BSD-3-Clause licensed by Neil Mitchell, jpmoresmau
Maintained by Neil Mitchell
This version can be pinned in stack with:ghcid-0.7.4@sha256:2ba93f7bfa68206d6465f5d92c526563d33d8284068eebbf2560dd785f4b6404,3489

Module documentation for 0.7.4

ghcid Hackage version Stackage version Linux build status Windows build status

Either “GHCi as a daemon” or “GHC + a bit of an IDE”. To a first approximation, it opens ghci and runs :reload whenever your source code changes, formatting the output to fit a fixed height console. Unlike other Haskell development tools, ghcid is intended to be incredibly simple. In particular, it doesn’t integrate with any editors, doesn’t depend on GHC the library and doesn’t start web servers.

Acknowledgements: This project incorporates significant work from JPMoresmau, who is listed as a co-author.

Using it

Run stack install ghcid or cabal update && cabal install ghcid to install it as normal. Then run ghcid "--command=ghci Main.hs". The command is how you start your project in ghci. If you omit --command then it will default to stack ghci if you have the stack.yaml file and .stack-work directory, default to ghci if you have a .ghci file in the current directory, and otherwise default to cabal repl.

Personally, I always create a .ghci file at the root of all my projects, which usually reads something like:

:set -fwarn-unused-binds -fwarn-unused-imports
:set -isrc
:load Main

After that, resize your console and make it so you can see it while working in your editor. On Windows you may wish to pass --topmost so the console will sit on top of all other windows. On Linux, you probably want to use your window manager to make it topmost or use a tiling window manager.

What you get

On every save you’ll see a list of the errors and warnings in your project. It uses ghci under the hood, so even relatively large projects should update their status pretty quickly. As an example:

Main.hs:23:10:
    Not in scope: `verbosit'
    Perhaps you meant `verbosity' (imported from System.Console.CmdArgs)
Util.hs:18:1: Warning: Defined but not used: `foo'

Or, if everything is good, you see:

All good

Please report any bugs you find.

Editor integration

There are a few plugins that integrate Ghcid into editors, notably:

Usage tips

In general, to use ghcid, you first need to get ghci working well for you. In particular, craft a command line or .ghci file such that when you start ghci it has loaded all the files you care about (check :show modules). If you want to use --test check that whatever expression you want to use works in that ghci session. Getting ghci started properly is one of the hardest things of using ghcid, and while ghcid has a lot of defaults for common cases, it doesn’t always work out of the box.

FAQ

This isn’t as good as full IDE

I’ve gone for simplicity over features. It’s a point in the design space, but not necessarily the best point in the design space for you. For “real” IDEs see the Haskell wiki.

If I delete a file and put it back it gets stuck.

Yes, that’s a bug in GHCi. If you see GHCi getting confused just kill ghcid and start it again.

I want to run my tests when files change.

You can pass any ghci expression with the --test flag, e.g. --test=:main, which will be run whenever the code is warning free (or pass --warnings for when the code is merely error free).

I want to run arbitrary commands when arbitrary files change.

This project reloads ghci when files loaded by ghci change. If you want a more general mechanism something like Steel Overseer or Watchman will probably work better.

I want syntax highlighting in the error messages.

One option is to use Neovim or Emacs and run the terminal in a buffer whose file type is set to Haskell. Another option is to pipe ghcid through source-highlight (ghcid | source-highlight -s haskell -f esc).

I’m not seeing pattern matching warnings.

Ghcid automatically appends -fno-code to the command line, which makes the reload cycle about twice as fast. Unfortunately GHC 8.0 and 8.2 suffer from bug 10600 which means -fno-code also disables pattern matching warnings. On these versions, either accept no pattern match warnings or use -c to specify a command line to start ghci that doesn’t include -fno-code. From GHC 8.4 this problem no longer exists.

I get “During interactive linking, GHCi couldn’t find the following symbol”

This problem is a manifestation of GHC bug 8025, which is fixed in GHC 8.4 and above. Ghcid automatically appends -fno-code to the command line, but for older GHC’s you can supress that with --test "return ()" (to add a fake test) or -c "ghci ..." to manually specify the command to run.

I only see source-spans or error messages on errors/warnings after the first load.

Due to limitations in ghci, these flags are only set after the first load. If you want them to apply from the start, pass them on the command line to ghci with something like -c "ghci -ferror-spans -fdiagnostics-color=always".

I want to match on the file/line/column to get jump-to-error functionality in my editor.

You will variously see file:line:col:message, file:line:col1-col2:msg and file:(line1,col1)-(line2,col2):message, as these are the formats GHC uses. To match all of them you can use a regular expression such as ^(\\S*?):(?|(\\d+):(\\d+)(?:-\\d+)?|\\((\\d+),(\\d+)\\)-\\(\\d+,\\d+\\)):([^\n]*).

What if the error message is too big for my console?

You can let ghcid print more with --no-height-limit. The first error message might end up outside of the console view, so you can use --reverse-errors to flip the order of the errors and warnings. Further error messages are just a scroll away. Finally if you’re going to be scrolling, you can achieve a cleaner experience with the --clear flag, which clears the console on reload.

