ierl is a command line tool based on erlang-jupyter to allow running and installing
Jupyter kernels on the Erlang Virtual Machine.
Currently, three kernels have been implemented to the point that they support running code, compiling modules, code completion:
Not a full replacement for the built-in shell, yet, as records are not supported and pseudo-functions like f or l are not implemented.
The path to the Elixir installation is currently hard-coded to its default Windows installation path. Sorry for that. I'll work on both better discovery and embedding a small Elixir distribution.
LFE is completely embedded and can be run without any further installation.
The released escript can be run directly by either making it executable (chmod +x ierl) and using it directly (./ierl) or starting
it explicitly with escript ierl. It will present the available commands and backends.
To install an Erlang kernel, run
./ierl install erlang
Analogously kernels for LFE and Elixir can be installed.
To specify the name of the installed kernelspec, pass it using --name. By default it will match the backend name (so erlang,
elixir or lfe).
./ierl install erlang --name my_erlang_kernel
Remoting is also supported. Pass the node to connect to via --node and the cookie to use via --cookie.
./ierl install erlang --node remote_node@REMOTEHOST --cookie my_secret_cookie
The installed kernels will be immediately avaialable in the Jupyter Notebook, to use them in the console run
jupyter console --kernel my_erlang_kernel