1 The Glasgow Haskell Compiler
2 ============================
4 This is the source tree for GHC, a compiler and interactive
5 environment for the Haskell functional programming language.
7 For more information, visit GHC's web site:
9 http://www.haskell.org/ghc/
11 Information for developers of GHC can be found here:
13 http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/
19 There are two ways to get a source tree:
21 1. Download source tarballs
22 ---------------------------
24 Download the GHC source distribution:
26 ghc-<version>-src.tar.bz2
28 which contains GHC itself and the "boot" libraries.
30 2. Check out the source code from darcs
31 ---------------------------------------
33 The recommended way to get a darcs checkout is to start off by
34 downloading a snapshot with a name like:
36 ghc-HEAD-2009-09-09-ghc-corelibs-testsuite.tar.bz2
40 http://darcs.haskell.org/
42 and then untar it and bring it up-to-date with:
48 Alternatively you can use darcs to get the repos, but it will take a
49 lot longer. First get the GHC darcs repository:
51 $ darcs get http://darcs.haskell.org/ghc/
53 Then run the darcs-all script in that repository
54 to get the other repositories:
60 This checks out the "boot" packages.
66 For full information on building GHC, see the GHC Building Guide [3].
67 Here follows a summary - if you get into trouble, the Building Guide
70 NB. you need GHC installed in order to build GHC, because the compiler
71 is itself written in Haskell. For instructions on how to port GHC to a
72 new platform, see the Building Guide.
74 If you're building from darcs sources (as opposed to a source
75 distribution) then you also need to install Happy [4] and Alex [5].
77 For building library documentation, you'll need Haddock [6]. To build
78 the compiler documentation, you need a good DocBook XML toolchain and
81 Quick start: the following gives you a default build:
88 The "perl boot" step is only necessary if this is a tree checked out
89 from darcs. For source distributions downloaded from GHC's web site,
90 this step has already been performed.
92 These steps give you the default build, which includes everything
93 optimised and built in various ways (eg. profiling libs are built).
94 It can take a long time. To customise the build, see the file
102 [1] http://www.haskell.org/ghc/ GHC Home Page
103 [2] http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc GHC Developer's Wiki
104 [3] http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Building Building Guide
105 [4] http://www.haskell.org/happy/ Happy
106 [5] http://www.haskell.org/alex/ Alex
107 [6] http://www.haskell.org/haddock/ Haddock
115 http://www.haskell.org/ghc/contributors.html