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Hazel Installation Guide

This guide contains step-by-step instructions for building and running Hazel. If you are unfamiliar with ocaml or opam or get stuck, we recommend you follow these instructions instead of the shorter instructions in the README.md.

Prerequisites

  • If you are on Windows, install the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) by doing the following.

    • WSL has to be enabled before it can be installed. So, to enable WSL, do the following:

      • From the start menu or task bar, open the "PowerShell" application as an administrator (by right-clicking on it when you search for it in the start menu).

      • Run the following command at the PowerShell prompt:

        Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature -Online -FeatureName Microsoft-Windows-Subsystem-Linux
      • When this command asks you if you want to reboot, reboot by pressing y.

    • After enabling WSL, to install WSL, go the to Microsoft Store, and search for and install "Ubuntu". This will install WSL and the Ubuntu Linux distribution.

    • From the start menu or taskbar, open the "Ubuntu" application. This will open a Bash shell on Ubuntu Linux. Use this when running the commands in the rest of these instructions.

  • If you are on MacOS, make sure you have Homebrew installed.

  • Make sure gcc, git, make, nodejs, and m4 are installed.

    • If you are on Ubuntu or Windows, you can do this by running the following commands:

      sudo apt update
      sudo apt install gcc git make m4 nodejs pkg-config
    • If you are on MacOS, we recommend using the built-in m4 (i.e., not the one from Homebrew).

      You can install the remaining programs (i.e., gcc, git, node, and make) by running the following commands:

      brew update
      brew install gcc git make node pkg-config

Install and Initialize opam

  • Install the most recent version of opam (which must be at least 2.0):

    • If you are on Ubuntu Linux 19.04 (disco) or later, you can do this by running the following commands:

      sudo apt update
      sudo apt install opam
    • If you are on MacOS, you can do this by running the following commands:

      brew update
      brew install opam
  • Check that you have the correct version of opam by running the following command:

    opam --version

    This should report version 2.0 or greater. If it does not, the following instructions may not work.

  • Initialize opam, by running:

    • If you are on Windows:

      opam init github git+https://github.com/ocaml/opam-repository.git
    • If you are on Linux or MacOS:

      opam init
  • Enable opam for the current shell with the following:

    eval $(opam env)

Install OCaml

  • Update the list of available opam packages:

    opam update
  • Install OCaml 5.2.0 (some older versions may also work; see the "Current version" section of Updating.md for why we may not use the newest version of OCaml).

     opam switch create 5.2.0 ocaml-base-compiler.5.2.0
  • Update the current switch environment

    eval $(opam env --switch=5.2.0)

Clone the Source Code

  • Pick a directory that you want to be the parent of the directory that contains the Hazel source code and use the cd command to change to that directory.

  • Clone a copy of the source code by either running the following command:

    git clone [email protected]:hazelgrove/hazel.git
    

    Or running the following command:

    git clone https://github.com/hazelgrove/hazel.git
    

    This will put create a hazel directory containing the Hazel source code inside the current directory.

    If you plan to git push or git pull frequently, you may want to consider configuring your GitHub account to work with your SSH key. This will prevent you from having type your password every time. For more information, see the GitHub documentation on Connecting to GitHub with SSH and Troubleshooting SSH.

Install Library Dependencies

  • Use the cd command to change to the directory containing the Hazel source code. If you just ran the git clone command, you can do this by running the following command:

    cd hazel
  • If you run ls, you should see some files like the following:

    dune-project
    LICENSE
    Makefile
    README.md
    src
    UPDATING.md

    If you do not see these files, use cd to change to the directory containing the Hazel source code.

  • Run the following to install the necessary OCaml library dependencies:

    make deps

Compile Hazel

  • You can now compile Hazel by running one of the following.

    • If you want to compile a development version of Hazel, run make (or equivalently, make dev)

    • If you want to compile a release version of Hazel, which optimizes more aggressively, run make release

If the build fails, it sometimes helps to do a make clean.

Run Hazel

To view Hazel, you have to serve it, on localhost for development (you can't run it from a file:/// URL due to browser restrictions on e.g. web workers.)

If you have python3 on your path, you can use the Python server via make serve, then navigate to http://0.0.0.0:8000/ in your browser.

Otherwise, run make echo-html-dir which will echo the directory that needs to be served using some other server of your choice.

You can also run make repl to get a REPL in which you can play with the definitions in haz3lcore. The definitions in haz3lweb cannot be used in the REPL because that package needs a browser environment to run.

(Optional) Install fswatch for automatic reformatting & recompilation

Do this if you want to be able to run make watch to automatically watch the Hazel source for changes, triggering reformatting and recompilation.

  • If you are on Ubuntu/Debian, you can do this by running the following commands:

    sudo apt install fswatch
    opam install fswatch
  • If you are on MacOS, you can do this by running the following commands:

    brew install fswatch
    opam install fswatch