package libbinaryen
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
md5=0079cc78b9a3f9eee566642f305d7086
sha512=fc826f141912edfe7a723cd1cb4786e0d176bd66c0394569a2e51fc692273aff83ee0e51266b6e0dda99a22bbb180ed496844f9e7e2ed63cd1b5773923f521eb
Description
Published: 16 Nov 2023
README
libbinaryen
Libbinaryen packaged for OCaml.
This is just the low-level C library. If you are looking for OCaml bindings to Binaryen, check out Binaryen.ml!
Usage
Inside your dune file, you can depend on libbinaryen
as such:
(library
(name binaryen)
(public_name binaryen)
(libraries libbinaryen.c)
(foreign_stubs
(language c)
(names binaryen_stubs)
(flags :standard -O2 -Wall -Wextra)))
MacOS C++ Compiler
When including this library in your dune
MacOS executables, you'll need to specify -cc clang++
in your (flags)
stanza. This is required because Binaryen will throw errors for itself to catch and using clang++
is the only way to handle them correctly. You can find more info on this ocaml issue.
Your stanza could look something like this:
(executable
(name example)
(public_name example)
(package example)
+ (flags -cc clang++)
(modules example)
(libraries binaryen))
These flags likely won't work on other operating systems, so you'll probably need to use dune-configurator
to vary the flags per platform. You can see an example of this in our tests/.
Static Linking
If you are planning to create portable binaries for Windows, it will try to find Cygwin/MinGW locations in your PATH
. To avoid this, you probably want to add this to your (executable)
stanzas:
(executable
(name example)
(public_name example)
(package example)
+ (flags (:standard -ccopt -- -ccopt -static))
(modules example)
(libraries binaryen))
These flags might not work on other operating systems (like MacOS), so you'll probably need to use dune-configurator
to vary the flags per platform. You can see an example of this in our tests/.
Contributing
You'll need Node.js and esy
to build this project. You should be able to use Opam if you are more comfortable with it, but the core team does all development using esy.
dune
will take care of compiling Binaryen, so to build the project you'll only need to run:
esy
This will take a while. Once it's done, you can run the tests:
esy test
Dependencies (4)
-
ocaml
>= "4.12"
-
dune-configurator
>= "3.0.0"
-
dune
>= "3.0.0"
-
conf-cmake
build
Dev Dependencies (1)
-
js_of_ocaml-compiler
with-test & >= "4.1.0" & < "6.0.0"
Used by
None
Conflicts
None