{-# LANGUAGE DeriveLift #-} {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} {-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-} {-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-} {-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-orphans #-} {- | Digging metadata out of the description of your project, and other useful helpers. -} module Core.Program.Metadata ( Version, versionNumberFrom, projectNameFrom, projectSynopsisFrom, -- * Splice fromPackage, -- * Source code __LOCATION__, ) where import Core.Data import Core.System.Base (IOMode (..), withFile) import Core.System.Pretty import Core.Text import qualified Data.List as List (find, isSuffixOf) import Data.Maybe (fromMaybe) import Data.String import GHC.Stack (HasCallStack, SrcLoc (..), callStack, getCallStack) import Language.Haskell.TH (Q, runIO) import Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax (Exp (..), Lift) import System.Directory (listDirectory) {- | Information about the version number of this piece of software and other related metadata related to the project it was built from. This is supplied to your program when you call 'Core.Program.Execute.configure'. This value is used if the user requests it by specifying the @--version@ option on the command-line. Simply providing an overloaded string literal such as version @\"1.0\"@ will give you a 'Version' with that value: @ \{\-\# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings \#\-\} main :: 'IO' () main = do context <- 'Core.Program.Execute.configure' \"1.0\" 'Core.Program.Execute.None' ('Core.Program.Arguments.simpleConfig' ... @ For more complex usage you can populate a 'Version' object using the 'fromPackage' splice below. You can then call various accessors like 'versionNumberFrom' to access individual fields. -} data Version = Version { projectNameFrom :: String , projectSynopsisFrom :: String , versionNumberFrom :: String } deriving (Show, Lift) emptyVersion :: Version emptyVersion = Version "" "" "0" instance IsString Version where fromString x = emptyVersion{versionNumberFrom = x} {- | This is a splice which includes key built-time metadata, including the number from the version field from your project's /.cabal/ file (as written by hand or generated from /package.yaml/). This uses the evil @TemplateHaskell@ extension. While we generally discourage the use of Template Haskell by beginners (there are more important things to learn first) it is a way to execute code at compile time and that is what what we need in order to have the version number extracted from the /.cabal/ file rather than requiring the user to specify (and synchronize) it in multiple places. To use this, enable the Template Haskell language extension in your /Main.hs/ file. Then use the special @$( ... )@ \"insert splice here\" syntax that extension provides to get a 'Version' object with the desired metadata about your project: @ \{\-\# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell \#\-\} version :: 'Version' version = $('fromPackage') main :: 'IO' () main = do context <- 'Core.Program.Execute.configure' version 'Core.Program.Execute.None' ('Core.Program.Arguments.simpleConfig' ... @ (Using Template Haskell slows down compilation of this file, but the upside of this technique is that it avoids linking the Haskell build machinery into your executable, saving you about 10 MB in the size of the resultant binary) -} fromPackage :: Q Exp fromPackage = do pairs <- readCabalFile let name = fromMaybe "" . lookupKeyValue "name" $ pairs let synopsis = fromMaybe "" . lookupKeyValue "synopsis" $ pairs let version = fromMaybe "" . lookupKeyValue "version" $ pairs let result = Version { projectNameFrom = fromRope name , projectSynopsisFrom = fromRope synopsis , versionNumberFrom = fromRope version } -- I would have preferred -- -- let e = AppE (VarE ... -- return e -- -- but that's not happening. So more voodoo TH nonsense instead. [e|result|] {- Locate the .cabal file in the present working directory (assumed to be the build root) and use the **Cabal** library to parse the few bits we need out of it. -} findCabalFile :: IO FilePath findCabalFile = do files <- listDirectory "." let found = List.find (List.isSuffixOf ".cabal") files case found of Just file -> return file Nothing -> error "No .cabal file found" readCabalFile :: Q (Map Rope Rope) readCabalFile = runIO $ do -- Find .cabal file file <- findCabalFile -- Parse .cabal file contents <- withFile file ReadMode hInput let pairs = parseCabalFile contents -- pass to calling program return pairs -- TODO this could be improved; we really only need the data from the first -- block of lines, with colons in them! We're probably reached the point where -- a proper parser would be good, but whatever. parseCabalFile :: Bytes -> Map Rope Rope parseCabalFile contents = let breakup = intoMap . fmap (\(a, b) -> (a, trimValue b)) . fmap (breakRope (== ':')) . breakLines . fromBytes in breakup contents -- knock off the colon and whitespace in ": hello" trimValue :: Rope -> Rope trimValue value = case unconsRope value of Nothing -> emptyRope Just (_, remainder) -> case findIndexRope (/= ' ') remainder of Nothing -> emptyRope Just i -> snd (splitRope i remainder) {- | Access the source location of the call site. This is insanely cool, and does /not/ require you to turn on the @CPP@ or @TemplateHaskell@ language extensions! Nevertheless we named it with underscores to compliment the symbols that @CPP@ gives you; the double underscore convention holds across many languages and stands out as a very meta thing, even if it is a proper Haskell value. We have a 'Render' instance that simply prints the filename and line number. Doing: @ main :: 'IO' () main = 'Core.Program.Execute.execute' $ do 'Core.Program.Logging.writeR' '__LOCATION__' @ will give you: @ tests/Snipppet.hs:32 @ This isn't the full stack trace, just information about the current line. If you want more comprehensive stack trace you need to add 'HasCallStack' constraints everywhere, and then... -} -- This works because the call stack has the most recent frame at the head of -- the list. Huge credit to Matt Parsons for having pointed out this technique -- at __LOCATION__ :: HasCallStack => SrcLoc __LOCATION__ = case getCallStack callStack of (_, srcLoc) : _ -> srcLoc _ -> emptySrcLoc where -- we construct a dud SrcLoc rather than using error "unreachable!" -- because often the only time you need a source location is an exception -- pathway already. If something goes wrong with this gimick we don't want -- to submerge the actual problem. emptySrcLoc = SrcLoc { srcLocPackage = "" , srcLocModule = "" , srcLocFile = "" , srcLocStartLine = 0 , srcLocStartCol = 0 , srcLocEndLine = 0 , srcLocEndCol = 0 } instance Render SrcLoc where type Token SrcLoc = () colourize = const pureWhite highlight loc = pretty (srcLocFile loc) <> ":" <> pretty (show (srcLocStartLine loc))