"refactor" readme
This commit is contained in:
parent
6590351e48
commit
7a2db8166b
1 changed files with 22 additions and 20 deletions
42
README.md
42
README.md
|
@ -3,18 +3,18 @@
|
|||
A featureful extension runtime for Lua 5.4, using POSIX APIs.
|
||||
|
||||
Callisto is an extension to Lua that adds commonly-needed functions
|
||||
and features to the language, and includes a file library to manage
|
||||
and manipulate files, a process library to find active processes and
|
||||
manipulate signals, a socket and networking library using LuaSocket,
|
||||
and features to the language, and includes a file system library to
|
||||
manage and manipulate files, a process library to find active processes
|
||||
and manipulate signals, a socket and networking library using LuaSocket,
|
||||
and a JSON manipulation library *among many more*.
|
||||
|
||||
It is a standalone runtime designed for people using Lua as a
|
||||
It is a standalone program designed for people using Lua as a
|
||||
general scripting language, instead of using it embedded into
|
||||
another application.
|
||||
|
||||
Before I made Callisto, I usually had to rely on three libraries:
|
||||
luaposix for basic file manipulation and other routines, lua-cjson
|
||||
for JSON parsing support and LuaSocket for networking.
|
||||
luaposix for basic file system manipulation and other routines,
|
||||
lua-cjson for JSON parsing support and LuaSocket for networking.
|
||||
|
||||
luaposix provides most of the necessary functions, but is
|
||||
generally aimed towards people who already know how to use
|
||||
|
@ -24,10 +24,13 @@ First and foremost, Callisto tries to be:
|
|||
- an all-in-one zero-dependencies library for Lua that includes
|
||||
most features people would need, out of the box
|
||||
- a library that works and integrates well with Lua and its
|
||||
standard library, and is easy to use
|
||||
standard library, and is easy to use for those who have no
|
||||
experience with C
|
||||
|
||||
Callisto only works on POSIX-compliant operating systems such as
|
||||
Linux and the BSDs. There is no plan for a Windows port.
|
||||
Callisto relies on APIs specified in the POSIX specification;
|
||||
therefore it does not support operating systems that do not
|
||||
implement these APIs (like Microsoft Windows), only ones that
|
||||
do (like Linux and the BSDs).
|
||||
|
||||
## Dependencies
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -35,7 +38,8 @@ To build Callisto, you'll need nothing but a C compiler.
|
|||
The default C compiler is *cc* which is usually a symbolic link
|
||||
to your system's default C compiler. This should be gcc on Linux,
|
||||
and clang on most of the BSDs. If *cc* doesn't exist on your system,
|
||||
change the `CC` variable in the Makefile to your desired C compiler.
|
||||
override it by adding `CC=cc` to `make`'s command like (replace `cc` with
|
||||
the name of or the path to your C compiler)
|
||||
|
||||
**Callisto has zero runtime dependencies**, unless you built it with
|
||||
support for GNU libreadline. Lua 5.4 is statically linked in.
|
||||
|
@ -47,20 +51,18 @@ not hard to compile.
|
|||
|
||||
First, get the source code using one of the tarballs found in
|
||||
the [Releases](https://github.com/jtbx/callisto/releases) page.
|
||||
Untar it then run `make` to compile Callisto. The compiled
|
||||
executable will be named `csto`.
|
||||
Untar it then run `make` to compile Callisto.
|
||||
|
||||
To install `csto` (the Callisto standalone executable) and
|
||||
`libcallisto.so` (the Callisto shared library), run `make install`
|
||||
as the root user in the source code directory.
|
||||
Run `make install`as the root user in the source code directory
|
||||
to install Callisto and its shared library.
|
||||
|
||||
## Usage
|
||||
|
||||
The standalone Callisto interpreter is called `csto`. Running it
|
||||
will start a REPL so you can execute chunks of code interactively.
|
||||
|
||||
csto works like the standalone Lua 5.4 interpreter. To run a file,
|
||||
run `csto <file>` where *<file>* is the name of the file you want
|
||||
to run. Alternatively, you can put `#!/usr/bin/env csto` at the top
|
||||
of your script, run `chmod +x` on it, and then you can run the script
|
||||
as if it was a standalone executable, for example `./yourscript.lua`.
|
||||
csto works just like the standalone Lua 5.4 interpreter. To execute
|
||||
a file, run `csto <file>` where *\<file\>* is the name of the file
|
||||
you want to run. Alternatively, you can put `#!/usr/bin/env csto` at
|
||||
the top of your script, run `chmod +x` on it, and then you can run the
|
||||
script as if it was a standalone executable, for example `./yourscript.lua`.
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Add table
Add a link
Reference in a new issue