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Deprecated

This repository is now an historical artifact. It was the original LSP support for haskell, which is now provided by

https://github.com/haskell/haskell-language-server

Haskell IDE Engine (HIE)

License BSD3 CircleCI Azure Pipeline AppVeyor Open Source Helpers

This project aims to be the universal interface to a growing number of Haskell tools, providing a fully-featured Language Server Protocol server for editors and IDEs that require Haskell-specific functionality.

Features

  • Supports plain GHC projects, cabal projects(sandboxed and non sandboxed) and stack projects

  • Fast due to caching of compile info

  • Uses LSP, so should be easy to integrate with a wide selection of editors

  • Diagnostics via hlint and GHC warnings/errors

    Diagnostics

  • Code actions and quick fixes via apply-refact

    Apply Refact

  • Type information and documentation(via haddock) on hover

    Hover

  • Jump to definition

    Find Def

  • List all top level definitions

    Doc Symbols

  • Highlight references in document

    Doc Highlight

  • Completion

    Completion

  • Formatting via brittany

    Formatting

  • Renaming via HaRe (NOTE: HaRe is temporarily disabled)

    Renaming

  • Add packages to cabal and hpack package files

    Adding package to hpack Adding import & deps

  • Typo quick fixes

    Quick fixes

  • Add missing imports (via hsimport)

    Missing imports

Installation

Installation with Nix

Follow the instructions at https://github.com/Infinisil/all-hies

Installation on Arch Linux

A haskell-ide-engine package is available on the AUR.

Install it using Aura:

# aura -A haskell-ide-engine

To change which GHC versions are supported by HIE, use

# aura -A --hotedit haskell-ide-engine

and modify the value of _enabled_ghc_versions.

Reducing the number of supported GHC versions makes HIE compile faster.

Installation with GHC and HIE as a VS Code Devcontainer

VS Code provides the ability to develop applications inside of a Docker container (called Devcontainers) https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/containers

There is a community Devcontainer setup which installs and configures GHC + HIE 8.6.5 and the necessary VS Code extensions to integrate them into the editor.

https://github.com/hmemcpy/haskell-hie-devcontainer

Installation from source

To install HIE, you need stack version >= 2.1.1.

HIE builds from source code, so there's a couple of extra steps.

Common pre-requirements

  • stack must be in your PATH
  • git must be in your PATH
  • Stack local bin directory must be in your PATH. Get it with stack path --local-bin

Tip: you can quickly check if some command is in your path by running the command. If you receive some meaningful output instead of "command not found"-like message then it means you have the command in PATH.

Linux-specific pre-requirements

On Linux you will need install a couple of extra libraries (for Unicode (ICU) and NCURSES):

Debian 9/Ubuntu 18.04 or earlier:

sudo apt install libicu-dev libtinfo-dev libgmp-dev

Debian 10/Ubuntu 18.10 or later:

sudo apt install libicu-dev libncurses-dev libgmp-dev # also zlib1g-dev if not installed

Fedora:

sudo dnf install libicu-devel ncurses-devel # also zlib-devel if not already installed

Windows-specific pre-requirements

In order to avoid problems with long paths on Windows you can do either one of the following:

  1. Clone the haskell-ide-engine to a short path, for example the root of your logical drive (e.g. to C:\hie). If this doesn't work or you want to use a longer path, try the second option.

  2. If the Local Group Policy Editor is available on your system, go to: Local Computer Policy -> Computer Configuration -> Administrative Templates -> System -> Filesystem set Enable Win32 long paths to Enabled. If you don't have the policy editor you can use regedit by using the following instructions here. You also need to configure git to allow longer paths by using unicode paths. To set this for all your git repositories use git config --system core.longpaths true (you probably need an administrative shell for this) or for just this one repository use git config core.longpaths true.

In addition make sure hie.exe is not running by closing your editor, otherwise in case of an upgrade the executable can not be installed.

Download the source code

git clone https://github.com/haskell/haskell-ide-engine --recurse-submodules
cd haskell-ide-engine

Building

Uses the shake build system for predictable builds.

Note, on first invocation of the build script, a GHC is being installed for execution. The GHC used for the install.hs can be adjusted in shake.yaml by using a different resolver.

Available commands can be seen with:

stack ./install.hs help

Remember, this will take time to download a Stackage-LTS and an appropriate GHC. However, afterwards all commands should work as expected.

