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Haskell
The Haskell infrastructure in Nixpkgs has two main purposes: The primary purpose is to provide a Haskell compiler and build tools as well as infrastructure for packaging Haskell-based packages.
The secondary purpose is to provide support for Haskell development environments including prebuilt Haskell libraries. However, in this area sacrifices have been made due to self-imposed restrictions in Nixpkgs, to lessen the maintenance effort and to improve performance. (More details in the subsection Limitations.)
Available packages
The compiler and most build tools are exposed at the top level:
ghc
is the default version of GHC- Language specific tools:
cabal-install
,stack
,hpack
, …
Many “normal” user facing packages written in Haskell, like niv
or cachix
,
are also exposed at the top level, and there is nothing Haskell specific to
installing and using them.
All of these packages are originally defined in the haskellPackages
package
set and are re-exposed with a reduced dependency closure for convenience.
(see justStaticExecutables
or separateBinOutput
below)
The haskellPackages
set includes at least one version of every package from
Hackage as well as some manually injected packages. This amounts to a lot of
packages, so it is hidden from nix-env -qa
by default for performance reasons.
You can still list all packages in the set like this:
$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -qaP -A haskellPackages
haskellPackages.a50 a50-0.5
haskellPackages.AAI AAI-0.2.0.1
haskellPackages.aasam aasam-0.2.0.0
haskellPackages.abacate abacate-0.0.0.0
haskellPackages.abc-puzzle abc-puzzle-0.2.1
…
Also, the haskellPackages
set is included on search.nixos.org.
The attribute names in haskellPackages
always correspond with their name on
Hackage. Since Hackage allows names that are not valid Nix without escaping,
you need to take care when handling attribute names like 3dmodels
.
For packages that are part of Stackage (a curated set of known to be compatible packages), we use the version prescribed by a Stackage snapshot (usually the current LTS one) as the default version. For all other packages we use the latest version from Hackage (the repository of basically all open source Haskell packages). See [below](#haskell-available- versions) for a few more details on this.
Roughly half of the 16K packages contained in haskellPackages
don’t actually
build and are marked as broken semi-automatically.
Most of those packages are deprecated or unmaintained, but sometimes packages
that should build, do not build. Very often fixing them is not a lot of work.
haskellPackages
is built with our default compiler, but we also provide other
releases of GHC and package sets built with them. You can list all available
compilers like this:
$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -qaP -A haskell.compiler
haskell.compiler.ghc810 ghc-8.10.7
haskell.compiler.ghc88 ghc-8.8.4
haskell.compiler.ghc90 ghc-9.0.2
haskell.compiler.ghc924 ghc-9.2.4
haskell.compiler.ghc925 ghc-9.2.5
haskell.compiler.ghc926 ghc-9.2.6
haskell.compiler.ghc92 ghc-9.2.7
haskell.compiler.ghc942 ghc-9.4.2
haskell.compiler.ghc943 ghc-9.4.3
haskell.compiler.ghc94 ghc-9.4.4
haskell.compiler.ghcHEAD ghc-9.7.20221224
haskell.compiler.ghc8102Binary ghc-binary-8.10.2
haskell.compiler.ghc8102BinaryMinimal ghc-binary-8.10.2
haskell.compiler.ghc8107BinaryMinimal ghc-binary-8.10.7
haskell.compiler.ghc8107Binary ghc-binary-8.10.7
haskell.compiler.ghc865Binary ghc-binary-8.6.5
haskell.compiler.ghc924Binary ghc-binary-9.2.4
haskell.compiler.ghc924BinaryMinimal ghc-binary-9.2.4
haskell.compiler.integer-simple.ghc810 ghc-integer-simple-8.10.7
haskell.compiler.integer-simple.ghc8107 ghc-integer-simple-8.10.7
haskell.compiler.integer-simple.ghc88 ghc-integer-simple-8.8.4
haskell.compiler.integer-simple.ghc884 ghc-integer-simple-8.8.4
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc90 ghc-native-bignum-9.0.2
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc902 ghc-native-bignum-9.0.2
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc924 ghc-native-bignum-9.2.4
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc925 ghc-native-bignum-9.2.5
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc926 ghc-native-bignum-9.2.6
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc92 ghc-native-bignum-9.2.7
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc927 ghc-native-bignum-9.2.7
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc942 ghc-native-bignum-9.4.2
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc943 ghc-native-bignum-9.4.3
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc94 ghc-native-bignum-9.4.4
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghc944 ghc-native-bignum-9.4.4
haskell.compiler.native-bignum.ghcHEAD ghc-native-bignum-9.7.20221224
haskell.compiler.ghcjs ghcjs-8.10.7
Each of those compiler versions has a corresponding attribute set built using
it. However, the non-standard package sets are not tested regularly and, as a
result, contain fewer working packages. The corresponding package set for GHC
9.4.5 is haskell.packages.ghc945
. In fact haskellPackages
is just an alias
for haskell.packages.ghc927
:
$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -qaP -A haskell.packages.ghc927
haskell.packages.ghc927.a50 a50-0.5
haskell.packages.ghc927.AAI AAI-0.2.0.1
haskell.packages.ghc927.aasam aasam-0.2.0.0
haskell.packages.ghc927.abacate abacate-0.0.0.0
haskell.packages.ghc927.abc-puzzle abc-puzzle-0.2.1
…
Every package set also re-exposes the GHC used to build its packages as haskell.packages.*.ghc
.
