This document is a work-in-progress attempt to provide useful information for people willing to inspect or modify the compiler distribution’s codebase. Feel free to improve it by sending change proposals for it.
If you already have a patch that you would like to contribute to the official distribution, please see CONTRIBUTING.md.
-
Create a new git branch to store your changes.
git checkout -b my-modification
Usually, this branch wants to be based on
trunk
. If your changes must be on a specific release, use its release branch (not the release tag) instead. For example, to make a fix for 4.11.1, base your branch on 4.11 (not on 4.11.1). Theconfigure
step for the compiler recognises a development build from the+dev
in the version number (see fileVERSION
), and release tarballs and the tagged Git commits do not have this which causes some important development things to be disabled (ocamltest and converting C compiler warnings to errors). -
Consult INSTALL.adoc for build instructions. Here is the gist of it:
./configure make
If you are on a release build and need development options, you can add
--enable-ocamltest
(to allow running the testsuite) and--enable-warn-error
(so you don’t get caught by CI later!). -
Try the newly built compiler binaries
ocamlc
,ocamlopt
or their.opt
version. To try the toplevel, use:make runtop
-
Hack frenetically and keep rebuilding.
-
Run the testsuite from time to time.
make tests
-
You did it, Well done! Consult CONTRIBUTING.md to send your contribution upstream.
See also our development tips and tricks, for example on how to create an opam switch to test your modified compiler.
There is always a lot of potential tasks, both for old and newcomers. Here are various potential projects:
-
The OCaml bugtracker contains reported bugs and feature requests. Some changes that should be accessible to newcomers are marked with the tag newcomer-job.
-
The OCaml Labs compiler-hacking wiki contains various ideas of changes to propose, some easy, some requiring a fair amount of work.
-
Documentation improvements are always much appreciated, either in the various
.mli
files or in the official manual (See manual/README.md). If you invest effort in understanding a part of the codebase, submitting a pull request that adds clarifying comments can be an excellent contribution to help you, next time, and other code readers. -
The github project contains a lot of pull requests, many of them being in dire need of a review — we have more people willing to contribute changes than to review someone else’s change. Picking one of them, trying to understand the code (looking at the code around it) and asking questions about what you don’t understand or what feels odd is super-useful. It helps the contribution process, and it is also an excellent way to get to know various parts of the compiler from the angle of a specific aspect or feature.
Again, reviewing small or medium-sized pull requests is accessible to anyone with OCaml programming experience, and helps maintainers and other contributors. If you also submit pull requests yourself, a good discipline is to review at least as many pull requests as you submit.
The compiler codebase can be intimidating at first sight. Here are a few pointers to get started.
The driver — driver/
The driver contains the "main" function of the compilers that drive compilation. It parses the command-line arguments and composes the required compiler passes by calling functions from the various parts of the compiler described below.
Parsing — parsing/
Parses source files and produces an Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) (parsing/parsetree.mli has lot of helpful comments). See parsing/HACKING.adoc.
The logic for Camlp4 and Ppx preprocessing is not in parsing/, but in driver/, see driver/pparse.mli and driver/pparse.ml.
Typing — typing/
Type-checks the AST and produces a typed representation of the program (typing/typedtree.mli has some helpful comments). See typing/HACKING.adoc.
The bytecode compiler — bytecomp/
The native compiler — middle_end/ and asmcomp/
- stdlib/
-
The standard library. Each file is largely independent and should not need further knowledge.
- otherlibs/
-
External libraries such as
unix
,threads
,dynlink
,str
andbigarray
.
Instructions for building the full reference manual are provided in
manual/README.md. However, if you only modify the documentation
comments in .mli
files in the compiler codebase, you can observe the
result by running
make html_doc
and then opening ./api_docgen/ocamldoc/build/html/libref/index.html in a web browser.
The documentation is located in
./api_docgen/odoc/build/html/libref/index.html when --with-odoc
is
passed to the configure script.
- lex/
-
The
ocamllex
lexer generator. - yacc/
-
The
ocamlyacc
parser generator. We do not recommend using it for user projects in need of a parser generator. Please consider using and contributing to menhir instead, which has tons of extra features, lets you write more readable grammars, and has excellent documentation.
