[project @ 2003-04-14 13:36:04 by simonpj]
[ghc-hetmet.git] / docs / building / building.sgml
1 <!DOCTYPE Article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V3.1//EN">
2
3 <Article id="building-guide">
4
5 <ArtHeader>
6
7 <Title>Building the Glasgow Functional Programming Tools Suite</Title>
8 <Author><OtherName>The GHC Team</OtherName></Author>
9 <Address><Email>glasgow-haskell-&lcub;users,bugs&rcub;@haskell.org</Email></Address>
10 <PubDate>November 2001</PubDate>
11
12     <abstract>
13       <para>The Glasgow fptools suite is a collection of Functional
14       Programming related tools, including the Glasgow Haskell
15       Compiler (GHC).  The source code for the whole suite is kept in
16       a single CVS repository and shares a common build and
17       installation system.</para>
18
19       <para>This guide is intended for people who want to build or
20       modify programs from the Glasgow <Literal>fptools</Literal>
21       suite (as distinct from those who merely want to
22       <Emphasis>run</Emphasis> them). Installation instructions are
23       now provided in the user guide.</para>
24
25       <para>The bulk of this guide applies to building on Unix
26       systems; see <XRef LinkEnd="winbuild"> for Windows notes.</para>
27     </abstract>
28
29   </artheader>
30
31
32   <sect1 id="sec-getting">
33     <title>Getting the sources</title>
34     
35     <para>You can get your hands on the <literal>fptools</literal>
36     in two ways:</para>
37
38     <variablelist>
39
40       <varlistentry>
41         <term><indexterm><primary>Source
42         distributions</primary></indexterm>Source distributions</term>
43         <listitem>
44           <para>You have a supported platform, but (a)&nbsp;you like
45           the warm fuzzy feeling of compiling things yourself;
46           (b)&nbsp;you want to build something ``extra&rdquo;&mdash;e.g., a
47           set of libraries with strictness-analysis turned off; or
48           (c)&nbsp;you want to hack on GHC yourself.</para>
49
50           <para>A source distribution contains complete sources for
51           one or more projects in the <literal>fptools</literal>
52           suite.  Not only that, but the more awkward
53           machine-independent steps are done for you.  For example, if
54           you don't have
55           <command>happy</command><indexterm><primary>happy</primary></indexterm>
56           you'll find it convenient that the source distribution
57           contains the result of running <command>happy</command> on
58           the parser specifications.  If you don't want to alter the
59           parser then this saves you having to find and install
60           <command>happy</command>. You will still need a working
61           version of GHC (preferably version 4.08+) on your machine in
62           order to compile (most of) the sources, however.</para>
63         </listitem>
64       </varlistentry>
65
66       <varlistentry>
67         <term>The CVS repository.</term>
68         <indexterm><primary>CVS repository</primary>
69         </indexterm>
70         <listitem>
71           <para>We make releases infrequently.  If you want more
72           up-to-the minute (but less tested) source code then you need
73           to get access to our CVS repository.</para>
74
75           <para>All the <literal>fptools</literal> source code is held
76           in a CVS repository. CVS is a pretty good source-code
77           control system, and best of all it works over the
78           network.</para>
79
80           <para>The repository holds source code only. It holds no
81           mechanically generated files at all.  So if you check out a
82           source tree from CVS you will need to install every utility
83           so that you can build all the derived files from
84           scratch.</para>
85
86           <para>More information about our CVS repository can be found
87           in <xref linkend="sec-cvs">.</para>
88         </listitem>
89       </varlistentry>
90     </variablelist>
91
92     <para>If you are going to do any building from sources (either
93     from a source distribution or the CVS repository) then you need to
94     read all of this manual in detail.</para>
95   </sect1>
96
97   <sect1 id="sec-cvs">
98     <title>Using the CVS repository</title>
99
100     <para>We use <ulink url="http://www.cvshome.org/">CVS</ulink> (Concurrent Version System) to keep track of our
101     sources for various software projects. CVS lets several people
102     work on the same software at the same time, allowing changes to be
103     checked in incrementally. </para>
104
105     <para>This section is a set of guidelines for how to use our CVS
106     repository, and will probably evolve in time. The main thing to
107     remember is that most mistakes can be undone, but if there's
108     anything you're not sure about feel free to bug the local CVS
109     meister (namely Jeff Lewis
110     <email>jlewis@galconn.com</email>). </para>
111
112     <sect2 id="cvs-access">
113       <title>Getting access to the CVS Repository</title>
114
115       <para>You can access the repository in one of two ways:
116       read-only (<xref linkend="cvs-read-only">), or read-write (<xref
117       linkend="cvs-read-write">).</para>
118
119       <sect3 id="cvs-read-only">
120         <title>Remote Read-only CVS Access</title>
121
122         <para>Read-only access is available to anyone - there's no
123         need to ask us first.  With read-only CVS access you can do
124         anything except commit changes to the repository.  You can
125         make changes to your local tree, and still use CVS's merge
126         facility to keep your tree up to date, and you can generate
127         patches using 'cvs diff' in order to send to us for
128         inclusion. </para>
129
130         <para>To get read-only access to the repository:</para>
131
132         <orderedlist>
133           <listitem>
134             <para>Make sure that <application>cvs</application> is
135             installed on your machine.</para>
136           </listitem>
137           <listitem>
138             <para>Set your <literal>$CVSROOT</literal> environment variable to
139             <literal>:pserver:anoncvs@glass.cse.ogi.edu:/cvs</literal></para>
140           </listitem>
141           <listitem>
142             <para>Run the command</para>
143 <programlisting>
144     $ cvs login
145 </programlisting>
146             <para>The password is simply <literal>cvs</literal>.  This
147             sets up a file in your home directory called
148             <literal>.cvspass</literal>, which squirrels away the
149             dummy password, so you only need to do this step once.</para>
150           </listitem>
151
152           <listitem>
153             <para>Now go to <xref linkend="cvs-first">.</para>
154           </listitem>
155         </orderedlist>
156       </sect3>
157
158       <sect3 id="cvs-read-write">
159         <title>Remote Read-Write CVS Access</title>
160
161         <para>We generally supply read-write access to folk doing
162         serious development on some part of the source tree, when
163         going through us would be a pain. If you're developing some
164         feature, or think you have the time and inclination to fix
165         bugs in our sources, feel free to ask for read-write
166         access. There is a certain amount of responsibility that goes
167         with commit privileges; we are more likely to grant you access
168         if you've demonstrated your competence by sending us patches
169         via mail in the past.</para>
170
171         <para>To get remote read-write CVS access, you need to do the
172         following steps.</para>
173
174         <orderedlist>
175           <listitem>
176             <para>Make sure that <literal>cvs</literal> and
177             <literal>ssh</literal> are both installed on your
178             machine.</para>
179           </listitem>
180
181           <listitem>
182             <para>Generate a DSA private-key/public-key pair, thus:</para>
183 <screen>
184      $ ssh-keygen -d
185 </screen>
186             <para>(<literal>ssh-keygen</literal> comes with
187             <literal>ssh</literal>.)  Running <literal>ssh-keygen
188             -d</literal> creates the private and public keys in
189             <literal>$HOME/.ssh/id_dsa</literal> and
190             <literal>$HOME/.ssh/id_dsa.pub</literal> respectively
191             (assuming you accept the standard defaults).</para>
192
193             <para><literal>ssh-keygen -d</literal> will only work if
194             you have Version 2 <literal>ssh</literal> installed; it
195             will fail harmlessly otherwise.  If you only have Version
196             1 you can instead generate an RSA key pair using plain</para>
197 <screen>
198     $ ssh-keygen
199 </screen>
200
201             <para>Doing so creates the private and public RSA keys in
202             <literal>$HOME/.ssh/identity</literal> and
203             <literal>$HOME/.ssh/identity.pub</literal>
204             respectively.</para>
205
206             <para>[Deprecated.]  Incidentally, you can force a Version
207             2 <literal>ssh</literal> to use the Version 1 protocol by
208             creating <literal>$HOME/config</literal> with the
209             following in it:</para>
210 <screen>
211    BatchMode Yes
212
213    Host cvs.haskell.org
214    Protocol 1
215 </screen>
216
217             <para>In both cases, <literal>ssh-keygen</literal> will
218             ask for a <firstterm>passphrase</firstterm>.  The
219             passphrase is a password that protects your private key.
220             In response to the 'Enter passphrase' question, you can
221             either:</para>
222             <itemizedlist>
223               <listitem>
224                 <para>[Recommended.]  Enter a passphrase, which you
225                 will quote each time you use CVS.
226                 <literal>ssh-agent</literal> makes this entirely
227                 un-tiresome.</para>
228               </listitem>
229               <listitem>
230                 <para>[Deprecated.] Just hit return (i.e. use an empty
231                 passphrase); then you won't need to quote the
232                 passphrase when using CVS.  The downside is that
233                 anyone who can see into your <literal>.ssh</literal>
234                 directory, and thereby get your private key, can mess
235                 up the repository.  So you must keep the
236                 <literal>.ssh</literal> directory with draconian
237                 no-access permissions.</para>
238               </listitem>
239             </itemizedlist>
240
241
242        <para>
243        [Windows users.] The programs <command>ssh-keygen1</command>, <command>ssh1</command>, and <command>cvs</command>,
244        seem to lock up <command>bash</command> entirely if they try to get user input (e.g. if
245        they ask for a password).  To solve this, start up <filename>cmd.exe</filename> 
246        and run it as follows:
247        <Screen>
248        c:\tmp> set CYGWIN32=tty
249        c:\tmp> c:/user/local/bin/ssh-keygen1
250        </Screen> </para>
251
252             <para>[Windows users.] To protect your
253             <literal>.ssh</literal> from access by anyone else,
254             right-click your <literal>.ssh</literal> directory, and
255             select <literal>Properties</literal>.  If you are not on
256             the access control list, add yourself, and give yourself
257             full permissions (the second panel).  Remove everyone else
258             from the access control list.  Don't leave them there but
259             deny them access, because 'they' may be a list that
260             includes you!</para>
261             <para>[March 2003] In fact <command>ssh</command> 3.6.1 now seems to <emphasis>require</emphasis>
262               you to have Unix permissions 600 (read/write for owner only) 
263               on the <literal>.ssh/identity</literal> file, else it 
264               bombs out.  For your local C drive, it seems that <literal>chmod 600 identity</literal> works,
265               but on Windows NT/XP, it doesn't work on a network drive (exact dteails obscure).  
266               The solution seems to be to set the CYGWIN environment
267               variable to "<literal>ntsec neta</literal>".  The CYGWIN environment variable is discussed
268               in <ulink url="http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/using-cygwinenv.html">the Cygwin User's Guide</ulink>,
269               and there are more details in <ulink url="http://cygwin.com/faq/faq_4.html#SEC44">the Cygwin FAQ</ulink>.
270               </para>
271           </listitem>
272
273           <listitem>
274             <para>Send a message to to the CVS repository
275             administrator (currently Jeff Lewis
276             <email>jeff@galconn.com</email>), containing:</para>
277             <itemizedlist>
278               <listitem>
279                 <para>Your desired user-name.</para>
280               </listitem>
281               <listitem>
282                 <para>Your <literal>.ssh/id_dsa.pub</literal> (or
283                 <literal>.ssh/identity.pub</literal>).</para>
284               </listitem>
285             </itemizedlist>
286             <para>He will set up your account.</para>
287           </listitem>
288
289           <listitem>
290             <para>Set the following environment variables:</para>
291            <ItemizedList>
292            <listitem>
293            <para>
294            <constant>$HOME</constant>: points to your home directory.  This is where CVS
295            will look for its <filename>.cvsrc</filename> file.
296            </para>
297            </listitem>
298
299            <listitem>
300            <para>
301            <constant>$CVS_RSH</constant> to <filename>ssh</filename>
302            </para>
303            <para>[Windows users.] Setting your <literal>CVS_RSH</literal> to
304             <literal>ssh</literal> assumes that your CVS client
305             understands how to execute shell script
306             (&quot;#!&quot;s,really), which is what
307             <literal>ssh</literal> is. This may not be the case on
308             Win32 platforms, so in that case set <literal>CVS_RSH</literal> to
309             <literal>ssh1</literal>.</para>
310            </listitem>
311
312              <listitem>
313                 <para><literal>$CVSROOT</literal> to
314                 <literal>:ext:</literal><replaceable>your-username</replaceable>
315                 <literal>@cvs.haskell.org:/home/cvs/root</literal>
316                 where <replaceable>your-username</replaceable> is your user name on
317                 <literal>cvs.haskell.org</literal>.
318                 </para>
319         <para>The <literal>CVSROOT</literal> environment variable will
320         be recorded in the checked-out tree, so you don't need to set
321         this every time. </para>
322
323              </listitem>
324
325         <listitem>
326         <para>
327         <constant>$CVSEDITOR</constant>: <filename>bin/gnuclient.exe</filename> 
328         if you want to use an Emacs buffer for typing in those long commit messages.
329         </para>
330         </listitem>
331
332         <listitem>
333         <para>
334         <constant>$SHELL</constant>: To use bash as the shell in Emacs, you need to
335         set this to point to <filename>bash.exe</filename>.
336         </para>
337         </listitem>
338
339        </ItemizedList>
340
341
342           </listitem>
343
344           <listitem>
345           <para>
346           Put the following in <filename>$HOME/.cvsrc</filename>:
347           </para>
348           
349           <ProgramListing>
350           checkout -P
351           release -d
352           update -P
353           diff -u
354           </ProgramListing>
355           
356           <para>
357           These are the default options for the specified CVS commands,
358           and represent better defaults than the usual ones.  (Feel
359           free to change them.)
360           </para>
361           
362           <para>
363           [Windows users.]  Filenames starting with <filename>.</filename> were illegal in 
364           the 8.3 DOS filesystem, but that restriction should have
365           been lifted by now (i.e., you're using VFAT or later filesystems.) If
366           you're still having problems creating it, don't worry; <filename>.cvsrc</filename> is entirely
367           optional.
368           </para>
369           </listitem>
370
371         </orderedlist>
372
373
374         <para>[Experts.]  Once your account is set up, you can get
375         access from other machines without bothering Jeff, thus:</para>
376         <orderedlist>
377           <listitem>
378             <para>Generate a public/private key pair on the new
379             machine.</para>
380           </listitem>
381           <listitem>
382             <para>Use ssh to log in to
383             <literal>cvs.haskell.org</literal>, from your old
384             machine.</para>
385           </listitem>
386           <listitem>
387             <para>Add the public key for the new machine to the file
388             <literal>$HOME/ssh/authorized_keys</literal> on
389             <literal>cvs.haskell.org</literal>.
390             (<literal>authorized_keys2</literal>, I think, for Version
391             2 protocol.)</para>
392           </listitem>
393           <listitem>
394             <para>Make sure that the new version of
395             <literal>authorized_keys</literal> still has 600 file
396             permissions.</para>
397           </listitem>
398         </orderedlist>
399       </sect3>
400     </sect2>
401
402
403
404     <sect2 id="cvs-first">
405       <title>Checking Out a Source Tree</title>
406
407       <itemizedlist>
408         <listitem>
409           <para>Make sure you set your <literal>CVSROOT</literal>
410           environment variable according to either of the remote
411           methods above. The Approved Way to check out a source tree
412           is as follows:</para>
413
414 <screen>
415     $ cvs checkout fpconfig
416 </screen>
417
418           <para>At this point you have a new directory called
419           <literal>fptools</literal> which contains the basic stuff
420           for the fptools suite, including the configuration files and
421           some other junk. </para>
422
423 <para>[Windows users.]  The following messages appear to be harmless:
424 <Screen>
425 setsockopt IPTOS_LOWDELAY: Invalid argument
426 setsockopt IPTOS_THROUGHPUT: Invalid argument
427 </Screen>
428 </para>
429
430
431           <para>You can call the fptools directory whatever you like,
432           CVS won't mind: </para>
433           
434 <screen>
435     $ mv fptools <replaceable>directory</replaceable>
436 </screen>
437
438           <para> NB: after you've read the CVS manual you might be
439           tempted to try</para>
440 <screen>
441     $ cvs checkout -d <replaceable>directory</replaceable> fpconfig
442 </screen>
443
444           <para>instead of checking out <literal>fpconfig</literal>
445           and then renaming it.  But this doesn't work, and will
446           result in checking out the entire repository instead of just
447           the <literal>fpconfig</literal> bit.</para>
448 <screen>
449     $ cd <replaceable>directory</replaceable>
450     $ cvs checkout ghc hslibs libraries
451 </screen>
452
453           <para>The second command here checks out the relevant
454           modules you want to work on. For a GHC build, for instance,
455           you need at least the <literal>ghc</literal>,
456           <literal>hslibs</literal> and <literal>libraries</literal>
457           modules (for a full list of the projects available, see
458           <xref linkend="projects">).</para>
459         </listitem>
460       </itemizedlist>
461     </sect2>
462
463     <sect2 id="cvs-committing">
464       <title>Committing Changes</title>
465
466       <para>This is only if you have read-write access to the
467       repository. For anoncvs users, CVS will issue a &quot;read-only
468       repository&quot; error if you try to commit changes.</para>
469
470       <itemizedlist>
471         <listitem>
472           <para>Build the software, if necessary. Unless you're just
473           working on documentation, you'll probably want to build the
474           software in order to test any changes you make.</para>
475         </listitem>
476
477         <listitem>
478           <para>Make changes. Preferably small ones first.</para>
479         </listitem>
480
481         <listitem>
482           <para>Test them. You can see exactly what changes you've
483           made by using the <literal>cvs diff</literal> command:</para>
484 <screen>
485 $ cvs diff
486 </screen>
487           <para>lists all the changes (using the
488           <literal>diff</literal> command) in and below the current
489           directory. In emacs, <literal>C-c C-v =</literal> runs
490           <literal>cvs diff</literal> on the current buffer and shows
491           you the results.</para>
492         </listitem>
493
494       <listitem>
495           <para>Before checking in a change, you need to update your
496           source tree:</para>
497
498 <screen>
499 $ cd fptools
500 $ cvs update
501 </screen>
502           <para>This pulls in any changes that other people have made,
503           and merges them with yours. If there are any conflicts, CVS
504           will tell you, and you'll have to resolve them before you
505           can check your changes in. The documentation describes what
506           to do in the event of a conflict.</para>
507
508           <para>It's not always necessary to do a full cvs update
509           before checking in a change, since CVS will always tell you
510           if you try to check in a file that someone else has changed.
511           However, you should still update at regular intervals to
512           avoid making changes that don't work in conjuction with
513           changes that someone else made. Keeping an eye on what goes
514           by on the mailing list can help here.</para>
515         </listitem>
516
517         <listitem>
518           <para>When you're happy that your change isn't going to
519           break anything, check it in. For a one-file change:</para>
520
521 <screen>
522 $ cvs commit <replaceable>filename</replaceable>
523 </screen>
524
525           <para>CVS will then pop up an editor for you to enter a
526           &quot;commit message&quot;, this is just a short description
527           of what your change does, and will be kept in the history of
528           the file.</para>
529
530           <para>If you're using emacs, simply load up the file into a
531           buffer and type <literal>C-x C-q</literal>, and emacs will
532           prompt for a commit message and then check in the file for
533           you.</para>
534
535           <para>For a multiple-file change, things are a bit
536           trickier. There are several ways to do this, but this is the
537           way I find easiest. First type the commit message into a
538           temporary file. Then either</para>
539
540 <screen>
541 $ cvs commit -F <replaceable>commit-message</replaceable> <replaceable>file_1</replaceable> .... <replaceable>file_n</replaceable>
542 </screen>
543
544           <para>or, if nothing else has changed in this part of the
545           source tree, </para>
546
547 <screen>
548 $ cvs commit -F <replaceable>commit-message</replaceable> <replaceable>directory</replaceable>
549 </screen>
550
551           <para>where <replaceable>directory</replaceable> is a common
552           parent directory for all your changes, and
553           <replaceable>commit-message</replaceable> is the name of the
554           file containing the commit message.</para>
555
556           <para>Shortly afterwards, you'll get some mail from the
557           relevant mailing list saying which files changed, and giving
558           the commit message. For a multiple-file change, you should
559           still get only <emphasis>one</emphasis> message.</para>
560         </listitem>
561       </itemizedlist>
562     </sect2>
563
564     <sect2 id="cvs-update">
565       <title>Updating Your Source Tree</title>
566
567       <para>It can be tempting to cvs update just part of a source
568       tree to bring in some changes that someone else has made, or
569       before committing your own changes. This is NOT RECOMMENDED!