Available package versions
We aim for a “blessed” package set which only contains one version of each package, like Stackage, which is a curated set of known to be compatible packages. We use the version information from Stackage snapshots and extend it with more packages. Normally in Nixpkgs the number of building Haskell packages is roughly two to three times the size of Stackage. For choosing the version to use for a certain package we use the following rules:
- By default, for
haskellPackages.foo
is the newest version of the packagefoo
found on Hackage, which is the central registry of all open source Haskell packages. Nixpkgs contains a reference to a pinned Hackage snapshot, thus we use the state of Hackage as of the last time we updated this pin. - If the Stackage snapshot that we use (usually the newest LTS snapshot) contains a package, we use instead the version in the Stackage snapshot as default version for that package.
- For some packages, which are not on Stackage, we have if necessary manual overrides to set the default version to a version older than the newest on Hackage.
- For all packages, for which the newest Hackage version is not the default
version, there will also be a
haskellPackages.foo_x_y_z
package with the newest version. Thex_y_z
part encodes the version with dots replaced by underscores. When the newest version changes by a new release to Hackage the old package will disappear under that name and be replaced by a newer one under the name with the new version. The package name including the version will also disappear when the default version e.g. from Stackage catches up with the newest version from Hackage. E.g. ifhaskellPackages.foo
gets updated from 1.0.0 to 1.1.0 the packagehaskellPackages.foo_1_1_0
becomes obsolete and gets dropped. - For some packages, we also manually add other
haskellPackages.foo_x_y_z
versions, if they are required for a certain build.
Relying on haskellPackages.foo_x_y_z
attributes in derivations outside
nixpkgs is discouraged because they may change or disappear with every package
set update.
All haskell.packages.*
package sets use the same package descriptions and the same sets
of versions by default. There are however GHC version specific override .nix
files to loosen this a bit.
Dependency resolution
Normally when you build Haskell packages with cabal-install
, cabal-install
does dependency resolution. It will look at all Haskell package versions known
on Hackage and tries to pick for every (transitive) dependency of your build
exactly one version. Those versions need to satisfy all the version constraints
given in the .cabal
file of your package and all its dependencies.
The Haskell builder in nixpkgs does no such thing.
It will simply take as input packages with names off the desired dependencies
and just check whether they fulfill the version bounds and fail if they don’t
(by default, see jailbreak
to circumvent this).
The haskellPackages.callPackage
function does the package resolution.
It will, e.g., use haskellPackages.aeson
which has the default version as
described above for a package input of name aeson
. (More general:
<packages>.callPackage f
will call f
with named inputs provided from the
package set <packages>
.)
While this is the default behavior, it is possible to override the dependencies
for a specific package, see
override
and overrideScope
.
Limitations
Our main objective with haskellPackages
is to package Haskell software in
nixpkgs. This entails some limitations, partially due to self-imposed
restrictions of nixpkgs, partially in the name of maintainability:
- Only the packages built with the default compiler see extensive testing of the whole package set. For other GHC versions only a few essential packages are tested and cached.
- As described above we only build one version of most packages.
The experience using an older or newer packaged compiler or using different
versions may be worse, because builds will not be cached on cache.nixos.org
or may fail.
Thus, to get the best experience, make sure that your project can be compiled using the default compiler of nixpkgs and recent versions of its dependencies.
A result of this setup is, that getting a valid build plan for a given
package can sometimes be quite painful, and in fact this is where most of the
maintenance work for haskellPackages
is required. Besides that, it is not
possible to get the dependencies of a legacy project from nixpkgs or to use a
specific stack solver for compiling a project.
Even though we couldn’t use them directly in nixpkgs, it would be desirable
to have tooling to generate working Nix package sets from build plans generated
by cabal-install
or a specific Stackage snapshot via import-from-derivation.
Sadly we currently don’t have tooling for this. For this you might be
interested in the alternative haskell.nix framework, which, be warned, is
completely incompatible with packages from haskellPackages
.
haskellPackages.mkDerivation
Every haskell package set has its own haskell-aware mkDerivation
which is used
to build its packages. Generally you won't have to interact with this builder
since cabal2nix can generate packages
using it for an arbitrary cabal package definition. Still it is useful to know
the parameters it takes when you need to
override a generated Nix expression.
haskellPackages.mkDerivation
is a wrapper around stdenv.mkDerivation
which
re-defines the default phases to be haskell aware and handles dependency
specification, test suites, benchmarks etc. by compiling and invoking the
package's Setup.hs
. It does not use or invoke the cabal-install
binary,
but uses the underlying Cabal
library instead.
