
`cabal install --only-dependencies`, possibly with a sandbox set, should
fix that issue. Then configure and move from there.
---
Elliot Robinson
Phone: (321) 252-9660
Site: www.argiopetech.com
Email: elliot.robinson@argiopetech.com
PGP Fingerprint: 0xD1E72E6A9D0610FFBBF838A6FFB5205A9FEDE59A
On Wed, Jun 11, 2014 at 12:07 PM, Corentin Dupont wrote: Hi,
it seems that 'cabal configure' fails if some dependencies are missing.
Then cabal copy complains that I should run 'cabal configure' first... On Wed, Jun 11, 2014 at 4:23 PM, Tom Feron Hi Corentin, I think you're searching for `cabal configure && cabal copy`. It will
still have an exit code of 1 if you don't compile anything but it will copy
the files from data-files (and alike). On my machine, it copies share/index.html into
.cabal-sandbox/share/x86_64-openbsd-ghc-7.6.3/dummy-0.1.0.0/share/index.html. Tom On 11 June 2014 16:00, Corentin Dupont In the .cabal file you can put a directive "data-files" and they will be
deployed in ~/.cabal/share...
I want to trigger only this. On Wed, Jun 11, 2014 at 3:40 PM, Tom Nielsen Not sure what you mean - cabal doesn't do any deployment, or at least I
have not found a useful way of making it do so. In our case the deployment
is done by running apt-get update && apt-get install on the server. Tom On Wed, Jun 11, 2014 at 3:18 PM, Corentin Dupont <
corentin.dupont@gmail.com> wrote: Thanks for your response!
Is there a way to ask Cabal to just deploy the resources and not
compile everything? On Wed, Jun 11, 2014 at 11:47 AM, Tom Nielsen We package up the executables and other files into a Debain .deb
package using fpm after running cabal. Here is an example Makefile which
runs cabal, creates the debian package and adds it to our apt server: https://github.com/openbrainsrc/debcd/blob/master/Makefile This is run by our CI server after every commit to GitHub. Tom On Wed, Jun 11, 2014 at 11:33 AM, Vo Minh Thu > Hi,
>
> These days, an increasingly popular solution to package an
> application
> with its dependencies is to use Docker. You can build the Docker
> image
> locally and push it to a Docker registry and retrieve it on your
> remote machine, or you can dump it as a tarball and load it on your
> remote machine.
>
> You have different ways to create the Docker image, one of which
> would
> be similar to pushing your Haskell binary to your remote machine.
> That
> way is simply to compile your exectuable locally, and copy it to the
> remote machine with is assets if any (you might even move it to a
> .cabal directory as if it was installed through `cabal install`). By
> default your executable will be statically linked, except for libgmp
> that you have to install on the remote machine.
>
> I recommand you look into Docker. You will be able to e-use its
> knowledge to package increasingly complex applications (that might
> have more numerous dependencies that you wouldn't have to manage on
> the host).
>
> HTH,
> Thu
>
> 2014-06-11 12:24 GMT+02:00 Corentin Dupont <
> corentin.dupont@gmail.com>:
> > Hi guys!
> > Is there a procedure to deploy a Haskell application?
> > I have an Amazon EC2 micro instance to run my application, but
> it's way too
> > small to compile it using cabal (compilation takes half a day
> rouhgly), so I
> > compile it on my computer.
> > Is there a convenient way to bundle the executable with the
> resources and
> > ship it to the server?
> >
> > Thanks!
> > Corentin
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Haskell-Cafe mailing list
> > Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
> > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
> >
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