Packager, pkg management and building.
|
|
||
|---|---|---|
| .idea | ||
| bootpkg | ||
| docs | ||
| manifest | ||
| pkgfile | ||
| pkgr | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .woodpecker.yml | ||
| build | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| package.example.toml | ||
| pkg.py | ||
| README.md | ||
Packager
"A package manager and builder but like rust."
-- Gandhi (2050)
Almost to a point you can use it :)
Packager is a simple yet powerful package manager
Install a package
pkgr supports fetching packages with a:
- path
- url (http/https)
- package locator
# example with path
pkgr install ./foxy/snek.pkg
# example with url
pkgr install https://example.com/doggo.pkg
# example with package locator
pkgr install foo:stable,bar
Composing a package
Right now, pkgr does not have a compose/package command. (it's in the works dw!)
You can create a package with pkg.py!
# Usage: pkg.py <package_toml_path> <output_path> [<directories_to_include> ...]
# example:
python pkg.py manifest.toml example.pkg root/ source/ scripts/
# this will create a package with an archive that look like this:
# [header+manifest]
# ...
# [archive:
# root/
# source/
# scripts/
# ]
It's not perfect, but it'll get the job done :)