Applications and libraries/Operating system
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Revision as of 06:26, 30 March 2006 by DonStewart (talk | contribs) (Add 'shell utilties' section, add Igloo's gnu-ls in haskell)
Standalone implementations of operating systems in Haskell
Filesystems
- Fuse David Roundy's combination of a nice DarcsIO-style filesystem interface on the Haskell side (called FuseIO) with an interface to libfuse (which is a library for creating filesystems from user space on linux).
- Halfs, the Haskell Filesystem
- ZipperFS is Oleg Kiselyov's file server/OS where threading and exceptions are all realized via delimited continuations.
Dynamic linking
- hs-plugins Library support for dynamically loading Haskell modules, as well as compiling source or eval code fragments at runtime.
Shell
Link collections on pure functional shells
Haskell shell examples
- HsShellScript
- A library for using Haskell for tasks which are usually done by shell scripts, e.g. command line parsing, analysing paths, etc. It can be used also for tasks usually done GetOpt (a module for GNU-/POSIX-like option handling of commandline arguments). But also for many other things.
- Jim Mattson's Hsh Haskell shell
- on the software page by Ralf Hinze. Hsh seems to be written in Haskell 1.3.
- HaSh
- a nascent project page on a shell scripting system
- Monadic i/o and UNIX shell programming
- UNIX pipes as IO monads.
- shell-haskell
- library for communicating with other processes via Haskell code
Shell utilities
- haskell-ls
- A (near-)clone of the GNU ls utility.
- h4sh
- h4sh provides a set of Haskell List functions as normal unix shell commands. This allows us to use Haskell in shell scripts transparently. Each program is generated from the corresponding Haskell function's type