go-mruby provides mruby bindings for Go. This allows Go applications to run a lightweight embedded Ruby VM. Using the mruby library, Go applications can call Ruby code, and Ruby code can call Go code (that is properly exposed)!
At the time of writing, this is the most comprehensive mruby library for Go by far. It is also the only mruby library for Go that enables exposing Go functions to Ruby as well as being able to generically convert complex Ruby types into Go types. Our goal is to implement all of the mruby API.
Project Status: The major portions of the mruby API are implemented, but the mruby API is huge. If there is something that is missing, please issue a pull request and I'd be happy to add it! We're also not yet ready to promise API backwards compatibility on a Go-level, but we're getting there.
Installation is a little trickier than a standard Go library, but not
by much. You can't simply go get
this library, unfortunately. This is
because mruby must first be built. We
don't ship a pre-built version of mruby because the build step of mruby
is important in customizing what aspects of the standard library you want
available, as well as any other extensions.
To build mruby, we've made it very easy. You will need the following packages available on your host operating system:
- bison
- flex
- ruby 2.x
Then just type:
$ make
This will download mruby, compile it, and run the tests for go-mruby, verifying that your build is functional. By default, go-mruby will download and build a default version of mruby, but this is customizable.
Compiling/installing the go-mruby library should work on Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows. On Windows, msys is the only supported build toolchain (same as Go itself).
Due to this linking, it is strongly recommended that you vendor this repository and bake our build system into your process.
You can customize the mruby compilation by setting a couple environmental
variables prior to calling make
:
-
MRUBY_COMMIT
is the git ref that will be checked out for mruby. This defaults to to a recently tagged version. Many versions before 1.2.0 do not work with go-mruby. It is recommend you explicitly set this to a ref that works for you to avoid any changes in this library later. -
MRUBY_CONFIG
is the path to abuild_config.rb
file used to configure how mruby is built. If this is not set, go-mruby will use the default build config that comes with mruby. You can learn more about configuring the mruby build here.
go-mruby exposes the mruby API in a way that is idiomatic Go, so that it is comfortable to use by a standard Go programmer without having intimate knowledge of how mruby works.
For usage examples and documentation, please see the go-mruby GoDoc, which we keep up to date and full of examples.
For a quick taste of what using go-mruby looks like, though, we provide an example below:
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/mitchellh/go-mruby"
)
func main() {
mrb := mruby.NewMrb()
defer mrb.Close()
// Our custom function we'll expose to Ruby. The first return
// value is what to return from the func and the second is an
// exception to raise (if any).
addFunc := func(m *mruby.Mrb, self *mruby.MrbValue) (mruby.Value, mruby.Value) {
args := m.GetArgs()
return mruby.Int(args[0].Fixnum() + args[1].Fixnum()), nil
}
// Lets define a custom class and a class method we can call.
class := mrb.DefineClass("Example", nil)
class.DefineClassMethod("add", addFunc, mruby.ArgsReq(2))
// Let's call it and inspect the result
result, err := mrb.LoadString(`Example.add(12, 30)`)
if err != nil {
panic(err.Error())
}
// This will output "Result: 42"
fmt.Printf("Result: %s\n", result.String())
}