Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
133 lines (92 loc) · 4.49 KB

HACKING.md

File metadata and controls

133 lines (92 loc) · 4.49 KB

Contributing to the Glasgow Haskell Compiler

So you've decided to hack on GHC, congratulations! We hope you have a rewarding experience. This file will point you in the direction of information to help you get started right away.

The GHC Developer's Wiki

The home for GHC hackers is our GitLab instance, located here:

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc

From here, you can file bugs (or look them up,) use the wiki, view the git history, among other things. Of particular note is the building page, which has the high level overview of the build process and how to get the source:

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/building

Contributing patches to GHC in a hurry

Make sure your system has the necessary tools to compile GHC. You can find an overview here:

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/building/preparation

Next, clone the repository and all the associated libraries:

$ git clone --recursive git@gitlab.haskell.org:ghc/ghc.git

On Windows, you need an extra repository containing some build tools. These can be downloaded for you by configure. This only needs to be done once by running:

$ ./configure --enable-tarballs-autodownload

First copy mk/build.mk.sample to mk/build.mk and ensure it has your preferred build settings. (You probably want to at least set BuildFlavour to quick):

$ cp mk/build.mk.sample mk/build.mk
$ ... double-check mk/build.mk ...

Now build. The convenient validate script will build the tree in a way which is both quick to build and consistent with our testsuite,

$ ./validate --build-only

You can use the ./inplace/bin/ghc-stage2 binary to play with the newly built compiler.

Now, hack on your copy and rebuild (with make) as necessary.

Then start by making your commits however you want. When you're done, you can submit a pull request on Github for small changes. For larger changes the patch needs to be submitted to GitLab for code review. The GHC Wiki has a good summary for the overall process.

Useful links:

An overview of things like using git, the release process, filing bugs and more can be located here:

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/contributing

You can find our coding conventions for the compiler and RTS here:

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/commentary/coding-style https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/commentary/rts/conventions

If you're going to contribute regularly, learning how to use the build system is important and will save you lots of time. You should read over this page carefully:

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/building/using

If you want to watch issues and code review activities, the following page is a good start:

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/activity

How to communicate with us

GHC is a big project, so you'll surely need help. Luckily, we can provide plenty through a variety of means!

IRC

If you're an IRC user, be sure to drop by the official #ghc channel on freenode. Many (but not all) of the developers and committers are actively there during a variety of hours.

Mailing lists

In the event IRC does not work or if you'd like a bigger audience, GHC has several mailing lists for this purpose. The most important one is ghc-devs, which is where the developers actively hang out and discuss incoming changes and problems.

There is no strict standard about where you post patches - either in ghc-devs or in the bug tracker. Ideally, please put it in the bug tracker with test cases or relevant information in a ticket, and set the ticket status to patch. By doing this, we'll see the patch quickly and be able to review. This will also ensure it doesn't get lost. But if the change is small and self contained, feel free to attach it to your email, and send it to ghc-devs.

Furthermore, if you're a developer (or want to become one!) you're undoubtedly also interested in the other mailing lists:

El fin

Happy Hacking! -- The GHC Team