@hackage ats-pkg1.4.0.3

Package manager for ATS

ats-pkg

Build Status

This is a build system for ATS written in Haskell and configured with Dhall.

Installation

The easiest way to install is via a script, viz.

 $ curl -sSl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/vmchale/atspkg/master/bash/install.sh | bash -s

Alternately, you can download Cabal and GHC and install with

 $ cabal new-install ats-pkg --symlink-bindir ~/.local/bin

Examples

atspkg is configured with Dhall. You may wish to read the Dhall tutorial first, but you do not need to fully understand everything to get started.

Project Templates

You can use pi with the builtin ats template as follows:

pi new ats cool-project

You can then build with atspkg build or install with atspkg install.

Alternately, you can start with a templated Haskell library calling ATS code:

pi git vmchale/haskell-ats ambitious-project

which can be built with atspkg build followed by cabal new-build.

Building a Binary Package

The minimal configuration for a package with a binary target is as follows:

let pkg = https://raw.githubusercontent.com/vmchale/atspkg/master/pkgs/default.dhall

in pkg //
  { bin =
    [
      { src = "src/program.dats"
      , target = "target/program"
      , gc = True
      }
    ]
  }

You need only specify the source file and the target; atspkg will parse your ATS source files and track them (it will not track included C however).

Depending on a Library

Library specifications are also written in Dhall. Let's look at an example:

let dep =
  { libName = "atscntrb-concurrency-0.1.0"
  , dir = ".atspkg/contrib"
  , url = "https://github.com/vmchale/ats-concurrency/archive/0.1.0.tar.gz"
  , libVersion = [0,1,0]
  }

in dep

This defines a dependency by pointing to its tarball. Unlike cabal or other sophisticated package managers, atspkg does not allow transitive dependencies and it does not do any constraint solving. Let's look at a simple example:

let pkg = https://raw.githubusercontent.com/vmchale/atspkg/master/pkgs/default.dhall

in pkg //
  { bin =
    [
      { src = "src/compat.dats"
      , target = "target/poly"
      , libs = ([] : List Text)
      , gc = True
      }
    ]
  , dependencies = [ https://raw.githubusercontent.com/vmchale/ats-concurrency/master/atspkg.dhall ]
  }

As Dhall is distributed, you can simply point to the package configuration URL to add a dependency. You can find several preconfigured packages here, or you can write your own configurations.

Building a Haskell Library

You can see an example here. You can configure the ATS side of things as follows:

let pkg = https://raw.githubusercontent.com/vmchale/atspkg/master/pkgs/default.dhall

in pkg //
  { atsSource = [ "ats-src/ambitious-project.dats" ] }

This just tells atspkg to look for a source file called ats-src/ambitious-project.dats, which will be compiled to ambitious-project.c in the default directory (i.e. cbits). You can then call the generated code just as you would call C.

You may wish to consider ats-setup as well if you are packaging the Haskell for distribution.