rebar3_grisp
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Rebar plug-in for GRiSP
rebar3_grisp
Rebar plug-in for the GRiSP project.
Installation
Globally
To install the plug-in globally, add the plug-in to your plug-ins list in
~/.config/rebar3/rebar.config:
{plugins, [
rebar3_hex,
rebar3_grisp
]}.
The first time you use Rebar the plug-in will be installed. To upgrade the plug-in to the latest version, you need to first update the Hex index and then the plug-in:
$ rebar3 update
===> Updating package registry...
===> Writing registry to ~/.cache/rebar3/hex/default/registry
===> Generating package index...
===> Writing index to ~/.cache/rebar3/hex/default/packages.idx
$ rebar3 plugins upgrade rebar3_grisp
===> Fetching rebar3_grisp ({pkg,<<"rebar3_grisp">>,<<"1.1.0">>})
===> Downloaded package, caching at ~/.cache/rebar3/hex/default/packages/rebar3_grisp-1.1.0.tar
===> Compiling rebar3_grisp
For an Existing Project
Add the plug-in to your rebar config:
{plugins, [rebar3_grisp]}.
Then just call your plug-in directly in the root of the existing application:
$ rebar3 grisp
===> Fetching grisp
===> Compiling grisp
<Plugin Output>
Create New Application
Prerequisites:
- Install Plug-In Globally
To create a new GRiSP project:
rebar3 new grispapp name=mygrispproject dest=/path/to/SD-card
The specific variables provided by this plug-in are:
nameis the name of the OTP applicationdestis the destination path for deployment. This should point to where your SD-card is mounted (e.g. on macOS it is/Volumes/<NAME>where<NAME>is the name of the SD-card partition)otp_releaseis the target Erlang/OTP version used on the GRiSP board
For a full list of customizable variables, run rebar3 new help grispapp.
Compile the project
rebar3 compile
Make sure you do that with the same Erlang version that you configured in the rebar.config. If you compiled rebar3 yourself with a more recent version of Erlang it will give errors, you will need to recompile rebar3 as well in that case.
For further information have a look at the GRiSP Wiki
Deploy an Application
To deploy a GRiSP application, use the command rebar3 grisp deploy. The
command requires the release name and version to be provided. The deployment
destination can be set in rebar.config or be given as an additional argument.
Example:
rebar3 grisp deploy --relname mygrispproject --relvsn 0.7.8
or shorter:
rebar3 grisp deploy -n mygrispproject -v 0.1.0
Above command will try to download a crosscompiled OTP version from our CDN and unpack it. In many usecases this will be enough. If you want to add own port drivers or NIFs in C you will have to build your own toolchain and OTP, see below.
Run rebar3 help grisp deploy for information on all arguments.
Configuration
rebar.config:
{grisp, [
{otp, [{version, "22.0"}]},
{deploy, [
% Path to put deployed release in
{destination, "/path/to/destination"},
% Shell script to run before deploying begins
{pre_script, "rm -rf /path/to/destination/*"},
% Shell script to run after deploying has finished
{post_script, "umount /path/to/destination"}
]}
]}.
Listing Packages
The plug-in can list pre-built GRiSP OTP packages and toolchains:
$ rebar3 grisp package list
===> GRiSP pre-built OTP versions for platform 'grisp2'
Version
23.3.4.11
23.3.4.9
$ rebar3 grisp package list --type=toolchain
===> GRiSP pre-built toolchain packages
OS Latest OS Version Url
Linux true 5.11.0-1027-azure https://grisp.s3.amazonaws.com/platforms/grisp2/toolchain/grisp2-rtems-toolchain_Linux_5.11.0-1027-azure_e2c29d3374d9046af01af570f6a85a6aa99546bb.tar.gz
Linux 5.11.0-1028-azure https://grisp.s3.amazonaws.com/platforms/grisp2/toolchain/grisp2-rtems-toolchain_Linux_5.11.0-1028-azure_3122986b9cd7073f42f1387f3981c812a2909b68.tar.gz
macOS true 10.15.7 https://grisp.s3.amazonaws.com/platforms/grisp2/toolchain/grisp2-rtems-toolchain_macOS_10.15.7_e2c29d3374d9046af01af570f6a85a6aa99546bb.tar.gz
macOS 11.6.3 https://grisp.s3.amazonaws.com/platforms/grisp2/toolchain/grisp2-rtems-toolchain_macOS_11.6.3_3122986b9cd7073f42f1387f3981c812a2909b68.tar.gz
Build OTP for GRiSP
The fastest way is to use our docker image grisp/grisp2-rtems-toolchain:
Add the toolchain image name to the rebar.config under grisp → build → toolchain → docker
Or if you have a local installation you can use that:
Add the path to the toolchain to the rebar.config under grisp → build → toolchain → directory
{grisp, [
{otp, [{version, "25"}]},
{build, [
{toolchain, [
{directory, "/PATH/TO/TOOLCHAIN-ROOT"}
% Or use docker
{docker, "grisp/grisp2-rtems-toolchain"}
% If both are specified, only 'directory' is used
]}
]},
{deploy, [
{destination, "/PATH/TO/DESTINATION"}
]}
]}.
Then execute rebar3 grisp build. This will take some time, because Erlang/OTP is cross-compiled for the GRiSP board.
You only need to do that again if you updated and rebuilt the grisp2-rtems-toolchain repository or if you changed or wrote new drivers in C. If you need to build OTP for a second time and just changed files you can speed it up by using rebar3 grisp build --configure false. Each time you add new C files you will need to run configure again, because this tool will apply a patch to a makefile for each C driver, NIF and system file.
You can create the tarballs we use for distribution on our CDN with rebar3 grisp build --tar true
The built Erlang distribution and its runtime system is located in the project
folder, under the path _grisp/otp/<version>/install.
Bug reports
You can run rebar3 grisp report to gather info about the project configuration. The user can view and edit the generated text files. It's possible to pack them later adding --tar to the same command. Providing such report file can speedup debugging and support from the dev team.
Development
To test the plug-in and develop for it, we recommend checking out a specific version into a local project. You can also create a new temporary GRiSP project using this plug-in. This can be useful to test deployments locally before copying them to an SD card:
$ rebar3 new grispapp name=grisp_test dest=/tmp/GRISP_SD_CARD
Go into the project folder and prepare the checkout directory used by Rebar 3 for dependency overrides:
$ cd grisp_test
$ mkdir -p _checkouts
Testing master
You need to clone both rebar3_grisp (this repo) and its dependency grisp_tools. If you want the latest master versions:
$ git clone git clone https://github.com/grisp/rebar3_grisp.git _checkouts/rebar3_grisp
$ git clone git clone https://github.com/grisp/grisp_tools.git _checkouts/rebar3_grisp
Testing a Specific Branch
Alternatively, clone a specific branch. Replace $REBAR3_PLUGIN_BRANCH with the branch name you want from rebar3_grisp and $GRISP_TOOLS_BRANCH with the branch name you want from grisp_tool:
$ git clone git clone --single-branch --branch $REBAR3_PLUGIN_BRANCH https://github.com/grisp/rebar3_grisp.git _checkouts/rebar3_grisp
$ git clone git clone --single-branch --branch $GRISP_TOOLS_BRANCH https://github.com/grisp/grisp_tools.git _checkouts/rebar3_grisp
In case you only need a specific branch of rebar3_grisp, you can default to using the master version of grisp_tools.