Can't build the haskell shakespeare library on windows 10. Any ideas? - windows

I'm trying to install Yesod through cabal on my HP computer, but the building process fails when shakespeare library gets the turn. MSYS2+MinGW in the path, the rest actually works. What could be the issue? I have my suspicions that it might be due to the x64 processor I have, but not sure.
Tried installing globally with runhaskell, but same story.
C:\Users\Ivan Kretov>cabal install shakespeare
Warning: The install command is a part of the legacy v1 style of cabal
usage.
Please switch to using either the new project style and the new-install
command or the legacy v1-install alias as new-style projects will become
the default in the next version of cabal-install. Please file a bug if
you cannot replicate a working v1- use case with the new-style commands.
For more information, see: https://wiki.haskell.org/Cabal/NewBuild
Resolving dependencies...
Starting shakespeare-2.0.20
Building shakespeare-2.0.20

Related

Running qtcreator 4.0.1 on a lxc-container

Using this link I created a container and after getting some packages, I want to start a qtcreator 4.0.1 on it. I use a ssh connection to connect to the container. After launching qtcreator I get an error such as this:
This application failed to start because it could not find or load the Qt platform plugin "xcb"
in "".
Available platform plugins are: eglfs, linuxfb, minimal, minimalegl, offscreen, xcb.
Reinstalling the application may fix this problem.
I installed all prerequisites packages as listed here but still the problem is remained.
I must mention that I am using a privileged container in opposite of the link.
xcb listed as available plug-ins but it does not run. Is there any suggestion to get around this bug?
This answer has the main solution. In my case I find the libqxcb.so in path /path_to_qt/plugins/platforms/ and after running ldd command on it I found that it has not one of its dependency libEGL.so after install this package using sudo apt install libegl-mesa0-dev I could run qtcreator.

Trouble installing hmatrix through MSYS2 on Windows 10

I've been trying to install hmatrix on my (64-bit) Windows 10 computer; after searching through and trying many possible solutions (including the instructions under "Windows" and "Alternative Windows Build" given here), I decided to pursue the course of action given on this Reddit thread.
However, when I type in the command
cabal install hmatrix -fopenblas --extra-lib-dir=${c:\msys64\mingw64\bin} --extra-include-dir=${c:\msys64\mingw64\include}
into the MSYS2 shell, the following log is given:
Resolving dependencies...
Configuring hmatrix-0.17.0.2...
Failed to install hmatrix-0.17.0.2
Build log ( C:\Users\Christian\AppData\Roaming\cabal\logs\hmatrix-0.17.0.2.log ):
Configuring hmatrix-0.17.0.2...
cabal.exe: Missing dependency on a foreign library:
* Missing C library: libopenblas
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.
cabal: Leaving directory 'C:\msys64\tmp\cabal-tmp-4244\hmatrix-0.17.0.2'
cabal.exe: Error: some packages failed to install:
hmatrix-0.17.0.2 failed during the configure step. The exception was:
ExitFailure 1
However, when I check the directory c:\msys64\mingw64\bin, I see that libopenblas.dll is right there; I don't know why cabal can't seem to find it.
Any insight into why this is not working or what to do?
UPDATE:
The files libopenblas.dll.a and libopenblas.a are in the directory c:\msys64\mingw64\lib. Is it possible I need to somehow include this directory as well? (If I do, how would I do that?)
I also downloaded the files in Alex Vorobiev's comment below and put them in c:\msys64\mingw64\bin if they are .dlls or c:\msys64\mingw64\lib if they are .libs. The header files were already contained in c:\msys64\include\openblas.
I tried several variations on the command in the original post after making these changes, including switching \bin with \lib and switching \include with \include\openblas, but all of them still give the same error.
I'm a bit suspicious about the
if os(windows)
if flag(openblas)
extra-libraries: libopenblas
in the cabal file, could you unpack it and remove the "lib" part? If that doesn't work please post a log with -v3 output. I've seen quite a few people with troubles installing this package. So could you also open a ticket on the GHC bug tracker if this doesn't work (and CC me "Phyx-")?
Secondly, you never said which version of GHC you're using. 8.0.1 should have far less trouble (and won't need the hack to get it working in GHCi) since the runtime linker has been overhauled and should be much better on Windows. 8.0.2 will likely include the new import libraries support as well.

