GHC/As a library (up to 6.8): Difference between revisions
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Example: | Example: | ||
<pre>runStmt session "let n = 2 + 2"</pre> | <pre>runStmt session "let n = 2 + 2"</pre> | ||
The RunResult of this is RunOk [n] where n is bound to 4. So if we subsequently enter <pre>runStmt session "n"</pre> | The RunResult of this is RunOk [n] where n is bound to 4. So if we subsequently enter <pre>runStmt session "n"</pre> we get 4. | ||
CompileExpr, DynCompileExpr | CompileExpr, DynCompileExpr |
Revision as of 02:32, 7 January 2007
Using GHC as a library
In GHC 6.5 and subsequently you can import GHC as a Haskell library, which lets you write a Haskell program that has access to all of GHC.
This page is a place for everyone to add
- Notes about how to get it working
- Comments about the API
- Suggestions for improvement
and so on.
Getting started
You'll need to get a version of GHC that supports the GHC API. Either download ghc from CVS or use darcs: darcs get --partial http://darcs.haskell.org/ghc. There are also nightly snapshot distributions available.
To use the GHC API you say simply
import GHC
Doing this imports the module GHC from the package ghc, which comes with GHC 6.5 and subsequent. The module GHC exports the "GHC API", which is still in a state of flux. Currently it's not even Haddock-documented. You can see the source code (which is somewhat documented) here http://darcs.haskell.org/ghc/compiler/main/GHC.hs
Here's an example main program that does it Media:Main.hs (good for GHC 6.6). You need to manually change the value of myGhcRoot
to point to your GHC directory.
To compile Media:Main.hs, you have to turn on the flag "-package ghc", e.g.
ghc -package ghc Main.hs
Using the GHC library from inside GHCi
This works, to some extent. However, beware about loading object code, because there is only a single linker symbol table in the runtime, so GHCi will be sharing the symbol table with the new GHC session.
Prelude> :m + GHC Module Packages PackageConfig Prelude GHC> session <- newSession Interactive (Just "/usr/local/lib/ghc-6.6") Prelude GHC> (\(f,_) -> setSessionDynFlags session f) =<< initPackages =<< getSessionDynFlags session Prelude GHC> setContext session [] [mkModule (stringToPackageId "base") (mkModuleName "Prelude")] Prelude GHC> runStmt session "let add1 x = x + 1" Prelude GHC> runStmt session "add1 2" 3 Prelude GHC> :q Leaving GHCi.
Relevant information
As of GHC 6.6.
First create a session:
GHC.newSession :: DynFlags.GhcMode -> Maybe FilePath -> IO Session
The path should be the GHC installation directory, e.g., /usr/local/lib/ghc-6.6
Load Module
HscTypes.TargetId = TargetModule ModuleName | TargetFile FilePath (Maybe Phase)
The Phase determines which phase to start from (preprocessing)
Enter Expressions/Run Statements
GHC.runStmt :: Session -> String -> IO RunResult data GHC.RunResult = RunOk [Name] | RunFailed | RunException GHC.IOBase.Exception -- that's Control.Exception.Exception
Example:
runStmt session "let n = 2 + 2"
The RunResult of this is RunOk [n] where n is bound to 4. So if we subsequently enter
runStmt session "n"
we get 4.
CompileExpr, DynCompileExpr
Get module dependency graph
GHC.getModuleGraph :: Session -> IO ModuleGraph
Get bindings
GHC.getBindings :: Session -> IO [TyThing]
Error messages can be routed through a callback mechanism using
setSessionDynFlags :: Session -> DynFlags -> IO [PackageId]
where DynFlags
is a record with many fields, one of which is
log_action :: Severity -> SrcLoc.SrcSpan -> Outputable.PprStyle -> ErrUtils.Message -> IO ()}
and you can set it to your action, like
f <- getSessionDynFlags session setSessionDynFlags session f{log_action = my_action}
Interactive mode example
The file Media:Interactive.hs (also requires Media:MyPrelude.hs) serves as an example for using GHC as a library in interactive mode. It also shows how to replace some of the standard prelude functions with modified versions. See the comments in the code for further information.