How do I require and provide clojure files? - file

I have a set of functions saved in a clojure file.
How do I Provide selected set of functions and then import these functions in my other file?

You have a few options.
If it’s just a file (not in a package) then in your files, you can just use load. If your file was named “fun.clj”, you would just use the name of the file without the extension:
(load "fun")
(provided fun.clj was on your classpath). Or
(load "files/fun")
if it wasn’t on your classpath but in the files directory.
Or you could use load-file and pass it the location of your file:
(load-file "./files/fun.clj")
If you wanted to namespace them (put them in a package), then you’d put the ns macro at the beginning of your file, again put it on your classpath. Then you could load it via use or require.
Here are the docs for the functions I’ve described:
load
load-file
ns
use
require

Besides "load"ing source files, you can also use the leiningen "checkout dependencies" feature. If you have two leiningen projects, say, project A requires B (provider). In the root directory of project A, create a directory called "checkouts". Inside "/checkouts" make a symbolic link to the root directory of project B.
- project A
- project.clj
- checkouts
- symlink to project B
- src
- test
in project A's project.clj, declare project B as a dependency in the :dependencies section as if it were a project in clojars.org. E.g.
(defproject project-a
:dependencies [[org.clojure/clojure "1.5.1"]
[project-b "0.1.0"]])
The thing though is, you have to go into project B and type:
lein install
That will compile project B's files into a jar file, which will appear in your ~/.m2 directory, which is kind of like your local clojars.org cache.
Once you set all this up, in your *.clj src file(s) of project A, you can "require" project B files in the normal way, as if it were from clojars.org:
(ns project-a.core
(:require [project-b.core :as pb])
This way, you can refer to functions in your project-b.core the usual way like this:
pb/myfunction1
In my opinion, this is a pretty good way to share libraries and data between Leiningen projects while trying keep each Leiningen project as independent, self-contained, and minimal as possible.

This one solved my problem and I have looked through countless other issues here so I would like to clarify.
The easiest way in emacs (on linux) is to do something like this:
java -cp "lib/*":. clojure.main -e "(do (require 'swank.swank) (swank.swank/start-repl))"
(note the "lib/*":. given to -cp
Then you can use M-x slime-connect to connect with this instance.
Don't know if it's required, but I have read that it's a good idea to use the same version of clojure, clojure-contrib and swank-clojure on both sides.
You can also setup the path inside emacs by consing the "." to swank-clojure-classpath.

Related

Docker File No such file or directory - Absolute Path issue

Writing because I have a stranger problem with Docker File process
The problem is regarding Docker File Context. As far as I understood the directory context that I can access from Dockerfiles is one directory up and one directory down
Example Directory Tree
A - B - C - D - E
If my docketfile is on C
I can access B D
But I can’t access A E
I have a problem because this is my case
My Docker file is on C
And I need to access files from B D E
And I really don’t know how to do it
I need to access it
Becaiuse my target jar is on E
And I need to do an ADD to this file to implementing docket hot deploy with Spring Dev Tools
Somenthing like on Docker
ADD .\D\E\jar.file jar.file
ENtrypoint xxx
Expose xxx
And I still need to access B to get some other files.
Was Clear?
Sorry I know is strange
If you can do something it does not mean it is right or if is something not recommended so it means the issue can arise.
If you read General guidelines and recommendations, It will recommend keeping the thing in context, then why you need to copy thing from the different drive? Btw it is not possible in Linux as docker need to copy from the context so better to keep your jar file in dockerfile context.
Understand build context
When you issue a docker build command, the current working directory
is called the build context. By default, the Dockerfile is assumed to
be located here, but you can specify a different location with the
file flag (-f). Regardless of where the Dockerfile actually lives, all
recursive contents of files and directories in the current directory
are sent to the Docker daemon as the build context.

