cabal-cargs
cabal-cargs
is a command line program for extracting compiler relevant
arguments from a cabal file and print them out formatted so that they're
directly usable as arguments for ghc
or hdevtools
.
The main motivation for writing cabal-cargs
was to get a mostly just working
default, non modified hdevtools
.
If you want to call hdevtools check
for a source file of a cabalized project and
would like to consider all compiler relevant arguments in the cabal file - like
hs-source-dirs
, ghc-options
, cpp-options
... - and also the cabal sandbox
,
then you could just use cabal-cargs
the following way:
$> hdevtools check `cabal-cargs --format=hdevtools --sourcefile=Source.hs` Source.hs
This call of cabal-cargs
will search for a cabal file starting at the directory
of Source.hs
upwards the directory tree. The cabal file is then searched for
a fitting section for the given source file. A section is considered fitting if
the source file is contained in a directory or sub-directory listed in hs-source-dirs
.
At the end the fields of the found sections are printed out in the desired format.
Normally you don't want to use cabal-cargs
manually, but use it to initialize the
options of hdevtools. So in the case of the editor vim
and the plugin vim-hdevtools
you could use something like:
function! s:CabalCargs(args)
let l:output = system('cabal-cargs ' . a:args)
if v:shell_error != 0
let l:lines = split(l:output, '\n')
echohl ErrorMsg
echomsg 'args: ' . a:args
for l:line in l:lines
echomsg l:line
endfor
echohl None
return ''
endif
return l:output
endfunction
function! s:HdevtoolsOptions()
return s:CabalCargs('--format=hdevtools --sourcefile=' . shellescape(expand('%')))
endfunction
autocmd Bufenter *.hs :call s:InitHaskellVars()
function! s:InitHaskellVars()
if filereadable(expand('%'))
let g:hdevtools_options = s:HdevtoolsOptions()
endif
endfunction
To see if cabal-cargs
did the right thing you can verify the hdevtools options by
calling in the vim command line:
:let g:hdevtools_options
Example: Compiler Arguments from Cabal File
Instead of searching for the cabal file by a source file the cabal file can be given explicitly:
$> cabal-cargs --cabalfile=Some.cabal
If an additional source file is given, then the cabal file is searched for a fitting section.
If no cabal file nor a source file is given, then starting at the current directory a
cabal file is searched upwards the directory tree.
Sections
If you don't want any automatic finding of sections or only want to consider a
certain section, then you could do this by using the options:
--library
--executable=name
--testsuite=name
--benchmark=name
--allsections
You can use multiple of these options at once and even specify multiple
e.g. executables at once: --executable=exe1 --executable=exe2 ...
.
Fields
By default all fields of a section are printed out. You can constrain the
output by the options: --only=name
or --ignore=name
. These options can
be specified multiple times.
The allowed names are the field names from the cabal file, just the hyphen
replaced by an underscore e.g.: hs-source-dirs
-> hs_source_dirs
.
Currently supported cabal fields are:
hs_source_dirs
ghc_options
default_extensions
default_language
cpp_options
c_sources
cc_options
extra_lib_dirs
extra_libraries
ld_options
include_dirs
includes
build_depends
There are further some special fields:
package_db
root_dir
autogen_hs_source_dirs
autogen_include_dirs
autogen_includes
hdevtools_socket
It's not quite true, that all fields are printed out if not constrained, that's
only the case for the pure
formatting option. For the other formatting options
currently the fields c_sources
and ld_options
are ignored
and additionally the ghc
formatting option ignores the hdevtools_socket
field.
Flags
The conditional parts of the cabal file are respected by cabal-cargs
by taking
the default values of the flags defined in the cabal file into account.
You can overwrite the default values of the flags with the options:
--enable=FLAGNAME
--disable=FLAGNAME
It's also possible to overwrite the OS
and Arch
values - which by default are
the ones the cabal library was build on - with the options:
--os=OSNAME
--arch=ARCHNAME
By default the fields are formatted for the ghc
compiler. The available options
for --format
are:
pure
prints the values like they are present in the cabal file and is mostly
only useful in conjunction with --only
to get the value of one cabal field.
Installation
It's recommended to build cabal-cargs
in a cabal sandbox
with: cabal install cabal-cargs
.