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STATUS: highly WIP, the API WILL change, but it is usable.
I am dogfooding it in public and private projects.
CIEL is a ready-to-use collection of libraries.
It's Common Lisp, batteries included.
It comes in 3 forms:
- a binary, to run CIEL scripts: fast start-up times, standalone image, built-in utilities.
- a simple full-featured REPL for the terminal.
- a Lisp library and a core image.
Questions, doubts? See the FAQ.
NEW: we now have a Docker file.
#!/usr/bin/env ciel
(-> "https://fakestoreapi.com/products?limit=5"
http:get
json:read-json
(elt 0)
(access "title"))
$ chmodx +x getproduct.lisp
$ time ./getproduct.lisp
"Fjallraven - Foldsack No…ckpack, Fits 15 Laptops"
./getproduct.lisp 0.10s user 0.02s system 24% cpu 0.466 total
One of our goals is to make Common Lisp useful out of the box for mundane tasks -by today standards. As such, we ship libraries to handle JSON or CSV, as well as others to ease string manipulation, to do pattern matching, to bring regular expressions, for threads and jobs scheduling, for HTTP and URI handling, and so on. You can of course do all this without CIEL, but then you have to install the library manager first and load these libraries into your Lisp image every time you start it. Now, you have them at your fingertips whenever you start CIEL.
We also aim to soften the irritating parts of standard Common Lisp. A
famous one, puzzling for beginners and non-optimal for seasoned lispers,
is the creation of hash-tables. We include the dict
function from the
Serapeum library (which we enhanced further with a pull request):
CIEL-USER> (dict :a 1 :b 2 :c 3)
which prints:
(dict
:A 1
:B 2
:C 3
)
In standard Common Lisp, the equivalent is more convoluted:
(let ((ht (make-hash-table :test 'equal)))
(setf (gethash :a ht) 1)
(setf (gethash :b ht) 2)
(setf (gethash :c ht) 3)
ht)
;; #<HASH-TABLE :TEST EQUAL :COUNT 3 {1006CE5613}>
;; (and we don't get a readable representation, so our example is not even equivalent)
Moreover, we bring:
- a full featured REPL on the terminal and
- scripting capabilities, see more below.
See the documentation.
Table of Contents
- CIEL Is an Extended Lisp
- Install
- Build
- Usage
- Libraries
- Language extensions
- Final words
- Misc: how to generate the documentation
- Contributors
- Lisp?!
Getting a binary allows you to run scripts, to play around in its terminal readline REPL. A binary doesn't allow you to use CIEL in your existing Common Lisp editor (which still offers the most interactive and fast development experience).
To download a CIEL binary:
- check our releases on https://github.com/ciel-lang/CIEL/releases/
- we provide a binary from a CI for some systems: go to
https://gitlab.com/vindarel/ciel/-/pipelines, download the latest
artifacts, unzip the
ciel-v0-{platform}.zip
archive and runciel-v0-{platform}/ciel
.
CIEL is currently built for the following platforms:
Platform | System Version (release date) |
---|---|
debian | Debian Buster (2019) |
void | Void Linux glibc (2023-05), using cinerion's Docker image |
Start it with ./ciel
.
With no arguments, you enter CIEL's terminal REPL.
You can give a CIEL script as first argument, or call a built-in one. See the scripting section.
To build CIEL, both the binary and the core image, you need a couple system dependencies and you have to check a couple things on the side of lisp before proceeding.
You will probably need the following system dependencies (names for a Debian Bullseye system):
zlib1g-dev # from deploy for SBCL < 2.2.6
If your SBCL version is >= 2.2.6 you might want to use the more
performant libzstd-dev
library instead of zlib1g-dev
.
libzstd-dev # from deploy for SBCL >= 2.2.6
On Linux:
inotify-tools
On MacOS:
fsevent
You can run: make debian-deps
or make macos-deps
.
ASDF is the de-facto system definition facility of Common Lisp, that lets you define your system's metadata (author, dependencies, sources, modules…).
Please ensure that you have ASDF >= 3.3.4. It is for instance not the case with SBCL 2.2.9.
