nixpkgs/pkgs/top-level/haskell-defaults.nix

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# Haskell / GHC infrastructure in Nixpkgs
#
# In this file, we
#
# * define sets of default package versions for each GHC compiler version,
# * associate GHC versions with bootstrap compiler versions and package defaults.
#
# The actual Haskell packages are composed in haskell-packages.nix. There is
# more documentation in there.
{ makeOverridable, lowPrio, hiPrio, stdenv, pkgs, newScope, config, callPackage } : rec {
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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# haskell-packages.nix provides the latest possible version of every package,
# and this file overrides those version choices per compiler when appropriate.
# Older compilers inherit the overrides from newer ones.
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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ghcHEADPrefs = self : super : super // {
cabalInstall_1_20_0_6 = super.cabalInstall_1_20_0_6.override { Cabal = null; };
mtl = self.mtl_2_2_1;
ghcjsBase = null;
ghcjsDom = with self; super.ghcjsDom.override {
cabal = self.cabal.override {
extension = self: super: {
configureFlags = [ "-f-ghcjs" "-fwebkit" "-f-gtk3" ];
buildDepends = [ mtl glib transformers gtk webkit ];
};
};
};
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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};
ghc784Prefs = self : super : ghcHEADPrefs self super // {
cabalInstall_1_20_0_6 = super.cabalInstall_1_20_0_6.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_20_0_3; };
codex = super.codex.override { hackageDb = super.hackageDb.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_20_0_3; }; };
jailbreakCabal = super.jailbreakCabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_20_0_3; };
MonadRandom = self.MonadRandom_0_2_0_1; # newer versions require transformers >= 0.4.x
mtl = self.mtl_2_1_3_1;
transformersCompat = super.transformersCompat.override { cabal = self.cabal.override {
extension = self: super: { configureFlags = "-fthree " + super.configureFlags or ""; };
}; };
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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};
ghc763Prefs = self : super : ghc784Prefs self super // {
aeson = self.aeson_0_7_0_4;
ariadne = super.ariadne.override {
haskellNames = self.haskellNames.override {
haskellPackages = self.haskellPackages.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_18_1_3; };
};
};
attoparsec = self.attoparsec_0_11_3_1;
binaryConduit = super.binaryConduit.override { binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; };
bson = super.bson.override { dataBinaryIeee754 = self.dataBinaryIeee754.override { binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; }; };
cabal2nix = super.cabal2nix.override { hackageDb = super.hackageDb.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_18_1_3; }; };
cabalInstall_1_16_0_2 = super.cabalInstall_1_16_0_2.override {
HTTP = self.HTTP.override { network = self.network_2_5_0_0; };
network = self.network_2_5_0_0;
};
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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criterion = super.criterion.override {
statistics = self.statistics.override {
vectorBinaryInstances = self.vectorBinaryInstances.override { binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; };
};
};
entropy = super.entropy.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_18_1_3; }; };
gloss = null; # requires base >= 4.7
modularArithmetic = null; # requires base >= 4.7
pipesBinary = super.pipesBinary.override { binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; };
rank1dynamic = super.rank1dynamic.override { binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; };
distributedStatic = super.distributedStatic.override { binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; };
networkTransport = super.networkTransport.override { binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; };
distributedProcess = super.distributedProcess.override { binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; };
scientific = self.scientific_0_2_0_2;
singletons = null; # requires base >= 4.7
transformers = self.transformers_0_3_0_0; # core packagen in ghc > 7.6.x
zipArchive = super.zipArchive_0_2_2_1; # works without binary 0.7.x
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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};
ghc742Prefs = self : super : ghc763Prefs self super // {
