Atlas is a simple package cloner tool that automates some of the workflows and needs for Nim's stdlib evolution.
Atlas is compatible with Nimble in the sense that it supports the Nimble file format.
Atlas uses git commits internally; version requirements are translated
to git commits via git show-ref --tags
.
Atlas uses URLs internally; Nimble package names are translated to URLs
via Nimble's packages.json
file.
Atlas does not call the Nim compiler for a build, instead it creates/patches
a nim.cfg
file for the compiler. For example:
############# begin Atlas config section ##########
--noNimblePath
--path:"../nimx"
--path:"../sdl2/src"
--path:"../opengl/src"
############# end Atlas config section ##########
The version selection is deterministic, it picks up the minimum required version. Thanks to this design, lock files are much less important.
Dependencies are neither installed globally, nor locally into the current
project. Instead a "workspace" is used. The workspace is the nearest parent
directory of the current directory that does not contain a .git
subdirectory.
Dependencies are managed as siblings, not as children. Dependencies are
kept as git repositories.
Thanks to this setup, it's easy to develop multiple projects at the same time.
A project plus its dependencies are stored in a workspace:
$workspace / main project $workspace / dependency A $workspace / dependency B
No attempts are being made at keeping directory hygiene inside the
workspace, you're supposed to create appropriate $workspace
directories
at your own leisure.
Atlas supports the following commands:
Clones a URL and all of its dependencies (recursively) into the workspace.
Creates or patches a nim.cfg
file with the required --path
entries.
The <package name>
is translated into an URL via packages.json
and
then clone <url>
is performed.
Search the package index packages.json
for a package that the given terms
in its description (or name or list of tags).
Use the .nimble file to setup the project's dependencies.