b7f3d447a1
This change keeps the lumi prefix on our CLI tools. As @lukehoban pointed out in person, as soon as we do pulumi/coconut#98, most people (other than compiler authors themselves) won't actually be typing the commands. And, furthermore, the commands aren't all that bad. Eventually I assume we'll want something like `lumi-js`, or `lumi-js-compiler`, so that binaries are discovered dynamically in a way that is extensible for future languages. We can tackle this during #98.
27 lines
1.1 KiB
Markdown
27 lines
1.1 KiB
Markdown
# lumi/lib
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This directory contains some libraries that Lumi programs may depend upon.
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## Overview
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The Lumi standard library underneath `lumi/` is special in that every program will ultimately use it directly or
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indirectly to create resources.
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Similarly, `lumijs/` is the LumiJS compiler's runtime library, and so most LumiJS programs will on it.
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Note that these are written in the Lumi subsets of the languages and therefore cannot perform I/O, etc.
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## Installation and Usage
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Eventually these packages will be published like any other NPM package. For now, they are consumed only in a
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development capacity, and so there are some manual steps required to prepare a developer workspace.
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For each library `<lib>` you wish to use, please see its `install.sh` script in its root directory. This performs
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installation so that it can be used simply by adding a dependency to it.
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We currently use NPM/Yarn symlinks to ease the developer workspace flow. As such, you will need to run:
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* `yarn link <lib>`
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In a project that intends to consume `<lib>` before actually using it. For example, `yarn link @lumi/lumi`.
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