What do you expect from a package manager for Emacs?

EmacsPackagesPackage Managers

Emacs Problem Overview


Although several thousand Emacs Lisp libraries exist, GNU Emacs, until version 24.1 did not have an (internal) package manager.

I guess that most users would agree that it is currently rather inconvenient to find, install and especially keep up-to-date Emacs Lisp libraries.

Pages that make life a bit easier

For versions of Emacs older than 24.1:

  • Emacs Lisp List - Problem: I see dead people (links).
  • Emacswiki - Problem: May contain traces of nuts (malicious code).
  • Emacsmirror - The package repository I am working on. Problem: No package manager supports it natively yet.

Some package managers

It's not that nobody has tried yet. (Some of these did not exist when this question was asked.)


UPDATE -- package.el is included in GNU Emacs, starting with version 24.1


package has been included in the Emacs trunk. epkg is not ready yet and also currently not available. At least install-elisp, plugin and use-package do not seem to be actively maintained anymore.

I have created a git repository containing all these package managers as submodules.

Some utilities that might be useful

Package managers could use these utilities and/or they could be used to maintain a mirror of packages.

Discussions about the subject at hand

The question (finally)

So - I would like to know from you what you consider important/unimportant/supplementary etc. in a package manager for Emacs.

Some ideas

  1. Many packages (the Emacsmirror provides that largest available collection of packages, but there is no explicit support in any package manager yet).
  2. Only packages that have been tested.
  3. Support for more than one package archive (so people can choose between many/tested packages).
  4. Dependency calculated based on required features only.
  5. Dependencies take particular versions into account.
  6. Only use versions that have been released upstream.
  7. Use versions from version control systems if available.
  8. Packages are categorized.
  9. Packages can be uninstalled and updated not only installed.
  10. Support creating fork of upstream version of packages.
  11. Support publishing these forks.
  12. Support choosing a fork.
  13. After installation packages are activated.
  14. Generate autoload files.
  15. Integration with Emacswiki (see wikirel.el).
  16. Users can tag, comment etc. packages and share that information.
  17. Only FSF-assigned/GPL/FOSS software or don't care about license.
  18. Package manager should be integrated be distributed with Emacs.
  19. Support for easily contacting author.
  20. Lots of metadata.
  21. Suggest alternatives before installing a particular package.

I am hoping for these kinds of answers

  • Pointers to more implementations, discussions etc.
  • Lengthy descriptions of a set of features that make up your ideal package manager.
  • Descriptions of one particular desired/undesired feature. Feel free to elaborate on my ideas from above.
  • Surprise me.

Emacs Solutions


Solution 1 - Emacs

I'm still learning Emacs, so I haven't had a chance to look into package managers, but a great feature would be to inform the user that the package is available if they try to use it but it's not on their system. For example, I wanted to edit a PHP file on a server once, and I tried

M-x php-mode

and Emacs was all like

M-x php-mode [no match]

when it should have been like

php-mode available from ftp.gnu.org. install? (y/n)

and then it would have installed and loaded up php-mode for me. That would have made my day right there.

Solution 2 - Emacs

Automatic publishing from version control

I'd love to see a standard, central, and single Emacs package manager. Right now, I'd put my money on ELPA, but there is still a long way to go.

The biggest thing that would help an Emacs package manager would be to make it super trivial to publish packages. In my opinion, I'd like to see this happen in combination with a version control system like git on a central hosted platform like GitHub -- something that would make it easy for authors to publish their packages and would make it easy for others to contribute back.

Similar to how GitHub (used to) make it easy to publish RubyGems, I'd like to see something similar in an Emacs package manager. For example, tag your repository with "vX.Y.Z" and have your elisp goodness automatically available to all.

The added benefit of using a popular backend like GitHub is that you'd immediately get a lot of exposure which should help drive its success.

Solution 3 - Emacs

What I expect most is that everything useful is on it, and works well. This requires you (or a team of maintainers) to aggressively pursue packaging everything for it, and doing whatever that involves — emailing every author of a useful package, and so on.

For instance, the reason Debian (and its derivatives: Ubuntu etc.) is so good is that you can happily use your system without ever having to install something outside the repositories, and that everything on it is thoroughly tested. The actual features of the package manager are important, but secondary to the managed packages themselves.

Solution 4 - Emacs

Easy configuration synchronization: I, like many people, use Emacs on many different computers and servers, some of them my own and some not. It would be amazing if the package manager had some sort of file which I could transfer from one computer to another; then, on the latter computer, the package manager would bring my Emacs into the state I like it in -- all the packages installed and configurations set. Combined with the ability to be able to easily install either site-wide (if one has root permissions) or as a single user, I could synchronize all of Emacsen everywhere.

Solution 5 - Emacs

I'm nearly positive that the best solution involves submitting more packages to ELPA and adding multi-source support to package.el. The Emacs maintainers have said that they would consider including package.el in version 24 as long as it pointed to an FSF repository by default.

Of course, submission also needs to be an automated process too; the current method of mailing the ELPA maintainer only works on a small scale.

Solution 6 - Emacs

No matter how this is done, the most important thing in my opinion is that it should be trivial to submit packages to the repository. At the same time, we do not want those packages to be instantly available, to guard against malicious code(and due to licensing issues). Unless there is a "trust" system in place, based on crypto signatures.