General arguments
pname
- Package name, assumed to be the same as on Hackage (if applicable)
version
- Packaged version, assumed to be the same as on Hackage (if applicable)
src
- Source of the package. If omitted, fetch package corresponding to
pname
andversion
from Hackage. sha256
- Hash to use for the default case of
src
. revision
- Revision number of the updated cabal file to fetch from Hackage.
If
null
(which is the default value), the one included insrc
is used. editedCabalFile
sha256
hash of the cabal file identified byrevision
ornull
.configureFlags
- Extra flags passed when executing the
configure
command ofSetup.hs
. buildFlags
- Extra flags passed when executing the
build
command ofSetup.hs
. haddockFlags
- Extra flags passed to
Setup.hs haddock
when building the documentation. doCheck
- Whether to execute the package's test suite if it has one. Defaults to
true
unless cross-compiling. doBenchmark
- Whether to execute the package's benchmark if it has one. Defaults to
false
. doHoogle
- Whether to generate an index file for hoogle as part of
haddockPhase
by passing the--hoogle
option. Defaults totrue
. doHaddockQuickjump
- Whether to generate an index for interactive navigation of the HTML documentation.
Defaults to
true
if supported. doInstallIntermediates
- Whether to install intermediate build products (files written to
dist/build
by GHC during the build process). WithenableSeparateIntermediatesOutput
, these files are instead installed to a separateintermediates
output. The output can then be passed into a future build of the same package with thepreviousIntermediates
argument to support incremental builds. See “Incremental builds” for more information. Defaults tofalse
. enableLibraryProfiling
- Whether to enable profiling for libraries contained in the package. Enabled by default if supported.
enableExecutableProfiling
- Whether to enable profiling for executables contained in the package. Disabled by default.
profilingDetail
- Profiling detail level to set. Defaults to
exported-functions
. enableSharedExecutables
- Whether to link executables dynamically. By default, executables are linked statically.
enableSharedLibraries
- Whether to build shared Haskell libraries. This is enabled by default unless we are using
pkgsStatic
or shared libraries have been disabled in GHC. enableStaticLibraries
- Whether to build static libraries. Enabled by default if supported.
enableDeadCodeElimination
- Whether to enable linker based dead code elimination in GHC. Enabled by default if supported.
enableHsc2hsViaAsm
- Whether to pass
--via-asm
tohsc2hs
. Enabled by default only on Windows. hyperlinkSource
- Whether to render the source as well as part of the haddock documentation
by passing the
--hyperlinked-source
flag. Defaults totrue
. isExecutable
- Whether the package contains an executable.
isLibrary
- Whether the package contains a library.
jailbreak
- Whether to execute jailbreak-cabal before
configurePhase
to lift any version constraints in the cabal file. Note that this can't lift version bounds if they are conditional, i.e. if a dependency is hidden behind a flag. enableParallelBuilding
- Whether to use the
-j
flag to make GHC/Cabal start multiple jobs in parallel. maxBuildCores
- Upper limit of jobs to use in parallel for compilation regardless of
$NIX_BUILD_CORES
. Defaults to 16 as Haskell compilation with GHC currently sees a performance regression if too many parallel jobs are used. doCoverage
- Whether to generate and install files needed for HPC.
Defaults to
false
. doHaddock
- Whether to build (HTML) documentation using haddock.
Defaults to
true
if supported. testTarget
- Name of the test suite to build and run. If unset, all test suites will be executed.
preCompileBuildDriver
- Shell code to run before compiling
Setup.hs
. postCompileBuildDriver
- Shell code to run after compiling
Setup.hs
. preHaddock
- Shell code to run before building documentation using haddock.
postHaddock
- Shell code to run after building documentation using haddock.
coreSetup
- Whether to only allow core libraries to be used while building
Setup.hs
. Defaults tofalse
. useCpphs
- Whether to enable the cpphs preprocessor. Defaults to
false
. enableSeparateBinOutput
- Whether to install executables to a separate
bin
output. Defaults tofalse
. enableSeparateDataOutput
- Whether to install data files shipped with the package to a separate
data
output. Defaults tofalse
. enableSeparateDocOutput
- Whether to install documentation to a separate
doc
output. Is automatically enabled ifdoHaddock
istrue
. enableSeparateIntermediatesOutput
- When
doInstallIntermediates
is true, whether to install intermediate build products to a separateintermediates
output. See “Incremental builds” for more information. Defaults tofalse
. allowInconsistentDependencies
- If enabled, allow multiple versions of the same Haskell package in the
dependency tree at configure time. Often in such a situation compilation would
later fail because of type mismatches. Defaults to
false
. enableLibraryForGhci
- Build and install a special object file for GHCi. This improves performance
when loading the library in the REPL, but requires extra build time and
disk space. Defaults to
false
. previousIntermediates
- If non-null, intermediate build artifacts are copied from this input to
dist/build
before performing compiling. See “Incremental builds” for more information. Defaults tonull
. buildTarget
- Name of the executable or library to build and install. If unset, all available targets are built and installed.
