X-Git-Url: http://git.megacz.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Fbuilding%2Fbuilding.xml;h=18d3ff4f7941786e3738ab398b685833556cc087;hb=22501a5d518c093b1233af3e5c52503d5aa43281;hp=ae22c81d286733017018997588e925bdbe67190f;hpb=1013f2bbde5eb3e8bba4da6d851215963a93b239;p=ghc-hetmet.git diff --git a/docs/building/building.xml b/docs/building/building.xml index ae22c81..18d3ff4 100644 --- a/docs/building/building.xml +++ b/docs/building/building.xml @@ -1,27 +1,23 @@ + "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd" [ + +]>
-Building the Glasgow Functional Programming Tools Suite +Building and developing GHC The GHC Team
glasgow-haskell-{users,bugs}@haskell.org
- The Glasgow fptools suite is a collection of Functional - Programming related tools, including the Glasgow Haskell - Compiler (GHC). The source code for the whole suite is kept in - a single CVS repository and shares a common build and - installation system. - - This guide is intended for people who want to build or - modify programs from the Glasgow fptools - suite (as distinct from those who merely want to - run them). Installation instructions are - now provided in the user guide. + This Guide is primarily aimed at those who want to build and/or + hack on GHC. It describes how to get started with building GHC on your + machine, and how to tweak the settings to get the kind of build you + want. It also describes the inner workings of the build system, so you + can extend it, modify it, and use it to build your code. The bulk of this guide applies to building on Unix systems; see for Windows notes. @@ -33,8 +29,7 @@ Getting the sources - You can get your hands on the fptools - in two ways: + You can get your hands on the GHC sources in two ways: @@ -49,8 +44,7 @@ (c) you want to hack on GHC yourself. A source distribution contains complete sources for - one or more projects in the fptools - suite. Not only that, but the more awkward + GHC. Not only that, but the more awkward machine-independent steps are done for you. For example, if you don't have happyhappy @@ -65,1118 +59,83 @@ - The CVS repository.CVS repository + The darcs repository.darcs repository We make releases infrequently. If you want more up-to-the minute (but less tested) source code then you need - to get access to our CVS repository. + to get access to our darcs repository. - All the fptools source code is held - in a CVS repository. CVS is a pretty good source-code - control system, and best of all it works over the - network. + Information on accessing the darcs repository is on + the wiki: . The repository holds source code only. It holds no mechanically generated files at all. So if you check out a - source tree from CVS you will need to install every utility + source tree from darcs you will need to install every utility so that you can build all the derived files from scratch. + + + + - More information about our CVS repository can be found - in . - - - - - If you are going to do any building from sources (either - from a source distribution or the CVS repository) then you need to - read all of this manual in detail. - - - - Using the CVS repository - - We use CVS (Concurrent Version System) to keep track of our - sources for various software projects. CVS lets several people - work on the same software at the same time, allowing changes to be - checked in incrementally. - - This section is a set of guidelines for how to use our CVS - repository, and will probably evolve in time. The main thing to - remember is that most mistakes can be undone, but if there's - anything you're not sure about feel free to bug the local CVS - meister (namely Jeff Lewis - jlewis@galois.com). - - - Getting access to the CVS Repository - - You can access the repository in one of two ways: - read-only (), or read-write (). - - - Remote Read-only CVS Access - - Read-only access is available to anyone - there's no - need to ask us first. With read-only CVS access you can do - anything except commit changes to the repository. You can - make changes to your local tree, and still use CVS's merge - facility to keep your tree up to date, and you can generate - patches using 'cvs diff' in order to send to us for - inclusion. - - To get read-only access to the repository: - - - - Make sure that cvs is - installed on your machine. - - - Set your $CVSROOT environment variable to - :pserver:anoncvs@glass.cse.ogi.edu:/cvs - If you set $CVSROOT in a shell script, be sure not to - have any trailing spaces on that line, otherwise CVS will respond with - a perplexing message like - /cvs : no such repository - - - Run the command -$ cvs login - The password is simply cvs. This - sets up a file in your home directory called - .cvspass, which squirrels away the - dummy password, so you only need to do this step once. - - - - Now go to . - - - - - - Remote Read-Write CVS Access - - We generally supply read-write access to folk doing - serious development on some part of the source tree, when - going through us would be a pain. If you're developing some - feature, or think you have the time and inclination to fix - bugs in our sources, feel free to ask for read-write - access. There is a certain amount of responsibility that goes - with commit privileges; we are more likely to grant you access - if you've demonstrated your competence by sending us patches - via mail in the past. - - To get remote read-write CVS access, you need to do the - following steps. - - - - Make sure that cvs and - ssh are both installed on your - machine. - - - - Generate a DSA private-key/public-key pair, thus: -$ ssh-keygen -d - (ssh-keygen comes with - ssh.) Running ssh-keygen - -d creates the private and public keys in - $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa and - $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa.pub respectively - (assuming you accept the standard defaults). - - ssh-keygen -d will only work if - you have Version 2 ssh installed; it - will fail harmlessly otherwise. If you only have Version - 1 you can instead generate an RSA key pair using plain -$ ssh-keygen - - Doing so creates the private and public RSA keys in - $HOME/.ssh/identity and - $HOME/.ssh/identity.pub - respectively. - - [Deprecated.] Incidentally, you can force a Version - 2 ssh to use the Version 1 protocol by - creating $HOME/config with the - following in it: -BatchMode Yes - -Host cvs.haskell.org -Protocol 1 - - In both cases, ssh-keygen will - ask for a passphrase. The - passphrase is a password that protects your private key. - In response to the 'Enter passphrase' question, you can - either: - - - [Recommended.] Enter a passphrase, which you - will quote each time you use CVS. - ssh-agent makes this entirely - un-tiresome. - - - [Deprecated.] Just hit return (i.e. use an empty - passphrase); then you won't need to quote the - passphrase when using CVS. The downside is that - anyone who can see into your .ssh - directory, and thereby get your private key, can mess - up the repository. So you must keep the - .ssh directory with draconian - no-access permissions. - - - - - - Windows users: see the notes in about ssh wrinkles! - - - - - - - Send a message to to the CVS repository - administrator (currently Jeff Lewis - jeff@galois.com), containing: - - - Your desired user-name. - - - Your .ssh/id_dsa.pub (or - .ssh/identity.pub). - - - He will set up your account. - - - - Set the following environment variables: - - - - $HOME: points to your home directory. This is where CVS - will look for its .cvsrc file. - - - - - - $CVS_RSH to ssh - - [Windows users.] Setting your CVS_RSH to - ssh assumes that your CVS client - understands how to execute shell script - ("#!"s,really), which is what - ssh is. This may not be the case on - Win32 platforms, so in that case set CVS_RSH to - ssh1. - - - - $CVSROOT to - :ext:your-username - @cvs.haskell.org:/home/cvs/root - where your-username is your user name on - cvs.haskell.org. - - The CVSROOT environment variable will - be recorded in the checked-out tree, so you don't need to set - this every time. - - - - - - $CVSEDITOR: bin/gnuclient.exe - if you want to use an Emacs buffer for typing in those long commit messages. - - - - - - $SHELL: To use bash as the shell in Emacs, you need to - set this to point to bash.exe. - - - - - - - - - - - Put the following in $HOME/.cvsrc: - - -checkout -P -release -d -update -P -diff -u - - - These are the default options for the