aeson = self.aeson_0_7_0_4.override { blazeBuilder = self.blazeBuilder; };
extensibleExceptions = null; # core package in ghc <= 7.4.x
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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hackageDb = super.hackageDb.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; };
haskeline = super.haskeline.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
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primitive = self.primitive_0_5_3_0; # later versions don't compile
random = self.random_1_0_1_1; # requires base >= 4.6.x
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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};
ghc722Prefs = self : super : ghc742Prefs self super // {
caseInsensitive = self.caseInsensitive_1_0_0_1;
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
deepseq = self.deepseq_1_3_0_2;
2014-05-17 14:25:23 +04:00
DrIFT = null; # doesn't compile with old GHC versions
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
syb = self.syb_0_4_0;
};
ghc704Prefs = self : super : ghc722Prefs self super // {
binary = self.binary_0_7_2_2; # core package in ghc >= 7.2.2
caseInsensitive = super.caseInsensitive; # undo the override from ghc 7.2.2
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
HsSyck = self.HsSyck_0_51;
random = null; # core package in ghc <= 7.0.x
};
ghc6123Prefs = self : super : ghc704Prefs self super // {
alex = self.alex_3_1_3;
async = self.async_2_0_1_4;
attoparsec = self.attoparsec_0_10_4_0;
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
cabalInstall = self.cabalInstall_1_16_0_2;
cgi = self.cgi_3001_1_7_5;
deepseq = self.deepseq_1_2_0_1;
dlist = super.dlist.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
exceptions = null; # none of our versions compile
jailbreakCabal = super.jailbreakCabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; };
logict = super.logict.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
monadPar = self.monadPar_0_1_0_3;
nats = null; # none of our versions compile
networkUri = super.networkUri.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
parallel = self.parallel_3_2_0_3;
primitive = self.primitive_0_5_0_1;
reflection = super.reflection.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
scientific = null; # none of our versions compile
split = self.split_0_1_4_3;
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
stm = self.stm_2_4_2;
syb = null; # core package in ghc < 7
tagged = super.tagged.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
temporary = null; # none of our versions compile
vector = super.vector_0_10_9_3;
vectorAlgorithms = super.vectorAlgorithms.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
};
ghc6104Prefs = self : super : ghc6123Prefs self super // {
alex = self.alex_2_3_5.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
async = null; # none of our versions compile
attoparsec = null; # none of our versions compile
binary = super.binary_0_7_2_2.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
cabalInstall_1_16_0_2 = super.cabalInstall_1_16_0_2;
caseInsensitive = super.caseInsensitive.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
GLUT = self.GLUT_2_2_2_1;
happy = super.happy.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
hashable = super.hashable.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
hashtables = super.hashtables.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
hsyslog = super.hsyslog.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
HTTP = super.HTTP.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
HUnit = super.HUnit.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
network = super.network_2_2_1_7.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
OpenGLRaw = self.OpenGLRaw_1_3_0_0;
OpenGL = self.OpenGL_2_6_0_1;
parsec = super.parsec.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
QuickCheck = super.QuickCheck.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
stm = self.stm_2_4_2.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
systemFilepath = super.systemFilepath.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
systemFileio = super.systemFileio.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
tar = super.tar.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
text = self.text_0_11_2_3.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
tfRandom = null; # does not compile
time = self.time_1_1_2_4.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
zlib = super.zlib.override { cabal = self.cabal.override { Cabal = self.Cabal_1_16_0_3; }; };
