https://www.stackage.org/ lists the latest LTS snapshot for any GHC
version which, on the flipside, lets us discover which versions don't
have a corresponding LTS snapshot. There is really no reason to keep
around GHCs that only appeared in some nightly snapshot way back.
haskell.compiler.ghc924: remove at 9.2.4
haskell.compiler.ghc942: remove at 9.4.2
haskell.compiler.ghc943: remove at 9.4.3
haskell.compiler.ghc944: remove at 9.4.4
haskell.compiler.ghc962: remove at 9.6.2
We want to remove llvmPackages_6, but it is the only version GHC 8.6.5
supports. Luckily, we actually don't need LLVM in any case, since all
X86 architectures have native codegen for Darwin and Linux, as well as
POWER for Linux. Consequently, we can just pass `null` and add an extra
assert to make this more transparent to future tinkerers.
There won't be any new integer-simple compilers and they are already in
the minority, so converting the mechanism to an include list is much
better. Maybe native-bignum should now become an exclude list
additionally?
Verified that nix-env -qaP -A haskell.compiler output stays identical.
haskell.compiler.ghc8102BinaryMinimal: remove at 8.10.2
haskell.compiler.ghc8107BinaryMinimal: remove at 8.10.7
haskell.compiler.ghc924BinaryMinimal: remove at 9.2.4
On aarch64-linux the binary GHCs take up about 2.6GB (which compresses
pretty well on zfs as it turns out), so they are below the output limit
of Hydra. This allows us to drop the special casing of aarch platforms
in haskell-packages.nix. While we're at it, drop the minimal variants so
we don't unnecessarily build variants of the binary GHCs.
This should make overriding the precisely versioned set also influence
the default aliases. When overriding the aliases, still only the aliases
would be changed.
GHC HEAD is a pre basically pre GHC 9.8 (or rather 9.7 something).
Let's name the configuration like the upcoming release, so we can use it
immediately when the new release comes out. Instead of keeping the HEAD
configuration like we used to, we'd create a new (empty) one.
Initial port of our GHC Nix expressions to the new hadrian build system,
as it has become required after 9.4. Unfortunately there are some
regressions affecting us, namely the inability to install a GHC
cross-compiler at the moment (see issue linked in relevant error
message). This means that a lot of specific configuration snippets for
cross-platforms and static compilation have been ported from make
speculatively, as we are unable to test them for the moment.
text.cabal has the following snippet mandating this:
-- GHC 8.10 has linking issues (probably TH-related) on ARM.
if (arch(aarch64) || arch(arm)) && impl(ghc == 8.10.*)
build-depends: base < 0
Since we're now testing 9.0.2 for bootstrapping on Hydra, we can also
use the proper GHC version for powerpc64le.
This shortens the bootstrap chain for 9.4.1 and should be kinder on
rebuilds. It requires some messing around in the configure file, since
it is not officially supported by upstream (but known to work). For now
it saves us the hassle of adding another bindist to nixpkgs. When we
support hadrian, we'll be able to use the already packaged 9.2.2
bindist.
Since the musl / alpine bindist now uses the GMP backend, we need to
learn to tell Hadrian bindists about GMP. Hadrian bindists no longer
have the buildinfo files, instead we need to patch the package db before
installing and recache it afterwards which is not too hard, luckily.
Same goes for libiconv and base as well as libffi and rts on
darwin (those bindists are all produced using hadrian).
See also: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/issues/21554#note_431000
Note that pkgsMusl.haskell.compiler.ghc922Binary still has severe
issues: It can't produce shared libraries because the bindist ships
none (and using the GMP backend has a hard requirement for shared
objects, apparently) and ghci segfaults for unknown reasons at the
moment. However, I've successfully compiled hadrian with it so far, so
perhaps it's good enough.