hledger/doc/DEVFAQ.md
Simon Michael 46b79079bf ;doc: The flattening: adapt to the site's depth-1 page TOCs
and tweak command/screen headings.

This goes further in the direction of showing simple lists of topics
instead of outlines. mdbook-toc doesn't support configuring the TOC
depth this per page, so it has to be site wide.

Overall I feel this is better, see eg the hledger manual.  It hides a
lot of interesting topic names but a shorter, linear list is less
scary and clearer than a huge scrolling outline. Once you click in to
a section and find a subsection of interest, it's still easy to
bookmark/share those by clicking their heading.
2024-05-22 13:06:08 -10:00

90 lines
3.6 KiB
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# Developer FAQ
This is just getting started. It will absorb some of the other [Developer docs](dev.md).
<!-- toc -->
<!-- ## Developing hledger -->
## How do I get/build the hledger source ?
```cli
$ git clone https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger
$ stack build
```
You can specify `hledger`, `hledger-ui` or `hledger-web` as an argument to build just that executable.
Please see [Install > Build from source](install.md#build-from-source) for more details and other build methods.
## What other repos are there ?
There are three official repos:
- <https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger> - the main hledger repo, for hledger, hledger-ui and hledger-web. Shortcut url: <https://code.hledger.org>
- <https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger_site> - the hledger.org website
- <https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger_finance> - the hledger project's financial ledger
And third-party add-ons and tools (hledger-iadd, hledger-utils, full fledged hledger, hledger-flow, etc.) have their own repos.
## How do I run a build in place ?
After building with stack,
```cli
$ stack exec -- hledger [ARGS] # or hledger-ui, hledger-web
```
Or after building with cabal,
```cli
$ cabal exec -- hledger [ARGS]
```
## How do I install a build in PATH ?
```cli
$ stack install
```
This installs the hledger executables to `~/.local/bin`. You should have this directory configured in $PATH.
Or you can install to another directory with `--local-bin-path`.
It builds the executables first if needed; see [Install > Build from source](install.md#build-from-source) for more about building.
You can specify `hledger`, `hledger-ui` or `hledger-web` as an argument to build/install just that executable.
If you use cabal, it has a similar command; the argument is required.
It will install executables to `~/.cabal/bin`:
```cli
$ cabal install all:exes
```
## How do I build/run with ghc-debug support ?
You might need to stop background builders like HLS, to avoid a fight over the build flag
(in VS Code, run the command "Haskell: Stop Haskell LSP server").
Then build lib and executable(s) with the `ghcdebug` flag:
```cli
$ stack build --flag='*:ghcdebug'
```
When the build is right, --version should mention ghc-debug:
```
$ stack exec -- hledger --version
... with ghc debug support
```
And when you run at debug level -1, -2 or -3 the output should mention ghc-debug:
```cli
$ hledger CMD --debug=-1 # run normally, and listen for ghc-debug commands
$ hledger CMD --debug=-2 # pause for ghc-debug commands at program start (doesn't work)
$ hledger CMD --debug=-3 # pause for ghc-debug commands at program end (doesn't work)
Starting ghc-debug on socket: ...
```
Now in another window, you can run [ghc-debug-brick](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/ghc-debug-brick) and it will show the hledger process (until it ends). Press enter to connect. If it fails,
- you might need to clear out stale sockets: `rm -f ~/.local/share/ghc-debug/debuggee/sockets/*`
- you might need to kill stale hledger processes: `pkill -fl hledger`
- with --debug=-2 or -3 it fails with `rts_resume: called from a different OS thread than rts_pause`,
so use --debug=-1 instead. This works best with the long-running hledger-ui or hledger-web;
with hledger, you'll need a big enough data file so that you have time to connect before it finishes.
Once connected, press `p` to pause the program.
At this point, you can explore memory/profile information, save snapshots, resume execution, etc.
Or, instead of ghc-debug-brick you can write a [ghc-debug-client](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/ghc-debug-client) script to extract specific information.