- BOOTSTRAP.adoc
-
instructions for bootstrapping
- Changes
-
what’s new with each release
- CONTRIBUTING.md
-
how to contribute to OCaml
- HACKING.adoc
-
this file
- INSTALL.adoc
-
instructions for installation
- LICENSE
-
license and copyright notice
- Makefile
-
main Makefile
- Makefile.common
-
common Makefile definitions
- README.adoc
-
general information on the compiler distribution
- README.win32.adoc
-
general information on the Windows ports of OCaml
- VERSION
-
version string. Run
make configure
after changing. - asmcomp/
-
native-code compiler and linker
- boot/
-
bootstrap compiler build-aux/: autotools support scripts
- bytecomp/
-
bytecode compiler and linker
- compilerlibs/
-
the OCaml compiler as a library
- configure
-
configure script configure.ac: autoconf input file
- debugger/
-
source-level replay debugger
- driver/
-
driver code for the compilers
- flexdll/
-
git submodule — see README.win32.adoc
- lex/
-
lexer generator
- man/
-
man pages
- manual/
-
system to generate the manual
- middle_end/
-
the flambda optimisation phase
- ocamldoc/
-
documentation generator
- ocamltest/
-
test driver
- otherlibs/
-
several additional libraries
- parsing/
-
syntax analysis — see parsing/HACKING.adoc
- release-info/
-
documentation and tools to prepare releases
- runtime/
-
bytecode interpreter and runtime systems
- stdlib/
-
standard library
- testsuite/
-
tests — see testsuite/HACKING.adoc
- tools/
-
various utilities
- toplevel/
-
interactive system
- typing/
-
typechecking — see typing/HACKING.adoc
- utils/
-
utility libraries
- yacc/
-
parser generator
Having the Github PR number show up in the git log is very useful for later triaging. We recently disabled the "Rebase and merge" button, precisely because it does not produce a merge commit.
When you cherry-pick a PR in another branch, please cherry-pick this
merge-style commit rather than individual commits, whenever
possible. (Picking a merge commit typically requires the -m 1
option.) You should also use the -x
option to include the hash of
the original commit in the commit message.
git cherry-pick -x -m 1 <merge-commit-hash>
If you are working on a development version of the compiler, you can create an opam switch from it by running the following from the development repository:
opam switch create . --empty opam install .
If you want to test someone else’s development version from a public git repository, you can build a switch directly (without cloning their work locally) by pinning:
opam switch create my-switch-name --empty # Replace $VERSION by the trunk version opam pin add ocaml-variants.$VERSION+branch git+https://$REPO#branch
This section documents some tips to speed up your workflow when you need to alternate between testing your branch and patching the compiler. We’ll assume that you’re currently in a clone of the compiler’s source code.
For the rest of the section to work, you’ll need your compiler to be
configured in the same way as opam
would have configured it. The simplest
way is to run the normal commands for the switch initialization, with the extra
--inplace-build
flag:
opam switch create . --empty opam install . --inplace-build
However, if you need specific configuration options, you can also configure it
manually, as long as you make sure that the configuration prefix is the one
where opam
would install the compiler.
You will then need to install the compiler, either from the working directory
(that you must build yourself) or using the regular sandboxed builds.
# Example with regular opam build opam switch create . --empty opam install . ./configure --prefix=$(opam var prefix) # put extra configuration args here
# Example with installation from the current directory, installing only the # bytecode versions of the tools opam switch create . --empty ./configure --prefix=$(opam var prefix) # put extra configuration args here make world && make opt opam install . --assume-built
We will assume that the workflow alternates between work on the compiler and
external (opam
-related) commands.
As an example, debugging an issue in the compiler can be done by a first step
that triggers the issue (by installing a given opam
package), then adding
some logging to the compiler, re-trigger the issue, and based on the logs either
add more logging, or try a patch, and so on.
The part of this workflow that we’re going to optimize is when we switch from
working on the compiler to using the compiler. The basic way to do this is to
run opam install .
again, but this will recompile the compiler from scratch
and also trigger a recompilation of all the packages in the switch.