Specifying dependencies
Since haskellPackages.mkDerivation
is intended to be generated from cabal
files, it reflects cabal's way of specifying dependencies. For one, dependencies
are grouped by what part of the package they belong to. This helps to reduce the
dependency closure of a derivation, for example benchmark dependencies are not
included if doBenchmark == false
.
setup*Depends
- dependencies necessary to compile
Setup.hs
library*Depends
- dependencies of a library contained in the package
executable*Depends
- dependencies of an executable contained in the package
test*Depends
- dependencies of a test suite contained in the package
benchmark*Depends
- dependencies of a benchmark contained in the package
The other categorization relates to the way the package depends on the dependency:
*ToolDepends
- Tools we need to run as part of the build process.
They are added to the derivation's
nativeBuildInputs
. *HaskellDepends
- Haskell libraries the package depends on.
They are added to
propagatedBuildInputs
. *SystemDepends
- Non-Haskell libraries the package depends on.
They are added to
buildInputs
*PkgconfigDepends
*SystemDepends
which are discovered usingpkg-config
. They are added tobuildInputs
and it is additionally ensured thatpkg-config
is available at build time.*FrameworkDepends
- Apple SDK Framework which the package depends on when compiling it on Darwin.
Using these two distinctions, you should be able to categorize most of the dependency
specifications that are available:
benchmarkFrameworkDepends
,
benchmarkHaskellDepends
,
benchmarkPkgconfigDepends
,
benchmarkSystemDepends
,
benchmarkToolDepends
,
executableFrameworkDepends
,
executableHaskellDepends
,
executablePkgconfigDepends
,
executableSystemDepends
,
executableToolDepends
,
libraryFrameworkDepends
,
libraryHaskellDepends
,
libraryPkgconfigDepends
,
librarySystemDepends
,
libraryToolDepends
,
setupHaskellDepends
,
testFrameworkDepends
,
testHaskellDepends
,
testPkgconfigDepends
,
testSystemDepends
and
testToolDepends
.
That only leaves the following extra ways for specifying dependencies:
buildDepends
- Allows specifying Haskell dependencies which are added to
propagatedBuildInputs
unconditionally. buildTools
- Like
*ToolDepends
, but are added tonativeBuildInputs
unconditionally. extraLibraries
- Like
*SystemDepends
, but are added tobuildInputs
unconditionally. pkg-configDepends
- Like
*PkgconfigDepends
, but are added tobuildInputs
unconditionally. testDepends
- Deprecated, use either
testHaskellDepends
ortestSystemDepends
. benchmarkDepends
- Deprecated, use either
benchmarkHaskellDepends
orbenchmarkSystemDepends
.
The dependency specification methods in this list which are unconditional are especially useful when writing overrides when you want to make sure that they are definitely included. However, it is recommended to use the more accurate ones listed above when possible.
Meta attributes
haskellPackages.mkDerivation
accepts the following attributes as direct
arguments which are transparently set in meta
of the resulting derivation. See
the Meta-attributes section for their documentation.
- These attributes are populated with a default value if omitted:
homepage
: defaults to the Hackage page forpname
.platforms
: defaults tolib.platforms.all
(since GHC can cross-compile)
- These attributes are only set if given:
description
license
changelog
maintainers
broken
hydraPlatforms
Incremental builds
haskellPackages.mkDerivation
supports incremental builds for GHC 9.4 and
newer with the doInstallIntermediates
, enableSeparateIntermediatesOutput
,
and previousIntermediates
arguments.
The basic idea is to first perform a full build of the package in question, save its intermediate build products for later, and then copy those build products into the build directory of an incremental build performed later. Then, GHC will use those build artifacts to avoid recompiling unchanged modules.
For more detail on how to store and use incremental build products, see Gabriella Gonzalez’ blog post “Nixpkgs support for incremental Haskell builds”. motivation behind this feature.
An incremental build for the turtle
package can be performed like
so:
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
inherit (pkgs) haskell;
inherit (haskell.lib.compose) overrideCabal;
# Incremental builds work with GHC >=9.4.
turtle = haskell.packages.ghc944.turtle;
# This will do a full build of `turtle`, while writing the intermediate build products
# (compiled modules, etc.) to the `intermediates` output.
turtle-full-build-with-incremental-output = overrideCabal (drv: {
doInstallIntermediates = true;
enableSeparateIntermediatesOutput = true;
}) turtle;
# This will do an incremental build of `turtle` by copying the previously
# compiled modules and intermediate build products into the source tree
# before running the build.
#
# GHC will then naturally pick up and reuse these products, making this build
# complete much more quickly than the previous one.
turtle-incremental-build = overrideCabal (drv: {
previousIntermediates = turtle-full-build-with-incremental-output.intermediates;
}) turtle;
in
turtle-incremental-build
Development environments
In addition to building and installing Haskell software, nixpkgs can also
provide development environments for Haskell projects. This has the obvious
advantage that you benefit from cache.nixos.org
and no longer need to compile
all project dependencies yourself. While it is often very useful, this is not
the primary use case of our package set. Have a look at the section
available package versions to learn which
versions of packages we provide and the section
limitations, to judge whether a haskellPackages
based development environment for your project is feasible.
