Fano CLI is command line tools to help scaffolding web application using Fano Web Framework.
- Linux or FreeBSD or Windows
- Free Pascal >= 3.0,
- git
Run
$ git clone https://github.com/fanoframework/fano-cli.git
$ cd fano-cli
$ ./tools/config.setup.sh
$ ./build.sh
For easier access, copy bin/out/fanocli
executable binary to globally accessible location, for example
$ sudo cp bin/out/fanocli /usr/local/bin/fanocli
or you can put absolute path of bin/out
directory in PATH
environment variable.
In FreeBSD, before you run build.sh
, edit build.cfg
and replace target OS compilation to -Tfreebsd
.
Make sure Free Pascal is installed. Run
$ fpc -i
If you see something like Free Pascal Compiler version 3.x.x
, you are good to go.
Clone this repository
$ git clone https://github.com/fanoframework/fano-cli.git
Copy *.cfg.sample
to *.cfg
.
$ cp build.prod.cfg.sample build.prod.cfg
$ cp build.dev.cfg.sample build.dev.cfg
$ cp build.cfg.sample build.cfg
Make adjustment as you need in build.cfg
, build.prod.cfg
, build.dev.cfg
.
These *.cfg
files contain some Free Pascal compiler switches that you can turn on/off to change how executable is compiled and generated. For complete
explanation on available compiler switches, consult Free Pascal documentation.
tools/config.setup.sh
shell script is provided to simplify copying those
configuration files. Following shell command is similar to command above.
$ ./tools/config.setup.sh
Run build.sh
(or build.cmd
if on Windows) script to compile application.
$ ./build.sh
By default, it will output binary executable in bin/out
directory.
To build for different environment, set BUILD_TYPE
environment variable.
$ BUILD_TYPE=prod ./build.sh
Build process will use compiler configuration defined in build.cfg
and build.prod.cfg
. By default, build.prod.cfg
contains some compiler switches that will aggressively optimize executable both in speed and size.
$ BUILD_TYPE=dev ./build.sh
Build process will use compiler configuration defined in build.cfg
and build.dev.cfg
.
If BUILD_TYPE
environment variable is not set, production environment will be assumed.
Compilation will output executable to directory defined in EXEC_OUTPUT_DIR
environment variable. By default is bin/out
directory.
$ EXEC_OUTPUT_DIR=/path/to/exec/dir ./build.sh
Compilation will output compiled units to directory defined in UNIT_OUTPUT_DIR
environment variable. By default is bin/unit
directory.
$ UNIT_OUTPUT_DIR=/path/to/compiled/units/dir ./build.sh
By default, build script uses fpc
command. If fpc
can not be found or if you want to use different Free Pascal version, you can set compiler binary with FPC_BIN
environment variable. By default it is fpc
.
$ FPC_BIN=/path/to/fpc ./build.sh
You will very likely need to set location of fpc.cfg
file to match Free Pascal version. For example, if you have multiple version of Free Pascal installation and you want to compile using Free Pascal version 3.0.4 as shown in following command.
$ PPC_CONFIG_PATH=/path/to/fpc-3.0.4 FPC_BIN=/path/to/fpc-3.0.4/fpc ./build.sh
where PPC_CONFIG_PATH
is environment variable which Free Pascal uses to look for fpc.cfg
file for Free Pascal version 3.0.4.
Copy bin/out/fanocli
executable file to directory that is accessible globally, for example /usr/local/bin
,
$ sudo cp bin/out/fanocli /usr/local/bin
then you can run
$ fanocli --help
Read Scaffolding with Fano CLI for more information.
Fano CLI follows Semantic Versioning 2.0.0.
Read NOTICE
When running build.sh
script, you may encounter following warning:
/usr/bin/ld: warning: bin/out/link.res contains output sections; did you forget -T?
This is known issue between Free Pascal and GNU Linker. See FAQ: link.res syntax error, or "did you forget -T?" and only happens with Free Pascal 3.0.4 or older. Free Pascal 3.2.0 or newer does not have this issue.
However, this warning is minor and can be ignored. It does not affect output executable.
build.sh
script may show error about missing /etc/fpc.cfg
file. This may happen if you install Free Pascal in non default directory or using tools such as fpcupdeluxe. To remedy this situation, create symbolic link in /etc
to actual fpc.cfg
file. Alternatively you can set PPC_CONFIG_PATH
environment variable as described above.
$ sudo ln -s ~/fpcupdeluxe/fpc/bin/x86_64-linux/fpc.cfg /etc/fpc.cfg
Sometime Free Pascal can not compile your code because, for example, you deleted a unit source code (.pas) but old generated unit (.ppu, .o, .a files) still there or when you switch between git branches. Solution is to remove those files.
By default, generated compiled units are in bin/unit
directory.
But do not delete README.md
file inside this directory, as it is not being ignored by git.
$ rm bin/unit/*.ppu
$ rm bin/unit/*.o
$ rm bin/unit/*.rsj
$ rm bin/unit/*.a
Following shell command will remove all files inside bin/unit
directory except
README.md
file.
$ find bin/unit ! -name 'README.md' -type f -exec rm -f {} +
tools/clean.sh
script is provided to simplify this task. Following shell command is similar as command above.
$ ./tools/clean.sh
Free Pascal supports Windows as target operating system, however, this repository is not yet tested on Windows. To target Windows, in build.cfg
replace
compiler switch -Tlinux
with -Twin64
and uncomment line #-WC
to
become -WC
.
While you can use Lazarus IDE, it is not mandatory tool. Any text editor for code editing (Atom, Visual Studio Code, Sublime, Vim etc) should suffice.
Just create pull request if you have improvement you want to add.