# packcheck [![Hackage](https://img.shields.io/hackage/v/packcheck.svg?style=flat)](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/packcheck) [![Gitter chat](https://badges.gitter.im/composewell/gitter.svg)](https://gitter.im/composewell/streamly) [![Windows Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/f7c0ncy84cxp8lbe?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/harendra-kumar/packcheck) [![CircleCI](https://circleci.com/gh/composewell/packcheck/tree/master.svg?style=svg)](https://circleci.com/gh/composewell/packcheck/tree/master) ## Quick Start ### Build on CI To use packcheck for CI testing of your repo: #### CircleCI * Add your package repo to CircleCI as necessary (See https://circleci.com/docs/2.0/getting-started/) * Copy [.circleci/config.yml](https://github.com/composewell/packcheck/blob/master/.circleci/config.yml) to your package repo #### Appveyor * Add your package repo to Appveyor as necessary (See https://www.appveyor.com/docs/server/) * Copy [appveyor.yml](https://github.com/composewell/packcheck/blob/master/appveyor.yml) to your package repo #### Github Actions * Add your package repo to Github as necessary (See https://docs.github.com/en/actions/quickstart) * Copy [.github/workflows/packcheck.yml](https://github.com/composewell/packcheck/blob/master/.github/workflows/packcheck.yml) to your package repo CI should work out of the box for most packages. Uncomment the relevant lines in the CI config files or change the values of the environment variables for fine grained control or custom configuration. ### Build on Local Machine You can use packcheck to build or CI test a package on your local machine as well. For local use, copy [packcheck.sh](https://github.com/composewell/packcheck/blob/master/packcheck.sh) to your local machine (Linux/OSX/Windows), put it in your PATH, and run it from your package directory. You can pass the same environment variables that are used in CI files to run the exact same tests locally. Usage is as simple as: ``` $ packcheck.sh cabal $ packcheck.sh cabal GHCUP_VERSION=0.1.20.0 GHCVER=9.8.1 $ packcheck.sh stack GHCVER=9.4 ``` `packcheck` can automatically pick the requested version of GHC from: * multiple GHC path components in your PATH environment variable * stack installed ghc binaries ### Out of the box support | cabal | stack | |:-------------:|:---------:| | Linux | OSX | Windows | |:-------------:|:---------:|:--------------| | Github | Appveyor | CircleCI | Local Machine | |:-------------:|:---------:|:--------------|:--------------| The script can be easily adapted to any CI with a single line build command. ## Key Features * _Error messages:_ A lot of emphasis has been put on providing precise and detailed error messages when something fails so that the user can easily fix things. * _Informational:_ The output provides all the information that you may want to know, tool paths being used, their versions, how they are invoked, build options, time taken by each build step etc. You can even copy the commands from the output and paste them on your local host to reproduce the build or failure and debug quickly. * _Same tests everywhere:_ You can run exact same tests with same options or flags, in the same way, on all CI platforms. * _Choose options:_ Conveniently control all aspects of build through command line or environment variables, including tool options or whether to enable benchmarks, haddock, coverage, test etc. * _Picking GHC:_ Right GHC is picked up automatically from PATH or installed using ghcup by specifying GHCUP_VERSION and GHCVER env vars. Stack installed GHC binaries can be picked automatically when available. * _Test source distribution:_ `packcheck` creates the source distribution and builds the package from the generated tarball to make sure that you build what you release and don't miss adding a file to the distribution. Also, checks if any file in the git repo is missing in the source distribution. * _Non-destructive_: By default the script does not change any config or upgrade any tools on the host machine. * _Auto tool install_: `stack` and `ghc` can be installed automatically ## Introduction The package `packcheck` includes a script called `packcheck.sh`, it is a high level universal super build script to uniformly, consistently build and comprehensively sanity test a Haskell package across build tools (stack/cabal) and across all platforms (Linux/MacOS/Windows). You do not need to be familiar with any of the build tools to use it. To make sure that it works everywhere without installing anything it is deliberately written using the `bash` shell scripting language. Any of the parameters to control the builds can either be passed on the script command line or as environment variables for convenient use on CI systems. `packcheck` is also a minimal yet complete "hello world" Haskell package with model config files that can be used unmodified in any Haskell package. The CI configs can be modified **declaratively**, using environment variables, to adapt to **any** kind of build scenario you can imagine. This model package has everything that a Haskell package usually has; including tests, benchmarks