-<Chapter id="sec-installing-bin-distrib">
- <Title>Installing GHC</Title>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>binary installations</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>installation, of binaries</Primary></IndexTerm>
+<chapter id="sec-installing-bin-distrib">
+ <title>Installing GHC</title>
+<indexterm><primary>binary installations</primary></indexterm>
+<indexterm><primary>installation, of binaries</primary></indexterm>
-<Para>
+<para>
Installing from binary distributions is easiest, and recommended!
(Why binaries? Because GHC is a Haskell compiler written in Haskell,
so you've got to bootstrap it somehow. We provide machine-generated
C-files-from-Haskell for this purpose, but it's really quite a pain to
use them. If you must build GHC from its sources, using a
binary-distributed GHC to do so is a sensible way to proceed. For the
-other <Literal>fptools</Literal> programs, many are written in
+other <literal>fptools</literal> programs, many are written in
Haskell, so binary distributions allow you to install them without
having a Haskell compiler.)
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>This guide is in several parts:</para>
+<para>This guide is in several parts:</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
- <para> Installing on Unix-a-likes (<Xref
- LinkEnd="sec-unix-a-likes">). </para>
+ <para> Installing on Unix-a-likes (<xref
+ linkend="sec-unix-a-likes"/>). </para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
- <para> Installing on Windows (<Xref
- LinkEnd="sec-install-windows">). </para>
+ <para> Installing on Windows (<xref
+ linkend="sec-install-windows"/>). </para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
- <para> The layout of installed files (<Xref
- LinkEnd="sec-install-files">). You don't need to know this to
+ <para> The layout of installed files (<xref
+ linkend="sec-install-files"/>). You don't need to know this to
install GHC, but it's useful if you are changing the
implementation.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
- <Sect1 id="sec-unix-a-likes"><Title>Installing on Unix-a-likes</Title>
+ <sect1 id="sec-unix-a-likes"><title>Installing on Unix-a-likes</title>
<sect2>
<title>When a platform-specific package is available</title>
<varlistentry>
<term>RedHat or SuSE Linux/x86</term>
<listitem>
- <para>RPM source & binary packages for RedHat and SuSE
+ <para>RPM source & binary packages for RedHat and SuSE
Linux (x86 only) are available for most major
releases.</para>
</listitem>
<term>FreeBSD/x86</term>
<listitem>
<para>On FreeBSD/x86, GHC can be installed using either
- the ports tree (<literal>cd /usr/ports/lang/ghc && make
+ the ports tree (<literal>cd /usr/ports/lang/ghc && make
install</literal>) or from a pre-compiled package
available from your local FreeBSD mirror.</para>
</listitem>
the GHC download page for details.</para>
</sect2>
-<Sect2>
-<Title>GHC binary distributions</Title>
+<sect2>
+<title>GHC binary distributions</title>
-<Para>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>bundles of binary stuff</Primary></IndexTerm>
-</Para>
+<para>
+<indexterm><primary>bundles of binary stuff</primary></indexterm>
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
Binary distributions come in “bundles,” one bundle per file called
-<literal><replaceable>bundle</replaceable>-<replaceable>platform</replaceable>.tar.gz</Literal>. (See the building guide for the definition of a platform.) Suppose that you untar a binary-distribution bundle, thus:
-</Para>
+<literal><replaceable>bundle</replaceable>-<replaceable>platform</replaceable>.tar.gz</literal>. (See the building guide for the definition of a platform.) Suppose that you untar a binary-distribution bundle, thus:
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
-<Screen>
+<screen>
% cd /your/scratch/space
-% gunzip < ghc-x.xx-sun-sparc-solaris2.tar.gz | tar xvf -</Screen>
+% gunzip < ghc-x.xx-sun-sparc-solaris2.tar.gz | tar xvf -</screen>
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
Then you should find a single directory,
-<Literal>ghc-<replaceable>version</replaceable></Literal>, with the
+<literal>ghc-<replaceable>version</replaceable></literal>, with the
following structure:
-</Para>
-
-<Para>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>binary distribution, layout</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>directory layout (binary distributions)</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<VariableList>
-
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>Makefile.in</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
-the raw material from which the <Literal>Makefile</Literal>
-will be made (<Xref LinkEnd="sec-install">).
