Gild

Gild is an opinionated command line utility that formats Haskell package
descriptions, which are also known as *.cabal files. Gild can also be used to
automatically discover exposed-modules; see the pragmas section for more
about that.
Gild started as a fork of phadej/cabal-fmt, but is now totally separate.
For a brief summary of the differences between Gild and cabal-fmt, read the
announcement post.
Summary
Given a package description like this:
CABAL-VERSION : 3.0
name : example
version : 0.0.0.0
library
build-depends: mtl>=2.3, base
ghc-options:-Wall
if impl(ghc>=9.8)
ghc-options: -Wmissing-role-annotations
Gild will produce output like this:
cabal-version: 3.0
name: example
version: 0.0.0.0
library
build-depends:
base,
mtl >=2.3,
ghc-options: -Wall
if impl(ghc >= 9.8)
ghc-options: -Wmissing-role-annotations
See the installation section for how to get Gild and the usage section
for how to use it.
Goals
-
There should be no configuration options. As long as the output format is
reasonable, the specifics should not matter too much. This means the amount
of indentation cannot be changed, for example.
-
The output should be diff friendly. This means things generally go on their
own line, trailing commas are used when possible, and elements are sorted
where it makes sense.
-
The output should be semantically the same as the input. This means no
normalization or canonicalization. For example, separate build-depends
fields are not merged together.
-
It should be possible to format other files that use the same format as
package descriptions. This means cabal.project files can be formatted as
well.
-
The focus should be mostly on formatting. There should be no effort made to
validate input or provide any checks or lints. However some quality of life
features, like automatic module discovery, are desireable.
-
Formatting should be as regular as possible. Special cases for particular
fields or sections should be avoided unless it improves quality of life. For
example, interpreting the build-depends field to pretty print it is okay.
-
The command line utility should be fast enough to run on every save. It
should not need network access.
Installation
Go to the latest release page and download the binary for your platform.
To run Gild in a GitHub Actions workflow, consider using cabal-gild-setup-action.
From Source
In general you should prefer downloading the appropriate binary for you
platform. However it is possible to build Gild from source. It supports Linux,
macOS, and Windows along with the three most recent versions of GHC. Any other
configurations are unsupported.
With Cabal:
$ cabal install cabal-gild
With Stack:
$ stack install cabal-gild
Usage
Gild is a command line utility named cabal-gild. Pass one or more files as
arguments to format them in-place:
$ cabal-gild p.cabal
$ cabal-gild a.cabal b.cabal
When no files are given, Gild reads from standard input (STDIN) and writes to
standard output (STDOUT):
$ cabal-gild < p.cabal > q.cabal
When run interactively with no arguments, Gild will look for a *.cabal file
in the current directory and format it in-place.
Options
Run cabal-gild --help to see the options that Gild supports. They are:
-
--help: Prints the help message to STDOUT then exits successfully.
-
--version: Prints the version number to STDOUT then exits successfully.
-
--crlf=LENIENCY: Sets the CRLF handling mode, which must be either
lenient (the default) or strict. When checking if the input is formatted,
setting this to lenient will treat CRLF line endings the same as LF.
Setting this to strict will require the input to be byte-for-byte identical
to the expected output. (Note that Gild will never produce CRLF line endings
when formatting.)
-
--mode=MODE: Sets the mode to MODE, which must be either format (the
default) or check. When the mode is format, Gild will output the
formatted package description. When the mode is check, Gild will exit
successfully if the input is already formatted, otherwise it will exit
unsuccessfully. When checking multiple files, all files are checked before
exiting.
-
--stdin=FILE: When reading input from STDIN, use FILE as the effective
input file. This is useful when a file’s contents are already available, like
in an editor. For example:
$ cabal-gild --stdin p.cabal < p.cabal
It is an error to provide a value for this option when a file argument is
given.
Deprecated Options
The following options are deprecated and will be removed in a future version.
Use positional file arguments instead.
-
--input=FILE: Uses FILE as the input. Use a positional argument instead.
-
--output=FILE: Uses FILE as the output. Use piping instead.
-
--io=FILE: Shortcut for setting both --input and --output. Use a
positional argument instead.
It is an error to combine these options with positional file arguments.
Pragmas
Gild supports special comments in package descriptions that act as pragmas.
Each pragma starts with -- cabal-gild:. Pragmas must be the last comment
before a field.
discover
-- cabal-gild: discover [DIRECTORY ...] [--include=PATTERN ...] [--exclude=PATTERN ...]
This pragma will discover files in any of the given directories. If no
directories are given, defaults to . (the directory of the package
description). For example, given this input:
library
-- cabal-gild: discover
exposed-modules: ...
Assuming there is a single Haskell file at Example.hs, Gild will produce this
output:
library
-- cabal-gild: discover
exposed-modules: Example
This pragma works with the following fields:
asm-sources
c-sources
cxx-sources
data-files
exposed-modules
extra-doc-files
extra-source-files
includes
install-includes
js-sources
license-files
other-modules
signatures
It will be ignored on all other fields. For the exposed-modules,
other-modules, and signatures fields, only files with the following
extensions will be discovered:
*.chs
*.cpphs
*.gc
*.hs
*.hsc
*.hsig
*.lhs
*.lhsig
*.ly
*.x
*.y
For all other fields, files with any extension will be discovered.
Any existing files, modules, or signatures in the field will be ignored. The
entire field will be replaced. This means adding, removing, and renaming files
should be handled automatically.
Directories can be quoted if they contain spaces. For example:
library
-- cabal-gild: discover "my modules"
exposed-modules: ...
By default, all files in any of the given directories are considered for
discovery. To explicitly include only certain files, use the
--include=PATTERN option. For example:
library
-- cabal-gild: discover --include=**/*Spec.hs
other-modules: ...
Files can be excluded from discovery by using the --exclude=PATTERN option.
For example:
library
-- cabal-gild: discover --exclude=**/*Spec.hs
exposed-modules: ...
If a file would match both the --include pattern and the --exclude pattern,
it will be excluded.
version
-- cabal-gild: version
This pragma will insert a comment below it indicating which version of Gild
produced the output. For example, given this input:
-- cabal-gild: version
name: my-package
Gild will produce this output:
-- cabal-gild: version
-- Generated with cabal-gild version 1.8.0.0
name: my-package
On subsequent runs, the generated comment will be updated to reflect the
current version of Gild. The pragma itself is left unchanged. This pragma can
be used on any field or section.