# Hacking on Dune This section is for people who want to work on Dune itself. ## Bootstrap In order to build itself, Dune uses an OCaml script ([bootstrap.ml](bootstrap.ml)) that dumps most of the sources of Dune into a single `boot.ml` file. This file is built using `ocamlopt` or `ocamlc` and used to build everything else. Note that we don't include all of the sources in boot.ml. We skip a few parts to speed up the build. In particular: - vendored libraries are replaced by simpler implementations taken from `vendor/boot` - a few files in `src` have an alternative version. These alternatives versions are named `XXX.boot.EXT`. For instance: `glob_lexer.boot.ml` ## OCaml compatibility test Install opam switches for all the entries in the [dune-workspace.dev](dune-workspace.dev) file and run: ```sh $ make all-supported-ocaml-versions ``` ## Repository organization - `vendor/` contains dependencies of Dune, that have been vendored - `plugin/` contains the API given to `dune` files that are OCaml scripts - `src/` contains the core of `Dune`, as a library so that it can be used to implement the Jenga bridge later - `bin/` contains the command line interface - `doc/` contains the manual and rules to generate the manual pages ## Design Dune (nee "JBuilder") was initially designed to sort out the public release of Jane Street packages which became incredibly complicated over time. It is still successfully used for this purpose. One necessary feature to achieve this is the ability to precisely report the external dependencies necessary to build a given set of targets without running any command, just by looking at the source tree. This is used to automatically generate the `.opam` files for all Jane Street packages. To implement this, the build rules are described using a build arrow, which is defined in [src/build.mli](src/build.mli). In the end it makes the development of the internal rules of Dune very composable and quite pleasant. To deal with process multiplexing, Dune uses a simplified Lwt/Async-like monad, implemented in [src/fiber/fiber.mli](src/fiber/fiber.mli). ## Code flow - [src/dune_file.mli](src/dune_file.mli) contains the internal representation of `dune` files and the parsing code - [src/jbuild_load.mli](src/jbuild_load.mli) contains the code to scan a source tree and build the internal database by reading the `dune` files - [src/gen_rules.mli](src/gen_rules.mli) contains all the build rules of Dune - [src/build_system.mli](src/build_system.mli) contains a trivial implementation of a Build system. This is what Jenga will provide when implementing the bridge