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PaaS (platform as a service) cloud providers generally limit you to a fixed technology stack. However, OpenShift and Heroku allow third-party extensions, which can be used to support Haskell.
OpenShift
GHC version: | 7.6.3 / 7.8.2 |
---|---|
Author: | Gideon Sireling |
Home page: | https://github.com/accursoft/Haskell-Cloud |
Documentation: | https://github.com/accursoft/Haskell-Cloud/blob/master/README.md |
The cartridge comes in several flavours, with just the network package (GHC 7.8.2) or a pre-installed framework (GHC 7.6.3 *):
Framework | Cartridge | QuickStart | Deploy |
---|---|---|---|
network | manifest | quickstart | deploy |
Yesod | manifest | quickstart | deploy |
Snap | manifest | quickstart | deploy |
Happstack | manifest | quickstart | deploy |
MFlow | manifest | quickstart | deploy |
Scotty | manifest | quickstart | deploy |
* GHC 7.8 requires dynamic libraries for Template Haskell and Quasiquoting. OpenShift gears default to a 1Gb quota, which is insufficient for a full web framework with two copies (dynamic and static) of every library.
Heroku
GHC version: | 7.4.1 |
---|---|
Author: | Brian McKenna |
Home page: | https://github.com/puffnfresh/heroku-buildpack-haskell |
Documentation: | https://github.com/puffnfresh/heroku-buildpack-haskell/blob/master/README.md |