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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};
# Abstraction for Haskell packages collections
packagesFun = makeOverridable
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({ ghcPath
, ghcBinary ? ghc6101Binary
, prefFun
Rework the knot-tying code for defining Haskell packages. The existing knot-tying code I felt was a bit incoherent with result, finalReturn, self, refering to different various forms of the "haskellPackages" value and often different forms in the same place. This commit instills some object-oriented discipline to the construction of hasekllPackages using a small number of fundamental OO concepts: * An class is a open recursive function of the form (self : fooBody) where fooBody is a set. * An instance of a class is the fixed point of the class. This value is sometimes refered to as an object and the values in the resulting set are sometimes refered to as methods. * A class, foo = self : fooBody, can be extended by an extension which is a function bar = (self : super : barBody) where barBody a set of overrides for fooBody. The result of a class extension is a new class whose value is self : foo self // bar self (foo self). The super parameter gives access to the original methods that barBody may be overriding. This commit turns the haskell-packages value into a "class". The knot-tying, a.k.a the object instanitation, is moved into haskells-defaults. The "finalReturn" is no longer needed and is eliminated from the body of haskell-packages. All the work done by prefFun is moved to haskell-defaults, so that parameter is eliminated form haskell-packages. Notice that the old prefFun took two pameters named "self" and "super", but both parameters got passed the same value "result". There seems to have been some confusion in the old code. Inside haskell-defaults, the haskell-packages class is extended twice before instantiation. The first extension is done using prefFun argument. The second extension is done the extension argument, which is a renamed version of extraPrefs. This two stage approach means that extension's super gets access to the post "perfFun" object while previously the extraPrefs only had access to the pre "prefFun" object. Also the extension function has access to both the super (post "perfFun") object and to self, the final object. With extraPrefs, one needed to use the "finalReturn" of the haskell packages to get access to the final object. Due to significant changes in semantics, I thought it best to replace extraPrefs with extension so that people using extraPrefs know to update thier cod. Lastly, all the Prefs functions have renamed the "self" parameter to "super". This is because "self" was never actually a self-reference in the object oriented sense of the word. For example Cabal_1_18_1_3 = self.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = self.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; doesn't actually make sense from an object oriented standpoint because, barring further method overriding, the value of Cabal_1_18_1_3 would be trying to override it's own value which simply causes a loop exception. Thankfully all these uses of self were really uses of super: Cabal_1_18_1_3 = super.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = super.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; In this notation the overriden Cabal_1_18_1_3 method calls the Cabal_1_18_1_3 of the super-class, which is a well-founded notion. Below is an example use of using "extension" parameter { packageOverrides = pkgs : { testHaskellPackages = pkgs.haskellPackages.override { extension = self : super : { transformers_0_4_1_0 = self.cabal.mkDerivation (pkgs: { pname = "transformers"; version = "0.4.1.0"; sha256 = "0jlnz86f87jndv4sifg1zpv5b2g2cxy1x2575x727az6vyaarwwg"; meta = { description = "Concrete functor and monad transformers"; license = pkgs.stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3; platforms = pkgs.ghc.meta.platforms; maintainers = [ pkgs.stdenv.lib.maintainers.andres ]; }; }); transformers = self.transformers_0_4_1_0; lensFamilyCore = super.lensFamilyCore.override { transformers = self.transformers_0_3_0_0; }; }; }; }; } Notice the use of self in the body of the override of the transformers method which references the newly defined transformers_0_4_1_0 method. With the previous code, one would have to instead akwardly write transformers = super.finalReturn.transformers_0_4_1_0; or use a rec clause, which would prevent futher overriding of transformers_0_4_1_0.