and Linux/MacOS/Windows CI already working. It can be used as a starting point to develop a new package. Beginners can use it to learn about Haskell package metadata structure. ## What all does it do? An invocation of `packcheck.sh` performs a whole battery of tests, all aspects can be controlled via environment variables, command line. The flow goes roughly as follows: * Pick or install the requested version of GHC/cabal/stack * create source distribution package, unpack and test from it * Check the differences in git repo and source distribution * perform distribution checks * build source * build benchmarks * build haddock docs * run tests * run `hlint` * generate coverage report ## Usage Examples You can run these commands on your local machine as well as inside a CI script. You can try these commands in the `packcheck` package itself: ``` $ cd packcheck $ ./packcheck.sh cabal GHCUP_VERSION=0.1.20.0 GHCVER=9.8.1 ``` ``` $ ./packcheck.sh stack RESOLVER=lts-21 $ ./packcheck.sh stack GHCVER=8.6.5 $ ./packcheck.sh stack RESOLVER=lts-21.24 STACK_YAML=stack-8.0.yaml STACK_BUILD_OPTIONS="--flag streamly:examples-sdl" CABALVER=3.10 # You can also do a cabal build using stack installed ghc: $ stack exec ./packcheck.sh cabal RESOLVER=lts-21 ``` Run hlint commands on the directories `src` and `test`: ``` $ ./packcheck.sh hlint HLINT_OPTIONS="lint" HLINT_TARGETS="src test" ``` ## Picking GHC versions When `GHCVER` parameter is not specified, `packcheck` looks for a binary named `ghc` in your `PATH` environment variable. It uses first such binary found in `PATH`. When `GHCVER` parameter is specified and is not set to `head`, it looks for `ghc` in the `PATH` and if `GHCVER` is a PREFIX of the actual version of `ghc` binary found then that `ghc` binary is used. Otherwise, `packcheck` tries to look for another `ghc` binary in the next PATH components until it finds a matching `ghc` version. If `GHCVER` is set to `head`, packcheck looks for `ghc-head` as the compiler and does not check the numeric version of the compiler. If `GHCUP_VERSION` is specified packcheck tries to use the existing `ghcup` to install the ghc, if `ghcup` is not found it installs the requested version and then installs the `GHCVER` using it. If all of the above fails `packcheck` looks for ghc in the `stack` install locations. ## packcheck-safe `packcheck-safe.sh` is a more robust wrapper over `packcheck.sh`, it does not trust or use any environment variables, all environment needs to be specified explicitly on the command line. Therefore, it ensures better reproducibility. It also catches any misspelled command line parameter names. For example, `packcheck.sh` won't catch it if you typed `GHCVWR=9.8` instead of `GHCVER=9.8`, it just assumes that `GHCVER` is not specified. `packcheck-safe.sh` would generate an error saying that `GHCVWR` is not recognized. Since it uses a clean environment you will have to specify PATH as well on the command line. For example, ``` $ ./packcheck-safe.sh cabal PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/opt/ghc/bin ``` ## packcheck-remote `packcheck-remote.sh` is a wrapper over `packcheck.sh`. It allows you to run packcheck on a remote repository by cloning it locally and optionally merging a branch into another branch (e.g. merging a PR branch into master). ``` $ ./packcheck-remote.sh --force \ --remote=https://github.com/user/repo \ --checkout=origin/master \ --merge=origin/branch \ --directory=./repo.packcheck \ -- cabal GHCVER=9.8.1 ``` Use `./packcheck-remote.sh --help` for more information. ## Full Reference Please use `cabal` version 2.4 or later. NOTE: Any of the parameters described below can either be passed on command line or as an environment variable. Passing options on command line is more convenient when running interactively, while environment variables are more convenient when running on a CI system. ``` $ packcheck.sh --help -------------------------------------------------- Usage -------------------------------------------------- packcheck.sh COMMAND [PARAMETER=VALUE ...] For example: packcheck.sh cabal GHCVER=9.8.1 packcheck.sh stack RESOLVER=lts GHC_OPTIONS="-O0 -Werror" packcheck.sh hlint Ask questions: https://app.gitter.im/#/room/#composewell_streamly:gitter.im Report issues: https://github.com/composewell/packcheck/issues/new Control parameters can either be passed on command line or exported as environment variables. Parameters marked DESTRUCTIVE may modify your global user config or state. Boolean parameters can be specified as y|Y|yes|Yes|YES|true|True|TRUE|on|On|ON for an affirmative value and as n|N|no|No|NO|false|False|FALSE|off|Off|OFF or empty for a negative value. -------------------------------------------------- Commands and flags -------------------------------------------------- cabal : build using cabal stack : build using stack hlint : run hlint clean : remove the .packcheck directory cleanall : remove .packcheck, .stack-work directories help | --help | -h : show this help message --version : show packcheck version -------------------------------------------------- Selecting tool versions -------------------------------------------------- GHCUP_VERSION : [a.b.c.d] GHCUP version to install GHCVER if needed GHCVER : [a.b.c | head] GHC version prefix (may not be enforced when using stack) CABALVER : [a.b.c.d] Cabal version (prefix) to use STACKVER : [a.b.c.d] Stack version (prefix) to use STACK_UPGRADE : [y] DESTRUCTIVE! Upgrades stack to latest version RESOLVER : Stack resolver to use for stack builds or cabal builds using stack HLINT_VERSION : Download a specific version binary of hlint instead of using one in PATH DOCSPEC_URL : cabal-docspec release URL to install at ~/.local/bin/cabal-docspec (see https://github.com/phadej/cabal-extras/releases/) -------------------------------------------------- Where to find the required tools -------------------------------------------------- PATH : [path] Set PATH explicitly for predictable builds -------------------------------------------------- Specifying common tool options -------------------------------------------------- GHCUP_GHC_OPTIONS : Used as in "ghcup install ghc " GHC_OPTIONS : Specify GHC options to use SDIST_OPTIONS : Arguments to stack/cabal sdist command -------------------------------------------------- Specifying what to build -------------------------------------------------- DISABLE_BENCH : [y] Do not build benchmarks, default is to build but not run DISABLE_TEST : [y] Do not run tests, default is to run tests DISABLE_DOCS : [y] Do not build haddocks, default is to build docs ENABLE_DOCSPEC : [y] Run cabal-docspec after the cabal build DISABLE_SDIST_BUILD : [y] Do not build from source distribution DISABLE_SDIST_PROJECT_CHECK: [y] Ignore project file and continue DISABLE_SDIST_GIT_CHECK : [y] Do not compare source distribution with git repo DISABLE_DIST_CHECKS : [y] Do not perform source distribution checks -------------------------------------------------- cabal options -------------------------------------------------- CABAL_REINIT_CONFIG : [y] DESTRUCTIVE! Remove old config to avoid incompatibility issues CABAL_PROJECT : Alternative cabal project file, path relative to project root CABAL_BUILD_OPTIONS : ADDITIONAL cabal v2-build options to append to defaults CABAL_DISABLE_DEPS : [y] Do not install dependencies, do not do cabal update CABAL_BUILD_TARGETS : cabal v2-build targets, default is 'all' CABAL_CHECK_RELAX : [y] Do not fail if cabal check fails on the package. CABAL_HACKAGE_MIRROR : DESTRUCTIVE! Specify an alternative mirror, modifies the cabal config file. -------------------------------------------------- stack options -------------------------------------------------- STACK_YAML : Alternative stack config file path relative to project root STACK_OPTIONS : ADDITIONAL stack global options (e.g. -v) to append STACK_BUILD_OPTIONS : ADDITIONAL stack build command options to append -------------------------------------------------- hlint options -------------------------------------------------- HLINT_OPTIONS : hlint arguments e.g.'--datadir=. lint' HLINT_TARGETS : target directories to run hlint on e.g. 'src test' -------------------------------------------------- Coverage options -------------------------------------------------- COVERAGE : [y] Just generate coverage information -------------------------------------------------- Diagnostics options -------------------------------------------------- CHECK_ENV : [y] Treat unknown env variables as error, used with env -i BASE_TIME : System time to be used as base for timeline reporting ``` Build fails if `DISABLE_SDIST_BUILD` is not set and the contents of the source distribution tar ball do not match the git repository contents. Either add any exceptions to `.packcheck.ignore` file or use `DISABLE_SDIST_GIT_CHECK=y` to disable this feature. Currently this check is done only if `git` and `tar` commands are available in the `PATH`. Options marked `DESTRUCTIVE!` are fine in a CI environment. But on a local machine sometimes it may not be desirable as it will change the state of your global cabal config, so consider that before using these options. By default cabal builds are done using sandboxes. It creates any temporary files or build artifacts inside `.packcheck` directory. See the `clean` and `cleanall` commands to release the temporary space. `stack` is automatically installed and can be used to do cabal builds as well. If you specify `BUILD=cabal` and `RESOLVER` at the same time then the cabal build uses stack installed `cabal` and `ghc`, both are installed automatically when needed. For pure cabal builds i.e. when `BUILD=cabal` and `RESOLVER` is not specified, `cabal` and `ghc` must be pre-installed on the system before building. ## Diagnostics Sometimes you may run into issues due to some environment variables unknowingly set or some command line parameters or env variables being misspelled and therefore silently ignored. To avoid any such issues the robust way to invoke `packcheck` is to use a clean environment using `env -i` and passing `CHECK_ENV=y` parameter. When this parameter is set unwanted/misspelled variables are detected and reported. ``` $ env -i CHECK_ENV=y ./packcheck.sh stack ``` For performance diagnostics `packcheck` prints the time elapsed from the beginning at each build step performed.