Installing Logtalkï
This page provides an overview of Logtalk installation requirements and
instructions and a description of the files contained on the Logtalk
distribution. For detailed, up-to-date installation and configuration
instructions, please see the README.md
, INSTALL.md
, and
CUSTOMIZE.md
files distributed with Logtalk. The broad compatibility
of Logtalk, both with Prolog compilers and operating-systems, together
with all the possible user scenarios, means that installation can vary
from very simple by running an installer or a couple of scripts to the
need of patching both Logtalk and Prolog compilers to workaround the
lack of strong Prolog standards or to cope with the requirements of less
common operating-systems.
The preferred installation scenario is to have Logtalk installed in a
system-wide location, thus available for all users, and a local copy of
user-modifiable files on each user home directory (even when you are the
single user of your computer). This scenario allows each user to
independently customize Logtalk and to freely modify the provided
libraries and programming examples. Logtalk installers, installation
shell scripts, and Prolog integration scripts favor this installation
scenario, although alternative installation scenarios are always
possible. The installers set two environment variables, LOGTALKHOME
and LOGTALKUSER
, pointing, respectively, to the Logtalk installation
folder and to the Logtalk user folder.
User applications should preferable be kept outside of the Logtalk user folder created by the installation process, however, as updating Logtalk often results in updating the contents of this folder. If your applications depend on customizations to the distribution files, backup those changes before updating Logtalk.
Hardware and software requirementsï
Computer and operating systemï
Logtalk is compatible with almost any computer/operating-system with a modern, standards compliant, Prolog compiler available.
Prolog compilerï
Logtalk requires a backend Prolog compiler supporting official and de facto standards. Capabilities needed by Logtalk that are not defined in the official ISO Prolog Core standard include:
access to predicate properties
operating-system access predicates
de facto standard predicates not (yet) specified in the official standard
Logtalk needs access to the predicate property built_in
to properly
compile objects and categories that contain Prolog built-in predicates
calls. In addition, some Logtalk built-ins need to know the
dynamic/static status of predicates to ensure correct application. The
ISO standard for Prolog modules defines a predicate_property/2
predicate that is already implemented by most Prolog compilers. Note
that if these capabilities are not built-in the user cannot easily
define them.
For optimal performance, Logtalk requires that the Prolog compiler supports first-argument indexing for both static and dynamic code (most modern compilers support this feature).
Since most Prolog compilers are moving closer to the ISO Prolog standard [ISO95], it is advisable that you try to use the most recent version of your favorite Prolog compiler.
Logtalk installersï
Logtalk installers are available for macOS, Linux, and Microsoft Windows. Depending on the chosen installer, some tasks (e.g. setting environment variables or integrating Logtalk with some Prolog compilers) may need to be performed manually.
Source distributionï
Logtalk sources are available in a tar
archive compressed with
bzip2
, lgt3xxx.tar.bz2
. You may expand the archive by using a
decompressing utility or by typing the following commands at the
command-line:
% tar -jxvf lgt3xxx.tar.bz2
This will create a sub-directory named lgt3xxx
in your current
directory. Almost all files in the Logtalk distribution are text files.
Different operating-systems use different end-of-line codes for text
files. Ensure that your decompressing utility converts the end-of-lines
of all text files to match your operating system.
Distribution overviewï
In the Logtalk installation directory, you will find the following files and directories:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.md
- List of authors, contributors, sponsors, and open source credits
BIBLIOGRAPHY.bib
â Logtalk bibliography in BibTeX format
CITATION.cff
- Information on how to cite Logtalk
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
- Code of conduct for contributors and users posting on support forums
CUSTOMIZE.md
â Logtalk end-user customization instructions
INSTALL.md
â Logtalk installation instructions
LICENSE.txt
â Logtalk user license
NOTICE.txt
â Logtalk copyright notice
QUICK_START.md
â Quick start instructions for those that do not like
to read manuals
README.md
â several useful information
RELEASE_NOTES.md
â release notes for this version
UPGRADING.md
â instructions on how to upgrade your programs to the
current Logtalk version
VERSION.txt
â file containing the current Logtalk version number
(used for compatibility checking when upgrading Logtalk)
loader-sample.lgt
â sample loader file for user applications
settings-sample.lgt
â sample file for user-defined Logtalk settings
tester-sample.lgt
â sample file for helping to automate running user
application unit tests
adapters
NOTES.md
â notes on the provided adapter filestemplate.pl
â template adapter file...
