2. Creating a package

Suppose you have a directory hierarchy containing the source files that make up your package. You will need to add two more files to the root directory of the package:

package.cabal

a text file containing a package description (for details of the syntax of this file, see Section 2.1, “Package descriptions”), and

Setup.hs or Setup.lhs

a single-module Haskell program to perform various setup tasks (with the interface described in Section 3, “Building and installing a package”). This module should import only modules that will be present in all Haskell implementations, including modules of the Cabal library. In most cases it will be trivial, calling on the Cabal library to do most of the work.

Once you have these, you can create a source bundle of this directory for distribution. Building of the package is discussed in Section 3, “Building and installing a package”.

Example 1. A package containing a simple library

The HUnit package contains a file HUnit.cabal containing:

Name:           HUnit
Version:        1.1
License:        BSD3
Author:         Dean Herington
Homepage:       http://hunit.sourceforge.net/
Category:       Testing
Build-Depends:  base
Synopsis:       Unit testing framework for Haskell
Exposed-modules:
        Test.HUnit, Test.HUnit.Base, Test.HUnit.Lang,
        Test.HUnit.Terminal, Test.HUnit.Text
Extensions:     CPP

and the following Setup.hs:

import Distribution.Simple
main = defaultMain

Example 2. A package containing executable programs

Name:           TestPackage
Version:        0.0
License:        BSD3
Author:         Angela Author
Synopsis:       Small package with two programs
Build-Depends:  HUnit

Executable:     program1
Main-Is:        Main.hs
Hs-Source-Dirs: prog1

Executable:     program2
Main-Is:        Main.hs
Hs-Source-Dirs: prog2
Other-Modules:  Utils

with Setup.hs the same as above.

Example 3. A package containing a library and executable programs

Name:            TestPackage
Version:         0.0
License:         BSD3
Author:          Angela Author
Synopsis:        Package with library and two programs
Build-Depends:   HUnit
Exposed-Modules: A, B, C

Executable:      program1
Main-Is:         Main.hs
Hs-Source-Dirs:  prog1
Other-Modules:   A, B

Executable:      program2
Main-Is:         Main.hs
Hs-Source-Dirs:  prog2
Other-Modules:   A, C, Utils

with Setup.hs the same as above. Note that any library modules required (directly or indirectly) by an executable must be listed again.

The trivial setup script used in these examples uses the simple build infrastructure provided by the Cabal library (see Distribution.Simple). The simplicity lies in its interface rather that its implementation. It automatically handles preprocessing with standard preprocessors, and builds packages for all the Haskell implementations (except nhc98, for now).

The simple build infrastructure can also handle packages where building is governed by system-dependent parameters, if you specify a little more (see Section 2.3, “System-dependent parameters”). A few packages require more elaborate solutions (see Section 2.4, “More complex packages”).

2.1. Package descriptions

The package description file should have a name ending in “.cabal”. There must be exactly one such file in the directory. The first part of the name is immaterial, but it is conventional to use the package name.

In the package description file, lines beginning with “--” are treated as comments and ignored.

This file should contain one or more stanzas separated by blank lines:

Each stanza consists of a number of field/value pairs, with a syntax like mail message headers.

  • case is not significant in field names

  • to continue a field value, indent the next line

  • to get a blank line in a field value, use an indented “.

The syntax of the value depends on the field. Field types include:

token , filename , directory

Either a sequence of one or more non-space non-comma characters, or a quoted string in Haskell 98 lexical syntax. Unless otherwise stated, relative filenames and directories are interpreted from the package root directory.

freeform , URL , address

An arbitrary, uninterpreted string.

identifier

A letter followed by zero or more alphanumerics or underscores.

Modules and preprocessors

Haskell module names listed in the exposed-modules and other-modules fields may correspond to Haskell source files, i.e. with names ending in “.hs” or “.lhs”, or to inputs for various Haskell preprocessors. The simple build infrastructure understands the extensions “.gc” (haddock), “.chs” (c2hs), “.hsc” (hsc2hs), “.y” and “.ly” (happy), “.x” (alex) and “.cpphs” (cpphs). When building, Cabal will automatically run the appropriate preprocessor and compile the Haskell module it produces.

