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The F# Compiler, Core Library & Tools (F# Software Foundation Repository)
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This repository is theF# Software Foundation repository for F#, as described inthe mission statement of the Foundation:
The F# Software Foundation... maintains a core open-source F# code repository and distributions made available to the public free of charge for use across multiple platforms. This includes the F# compiler, F# language specification, the F# core library and assorted tools and applications.
The process for contributing to the F# Compiler, Core Library and Tools is describedhere.
The main day-to-day purpose of this repository is to deliver extra packagings of the F# compiler, core library and core tools for use in different settings. This repo accepts direct contributions related to the cross-platform packaging of F#. Most other contributions to the F# compiler/library/tools go first via theupstream repository which is also used to package the Visual F# Tools and .NET SDK tooling for F#. This repo mirrors the core implementation of the F# language from the upstream repository. This arrangement ensures that versions do not diverge, and that very extensive QA is done on all core contributions.
The F# community use this repo and others to publish these components:
FSharp.Compiler.Tools NuGet package (published from this repo)
FSharp.Compiler.Service NuGet package (published fromderivative repo)
Fable, the F# compiler for JavaScript, published from its own repo but using FSharp.Compiler.Service NuGet package
“fsharp” Debian Linux packages for F# + Mono (published fromderivative repo)
“fsharp” as bundled in macOS tooling for F# + Mono by Xamarin and installed either fromthe Mono Project Download page or via homebrew cask as part of the
mono-mdkcask (brew cask install mono-mdk)“fsharp” docker image (published fromrelated repo)
“fsharp” homebrew formula (published as part ofthe mono homebrew formula)
other packagings such as: theF# support in Jupyter Notebooks - iFSharp; the F# support in Azure Functions; andWebSharper all using the FSharp.Compiler.Service NuGet package
See notes below for most of these. Because the core logic of F# is made available asa library component, an unlimited number of other packagings of F# are possible. Please contribute additional notes to thisREADME.md if you are packaging F# for other settings.
If you are using Windows, you should normally fork theupstream repository repo and contribute directly there. Your contributions will then be merged into this repo.
If you are using Linux or macOS, you can contribute directly toupstream repository if you like. Some CI for that repo runs on Linux. Your contributions will then be merged into this repo. Alternatively, you can prepare your contributions by forking this repository (the code is essentially the same). This will give you access to some additional testingavailable from this repo.
Themaster branch is for F# 4.x. To bootstrap the compiler, binaries built from an earlier version of this project are used. This codebase uses the Apache 2.0 license.
| F# | Branch | macOS/Linux | Windows |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4.1+ | master | ![]() | |
| 4.0 | fsharp4 | ![]() |
The FSharp.Core NuGet package was previously published from this repo.With the informal consent of the F# Software Foundation this package is now published by Microsoft.
- FSharp.Core.dll for .NET Framework/Mono
- FSharp.Core.dll for .NET Core
- FSharp.Core.dll for portable profiles
The FSharp.Core NuGet package includes all of the FSharp.Core redistributables from Visual F#.
This repo is currently used to makethe FSharp.Compiler.Tools NuGet package. This package includes the following for both .NET Core and .NET Framework/Mono:
- the F# compiler
fsc.exe - F# Interactive
fsi.exe - build support,
- a copy of FSharp.Core used to run the tools
- related DLLs.
The NuGet packages are exactly the ones produced by AppVeyor CI, e.g.for version 4.1.2. They are pushed tohttps://nuget.orgby someone with appropriate permissions.
TheFSharp.Compiler.Tools NuGet package can be used if you wish to use the latest F# compiler on a computer without relying on the installed version of Visual Studio.Adding it via NuGet to a project will override the in-box compiler with the compiler from the NuGet package.Note: you will need to manually modify your project file once (seefsharp#676).
Usage: Seehttp://fsharp.org/use/linux
apt-get install fsharpSeethe mono packaging repo, which is a downstream variant of this repo, where this package is actually made.
- There is a tag for each upstream source tag
- There is a tag for each "debianized" package
- Packaging metadata lives in debian/
- install files are files installed to disk
- cligacinstall are GAC-installed libraries
controlis the manifest of packages- rules is the Makefile which handles build/install.
Jo Shields (@directhex) has done much of this work and says:
I tend to only update the published packages when a) the same update has already been pulled in on Mac by Jason, and either b) something breaks horribly in the existing version on a new Mono, or c) someone explicitly asks me to.
Linux package delivery is (now) based on packages built on our public Jenkins instance, and published automatically as a post-build step, based on two inputs - a Git repository in standard Debian git packaging format (whichhttps://github.com/mono/linux-packaging-fsharp already is), and a tarball to consider as the canonical source of the next release (giving the same tarball in subsequent builds is how you indicate packaging-only changes such as alterations to metadata in debian/)
Alexander Köplinger has admin access to Jenkins, SSH access to the Jenkins and repository servers, and has taken care of things for me in my absence in the past (but isn't a Debian packaging expert, so would be trusting that metadata changes are solid)
F# is packaged as part of Mono on macOS. Jason Imison says:
We use a system called BockBuild that pushes versions of F# (sometimes with patches) out with Mono for macOS (F# is bundled with mono here, not a separate package).