specified CVS commands, - and represent better defaults than the usual ones. (Feel - free to change them.) - - - - [Windows users.] Filenames starting with . were illegal in - the 8.3 DOS filesystem, but that restriction should have - been lifted by now (i.e., you're using VFAT or later filesystems.) If - you're still having problems creating it, don't worry; .cvsrc is entirely - optional. - - - - - - - [Experts.] Once your account is set up, you can get - access from other machines without bothering Jeff, thus: - - - Generate a public/private key pair on the new - machine. - - - Use ssh to log in to - cvs.haskell.org, from your old - machine. - - - Add the public key for the new machine to the file - $HOME/ssh/authorized_keys on - cvs.haskell.org. - (authorized_keys2, I think, for Version - 2 protocol.) - - - Make sure that the new version of - authorized_keys still has 600 file - permissions. - - - - - - - - - Checking Out a Source Tree - - - - Make sure you set your CVSROOT - environment variable according to either of the remote - methods above. The Approved Way to check out a source tree - is as follows: - -$ cvs checkout fpconfig - - At this point you have a new directory called - fptools which contains the basic stuff - for the fptools suite, including the configuration files and - some other junk. - -[Windows users.] The following messages appear to be harmless: -setsockopt IPTOS_LOWDELAY: Invalid argument -setsockopt IPTOS_THROUGHPUT: Invalid argument - - - - You can call the fptools directory whatever you like, - CVS won't mind: - -$ mv fptools directory - - NB: after you've read the CVS manual you might be - tempted to try -$ cvs checkout -d directory fpconfig - - instead of checking out fpconfig - and then renaming it. But this doesn't work, and will - result in checking out the entire repository instead of just - the fpconfig bit. -$ cd directory -$ cvs checkout ghc hslibs libraries - - The second command here checks out the relevant - modules you want to work on. For a GHC build, for instance, - you need at least the ghc, - hslibs and libraries - modules (for a full list of the projects available, see - ). - - Remember that if you do not have - happy and/or Alex - installed, you need to check them out as well. - - - - - - Committing Changes - - This is only if you have read-write access to the - repository. For anoncvs users, CVS will issue a "read-only - repository" error if you try to commit changes. - - - - Build the software, if necessary. Unless you're just - working on documentation, you'll probably want to build the - software in order to test any changes you make. - - - - Make changes. Preferably small ones first. - - - - Test them. You can see exactly what changes you've - made by using the cvs diff command: -$ cvs diff - lists all the changes (using the - diff command) in and below the current - directory. In emacs, C-c C-v = runs - cvs diff on the current buffer and shows - you the results. - - - - If you changed something in the - fptools/libraries subdirectories, also run - make html to check if the documentation can - be generated successfully, too. - - - - Before checking in a change, you need to update your - source tree: - -$ cd fptools -$ cvs update - This pulls in any changes that other people have made, - and merges them with yours. If there are any conflicts, CVS - will tell you, and you'll have to resolve them before you - can check your changes in. The documentation describes what - to do in the event of a conflict. - - It's not always necessary to do a full cvs update - before checking in a change, since CVS will always tell you - if you try to check in a file that someone else has changed. - However, you should still update at regular intervals to - avoid making changes that don't work in conjuction with - changes that someone else made. Keeping an eye on what goes - by on the mailing list can help here. - - - - When you're happy that your change isn't going to - break anything, check it in. For a one-file change: - -$ cvs commit filename - - CVS will then pop up an editor for you to enter a - "commit message", this is just a short description - of what your change does, and will be kept in the history of - the file. - - If you're using emacs, simply load up the file into a - buffer and type C-x C-q, and emacs will - prompt for a commit message and then check in the file for - you. - - For a multiple-file change, things are a bit - trickier. There are several ways to do this, but this is the - way I find easiest. First type the commit message into a - temporary file. Then either - -$ cvs commit -F commit-message file_1 .... file_n - - or, if nothing else has changed in this part of the - source tree, - -$ cvs commit -F commit-message directory - - where directory is a common - parent directory for all your changes, and - commit-message is the name of the - file containing the commit message. - - Shortly afterwards, you'll get some mail from the - relevant mailing list saying which files changed, and giving - the commit message. For a multiple-file change, you should - still get only one message. - - - - - - Updating Your Source Tree - - It can be tempting to cvs update just part of a source - tree to bring in some changes that someone else has made, or - before committing your own changes. This is NOT RECOMMENDED! - Quite often changes in one part of the tree are dependent on - changes in another part of the tree (the - mk/*.mk files are a good example where - problems crop up quite often). Having an inconsistent tree is a - major cause of headaches. - - So, to avoid a lot of hassle, follow this recipe for - updating your tree: - -$ cd fptools -$ cvs update -P 2>&1 | tee log - - Look at the log file, and fix any conflicts (denoted by a - C in the first column). New directories may have - appeared in the repository; CVS doesn't check these out by - default, so to get new directories you have to explicitly do -$ cvs update -d - in each project subdirectory. Don't do this at the top level, - because then all the projects will be - checked out. - - If you're using multiple build trees, then for every build - tree you have pointing at this source tree, you need to update - the links in case any new files have appeared: - -$ cd build-tree -$ lndir source-tree - - Some files might have been removed, so you need to remove - the links pointing to these non-existent files: - -$ find . -xtype l -exec rm '{}' \; - - To be really safe, you should do - - -$ gmake all - - from the top-level, to update the dependencies and build - any changed files. - - - - GHC Tag Policy - - If you want to check out a particular version of GHC, - you'll need to know how we tag versions in the repository. The - policy (as of 4.04) is: - - - - The tree is branched before every major release. The - branch tag is ghc-x-xx-branch, where - x-xx is the version number of the release - with the '.' replaced by a - '-'. For example, the 4.04 release lives - on ghc-4-04-branch. - - - - The release itself is tagged with - ghc-x-xx (on the branch). eg. 4.06 is - called ghc-4-06. - - - - We didn't always follow these guidelines, so to see - what tags there are for previous versions, do cvs - log on a file that's been around for a while (like - fptools/ghc/README). - - - - So, to check out a fresh GHC 4.06 tree you would - do: - -$ cvs co -r ghc-4-06 fpconfig -$ cd fptools -$ cvs co -r ghc-4-06 ghc hslibs - - - - General Hints - - - - As a general rule: commit changes in small units, - preferably addressing one issue or implementing a single - feature. Provide a descriptive log message so that the - repository records exactly which changes were required to - implement a given feature/fix a bug. I've found this - very useful in the past for finding out - when a particular bug was introduced: you can just wind back - the CVS tree until the bug disappears. - - - - Keep the sources at least *buildable* at any given - time. No doubt bugs will creep in, but it's quite easy to - ensure that any change made at least leaves the tree in a - buildable state. We do nightly builds of GHC to keep an eye - on what things work/don't work each day and how we're doing - in relation to previous verions. This idea is truely wrecked - if the compiler won't build in the first place! - - - - To check out extra bits into an already-checked-out - tree, use the following procedure. Suppose you have a - checked-out fptools tree