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17:21
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A: How do I get documentation for my Haskell package onto Hackage?

Emmanuel TouzeryEven if the docs would build on hackage, they take some time to appear and at some point they were broken for an extended period of time. I got used to do it with the neil tool as described here: http://neilmitchell.blogspot.si/2014/10/fixing-haddock-docs-on-hackage.html I first install neil (i...

This would build them locally with my version of base though, right?
Yes honestly it works so transparently that i am not 100% certain how it works but i am pretty sure it does everything locally and just uploads the final product to hackage.
Since I get all the way to the upload step with the other scripts, I think the best avenue is to figure out what "file in tar archive is not in the expected directory". Is there perhaps something that Hackage needs to be uploaded, that would not have been built locally; a setting I should add to my (local) Cabal/Haddock config, perhaps?
So you didn't try neil yet? Honestly at the time I was in your position, I tried neil, never looked back, and thankfully never needed to understand the details.
I was a bit spooked by the pages of packages that installing it threatens to break.
17:21
Yes install it in a separate sandbox. Create a new folder, cabal sandbox init, cabal install neil, then the executable will be in .cabal-sandbox/bin. Run it from your app's folder and you are set. You must trust it though because it asks for your hackage password.
I guess I need to get comfortable with sandboxes (I've never used them). Briefly though (1) how do I tear down a sandbox and (2) if neil docs works, can I leave the sandbox around and not use it for anything else other than to invoke neil from the command line?
It worked!
So now the question is more about (a) sandbox management and (b) whether I can get neil to use netrc (so I don't have to keep entering my complicated password) — and maybe (c) whether I can just install neil along with my other packages, ignoring the warning that they will all "break".
The sandbox doesn't touch anything outside of it. Just wipe the folder if you want to wipe it. I personally have that neil sandbox around so i can upload docs for my other projects, and i put the neil in my path. Sandboxes with cabal are a must otherwise you quickly have problems. The stack tool attempts to make it all transparent (no experience with it yet, myself).
So I can just leave the sandbox around and invoke neil from it without it touching or changing (or needing to change) anything in my "real" Haskell packages? That would answer (2), and would be great.
No idea regarding the password. You could look at the neil source code or contact the author. Yes, you can leave the sandbox around, or delete it, no influence on your other packages. I think of it like that: there is a package database at $HOME/.cabal. With sandboxes you can have as many independent package databases as you want. And the dependencies don't fight with one another.
How do I "switch back" to my "real" Haskell packages installation (for purposes of import and build)? No that I've done cabal sandbox initCabal and GHC think I'm "in" that sandbox, right? How do I "get out of it" for all other purposes, but still leave it around for (the sole purpose of) invoking neil from the command line?
17:36
When you are in a sandbox folder you work against the sandbox package database, when you are not you work in the global package database. So you decide depending on the folder where you are. You can force a sandbox with some flags, but that's "advanced" use.
Excellent. OK, let me live with this for a bit and see if it stays stable. If it does this looks like an answer (though I have no idea why it's working!). Meanwhile I'll see about netrc from the author.
And one style/practices question: It sounds like having a few sandboxes around is useful and inevitable — where does one general keep such sandboxes, i.e., ones that are for tools (rather than temps for testing or dev)? Is there a standard place for them to be collected?
17:51
Not sure about sandbox location. Not aware of any standards. For me i put everything in sandboxes. If you are curious, stack intends to make the whole process transparent and more efficient. One annoyance with sandboxes is that you rebuild everything for each sandbox ehich takes time and disk space. The documentation of both cabal and stack are very complete.
K. Thanks. (Asked about netrc here.)
One thing which may surprise you: you can not move sandboxes on disk, they hardcode their full path.

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