I can't understand why it just dosen't work. My question is what might have gone wrong i have created the ~/.bash_profile and tried to add the PATH given by the haskell webpage.
When i preform cabal install i get this output:
Marcuss-MacBook-Pro:~ marcuslagerstedt$ cabal install
cabal: Error reading local package.
Couldn't find .cabal file in: .
Marcuss-MacBook-Pro:~ marcuslagerstedt$
I hope i did a correct question.
But i really need help aswell.
You seem to be wanting to install a particular package, namely agda. The command cabal install takes either the name of a package or assumes you are installing some package in the local directory. You are hitting this second case.
To install agda try:
cabal update
cabal install agda
Related
cabal install ghc-mod seems to work, but when I try cabal run ghc-mod I get the following error:
Package has never been configured. Configuring with default flags. If this fails, please configure manually.
cabal: No cabal file found.
Please create a package description file <pkgname>.cabal
The resources I've found seem to suggest that creating a package description file shouldn't be necessary to install a package.
Any ideas?
The standard way to install stuff on Haskell nowadays is within sandboxes.
Go to the terminal and create an empty folder that will house your ghc-mod sandbox. cd into that folder and:
cabal sandbox init
cabal install ghc-mod
After it finishes you will find the ghc-mod binary you seek within .cabal-sandbox/bin. Since it's statically linked it's safe to move it to somewhere in your $PATH.
I strongly encourage you use a sandbox but if you don't want to go to .cabal in your home directory and you will find the binary with bin
Im trying to get Agda working following this turtorial. However when I type cabal install agda I get an error saying I have the wrong version of alex installed, I then use cabal install alex and after alex is installed I checks so that alex -v gives me the correct version which it does. I then try to run cabal install agda again but still it is complaining about wrong version of alex. I then put the exact path to alex on my path which is:
/Users/me/Library/Haskell/ghc-7.6.3/lib/alex-3.1.4/bin
This works and fixes the problem for alex but now cabal install agda need the correct version of cpph.
So my questions is why do i need to put ever package directly on my systems path for cabal to find the latest version? Why can it not use the following path which has all the correct symlinks and is also on my systems path:
~/Library/Haskell/bin:
The path ~/Library/Haskell/bin should be the first one in the list of your paths.
I am trying to install Elm and the instructions are to install Haskell and then
sh> cabal update
sh> cabal install cabal-install
sh> cabal install -j Elm elm-repl elm-reactor elm-get
When I do, the cabal-install installation installs text-1.2.0.0 which conflicts with the text-1.1.0.0 which uniplate requires so uniplate and its dependents fail to install. Text-1.1.0.0 is installed and present but is rejected in favour of text-1.2.0.0, even though the target needs text-1.1.0.0.
Is there a way to insist that cabal use text-1.1.0.0?
Is there a way to get text-1.1.0.0 and text-1.2.0.0 to co-exist?
Is there a way to convince uniplate that it can accept text-1.2.0.0?
Or a way to make uniplate (or cabal) believe that version text-1.1.0.0 is actually installed? Would that even work?
When I explicitly try to install version 1.1.0.0 of text, I am told that a reinstall would break other packages. Apparently it is a downgrade and not a co-installation. cabal does not seem to have an option to allow to me install two versions of the same library at the same time.
If I uninstall Haskell and all the libraries and then re-install Elm (without installing cabal-install so I don't get text-1.2.0.0 installed so there is no clash), I get 100 or so lines of
package aeson-0.7.0.4-8f84b14cc682e4c9b009352420076a45 is unusable due to missing or recursive dependencies:
attoparsec-0.10.4.0-ec2d0a330db1f6e3a6a3b79471a403ef hashable-1.2.2.0-45bd22df8c4ead6b3a7fb1d08bb07f7d mtl-2.1.3.1-8bcc0591131896cfc8761a93703d4c61 scientific-0.2.0.2-5e275f5d96527da6dc1f05642692a484 syb-0.4.1-be94ebe67c3607f5df1dfcc1906f5d5c text-1.1.0.0-9bd69e9ace700e05fb08e463086bc383 unordered-containers-0.2.4.0-69836b34d13649bcfacc8fb0c9f53e64 vector-0.10.9.1-c550551354bc7c2b5a1d261f39b2f3f4
package aeson-pretty-0.7.1-5dc26d5a4560afe110e90283479a1251 is unusable due to missing or recursive dependencies:
aeson-0.7.0.4-8f84b14cc682e4c9b009352420076a45
text-1.1.0.0-9bd69e9ace700e05fb08e463086bc383
unordered-containers-0.2.4.0-69836b34d13649bcfacc8fb0c9f53e64
vector-0.10.9.1-c550551354bc7c2b5a1d261f39b2f3f4
package asn1-encoding-0.9.0-94e9066cccf7ead73bee5ae4aa982071 is unusable due to missing or recursive dependencies:
mtl-2.1.3.1-8bcc0591131896cfc8761a93703d4c61
package asn1-parse-0.9.0-af4efc4777a8a0d9d19a626d5e4b08ff is unusable due to missing or recursive dependencies:
asn1-encoding-0.9.0-94e9066cccf7ead73bee5ae4aa982071
mtl-2.1.3.1-8bcc0591131896cfc8761a93703d4c61
text-1.1.0.0-9bd69e9ace700e05fb08e463086bc383
I have no idea at all how in resolve this or where to even try. Has anybody trod this path before and do you have any advice or pointers?
Thank you.