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>configure</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
-the configuration script (<Xref LinkEnd="sec-install">).
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>README</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+
+<para>
+<indexterm><primary>binary distribution, layout</primary></indexterm>
+<indexterm><primary>directory layout (binary distributions)</primary></indexterm>
+<variablelist>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>Makefile.in</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
+the raw material from which the <literal>Makefile</literal>
+will be made (<xref linkend="sec-install"/>).
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>configure</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
+the configuration script (<xref linkend="sec-install"/>).
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>README</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
Contains this file summary.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>INSTALL</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>INSTALL</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
Contains this description of how to install
the bundle.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>ANNOUNCE</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>ANNOUNCE</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
The announcement message for the bundle.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>NEWS</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>NEWS</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
release notes for the bundle—a longer version
-of <Literal>ANNOUNCE</Literal>. For GHC, the release notes are contained in the User
+of <literal>ANNOUNCE</literal>. For GHC, the release notes are contained in the User
Guide and this file isn't present.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
- <Term><Literal>bin/<replaceable>platform</replaceable></Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>bin/<replaceable>platform</replaceable></literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
contains platform-specific executable
files to be invoked directly by the user. These are the files that
must end up in your path.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>lib/<replaceable>platform</replaceable>/</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>lib/<replaceable>platform</replaceable>/</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
contains platform-specific support
files for the installation. Typically there is a subdirectory for
-each <Literal>fptools</Literal> project, whose name is the name of the project with its
+each <literal>fptools</literal> project, whose name is the name of the project with its
version number. For example, for GHC there would be a sub-directory
-<Literal>ghc-x.xx</Literal>/ where <Literal>x.xx</Literal> is the version number of GHC in the bundle.
-</Para>
+<literal>ghc-x.xx</literal>/ where <literal>x.xx</literal> is the version number of GHC in the bundle.
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
These sub-directories have the following general structure:
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
-<VariableList>
+<para>
+<variablelist>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>libHSstd.a</Literal> etc:</Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>libHSstd.a</literal> etc:</term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
supporting library archives.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>ghc-iface.prl</Literal> etc:</Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>ghc-iface.prl</literal> etc:</term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
support scripts.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>import/</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>Interface files</Primary></IndexTerm> (<Literal>.hi</Literal>) for the prelude.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>include/</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
-A few C <Literal>#include</Literal> files.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-</VariableList>
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>share/</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>import/</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
+<indexterm><primary>Interface files</primary></indexterm> (<literal>.hi</literal>) for the prelude.
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>include/</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
+A few C <literal>#include</literal> files.
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>share/</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
contains platform-independent support files
for the installation. Again, there is a sub-directory for each
-<Literal>fptools</Literal> project.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>html/</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+<literal>fptools</literal> project.
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>html/</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
contains HTML documentation files (one
sub-directory per project).
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-</Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+</para>
-<Sect3 id="sec-install">
-<Title>Installing</Title>
+<sect3 id="sec-install">
+<title>Installing</title>
-<Para>
+<para>
OK, so let's assume that you have unpacked your chosen bundles. What
next? Well, you will at least need to run the
-<Literal>configure</Literal><IndexTerm><Primary>configure</Primary></IndexTerm>
+<literal>configure</literal><indexterm><primary>configure</primary></indexterm>
script by changing directory into the top-level directory for the
-bundle and typing <Literal>./configure</Literal>. That should convert
-<Literal>Makefile.in</Literal> to <Literal>Makefile</Literal>.