By default, every derivation built using
haskellPackages.mkDerivation
exposes an environment
suitable for building it interactively as the env
attribute. For example, if
you have a local checkout of random
, you can enter a development environment
for it like this (if the dependencies in the development and packaged version
match):
$ cd ~/src/random
$ nix-shell -A haskellPackages.random.env '<nixpkgs>'
[nix-shell:~/src/random]$ ghc-pkg list
/nix/store/a8hhl54xlzfizrhcf03c1l3f6l9l8qwv-ghc-9.2.4-with-packages/lib/ghc-9.2.4/package.conf.d
Cabal-3.6.3.0
array-0.5.4.0
base-4.16.3.0
binary-0.8.9.0
…
ghc-9.2.4
…
As you can see, the environment contains a GHC which is set up so it finds all
dependencies of random
. Note that this environment does not mirror
the environment used to build the package, but is intended as a convenient
tool for development and simple debugging. env
relies on the ghcWithPackages
wrapper which automatically injects a pre-populated package-db into every
GHC invocation. In contrast, using nix-shell -A haskellPackages.random
will
not result in an environment in which the dependencies are in GHCs package
database. Instead, the Haskell builder will pass in all dependencies explicitly
via configure flags.
env
mirrors the normal derivation environment in one aspect: It does not include
familiar development tools like cabal-install
, since we rely on plain Setup.hs
to build all packages. However, cabal-install
will work as expected if in
PATH
(e.g. when installed globally and using a nix-shell
without --pure
).
A declarative and pure way of adding arbitrary development tools is provided
via shellFor
.
When using cabal-install
for dependency resolution you need to be a bit
careful to achieve build purity. cabal-install
will find and use all
dependencies installed from the packages env
via Nix, but it will also
consult Hackage to potentially download and compile dependencies if it can’t
find a valid build plan locally. To prevent this you can either never run
cabal update
, remove the cabal database from your ~/.cabal
folder or run
cabal
with --offline
. Note though, that for some usecases cabal2nix
needs
the local Hackage db.
Often you won't work on a package that is already part of haskellPackages
or
Hackage, so we first need to write a Nix expression to obtain the development
environment from. Luckily, we can generate one very easily from an already
existing cabal file using cabal2nix
:
$ ls
my-project.cabal src …
$ cabal2nix ./. > my-project.nix
The generated Nix expression evaluates to a function ready to be
callPackage
-ed. For now, we can add a minimal default.nix
which does just
that:
# Retrieve nixpkgs impurely from NIX_PATH for now, you can pin it instead, of course.
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
# use the nixpkgs default haskell package set
pkgs.haskellPackages.callPackage ./my-project.nix { }
Using nix-build default.nix
we can now build our project, but we can also
enter a shell with all the package's dependencies available using nix-shell -A env default.nix
. If you have cabal-install
installed globally, it'll work
inside the shell as expected.
shellFor
Having to install tools globally is obviously not great, especially if you want
to provide a batteries-included shell.nix
with your project. Luckily there's a
proper tool for making development environments out of packages' build
environments: shellFor
, a function exposed by every haskell package set. It
takes the following arguments and returns a derivation which is suitable as a
development environment inside nix-shell
:
packages
- This argument is used to select the packages for which to build the
development environment. This should be a function which takes a haskell package
set and returns a list of packages.
shellFor
will pass the used package set to this function and include all dependencies of the returned package in the build environment. This means you can reuse Nix expressions of packages included in nixpkgs, but also use local Nix expressions like this:hpkgs: [ (hpkgs.callPackage ./my-project.nix { }) ]
. nativeBuildInputs
- Expects a list of derivations to add as build tools to the build environment.
This is the place to add packages like
cabal-install
,doctest
orhlint
. Defaults to[]
. buildInputs
- Expects a list of derivations to add as library dependencies, like
openssl
. This is rarely necessary as the haskell package expressions usually track system dependencies as well. Defaults to[]
. (see also derivation dependencies) withHoogle
- If this is true,
hoogle
will be added tonativeBuildInputs
. Additionally, its database will be populated with all included dependencies, so you'll be able search through the documentation of your dependencies. Defaults tofalse
. genericBuilderArgsModifier
- This argument accepts a function allowing you to modify the arguments passed
to
mkDerivation
in order to create the development environment. For example,args: { doCheck = false; }
would cause the environment to not include any test dependencies. Defaults tolib.id
. doBenchmark
- This is a shortcut for enabling
doBenchmark
viagenericBuilderArgsModifier
. Setting it totrue
will cause the development environment to include all benchmark dependencies which would be excluded by default. Defaults tofalse
.
One neat property of shellFor
is that it allows you to work on multiple
packages using the same environment in conjunction with
cabal.project files.