Ask the version with our script:
$ make check-asdf-version
or yourself with(asdf:asdf-version)
on a Lisp REPL, or with
this one-liner from a terminal:
$ sbcl --eval '(and (print (asdf:asdf-version)) (quit))'
Here's a one-liner to update ASDF:
$ mkdir ~/common-lisp/
$ ( cd ~/common-lisp/ && wget https://asdf.common-lisp.dev/archives/asdf-3.3.5.tar.gz && tar -xvf asdf-3.3.5.tar.gz && mv asdf-3.3.5 asdf )
To build CIEL on your machine, you need the Quicklisp library manager. Quicklisp downloads and installs a library and its dependencies on your machine. It's very slick, we can install everything from the REPL without restarting our Lisp process. It follows a "distrubution" approach, think Debian releases, where libraries are tested to load.
It isn't the only library manager nowadays. See https://github.com/CodyReichert/awesome-cl#library-manager.
Install it:
curl -O https://beta.quicklisp.org/quicklisp.lisp
sbcl --load quicklisp.lisp --eval "(quicklisp-quickstart:install)" --quit
sbcl --load ~/quicklisp/setup.lisp --eval "(ql:add-to-init-file)" --quit
It creates a ~/quicklisp/
directory. Read its installation instructions to know more.
Even if you have a Lisp setup with Quicklisp installed, the current distribution of Quicklisp is quite old (as of August, 2024) and you need to pull recent dependencies.
We'll clone the required ones into your ~/quicklisp/local-projects/
.
make ql-deps
Other tools exist for this (Qlot, ocicl…), we are just not using them yet.
You need the dependencies above: Quicklisp, a good ASDF version, our up-to-date Lisp dependencies.
This shows you how to load CIEL and all its goodies, in order to use it in your current editor.
CIEL is not on Quicklisp yet, but it is on Ultralisp.
So, either clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/ciel-lang/CIEL ~/quicklisp/local-projects/CIEL
or install the Ultralisp distribution and pull the library from there:
(ql-dist:install-dist "http://dist.ultralisp.org/" :prompt nil)
Now, in both cases, you can load the ciel.asd
file (with asdf:load-asd
or C-c C-k
in Slime) and quickload "ciel":
CL-USER> (ql:quickload "ciel")
be sure to enter the ciel-user
package:
(in-package :ciel-user)
you now have access to all CIEL's packages and functions.
You need the dependencies above: Quicklisp, a good ASDF version, our up-to-date Lisp dependencies.
To build CIEL's binary, use:
$ make build
This creates a ciel
binary in the current directory.
To create a Lisp image:
$ make image
# or
$ sbcl --load build-image.lisp
This creates the ciel-core
Lisp image.
Unlike a binary, we can not distribute core images. It is dependent on the machine it was built on.
The way we use a core image is to load it at startup like this:
sbcl --core ciel-core --eval '(in-package :ciel-user)'
It loads fast and you have all CIEL libraries and goodies at your disposal.
Then you have to configure your editor, like Slime, to have the choice of the Lisp image to start. See below.
We have a Dockerfile.
Build your CIEL image:
docker build -t ciel .
The executable is built in /usr/local/bin/ciel
of the Docker image.
Get a CIEL REPL:
docker run --rm -it ciel /usr/local/bin/ciel
Run a script on your filesystem:
docker run --rm -it ciel /usr/local/bin/ciel path/to/your/lisp/script.lisp
Run a built-in script:
docker run --rm -it ciel /usr/local/bin/ciel -s simpleHTTPserver
So, save you some typing with a shell alias:
alias ciel="sudo docker run --rm -it ciel /usr/local/bin/ciel"
Note
this is brand new! Expect limitations and changes.
Get the ciel
binary and call it with your .lisp script:
$ ciel script.lisp
Use the #!/usr/bin/env ciel
shebang line to directly call your files:
$ ./script
Call built-in scripts:
$ ciel -s simpleHTTPserver 9000
See available built-in scripts with --scripts
.
See the scripts documentation.
CIEL ships a terminal REPL for the terminal which is more user friendly than the default SBCL one:
- it has readline capabilities, meaning that the arrow keys work by default (woohoo!) and there is a persistent history, like in any shell.
- it has multiline input.
- it has TAB completion.
- including for files (after a bracket) and binaries in the PATH.
