”‚   └── (>= 1.4.2) ocp-index.1.3.4
β”‚       └── (= version) ocp-browser.1.3.4 [*]
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 1.1.0) ocp-index.1.3.4 [*]
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 1.1.0) odig.0.0.9 [*]
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 1.0.0) odoc.2.2.0
β”‚   └── (>= 2.0.0) odig.0.0.9 [*]
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 1.1.0) opam-client.2.2.0~alpha
β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€ (= version) opam.2.2.0~alpha
β”‚   └── (= version) opam-devel.2.2.0~alpha
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 1.1.0) opam-devel.2.2.0~alpha [*]
β”œβ”€β”€ (>= 0.9.8) opam-installer.2.2.0~alpha
└── user-setup.0.7

Special thanks to @cannorin for contributing this feature.

Recommended Development Tools

There is now a way for a project maintainer to share their project development tools: the with-dev-setup dependency flag. It is used in the same way as with-doc and with-test: by adding a {with-dev-setup} filter after a dependency. It will be ignored when installing normally, but it's pulled in when the package is explicitely installed with the --with-dev-setup flag specified on the command line. The variable is also resolved in the post-messages: field to allow maintainers to share more informations about that setup.

This is typically useful for tools that are required for bootstrapping or regenerating artifacts.

For example

opam-version: "2.0"
depends: [
  "ocaml"
  "dune"
  "ocp-indent" {with-dev-setup}
]
build: [make]
install: [make "install"]
post-messages:
[ "Thanks for installing the package"
  "and its tool dependencies too, it will help for your futur PRs" {with-dev-setup} ]

Software Heritage Binding

Software Heritage is a project that aims to archive all software source code in existence. This is done by collecting source code with a loader that uploads software source code to the Software Heritage distributed infrastructure. From there, any project/version is available via the search webpage and via a unique identifier called the SWHID. Some OCaml source code is already archived, and the main opam and Coq repository packages are continuously uploaded.

Opam now integrates a fallback to Software Heritage archive retrieval, based on SWHID. If an SWHID URL is present in an opam file, the fallback can be activated.

To keep backwards compatibility of opam files, we added a specific Software Heritage URL syntax to the url.mirrors: field, which is used to specify mirrors of the main URL. Opam 2.2.+ understands this specific syntax as a Software Heritage fallback URL: https://swhid.opam.ocaml.org/<SWHID>.

url {
  src: "https://faili.ng/url.tar.gz"
  checksum: "sha512=e2146c1d7f53679fd22df66c9061b5ae4f8505b749513eedc67f3c304f297d92e54f5028f40fb5412d32c7d7db92592eacb183128d2b6b81d10ea716b7496eba"
  mirrors: [
    "https//failli.ng/mirror.tar.gz"
    "https://swhid.opam.ocaml.org/swh:1:dir:9f2be900491e1dabfc027848204ae01aa88fc71d"
  ]
}

To add a Software Heritage fallback URL to your package, use the swhid library. Specifically the Compute.directory_identifier_deep function:

  1. Download opam package archive
  2. Extract the archive
  3. Compute SWHID with Compute.directory_identifier_deep. You can use this oneliner in the directory:
ocaml -e '#use "topfind";; #require "digestif.ocaml";; #require "swhid";; Swhid_core.Object.pp Format.std_formatter (Result.get_ok (Swhid.Compute.directory_identifier_deep "."))'

Special thanks to @zapashcanon for collaborating on this feature.

Formula (Experimental)

It is now possible to leverage the full expressivity of package dependency formulas from the command line during switch creation and package operations.

It is possible to create a switch using a formula. For example, with ocaml-variant or ocaml-system, excluding ocaml-base-compiler:

opam switch create ocaml --formula '"ocaml-variants" {>= "4.14.1"} | "ocaml-system"'

This syntax is brought to install commands. For example, while installing a package, let's say genet, you can specify that you want to install either conf-mariadb & mariadb or conf-postgresql:

opam install genet --formula '["mysql" ("conf-mariadb" & "mariadb" | "conf-postgresql")]'

New Options

Here are several of new options (possibly scripts breaking changes are marked with ✘):

  • opam pin --current to fix a package to its current state (disabling pending reinstallations or removals from the repository). The installed package will be pinned with the opam file that is stored in opam internal state, the one that is currently installed.

  • opam pin remove --all to remove all the pinned packages from a switch.

  • opam pin remove pkg.version now removes the pins on pinned pkg.version.

  • opam exec --no-switch to remove opam environment from launched command.

$ export FOOVAR=env
$ opam show foo --field setenv
FOOVAR = "package"
$ opam exec  -- env | grep "OPAM_SWITCH\|FOO"
FOOVAR=package
OPAM_SWITCH_PREFIX=~/.opam/env
$ opam exec --no-switch -- env | grep "OPAM_SWITCH\|FOO"
FOOVAR=env
  • opam source --no-switch to allow downloading package sources without having an installed switch (instead of failing).