Say our example above depends on distribution-nixpkgs
and we have a project
file set up for both, we can add the following shell.nix
expression:
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
pkgs.haskellPackages.shellFor {
packages = hpkgs: [
# reuse the nixpkgs for this package
hpkgs.distribution-nixpkgs
# call our generated Nix expression manually
(hpkgs.callPackage ./my-project/my-project.nix { })
];
# development tools we use
nativeBuildInputs = [
pkgs.cabal-install
pkgs.haskellPackages.doctest
pkgs.cabal2nix
];
# Extra arguments are added to mkDerivation's arguments as-is.
# Since it adds all passed arguments to the shell environment,
# we can use this to set the environment variable the `Paths_`
# module of distribution-nixpkgs uses to search for bundled
# files.
# See also: https://cabal.readthedocs.io/en/latest/cabal-package.html#accessing-data-files-from-package-code
distribution_nixpkgs_datadir = toString ./distribution-nixpkgs;
}
haskell-language-server
To use HLS in short: Install pkgs.haskell-language-server
e.g. in
nativeBuildInputs
in shellFor
and use the haskell-language-server-wrapper
command to run it. See the HLS user guide on how to configure your text
editor to use HLS and how to test your setup.
HLS needs to be compiled with the GHC version of the project you use it on.
pkgs.haskell-language-server
provides
haskell-language-server-wrapper
, haskell-language-server
and haskell-language-server-x.x.x
binaries, where x.x.x
is the GHC version for which it is compiled. By
default, it only includes binaries for the current GHC version, to reduce
closure size. The closure size is large, because HLS needs to be dynamically
linked to work reliably. You can override the list of supported GHC versions
with e.g.
pkgs.haskell-language-server.override { supportedGhcVersions = [ "90" "94" ]; }
Where all strings version
are allowed such that
haskell.packages.ghc${version}
is an existing package set.
When you run haskell-language-server-wrapper
it will detect the GHC
version used by the project you are working on (by asking e.g. cabal or
stack) and pick the appropriate versioned binary from your path.
Be careful when installing HLS globally and using a pinned nixpkgs for a
Haskell project in a nix-shell
. If the nixpkgs versions deviate to much
(e.g., use different glibc
versions) the haskell-language-server-?.?.?
executable will try to detect these situations and refuse to start. It is
recommended to obtain HLS via nix-shell
from the nixpkgs version pinned in
there instead.
The top level pkgs.haskell-language-server
attribute is just a convenience
wrapper to make it possible to install HLS for multiple GHC versions at the
same time. If you know, that you only use one GHC version, e.g., in a project
specific nix-shell
you can simply use
pkgs.haskellPackages.haskell-language-server
or
pkgs.haskell.packages.*.haskell-language-server
from the package set you use.
If you use nix-shell
for your development environments remember to start your
editor in that environment. You may want to use something like direnv
and/or an
editor plugin to achieve this.
Overriding Haskell packages
Overriding a single package
Like many language specific subsystems in nixpkgs, the Haskell infrastructure
also has its own quirks when it comes to overriding. Overriding of the inputs
to a package at least follows the standard procedure. For example, imagine you
need to build nix-tree
with a more recent version of brick
than the default
one provided by haskellPackages
:
haskellPackages.nix-tree.override {
brick = haskellPackages.brick_0_67;
}
The custom interface comes into play when you want to override the arguments
passed to haskellPackages.mkDerivation
. For this, the function overrideCabal
from haskell.lib.compose
is used. E.g., if you want to install a man page
that is distributed with the package, you can do something like this:
haskell.lib.compose.overrideCabal (drv: {
postInstall = ''
${drv.postInstall or ""}
install -Dm644 man/pnbackup.1 -t $out/share/man/man1
'';
}) haskellPackages.pnbackup
overrideCabal
takes two arguments:
- A function which receives all arguments passed to
haskellPackages.mkDerivation
before and returns a set of arguments to replace (or add) with a new value. - The Haskell derivation to override.
The arguments are ordered so that you can easily create helper functions by making use of currying:
let
installManPage = haskell.lib.compose.overrideCabal (drv: {
postInstall = ''
${drv.postInstall or ""}
install -Dm644 man/${drv.pname}.1 -t "$out/share/man/man1"
'';
});
in
installManPage haskellPackages.pnbackup
In fact, haskell.lib.compose
already provides lots of useful helpers for common
tasks, detailed in the next section. They are also structured in such a way that
they can be combined using lib.pipe
:
lib.pipe my-haskell-package [
# lift version bounds on dependencies
haskell.lib.compose.doJailbreak
# disable building the haddock documentation
haskell.lib.compose.dontHaddock
# pass extra package flag to Cabal's configure step
(haskell.lib.compose.enableCabalFlag "myflag")
]
haskell.lib.compose
The base interface for all overriding is the following function:
overrideCabal f drv
- Takes the arguments passed to obtain
drv
tof
and uses the resulting attribute set to update the argument set. Then a recomputed version ofdrv
using the new argument set is returned.
All other helper functions are implemented in terms of overrideCabal
and make
common overrides shorter and more complicate ones trivial. The simple overrides
which only change a single argument are only described very briefly in the
following overview. Refer to the
documentation of haskellPackages.mkDerivation
for a more detailed description of the effects of the respective arguments.
