Hpack is a format for Haskell packages. It is a modern alternative to the Cabal package format and follows different design principles.
The guiding design principles for Hpack are:
- Don't require the user to state the obvious, make sensible assumptions by default
- Give the user 100% control when needed
- Don't require the user to repeat things, facilitate DRYness
Hpack packages are described in a file named package.yaml
. Both
cabal2nix
and
stack
support package.yaml
natively. For
other build tools the hpack
executable can be used to generate a .cabal
file from package.yaml
.
There is reference documentation below, but introductory documentation is still lacking. For the time being, take a look at the slides from my talk about Hpack at the Singapore Haskell meetup: http://typeful.net/talks/hpack
- Given this package.yaml running
hpack
will generate hpack.cabal - Given this package.yaml running
hpack
will generate getopt-generics.cabal - Given this package.yaml running
hpack
will generate sensei.cabal - Given this package.yaml running
hpack
will generate base-orphans.cabal
- hpack: A modern format for Haskell packages
Cabal generates a Paths_
module for every package. By default Hpack adds
that module to other-modules
when generating a .cabal
file. This is
sometimes useful and most of the time not harmful.
However, there are situations when this can lead to compilation errors (e.g
when using a custom Prelude
).
To prevent Hpack from adding the Paths_
module to other-modules
add the
following to package.yaml
:
library:
when:
- condition: false
other-modules: Paths_name # substitute name with the package name
Hpack | Cabal | Default | Notes | Example | Since |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
spec-version |
The minimum version of hpack that is required to parse this package description. |
spec-version: 0.30.0 |
0.30.0 |
||
name |
· | ||||
version |
· | 0.0.0 |
|||
synopsis |
· | ||||
description |
· | ||||
category |
· | ||||
stability |
· | ||||
homepage |
· | If github given, <repo>#readme |
|||
bug-reports |
· | If github given, <repo>/issues |
|||
author |
· | May be a list | |||
maintainer |
· | author |
May be a list | ||
copyright |
· | May be a list | |||
license |
· | Inferred from license-file |
Both SPDX license expressions and traditional Cabal license identifiers are accepted. | license: MIT |
SPDX: 0.29.0 |
license-file |
license-file or license-files |
LICENSE if file exists |
May be a list | ||
tested-with |
· | May be a list (since 0.34.3 ) |
|||
build-type |
· | Simple , or Custom if custom-setup exists |
Must be Simple , Configure , Make , or Custom |
||
extra-source-files |
· | Accepts glob patterns | |||
extra-doc-files |
· | Accepts glob patterns | 0.21.2 |
||
data-files |
· | Accepts glob patterns | |||
data-dir |
· | ||||
github |
source-repository head |
Accepts owner/repo or owner/repo/subdir |
github: foo/bar |
||
git |
source-repository head |
No effect if github given |
git: https://my.repo.com/foo |
||
custom-setup |
· | See Custom setup | |||
flags |
flag <name> |
Map from flag name to flag (see Flags) | |||
library |
· | See Library fields | |||
internal-libraries |
library <name> |
Map from internal library name to a dict of library fields and global top-level fields. | 0.21.0 |
||
executables |
executable <name> |
Map from executable name to executable (see Executable fields) | |||
executable |
executable <package-name> |
Shortcut for executables: { package-name: ... } |
0.18.0 |
||
tests |
test-suite <name> |
Map from test name to test (see Test fields) | |||
benchmarks |
benchmark <name> |
Map from benchmark name to benchmark (see Benchmark fields) | |||
defaults |
See Defaults, may be a list |
Hpack does not require you to specify a cabal-version
manually. When
generating a .cabal
file, Hpack sets the cabal-version
automatically based
on the features that are used.
If you want to override this behavior you can use verbatim
to set
cabal-version
manually, e.g.:
verbatim:
cabal-version: 2.2
Hpack allows the inclusion of common fields from a file on GitHub or a local file.
To use this feature a user must specify a GitHub repository, Git reference and a path to a file within that repository; alternatively, a path to the local file must be given.
