Most of the articles and books about Erlang I could find focus on creating long running server-like applications leaving the process of command line tools
Regardless if you are starting a long-running daemon-like application in Erlang, or a CLI command, you always need the following:
erts
application - the VM and kernel in a particular versionThen in either case the CLI entry point has to start the Erlang VM and execute the code that it supposed to execute in a given situation. Then it will either exit or continue running - the later for a long-running application.
The CLI entry point can be anything that starts an Erlang VM, e.g. an escript
script, sh
, bash
, etc. The obvious advantage of escript
over generic shell is that escript
is already being executed in the context of an Erlang VM, so no need to handle starting/stopping the VM.
You can start Erlang VM in two ways:
In the first case you don't supply erts
nor any OTP application with your package, you only make a particular Erlang version a dependency for your application. In the second case you supply erts
and all required OTP applications along with your application's dependencies in your package.
In the second case you also need to handle setting the code root properly when starting the VM. But this is quite easy, see the erl
script that Erlang uses to start the system-wide VM:
# location: /usr/local/lib/erlang/bin/erl
ROOTDIR="/usr/local/lib/erlang"
BINDIR=$ROOTDIR/erts-7.2.1/bin
EMU=beam
PROGNAME=`echo $0 | sed 's/.*\///'`
export EMU
export ROOTDIR
export BINDIR
export PROGNAME
exec "$BINDIR/erlexec" ${1+"$@"}
This can be handled by scripts, for example the node_package tool that Basho uses to package their Riak database for all major operating systems. I am maintaining my own fork of it which I am using with my own build tool called builderl. I just say that so you know that if I managed to customize it you will well be able to do that as well :)
Once the Erlang VM is started, your application should be able to load and start any application, either supplied with Erlang or with your application (and that includes the mylib
library that you mentioned). Here are some examples how this could be achieved:
escript
example
See this builderl.esh example how I handle loading other Erlang applications from builderl
. That escript
script assumes that the Erlang installation is relative to the folder from which it's executed. When it's a part of another application, like for example humbundee, the load_builderl.hrl include file compiles and loads bld_load
, which in turn loads all remaining modules with bld_load:boot/3. Notice how I can use standard OTP applications without specifying where they are - builderl
is being executed by escript
and so all the applications are loaded from where they were installed (/usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/
on my system). If libraries used by your application, e.g. mylib
, are installed somewhere else, all you need to do is add that location to the Erlang path, e.g. with code:add_path. Erlang will automatically load modules used in the code from folders added to the code path list.
embedded Erlang
However, the same would hold if the application was a proper OTP release installed independently from the system-wide Erlang installation. That's because in that case the script is executed by escript
belonging to that embedded Erlang release rather than the system-wide version (even if it's installed). So it knows the location of all applications belonging to that release (including your applications). For example riak
does exactly that - in their package they supply an embedded Erlang release that contains its own erts
and all dependent Erlang applications. That way riak
can be started without Erlang being even installed on the host operating system. This is an excerpt from a riak
package on FreeBSD:
% tar -tf riak2-2.1.1_1.txz
/usr/local/sbin/riak
/usr/local/lib/riak/releases/start_erl.data
/usr/local/lib/riak/releases/2.1.0/riak.rel
/usr/local/lib/riak/releases/RELEASES
/usr/local/lib/riak/erts-5.10.3/bin/erl
/usr/local/lib/riak/erts-5.10.3/bin/beam
/usr/local/lib/riak/erts-5.10.3/bin/erlc
/usr/local/lib/riak/lib/stdlib-1.19.3/ebin/re.beam
/usr/local/lib/riak/lib/ssl-5.3.1/ebin/tls_v1.beam
/usr/local/lib/riak/lib/crypto-3.1/ebin/crypto.beam
/usr/local/lib/riak/lib/inets-5.9.6/ebin/inets.beam
/usr/local/lib/riak/lib/bitcask-1.7.0/ebin/bitcask.app
/usr/local/lib/riak/lib/bitcask-1.7.0/ebin/bitcask.beam
(...)
sh
/bash
This doesn't differ much in principle from the above apart from having to explicitly call the function that you want to execute when starting the Erlang VM (the entry point or the main
function as you called it).