570       Quite often changes in one part of the tree are dependent on
571       changes in another part of the tree (the
572       <literal>mk/*.mk</literal> files are a good example where
573       problems crop up quite often). Having an inconsistent tree is a
574       major cause of headaches. </para>
575
576       <para>So, to avoid a lot of hassle, follow this recipe for
577       updating your tree: </para>
578
579 <screen>
580 $ cd fptools
581 $ cvs update -Pd 2&gt;&amp;1 | tee log</screen>
582
583       <para>Look at the log file, and fix any conflicts (denoted by a
584       <quote>C</quote> in the first column). If you're using multiple
585       build trees, then for every build tree you have pointing at this
586       source tree, you need to update the links in case any new files
587       have appeared: </para>
588
589 <screen>
590 $ cd <replaceable>build-tree</replaceable>
591 $ lndir <replaceable>source-tree</replaceable>
592 </screen>
593
594       <para>Some files might have been removed, so you need to remove
595       the links pointing to these non-existent files:</para>
596
597 <screen>
598 $ find . -xtype l -exec rm '{}' \;
599 </screen>
600
601       <para>To be <emphasis>really</emphasis> safe, you should do
602       </para>
603
604 <screen>$ gmake all</screen>
605
606       <para>from the top-level, to update the dependencies and build
607       any changed files. </para>
608     </sect2>
609
610     <sect2 id="cvs-tags">
611       <title>GHC Tag Policy</title>
612
613       <para>If you want to check out a particular version of GHC,
614       you'll need to know how we tag versions in the repository.  The
615       policy (as of 4.04) is:</para>
616
617       <itemizedlist>
618         <listitem>
619           <para>The tree is branched before every major release.  The
620           branch tag is <literal>ghc-x-xx-branch</literal>, where
621           <literal>x-xx</literal> is the version number of the release
622           with the <literal>'.'</literal> replaced by a
623           <literal>'-'</literal>.  For example, the 4.04 release lives
624           on <literal>ghc-4-04-branch</literal>.</para>
625         </listitem>
626
627         <listitem>
628           <para>The release itself is tagged with
629           <literal>ghc-x-xx</literal> (on the branch).  eg. 4.06 is
630           called <literal>ghc-4-06</literal>.</para>
631         </listitem>
632
633         <listitem>
634           <para>We didn't always follow these guidelines, so to see
635           what tags there are for previous versions, do <literal>cvs
636           log</literal> on a file that's been around for a while (like
637           <literal>fptools/ghc/README</literal>).</para>
638         </listitem>
639       </itemizedlist>
640
641       <para>So, to check out a fresh GHC 4.06 tree you would
642       do:</para>
643
644 <screen>
645      $ cvs co -r ghc-4-06 fpconfig
646      $ cd fptools
647      $ cvs co -r ghc-4-06 ghc hslibs
648 </screen>
649     </sect2>
650
651     <sect2 id="cvs-hints">
652       <title>General Hints</title>
653
654       <itemizedlist>
655         <listitem>
656           <para>As a general rule: commit changes in small units,
657           preferably addressing one issue or implementing a single
658           feature.  Provide a descriptive log message so that the
659           repository records exactly which changes were required to
660           implement a given feature/fix a bug. I've found this
661           <emphasis>very</emphasis> useful in the past for finding out
662           when a particular bug was introduced: you can just wind back
663           the CVS tree until the bug disappears.</para>
664         </listitem>
665
666         <listitem>
667           <para>Keep the sources at least *buildable* at any given
668           time. No doubt bugs will creep in, but it's quite easy to
669           ensure that any change made at least leaves the tree in a
670           buildable state. We do nightly builds of GHC to keep an eye
671           on what things work/don't work each day and how we're doing
672           in relation to previous verions. This idea is truely wrecked
673           if the compiler won't build in the first place!</para>
674         </listitem>
675
676         <listitem>
677           <para>To check out extra bits into an already-checked-out
678           tree, use the following procedure.  Suppose you have a
679           checked-out fptools tree containing just ghc, and you want
680           to add nofib to it:</para>
681
682 <screen>
683 $ cd fptools
684 $ cvs checkout nofib
685 </screen>
686
687           <para>or: </para>
688
689 <screen>
690 $ cd fptools
691 $ cvs update -d nofib
692 </screen>
693           
694           <para>(the -d flag tells update to create a new
695           directory). If you just want part of the nofib suite, you
696           can do </para>
697
698 <screen>
699 $ cd fptools
700 $ cvs checkout nofib/spectral
701 </screen>
702
703           <para>This works because <literal>nofib</literal> is a
704           module in its own right, and spectral is a subdirectory of
705           the nofib module. The path argument to checkout must always
706           start with a module name. There's no equivalent form of this
707           command using <literal>update</literal>.</para>
708         </listitem>
709       </itemizedlist>
710     </sect2>
711   </sect1>
712
713   <sect1 id="projects">
714     <title>What projects are there?</title>
715
716     <para>The <literal>fptools</literal> suite consists of several
717     <firstterm>projects</firstterm>, most of which can be downloaded,
718     built and installed individually.  Each project corresponds to a
719     subdirectory in the source tree, and if checking out from CVS then
720     each project can be checked out individually by sitting in the top
721     level of your source tree and typing <command>cvs checkout
722     <replaceable>project</replaceable></command>.</para>
723
724     <para>Here is a list of the projects currently available:</para>
725
726     <variablelist>
727       <varlistentry>
728         <term><literal>ghc</literal></term>
729         <indexterm><primary><literal>ghc</literal></primary>
730         <secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
731         <listitem>
732           <para>The <ulink url="http://www.haskell.org/ghc/">Glasgow
733           Haskell Compiler</ulink> (minus libraries).  Absolutely
734           required for building GHC.</para>
735         </listitem>
736       </varlistentry>
737
738       <varlistentry>
739         <term><literal>glafp-utils</literal></term>
740         <indexterm><primary><literal>glafp-utils</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
741         <listitem>
742           <para>Utility programs, some of which are used by the
743           build/installation system.  Required for pretty much
744           everything.</para>
745         </listitem>
746       </varlistentry>
747
748       <varlistentry>
749         <term><literal>green-card</literal></term>
750         <indexterm><primary><literal>green-card</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
751         <listitem>
752           <para>The <ulink
753           url="http://www.haskell.org/greencard/">Green Card</ulink>
754           system for generating Haskell foreign function
755           interfaces.</para>
756         </listitem>
757       </varlistentry>
758
759       <varlistentry>
760         <term><literal>haggis</literal></term>
761         <indexterm><primary><literal>haggis</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
762         <listitem>
763           <para>The <ulink
764           url="http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/fp/software/haggis/">Haggis</ulink>
765           Haskell GUI framework.</para>
766         </listitem>
767       </varlistentry>
768
769       <varlistentry>
770         <term><literal>haddock</literal></term>
771         <indexterm><primary><literal>haddock</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
772         <listitem>
773           <para>The <ulink
774           url="http://www.haskell.org/haddock/">Haddock</ulink>
775           documentation tool.</para>
776         </listitem>
777       </varlistentry>
778
779       <varlistentry>
780         <term><literal>happy</literal></term>
781         <indexterm><primary><literal>happy</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
782         <listitem>
783           <para>The <ulink
784           url="http://www.haskell.org/happy/">Happy</ulink> Parser
785           generator.</para>
786         </listitem>
787       </varlistentry>
788
789       <varlistentry>
790         <term><literal>hdirect</literal></term>
791         <indexterm><primary><literal>hdirect</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
792         <listitem>
793           <para>The <ulink
794           url="http://www.haskell.org/hdirect/">H/Direct</ulink>
795           Haskell interoperability tool.</para>
796         </listitem>
797       </varlistentry>
798
799       <varlistentry>
800         <term><literal>hood</literal></term>
801         <indexterm><primary><literal>hood</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
802         <listitem>
803           <para>The <ulink url="http://www.haskell.org/hood/">Haskell
804           Object Observation Debugger</ulink>.</para>
805         </listitem>
806       </varlistentry>
807
808       <varlistentry>
809         <term><literal>hslibs</literal></term>
810         <indexterm><primary><literal>hslibs</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
811         <listitem>
812           <para>Supplemental libraries for GHC
813           (<emphasis>required</emphasis> for building GHC).</para>
814         </listitem>
815       </varlistentry>
816
817       <varlistentry>
818         <term><literal>libraries</literal></term>
819         <indexterm><primary><literal></literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
820         <listitem>
821           <para>Hierarchical Haskell library suite
822           (<emphasis>required</emphasis> for building GHC).</para>
823         </listitem>
824       </varlistentry>
825
826       <varlistentry>
827         <term><literal>mhms</literal></term>
828         <indexterm><primary><literal></literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
829         <listitem>
830           <para>The Modular Haskell Metric System.</para>
831         </listitem>
832       </varlistentry>
833
834       <varlistentry>
835         <term><literal>nofib</literal></term>
836         <indexterm><primary><literal>nofib</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
837         <listitem>
838           <para>The NoFib suite: A collection of Haskell programs used
839           primarily for benchmarking.</para>
840         </listitem>
841       </varlistentry>
842
843       <varlistentry>
844         <term><literal>testsuite</literal></term>
845         <indexterm><primary><literal>testsuite</literal></primary><secondary>project</secondary></indexterm>
846         <listitem>
847           <para>A testing framework, including GHC's regression test
848           suite.</para>
849         </listitem>
850       </varlistentry>
851     </variablelist>
852
853     <para>So, to build GHC you need at least the
854     <literal>ghc</literal>, <literal>libraries</literal> and
855     <literal>hslibs</literal> projects (a GHC source distribution will
856     already include the bits you need).</para>
857   </sect1>
858
859   <sect1 id="sec-build-checks">
860     <title>Things to check before you start</title>
861
862     <para>Here's a list of things to check before you get
863     started.</para>
864
865     <orderedlist>
866
867       <listitem>
868         <indexterm><primary>Disk space needed</primary></indexterm>
869         <para>Disk space needed: from about 100Mb for a basic GHC
870         build, up to probably 500Mb for a GHC build with everything
871         included (libraries built several different ways,
872         etc.).</para>
873       </listitem>
874
875       <listitem>
876         <para>Use an appropriate machine / operating system.  <xref
877         linkend="sec-port-info"> lists the supported platforms; if
878         yours isn't amongst these then you can try porting GHC (see
879         <xref linkend="sec-porting-ghc">).</para>
880       </listitem>
881
882       <listitem>
883         <para>Be sure that the &ldquo;pre-supposed&rdquo; utilities are
884         installed.  <Xref LinkEnd="sec-pre-supposed">
885         elaborates.</para>
886       </listitem>
887
888       <listitem>
889         <para>If you have any problem when building or installing the
890         Glasgow tools, please check the &ldquo;known pitfalls&rdquo; (<Xref
891         LinkEnd="sec-build-pitfalls">).  Also check the FAQ for the
892         version you're building, which is part of the User's Guide and
893         available on the <ulink URL="http://www.haskell.org/ghc/" >GHC web
894         site</ulink>.</para>
895
896         <indexterm><primary>bugs</primary><secondary>known</secondary></indexterm>
897
898         <para>If you feel there is still some shortcoming in our
899         procedure or instructions, please report it.</para>
900
901         <para>For GHC, please see the <ulink
902         url="http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/latest/set/bug-reporting.html">bug-reporting
903         section of the GHC Users' Guide</ulink>, to maximise the
904         usefulness of your report.</para>
905
906         <indexterm><primary>bugs</primary><secondary>seporting</secondary></indexterm>
907         <para>If in doubt, please send a message to
908         <email>glasgow-haskell-bugs@haskell.org</email>.
909         <indexterm><primary>bugs</primary><secondary>mailing
910         list</secondary></indexterm></para>
911       </listitem>
912     </orderedlist>
913   </sect1>
914
915   <sect1 id="sec-port-info">
916     <title>What machines the Glasgow tools run on</title>
917
918 <indexterm><primary>ports</primary><secondary>GHC</secondary></indexterm>
919 <indexterm><primary>GHC</primary><secondary>ports</secondary></indexterm>
920 <indexterm><primary>platforms</primary><secondary>supported</secondary></indexterm>
921
922     <para>The main question is whether or not the Haskell compiler
923     (GHC) runs on your platform.</para>
924
925     <para>A &ldquo;platform&rdquo; is a
926     architecture/manufacturer/operating-system combination, such as
927     <literal>sparc-sun-solaris2</literal>.  Other common ones are
928     <literal>alpha-dec-osf2</literal>,
929     <literal>hppa1.1-hp-hpux9</literal>,
930     <literal>i386-unknown-linux</literal>,
931     <literal>i386-unknown-solaris2</literal>,
932     <literal>i386-unknown-freebsd</literal>,
933     <literal>i386-unknown-cygwin32</literal>,
934     <literal>m68k-sun-sunos4</literal>,
935     <literal>mips-sgi-irix5</literal>,
936     <literal>sparc-sun-sunos4</literal>,
937     <literal>sparc-sun-solaris2</literal>,
938     <literal>powerpc-ibm-aix</literal>.</para>
939
940     <para>Some libraries may only work on a limited number of
941     platforms; for example, a sockets library is of no use unless the
942     operating system supports the underlying BSDisms.</para>
943
944     <sect2>
945       <title>What platforms the Haskell compiler (GHC) runs on</title>
946
947       <indexterm><primary>fully-supported platforms</primary></indexterm>
948       <indexterm><primary>native-code generator</primary></indexterm>
949       <indexterm><primary>registerised ports</primary></indexterm>
950       <indexterm><primary>unregisterised ports</primary></indexterm>
951
952       <para>The GHC hierarchy of Porting Goodness: (a)&nbsp;Best is a
953       native-code generator; (b)&nbsp;next best is a
954       &ldquo;registerised&rdquo; port; (c)&nbsp;the bare minimum is an
955       &ldquo;unregisterised&rdquo; port.
956       (&ldquo;Unregisterised&rdquo; is so terrible that we won't say
957       more about it).</para>
958
959       <para>We use Sparcs running Solaris 2.7 and x86 boxes running
960       FreeBSD and Linux, so those are the best supported platforms,
961       unsurprisingly.</para>
962
963       <para>Here's everything that's known about GHC ports.  We
964       identify platforms by their &ldquo;canonical&rdquo;
965       CPU/Manufacturer/OS triple.</para>
966
967       <variablelist>
968         <varlistentry>
969           <term>alpha-dec-{osf,linux,freebsd,openbsd,netbsd}:</term>
970           <indexterm><primary>alpha-dec-osf</primary></indexterm>
971           <indexterm><primary>alpha-dec-linux</primary></indexterm>
972           <indexterm><primary>alpha-dec-freebsd</primary></indexterm>
973           <indexterm><primary>alpha-dec-openbsd</primary></indexterm>
974           <indexterm><primary>alpha-dec-netbsd</primary></indexterm>
975           
976           <listitem>
977             <para>The OSF port is currently working (as of GHC version
978             5.02.1) and well supported.  The native code generator is
979             currently non-working.  Other operating systems will
980             require some minor porting.</para>
981           </listitem>
982         </varlistentry>
983
984         <varlistentry>
985           <term>sparc-sun-sunos4</term>
986           <indexterm><primary>sparc-sun-sunos4</primary></indexterm>
987           <listitem>
988             <para>Probably works with minor tweaks, hasn't been tested
989             for a while.</para>
990           </listitem>
991         </varlistentry>
992
993         <varlistentry>
994           <term>sparc-sun-solaris2</term>
995           <indexterm><primary>sparc-sun-solaris2</primary></indexterm>
996           <listitem>
997             <para>Fully supported (at least for Solaris 2.7),
998             including native-code generator.</para>
999           </listitem>
1000         </varlistentry>
1001
1002         <varlistentry>
1003           <term>hppa1.1-hp-hpux (HP-PA boxes running HPUX 9.x)</term>
1004           <indexterm><primary>hppa1.1-hp-hpux</primary></indexterm>
1005           <listitem>
1006             <para>A registerised port is available for version 4.08,
1007             but GHC hasn't been built on that platform since (as far
1008             as we know).  No native-code generator.</para>
1009           </listitem>
1010         </varlistentry>
1011
1012         <varlistentry>
1013           <term>i386-unknown-linux (PCs running Linux, ELF binary format)</term>
1014           <indexterm><primary>i386-*-linux</primary></indexterm>
1015           <listitem>
1016             <para>GHC works registerised and has a native code
1017             generator.  You <Emphasis>must</Emphasis> have GCC 2.7.x
1018             or later.  NOTE about <literal>glibc</literal> versions:
1019             GHC binaries built on a system running <literal>glibc
1020             2.0</literal> won't work on a system running
1021             <literal>glibc 2.1</literal>, and vice versa.  In general,
1022             don't expect compatibility between
1023             <literal>glibc</literal> versions, even if the shared
1024             library version hasn't changed.</para>
1025           </listitem>
1026         </varlistentry>
1027
1028         <varlistentry>
1029           <term>i386-unknown-freebsd (PCs running FreeBSD 2.2 or
1030           higher)</term>
1031           <indexterm><primary>i386-unknown-freebsd</primary></indexterm>
1032           <listitem>
1033             <para>GHC works registerised.  Pre-built packages are
1034             available in the native package format, so if you just
1035             need binaries you're better off just installing the
1036             package (it might even be on your installation
1037             CD!).</para>
1038           </listitem>
1039         </varlistentry>
1040
1041         <varlistentry>
1042           <term>i386-unknown-openbsd (PCs running OpenBSD)</term>
1043           <indexterm><primary>i386-unknown-openbsd</primary></indexterm> 
1044           <listitem>
1045             <para>Supported, with native code generator.  Packages are
1046             available through the ports system in the native package
1047             format.</para>
1048           </listitem>
1049         </varlistentry>
1050
1051         <varlistentry>
1052           <term>i386-unknown-netbsd (PCs running NetBSD and
1053             OpenBSD)</term>
1054             <indexterm><primary>i386-unknown-netbsd</primary></indexterm>
1055           <listitem>
1056             <para>Will require some minor porting effort, but should
1057             work registerised.</para>
1058           </listitem>
1059         </varlistentry>
1060
1061         <varlistentry>
1062           <term>i386-unknown-mingw32 (PCs running Windows)</term>
1063           <indexterm><primary>i386-unknown-mingw32</primary></indexterm>
1064           <listitem>
1065             <para>Fully supported under Win9x, WinNT, Win2k, and
1066             WinXP.  Includes a native code generator.  Building from
1067             source requires a recent <ulink
1068             url="http://www.cygwin.com/">Cygwin</ulink> distribution
1069             to be installed.</para>
1070           </listitem>
1071         </varlistentry>
1072
1073         <varlistentry>
1074           <term>ia64-unknown-linux</term>
1075           <indexterm><primary>ia64-unknown-linux</primary></indexterm>
1076           <listitem>
1077             <para>GHC currently works unregisterised.  A registerised
1078             port is in progress.</para>
1079           </listitem>
1080         </varlistentry>
1081
1082         <varlistentry>
1083           <term>mips-sgi-irix5</term>
1084           <indexterm><primary>mips-sgi-irix[5-6]</primary></indexterm>
1085           <listitem>
1086             <para>Port has worked in the past, but hasn't been tested
1087             for some time (and will certainly have rotted in various
1088             ways).  As usual, we don't have access to machines and
1089             there hasn't been an overwhelming demand for this port,
1090             but feel free to get in touch.</para>
1091           </listitem>
1092         </varlistentry>
1093
1094         <varlistentry>
1095           <term>powerpc-ibm-aix</term>
1096           <indexterm><primary>powerpc-ibm-aix</primary></indexterm>
1097           <listitem>
1098             <para>Port currently doesn't work, needs some minimal
1099             porting effort.  As usual, we don't have access to
1100             machines and there hasn't been an overwhelming demand for
1101             this port, but feel free to get in touch.</para>
1102           </listitem>
1103         </varlistentry>
1104
1105         <varlistentry>
1106           <term>powerpc-apple-darwin</term>
1107           <indexterm><primary>powerpc-apple-darwin</primary></indexterm> 
1108           <listitem>
1109             <para>Supported registerised.  No native code
1110             generator.</para>
1111           </listitem>
1112         </varlistentry>
1113
1114         <varlistentry>
1115           <term>powerpc-apple-linux</term>
1116           <indexterm><primary>powerpc-apple-linux</primary></indexterm> 
1117           <listitem>
1118             <para>Not supported (yet).</para>
1119           </listitem>
1120         </varlistentry>
1121       </variablelist>
1122
1123       <para>Various other systems have had GHC ported to them in the
1124       distant past, including various Motorola 68k boxes.  The 68k
1125       support still remains, but porting to one of these systems will
1126       certainly be a non-trivial task.</para>
1127     </sect2>
1128
1129     <sect2>
1130       <title>What machines the other tools run on</title>
1131
1132       <para>Unless you hear otherwise, the other tools work if GHC
1133       works.</para>
1134     </sect2>
1135   </sect1>
1136
1137
1138   <sect1 id="sec-pre-supposed">
1139     <title>Installing pre-supposed utilities</title>
1140
1141     <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed utilities</primary></indexterm>
1142     <indexterm><primary>utilities, pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
1143
1144     <para>Here are the gory details about some utility programs you
1145     may need; <command>perl</command>, <command>gcc</command> and
1146     <command>happy</command> are the only important
1147     ones. (PVM<indexterm><primary>PVM</primary></indexterm> is
1148     important if you're going for Parallel Haskell.)  The
1149     <command>configure</command><indexterm><primary>configure</primary></indexterm>
1150     script will tell you if you are missing something.</para>
1151
1152     <variablelist>
1153
1154       <varlistentry>
1155         <term>GHC</term>
1156         <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: GHC</primary></indexterm>
1157         <indexterm><primary>GHC, pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
1158         <listitem>
1159           <para>GHC is required to build many of the tools, including
1160           GHC itself.  If you need to port GHC to your platform
1161           because there isn't a binary distribution of GHC available,
1162           then see <xref linkend="sec-porting-ghc">.</para>
1163
1164           <para>Which version of GHC you need will depend on the
1165           packages you intend to build.  GHC itself will normally
1166           build using one of several older versions of itself - check
1167           the announcement or release notes for details.</para>
1168         </listitem>
1169       </varlistentry>
1170
1171       <varlistentry>
1172         <term>Perl</term>
1173         <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: Perl</primary></indexterm>
1174         <indexterm><primary>Perl, pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
1175         <listitem>
1176           <para><emphasis>You have to have Perl to proceed!</emphasis>
1177           Perl version 5 at least is required.  GHC has been known to
1178           tickle bugs in Perl, so if you find that Perl crashes when
1179           running GHC try updating (or downgrading) your Perl
1180           installation.  Versions of Perl that we use and are known to
1181           be fairly stable are 5.005 and 5.6.1.</para>
1182
1183           <para>For Win32 platforms, you should use the binary
1184           supplied in the InstallShield (copy it to
1185           <filename>/bin</filename>).  The Cygwin-supplied Perl seems
1186           not to work.</para>
1187
1188           <para>Perl should be put somewhere so that it can be invoked
1189           by the <literal>&num;!</literal> script-invoking
1190           mechanism. The full pathname may need to be less than 32
1191           characters long on some systems.</para>
1192         </listitem>
1193       </varlistentry>
1194
1195       <varlistentry>
1196         <term>GNU C (<command>gcc</command>)</term>
1197         <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: GCC (GNU C
1198         compiler)</primary></indexterm> <indexterm><primary>GCC (GNU C
1199         compiler), pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
1200         <listitem>
1201           <para>We recommend using GCC version 2.95.2 on all
1202           platforms.  Failing that, version 2.7.2 is stable on most
1203           platforms.  Earlier versions of GCC can be assumed not to
1204           work, and versions in between 2.7.2 and 2.95.2 (including
1205           <command>egcs</command>) have varying degrees of stability
1206           depending on the platform.</para>
1207
1208           <para>If your GCC dies with &ldquo;internal error&rdquo; on
1209           some GHC source file, please let us know, so we can report
1210           it and get things improved.  (Exception: on iX86
1211           boxes&mdash;you may need to fiddle with GHC's
1212           <option>-monly-N-regs</option> option; see the User's
1213           Guide)</para>
1214         </listitem>
1215       </varlistentry>
1216
1217       <varlistentry>
1218         <term>GNU Make</term>
1219         <indexterm><primary>make</primary><secondary>GNU</secondary>
1220         </indexterm>
1221         <listitem>
1222           <para>The fptools build system makes heavy use of features
1223           specific to GNU <command>make</command>, so you must have
1224           this installed in order to build any of the fptools
1225           suite.</para>
1226         </listitem>
1227       </varlistentry>
1228
1229       <varlistentry>
1230         <term>Happy</term>
1231         <indexterm><primary>Happy</primary></indexterm>
1232         <listitem>
1233           <para>Happy is a parser generator tool for Haskell, and is
1234           used to generate GHC's parsers.  Happy is written in
1235           Haskell, and is a project in the CVS repository
1236           (<literal>fptools/happy</literal>).  It can be built from
1237           source, but bear in mind that you'll need GHC installed in
1238           order to build it.  To avoid the chicken/egg problem,
1239           install a binary distribtion of either Happy or GHC to get
1240           started.  Happy distributions are available from <ulink
1241           url="http://www.haskell.org/happy/">Happy's Web
1242           Page</ulink>.</para>
1243         </listitem>
1244       </varlistentry>
1245
1246       <varlistentry>
1247         <term>Autoconf</term>
1248         <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: Autoconf</primary></indexterm>
1249         <indexterm><primary>Autoconf, pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
1250         <listitem>
1251           <para>GNU Autoconf is needed if you intend to build from the
1252           CVS sources, it is <emphasis>not</emphasis> needed if you
1253           just intend to build a standard source distribution.</para>
1254
1255           <para>Autoconf builds the <command>configure</command>
1256           script from <filename>configure.in</filename> and
1257           <filename>aclocal.m4</filename>.  If you modify either of
1258           these files, you'll need <command>autoconf</command> to
1259           rebuild <filename>configure</filename>.</para>
1260         </listitem>
1261       </varlistentry>
1262
1263       <varlistentry>
1264         <term><command>sed</command></term>
1265         <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: sed</primary></indexterm>
1266         <indexterm><primary>sed, pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
1267         <listitem>
1268           <para>You need a working <command>sed</command> if you are
1269           going to build from sources.  The build-configuration stuff
1270           needs it.  GNU sed version 2.0.4 is no good!  It has a bug
1271           in it that is tickled by the build-configuration.  2.0.5 is
1272           OK. Others are probably OK too (assuming we don't create too
1273           elaborate configure scripts.)</para>
1274         </listitem>
1275       </varlistentry>
1276     </variablelist>
1277
1278     <para>One <literal>fptools</literal> project is worth a quick note
1279     at this point, because it is useful for all the others:
1280     <literal>glafp-utils</literal> contains several utilities which
1281     aren't particularly Glasgow-ish, but Occasionally Indispensable.