-</Para>
-
-<Para>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>installing in-place</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>in-place installation</Primary></IndexTerm>
-You can now either start using the tools <Emphasis>in-situ</Emphasis> without going
-through any installation process, just type <Literal>make in-place</Literal> to set the
-tools up for this. You'll also want to add the path which <Literal>make</Literal> will
-now echo to your <Literal>PATH</Literal> environment variable. This option is useful if
+bundle and typing <literal>./configure</literal>. That should convert
+<literal>Makefile.in</literal> to <literal>Makefile</literal>.
+</para>
+
+<para>
+<indexterm><primary>installing in-place</primary></indexterm>
+<indexterm><primary>in-place installation</primary></indexterm>
+You can now either start using the tools <emphasis>in-situ</emphasis> without going
+through any installation process, just type <literal>make in-place</literal> to set the
+tools up for this. You'll also want to add the path which <literal>make</literal> will
+now echo to your <literal>PATH</literal> environment variable. This option is useful if
you simply want to try out the package and/or you don't have the
necessary privileges (or inclination) to properly install the tools
locally. Note that if you do decide to install the package `properly'
at a later date, you have to go through the installation steps that
follow.
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
To install a package, you'll have to do the following:
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
-<OrderedList>
-<ListItem>
+<orderedlist>
+<listitem>
-<Para>
- Edit the <Literal>Makefile</Literal> and check the settings of the following variables:
+<para>
+ Edit the <literal>Makefile</literal> and check the settings of the following variables:
-<IndexTerm><Primary>directories, installation</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>installation directories</Primary></IndexTerm>
+<indexterm><primary>directories, installation</primary></indexterm>
+<indexterm><primary>installation directories</primary></indexterm>
-<VariableList>
+<variablelist>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>platform</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>platform</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
the platform you are going to install for.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>bindir</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>bindir</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
the directory in which to install user-invokable
binaries.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>libdir</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>libdir</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
the directory in which to install
platform-dependent support files.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>datadir</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>datadir</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
the directory in which to install
platform-independent support files.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>infodir</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>infodir</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
the directory in which to install Emacs info
files.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>htmldir</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>htmldir</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
the directory in which to install HTML
documentation.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>dvidir</Literal></Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>dvidir</literal></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
the directory in which to install DVI
documentation.
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-</VariableList>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
The values for these variables can be set through invocation of the
-<Command>configure</Command><IndexTerm><Primary>configure</Primary></IndexTerm>
+<command>configure</command><indexterm><primary>configure</primary></indexterm>
script that comes with the distribution, but doing an optical diff to
see if the values match your expectations is always a Good Idea.
</para>
<para>
-<Emphasis>Instead of running <Command>configure</Command>, it is
-perfectly OK to copy <Filename>Makefile.in</Filename> to
-<Filename>Makefile</Filename> and set all these variables directly
-yourself. But do it right!</Emphasis>
-</Para>
+<emphasis>Instead of running <command>configure</command>, it is
+perfectly OK to copy <filename>Makefile.in</filename> to
+<filename>Makefile</filename> and set all these variables directly
+yourself. But do it right!</emphasis>
+</para>
-</ListItem>
-<ListItem>
+</listitem>
+<listitem>
-<Para>
-Run <Literal>make install</Literal>. This <Emphasis>
-should</Emphasis> work with ordinary Unix
-<Literal>make</Literal>—no need for fancy stuff like GNU
-<Literal>make</Literal>.
+<para>
+Run <literal>make install</literal>. This <emphasis>
+should</emphasis> work with ordinary Unix
+<literal>make</literal>—no need for fancy stuff like GNU
+<literal>make</literal>.
-</Para>
-</ListItem>
-<ListItem>
+</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem>
-<Para>
-<Literal>rehash</Literal> (t?csh or zsh users), so your shell will see the new
+<para>
+<literal>rehash</literal> (t?csh or zsh users), so your shell will see the new
stuff in your bin directory.
