The Haskell Tool Stack¶
Stack is a cross-platform program for developing Haskell projects. It is aimed at Haskellers both new and experienced.
It features:
- Installing GHC automatically, in an isolated location.
- Installing packages needed for your project.
- Building your project.
- Testing your project.
- Benchmarking your project.
How to install¶
For many Un*x operating systems, all you need to do is run:
curl -sSL https://get.haskellstack.org/ | sh
or:
wget -qO- https://get.haskellstack.org/ | sh
For detailed instructions and downloads, instructions are available by operating system/distribution:
- Windows
- macOS
- Ubuntu
- Debian
- CentOS / Red Hat / Amazon Linux
- Fedora
- openSUSE / SUSE Linux Enterprise
- Arch Linux
- NixOS
- Linux (general)
- FreeBSD
Quick Start Guide¶
First you need to install it (see previous section).
Start your new project:¶
stack new my-project
cd my-project
stack setup
stack build
stack exec my-project-exe
- The
stack new
command will create a new directory containing all the needed files to start a project correctly. - The
stack setup
will download the compiler if necessary in an isolated location (default~/.stack
) that won't interfere with any system-level installations. (For information on installation paths, please use thestack path
command.). - The
stack build
command will build the minimal project. stack exec my-project-exe
will execute the command.- If you just want to install an executable using stack, then all you have to do
is
stack install <package-name>
.
If you want to launch a REPL:
stack ghci
Run stack
for a complete list of commands.
Workflow¶
The stack new
command should have created the following files:
.
├── LICENSE
├── Setup.hs
├── app
│ └── Main.hs
├── my-project.cabal
├── src
│ └── Lib.hs
├── stack.yaml
└── test
└── Spec.hs
3 directories, 7 files
So to manage your library:
- Edit files in the
src/
directory.
The app
directory should preferably contain only files related to
executables.
-
If you need to include another library (for example the package
text
: -
Add the package
text
to the filemy-project.cabal
in the sectionbuild-depends: ...
. -
run
stack build
another time -
If you get an error that tells you your package isn't in the LTS. Just try to add a new version in the
stack.yaml
file in theextra-deps
section.
It was a really fast introduction on how to start to code in Haskell using stack
.
If you want to go further, we highly recommend you to read the stack
guide.
How to contribute¶
This assumes that you have already installed a version of stack, and have git
installed.
- Clone
stack
from git withgit clone https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack.git
. - Enter into the stack folder with
cd stack
. - Build
stack
using a pre-existingstack
install withstack setup && stack build
. - Once
stack
finishes building, check the stack version withstack exec stack -- --version
. Make sure the version is the latest. - Look for issues tagged with
newcomer
andawaiting-pr
labels.
Build from source as a one-liner:
git clone https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack.git && \
cd stack && \
stack setup && \
stack build
Complete guide to stack¶
This repository also contains a complete user guide to using stack , covering all of the most common use cases.
Questions, Feedback, Discussion¶
- For frequently asked questions about detailed or specific use-cases, please see the FAQ.
- For general questions, comments, feedback and support please write to the stack mailing list.
- For bugs, issues, or requests please open an issue.
- When using Stack Overflow, please use the haskell-stack tag.
Why stack?¶
stack is a project of the Commercial Haskell group, spearheaded by FP Complete. It is designed to answer the needs of commercial Haskell users, hobbyist Haskellers, and individuals and companies thinking about starting to use Haskell. It is intended to be easy to use for newcomers, while providing the customizability and power experienced developers need.
While stack itself has been around since June of 2015, it is based on codebases used by FP Complete for its corporate customers and internally for years prior. stack is a refresh of that codebase combined with other open source efforts like stackage-cli to meet the needs of users everywhere.
A large impetus for the work on stack was a large survey of people interested in Haskell, which rated build issues as a major concern. The stack team hopes that stack can address these concerns.