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Distribution.Simple.PreProcess | Portability | portable | Maintainer | cabal-devel@haskell.org |
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Description |
This defines a PreProcessor abstraction which represents a pre-processor
that can transform one kind of file into another. There is also a
PPSuffixHandler which is a combination of a file extension and a function
for configuring a PreProcessor. It defines a bunch of known built-in
preprocessors like cpp, cpphs, c2hs, hsc2hs, happy, alex etc and
lists them in knownSuffixHandlers. On top of this it provides a function
for actually preprocessing some sources given a bunch of known suffix
handlers. This module is not as good as it could be, it could really do with
a rewrite to address some of the problems we have with pre-processors.
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Synopsis |
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Documentation |
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Standard preprocessors: GreenCard, c2hs, hsc2hs, happy, alex and cpphs.
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Convenience function; get the suffixes of these preprocessors.
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A preprocessor for turning non-Haskell files with the given extension
into plain Haskell source files.
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The interface to a preprocessor, which may be implemented using an
external program, but need not be. The arguments are the name of
the input file, the name of the output file and a verbosity level.
Here is a simple example that merely prepends a comment to the given
source file:
ppTestHandler :: PreProcessor
ppTestHandler =
PreProcessor {
platformIndependent = True,
runPreProcessor = mkSimplePreProcessor $ \inFile outFile verbosity ->
do info verbosity (inFile++" has been preprocessed to "++outFile)
stuff <- readFile inFile
writeFile outFile ("-- preprocessed as a test\n\n" ++ stuff)
return ExitSuccess
We split the input and output file names into a base directory and the
rest of the file name. The input base dir is the path in the list of search
dirs that this file was found in. The output base dir is the build dir where
all the generated source files are put.
The reason for splitting it up this way is that some pre-processors don't
simply generate one output .hs file from one input file but have
dependencies on other genereated files (notably c2hs, where building one
.hs file may require reading other .chi files, and then compiling the .hs
file may require reading a generated .h file). In these cases the generated
files need to embed relative path names to each other (eg the generated .hs
file mentions the .h file in the FFI imports). This path must be relative to
the base directory where the genereated files are located, it cannot be
relative to the top level of the build tree because the compilers do not
look for .h files relative to there, ie we do not use "-I .", instead we
use "-I dist/build" (or whatever dist dir has been set by the user)
Most pre-processors do not care of course, so mkSimplePreProcessor and
runSimplePreProcessor functions handle the simple case.
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Produced by Haddock version 2.6.1 |