We’ve been working on Stackage server for a while and now that the code has stabilized it’s ready to be open source. You can fork it on Github! We’re a responsive team, used to bringing pull requests forward and getting them deployed.
Since the last update we added a bunch of things. Here’s a rundown:
Recommended snapshots: The home page now lists recommended snapshots for GHC 7.8, GHC 7.8 Haskell Platform flavour, and GHC 7.6. Makes it a little more straight-forward where to start.
Snapshots: The snapshots page has been cleaned up a bit to cleanly separate times when snapshots are uploaded. Just an aesthetic improvement.
We also reorganized the Preparing your system to use Stackage wiki page to be more straight-forward to get started.
We now list all packages from Hackage on the packages page. A subset of these are included in Stackage snapshots. Hitting those links takes you to our new page package. Examples:
On this page we display:
Metadata for the most recently uploaded version of that package:
We also display the dependencies of that package. Notice that there are no version constraints. That information is stored in the snapshot itself.
Documentation versions: each snapshot that contains a version of this package will be listed along with documentation for that version.
We support showing a README from your package (see e.g. hlint
example above), which is a really nice way to introduce people to
your package. You can use the same one that you use for your Github
README.md
, just include it in your .cabal
file with:
extra-source-files: README.md
If your filename is just README
it’ll be included
as plain text. With the .md
extension it will be
rendered as markdown.
Please do go ahead and include your README.md in your .cabal file. If you don’t have one, please write one and make it helpful and descriptive for any newbies to your package.
If no README file is found it falls back to the package description, which is displayed as plain text. As is well-known in the community at large, writing descriptive pros in Haddock syntax is not pleasant, whereas everyone is pretty much writing their READMEs in markdown anyway thanks to Github.
CHANGELOGs are also displayed as markdown if the file extension
is .md
, otherwise it’s treated as plain text.
An issue with using Stackage in the past was that you had to
either put your remote-repo
field in your global cabal
config, or setup an hsenv. Or by using a cabal.config
with constraints in it. Now the feature has been merged
to be able to specify remote-repo
in the
cabal.config
file in your project root. Once this is
released you’ll be able to use a Stackage snapshot within a sandbox
and keep the cabal.config
file in your source
repository.
Additional features include:
Tagging: tagging a package is easy: you just click the
+
button, type something and hit return.
We try to keep the tags of a simple format (a slug), so if you type characters that shouldn’t be in there, it’ll remove them and then prompt you to confirm.
Related: if you click a tag it will take you to a page of all packages tagged with that.
Finally, there is a list of all tags. Currently it’s rather small because that’s just what I populated myself.
Likes: just upvote a package if you like it. Hit the thumbs up icon.
Comments: comments are provided by Disqus. It’s very easy to comment with Disqus, you can use your normal account.
If you’re interested in a package, or are an author, you can hit the Subscribe link displayed at the bottom of the page to subscribe to that discussion to get updates of future comments.
Additional to the other metadata, like Github, we make use of the files in your package, so we will also display:
Stackage just got easier to use:
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