-</Para>
-</ListItem>
-<ListItem>
+</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem>
-<Para>
+<para>
Once done, test your “installation” as suggested in
-<XRef LinkEnd="sec-GHC-test">. Be sure to use a <Literal>-v</Literal>
+<xref linkend="sec-GHC-test"/>. Be sure to use a <literal>-v</literal>
option, so you can see exactly what pathnames it's using.
If things don't work as expected, check the list of known pitfalls in
the building guide.
-</Para>
-</ListItem>
+</para>
+</listitem>
-</OrderedList>
+</orderedlist>
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>link, installed as ghc</Primary></IndexTerm>
+<para>
+<indexterm><primary>link, installed as ghc</primary></indexterm>
When installing the user-invokable binaries, this installation
-procedure will install GHC as <Literal>ghc-x.xx</Literal> where <Literal>x.xx</Literal> is the version
+procedure will install GHC as <literal>ghc-x.xx</literal> where <literal>x.xx</literal> is the version
number of GHC. It will also make a link (in the binary installation
-directory) from <Literal>ghc</Literal> to <Literal>ghc-x.xx</Literal>. If you install multiple versions
-of GHC then the last one “wins”, and “<Literal>ghc</Literal>” will invoke the last
+directory) from <literal>ghc</literal> to <literal>ghc-x.xx</literal>. If you install multiple versions
+of GHC then the last one “wins”, and “<literal>ghc</literal>” will invoke the last
one installed. You can change this manually if you want. But
-regardless, <Literal>ghc-x.xx</Literal> should always invoke GHC version <Literal>x.xx</Literal>.
-</Para>
+regardless, <literal>ghc-x.xx</literal> should always invoke GHC version <literal>x.xx</literal>.
+</para>
-</Sect3>
+</sect3>
-<Sect3>
-<Title>What bundles there are</Title>
+<sect3>
+<title>What bundles there are</title>
-<Para>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>bundles, binary</Primary></IndexTerm> There are
+<para>
+<indexterm><primary>bundles, binary</primary></indexterm> There are
plenty of “non-basic” GHC bundles. The files for them are
called
-<Literal>ghc-x.xx-<replaceable>bundle</replaceable>-<replaceable>platform</replaceable>.tar.gz</Literal>,
+<literal>ghc-x.xx-<replaceable>bundle</replaceable>-<replaceable>platform</replaceable>.tar.gz</literal>,
where the <replaceable>platform</replaceable> is as above, and
<replaceable>bundle</replaceable> is one of these:
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
-<VariableList>
+<para>
+<variablelist>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>prof</Literal>:</Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>prof</literal>:</term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
Profiling with cost-centres. You probably want this.
-<IndexTerm><Primary>profiling bundles</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>bundles, profiling</Primary></IndexTerm>
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>par</Literal>:</Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+<indexterm><primary>profiling bundles</primary></indexterm>
+<indexterm><primary>bundles, profiling</primary></indexterm>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>par</literal>:</term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
Parallel Haskell features (sits on top of PVM).
You'll want this if you're into that kind of thing.
-<IndexTerm><Primary>parallel bundles</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>bundles, parallel</Primary></IndexTerm>
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>gran</Literal>:</Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+<indexterm><primary>parallel bundles</primary></indexterm>
+<indexterm><primary>bundles, parallel</primary></indexterm>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>gran</literal>:</term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
The “GranSim” parallel-Haskell simulator
(hmm… mainly for implementors).
-<IndexTerm><Primary>bundles, gransim</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>gransim bundles</Primary></IndexTerm>
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-<VarListEntry>
-<Term><Literal>ticky</Literal>:</Term>
-<ListItem>
-<Para>
+<indexterm><primary>bundles, gransim</primary></indexterm>
+<indexterm><primary>gransim bundles</primary></indexterm>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><literal>ticky</literal>:</term>
+<listitem>
+<para>
“Ticky-ticky” profiling; very detailed
information about “what happened when I ran this program”—really
for implementors.