Consider this script that builderl
generates to start an Erlang application just to execute a specified task (generate the RELEASES
file), after which the node shuts down:
#!/bin/sh
START_ERL=`cat releases/start_erl.data`
APP_VSN=${START_ERL#* }
run_erl -daemon ../hbd/shell/ ../hbd/log "exec erl ../hbd releases releases/start_erl.data -config releases/$APP_VSN/hbd.config -args_file ../hbd/etc/vm.args -boot releases/$APP_VSN/humbundee -noshell -noinput -eval \"{ok, Cwd} = file:get_cwd(), release_handler:create_RELEASES(Cwd, \\\"releases\\\", \\\"releases/$APP_VSN/humbundee.rel\\\", []), init:stop()\""
This is a similar script but doesn't start any specific code or application. Instead, it starts a proper OTP release, so which applications are started and in what order depends on the release (specified by the -boot
option).
#!/bin/sh
START_ERL=`cat releases/start_erl.data`
APP_VSN=${START_ERL#* }
run_erl -daemon ../hbd/shell/ ../hbd/log "exec erl ../hbd releases releases/start_erl.data -config releases/$APP_VSN/hbd.config -args_file ../hbd/etc/vm.args -boot releases/$APP_VSN/humbundee"
In the vm.args
file you can provide additional paths to your applications if required, e.g.:
-pa lib/humbundee/ebin lib/yolf/ebin deps/goldrush/ebin deps/lager/ebin deps/yajler/ebin
In this example these are relative, but could be absolute if your application is installed into a standard well-known location. Also, this would be only required if you are using the system-wide Erlang installation and need to add the additional paths to locate your Erlang applications, or if your Erlang applications are located in non-standard location (e.g. not in lib
folder, as Erlang OTP requires). In a proper embedded Erlang release, where the applications are located in the code root/lib folder, Erlang is able to load those applications without specifying any additional paths.
Summing up and other considerations
The deployment of Erlang applications doesn't differ much from other projects written in scripting languages, e.g. ruby or python projects. All those projects have to deal with similar issues and I believe each operating system's package management deals with them one way or another:
Get to know how your operating system deals with packaging projects that have run-time dependencies.
See how other Erlang applications are packaged for your operating system, there are plenty of them that are usually distributed by all major systems: RabbitMQ, Ejabberd, Riak among others. Just download the package and unpack it to a folder, then you will see where all the files are placed.
EDIT - reference the requirements
Coming back to your requirements, you have the following choices:
Install Erlang as an OTP release system-wide, as an embedded Erlang, or as a bag with applications in some random folders (sorry Rebar)
You can have multiple entry points in the form of sh
or escript
scripts executing a selection of applications from the installed release. Both will work as long as you configured the code root and paths to those applications correctly (as outlined above).
Then each of your applications: myweb
and mycli
, would need to be executed in its own new context, e.g. start a new VM instance and execute the required application (from the same Erlang release). In case of myweb
the entry point can be a sh
scripts that starts a new node according to the release (similar to Riak). In case of mycli
the entry point can be an escript
, which finishes executing once the task is completed.
But it's entirely possible to create a short-running task that exits the VM even if it's started from sh
- see the example above. In that case mycli
would require separate release files - the script
and boot
to boot the VM. And of course it's also possible to start a long-running Erlang VM from escript
.
I provided an example project that uses all these methods at once, humbundee. Once it's compiled it provides three access points:
cmd
release.humbundee
release.builder.esh
escript
.The first one is used to start the node for installation and then shut it down. The second is used to start a long-running Erlang application. The third is a build tool to install/configure the node. This is how the project looks like once the release has been created:
$:~/work/humbundee/tmp/rel % ls | tr " " "\n"
bin
erts-7.3
etc
lib
releases
$:~/work/humbundee/tmp/rel % ls bin | tr " " "\n"
builderl.esh
cmd.boot
humbundee.boot
epmd
erl
escript
run_erl
to_erl
(...)
$:~/work/humbundee/tmp/rel % ls lib | tr " " "\n"
builderl-0.2.7
compiler-6.0.3
deploy-0.0.1
goldrush-0.1.7
humbundee-0.0.1
kernel-4.2
lager-3.0.1
mnesia-4.13.3
sasl-2.7
stdlib-2.8
syntax_tools-1.7
yajler-0.0.1
yolf-0.1.1
$:~/work/humbundee/tmp/rel % ls releases/hbd-0.0.1 | tr " " "\n"
builderl.config
cmd.boot
cmd.rel
cmd.script
humbundee.boot
humbundee.rel
humbundee.script
sys.config.src
The cmd
entry point will use application deploy-0.0.1
and builderl-0.2.7
as well as release files cmd.boot
, cmd.script
, and some OTP applications. The standard humbundee
entry point will use all applications apart from builderl
and deploy
. Then the builderl.esh
escript will use application deploy-0.0.1
and builderl-0.2.7
. All from the same embedded Erlang OTP installation.