This repository contains a nix develop shell for Haskell. Its primary purpose
is to help get a development shell for Haskell quickly and across multiple
operating systems (and architectures).
It requires nix to be installed.
Important
The README previously suggested to add your current user to trusted-users,
but this is essentially equivalent to giving that user root access to the
system.
Once you have nix installed:
- Add
experimental-features = nix-command flakesto your$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nix/nix.conffile to enable Nix flakes. - You should manually add necessary substituters and trusted public keys to your
/etc/nix/nix.conf:allow-import-from-derivation = "true"; extra-substituters = https://cache.iog.io https://cache.zw3rk.com extra-trusted-public-keys = "hydra.iohk.io:f/Ea+s+dFdN+3Y/G+FDgSq+a5NEWhJGzdjvKNGv0/EQ=" "loony-tools:pr9m4BkM/5/eSTZlkQyRt57Jz7OMBxNSUiMC4FkcNfk=" - Ensure that
nix-daemonis running (systemctl status nix-daemononsystemd-based systems).
Then, (on Linux, macOS, windows WSL) you can use:
nix develop github:input-output-hk/devx#ghc96 --no-write-lock-file --refreshTo obtain a haskell development shell for GHC 8.10.7 including cabal-install,
as well as hls and hlint. If you are on macOS on an Apple Silicon chip
(M1, M2, ...), and want to switch between Intel (x86_64) and Apple Silicon
(aarch64), you can do this by simply passing the corresponding
--system argument:
nix develop github:input-output-hk/devx#ghc810 --no-write-lock-file --refresh --system x86_64-darwin
# ... or:
nix develop github:input-output-hk/devx#ghc810 --no-write-lock-file --refresh --system aarch64-darwinIf you use direnv, you can integrate this shell by creating an .envrc file with the following content:
# https://github.com/nix-community/nix-direnv A fast, persistent use_nix/use_flake implementation for direnv:
if ! has nix_direnv_version || ! nix_direnv_version 2.3.0; then
source_url "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nix-community/nix-direnv/2.3.0/direnvrc" "sha256-Dmd+j63L84wuzgyjITIfSxSD57Tx7v51DMxVZOsiUD8="
fi
# https://github.com/input-output-hk/devx Slightly opinionated shared GitHub Action for Cardano-Haskell projects
use flake "github:input-output-hk/devx#ghc810-iog"
Refer to direnv and devx guide for more information.
To make this developer shell available in VSCode DevContainer or GitHub CodeSpace, simply add a file named .devcontainer/devcontainer.json with the following content:
This configuration will work immediately in GitHub CodeSpace! For local VSCode DevContainer, you need Docker and the VSCode extension. For guidance on this, you can follow the Microsoft tutorial.
It's also advised to enable GitHub CodeSpace prebuilds in your repository settings, follow the instructions provided in the GitHub documentation. This will significantly enhance your development experience by reducing the setup time when opening a new CodeSpace.
List of images available: ghc810-iog, ghc96-iog, ghc810-js-iog, ghc96-js-iog, ghc810-windows-iog, ghc96-windows-iog.
Tip
If you wish to utilize the DevContainer as a normal Docker container outside of GitHub or VSCode, remember to prefix your commands with bash -ic. This is necessary because the Nix developer environment is loaded through ~/.bashrc.
E.g., docker run -it ghcr.io/input-output-hk/devx-devcontainer:x86_64-linux.ghc96-iog bash -ic "cabal --version"
There are multiple compilers available, and usually the latest for each series
from 8.10 to 9.6 (a slight delay between the official release announcement and
the compiler showing up in the devx shell is expected due to integration work
necessary). The current available ones are: ghc810, ghc90, ghc92, ghc94, and
ghc96 (these are the same ones as in haskell.nix and may contain patches for defects in the official releases).
There are various flavors available as suffixes to the compiler names (e.g. #ghc810-minimal-iog).
| Flavor | Description | Example | Included |
|---|---|---|---|
| empty | General Haskell Dev | #ghc810 |
ghc, cabal-install, hls, hlint |
-iog |
IOG Haskell Dev | #ghc810 |
adds sodium-vrf, blst, secp256k1 |
-iog-full |
IOG Haskell Dev | #ghc810 |
adds sodium-vrf, blst, secp256k1, R, postgresql |
-minimal |
Only GHC, and Cabal | #ghc810-minimal |
drops hls, hlint |
-static |
Building static binaries | #ghc810-static |
Static Haskell Cross-Compiler |
-js |
JavaScript Cross-Compiler | #ghc810-js |
JavaScript Haskell Cross-Compiler |
-windows |
Windows Cross-Compiler | #ghc810-windows |
Windows Haskell Cross-Compiler |
These can then be combined following this schema:
#ghc<ver>[-js|-windows|-static][-minimal][-iog|-iog-full]
For example:
nix develop github:input-output-hk/devx#ghc810-windows-minimal-iog --no-write-lock-file --refresh... would provide a development shell with a windows cross-compiler as well as cabal, and the IOG specific libraries, but no Haskell Language Server (hls), and no HLint.
A full list of all available devShells can be seen with:
nix flake show github:input-output-hk/devxThe devx shell utilizes haskell.nix for a consistent development environment across platforms. Direct use of haskell.nix allows for greater customization by adapting Nix expressions to specific project needs, haskell.nix turn a Cabal or Stack projects into a Nix expression. For more details, see the haskell.nix documentation.
The devx GitHub Action, alongside other IOG-provided actions, supports automated workflows for Haskell projects. More information can be found in the IOG GitHub Actions repository.
Note
For commercial support, please don't hesitate to reach out at devx@iohk.io
{ "image":"ghcr.io/input-output-hk/devx-devcontainer:x86_64-linux.ghc96-iog", "onCreateCommand": "on-create-command", "customizations":{ "vscode":{ "extensions":[ "haskell.haskell" ] } // Do not set custom `settings` as they would override devx-container defaults... } }