@hackage cabal-edit0.1.0.0

Cabal utility

cabal-edit

Cabal CI Stack CI

This is an extension to Haskell's package manager Cabal to allow you to add, remove, and upgrade dependencies by modifying your cabal file from the command line. This behaves similar to install --save commands in other package managers.

Usage

add

For example to setup a new project one often wants to add common dependencies like text and aeson. We can use cabal-edit to automatically append these to our dependency list and deduce the latest versions from Hackage.

$ cabal init --lib --cabal-version=3.0    

$ cabal-edit add aeson                
Adding dependency: aeson ^>=1.5 to sample.cabal

$ cabal-edit add text 
Adding dependency: text ^>=1.2 to sample.cabal

If we want to depend on a specific version of aeson, we can pass this explicitly as an argument.

$ cabal-edit add aeson==1.4.0.0

Multiple packages can be passed to the add command at once. For example:

$ cabal-edit add base bytestring aeson text process filepath directory mtl transformers protolude
Adding latest dependency: base ^>=4.14 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: bytestring ^>=0.10 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: aeson ^>=1.5 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: text ^>=1.2 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: process ^>=1.6 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: filepath ^>=1.4 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: directory ^>=1.3 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: mtl ^>=2.2 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: transformers ^>=0.5 to sample.cabal
Adding latest dependency: protolude ^>=0.3 to sample.cabal

Note: Dependency modification will happen over the library stanza of your Cabal file, and not the executable sections.

upgrade

The upgrade command can be used to safely manipulate the version bounds for a given library. For instance if one has a simple dependency on text for 1.0 version range, like as follows:

library
    exposed-modules:  MyLib
    default-language: Haskell2010
    build-depends:
        base >= 4.14 && <=5.0,
        text ^>= 1.0

We can bump the bound of this library to upgrade it to allow the latest version from Hackage. We simply pass the upgrade command the name of the package (i.e. text) and it will automatically figure out the appropriate version range for the upgrade including previously version ranges. The resulting version ranges will always have an upper bound and will conform to Hackage PVP standards.

$ cabal-edit upgrade text
Upgrading bounds for text to 1.3

This will produce the following modified Cabal file.

library
    exposed-modules:  MyLib
    default-language: Haskell2010
    build-depends:
        base >=4.14 && <=5.0,
        text >=1.0 && <=1.3

upgradeall

upgradeall behaves like upgrade but performs the version bound bump for all available dependencies. This sets the upper bounds for all dependencies to the latest available version on Hackage.

$ cabal-edit upgradeall
Upgrading bounds for Cabal to 3.3
Upgrading bounds for aeson to 1.6
Upgrading bounds for base to 4.15
Upgrading bounds for bytestring to 0.11
Upgrading bounds for ghc to 8.11
Upgrading bounds for text to 1.3

remove

Remove will remove a given dependency from the file completely.

$ cabal-edit remove microlens
Removing depndency on microlens

list

The Hackage database can be queried from the command line to search for all available versions to use with the list command.

$ cabal-edit list filepath
1.0
1.1.0.0
1.1.0.1
1.1.0.2
1.1.0.3
1.1.0.4
1.2.0.0
1.2.0.1
1.3.0.0
1.3.0.1
1.3.0.2
1.4.0.0
1.4.1.0
1.4.1.1
1.4.1.2
1.4.2
1.4.2.1

format

The format command will canonicalise the Cabal into by parsing it and running it through the pretty printer again.

$ cabal-edit format
Formatting: sample.cabal

extensions

The extensions command will enumerate all the default extensions enabled for the given library. This is useful if you wish to add these headers to files within the project.

$ cabal-edit extensions

{-# LANGUAGE LambdaCase #-}
{-# LANGUAGE BlockArguments #-}
{-# LANGUAGE RecordWildCards #-}
{-# LANGUAGE NoImplicitPrelude #-}
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleContexts #-}
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances #-}
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
{-# LANGUAGE RankNTypes #-}
{-# LANGUAGE ScopedTypeVariables #-}

lint

The lint command will detect common problems with your version bounds and recommend package upgrades when available.

