
You should be able to get it just by running cabal update & cabal install
AC-Vector.
With 6.12 it may be that you don't have the cabal-install package installed
already, so cabal install won't work.
If that's the case, you'll need to download cabal-install and it's deps and
install it using runhaskell Setup.hs configure, runhaskell Setup.hs build ad
runhaskell Setup.hs install.
That, or wait until 6.12 is considered stable enough to become part of the
Haskell platform.
For reference – I can quite believe that Haskell came out incredibly fast
here – it's trivially easy to parallelise haskell programs, and GHC deals
with parallelisation well (except for garbage collection unfortunately).
Bob
On Fri, Jan 15, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Jon Harrop
Someone has tried to parallelize Lennart's Haskell from my ray tracer language comparison and they are claiming awesome performance results for Haskell, even beating HLVM:
http://poorlytyped.blogspot.com/2010/01/haskell-ray-tracing-parallel.html
Frankly, I don't believe their claims for a second. So I'd like to test their code for myself. However, apparently their code needs some third-party library that can be installed with:
cabal install AC-Vector
but, on my machine, that only seems to make the library accessible to GHC 6.10 and not to GHC 6.12 (which is needed to compile this benchmark).
What is the easiest way for me to get this library working under GHC 6.12?
-- Dr Jon Harrop, Flying Frog Consultancy Ltd. http://www.ffconsultancy.com/?e _______________________________________________ Beginners mailing list Beginners@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/beginners