You can see an example build script here (if you have access, ping me if not)https://github.com/xamarin/bockbuild/blob/2017-02/packages/fsharp.py. Unfortunately, you need to know the branch name here – 2017-02 is what is going to be released with VS for Mac aka Mono 4.9.x
We build fsharp/fsharp internally so that we’re not dependent on you pushing out fixes / bumping packages. Miguel de Icaza likes to ‘own’ the code that we ship precisely to stop these kind of emergency issues.
@cartermp says:
For future reference,dependencies and code for the F# editing and F# Interactive support in Visual Studio for Mac/Xamarin Studio is here
A feed of NuGet packages from builds is available from AppVeyor using the NuGet feed:https://ci.appveyor.com/nuget/fsgit-fsharp
If using Paket, add the source at the top ofpaket.dependencies.
source https://www.nuget.org/api/v2source https://ci.appveyor.com/nuget/fsgit-fsharpAdd the dependency onFSharp.Core and runpaket update. See the AppVeyorbuild history for a list of available versions. Here are some options for specifying the dependency:
nuget FSharp.Corenuget FSharp.Core prereleasenuget FSharp.Core 3.1.2.3nuget FSharp.Core 3.1.2.3-b208If using NuGet Package Manager, add the source to the list of available package sources.
Building F# on Unix-type platforms requiresMono 5.0 or higher.
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usrmakesudo make installThat build and installs optimized binaries. To make debug, usemake CONFIG=debug
Building on macOS requires an install of the latest Xamarin tools or Mono package. Use a prefix to your version of Mono:
./autogen.sh --prefix=/Library/Frameworks/Mono.framework/Versions/Current/makesudo make installThat build and installs optimized binaries. To make debug, usemake CONFIG=debug
Install.NET 4.5.1 andMSBuild 12.0
Build using:
mono\build.batThis builds the proto compiler, then the library, then the final compiler.
The FSharp.Core.dll produced is only delay-signed (Mono does not require strong names).If a strong-name signed FSharp.Core.dll is needed then use the one in
lib\bootstrap\signed\.NETFramework\v4.0\4.3.0.0\FSharp.Core.dlllib\bootstrap\signed\.NETFramework\v4.0\4.3.1.0\FSharp.Core.dllvagrant upvagrant sshcd /vagrantsudo apt-get install dos2unix autoconf./autogen.sh --prefix=/usrmakesudo make installTo integrate latest changes fromhttps://github.com/Microsoft/visualfsharp, use
git checkout -b integrategit remote add visualfsharp https://github.com/Microsoft/visualfsharpgit pull visualfsharp mastergit rm -fr vsintegrationgit rm -fr setupgit rm -fr tests/fsharpqaThere are certain guidelines that need to be followed when integrating changes from upstream:
- this repository does not undergo the QA test process that upstream does, so the
tests/fsharpqafolder and all files within should be removed when merging - this repository does not contain any of the Visual Studio tooling or integrations, so the
vsintegrationdirectory and all files within should be removed when merging - anything referencing
FSharp.LaunguageService.Compileris a Microsoft-internal version of the open FSharp.Compiler.Service repository, and should be removed when merging - Windows-specific scripts like
update.cmdandruntests.cmdaren't used in this repository, and so should be removed when merging
A continuous integration build is set up with Travis and AppVeyor. See above.
Historically it is difficult to edit the compiler with Xamarin Studio or MonoDevelop because of bugs in loading the hand-edited project files and targets used in the F# compiler build. These are generally in the process of being fixed, your mileage will vary.
Only a subset of the tests are currently enabled.
After building and installing, run
cd tests/fsharp/core./run-all.shSee theTESTGUIDE.md for instructions for how to test on Windows. Use that repositoryto develop and test on Windows.
F# compiler sources as initially dropped are available fromfsharppowerpack.codeplex.com.
On 4 April 2014, Microsoft Open Tech published the F# compiler sources athttp://visualfsharp.codeplex.com and beganaccepting contributions to the F# compiler/library and tools.
In 2016 the Microsofthttp://visualfsharp.codeplex.com repo moved to GitHub athttps://github.com/Microsoft/visualfsharp.
This repository uses bootstrapping libraries, tools and F# compiler. Thelib/bootstrap/X.0 directories contain mono-built libraries, compiler and tools that can be used to bootstrap a build. You can also supply your own via the--with-bootstrap option.
The maintainers of this repository appointed by the F# Core Engineering Group are:
- Enrico Sada,Don Syme
- with help and guidance fromTomas Petricek,Robin Neatherway,Cameron Taggart,Dave Thomas,Jo Shields,Kevin Ransom andHenrik Feldt and many others
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