Module Mltop

Toplevel management
type toplevel = {
load_obj : string -> unit;
add_dir : string -> unit;
ml_loop : unit -> unit;
}

If there is a toplevel under Coq, it is described by the following record.

val set_top : toplevel -> unit

Sets and initializes a toplevel (if any)

val remove : unit -> unit

Removes the toplevel (if any)

val is_ocaml_top : unit -> bool

Tests if an Ocaml toplevel runs under Coq

val ocaml_toploop : unit -> unit

Starts the Ocaml toplevel loop

val add_ml_dir : string -> unit

Adds a dir to the plugin search path

Tests if we can load ML files

val add_known_module : string -> unit

List of modules linked to the toplevel

val module_is_known : string -> bool
Initialization functions
val add_known_plugin : (unit -> unit) -> string -> unit

Declare a plugin and its initialization function. A plugin is just an ML module with an initialization function. Adding a known plugin implies adding it as a known ML module. The initialization function is granted to be called after Coq is fully bootstrapped, even if the plugin is statically linked with the toplevel

val init_known_plugins : unit -> unit

Calls all initialization functions in a non-specified order

val declare_cache_obj : (unit -> unit) -> string -> unit

Register a callback that will be called when the module is declared with the Declare ML Module command. This is useful to define Coq objects at that time only. Several functions can be defined for one module; they will be called in the order of declaration, and after the ML module has been properly initialized.

Declaring modules
val declare_ml_modules : Vernacexpr.locality_flag -> string list -> unit
Utilities
val print_ml_path : unit -> Pp.t
val print_ml_modules : unit -> Pp.t
val print_gc : unit -> Pp.t