containing just ghc, and you want - to add nofib to it: - -$ cd fptools -$ cvs checkout nofib - - or: - -$ cd fptools -$ cvs update -d nofib - - (the -d flag tells update to create a new - directory). If you just want part of the nofib suite, you - can do - -$ cd fptools -$ cvs checkout nofib/spectral - - This works because nofib is a - module in its own right, and spectral is a subdirectory of - the nofib module. The path argument to checkout must always - start with a module name. There's no equivalent form of this - command using update. - - - - - - - What projects are there? - - The fptools suite consists of several - projects, most of which can be downloaded, - built and installed individually. Each project corresponds to a - subdirectory in the source tree, and if checking out from CVS then - each project can be checked out individually by sitting in the top - level of your source tree and typing cvs checkout - project. - - Here is a list of the projects currently available: - - - - - alex - alexproject - - - The Alex lexical - analyser generator for Haskell. - - - - - - ghc - ghc - project - - - The Glasgow - Haskell Compiler (minus libraries). Absolutely - required for building GHC. - - - - - - glafp-utils - glafp-utilsproject - - - Utility programs, some of which are used by the - build/installation system. Required for pretty much - everything. - - - - - - greencard - greencardproject - - - The GreenCard - system for generating Haskell foreign function - interfaces. - - - - - - haggis - haggisproject - - - The Haggis - Haskell GUI framework. - - - - - - haddock - haddockproject - - - The Haddock - documentation tool. - - - - - - happy - happyproject - - - The Happy Parser - generator. - - - - - - hdirect - hdirectproject - - - The H/Direct - Haskell interoperability tool. - - - - - - hood - hoodproject - - - The Haskell - Object Observation Debugger. - - - - - - hslibs - hslibsproject - - - Supplemental libraries for GHC - (required for building GHC). - - - - - - libraries - project - - - Hierarchical Haskell library suite - (required for building GHC). - - - - - - mhms - project - - - The Modular Haskell Metric System. - - - - - - nofib - nofibproject - - - The NoFib suite: A collection of Haskell programs used - primarily for benchmarking. - - - - - - testsuite - testsuiteproject - - - A testing framework, including GHC's regression test - suite. - - - - - So, to build GHC you need at least the - ghc, libraries and - hslibs projects (a GHC source distribution will - already include the bits you need). - - - - Things to check before you start - - Here's a list of things to check before you get - started. - - - - Disk space neededDisk - space needed: from about 100Mb for a basic GHC - build, up to probably 500Mb for a GHC build with everything - included (libraries built several different ways, - etc.). - - - - Use an appropriate machine / operating system. lists the supported platforms; if - yours isn't amongst these then you can try porting GHC (see - ). - - - - Be sure that the “pre-supposed” utilities are - installed. - elaborates. - - - - If you have any problem when building or installing the - Glasgow tools, please check the “known pitfalls” (). Also check the FAQ for the - version you're building, which is part of the User's Guide and - available on the GHC web - site. - - bugsknown - - If you feel there is still some shortcoming in our - procedure or instructions, please report it. - - For GHC, please see the bug-reporting - section of the GHC Users' Guide, to maximise the - usefulness of your report. - - bugsseporting - If in doubt, please send a message to - glasgow-haskell-bugs@haskell.org. - bugsmailing - list - - - - - - What machines the Glasgow tools run on - -portsGHC -GHCports -platformssupported - - The main question is whether or not the Haskell compiler - (GHC) runs on your platform. - - A “platform” is a - architecture/manufacturer/operating-system combination, such as - sparc-sun-solaris2. Other common ones are - alpha-dec-osf2, - hppa1.1-hp-hpux9, - i386-unknown-linux, - i386-unknown-solaris2, - i386-unknown-freebsd, - i386-unknown-cygwin32, - m68k-sun-sunos4, - mips-sgi-irix5, - sparc-sun-sunos4, - sparc-sun-solaris2, - powerpc-ibm-aix. - - Some libraries may only work on a limited number of - platforms; for example, a sockets library is of no use unless the - operating system supports the underlying BSDisms. - - - What platforms the Haskell compiler (GHC) runs on - - fully-supported platforms - native-code generator - registerised ports - unregisterised ports - - The GHC hierarchy of Porting Goodness: (a) Best is a - native-code generator; (b) next best is a - “registerised” port; (c) the bare minimum is an - “unregisterised” port. - (“Unregisterised” is so terrible that we won't say - more about it). - - We use Sparcs running Solaris 2.7 and x86 boxes running - FreeBSD and Linux, so those are the best supported platforms, - unsurprisingly. - - Here's everything that's known about GHC ports. We - identify platforms by their “canonical” - CPU/Manufacturer/OS triple. - - - - alpha-dec-{osf,linux,freebsd,openbsd,netbsd}: - alpha-dec-osf - alpha-dec-linux - alpha-dec-freebsd - alpha-dec-openbsd - alpha-dec-netbsd - - - The OSF port is currently working (as of GHC version - 5.02.1) and well supported. The native code generator is - currently non-working. Other operating systems will - require some minor porting. - - - - - sparc-sun-sunos4 - sparc-sun-sunos4 - - - Probably works with minor tweaks, hasn't been tested - for a while. - - - - - sparc-sun-solaris2 - sparc-sun-solaris2 - - - Fully supported (at least for Solaris 2.7 and 2.6), - including native-code generator. - - - - - sparc-unknown-openbsd - sparc-unknown-openbsd - - - Supported, including native-code generator. The - same should also be true of NetBSD - - - - - hppa1.1-hp-hpux (HP-PA boxes running HPUX 9.x) - hppa1.1-hp-hpux - - - A registerised port is available for version 4.08, - but GHC hasn't been built on that platform since (as far - as we know). No native-code generator. - - - - - i386-unknown-linux (PCs running Linux, ELF binary format) - i386-*-linux - - - GHC works registerised and has a native code - generator. You must have GCC 2.7.x - or later. NOTE about glibc versions: - GHC binaries built on a system running glibc - 2.0 won't work on a system running - glibc 2.1, and vice versa. In general, - don't expect compatibility between - glibc versions, even if the shared - library version hasn't changed. - - - - - i386-unknown-freebsd (PCs running FreeBSD 2.2 or higher) - i386-unknown-freebsd - - - GHC works registerised. Pre-built packages are - available in the native package format, so if you just - need binaries you're better off just installing the - package (it might even be on your installation - CD!). - - - - - i386-unknown-openbsd (PCs running OpenBSD) - i386-unknown-openbsd - - - Supported, with native code generator. Packages are - available through the ports system in the native package - format. - - - - - i386-unknown-netbsd (PCs running NetBSD) - i386-unknown-netbsd - - - Will require some minor porting effort, but should - work registerised. - - - - - i386-unknown-mingw32 (PCs running Windows) - i386-unknown-mingw32 - - - Fully supported under Win9x, WinNT, Win2k, and - WinXP. Includes a native code generator. Building from - source requires a recent Cygwin distribution - to be installed. - - - - - ia64-unknown-linux - ia64-unknown-linux - - - Supported, except there is no native code - generator. - - + + Things to check before you start - - x86_64-unknown-linux - x86_64-unknown-linux - - - GHC currently works unregisterised. A registerised - port is in progress. - - + Here's a list of things to check before you get + started. - - amd64-unknown-openbsd - amd64-unknown-linux - - - (This is the same as x86_64-unknown-openbsd). GHC - currently works unregisterised. A registerised port is in - progress. - - + - - mips-sgi-irix5 - mips-sgi-irix[5-6] - - - Port has worked in the past, but hasn't been tested - for some time (and will certainly have rotted in various - ways). As usual, we don't have access to machines and - there hasn't been an overwhelming demand for this port, - but feel free to get in touch. - - + Disk space neededDisk + space needed: from about 100Mb for a basic GHC + build, up to probably 500Mb for a GHC build with everything + included (libraries built several