Trying to follow the solution proposed in the answer to reducing haskell's binary question, I keep getting the error, when I install with --enable-shared option:
> cabal install opengl --enable-shared --reinstall
...
Could not find module `Prelude'
Perhaps you haven't installed the "dyn" libraries for package `base'?
Tried everything. I'm using apt-get installedhaskell-platform (with ghc 7.4.1), on Ubuntu 12.04, 64bit.
ANY tips?
It seems that Ubuntu's Haskell platform doesn't include dynamic libraries.
You can try installing ghc-dynamic, that should work, I assume the distro packagers know what they're doing. You would probably need to install the *-dynamic packages for several libraries included in the platform too.
In case it doesn't work, the only suggestions I can make is to compile GHC yourself from source (using the installed GHC), or use a vanilla GHC bindist, those come with dynamic libraries, as far as I'm aware.
Both would require reinstalling (recompiling included) the libraries, though (perhaps best to compile the vanilla platform from source then), so I recommend trying the distribution packages first.
Related
I'm trying to compile a Haskell source package as a dynamic library to be used with OCaml code. I tried using the --enable-shared option with cabal install on the .cabal file of the source, I got a Perhaps you haven't installed the "dyn" libraries for package 'zeromq4-haskell-0.6.5' error. After a little googling, I realised that the dependencies must also be compiled as dynamic libraries. I downloaded the source package for zeromq and tried installing the zeromq package with the --enable-shared option. This time I got a similar error with one of zeromq's dependencies. I tried doing this 4-5 times and get an error with a different dependency at each level.
Am I making a mistake here? How can I get all of the dependencies to install as dynamic libraries?
Thanks!
If you generally want to have shared libraries, you can permanently enable it in your .cabal/config:
shared: True
However, it will only affect libraries installed after that, so you may want to purge all libraries and start over again.
If this is just a one-shot, you may create a cabal sandbox just for that purpose:
cd yourlib
cabal sandbox init
cabal install --enable-shared
The result will be in the directory .cabal-sandbox.
Recently I was trying to install llvm-general-3.5.1.0 package.. for about a week. Basically I am getting this error: link. My situation is identical. Windows 10, ghc 7.10.2, cabal 1.22.4.0. I installed llvm 3.5.2 from sources with cmake and everything went fine. In llvm/lib directory I have *.lib files (eg. LLVMAnalysis.lib).
But somehow cabal can't see those libraries and gives this frustrating error:
Configuring llvm-general-3.5.1.0...
setup.exe: Missing dependencies on foreign libraries:
* Missing C libraries: LLVMLTO, LLVMObjCARCOpts, LLVMLinker, LLVMipo,
LLVMVectorize, LLVMBitWriter, LLVMCppBackendCodeGen, LLVMCppBackendInfo,
LLVMTableGen, LLVMDebugInfo, LLVMOption, LLVMX86Disassembler,
LLVMX86AsmParser, LLVMX86CodeGen, LLVMSelectionDAG, LLVMAsmPrinter,
LLVMX86Desc, LLVMX86Info, LLVMX86AsmPrinter, LLVMX86Utils, LLVMJIT,
LLVMIRReader, LLVMAsmParser, LLVMLineEditor, LLVMMCAnalysis,
LLVMMCDisassembler, LLVMInstrumentation, LLVMInterpreter, LLVMCodeGen,
LLVMScalarOpts, LLVMInstCombine, LLVMTransformUtils, LLVMipa, LLVMAnalysis,
LLVMProfileData, LLVMMCJIT, LLVMTarget, LLVMRuntimeDyld, LLVMObject,
LLVMMCParser, LLVMBitReader, LLVMExecutionEngine, LLVMMC, LLVMCore,
LLVMSupport
This problem can usually be solved by installing the system packages that
provide these libraries (you may need the "-dev" versions). If the libraries
are already installed but in a non-standard location then you can use the
flags --extra-include-dirs= and --extra-lib-dirs= to specify where they are.
I really want to use this package on my Windows, but nothing seems to work (I tried everything like --extra-lib-dirs and compiled also with MinGW and VS - the same problem).