  • opam clean --untracked to remove untracked files interactively remaining from previous packages removal.

  • opam switch -, inspired from git switch -, that goes back to the previously selected global switch.

  • opam admin add-constraint <cst> --packages pkg1,pkg2,pkg3 to select a subset of packages to apply constraints.

  • ✘ Change --base into --invariant. opam switch compiler column now contains installed packages that verifies invariant formula, and empty synopsis shows switch invariant.

$ opam switch create inv --formula '["ocaml" {>= "4.14.1"} "dune"]'
$ opam switch invariant
["ocaml" {>= "4.14.1"} "dune"]
$ opam list --invariant
# Packages matching: invariant
# Name # Installed # Synopsis
dune   3.8.2       Fast, portable, and opinionated build system
ocaml  5.0.0       The OCaml compiler (virtual package)
$ opam switch list
#  switch   compiler                                            description
β†’  inv      ocaml-base-compiler.5.0.0,ocaml-options-vanilla.1   ocaml >= 4.14.1 & dune

Try It!

In case you plan a possible rollback, you may want to first backup your ~/.opam directory.

The upgrade instructions are unchanged:

  1. From binaries: run
bash -c "sh <(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ocaml/opam/master/shell/install.sh) --version 2.2.0~alpha"

Or download manually from the Github "Releases" page to your PATH.

  1. From source, manually: see the instructions in the README.

Then run:

opam init --reinit -ni

Please report any issues to the bug-tracker.

Thanks for trying this new release out, and we're hoping you will enjoy the new features!

Dune 3.9.0

The Dune team is thrilled to announce the release of Dune 3.9.0. This version ships with a host of new features and improvements, including:

  • New dune show Command: This command enables you to display various pieces of information. For instance, you can use dune show pp to display the preprocessed output of a file or dune show aliases [DIR] to list the aliases available in DIR. Read more about the command on its manpage using dune show --help.
  • Improved Dialect Support: We have rolled out several fixes related to dialect support. These changes make it easier to work with Dream's .eml files.
  • Introduction of (build_if) Toggle in (test) Stanza: This new field facilitates the packaging of non-portable tests and benchmarks. If you have tests that don't build on a specific platform, you can now tell Dune not to build them on other Platforms with the build_if field.

Enjoy the new features and improvements incorporated into this version!

See full changelog

Added

  • Include the time it takes to read/write state files when --trace-file is enabled (#7960, @rgrinberg)

  • Include source tree scans in the traces produced by --trace-file (#7937, @rgrinberg)

  • Add --all option to dune rpc status to show all Dune RPC servers running. (#8011, fix #7902, @Alizter)

  • Add additional metadata to the traces provided by --trace-file whenever --trace-extended is passed (#7778, @rleshchinskiy)

  • $ dune describe is now a command group, so arguments to subcommands must be passed after subcommand itself. (#7919, @Alizter)

  • Add dune show command group which is an alias of dune describe. (#7946, @Alizter)

  • Add dune show env command and make dune printenv an alias of it. (#7985, @Alizter)

  • Add commands dune show targets and dune show aliases that display all the available targets and aliases in a given directory respectively. (#7770, grants #265, @Alizter)

  • Extensions used in (dialect) can contain periods (e.g., cppo.ml). (#7782, fixes #7777, @nojb)

  • The interface and implementation fields of a (dialect) are now optional (#7757, @gpetiot)

  • Add (build_if) to the (test) stanza. When it evaluates to false, the executable is not built. (#7899, fixes #6938, @emillon)

  • Allow (include_subdirs qualified) to be used when libraries define a (modules ...) field (#7797, fixes #7597, @anmonteiro)

  • Allow multiple globs in library's (stdlib (internal_modules ..)) (@anmonteiro, #7878)

Changed

  • Do not rerun OCaml syntax files on every iteration of the watch mode. This is too memory consuming. (#7894, fix #6900, @rgrinberg)

  • Attach melange rules to the default alias (#7926, @haochenx)

  • Compute digests and manage sandboxes in background threads (#7947, @rgrinberg)

Fixed

  • Validate file extension for $ dune ocaml top-module. (#8005, fixes #8004, @3Rafal)

  • Cinaps: The promotion rules for cinaps would only offer one file at a time no matter how many promotions were available. Now we offer all the promotions at once (#7901, @rgrinberg)

  • Add necessary parentheses in generated opam constraints (#7682, fixes #3431, @Lucccyo)

Removed

  • Remove some compatibility code for old version of dune that generated .merlin files. Now dune will never remove .merlin files automatically (#7562)

  • In opam constraints, reject (and) and (or) with no arguments at parse time (#7730, @emillon)

If you want to contribute to a new release announcement, check out the Contributing Guide on GitHub.