These are commands that will likely be useful during development.
General: ./scripts/test.sh
compiles and builds the Haskell code and runs all tests. Recommended that you run this before pushing any code to a branch that others might be working on.
Disclaimer If you have trouble getting started, please get in touch via Discord so we can help. If you have any fixes to the process, please send us a PR!
To get cracking with Unison:
- Install
stack
. - Build the project with
stack build
. This builds all executables. - (Optional) Run
./dev-ui-install.hs
to fetch the latest release of the codebase UI. If you don't care about running the codebase UI locally you can ignore this step. - After building do
stack exec unison
to will initialize a codebase in your home directory (in~/.unison
). This only needs to be done once. (Alternatively, you can usestack exec -- unison -C <other dir> to create a codebase in <other dir>
stack exec unison
starts Unison and watches for.u
file changes in the current directory. If you want to run it in a different directory, just addunison
to yourPATH
, after finding it withstack exec which unison
.
On startup, Unison prints a url for the codebase UI. If you did step 3 above, then visiting that URL in a browser will give you a nice interface to your codebase.
We use 0.5.0.1 of Ormolu and CI will add an extra commit, if needed, to autoformat your code.
Also note that you can always wrap a comment around some code you don't want Ormolu to touch, using:
{- ORMOLU_DISABLE -}
dontFormatMe = do blah
blah
blah
{- ORMOLU_ENABLE -}
stack test --fast
builds and runs most test suites, see below for exceptions to this (e.g. transcript tests).
Most test suites support selecting a specific test to run by passing a prefix as a test argument:
stack test unison-parser-typechecker --fast --test-arguments my-test-prefix
builds and runs most test suites, see below for exceptions to this (e.g. transcript tests).
Some tests are executables instead:
stack exec transcripts
runs the transcripts-related integration tests, found inunison-src/transcripts
. You can add more tests to this directory.stack exec transcripts -- prefix-of-filename
runs only transcript tests with a matching filename prefix.stack exec cli-integration-tests
runs the additional integration tests for cli. These tests are not triggered bytests
ortranscripts
.stack exec unison -- transcript unison-src/transcripts-round-trip/main.md
runs the pretty-printing round trip testsstack exec unison -- transcript unison-src/transcripts-manual/benchmarks.md
runs the benchmark suite. Output goes in unison-src/transcripts-manual/benchmarks/output.txt.
Do:
stack build --fast --test --bench --no-run-tests --no-run-benchmarks
Do:
stack build --profile unison-parser-typechecker
Again you can leave off the flag. To run an executable with profiling enabled, do:
stack exec -- <executable-name> +RTS -p
That will generate a <executable-name>.prof
plain text file with profiling data. More info on profiling.
Unison can also be built/installed with cabal. You'll need the same ghc
used by stack.yaml
to successfully build its dependencies.
The provided project file is also in contrib/ so you'll need to specify
its location on the command line.
-
To build all projects use
cabal v2-build --project-file=contrib/cabal.project all
-
Tests can be run with e.g.
cabal v2-test --project-file=contrib/cabal.project all
-
The executable can be installed with
cabal v2-install --project-file=contrib/cabal.project unison
-
The install directory can be modified with the option
--installdir: ...
-
Take in account that if you want to load the project in haskell-language-server using cabal instead stack you will need:
- Copy or link
./contrib/cabal.project
to./cabal.project
- Delete or rename the existing
./hie.yaml
. The default behaviour withouthie.yaml
works with cabal.
- Copy or link
This codebase uses symlinks as a workaround for some inconveniences in the here
package. Support for symlinks in Windows is relatively new, and isn't enabled by default. As a result, your cloned copy of the code probably won't build.
First you'll need to enable "Developer Mode" in your Windows settings.
See https://consumer.huawei.com/en/support/content/en-us15594140/
Then you'll need to enable symlink support in your git
configuration, e.g.
git config core.symlinks true
And then ask git
to fix up your symlinks with git checkout .
More context at: https://stackoverflow.com/a/59761201/310162
I get an error about removeDirectoryRecursive
/removeContentsRecursive
/removePathRecursive
/permission denied (Access is denied.)
Stack doesn't work deterministically in Windows due to mismatched expectations about how file deletion works. If you get this error, you can just retry the build and it will probably make more progress than the last time.
NB: It is important that the Unison Nix cache is trusted when building, otherwise you will likely end up building hundreds of packages, including GHC itself.
The recommended way to do this is to add the public key and URL for the cache to your system’s Nix configuration. /etc/nix/nix.conf should have lines similar to
trusted-public-keys = unison.cachix.org-1:i1DUFkisRPVOyLp/vblDsbsObmyCviq/zs6eRuzth3k=
trusted-substituters = https://unison.cachix.org
these lines could be prefixed with extra-
and they may have additional entries besides the ones for our cache.
This command should work if you don’t want to edit the file manually:
sudo sh -c 'echo "extra-trusted-public-keys = unison.cachix.org-1:i1DUFkisRPVOyLp/vblDsbsObmyCviq/zs6eRuzth3k=
extra-trusted-substituters = https://unison.cachix.org" >>/etc/nix/nix.conf'
After updating /etc/nix/nix.conf, you need to restart the Nix daemon. To do this on
- Ubuntu:
sudo systemctl restart nix-daemon
- MacOS:
sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist sudo launchctl load /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist
If you use NixOS, you may instead add this via your configuration.nix with
nix.settings.trusted-public-keys = ["unison.cachix.org-1:i1DUFkisRPVOyLp/vblDsbsObmyCviq/zs6eRuzth3k="];
nix.settings.trusted-substituters = ["https://unison.cachix.org"];
and run sudo nixos-rebuild switch
afterward.
It is not recommended to add your user to trusted-users
. This can make enabling flake configurations simpler (like the Unison Nix cache here), but it is equivalent to giving that user root access (without need for sudo).
nix build
This is specified with the normal
<package>:<component-type>:<component-name>
triple.
Some examples:
nix build '.#component-unison-cli:lib:unison-cli'
nix build '.#component-unison-syntax:test:syntax-tests'
nix build '.#component-unison-cli:exe:transcripts'
This gets you into a development environment with the preferred versions of the compiler and other development tools. These include:
- ghc
- stack
- ormolu
- haskell-language-server
nix develop
This gets you into a development environment with the preferred versions of the compiler and other development tools. Additionally, all non-local haskell dependencies (including profiling dependencies) are provided in the nix shell.
nix develop '.#cabal-local'
This gets you into a development environment with the preferred versions of the compiler and other development tools. Additionally, all haskell dependencies of this package are provided by the nix shell (including profiling dependencies).
nix develop '.#cabal-<package-name>'
for example:
nix develop '.#cabal-unison-cli'
or
nix develop '.#cabal-unison-parser-typechecker'
This is useful if you wanted to profile a package. For example, if you
want to profile unison-cli-main:exe:unison
then you could get into one of these
shells, cd into its directory, then run the program with
profiling.
nix develop '.#cabal-unison-parser-typechecker'
cd unison-cli
cabal run --enable-profiling unison-cli-main:exe:unison -- +RTS -p
See the readme.