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Frequently asked questions

Stack and Cabal

??? question "What is the relationship between Stack and Cabal?"

'Cabal' can refer to Cabal (the library) or to Cabal (the tool).

=== "Cabal (the library)"

     Cabal (the library) is used by Stack to build your Haskell code.

     A Haskell package is described by a Cabal file, which file is part of
     the package. The file is named `<package_name>.cabal`.

     Stack requires a project-level configuration file (`stack.yaml`, by
     default).

     For further information about the difference between a Cabal file and
     a project-level configuration file, see the
     [stack.yaml vs a Cabal file](topics/stack_yaml_vs_cabal_package_file.md)
     documentation.

     The [`stack init`](commands/init_command.md) command initializes a
     project-level configuration file from package description files.

     Stack uses Cabal (the library) via an executable. For
     `build-type: Simple` (the most common case), Stack builds that
     executable using the version of Cabal which came with GHC. Stack caches
     such executables, in the [Stack root](topics/stack_root.md) under
     directory `setup-exe-cache`.

     In rare or complex cases, a different version of Cabal to the one that
     came with GHC may be needed. `build-type: Custom` and a `setup-custom`
     stanza in the Cabal file, and a `Setup.hs` file in the package
     directory, can be specified. Stack's project-level configuration file
     can then specify the version of Cabal that Stack will use to build the
     executable (named `setup`) from `Setup.hs`. Stack will use Cabal via
     `setup`.

=== "Cabal (the tool)"

    Cabal (the tool) is a tool provided by the
    [`cabal-install`](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/cabal-install)
    Haskell package. It aims to simplify the process of managing Haskell
    software by automating the fetching, configuration, compilation and
    installation of Haskell libraries and programs. These are goals that
    Stack shares. Stack can be used independently of Cabal (the tool) but
    users can also use both, if they wish.

??? question "How do I use Stack with sandboxes?"

A 'sandbox' is a development environment that is isolated from other parts
of the system. The concept of sandboxing is built in to Stack. All builds
are automatically isolated into separate package databases.

??? question "Can I run cabal commands inside stack exec?"

Yes. Some `cabal` commands are inconsistent with the `GHC_PACKAGE_PATH`
environment variable in the Stack environment. Command, for example:

~~~text
stack exec --no-ghc-package-path -- cabal build
~~~

GHC or GHCi-related

??? question "Will Stack interfere with the GHC I already have installed?"

No.

??? question "I already have GHC installed. Can I still use Stack?"

Yes. In its default configuration, Stack will simply ignore any system GHC
installation and use a sandboxed GHC that it has installed itself. You can
find these sandboxed GHC installations in the `ghc-*` directories in the
`stack path --programs` directory.

If you would like Stack to use your system GHC installation, use the
[`--system-ghc`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#system-ghc) flag or run
`stack config set system-ghc --global true` to make Stack check your PATH
for a suitable GHC by default.

Stack can only use a system GHC installation if its version is compatible
with the configuration of the current project, particularly the snapshot
specified by the [`snapshot`](configure/yaml/project.md#snapshot) or
[`resolver`](configure/yaml/project.md#resolver) key.

GHC installation doesn't work for all operating systems, so in some cases
you will need to use `system-ghc` and install GHC yourself.

??? question "When I command stack ghci what version of GHC is used?"

The version of GHC is specified by the snapshot in the relevant Stack
project-level configuration file. This may be the file in the
`global-project` directory in the [Stack root](topics/stack_root.md).

For further information, see the [configuration](configure/yaml/index.md)
documentation.

??? question "How does Stack determine what GHC to use?"

In its default configuration, Stack determines from the current project which
GHC version, architecture etc it needs. It then looks in the `ghc-<version>`
subdirectory of the `stack path --programs` directory for a compatible GHC,
requesting to install one via `stack setup` if none is found.

If you are using the [`--system-ghc`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#system-ghc)
flag or have configured `system-ghc: true` either in the project `stack.yaml` or
the global `config.yaml`, Stack will use the first GHC that it finds on your
PATH, falling back on its sandboxed installations only if the found GHC doesn't
comply with the various requirements (version, architecture) that your project
needs.