1282     Like <command>lndir</command> for creating symbolic link
1283     trees.</para>
1284
1285     <sect2 id="pre-supposed-gph-tools">
1286       <title>Tools for building parallel GHC (GPH)</title>
1287
1288       <variablelist>
1289         <varlistentry>
1290           <term>PVM version 3:</term>
1291           <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: PVM3 (Parallel Virtual Machine)</primary></indexterm>
1292           <indexterm><primary>PVM3 (Parallel Virtual Machine), pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
1293           <listitem>
1294             <para>PVM is the Parallel Virtual Machine on which
1295             Parallel Haskell programs run.  (You only need this if you
1296             plan to run Parallel Haskell.  Concurent Haskell, which
1297             runs concurrent threads on a uniprocessor doesn't need
1298             it.)  Underneath PVM, you can have (for example) a network
1299             of workstations (slow) or a multiprocessor box
1300             (faster).</para>
1301
1302             <para>The current version of PVM is 3.3.11; we use 3.3.7.
1303             It is readily available on the net; I think I got it from
1304             <literal>research.att.com</literal>, in
1305             <filename>netlib</filename>.</para>
1306
1307             <para>A PVM installation is slightly quirky, but easy to
1308             do.  Just follow the <filename>Readme</filename>
1309             instructions.</para>
1310           </listitem>
1311         </varlistentry>
1312
1313         <varlistentry>
1314           <term><command>bash</command>:</term>
1315           <indexterm><primary>bash, presupposed (Parallel Haskell only)</primary></indexterm>
1316           <listitem>
1317             <para>Sadly, the <command>gr2ps</command> script, used to
1318             convert &ldquo;parallelism profiles&rdquo; to PostScript,
1319             is written in Bash (GNU's Bourne Again shell).  This bug
1320             will be fixed (someday).</para>
1321           </listitem>
1322         </varlistentry>
1323       </variablelist>
1324     </sect2>
1325
1326     <sect2 id="pre-supposed-other-tools">
1327       <title>Other useful tools</title>
1328
1329       <variablelist>
1330         <varlistentry>
1331           <term>Flex</term>
1332           <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: flex</primary></indexterm> 
1333           <indexterm><primary>flex, pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
1334           <listitem>
1335             <para>This is a quite-a-bit-better-than-Lex lexer.  Used
1336             to build a couple of utilities in
1337             <literal>glafp-utils</literal>.  Depending on your
1338             operating system, the supplied <command>lex</command> may
1339             or may not work; you should get the GNU version.</para>
1340           </listitem>
1341         </varlistentry>
1342       </variablelist>
1343
1344       <para>More tools are required if you want to format the documentation
1345       that comes with GHC and other fptools projects.  See <xref
1346       linkend="building-docs">.</para>
1347     </sect2>
1348   </sect1>
1349
1350   <sect1 id="sec-building-from-source">
1351     <title>Building from source</title>
1352
1353     <indexterm><primary>Building from source</primary></indexterm>
1354     <indexterm><primary>Source, building from</primary></indexterm>
1355
1356     <para>You've been rash enough to want to build some of the Glasgow
1357     Functional Programming tools (GHC, Happy, nofib, etc.) from
1358     source.  You've slurped the source, from the CVS repository or
1359     from a source distribution, and now you're sitting looking at a
1360     huge mound of bits, wondering what to do next.</para>
1361
1362     <para>Gingerly, you type <command>make</command>.  Wrong
1363     already!</para>
1364
1365     <para>This rest of this guide is intended for duffers like me, who
1366     aren't really interested in Makefiles and systems configurations,
1367     but who need a mental model of the interlocking pieces so that
1368     they can make them work, extend them consistently when adding new
1369     software, and lay hands on them gently when they don't
1370     work.</para>
1371
1372     <sect2 id="quick-start">
1373       <title>Quick Start</title>
1374
1375       <para>If you are starting from a source distribution, and just
1376       want a completely standard build, then the following should
1377       work:</para>
1378
1379 <screen>$ ./configure
1380 $ make
1381 $ make install
1382 </screen>
1383
1384       <para>For GHC, this will do a 2-stage bootstrap build of the
1385       compiler, with profiling libraries, and install the
1386       results.</para>
1387
1388       <para>If you want to do anything at all non-standard, or you
1389       want to do some development, read on...</para>
1390     </sect2>
1391
1392     <sect2 id="sec-source-tree">
1393       <title>Your source tree</title>
1394
1395       <para>The source code is held in your <emphasis>source
1396       tree</emphasis>.  The root directory of your source tree
1397       <emphasis>must</emphasis> contain the following directories and
1398       files:</para>
1399
1400       <itemizedlist>
1401         <listitem>
1402           <para><filename>Makefile</filename>: the root
1403           Makefile.</para>
1404         </listitem>
1405
1406         <listitem>
1407           <para><filename>mk/</filename>: the directory that contains
1408           the main Makefile code, shared by all the
1409           <literal>fptools</literal> software.</para>
1410         </listitem>
1411
1412         <listitem>
1413           <para><filename>configure.in</filename>,
1414           <filename>config.sub</filename>,
1415           <filename>config.guess</filename>: these files support the
1416           configuration process.</para>
1417         </listitem>
1418
1419         <listitem>
1420           <para><filename>install-sh</filename>.</para>
1421         </listitem>
1422       </itemizedlist>
1423
1424       <para>All the other directories are individual
1425       <emphasis>projects</emphasis> of the <literal>fptools</literal>
1426       system&mdash;for example, the Glasgow Haskell Compiler
1427       (<literal>ghc</literal>), the Happy parser generator
1428       (<literal>happy</literal>), the <literal>nofib</literal>
1429       benchmark suite, and so on.  You can have zero or more of these.
1430       Needless to say, some of them are needed to build others.</para>
1431
1432       <para>The important thing to remember is that even if you want
1433       only one project (<literal>happy</literal>, say), you must have
1434       a source tree whose root directory contains
1435       <filename>Makefile</filename>, <filename>mk/</filename>,
1436       <filename>configure.in</filename>, and the project(s) you want
1437       (<filename>happy/</filename> in this case).  You cannot get by
1438       with just the <filename>happy/</filename> directory.</para>
1439     </sect2>
1440
1441     <sect2>
1442       <title>Build trees</title>
1443       <indexterm><primary>build trees</primary></indexterm>
1444       <indexterm><primary>link trees, for building</primary></indexterm>
1445
1446       <para>If you just want to build the software once on a single
1447       platform, then your source tree can also be your build tree, and
1448       you can skip the rest of this section.</para>
1449
1450       <para>We often want to build multiple versions of our software
1451       for different architectures, or with different options
1452       (e.g. profiling).  It's very desirable to share a single copy of
1453       the source code among all these builds.</para>
1454
1455       <para>So for every source tree we have zero or more
1456       <emphasis>build trees</emphasis>.  Each build tree is initially
1457       an exact copy of the source tree, except that each file is a
1458       symbolic link to the source file, rather than being a copy of
1459       the source file.  There are &ldquo;standard&rdquo; Unix
1460       utilities that make such copies, so standard that they go by
1461       different names:
1462       <command>lndir</command><indexterm><primary>lndir</primary></indexterm>,
1463       <command>mkshadowdir</command><indexterm><primary>mkshadowdir</primary></indexterm>
1464       are two (If you don't have either, the source distribution
1465       includes sources for the X11
1466       <command>lndir</command>&mdash;check out
1467       <filename>fptools/glafp-utils/lndir</filename>). See <Xref
1468       LinkEnd="sec-storysofar"> for a typical invocation.</para>
1469
1470       <para>The build tree does not need to be anywhere near the
1471       source tree in the file system.  Indeed, one advantage of
1472       separating the build tree from the source is that the build tree
1473       can be placed in a non-backed-up partition, saving your systems
1474       support people from backing up untold megabytes of
1475       easily-regenerated, and rapidly-changing, gubbins.  The golden
1476       rule is that (with a single exception&mdash;<XRef
1477       LinkEnd="sec-build-config">) <emphasis>absolutely everything in
1478       the build tree is either a symbolic link to the source tree, or
1479       else is mechanically generated</emphasis>.  It should be
1480       perfectly OK for your build tree to vanish overnight; an hour or
1481       two compiling and you're on the road again.</para>
1482
1483       <para>You need to be a bit careful, though, that any new files
1484       you create (if you do any development work) are in the source
1485       tree, not a build tree!</para>
1486
1487       <para>Remember, that the source files in the build tree are
1488       <emphasis>symbolic links</emphasis> to the files in the source
1489       tree.  (The build tree soon accumulates lots of built files like
1490       <filename>Foo.o</filename>, as well.)  You can
1491       <emphasis>delete</emphasis> a source file from the build tree
1492       without affecting the source tree (though it's an odd thing to
1493       do).  On the other hand, if you <emphasis>edit</emphasis> a
1494       source file from the build tree, you'll edit the source-tree
1495       file directly.  (You can set up Emacs so that if you edit a
1496       source file from the build tree, Emacs will silently create an
1497       edited copy of the source file in the build tree, leaving the
1498       source file unchanged; but the danger is that you think you've
1499       edited the source file whereas actually all you've done is edit
1500       the build-tree copy.  More commonly you do want to edit the
1501       source file.)</para>
1502
1503       <para>Like the source tree, the top level of your build tree
1504       must be (a linked copy of) the root directory of the
1505       <literal>fptools</literal> suite.  Inside Makefiles, the root of
1506       your build tree is called
1507       <constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant><indexterm><primary>FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP</primary></indexterm>.
1508       In the rest of this document path names are relative to
1509       <constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant> unless
1510       otherwise stated.  For example, the file
1511       <filename>ghc/mk/target.mk</filename> is actually
1512       <filename><constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant>/ghc/mk/target.mk</filename>.</para>
1513     </sect2>
1514
1515     <sect2 id="sec-build-config">
1516       <title>Getting the build you want</title>
1517
1518       <para>When you build <literal>fptools</literal> you will be
1519       compiling code on a particular <emphasis>host
1520       platform</emphasis>, to run on a particular <emphasis>target
1521       platform</emphasis> (usually the same as the host
1522       platform)<indexterm><primary>platform</primary></indexterm>.
1523       The difficulty is that there are minor differences between
1524       different platforms; minor, but enough that the code needs to be
1525       a bit different for each.  There are some big differences too:
1526       for a different architecture we need to build GHC with a
1527       different native-code generator.</para>
1528
1529       <para>There are also knobs you can turn to control how the
1530       <literal>fptools</literal> software is built.  For example, you
1531       might want to build GHC optimised (so that it runs fast) or
1532       unoptimised (so that you can compile it fast after you've
1533       modified it.  Or, you might want to compile it with debugging on
1534       (so that extra consistency-checking code gets included) or off.
1535       And so on.</para>
1536
1537       <para>All of this stuff is called the
1538       <emphasis>configuration</emphasis> of your build.  You set the
1539       configuration using a three-step process.</para>
1540
1541       <variablelist>
1542         <varlistentry>
1543           <term>Step 1: get ready for configuration.</term>
1544           <listitem>
1545             <para>NOTE: if you're starting from a source distribution,
1546             rather than CVS sources, you can skip this step.</para>
1547
1548             <para>Change directory to
1549             <constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant> and
1550             issue the command
1551             <command>autoconf</command><indexterm><primary>autoconf</primary></indexterm>
1552             (with no arguments). This GNU program converts
1553             <filename><constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant>/configure.in</filename>
1554             to a shell script called
1555             <filename><constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant>/configure</filename>.
1556             </para>
1557
1558             <para>Some projects, including GHC, have their own
1559             configure script.  If there's an
1560             <constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)/&lt;project&gt;/configure.in</constant>,
1561             then you need to run <command>autoconf</command> in that
1562             directory too.</para>
1563
1564             <para>Both these steps are completely
1565             platform-independent; they just mean that the
1566             human-written file (<filename>configure.in</filename>) can
1567             be short, although the resulting shell script,
1568             <command>configure</command>, and
1569             <filename>mk/config.h.in</filename>, are long.</para>
1570           </listitem>
1571         </varlistentry>
1572
1573         <varlistentry>
1574           <term>Step 2: system configuration.</term>
1575           <listitem>
1576             <para>Runs the newly-created <command>configure</command>
1577             script, thus:</para>
1578
1579 <ProgramListing>
1580 ./configure <optional><parameter>args</parameter></optional>
1581 </ProgramListing>
1582
1583             <para><command>configure</command>'s mission is to scurry
1584             round your computer working out what architecture it has,
1585             what operating system, whether it has the
1586             <Function>vfork</Function> system call, where
1587             <command>yacc</command> is kept, whether
1588             <command>gcc</command> is available, where various obscure
1589             <literal>&num;include</literal> files are, whether it's a
1590             leap year, and what the systems manager had for lunch.  It
1591             communicates these snippets of information in two
1592             ways:</para>
1593
1594             <itemizedlist>
1595               <listitem>
1596                 
1597                 <para>It translates
1598                 <filename>mk/config.mk.in</filename><indexterm><primary>config.mk.in</primary></indexterm>
1599                 to
1600                 <filename>mk/config.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>config.mk</primary></indexterm>,
1601                 substituting for things between
1602                 &ldquo;<literal>@</literal>&rdquo; brackets.  So,
1603                 &ldquo;<literal>@HaveGcc@</literal>&rdquo; will be
1604                 replaced by &ldquo;<literal>YES</literal>&rdquo; or
1605                 &ldquo;<literal>NO</literal>&rdquo; depending on what
1606                 <command>configure</command> finds.
1607                 <filename>mk/config.mk</filename> is included by every
1608                 Makefile (directly or indirectly), so the
1609                 configuration information is thereby communicated to
1610                 all Makefiles.</para>
1611                 </listitem>
1612
1613               <listitem>
1614                 <para> It translates
1615                 <filename>mk/config.h.in</filename><indexterm><primary>config.h.in</primary></indexterm>
1616                 to
1617                 <filename>mk/config.h</filename><indexterm><primary>config.h</primary></indexterm>.
1618                 The latter is <literal>&num;include</literal>d by
1619                 various C programs, which can thereby make use of
1620                 configuration information.</para>
1621               </listitem>
1622             </itemizedlist>
1623
1624             <para><command>configure</command> takes some optional
1625             arguments.  Use <literal>./configure --help</literal> to
1626             get a list of the available arguments.  Here are some of
1627             the ones you might need:</para>
1628
1629             <variablelist>
1630               <varlistentry>
1631                 <term><literal>--with-ghc=<parameter>path</parameter></literal></term>
1632                 <indexterm><primary><literal>--with-ghc</literal></primary>
1633                 </indexterm>
1634                 <listitem>
1635                   <para>Specifies the path to an installed GHC which
1636                   you would like to use.  This compiler will be used
1637                   for compiling GHC-specific code (eg. GHC itself).
1638                   This option <emphasis>cannot</emphasis> be specified
1639                   using <filename>build.mk</filename> (see later),
1640                   because <command>configure</command> needs to
1641                   auto-detect the version of GHC you're using.  The
1642                   default is to look for a compiler named
1643                   <literal>ghc</literal> in your path.</para>
1644                 </listitem>
1645               </varlistentry>
1646               
1647               <varlistentry>
1648                 <term><literal>--with-hc=<parameter>path</parameter></literal></term>
1649                 <indexterm><primary><literal>--with-hc</literal></primary>
1650                 </indexterm>
1651                 <listitem>
1652                   <para>Specifies the path to any installed Haskell
1653                   compiler.  This compiler will be used for compiling
1654                   generic Haskell code.  The default is to use
1655                   <literal>ghc</literal>.</para>
1656                 </listitem>
1657               </varlistentry>
1658               
1659               <varlistentry>
1660                 <term><literal>--with-gcc=<parameter>path</parameter></literal></term>
1661                 <indexterm><primary><literal>--with-gcc</literal></primary>
1662                 </indexterm>
1663                 <listitem>
1664                   <para>Specifies the path to the installed GCC. This
1665                   compiler will be used to compile all C files,
1666                   <emphasis>except</emphasis> any generated by the
1667                   installed Haskell compiler, which will have its own
1668                   idea of which C compiler (if any) to use.  The
1669                   default is to use <literal>gcc</literal>.</para>
1670                 </listitem>
1671               </varlistentry>
1672             </variablelist>
1673             
1674             <para><command>configure</command> caches the results of
1675             its run in <filename>config.cache</filename>.  Quite often
1676             you don't want that; you're running
1677             <command>configure</command> a second time because
1678             something has changed.  In that case, simply delete
1679             <filename>config.cache</filename>.</para>
1680           </listitem>
1681         </varlistentry>
1682         
1683         <varlistentry>
1684           <term>Step 3: build configuration.</term>
1685           <listitem>
1686             <para>Next, you say how this build of
1687             <literal>fptools</literal> is to differ from the standard
1688             defaults by creating a new file
1689             <filename>mk/build.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>build.mk</primary></indexterm>
1690             <emphasis>in the build tree</emphasis>.  This file is the
1691             one and only file you edit in the build tree, precisely
1692             because it says how this build differs from the source.
1693             (Just in case your build tree does die, you might want to
1694             keep a private directory of <filename>build.mk</filename>
1695             files, and use a symbolic link in each build tree to point
1696             to the appropriate one.)  So
1697             <filename>mk/build.mk</filename> never exists in the
1698             source tree&mdash;you create one in each build tree from
1699             the template.  We'll discuss what to put in it
1700             shortly.</para>
1701           </listitem>
1702         </varlistentry>
1703       </variablelist>
1704
1705       <para>And that's it for configuration. Simple, eh?</para>
1706
1707       <para>What do you put in your build-specific configuration file
1708       <filename>mk/build.mk</filename>?  <emphasis>For almost all
1709       purposes all you will do is put make variable definitions that
1710       override those in</emphasis>
1711       <filename>mk/config.mk.in</filename>.  The whole point of
1712       <filename>mk/config.mk.in</filename>&mdash;and its derived
1713       counterpart <filename>mk/config.mk</filename>&mdash;is to define
1714       the build configuration. It is heavily commented, as you will
1715       see if you look at it.  So generally, what you do is look at
1716       <filename>mk/config.mk.in</filename>, and add definitions in
1717       <filename>mk/build.mk</filename> that override any of the
1718       <filename>config.mk</filename> definitions that you want to
1719       change.  (The override occurs because the main boilerplate file,
1720       <filename>mk/boilerplate.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>boilerplate.mk</primary></indexterm>,
1721       includes <filename>build.mk</filename> after
1722       <filename>config.mk</filename>.)</para>
1723
1724       <para>For example, <filename>config.mk.in</filename> contains
1725       the definition:</para>
1726
1727 <ProgramListing>
1728 GhcHcOpts=-O -Rghc-timing
1729 </ProgramListing>
1730
1731       <para>The accompanying comment explains that this is the list of
1732       flags passed to GHC when building GHC itself.  For doing
1733       development, it is wise to add <literal>-DDEBUG</literal>, to
1734       enable debugging code.  So you would add the following to
1735       <filename>build.mk</filename>:</para>
1736       
1737       <para>or, if you prefer,</para>
1738
1739 <ProgramListing>
1740 GhcHcOpts += -DDEBUG
1741 </ProgramListing>
1742
1743       <para>GNU <command>make</command> allows existing definitions to
1744       have new text appended using the &ldquo;<literal>+=</literal>&rdquo;
1745       operator, which is quite a convenient feature.)</para>
1746
1747       <para>If you want to remove the <literal>-O</literal> as well (a
1748       good idea when developing, because the turn-around cycle gets a
1749       lot quicker), you can just override
1750       <literal>GhcLibHcOpts</literal> altogether:</para>
1751
1752 <ProgramListing>
1753 GhcHcOpts=-DDEBUG -Rghc-timing
1754 </ProgramListing>
1755
1756       <para>When reading <filename>config.mk.in</filename>, remember
1757       that anything between &ldquo;@...@&rdquo; signs is going to be substituted
1758       by <command>configure</command> later.  You
1759       <emphasis>can</emphasis> override the resulting definition if
1760       you want, but you need to be a bit surer what you are doing.