I can't accept the fact that it won't install. I mean, there must be some way to fix Setup.hs from this cabal package or something. Does anyone have an idea what can be wrong with cabal in this case and how can I try to workaround this? I don't know how exactly cabal works, maybe someone with this knowledge will have an idea? Or maybe there is a way to do this without cabal?
Ok, i've managed to build it and, i think, found the root of the issue.
First, steps to build:
Get the MinGW. My installation of MinGW has gcc 4.8.
Get 32-bit MinGHC.
Compile LLVM 3.5 with MinGW's gcc and install it somewhere.
Copy contents of MinGW installation directory into MinGHC Install
Dir\ghc-7.10.2\mingw, replacing conflict files.
In the command line set your PATH so it has haskell toolset from
MinGHC (i recommend using switch .bat scripts) and llvm-config.exe.
Get the llvm-general package source either using cabal fetch or
downloading via browser from hackage.
Replace cc-options: -std=c++11 line of llvm-general.cabal with
cc-options: -std=gnu++11.
Finally, cabal configure and cabal build should work.
I have been changing my build environment many times, so if this doesn't work for you let me know, i probably forgot something.
Now let's go into details.
What we thought is a bug of cabal is not, actually. The problem is that both stack and MinGHC (and Haskell Platform, i guess) use quite old gcc - 4.6. This gcc has even two defects:
It doesn't support -std=c++11 and LLVM 3.5 can't be built using it.
As a consequence, this gcc can't be used by ghc when compiling
llvm-general, because it can't parse LLVM headers properly.
Even if it could, its linker can't link against LLVM libs compiled by
MinGW using gcc 4.8. This is why cabal was telling you it
couldn't find LLVM libs. I've hacked Setup.hs so that it wouldn't
look for these libs, but pass -lLLVMSomething to linker via -pgml
ghc option. This lead to clear error message:
ld.exe: ignoring libLLVMSupport.a ...
ld.exe: can't find -lLLVMSupport
So, the cabal was actually finding these libs, but was dropping them because they couldn't be linked to.
Ideally, the solution would be to update mingw distribution used by stack/MinGHC. But as a workaround you can just replace old gcc with new one.
Finally, -std=gnu++11 is used because current MinGW release is affected by this bug, which prevents compilation of c++ bits of the package. Whew, that was a long way.
Background:
I've been using the gloss library for some simple diagram work. But when it came time for something more interactive, I found I wanted a more powerful library. After doing some research, I decided that I liked the features of the SDL library and wanted to try to install the Haskell bindings for it. I have to this point been unsuccessful.
Part 1:
How do I install and configure the SDL binaries so that they can be used by the Haskell bindings?
Part 2:
Which one of the numerous and ill documented SDL packages on Hackage it the current preferred binding in the community? How do I get that package to install correctly?
Part 3: (Optional)
If SDL is not a good fit for haskell development what is the preferred alternative?
I am going to answer your question for SDL2 (should also work for SDL1 with some modifications).
Install pkg-config for Windows
(How to install pkg config in windows?)
This tool is very important. It is used by various Cabal packages to search for libraries and contains directions for linking and compiling.
Download the SDL development libraries for Windows/MinGW:
http://libsdl.org/release/SDL2-devel-2.0.3-mingw.tar.gz
If you have installed the 32-bit version of the Haskell platform, extract the folder i686-w64-mingw32
For 64-bit versions extract x86_64-w64-mingw32
You will get following layout:
include
share
bin
lib
"Register" the library with pkg-config.
Either copy lib/pkgconfig/sdl2.pc into the folder of your pkg-config.exe or modify/create the PKG_CONFIG_PATH accordingly. Check that you set up everything correctly:
C:\pkg-config --list-all | grep sdl2
sdl2 sdl2 - Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia
library designed to provide low level access to audio, keyboard,
mouse, joystick, 3D hardware via OpenGL, and 2D video framebuffer.
Add the bin folder to your PATH environment variable.
Install the sdl2 package via the Cabal installer and tell Cabal where to find your libraries.
