qlot
qlot | quicklisp-https | |
---|---|---|
9 | 3 | |
384 | 1 | |
- | - | |
9.7 | 0.0 | |
1 day ago | almost 7 years ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
MIT License | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
qlot
- qlot – a project-local library installer for Common Lisp
- Qlot: Common Lisp Library Manager
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Ocicl – An ASDF system distribution and management tool for Common Lisp
Other options are:
- Quicklisp -really slick, libraries in there are curated. (with https support here: https://github.com/rudolfochrist/ql-https and here: https://github.com/snmsts/quicklisp-https.git)
- for project-local dependencies like virtualenv: https://github.com/fukamachi/qlot
- a new, more traditional one: https://www.clpm.dev (CLPM comes as a pre-built binary, supports HTTPS by default, supports installing multiple package versions, supports versioned systems, and more)
For recent Quicklisp upgrades: http://ultralisp.org/
Ocicl is very new (5 days) and tries a new approach, building "on tools from the world of containers".
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SLT Ide - which implementation to target?
I frequently use roswell (and occasionally qlot) to manage my CL distributions and packages. Native support for roswell would be fantastic!
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Project and EDE: A potential way to organize project types?
An easy example would be to look at qlot.asd.
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What features should a Lisp IDE have?
I think definitely some kind of integration with quicklisp and/or qlot would be amazing, so you can open a project and have all the dependencies pulled and ready for your project.
- Is it okay to not specify version of dependencies?
- Qlot v1.0.0 officially released - a project-local library installer for Common Lisp
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How to load a system outside quicklisp?
I prefer to use Qlot.
quicklisp-https
-
Ocicl – An ASDF system distribution and management tool for Common Lisp
Other options are:
- Quicklisp -really slick, libraries in there are curated. (with https support here: https://github.com/rudolfochrist/ql-https and here: https://github.com/snmsts/quicklisp-https.git)
- for project-local dependencies like virtualenv: https://github.com/fukamachi/qlot
- a new, more traditional one: https://www.clpm.dev (CLPM comes as a pre-built binary, supports HTTPS by default, supports installing multiple package versions, supports versioned systems, and more)
For recent Quicklisp upgrades: http://ultralisp.org/
Ocicl is very new (5 days) and tries a new approach, building "on tools from the world of containers".
-
quicklisp security (or total lack of it)
I use this on a system that has curl to safely bootstrap https://github.com/snmsts/quicklisp-https.git which then uses openssl via dexador so that I can drop the curl dependency. A bit of a dance to get everything up and running, but once it is done for a given system you are good to go.
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Why do people use Quicklisp although it is known to be vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks?
https://github.com/snmsts/quicklisp-https/blob/master/quicklisp-https.asd#L7 ?
What are some alternatives?
ultralisp - The software behind a Ultralisp.org Common Lisp repository
quicklisp-client - Quicklisp client.
sbcl - Mirror of Steel Bank Common Lisp (SBCL)'s official repository
BDFProxy - Patch Binaries via MITM: BackdoorFactory + mitmProxy.
slime - The Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs
ql-https - HTTPS support for Quicklisp via curl
quicklisp-projects - Metadata for projects tracked by Quicklisp.
minispec - Common Lisp MiniSpec Documentation
oras - OCI registry client - managing content like artifacts, images, packages
ocicl - An OCI-based ASDF system distribution and management tool for Common Lisp