1761       For example, there's a line that says:</para>
1762
1763 <ProgramListing>
1764 YACC = @YaccCmd@
1765 </ProgramListing>
1766
1767       <para>This defines the Make variables <constant>YACC</constant>
1768       to the pathname for a <command>yacc</command> that
1769       <command>configure</command> finds somewhere.  If you have your
1770       own pet <command>yacc</command> you want to use instead, that's
1771       fine. Just add this line to <filename>mk/build.mk</filename>:</para>
1772
1773 <ProgramListing>
1774 YACC = myyacc
1775 </ProgramListing>
1776
1777       <para>You do not <emphasis>have</emphasis> to have a
1778       <filename>mk/build.mk</filename> file at all; if you don't,
1779       you'll get all the default settings from
1780       <filename>mk/config.mk.in</filename>.</para>
1781
1782       <para>You can also use <filename>build.mk</filename> to override
1783       anything that <command>configure</command> got wrong.  One place
1784       where this happens often is with the definition of
1785       <constant>FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP&lowbar;ABS</constant>: this
1786       variable is supposed to be the canonical path to the top of your
1787       source tree, but if your system uses an automounter then the
1788       correct directory is hard to find automatically.  If you find
1789       that <command>configure</command> has got it wrong, just put the
1790       correct definition in <filename>build.mk</filename>.</para>
1791
1792     </sect2>
1793
1794     <sect2 id="sec-storysofar">
1795       <title>The story so far</title>
1796
1797       <para>Let's summarise the steps you need to carry to get
1798       yourself a fully-configured build tree from scratch.</para>
1799
1800       <orderedlist>
1801         <listitem>
1802           <para> Get your source tree from somewhere (CVS repository
1803           or source distribution).  Say you call the root directory
1804           <filename>myfptools</filename> (it does not have to be
1805           called <filename>fptools</filename>).  Make sure that you
1806           have the essential files (see <XRef
1807           LinkEnd="sec-source-tree">).</para>
1808         </listitem>
1809
1810         <listitem>
1811
1812           <para>(Optional) Use <command>lndir</command> or
1813           <command>mkshadowdir</command> to create a build tree.</para>
1814
1815 <programlisting>
1816 $ cd myfptools
1817 $ mkshadowdir . /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4
1818 </programlisting>
1819
1820           <para>(N.B. <command>mkshadowdir</command>'s first argument
1821           is taken relative to its second.) You probably want to give
1822           the build tree a name that suggests its main defining
1823           characteristic (in your mind at least), in case you later
1824           add others.</para>
1825         </listitem>
1826
1827         <listitem>
1828           <para>Change directory to the build tree.  Everything is
1829           going to happen there now.</para>
1830
1831 <programlisting>
1832 $ cd /scratch/joe-bloggs/myfptools-sun4
1833 </programlisting>
1834
1835         </listitem>
1836
1837         <listitem>
1838           <para>Prepare for system configuration:</para>
1839
1840 <programlisting>
1841 $ autoconf
1842 </programlisting>
1843
1844           <para>(You can skip this step if you are starting from a
1845           source distribution, and you already have
1846           <filename>configure</filename> and
1847           <filename>mk/config.h.in</filename>.)</para>
1848
1849           <para>Some projects, including GHC itself, have their own
1850           configure scripts, so it is necessary to run autoconf again
1851           in the appropriate subdirectories. eg:</para>
1852
1853 <programlisting>
1854 $ (cd ghc; autoconf)
1855 </programlisting>
1856         </listitem>
1857
1858         <listitem>
1859           <para>Do system configuration:</para>
1860
1861 <programlisting>
1862 $ ./configure
1863 </programlisting>
1864
1865           <para>Don't forget to check whether you need to add any
1866           arguments to <literal>configure</literal>; for example, a
1867           common requirement is to specify which GHC to use with
1868           <option>--with-ghc=<replaceable>ghc</replaceable></option>.</para>
1869         </listitem>
1870
1871         <listitem>
1872           <para>Create the file <filename>mk/build.mk</filename>,
1873           adding definitions for your desired configuration
1874           options.</para>
1875
1876 <programlisting>
1877 $ emacs mk/build.mk
1878 </programlisting>
1879         </listitem>
1880       </orderedlist>
1881
1882       <para>You can make subsequent changes to
1883       <filename>mk/build.mk</filename> as often as you like.  You do
1884       not have to run any further configuration programs to make these
1885       changes take effect. In theory you should, however, say
1886       <command>gmake clean</command>, <command>gmake all</command>,
1887       because configuration option changes could affect
1888       anything&mdash;but in practice you are likely to know what's
1889       affected.</para>
1890     </sect2>
1891
1892     <sect2>
1893       <title>Making things</title>
1894
1895       <para>At this point you have made yourself a fully-configured
1896       build tree, so you are ready to start building real
1897       things.</para>
1898
1899       <para>The first thing you need to know is that <emphasis>you
1900       must use GNU <command>make</command>, usually called
1901       <command>gmake</command>, not standard Unix
1902       <command>make</command></emphasis>.  If you use standard Unix
1903       <command>make</command> you will get all sorts of error messages
1904       (but no damage) because the <literal>fptools</literal>
1905       <command>Makefiles</command> use GNU <command>make</command>'s
1906       facilities extensively.</para>
1907
1908       <para>To just build the whole thing, <command>cd</command> to
1909       the top of your <literal>fptools</literal> tree and type
1910       <command>gmake</command>.  This will prepare the tree and build
1911       the various projects in the correct order.</para>
1912     </sect2>
1913
1914     <sect2 id="sec-bootstrapping">
1915       <title>Bootstrapping GHC</title>
1916
1917       <para>GHC requires a 2-stage bootstrap in order to provide 
1918       full functionality, including GHCi.  By a 2-stage bootstrap, we
1919       mean that the compiler is built once using the installed GHC,
1920       and then again using the compiler built in the first stage.  You
1921       can also build a stage 3 compiler, but this normally isn't
1922       necessary except to verify that the stage 2 compiler is working
1923       properly.</para>
1924
1925       <para>Note that when doing a bootstrap, the stage 1 compiler
1926       must be built, followed by the runtime system and libraries, and
1927       then the stage 2 compiler.  The correct ordering is implemented
1928       by the top-level fptools <filename>Makefile</filename>, so if
1929       you want everything to work automatically it's best to start
1930       <command>make</command> from the top of the tree.  When building
1931       GHC, the top-level fptools <filename>Makefile</filename> is set
1932       up to do a 2-stage bootstrap by default (when you say
1933       <command>make</command>).  Some other targets it supports
1934       are:</para>
1935
1936       <variablelist>
1937         <varlistentry>
1938           <term>stage1</term>
1939           <listitem>
1940             <para>Build everything as normal, including the stage 1
1941             compiler.</para>
1942           </listitem>
1943         </varlistentry>
1944
1945         <varlistentry>
1946           <term>stage2</term>
1947           <listitem>
1948             <para>Build the stage 2 compiler only.</para>
1949           </listitem>
1950         </varlistentry>
1951
1952         <varlistentry>
1953           <term>stage3</term>
1954           <listitem>
1955             <para>Build the stage 3 compiler only.</para>
1956           </listitem>
1957         </varlistentry>
1958
1959         <varlistentry>
1960           <term>bootstrap</term> <term>bootstrap2</term>
1961           <listitem>
1962             <para>Build stage 1 followed by stage 2.</para>
1963           </listitem>
1964         </varlistentry>
1965
1966         <varlistentry>
1967           <term>bootstrap3</term>
1968           <listitem>
1969             <para>Build stages 1, 2 and 3.</para>
1970           </listitem>
1971         </varlistentry>
1972
1973         <varlistentry>
1974           <term>install</term>
1975           <listitem>
1976             <para>Install everything, including the compiler built in
1977             stage 2.  To override the stage, say <literal>make install
1978             stage=<replaceable>n</replaceable></literal> where
1979             <replaceable>n</replaceable> is the stage to install.</para>
1980           </listitem>
1981         </varlistentry>
1982       </variablelist>
1983
1984       <para>The top-level <filename>Makefile</filename> also arranges
1985       to do the appropriate <literal>make boot</literal> steps (see
1986       below) before actually building anything.</para>
1987
1988       <para>The <literal>stage1</literal>, <literal>stage2</literal>
1989       and <literal>stage3</literal> targets also work in the
1990       <literal>ghc/compiler</literal> directory, but don't forget that
1991       each stage requires its own <literal>make boot</literal> step:
1992       for example, you must do</para>
1993
1994       <screen>$ make boot stage=2</screen>
1995
1996       <para>before <literal>make stage2</literal> in
1997       <literal>ghc/compiler</literal>.</para>
1998     </sect2>
1999
2000     <sect2 id="sec-standard-targets">
2001       <title>Standard Targets</title>
2002       <indexterm><primary>targets, standard makefile</primary></indexterm>
2003       <indexterm><primary>makefile targets</primary></indexterm>
2004
2005       <para>In any directory you should be able to make the following:</para>
2006
2007       <variablelist>
2008         <varlistentry>
2009           <term><literal>boot</literal></term>
2010           <listitem>
2011             <para>does the one-off preparation required to get ready
2012             for the real work.  Notably, it does <command>gmake
2013             depend</command> in all directories that contain programs.
2014             It also builds the necessary tools for compilation to
2015             proceed.</para>
2016
2017             <para>Invoking the <literal>boot</literal> target
2018             explicitly is not normally necessary.  From the top-level
2019             <literal>fptools</literal> directory, invoking
2020             <literal>gmake</literal> causes <literal>gmake boot
2021             all</literal> to be invoked in each of the project
2022             subdirectories, in the order specified by
2023             <literal>&dollar;(AllTargets)</literal> in
2024             <literal>config.mk</literal>.</para>
2025
2026             <para>If you're working in a subdirectory somewhere and
2027             need to update the dependencies, <literal>gmake
2028             boot</literal> is a good way to do it.</para>
2029           </listitem>
2030         </varlistentry>
2031
2032         <varlistentry>
2033           <term><literal>all</literal></term>
2034           <listitem>
2035             <para>makes all the final target(s) for this Makefile.
2036             Depending on which directory you are in a &ldquo;final
2037             target&rdquo; may be an executable program, a library
2038             archive, a shell script, or a Postscript file.  Typing
2039             <command>gmake</command> alone is generally the same as
2040             typing <command>gmake all</command>.</para>
2041           </listitem>
2042         </varlistentry>
2043
2044         <varlistentry>
2045           <term><literal>install</literal></term>
2046           <listitem>
2047             <para>installs the things built by <literal>all</literal>
2048             (except for the documentation).  Where does it install
2049             them?  That is specified by
2050             <filename>mk/config.mk.in</filename>; you can override it
2051             in <filename>mk/build.mk</filename>, or by running
2052             <command>configure</command> with command-line arguments
2053             like <literal>--bindir=/home/simonpj/bin</literal>; see
2054             <literal>./configure --help</literal> for the full
2055             details.</para>
2056           </listitem>
2057         </varlistentry>
2058
2059         <varlistentry>
2060           <term><literal>install-docs</literal></term>
2061           <listitem>
2062             <para>installs the documentation. Otherwise behaves just
2063             like <literal>install</literal>.</para>
2064           </listitem>
2065         </varlistentry>
2066
2067         <varlistentry>
2068           <term><literal>uninstall</literal></term>
2069           <listitem>
2070             <para>reverses the effect of
2071             <literal>install</literal>.</para>
2072           </listitem>
2073         </varlistentry>
2074
2075         <varlistentry>
2076           <term><literal>clean</literal></term>
2077           <listitem>
2078             <para>Delete all files from the current directory that are
2079             normally created by building the program.  Don't delete
2080             the files that record the configuration, or files
2081             generated by <command>gmake boot</command>.  Also preserve
2082             files that could be made by building, but normally aren't
2083             because the distribution comes with them.</para>
2084           </listitem>
2085         </varlistentry>
2086
2087         <varlistentry>
2088           <term><literal>distclean</literal></term>
2089           <listitem>
2090             <para>Delete all files from the current directory that are
2091             created by configuring or building the program. If you
2092             have unpacked the source and built the program without
2093             creating any other files, <literal>make
2094             distclean</literal> should leave only the files that were
2095             in the distribution.</para>
2096           </listitem>
2097         </varlistentry>
2098
2099         <varlistentry>
2100           <term><literal>mostlyclean</literal></term>
2101           <listitem>
2102             <para>Like <literal>clean</literal>, but may refrain from
2103             deleting a few files that people normally don't want to
2104             recompile.</para>
2105           </listitem>
2106         </varlistentry>
2107
2108         <varlistentry>
2109           <term><literal>maintainer-clean</literal></term>
2110           <listitem>
2111             <para>Delete everything from the current directory that
2112             can be reconstructed with this Makefile.  This typically
2113             includes everything deleted by
2114             <literal>distclean</literal>, plus more: C source files
2115             produced by Bison, tags tables, Info files, and so
2116             on.</para>
2117
2118             <para>One exception, however: <literal>make
2119             maintainer-clean</literal> should not delete
2120             <filename>configure</filename> even if
2121             <filename>configure</filename> can be remade using a rule
2122             in the <filename>Makefile</filename>. More generally,
2123             <literal>make maintainer-clean</literal> should not delete
2124             anything that needs to exist in order to run
2125             <filename>configure</filename> and then begin to build the
2126             program.</para>
2127           </listitem>
2128         </varlistentry>
2129
2130         <varlistentry>
2131           <term><literal>check</literal></term>
2132           <listitem>
2133             <para>run the test suite.</para>
2134           </listitem>
2135         </varlistentry>
2136       </variablelist>
2137
2138       <para>All of these standard targets automatically recurse into
2139       sub-directories.  Certain other standard targets do not:</para>
2140
2141       <variablelist>
2142         <varlistentry>
2143           <term><literal>configure</literal></term>
2144           <listitem>
2145             <para>is only available in the root directory
2146             <constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant>; it has
2147             been discussed in <XRef
2148             LinkEnd="sec-build-config">.</para>
2149           </listitem>
2150         </varlistentry>
2151
2152         <varlistentry>
2153           <term><literal>depend</literal></term>
2154           <listitem>
2155             <para>make a <filename>.depend</filename> file in each
2156             directory that needs it. This <filename>.depend</filename>
2157             file contains mechanically-generated dependency
2158             information; for example, suppose a directory contains a
2159             Haskell source module <filename>Foo.lhs</filename> which
2160             imports another module <literal>Baz</literal>.  Then the
2161             generated <filename>.depend</filename> file will contain
2162             the dependency:</para>
2163
2164 <ProgramListing>
2165 Foo.o : Baz.hi
2166 </ProgramListing>
2167
2168             <para>which says that the object file
2169             <filename>Foo.o</filename> depends on the interface file
2170             <filename>Baz.hi</filename> generated by compiling module
2171             <literal>Baz</literal>.  The <filename>.depend</filename>
2172             file is automatically included by every Makefile.</para>
2173           </listitem>
2174         </varlistentry>
2175
2176         <varlistentry>
2177           <term><literal>binary-dist</literal></term>
2178           <listitem>
2179             <para>make a binary distribution.  This is the target we
2180             use to build the binary distributions of GHC and
2181             Happy.</para>
2182           </listitem>
2183         </varlistentry>
2184
2185         <varlistentry>
2186           <term><literal>dist</literal></term>
2187           <listitem>
2188             <para>make a source distribution.  Note that this target
2189             does &ldquo;make distclean&rdquo; as part of its work;
2190             don't use it if you want to keep what you've built.</para>
2191           </listitem>
2192         </varlistentry>
2193       </variablelist>
2194
2195       <para>Most <filename>Makefile</filename>s have targets other
2196       than these.  You can discover them by looking in the
2197       <filename>Makefile</filename> itself.</para>
2198     </sect2>
2199
2200     <sect2>
2201       <title>Using a project from the build tree</title> 
2202
2203       <para>If you want to build GHC (say) and just use it direct from
2204       the build tree without doing <literal>make install</literal>
2205       first, you can run the in-place driver script:
2206       <filename>ghc/compiler/ghc-inplace</filename>.</para>
2207
2208       <para> Do <emphasis>NOT</emphasis> use
2209       <filename>ghc/compiler/ghc</filename>, or
2210       <filename>ghc/compiler/ghc-5.xx</filename>, as these are the
2211       scripts intended for installation, and contain hard-wired paths
2212       to the installed libraries, rather than the libraries in the
2213       build tree.</para>
2214
2215       <para>Happy can similarly be run from the build tree, using
2216       <filename>happy/src/happy-inplace</filename>.</para>
2217     </sect2>
2218
2219     <sect2>
2220       <title>Fast Making</title>
2221
2222       <indexterm><primary>fastmake</primary></indexterm>
2223       <indexterm><primary>dependencies, omitting</primary></indexterm>
2224       <indexterm><primary>FAST, makefile variable</primary></indexterm>
2225
2226       <para>Sometimes the dependencies get in the way: if you've made
2227       a small change to one file, and you're absolutely sure that it
2228       won't affect anything else, but you know that
2229       <command>make</command> is going to rebuild everything anyway,
2230       the following hack may be useful:</para>
2231
2232 <ProgramListing>
2233 gmake FAST=YES 
2234 </ProgramListing>
2235
2236       <para>This tells the make system to ignore dependencies and just
2237       build what you tell it to.  In other words, it's equivalent to
2238       temporarily removing the <filename>.depend</filename> file in
2239       the current directory (where <command>mkdependHS</command> and
2240       friends store their dependency information).</para>
2241
2242       <para>A bit of history: GHC used to come with a
2243       <command>fastmake</command> script that did the above job, but
2244       GNU make provides the features we need to do it without
2245       resorting to a script.  Also, we've found that fastmaking is
2246       less useful since the advent of GHC's recompilation checker (see
2247       the User's Guide section on "Separate Compilation").</para>
2248     </sect2>
2249   </sect1>
2250
2251   <sect1 id="sec-makefile-arch">
2252     <title>The <filename>Makefile</filename> architecture</title>
2253     <indexterm><primary>makefile architecture</primary></indexterm>
2254
2255     <para><command>make</command> is great if everything
2256     works&mdash;you type <command>gmake install</command> and lo! the
2257     right things get compiled and installed in the right places.  Our
2258     goal is to make this happen often, but somehow it often doesn't;
2259     instead some weird error message eventually emerges from the
2260     bowels of a directory you didn't know existed.</para>
2261
2262     <para>The purpose of this section is to give you a road-map to
2263     help you figure out what is going right and what is going
2264     wrong.</para>
2265
2266     <sect2>
2267       <title>Debugging</title>
2268       
2269       <para>Debugging <filename>Makefile</filename>s is something of a
2270       black art, but here's a couple of tricks that we find
2271       particularly useful.  The following command allows you to see
2272       the contents of any make variable in the context of the current
2273       <filename>Makefile</filename>:</para>
2274
2275 <screen>$  make show VALUE=HS_SRCS</screen>
2276
2277       <para>where you can replace <literal>HS_SRCS</literal> with the
2278       name of any variable you wish to see the value of.</para>
2279       
2280       <para>GNU make has a <option>-d</option> option which generates
2281       a dump of the decision procedure used to arrive at a conclusion
2282       about which files should be recompiled.  Sometimes useful for
2283       tracking down problems with superfluous or missing
2284       recompilations.</para>
2285     </sect2>
2286
2287     <sect2>
2288       <title>A small project</title>
2289
2290       <para>To get started, let us look at the
2291       <filename>Makefile</filename> for an imaginary small
2292       <literal>fptools</literal> project, <literal>small</literal>.
2293       Each project in <literal>fptools</literal> has its own directory
2294       in <constant>FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP</constant>, so the
2295       <literal>small</literal> project will have its own directory
2296       <constant>FPOOLS&lowbar;TOP/small/</constant>.  Inside the
2297       <filename>small/</filename> directory there will be a
2298       <filename>Makefile</filename>, looking something like
2299       this:</para>
2300
2301 <indexterm><primary>Makefile, minimal</primary></indexterm>
2302
2303 <ProgramListing>
2304 #     Makefile for fptools project "small"
2305
2306 TOP = ..
2307 include $(TOP)/mk/boilerplate.mk
2308
2309 SRCS = $(wildcard *.lhs) $(wildcard *.c)
2310 HS_PROG = small
2311
2312 include $(TOP)/target.mk
2313 </ProgramListing>
2314
2315       <para>this <filename>Makefile</filename> has three
2316       sections:</para>
2317
2318       <orderedlist>
2319         <listitem>
2320           <para>The first section includes
2321 <footnote>
2322 <para>
2323 One of the most important
2324 features of GNU <command>make</command> that we use is the ability for a <filename>Makefile</filename> to
2325 include another named file, very like <command>cpp</command>'s <literal>&num;include</literal>
2326 directive.
2327 </para>
2328 </footnote>
2329
2330           a file of &ldquo;boilerplate&rdquo; code from the level
2331           above (which in this case will be
2332           <filename><constant>FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP</constant>/mk/boilerplate.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>boilerplate.mk</primary></indexterm>).
2333           As its name suggests, <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename>
2334           consists of a large quantity of standard
2335           <filename>Makefile</filename> code.  We discuss this
2336           boilerplate in more detail in <XRef LinkEnd="sec-boiler">.
