% require 'json' require 'ostruct' include ERB::Util archive_json = JSON.parse(File.open("../archive.json").read) recipe_json = JSON.parse(File.open("../recipes.json").read) packages = (archive_json.keys & recipe_json.keys).sort.map do |pkgname| package = OpenStruct.new package.name = pkgname versions, deps, package.descr, package.pkgtype = archive_json[package.name] recipe = recipe_json[package.name] package.version = versions.join('.') package.url = "packages/#{package.name}-#{package.version}." + (package.pkgtype == "single" ? "el" : "tar") package.recipe_url = "https://github.com/milkypostman/melpa/blob/master/recipes/#{package.name}" package.source = recipe["fetcher"] if package.descr =~ /(.*?)(\s*-\*-.*?)?\s*\[source:\s*(\w+)\]\s*/ package.descr end package.source_url = case package.source when 'github' then recipe['repo'].include?('/') ? "https://github.com/#{recipe['repo']}" : "https://gist.github.com/#{recipe['repo']}" when 'wiki' then recipe.key?('files') ? nil : "http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/#{package.name}.el" when 'hg' then if recipe['url'] =~ /(bitbucket\.org\/[^\/]+\/[^\/\?]+)/ "https://" + $1 end end package end %>
Package | Version | Description | Recipe | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
<%=h package.name %> | <%=h package.version %> | <%=h package.descr %> | recipe | <% if package.source_url %> <%=h package.source %> <% else %> <%=h package.source %> <% end %> |
To add the repository put this before the call to package-initialize
in your init.el
file.
(add-to-list 'package-archives
'("melpa" . "http://melpa.milkbox.net/packages/") t)
In Emacs < 24, you'll also need to explicitly include the GNU
ELPA archive, which provides important compatibility libraries like cl-lib
:
(when (< emacs-major-version 24)
(add-to-list 'package-archives '("gnu" . "http://elpa.gnu.org/packages/")))
Please read about known issues below before attempting to install multiple packages at once.
There is currently no way in package.el
to
exclude or include versions. So to remedy this there is
a melpa.el
package (available in MELPA) that will
allow you to enable only certain packages or exclude certain
packages. You can install the package manually by pasting this
into your *scratch*
buffer and evaluating it.
(progn
(switch-to-buffer
(url-retrieve-synchronously
"https://raw.github.com/milkypostman/melpa/master/melpa.el"))
(package-install-from-buffer (package-buffer-info) 'single))
You can then customize two variables:
package-archive-enable-alist
Optional Alist of enabled packages used
by package-filter
. The format
is (ARCHIVE . PACKAGE ...)
,
where ARCHIVE
is a string matching an archive
name inpackage-archives
, PACKAGE
is a symbol of a package in ARCHIVE
to
enable.
If no ARCHIVE
exists in the alist, all
packages are enabled.
package-archive-exclude-alist
Alist of packages excluded by package-filter
. The format is (ARCHIVE . PACKAGE
...)
, where ARCHIVE
is a string
matching an archive name
inpackage-archives, PACKAGE
is
a symbol of a package in that archive to exclude.
Any specified package is excluded regardless of the value
of package-archive-enable-alist
Note: These fixes are included in
the melpa.el
package.
There is a small bug in Emacs24’s package.el
such
that the dependency order comes out backwards. The problem is
patched by some advice.
(defadvice package-compute-transaction
(before package-compute-transaction-reverse (package-list requirements) activate compile)
"reverse the requirements"
(setq requirements (reverse requirements))
(print requirements))
package.el
now includes a mechanism to upgrade
packages. After running package-list-packages
,
type U (mark Upgradable packages) and then x
(eXecute the installs and deletions). When it’s done
installing all the packages it will ask if you want to delete
the obsolete packages and so you can hit y (Yes).
If you run into a problem installing or upgrading, you may
need to go into your ~/.emacs.d/elpa/
directory
and delete packages that are installed multiple times. This
can happen when the install times out.
https://github.com/milkypostman/melpa
Contributions are welcome. Currently, the builder supports packages using git, subversion, mercurial, bzr, cvs, darcs and emacswiki.