different ways, + etc.). + - - mips64-sgi-irix6 - mips-sgi-irix6 - - - GHC currently works unregisterised. - - + + Use an appropriate machine / operating system. GHC + Platform Support lists the currently supported + platforms; if yours isn't amongst these then you can try + porting GHC (see ). + - - powerpc-ibm-aix - powerpc-ibm-aix - - - Port currently doesn't work, needs some minimal - porting effort. As usual, we don't have access to - machines and there hasn't been an overwhelming demand for - this port, but feel free to get in touch. - - + + Be sure that the “pre-supposed” utilities are + installed. + elaborates. + - - powerpc-apple-darwin - powerpc-apple-darwin - - - Supported registerised. Native code generator is - almost working. - - + + If you have any problem when building or installing the + Glasgow tools, please check the “known pitfalls” (). Also check the FAQ for the + version you're building, which is part of the User's Guide and + available on the GHC web + site. - - powerpc-apple-linux - powerpc-apple-linux - - - Not supported (yet). - - - + bugsknown - Various other systems have had GHC ported to them in the - distant past, including various Motorola 68k boxes. The 68k - support still remains, but porting to one of these systems will - certainly be a non-trivial task. - + If you feel there is still some shortcoming in our + procedure or instructions, please report it. - - What machines the other tools run on + For GHC, please see the bug-reporting + section of the GHC Users' Guide, to maximise the + usefulness of your report. - Unless you hear otherwise, the other tools work if GHC - works. - + bugsseporting + If in doubt, please send a message to + glasgow-haskell-bugs@haskell.org. + bugsmailing + list + + - Installing pre-supposed utilities @@ -1199,10 +158,12 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral GHC, pre-supposed - GHC is required to build many of the tools, including - GHC itself. If you need to port GHC to your platform - because there isn't a binary distribution of GHC available, - then see . + GHC is required to build GHC, because GHC itself is + written in Haskell, and uses GHC extensions. It is possible + to build GHC using just a C compiler, and indeed some + distributions of GHC do just that, but it isn't the best + supported method, and you may encounter difficulties. Full + instructions are in . Which version of GHC you need will depend on the packages you intend to build. GHC itself will normally @@ -1221,8 +182,9 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral Perl version 5 at least is required. GHC has been known to tickle bugs in Perl, so if you find that Perl crashes when running GHC try updating (or downgrading) your Perl - installation. Versions of Perl that we use and are known to - be fairly stable are 5.005 and 5.6.1. + installation. Versions of Perl before 5.6 have been known to have + various bugs tickled by GHC, so the configure script + will look for version 5.6 or later. For Win32 platforms, you should use the binary supplied in the InstallShield (copy it to @@ -1242,16 +204,12 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral GCC (GNU C compiler), pre-supposed - We recommend using GCC version 2.95.2 on all - platforms. Failing that, version 2.7.2 is stable on most - platforms. Earlier versions of GCC can be assumed not to - work, and versions in between 2.7.2 and 2.95.2 (including - egcs) have varying degrees of stability - depending on the platform. - - GCC 3.2 is currently known to have problems building - GHC on Sparc, but is stable on x86. - + Most GCC versions should work with the most recent GHC + sources. Expect trouble if you use a recent GCC with + an older GHC, though (trouble in the form of mis-compiled code, + link errors, and errors from the ghc-asm + script). + If your GCC dies with “internal error” on some GHC source file, please let us know, so we can report it and get things improved. (Exception: on x86 @@ -1266,28 +224,33 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral makeGNU - The fptools build system makes heavy use of features + The GHC build system makes heavy use of features specific to GNU make, so you must have - this installed in order to build any of the fptools - suite. + this installed in order to build GHC. + + NB. it has been reported that version 3.79 no longer + works to build GHC, and 3.80 is required. - Happy + Happy Happy Happy is a parser generator tool for Haskell, and is - used to generate GHC's parsers. Happy is written in - Haskell, and is a project in the CVS repository - (fptools/happy). It can be built from - source, but bear in mind that you'll need GHC installed in - order to build it. To avoid the chicken/egg problem, - install a binary distribution of either Happy or GHC to get - started. Happy distributions are available from Happy's Web - Page. + used to generate GHC's parsers. + + If you start from a source tarball of GHC (i.e. not a darcs + checkout), then you don't need Happy, because we supply the + pre-processed versions of the Happy parsers. If you intend to + modify the compiler and/or you're using a darcs checkout, then you + need Happy. + + Happy version 1.15 is currently required to build GHC. + Grab a copy from Happy's Web + Page. @@ -1297,10 +260,15 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral Alex is a lexical-analyser generator for Haskell, - which GHC uses to generate its lexer. Like Happy, Alex is - written in Haskell and is a project in the CVS repository. - Alex distributions are available from Alex's Web + which GHC uses to generate its lexer. + + Like Happy, you don't need Alex if you're building GHC from a + source tarball, but you do need it if you're modifying GHC and/or + building a darcs checkout. + + Alex is + written in Haskell and is a project in the darcs repository. + Alex distributions are available from Alex's Web Page. @@ -1312,7 +280,7 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral GNU autoconf is needed if you intend to build from the - CVS sources, it is not needed if you + darcs sources, it is not needed if you just intend to build a standard source distribution. Version 2.52 or later of the autoconf package is required. @@ -1344,13 +312,6 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral - One fptools project is worth a quick note - at this point, because it is useful for all the others: - glafp-utils contains several utilities which - aren't particularly Glasgow-ish, but Occasionally Indispensable. - Like lndir for creating symbolic link - trees. - Tools for building parallel GHC (GPH) @@ -1392,29 +353,9 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral - - - - Other useful tools - - - - Flex - pre-supposed: flex - flex, pre-supposed - - - This is a quite-a-bit-better-than-Lex lexer. Used - to build a couple of utilities in - glafp-utils. Depending on your - operating system, the supplied lex may - or may not work; you should get the GNU version. - - - - More tools are required if you want to format the documentation - that comes with GHC and other fptools projects. See More tools are required if you want to format the + documentation that comes with GHC. See . @@ -1425,89 +366,77 @@ $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral Building from source Source, building from - You've been rash enough to want to build some of the Glasgow - Functional Programming tools (GHC, Happy, nofib, etc.) from - source. You've slurped the source, from the CVS repository or - from a source distribution, and now you're sitting looking at a - huge mound of bits, wondering what to do next. - - Gingerly, you type make. Wrong - already! - - This rest of this guide is intended for duffers like me, who - aren't really interested in Makefiles and systems configurations, - but who need a mental model of the interlocking pieces so that - they can make them work, extend them consistently when adding new - software, and lay hands on them gently when they don't - work. + “I just want to build it!” - - Quick Start + No problem. This recipe should build and install a working GHC with + all the default settings. (unless you're + on Windows, in which case go to ). - If you are starting from a source distribution, and just - want a completely standard build, then the following procedure should - work (unless you're on Windows, in which case go to ). - -$ autoreconf +$ autoreconfnot necessary if you