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, extension ? (self : super : {})
, profExplicit ? false, profDefault ? false
, modifyPrio ? lowPrio
, extraArgs ? {}
} :
Rework the knot-tying code for defining Haskell packages. The existing knot-tying code I felt was a bit incoherent with result, finalReturn, self, refering to different various forms of the "haskellPackages" value and often different forms in the same place. This commit instills some object-oriented discipline to the construction of hasekllPackages using a small number of fundamental OO concepts: * An class is a open recursive function of the form (self : fooBody) where fooBody is a set. * An instance of a class is the fixed point of the class. This value is sometimes refered to as an object and the values in the resulting set are sometimes refered to as methods. * A class, foo = self : fooBody, can be extended by an extension which is a function bar = (self : super : barBody) where barBody a set of overrides for fooBody. The result of a class extension is a new class whose value is self : foo self // bar self (foo self). The super parameter gives access to the original methods that barBody may be overriding. This commit turns the haskell-packages value into a "class". The knot-tying, a.k.a the object instanitation, is moved into haskells-defaults. The "finalReturn" is no longer needed and is eliminated from the body of haskell-packages. All the work done by prefFun is moved to haskell-defaults, so that parameter is eliminated form haskell-packages. Notice that the old prefFun took two pameters named "self" and "super", but both parameters got passed the same value "result". There seems to have been some confusion in the old code. Inside haskell-defaults, the haskell-packages class is extended twice before instantiation. The first extension is done using prefFun argument. The second extension is done the extension argument, which is a renamed version of extraPrefs. This two stage approach means that extension's super gets access to the post "perfFun" object while previously the extraPrefs only had access to the pre "prefFun" object. Also the extension function has access to both the super (post "perfFun") object and to self, the final object. With extraPrefs, one needed to use the "finalReturn" of the haskell packages to get access to the final object. Due to significant changes in semantics, I thought it best to replace extraPrefs with extension so that people using extraPrefs know to update thier cod. Lastly, all the Prefs functions have renamed the "self" parameter to "super". This is because "self" was never actually a self-reference in the object oriented sense of the word. For example Cabal_1_18_1_3 = self.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = self.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; doesn't actually make sense from an object oriented standpoint because, barring further method overriding, the value of Cabal_1_18_1_3 would be trying to override it's own value which simply causes a loop exception. Thankfully all these uses of self were really uses of super: Cabal_1_18_1_3 = super.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = super.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; In this notation the overriden Cabal_1_18_1_3 method calls the Cabal_1_18_1_3 of the super-class, which is a well-founded notion. Below is an example use of using "extension" parameter { packageOverrides = pkgs : { testHaskellPackages = pkgs.haskellPackages.override { extension = self : super : { transformers_0_4_1_0 = self.cabal.mkDerivation (pkgs: { pname = "transformers"; version = "0.4.1.0"; sha256 = "0jlnz86f87jndv4sifg1zpv5b2g2cxy1x2575x727az6vyaarwwg"; meta = { description = "Concrete functor and monad transformers"; license = pkgs.stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3; platforms = pkgs.ghc.meta.platforms; maintainers = [ pkgs.stdenv.lib.maintainers.andres ]; }; }); transformers = self.transformers_0_4_1_0; lensFamilyCore = super.lensFamilyCore.override { transformers = self.transformers_0_3_0_0; }; }; }; }; } Notice the use of self in the body of the override of the transformers method which references the newly defined transformers_0_4_1_0 method. With the previous code, one would have to instead akwardly write transformers = super.finalReturn.transformers_0_4_1_0; or use a rec clause, which would prevent futher overriding of transformers_0_4_1_0.
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let haskellPackagesClass = import ./haskell-packages.nix {
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inherit pkgs newScope modifyPrio;
