Dear Simon, I do not know the answer to your question, but I do know a few workarounds using cabal that may or may not be helpful. Cabal lets you do this: $ cabal repl -b hspec -w ~/code/HEAD-22/_build/stage1/bin/ghc this creates a fake project with "hspec" as the list of dependencies, and starts a ghci session there. (You could also write something like `cabal repl -b 'hspec ==2.11.17, HUnit >= 1.6'` -- it's really a list of constraints.) Naturally, this doesn't work if you want to compile a file instead of opening ghci. One can work around this as follows (but see the warning below): $ cabal repl -b hspec -w ~/code/HEAD-22/_build/stage1/bin/ghc --repl-option=-fobject-code --repl-option=Foo.hs which does open ghci, but it compiles Foo.hs to an object file, which may sufficient for your use case. Warning: it seems that -fobject-code breaks the illusion that the fake project doesn't actually exist, as a `dist-newstyle` tree is created in the current directory, which you may need to clean up afterwards. Note: I used --repl-option twice instead of --repl-options (mind the S) once to allow spaces in Foo.hs. Another workaround which does allow you to avoid opening ghci but requires editing the test file, is to make it a "cabal script". [1] If I put the below (between the markers) in a file `test.hs`: ``` {- cabal: build-depends: base, hspec -} {- project: with-compiler: /path/to/some/ghc -} module M where x = 4 ``` and run: $ cabal build test.hs the thing is compiled to an object file, and I get an error from GHC that there was no Main module but there was a -o option so what did you want to do exactly. (If test.hs is a Main module, this works better, naturally). Apologies if this is not helpful, but perhaps at least one of these tricks was new to one of the readers of this list. - Tom [1]: https://cabal.readthedocs.io/en/stable/cabal-commands.html#cabal-run On 10/04/2026 09:22, Simon Peyton Jones via ghc-devs wrote:
Why you want to build and install a bunch of libraries? You most likely don't want to do that.
I think I really do. Let's call my build #22 ghc-22 export ghc-22 $HOME/code/HEAD-22/_build/stage1/bin/ghc
Then on any one of dozens of 5-line tests, given in tickets, I can say
ghc-22 -c Foo.hs
and ghc-22 already knows about base, ghc-internal, text, containers etc built by and for ghc-22. They are squirrelled away somewhere in $HOME/code/HEAD-22/_build
It's like "batteries included": I already have `base`
Now some has a test that needs `hspec`. I'd like to add `hspec` to the batteries in $HOME/code/HEAD-22/_build, so that after that I can always say ghc-22 -package hspec Foo.hs and away we go.
Yes I could make a cabal project for a 5-line test, but that's more keystrokes. Is it difficult to just get it to treat `hspec` the same way that it treats `base` or `containers`?
I know this isn't the intended use-case for cabal; it's just the use-case I have.
Thanks
Simon
On Fri, 10 Apr 2026 at 05:01, Oleg Grenrus via ghc-devs
wrote: Why you want to build and install a bunch of libraries? You most likely don't want to do that.
If you want to play with particular GHC version, create an ordinary cabal package with dependencies you need, and point `cabal-install` to use your HOME/code/HEAD-22/_build/stage1/bin/ghc
There is nothing (noteworthy) special about `cabal repl -w $HOME/code/HEAD-22/_build/stage1/bin/ghc`; as long as `cabal-install` is concerned, it's just some GHC build.
- Oleg
On 4/8/26 17:43, Simon Peyton Jones via ghc-devs wrote:
Dear devs
I have thirty or so builds of GHC on my disk. Sometimes I want to use one build to build and install (for that build alone) a bunch of libraries. If I do cabal install hspec -w $HOME/code/HEAD-22/_build/stage1/bin/ghc then Cabal rightly warns me
Warning: The libraries were installed by creating a global GHC environment file at: /home/simonpj/.ghc/x86_64-linux-9.15.20260309/environments/default
The presence of such an environment file is likely to confuse or break other
tools because it changes GHC's behaviour: it changes the default package set in ghc and ghci from its normal value (which is "all boot libraries"). GHC environment files are little-used and often not tested for.
Question: how can I install the libraries in the build tree for $HOME/code/HEAD-22? After all, I think ghc-internal, base etc are all in that build-tree. Surely hspec can be too?
But how?
Thanks!
Simon
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