-<IndexTerm><Primary>bundles, ticky-ticky</Primary></IndexTerm>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>ticky-ticky bundles</Primary></IndexTerm>
-</Para>
-</ListItem></VarListEntry>
-</VariableList>
-</Para>
-
-<Para>
-One likely scenario is that you will grab <Emphasis>two</Emphasis>
+<indexterm><primary>bundles, ticky-ticky</primary></indexterm>
+<indexterm><primary>ticky-ticky bundles</primary></indexterm>
+</para>
+</listitem></varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+</para>
+
+<para>
+One likely scenario is that you will grab <emphasis>two</emphasis>
binary bundles—basic, and profiling. We don't usually make the
rest, although you can build them yourself from a source distribution.
-</Para>
+</para>
<para>The various GHC bundles are designed to be unpacked into the
same directory; then installing as per the directions above will
at least have the basic GHC binary distribution bundle, these extra
bundles won't install on their own.</para>
-</Sect3>
+</sect3>
-<Sect3 id="sec-GHC-test">
-<Title>Testing that GHC seems to be working
-</Title>
+<sect3 id="sec-GHC-test">
+<title>Testing that GHC seems to be working
+</title>
-<Para>
-<IndexTerm><Primary>testing a new GHC</Primary></IndexTerm>
-</Para>
+<para>
+<indexterm><primary>testing a new GHC</primary></indexterm>
+</para>
-<Para>
-The way to do this is, of course, to compile and run <Emphasis>this</Emphasis> program
-(in a file <Literal>Main.hs</Literal>):
-</Para>
+<para>
+The way to do this is, of course, to compile and run <emphasis>this</emphasis> program
+(in a file <literal>Main.hs</literal>):
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
-<ProgramListing>
+<programlisting>
main = putStr "Hello, world!\n"
-</ProgramListing>
+</programlisting>
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
-Compile the program, using the <Literal>-v</Literal> (verbose) flag to verify that
+<para>
+Compile the program, using the <literal>-v</literal> (verbose) flag to verify that
libraries, etc., are being found properly:
-<Screen>
-% ghc -v -o hello Main.hs</Screen>
+<screen>
+% ghc -v -o hello Main.hs</screen>
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
Now run it:
-<Screen>
+<screen>
% ./hello
-Hello, world!</Screen>
+Hello, world!</screen>
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
Some simple-but-profitable tests are to compile and run the notorious
-<Literal>nfib</Literal><IndexTerm><Primary>nfib</Primary></IndexTerm> program, using different numeric types. Start with
-<Literal>nfib :: Int -> Int</Literal>, and then try <Literal>Integer</Literal>, <Literal>Float</Literal>, <Literal>Double</Literal>,
-<Literal>Rational</Literal> and perhaps the overloaded version. Code for this is
-distributed in <Literal>ghc/misc/examples/nfib/</Literal> in a source distribution.
-</Para>
+<literal>nfib</literal><indexterm><primary>nfib</primary></indexterm> program, using different numeric types. Start with
+<literal>nfib :: Int -> Int</literal>, and then try <literal>Integer</literal>, <literal>Float</literal>, <literal>Double</literal>,
+<literal>Rational</literal> and perhaps the overloaded version. Code for this is
+distributed in <literal>ghc/misc/examples/nfib/</literal> in a source distribution.
+</para>
<para>For more information on how to “drive” GHC, read
on...</para>
-</Sect3>
+</sect3>
-</Sect2>
+</sect2>
-</Sect1>
+</sect1>
-<Sect1 id="sec-install-windows"><Title>Installing on Windows</Title>
+<sect1 id="sec-install-windows"><title>Installing on Windows</title>
<para>
Getting the Glasgow Haskell Compiler (post 5.02) to run on Windows platforms is
a snap: the Installshield does everything you need.
