9.8 KiB
Agda
How to use Agda
Agda is available as the agda package.
The agda
package installs an Agda-wrapper, which calls agda
with --library-file
set to a generated library-file within the nix store, this means your library-file in
$HOME/.agda/libraries
will be ignored. By default the agda package installs Agda
with no libraries, i.e. the generated library-file is empty. To use Agda with libraries,
the agda.withPackages
function can be used. This function either takes:
- A list of packages,
- or a function which returns a list of packages when given the
agdaPackages
attribute set, - or an attribute set containing a list of packages and a GHC derivation for compilation (see below).
- or an attribute set containing a function which returns a list of packages when given the
agdaPackages
attribute set and a GHC derivation for compilation (see below).
For example, suppose we wanted a version of Agda which has access to the standard library. This can be obtained with the expressions:
agda.withPackages [ agdaPackages.standard-library ]
or
agda.withPackages (p: [ p.standard-library ])
or can be called as in the Compiling Agda section.
If you want to use a different version of a library (for instance a development version)
override the src
attribute of the package to point to your local repository
agda.withPackages (p: [
(p.standard-library.overrideAttrs (oldAttrs: {
version = "local version";
src = /path/to/local/repo/agda-stdlib;
}))
])
You can also reference a GitHub repository
agda.withPackages (p: [
(p.standard-library.overrideAttrs (oldAttrs: {
version = "1.5";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
repo = "agda-stdlib";
owner = "agda";
rev = "v1.5";
sha256 = "16fcb7ssj6kj687a042afaa2gq48rc8abihpm14k684ncihb2k4w";
};
}))
])
If you want to use a library not added to Nixpkgs, you can add a
dependency to a local library by calling agdaPackages.mkDerivation
.
agda.withPackages (p: [
(p.mkDerivation {
pname = "your-agda-lib";
version = "1.0.0";
src = /path/to/your-agda-lib;
})
])
Again you can reference GitHub
agda.withPackages (p: [
(p.mkDerivation {
pname = "your-agda-lib";
version = "1.0.0";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
repo = "repo";
owner = "owner";
version = "...";
rev = "...";
sha256 = "...";
};
})
])
See Building Agda Packages for more information on mkDerivation
.
Agda will not by default use these libraries. To tell Agda to use a library we have some options:
- Call
agda
with the library flag:$ agda -l standard-library -i . MyFile.agda
- Write a
my-library.agda-lib
file for the project you are working on which may look like:name: my-library include: . depend: standard-library
- Create the file
~/.agda/defaults
and add any libraries you want to use by default.
More information can be found in the official Agda documentation on library management.
Compiling Agda
Agda modules can be compiled using the GHC backend with the --compile
flag. A version of ghc
with ieee754
is made available to the Agda program via the --with-compiler
flag.
This can be overridden by a different version of ghc
as follows:
agda.withPackages {
pkgs = [ ... ];
ghc = haskell.compiler.ghcHEAD;
}
Writing Agda packages
To write a nix derivation for an Agda library, first check that the library has a *.agda-lib
file.
A derivation can then be written using agdaPackages.mkDerivation
. This has similar arguments to stdenv.mkDerivation
with the following additions:
everythingFile
can be used to specify the location of theEverything.agda
file, defaulting to./Everything.agda
. If this file does not exist then either it should be patched in or thebuildPhase
should be overridden (see below).libraryName
should be the name that appears in the*.agda-lib
file, defaulting topname
.libraryFile
should be the file name of the*.agda-lib
file, defaulting to${libraryName}.agda-lib
.
Here is an example default.nix
{ nixpkgs ? <nixpkgs> }:
with (import nixpkgs {});
agdaPackages.mkDerivation {
version = "1.0";
pname = "my-agda-lib";
src = ./.;
buildInputs = [
agdaPackages.standard-library
];
}
Building Agda packages
The default build phase for agdaPackages.mkDerivation
simply runs agda
on the Everything.agda
file.
If something else is needed to build the package (e.g. make
) then the buildPhase
should be overridden.