Install via cabal

The install-script can be invoked via cabal instead of stack with the command

cabal v2-run ./install.hs --project-file install/shake.project <target>

or using the existing alias script

./cabal-hie-install <target>

Running the script with cabal on windows requires a cabal version greater or equal to 3.0.0.0.

For brevity, only the stack-based commands are presented in the following sections.

Install specific GHC Version

Install hie for the latest available and supported GHC version (and hoogle docs):

stack ./install.hs hie

Install hie for a specific GHC version (and hoogle docs):

stack ./install.hs hie-8.6.5
stack ./install.hs data

The Haskell IDE Engine can also be built with cabal v2-build instead of stack build. This has the advantage that you can decide how the GHC versions have been installed. To see what GHC versions are available, the command cabal-hie-install ghcs can be used. It will list all GHC versions that are on the path and their respective installation directory. If you think, this list is incomplete, you can try to modify the PATH variable, such that the executables can be found. Note, that the targets hie and data depend on the found GHC versions. They install Haskell IDE Engine only for the found GHC versions.

An example output is:

> cabal-hie-install ghcs
******************************************************************
Found the following GHC paths:
ghc-8.4.4: /opt/bin/ghc-8.4.4
ghc-8.6.2: /opt/bin/ghc-8.6.2

******************************************************************

If your desired ghc has been found, you use it to install Haskell IDE Engine.

cabal-hie-install hie-8.4.4
cabal-hie-install data

In general, executing targets with cabal instead of stack have the same behaviour, except they do not install a GHC if it is missing but fail.

Multiple versions of HIE (optional)

If you installed multiple versions of HIE then you will need to use a wrapper script. Wrapper script will analyze your project, find suitable version of HIE and launch it. Enable it by editing VS Code settings like this:

"haskell.useCustomHieWrapper": true,
"haskell.useCustomHieWrapperPath": "hie-wrapper",

Configuration

There are some settings that can be configured via a settings.json file:

{
    "haskell": {
        "hlintOn": Boolean,
        "maxNumberOfProblems": Number
        "diagnosticsDebounceDuration" : Number
        "liquidOn"                    : Bool (default False)
        "completionSnippetsOn"        : Bool (default True)
        "formatOnImportOn"            : Bool (default True)
        "formattingProvider"          : String (default "brittany",
                                                alternate "floskell")
    }
}
  • VS Code: These settings will show up in the settings window
  • LanguageClient-neovim: Create this file in $projectdir/.vim/settings.json or set g:LanguageClient_settingsPath

Project Configuration

For a full explanation of possible configurations, refer to hie-bios/README.

HIE will attempt to automatically detect your project configuration and set up the environment for GHC.

cabal.project stack.yaml *.cabal Project selected
- - Cabal v2
- Stack
Cabal (v2 or v1)
None

However, you can also place a hie.yaml file in the root of the workspace to explicitly describe how to setup the environment. For example, to state that you want to use stack then the configuration file would look like:

cradle:
  stack:
    component: "haskell-ide-engine:lib"

If you use cabal then you probably need to specify which component you want to use.

cradle:
  cabal:
    component: "lib:haskell-ide-engine"

If you have a project with multiple components, you can use a cabal-multi cradle:

cradle:
  cabal:
    - path: "./test/dispatcher/"
      component: "test:dispatcher-test"
    - path: "./test/functional/"
      component: "test:func-test"
    - path: "./test/unit/"
      component: "test:unit-test"
    - path: "./hie-plugin-api/"
      component: "lib:hie-plugin-api"
    - path: "./app/MainHie.hs"
      component: "exe:hie"
    - path: "./app/HieWrapper.hs"
      component: "exe:hie-wrapper"
    - path: "./"
      component: "lib:haskell-ide-engine"

Equivalently, you can use stack:

cradle:
  stack:
    - path: "./test/dispatcher/"
      component: "haskell-ide-engine:test:dispatcher-test"
    - path: "./test/functional/"
      component: "haskell-ide-engine:test:func-test"
    - path: "./test/unit/"
      component: "haskell-ide-engine:test:unit-test"
    - path: "./hie-plugin-api/"
      component: "hie-plugin-api:lib"
    - path: "./app/MainHie.hs"
      component: "haskell-ide-engine:exe:hie"
    - path: "./app/HieWrapper.hs"
      component: "haskell-ide-engine:exe:hie-wrapper"
    - path: "./"
      component: "haskell-ide-engine:lib"