See issue [#420](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/420) for a
detailed discussion of Stack's behavior when `system-ghc` is enabled.

??? question "How can I test that different GHC versions can build my project?"

You can create multiple project-level configuration files for your project,
one for each build plan. For example, you might set up your project
directory like so:

~~~text
myproject/
  stack-ghc-9.6.6.yaml
  stack-ghc-9.8.2.yaml
  stack.yaml --> symlink to stack-ghc-9.6.6.yaml
  myproject.cabal
  src/
    ...
~~~

When you run `stack build`, you can set the `STACK_YAML` environment
variable to indicate which build plan to use. Command:

=== "Unix-like"

    ~~~text
    STACK_YAML=stack-ghc-9.8.2.yaml
    stack build
    ~~~

=== "Windows"

    ~~~text
    $Env:STACK_YAML='stack-ghc-9.8.2.yaml'
    stack build
    ~~~

=== "Windows (Command Prompt)"

    ~~~text
    set STACK_YAML=stack-ghc-9.8.2.yaml
    stack build
    ~~~

Setup-related

??? question "Where is Stack installed?"

Command:

~~~text
stack uninstall
~~~

for information about where Stack is installed.

??? question "Can I change Stack's default temporary directory?"

Stack downloads and extracts files to `$STACK_ROOT/programs` on most platforms,
which defaults to `~/.stack/programs`. On Windows `$LOCALAPPDATA\Programs\stack`
is used. If there is not enough free space in this directory, Stack may fail.
For instance, `stack setup` with a GHC installation requires roughly 1GB free.
If this is an issue, you can set `local-programs-path` in your
`~/.stack/config.yaml` to a directory on a file system with more free space.

If you use Stack with Nix integration, be aware that Nix uses a `TMPDIR`
variable, and if it is not set Nix sets it to some subdirectory of `/run`, which
on most Linuxes is a Ramdir. Nix will run the builds in `TMPDIR`, therefore if
you don't have enough RAM you will get errors about disk space. If this happens
to you, please _manually_ set `TMPDIR` before launching Stack to some directory
on the disk.

??? question "On Windows, stack setup tells me to add certain paths to the PATH instead of doing it?"

In PowerShell, it is easy to automate even that step. Command:

~~~text
$Env:Path = ( stack setup | %{ $_ -replace '[^ ]+ ', ''} ), $Env:Path -join ";"
~~~

??? question "Does Stack install the system/C libraries that some Cabal packages depend on?"

No. This is currently out of the scope of Stack's target set of features.
Instead of attempting to automate the installation of 3rd party dependencies, we
have the following approaches for handling system dependencies:

* Nix and docker help make your build and execution environment deterministic
  and predictable. This way, you can install system dependencies into a
  container, and share this container with all developers.

* If you have installed some libraries into a non-standard location, use the
  [`extra-lib-dirs`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#extra-lib-dirs) option or the
  [`extra-include-dirs`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#extra-include-dirs)
  option to specify it.

In the future, Stack might give operating system-specific suggestions for how to
install system libraries.

??? question "How can I make Stack aware of my custom SSL certificates?"

=== "Linux"

    Use the `SYSTEM_CERTIFICATE_PATH` environment variable to point at the directory
    where you keep your SSL certificates.


=== "macOS"

    In principle, you can use the following command to add a certificate to your
    system certificate keychain:

    ~~~bash
    sudo security add-trusted-cert -d -r trustRoot -k /Library/Keychains/System.keychain <certificate>
    ~~~

    Some users have reported issues with this approach, see issue
    [#907](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/907) for more
    information.

Package description format-related

??? question "How does Stack support the Hpack specification?"

The [Hpack](https://github.com/sol/hpack) package description format is an
alternative to that used in a Cabal file.

If a package directory contains an package description file in the Hpack
format (`package.yaml`), Stack will use that file to create the
corresponding Cabal file.

[`stack init`](commands/init_command.md) will use Hpack format package
description files, if they are present.

