kcl.mod: The KCL package Manifest File
The Manifest
The kcl.mod
file for each module is called its manifest. It is written in the TOML format. It contains metadata that is needed to compile the module.
In the MVP version, the sections we plan to support are as follows:
- Package metadata:
- package - Defines a package.
- name — The name of the package.
- version — The version of the package.
- edition — The KCL compiler edition.
- description — The description of the package.
- package - Defines a package.
- Dependency tables:
- dependencies - Package library dependencies.
- Compiler settings:
- [profile] - The compiler settings.
- entries - The entry points of the package when compiling.
- [profile] - The compiler settings.
package
The first section in a kcl.mod
is [package].
[package]
name = "hello_world" # the name of the package
version = "0.1.0" # the current version, obeying semver
edition = "0.5.0" # the KCL compiler version
description = "This is a hello world package." # the description of the package
dependencies
Your kcl package can depend on other libraries from OCI registries, git repositories, or subdirectories on your local file system.
You can specify a dependency by following:
[dependencies]
<package name> = <package_version>
You can specify a dependency from git repository by git tag.
[dependencies]
<package name> = { git = "<git repo url>", tag = "<git repo tag>" }
You can specify a dependency from git repository by git commit id.
[dependencies]
<package name> = { git = "<git repo url>", commit = "<git repo commit>" }
You can specify a dependency from local file path.
# Find the kcl.mod under "./xxx/xxx".
[dependencies]
<package name> = {path = "<package local path>"}
entries
You can specify the entry points of the package when compiling.
entries
is a sub section of profile
section.
[profile]
entries = [
...
]
entries
is the relative path of kcl package root path, the kcl.mod
file path is the package root path. There are two types of file paths formats supported, normal paths
and mod relative paths
.
- normal path: The path is relative to the current package root path.
- mod relative path: The path is relative to the vendor package root path that can be found by the section dependencies in
kcl.mod
file.
For example:
- If the
kcl.mod
is localed in/usr/my_pkg/kcl.mod
,kpm run
will take/usr/my_pkg/entry1.k
and/usr/my_pkg/subdir/entry2.k
as the entry point of the kcl compiler.
entries = [
"entry1.k",
"subdir/entry2.k",
]
- If the
kcl.mod
is localed in/usr/my_pkg/kcl.mod
, and the current kcl package depends on the kcl packagek8s
. You can use themod relative paths
the take the kcl file in the packagek8s
as the entry point of the kcl compiler.
entries = [
"entry1.k",
"subdir/entry2.k",
"${k8s:KCL_MOD}/core/api/v1/deployment.k"
]
The mod relative paths
must contains the preffix ${k8s:KCL_MOD}
, k8s
is the package name, ${k8s:KCL_MOD}
means the package root path of the package k8s
. Therefore, if the package root path of k8s
is /.kcl/kpm/k8s
, the entries
show above will take /usr/my_pkg/entry1.k
, /usr/my_pkg/subdir/entry2.k
and /.kcl/kpm/k8s/core/api/v1/deployment.k
as the entry point of the kcl compiler.
Note
You can use normal path
to specify the compilation entry point in the current package path, and use mod relative path
to specify the entry point in a third-party package.
Therefore, the file path specified by normal path
must come from the same package, that is, the kcl.mod
path found from the normal path must only find one kcl.mod
file, otherwise the compiler will output an error.
For example:
In the path /usr/kcl1
:
/usr/kcl1
|--- kcl.mod
|--- entry1.k
In the path /usr/kcl2
:
/usr/kcl2
|--- kcl.mod
|--- entry2.k
If you compile with this kcl.mod
in the path /usr/kcl1
:
entries = [
"entry1.k", # The corresponding kcl.mod file is /usr/kcl1/kcl.mod
"/usr/kcl2/entry2.k", # The corresponding kcl.mod file is /usr/kcl2/kcl.mod
]
You will get an error:
error[E3M38]: conflict kcl.mod file paths