Promote Jenkins build by copying archived file to shared folder

That seems a very intuitive step to do but I have a issue with that.We have a build that contains some archived files. Let’s say, we would like to promote it and copy the artifact saved in this build to some shared storage location. So we are using a promote plugin that is exactly what we need but there is NO option to use a "parent" job archived files. I tried to use "copy artifact from another project" but I cannot pass a build number of a "parent" build.
What do I miss?
P.S. We cannot use “Publish Over” plugin since it expose all Jenkins users our shared folders and enables all users to copy files there.
I'm not sure i understood right when you say
I tried to use "copy artifact from another project" but I cannot pass a build number of a "parent" build."
But possibly it could help, with these variables you can retrieve information from the parent job:
Retrieve build number or artifacts of downstream build in Jenkins
Moreover, you can try this one too: https://wiki.jenkins.io/display/JENKINS/Copy+Artifact+Plugin
It permit you to finger print artefact and than copy them, i used in the past and it works pretty good!
Hope it helps
Here I found a lead to my solution: Jenkins: Use Archived Artifact in Promoted Build
Within the "Copy Artifact Plugin":
Project name: "my parent job name" (somehow, ${PROMOTED_JOB_NAME} refuses to work)
Which build: Specific build
Build number: ${PROMOTED_NUMBER}
Artifact to copy: empty
Artifact not to copy: empty
Target directory: \\my_shared_folder\

How to upload an artifact to Artifactory / consume it in a build system (Gradle Maven Ant) where the artifact does not have an extension