</para>
-<Sect2><Title>Installing GHC on Windows</Title>
+<sect2><title>Installing GHC on Windows</title>
<para>
To install GHC, use the following steps:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para>Download the Installshield <Filename>setup.exe</Filename>
+<listitem><para>Download the Installshield <filename>setup.exe</filename>
from the GHC download page
-<ULink
-URL="http://www.haskell.org/ghc">haskell.org</ULink>.
+<ulink
+URL="http://www.haskell.org/ghc">haskell.org</ulink>.
</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>Run <Filename>setup.exe</Filename>.
-(If you have a previous version of GHC, Installshield will offer to "modify",
-or "remove" GHC. Choose "remove"; then run <Filename>setup.exe</Filename> a
+<listitem><para>Run <filename>setup.exe</filename>.
+On Windows, all of GHC's files are installed in a single directory.
+If you choose ``Custom'' from the list of install options, you will be given a
+choice about where this directory is; otherwise it will be installed
+in <filename>c:/ghc/<replaceable>ghc-version</replaceable></filename>.
+The executable binary for GHC will be installed in the <filename>bin/</filename> sub-directory
+of the installation directory you choose.
+</para>
+<para>(If you have already installed the same version of GHC, Installshield will offer to "modify",
+or "remove" GHC. Choose "remove"; then run <filename>setup.exe</filename> a
second time. This time it should offer to install.)
</para>
<para>
-At this point you should find GHCi and the GHC documentation are
+When installation is complete, you should find GHCi and the GHC documentation are
available in your Start menu under "Start/Programs/Glasgow Haskell Compiler".
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem><para>
-The final dialogue box from the install process tells you where GHC has
-been installed. If you want to invoke GHC from a command line, add this
-to your PATH environment variable. Usually, GHC installs into
-<Filename>c:/ghc/ghc-5.02</Filename>, though the last part of this path
-depends on which version of GHC you are installing, of course.
-You need to add <Filename>c:/ghc/ghc-5.02/bin</Filename> to your path if yo
+The final dialogue box from the install process reminds you where the GHC binary
+has been installed (usually <filename>c:/ghc/<replaceable>ghc-version</replaceable>/bin/</filename>.
+If you want to invoke GHC from a command line, add this
+to your PATH environment variable.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
<listitem><para>Otherwise, there is a per-user default which varies
between versions of Windows. On NT and XP-ish versions, it might
be:
-<Filename>c:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local Settings\Temp</filename>
+<filename>c:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local Settings\Temp</filename>
</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
The main point is that if you don't do anything GHC will work fine;
</para></listitem>
<listitem>
-<Para>
+<para>
To test the fruits of your labour, try now to compile a simple
Haskell program:
-</Para>
+</para>
-<Screen>
+<screen>
bash$ cat main.hs
module Main(main) where
..
bash$ ./main
Hello, world!
-bash$ </Screen>
+bash$ </screen>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
You do <emphasis>not</emphasis> need the Cygwin toolchain, or anything
else, to install and run GHC.
</para>
-<Para>
+<para>
An installation of GHC requires about 140M of disk space.
To run GHC comfortably, your machine should have at least
64M of memory.
-</Para>
+</para>
</sect2>
-<Sect2><title>Moving GHC around</title>
-<Para>
-At the moment, GHC installs in a fixed place (<Filename>c:/ghc/ghc-x.yy</Filename>,
+<sect2><title>Moving GHC around</title>
+<para>
+At the moment, GHC installs in a fixed place (<filename>c:/ghc/ghc-x.yy</filename>,
but once it is installed, you can freely move the entire GHC tree just by copying
-the <Filename>ghc-x.yy</Filename> directory. (You may need to fix up
+the <filename>ghc-x.yy</filename> directory. (You may need to fix up
the links in "Start/Programs/Glasgow Haskell Compiler" if you do this.)
</para>
<para>
We havn't quite got to the bottom of this, but so far as we know it's not
a problem with GHC itself. Nevertheless, just to keep life simple we usually
put GHC in a place with a space-free path.
