vibe.d is a high-performance asynchronous I/O, concurrency and web application toolkit written in D. It already contains many supplemental features such as database support to be able to offer a complete development environment. For more specialized needs, there are also many compatible DUB packages available.
Visit the website at https://vibed.org/ for more information and documentation.
#!/usr/bin/env dub
/+ dub.sdl:
name "hello_vibed"
dependency "vibe-d" version="~>0.8.0"
+/
import vibe.vibe;
void main()
{
listenHTTP("127.0.0.1:8080", (req, res) {
res.writeBody("Hello Vibe.d: " ~ req.path);
});
runApplication();
}
Download this file as hello.d
and run it with DUB:
> dub hello.d
(or chmod +x
and execute it: ./hello.d
)
Alternatively, you can quickstart with examples directly on .
Vibe.d aims to support at least the 5 latest minor releases of D. At the moment, the following compilers are supported and tested:
- DMD 2.087.1
- DMD 2.086.1
- DMD 2.085.0
- DMD 2.084.0
- DMD 2.077.1
- LDC 1.17.0 (FE: 2.087.1)
- LDC 1.16.0 (FE: 2.086.1)
- LDC 1.15.0 (FE: 2.085.1)
- LDC 1.14.0 (FE: 2.084.1)
- LDC 1.7.0 (FE: 2.077.1)
Up to 0.8.6:
- DMD 2.076.1
- LDC 1.6.0 (FE: 2.076.1)
Up to 0.8.4:
- DMD 2.075.1
- DMD 2.074.1
- LDC 1.5.0 (FE: 2.075.1)
- LDC 1.4.0 (FE: 2.074.1)
Up to 0.8.3:
- DMD 2.073.2
- LDC 1.3.0 (FE: 2.073.2)
Up to 0.8.2:
- DMD 2.072.2
- LDC 1.2.0 (FE: 2.072.2)
Up to 0.8.1:
- DMD 2.071.2
- LDC 1.1.1 (FE: 2.071.2)
Instead of explicitly installing vibe.d, it is recommended to use DUB for building vibe.d based applications. Once DUB is installed, you can create and run a new project using the following shell commands:
dub init <name> -t vibe.d
cd <name>
dub
Similarly, you can run an example by invoking dub
from any of the
example project directories.
Note that on non-Windows operating systems, you also need to have libevent and OpenSSL installed - and of course a D compiler. See below for instructions.
- Just install DMD using the installer on https://dlang.org/download.html
- And get the latest DUB release
There are currently no 64-bit Windows binaries of libevent included, so you'll either need to build those yourself, or you can switch to the "win32" event driver by inserting "subConfigurations": {"vibe-d": "win32"}
into the dub.json file of your project.
If you don't have brew installed, install it according to their install instructions and install libevent.
ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
brew install libevent
You can then also install DUB using brew:
brew install dub
(Note: Install brew only if you do not have macports, as they will conflict)
Install DMD using the installer on https://dlang.org/download.html.
Optionally, run ./setup-mac.sh
to create a user/group pair for privilege lowering.
Install vibe.d's dependencies (*)
sudo apt-get install libevent-dev libssl-dev
On 32-bit linux: Install DMD-i386
sudo apt-get install g++ gcc-multilib xdg-utils
wget "http://downloads.dlang.org/releases/2.x/2.087.1/dmd_2.087.1-0_i386.deb"
sudo dpkg -i dmd_2.087.1-0_i386.deb
On 64-bit linux: Install DMD-amd64
sudo apt-get install g++ gcc-multilib xdg-utils
wget "http://downloads.dlang.org/releases/2.x/2.087.1/dmd_2.087.1-0_amd64.deb"
sudo dpkg -i dmd_2.087.1-0_amd64.deb
Optionally, run ./setup-linux.sh
to create a user/group pair for privilege lowering.
(*) Note that Debian 6 (Squeeze) and older requires manual installation (see below).
You need to have the following dependencies installed:
If using the (now deprecated) "libevent" configuration, libevent is also required:
- libevent 2.0.x (*)
Optionally, run ./setup-linux.sh
to create a user/group pair for privilege lowering.
(*) Note that some Linux distributions such as Debian Squeeze or CentOS 6 may only ship libevent 1.4, in this case you will have to manually compile the latest 2.0.x version:
wget https://github.com/downloads/libevent/libevent/libevent-2.0.21-stable.tar.gz
tar -xf libevent-2.0.21-stable.tar.gz
cd libevent-2.0.21-stable
./configure
make
make install
ldconfig
Install the DMD compiler and vibe.d's dependencies using portupgrade or a similar mechanism:
sudo portupgrade -PN devel/libevent2 devel/pkgconf
Optionally, run ./setup-freebsd.sh
to create a user/group pair for privilege lowering.
By default, vibe.d is built against OpenSSL 1.0.x. On systems that use the newer
1.1.x branch, this can be overridden on the DUB command line using
--override-config vibe-d:tls/openssl-1.1
. Alternatively, the same can be done
using a sub configuration directive in the package recipe:
SDL syntax:
dependency "vibe-d:tls" version="~>0.8.2"
subConfiguration "vibe-d:tls" "openssl-1.1"
JSON syntax:
{
...
"dependencies": {
...
"vibe-d:tls": "*"
},
"subConfigurations": {
...
"vibe-d:tls": "openssl-1.1"
}
}
For older systems there is also an "openssl-0.9" configuration that can be used in analogy to the above to build against the OpenSSL 0.9.8 branch.
Finally, there is a "botan" configuration for using the D port of the Botan library.