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Distribution.Simple.Program.Db | Portability | portable | Maintainer | cabal-devel@haskell.org |
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Description |
This provides a ProgramDb type which holds configured and not-yet
configured programs. It is the parameter to lots of actions elsewhere in
Cabal that need to look up and run programs. If we had a Cabal monad,
the ProgramDb would probably be a reader or state component of it.
One nice thing about using it is that any program that is
registered with Cabal will get some "configure" and ".cabal"
helpers like --with-foo-args --foo-path= and extra-foo-args.
There's also a hook for adding programs in a Setup.lhs script. See
hookedPrograms in Distribution.Simple.UserHooks. This gives a
hook user the ability to get the above flags and such so that they
don't have to write all the PATH logic inside Setup.lhs.
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Synopsis |
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The collection of configured programs we can run
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The configuration is a collection of information about programs. It
contains information both about configured programs and also about programs
that we are yet to configure.
The idea is that we start from a collection of unconfigured programs and one
by one we try to configure them at which point we move them into the
configured collection. For unconfigured programs we record not just the
Program but also any user-provided arguments and location for the program.
| Instances | |
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The Read/Show instance does not preserve all the unconfigured Programs
because Program is not in Read/Show because it contains functions. So to
fully restore a deserialised ProgramDb use this function to add
back all the known Programs.
- It does not add the default programs, but you probably want them, use
builtinPrograms in addition to any extra you might need.
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Query and manipulate the program db
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Add a known program that we may configure later
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:: String | Program name
| -> FilePath | user-specified path to the program
| -> ProgramDb | | -> ProgramDb | | User-specify this path. Basically override any path information
for this program in the configuration. If it's not a known
program ignore it.
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Like userSpecifyPath but for a list of progs and their paths.
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:: String | Program name
| -> [ProgArg] | user-specified args
| -> ProgramDb | | -> ProgramDb | | User-specify the arguments for this program. Basically override
any args information for this program in the configuration. If it's
not a known program, ignore it..
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Like userSpecifyPath but for a list of progs and their args.
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Get any extra args that have been previously specified for a program.
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Try to find a configured program
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Update a configured program in the database.
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Query and manipulate the program db
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Try to configure a specific program. If the program is already included in
the colleciton of unconfigured programs then we use any user-supplied
location and arguments. If the program gets configured sucessfully it gets
added to the configured collection.
Note that it is not a failure if the program cannot be configured. It's only
a failure if the user supplied a location and the program could not be found
at that location.
The reason for it not being a failure at this stage is that we don't know up
front all the programs we will need, so we try to configure them all.
To verify that a program was actually sucessfully configured use
requireProgram.
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Try to configure all the known programs that have not yet been configured.
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reconfigure a bunch of programs given new user-specified args. It takes
the same inputs as userSpecifyPath and userSpecifyArgs and for all progs
with a new path it calls configureProgram.
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Check that a program is configured and available to be run.
It raises an exception if the program could not be configured, otherwise
it returns the configured program.
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Check that a program is configured and available to be run.
Additionally check that the version of the program number is suitable and
return it. For example you could require AnyVersion or
orLaterVersion (Version [1,0] [])
It raises an exception if the program could not be configured or the version
is unsuitable, otherwise it returns the configured program and its version
number.
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Produced by Haddock version 2.6.0 |