I used the existing anchors generated by Docbook, so the anchor part should be a no-op. This could be useful depending on the infrastructure we choose to use, and it is better to be explicit than rely on Docbook's id generating algorithms. I got rid of the metadata segments of the Markdown files, because they are outdated, inaccurate, and could make people less willing to change them without speaking with the author.
3.4 KiB
Idris
Installing Idris
The easiest way to get a working idris version is to install the idris
attribute:
$ # On NixOS
$ nix-env -i nixos.idris
$ # On non-NixOS
$ nix-env -i nixpkgs.idris
This however only provides the prelude
and base
libraries. To install idris with additional libraries, you can use the idrisPackages.with-packages
function, e.g. in an overlay in ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/my-idris.nix
:
self: super: {
myIdris = with self.idrisPackages; with-packages [ contrib pruviloj ];
}
And then:
$ # On NixOS
$ nix-env -iA nixos.myIdris
$ # On non-NixOS
$ nix-env -iA nixpkgs.myIdris
To see all available Idris packages:
$ # On NixOS
$ nix-env -qaPA nixos.idrisPackages
$ # On non-NixOS
$ nix-env -qaPA nixpkgs.idrisPackages
Similarly, entering a nix-shell
:
$ nix-shell -p 'idrisPackages.with-packages (with idrisPackages; [ contrib pruviloj ])'
Starting Idris with library support
To have access to these libraries in idris, call it with an argument -p <library name>
for each library:
$ nix-shell -p 'idrisPackages.with-packages (with idrisPackages; [ contrib pruviloj ])'
[nix-shell:~]$ idris -p contrib -p pruviloj
A listing of all available packages the Idris binary has access to is available via --listlibs
:
$ idris --listlibs
00prelude-idx.ibc
pruviloj
base
contrib
prelude
00pruviloj-idx.ibc
00base-idx.ibc
00contrib-idx.ibc
Building an Idris project with Nix
As an example of how a Nix expression for an Idris package can be created, here is the one for idrisPackages.yaml
:
{ build-idris-package
, fetchFromGitHub
, contrib
, lightyear
, lib
}:
build-idris-package {
name = "yaml";
version = "2018-01-25";
# This is the .ipkg file that should be built, defaults to the package name
# In this case it should build `Yaml.ipkg` instead of `yaml.ipkg`
# This is only necessary because the yaml packages ipkg file is
# different from its package name here.
ipkgName = "Yaml";
# Idris dependencies to provide for the build
idrisDeps = [ contrib lightyear ];
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "Heather";
repo = "Idris.Yaml";
rev = "5afa51ffc839844862b8316faba3bafa15656db4";
sha256 = "1g4pi0swmg214kndj85hj50ccmckni7piprsxfdzdfhg87s0avw7";
};
meta = {
description = "Idris YAML lib";
homepage = "https://github.com/Heather/Idris.Yaml";
license = lib.licenses.mit;
maintainers = [ lib.maintainers.brainrape ];
};
}
Assuming this file is saved as yaml.nix
, it's buildable using
$ nix-build -E '(import <nixpkgs> {}).idrisPackages.callPackage ./yaml.nix {}'
Or it's possible to use
with import <nixpkgs> {};
{
yaml = idrisPackages.callPackage ./yaml.nix {};
}
in another file (say default.nix
) to be able to build it with
$ nix-build -A yaml
Passing options to idris
commands
The build-idris-package
function provides also optional input values to set additional options for the used idris
commands.
Specifically, you can set idrisBuildOptions
, idrisTestOptions
, idrisInstallOptions
and idrisDocOptions
to provide additional options to the idris
command respectively when building, testing, installing and generating docs for your package.
For example you could set
build-idris-package {
idrisBuildOptions = [ "--log" "1" "--verbose" ]
...
}
to require verbose output during idris
build phase.