started from a source tarball + $ ./configure $ make $ make install For GHC, this will do a 2-stage bootstrap build of the compiler, with profiling libraries, and install the - results. + results in the default location (under /usr/local on + Unix, for example). + + The configure script is a standard GNU + autoconf script, and accepts the usual options for + changing install locations and the like. Run + ./configure --help for a list of options. If you want to do anything at all non-standard, or you want to do some development, read on... - - - - Your source tree - - The source code is held in your source - tree. The root directory of your source tree - must contain the following directories and - files: - - - - Makefile: the root - Makefile. - - - - mk/: the directory that contains - the main Makefile code, shared by all the - fptools software. - - - - configure.ac, - config.sub, - config.guess: these files support the - configuration process. - - - - install-sh. - - + + + + Quick start for GHC developers + + This section is a copy of the file + HACKING from the GHC source tree. It describes + how to get started with setting up your build tree for developing GHC + or its libraries, and how to start building. + + +&hacking; + + + + + Working with the build system + + This rest of this guide is intended for duffers like me, who + aren't really interested in Makefiles and systems configurations, + but who need a mental model of the interlocking pieces so that + they can make them work, extend them consistently when adding new + software, and lay hands on them gently when they don't + work. - All the other directories are individual - projects of the fptools - system—for example, the Glasgow Haskell Compiler - (ghc), the Happy parser generator - (happy), the nofib - benchmark suite, and so on. You can have zero or more of these. - Needless to say, some of them are needed to build others. - - The important thing to remember is that even if you want - only one project (happy, say), you must have - a source tree whose root directory contains - Makefile, mk/, - configure.ac, and the project(s) you want - (happy/ in this case). You cannot get by - with just the happy/ directory. + + History + + First, a historical note. The GHC build system used to be + called "fptools": a generic build system used to build multiple + projects (GHC, Happy, GreenCard, H/Direct, etc.). It had a + concept of the generic project-independent parts, and + project-specific parts that resided in a project + subdirectory. + + Nowadays, most of these other projects are using Cabal, or have faded + away, and GHC is the only regular user of the fptools build + system. We decided therefore to simplify the situation for + developers, and specialise the build system for GHC. This + resulted in a simpler organisation of the source tree and the + build system, which hopefully makes the whole thing easier to + understand. + + You might find old comments that refer to "projects" or + "fptools" in the documentation and/or source; please let us know + if you do. @@ -1536,7 +465,7 @@ $ make install are two (If you don't have either, the source distribution includes sources for the X11 lndir—check out - fptools/glafp-utils/lndir). See utils/lndir). See for a typical invocation. The build tree does not need to be anywhere near the @@ -1573,24 +502,23 @@ $ make install source file.) Like the source tree, the top level of your build tree - must be (a linked copy of) the root directory of the - fptools suite. Inside Makefiles, the root of - your build tree is called + must be (a linked copy of) the root directory of the GHC source + tree.. Inside Makefiles, the root of your build tree is called $(FPTOOLS_TOP)FPTOOLS_TOP. In the rest of this document path names are relative to $(FPTOOLS_TOP) unless otherwise stated. For example, the file - ghc/mk/target.mk is actually - $(FPTOOLS_TOP)/ghc/mk/target.mk. + mk/target.mk is actually + $(FPTOOLS_TOP)/mk/target.mk. Getting the build you want - When you build fptools you will be - compiling code on a particular host - platform, to run on a particular target - platform (usually the same as the host + When you build GHC you will be compiling code on a + particular host platform, to run on a + particular target platform (usually the + same as the host platform)platform. The difficulty is that there are minor differences between different platforms; minor, but enough that the code needs to be @@ -1599,12 +527,11 @@ $ make install different native-code generator. There are also knobs you can turn to control how the - fptools software is built. For example, you - might want to build GHC optimised (so that it runs fast) or - unoptimised (so that you can compile it fast after you've - modified it. Or, you might want to compile it with debugging on - (so that extra consistency-checking code gets included) or off. - And so on. + software is built. For example, you might want to build GHC + optimised (so that it runs fast) or unoptimised (so that you can + compile it fast after you've modified it. Or, you might want to + compile it with debugging on (so that extra consistency-checking + code gets included) or off. And so on. All of this stuff is called the configuration of your build. You set the @@ -1615,7 +542,7 @@ $ make install Step 1: get ready for configuration. NOTE: if you're starting from a source distribution, - rather than CVS sources, you can skip this step. + rather than darcs sources, you can skip this step. Change directory to $(FPTOOLS_TOP) and @@ -1633,7 +560,8 @@ $ make install a message like "No rule to make target 'mk/config.h.in'". - Some projects, including GHC, have their own configure script. + Some parts of the source tree, particularly + libraries, have their own configure script. autoreconf takes care of that, too, so all you have to do is calling autoreconf in the top-level directory $(FPTOOLS_TOP). @@ -1726,7 +654,10 @@ $ make install Specifies the path to any installed Haskell compiler. This compiler will be used for compiling generic Haskell code. The default is to use - ghc. + ghc. (NOTE: I'm not sure it + actually works to specify a compiler other than GHC + here; unless you really know what you're doing I + suggest not using this option at all.) @@ -1751,7 +682,7 @@ $ make install Step 3: build configuration. Next, you say how this build of - fptools is to differ from the standard + GHC is to differ from the standard defaults by creating a new file mk/build.mkbuild.mk in the build tree. This file is the @@ -1788,13 +719,14 @@ $ make install includes build.mk after config.mk.) - For your convenience, there's a file called build.mk.sample - that can serve as a starting point for your build.mk. + For your convenience, there's a file called + build.mk.sample that can serve as a starting + point for your build.mk. For example, config.mk.in contains the definition: -GhcHcOpts=-O -Rghc-timing +GhcHcOpts=-Rghc-timing The accompanying comment explains that this is the list of flags passed to GHC when building GHC itself. For doing @@ -1802,20 +734,30 @@ $ make install enable debugging code. So you would add the following to build.mk: - or, if you prefer, - GhcHcOpts += -DDEBUG GNU make allows existing definitions to have new text appended using the “+=” - operator, which is quite a convenient feature.) + operator, which is quite a convenient feature. + + Haskell compilations by default have -O + turned on, by virtue of this setting from + config.mk: + +SRC_HC_OPTS += -H16m -O + + SRC_HC_OPTS means "options for HC from + the source tree", where HC stands for Haskell Compiler. + SRC_HC_OPTS are added to every Haskell + compilation. To turn off optimisation, you could add this to + build.mk: - If you want to remove the -O as well (a - good idea when developing, because the turn-around cycle gets a - lot quicker), you can just override - GhcLibHcOpts altogether: +SRC_HC_OPTS = -H16m -O0 -GhcHcOpts=-DDEBUG -Rghc-timing + Or you could just add -O0 to + GhcHcOpts to turn off optimisation for the + compiler. See for some more + suggestions. When reading config.mk.in, remember that anything between “@...