Or you can explicitly state the program which should be used to collect the options by supplying the path to the program. It is interpreted relative to the current working directory if it is not an absolute path.

cradle:
  bios:
    program: ".hie-bios"

The complete configuration is a subset of

cradle:
  cabal:
    component: "optional component name"
  stack:
    component: "optional component name"
  bios:
    program: "program to run"
    dependency-program: "optional program to run"
  direct:
    arguments: ["list","of","ghc","arguments"]
  default:
  none:

dependencies:
  - someDep

There is also support for multiple cradles in a single hie.yaml. An example configuration for Haskell IDE Engine:

cradle:
  multi:
    - path: ./test/dispatcher/
      config:
        cradle:
          cabal:
            component: "test:dispatcher-test"
    - path: ./test/functional/
      config:
        cradle:
          cabal:
            component: "test:func-test"
    - path: ./test/unit/
      config:
        cradle:
          cabal:
            component: "test:unit-test"
    - path: ./hie-plugin-api/
      config:
        cradle:
          cabal:
            component: "lib:hie-plugin-api"
    - path: ./app/MainHie.hs
      config:
        cradle:
          cabal:
            component: "exe:hie"
    - path: ./app/HieWrapper.hs
      config:
        cradle:
          cabal:
            component: "exe:hie-wrapper"
    - path: ./
      config:
        cradle:
          cabal:
            component: "lib:haskell-ide-engine"

Editor Integration

Note to editor integrators: there is now a hie-wrapper executable, which is installed alongside the hie executable. When this is invoked in the project root directory, it attempts to work out the GHC version used in the project, and then launch the matching hie executable.

All of the editor integrations assume that you have already installed HIE (see above) and that stack put the hie binary in your path (usually ~/.local/bin on linux and macOS).

Using HIE with VS Code

Install from the VSCode marketplace, or manually from the repository vscode-hie-server.

Using VS Code with Nix

.config/nixpkgs/config.nix sample:

with import <nixpkgs> {};

let
  hie = (import (fetchFromGitHub {
                   owner="domenkozar";
                   repo="hie-nix";
                   rev="e3113da";
                   sha256="05rkzjvzywsg66iafm84xgjlkf27yfbagrdcb8sc9fd59hrzyiqk";
                 }) {}).hie84;
in
{
  allowUnfree = true;
  packageOverrides = pkgs: rec {

    vscode = pkgs.vscode.overrideDerivation (old: {
      postFixup = ''
        wrapProgram $out/bin/code --prefix PATH : ${lib.makeBinPath [hie]}
      '';
    });

  };
}

Using HIE with Sublime Text

  • Make sure HIE is installed (see above) and that the directory stack put the hie binary in is in your path
    • (usually ~/.local/bin on unix)
  • Install LSP using Package Control
  • From Sublime Text, press Command+Shift+P and search for Preferences: LSP Settings
  • Paste in these settings. Make sure to change the command path to your hie
{
"clients": {
  "haskell-ide-engine": {
    "command": ["hie", "--lsp"],
    "scopes": ["source.haskell"],
    "syntaxes": ["Packages/Haskell/Haskell.sublime-syntax"],
    "languageId": "haskell",
  },
},
}

Now open a Haskell project with Sublime Text. You should have these features available to you:

  1. Errors are underlined in red
  2. LSP: Show Diagnostics will show a list of hints and errors
  3. LSP: Format Document will prettify the file

Using HIE with Vim or Neovim

As above, make sure HIE is installed. Then you can use Coc, LanguageClient-neovim or any other vim Langauge server protocol client. Coc is recommend since it is the only complete LSP implementation for Vim and Neovim and offers snippets and floating documentation out of the box.

Coc

Follow Coc's installation instructions, Then issue :CocConfig and add the following to your Coc config file.

"languageserver": {
  "haskell": {
    "command": "hie-wrapper",
    "args": ["--lsp"],
    "rootPatterns": [
      "*.cabal",
      "stack.yaml",
      "cabal.project",
      "package.yaml"
    ],
    "filetypes": [
      "hs",
      "lhs",
      "haskell"
    ],
    "initializationOptions": {
      "haskell": {
      }
    }
  }
}

LanguageClient-neovim

vim-plug

If you use vim-plug, then you can do this by e.g., including the following line in the Plug section of your init.vim or ~/.vimrc:

Plug 'autozimu/LanguageClient-neovim', {
    \ 'branch': 'next',
    \ 'do': './install.sh'
    \ }

and issuing a :PlugInstall command within Neovim or Vim.