Some fields take lists of values, which are optionally separated by commas, except for the build-depends field, where the commas are mandatory.

Some fields are marked as required. All others are optional, and unless otherwise specified have empty default values.

2.1.1. Package properties

These fields may occur in the first stanza, and describe the package as a whole:

name: package-name (required)

The unique name of the package (see Section 1, “Packages”), without the version number.

version: numbers (required)

The package version number, usually consisting of a sequence of natural numbers separated by dots.

cabal-version: >, <=, etc. & numbers

The version of Cabal required for this package. Use ONLY if this package requires a particular version of Cabal, since unfortunitely, early versions of Cabal do not recognize this field. List the field early in your .cabal file so that it will appear as a syntax error before any others.

license: identifier (default: AllRightsReserved)

The type of license under which this package is distributed. License names are the constants of the License type.

license-file: filename

The name of a file containing the precise license for this package.

copyright: freeform

The content of a copyright notice, typically the name of the holder of the copyright on the package and the year(s) from which copyright is claimed.

author: freeform

The original author of the package.

maintainer: address

The current maintainer or maintainers of the package. This is an e-mail address to which users should send bug reports, feature requests and patches.

stability: freeform

The stability level of the package, e.g. alpha, experimental, provisional, stable.

homepage: URL

The package homepage.

package-url: URL

The location of a source bundle for the package. The distribution should be a Cabal package.

synopsis: freeform

A very short description of the package, for use in a table of packages. This is your headline, so keep it short (one line) but as informative as possible. Save space by not including the package name or saying it's written in Haskell.

description: freeform

Description of the package. This may be several paragraphs, and should be aimed at a Haskell programmer who has never heard of your package before.

category: freeform

A classification category for future use by the package catalogue Hackage. These categories have not yet been specified, but the upper levels of the module hierarchy make a good start.

tested-with: compiler list

A list of compilers and versions against which the package has been tested (or at least built).

build-depends: package list

A list of packages, possibly annotated with versions, needed to build this one, e.g. foo > 1.2, bar. If no version constraint is specified, any version is assumed to be acceptable.

data-files: filename list

A list of files to be installed for run-time use by the package. This is useful for packages that use a large amount of static data, such as tables of values or code templates. For details on how to find these files at run-time, see Section 2.2, “Accessing data files from package code”.

extra-source-files: filename list

A list of additional files to be included in source distributions built with setup sdist (see Section 3.10, “setup sdist”).

extra-tmp-files: filename list

A list of additional files or directories to be removed by setup clean (see Section 3.8, “setup clean”). These would typically be additional files created by additional hooks, such as the scheme described in Section 2.3, “System-dependent parameters”.

2.1.2. Library

If the package contains a library, the first stanza should also contain the following field:

exposed-modules: identifier list (required if this package contains a library)

A list of modules added by this package.

The first stanza may also contain build information fields (see Section 2.1.4, “Build information”) relating to the library.

2.1.3. Executables

Subsequent stanzas (if present) describe executable programs contained in the package, using the following fields, as well as build information fields (see Section 2.1.4, “Build information”).

executable: freeform (required)

The name of the executable program.

main-is: filename (required)

The name of the source file containing the Main module, relative to one of the directories listed in hs-source-dirs.

These stanzas may also contain build information fields (see Section 2.1.4, “Build information”) relating to the executable.

2.1.4. Build information

The following fields may be optionally present in any stanza, and give information for the building of the corresponding library or executable. See also Section 2.3, “System-dependent parameters” for a way to supply system-dependent values for these fields.

buildable: Boolean (default: True)

Is the component buildable? Like some of the other fields below, this field is more useful with the slightly more elaborate form of the simple build infrastructure described in Section 2.3, “System-dependent parameters”.

other-modules: identifier list

A list of modules used by the component but not exposed to users. For a library component, these would be hidden modules of the library. For an executable, these would be auxiliary modules to be linked with the file named in the main-is field.

hs-source-dirs: directory list (default: “.”)