Rework the knot-tying code for defining Haskell packages. The existing knot-tying code I felt was a bit incoherent with result, finalReturn, self, refering to different various forms of the "haskellPackages" value and often different forms in the same place. This commit instills some object-oriented discipline to the construction of hasekllPackages using a small number of fundamental OO concepts: * An class is a open recursive function of the form (self : fooBody) where fooBody is a set. * An instance of a class is the fixed point of the class. This value is sometimes refered to as an object and the values in the resulting set are sometimes refered to as methods. * A class, foo = self : fooBody, can be extended by an extension which is a function bar = (self : super : barBody) where barBody a set of overrides for fooBody. The result of a class extension is a new class whose value is self : foo self // bar self (foo self). The super parameter gives access to the original methods that barBody may be overriding. This commit turns the haskell-packages value into a "class". The knot-tying, a.k.a the object instanitation, is moved into haskells-defaults. The "finalReturn" is no longer needed and is eliminated from the body of haskell-packages. All the work done by prefFun is moved to haskell-defaults, so that parameter is eliminated form haskell-packages. Notice that the old prefFun took two pameters named "self" and "super", but both parameters got passed the same value "result". There seems to have been some confusion in the old code. Inside haskell-defaults, the haskell-packages class is extended twice before instantiation. The first extension is done using prefFun argument. The second extension is done the extension argument, which is a renamed version of extraPrefs. This two stage approach means that extension's super gets access to the post "perfFun" object while previously the extraPrefs only had access to the pre "prefFun" object. Also the extension function has access to both the super (post "perfFun") object and to self, the final object. With extraPrefs, one needed to use the "finalReturn" of the haskell packages to get access to the final object. Due to significant changes in semantics, I thought it best to replace extraPrefs with extension so that people using extraPrefs know to update thier cod. Lastly, all the Prefs functions have renamed the "self" parameter to "super". This is because "self" was never actually a self-reference in the object oriented sense of the word. For example Cabal_1_18_1_3 = self.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = self.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; doesn't actually make sense from an object oriented standpoint because, barring further method overriding, the value of Cabal_1_18_1_3 would be trying to override it's own value which simply causes a loop exception. Thankfully all these uses of self were really uses of super: Cabal_1_18_1_3 = super.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = super.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; In this notation the overriden Cabal_1_18_1_3 method calls the Cabal_1_18_1_3 of the super-class, which is a well-founded notion. Below is an example use of using "extension" parameter { packageOverrides = pkgs : { testHaskellPackages = pkgs.haskellPackages.override { extension = self : super : { transformers_0_4_1_0 = self.cabal.mkDerivation (pkgs: { pname = "transformers"; version = "0.4.1.0"; sha256 = "0jlnz86f87jndv4sifg1zpv5b2g2cxy1x2575x727az6vyaarwwg"; meta = { description = "Concrete functor and monad transformers"; license = pkgs.stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3; platforms = pkgs.ghc.meta.platforms; maintainers = [ pkgs.stdenv.lib.maintainers.andres ]; }; }); transformers = self.transformers_0_4_1_0; lensFamilyCore = super.lensFamilyCore.override { transformers = self.transformers_0_3_0_0; }; }; }; }; } Notice the use of self in the body of the override of the transformers method which references the newly defined transformers_0_4_1_0 method. With the previous code, one would have to instead akwardly write transformers = super.finalReturn.transformers_0_4_1_0; or use a rec clause, which would prevent futher overriding of transformers_0_4_1_0.
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enableLibraryProfiling =
if profExplicit then profDefault
else config.cabal.libraryProfiling or profDefault;
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ghc = callPackage ghcPath ({ ghc = ghcBinary; } // extraArgs);