-</Para>
+</para>
</sect2>
-<Sect2 id="winfaq"><title>Installing ghc-win32 FAQ</title>
+<sect2 id="winfaq">
+<title>Installing ghc-win32 FAQ</title>
-<QandASet>
+<qandaset>
-<QandAEntry>
+<qandaentry>
-<Question>
-<Para>
+<question>
+<para>
I'm having trouble with symlinks.
-</Para>
-</Question>
+</para>
+</question>
-<Answer>
-<Para>
-Symlinks only work under Cygwin (<Xref LinkEnd="sec-install">), so binaries
+<answer>
+<para>
+Symlinks only work under Cygwin (<xref linkend="sec-install"/>), so binaries
not linked to the Cygwin DLL, in particular those built for Mingwin, will not
work with symlinks.
-</Para>
-</Answer>
+</para>
+</answer>
-</QandAEntry>
+</qandaentry>
-<QandAEntry>
+<qandaentry>
-<Question>
-<Para>
-I'm getting “permission denied” messages from the <Command>rm</Command> or
-<Command>mv</Command>.
-</Para>
-</Question>
+<question>
+<para>
+I'm getting “permission denied” messages from the <command>rm</command> or
+<command>mv</command>.
+</para>
+</question>
-<Answer>
-<Para>
+<answer>
+<para>
This can have various causes: trying to rename a directory when an Explorer
window is open on it tends to fail. Closing the window generally cures the
problem, but sometimes its cause is more mysterious, and logging off and back
on or rebooting may be the quickest cure.
-</Para>
-</Answer>
+</para>
+</answer>
-</QandAEntry>
+</qandaentry>
-</QandASet>
+</qandaset>
<!-- doesn't add much value any longer; leave out [sof 7/2002].
-<Para>
-Further information on using GHC under Windows can be found in <ULink
+<para>
+Further information on using GHC under Windows can be found in <ulink
URL="http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~sof/ghc-win32.html">Sigbjørn Finne's
-pages</ULink>. Note: ignore the installation instructions, which are rather
-out of date; the <Emphasis>Miscellaneous</Emphasis> section at the bottom of
+pages</ulink>. Note: ignore the installation instructions, which are rather
+out of date; the <emphasis>Miscellaneous</emphasis> section at the bottom of
the page is of most interest, covering topics beyond the scope of this
manual.
-</Para>
+</para>
-->
-</Sect2>
+</sect2>
-</Sect1>
+</sect1>
-<Sect1 id="sec-install-files"><Title>The layout of installed files</Title>
+<sect1 id="sec-install-files"><title>The layout of installed files</title>
<para>
This section describes what files get installed where. You don't need to know it
<para> GHC is installed in two directory trees:</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
-<term>Binary directory</term>
-<listitem> <para> known as <Filename>$(bindir)</Filename>, holds executables that
-the user is expected to invoke. Notably,
-<Filename>ghc</Filename> and <Filename>ghci</FileName>. On Unix, this directory
-is typically something like <Filename>/usr/local/bin</Filename>. On Windows,
-however, this directory is always <Filename>$(libdir)/bin</Filename>.
-</para>
+<term>Library directory,</term>
+<listitem> <para> known as <filename>$(libdir)</filename>, holds all the
+support files needed to run GHC. On Unix, this
+directory is usually something like <filename>/usr/lib/ghc/ghc-5.02</filename>. </para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
-<term>Library directory,</term>
-<listitem> <para> known as <Filename>$(libdir)</Filename>, holds all the
-support files needed to run GHC. On Unix, this
-directory is usually something like <Filename>/usr/lib/ghc/ghc-5.02</Filename>. </para>
+<term>Binary directory</term>
+<listitem> <para> known as <filename>$(bindir)</filename>, holds executables that
+the user is expected to invoke.
+Notably, it contains
+<filename>ghc</filename> and <filename>ghci</filename>. On Unix, this directory
+can be anywhere, but is typically something like <filename>/usr/local/bin</filename>. On Windows,
+however, this directory <emphasis>must be</emphasis> <filename>$(libdir)/bin</filename>.
