stack-all
A CLI tool for building Haskell projects easily over Stackage major versions.
This is how I do my Haskell build CI for projects locally with stack.
Usage
stack-all by default runs stack build over Stackage Nightly and LTS major versions (current default is nightly & major LTS versions back to lts-16) corresponding to latest major ghc minor versions, with appropriate stack --resolver options.
Note that stack only works if a stack.yaml file exists. If no stack.yaml file is found in a .cabal project, stack-all will create one. Of course it may still fail to build, but this allows for quickly trying to build a package that does not include stack support.
Help output
$ stack-all --version
0.5
$ stack-all --help
Build over Stackage versions Usage: stack-all [--version] [(-c|--create-config) | (-s|--make-lts)] [-k|--keep-going] [-d|--debug] [--refresh-cache] [-n|--newest MAJOR] [(-o|--oldest MAJOR) | (-a|--all-lts)] [MAJORVER... [COMMAND...]] stack-all builds projects easily across different Stackage versions Available options: -h,--help Show this help text --version Show version -c,--create-config Create a project .stack-all file -s,--make-lts Create a stack-ltsXX.yaml file -k,--keep-going Keep going even if an LTS fails -d,--debug Verbose stack build output on error --refresh-cache Force refresh of stackage snapshots.json cache -n,--newest MAJOR Newest LTS release to build from -o,--oldest MAJOR Oldest compatible LTS release -a,--all-lts Try to build back to LTS 1 even
Overriding stack.yaml
stack-all can use stack-ltsXX.yaml files to override the default stack.yaml file for particular Stackage major versions. Note that a stack-ltsXX.yaml file will also be used for older LTS major versions until another stack-ltsYY.yaml file is found. stack-nightly.yaml is also supported, but used only for nightly.
For example if you have stack-lts20.yaml and stack-lts18.yaml files in your project, then stack.yaml will be used as normal to build nightly, lts-22 and lts-21, but stack-lts20.yaml will be used for building lts-20 and lts-19, and stack-lts18.yaml will be used for lts-18, lts-16 (and older). Since stack-all overrides the exact resolver with the latest minor snapshot, the exact minor Stackage version specified in the stack*.yaml files doesn't actually matter: stack-all always uses the latest published minor releases of Stackage major versions.
stack-ltsXX.yaml files can be easily created using stack-all --make-lts ltsXX (or -s ltsXX for short).
(Other versioned stack.yaml filenames like stack-ghc-8.8.yaml are not currently supported.)
Specifying LTS versions
You can abbreviate lts-XX args to ltsXX on the commandline. lts is also accepted and resolved to the latest major LTS version.
You can also use ghc major version aliases: eg ghc9.6 corresponds to lts22 or ghc-9.2 to lts-20.
There are --oldest and --newest options to specify the range of lts versions to build over:
You can specify the oldest major LTS to build for with eg stack-all -o lts14. Otherwise if not configured the default oldest LTS is currently lts-16.
Similarly you can specify the newest LTS version to build from with eg stack-all -n lts20. (The default is to build from nightly.)
Alternatively, one can give one or more explicit LTS major versions to build for as arguments: eg stack-all lts18 if you only wish to build that version.
Configuring the oldest and/or newest LTS to build
You can configure the oldest working LTS major version for your project by running for example stack-all -c -o lts-18 which generates a .stack-all project config file like this:
[versions] # lts-16 too old oldest = lts-18
(the comment line can be used to document why the older LTS doesn't work). This specifies that the oldest LTS version to build for is lts-18.
The newest LTS to build with stack-all can similarly be configured: stack-all -c -n lts21 or setting newest = lts-21.
Running other stack commands
By default stack-all just runs the stack build command over Stackage major versions.
You can also specify a stack command to run with options on the commandline: eg
$ stack-all test --no-rerun-tests
will run stack test over the LTS versions instead.
Happy stack building!
Install
The project is released on Hackage.
You can also build from git source with stack install or cabal install.
Collaboration
The project is hosted at https://github.com/juhp/stack-all under a BSD license.