The opam-custom-install
plugin allows you to install a package using a custom
command instead of the package-supplied one. It can be installed following
instructions here.
In our case, we need to build the compiler, and when we’ve built everything
that we need then we run opam custom-install ocaml-variants — make install
.
This will make opam
remove the previously installed version of the compiler
(if any), then install the new one in its stead.
# reinstall the compiler, and rebuild all opam packages opam custom-install ocaml-variants -- make install
Since most opam
packages depend on the compiler, this will trigger a
reinstallation of all the packages in the switch.
If you want to avoid that (for instance, your patch only adds some logging
so you expect the core libraries and all the already compiled packages to be
identical), you can use the additional --no-recompilations
flag.
There are no checks that it’s safe to do so, so if your patch ends up
changing even slightly one of the core libraries' files, you will likely
get inconsistent assumptions errors later.
# reinstall the compiler, leaving the opam packages untouched -- unsafe! opam custom-install --no-recompilations ocaml-variants -- make install
Note about the first installation:
When you start from an empty switch, and install a compiler (in our case,
the ocaml-variants
package provided by the compiler’s opam
file), then
a number of additional packages are installed to ensure that the switch
will work correctly. Mainly, the ocaml
package needs to be installed,
and while it’s done automatically when using regular opam
commands, the
custom-install
plugin will not force installation of dependencies.
Moreover, if you try to fix the problem by manually installing the ocaml
package, opam
will try to recompile ocaml-variants
, using the default
instructions. You can get around this by running
opam reinstall --forget-pending
just after the opam custom-install
command
and just before the opam install ocaml command
.
Full example:
opam switch create . --empty ./configure --prefix=$(opam var prefix) --disable-ocamldoc --disable-ocamltest make world && make opt opam custom-install ocaml-variants -- make install opam reinstall --forget-pending --yes opam install ocaml # You now have a working switch, in which you can start installing packages
One advantage of this plugin over a plain make install
is that it
correctly tracks the files associated with the compiler, so if your
make install
command only installs the bytecode versions of the tools,
then with opam-custom-install
you will end up in a state where only the
bytecode tools are installed, whereas with a raw make install
you will have
stale native binaries remaining in your switch.
Since it’s significantly faster to build the bytecode version of the tools,
and many opam
packages will pick the native version of the compilers if
present and the bytecode version otherwise, you can build your initial switch
with the native versions (to get quickly to a state where a bug appears),
then clean your working directory and start building bytecode tools only
for the actual debugging phase.
You can achieve some improvements using built-in opam
commands.
Using opam install . --assume-built
will simply remove the
package for the compiler, then run the installation instructions
(make install
) in the working directory, tracking the installed files
correctly. The main difference with the opam-custom-install
version
is that there’s no way to prevent this command from triggering a full
recompilation of your switch.
You can also run make install
manually, which will not trigger a
recompilation, but will not remove the previous version either and can
mess with `opam’s tracking of installed files.
Besides the targets listed in INSTALL.adoc for build and installation, the following targets may be of use:
make runtop
-
builds and runs the ocaml toplevel of the distribution (optionally uses
rlwrap
for readline+history support) make natruntop
-
builds and runs the native ocaml toplevel (experimental)
make partialclean
-
Clean the OCaml files but keep the compiled C files.
make depend
-
Regenerate the
.depend
file. Should be used each time new dependencies are added between files. make -C testsuite parallel
Additionally, there are some developer specific targets in Makefile.dev. These targets are automatically available when working in a Git clone of the repository, but are not available from a tarball.
If you have options to configure
which you always (or at least frequently)
use, it’s possible to store them in Git, and configure
will automatically add
them. For example, you may wish to avoid building the debug runtime by default
while developing, in which case you can issue
git config --global ocaml.configure '--disable-debug-runtime'
. The configure
script will alert you that it has picked up this option and added it before
any options you specified for configure
.