Example:
defaults:
github: sol/hpack-template
ref: 2017
path: defaults.yaml
This will include all common fields from https://github.com/sol/hpack-template/blob/2017/defaults.yaml into the package specification.
Field | Default | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|---|
github |
For github defaults. | Accepts <owner>/<repo> |
github: sol/hpack-template |
ref |
For github defaults. | ref: 2017 |
|
path |
.hpack/defaults.yaml |
For github defaults. A relative path to a file within the repository, path segments are separated by / and must not contain : and \ . |
path: defaults.yaml |
local |
For local defaults. New in 0.26.0 . |
Exactly one of github
and local
must be given in a defaults
section.
Hpack supports shorthand syntax for specifying github
and ref
as a string:
defaults: sol/hpack-template@2017
This is equivalent to:
defaults:
github: sol/hpack-template
ref: 2017
Note: Hpack caches downloaded files under
~/.hpack/defaults/<owner>/<repo>/<path>
. Once downloaded, a file is reused
from the cache. If the content on GitHub changes the file is not updated. For
this reason it is recommended to only use tags as Git references.
-
If a defaults file has changed on GitHub and you want to use the latest version, then you have to delete that file from the cache manually.
-
If you want to prevent Hpack from accessing the network to download a defaults file, then you can achieve this by adding that file to the cache manually.
Hpack | Cabal | Default | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|---|---|
dependencies |
setup-depends |
Implies build-type: Custom |
These fields can be specified top-level or on a per section basis; top-level values are merged with per section values.
Hpack | Cabal | Default | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
buildable |
· | Per section takes precedence over top-level | |
source-dirs |
hs-source-dirs |
||
default-extensions |
· | ||
other-extensions |
· | ||
ghc-options |
· | ||
ghc-prof-options |
· | ||
ghcjs-options |
· | ||
cpp-options |
· | ||
cc-options |
· | ||
c-sources |
· | Accepts glob patterns | |
cxx-options |
· | ||
cxx-sources |
· | Accepts glob patterns | |
js-sources |
· | Accepts glob patterns | |
extra-lib-dirs |
· | ||
extra-libraries |
· | ||
include-dirs |
· | ||
install-includes |
· | ||
frameworks |
· | ||
extra-frameworks-dirs |
· | ||
ld-options |
· | ||
dependencies |
build-depends |
See Dependencies | |
pkg-config-dependencies |
pkgconfig-depends |
||
build-tools |
build-tools and/or build-tool-depends |
||
system-build-tools |
build-tools |
A set of system executables that have to be on the PATH to build this component |
|
when |
Accepts a list of conditionals (see Conditionals) |
build-tools
: A set of Haskell executables that are needed to build this component
Each element consists of a name and an optional version constraint.
The name can be specified in two ways:
- Qualified:
<package>:<executable>
- Unqualified:
<executable>
A qualified name refers to an executable named <executable>
from a
package named <package>
.
An unqualified name either refers to an executables in the same package, or if
no such executable exists it is desugared to <executable>:<executable>
.
build-tools
can be specified as a list or a mapping.
Examples:
build-tools:
- alex
- happy:happy
- hspec-discover == 2.*
build-tools:
alex: 3.2.*
happy:happy: 1.19.*
hspec-discover: 2.*
When generating a .cabal
file each element of build-tools
is either added
to build-tools
or build-tool-depends
.
If the name refers to one of alex
, c2hs
, cpphs
, greencard
, haddock
,
happy
, hsc2hs
or hscolour
then the element is added to build-tools
,
otherwise it is added to build-tool-depends
.
This is done to allow compatibility with a wider range of Cabal
versions.
Note: Unlike Cabal
, Hpack does not accept system executables as
build-tools
. Use system-build-tools
if you need this.