Additionally, a preBuild
or configurePhase
can be used if there are steps that need to be done prior to checking the Everything.agda
file.
agda
and the Agda libraries contained in buildInputs
are made available during the build phase.
Installing Agda packages
The default install phase copies Agda source files, Agda interface files (*.agdai
) and *.agda-lib
files to the output directory.
This can be overridden.
By default, Agda sources are files ending on .agda
, or literate Agda files ending on .lagda
, .lagda.tex
, .lagda.org
, .lagda.md
, .lagda.rst
. The list of recognised Agda source extensions can be extended by setting the extraExtensions
config variable.
Maintaining the Agda package set on Nixpkgs
We are aiming at providing all common Agda libraries as packages on nixpkgs
,
and keeping them up to date.
Contributions and maintenance help is always appreciated,
but the maintenance effort is typically low since the Agda ecosystem is quite small.
The nixpkgs
Agda package set tries to take up a role similar to that of Stackage in the Haskell world.
It is a curated set of libraries that:
- Always work together.
- Are as up-to-date as possible.
While the Haskell ecosystem is huge, and Stackage is highly automatised, the Agda package set is small and can (still) be maintained by hand.
Adding Agda packages to Nixpkgs
To add an Agda package to nixpkgs
, the derivation should be written to pkgs/development/libraries/agda/${library-name}/
and an entry should be added to pkgs/top-level/agda-packages.nix
. Here it is called in a scope with access to all other Agda libraries, so the top line of the default.nix
can look like:
{ mkDerivation, standard-library, fetchFromGitHub }:
Note that the derivation function is called with mkDerivation
set to agdaPackages.mkDerivation
, therefore you
could use a similar set as in your default.nix
from Writing Agda Packages with
agdaPackages.mkDerivation
replaced with mkDerivation
.
Here is an example skeleton derivation for iowa-stdlib:
mkDerivation {
version = "1.5.0";
pname = "iowa-stdlib";
src = ...
libraryFile = "";
libraryName = "IAL-1.3";
buildPhase = ''
patchShebangs find-deps.sh
make
'';
}
This library has a file called .agda-lib
, and so we give an empty string to libraryFile
as nothing precedes .agda-lib
in the filename. This file contains name: IAL-1.3
, and so we let libraryName = "IAL-1.3"
. This library does not use an Everything.agda
file and instead has a Makefile, so there is no need to set everythingFile
and we set a custom buildPhase
.
When writing an Agda package it is essential to make sure that no .agda-lib
file gets added to the store as a single file (for example by using writeText
). This causes Agda to think that the nix store is a Agda library and it will attempt to write to it whenever it typechecks something. See https://github.com/agda/agda/issues/4613.
In the pull request adding this library, you can test whether it builds correctly by writing in a comment:
@ofborg build agdaPackages.iowa-stdlib
Maintaining Agda packages
As mentioned before, the aim is to have a compatible, and up-to-date package set.
These two conditions sometimes exclude each other:
For example, if we update agdaPackages.standard-library
because there was an upstream release,
this will typically break many reverse dependencies,
i.e. downstream Agda libraries that depend on the standard library.
In nixpkgs
we are typically among the first to notice this,
since we have build tests in place to check this.
In a pull request updating e.g. the standard library, you should write the following comment:
@ofborg build agdaPackages.standard-library.passthru.tests
This will build all reverse dependencies of the standard library,
for example agdaPackages.agda-categories
, or agdaPackages.generic
.
In some cases it is useful to build all Agda packages. This can be done with the following Github comment:
@ofborg build agda.passthru.tests.allPackages
Sometimes, the builds of the reverse dependencies fail because they have not yet been updated and released. You should drop the maintainers a quick issue notifying them of the breakage, citing the build error (which you can get from the ofborg logs). If you are motivated, you might even send a pull request that fixes it. Usually, the maintainers will answer within a week or two with a new release. Bumping the version of that reverse dependency should be a further commit on your PR.
In the rare case that a new release is not to be expected within an acceptable time,
simply mark the broken package as broken by setting meta.broken = true;
.
This will exclude it from the build test.
It can be added later when it is fixed,
and does not hinder the advancement of the whole package set in the meantime.