I have the following files which I would like to upload to Artifactory as a 9.8.0 versioned artifact.
NOTE: The first two files DO NOT have an extension (they are executable files i.e. if you open them/cat on it, you'll see junk characters).
Folder/files of a given version 9.8.0 in CVS is like:
com.company.project/gigaproject/v9.8.0/linux/gigainstall
com.company.project/gigaproject/v9.8.0/solaris/gigainstall
com.company.project/gigaproject/v9.8.0/win32/gigainstall.exe
com.company.project/gigaproject/v9.8.0/gigafile.dtd
com.company.project/gigaproject/v9.8.0/gigaanotherfile.dtd
com.company.project/gigaproject/v9.8.0/giga.jar
com.company.project/gigaproject/v9.8.0/giga.war
Uploading the above files which have an extension is very easy... You log in to Artifactory as an administrator/user which has access to deploy artifacts, click on "Deploy" tab, browse for the Artifactory file and once you select the file, click on "Upload" button.
Next you'll see a screen (like shown above). You'll tweak what you want in the fields on this page and once you click on "Deploy Artifact", you are done. All you have to make sure is you select the correct file.extension file while uploading and make sure the file extension is shown in the "Target Path" box correctly (with the version -x.x.x, etc.).
My questions:
Question 1: How do I upload an artifact which doesn't have an extension? It seems like Artifactory by default takes an artifact as a .jar extension. How can I upload the "gigainstall" artifact as shown in the folder/file structure above for both Linux and Solaris? I see I can use the artifact name as gigainstall-linux and gigainstall-solaris and differentiate it, but I am not sure how to tell Artifactory that this artifact doesn't have any extension.
I don't think the development team will start generating this artifact with a proper extension (as this artifact may be hard coded everywhere in other projects where they are currently getting it from CVS/SVN source control somewhere - which is itself a bad practice to store an artifact in a source control version tool).
Question 2: How would I tell a build system (for example, Gradle) to consume a non-extensioned artifact during, let's say, 'compile' task. In build.gradle under section dependencies { .. }, I will add something like as shown below, but I am not sure for non-extensioned files (the first two in the folder/file structure I mentioned above).
dependencies {
//compile 'com.company.project:gigainstall-linux:9.8.0#'
//compile 'com.company.project:gigainstall-linux:9.8.0#??????'
//compile 'com.company.project:gigainstall-linux:9.8.0#""'
//compile 'com.company.project:gigainstall-linux:9.8.0#"none"'
//compile 'com.company.project:gigainstall-linux:9.8.0#"NULL_or_something"'
// The following will easily get giga.jar version giga-9.8.0.jar from Artifactory repository
compile 'com.company.project:giga:9.8.0'
// The following will easily get giga.war
compile 'com.company.project:giga:9.8.0#war'
// Similarly, other extension based artifacts can be fetched from Artifactory
compile 'com.company.project:gigafile:9.8.0#dtd'
compile 'com.company.project:gigaanotherfile:9.8.0#dtd'
}
Answer 1 (will cover 2 as well in a different sense): Using Artifactory "Artifact Bundle" feature section under "Deploy" tab can do the TRICK for AT LEAST uploading the artifacts in a way we want, by creating a zip file first (containing the structure and artifacts in it) --OR you can upload the artifacts using/calling Artifactory REST API way.
High level idea:
Create a zip file called gigaproject.zip OR anyname.zip/.tar/compressed file which Artifactory can read. Inside the zip, create the structure - how these artifacts will be loaded to Artifactory
i.e.
gigaproject.zip will contain the following folders/structure/files.
Case 1:
com/company/project/gigaproject/9.8.0/linux/gigainstall
com/company/project/gigaproject/9.8.0/solaris/gigainstall
com/company/project/gigaproject/9.8.0/win32/gigainstall.exe
com/company/project/gigaproject/9.8.0/gigafile.dtd
com/company/project/gigaproject/9.8.0/gigaanotherfile.dtd
com/company/project/gigaproject/9.8.0/giga.jar
com/company/project/gigaproject/9.8.0/giga.war
NOTE: In case 1 example, I didn't use any -x.x.x in the filename (i.e. I'm using plain and simple giga.jar instead of giga-9.8.0.jar).
The above Upload/Deploy will result the files (as shown in the following snapshot):
So, we have achieved what we wanted. Actually (visibly speaking yes), but not in a way Artifactory usually stores these artifacts (as they should -x.x.x version embedded in the file name and where artifact id should match the artifact filename). Now, if you want to consume the following in a Gradle build file, you CANNOT as first, you haven't uploaded the filename with -x.x.x version name in it, secondly, the artifact id in our case 1 tree was "gigaproject" (after com/company/project folder), so Gradle way of defining what artifact id and what artifact file name you want won't work.
compile 'com.company.project:gigaproject:CANNOTSAY_HOW_TO_GET_GIGA_JARorGIGAINSTALL_with_without_extension'
Conclusion: It's possible to upload any files (with/without extension in Artifactory) in any structure but it depends how your build system will consume it or will be able to consume it or not.
- I deleted the structure I just created with case 1 .zip file from Artifactory repository to try next case#2 and deleted the .zip file I created.
Case 2:
Let's create an individual versioned file name for each artifact and also create structure in the format - how Artifactory actually stores them (an artifact as seen in a repository in a tree view) and create a .zip file containing that structure. Let's use the same "Artifact Bundle" feature to upload this .zip file to upload individual artifacts that we need in Artifactory - where artifact-id (second value which we mention while trying to consume it) would match the artifactfile name in Artifactory.
Folder/file structure for the .zip file:
com/company/project/gigainstall/9.8.0/gigainstall-9.8.0.linux
com/company/project/gigainstall/9.8.0/gigainstall-9.8.0.solaris
com/company/project/gigainstall/9.8.0/gigainstall-9.8.0.exe
com/company/project/gigafile/9.8.0/gigafile-9.8.0.dtd
com/company/project/gigaanotherfile/9.8.0/gigaanotherfile-9.8.0.dtd
com/company/project/giga/9.8.0/giga-9.8.0.jar