@” signs is going to be substituted @@ -1848,7 +790,6 @@ $ make install correct directory is hard to find automatically. If you find that configure has got it wrong, just put the correct definition in build.mk. - @@ -1859,21 +800,18 @@ $ make install - Get your source tree from somewhere (CVS repository + Get your source tree from somewhere (darcs repository or source distribution). Say you call the root directory - myfptools (it does not have to be - called fptools). Make sure that you - have the essential files (see ). + myghc (it does not have to be + called ghc). - (Optional) Use lndir or mkshadowdir to create a build tree. -$ cd myfptools -$ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 +$ cd myghc +$ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myghc-x86 (N.B. mkshadowdir's first argument is taken relative to its second.) You probably want to give @@ -1886,7 +824,7 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 Change directory to the build tree. Everything is going to happen there now. -$ cd /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 +$ cd /scratch/joe-bloggs/myghc-x86 @@ -1916,8 +854,6 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 Create the file mk/build.mk, adding definitions for your desired configuration options. - -$ emacs mk/build.mk @@ -1925,10 +861,9 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 mk/build.mk as often as you like. You do not have to run any further configuration programs to make these changes take effect. In theory you should, however, say - gmake clean, gmake all, - because configuration option changes could affect - anything—but in practice you are likely to know what's - affected. + make clean; make, because configuration + option changes could affect anything—but in practice you + are likely to know what's affected. @@ -1939,18 +874,23 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 things. The first thing you need to know is that you - must use GNU make, usually called - gmake, not standard Unix - make. If you use standard Unix - make you will get all sorts of error messages - (but no damage) because the fptools + must use GNU make. On some + systems this is called gmake, whereas on + others it is the standard make command. In + this document we will always refer to it as + make; please substitute with + gmake if your system requires it. If you use + a the wrong make you will get all sorts of + error messages (but no damage) because the GHC Makefiles use GNU make's facilities extensively. To just build the whole thing, cd to - the top of your fptools tree and type - gmake. This will prepare the tree and build - the various projects in the correct order. + the top of your build tree and type make. + This will prepare the tree and build the various parts in the + correct order, resulting in a complete build of GHC that can + even be used directly from the tree, without being installed + first. @@ -1967,13 +907,12 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 Note that when doing a bootstrap, the stage 1 compiler must be built, followed by the runtime system and libraries, and then the stage 2 compiler. The correct ordering is implemented - by the top-level fptools Makefile, so if - you want everything to work automatically it's best to start - make from the top of the tree. When building - GHC, the top-level fptools Makefile is set - up to do a 2-stage bootstrap by default (when you say - make). Some other targets it supports - are: + by the top-level Makefile, so if you want + everything to work automatically it's best to start + make from the top of the tree. The top-level + Makefile is set up to do a 2-stage + bootstrap by default (when you say make). + Some other targets it supports are: @@ -2029,14 +968,14 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 The stage1, stage2 and stage3 targets also work in the - ghc/compiler directory, but don't forget that + compiler directory, but don't forget that each stage requires its own make boot step: for example, you must do $ make boot stage=2 before make stage2 in - ghc/compiler. + compiler. @@ -2051,7 +990,7 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 boot does the one-off preparation required to get ready - for the real work. Notably, it does gmake + for the real work. Notably, it does make depend in all directories that contain programs. It also builds the necessary tools for compilation to proceed. @@ -2059,14 +998,14 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 Invoking the boot target explicitly is not normally necessary. From the top-level fptools directory, invoking - gmake causes gmake boot + make causes make boot all to be invoked in each of the project subdirectories, in the order specified by $(AllTargets) in config.mk. If you're working in a subdirectory somewhere and - need to update the dependencies, gmake + need to update the dependencies, make boot is a good way to do it. @@ -2078,8 +1017,8 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 Depending on which directory you are in a “final target” may be an executable program, a library archive, a shell script, or a Postscript file. Typing - gmake alone is generally the same as - typing gmake all. + make alone is generally the same as + typing make all. @@ -2120,7 +1059,7 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 Delete all files from the current directory that are normally created by building the program. Don't delete the files that record the configuration, or files - generated by gmake boot. Also preserve + generated by make boot. Also preserve files that could be made by building, but normally aren't because the distribution comes with them. @@ -2243,11 +1182,11 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 If you want to build GHC (say) and just use it direct from the build tree without doing make install first, you can run the in-place driver script: - ghc/compiler/ghc-inplace. + compiler/ghc-inplace. Do NOT use - ghc/compiler/ghc, or - ghc/compiler/ghc-6.xx, as these are the + compiler/ghc, or + compiler/ghc-6.xx, as these are the scripts intended for installation, and contain hard-wired paths to the installed libraries, rather than the libraries in the build tree. @@ -2270,7 +1209,7 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 make is going to rebuild everything anyway, the following hack may be useful: -$ gmake FAST=YES +$ make FAST=YES This tells the make system to ignore dependencies and just build what you tell it to. In other words, it's equivalent to @@ -2292,7 +1231,7 @@ $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4 makefile architecture make is great if everything - works—you type gmake install and lo! the + works—you type make install and lo! the right things get compiled and installed in the right places. Our goal is to make this happen often, but somehow it often doesn't; instead some weird error message eventually emerges from the @@ -2390,7 +1329,7 @@ directive. include other files. (Unfortunately, when an included file does an include, the filename is treated relative - to the directory in which gmake is being + to the directory in which make is being run, not the directory in which the included sits.) In general, every file foo.mk assumes @@ -2439,7 +1378,7 @@ directive. The last section includes a second file of standard code, called target.mktarget.mk. - It contains the rules that tell gmake how + It contains the rules that tell make how to make the standard targets (). Why, you ask, can't this standard code be part of @@ -2461,12 +1400,12 @@ directive. In our example Makefile, most of the work is done by the two included files. When - you say gmake all, the following things + you say make all, the following things happen: - gmake figures out that the object + make figures out that the object files are Foo.o and Baz.o. @@ -2490,7 +1429,7 @@ directive. compiler to do the link step. (Why not use ld? Because the Haskell compiler knows what standard libraries to link in. How did - gmake know to use the Haskell compiler to + make know to use the Haskell compiler to do the link, rather than the C compiler? Because we set the variable HS_PROG rather than C_PROG.) @@ -2535,7 +1474,7 @@ directive. Makefile in $(FPTOOLS_TOP)/ghc. It does most of its work by recursively invoking - gmake on the Makefiles + make on the Makefiles in the sub-directories. We say that ghc/Makefile is a non-leaf Makefile, because it does little @@ -2617,7 +1556,7 @@ directive. Standard pattern rules that - tell gmake how to construct one file + tell make how to construct one file from another. @@ -2627,7 +1566,7 @@ directive. of each Makefile, so that the user can replace the boilerplate definitions or pattern rules by simply