Pack a haskell project into a deployable directory structure
hsinstall is a tool for installing a Haskell software project into a directory
structure for deployment. It builds upon the stack install
command and adds
these features:
- Copies the
LICENSE
file into<PREFIX>/share/<PROJECT-NAME>/doc
- Copies the contents of a static directory stucture in your project (named
hsinstall
) into the destination prefix directory. This can contain additional binaries or scripts, resources, documentation, etc. (more on this later in TEMPLATE DIRECTORY) - Optionally builds an AppDir directory structure for the project and produces an AppImage binary
To use hsinstall, it will be necessary to have the Haskell stack tool on your PATH: https://docs.haskellstack.org/en/stable/README/
If the AppImage features are desired, you must have these tools on your PATH: linuxdeploy: https://github.com/linuxdeploy/linuxdeploy/releases, linuxdeploy-plugin-appimage: https://github.com/linuxdeploy/linuxdeploy-plugin-appimage/releases
Running hsinstall on a project for the first time and with no arguments will produce this in . :
AppDir/
usr/
bin/ <-- All binaries in the project
share/
<PROJECT-NAME>/
doc/
LICENSE
The -p,--prefix switch allows you to set a prefix other than AppDir/usr
. This
could be anywhere, like myproject-2.3
or /usr/local
or /opt
In addition, if an hsinstall
directory exists, its contents will be copied
into the prefix before build and install. See TEMPLATE DIRECTORY below for more
info on this.
The -i,--mk-appimage switch will change the default prefix to EXE.AppDir/usr
and only the specified EXE will be installed into <PREFIX>/bin
, AppImages are
intended to be made for exactly one binary.
If .desktop and .svg files are not found in the hsinstall directory, defaults will be created for you and placed in the correct subdirs. Check these files into source control for future builds.
The default .desktop
file Categories will be populated with 'Utility;'. We
recommend adjusting this using the XDG list of registered categories:
https://specifications.freedesktop.org/menu-spec/latest/apa.html
If your application is a command-line program, append a line containing this to
the end of the default .desktop
file: 'Terminal=true'
If your application isn't a command-line program, we recommend using a proper icon instead of the hsinstall default, which is a command shell icon.
For more info on AppImage: https://appimage.org/
If present, hsinstall will copy the contents of the hsinstall
template
directory into <PREFIX>
. Here's an explanation of the hsinstall directory
contents:
hsinstall/
bin/ <-- Put additional binaries and scripts to be deployed here
share/
applications/ <-- Only for AppImage
<EXE>.desktop <-- Will be generated by first-time AppImage creation attempt
<PROJECT-NAME>/ <-- Only needed if you have resources
resources/ <-- Put data files your software will need at runtime here
icons/ <-- Only for AppImage
hicolor/
scalable/
apps/
<EXE>.svg <-- Will be generated by first-time AppImage creation attempt
In order to locate data files at runtime, including resources, the hsinstall project includes a library to construct the share path relative to the executable. See this source code for help with integrating this into your app.
Browse the source
Get source with git and build
$ git clone https://github.com/dino-/hsinstall.git
$ cd hsinstall
$ stack build
$ stack haddock --no-haddock-deps hsinstall
If you have the abovementioned linuxdeploy-*
programs on your path, we can do
something really cool. Use this freshly-built hsinstall to package itself
into an AppImage:
$ stack exec hsinstall -- --mk-appimage hsinstall
And you should see an hsinstall-y.z-x86_64.AppImage
binary in .
Tip: Use git clean -df
to blow away untracked things like the AppDir and
AppImage artifacts.
Dino Morelli dino@ui3.info