2337           <indexterm><primary>include, directive in
2338           Makefiles</primary></indexterm> <indexterm><primary>Makefile
2339           inclusion</primary></indexterm></para>
2340
2341           <para>Before the <literal>include</literal> statement, you
2342           must define the <command>make</command> variable
2343           <constant>TOP</constant><indexterm><primary>TOP</primary></indexterm>
2344           to be the directory containing the <filename>mk</filename>
2345           directory in which the <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename>
2346           file is.  It is <emphasis>not</emphasis> OK to simply say</para>
2347
2348 <ProgramListing>
2349 include ../mk/boilerplate.mk  # NO NO NO
2350 </ProgramListing>
2351
2352
2353           <para>Why?  Because the <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename>
2354           file needs to know where it is, so that it can, in turn,
2355           <literal>include</literal> other files.  (Unfortunately,
2356           when an <literal>include</literal>d file does an
2357           <literal>include</literal>, the filename is treated relative
2358           to the directory in which <command>gmake</command> is being
2359           run, not the directory in which the
2360           <literal>include</literal>d sits.)  In general,
2361           <emphasis>every file <filename>foo.mk</filename> assumes
2362           that
2363           <filename><constant>&dollar;(TOP)</constant>/mk/foo.mk</filename>
2364           refers to itself.</emphasis> It is up to the
2365           <filename>Makefile</filename> doing the
2366           <literal>include</literal> to ensure this is the case.</para>
2367
2368           <para>Files intended for inclusion in other
2369           <filename>Makefile</filename>s are written to have the
2370           following property: <emphasis>after
2371           <filename>foo.mk</filename> is <literal>include</literal>d,
2372           it leaves <constant>TOP</constant> containing the same value
2373           as it had just before the <literal>include</literal>
2374           statement</emphasis>.  In our example, this invariant
2375           guarantees that the <literal>include</literal> for
2376           <filename>target.mk</filename> will look in the same
2377           directory as that for <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename>.</para>
2378         </listitem>
2379
2380         <listitem>
2381           <para> The second section defines the following standard
2382           <command>make</command> variables:
2383           <constant>SRCS</constant><indexterm><primary>SRCS</primary></indexterm>
2384           (the source files from which is to be built), and
2385           <constant>HS&lowbar;PROG</constant><indexterm><primary>HS&lowbar;PROG</primary></indexterm>
2386           (the executable binary to be built).  We will discuss in
2387           more detail what the &ldquo;standard variables&rdquo; are,
2388           and how they affect what happens, in <XRef
2389           LinkEnd="sec-targets">.</para>
2390
2391           <para>The definition for <constant>SRCS</constant> uses the
2392           useful GNU <command>make</command> construct
2393           <literal>&dollar;(wildcard&nbsp;$pat$)</literal><indexterm><primary>wildcard</primary></indexterm>,
2394           which expands to a list of all the files matching the
2395           pattern <literal>pat</literal> in the current directory.  In
2396           this example, <constant>SRCS</constant> is set to the list
2397           of all the <filename>.lhs</filename> and
2398           <filename>.c</filename> files in the directory.  (Let's
2399           suppose there is one of each, <filename>Foo.lhs</filename>
2400           and <filename>Baz.c</filename>.)</para>
2401         </listitem>
2402
2403         <listitem>
2404           <para>The last section includes a second file of standard
2405           code, called
2406           <filename>target.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>target.mk</primary></indexterm>.
2407           It contains the rules that tell <command>gmake</command> how
2408           to make the standard targets (<Xref
2409           LinkEnd="sec-standard-targets">).  Why, you ask, can't this
2410           standard code be part of
2411           <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename>?  Good question.  We
2412           discuss the reason later, in <Xref
2413           LinkEnd="sec-boiler-arch">.</para>
2414
2415           <para>You do not <emphasis>have</emphasis> to
2416           <literal>include</literal> the
2417           <filename>target.mk</filename> file.  Instead, you can write
2418           rules of your own for all the standard targets.  Usually,
2419           though, you will find quite a big payoff from using the
2420           canned rules in <filename>target.mk</filename>; the price
2421           tag is that you have to understand what canned rules get
2422           enabled, and what they do (<Xref
2423           LinkEnd="sec-targets">).</para>
2424         </listitem>
2425       </orderedlist>
2426
2427       <para>In our example <filename>Makefile</filename>, most of the
2428       work is done by the two <literal>include</literal>d files.  When
2429       you say <command>gmake all</command>, the following things
2430       happen:</para>
2431
2432       <itemizedlist>
2433         <listitem>
2434           <para><command>gmake</command> figures out that the object
2435           files are <filename>Foo.o</filename> and
2436           <filename>Baz.o</filename>.</para>
2437         </listitem>
2438
2439         <listitem>
2440           <para>It uses a boilerplate pattern rule to compile
2441           <filename>Foo.lhs</filename> to <filename>Foo.o</filename>
2442           using a Haskell compiler.  (Which one?  That is set in the
2443           build configuration.)</para>
2444         </listitem>
2445
2446         <listitem>
2447           <para>It uses another standard pattern rule to compile
2448           <filename>Baz.c</filename> to <filename>Baz.o</filename>,
2449           using a C compiler.  (Ditto.)</para>
2450         </listitem>
2451
2452         <listitem>
2453           <para>It links the resulting <filename>.o</filename> files
2454           together to make <literal>small</literal>, using the Haskell
2455           compiler to do the link step.  (Why not use
2456           <command>ld</command>?  Because the Haskell compiler knows
2457           what standard libraries to link in.  How did
2458           <command>gmake</command> know to use the Haskell compiler to
2459           do the link, rather than the C compiler?  Because we set the
2460           variable <constant>HS&lowbar;PROG</constant> rather than
2461           <constant>C&lowbar;PROG</constant>.)</para>
2462         </listitem>
2463       </itemizedlist>
2464
2465       <para>All <filename>Makefile</filename>s should follow the above
2466       three-section format.</para>
2467     </sect2>
2468
2469     <sect2>
2470       <title>A larger project</title>
2471
2472       <para>Larger projects are usually structured into a number of
2473       sub-directories, each of which has its own
2474       <filename>Makefile</filename>.  (In very large projects, this
2475       sub-structure might be iterated recursively, though that is
2476       rare.)  To give you the idea, here's part of the directory
2477       structure for the (rather large) GHC project:</para>
2478
2479 <Screen>
2480 $(FPTOOLS_TOP)/ghc/
2481   Makefile
2482   mk/
2483     boilerplate.mk
2484     rules.mk
2485    docs/
2486     Makefile
2487     ...source files for documentation...
2488    driver/
2489     Makefile
2490     ...source files for driver...
2491    compiler/
2492     Makefile
2493     parser/...source files for parser...
2494     renamer/...source files for renamer...
2495     ...etc...
2496 </Screen>
2497
2498       <para>The sub-directories <filename>docs</filename>,
2499       <filename>driver</filename>, <filename>compiler</filename>, and
2500       so on, each contains a sub-component of GHC, and each has its
2501       own <filename>Makefile</filename>.  There must also be a
2502       <filename>Makefile</filename> in
2503       <filename><constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant>/ghc</filename>.
2504       It does most of its work by recursively invoking
2505       <command>gmake</command> on the <filename>Makefile</filename>s
2506       in the sub-directories.  We say that
2507       <filename>ghc/Makefile</filename> is a <emphasis>non-leaf
2508       <filename>Makefile</filename></emphasis>, because it does little
2509       except organise its children, while the
2510       <filename>Makefile</filename>s in the sub-directories are all
2511       <emphasis>leaf <filename>Makefile</filename>s</emphasis>.  (In
2512       principle the sub-directories might themselves contain a
2513       non-leaf <filename>Makefile</filename> and several
2514       sub-sub-directories, but that does not happen in GHC.)</para>
2515
2516       <para>The <filename>Makefile</filename> in
2517       <filename>ghc/compiler</filename> is considered a leaf
2518       <filename>Makefile</filename> even though the
2519       <filename>ghc/compiler</filename> has sub-directories, because
2520       these sub-directories do not themselves have
2521       <filename>Makefile</filename>s in them.  They are just used to
2522       structure the collection of modules that make up GHC, but all
2523       are managed by the single <filename>Makefile</filename> in
2524       <filename>ghc/compiler</filename>.</para>
2525
2526       <para>You will notice that <filename>ghc/</filename> also
2527       contains a directory <filename>ghc/mk/</filename>.  It contains
2528       GHC-specific <filename>Makefile</filename> boilerplate code.
2529       More precisely:</para>
2530
2531       <itemizedlist>
2532         <listitem>
2533           <para><filename>ghc/mk/boilerplate.mk</filename> is included
2534           at the top of <filename>ghc/Makefile</filename>, and of all
2535           the leaf <filename>Makefile</filename>s in the
2536           sub-directories.  It in turn <literal>include</literal>s the
2537           main boilerplate file
2538           <filename>mk/boilerplate.mk</filename>.</para>
2539         </listitem>
2540
2541         <listitem>
2542           <para><filename>ghc/mk/target.mk</filename> is
2543           <literal>include</literal>d at the bottom of
2544           <filename>ghc/Makefile</filename>, and of all the leaf
2545           <filename>Makefile</filename>s in the sub-directories.  It
2546           in turn <literal>include</literal>s the file
2547           <filename>mk/target.mk</filename>.</para>
2548         </listitem>
2549       </itemizedlist>
2550
2551       <para>So these two files are the place to look for GHC-wide
2552       customisation of the standard boilerplate.</para>
2553     </sect2>
2554
2555     <sect2 id="sec-boiler-arch">
2556       <title>Boilerplate architecture</title>
2557       <indexterm><primary>boilerplate architecture</primary></indexterm>
2558
2559       <para>Every <filename>Makefile</filename> includes a
2560       <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>boilerplate.mk</primary></indexterm>
2561       file at the top, and
2562       <filename>target.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>target.mk</primary></indexterm>
2563       file at the bottom.  In this section we discuss what is in these
2564       files, and why there have to be two of them.  In general:</para>
2565
2566       <itemizedlist>
2567         <listitem>
2568           <para><filename>boilerplate.mk</filename> consists of:</para>
2569
2570           <itemizedlist>
2571             <listitem>
2572               <para><emphasis>Definitions of millions of
2573               <command>make</command> variables</emphasis> that
2574               collectively specify the build configuration.  Examples:
2575               <constant>HC&lowbar;OPTS</constant><indexterm><primary>HC&lowbar;OPTS</primary></indexterm>,
2576               the options to feed to the Haskell compiler;
2577               <constant>NoFibSubDirs</constant><indexterm><primary>NoFibSubDirs</primary></indexterm>,
2578               the sub-directories to enable within the
2579               <literal>nofib</literal> project;
2580               <constant>GhcWithHc</constant><indexterm><primary>GhcWithHc</primary></indexterm>,
2581               the name of the Haskell compiler to use when compiling
2582               GHC in the <literal>ghc</literal> project.</para>
2583             </listitem>
2584
2585             <listitem>
2586               <para><emphasis>Standard pattern rules</emphasis> that
2587               tell <command>gmake</command> how to construct one file
2588               from another.</para>
2589             </listitem>
2590           </itemizedlist>
2591
2592           <para><filename>boilerplate.mk</filename> needs to be
2593           <literal>include</literal>d at the <emphasis>top</emphasis>
2594           of each <filename>Makefile</filename>, so that the user can
2595           replace the boilerplate definitions or pattern rules by
2596           simply giving a new definition or pattern rule in the
2597           <filename>Makefile</filename>.  <command>gmake</command>
2598           simply takes the last definition as the definitive one.</para>
2599
2600           <para>Instead of <emphasis>replacing</emphasis> boilerplate
2601           definitions, it is also quite common to
2602           <emphasis>augment</emphasis> them. For example, a
2603           <filename>Makefile</filename> might say:</para>
2604
2605 <ProgramListing>
2606 SRC_HC_OPTS += -O
2607 </ProgramListing>
2608
2609           <para>thereby adding &ldquo;<option>-O</option>&rdquo; to
2610           the end of
2611           <constant>SRC&lowbar;HC&lowbar;OPTS</constant><indexterm><primary>SRC&lowbar;HC&lowbar;OPTS</primary></indexterm>.</para>
2612         </listitem>
2613
2614         <listitem>
2615           <para><filename>target.mk</filename> contains
2616           <command>make</command> rules for the standard targets
2617           described in <Xref LinkEnd="sec-standard-targets">.  These
2618           rules are selectively included, depending on the setting of
2619           certain <command>make</command> variables.  These variables
2620           are usually set in the middle section of the
2621           <filename>Makefile</filename> between the two
2622           <literal>include</literal>s.</para>
2623
2624           <para><filename>target.mk</filename> must be included at the
2625           end (rather than being part of
2626           <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename>) for several tiresome
2627           reasons:</para>
2628
2629           <itemizedlist>
2630             <listitem>
2631
2632               <para><command>gmake</command> commits target and
2633               dependency lists earlier than it should.  For example,
2634               <FIlename>target.mk</FIlename> has a rule that looks
2635               like this:</para>
2636
2637 <ProgramListing>
2638 $(HS_PROG) : $(OBJS)
2639       $(HC) $(LD_OPTS) $&#60; -o $@
2640 </ProgramListing>
2641
2642               <para>If this rule was in
2643               <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename> then
2644               <constant>&dollar;(HS&lowbar;PROG)</constant><indexterm><primary>HS&lowbar;PROG</primary></indexterm>
2645               and
2646               <constant>&dollar;(OBJS)</constant><indexterm><primary>OBJS</primary></indexterm>
2647               would not have their final values at the moment
2648               <command>gmake</command> encountered the rule.  Alas,
2649               <command>gmake</command> takes a snapshot of their
2650               current values, and wires that snapshot into the rule.
2651               (In contrast, the commands executed when the rule
2652               &ldquo;fires&rdquo; are only substituted at the moment
2653               of firing.)  So, the rule must follow the definitions
2654               given in the <filename>Makefile</filename> itself.</para>
2655             </listitem>
2656
2657             <listitem>
2658               <para>Unlike pattern rules, ordinary rules cannot be
2659               overriden or replaced by subsequent rules for the same
2660               target (at least, not without an error message).
2661               Including ordinary rules in
2662               <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename> would prevent the
2663               user from writing rules for specific targets in specific
2664               cases.</para>
2665             </listitem>
2666
2667             <listitem>
2668               <para>There are a couple of other reasons I've
2669               forgotten, but it doesn't matter too much.</para>
2670             </listitem>
2671           </itemizedlist>
2672         </listitem>
2673       </itemizedlist>
2674     </sect2>
2675
2676     <sect2 id="sec-boiler">
2677       <title>The main <filename>mk/boilerplate.mk</filename> file</title>
2678       <indexterm><primary>boilerplate.mk</primary></indexterm>
2679
2680       <para>If you look at
2681       <filename><constant>&dollar;(FPTOOLS&lowbar;TOP)</constant>/mk/boilerplate.mk</filename>
2682       you will find that it consists of the following sections, each
2683       held in a separate file:</para>
2684
2685       <variablelist>
2686         <varlistentry>
2687           <term><filename>config.mk</filename></term>
2688           <indexterm><primary>config.mk</primary></indexterm>
2689           <listitem>
2690             <para>is the build configuration file we discussed at
2691             length in <Xref LinkEnd="sec-build-config">.</para>
2692           </listitem>
2693         </varlistentry>
2694
2695         <varlistentry>
2696           <term><filename>paths.mk</filename></term>
2697           <indexterm><primary>paths.mk</primary></indexterm>
2698           <listitem>
2699             <para>defines <command>make</command> variables for
2700             pathnames and file lists.  This file contains code for
2701             automatically compiling lists of source files and deriving
2702             lists of object files from those.  The results can be
2703             overriden in the <filename>Makefile</filename>, but in
2704             most cases the automatic setup should do the right
2705             thing.</para>
2706             
2707             <para>The following variables may be set in the
2708             <filename>Makefile</filename> to affect how the automatic
2709             source file search is done:</para>
2710
2711             <variablelist>
2712               <varlistentry>
2713                 <term><literal>ALL_DIRS</literal></term>
2714                 <indexterm><primary><literal>ALL_DIRS</literal></primary>
2715                 </indexterm>
2716                 <listitem>
2717                   <para>Set to a list of directories to search in
2718                   addition to the current directory for source
2719                   files.</para>
2720                 </listitem>
2721               </varlistentry>
2722
2723               <varlistentry>
2724                 <term><literal>EXCLUDE_SRCS</literal></term>
2725                 <indexterm><primary><literal>EXCLUDE_SRCS</literal></primary>
2726                 </indexterm>
2727                 <listitem>
2728                   <para>Set to a list of source files (relative to the
2729                   current directory) to omit from the automatic
2730                   search.  The source searching machinery is clever
2731                   enough to know that if you exclude a source file
2732                   from which other sources are derived, then the
2733                   derived sources should also be excluded.  For
2734                   example, if you set <literal>EXCLUDED_SRCS</literal>
2735                   to include <filename>Foo.y</filename>, then
2736                   <filename>Foo.hs</filename> will also be
2737                   excluded.</para>
2738                 </listitem>
2739               </varlistentry>
2740
2741               <varlistentry>
2742                 <term><literal>EXTRA_SRCS</literal></term>
2743                 <indexterm><primary><literal>EXCLUDE_SRCS</literal></primary>
2744                 </indexterm>
2745                   <listitem>
2746                   <para>Set to a list of extra source files (perhaps
2747                   in directories not listed in
2748                   <literal>ALL_DIRS</literal>) that should be
2749                   considered.</para>
2750                 </listitem>
2751               </varlistentry>
2752             </variablelist>
2753
2754             <para>The results of the automatic source file search are
2755             placed in the following make variables:</para>
2756
2757             <variablelist>
2758               <varlistentry>
2759                 <term><literal>SRCS</literal></term>
2760                 <indexterm><primary><literal>SRCS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2761                 <listitem>
2762                   <para>All source files found, sorted and without
2763                   duplicates, including those which might not exist
2764                   yet but will be derived from other existing sources.