giving a new definition or pattern rule in the - Makefile. gmake + Makefile. make simply takes the last definition as the definitive one. Instead of replacing boilerplate @@ -2660,7 +1599,7 @@ directive. - gmake commits target and + make commits target and dependency lists earlier than it should. For example, target.mk has a rule that looks like this: @@ -2674,8 +1613,8 @@ directive. and $(OBJS)OBJS would not have their final values at the moment - gmake encountered the rule. Alas, - gmake takes a snapshot of their + make encountered the rule. Alas, + make takes a snapshot of their current values, and wires that snapshot into the rule. (In contrast, the commands executed when the rule “fires” are only substituted at the moment @@ -2952,6 +1891,58 @@ directive. ones in boilerplate.mk. + + Platform settings + Platform settings + + + There are three platforms of interest when building GHC: + + + + The build platform + + The platform on which we are doing this build. + + + + + The host platform + + The platform on which these binaries will run. + + + + + The target platform + + The platform for which this compiler will generate code. + + + + + These platforms are set when running the + configure script, using the + , , and + options. The mk/config.mk + file defines several symbols related to the platform settings (see + mk/config.mk for details). + + We don't currently support build & host being different, because + the build process creates binaries that are both run during the build, + and also installed. + + If host and target are different, then we are building a + cross-compiler. For GHC, this means a compiler + which will generate intermediate .hc files to port to the target + architecture for bootstrapping. The libraries and stage 2 compiler + will be built as HC files for the target system (see for details. + + More details on when to use BUILD, HOST or TARGET can be found in + the comments in config.mk. + + Pattern rules and options Pattern rules @@ -3045,7 +2036,7 @@ directive. extra options to pass to all C compilations. This is intended for command line use, thus: -$ gmake libHS.a EXTRA_CC_OPTS="-v" +$ make libHS.a EXTRA_CC_OPTS="-v" @@ -3160,7 +2151,7 @@ directive. dependencies say to do so. This means that you can, for example, define both HS_PROG and LIBRARY, which will generate two rules for - install. When you type gmake + install. When you type make install both rules will be fired, and both the program and the library will be installed, just as you wanted. @@ -3190,7 +2181,7 @@ directive. These recursive invocations are guaranteed to occur in the order in which the list of directories is specified in SUBDIRS. This guarantee can - be important. For example, when you say gmake + be important. For example, when you say make boot it can be important that the recursive invocation of make boot is done in one sub-directory (the include files, say) before another (the source files). @@ -3236,11 +2227,11 @@ directive. A make variable called way holds the current way tag. way is only ever set on the - command line of gmake (usually in - a recursive invocation of gmake by the + command line of make (usually in + a recursive invocation of make by the system). It is never set inside a Makefile. So it is a global constant for - any one invocation of gmake. Two other + any one invocation of make. Two other make variables, way_ and _way are immediately derived from @@ -3285,9 +2276,9 @@ directive. Foo.mp_o) there is a rule which recursively invokes make to make the specified target, setting the way - variable. So if you say gmake + variable. So if you say make Foo.mp_o you should see a recursive - invocation gmake Foo.mp_o way=mp, + invocation make Foo.mp_o way=mp, and in this recursive invocation the pattern rule for compiling a Haskell file into a .o file will match. The key pattern rules (in @@ -3566,7 +2557,7 @@ $ make install corresponding Haskell source (.hs or .lhs) in the compiler subdirectory ghc/compiler and in the libraries - (subdirectories of hslibs and + (subdirectories of libraries). @@ -3695,7 +2686,7 @@ $ ./configure --enable-hc-boot --enable-hc-boot-unregisterised $ cd T/ghc/includes -$ make ghcconfig.h +$ make @@ -3726,7 +2717,7 @@ GhcLibWays = SplitObjs = NO GhcWithNativeCodeGen = NO GhcWithInterpreter = NO -GhcStage1HcOpts = -O -fasm +GhcStage1HcOpts = -O GhcStage2HcOpts = -O -fvia-C -keep-hc-files SRC_HC_OPTS += -H32m GhcBootLibs = YES @@ -3739,7 +2730,8 @@ GhcBootLibs = YES change TARGETPLATFORM appropriately, and set the variables involving - TARGET to the correct values for + TARGET or + Target to the correct values for the target platform. This step is necessary because currently configure doesn't cope with specifying different values for the @@ -3755,20 +2747,31 @@ GhcBootLibs = YES Copy - T/ghc/includes/ghcconfig.h + T/ghc/includes/ghcautoconf.h, T/ghc/includes/DerivedConstants.h, and T/ghc/includes/GHCConstants.h to H/ghc/includes. Note that we are building on the host machine, using the - target machine's config.h file. This + target machine's configuration files. This is so that the intermediate C files generated here will be suitable for compiling on the target system. - - Touch ghcconfig.h, just to make - sure it doesn't get replaced during the build: -$ touch H/ghc/includes/ghcconfig.h + Touch the generated configuration files, just to make + sure they don't get replaced during the build: +$ cd H/ghc/includes +$ touch ghcautoconf.h DerivedConstants.h GHCConstants.h mkDerivedConstants.c +$ touch mkDerivedConstantsHdr mkDerivedConstants.o mkGHCConstants mkGHCConstants.o + + Note: it has been reported that these files still get + overwritten during the next stage. We have installed a fix + for this in GHC 6.4.2, but if you are building a version + before that you need to watch out for these files getting + overwritte by the Makefile in + ghc/includes. If your system supports + it, you might be able to prevent it by making them + immutable: +$ chflags uchg ghc/includes/{ghcautoconf.h,DerivedConstants.h,GHCConstants.h} @@ -3790,9 +2793,10 @@ $ make boot stage=2 && make stage=2 -$ cd H/ghc/lib +$ cd H/compat $ make clean -$ make -k UseStage1=YES EXTRA_HC_OPTS='-O -fvia-C -keep-hc-files' +$ rm .depend +$ make boot UseStage1=YES EXTRA_HC_OPTS='-O -fvia-C -keep-hc-files' $ cd H/ghc/utils $ make clean $ make -k UseStage1=YES EXTRA_HC_OPTS='-O -fvia-C -keep-hc-files' @@ -4117,7 +3121,7 @@ above. -and try again: gmake. (see for information about +and try again: make. (see for information about <module>_HC_OPTS.) Alternatively, just cut to the chase: @@ -4222,7 +3226,7 @@ Posix interface. You can't use the MinGW to build GHC, because MinGW doesn't have a shell, or the standard Unix commands such as mv, rm, -ls, nor build-system stuff such as make and cvs. +ls, nor build-system stuff such as make and darcs. For that, there are two choices: Cygwin and MSYS: @@ -4245,7 +3249,7 @@ through fewer layers, so MSYS is quite a bit faster too. Furthermore, MSYS provides no compilation tools; it relies instead on the MinGW tools. These compile binaries that run with no DLL support, on any Win32 system. However, MSYS does come with all the make-system tools, such as make, autoconf, -cvs, ssh etc. To get these, you have to download the +darcs, ssh etc. To get these, you have to download the MsysDTK (Developer Tool Kit) package, as well as the base MSYS package. MSYS does have a DLL, but it's only used by MSYS commands (sh, rm, @@ -4444,7 +3448,7 @@ download the following (of course, the version numbers will differ): The MSYS developer's toolkit (binary is sufficient): msysDTK-1.0.1.exe. This provides make, autoconf, - ssh, cvs and probably more besides. + ssh and probably more besides. Run both executables (in the order given above) to install them. I put them in c:/msys @@ -4515,11 +3519,17 @@ bzip'd dump. -Installing and configuring Cygwin +Installing and configuring Cygwin Install Cygwin from http://www.cygwin.com/. -The installation process is straightforward; we install it in c:/cygwin. -During the installation dialogue, make sure that you select all of the following: +The installation process is straightforward; we install it in +c:/cygwin. + +You must install enough Cygwin packages to support +building GHC. If you miss out any of these, strange things will happen to you. There are two ways to do this: + +The direct, but laborious way is to +select all of the following packages in