Automatically compile Emacs Lisp libraries
This package provides two minor modes which automatically recompile Emacs Lisp source files. Together these modes guarantee that Emacs never loads outdated byte code files.
auto-compile-on-save-mode
re-compiles source files when they are
being saved and auto-compile-on-load-mode
does so before they are
being loaded (by advising load
and require
). Both modes only
ever re-compile a source file when the respective byte code file
already exists but is outdated. Otherwise they do not compile
the source file.
Even when using auto-compile-on-save-mode
it can happen that some
source file is newer than the respective byte code file, which is a
problem because by default Emacs loads the byte code file even when
the respective source file has been modified more recently.
Starting with Emacs version 24.4, setting load-prefer-newer
to t
prevents outdated byte code files from being loaded. However this
does not cause re-compilation of the source file, to actually do
that auto-compile-on-load-mode
is still required.
Setup
To reduce the risk of loading outdated byte code files, you should
set load-prefer-newer
and enable auto-compile-on-load-mode
as
early as possible. Then also enable auto-compile-on-save-mode
.
You should also consider not byte-compiling your personal init
file, or setting load-prefer-newer
in a system-wide init file.
If you use package.el
then use something like this:
;;; init.el --- user init file
(setq load-prefer-newer t)
(package-initialize)
(require 'auto-compile)
(auto-compile-on-load-mode)
(auto-compile-on-save-mode)
otherwise:
;;; init.el --- user init file
(setq load-prefer-newer t)
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/auto-compile")
(require 'auto-compile)
(auto-compile-on-load-mode)
(auto-compile-on-save-mode)
You might want to set the file-local value of no-byte-compile
to
t
, e.g. by adding -*- no-byte-compile: t -*-
at the end of the
very first line. That way all user files benefit from the
protection offered by load-prefer-newer
and the modes that are
defined here, otherwise ~~/.emacs.d/init.el~ is the unfortunate
exception.
If you are using Emacs 27 or later, then these settings should be
placed in early-init.el
, which should never be compiled:
;;; early-init.el --- early bird -*- no-byte-compile: t -*-
(setq load-prefer-newer t)
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/auto-compile")
(require 'auto-compile)
(auto-compile-on-load-mode)
(auto-compile-on-save-mode)
;;; early-init.el ends here
Usage
Take note of the compile warnings and fix them.
To permanently or temporarily toggle automatic compilation of some
source file use the command toggle-auto-compile
. Since the modes
only ever update byte code files, toggling automatic compilation
is done simply by either creating the byte code file or by removing
it. toggle-auto-compile
can also toggle automatic compilation of
multiple files at once; see its doc-string for more information.
Customization
Constantly having the *Compile-Log*
buffer pop up when a file is
being saved can quickly become annoying. Obviously the first thing
you should do to about that is to actually fix outstanding issues.
Once you have done that you might also want to keep that buffer from being automatically displayed and instead only show the number of compile warnings for the current file in the mode-line.
(setq auto-compile-display-buffer nil)
(setq auto-compile-mode-line-counter t)
To display the buffer use M-x auto-compile-display-log
or click
on the counter in the mode-line.
Using auto-compile-inhibit-compile-hook
it is possible to inhibit
automatic compilation under certain circumstances; e.g. when HEAD
is detached inside a Git repository (useful during rebase sessions).