2765                   <literal>SRCS</literal> <emphasis>can</emphasis> be
2766                   overriden if necessary, in which case the variables
2767                   below will follow suit.</para>
2768                 </listitem>
2769               </varlistentry>
2770
2771               <varlistentry>
2772                 <term><literal>HS_SRCS</literal></term>
2773                 <indexterm><primary><literal>HS_SRCS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2774                 <listitem>
2775                   <para>all Haskell source files in the current
2776                   directory, including those derived from other source
2777                   files (eg. Happy sources also give rise to Haskell
2778                   sources).</para>
2779                 </listitem>
2780               </varlistentry>
2781
2782               <varlistentry>
2783                 <term><literal>HS_OBJS</literal></term>
2784                 <indexterm><primary><literal>HS_OBJS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2785                 <listitem>
2786                   <para>Object files derived from
2787                   <literal>HS_SRCS</literal>.</para>
2788                 </listitem>
2789               </varlistentry>
2790
2791               <varlistentry>
2792                 <term><literal>HS_IFACES</literal></term>
2793                 <indexterm><primary><literal>HS_IFACES</literal></primary></indexterm>
2794                 <listitem>
2795                   <para>Interface files (<literal>.hi</literal> files)
2796                   derived from <literal>HS_SRCS</literal>.</para>
2797                 </listitem>
2798               </varlistentry>
2799
2800               <varlistentry>
2801                 <term><literal>C_SRCS</literal></term>
2802                 <indexterm><primary><literal>C_SRCS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2803                 <listitem>
2804                   <para>All C source files found.</para>
2805                 </listitem>
2806               </varlistentry>
2807
2808               <varlistentry>
2809                 <term><literal>C_OBJS</literal></term>
2810                 <indexterm><primary><literal>C_OBJS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2811                 <listitem>
2812                   <para>Object files derived from
2813                   <literal>C_SRCS</literal>.</para>
2814                 </listitem>
2815               </varlistentry>
2816
2817               <varlistentry>
2818                 <term><literal>SCRIPT_SRCS</literal></term>
2819                 <indexterm><primary><literal>SCRIPT_SRCS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2820                 <listitem>
2821                   <para>All script source files found
2822                   (<literal>.lprl</literal> files).</para>
2823                 </listitem>
2824               </varlistentry>
2825
2826               <varlistentry>
2827                 <term><literal>SCRIPT_OBJS</literal></term>
2828                 <indexterm><primary><literal>SCRIPT_OBJS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2829                 <listitem>
2830                   <para><quote>object</quote> files derived from
2831                   <literal>SCRIPT_SRCS</literal>
2832                   (<literal>.prl</literal> files).</para>
2833                 </listitem>
2834               </varlistentry>
2835
2836               <varlistentry>
2837                 <term><literal>HSC_SRCS</literal></term>
2838                 <indexterm><primary><literal>HSC_SRCS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2839                 <listitem>
2840                   <para>All <literal>hsc2hs</literal> source files
2841                   (<literal>.hsc</literal> files).</para>
2842                 </listitem>
2843               </varlistentry>
2844
2845               <varlistentry>
2846                 <term><literal>HAPPY_SRCS</literal></term>
2847                 <indexterm><primary><literal>HAPPY_SRCS</literal></primary></indexterm>
2848                 <listitem>
2849                   <para>All <literal>happy</literal> source files
2850                   (<literal>.y</literal> or <literal>.hy</literal> files).</para>
2851                 </listitem>
2852               </varlistentry>
2853
2854               <varlistentry>
2855                 <term><literal>OBJS</literal></term>
2856                 <indexterm><primary>OBJS</primary></indexterm>
2857                 <listitem>
2858                   <para>the concatenation of
2859                   <literal>&dollar;(HS_OBJS)</literal>,
2860                   <literal>&dollar;(C_OBJS)</literal>, and
2861                   <literal>&dollar;(SCRIPT_OBJS)</literal>.</para>
2862                 </listitem>
2863               </varlistentry>
2864             </variablelist>
2865
2866             <para>Any or all of these definitions can easily be
2867             overriden by giving new definitions in your
2868             <filename>Makefile</filename>.</para>
2869
2870             <para>What, exactly, does <filename>paths.mk</filename>
2871             consider a <quote>source file</quote> to be?  It's based
2872             on the file's suffix (e.g. <filename>.hs</filename>,
2873             <filename>.lhs</filename>, <filename>.c</filename>,
2874             <filename>.hy</filename>, etc), but this is the kind of
2875             detail that changes, so rather than enumerate the source
2876             suffices here the best thing to do is to look in
2877             <filename>paths.mk</filename>.</para>
2878           </listitem>
2879         </varlistentry>
2880
2881         <varlistentry>
2882           <term><filename>opts.mk</filename></term>
2883           <indexterm><primary>opts.mk</primary></indexterm>
2884           <listitem>
2885             <para>defines <command>make</command> variables for option
2886             strings to pass to each program. For example, it defines
2887             <constant>HC&lowbar;OPTS</constant><indexterm><primary>HC&lowbar;OPTS</primary></indexterm>,
2888             the option strings to pass to the Haskell compiler.  See
2889             <Xref LinkEnd="sec-suffix">.</para>
2890           </listitem>
2891         </varlistentry>
2892
2893         <varlistentry>
2894           <term><filename>suffix.mk</filename></term>
2895           <indexterm><primary>suffix.mk</primary></indexterm>
2896           <listitem>
2897             <para>defines standard pattern rules&mdash;see <Xref
2898             LinkEnd="sec-suffix">.</para>
2899           </listitem>
2900         </varlistentry>
2901       </variablelist>
2902
2903       <para>Any of the variables and pattern rules defined by the
2904       boilerplate file can easily be overridden in any particular
2905       <filename>Makefile</filename>, because the boilerplate
2906       <literal>include</literal> comes first.  Definitions after this
2907       <literal>include</literal> directive simply override the default
2908       ones in <filename>boilerplate.mk</filename>.</para>
2909     </sect2>
2910
2911     <sect2 id="sec-suffix">
2912       <title>Pattern rules and options</title>
2913       <indexterm><primary>Pattern rules</primary></indexterm>
2914
2915       <para>The file
2916       <filename>suffix.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>suffix.mk</primary></indexterm>
2917       defines standard <emphasis>pattern rules</emphasis> that say how
2918       to build one kind of file from another, for example, how to
2919       build a <filename>.o</filename> file from a
2920       <filename>.c</filename> file.  (GNU <command>make</command>'s
2921       <emphasis>pattern rules</emphasis> are more powerful and easier
2922       to use than Unix <command>make</command>'s <emphasis>suffix
2923       rules</emphasis>.)</para>
2924
2925       <para>Almost all the rules look something like this:</para>
2926
2927 <ProgramListing>
2928 %.o : %.c
2929       $(RM) $@
2930       $(CC) $(CC_OPTS) -c $&#60; -o $@
2931 </ProgramListing>
2932
2933       <para>Here's how to understand the rule.  It says that
2934       <emphasis>something</emphasis><filename>.o</filename> (say
2935       <filename>Foo.o</filename>) can be built from
2936       <emphasis>something</emphasis><filename>.c</filename>
2937       (<filename>Foo.c</filename>), by invoking the C compiler (path
2938       name held in <constant>&dollar;(CC)</constant>), passing to it
2939       the options <constant>&dollar;(CC&lowbar;OPTS)</constant> and
2940       the rule's dependent file of the rule
2941       <literal>&dollar;&lt;</literal> (<filename>Foo.c</filename> in
2942       this case), and putting the result in the rule's target
2943       <literal>&dollar;@</literal> (<filename>Foo.o</filename> in this
2944       case).</para>
2945
2946       <para>Every program is held in a <command>make</command>
2947       variable defined in <filename>mk/config.mk</filename>&mdash;look
2948       in <filename>mk/config.mk</filename> for the complete list.  One
2949       important one is the Haskell compiler, which is called
2950       <constant>&dollar;(HC)</constant>.</para>
2951
2952       <para>Every program's options are are held in a
2953       <command>make</command> variables called
2954       <constant>&lt;prog&gt;&lowbar;OPTS</constant>.  the
2955       <constant>&lt;prog&gt;&lowbar;OPTS</constant> variables are
2956       defined in <filename>mk/opts.mk</filename>.  Almost all of them
2957       are defined like this:</para>
2958
2959 <ProgramListing>
2960 CC_OPTS = $(SRC_CC_OPTS) $(WAY$(_way)_CC_OPTS) $($*_CC_OPTS) $(EXTRA_CC_OPTS)
2961 </ProgramListing>
2962
2963       <para>The four variables from which
2964        <constant>CC&lowbar;OPTS</constant> is built have the following
2965       meaning:</para>
2966
2967       <variablelist>
2968         <varlistentry>
2969           <term><constant>SRC&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</constant><indexterm><primary>SRC&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</primary></indexterm>:</term>
2970           <listitem>
2971             <para>options passed to all C compilations.</para>
2972           </listitem>
2973         </varlistentry>
2974
2975         <varlistentry>
2976           <term><constant>WAY&lowbar;&lt;way&gt;&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</constant>:</term>
2977           <listitem>
2978             <para>options passed to C compilations for way
2979             <literal>&lt;way&gt;</literal>. For example,
2980             <constant>WAY&lowbar;mp&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</constant>
2981             gives options to pass to the C compiler when compiling way
2982             <literal>mp</literal>.  The variable
2983             <constant>WAY&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</constant> holds
2984             options to pass to the C compiler when compiling the
2985             standard way.  (<Xref LinkEnd="sec-ways"> dicusses
2986             multi-way compilation.)</para>
2987           </listitem>
2988         </varlistentry>
2989
2990         <varlistentry>
2991           <term><constant>&lt;module&gt;&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</constant>:</term>
2992           <listitem>
2993             <para>options to pass to the C compiler that are specific
2994             to module <literal>&lt;module&gt;</literal>.  For example,
2995             <constant>SMap&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</constant> gives the
2996             specific options to pass to the C compiler when compiling
2997             <filename>SMap.c</filename>.</para>
2998           </listitem>
2999         </varlistentry>
3000
3001         <varlistentry>
3002           <term><constant>EXTRA&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</constant><indexterm><primary>EXTRA&lowbar;CC&lowbar;OPTS</primary></indexterm>:</term>
3003           <listitem>
3004             <para>extra options to pass to all C compilations.  This
3005             is intended for command line use, thus:</para>
3006
3007 <ProgramListing>
3008 gmake libHS.a EXTRA_CC_OPTS="-v"
3009 </ProgramListing>
3010           </listitem>
3011         </varlistentry>
3012       </variablelist>
3013     </sect2>
3014
3015     <sect2 id="sec-targets">
3016       <title>The main <filename>mk/target.mk</filename> file</title>
3017       <indexterm><primary>target.mk</primary></indexterm>
3018
3019       <para><filename>target.mk</filename> contains canned rules for
3020       all the standard targets described in <Xref
3021       LinkEnd="sec-standard-targets">.  It is complicated by the fact
3022       that you don't want all of these rules to be active in every
3023       <filename>Makefile</filename>.  Rather than have a plethora of
3024       tiny files which you can include selectively, there is a single
3025       file, <filename>target.mk</filename>, which selectively includes
3026       rules based on whether you have defined certain variables in
3027       your <filename>Makefile</filename>.  This section explains what
3028       rules you get, what variables control them, and what the rules
3029       do.  Hopefully, you will also get enough of an idea of what is
3030       supposed to happen that you can read and understand any weird
3031       special cases yourself.</para>
3032
3033       <variablelist>
3034         <varlistentry>
3035           <term><constant>HS&lowbar;PROG</constant><indexterm><primary>HS&lowbar;PROG</primary></indexterm>.</term>
3036           <listitem>
3037             <para>If <constant>HS&lowbar;PROG</constant> is defined,
3038             you get rules with the following targets:</para>
3039
3040             <variablelist>
3041               <varlistentry>
3042                 <term><filename>HS&lowbar;PROG</filename><indexterm><primary>HS&lowbar;PROG</primary></indexterm></term>
3043                 <listitem>
3044                   <para>itself.  This rule links
3045                   <constant>&dollar;(OBJS)</constant> with the Haskell
3046                   runtime system to get an executable called
3047                   <constant>&dollar;(HS&lowbar;PROG)</constant>.</para>
3048                 </listitem>
3049               </varlistentry>
3050
3051               <varlistentry>
3052                 <term><literal>install</literal><indexterm><primary>install</primary></indexterm></term>
3053                 <listitem>
3054                   <para>installs
3055                   <constant>&dollar;(HS&lowbar;PROG)</constant> in
3056                   <constant>&dollar;(bindir)</constant>.</para>
3057                 </listitem>
3058               </varlistentry>
3059             </variablelist>
3060
3061           </listitem>
3062         </varlistentry>
3063
3064         <varlistentry>
3065           <term><constant>C&lowbar;PROG</constant><indexterm><primary>C&lowbar;PROG</primary></indexterm></term>
3066           <listitem>
3067             <para>is similar to <constant>HS&lowbar;PROG</constant>,
3068             except that the link step links
3069             <constant>&dollar;(C&lowbar;OBJS)</constant> with the C
3070             runtime system.</para>
3071           </listitem>
3072         </varlistentry>
3073
3074         <varlistentry>
3075           <term><constant>LIBRARY</constant><indexterm><primary>LIBRARY</primary></indexterm></term>
3076           <listitem>
3077             <para>is similar to <constant>HS&lowbar;PROG</constant>,
3078             except that it links
3079             <constant>&dollar;(LIB&lowbar;OBJS)</constant> to make the
3080             library archive <constant>&dollar;(LIBRARY)</constant>,
3081             and <literal>install</literal> installs it in
3082             <constant>&dollar;(libdir)</constant>.</para>
3083           </listitem>
3084         </varlistentry>
3085
3086         <varlistentry>
3087           <term><constant>LIB&lowbar;DATA</constant><indexterm><primary>LIB&lowbar;DATA</primary></indexterm></term>
3088           <listitem>
3089             <para>&hellip;</para>
3090           </listitem>
3091         </varlistentry>
3092
3093         <varlistentry>
3094           <term><constant>LIB&lowbar;EXEC</constant><indexterm><primary>LIB&lowbar;EXEC</primary></indexterm></term>
3095           <listitem>
3096             <para>&hellip;</para>
3097           </listitem>
3098         </varlistentry>
3099
3100         <varlistentry>
3101           <term><constant>HS&lowbar;SRCS</constant><indexterm><primary>HS&lowbar;SRCS</primary></indexterm>, <constant>C&lowbar;SRCS</constant><indexterm><primary>C&lowbar;SRCS</primary></indexterm>.</term>
3102           <listitem>
3103             <para>If <constant>HS&lowbar;SRCS</constant> is defined
3104             and non-empty, a rule for the target
3105             <literal>depend</literal> is included, which generates
3106             dependency information for Haskell programs.  Similarly
3107             for <constant>C&lowbar;SRCS</constant>.</para>
3108           </listitem>
3109         </varlistentry>
3110       </variablelist>
3111
3112       <para>All of these rules are &ldquo;double-colon&rdquo; rules,
3113       thus</para>
3114
3115 <ProgramListing>
3116 install :: $(HS_PROG)
3117       ...how to install it...
3118 </ProgramListing>
3119
3120       <para>GNU <command>make</command> treats double-colon rules as
3121       separate entities.  If there are several double-colon rules for
3122       the same target it takes each in turn and fires it if its
3123       dependencies say to do so.  This means that you can, for
3124       example, define both <constant>HS&lowbar;PROG</constant> and
3125       <constant>LIBRARY</constant>, which will generate two rules for
3126       <literal>install</literal>.  When you type <command>gmake
3127       install</command> both rules will be fired, and both the program
3128       and the library will be installed, just as you wanted.</para>
3129     </sect2>
3130
3131     <sect2 id="sec-subdirs">
3132       <title>Recursion</title>
3133       <indexterm><primary>recursion, in makefiles</primary></indexterm>
3134       <indexterm><primary>Makefile, recursing into subdirectories</primary></indexterm>
3135
3136       <para>In leaf <filename>Makefile</filename>s the variable
3137       <constant>SUBDIRS</constant><indexterm><primary>SUBDIRS</primary></indexterm>
3138       is undefined.  In non-leaf <filename>Makefile</filename>s,
3139       <constant>SUBDIRS</constant> is set to the list of
3140       sub-directories that contain subordinate
3141       <filename>Makefile</filename>s.  <emphasis>It is up to you to
3142       set <constant>SUBDIRS</constant> in the
3143       <filename>Makefile</filename>.</emphasis> There is no automation
3144       here&mdash;<constant>SUBDIRS</constant> is too important to
3145       automate.</para>
3146
3147       <para>When <constant>SUBDIRS</constant> is defined,
3148       <filename>target.mk</filename> includes a rather neat rule for
3149       the standard targets (<Xref LinkEnd="sec-standard-targets"> that
3150       simply invokes <command>make</command> recursively in each of
3151       the sub-directories.</para>
3152
3153       <para><emphasis>These recursive invocations are guaranteed to
3154       occur in the order in which the list of directories is specified
3155       in <constant>SUBDIRS</constant>. </emphasis>This guarantee can
3156       be important.  For example, when you say <command>gmake
3157       boot</command> it can be important that the recursive invocation
3158       of <command>make boot</command> is done in one sub-directory
3159       (the include files, say) before another (the source files).
3160       Generally, put the most independent sub-directory first, and the
3161       most dependent last.</para>
3162     </sect2>
3163
3164     <sect2 id="sec-ways">
3165       <title>Way management</title>
3166       <indexterm><primary>way management</primary></indexterm>
3167
3168       <para>We sometimes want to build essentially the same system in
3169       several different &ldquo;ways&rdquo;.  For example, we want to build GHC's
3170       <literal>Prelude</literal> libraries with and without profiling,
3171       so that there is an appropriately-built library archive to link
3172       with when the user compiles his program.  It would be possible
3173       to have a completely separate build tree for each such &ldquo;way&rdquo;,
3174       but it would be horribly bureaucratic, especially since often
3175       only parts of the build tree need to be constructed in multiple
3176       ways.</para>
3177
3178       <para>Instead, the
3179       <filename>target.mk</filename><indexterm><primary>target.mk</primary></indexterm>
3180       contains some clever magic to allow you to build several
3181       versions of a system; and to control locally how many versions
3182       are built and how they differ.  This section explains the
3183       magic.</para>
3184
3185       <para>The files for a particular way are distinguished by
3186       munging the suffix.  The <quote>normal way</quote> is always
3187       built, and its files have the standard suffices
3188       <filename>.o</filename>, <filename>.hi</filename>, and so on.
3189       In addition, you can build one or more extra ways, each
3190       distinguished by a <emphasis>way tag</emphasis>.  The object
3191       files and interface files for one of these extra ways are
3192       distinguished by their suffix.  For example, way
3193       <literal>mp</literal> has files
3194       <filename>.mp&lowbar;o</filename> and
3195       <filename>.mp&lowbar;hi</filename>.  Library archives have their
3196       way tag the other side of the dot, for boring reasons; thus,
3197       <filename>libHS&lowbar;mp.a</filename>.</para>
3198
3199       <para>A <command>make</command> variable called
3200       <constant>way</constant> holds the current way tag.
3201       <emphasis><constant>way</constant> is only ever set on the
3202       command line of <command>gmake</command></emphasis> (usually in
3203       a recursive invocation of <command>gmake</command> by the
3204       system).  It is never set inside a
3205       <filename>Makefile</filename>.  So it is a global constant for
3206       any one invocation of <command>gmake</command>.  Two other
3207       <command>make</command> variables,
3208       <constant>way&lowbar;</constant> and
3209       <constant>&lowbar;way</constant> are immediately derived from
3210       <constant>&dollar;(way)</constant> and never altered.  If
3211       <constant>way</constant> is not set, then neither are
3212       <constant>way&lowbar;</constant> and
3213       <constant>&lowbar;way</constant>, and the invocation of
3214       <command>make</command> will build the <quote>normal
3215       way</quote>.  If <constant>way</constant> is set, then the other
3216       two variables are set in sympathy.  For example, if
3217       <constant>&dollar;(way)</constant> is &ldquo;<literal>mp</literal>&rdquo;,
3218       then <constant>way&lowbar;</constant> is set to
3219       &ldquo;<literal>mp&lowbar;</literal>&rdquo; and
3220       <constant>&lowbar;way</constant> is set to
3221       &ldquo;<literal>&lowbar;mp</literal>&rdquo;.  These three variables are
3222       then used when constructing file names.</para>
3223
3224       <para>So how does <command>make</command> ever get recursively
3225       invoked with <constant>way</constant> set?  There are two ways
3226       in which this happens:</para>
3227
3228       <itemizedlist>
3229         <listitem>
3230           <para>For some (but not all) of the standard targets, when
3231           in a leaf sub-directory, <command>make</command> is
3232           recursively invoked for each way tag in
3233           <constant>&dollar;(WAYS)</constant>.  You set
3234           <constant>WAYS</constant> in the
3235           <filename>Makefile</filename> to the list of way tags you
3236           want these targets built for.  The mechanism here is very
3237           much like the recursive invocation of
3238           <command>make</command> in sub-directories (<Xref
3239           LinkEnd="sec-subdirs">).  It is up to you to set
3240           <constant>WAYS</constant> in your
3241           <filename>Makefile</filename>; this is how you control what
3242           ways will get built.</para>
3243         </listitem>
3244
3245         <listitem>
3246           <para>For a useful collection of targets (such as
3247           <filename>libHS&lowbar;mp.a</filename>,
3248           <filename>Foo.mp&lowbar;o</filename>) there is a rule which
3249           recursively invokes <command>make</command> to make the
3250           specified target, setting the <constant>way</constant>
3251           variable.  So if you say <command>gmake
3252           Foo.mp&lowbar;o</command> you should see a recursive
3253           invocation <command>gmake Foo.mp&lowbar;o way=mp</command>,
3254           and <emphasis>in this recursive invocation the pattern rule
3255           for compiling a Haskell file into a <filename>.o</filename>
3256           file will match</emphasis>.  The key pattern rules (in
3257           <filename>suffix.mk</filename>) look like this:
3258
3259 <ProgramListing>
3260 %.$(way_)o : %.lhs
3261       $(HC) $(HC_OPTS) $&#60; -o $@
3262 </ProgramListing>
3263
3264           Neat, eh?</para>
3265         </listitem>
3266
3267         <listitem>
3268           <para>You can invoke <command>make</command> with a
3269           particular <literal>way</literal> setting yourself, in order
3270           to build files related to a particular
3271           <literal>way</literal> in the current directory.  eg.
3272
3273 <screen>
3274 $ make way=p
3275 </screen>
3276
3277           will build files for the profiling way only in the current
3278           directory. </para>
3279         </listitem>
3280       </itemizedlist>
3281     </sect2>
3282
3283     <sect2>
3284       <title>When the canned rule isn't right</title>
3285
3286       <para>Sometimes the canned rule just doesn't do the right thing.
3287       For example, in the <literal>nofib</literal> suite we want the
3288       link step to print out timing information.  The thing to do here
3289       is <emphasis>not</emphasis> to define
3290       <constant>HS&lowbar;PROG</constant> or
3291       <constant>C&lowbar;PROG</constant>, and instead define a special
3292       purpose rule in your own <filename>Makefile</filename>.  By
3293       using different variable names you will avoid the canned rules
3294       being included, and conflicting with yours.</para>
3295     </sect2>
3296   </sect1>
3297
3298   <sect1 id="building-docs">
3299     <title>Building the documentation</title>
3300
3301     <sect2 id="pre-supposed-doc-tools">
3302       <title>Tools for building the Documentation</title>
3303
3304       <para>The following additional tools are required if you want to
3305       format the documentation that comes with the
3306       <literal>fptools</literal> projects:</para>
3307       
3308       <variablelist>
3309         <varlistentry>
3310           <term>DocBook</term>
3311           <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: DocBook</primary></indexterm>
3312           <indexterm><primary>DocBook, pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
3313           <listitem>
3314             <para>Much of our documentation is written in SGML, using
3315             the DocBook DTD.  Instructions on installing and
3316             configuring the DocBook tools are below.</para>
3317           </listitem>
3318         </varlistentry>
3319
3320         <varlistentry>
3321           <term>TeX</term>
3322           <indexterm><primary>pre-supposed: TeX</primary></indexterm>
3323           <indexterm><primary>TeX, pre-supposed</primary></indexterm>
3324           <listitem>
3325             <para>A decent TeX distribution is required if you want to
3326             produce printable documentation.  We recomment teTeX,
3327             which includes just about everything you need.</para>
3328           </listitem>
3329         </varlistentry>
3330
3331         <varlistentry>
3332           <term>Haddock</term>
3333           <indexterm><primary>Haddock</primary>
3334           </indexterm>
3335           <listitem>
3336             <para>Haddock is a Haskell documentation tool that we use
3337             for automatically generating documentation from the
3338             library source code.  It is an <literal>fptools</literal>
3339             project in itself.  To build documentation for the
3340             libraries (<literal>fptools/libraries</literal>) you
3341             should check out and build Haddock in
3342             <literal>fptools/haddock</literal>.  Haddock requires GHC
3343             to build.</para>
3344           </listitem>
3345         </varlistentry>
3346       </variablelist>
3347     </sect2>
3348
3349     <sect2>
3350       <title>Installing the DocBook tools</title>
3351
3352       <sect3>
3353         <title>Installing the DocBook tools on Linux</title>
3354
3355         <para>If you're on a recent RedHat system (7.0+), you probably
3356         have working DocBook tools already installed.  The configure
3357         script should detect your setup and you're away.</para>
3358
3359         <para>If you don't have DocBook tools installed, and you are
3360         using a system that can handle RedHat RPM packages, you can
3361         probably use the <ULink
3362         URL="http://sourceware.cygnus.com/docbook-tools/">Cygnus
3363         DocBook tools</ULink>, which is the most shrink-wrapped SGML
3364         suite that we could find. You need all the RPMs except for
3365         psgml (i.e.  <Filename>docbook</Filename>,
3366         <Filename>jade</Filename>, <Filename>jadetex</Filename>,
3367         <Filename>sgmlcommon</Filename> and
3368         <Filename>stylesheets</Filename>). Note that most of these
3369         RPMs are architecture neutral, so are likely to be found in a
3370         <Filename>noarch</Filename> directory. The SuSE RPMs also
3371         work; the RedHat ones <Emphasis>don't</Emphasis> in RedHat 6.2
3372         (7.0 and later should be OK), but they are easy to fix: just
3373         make a symlink from
3374         <Filename>/usr/lib/sgml/stylesheets/nwalsh-modular/lib/dblib.dsl</Filename>
3375         to <Filename>/usr/lib/sgml/lib/dblib.dsl</Filename>. </para>
3376       </sect3>
3377     
3378       <sect3>
3379         <title>Installing DocBook on FreeBSD</title>
3380
3381         <para>On FreeBSD systems, the easiest way to get DocBook up
3382         and running is to install it from the ports tree or a
3383         pre-compiled package (packages are available from your local
3384         FreeBSD mirror site).</para>
3385
3386         <para>To use the ports tree, do this:
3387 <screen>
3388       $ cd /usr/ports/textproc/docproj
3389       $ make install
3390 </screen>
3391         This installs the FreeBSD documentation project tools, which
3392         includes everything needed to format the GHC
3393         documentation.</para>
3394       </sect3>
3395
3396       <sect3>
3397         <title>Installing from binaries on Windows</title>
3398         
3399         <Para>It's a good idea to use Norman Walsh's <ULink
3400         URL="http://nwalsh.com/docbook/dsssl/doc/install.html">installation
3401         notes</ULink> as a guide. You should get version 3.1 of
3402         DocBook, and note that his file <Filename>test.sgm</Filename>
3403         won't work, as it needs version 3.0. You should unpack Jade
3404         into <Filename>\Jade</Filename>, along with the entities,
3405         DocBook into <Filename>\docbook</Filename>, and the DocBook
3406         stylesheets into <Filename>\docbook\stylesheets</Filename> (so
3407         they actually end up in
3408         <Filename>\docbook\stylesheets\docbook</Filename>).</para>
3409       </Sect3>
3410
3411
3412       <sect3>
3413         <title>Installing the DocBook tools from source</title>
3414
3415         <sect4>
3416           <title>Jade</title>
3417
3418           <para>Install <ULink
3419           URL="http://openjade.sourceforge.net/">OpenJade</ULink>
3420           (Windows binaries are available as well as sources). If you
3421           want DVI, PS, or PDF then install JadeTeX from the
3422           <Filename>dsssl</Filename> subdirectory. (If you get the
3423           error:
3424
3425 <screen>
3426 ! LaTeX Error: Unknown option implicit=false' for package hyperref'.