the installation dialogue: cvs, openssh, autoconf, @@ -4527,11 +3537,32 @@ During the installation dialogue, make sure that you select all of the following gcc, flex, make. -If you miss out any of these, strange things will happen to you. To see thse packages, +To see thse packages, click on the "View" button in the "Select Packages" stage of Cygwin's installation dialogue, until the view says "Full". The default view, which is "Category" isn't very helpful, and the "View" button is rather unobtrousive. + + +The clever way is to point the Cygwin installer at the +ghc-depends package, which is kept at http://haskell.org/ghc/cygwin. +When the Cygwin installer asks you to "Choose a Download Site", choose one of +the +offered mirror sites; and then type "http://haskell.org/ghc/cygwin" into the +"User URL" box and click "Add"; now two sites are selected. (The Cygwin +installer remembers this for next time.) +Click "Next". +In the "Select Packages" dialogue box that follows, click the "+" sign by +"Devel", scroll down to the end of the "Devel" packages, and choose +ghc-depends. +The package ghc-depends will not actually install anything itself, +but forces additional packages to be added by the Cygwin installer. + + + + + Now set the following user environment variables: @@ -4560,50 +3591,7 @@ file. Ditto emacs looking for .emacsrc - -There are a few other things to do: - - - -By default, cygwin provides the command shell ash -as sh.exe. We have often seen build-system problems that -turn out to be due to bugs in ash -(to do with quoting -and length of command lines). On the other hand bash seems -to be rock solid. -So, in cygwin/bin -remove the supplied sh.exe (or rename it as ash.exe), -and copy bash.exe to sh.exe. -You'll need to do this in Windows Explorer or the Windows cmd shell, because -you can't rename a running program! - - - - - -Some script files used in the make system start with "#!/bin/perl", -(and similarly for sh). Notice the hardwired path! -So you need to ensure that your /bin directory has the following -binaries in it: - - sh - perl - cat - -All these come in Cygwin's bin directory, which you probably have -installed as c:/cygwin/bin. By default Cygwin mounts "/" as -c:/cygwin, so if you just take the defaults it'll all work ok. -(You can discover where your Cygwin -root directory / is by typing mount.) -Provided /bin points to the Cygwin bin -directory, there's no need to copy anything. If not, copy these binaries from the cygwin/bin -directory (after fixing the sh.exe stuff mentioned in the previous bullet). - - - - - -Finally, here are some things to be aware of when using Cygwin: +Here are some things to be aware of when using Cygwin: Cygwin doesn't deal well with filenames that include spaces. "Program Files" and "Local files" are @@ -4622,6 +3610,38 @@ they don't recognise symlinks. See the notes in about find and bzip, which apply to Cygwin too. + + + +Some script files used in the make system start with "#!/bin/perl", +(and similarly for sh). Notice the hardwired path! +So you need to ensure that your /bin directory has at least +sh, perl, and cat in it. +All these come in Cygwin's bin directory, which you probably have +installed as c:/cygwin/bin. By default Cygwin mounts "/" as +c:/cygwin, so if you just take the defaults it'll all work ok. +(You can discover where your Cygwin +root directory / is by typing mount.) +Provided /bin points to the Cygwin bin +directory, there's no need to copy anything. If not, copy these binaries from the cygwin/bin +directory (after fixing the sh.exe stuff mentioned in the previous bullet). + + + + + +By default, cygwin provides the command shell ash +as sh.exe. It seems to be fine now, but in the past we +saw build-system problems that turned out to be due to bugs in ash +(to do with quoting and length of command lines). On the other hand bash seems +to be rock solid. +If this happens to you (which it shouldn't), in cygwin/bin +remove the supplied sh.exe (or rename it as ash.exe), +and copy bash.exe to sh.exe. +You'll need to do this in Windows Explorer or the Windows cmd shell, because +you can't rename a running program! + + @@ -4630,9 +3650,10 @@ which apply to Cygwin too. Configuring SSH -ssh comes with Cygwin, provided you remember to ask for it when -you install Cygwin. (If not, the installer lets you update easily.) Look for openssh -(not ssh) in the Cygwin list of applications! +ssh comes with both Cygwin and MSYS. +(Cygwin note: you need to ask for package openssh (not ssh) +in the Cygwin list of packages; or use the ghc-depends +package -- see .) There are several strange things about ssh on Windows that you need to know. @@ -4750,7 +3771,11 @@ in your path. On Cygwin, do not add any of the mingw binaries to your path. They are only going to get used by explicit access (via the --with-gcc flag you give to configure later). If you do add them to your path -you are likely to get into a mess because their names overlap with Cygwin binaries. +you are likely to get into a mess because their names overlap with Cygwin +binaries. +On the other hand, you do need ld, ar +(and perhaps one or two other things) in your path. The Cygwin ones are fine, +but you must have them; hence needing the Cygwin binutils package. @@ -4766,11 +3791,15 @@ so you will need to add emacs/bin to your PATH + + You might want to install GLUT in your MSYS/Cygwin + installation, otherwise the GLUT package will not be built with + GHC. + Finally, check out a copy of GHC sources from -the CVS repository, following the instructions above (). - +the darcs repository, following the instructions at . @@ -4871,6 +3900,86 @@ Win32. +A Windows build log using Cygwin + +Here is a complete, from-scratch, log of all you need to build GHC using +Cygwin, kindly provided by Claus Reinke. It does not discuss alternative +choices, but it gives a single path that works. +- Install some editor (vim, emacs, whatever) + +- Install cygwin (http://www.cygwin.com) + ; i used 1.5.16-1, installed in c:\cygwin + - run 'setup.exe' + Choose a Download Source: + select 'download from internet'; + Select Root Install Directory: + root dir: c:\cygwin; + install for: all users; + default file type: unix + Select Local Package Directory + choose a spare temporary home + Select Your Internet Connection + Use IE5 settings + Choose a Download Site + Choose your preferred main mirror and + Add 'http://www.haskell.org/ghc/cygwin' + Select Packages + In addition to 'Base' (default install), + select 'Devel->ghc-depends' + +- Install mingw (http://www.mingw.org/) + ; i used MinGW-3.1.0-1.exe + ; installed in c:\mingw + - you probably want to add GLUT + ; (http://www.xmission.com/~nate/glut.html) + ; i used glut-3.7.3-mingw32.tar + +- Get recent binary snapshot of ghc-6.4.1 for mingw + ; (http://www.haskell.org/ghc/dist/stable/dist/) + - unpack in c:/ghc + - add C:\ghc\ghc-6.4.1\bin to %PATH% + (Start->Control Panel->System->Advanced->Environment Variables) + +- Get darcs version of ghc + ; also, subscribe to cvs-all@haskell.org, or follow the mailing list + ; archive, in case you checkout a version with problems + ; http://www.haskell.org//pipermail/cvs-all/ + - mkdir c:/fptools; cd c:/fptools + ; (or whereever you want your darcs tree to be) + - darcs get http://darcs.haskell.org/ghc + - cd ghc + - chmod +x darcs-all + - ./darcs-all get + +- Build ghc, using cygwin and mingw, targetting mingw + - export PATH=/cygdrive/c/ghc/ghc-6.4.1:$PATH + ; for haddock, alex, happy (*) + - export PATH=/cygdrive/c/mingw/bin:$PATH + ; without, we pick up some cygwin tools at best! + - cd c:/fptools/fptools + ; (if you aren't there already) + - autoreconf + - ./configure --host=i386-unknown-mingw32 --with-gcc=C:/Mingw/bin/gcc.exe + ; we use cygwin, but build for windows + - cp mk/build.mk.sample mk/build.mk + - in mk/build.mk: + add line: SplitObjs = NO + (MSYS seems slow when there are zillions of object files) + uncomment line: BuildFlavour = perf + (or BuildFlavour = devel, if you are doing development) + add line: BIN_DIST=1 + - make 2>&1 | tee make.log + ; always useful to have a log around + +- Package up binary distribution + - make binary-dist Project=Ghc 2>&1 | tee make-bin-dist.log + ; always useful to have a log around + - cd ghc-6.5 + - chmod +x ../distrib/prep-bin-dist-mingw + ; if you're happy with the script's contents (*) + - ../distrib/prep-bin-dist-mingw + ; then tar up, unpack where wanted, and enjoy +