Changes

Changelog for ghcid (* = breaking change)

0.7.4, released 2019-04-17
#237, ability to cope better with large error messages
#237, add --clear, --no-height-limit, --reverse-errors
0.7.3, released 2019-04-15
#236, add hlint support, pass --lint
0.7.2, released 2019-03-12
#225, allow watching directories for new files
#226, fix the polling behaviour
#224, print out overly long files without line breaks
#202, make --verbose print out version, arch, os
0.7.1, released 2018-09-07
#190, load benchmarks as well as tests when using stack
#171, support GHCJSi
#163, allow --run, like --test but defaults to main
#161, if a file disappears, reload as soon as it returns
#162, always disable :set +t (which writes out types)
0.7, released 2018-04-18
#153, show errors/warnings to freshly edited files first
#153, set -j
#154, improve Ctrl-C behaviour and process termination during startup
Require extra-1.6.6
Add --setup actions to send to ghci stdin on startup
#152, make --output for a file ending .json produce JSON output
Make module cycles generate well-formed Load messages
* Add loadFilePosEnd to Load
If a command exits unexpectedly return a failing exit code
#120, use absolute paths everywhere, in case ghci does a cd
Add showPaths function to exercise ":show paths"
#127, use Loaded GHCi configuration message to add .ghci restart
#141, restart if .ghcid changes
#151, make "All good" green
#109, support OverloadedStrings and RebindableSyntax together
Remove support for GHC 7.6
#87, enable HSPEC colors if possible (POSIX only)
#147, move some :set flags to the command line if possible
#148, enable -ferror-spans by default
* #144, allow ANSI escape codes in loadMessage
#144, use color GHC messages where possible
#139, add --color=never to not show Bold output
#142, add startGhciProcess which takes CreateProcess
#146, add --max-messages=N to limit to N messages
0.6.10, released 2018-02-06
#96, make it work even if -fdiagnostics-color is active
#130, pass -fno-it to reduce memory leaks
#132, work even if -fhide-source-paths is set
Add isLoading function to test the constructor
0.6.9, released 2018-01-26
#121, add a --poll flag to use polling instead of notifiers
Require time-1.5 or above
#124, add timestamp to "All good" message
After the test completes write a message
0.6.8, released 2017-11-10
#110, work even if -v0 is passed to ghci
Read additional arguments from .ghcid file if present
0.6.7, released 2017-09-17
#104, add --ignore-loaded flag for use with -fobject-code
#103, deal with new GHC error formatting
0.6.6, released 2016-11-11
#89, exit sooner when the child process exits unexpectedly
Add Eq instance for Ghci
#88, add a --project flag
Rename --notitle flag to --no-title
0.6.5, released 2016-08-10
#82, properly deal with warning messages including spans
#78, support boot files better
Better support for dealing with GHC 8.0 call stack messages
#79, support multiple --test flags
#71, improve multi-project stack support
#74, make sure Cygwin terminals flush output properly
If the test exits then exit ghcid
0.6.4, released 2016-05-13
#69, fix up for stack project with file arguments
0.6.3, released 2016-05-11
#68, add --no-status to avoid printing the reloading message
0.6.2, released 2016-04-25
#63, detect test failures and update the titlebar/icon
#66, add --warnings to run tests even in there are warnings
#62, find stack.yaml in the parent directory
Make --verbose echo all things sent to stdin
#57, support wrappers that access stdin first (e.g. stack)
#67, make --reload/--restart recurse through directories
#61, deal with drive letters in files (for stack on Windows)
#58, improve the --help message
0.6.1, released 2016-04-06
Add --reload to add files that reload, but do not restart
#56, allow --restart to take directories
0.6, released 2016-04-06
#38, implement loading with stack
Add process, quit and execStream to the API
#29, add interrupt function
Add Data instances for the types
Make stopGhci more effective, now kills the underlying process
* Make startGhci take a function to write the buffer to
0.5.1, released 2016-03-02
#17, deal with recursive modules errors properly
#50, use -fno-code when not running tests (about twice as fast)
#44, abbreviate the redundant module import error
#45, add an extra space before the ... message
#42, always show the first error in full
#43, work even if people use break-on-exception flags
#42, make the first error a minimum of 5 lines
0.5, released 2015-06-20
* Add an extra boolean argument to startGhci
Add the number of modules loaded after All good
Print out messages until the prompt comes up
#23, add arguments and change what commands get invoked
#35, change the titlebar icon on Windows
0.4.2, released 2015-06-11
Fix a GHC 7.6 warning
0.4.1, released 2015-06-11
#37, add a --notitle flag
Require extra-1.2
0.4, released 2015-06-07
#33, make Ctrl-C more robust
#31, add an outputfile feature
#32, make newer warnings first (save a file, view its warnings)
#28, fix issues on VIM file saves
#29, support running a quick test on each save
Add a --directory flag to change directory first
#26, use fs-notify to avoid excessive wakeups
#25, detect console size just before using it
0.3.6, released 2015-03-09
#24, don't error out if error/putStrLn are not imported
0.3.5, released 2015-02-25
#19, put errors in bold
#9, display interesting information in the title bar
#7, reload if the .ghci or .cabal file changes
Use nubOrd
Require extra-1.1
0.3.4, released 2014-12-24
#21, if you aren't waiting for any files, exit
0.3.3, released 2014-12-21
#21, if the root file is missing, report an error
#20, avoid an O(n^2) nub
0.3.2, released 2014-11-06
#18, reformat excessively long lines, add a --width flag
0.3.1, released 2014-10-28
Ensure if there are lots of warnings, the first error gets shown
0.3, released 2014-10-24
#11, ignore certain GHCi-only warnings
#13, fix version printing
#8, display Loading... when starting
Require the extra library
#14, figure out the terminal height automatically
0.2, released 2014-10-06
#6, rewrite as a library
Remove duplicate error messages from cabal repl
0.1.3, released 2014-09-29
#2, handle files that get deleted while loaded
#3, flesh out the test suite
#4, give a polite error if ghci does not start
#5, add --topmost flag to make the window topmost
Add a very simple test suite
Default to cabal repl if there is no .ghci file
#1, if there is an IOError just :reload
Say why you are reloading
0.1.1, released 2014-09-27
Support arguments to --command
0.1, released 2014-09-27
Initial version