3427 </screen>
3428
3429           your version of <Command>hyperref</Command> is out of date;
3430           download it from CTAN
3431           (<Filename>macros/latex/contrib/supported/hyperref</Filename>),
3432           and make it, ensuring that you have first removed or renamed
3433           your old copy. If you start getting file not found errors
3434           when making the test for <Command>hyperref</Command>, you
3435           can abort at that point and proceed straight to
3436           <Command>make install</Command>, or enter them as
3437           <Filename>../</Filename><Emphasis>filename</Emphasis>.)</para>
3438
3439           <para>Make links from <Filename>virtex</Filename> to
3440           <Filename>jadetex</Filename> and
3441           <Filename>pdfvirtex</Filename> to
3442           <Filename>pdfjadetex</Filename> (otherwise DVI, PostScript
3443           and PDF output will not work). Copy
3444           <Filename>dsssl/*.{dtd,dsl}</Filename> and
3445           <Filename>catalog</Filename> to
3446           <Filename>/usr/[local/]lib/sgml</Filename>.</para>
3447         </sect4>
3448
3449         <sect4>
3450           <title>DocBook and the DocBook stylesheets</title>
3451
3452           <para>Get a Zip of <ULink
3453           URL="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/sgml/3.1/index.html">DocBook</ULink>
3454           and install the contents in
3455           <Filename>/usr/[local/]/lib/sgml</Filename>.</para>
3456
3457           <para>Get the <ULink
3458           URL="http://nwalsh.com/docbook/dsssl/">DocBook
3459           stylesheets</ULink> and install in
3460           <Filename>/usr/[local/]lib/sgml/stylesheets</Filename>
3461           (thereby creating a subdirectory docbook). For indexing,
3462           copy or link <Filename>collateindex.pl</Filename> from the
3463           DocBook stylesheets archive in <Filename>bin</Filename> into
3464           a directory on your <Constant>PATH</Constant>.</para>
3465
3466           <para>Download the <ULink
3467           URL="http://www.oasis-open.org/cover/ISOEnts.zip">ISO
3468           entities</ULink> into
3469           <Filename>/usr/[local/]lib/sgml</Filename>.</para>
3470         </sect4>
3471       </sect3>
3472     </sect2>
3473
3474     <sect2>
3475       <title>Configuring the DocBook tools</title>
3476
3477       <Para>Once the DocBook tools are installed, the configure script
3478       will detect them and set up the build system accordingly. If you
3479       have a system that isn't supported, let us know, and we'll try
3480       to help.</para>
3481     </sect2>
3482
3483     <sect2>
3484       <title>Remaining problems</title>
3485
3486       <para>If you install from source, you'll get a pile of warnings
3487       of the form
3488
3489 <Screen>DTDDECL catalog entries are not supported</Screen>
3490
3491       every time you build anything. These can safely be ignored, but
3492       if you find them tedious you can get rid of them by removing all
3493       the <Constant>DTDDECL</Constant> entries from
3494       <Filename>docbook.cat</Filename>.</para>
3495     </sect2>
3496
3497     <sect2>
3498       <title>Building the documentation</title>
3499
3500       <para>To build documentation in a certain format, you can
3501       say, for example,</para>
3502
3503 <screen>
3504 $ make html
3505 </screen>
3506
3507       <para>to build HTML documentation below the current directory.
3508       The available formats are: <literal>dvi</literal>,
3509       <literal>ps</literal>, <literal>pdf</literal>,
3510       <literal>html</literal>, and <literal>rtf</literal>.  Note that
3511       not all documentation can be built in all of these formats: HTML
3512       documentation is generally supported everywhere, and DocBook
3513       documentation might support the other formats (depending on what
3514       other tools you have installed).</para>
3515
3516       <para>All of these targets are recursive; that is, saying
3517       <literal>make html</literal> will make HTML docs for all the
3518       documents recursively below the current directory.</para>
3519
3520       <para>Because there are many different formats that the DocBook
3521       documentation can be generated in, you have to select which ones
3522       you want by setting the <literal>SGMLDocWays</literal> variable
3523       to a list of them.  For example, in
3524       <filename>build.mk</filename> you might have a line:</para>
3525
3526 <screen>
3527 SGMLDocWays = html ps
3528 </screen>
3529
3530       <para>This will cause the documentation to be built in the requested
3531       formats as part of the main build (the default is not to build
3532       any documentation at all).</para>
3533     </sect2>
3534
3535     <sect2>
3536       <title>Installing the documentation</title>
3537
3538       <para>To install the documentation, use:</para>
3539
3540 <screen>
3541 $ make install-docs
3542 </screen>
3543
3544       <para>This will install the documentation into
3545       <literal>$(datadir)</literal> (which defaults to
3546       <literal>$(prefix)/share</literal>).  The exception is HTML
3547       documentation, which goes into
3548       <literal>$(datadir)/html</literal>, to keep things tidy.</para>
3549
3550       <para>Note that unless you set <literal>$(SGMLDocWays)</literal>
3551       to a list of formats, the <literal>install-docs</literal> target
3552       won't do anything for SGML documentation.</para>
3553     </sect2>
3554
3555   </sect1>
3556     
3557
3558   <sect1 id="sec-porting-ghc">
3559     <title>Porting GHC</title>
3560
3561     <para>This section describes how to port GHC to a currenly
3562     unsupported platform.  There are two distinct
3563     possibilities:</para>
3564
3565     <itemizedlist>
3566       <listitem>
3567         <para>The hardware architecture for your system is already
3568         supported by GHC, but you're running an OS that isn't
3569         supported (or perhaps has been supported in the past, but
3570         currently isn't).  This is the easiest type of porting job,
3571         but it still requires some careful bootstrapping.  Proceed to
3572         <xref linkend="sec-booting-from-hc">.</para>
3573       </listitem>
3574       
3575       <listitem>
3576         <para>Your system's hardware architecture isn't supported by
3577         GHC.  This will be a more difficult port (though by comparison
3578         perhaps not as difficult as porting gcc).  Proceed to <xref
3579         linkend="unregisterised-porting">.</para>
3580       </listitem>
3581     </itemizedlist>
3582     
3583     <sect2 id="sec-booting-from-hc">
3584       <title>Booting/porting from C (<filename>.hc</filename>) files</title>
3585
3586       <indexterm><primary>building GHC from .hc files</primary></indexterm>
3587       <indexterm><primary>booting GHC from .hc files</primary></indexterm>
3588       <indexterm><primary>porting GHC</primary></indexterm>
3589
3590       <para>Bootstrapping GHC on a system without GHC already
3591       installed is achieved by taking the intermediate C files (known
3592       as HC files) from a GHC compilation on a supported system to the
3593       target machine, and compiling them using gcc to get a working
3594       GHC.</para>
3595
3596       <para><emphasis>NOTE: GHC version 5.xx is significantly harder
3597       to bootstrap from C than previous versions.  We recommend
3598       starting from version 4.08.2 if you need to bootstrap in this
3599       way.</emphasis></para>
3600
3601       <para>HC files are architecture-dependent (but not
3602       OS-dependent), so you have to get a set that were generated on
3603       similar hardware.  There may be some supplied on the GHC
3604       download page, otherwise you'll have to compile some up
3605       yourself, or start from <emphasis>unregisterised</emphasis> HC
3606       files - see <xref linkend="unregisterised-porting">.</para>
3607
3608       <para>The following steps should result in a working GHC build
3609       with full libraries:</para>
3610
3611       <itemizedlist>
3612         <listitem>
3613           <para>Unpack the HC files on top of a fresh source tree
3614           (make sure the source tree version matches the version of
3615           the HC files <emphasis>exactly</emphasis>!).  This will
3616           place matching <filename>.hc</filename> files next to the
3617           corresponding Haskell source (<filename>.hs</filename> or
3618           <filename>.lhs</filename>) in the compiler subdirectory
3619           <filename>ghc/compiler</filename> and in the libraries
3620           (subdirectories of <filename>hslibs</filename> and
3621           <literal>libraries</literal>).</para>
3622         </listitem>
3623
3624         <listitem>
3625           <para>The actual build process is fully automated by the
3626           <filename>hc-build</filename> script located in the
3627           <filename>distrib</filename> directory.  If you eventually
3628           want to install GHC into the directory
3629           <replaceable>dir</replaceable>, the following
3630           command will execute the whole build process (it won't
3631           install yet):</para>
3632
3633 <Screen>
3634 foo% distrib/hc-build --prefix=<replaceable>dir</replaceable>
3635 </Screen>
3636 <indexterm><primary>--hc-build</primary></indexterm>
3637
3638           <para>By default, the installation directory is
3639           <filename>/usr/local</filename>.  If that is what you want,
3640           you may omit the argument to <filename>hc-build</filename>.
3641           Generally, any option given to <filename>hc-build</filename>
3642           is passed through to the configuration script
3643           <filename>configure</filename>.  If
3644           <filename>hc-build</filename> successfully completes the
3645           build process, you can install the resulting system, as
3646           normal, with</para>
3647
3648 <Screen>
3649 foo% make install
3650 </Screen>
3651         </listitem>
3652       </itemizedlist>
3653     </sect2>
3654
3655     <sect2 id="unregisterised-porting">
3656       <title>Porting GHC to a new architecture</title>
3657       
3658       <para>The first step in porting to a new architecture is to get
3659       an <firstterm>unregisterised</firstterm> build working.  An
3660       unregisterised build is one that compiles via vanilla C only.
3661       By contrast, a registerised build uses the following
3662       architecture-specific hacks for speed:</para>
3663
3664       <itemizedlist>
3665         <listitem>
3666           <para>Global register variables: certain abstract machine
3667           <quote>registers</quote> are mapped to real machine
3668           registers, depending on how many machine registers are
3669           available (see
3670           <filename>ghc/includes/MachRegs.h</filename>).</para>
3671         </listitem>
3672
3673         <listitem>
3674           <para>Assembly-mangling: when compiling via C, we feed the
3675           assembly generated by gcc though a Perl script known as the
3676           <firstterm>mangler</firstterm> (see
3677           <filename>ghc/driver/mangler/ghc-asm.lprl</filename>).  The
3678           mangler rearranges the assembly to support tail-calls and
3679           various other optimisations.</para>
3680         </listitem>
3681       </itemizedlist>
3682
3683       <para>In an unregisterised build, neither of these hacks are
3684       used &mdash; the idea is that the C code generated by the
3685       compiler should compile using gcc only.  The lack of these
3686       optimisations costs about a factor of two in performance, but
3687       since unregisterised compilation is usually just a step on the
3688       way to a full registerised port, we don't mind too much.</para>
3689
3690       <sect3>
3691         <title>Building an unregisterised port</title>
3692         
3693         <para>The first step is to get some unregisterised HC files.
3694         Either (a)&nbsp;download them from the GHC site (if there are
3695         some available for the right version of GHC), or
3696         (b)&nbsp;build them yourself on any machine with a working
3697         GHC.  If at all possible this should be a machine with the
3698         same word size as the target.</para>
3699
3700         <para>There is a script available which should automate the
3701         process of doing the 2-stage bootstrap necessary to get the
3702         unregisterised HC files - it's available in <ulink
3703         url="http://cvs.haskell.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/fptools/distrib/cross-port"><filename>fptools/distrib/cross-port</filename></ulink>
3704         in CVS.</para>
3705
3706         <para>Now take these unregisterised HC files to the target
3707         platform and bootstrap a compiler from them as per the
3708         instructions in <xref linkend="sec-booting-from-hc">.  In
3709         <filename>build.mk</filename>, you need to tell the build
3710         system that the compiler you're building is
3711         (a)&nbsp;unregisterised itself, and (b)&nbsp;builds
3712         unregisterised binaries.  This varies depending on the GHC
3713         version you're bootstraping:</para>
3714
3715 <programlisting>
3716 # build.mk for GHC 4.08.x
3717 GhcWithRegisterised=NO
3718 </programlisting>
3719
3720 <programlisting>
3721 # build.mk for GHC 5.xx
3722 GhcUnregisterised=YES
3723 </programlisting>
3724
3725         <para>Version 5.xx only: use the option
3726         <option>--enable-hc-boot-unregisterised</option> instead of
3727         <option>--enable-hc-boot</option> when running
3728         <filename>./configure</filename>.</para>
3729
3730         <para>The build may not go through cleanly.  We've tried to
3731         stick to writing portable code in most parts of the compiler,
3732         so it should compile on any POSIXish system with gcc, but in
3733         our experience most systems differ from the standards in one
3734         way or another.  Deal with any problems as they arise - if you
3735         get stuck, ask the experts on
3736         <email>glasgow-haskell-users@haskell.org</email>.</para>
3737         
3738         <para>Once you have the unregisterised compiler up and
3739         running, you can use it to start a registerised port.  The
3740         following sections describe the various parts of the system
3741         that will need architecture-specific tweaks in order to get a
3742         registerised build going.</para>
3743
3744         <para>Lots of useful information about the innards of GHC is
3745         available in the <ulink
3746         url="http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~chak/haskell/ghc/comm/">GHC
3747         Commentary</ulink>, which might be helpful if you run into
3748         some code which needs tweaking for your system.</para>
3749       </sect3>
3750
3751       <sect3>
3752         <title>Porting the RTS</title>
3753         
3754         <para>The following files need architecture-specific code for a
3755         registerised build:</para>
3756
3757         <variablelist>
3758           <varlistentry>
3759             <term><filename>ghc/includes/MachRegs.h</filename></term>
3760             <indexterm><primary><filename>MachRegs.h</filename></primary>
3761             </indexterm>
3762             <listitem>
3763               <para>Defines the STG-register to machine-register
3764               mapping.  You need to know your platform's C calling
3765               convention, and which registers are generally available
3766               for mapping to global register variables.  There are
3767               plenty of useful comments in this file.</para>
3768             </listitem>
3769           </varlistentry>
3770           <varlistentry>
3771             <term><filename>ghc/includes/TailCalls.h</filename></term>
3772             <indexterm><primary><filename>TailCalls.h</filename></primary>
3773             </indexterm>
3774             <listitem>
3775               <para>Macros that cooperate with the mangler (see <xref
3776               linkend="sec-mangler">) to make proper tail-calls
3777               work.</para>
3778             </listitem>
3779           </varlistentry>
3780           <varlistentry>
3781             <term><filename>ghc/rts/Adjustor.c</filename></term>
3782             <indexterm><primary><filename>Adjustor.c</filename></primary>
3783             </indexterm>
3784             <listitem>
3785               <para>Support for
3786               <literal>foreign&nbsp;import&nbsp;"wrapper"</literal>
3787               (aka
3788               <literal>foreign&nbsp;export&nbsp;dynamic</literal>).
3789               Not essential for getting GHC bootstrapped, so this file
3790               can be deferred until later if necessary.</para>
3791             </listitem>
3792           </varlistentry>
3793           <varlistentry>
3794             <term><filename>ghc/rts/StgCRun.c</filename></term>
3795             <indexterm><primary><filename>StgCRun.c</filename></primary>
3796             </indexterm>
3797             <listitem>
3798               <para>The little assembly layer between the C world and
3799               the Haskell world.  See the comments and code for the
3800               other architectures in this file for pointers.</para>
3801             </listitem>
3802           </varlistentry>
3803           <varlistentry>
3804             <term><filename>ghc/rts/MBlock.h</filename></term>
3805             <term><filename>ghc/rts/MBlock.c</filename></term>
3806             <indexterm><primary><filename>MBlock.h</filename></primary>
3807             </indexterm>
3808             <indexterm><primary><filename>MBlock.c</filename></primary>
3809             </indexterm>
3810             <listitem>
3811               <para>These files are really OS-specific rather than
3812               architecture-specific.  In <filename>MBlock.h</filename>
3813               is specified the absolute location at which the RTS
3814               should try to allocate memory on your platform (try to
3815               find an area which doesn't conflict with code or dynamic
3816               libraries).  In <filename>Mblock.c</filename> you might
3817               need to tweak the call to <literal>mmap()</literal> for
3818               your OS.</para>
3819             </listitem>
3820           </varlistentry>
3821         </variablelist>
3822       </sect3>
3823
3824       <sect3 id="sec-mangler">
3825         <title>The mangler</title>
3826         
3827         <para>The mangler is an evil Perl-script that rearranges the
3828         assembly code output from gcc to do two main things:</para>
3829
3830         <itemizedlist>
3831           <listitem>
3832             <para>Remove function prologues and epilogues, and all
3833             movement of the C stack pointer.  This is to support
3834             tail-calls: every code block in Haskell code ends in an
3835             explicit jump, so we don't want the C-stack overflowing
3836             while we're jumping around between code blocks.</para>
3837           </listitem>
3838           <listitem>
3839             <para>Move the <firstterm>info table</firstterm> for a
3840             closure next to the entry code for that closure.  In
3841             unregisterised code, info tables contain a pointer to the
3842             entry code, but in registerised compilation we arrange
3843             that the info table is shoved right up against the entry
3844             code, and addressed backwards from the entry code pointer
3845             (this saves a word in the info table and an extra
3846             indirection when jumping to the closure entry
3847             code).</para>
3848           </listitem>
3849         </itemizedlist>
3850
3851         <para>The mangler is abstracted to a certain extent over some
3852         architecture-specific things such as the particular assembler
3853         directives used to herald symbols.  Take a look at the
3854         definitions for other architectures and use these as a
3855         starting point.</para>
3856       </sect3>
3857
3858       <sect3>
3859         <title>The native code generator</title>
3860
3861         <para>The native code generator isn't essential to getting a
3862         registerised build going, but it's a desirable thing to have
3863         because it can cut compilation times in half.  The native code
3864         generator is described in some detail in the <ulink
3865         url="http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~chak/haskell/ghc/comm/">GHC
3866         commentary</ulink>.</para>
3867       </sect3>
3868
3869       <sect3>
3870         <title>GHCi</title>
3871
3872         <para>To support GHCi, you need to port the dynamic linker
3873         (<filename>fptools/ghc/rts/Linker.c</filename>).  The linker
3874         currently supports the ELF and PEi386 object file formats - if
3875         your platform uses one of these then you probably don't have
3876         to do anything except fiddle with the
3877         <literal>#ifdef</literal>s at the top of
3878         <filename>Linker.c</filename> to tell it about your OS.</para>
3879         
3880         <para>If your system uses a different object file format, then
3881         you have to write a linker &mdash; good luck!</para>
3882       </sect3>
3883     </sect2>
3884
3885   </sect1>
3886
3887 <sect1 id="sec-build-pitfalls">
3888 <title>Known pitfalls in building Glasgow Haskell
3889
3890 <indexterm><primary>problems, building</primary></indexterm>
3891 <indexterm><primary>pitfalls, in building</primary></indexterm>
3892 <indexterm><primary>building pitfalls</primary></indexterm></title>
3893
3894 <para>
3895 WARNINGS about pitfalls and known &ldquo;problems&rdquo;:
3896 </para>
3897
3898 <para>
3899
3900 <OrderedList>
3901 <listitem>
3902
3903 <para>
3904 One difficulty that comes up from time to time is running out of space
3905 in <literal>TMPDIR</literal>.  (It is impossible for the configuration stuff to
3906 compensate for the vagaries of different sysadmin approaches to temp
3907 space.)
3908 <indexterm><primary>tmp, running out of space in</primary></indexterm>
3909
3910 The quickest way around it is <command>setenv TMPDIR /usr/tmp</command><indexterm><primary>TMPDIR</primary></indexterm> or
3911 even <command>setenv TMPDIR .</command> (or the equivalent incantation with your shell
3912 of choice).
3913
3914 The best way around it is to say
3915
3916 <ProgramListing>
3917 export TMPDIR=&#60;dir&#62;
3918 </ProgramListing>
3919
3920 in your <filename>build.mk</filename> file.
3921 Then GHC and the other <literal>fptools</literal> programs will use the appropriate directory
3922 in all cases.
3923
3924
3925 </para>
3926 </listitem>
3927 <listitem>
3928
3929 <para>
3930 In compiling some support-code bits, e.g., in <filename>ghc/rts/gmp</filename> and even
3931 in <filename>ghc/lib</filename>, you may get a few C-compiler warnings.  We think these
3932 are OK.
3933
3934 </para>
3935 </listitem>
3936 <listitem>
3937
3938 <para>
3939 When compiling via C, you'll sometimes get &ldquo;warning: assignment from
3940 incompatible pointer type&rdquo; out of GCC.  Harmless.