Clone the LanguageClient-neovim repo

As an alternative to using vim-plug shown above, clone LanguageClient-neovim into ~/.vim/pack/XXX/start/, where XXX is just a name for your "plugin suite".

Sample ~/.vimrc
set rtp+=~/.vim/pack/XXX/start/LanguageClient-neovim
let g:LanguageClient_serverCommands = { 'haskell': ['hie-wrapper', '--lsp'] }

You'll probably want to add some mappings for common commands:

nnoremap <F5> :call LanguageClient_contextMenu()<CR>
map <Leader>lk :call LanguageClient#textDocument_hover()<CR>
map <Leader>lg :call LanguageClient#textDocument_definition()<CR>
map <Leader>lr :call LanguageClient#textDocument_rename()<CR>
map <Leader>lf :call LanguageClient#textDocument_formatting()<CR>
map <Leader>lb :call LanguageClient#textDocument_references()<CR>
map <Leader>la :call LanguageClient#textDocument_codeAction()<CR>
map <Leader>ls :call LanguageClient#textDocument_documentSymbol()<CR>

Use Ctrl+xCtrl+o (<C-x><C-o>) to open up the auto-complete menu, or for asynchronous auto-completion, follow the setup instructions on LanguageClient.

If you'd like diagnostics to be highlighted, add a highlight group for ALEError/ALEWarning/ALEInfo, or customize g:LanguageClient_diagnosticsDisplay:

hi link ALEError Error
hi Warning term=underline cterm=underline ctermfg=Yellow gui=undercurl guisp=Gold
hi link ALEWarning Warning
hi link ALEInfo SpellCap

If you're finding that the server isn't starting at the correct project root, it may also be helpful to also specify root markers:

let g:LanguageClient_rootMarkers = ['*.cabal', 'stack.yaml']

Using HIE with Atom

Make sure HIE is installed, then install the two Atom packages atom-ide-ui and ide-haskell-hie,

$ apm install language-haskell atom-ide-ui ide-haskell-hie

Using HIE with Emacs

Install HIE along with the following emacs packages:

lsp-mode lsp-ui lsp-haskell

Make sure to follow the instructions in the README of each of these packages.

Using HIE with Spacemacs

Install HIE, and then add the following to your .spacemacs config,

(defun dotspacemacs/layers ()
  "..."
  (setq-default
   ;; ...
   dotspacemacs-configuration-layers
   '(
     (haskell :variables haskell-completion-backend 'lsp)
     lsp
     )
    ))

Now you should be able to use HIE in Spacemacs.

Using HIE with Oni

Oni (a Neovim GUI) added built-in support for HIE, using stack, in #1918. If you need to change the configuration for HIE, you can overwrite the following settings in your ~/.config/oni/config.tsx file (accessible via the command palette and Configuration: Edit User Config),

export const configuration = {
  "language.haskell.languageServer.command": "stack",
  "language.haskell.languageServer.arguments": ["exec", "--", "hie"],
  "language.haskell.languageServer.rootFiles": [".git"],
  "language.haskell.languageServer.configuration": {},
}

Docs on hover/completion

HIE supports fetching docs from haddock on hover. It will fallback on using a hoogle db(generally located in ~/.hoogle on linux) if no haddock documentation is found.

To generate haddock documentation for stack projects:

$ cd your-project-directory
$ stack haddock --keep-going

To enable documentation generation for cabal projects, add the following to your ~/.cabal/config

documentation: True

To generate a hoogle database that hie can use

$ cd haskell-ide-engine
$ stack --stack-yaml=<stack.yaml you used to build hie> exec hoogle generate

Or you can set the environment variable HIE_HOOGLE_DATABASE to specify a specific database.

Contributing

Please see the note above about the new haskell-language-server project.

This project is not started from scratch:

  1. See why we should supersede previous tools
  2. Check the list of existing tools and functionality
  3. See more other tools and IDEs for inspiration

It's time to join the project!

❤️ Haskell tooling dream is near, we need your help! ❤️

Hacking on haskell-ide-engine

Haskell-ide-engine can be used on its own project. We have supplied preset samples of hie.yaml files for stack and cabal, simply copy the appropriate template to hie.yaml and it shoule work.