â specific adapter filescoding
NOTES.md
â notes on syntax highlighter and text editor support files providing syntax coloring for publishing and editing Logtalk source code...
â syntax coloring support filescontributions
NOTES.md
â notes on the user-contributed code...
â user-contributed code filescore
NOTES.md
â notes on the current status of the compiler and runtime...
â core source filesdocs
NOTES.md
â notes on the provided documentation for core, library, tools, and contributions entitiesindex.html
â root document for all entities documentation...
â other entity documentation filesexamples
NOTES.md
â short description of the provided examplesbricks
NOTES.md
â example description and other notesSCRIPT.txt
â step by step example tutorialloader.lgt
â loader utility file for the example objects...
â bricks example source files
...
â other examplesintegration
NOTES.md
â notes on scripts for Logtalk integration with Prolog compilers...
â Prolog integration scriptslibrary
NOTES.md
â short description of the library contentsall_loader.lgt
â loader utility file for all library entities...
â library source filesman
...
â POSIX man pages for the shell scriptsmanuals
NOTES.md
â notes on the provided documentationbibliography.html
â bibliographyglossary.html
â glossaryindex.html
â root document for all documentation...
â other documentation filespaths
NOTES.md
â description on how to setup library and examples pathspaths.pl
â default library and example pathsports
NOTES.md
â description of included ports of third-party software...
â portsscratch
NOTES.md
â notes on the scratch directoryscripts
NOTES.md
â notes on scripts for Logtalk user setup, packaging, and installation...
â packaging, installation, and setup scriptstests
NOTES.md
â notes on the current status of the unit tests...
â unit tests for built-in featurestools
NOTES.md
â notes on the provided programming tools...
â programming tools
Adapter filesï
Adapter files provide the glue code between the Logtalk compiler/runtime and a Prolog compiler. Each adapter file contains two sets of predicates: ISO Prolog standard predicates and directives not built-in in the target Prolog compiler and Logtalk specific predicates.
Logtalk already includes ready to use adapter files for most academic
and commercial Prolog compilers. If an adapter file is not available for
the compiler that you intend to use, then you need to build a new one,
starting from the included template.pl
file. Start by making a copy
of the template file. Carefully check (or complete if needed) each
listed definition. If your Prolog compiler conforms to the ISO standard,
this task should only take you a few minutes. In most cases, you can
borrow code from the predefined adapter files. If you are unsure
that your Prolog compiler provides all the ISO predicates needed by
Logtalk, try to run the system by setting the unknown predicate error
handler to report as an error any call to a missing predicate. Better
yet, switch to a modern, ISO compliant, Prolog compiler. If you send me
your adapter file, with a reference to the target Prolog compiler, maybe
I can include it in the next release of Logtalk.
The adapter files specify default values for most of the Logtalk compiler flags. They also specify values for read-only flags that are used to describe Prolog backend specific features.
Compiler and runtimeï
The core
sub-directory contains the Prolog and Logtalk source files that
implement the Logtalk compiler and the Logtalk runtime. The compiler and
the runtime may be split in two (or more) separate files or combined in
a single file, depending on the Logtalk release that you are installing.
Libraryï
The Logtalk distribution includes a standard library of useful objects,
categories, and protocols. Read the corresponding NOTES.md
file for
details about the library contents.
Examplesï
The Logtalk distribution includes a large number of programing examples.
The sources of each one of these examples can be found included in a
subdirectory with the same name, inside the directory examples. The
majority of these examples include tests and a file named SCRIPT.txt
with sample calls. Some examples may depend on other examples and
library objects to work properly. Read the corresponding NOTES.md
file for details before running an example.
Logtalk source filesï
Logtalk source files are text files containing one or more entity
definitions (objects, categories, or protocols). The Logtalk source
files may also contain plain Prolog code. The extension .lgt
is
normally used. Logtalk compiles these files to plain Prolog by appending
to the file name a suffix derived from the extension and by replacing
the .lgt
extension with .pl
(.pl
is the default Prolog
extension; if your Prolog compiler expects the Prolog source filenames
to end with a specific, different extension, you can set it in the
corresponding adapter file).