Rework the knot-tying code for defining Haskell packages. The existing knot-tying code I felt was a bit incoherent with result, finalReturn, self, refering to different various forms of the "haskellPackages" value and often different forms in the same place. This commit instills some object-oriented discipline to the construction of hasekllPackages using a small number of fundamental OO concepts: * An class is a open recursive function of the form (self : fooBody) where fooBody is a set. * An instance of a class is the fixed point of the class. This value is sometimes refered to as an object and the values in the resulting set are sometimes refered to as methods. * A class, foo = self : fooBody, can be extended by an extension which is a function bar = (self : super : barBody) where barBody a set of overrides for fooBody. The result of a class extension is a new class whose value is self : foo self // bar self (foo self). The super parameter gives access to the original methods that barBody may be overriding. This commit turns the haskell-packages value into a "class". The knot-tying, a.k.a the object instanitation, is moved into haskells-defaults. The "finalReturn" is no longer needed and is eliminated from the body of haskell-packages. All the work done by prefFun is moved to haskell-defaults, so that parameter is eliminated form haskell-packages. Notice that the old prefFun took two pameters named "self" and "super", but both parameters got passed the same value "result". There seems to have been some confusion in the old code. Inside haskell-defaults, the haskell-packages class is extended twice before instantiation. The first extension is done using prefFun argument. The second extension is done the extension argument, which is a renamed version of extraPrefs. This two stage approach means that extension's super gets access to the post "perfFun" object while previously the extraPrefs only had access to the pre "prefFun" object. Also the extension function has access to both the super (post "perfFun") object and to self, the final object. With extraPrefs, one needed to use the "finalReturn" of the haskell packages to get access to the final object. Due to significant changes in semantics, I thought it best to replace extraPrefs with extension so that people using extraPrefs know to update thier cod. Lastly, all the Prefs functions have renamed the "self" parameter to "super". This is because "self" was never actually a self-reference in the object oriented sense of the word. For example Cabal_1_18_1_3 = self.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = self.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; doesn't actually make sense from an object oriented standpoint because, barring further method overriding, the value of Cabal_1_18_1_3 would be trying to override it's own value which simply causes a loop exception. Thankfully all these uses of self were really uses of super: Cabal_1_18_1_3 = super.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = super.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; In this notation the overriden Cabal_1_18_1_3 method calls the Cabal_1_18_1_3 of the super-class, which is a well-founded notion. Below is an example use of using "extension" parameter { packageOverrides = pkgs : { testHaskellPackages = pkgs.haskellPackages.override { extension = self : super : { transformers_0_4_1_0 = self.cabal.mkDerivation (pkgs: { pname = "transformers"; version = "0.4.1.0"; sha256 = "0jlnz86f87jndv4sifg1zpv5b2g2cxy1x2575x727az6vyaarwwg"; meta = { description = "Concrete functor and monad transformers"; license = pkgs.stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3; platforms = pkgs.ghc.meta.platforms; maintainers = [ pkgs.stdenv.lib.maintainers.andres ]; }; }); transformers = self.transformers_0_4_1_0; lensFamilyCore = super.lensFamilyCore.override { transformers = self.transformers_0_3_0_0; }; }; }; }; } Notice the use of self in the body of the override of the transformers method which references the newly defined transformers_0_4_1_0 method. With the previous code, one would have to instead akwardly write transformers = super.finalReturn.transformers_0_4_1_0; or use a rec clause, which would prevent futher overriding of transformers_0_4_1_0.
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};
haskellPackagesPrefsClass = self : let super = haskellPackagesClass self; in super // prefFun self super;
Rework the knot-tying code for defining Haskell packages. The existing knot-tying code I felt was a bit incoherent with result, finalReturn, self, refering to different various forms of the "haskellPackages" value and often different forms in the same place. This commit instills some object-oriented discipline to the construction of hasekllPackages using a small number of fundamental OO concepts: * An class is a open recursive function of the form (self : fooBody) where fooBody is a set. * An instance of a class is the fixed point of the class. This value is sometimes refered to as an object and the values in the resulting set are sometimes refered to as methods. * A class, foo = self : fooBody, can be extended by an extension which is a function bar = (self : super : barBody) where barBody a set of overrides for fooBody. The result of a class extension is a new class whose value is self : foo self // bar self (foo self). The super parameter gives access to the original methods that barBody