Hpack | Cabal | Default | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
exposed |
· | ||
visibility |
· | ||
exposed-modules |
· | All modules in source-dirs less other-modules less any modules mentioned in when |
|
generated-exposed-modules |
Added to exposed-modules and autogen-modules . Since 0.23.0 . |
||
other-modules |
· | Outside conditionals: All modules in source-dirs less exposed-modules less any modules mentioned in when . Inside conditionals, and only if exposed-modules is not specified inside the conditional: All modules in source-dirs of the conditional less any modules mentioned in when of the conditional |
|
generated-other-modules |
Added to other-modules and autogen-modules . Since 0.23.0 . |
||
reexported-modules |
· | ||
signatures |
· | ||
default-language |
Haskell2010 |
Hpack | Cabal | Default | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
main |
main-is |
||
other-modules |
· | All modules in source-dirs less main less any modules mentioned in when |
|
generated-other-modules |
Added to other-modules and autogen-modules . Since 0.23.0 . |
||
default-language |
Haskell2010 |
Hpack | Cabal | Default | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
type |
exitcode-stdio-1.0 |
||
main |
main-is |
||
other-modules |
· | All modules in source-dirs less main less any modules mentioned in when |
|
generated-other-modules |
Added to other-modules and autogen-modules . Since 0.23.0 . |
||
default-language |
Haskell2010 |
Hpack | Cabal | Default | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
type |
exitcode-stdio-1.0 |
||
main |
main-is |
||
other-modules |
· | All modules in source-dirs less main less any modules mentioned in when |
|
generated-other-modules |
Added to other-modules and autogen-modules . Since 0.23.0 . |
||
default-language |
Haskell2010 |
Hpack | Cabal | Default | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
description |
· | Optional | |
manual |
· | Required (unlike Cabal) | |
default |
· | Required (unlike Cabal) |
Dependencies can be specified as either a list or an object. These are equivalent:
dependencies:
- base >= 4.10.1.0
- containers >= 5.10
dependencies:
base: ">= 4.10.1.0"
containers: ">= 5.10"
The individual dependencies can also be specified as an object:
dependencies:
- name: base
version: ">= 4.10.1.0"
- name: containers
You can use objects at both levels, or have a mix of valid ways to specify the individual dependencies:
dependencies:
base:
version: ">= 4.10.1.0"
# If you don't give a version, it defaults to 'any version'.
containers: {}
transformers: ">= 0.5.5.0 && < 5.6"
Individual dependencies as objects are only supported from version
0.31.0
.
When a dependency is specified as an object, you can use the mixin
field to control what modules from the dependency your program will
see and how its signatures are filled in:
dependencies:
# This gives you a shorter name to import from, and hides the other modules.
- name: containers
mixin:
- (Data.Map.Lazy as Map)
# This hides the System.IO.Unsafe module, and leaves the other modules unchanged.
- name: base
mixin:
- hiding (System.IO.Unsafe)
# This exposes only the listed modules - you won't be able to import the others!
- name: lens
mixin:
- (Control.Lens, Data.Set.Lens, Data.Map.Lens as MapL)
# This will rename the module, and expose the others.
- name: transformers
mixin:
- hiding (Control.Monad.Trans.State.Lazy)
- (Control.Monad.Trans.State.Lazy as State)
For more information, see the Cabal documentation.
Hint: you can hide the Prelude
module from base
, and then rename
an alternative prelude to Prelude
so that it doesn't need to be
imported!
mixin
was added in version 0.31.0
.
Conditionals with no else branch:
- Must have a
condition
field - May have any number of other fields
For example,
when:
- condition: os(darwin)
extra-lib-dirs: lib/darwin
becomes
if os(darwin)
extra-lib-dirs:
lib/darwin
Conditionals with an else branch:
- Must have a
condition
field - Must have a
then
field, itself an object containing any number of other fields - Must have a
else
field, itself an object containing any number of other fields
For example,
when:
- condition: flag(fast)
then:
ghc-options: -O2
else:
ghc-options: -O0
becomes
if flag(fast)
ghc-options: -O2
else
ghc-options: -O0
Note: Conditionals with condition: false
are omitted from the generated
.cabal
file.
