I'm trying out cabal-dev for a project I'm working on; the project is a library, and cabal-dev does a great job of building a sandboxed version of it - but I'm having trouble with part of my workflow...
I have a script, scratch.hs, which (pre-cabal-dev) I would load into ghci for trying stuff out. The contents of scratch.hs change over time depending on what feature I'm working on, of course. scratch.hs isn't part of the library codebase, it's just my personal scratchspace while I'm working on it.
Now, in order to get a ghci session with my sandbox loaded, I can just cabal-dev ghci, and then load scratch.hs into that. The problem is that this (by design, and sensibly) excludes my user package database, so if scratch.hs references modules from packages which aren't in my library's build-depends (which is not unreasonable - it's not part of the library after all), those packages aren't visible, and so I get an error such as:
scripts/scratch.hs:8:8:
Could not find module `Data.Aeson.Generic':
It is a member of the hidden package `aeson-0.3.2.11'.
Perhaps you need to add `aeson' to the build-depends in your .cabal file.
Use -v to see a list of the files searched for.
Failed, modules loaded: none.
where, in this case, scratch.hs wants to import Data.Aeson.Generic but aeson is not in my library's build-depends (quite properly), but is in my user package database.
So how can I work around this? I can imagine answers in either of these categories, but maybe there are categories I've missed:
A way to (selectively) use packages from my user package database in conjunction with the sandbox created by
cabal-dev. (Perhaps rolling my owncabal-dev ghcistyle script?)A suggestion on how to improve my workflow so the problem just goes away.
I know I could just install the package globally, but I'm reluctant to pollute my global package database in this manner (and cabal-dev discourages this explicitly).
Many thanks for all advice.
.ghciand have it happen automatically. Thanks, Daniel! – gimboland Sep 15 '11 at 14:36cabal-dev ghci, which is why I needed:set -package aesonto load it. If I remove that, then in fact:set -package aesondoesn't load the user package database version ("cannot satisfy -package aeson"), so I'm back where I started (except that everybody who's viewed this page in the last 3 hours thinks the problem is solved). – gimboland Sep 15 '11 at 17:44