The [`with-hpack`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#with-hpack) non-project
specific configuration option or the
[`--with-hpack`](configure/global_flags.md#-with-hpack-option) global flag
can be used to specify an Hpack executable to use instead of Stack's
built-in Hpack functionality.

Package index-related

??? question "How do I update my package index?"

Command:

~~~text
stack update
~~~

However, generally, it's not necessary with Stack: if the package index is
missing, or if a snapshot refers to package version that isn't available,
Stack will automatically update the package index and then try again.

If you run into a situation where Stack doesn't automatically update the
package index, please report it as a bug.

??? question "Is it dangerous to update the package index automatically? Can that corrupt build plans?"

No. Stack is explicit about which packages it's going to build. There are
three sources of information to tell Stack which packages to install: the
selected snapshot, the `extra-deps` configuration value, and your project
packages. The only way to get Stack to change its build plan is to modify
one of those three. Updating the index will have no effect on Stack's
behavior.

??? question "How do I use a custom package index?"

See the [`package-index`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#package-index)
non-project specific configuration option documentation.

Package-related

??? question "How do I use a package version on Hackage not in a snapshot?"

Add the package version to the [`extra-deps`](configure/yaml/project.md)
project-specific configuration option in the
[project-level configuration file](configure/yaml/index.md).

??? question "How do I use a package version not on Hackage?"

Add the location of the package version to the
[`extra-deps`](configure/yaml/project.md) project-specific configuration
option in the [project-level configuration file](configure/yaml/index.md).

For further information, see the
[package location](topics/package_location.md) documentation.

??? question "How do I use a modified version of a package?"

Typically, a modified version of a package is used as a project package.
Add the location of the package to the
[`packages`](configure/yaml/project.md#packages) project-specific
configuration option in the
[project-level configuration file](configure/yaml/index.md).

One way to get the source code for the unmodified package version is to use
the [`stack unpack`](commands/unpack_command.md).

??? question "I'd like to use my installed packages in a different directory. How do I tell Stack where to find my packages?"

Set the `STACK_YAML` environment variable to point to the `stack.yaml`
configuration file for your project. Then you can run `stack exec`, `stack ghc`,
etc., from any directory and still use your packages.

stack build-related

??? question "Why does stack test trigger a rebuild of other components?"

If the set of dependencies of a project package to be built are not a
subset of the set of dependencies when it was last built, then that will
trigger a rebuild of components that were previously built.

The command:

~~~text
stack build
~~~

will build the library and executable components of project packages and the
build will take into account the dependencies of those components.

If you then command:

~~~text
stack test
~~~

or, equivalently:

~~~text
stack build --test
~~~

the test suite components of project packages are added to the build
targets.

That can add dependencies to a project package, if its test suite
components have dependencies that are not dependencies of its library
and executable components.

What is true of test suite components applies equally to benchmark
components.

If that behaviour is undesirable, a way to avoid it is to change the
description of each project package so that adding its test suite (or
benchmark) components does not add dependencies to the package. That is,
to specify, in the package description, the dependencies as common to all
the components that you are switching between from one build to another.

For example, if you are using `package.yaml`, add the dependencies to its
top-level `dependencies` key.

Alternatively, build all components of project packages without running
tests or benchmarks once built. Add the following to a configuration file:

~~~yaml
build:
  test: true
  test-arguments:
    no-run-tests: true
  bench: true
  benchmark-opts:
    no-run-benchmarks: true
~~~

or command:

~~~text
stack build --test --no-run-tests --bench --no-run-benchmarks
~~~

??? question "How do I use a custom preprocessor?"

See the
[`customer-prepocessor-extensions`](configure/yaml/project.md#custom-preprocessor-extensions)
project-specific configuration option documentation.

??? question "How do I get extra tools used during building?"

Stack will automatically install tools used during building required by your
packages or their dependencies, in particular
[Alex](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/alex) and
[Happy](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/happy).

!!! note

    This works when using LTS or nightly snapshots, not with GHC or custom
    snapshots. You can manually install tools used during building by running,
    e.g., `stack build alex happy`.

??? question "My tests are failing. What should I do?"

