# Erl2ex
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Erl2ex is an Erlang to Elixir transpiler, converting well-formed Erlang source to Elixir source with equivalent functionality.
The goal is to produce correct, functioning, but not necessarily perfectly idiomatic, Elixir code. This tool may be used as a starting point to port code from Erlang to Elixir, but manual cleanup will likely be desired.
This software is currently highly experimental and should be considered "pre-alpha". Some capabilities are not yet complete, and there are significant known issues, particularly in the Erlang preprocessor support. See the Caveats section for more information.
## Installing
Erl2ex may be run as a mix task or as a standalone escript.
### Requirements
Erl2ex recognizes Erlang source that is compatible with Erlang 18.x. The generated Elixir source requires Elixir 1.2 or later. The Erl2ex tool itself also requires Elixir 1.2 or later.
### Installing the mix task
To run the mix task, first add Erl2ex as a dependency to your existing Elixir project:
```elixir
def deps do
[ {:erl2ex, ">= 0.0.9", only: :dev} ]
end
```
After adding Erl2ex as a dependency, run `mix deps.get` followed by `mix deps.compile` to install it. An `erl2ex` task will now be available. Run `mix help erl2ex` for help.
### Building the escript
To build a standalone command line application (escript), clone this repository using `git clone https://github.com/dazuma/erl2ex.git`, and then run `mix escript.build` within the cloned project.
## Usage
Erl2ex may be run in three modes:
* It can read an Erlang source file on stdin, and write the generated Elixir source to stdout.
* It can read a specified Erlang source file (.erl) from the file system, and write the generated Elixir source file (.ex) to the same or a different specified directory.
* It can search a directory for all Erlang source files (.erl), and write corresponding Elixir source files (.ex) to the same or a different specified directory.
Various switches may also be provided on the command line, including the include path for searching for Erlang include files (.hrl), and other conversion settings.
For detailed help, use `mix help erl2ex` for the mix task, or `erl2ex --help` for the standalone tool.
## Caveats
This software is still under heavy development, and many capabilities are not yet complete. The following is a partial list of known issues and planned features.
### Known issues
* Returning a remote function reference from a macro is not supported: e.g. `-define(A, m:f).` generates illegal Elixir syntax.
* Function macros cannot return function names; Erlang's parser rejects the syntax `?A()()`. In Erlang, the preprocessor fixes this, but we're not running the Erlang preprocessor directly.
* Record names cannot be macro results; Erlang's parser rejects the syntax `-record(?MODULE, {...}).` and `#?MODULE{...}`. (Examples in https://github.com/soranoba/bbmustache/blob/master/src/bbmustache.erl)
* Fully-qualified macros cannot appear in in typespecs; Erlang's parser won't handle it. (Example in the spec for abstract_module_/2 in https://github.com/DeadZen/goldrush/blob/master/src/glc_code.erl)
* Macro invocations cannot appear in comprehensions; Erlang's parser rejects it. (Example in the definition of the LOWER macro in https://github.com/ninenines/cowlib/blob/master/include/cow_inline.hrl)
* Elixir reserves the function name `__info__` and won't allow its definition. (Failure example in https://github.com/elixir-lang/elixir/blob/master/lib/elixir/src/elixir_bootstrap.erl).
* Erlang allows variables for function name/arity in captures, whereas Elixir apparently doesn't. (Example in the `expand_macro_named/6` function in https://github.com/elixir-lang/elixir/blob/master/lib/elixir/src/elixir_dispatch.erl)
### Incomplete features
* Preserve comments from the Erlang source.
* Generate exdoc comments, probably based on heuristics on the funtion comments.
* Provide an option to elixirize module names (e.g. instead of generating `defmodule :my_erlang_module`, generate `defmodule MyErlangModule`)
* Provide an option to convert variable names from camelCase to snake_case.
* Provide (possibly optional) translation of include files (.hrl) to separate modules rather than copying into the including module, so the declarations can be shared after translation to Elixir.
* Correct the usage of leading underscores in variable names.
* Closer integration with EUnit.
* Dead macro elimination, especially when inlining hrl files.
* Do better at determining when a macro contains content that is allowed in guard clauses. We may be able to do away with the generated `Macro.Env.in_guard?` check.
## Contributing
While we appreciate contributions, please note that this software is currently highly experimental, and the code is evolving very rapidly. It is recommended to contact the author before embarking on a major pull request. More detailed contribution guidelines will be provided when the software stabilizes further.
The source can be found on Github at [https://github.com/dazuma/erl2ex](https://github.com/dazuma/erl2ex)
## License
Copyright 2015 Daniel Azuma
This software is licensed under the 3-clause BSD license.
See the LICENSE.md file for more information.