
Right, sorry for not including more details. So what I'm trying to do is
get all the needed packages for adding taffybar built. The first I tried
with was HStringTemplate. My last attempt at doing this looking a bit like
# just getting started, making sure I can build from a clean repo
$ git clone git://github.com/archhaskell/habs.git
$ cd habs
$ cblrepo sync
$ cblrepo pkgbuild --ghc-version 7.8.2-1 $(cblrepo build base|tail -n +2)
$ ./makeahpkg -c -- $(cblrepo build base | tail -n +2)
# that worked, no problem, so now I try adding HStringTemplate
$ cblrepo add HStringTemplate,0.7.3
$ cblrepo pkgbuild --ghc-version 7.8.2-1 HStringTemplate
$ ./makeahpkg -c -- HStringTemplate
This ended up giving me a checksum error on the haskell-mtl package.
If I instead do the last step with the `./makeahpkg -c -- $(cblrepo build
base | tail -n +2)` everything builds without a hitch. At first I thought
I had to clean out all the previously built packages using `git clean -fd`,
but that turns out to not be the case. Do I just need to include all the
HStringTemplate dependencies when trying to build it?
Thanks,
Rich
On Sun, Apr 27, 2014 at 12:57 PM, Magnus Therning
On Sat, Apr 26, 2014 at 05:27:08PM -0700, Richard Wallace wrote:
Hm. Ok so the first time I don't think I had a completely clean repository like I thought. After adding a new package to the cblrepo.db, I started getting the same thing when trying to build all the packages without deleting the previously built packages. Should I be rebuilding all the packages from scratch after I add one?
No, you should absolutely *not* have to rebuild everything after adding a single package!
I'm not really sure I understand what commands you are running, or even what it is you are trying to accomplish. With a bit more information I might be able to help better.
/M
-- Magnus Therning OpenPGP: 0xAB4DFBA4 email: magnus@therning.org jabber: magnus@therning.org twitter: magthe http://therning.org/magnus
Perl is another example of filling a tiny, short-term need, and then being a real problem in the longer term. -- Alan Kay