Like all other targets, `stack test` runs test suites in parallel by default.
This can cause problems with test suites that depend on global resources such
as a database or binding to a fixed port number. A quick hack is to force stack
to run all test suites in sequence, using `stack test --jobs=1`. For test
suites to run in parallel developers should ensure that their test suites do
not depend on global resources (e.g. by asking the operating system for a random
port to bind to) and where unavoidable, add a lock in order to serialize access
to shared resources.

??? question "How do I use Stack with Docker?"

See the [Docker integration](topics/docker_integration.md) documentation.

??? question "How do I build a statically-linked executable on Linux?"

The way that Stack itself builds statically-linked Stack executables for Linux
is as follows:

* In the Cabal file, the following
  [`ld-options`](https://cabal.readthedocs.io/en/stable/cabal-package-description-file.html#pkg-field-ld-options)
  are set: `-static` and `-pthread`.

* The Stack command is run in a Docker container based on Alpine Linux. The
  relevant Docker image repository is set out in Stack's `stack.yaml` file. See
  also Olivier Benz's [GHC musl project](https://gitlab.com/benz0li/ghc-musl).

* Stack's configuration includes:

    ~~~yaml
    extra-include-dirs:
    - /usr/include
    extra-lib-dirs:
    - /lib
    - /usr/lib
    ~~~

* The build command is `stack build --docker --system-ghc --no-install-ghc` (on
  x86_64) or
  `stack build --docker --docker-stack-exe=image --system-ghc --no-install-ghc`
  (on AArch64; the host Stack and the image Stack must have the same version
  number).

??? question "Why doesn't Stack rebuild my project when I specify --ghc-options on the command line?"

Because GHC options often only affect optimization levels and warning behavior,
Stack doesn't recompile when it detects an option change by default. This
behavior can be changed though by setting the
[`rebuild-ghc-options` option](configure/yaml/non-project.md#rebuild-ghc-options)
to `true`.

To force recompilation manually, use the `--force-dirty` flag. If this still
doesn't lead to a rebuild, add the `-fforce-recomp` flag to your
`--ghc-options`.

??? question "Why doesn't Stack apply my --ghc-options to my dependencies?"

By default, Stack applies command line GHC options only to
[project packages](configure/yaml/project.md#packages). For an explanation of
this choice see this discussion on issue
[#827](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/827#issuecomment-133263678).

If you still want to set specific GHC options for a dependency, use the
[`ghc-options`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#ghc-options) option in your YAML
configuration file.

To change the set of packages that command line GHC options apply to, use the [`apply-ghc-options`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#apply-ghc-options) option.

??? question "How does Stack handle parallel builds?"

See issue [#644](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/644) for more
details.

??? question "Where does the output from --ghc-options=-ddump-splices (and other -ddump* options) go?"

These are written to `*.dump-*` files inside the package's `.stack-work`
directory. Specifically, they will be available at
`PKG-DIR/$(stack path --dist-dir)/build/SOURCE-PATH`, where `SOURCE-PATH` is the
path to the source file, relative to the location of the Cabal file. When
building named components such as test-suites, `SOURCE-PATH` will also include
`COMPONENT/COMPONENT-tmp`, where `COMPONENT` is the name of the component.

??? question "Why is DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH ignored?"

If you are on Mac OS X 10.11 ("El Capitan") or later, there is a GHC issue
[#11617](https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/11617) which prevents the
`DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH` environment variable from being passed to GHC (see issue
[#1161](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/1161)) when System
Integrity Protection (a.k.a. "rootless") is enabled. There are two known
workarounds:

 1. Known to work in all cases:
    [disable System Integrity Protection](http://osxdaily.com/2015/10/05/disable-rootless-system-integrity-protection-mac-os-x/).
    **WARNING: Disabling SIP will severely reduce the security of your system, so only do this if absolutely necessary!**
 2. Experimental: modify GHC's shell script wrappers to use a shell outside the
    protected directories (see issue
    [#1161](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/1161#issuecomment-186690904)).

??? question "How do I get verbose output from GHC when I build?"

Set the [`--ghc-options`](commands/build_command.md#-ghc-options-option)
option of `stack build` to `-v`.