Options are added before those passed on the command line, so it’s possible to
override them, for example ./configure --enable-debug-runtime
will build the
debug runtime, since the enable flag appears after the disable flag. You can
also use the full power of Git’s config
command and have options specific to
particular clone or worktree.
configure
includes the standard -C
option which caches various test results
in the file config.cache
and can use those results to avoid running tests in
subsequent invocations. This mechanism works fine, except that it is easy to
clean the cache by mistake (e.g. with git clean -dfX
). The cache is also
host-specific which means the file has to be deleted if you run configure
with
a new --host
value (this is quite common on Windows, where configure
is
also quite slow to run).
You can elect to have host-specific cache files by issuing
git config --global ocaml.configure-cache .
. The configure
script will now
automatically create ocaml-host.cache
(e.g. ocaml-x86_64-pc-windows.cache
,
or ocaml-default.cache
). If you work with multiple worktrees, you can share
these cache files by issuing git config --global ocaml.configure-cache ..
. The
directory is interpreted relative to the configure
script.
The OCaml compiler is bootstrapped. This means that previously-compiled bytecode versions of the compiler and lexer are included in the repository under the boot/ directory. These bytecode images are used once the bytecode runtime (which is written in C) has been built to compile the standard library and then to build a fresh compiler. Details can be found in BOOTSTRAP.adoc.
Once you’ve built a natively-compiled ocamlc.opt
, you can use it to
speed up future builds by copying it to boot
:
cp ocamlc.opt boot/
If boot/ocamlc
changes (e.g. because you ran make bootstrap
), then
the build will revert to the slower bytecode-compiled ocamlc
until
you do the above step again.
During the development of the compiler, the internal format of compiled object files evolves, and quickly becomes incompatible with the format of the last OCaml release. In particular, even an up-to-date merlin will be unable to use them during most of the development cycle: opening a compiler source file with merlin gives a frustrating error message.
To use merlin on the compiler, you want to build the compiler with an older version of itself. One easy way to do this is to use the experimental build rules for Dune, which are distributed with the compiler (with no guarantees that the build will work all the time). Assuming you already have a recent OCaml version installed with merlin and dune, you can just run the following from the compiler sources:
./configure # if not already done make clean && dune build @libs
which will do a bytecode build of all the distribution (without linking the executables), using your OCaml compiler.
Merlin will be looking at the artefacts generated by dune (in _build
), rather
than trying to open the incompatible artefacts produced by a Makefile build. In
particular, you need to repeat the dune build every time you change the interface
of some compilation unit, so that merlin is aware of the new interface.
You only need to run configure
once, but you will need to run make clean
every time you want to run dune
after you built something with make
;
otherwise dune will complain that build artefacts are present among the sources.
Finally, there will be times where the compiler simply cannot be built with an
older version of itself. One example of this is when a new primitive is added to
the runtime, and then used in the standard library straight away, since the rest
of the compiler requires the stdlib
library to build, nothing can be build. In
such situations, you will have to either live without merlin, or develop on an
older branch of the compiler, for example the maintenance branch of the last
released version. Developing a patch from a release branch can later introduce a
substantial amount of extra work, when you rebase to the current development
version. But it also makes it a lot easier to test the impact of your work on
third-party code, by installing a local opam switch: opam
packages tend to be compatible with released versions of the compiler, whereas
most packages are incompatible with the in-progress development version.
The tools/check-typo
script enforces various typographical rules in the
OCaml compiler codebase.
Running ./tools/check-typo
from the repository root will check all
source files. This can be fairly slow (2 minutes for example). Use
./tools/check-typo <path>
to run it on some file or directory
(recursively) only.
Running ./tools/check-typo-since trunk
checks all files that changed
in the commits since trunk
— this work with any git reference. It
runs much faster than a full ./tools/check-typo
, typically instantly.
You can also setup a git commit-hook to automatically run check-typo
on the changes you commit, by copying the file
tools/pre-commit-githook
to .git/hooks/pre-commit
. If changes in a commit
alter the configure
script, the hook also checks that committed configure
script is up-to-date.
Some files need special rules to opt out of check-typo
checks; this
is specified in the .gitattributes
file at the root of the
repository, using typo.foo
attributes.
The scripts that are run on GitHub Actions are described in .github/workflows/build.yml.