$ cabal-edit lint 
aeson : Consider upgrading major bound to latest version 1.6
text : Consider upgrading major bound to latest version 1.3

latest

The latest command will return the dependency string for adding the latest version of a given package.

$ cabal-edit latest aeson
aeson ^>=1.5

rebuild

cabal-edit uses a cache of Hackage package versions internally. This is normally built on first run and whenever the package database is older than 30 days. If you wish to manually rebuild it after running cabal update then run:

$ cabal-edit rebuild
Done.

Installation

Download this repository.

$ git clone git@github.com:sdiehl/cabal-edit.git
$ cd cabal-edit

Then install either with Stack, Cabal or Nix.

$ stack install 
$ cabal install --installdir=/home/$USER/.local/bin
$ nix-build -A cabal-edit

Note: This library links directly against Cabal, so you must be using the same version of Cabal you intend to compile your package against. It is reccomened to use Cabal > 3.0 to support modern versioning schemes.

Shell Completions

We can tab complete on the Hackage package index we install the local completions for you shell. Run one of the following commands to generate the shell completer appropriate to your shell. Then add the output to one of ~/.zshrc, ~/.bashrc or ~/.config/fish/config.fish.

$ cabal-edit --zsh-completion-script cabal-edit
$ cabal-edit --bash-completion-script cabal-edit
$ cabal-edit --fish-completion-script cabal-edit

This will completion against the Hackage database prefixed by name.

$ cabal-edit add gh
zsh: do you wish to see all 103 possibilities (15 lines)?
$ cabal-edit add ghc-pa
ghc-parmake  ghc-parser   ghc-paths

bash

_cabal-edit()
{
    local CMDLINE
    local IFS=$'\n'
    CMDLINE=(--bash-completion-index $COMP_CWORD)

    for arg in ${COMP_WORDS[@]}; do
        CMDLINE=(${CMDLINE[@]} --bash-completion-word $arg)
    done

    COMPREPLY=( $(cabal-edit "${CMDLINE[@]}") )
}

complete -o filenames -F _cabal-edit cabal-edit

zsh

#compdef cabal-edit

local request
local completions
local word
local index=$((CURRENT - 1))

request=(--bash-completion-enriched --bash-completion-index $index)
for arg in ${words[@]}; do
  request=(${request[@]} --bash-completion-word $arg)
done

IFS=$'\n' completions=($( cabal-edit "${request[@]}" ))

for word in $completions; do
  local -a parts

  # Split the line at a tab if there is one.
  IFS=$'\t' parts=($( echo $word ))

  if [[ -n $parts[2] ]]; then
     if [[ $word[1] == "-" ]]; then
       local desc=("$parts[1] ($parts[2])")
       compadd -d desc -- $parts[1]
     else
       local desc=($(print -f  "%-019s -- %s" $parts[1] $parts[2]))
       compadd -l -d desc -- $parts[1]
     fi
  else
    compadd -f -- $word
  fi
done

fish

 function _cabal-edit
    set -l cl (commandline --tokenize --current-process)
    # Hack around fish issue #3934
    set -l cn (commandline --tokenize --cut-at-cursor --current-process)
    set -l cn (count $cn)
    set -l tmpline --bash-completion-enriched --bash-completion-index $cn
    for arg in $cl
      set tmpline $tmpline --bash-completion-word $arg
    end
    for opt in (cabal-edit $tmpline)
      if test -d $opt
        echo -E "$opt/"
      else
        echo -E "$opt"
      end
    end
end

complete --no-files --command cabal-edit --arguments '(_cabal-edit)'

Limitations

Since this library works directly with the PackageDescription data structure it cannot handle Cabal files in their full generality. Instead we directly manipulate the internal structure used to represent the Cabal file which is not capable of representing all surface constructs. If your Cabal file currently uses:

  • Common stanzas
  • Conditional blocks
  • Preprocessor definitions

These constructs will be compiled into the PackageDescription and inlined if you use cabal-edit. This makes cabal-edit useful for small beginning projects and ones that don't use advanced Cabal features.

License

MIT License Copyright (c) 2020, Stephen Diehl