3941
3942 </para>
3943 </listitem>
3944 <listitem>
3945
3946 <para>
3947 Similarly, <command>ar</command>chiving warning messages like the following are not
3948 a problem:
3949
3950 <Screen>
3951 ar: filename GlaIOMonad__1_2s.o truncated to GlaIOMonad_
3952 ar: filename GlaIOMonad__2_2s.o truncated to GlaIOMonad_
3953 ...
3954 </Screen>
3955
3956
3957 </para>
3958 </listitem>
3959 <listitem>
3960
3961 <para>
3962  In compiling the compiler proper (in <filename>compiler/</filename>), you <emphasis>may</emphasis>
3963 get an &ldquo;Out of heap space&rdquo; error message.  These can vary with the
3964 vagaries of different systems, it seems.  The solution is simple:
3965
3966
3967 <itemizedlist>
3968 <listitem>
3969
3970 <para>
3971  If you're compiling with GHC 4.00 or later, then the
3972 <emphasis>maximum</emphasis> heap size must have been reached.  This
3973 is somewhat unlikely, since the maximum is set to 64M by default.
3974 Anyway, you can raise it with the
3975 <option>-optCrts-M&lt;size&gt;</option> flag (add this flag to
3976 <constant>&lt;module&gt;&lowbar;HC&lowbar;OPTS</constant>
3977 <command>make</command> variable in the appropriate
3978 <filename>Makefile</filename>).
3979
3980 </para>
3981 </listitem>
3982 <listitem>
3983
3984 <para>
3985  For GHC &#60; 4.00, add a suitable <option>-H</option> flag to the <filename>Makefile</filename>, as
3986 above.
3987
3988 </para>
3989 </listitem>
3990
3991 </itemizedlist>
3992
3993
3994 and try again: <command>gmake</command>.  (see <Xref LinkEnd="sec-suffix"> for information about
3995 <constant>&lt;module&gt;&lowbar;HC&lowbar;OPTS</constant>.)
3996
3997 Alternatively, just cut to the chase:
3998
3999 <Screen>
4000 % cd ghc/compiler
4001 % make EXTRA_HC_OPTS=-optCrts-M128M
4002 </Screen>
4003
4004
4005 </para>
4006 </listitem>
4007 <listitem>
4008
4009 <para>
4010 If you try to compile some Haskell, and you get errors from GCC about
4011 lots of things from <filename>/usr/include/math.h</filename>, then your GCC was
4012 mis-installed.  <command>fixincludes</command> wasn't run when it should've been.
4013
4014 As <command>fixincludes</command> is now automagically run as part of GCC installation,
4015 this bug also suggests that you have an old GCC.
4016
4017
4018 </para>
4019 </listitem>
4020 <listitem>
4021
4022 <para>
4023 You <emphasis>may</emphasis> need to re-<command>ranlib</command><indexterm><primary>ranlib</primary></indexterm> your libraries (on Sun4s).
4024
4025
4026 <Screen>
4027 % cd $(libdir)/ghc-x.xx/sparc-sun-sunos4
4028 % foreach i ( `find . -name '*.a' -print` ) # or other-shell equiv...
4029 ?    ranlib $i
4030 ?    # or, on some machines: ar s $i
4031 ? end
4032 </Screen>
4033
4034
4035 We'd be interested to know if this is still necessary.
4036
4037
4038 </para>
4039 </listitem>
4040 <listitem>
4041
4042 <para>
4043 GHC's sources go through <command>cpp</command> before being compiled, and <command>cpp</command> varies
4044 a bit from one Unix to another.  One particular gotcha is macro calls
4045 like this:
4046
4047
4048 <ProgramListing>
4049 SLIT("Hello, world")
4050 </ProgramListing>
4051
4052
4053 Some <command>cpp</command>s treat the comma inside the string as separating two macro
4054 arguments, so you get
4055
4056
4057 <Screen>
4058 :731: macro `SLIT' used with too many (2) args
4059 </Screen>
4060
4061
4062 Alas, <command>cpp</command> doesn't tell you the offending file!
4063
4064 Workaround: don't put weird things in string args to <command>cpp</command> macros.
4065 </para>
4066 </listitem>
4067
4068 </OrderedList>
4069
4070 </para>
4071
4072 </sect1>
4073
4074
4075 <Sect1 id="winbuild"><Title>Notes for building under Windows</Title>
4076
4077 <para>
4078 This section summarises how to get the utilities you need on your
4079 Win95/98/NT/2000 machine to use CVS and build GHC. Similar notes for
4080 installing and running GHC may be found in the user guide. In general,
4081 Win95/Win98 behave the same, and WinNT/Win2k behave the same.
4082 You should read the GHC installation guide sections on Windows (in the user
4083 guide) before continuing to read these notes.
4084 </para>
4085
4086
4087 <sect2 id="cygwin-and-mingw"><Title>Cygwin and MinGW</Title>
4088
4089 <para> The Windows situation for building GHC is rather confusing.  This section
4090 tries to clarify, and to establish terminology.</para>
4091
4092 <sect3 id="ghc-mingw"><title>GHC-mingw</title>
4093
4094 <para> <ulink url="http://www.mingw.org">MinGW (Minimalist GNU for Windows)</ulink> 
4095 is a collection of header
4096 files and import libraries that allow one to use <command>gcc</command> and produce
4097 native Win32 programs that do not rely on any third-party DLLs. The
4098 current set of tools include GNU Compiler Collection (<command>gcc</command>), GNU Binary
4099 Utilities (Binutils), GNU debugger (Gdb), GNU make, and a assorted
4100 other utilities. 
4101 </para>
4102 <para>The GHC that we distribute includes, inside the distribution itself, the MinGW <command>gcc</command>,
4103 <command>as</command>, <command>ld</command>, and a bunch of input/output libraries.  
4104 GHC compiles Haskell to C (or to 
4105 assembly code), and then invokes these MinGW tools to generate an executable binary.
4106 The resulting binaries can run on any Win32 system.
4107 </para>
4108 <para> We will call a GHC that targets MinGW in this way <emphasis>GHC-mingw</emphasis>.</para>
4109
4110 <para> The down-side of GHC-mingw is that the MinGW libraries do not support anything like the full
4111 Posix interface.  So programs compiled with GHC-mingw cannot import the (Haskell) Posix 
4112 library; they have to do
4113 their input output using standard Haskell I/O libraries, or native Win32 bindings.
4114 </para>
4115 </sect3>
4116
4117 <sect3 id="ghc-cygwin"><title>GHC-cygwin</title>
4118
4119 <para>There <emphasis>is</emphasis> a way to get the full Posix interface, which is to use Cygwin.  
4120 <ulink url="http://www.cygwin.com">Cygwin</ulink> is a complete Unix simulation that runs on Win32.
4121 Cygwin comes with a shell, and all the usual Unix commands: <command>mv</command>, <command>rm</command>,
4122 <command>ls</command>, plus of course <command>gcc</command>, <command>ld</command> and so on.
4123 A C program compiled with the Cygwin <command>gcc</command> certainly can use all of Posix.
4124 </para>
4125 <para>So why doesn't GHC use the Cygwin <command>gcc</command> and libraries?  Because
4126 Cygwin comes with a DLL <emphasis>that must be linked with every runnable Cygwin-compiled program</emphasis>.
4127 A program compiled by the Cygwin tools cannot run at all unless Cygwin is installed. 
4128 If GHC targeted Cygwin, users would have to install Cygwin just to run the Haskell programs
4129 that GHC compiled; and the Cygwin DLL would have to be in the DLL load path.
4130 Worse, Cygwin is a moving target.  The name of the main DLL, <literal>cygwin1.dll</literal>
4131 does not change, but the implementation certainly does.  Even the interfaces to functions
4132 it exports seem to change occasionally. So programs compiled by GHC might only run with
4133 particular versions of Cygwin.  All of this seems very undesirable.
4134 </para>
4135 <para>
4136 Nevertheless, it is certainly possible to build a version of GHC that targets Cygwin;
4137 we will call that <emphasis>GHC-cygwin</emphasis>.  The up-side of GHC-cygwin is
4138 that Haskell programs compiled by GHC-cygwin can import the (Haskell) Posix library.
4139 </para>
4140 </sect3>
4141
4142 <sect3><title>HOST_OS vs TARGET_OS</title>
4143
4144 <para>
4145 In the source code you'll find various ifdefs looking like:
4146 <programlisting>
4147   #ifdef mingw32_HOST_OS
4148     ...blah blah...
4149   #endif
4150 </programlisting>
4151 and 
4152 <programlisting>
4153   #ifdef mingw32_TARGET_OS
4154     ...blah blah...
4155   #endif
4156 </programlisting>
4157 These macros are set by the configure script (via the file config.h).
4158 Which is which?  The criterion is this.  In the ifdefs in GHC's source code:
4159 <itemizedlist>
4160   <listitem> <para>
4161   The "host" system is the one on which GHC itself will be run.
4162   </para> </listitem>
4163   <listitem> <para>
4164   The "target" system is the one for which the program compiled by GHC will be run.
4165   </para> </listitem>
4166 </itemizedlist>
4167 For a stage-2 compiler, in which GHCi is available, the "host" and "target" systems must be the same.
4168 So then it doesn't really matter whether you use the HOST_OS or TARGET_OS cpp macros.
4169
4170 </para>
4171 </sect3>
4172
4173 <sect3><title>Summary</title>
4174
4175 <para>Notice that "GHC-mingw" means "GHC that <emphasis>targets</emphasis> MinGW".  It says nothing about 
4176 how that GHC was <emphasis>built</emphasis>.  It is entirely possible to have a GHC-mingw that was built
4177 by compiling GHC's Haskell sources with a GHC-cygwin, or vice versa.</para>
4178
4179 <para>We distribute only a GHC-mingw built by a GHC-mingw; supporting
4180 GHC-cygwin too is beyond our resources.  The GHC we distribute
4181 therefore does not require Cygwin to run, nor do the programs it
4182 compiles require Cygwin.</para>
4183
4184 <para>The instructions that follow describe how to build GHC-mingw. It is
4185 possible to build GHC-cygwin, but it's not a supported route, and the build system might
4186 be flaky.</para>
4187
4188 <para>In your build tree, you build a compiler called <Command>ghc-inplace</Command>.  It
4189 uses the <Command>gcc</Command> that you specify using the
4190 <option>--with-gcc</option> flag when you run
4191 <Command>configure</Command> (see below).
4192 The makefiles are careful to use <Command>ghc-inplace</Command> (not <Command>gcc</Command>)
4193 to compile any C files, so that it will in turn invoke the right <Command>gcc</Command> rather that
4194 whatever one happens to be in your path.  However, the makefiles do use whatever <Command>ld</Command> 
4195 and <Command>ar</Command> happen to be in your path. This is a bit naughty, but (a) they are only
4196 used to glom together .o files into a bigger .o file, or a .a file, 
4197 so they don't ever get libraries (which would be bogus; they might be the wrong libraries), and (b)
4198 Cygwin and Mingw use the same .o file format.  So its ok.
4199 </para>
4200 </sect3>
4201 </sect2>
4202
4203 <Sect2><Title>Installing and configuring Cygwin</Title>
4204
4205 <para>You don't need Cygwin to <emphasis>use</emphasis> GHC, 
4206 but you do need it to <emphasis>build</emphasis> GHC.</para>
4207
4208 <para> Install Cygwin from <ulink url="http://www.cygwin.com/">http://www.cygwin.com/</ulink>.
4209 The installation process is straightforward; we install it in <Filename>c:/cygwin</Filename>.
4210 During the installation dialogue, make sure that you select:
4211 <command>cvs</command>, <command>openssh</command>,
4212 <command>autoconf</command>,
4213 <command>binutils</command> (includes ld and (I think) ar),
4214 <command>gcc</command>,
4215 <command>flex</command>,
4216 <command>make</command>.
4217
4218 </para>
4219 <para> Now set the following user environment variables:
4220 <itemizedlist>
4221
4222 <listitem><para> Add <filename>c:/cygwin/bin</filename> and <filename>c:/cygwin/usr/bin</filename> to your 
4223 <constant>PATH</constant></para></listitem>
4224
4225 <listitem>
4226 <para>
4227 Set <constant>MAKE_MODE</constant> to <Literal>UNIX</Literal>. If you
4228 don't do this you get very weird messages when you type
4229 <Command>make</Command>, such as:
4230 <Screen>
4231 /c: /c: No such file or directory
4232 </Screen>
4233 </para>
4234 </listitem>
4235
4236 <listitem><para> Set <constant>SHELL</constant> to
4237 <Filename>c:/cygwin/bin/sh</Filename>. When you invoke a shell in Emacs, this
4238 <constant>SHELL</constant> is what you get.
4239 </para></listitem>
4240
4241 <listitem><para> Set <constant>HOME</constant> to point to your 
4242 home directory.  This is where, for example,
4243 <command>bash</command> will look for your <filename>.bashrc</filename>
4244 file.  Ditto <command>emacs</command> looking for <filename>.emacsrc</filename>
4245 </para></listitem>
4246 </itemizedlist>
4247 </para>
4248
4249 <para>
4250 There are a few other things to do:
4251 <itemizedlist>
4252 <listitem>
4253 <para>
4254 Some script files used in the make system start with "<Command>#!/bin/perl</Command>",
4255 (and similarly for <Command>bash</Command>).  Notice the hardwired path!
4256 So you need to ensure that your <Filename>/bin</Filename> directory has the following
4257 binaries in it:
4258 <itemizedlist>
4259 <listitem> <para><Command>sh</Command></para></listitem>
4260 <listitem> <para><Command>perl</Command></para></listitem>
4261 <listitem> <para><Command>cat</Command></para></listitem>
4262 </itemizedlist>
4263 All these come in Cygwin's <Filename>bin</Filename> directory, which you probably have
4264 installed as <Filename>c:/cygwin/bin</Filename>.  By default Cygwin mounts "<Filename>/</Filename>" as
4265 <Filename>c:/cygwin</Filename>, so if you just take the defaults it'll all work ok.
4266 (You can discover where your Cygwin
4267 root directory <Filename>/</Filename> is by typing <Command>mount</Command>).
4268 Provided <Filename>/bin</Filename> points to the Cygwin <Filename>bin</Filename>
4269 directory, there's no need to copy anything.
4270 </para>
4271 </listitem>
4272
4273 <listitem>
4274 <para>
4275 By default, cygwin provides the command shell <filename>ash</filename>
4276 as <filename>sh.exe</filename>. It has a couple of 'issues' (to do with quoting
4277 and length of command lines), so
4278 in your <filename>/bin</filename> directory, make sure that <filename>
4279 bash.exe</filename> is also provided as <filename>sh.exe</filename>
4280 (i.e. overwrite the old <filename>sh.exe</filename> with a copy of
4281 <filename>bash.exe</filename>).
4282 </para>
4283 </listitem>
4284 </itemizedlist>
4285 </para>
4286
4287 <para>Finally, here are some things to be aware of when using Cygwin:
4288 <itemizedlist>
4289 <listitem> <para>Cygwin doesn't deal well with filenames that include
4290 spaces. "<filename>Program Files</filename>" and "<filename>Local files</filename>" are
4291 common gotchas.
4292 </para></listitem>
4293
4294 <listitem> <para> Cygwin implements a symbolic link as a text file with some
4295 magical text in it.  So other programs that don't use Cygwin's
4296 I/O libraries won't recognise such files as symlinks.  
4297 In particular, programs compiled by GHC are meant to be runnable
4298 without having Cygwin, so they don't use the Cygwin library, so
4299 they don't recognise symlinks.
4300 </para></listitem>
4301
4302 <listitem> <para>
4303 Win32 has a <command>find</command> command which is not the same as Cygwin's find.
4304 You will probably discover that the Win32 <command>find</command> appears in your <constant>PATH</constant>
4305 before the Cygwin one, because it's in the <emphasis>system</emphasis> <constant>PATH</constant> 
4306 environment variable, whereas you have probably modified the <emphasis>user</emphasis> <constant>PATH</constant> 
4307 variable.  You can always invoke <command>find</command> with an absolute path, or rename it.
4308 </para></listitem>
4309 </itemizedlist>
4310 </para>
4311
4312 </Sect2>
4313
4314 <Sect2><Title>Other things you need to install</Title>
4315
4316 <para>You have to install the following other things to build GHC:
4317 <itemizedlist>
4318 <listitem>
4319 <para>
4320 Install an executable GHC, from <ulink url="http://www.haskell.org/ghc">http://www.haskell.org/ghc</ulink>.
4321 This is what you will use to compile GHC.  Add it in your
4322 <constant>PATH</constant>: the installer tells you the path element
4323 you need to add upon completion.
4324 </para>
4325 </listitem>
4326
4327 <listitem>
4328 <para>
4329 Install an executable Happy, from <ulink url="http://www.haskell.org/happy">http://www.haskell.org/happy</ulink>.
4330 Happy is a parser generator used to compile the Haskell grammar.  Add it in your
4331 <constant>PATH</constant>.
4332 </para>
4333 </listitem>
4334
4335
4336 <listitem>
4337 <para>GHC uses the <emphasis>mingw</emphasis> C compiler to
4338 generate code, so you have to install that (see <xref linkend="cygwin-and-mingw">). 
4339 Just pick up a mingw bundle at
4340 <ulink url="http://www.mingw.org/">http://www.mingw.org/</ulink>.
4341 We install it in <filename>c:/mingw</filename>.
4342 </para>
4343 <para>Do <emphasis>not</emphasis> add any of the <emphasis>mingw</emphasis> binaries to your  path.
4344 They are only going to get used by explicit access (via the --with-gcc flag you
4345 give to <Command>configure</Command> later).  If you do add them to your path
4346 you are likely to get into a mess because their names overlap with Cygwin binaries.
4347 </para>
4348 </listitem>
4349
4350
4351 <listitem>
4352 <para>We use <command>emacs</command> a lot, so we install that too.
4353 When you are in <filename>fptools/ghc/compiler</filename>, you can use
4354 "<literal>make tags</literal>" to make a TAGS file for emacs.  That uses the utility
4355 <filename>fptools/ghc/utils/hasktags/hasktags</filename>, so you need to make that first.
4356 The most convenient way to do this is by going <literal>make boot</literal> in <filename>fptools/ghc</filename>.
4357 The <literal>make tags</literal> command also uses <command>etags</command>, which comes with <command>emacs</command>,
4358 so you will need to add <filename>emacs/bin</filename> to your <literal>PATH</literal>.
4359 </para>
4360 </listitem>
4361
4362
4363 <listitem>
4364 <para> Finally, check out a copy of GHC sources from
4365 the CVS repository, following the instructions above (<xref linkend="cvs-access">).
4366 </para>
4367 </listitem>
4368 </itemizedlist>
4369 </para>
4370 </sect2>
4371
4372 <Sect2><Title>Building GHC</Title>
4373
4374 <para>OK!  
4375 Now go read the documentation above on building from source (<xref linkend="sec-building-from-source">); 
4376 the bullets below only tell
4377 you about Windows-specific wrinkles.</para>
4378 <ItemizedList>
4379 <listitem>
4380 <para>
4381 Run <Command>autoconf</Command> both in <filename>fptools</filename>
4382 and in <filename>fptools/ghc</filename>.  If you omit the latter step you'll
4383 get an error when you run <filename>./configure</filename>:
4384 <Screen>
4385 ...lots of stuff...
4386 creating mk/config.h
4387 mk/config.h is unchanged
4388 configuring in ghc
4389 running /bin/sh ./configure  --cache-file=.././config.cache --srcdir=.
4390 ./configure: ./configure: No such file or directory
4391 configure: error: ./configure failed for ghc
4392 </Screen>
4393 </para>
4394 </listitem>
4395
4396 <listitem> <para><command>autoconf</command> seems to create the file <filename>configure</filename>
4397 read-only.  So if you need to run autoconf again (which I sometimes do for safety's sake),
4398 you get
4399 <screen>
4400 /usr/bin/autoconf: cannot create configure: permission denied
4401 </screen>
4402 Solution: delete <filename>configure</filename> first.
4403 </para></listitem>
4404
4405 <listitem>
4406 <para>
4407 You either need to add <filename>ghc</filename> to your
4408 <constant>PATH</constant> before you invoke
4409 <Command>configure</Command>, or use the <Command>configure</Command>
4410 option <option>--with-ghc=c:/ghc/ghc-some-version/bin/ghc</option>.
4411 </para>
4412 </listitem>
4413
4414 <listitem><para>
4415 If you are paranoid, delete <filename>config.cache</filename> if it exists.
4416 This file occasionally remembers out-of-date configuration information, which 
4417 can be really confusing.
4418 </para>
4419 </listitem>
4420
4421 <listitem>
4422   <para> 
4423     After <command>autoconf</command> run <command>./configure</command> in
4424     <filename>fptools/</filename> thus:
4425
4426 <Screen>
4427   ./configure --host=i386-unknown-mingw32 --with-gcc=c:/mingw/bin/gcc
4428 </Screen>
4429 This is the point at which you specify that you are building GHC-mingw
4430 (see <xref linkend="ghc-mingw">). </para>
4431
4432 <para> Both these options are important! It's possible to get into
4433 trouble using the wrong C compiler!
4434 Furthermore, it's very important that you specify a 
4435 full mingw path for <command>gcc</command>, not a cygwin path, because GHC (which
4436 uses this path to invoke <command>gcc</command>) is a Mingw program and won't
4437 understand a cygwin path..  For example, if you 
4438 say <literal>--with-gcc=/mingw/bin/gcc</literal>, it'll be interpreted as
4439 <filename>/cygdrive/c/mingw/bin/gcc</filename>, and GHC will fail the first
4440 time it tries to invoke it.   (Worse, the failure does not come with
4441 a helpful error message, unfortunately.)
4442 </para>
4443
4444 <para>
4445 If you want to build GHC-cygwin (<xref linkend="ghc-cygwin">)
4446 you'll have to do something more like:
4447 <Screen>
4448   ./configure --with-gcc=...the Cygwin gcc...
4449 </Screen>
4450 </para>
4451 </listitem>
4452
4453 <listitem><para> Do not attempt to build the documentation.
4454 It needs all kinds of wierd Jade stuff that we haven't worked out for
4455 Win32.</para></listitem>
4456 </ItemizedList>
4457 </Sect2>
4458
4459
4460 </sect1>
4461
4462 </Article>