Profiling an application on Windows with cabal/ghc

I’ve been experiencing a nasty issue with profiling on Windows. But first, the context of setup:
I created a shared sandbox in ~/dev/foo_shared: cabal sandbox init --sandbox=.
I created a sandbox in ~/dev/foo using the shared sandbox above: cabal sandbox init --sandbox=~/dev/foo_shared
I installed all the dependencies with profiling enabled: cabal install --only-dependencies --enable-library-profiling --enable-executable-profiling
I configured the foo package so that it includes profiling RTS: cabal configure --enable-profiling --enable-executable-profiling
I tried to build with cabal build
Everything builds up correctly, but doesn’t link. I then rebuilt with cabal build -v3, and this is the linker part (the most interesting part):
c:/program files/haskell platform/2014.2.0.0/mingw/bin/../lib/gcc/x86_64-w64-mingw32/4.6.3/../../../../x86_64-w64-mingw32/bin/ld.exe: cannot find -lHSrts_debug_p
I googled that, and IIRC, it’s because I lack the profiling library for the GHC’s RTS. I never found it for Windows :( Last information, I’m on Windows 10, not sure it helps though.
Problem solved. The issue is due to the fact I’m using -debug on the command line interface to GHC. I’ve been told -debug and -p are not compatible, hence the error.

using stackage on windows

I am trying to use stackage on windows. I cloned the git repo, ran cabal install --only-dependencies, cabal configure, cabal build. Everything works
then dist\build\Stackage\stackage.exe select
Loading Haskell Platform
Loading package database
Narrowing package database
Printing build plan to build-plan.log
Checking for bad versions
authenticate-oauth-1.4.0.8 (FP Complete <michael#fpcomplete.com> #yesodweb) cannot use:
- RSA-2.0 -- ==1.2.*
threepenny-gui-0.4.1.0 (FP Complete <michael#fpcomplete.com>) cannot use:
- aeson-0.7.0.2 -- ==0.6.*
stackage.exe: Conflicting build plan, exiting
the readme mention *.sh scripts like ./patching/scripts/create-tarballs.sh. I tried but failed to run them with cygwin. Are they important?
How can I use stackage on windows?
edit I was able to run the ./patching/scripts/create-tarballs.sh script using msys. But now the error message is:
Loading Haskell Platform
Loading package database
stackage.exe: Missing cabal file "MFlow-0.3.3/MFlow.cabal" in tarball: "patching/tarballs\\MFlow-0.3.3.tar.gz"
I checked the archive: the cabal file is inside.
Windows users are not recommended to install stackage by Haskell Platform installer due to some limitation:
On Windows, it does not provide a complete environment (missing MSYS).
By placing a large number of packages in the global package database, Haskell Platform installations are more easily corrupted.
The choice of package versions conflicts with the needs of many commonly used packages.
Some of the package versions included with the platform have known and severe bugs, and cannot be reliably upgraded.
As for solution to overcome, uninstall the Haskell platform first, then install minghc for windows by the following link: https://github.com/fpco/minghc#readme
Open command prompt run cabal update and cabal install alex happy.
Finally, install stackage.
Update 2015
A new tool has been developed by Commercial Haskell group for project development -- Stack, it can be install along with the latest Haskell Platform (7.10.2).
Features include:
Installing GHC automatically, in an isolated location.
Installing packages needed for your project.
Building your project.
Testing your project.
Benchmarking your project.
I have tried it for haskell web project, it works smoothly.

Readline for windows - developing on linux

I am developing on linux, but still release binaries for windows.
I recently started using readline though, and that has broken my windows builds. Initially it was unable to find the header files, so I copied them to the mingw includes folder. However I still get problems linking to the library (cannot find -lreadline).
How do I get the readline library so that I can link to it in linux when compiling for windows?
Readline should just work, on Windows, I think, although you'll probably have to compile it yourself and bundle it with your program.
You'll need a replacement for ncurses though: pdcurses should do the job for you. Again, you'll probably have to build it yourself, I think.

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