An advanced web framework using the Haskell programming language. Featuring:
- safety & security guaranteed at compile time
- developer productivity: tools for all your basic web development needs
- raw performance
- fast, compiled code
- techniques for constant-space memory consumption
- asynchronous IO
- this is built in to the Haskell programming language (like Erlang)
- handles a greater concurrent load than any other web application server
Learn more: http://yesodweb.com/
Installation: http://www.yesodweb.com/page/five-minutes
cabal update && cabal install yesod
yesod init
cabal-dev creates a sandboxed environment for an individual cabal package.
Your application is a cabal package and you should use cabal-dev with your Yesod application.
Instead of using the cabal
command, use the cabal-dev
command.
Use yesod-devel --dev
when developing your application.
Yesod is broken up into 4 separate code repositories each built upon many smaller packages.
Install conflicts are unfortunately common in Haskell development. However, we can prevent most of them by using some extra tools. This will require a little up-front reading and learning, but save you from a lot of misery in the long-run. See the above explanation of cabal-dev, and below of virthualenv.
Please note that cabal-dev will not work in a virthualenv shell - you can't use both at the same time.
virthualenv will not work on Windows - Windows users should use only cabal-dev.
To just install Yesod from github, we only need cabal-dev. However, cabal-dev may be more hassle than it is worth when hacking on Yesod.
We recommend using virthualenv when hacking on Yesod. This is optional, but prevents your custom build of Yesod from interfering with your currently installed cabal packages. virthualenv creates an isolated environment like cabal-dev. cabal-dev by default isolates a single cabal package, but virthualenv isolates multiple packages together. cabal-dev can isolate multiple packages together by using the -s sandbox argument
virthualenv works at the shell level, so every shell must activate the virthualenv.
Michael Snoyman just released the cabal-src tool, which helps resolve dependency conflicts when installing local packages.
Whenever you would use cabal install
for a local package, use cabal-src-install
instead. Our installer script now uses cabal-src-install when it is available.
# update your package database if you haven't recently
cabal update
# install required libraries
cabal install Cabal cabal-install cabal-src virthualenv
# clone and install all repos
# see below about first using virthualenv before running ./scripts/install
for repo in hamlet persistent wai yesod; do
git clone http://github.com/yesodweb/$repo
(
cd $repo
git submodule update --init
./scripts/install
)
done
To prevent Yesod from conflicting with your other installs, you should use virthualenv, although it is optional.
cabal update
cabal install virthualenv
cd yesodweb # the folder where you put the yesod, persistent, hamlet & wai repos
virthualenv --name=yesod
. .virthualenv/bin/activate
# install and test all packages in a repo
./scripts/install
# If things seem weird, you may need to do a clean.
./scripts/install --clean
# move to the individual package you are working on
cd shakespeare-text
# build and test the individual package
cabal configure -ftest --enable-tests
cabal build
cabal test
cabal-dev works very well if you are working on a single package. For working on multiple packages at once (installing Yesod), you need to use the shared sandbox feature.
Note that we have recommended to you to install Yesod into a sandboxed virthualenv environment. This is great for development, but when you want to use these development versions in your application that means they are not available through your user/global cabal database for your application. You should just continue to use your yesod virthualenv shell for your application. You can also use the same`cabal-dev shared sandbox.