may be overriding. This commit turns the haskell-packages value into a "class". The knot-tying, a.k.a the object instanitation, is moved into haskells-defaults. The "finalReturn" is no longer needed and is eliminated from the body of haskell-packages. All the work done by prefFun is moved to haskell-defaults, so that parameter is eliminated form haskell-packages. Notice that the old prefFun took two pameters named "self" and "super", but both parameters got passed the same value "result". There seems to have been some confusion in the old code. Inside haskell-defaults, the haskell-packages class is extended twice before instantiation. The first extension is done using prefFun argument. The second extension is done the extension argument, which is a renamed version of extraPrefs. This two stage approach means that extension's super gets access to the post "perfFun" object while previously the extraPrefs only had access to the pre "prefFun" object. Also the extension function has access to both the super (post "perfFun") object and to self, the final object. With extraPrefs, one needed to use the "finalReturn" of the haskell packages to get access to the final object. Due to significant changes in semantics, I thought it best to replace extraPrefs with extension so that people using extraPrefs know to update thier cod. Lastly, all the Prefs functions have renamed the "self" parameter to "super". This is because "self" was never actually a self-reference in the object oriented sense of the word. For example Cabal_1_18_1_3 = self.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = self.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; doesn't actually make sense from an object oriented standpoint because, barring further method overriding, the value of Cabal_1_18_1_3 would be trying to override it's own value which simply causes a loop exception. Thankfully all these uses of self were really uses of super: Cabal_1_18_1_3 = super.Cabal_1_18_1_3.override { deepseq = super.deepseq_1_3_0_2; }; In this notation the overriden Cabal_1_18_1_3 method calls the Cabal_1_18_1_3 of the super-class, which is a well-founded notion. Below is an example use of using "extension" parameter { packageOverrides = pkgs : { testHaskellPackages = pkgs.haskellPackages.override { extension = self : super : { transformers_0_4_1_0 = self.cabal.mkDerivation (pkgs: { pname = "transformers"; version = "0.4.1.0"; sha256 = "0jlnz86f87jndv4sifg1zpv5b2g2cxy1x2575x727az6vyaarwwg"; meta = { description = "Concrete functor and monad transformers"; license = pkgs.stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3; platforms = pkgs.ghc.meta.platforms; maintainers = [ pkgs.stdenv.lib.maintainers.andres ]; }; }); transformers = self.transformers_0_4_1_0; lensFamilyCore = super.lensFamilyCore.override { transformers = self.transformers_0_3_0_0; }; }; }; }; } Notice the use of self in the body of the override of the transformers method which references the newly defined transformers_0_4_1_0 method. With the previous code, one would have to instead akwardly write transformers = super.finalReturn.transformers_0_4_1_0; or use a rec clause, which would prevent futher overriding of transformers_0_4_1_0.
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haskellPackagesExtensionClass = self : let super = haskellPackagesPrefsClass self; in super // extension self super;
haskellPackages = haskellPackagesExtensionClass haskellPackages;
in haskellPackages);
defaultVersionPrioFun =
profDefault :
if config.cabal.libraryProfiling or false == profDefault
then (x : x)
else lowPrio;
packages = args : let r = packagesFun args;
in r // { lowPrio = r.override { modifyPrio = lowPrio; };
highPrio = r.override { modifyPrio = hiPrio; };
noProfiling = r.override { profDefault = false;
profExplicit = true;
modifyPrio = defaultVersionPrioFun false; };
profiling = r.override { profDefault = true;
profExplicit = true;
modifyPrio = defaultVersionPrioFun true; };
};
# Binary versions of GHC
#
# GHC binaries are around for bootstrapping purposes
ghc6101Binary = lowPrio (callPackage ../development/compilers/ghc/6.10.1-binary.nix {
gmp = pkgs.gmp4;
});
ghc6102Binary = lowPrio (callPackage ../development/compilers/ghc/6.10.2-binary.nix {
gmp = pkgs.gmp4;
});
ghc6121Binary = lowPrio (callPackage ../development/compilers/ghc/6.12.1-binary.nix {
gmp = pkgs.gmp4;
});
ghc704Binary = lowPrio (callPackage ../development/compilers/ghc/7.0.4-binary.nix {
gmp = pkgs.gmp4;
});
ghc742Binary = lowPrio (callPackage ../development/compilers/ghc/7.4.2-binary.nix {
gmp = pkgs.gmp4;
});
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ghc783Binary = lowPrio (callPackage ../development/compilers/ghc/7.8.3-binary.nix {});
ghc6101BinaryDarwin = if stdenv.isDarwin then ghc704Binary else ghc6101Binary;
ghc6121BinaryDarwin = if stdenv.isDarwin then ghc704Binary else ghc6121Binary;