Root directories for the module hierarchy.

For backwards compatibility, the old variant hs-source-dir is also recognized.

extensions: identifier list

A list of Haskell extensions used by every module. Extension names are the constructors of the Extension type. These determine corresponding compiler options. In particular, CPP specifies that Haskell source files are to be preprocessed with a C preprocessor.

Extensions used only by one module may be specified by placing a LANGUAGE pragma in the source file affected, e.g.:

{-# LANGUAGE CPP, MultiParamTypeClasses #-}

Note

GHC doesn't support the LANGUAGE pragma yet.

ghc-options: token list

Additional options for GHC. You can often achieve the same effect using the extensions field, which is preferred.

Options required only by one module may be specified by placing an OPTIONS_GHC pragma in the source file affected.

ghc-prof-options: token list

Additional options for GHC when the package is built with profiling enabled.

hugs-options: token list

Additional options for Hugs. You can often achieve the same effect using the extensions field, which is preferred.

Options required only by one module may be specified by placing an OPTIONS_HUGS pragma in the source file affected.

nhc-options: token list

Additional options for nhc98. You can often achieve the same effect using the extensions field, which is preferred.

Options required only by one module may be specified by placing an OPTIONS_NHC pragma in the source file affected.

includes: filename list

A list of header files from standard include directories or those listed in include-dirs, to be included in any compilations via C. These files typically contain function prototypes for foreign imports used by the package.

include-dirs: directory list

A list of directories to search for header files, both when using a C preprocessor and when compiling via C.

c-sources: filename list

A list of C source files to be compiled and linked with the Haskell files.

If you use this field, you should also name the C files in CFILES pragmas in the Haskell source files that use them, e.g.:

{-# CFILES dir/file1.c dir/file2.c #-}

These are ignored by the compilers, but needed by Hugs.

extra-libraries: token list

A list of extra libraries to link with.

extra-lib-dirs: directory list

A list of directories to search for libraries.

cc-options: token list

Command-line arguments to be passed to the C compiler. Since the arguments are compiler-dependent, this field is more useful with the setup described in Section 2.3, “System-dependent parameters”.

ld-options: token list

Command-line arguments to be passed to the linker. Since the arguments are compiler-dependent, this field is more useful with the setup described in Section 2.3, “System-dependent parameters”.

frameworks: token list

On Darwin/MacOS X, a list of frameworks to link to. See Apple's developer documentation for more details on frameworks. This entry is ignored on all other platforms.

2.2. Accessing data files from package code

The placement on the target system of files listed in the data-files field varies between systems, and in some cases one can even move packages around after installation (see Section 3.1.2.2, “Prefix-independence”). To enable packages to find these files in a portable way, Cabal generates a module called Paths_pkgname (with any hyphens in pkgname replaced by underscores) during building, so that it may be imported by modules of the package. This module defines a function

getDataFileName :: FilePath -> IO FilePath

If the argument is a filename listed in the data-files field, the result is the name of the corresponding file on the system on which the program is running.

2.3. System-dependent parameters

For some packages, especially those interfacing with C libraries, implementation details and the build procedure depend on the build environment. The simple build infrastructure can handle many such situations using a slightly longer Setup.hs:

import Distribution.Simple
main = defaultMainWithHooks defaultUserHooks

This program differs from defaultMain in two ways:

  1. If the package root directory contains a file called configure, the configure step will run that. This configure program may be a script produced by the autoconf system, or may be hand-written. This program typically discovers information about the system and records it for later steps, e.g. by generating system-dependent header files for inclusion in C source files and preprocessed Haskell source files. (Clearly this won't work for Windows without MSYS or Cygwin: other ideas are needed.)