  • hie.yaml.cbl for cabal
  • hie.yaml.stack for stack

Documentation

All the documentation is in the docs folder at the root of this project.

Architecture

Have a look at

Troubleshooting

Emacs

Parse errors, file state going out of sync

With the lsp-mode client for Emacs, it seems that the document can very easily get out of sync between, which leads to parse errors being displayed. To fix this, enable full document synchronization with

(setq lsp-document-sync-method 'full)

emacs-direnv loads environment too late

emacs-direnv sometimes loads the environment too late, meaning lsp-mode won't be able to find correct GHC/cabal versions. To fix this, add a direnv update hook after adding the lsp hook for haskell-mode (meaning the direnv hook is executed first, because hooks are LIFO):

(add-hook 'haskell-mode-hook 'lsp)
(add-hook 'haskell-mode-hook 'direnv-update-environment)

DYLD on macOS

If you hit a problem that looks like can't load .so/.DLL for: libiconv.dylib (dlopen(libiconv.dylib, 5): image not found), it means that libraries cannot be found in the library path. We can hint where to look for them and append more paths to DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH.

export DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH="$DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/lib:/usr/local/lib"

On practice /usr/local/lib is full of dylibs linked by brew. After you amend DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH, some of the previously compiled application might not work and yell about incorrect linking, for example, dyld: Symbol not found: __cg_jpeg_resync_to_restart. You may need to look up where it comes from and remove clashing links, in this case it were clashing images libs:

$ brew unlink libjpeg
$ brew unlink libtiff
$ brew unlink libpng

Recompile.

macOS: Got error while installing GHC 8.6.1 or 8.6.2 - dyld: Library not loaded: /usr/local/opt/gmp/lib/libgmp.10.dylib

These builds have a dependency on homebrew's gmp library. Install with brew: brew install gmp. Should be fixed in GHC 8.6.3.

macOS: Got error while processing diagnostics: unable to load package integer-gmp-1.0.2.0

Rename the file at ~/.stack/programs/x86_64-osx/ghc-8.4.3/lib/ghc-8.4.3/integer-gmp-1.0.2.0/HSinteger-gmp-1.0.2.0.o to a temporary name. Should be fixed in GHC 8.8.1.

cannot satisfy -package-id <package>

Is <package> base-x?

Make sure that the GHC version of HIE matches the one of the project. After that run

$ cabal configure

and then restart HIE (e.g. by restarting your editor).

Is there a hash (#) after <package>?

Delete any .ghc.environment* files in your project root and try again. (At the time of writing, cabal new-style projects are not supported with ghc-mod)

Otherwise

Try running cabal update.

Liquid Haskell

Liquid Haskell requires an SMT solver on the path. We do not take care of installing one, thus, Liquid Haskell will not run until one is installed. The recommended SMT solver is z3. To run the tests, it is also required to have an SMT solver on the path, otherwise the tests will fail for Liquid Haskell.

Profiling haskell-ide-engine.

If you think haskell-ide-engine is using a lot of memory then the most useful thing you can do is prepare a profile of the memory usage whilst you're using the program.

  1. Add profiling: True to the cabal.project file of haskell-ide-engine
  2. cabal new-build hie
  3. (IMPORTANT) Add profiling: True to the cabal.project file of the project you want to profile.
  4. Make a wrapper script which calls the hie you built in step 2 with the additional options +RTS -hd -l-au
  5. Modify your editor settings to call this wrapper script instead of looking for hie on the path
  6. Try using h-i-e as normal and then process the *.eventlog which will be created using eventlog2html.
  7. Repeat the process again using different profiling options if you like.

Using ghc-events-analyze

haskell-ide-engine contains the necessary tracing functions to work with ghc-events-analyze. Each request which is made will emit an event to the eventlog when it starts and finishes. This way you can see if there are any requests which are taking a long time to complete or are blocking.

  1. Make sure that hie is linked with the -eventlog option. This can be achieved by adding the flag to the ghc-options field in the cabal file.
  2. Run hie as normal but with the addition of +RTS -l. This will produce an eventlog called hie.eventlog.
  3. Run ghc-events-analyze on the hie.eventlog file to produce the rendered SVG. Warning, this might take a while and produce a big SVG file.

The default options for ghc-events-analyze will produce quite a wide chart which is difficult to view. You can try using less buckets in order to make the chart quicker to generate and faster to render.

ghc-events-analyze hie.eventlog -b 100

This support is similar to the logging capabilities built into GHC.