Packaging Helpers
overrideSrc { src, version } drv
- Replace the source used for building
drv
with the path or derivation given assrc
. Theversion
attribute is optional. Prefer this function over overridingsrc
viaoverrideCabal
, since it also automatically takes care of removing any Hackage revisions.
justStaticExecutables drv
- Only build and install the executables produced by
drv
, removing everything that may refer to other Haskell packages' store paths (like libraries and documentation). This dramatically reduces the closure size of the resulting derivation. Note that the executables are only statically linked against their Haskell dependencies, but will still link dynamically against libc, GMP and other system library dependencies. If dependencies use their Cabal-generatedPaths_*
module, this may not work as well if GHC's dead code elimination is unable to remove the references to the dependency's store path that module contains. enableSeparateBinOutput drv
- Install executables produced by
drv
to a separatebin
output. This has a similar effect asjustStaticExecutables
, but preserves the libraries and documentation in theout
output alongside thebin
output with a much smaller closure size. markBroken drv
- Sets the
broken
flag totrue
fordrv
. markUnbroken drv
,unmarkBroken drv
- Set the
broken
flag tofalse
fordrv
. doDistribute drv
- Updates
hydraPlatforms
so that Hydra will builddrv
. This is sometimes necessary when working with versioned packages inhaskellPackages
which are not built by default. dontDistribute drv
- Sets
hydraPlatforms
to[]
, causing Hydra to skip this package altogether. Useful if it fails to evaluate cleanly and is causing noise in the evaluation errors tab on Hydra.
Development Helpers
sdistTarball drv
- Create a source distribution tarball like those found on Hackage
instead of building the package
drv
. documentationTarball drv
- Create a documentation tarball suitable for uploading to Hackage
instead of building the package
drv
. buildFromSdist drv
- Uses
sdistTarball drv
as the source to compiledrv
. This helps to catch packaging bugs when building from a local directory, e.g. when required files are missing fromextra-source-files
. failOnAllWarnings drv
- Enables all warnings GHC supports and makes it fail the build if any of them are emitted.
enableDWARFDebugging drv
- Compiles the package with additional debug symbols enabled, useful
for debugging with e.g.
gdb
. doStrip drv
- Sets
doStrip
totrue
fordrv
. dontStrip drv
- Sets
doStrip
tofalse
fordrv
.
Trivial Helpers
doJailbreak drv
- Sets the
jailbreak
argument totrue
fordrv
. dontJailbreak drv
- Sets the
jailbreak
argument tofalse
fordrv
. doHaddock drv
- Sets
doHaddock
totrue
fordrv
. dontHaddock drv
- Sets
doHaddock
tofalse
fordrv
. Useful if the build of a package is failing because of e.g. a syntax error in the Haddock documentation. doHyperlinkSource drv
- Sets
hyperlinkSource
totrue
fordrv
. dontHyperlinkSource drv
- Sets
hyperlinkSource
tofalse
fordrv
. doCheck drv
- Sets
doCheck
totrue
fordrv
. dontCheck drv
- Sets
doCheck
tofalse
fordrv
. Useful if a package has a broken, flaky or otherwise problematic test suite breaking the build.
appendConfigureFlags list drv
- Adds the strings in
list
to theconfigureFlags
argument fordrv
. enableCabalFlag flag drv
- Makes sure that the Cabal flag
flag
is enabled in Cabal's configure step. disableCabalFlag flag drv
- Makes sure that the Cabal flag
flag
is disabled in Cabal's configure step. appendBuildflags list drv
- Adds the strings in
list
to thebuildFlags
argument fordrv
.
appendPatches list drv
- Adds the
list
of derivations or paths to thepatches
argument fordrv
.
addBuildTools list drv
- Adds the
list
of derivations to thebuildTools
argument fordrv
. addExtraLibraries list drv
- Adds the
list
of derivations to theextraLibraries
argument fordrv
. addBuildDepends list drv
- Adds the
list
of derivations to thebuildDepends
argument fordrv
. addTestToolDepends list drv
- Adds the
list
of derivations to thetestToolDepends
argument fordrv
. addPkgconfigDepends list drv
- Adds the
list
of derivations to thepkg-configDepends
argument fordrv
. addSetupDepends list drv
- Adds the
list
of derivations to thesetupHaskellDepends
argument fordrv
. doBenchmark drv
- Set
doBenchmark
totrue
fordrv
. Useful if your development environment is missing the dependencies necessary for compiling the benchmark component. dontBenchmark drv
- Set
doBenchmark
tofalse
fordrv
. setBuildTargets drv list
- Sets the
buildTarget
argument fordrv
so that the targets specified inlist
are built. doCoverage drv
- Sets the
doCoverage
argument totrue
fordrv
. dontCoverage drv
- Sets the
doCoverage
argument tofalse
fordrv
. enableExecutableProfiling drv
- Sets the
enableExecutableProfiling
argument totrue
fordrv
. disableExecutableProfiling drv
- Sets the
enableExecutableProfiling
argument tofalse
fordrv
. enableLibraryProfiling drv
- Sets the
enableLibraryProfiling
argument totrue
fordrv
. disableLibraryProfiling drv
- Sets the
enableLibraryProfiling
argument tofalse
fordrv
.