+</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
-<Filename>$(libdir)</Filename> is passed to GHC using the <option>-B</option> flag.
+<filename>$(libdir)</filename> is passed to GHC using the <option>-B</option> flag.
On Unix (but not Windows), the installed <filename>ghc</filename> is just a one-line
shell script that invokes the real GHC, passing a suitable <option>-B</option> flag.
[All the user-supplied flags
<listitem>
<para> On Windows (but not Unix), if no <option>-B</option> flag is given, GHC uses a system
call to find the directory in which the running GHC executable lives, and derives
-<Filename>$(libdir)</Filename> from that. [Unix lacks such a system call.]
+<filename>$(libdir)</filename> from that. [Unix lacks such a system call.]
+That is why <filename>$(bindir)</filename> must be <filename>$(libdir)/bin</filename>.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
-<sect2> <title>Layout of the library directory</title>
+<sect2> <title>The binary directory</title>
+
+<para>The binary directory, <filename>$(bindir)</filename> contains user-visible
+executables, notably <filename>ghc</filename> and <filename>ghci</filename>.
+You should add it to your <literal>$PATH</literal>
+</para>
+
+<para>On Unix, the user-invokable <filename>ghc</filename> invokes <filename>$(libdir)/ghc-<replaceable>version</replaceable></filename>,
+passing a suitable <option>-B</option> flag to tell <filename>ghc-<replaceable>version</replaceable></filename> where
+<filename>$(libdir)</filename> is.
+Similarly <filename>ghci</filename>, except the extra flag <literal>--interactive</literal> is passed.
+</para>
+
+<para>On Win32, the user-invokable <filename>ghc</filename> binary
+is the Real Thing (no intervening
+shell scripts or <filename>.bat</filename> files).
+Reason: we sometimes invoke GHC with very long command lines,
+and <filename>cmd.exe</filename> (which executes <filename>.bat</filename> files)
+truncates them. Similarly <filename>ghci</filename> is a C wrapper program that invokes <filename>ghc --interactive</filename>
+(passing on all other arguments), not a <filename>.bat</filename> file.
+</para>
+
+
+</sect2>
-<para>The layout of the library directory is almost identical on
-Windows and Unix, as follows: layout:</para>
+<sect2> <title>The library directory</title>
+
+<para>The layout of the library directory, <filename>$(libdir)</filename> is almost identical on
+Windows and Unix, as follows. Differences between Windows and Unix
+are noted thus <literal>[Win32 only]</literal> and are commented below.</para>
<programlisting>
$(libdir)/
bin/ [Win32 only] User-visible binaries
ghc.exe
- ghci.bat
+ ghci.exe
unlit Remove literate markup
HSlang.o not grok .a files yet)
</programlisting>
-<para>Note that:</para>
+<para>Note that:
<itemizedlist>
-<listitem>
-<para>On Win32, the <filename>$(libdir)/bin</filename> directory contains user-visible binaries;
-add it to your <filename>PATH</filename>. The <filename>ghci</filename> executable is a <filename>.bat</filename>
-file which invokes <filename>ghc</filename>. </para>
-
-<para>The GHC executable is the Real Thing (no intervening
-shell scripts or <filename>.bat</filename> files).
-Reason: we sometimes invoke GHC with very long command lines,
-and <filename>cmd.exe</filename> (which executes <filename>.bat</filename> files)
-truncates them. [We assume people won't invoke ghci with very long
-command lines.]</para>
-
-<para>On Unix, the user-invokable <filename>ghc</filename> invokes <filename>$(libdir)/ghc-<replaceable>version</replaceable></filename>,
-passing a suitable <option>-B</option> flag.
-</para>
-</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><filename>$(libdir)</filename> also contains support
with GHC, rather than assume some installed one. </para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
+</para>
</sect2>
</sect1>
-</Chapter>
+</chapter>
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