File

teal-src/README.md @ 13491:cf367ab36fcc

util.prosodyctl: Use notify socket to wait for Prosody to be ready Previously, prosodyctl only waits for the pidfile to appear, which does not necessarily mean that Prosody is fully ready to receive traffic. By waiting until Prosody says it's ready via the systemd notify socket we know for sure that Prosody is really ready. Notably this should ensure that when running `make integration-test` Prosody is really ready when Scansion starts running tests. Not sure if this timeout handling is optimal.
author Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se>
date Sun, 19 May 2024 13:06:55 +0200
parent 13005:1167aaf1aa1f
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# Teal definitions and sources

This directory contains files written in the
[Teal](https://github.com/teal-language/tl) language, a typed dialect of
Lua.  There are two kinds of files, `.tl` Teal source code and `.d.tl`
type definitions files for modules written in Lua. The later allows
writing type-aware Teal using regular Lua or C code.

## Setup

The Teal compiler can be installed from LuaRocks using:

```bash
luarocks install tl
```

## Checking types

```bash
tl check teal-src/prosody/util/example.tl
```

Some editors and IDEs also have support, see [text editor
support](https://github.com/teal-language/tl#text-editor-support)


## Compiling to Lua

`GNUmakefile` contains a rule for building Lua files from Teal sources.
It also applies [LuaFormat](https://github.com/Koihik/LuaFormatter) to
make the resulting code more readable, albeit this makes the line
numbers no longer match the original Teal source.  Sometimes minor
`luacheck` issues remain, such as types being represented as unused
tables, which can be removed.

```bash
sensible-editor teal-src/prosody/util/example.tl
# Write some code, remember to run tl check
make util/example.lua
sensible-editor util/example.lua
# Apply any minor tweaks that may be needed
```

## Files of note

`module.d.tl`
:	Describes the module environment.