Library functions in the Haskell package sets
Some library functions depend on packages from the Haskell package sets. Thus they are
exposed from those instead of from haskell.lib.compose
which can only access what is
passed directly to it. When using the functions below, make sure that you are obtaining them
from the same package set (haskellPackages
, haskell.packages.ghc944
etc.) as the packages
you are working with or – even better – from the self
/final
fix point of your overlay to
haskellPackages
.
Note: Some functions like shellFor
that are not intended for overriding per se, are omitted
in this section.
cabalSdist { src, name ? ... }
- Generates the Cabal sdist tarball for
src
, suitable for uploading to Hackage. Contrary tohaskell.lib.compose.sdistTarball
, it usescabal-install
overSetup.hs
, so it is usually faster: No build dependencies need to be downloaded, and we can skip compilingSetup.hs
. buildFromCabalSdist drv
- Build
drv
, but run itssrc
attribute throughcabalSdist
first. Useful for catching files necessary for compilation that are missing from the sdist. generateOptparseApplicativeCompletions list drv
- Generate and install shell completion files for the installed executables whose
names are given via
list
. The executables need to be usingoptparse-applicative
for this to work. Note that this feature is automatically disabled when cross-compiling, since it requires executing the binaries in question.
F.A.Q.
Why is topic X not covered in this section? Why is section Y missing?
We have been working on moving the nixpkgs Haskell documentation back into the nixpkgs manual. Since this process has not been completed yet, you may find some topics missing here covered in the old haskell4nix docs.
If you feel any important topic is not documented at all, feel free to comment on the issue linked above.
How to enable or disable profiling builds globally?
By default, Nixpkgs builds a profiling version of each Haskell library. The exception to this rule are some platforms where it is disabled due to concerns over output size. You may want to…
-
…enable profiling globally so that you can build a project you are working on with profiling ability giving you insight in the time spent across your code and code you depend on using GHC's profiling feature.
-
…disable profiling (globally) to reduce the time spent building the profiling versions of libraries which a significant amount of build time is spent on (although they are not as expensive as the “normal” build of a Haskell library).
::: {.note} The method described below affects the build of all libraries in the respective Haskell package set as well as GHC. If your choices differ from Nixpkgs' default for your (host) platform, you will lose the ability to substitute from the official binary cache.
If you are concerned about build times and thus want to disable profiling, it
probably makes sense to use haskell.lib.compose.disableLibraryProfiling
(see
) on the packages you are building locally while
continuing to substitute their dependencies and GHC.
:::
Since we need to change the profiling settings for the desired Haskell package
set and GHC (as the core libraries like base
, filepath
etc. are bundled
with GHC), it is recommended to use overlays for Nixpkgs to change them.
Since the interrelated parts, i.e. the package set and GHC, are connected
via the Nixpkgs fixpoint, we need to modify them both in a way that preserves
their connection (or else we'd have to wire it up again manually). This is
achieved by changing GHC and the package set in seperate overlays to prevent
the package set from pulling in GHC from prev
.
The result is two overlays like the ones shown below. Adjustable parts are annotated with comments, as are any optional or alternative ways to achieve the desired profiling settings without causing too many rebuilds.
let
# Name of the compiler and package set you want to change. If you are using
# the default package set `haskellPackages`, you need to look up what version
# of GHC it currently uses (note that this is subject to change).
ghcName = "ghc92";
# Desired new setting
enableProfiling = true;
in
[
# The first overlay modifies the GHC derivation so that it does or does not
# build profiling versions of the core libraries bundled with it. It is
# recommended to only use such an overlay if you are enabling profiling on a
# platform that doesn't by default, because compiling GHC from scratch is
# quite expensive.
(final: prev:
let
inherit (final) lib;
in
{
haskell = lib.recursiveUpdate prev.haskell {
compiler.${ghcName} = prev.haskell.compiler.${ghcName}.override {
# Unfortunately, the GHC setting is named differently for historical reasons
enableProfiledLibs = enableProfiling;
};
};
})
(final: prev:
let
inherit (final) lib;
haskellLib = final.haskell.lib.compose;
in
{
haskell = lib.recursiveUpdate prev.haskell {
packages.${ghcName} = prev.haskell.packages.${ghcName}.override {
overrides = hfinal: hprev: {
mkDerivation = args: hprev.mkDerivation (args // {
# Since we are forcing our ideas upon mkDerivation, this change will
# affect every package in the package set.
enableLibraryProfiling = enableProfiling;
# To actually use profiling on an executable, executable profiling
# needs to be enabled for the executable you want to profile. You
# can either do this globally or…
enableExecutableProfiling = enableProfiling;
});
# …only for the package that contains an executable you want to profile.
# That saves on unnecessary rebuilds for packages that you only depend
# on for their library, but also contain executables (e.g. pandoc).
my-executable = haskellLib.enableExecutableProfiling hprev.my-executable;
# If you are disabling profiling to save on build time, but want to
# retain the ability to substitute from the binary cache. Drop the
# override for mkDerivation above and instead have an override like
# this for the specific packages you are building locally and want
# to make cheaper to build.
my-library = haskellLib.disableLibraryProfiling hprev.my-library;
};
};
};
})
]