Example:
cabal install sdl2 --extra-include-dirs=C:\lib\sdl2\include --extra-lib-dirs=C:\lib\sdl2\lib\
To test my installation, I have written a small example:
https://github.com/ftl2014/haskell-stuff/blob/master/sdl/
Caveat emptor:
If Cabal complains about a "missing" library, it might be the case that library was actually found but it is incompatible (e.g. using a 32-bit instead of a 64-bit version) or corrupt. The same is true for header files.
For some reason, Cabal complained about not finding SDL.h, and I had to use the headers in the root include folder of the archive (but maybe I was just drinking too much Kool-aid).
I wasn't able to get it to install on my system. Here's what I tried. Strangely, I was able to get configure find the header files but not the actual binary.
Let's try it. I have installed the new 2014 Haskell Platform.
cabal install sdl
Configuring SDL-0.6.5...
setup.exe: The package has a './configure' script. This requires a Unix
compatibility toolchain such as MinGW+MSYS or Cygwin.
Failed to install SDL-0.6.5
GHC in the Haskell Platform comes with MinGW, so we probably need to install MSYS. The MSYS page says to install minggw get, which says to install
An automated GUI installer assistant called mingw-get-setup.exe is the preferred method for first time installation. This will guide you through the setup of the mingw-get installer proper; you will then use this to perform further package installations, and to manage your installation.
Running the installer with the default options gives us the following screen:
We already have mingw from installing the Haskell platform, so we'll click on only the last item in the list, msys-base, and select "Mark for Installation". Then, in the "Installation" menu in the top left, select "Apply Changes". This asks if it is ok to proceed, and we select "Apply"
This installer didn't put msys-base in the path, we can add it to the path, and try installing sdl again
set PATH=C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\bin\;%PATH%
cabal install sdl
Configuring SDL-0.6.5...
configure: WARNING: unrecognized options: --with-compiler, --with-gcc
checking for sdl-config... no
checking for sdl11-config... no
configure: error: *** SDL not found! Get SDL from www.libsdl.org.
If you already installed it, check it's in the path. If problem remains,
please send a mail to the address that appears in ./configure --version
indicating your platform, the version of configure script and the problem.
Failed to install SDL-0.6.5
We need to download and install libsdl. I went to the libsdl download page and downloaded the Win32 development libraries, SDL-devel-1.2.15-mingw32.tar.gz. I extracted this archive (7-zip can extract both tar archives and gzip compressed files). For convenience, I moved the SDL-1.2.15 directory to c:. We'll add this to the path, as suggested by the previous error, and try again
set PATH=C:\SDL-1.2.15\bin\;%PATH%
cabal install sdl
* Missing (or bad) header file: SDL/SDL.h
* Missing C library: SDL
This problem can usually be solved by installing the system package that
provides this library (you may need the "-dev" version). If the library is
already installed but in a non-standard location then you can use the flags
--extra-include-dirs= and --extra-lib-dirs= to specify where it is.
If the header file does exist, it may contain errors that are caught by the C
compiler at the preprocessing stage. In this case you can re-run configure
with the verbosity flag -v3 to see the error messages.
We can make part of this error go away by adding the suggested --extra-include-dirs flag, but still get the following error
cabal install sdl --extra-include-dirs=c:\SDL-1.2.15\include
* Missing C library: SDL
This problem can usually be solved by installing the system package that
provides this library (you may need the "-dev" version). If the library is
already installed but in a non-standard location then you can use the flags
--extra-include-dirs= and --extra-lib-dirs= to specify where it is.
Adding the --extra-lib-dirs flag with c:\SDL-1.2.15\bin or C:\SDL-1.2.15\lib or c:\SDL-1.2.15 failed to fix this problem.
again...
I'm messing around with profiling in GHC after recently starting to learn Haskell. I'm trying to use profiling to see how different implementations of functions vary in performance, for example using list comprehension instead of map. I'm trying to compile with the -prof flag but im getting the following output:
david#david-LinuxMint ~/Desktop/Sandbox/Haskell/a $ ghc --make Filt -prof
Filt.hs:1:1:
Could not find module `Prelude'
Perhaps you haven't installed the profiling libraries for package `base'?
Use -v to see a list of the files searched for
The program compiles fine with the -prof flag omitted. Anybody have any ideas where im going wrong? I've tried to find something on SO/internet but my Google-Fu is failing me? Cheers.