Also useful:

  • "metapackages", to install several packages at once.
  • In the same way, we should be able to install a set of elisp files, for maintainability
  • "Broken" packages should not be allowed to disrupt Emacs startup. This is easy and I have it implemented in my own .emacs
  • Ability to install files other than scripts. This is often overlooked, but very useful. You'd be able to, for instance, ship images, for icons, toolbars, etc.
  • Versioning:package X requires package Y > 1.0
  • Testing: perform basic sanity checks, testing for conflicts (keybindings, function redefinitions, functions that are expected to be present but aren't, etc).
  • BUG TRACKING: I can't stress the importance of this enough. Having a centralized place to report package bugs (and being able to track them) is extremely important to assure the quality of the packages.

Some sort of compressed archive seems to be best to do some of the above.


So far, a much improved ELPA seems the way to go.

Solution 7 - Emacs

I once spent some time writing a small package manager for Emacs.

http://gmarceau.qc.ca/plugin.el

I wrote:

> Plugin is my attempt at creating a > package manager for Emacs. Plugin > will automatically downloads Emacs > extensions, unpacks them in a > directory, adds that directory to the > load-path, generates auto-load > annotations, and modify your dot-emacs > file. The auto-load annotations are a > little-known feature of Emacs. Once > they are generated, Emacs extensions > load quickly and incrementally, which > is really nice if you have as many > extensions installed as I do.

You will need two library files to get it to run, loop-constructs.el and record.el

Solution 8 - Emacs

I think the hackers for the iPhone got quite close to what I want, as does Ubuntu's "apt".

I like to be able to:

  • add
  • remove (package only)
  • remove user settings
  • view documentation
  • upgrade ( after reading the change log)
  • add new archive ( aka add repository )
  • see dependencies
  • see version
  • search for name, keyword
  • browse by (date added, date modified, name)
  • save all installed packages & settings
  • load set of packages & settings

I would like a main set of things that all work nicely and are the recommended way of doing whatever. Then a global set where everything working gets in. Then the ability for anyone to host their own archive.

It would be nice if this was all tied into git/svn/whatever so that you could install old versions. Make your own patches by forking off etc etc etc....

Solution 9 - Emacs

Besides the mentioned above, i expect something like debian, and other repositories - set of the stable, experemental, untested packages. Ability to add my own repositories - i use lot of the packages directly from VCS, so it could be useful to create my own packages

Solution 10 - Emacs

I think that the package manager should take a lot of inspiration from Rubygems. I also think that it should have a site like Gemcutter.

A central repository could also be nice (like Emacsmirror). This however may not be necessary if a site like Gemcutter exists that collects all packages.

I think these things are important for this to work.

  • Central location of some kind that collects all packages
  • Easy to add packages
  • Easy to maintain packages
  • Easy to contribute to other packages
  • Easy to install, uninstall and update packages
  • Possibility to add package dependencies
  • Common structure for all packages

So a package manager like Rubygems with a site like Gemcutter and a central repository like Emacsmirror (preferably on Github because of it's social coding) would do Emacs really good.

All in all I think that much inspiration should be taken from Rails and how Rails handles Gems.

Solution 11 - Emacs

I don't know how fresh this question is...
but the model I would like to see is CPAN. I also don't know Rubygems but it sounds similar to CPAN.

CPAN is a perl archive + library management system. When I need to write a perl program that requires... FTP or SOAP or JSON or XML or ZIP, or...etc, I can run the CPAN package manager, select the requisite package for download, view and verify the dependencies, then install everything. CPAN is mirrored .."everywhere".

CPAN works wonderfully for my purposes, and something similar for emacs would be nice to have. It also supports building C/C++ code on demand.

That's what I would like to see in emacs.

Some further comment on requirements.

  • explicit download of packages. No auto install. No invisible downloads. I want to ask for new libraries or new function.
  • I should be able to list the name/version/timestamp of installed packages.
  • If my friend gives me his list, I should be able to diff his emacs state against mine.
  • check-for-updates function. What updates are available? What do they fix?
  • depedency checking, verification, and download. If I install csharp-mode and it requires v5.0.28 of cc-mode, then it should confirm with me, that I must also download cc-mode.
  • there should be some sort of community ranking of these packages, like ranking torrents on isohunt. I want to see if a package has 3 upvotes or 3000.
  • "transactional" behavior. If an install goes boom, it must unwind to a last-known-good state.
  • failsafes. If I've put custom mods in linum.el, it should refuse to install a new version over my changes, unless I explicitly allow it. It should warn me before even starting. Do this with checksums/md5's over the existing install.
  • have the option of running some packages from compressed archives, like zip files. So I never have any doubt that I have not updated any of the embbedded elisp.
  • ability to use mirrored hosts for package distribution.
  • all this function should be accessible through M-x library-manageemnt or something.

Finally, it would be nice to have a way to segregate or organize libraries of functions. Hierarchical namespaces. Emacs' flat namespace is very dated. This is sort of independent but complementary to the core function of package management. I'm not a lisp guru so I don't know how hard this would be; maybe there is already a way to do it.

Solution 12 - Emacs

Package managers don't offer anything I value w.r.t. single-file elisp packages with simple dependencies: adding and deleting from site-lisp has never caused problems. It's packages that depend on external programs (e.g., ispell), multi-file packages (e.g., auctex, org-mode) that can be tricky. Can't think of any single-file elisp package with nontrivial dependencies, offhand.

For these, short of a package manager, I'd like emacs' elisp-packages to acquire test suites which can be run en masse, and which provide useful information in the event of dependency failures.

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