# Compiler configurations
#
# Here, we associate compiler versions with bootstrap compiler versions and
# preference functions.
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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packages_ghcHEAD =
packages { ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/head.nix;
ghcBinary = pkgs.haskellPackages.ghcPlain;
prefFun = ghcHEADPrefs;
extraArgs = {
happy = pkgs.haskellPackages.happy;
alex = pkgs.haskellPackages.alex;
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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};
};
packages_ghc784 =
packages { ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/7.8.4.nix;
ghcBinary = if stdenv.isDarwin then ghc783Binary else ghc742Binary;
prefFun = ghc784Prefs;
};
packages_ghcjs =
packages {
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ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/7.8.4.nix;
ghcBinary = if stdenv.isDarwin then ghc783Binary else ghc742Binary;
prefFun = self : super : super // {
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ghc = let parent = packages_ghc784; in
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callPackage ../development/compilers/ghcjs/wrapper.nix {
ghc = parent.ghcjs // { inherit parent; };
};
cabal = self.cabalJs;
buildLocalCabalWithArgs = args: super.buildLocalCabalWithArgs (args // {
nativePkgs = packages_ghc784;
});
ghcjsDom = with self; super.ghcjsDom.override {
cabal = self.cabal.override {
extension = self: super: {
configureFlags = [ ];
buildDepends = [ mtl ghcjsBase ];
};
};
};
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# This is the list of packages that are built into a booted ghcjs installation
# It can be generated with the command:
# nix-shell '<nixpkgs>' -A pkgs.haskellPackages_ghcjs.ghc --command "ghcjs-pkg list | sed -n 's/^ \(.*\)-\([0-9.]*\)$/\1_\2/ p' | sed 's/\./_/g' | sed 's/-\(.\)/\U\1/' | sed 's/^\([^_]*\)\(.*\)$/\1 = null;/'"
Cabal = null;
aeson = null;
array = null;
async = null;
attoparsec = null;
base = null;
binary = null;
rts = null;
bytestring = null;
caseInsensitive = null;
containers = null;
deepseq = null;
directory = null;
dlist = null;
extensibleExceptions = null;
filepath = null;
ghcPrim = null;
ghcjsBase = null;
ghcjsPrim = null;
hashable = null;
integerGmp = null;
mtl = null;
oldLocale = null;
oldTime = null;
parallel = null;
pretty = null;
primitive = null;
process = null;
scientific = null;
stm = null;
syb = null;
templateHaskell = null;
text = null;
time = null;
transformers = null;
unix = null;
unorderedContainers = null;
vector = null;
};
};
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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packages_ghc763 =
packages { ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/7.6.3.nix;
ghcBinary = ghc704Binary;
prefFun = ghc763Prefs;
};
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
packages_ghc742 =
packages { ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/7.4.2.nix;
ghcBinary = ghc6121BinaryDarwin;
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
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prefFun = ghc742Prefs;
};
packages_ghc722 =
packages { ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/7.2.2.nix;
ghcBinary = ghc6121BinaryDarwin;
prefFun = ghc722Prefs;
};
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
packages_ghc704 =
packages { ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/7.0.4.nix;
ghcBinary = ghc6101BinaryDarwin;
prefFun = ghc704Prefs;
};
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
packages_ghc6123 =
packages { ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/6.12.3.nix;
prefFun = ghc6123Prefs;
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};
Re-write the Haskell Platform out of haskell-defaults.nix. 1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform". 2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist. Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0". (The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform. 3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7. 4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4, 6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot). 5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4 will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though. 6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix: | darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override { | cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override { | extension = self : super : { | isLibrary = false; | configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or ""; | }; | }; | }; In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or any other Haskell packages. The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and 'super' refers to the original attribute set. Note that ... - Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with the compiler. - Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and cabal-install. - Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
2014-05-07 21:36:45 +04:00
packages_ghc6104 =
packages { ghcPath = ../development/compilers/ghc/6.10.4.nix;
prefFun = ghc6104Prefs;
};
}