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By default, the melpa script will no longer delete all packages before rebuilding. The package-build.el script should automatically clean out old packages. |
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recipes | ||
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melpa | ||
melpa.el | ||
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missing.el | ||
package-build.el | ||
README.md |
MELPA
MELPA is a growing collection of package.el
-compatible Emacs Lisp
packages built automatically on our server from the upstream source
code using simple recipes. (Think of it as a server-side version of
el-get, or even
homebrew.)
Packages are updated when changes are made to the MELPA repository, or at least daily.
If you just want to browse and install packages, check out the archive index page for instructions.
Adding packages is as simple as submitting a pull request; read on for details.
About the name
MELPA is Milkypostman's ELPA or Milkypostman's Experimental Lisp Package Archive if you're not into the whole brevity thing.
Scripts
-
buildpkg
-- Create an archive of the package(s) passed as arguments to the script. Built packages are put in thepackages/
folder with version corresponding to the newest HEAD revision available; given according to the%Y%m%d
format. -
melpa
-- All the logic for generating everything in the repository based on the recipe files. By default this will clean thepackages/
directory, build all packages listed underrecipes/
, and compile theindex.html
file for the melpa website front page.
The following arguments are accepted:
- clear
- clean out the
packages/
directory - build
- build all packages in
pkglist
- index
- build the
index.html
file - validate
- naively validate that the correct number of packages were built.
Note that these scripts require an Emacs with package.el
installed,
such as Emacs 24. If you have an older version of Emacs, you can get a
suitable package.el
here.
Code
The package-build.el
file contains all the heavy lifting. The
scripts above call the package-build-archive
function from the
command-line to actually build the package(s).
Use (package-build-all)
to build all melpa packages.
Alternatively you can load this file from within Emacs and issues commands from there.
The package-build.el
automatically generates any required
information for the package. For multi-file packages this include
generating the file <NAME>-pkg.el
which contains description,
version, and requires information determined by searching
<NAME>-pkg.el
, <NAME>.el
, and <NAME>-pkg.el.in
if they exist in
the repository.
Contributing New Packages
Packages are specified by files in the recipes
directory. You can
contribute a new package by adding a new file under recipes
using
the following form,
(name
:fetcher [git|github|bzr|hg|darcs|svn|wiki]
[:url "<repo url>"]
[:repo "github-user/repo-name"]
[:files ("<file1>", ...)])
name
- a lisp symbol that has the same name as the package being specified.
:url
- specifies the URL of the version control repository. required for
the
git
,bzr
,hg
,darcs
andsvn
fetchers :fetcher
- specifies the type of repository that
:url
points to. Right now package-build supports git, github, bazaar (bzr), mercurial (hg), subversion (svn), darcs, and Emacs Wiki (wiki) as possible mechanisms for checking out the repository. With the exception of the Emacs Wiki fetcher, package-build uses the corresponding application to update files before building the package. The Emacs Wiki fetcher gets the latest version of the package fromhttp://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/download/<NAME>.el
whereNAME
is the package name. Note that the:url
property is not needed for thewiki
engine unless the name of the package file on the EmacsWiki differs from the package name being built. In the case of thegithub
fetcher, use:repo
instead of:url
; the git URL will then be deduced. :files
- optional property specifying the explicit files used to build the
package. Automatically populated by matching all
.el
files in the root of the repository. This is necessary when there are multiple.el
files in the repository but the package should only be built from a subset.
Single File Repository
ido-ubiquitous is a repository that contains two files:
README.md
ido-ubiquitous.el
Since there is only one .el
file, this package only needs the :url
and :fetcher
specified,
(ido-ubiquitous
:url "https://github.com/DarwinAwardWinner/ido-ubiquitous.git"
:fetcher git)
Multiple Packages in one Repository
The
emacs-starter-kit
contains the starter-kit package along with extra packages in the
modules
directory; starter-kit-bindings, starter-kit-lisp, etc.
(starter-kit
:url "https://github.com/technomancy/emacs-starter-kit.git"
:fetcher git)
(starter-kit-bindings
:url "https://github.com/technomancy/emacs-starter-kit.git"
:fetcher git
:files ("modules/starter-kit-bindings.el"))
Notice that :files
is not specified for starter-kit
since
package-build will automatically add all .el
files in the root
directory of the repository. The starter-kit-bindings
repository is
contained in the modules/
subdirectory and thus needs the packages
files specified explicitly.
Submitting the Package
You should first fork the MELPA repository, add your new file under
recipes
, and confirm your new package builds properly by running
buildpkg <NAME>
. You can install the package that you built by
running the interactive command package-install-file
in Emacs, and
specifying the newly built package which should be in the packages/
subdirectory under the melpa directory.
After verifying the entry works properly please open a pull request on Github.
Configuration
Packages end up in the packages/
directory by default.
This can be configured using the package-build-archive-dir
variable.
Repositories are checked out to the working/
directory by default.
This can be configured using the package-build-working-dir
variable.