This is for Linux, Debian in particular, but I believe the OP is using Mint which I think might be a Debian variant.
You probably got base from the OS packaging system (Debian: APT), so you'll also want to get the profiling version of base from that same system. On Debian the hackage package "foo" is in the Debian package "libghc-foo-dev"[1]. The profiling version of "libghc-blah-dev" is in the Debian package "libghc-blah-prof".
Now, base is a little special. Those packages exist, but are "virtual"; they are listed in relationships, but are actually installed by (one or more) other real packages. In Debian virtual libghc-base-dev is provided by real package ghc and virtual libghc-base-dev is provided by real package ghc-prof.
So, install ghc-prof (or the Mint equivalent) and you'll be good, or at least move on the the next error.
Eventually, you'll end up downloading and building packages directly from hackage. You'll have to change your cabal settings to build the profiling versions of those libraries.
[1] If another Haskell compiler gets (back) into Debian, the "ghc" in "libghc" will change to a string suitable for that compiler.
I'm trying to install GHC and Cabal on FreeBSD 8.1.
I've installed GHC 7.0.1 (because it's current stable release) and now trying to install Cabal (to install cabal-install), but it fails with this error message.
%./Setup configure
Configuring Cabal-1.8.0.4...
Setup: At least the following dependencies are missing:
base >=4 && <3 && >=1 && <5, filepath >=1 && <1.2
%
Definitely I'm having too higher version of library.
%ghc-pkg list
/usr/local/lib/ghc-7.0.1/package.conf.d
Cabal-1.10.0.0
array-0.3.0.2
base-4.3.0.0
bin-package-db-0.0.0.0
bytestring-0.9.1.8
containers-0.4.0.0
directory-1.1.0.0
extensible-exceptions-0.1.1.2
ffi-1.0
filepath-1.2.0.0
ghc-7.0.1
ghc-binary-0.5.0.2
ghc-prim-0.2.0.0
haskell2010-1.0.0.0
haskell98-1.1.0.0
hpc-0.5.0.6
integer-gmp-0.2.0.2
old-locale-1.0.0.2
old-time-1.0.0.6
pretty-1.0.1.2
process-1.0.1.4
random-1.0.0.3
rts-1.0
template-haskell-2.5.0.0
time-1.2.0.3
unix-2.4.1.0
/home/eonil/.ghc/x86_64-freebsd-7.0.1/package.conf.d
network-2.2.1.5
parsec-2.1.0.1
%
Should I downgrade to GHC 6.x? Or can I install lower version of the packages? (or side-by-side install)
You've hit on what is known as Haskell's own DLL hell.
You can install previous versions of libraries just by appending the version number, e.g. cabal install base-3.0.3.2, although I don't know what restrictions there are with GHC 7.0.1.
You can also create little cabal sandboxes with cabal-dev or capri. These would sort of allow you to start from scratch, ignoring packages that would cause conflicts.
If none of this works and you do find you have to reinstall GHC, can I recommend you use Haskell Platform. It bundles GHC 6.12.3 with a number of useful libraries.
Update: Misread you were trying to actually install cabal install. I'd just use Haskell Platform. It comes with all this stuff already set up.
One solution would be to install ghc-6.12, which would provide Cabal-1.8. You could use that ghc to build cabal-install for the executable, then switch to ghc-7 for everything else once the cabal executable is built.
However I think you should be able to build Cabal-1.8 with ghc-7. It looks like the installer is getting confused over the base dependencies. Try doing ./Setup configure -fbase4 -f-base3 and see if that works.
Edit: if you have darcs installed, you can check out the cabal source tree. This is already set up for Cabal-1.10 and ghc-7, so it should build out of the box. You could wget the source too if you can't install darcs.
I had to downgrade GHC 6.x.
Originally I did this for Happstack. However Happstack needs at least 6.12.x of GHC and installing Cabal on FreeBSD 8.1 with GHC 7.x is too hard. (I couldn't succeed)
I just downloaded and installed GHC 6.12.3 from GHC website, and everything worked magically! Cabal, Happstack installed at once. I failed just only once because of insufficient swapping space.