Edit
Installing in a sandbox changes the outcome only by degrees: text-1.1.0.0 does not clash with text-1.1.0.0 but still can not be loaded (despite being installed) and still remains the unsatisfied dependency.
blaze-builder is first to fail with cannot satisfy -package-id text-1.1.0.0-9bd69e9ace700e05fb08e463086bc383 yet the same log earlier stated [_12] trying: text-1.1.0.0/installed-9bd... (dependency of Elm-0.13) without apparent error or complaint.
cabal list shows both text-1.1.0.0 and text-1.2.0.0 as installed.
Installing blaze-builder separately looks the same. Dependency resolution shows
[_56] trying: blaze-builder-0.3.3.4 (user goal)
[_57] next goal: text (dependency of blaze-builder-0.3.3.4)
[_57] trying: text-1.1.0.0/installed-9bd...
[_58] done
All looks good but later, same log has
<command line>: cannot satisfy -package-id text-1.1.0.0-9bd69e9ace700e05fb08e463086bc383
(use -v for more information)
The ghc command line already had the -v flag and trying to re-run the command line copied from the log, with more -vs, gives an error with "can't find a package database at
dist/dist-sandbox-ad0bcd57/package.conf.inplace".
No package.conf.inplace seems to exist.
Further edit
On the Elm install page is a link to a BuildFromSource.hs script that is also supposed to work installing Elm. In the time that it took for that script to run and fail to work, I managed to install leiningen, node, npm, grunt and Clojure. I am now further along the road to getting Clojurescript installed in about 20 minutes than I am in getting Elm installed in nearly a week.
Elm looked really interesting but it is playing way too hard to get.
Thanks again to everyone who tried to help.
* Edit *
I finally got it.
Every executable installed by the installer at http://elm-lang.org/Install.elm caused a segfault.
The "Build from source" option at the same page did not work because the dependencies either stepped all over each other or could not get themselves straight in the first place.
The ghc at http://new-www.haskell.org/downloads/osx needs a later version of Mac OS than I have. (A link to older versions would not have gone astray.)
The solution (and it is obvious in retrospect) was to port install haskell-platform and port install hs-cabal-install and cabal install Elm .... I did have to run one of those installers twice because it could not find hackage.haskell.org (How is that a 'user' error?) but my hello-world.elm now compiles.
Thank you all again.
It looks like some dependency issues with elements you already have installed. You will probably need to install it in a sandbox.
First, update to the latest version of cabal:
$ cabal update
$ cabal install cabal cabal-install
Next, make sure you have the installed version of cabal on your $PATH.
$ which cabal
> /path/to/cabal/bin/cabal
If it says something like /usr/bin/cabal you will need to export cabal to be on your $PATH. For me this is `/home/username/.cabal/bin
$ export PATH=/path/to/cabal/bin/cabal;$PATH
Run which cabal again and ensure it is pointing to that path.
Now that you have the latest version of cabal. Run the following:
$ mkdir elm
$ cd elm
$ cabal sandbox init
This will initialize a sandbox where dependencies are completely independent of your other installs. Within this directory, you should be able to install the elm platform by running:
$ cabal install Elm elm-repl elm-reactor elm-get
These will be installed in a sub-directory called .cabal-sanbox/bin/ For convenience, you will probably want to add this to your $PATH so you can run the executables from any directory.
Hope this helps!
I'm new to Haskell, trying to write a program for compiler construction class.
I installed the haskell-platform package on my ubuntu 13.10, and then (without messing around with anything after installing haskell platform) tried to run the following command:
$ sudo cabal install bnfc
which results with:
Resolving dependencies...
Configuring BNFC-2.6.0.3...
cabal: The following installed packages are broken because other packages they
depend on are missing. These broken packages must be rebuilt before they can
be used.
package process-1.1.0.2 is broken due to missing package
directory-1.2.0.1-508733a890139bbedb8aa76468431462
Failed to install BNFC-2.6.0.3
cabal: Error: some packages failed to install:
BNFC-2.6.0.3 failed during the configure step. The exception was:
ExitFailure 1
As I try installing package directory it says the package is already installed.
Can anyone help?
I also am using Ubuntu 13.10 with the haskell platform package, and bnfc installs for me.
There are a few things you can check....
Don't use sudo with cabal install (by default cabal installs packages in your own home directory, using sudo might be causing trouble by giving the wrong file ownerships, or perhaps trying to put files in /root, or even overwriting /usr stuff)
Rename ~/.cabal/ and ~/.ghc/, and rebuild them by running "cabal update" (You may need to re-add ~/.cabal/bin/cabal from the moved location after the move). These hold installed packages and their info.... Since you have a new vanilla install, these should basically be empty, although the meta info in them may be corrupt. (if for some reason this makes things worse, you can always restore the original directory.... If it solves the problem, you can delete the original .cabal and .ghc)
You can get more info about why a package isn't installing by doing the following
cabal unpack bnfc #This will download and unpack the source code
cd BNFC-2.6.0.3 #enter the newly created source directory
cabal configure #This checks that all system dependencies are met
cabal build #This builds the package
cabal install #This installs the package in ~/.cabal/
(You may have to iterate to another package if a dependency isn't met)
I think 2. may solve your problem, as the error message you showed implies that the build process is hooked on finding a very specific version of the directory package, rather than the latest one. This happened to me once and cleaning out .cabal solved the problem for me.
when you try to install the library reactie-banana-wx, get the error:
src\CRUD.hs:10:18: Could not find module `Data.Map': It is a member of the hidden package `containers-0.4.0.0'. Perhaps you need to add `containers' to the build-depends in your .cabal file.
installed the command:
cabal install reactive-banana-wx
Please help correct the problem.
The advice it offers is sound, if a bit confusing: cabal install hides the step where it produces the .cabal file! Here's how you can do that part explicitly:
cabal unpack reactive-banana-wx
cd reactive-banana-wx-*
gvim *.cabal # or whatever editor you prefer
# follow the instructions given in the error
cabal install