At place where you can specify a list of files you can also use glob patterns. Glob patterns and ordinary file names can be freely mixed, e.g.:
extra-source-files:
- static/*.js
- static/site.css
Glob patterns are expanded according to the following rules:
?
and*
are expanded according to POSIX (they match arbitrary characters, except for directory separators)**
is expanded in azsh
-like fashion (matching across directory separators)?
,*
and**
do not match a.
at the beginning of a file/directory
(since hpack-0.24.0
)
In cases where Hpack does not (yet!) support what you want to do, you can use
the verbatim
field to pass things to Cabal verbatim.
It is recognized top-level, in sections, and in conditionals.
verbatim
accepts an object or a string (or a list of objects and strings).
Disclaimer: The content of verbatim
fields are merged into the
generated .cabal
file as a final step, after Hpack is done with most of its
work. Before that final step Hpack does not look at any verbatim
fields.
Consequently, the content of a verbatim
field does not affect any other
fields that are populated by Hpack. As an example, if you use verbatim
to
override hs-source-dirs
, the overridden information will not be used when
Hpack infers exposed-modules
or other-modules
.
When an object is used:
- field values can be strings, numbers, booleans, or
null
- existing
.cabal
fields can be overridden - existing
.cabal
fields can be removed by overriding withnull
- additional
.cabal
fields can be added
Example:
tests:
spec:
main: Spec.hs
source-dirs: test
verbatim:
type: detailed-0.9 # change type from exitcode-stdio-1.0
default-language: null # remove default-language
When a string is used:
- it will be added verbatim, indented to match the indentation of the surrounding context.
- all existing
.cabal
fields are left untouched
Example:
verbatim: |
build-tool-depends:
hspec-discover:hspec-discover == 2.*
You can combine the use of objects and strings to gain more fine-grained control, e.g. you can remove an existing field with an object and then include it with a string so that you have 100% control over the layout.
verbatim:
- build-depends: null
- |
-- let's use Cabal 5.0 dependency syntax
build-depends:
hspec: [2-3[
It is possible to use YAML anchors (&
), aliases
(*
) and merge keys (<<
) to define fields and reference them
later.
executables:
my-exe-1: &my-exe
main: my-exe-1.hs
dependencies: [base, my-lib]
ghc-options: [-threaded]
my-exe-2:
<<: *my-exe
main: my-exe-2.hs
Fields that start with an underscore are ignored by hpack
, so they can be
used to declare aliases:
_exe-ghc-options: &exe-ghc-options
- -threaded
- -rtsopts
executables:
my-exe-1:
ghc-options: *exe-ghc-options
It is also possible to use the !include
directive:
# ...
tests:
hlint: !include "../common/hlint.yaml"
hlint.yaml
:
source-dirs: test
main: hlint.hs
dependencies: [base, hlint]
This can also be used to provide entire libraries of snippets:
_common/lib: !include "../common/lib.yaml"
name: example1
version: '0.1.0.0'
synopsis: Example
<<: *legal
<<: *defaults
library:
source-dirs: src
tests:
hlint: *test_hlint
lib.yaml:
- &legal
maintainer: Some One <someone@example.com>
copyright: (c) 2017 Some One
license: BSD3
- &defaults
dependencies:
- base
- containers
ghc-options:
- -Wall
- -Werror
- &test_hlint
source-dirs: test
main: hlint.hs
dependencies: [hlint]
To run hpack
automatically on modifications to package.yaml
add the
following to your ~/.vimrc
:
autocmd BufWritePost package.yaml call Hpack()
function Hpack()
let err = system('hpack ' . expand('%'))
if v:shell_error
echo err
endif
endfunction
Stack has built-in support for Hpack.
If you are using Stack you can use package.yaml
instead of a .cabal
file. No additional
steps are required.
You can get binaries for use on Travis CI with:
curl -sSL https://github.com/sol/hpack/raw/master/get-hpack.sh | bash
(both Linux and OS X are supported)