Hi Magnus, I will also try your tool. Thanks for the advice.
Cheers Fabio 2011/6/26 Magnus Therning <[email protected]>: > I've written a tool called cblrepo[1] which aims to make it possible > to maintain a consistent set of packages without having to rebuild > to find broken dependencies. It is currently not used by anyone > involved in ArchHaskell, AFAIK, but it is surely possible to use to > speed up your ArchHaskell work (I know this from first-hand > experience). I should point out that cblrepo can do more than this. > For ArchHaskell work I think the following are valuable features: > > - Maintain a consistent set of Haskell packages, checking > dependencies when adding and upgrading packages. > - An interface to follow Hackage: > - Download the entire set of cabal files for all packages. > - Check for updates to packages you maintain in the set. > - An interface for adding/upgrading packages, takes a cabal file > (filename), or URL for a cabal file, or a package name and version > number (grabbed directly from Hackage). > - Can show a list of all packages that need to have their revision > bumped when a set of packages is upgraded. > - Can show a list of all packages that need to be rebuilt when a set > of packages are upgraded, the list is printed in a good build > order. > > /M > > [1] http://hackage.haskell.org/package/cblrepo > -- > Magnus Therning OpenPGP: 0xAB4DFBA4 > email: [email protected] jabber: [email protected] > twitter: magthe http://therning.org/magnus > > I invented the term Object-Oriented, and I can tell you I did not have > C++ in mind. > -- Alan Kay > > _______________________________________________ > arch-haskell mailing list > [email protected] > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/arch-haskell > > _______________________________________________ arch-haskell mailing list [email protected] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/arch-haskell
