ocamlmktop(1)

Building custom toplevel systems

Section 1 ocaml bookworm source

Description

OCAMLMKTOP

NAME

ocamlmktop - Building custom toplevel systems

SYNOPSIS

ocamlmktop [ -v|-version|-vnum ] [ -cclib libname ] [ -ccopt option ] [ -custom [ -o exec-file ] [ -I lib-dir ] filename ...

DESCRIPTION

The ocamlmktop(1) command builds OCaml toplevels that contain user code preloaded at start-up. The ocamlmktop(1) command takes as argument a set of x.cmo and x.cma files, and links them with the object files that implement the OCaml toplevel. If the -custom flag is given, C object files and libraries (.o and .a files) can also be given on the command line and are linked in the resulting toplevel.

OPTIONS

The following command-line options are recognized by ocamlmktop(1).

-v

Print the version string of the compiler and exit.

-vnum or -version

Print the version number of the compiler in short form and exit.

-cclib -llibname

Pass the -llibname option to the C linker when linking in ‘‘custom runtime’’ mode (see the corresponding option for ocamlc(1).

-ccopt

Pass the given option to the C compiler and linker, when linking in ‘‘custom runtime’’ mode. See the corresponding option for ocamlc(1).

-custom

Link in ‘‘custom runtime’’ mode. See the corresponding option for ocamlc(1).

-I directory

Add the given directory to the list of directories searched for compiled interface files (.cmo and .cma).

-o exec-file

Specify the name of the toplevel file produced by the linker. The default is is a.out.

SEE ALSO

ocamlc(1).