# Building babashka ## Prerequisites - Install [lein](https://leiningen.org/) for producing uberjars - Download [GraalVM](https://www.graalvm.org/downloads/). Currently we use *java11-20.1.0*. - For Windows, installing Visual Studio 2019 with the "Desktop development with C++" workload is recommended. - Set `$GRAALVM_HOME` to the GraalVM distribution directory. On macOS this can look like: ``` shell export GRAALVM_HOME=~/Downloads/graalvm-ce-java11-20.1.0/Contents/Home ``` On linux: ``` shell export GRAALVM_HOME=~/Downloads/graalvm-ce-java11-20.1.0 ``` On Windows, from the Visual Studio 2019 Developer Command Prompt or `cmd.exe` (not Powershell): ``` set GRAALVM_HOME=%USERPROFILE%\Downloads\graalvm-ce-java11-20.1.0 ``` If you are not running from the Developer Command Prompt, you will need to set additional environment variables using: ``` call "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Community\VC\Auxiliary\Build\vcvars64.bat" ``` ## Clone repository NOTE: the babashka repository contains submodules. You need to use the `--recursive` flag to clone these submodules along with the main repo. ``` shellsession $ git clone https://github.com/borkdude/babashka --recursive ``` To update later on: ``` shellsession $ git submodule update --recursive ``` ## Build Run the `uberjar` and `compile` script: ``` shell $ script/uberjar $ script/compile ``` To configure max heap size you can use: ``` $ export BABASHKA_XMX="-J-Xmx6500m" ``` Note: setting the max heap size to a low value can cause the build to crash or take long to complete. ## Windows Run `script\uberjar.bat` followed by `script\compile.bat`. ## Feature flags Babashka supports the following feature flags: | Name | Description | Default | |--------|----------------------------------------------|----------| | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_CORE_ASYNC` | Includes the [clojure.core.async](https://github.com/clojure/core.async) library | `true` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_CSV` | Includes the [clojure.data.csv](https://github.com/clojure/data.csv) library | `true` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_JAVA_NIO` | Includes commonly used classes from the `java.nio` package | `true` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_JAVA_TIME` | Includes commonly used classes from the `java.time` package | `true` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_TRANSIT` | Includes the [transit-clj](https://github.com/cognitect/transit-clj) library | `true` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_XML` | Includes the [clojure.data.xml](https://github.com/clojure/data.xml) library | `true` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_YAML` | Includes the [clj-yaml](https://github.com/clj-commons/clj-yaml) library | `true` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_JDBC` | Includes the [next.jdbc](https://github.com/seancorfield/next-jdbc) library | `false` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_POSTGRESQL` | Includes the [PostgresSQL](https://jdbc.postgresql.org/) JDBC driver | `false` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_HSQLDB` | Includes the [HSQLDB](http://www.hsqldb.org/) JDBC driver | `false` | | `BABASHKA_FEATURE_DATASCRIPT` | Includes [datascript](https://github.com/tonsky/datascript) | `false` | To disable all of the above features, you can set `BABASHKA_LEAN` to `true`. ### HyperSQL To compile babashka with the `next.jdbc` library and the embedded HyperSQL database: ``` shell $ export BABASHKA_FEATURE_JDBC=true $ export BABASHKA_FEATURE_HSQLDB=true $ script/uberjar $ script/compile ``` Note: there is now a [pod](https://github.com/babashka/babashka-sql-pods) for working with HyperSQL. ### PostgresQL To compile babashka with the `next.jdbc` library and a PostgresQL driver: ``` shell $ export BABASHKA_FEATURE_JDBC=true $ export BABASHKA_FEATURE_POSTGRESQL=true $ script/uberjar $ script/compile ``` Note: there is now a [pod](https://github.com/babashka/babashka-sql-pods) for working with PostgreSQL.