com/company/project/giga/9.8.0/giga-9.8.0.war
NOTE: This time, we'll be using the same "Artifact Bundle" feature and for similar files (gigainstall under both Linux/Solaris folders), I took the approach of creating gigainstall folder (containing gigainstall-9.8.0.linux and gigainstall-9.8.0.solaris file names) i.e. when we'll consume these artifacts in Gradle under dependencies { ... } section for compile, we'll use x.x.x# way to fetch these artifacts from Artifactory.
OK, once "Artifact Bundle" Deploy/Upload was successfully complete, I got the following message.
Successfully deployed 7 artifacts from archive: gigaproject.zip (1 seconds).
Now, let's see how it looks like in Artifactory while searching for one of the artifact/in Tree view. You can see we have the files now in place, with filename-x.x.x.extension way so that I can consume them easily in Gradle.
In Gradle build file (build.gradle), I'll mention:
dependencies {
compile "com.company.project:gigainstall:9.8.0#linux"
compile "com.company.project:gigainstall:9.8.0#solaris"
compile "com.company.project:gigainstall:9.8.0#linux"
compile "com.company.project:giga:9.8.0
compile "com.company.project:giga:9.8.0#war
compile "com.company.project:gigafile:9.8.0#dtd
compile "com.company.project:gigaanotherfile:9.8.0#dtd
}
OH OH!! - That didn't work, see below for Gradle error. Why? - Artifactory Bundle upload/deploy feature uploads a zip file content what you have in the .zip but it DOES NOT create a .pom file per artifact it deploys. Thus, making the Gradle build to fail. May be in Ant this might succeed. This occurred for each individual .jar/.war/.dtd/etc file. I'm just showing one error example.
While doing gradle clean build
Could not resolve all dependencies for configuration ':compile'.
> Could not resolve com.company.project:gigafile:0.0.0.
Required by:
com.company.project:ABCProjectWhichConsumesGIGAProjectArtifacts:1.64.0
> Could not GET 'http://artifactoryserver:8081/artifactory/ext-snapshot-local/com/company/project/gigafile/0.0.0/gigafile-0.0.0.pom'. Received status code 409 from server: Conflict
Case 3: Let's take a simple approach (workaround but will save a lot of pain).
Create gigaproject.zip file with the following structure, this approach takes - No x.x.x version value embedded in the individual artifact/filename in the folder/file structure. We will use "Single Artifact" approach (which will create the .pom for gigaproject.zip file automatically during the upload/deploy process provided by Artifactory). You'll still be able to get gigainstall file without needing any extension to its name using this approach. During the upload/deploy step, as you already have seen, you upload gigaproject.zip and artifactory will upload it to a given Target Repository as "gigaproject-x.x.x.zip" where x.x.x is 9.8.0 in our case. See the image snapshot below.
gigaproject/linux/gigainstall
gigaproject/solaris/gigainstall
gigaproject/win32/gigainstall.exe
gigaproject/gigafile.dtd
gigaproject/gigaanotherfile.dtd
gigaproject/gigaproject.zip
gigaproject/giga.jar
gigaproject/giga.war
Now, upload it in Artifactory using "Single Artifact" feature. Click "Deploy Artifact" once you tweak the values for GroupId, ArtifactId, Version, etc.
Once this is uploaded. You'll see in the zip artifact in the target repository (I took a bad example, usually this would be libs-snapshot-local or libs-release-local instead of ext-...), you'll be able to consume the ZIP artifact directly in Graddle:
dependencies {
// This is the only line we need now.
compile "com.company.project:gigaproject:9.8.0#zip"
}
Once the .zip is available to Gradle build system, now you can tell Gradle to unpack this .zip file somewhere in your build/workspace area where you can feed the actual(unpacked) files (gigainstall, .dtd, .jar, .war, etc.) to the build process/steps.
PS: Case# 1 and 2 would have worked for Ant I guess.
Answer 2:
If you have uploaded a non-extensioned file in either way. Make sure you have manually created/uploaded its POM file as well (i.e. if I uploaded gigainstall-9.8.0 as an artifact under com/company/project/gigainstall/9.8.0/gigainstall-9.8.0, then at the same level, I have to/should create it's POM file (see a simple template .pom file for a custom jar artifact or while uploading an extensioned file via "Single Artifact" deploy, you'll see what POM Editor window shows you) and upload both so that Gradle won't error out saying no POM conflict/error. Ant might not need pom (I didn't check that).
Once it's there in Artifactory, the following line should work -- OR comment please if you find another way.
dependencies {
// See nothing mentioned after - x.x.x#
compile "com.company.package:gigainstall:9.8.0#"
}

tizen delta and project files

What does the xml .project and .cproject file contains ?
.rds_delta is a file which contains data like
#delete
.delta.lst
#add
#modify
author-signature.xml
signature1.xml
what is it's purpose?
There is another file .sdk_delta.info what does this contains
I would like to know the consequences of change in these file (each of these files).
You typically wouldn't change any of these files manually.
The .project file contains general settings for your project. Eclipse settings, whether the project is linked to another project, etc.
The .cproject contains C/C++-specific settings for your project. Build paths, build flags, which compiler to use, etc.

Why won't drjava allow me to create a jar file?

I'm making a JApplet and need to make a JAR file to connect to a .htm file with the applet tag. The simple solution I could think of was to use the tool in drjava that says "Create Jar File From Project..." but alas, it's not highlighted for some reason, so I can't do that. What I'm really looking for is either (a) an explanation as to why drjava can't turn my classes into a jar file, (b) an alternative to allow me to create this jar file, or ideally (c) both. Thanks for your help ahead of time.
I don't use Drjava, but here is how you can create a JAR file from the command line without any IDE specific complications.
Simply go to the folder/directory where your project is located. Let's say your class files are located in the bin folder. You can then use
jar cvf myapplet.jar -C bin .
The JAR is then ready to be deployed.

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