ghcup-hs/docs/dev.md

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# Development
All you wanted to know about GHCup development.
## Module graph
[![Module graph](./modules_small.svg){: .center style="width:900px"}](./modules_wide.svg)
Main functionality is in `GHCup` module. Utility functions are
organised tree-ish in `GHCup.Utils` and `GHCup.Utils.*`.
Anything dealing with ghcup specific directories is in
`GHCup.Utils.Dirs`.
Download information on where to fetch bindists from is in the appropriate
yaml files: `data/metadata/ghcup-<yaml-ver>.yaml`.
## Design decisions
### Using [Excepts](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/haskus-utils-variant-3.0/docs/Haskus-Utils-Variant-Excepts.html) as a beefed up ExceptT
This is an open variant, similar to [plucky](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/plucky) or [oops](https://github.com/i-am-tom/oops) and allows us to combine different error types. Maybe it is too much and it's a little bit [unergonomic](https://github.com/haskus/packages/issues/32) at times. If it really hurts maintenance, it will be removed. It was more of an experiment.
### No use of haskell-TLS
I consider haskell-TLS an interesting experiment, but not a battle-tested and peer-reviewed crypto implementation. There is little to no research about what the intricacies of using haskell for low-level crypto are and how vulnerable such binaries are. Instead, we use either curl the binary or wget. There's also an implementation based on OpenSSL bindings, but it isn't enabled by default, since it would complicate shipping static binaries.
### Optics instead of lens
They're a little safer (less Monoid weirdness with view) and have better error messages. Consider the following with [lens](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/lens):
```
> view (_Just . to (++ "abc")) Nothing
""
```
vs [optics](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/optics):
```
> view (_Just % to (++ "abc")) Nothing
<interactive>:2:1: error:
• An_AffineFold cannot be used as A_Getter
• In the expression: view (_Just % to (++ "abc")) Nothing
In an equation for it: it = view (_Just % to (++ "abc")) Nothing
```
### StrictData on by default
Kazu Yamamoto [explained it in his PR](https://github.com/yesodweb/wai/pull/752#issuecomment-501531386) very well. I like to agree with him. The instances where we need non-strict behavior, we annotate it.
`Strict` is a little more odd as a default, since it depends on how you define your functions as well.
## Code style and formatting
Unfortunately, code formatters are semi-broken on this codebase, due to TH and CPP.
Some light suggestions:
1. mtl-style preferred
2. no overly pointfree style
3. use `where` a lot, so the main function body reads like prose
4. documentation is part of the code
## Common Tasks
### Adding a new GHC version
Head over to: [https://github.com/haskell/ghcup-metadata#adding-a-new-ghc-version](https://github.com/haskell/ghcup-metadata#adding-a-new-ghc-version)
### Adding a new CLI command
An example illustration on how to deal with [optparse-applicative](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/optparse-applicative) can be seen here: [https://gitlab.haskell.org/haskell/ghcup-hs/-/commit/c19dd5ee8b2edbaf0336af143f1c75b6f4843e26](https://gitlab.haskell.org/haskell/ghcup-hs/-/commit/c19dd5ee8b2edbaf0336af143f1c75b6f4843e26)
Every subcommand now lives in its own module under [GHCup.OptParse.MyCommand](https://gitlab.haskell.org/haskell/ghcup-hs/-/tree/master/app/ghcup/GHCup/OptParse).
## Major refactors
1. First major refactor included adding cross support. This added
`GHCTargetVersion`, which includes the target in addition to the version.
Most of the `Version` parameters to functions had to be replaced with
that and ensured the logic is consistent for cross and non-cross
installs.
2. This refactor added windows support wrt [#130](https://gitlab.haskell.org/haskell/ghcup-hs/-/issues/130).
The major changes here were switching `hpath` library out for `filepath`/`directory` (sadly) and
introducing a non-unix way of handling processes via the `process` library. It also introduced considerable
amounts of CPP wrt file handling, installation etc.
3. This refactor split up the huge `Main.hs` and put every subcommand in its own module: [#212](https://gitlab.haskell.org/haskell/ghcup-hs/-/merge_requests/212)
# Releasing
1. Update version in `ghcup.cabal` and `boostrap-haskell` (`ghver` variable at the top of the script)
2. Update `GHCup.Version` module. `ghcupURL` must only be updated if we change the `GHCupInfo` type or the YAML representation of it. The version of the YAML represents the change increments. `ghcUpVer` is the current application version, read from `ghcup.cabal`.
3. Add ChangeLog entry
4. Commit and git push with tag. Wait for tests to succeed and release artifacts to build.
5. Download release artifacts and upload them `downloads.haskell.org/~ghcup` along with checksum files (`sha256sum --tag * > SHA256SUMS && gpg --detach-sign -u <your-email> SHA256SUMS`)
6. Add ghcup release artifacts to ALL yaml files, see [ghcup-metadata repo](https://github.com/haskell/ghcup-metadata)
7. Upload the final `ghcup-<ver>.yaml` (and a detached GPG sig of it) to `webhost.haskell.org/ghcup/data/` (for yaml versions <= 0.0.6) as well as [https://github.com/haskell/ghcup-metadata](https://github.com/haskell/ghcup-metadata) (for all versions).
8. Upload `bootstrap-haskell` and `bootstrap-haskell.ps1` to `webhost.haskell.org/ghcup/sh/`
9. Update the top-level ghcup symlinks at `downloads.haskell.org/~ghcup`
10. Post on reddit/discourse/etc. and collect rewards
# Documentation
This documentation page is built via [mkdocs](https://www.mkdocs.org/), see `mkdocs.yml` and `docs/` subfolder.
The module graph needs [graphmod](https://github.com/yav/graphmod) and is generated via `scripts/dev/modgraph.sh`.