The Haxe compiler source files are hosted on GitHub under the HaxeFoundation account. The Haxe repository has several submodules, so cloning it should be done with the --recursive
flag like so:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/HaxeFoundation/haxe.git
Alternatively, source .zip archives or tarballs can be obtained from the GitHub Haxe release overview. However, the git submodules are not included, so you will have to manually place the source code of submodules into appropriate sub-folders.
The Haxe compiler is written in OCaml, so you have to set up an OCaml development environment. In addition, we make use of a number of OCaml libraries. We recommend using OPAM, which is an OCaml package manager that can also manage OCaml installations.
The Haxe compiler requires OCaml version 4.02 or higher. Since some of the OCaml libraries Haxe depends on were uploaded in the OPAM 2 format, you should use OPAM 2.x instead of OPAM 1.x.
To install OPAM on Unix (e.g. Mac, Linux) systems, follow the instruction given by OPAM. On Windows, we recommend using the Cygwin/MinGW-based OPAM environment provided by fdopen, choose the 64-bit versions of everything, also make sure to use the OPAM 2 version.
In case you messed up the OPAM installation, you can uninstall OPAM and remove ~/.opam
, which contains the OCaml switches (OCaml compilers and libraries), and start over.
Also note that since OPAM 2 on Linux will try to use bubblewrap, which uses Linux user namespaces, which might not be available on environments like Docker or Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL). In case of encountering related errors, use --disable-sandboxing
during opam init
.
You need to install some native libraries as well as some OCaml libraries.
- Native libraries
- PCRE
- zlib
- Neko (for building haxelib)
- OCaml libraries
- listed in the
opam
file at the repository root
- listed in the
To install the native libraries, use the appropriate system package manager.
- Mac OS X
- Use Homebrew,
brew install zlib pcre2
.
- Use Homebrew,
- Debian / Ubuntu
sudo apt install libpcre2-dev zlib1g-dev libmbedtls-dev
.
- Windows (Cygwin)
- Run the Cygwin setup-x86_64.exe against the Cygwin installation directory. Install
make
,git
,zlib-devel
,libpcre2-devel
,mingw64-x86_64-gcc-core
,mingw64-x86_64-zlib
, andmingw64-x86_64-pcre2
. You may need to select "Not Installed" in the dropdown list to see the packages. Copyzlib1.dll
andlibpcre2-8-0.dll
frompath/to/cygwin/usr/x86_64-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/bin
to the checked out Haxe source directory. - Install Neko by either
- Download the Neko binaries, and add the extracted directory to the beginning of PATH.
- Install the Chocolatey Neko package.
- Run the Cygwin setup-x86_64.exe against the Cygwin installation directory. Install
To install the OCaml libraries, use OPAM as follows:
# pin the haxe package to the checked out Haxe source directory
opam pin add haxe path/to/haxe --kind=path --no-action
# install the haxe package dependencies (as listed in the `opam` file)
opam install haxe --deps-only
In the checked out Haxe source directory,
# On Unix
make
# On Windows (Cygwin)
make -f Makefile.win
Generally, you should remove any existing Haxe installation to avoid conflict. You should at least make sure that the HAXE_STD_PATH
environment variable is not set.
To install the freshly built Haxe,
- On Unix (e.g. Mac and Linux),
sudo make install
- On Windows, add the checked out Haxe source directory to the beginning of PATH.