Common types, containers and utilities.
Want to get started? This is the simplest and quickest way:
Nothing to download or install! This will automatically start a JupyterLab environment in your browser with Open Space Toolkit libraries and example notebooks ready to use.
Docker must be installed on your system.
The following command will start an iPython shell within a container where the OSTk components are already installed:
docker run -it openspacecollective/open-space-toolkit-core-development python3.11 -m IPython
Once the shell is up and running, playing with it is easy:
from ostk.core.filesystem import Directory # Directory class
Directory.root().is_empty() # True if the root directory is empty
Tip: Use tab for auto-completion!
The following command will start a JupyterLab server within a container where the OSTk components are already installed:
docker run --publish=8888:8888 openspacecollective/open-space-toolkit-core-jupyter
Once the container is running, access http://localhost:8888/lab and create a Python 3 Notebook.
The binary packages are hosted using GitHub Releases:
- Runtime libraries:
open-space-toolkit-core-X.Y.Z-1.x86_64-runtime
- C++ headers:
open-space-toolkit-core-X.Y.Z-1.x86_64-devel
- Python bindings:
open-space-toolkit-core-X.Y.Z-1.x86_64-python
After downloading the relevant .deb
binary packages, install:
apt install open-space-toolkit-core-*.deb
Install from PyPI:
pip install open-space-toolkit-core
Documentation is available here:
Using Docker for development is recommended, to simplify the installation of the necessary build tools and dependencies. Instructions on how to install Docker are available here.
To start the development environment:
make start-development
This will:
- Build the
openspacecollective/open-space-toolkit-core-development
Docker image. - Create a development environment container with local source files and helper scripts mounted.
- Start a
bash
shell from the./build
working directory.
If installing Docker is not an option, you can manually install the development tools (GCC, CMake) and all required dependencies, by following a procedure similar to the one described in the Development Dockerfile.
From the ./build
directory:
cmake ..
make
Tip: The ostk-build
command simplifies building from within the development environment.
To start a container to build and run the tests:
make test
Or to run them manually:
./bin/open-space-toolkit-core.test
Tip: The ostk-test
command simplifies running tests from within the development environment.
Contributions are more than welcome!
Please read our contributing guide to learn about our development process, how to propose fixes and improvements, and how to build and test the code.
Apache License 2.0