  2. If the package root directory contains a file called package.buildinfo after the configuration step, subsequent steps will read it to obtain additional settings for build information fields (see Section 2.1.4, “Build information”), to be merged with the ones given in the .cabal file. In particular, this file may be generated by the configure script mentioned above, allowing these settings to vary depending on the build environment.

    The build information file should have the following structure:

    buildinfo
    
    executable: name
    buildinfo
    
    executable: name
    buildinfo
    
    ...

    where each buildinfo consists of settings of fields listed in Section 2.1.4, “Build information”. The first one (if present) relates to the library, while each of the others relate to the named executable. (The names must match the package description, but you don't have to have entries for all of them.)

Neither of these files is required. If they are absent, this setup script is equivalent to defaultMain.

Example 4. Using autoconf

(This example is for people familiar with the autoconf tools.)

In the X11 package, the file configure.ac contains:

AC_INIT([Haskell X11 package], [1.1], [libraries@haskell.org], [X11])

# Safety check: Ensure that we are in the correct source directory.
AC_CONFIG_SRCDIR([X11.cabal])

# Header file to place defines in
AC_CONFIG_HEADERS([include/HsX11Config.h])

# Check for X11 include paths and libraries
AC_PATH_XTRA
AC_TRY_CPP([#include <X11/Xlib.h>],,[no_x=yes])

# Build the package if we found X11 stuff
if test "$no_x" = yes
then BUILD_PACKAGE_BOOL=False
else BUILD_PACKAGE_BOOL=True
fi
AC_SUBST([BUILD_PACKAGE_BOOL])

AC_CONFIG_FILES([X11.buildinfo])
AC_OUTPUT

Then the setup script will run the configure script, which checks for the presence of the X11 libraries and substitutes for variables in the file X11.buildinfo.in:

buildable: @BUILD_PACKAGE_BOOL@
cc-options: @X_CFLAGS@
ld-options: @X_LIBS@

This generates a file X11.buildinfo supplying the parameters needed by later stages:

buildable: True
cc-options:  -I/usr/X11R6/include
ld-options:  -L/usr/X11R6/lib

The configure script also generates a header file include/HsX11Config.h containing C preprocessor defines recording the results of various tests. This file may be included by C source files and preprocessed Haskell source files in the package.

Note

Packages using these features will also need to list additional files such as configure, templates for .buildinfo files, files named only in .buildinfo files, header files and so on in the extra-source-files field, to ensure that they are included in source distributions. They should also list files and directories generated by configure in the extra-tmp-files field to ensure that they are removed by setup clean.

2.4. More complex packages

For packages that don't fit the simple schemes described above, you have a few options:

  • You can customize the simple build infrastructure using hooks. These allow you to perform additional actions before and after each command is run, and also to specify additional preprocessors. See UserHooks in Distribution.Simple for the details, but note that this interface is experimental, and likely to change in future releases.

  • You could delegate all the work to make, though this is unlikely to be very portable. Cabal supports this with a trivial setup library Distribution.Make, which simply parses the command line arguments and invokes make. Here Setup.hs looks like

    import Distribution.Make
    main = defaultMain

    The root directory of the package should contain a configure script, and, after that has run, a Makefile with a default target that builds the package, plus targets install, register, unregister, clean, dist and docs. Some options to commands are passed through as follows:

    • The --with-hc, --with-hc-pkg, --prefix, --bindir, --libdir, --datadir and --libexecdir options to the configure command are passed on to the configure script.

    • the --destdir option to the copy command becomes a setting of a destdir variable on the invocation of make copy. The supplied Makefile should provide a copy target, which will probably look like this:

      copy :
              $(MAKE) install prefix=$(destdir)/$(prefix) \
                              bindir=$(destdir)/$(bindir) \
                              libdir=$(destdir)/$(libdir) \
                              datadir=$(destdir)/$(datadir) \
                              libexecdir=$(destdir)/$(libexecdir)

  • You can write your own setup script conforming to the interface of Section 3, “Building and installing a package”, possibly using the Cabal library for part of the work. One option is to copy the source of Distribution.Simple, and alter it for your needs. Good luck.