For example, if you want to reproduce the default build on your machine, you can use the configuration values and run command taken from tools/ci/actions/runner.sh:
XARCH=x64 bash -ex tools/ci/actions/runner.sh configure
The .github/workflows/hygiene.yml script supports other kinds of tests which inspect the patch submitted as part of a pull request. These tests rely on ancillary data generated by GitHub Actions which you have to set explicitly to reproduce them locally.
Changes updated
checks that the Changes file has been modified
(hopefully to add a new entry). It can be disabled by including "(no change
entry needed)" in one of your commit messages — but in general all patches
submitted should come with a Changes entry; see the guidelines in
CONTRIBUTING.md.
The Windows ports take a long time to test - INRIA’s precheck service is the best to use when all 6 Windows ports need testing for a branch, but the AppVeyor scripts also support the other ports. The matrix is controlled by the following environment variables, which should be set in appveyor.yml:
-
PORT
- this must be set on each job. Eithermingw
,msvc
orcygwin
followed by32
or64
. -
BOOTSTRAP_FLEXDLL
- must be set on each job. Eithertrue
orfalse
. At present, must befalse
for Cygwin builds. Controls whether flexlink is bootstrapped as part of the test or installed from a binary archive. -
FORCE_CYGWIN_UPGRADE
. Default:0
. Set to1
to force an upgrade of Cygwin packages as part of the build. Normally a full upgrade is only triggered if the packages installed require it. -
BUILD_MODE
. Default:world.opt
. Eitherworld.opt
,steps
, orC
. Controls whether the build uses theworld.opt
target or the classicworld
,opt
,opt.opt
targets. TheC
build is a fast test used to build just enough of the tree to cover the C sources (it’s used to test old MSVC compilers). -
SDK
. Defaults to Visual Studio 2015. Specifies the exact command to run to set-up the Microsoft build environment. -
CYGWIN_DIST
. Default:64
. Either64
or32
, selects 32-bit or 64-bit Cygwin as the build environment.
INRIA provides a Jenkins continuous integration service that OCaml uses, see https://ci.inria.fr/ocaml/. It provides a wider architecture support (MSVC and MinGW, a zsystems s390x machine, and various MacOS versions) than the Travis/AppVeyor testing on github, but only runs on commits to the trunk or release branches, not on every PR.
You do not need to be an INRIA employee to open an account on this jenkins service; anyone can create an account there to access build logs and manually restart builds. If you would like to do this but have trouble doing it, please email ocaml-ci-admin@inria.fr.
To be notified by email of build failures, you can subscribe to the ocaml-ci-notifications@inria.fr mailing list by visiting its web page.
If you have suspicions that your changes may fail on exotic architectures (they touch the build system or the backend code generator, for example) and would like to get wider testing than github’s CI provides, it is possible to manually start INRIA’s CI on arbitrary git branches even before opening a pull request as follows:
-
Make sure you have an account on Inria’s CI as described before.
-
Make sure you have been added to the ocaml project.
-
Prepare a branch with the code you’d like to test, say "mybranch". It is probably a good idea to make sure your branch is based on the latest trunk.
-
Make your branch publicly available. For instance, you can fork OCaml’s GitHub repository and then push "mybranch" to your fork.
-
Visit https://ci.inria.fr/ocaml/job/precheck and log in. Click on "Build with parameters".
-
Fill in the REPO_URL and BRANCH fields as appropriate and run the build.
-
You should receive a bunch of e-mails with the build logs for each slave and each tested configuration (with and without flambda) attached.
INRIA’s CI "main" and "precheck" jobs run the script tools/ci-build. In particular, when running the CI on a publicly available branch via the "precheck" job as explained in the previous section, you can edit this script to change what the CI will test.
For instance, parallel builds are only tested for the "trunk" branch. In order to use "precheck" to test parallel build on a custom branch, add this at the beginning of tools/ci-build:
OCAML_JOBS=10
If you would like to receive email notifications of all commits made to the main git repository, you can subscribe to the caml-commits@inria.fr mailing list by visiting its web page.
Happy Hacking!