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Table of Contents

Online editor

The easiest way to try out F* quickly is directly in your browser by using either the online F* editor that's part of the F* tutorial or our new even cooler online editor (experimental).

OPAM package

If the OCaml package manager (OPAM) is present on your platform, you can install the latest development version of F* (master branch) and required dependencies (except for Z3) using the following commands:

    $ opam pin add fstar --dev-repo
    $ opam install fstar

Note: To install OCaml and OPAM on your platform please read the Working OCaml setup section further below, steps 0 to 3.

Binary releases

Every now and then we release F* binaries on GitHub (for Windows, Mac, and Linux) and for Windows and Linux we also provide experimental automatic weekly builds. This is the easiest way to get F* quickly running on your machine, but if the build you use is old you might be missing out on new features and bug fixes. Please do not report bugs in old releases until making sure they still exist in the master branch (see Building F* from sources section below) or at least in the latest automatic weekly builds.

Testing a binary package

Test that the binary is good by expanding the archive and running the following commands. (On Windows this requires Cygwin and make)

  1. Add fstar.exe and z3 to your PATH, either permanently or temporarily, for instance by running this:

     $ export PATH=/path/to/z3/bin:/path/to/fstar/bin:$PATH
     $ fstar.exe --version
     F* 0.9.7.0~dev
     platform=Linux_x86_64
     compiler=OCaml 4.05.0
     date=yyyy-mm-ddThh:nn:ss+02:00
     commit=xxxxxxxx
     $ z3 --version
     Z3 version 4.8.5 - 64 bit
    

    Note: if you are using the binary package and extracted it to, say, the fstar directory, then both fstar.exe and z3 are in the fstar/bin directory.

  2. Run the micro benchmarks:

     $ make -C tests/micro-benchmarks
    
  3. If you have OCaml installed and intend to extract and compile OCaml code against the F* library, please build it with:

     $ make -C ulib install-fstarlib
    

    Then the following command should print "Hello F*!"

     $ make -C examples/hello hello
    

    See here for further documentation on extracting and executing F* code.

    Note: to have a working OCaml install, please first read the Working OCaml setup section further below, especially steps 0 to 3 to first install OCaml on your OS; then use the following command to install the packages required to compile OCaml programs extracted from F* code:

     $ opam install ocamlfind batteries stdint zarith ppx_deriving ppx_deriving_yojson ocaml-migrate-parsetree process
    
  4. You can verify the F* library and all the examples, keeping in mind that this might take a long time.

     $ make -j6 -C ulib
     $ echo $?    # non-zero means build failed! scroll up for error message!
     $ make -j6 -C examples
     $ echo $?    # non-zero means build failed! scroll up for error message!
    

    Note: Some of the examples require having OCaml installed (as for step 3 above).

    Note: Some of the examples require our OCaml support library (as for step 3 above)

    Note: Some of the examples currently require having KreMLin installed and the KREMLIN_HOME variable pointing to its location.

    Note: The option -j6 controls the number of cores to be used in parallel build. Using more cores results in greater RAM usage. This can make builds slow if you do not have enough RAM to support all parallel builds. Consider monitoring RAM usage when building, and use fewer cores if you are using 100% of your RAM.

    Note: On Linux if you get a file descriptor exhaustion error that looks like this Unix.Unix_error(Unix.ENOMEM, "fork", "") you can increase the limits with ulimit -n 4000.

Homebrew formula for Mac OS X

On Macs you can build and install the latest F* release using Homebrew. This will install F* and all required dependencies (including Z3):

    $ brew install fstar

For building and installing the latest F* development version from GitHub (the master branch) instead of the latest release you can do:

    $ brew install --HEAD fstar

Chocolatey Package on Windows

On windows you can use chocolatey package manager to install and update fstar

> choco install fstar

or

> cinst fstar

you can find the package description here

Running F* from a docker image

An alternative to installing binaries is to install a docker image. We currently provide the following two on docker hub: fstarlang/fstar-emacs with emacs support and fstarlang/fstar for purists. The image is automatically kept up to date through a cloud build.

You only have to install docker and an X server for your platform and you are good to go. See Running F* from a docker image for the details on how to use docker.

Building F* from sources

Short version: Simply run make -j 6 from the master branch of the clone.

If you have a serious interest in F* or want to report bugs then we recommend that you build F* from the sources on GitHub (the master branch).

F* is written in a subset of F* itself and can generate OCaml or F# code from its own sources. Therefore, the standard bootstrap build process of F* involves the following three steps:

Step 1. Build F* using the OCaml compiler from the (possibly outdated) checked-in generated OCaml code.

