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Alloy is a language for describing structures and a tool for exploring them. It has been used in a wide range of applications from finding holes in security mechanisms to designing telephone switching networks. This repository contains the code for the tool.

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Alloy

Alloy 6 is a self-contained executable, which includes an extended version of the Kodkod model finder and a variety of SAT solvers, as well as the standard Alloy library and a collection of tutorial examples. The same jar file can be incorporated into other applications to use Alloy as an API, and includes the source code. See the release notes for details of new features.

Alloy 6 is a major new release More documentation can be found at: http://alloytools.org/documentation.html.

Requirements

Alloy runs on all operating systems with a recent JVM (Java 6 or later). It is made available as a runnable jar file with both a cross-platform SAT solver (Sat4j and more efficient native SAT solvers (minisat, lingeling/plingeling, glucose).

Note however that starting with macOS High Sierra, it is necessary to install a dedicated JVM to run Alloy on macOS. A .pkg file is provided for that purpose.

TL;DR

Checkout the project and type ./gradlew build. You find the executable JAR in org.alloytools.alloy.dist/target/org.alloytools.alloy.dist.jar after the build has finished.

 $ java -version           # requires 1.8 (and NOT 1.9, gradle does not run on 1.9)
 java version "1.8.0_144"
 Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_144-b01)
 Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.144-b01, mixed model
 $ git clone --recursive https://github.com/AlloyTools/org.alloytools.alloy.git
 $ cd org.alloytools.alloy
 $ ./gradlew build
 $ java -jar org.alloytools.alloy.dist/target/org.alloytools.alloy.dist.jar
 # opens GUI

Note: if you are behind a proxy, the call to gradlew is likely to fail, unless you pass it further options about the http and https proxies (and possibly your login and password on this proxy). There are several ways to pass these options, a simple one is to type (replace the XXXXX's by the adequate settings):

 $ ./gradlew -Dhttps.proxyHost=XXXXX -Dhttp.proxyHost=XXXXX -Dhttp.proxyPort=XXXXX \
      -Dhttps.proxyPort=XXXXX -Dhttp.proxyUser=XXXXX -Dhttp.proxyPassword=XXXXX \
      -Dhttps.proxyUser=XXXXX -Dhttps.proxyPassword=XXXXX \
      build

Building Alloy

The Alloy build is using a bnd workspace setup using a maven layout. This means it can be build with Gradle and the Eclipse IDE for interactive development. Projects are setup to continuously deliver the executable.

Projects

The workspace is divided into a number of projects:

Relevant Project files

This workspace uses bnd. This means that the following have special meaning:

  • cnf/build.xml – Settings shared between projects
  • ./bnd.bnd – Settings for a project. This file will drag in code in a JAR.
  • cnf/central.xml – Dependencies from maven central

Eclipse

The workspace is setup for interactive development in Eclipse with the Bndtools plugin. Download Eclipse and install it. You can then Import existing projects from the Git workspace. You should be asked to install Bndtools from the market place. You can also install Bndtools directly from the Eclipse Market place (see Help/Marketplace and search for Bndtools).

Bndtools will continuously create the final executable. The projects are setup to automatically update when a downstream project changes.

IntelliJ IDEA (Ultimate Edition only)

Ensure you have the Osmorc plugin is enabled, as this plugin is needed for Bndtools support. It should be enabled by default.

  1. Choose Import project from existing Sources by using Ctrl + Shift + a.
  2. Select the root folder (default folder name is org.alloytools.alloy).
  3. Choose "Import project from external model: Bnd/Bndtools" and click "Next"
  4. For "Select Bnd/Bndtools project to import", all projects should be checked by default, click "Next"
  5. For project SDK, Choose "1.8", Click Finish
  6. Select folder org/alloytools/kodkod/nativesat/jni as Resource Folder by selecting module org.alloytools.kodkod.nativesat, selecting folder jni -> right click -> Mark Directory As -> Resource Root.

Note: do not link the Gradle project, as this will prevent you from running Alloy within IDEA.

To run the Alloy GUI within IDEA, navigate to org.alloytools.alloy.application/src/main/java/edu/mit/csail/sdg/alloy4whole/SimpleGUI and run the SimpleGUI class.

Gradle

In the root of this workspace type ./gradlew. This is a script that will download the correct version of gradle and run the build scripts. For settings look at [gradle.properties] and [settings.gradle].

Continuous Integration

The workspace is setup to build after every commit using Travis.

It releases snapshots to https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/org/alloytools/ for every CI build on Travis.

Building the DMG file for OSX systems

Currently only the executable jar in org.alloytools.alloy.dist/target/org.alloytools.alloy.dist.jar is build. In the org.alloytools.alloy.dist project, run ../gradlew macos. This will leave the PKG file in target/bundle.

CONTRIBUTIONS

Please read the CONTRIBUTING to understand how you can contribute.

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Alloy is a language for describing structures and a tool for exploring them. It has been used in a wide range of applications from finding holes in security mechanisms to designing telephone switching networks. This repository contains the code for the tool.

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