clib

C package manager-ish


Keywords
c, clib, manager, package
License
MIT
Install
brew install clib

Documentation

clib(1)

Build Status

Package manager for the C programming language.

c package manager screenshot

Installation

Expects libcurl to be installed and linkable.

With homebrew:

$ brew install clib

With git:

$ git clone https://github.com/clibs/clib.git /tmp/clib
$ cd /tmp/clib
$ make install

Ubuntu:

# install libcurl
$ sudo apt-get install libcurl4-gnutls-dev -qq
# clone
$ git clone https://github.com/clibs/clib.git /tmp/clib && cd /tmp/clib
# build
$ make
# put on path
$ sudo make install

About

Basically the lazy-man's copy/paste promoting smaller C utilities, also serving as a nice way to discover these sort of libraries. From my experience C libraries are scattered all over the web and discovery is relatively poor. The footprint of these libraries is usually quite large and unfocused. The goal of clibs is to provide stand-alone "micro" C libraries for developers to quickly install without coupling to large frameworks.

You should use clib(1) to fetch these files for you and check them into your repository, the end-user and contributors should not require having clib(1) installed. This allows clib(1) to fit into any new or existing C workflow without friction.

The wiki listing of packages acts as the "registry" and populates the clib-search(1) results.

Usage

  clib <command> [options]

  Options:

    -h, --help     Output this message
    -v, --version  Output version information

  Commands:

    install [name...]  Install one or more packages
    search [query]     Search for packages
    help <cmd>         Display help for cmd

Examples

Install a few dependencies to ./deps:

$ clib install clibs/ms clibs/commander

Install them to ./src instead:

$ clib install clibs/ms clibs/commander -o src

When installing libraries from the clibs org you can omit the name:

$ clib install ms file hash

Install some executables:

$ clib install visionmedia/mon visionmedia/every visionmedia/watch

package.json

Example of a package.json explicitly listing the source:

{
  "name": "term",
  "version": "0.0.1",
  "repo": "clibs/term",
  "description": "Terminal ansi escape goodies",
  "keywords": ["terminal", "term", "tty", "ansi", "escape", "colors", "console"],
  "license": "MIT",
  "src": ["src/term.c", "src/term.h"]
}

Example of a package.json for an executable:

{
  "name": "mon",
  "version": "1.1.1",
  "repo": "visionmedia/mon",
  "description": "Simple process monitoring",
  "keywords": ["process", "monitoring", "monitor", "availability"],
  "license": "MIT",
  "install": "make install"
}

See explanation of package.json for more details.

Contributing

If you're interested in being part of this initiative let me know and I'll add you to the clibs organization so you can create repos here and contribute to existing ones.

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