Snapshot-related

??? question "How does Stack choose which snapshot to use when creating a project-level configuration file?"

See the [`stack init`](commands/init_command.md) command documentation.

CI-related

??? question "How do I use Stack with Travis CI?"

See the [Travis CI](topics/travis_ci.md) documentation.

??? question "How do I use Stack with Azure CI?"

See the [Azure CI](topics/azure_ci.md) documentation.

Linux-related

??? question "How do fix error [S-9443] for 'linux64-ncurses6'?"

Most Linux distributions have standardized on providing `libtinfo.so.6`,
either directly or as a symbolic link to `libncursesw.so.6`. As such, there
are no GHC binary distributions that link to `libncursesw.so.6` after
GHC 8.2.2.

This error can be prevented by creating a symbolic link to
`libncursesw.so.6` using name `libtinfo.so.6`. Command:

~~~bash
ln -s /usr/lib/libncursesw.so.6 /usr/lib/libtinfo.so.6
~~~

Root privileges may be required.

macOS-related

??? question "On macOS, how do I resolve linker errors when running stack setup or stack build?"

This is likely to be caused by having both a LLVM installation and default
Apple Clang compiler on the PATH. The symptom of this issue is a linker
error "bad relocation (Invalid pointer diff)". The compiler picks up
inconsistent versions of binaries and the mysterious error occurs.

The workaround is to remove LLVM binaries from the PATH.

??? question "On macOS, how do I suppress '-nopie' warnings with stack build?"

~~~bash
clang: warning: argument unused during compilation: '-nopie'
 [-Wunused-command-line-argument]
~~~

This warning is shown when compiler support of `-no-pie` is expected but
unavailable. It's possible to bypass the warning for a specific version of GHC
by modifying a global setting:

~~~bash
# ~/.stack/programs/x86_64-osx/ghc-8.2.2/lib/ghc-8.2.2/settings
-- ("C compiler supports -no-pie", "YES"),
++ ("C compiler supports -no-pie", "NO"),
~~~

**Note that we're fixing `ghc-8.2.2` in this case; repeat for other versions as necessary.**
You should apply this fix for the version of GHC that matches your snapshot.

Issue [#4009](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/4009) goes into
further detail.

Windows-related

??? question "What is licensing restrictions on Windows?"

Currently, on Windows, GHC produces binaries linked statically with
[GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic Library](https://gmplib.org/) (GMP), which is
used by [integer-gmp](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/integer-gmp) library
to provide big integer implementation for Haskell. Contrary to the majority of
Haskell code licensed under permissive BSD3 license, GMP library is licensed
under LGPL, which means resulting binaries
[have to be provided with source code or object files](http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#LGPLStaticVsDynamic).
That may or may not be acceptable for your situation. Current workaround is to
use GHC built with alternative big integer implementation called
`integer-simple`, which is free from LGPL limitations as it's pure Haskell and
does not use GMP.  Unfortunately it has yet to be available out of the box with
Stack. See issue [#399](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/399)
for the ongoing effort and information on workarounds.

??? question "I have a Windows username with a space in it and problems building"

See the [`local-programs-path`](configure/yaml/non-project.md#local-programs-path)
non-project specific configuration option documentation for advice.

??? question "How to get a working executable on Windows?"

When executing a binary after building with `stack build` (e.g. for target
"foo"), the command `foo.exe` might complain about missing runtime libraries
(whereas `stack exec foo` works).

Windows is not able to find the necessary C++ libraries from the standard
prompt because they're not in the PATH environment variable. `stack exec` works
because it's modifying PATH to include extra things.

Those libraries are shipped with GHC (and, theoretically in some cases, MSYS2).
The easiest way to find them is `stack exec which`. For example, command:

~~~text
stack exec -- which libstdc++-6.dll
/c/Users/Michael/AppData/Local/Programs/stack/i386-windows/ghc-7.8.4/mingw/bin/libstdc++-6.dll
~~~

A quick workaround is adding this path to the PATH environment variable or
copying the files somewhere Windows finds them (see
https://msdn.microsoft.com/de-de/library/7d83bc18.aspx).

See issue [#425](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/425).