Step 2. Extract the sources of F* itself to OCaml using the F* binary produced at step 1.

Step 3. Repeat step 1: rebuild F* from the newly generated OCaml code in the previous step.

Some convenience Makefile targets are available:

  • To run steps 2 and 1, do make -C src -j6 fstar-ocaml.
  • To run steps 1, 2 and 1 again (step 3), do: make -C src -j6 ocaml-fstar-ocaml.

Note: If you build F* from sources you will also need to get a Z3 binary. This is further explained towards the end of this document.

Prerequisites: Working OCaml setup

The steps require a working OCaml setup. OCaml version from 4.05.X to 4.08.1 should work.

Instructions for Windows

  1. Please use Andreas Hauptmann's OCaml Installer for Windows to install both OCaml and OPAM.

  2. If needed switch to a supported OCaml version by running the following commands:

$ opam update
$ opam switch list-available
$ opam switch create ocaml-variants.4.07.1+mingw64c
  1. Afterwards you can install the depext and depext-cygwinports packages, to be able to install some binary dependencies below more easily.
$ opam install depext depext-cygwinports

More documentation on depext-cygwin here.

Then follow step 4 in "Instructions for all OSes" below.

Instructions for Linux and Mac OS X

  1. Install OCaml

    • Can be installed using either your package manager or using OPAM (see below).
  2. Install OPAM (version 1.2.x or later).

  3. Initialize and configure OPAM

    • You need to initialize it by running opam init and update the PATH variable to the ocamlfind and the OCaml libraries. If you allow opam init to edit your ~/.bashrc or ~/.profile, it is done automatically; otherwise, use: eval $(opam config env).
  4. Ensure that OPAM is using a supported version of OCaml

    • Type opam switch list. The current OCaml version used by opam is identified by the letter C. If it is not within the version range required by F* (see above), type opam switch list-available to see what versions are available and then opam switch <version-number>.

    • Afterwards you can also install the depext package, to be able to install some binary dependencies below more easily.

      $ opam install depext

Then follow step 4 below.

Instructions for all OSes

  1. F* depends on a bunch of external OCaml packages which you should install using OPAM:
$ opam install ocamlbuild ocamlfind batteries stdint zarith yojson fileutils pprint menhir ulex ppx_deriving ppx_deriving_yojson process

Note: Some of these opam packages depend on binary packages that you need to install locally (eg, using your Linux package manager). So if the command above gives you errors like this:

[ERROR] The compilation of conf-gmp failed at "./test-win.sh".

You can use depext to install the missing binary packages, for instance:

$ opam depext -i conf-gmp

On Windows, for dynamic libraries like gmp, you should add /usr/x86_64-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/bin:/usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/bin to your cygwin $PATH. If you additionally want to call bin/fstar.exe from Windows or VSCode (not just from a cygwin shell), you also need to add the corresponding Windows paths (like C:\OCaml32\usr\i686-w64-mingw32\sys-root\mingw\bin) to your Windows $PATH. Otherwise you will get popups like this when trying to call fstar.exe outside cygwin:

The code execution cannot proceed because libgmp-10.dll was not found. Reinstall the program may fix this problem.

Note: This list of opam packages is longer than the list in the Testing a binary package section above, because the additional packages here are necessary to compile F*.

Step 1. Building F* from the OCaml snapshot

Once you have a working OCaml setup (see above) just run the following command:

    $ make -C src/ocaml-output -j6

Note: On Windows this generates a native F* binary, that is, a binary that does not depend on cygwin1.dll, since the installer above uses a native Windows port of OCaml. Cygwin is just there to provide make and other utilities required for the build. This also means that when linking C libraries with OCaml compiled objects one needs to use the correct mingw libraries and not the Cygwin ones. OCaml uses special flexlink technology for this. See contrib/CoreCrypto/ml and examples/crypto for examples.

Step 2. Extracting the sources of F* itself to OCaml

  1. Get an F* binary using the the OCaml build process (step 1 above).

  2. Make sure you follow the instructions above to get a working OCaml setup.

  3. Once you satisfy the prerequisites for your platform, translate the F* sources to OCaml using F* by running:

     $ make ocaml -C src -j6
    

Runtime dependency: Z3 SMT solver

To use F* for verification you need a Z3 binary. Our binary packages include that already in bin, but if you compile F* from sources you need to get a Z3 binary yourself and add it to your PATH. We recommend you use the Everest tested binaries here: https://github.com/FStarLang/binaries/tree/master/z3-tested