- it handles errors gracefully: you are not dropped into the debugger and its sub-REPL, you simply see the error message.
- it has optional syntax highlighting.
- it has a shell pass-through: try
!ls
.- you can mix and match shell and Lisp: try
!echo ?(+ 1/3 1/3)
(look, a fraction) - it runs interactive commands: try
!htop
,!vim test.lisp
,!emacs -nw test.lisp
or!env FOO=BAR sudo -i powertop
.
- you can mix and match shell and Lisp: try
- it has documentation lookup shorthands: use
:doc symbol
or?
after a symbol to get its documentation:ciel-user> (dict ?
. - it has developer friendly macros: use
(printv code)
for an annotated trace output. - it has an optional lisp critic that scans the code you enter at the REPL for instances of bad practices.
- and it defines some more helper commands.
- it works on Slime (to a certain extent)
The CIEL terminal REPL loads the ~/.cielrc
init file at start-up if present. Don't load it with --no-userinit
.
See more in the documentation.
Note
Our terminal readline REPL does NOT replace a good Common Lisp editor. You have more choices than Emacs. Check them out! https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/editor-support.html
Run ciel
with no arguments:
$ ciel
CIEL's REPL version 0.1.5
Read more on packages with readme or summary. For example: (summary :str)
Special commands:
%help => Prints this general help message
%doc => Print the available documentation for this symbol.
%? => Gets help on a symbol <sym>: :? str
%w => Writes the current session to a file <filename>
%d => Dumps the disassembly of a symbol <sym>
%t => Prints the type of a expression <expr>
%q => Ends the session.
%lisp-critic => Enable or disable the lisp critic. He critizes the code you type before compiling it.
%edit => Edit a file with EDITOR and evaluate it.
Press CTRL-D or type :q to exit
ciel-user>
It is freely based on sbcli.
You can install and quickload
CIEL like any other Common Lisp library.
To use it in your project, create a package and "use" ciel
in addition
of cl
:
(defpackage yourpackage
(:use :cl :ciel))
You can also use generic-ciel
, based on
generic-cl (warn:
generic-ciel is less tested at the moment).
(defpackage yourpackage
(:use :cl :generic-ciel))
generic-cl allows us to define our +
or equalp
methods for our own
objects (and more).
The advantage of a core image is that it loads instantly, faster than
a (ql:quickload "ciel")
. We'll ask our editor to start SBCL with our
CIEL core image.
We'll configure SLIME for multiple Lisps.
You need to add this to your Emacs init file:
(setq slime-lisp-implementations
`((sbcl ("sbcl" "--dynamic-space-size" "2000")) ;; default. Adapt if needed.
(ciel-sbcl ("sbcl" "--core" "/path/to/ciel/ciel-core" "--eval" "(in-package :ciel-user)"))))
(setq slime-default-lisp 'ciel-sbcl)
and start a Lisp process with M-x slime
.
If you didn't set ciel-sbcl
as the default, then start the Lisp
process with M-- M-x slime
(alt-minus prefix), and choose
ciel-sbcl
. You can start more than one Lisp process from SLIME.
The Lisp process should start instantly, as fast as the default SBCL, you won't wait for the quicklisp libraries to load.
We import, use and document libraries to fill various use cases: generic access to data structures, functional data structures, string manipulation, JSON, database access, web, URI handling, iteration helpers, type checking helpers, syntax extensions, developer utilities, etc.
See the documentation.
To see the full list of dependencies, see the ciel.asd
project
definition or this dependencies list.
We provide arrow macros, easy type declaratons in the function lambda list, macros for exhaustiveness type checking, pattern matching, etc.
See the documentation.
That was your life in CL:
and now:
See src/ciel.lisp
and run (generate-dependencies-page-reference)
.
Special big thanks to @cinerion, @themarcelor and everyone who helped (@agam, @patrixl, @bo-tato…).
- awesome-cl
- the Common Lisp Cookbook
- editor support (Emacs, Vim, VSCode, Atom, Pulsar, Jetbrains, Sublime, Jupyter notebooks…)
- Lisp companies
- blog posts:
- 🎥 Youtube showcases:
- 🎥 my Common Lisp course in videos: from novice to efficient programmer, on the Udemy platform.