Skip to content

iquiw/yesod

 
 

Repository files navigation

Yesod

An advanced web framework using the Haskell programming language. Featuring:

  • safety & security guaranteed at compile time
  • developer productivity: tools for all your basic web development needs
  • raw performance
    • fast, compiled code
    • techniques for constant-space memory consumption
  • asynchronous IO
    • this is built in to the Haskell programming language (like Erlang)
    • handles a greater concurrent load than any other web application server

Install the latests stable Yesod: http://www.yesodweb.com/page/quickstart

cabal update && cabal install yesod

Create a new project after installing

yesod init

Your application is a cabal package and you use cabal to install its dependencies.

Installing & isolation

Install conflicts are unfortunately common in Haskell development. If you are not using any sandbox tools, you may discover that some of the other haskell installs on your system are broken. You can prevent this by using sandbox tools: cabal-dev or hsenv.

Isolating an entire project with a virtual machine is also a great idea, you just need some tools to help that process. Vagrant is a great tool for that and there is a Haskell Platform installer for it.

Using cabal-dev

cabal-dev creates a sandboxed environment for an individual cabal package. Instead of using the cabal command, use the cabal-dev command which will use the sandbox.

Use yesod devel --dev when developing your application.

Installing the latest development version from github for use with your application

cabal update
cabal install cabal-meta cabal-src

In your application folder, create a sources.txt file with the following contents:

./
https://github.com/yesodweb/yesod
https://github.com/yesodweb/shakespeare
https://github.com/yesodweb/persistent
https://github.com/yesodweb/wai

./ means build your app. The yesod repos will be cloned and placed in a vendor repo. Now run: cabal-meta install. If you use cabal-dev, run cabal-meta --dev install

This should work almost all of the time. You can read more on cabal-meta If you aren't building from an application, remove the ./ and create a new directory for your sources.txt first.

hsenv (Linux only)

hsenv prevents your custom build of Yesod from interfering with your currently installed cabal packages:

  • hsenv creates an isolated environment like cabal-dev
  • hsenv works at the shell level, so every shell must activate the hsenv
  • cabal-dev by default isolates a single cabal package, but hsenv isolates multiple packages together.
  • cabal-dev can isolate multiple packages together by using the -s sandbox argument

cabal-src

The cabal-src tool helps resolve dependency conflicts when installing local packages. This capability is already built in if you are using cabal-dev or cabal-meta. Otherwise install cabal-src with:

cabal install cabal-src

Whenever you would use cabal install to install a local package, use cabal-src-install instead. Our installer script now uses cabal-src-install when it is available.

Cloning the repos

The above instructions for building the latest should work well. But you can clone the repos without the help of cabal-meta:

for repo in shakespeare persistent wai yesod; do
  git clone http://github.com/yesodweb/$repo
  (
    cd $repo
    git submodule update --init
  )
done

Building your changes to Yesod

Yesod is composed of 4 "mega-repos", each with multiple cabal packages. ./script/install will run tests against each package and install each package.

install package in all repos

for repo in shakespeare persistent wai yesod; do
    pushd $repo
    ./scripts/install
    popd
done

Clean build (sometimes necessary)

./scripts/install --clean

Building individual packages

# move to the individual package you are working on
cd shakespeare-text

# build and test the individual package
cabal configure -ftest --enable-tests
cabal build
cabal test

About

A RESTful Haskell web framework built on WAI.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Haskell 99.8%
  • Other 0.2%