WARNINGS about pitfalls and known ``problems'':
One difficulty that comes up from time to time is running out of space in TMPDIR. (It is impossible for the configuration stuff to compensate for the vagaries of different sysadmin approaches to temp space.) The quickest way around it is setenv TMPDIR /usr/tmp or even setenv TMPDIR . (or the equivalent incantation with your shell of choice). The best way around it is to say
export TMPDIR=<dir> |
In compiling some support-code bits, e.g., in ghc/rts/gmp and even in ghc/lib, you may get a few C-compiler warnings. We think these are OK.
When compiling via C, you'll sometimes get ``warning: assignment from incompatible pointer type'' out of GCC. Harmless.
Similarly, archiving warning messages like the following are not a problem:
ar: filename GlaIOMonad__1_2s.o truncated to GlaIOMonad_ ar: filename GlaIOMonad__2_2s.o truncated to GlaIOMonad_ ... |
In compiling the compiler proper (in compiler/), you may get an ``Out of heap space'' error message. These can vary with the vagaries of different systems, it seems. The solution is simple:
If you're compiling with GHC 4.00 or later, then the maximum heap size must have been reached. This is somewhat unlikely, since the maximum is set to 64M by default. Anyway, you can raise it with the -optCrts-M<size> flag (add this flag to <module>_HC_OPTS make variable in the appropriate Makefile).
For GHC < 4.00, add a suitable -H flag to the Makefile, as above.
% cd ghc/compiler % make EXTRA_HC_OPTS=-optCrts-M128M |
If you try to compile some Haskell, and you get errors from GCC about lots of things from /usr/include/math.h, then your GCC was mis-installed. fixincludes wasn't run when it should've been. As fixincludes is now automagically run as part of GCC installation, this bug also suggests that you have an old GCC.
You may need to re-ranlib your libraries (on Sun4s).
% cd $(libdir)/ghc-x.xx/sparc-sun-sunos4 % foreach i ( `find . -name '*.a' -print` ) # or other-shell equiv... ? ranlib $i ? # or, on some machines: ar s $i ? end |
GHC's sources go through cpp before being compiled, and cpp varies a bit from one Unix to another. One particular gotcha is macro calls like this:
SLIT("Hello, world") |
:731: macro `SLIT' used with too many (2) args |