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Haskell for Visual Studio Code

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This extension adds language support for Haskell, powered by the Haskell Language Server. As almost all features are provided by the server you might find interesting read its documentation.

Table of Contents

Setup

This Extension comes with "batteries"-included and can manage your Haskell Language Server installations for you, powered by GHCup. Installation of GHCup can not happen automatically, so if you want your HLS installations to be managed by the Extension, you will have to follow the installation instructions for GHCup.

Note: Make sure you have a working ghcup installation, before launching the Extension.

Features

You can watch demos for some of these features here.

Requirements

Configuration options

For a general picture about the server configuration, including the project setup, you can consult the server documentation about the topic.

For information on how to set configuration in VSCode, see here.

Path to server executable

If your server is manually installed and not on your path, you can also manually set the path to the executable.

"haskell.serverExecutablePath": "~/.local/bin/haskell-language-server"

There are a few placeholders which will be expanded:

Security warning

The option has machine-overridable scope so it can be changed per workspace. This supposes it could be used to execute arbitrary programs adding a .vscode/settings.json in the workspace folder including this option with the appropriate path. See #387 for more details.

Set additional environment variables for the server

You can add additional environment variables for the lsp server using the configuration option haskell.serverEnvironment. For example, to change the cache directory used by the server you could set:

{ "haskell.serverEnvironment": { "XDG_CACHE_HOME": "/path/to/my/cache" } }

as the server uses the XDG specification for cache directories.

The environment only will be visible for the lsp server, not for other extension tasks like find the server executable.

Downloaded binaries

This extension will download haskell-language-server binaries and the rest of the toolchain if you selected to use GHCup during first start. Check the haskell.manageHLS setting.

It will then download the newest version of haskell-language-server which has support for the required ghc. That means it could use an older version than the latest one, without the last features and bug fixes. For example, if a project needs ghc-8.10.4 the extension will download and use haskell-language-server-1.4.0, the latest version which supported ghc-8.10.4. Even if the latest global haskell language-server version is 1.5.1.

If you have disk space issues, check ghcup gc --help.

You can also instruct the extension to use a different installation directory for the toolchain, e.g. to not interfere with system GHCup installation. Depending on your platform, add the full resolved path like so:

  "haskell.serverEnvironment": {
    "GHCUP_INSTALL_BASE_PREFIX": "/home/foo/.config/Code/User/globalStorage/haskell.haskell/"
  }

The internal storage paths for the extension depend on the platform:

PlatformPath
macOS~/Library/Application\ Support/Code/User/globalStorage/haskell.haskell/.ghcup
Windows%APPDATA%\Code\User\globalStorage\haskell.haskell\ghcup
Linux$HOME/.config/Code/User/globalStorage/haskell.haskell/.ghcup

If you want to manage HLS yourself, set haskell.manageHLS to PATH and make sure HLS is in your PATH or set haskell.serverExecutablePath (overrides all other settings) to a valid executable.

If you need to set mirrors for ghcup download info, check the settings haskell.metadataURL and haskell.releasesURL.

Setting a specific toolchain

When manageHLS is set to GHCup, you can define a specific toolchain (hls, ghc, cabal and stack), either globally or per project. E.g.:

{
  "haskell.toolchain": {
    "hls": "1.6.1.1",
    "cabal": "recommended",
    "stack": null
  }
}

This means:

  1. install the ghc version corresponding to the project (default, because it's omitted)
  2. install hls 1.6.1.1
  3. install the recommended cabal version from ghcup
  4. don't install any stack version

Another config could be:

{
  "haskell.toolchain": {
    "ghc": "9.2.2",
    "hls": "latest",
    "cabal": "recommended"
  }
}

Meaning:

  1. install ghc 9.2.2 regardless of what the project requires
  2. always install latest hls, even if it doesn't support the given GHC version
  3. install recommended cabal
  4. install latest stack (default, because it's omitted)

The defaults (when omitted) are as follows:

  1. install the project required ghc (corresponding to with-compiler setting in cabal.project for example)
  2. install the latest hls version that supports the project required ghc version
  3. install latest cabal
  4. install latest stack

When a the value is null, the extension will refrain from installing it.

At last, if you don't want ghcup to manage any of the external tools except hls, you can use:

{
  "haskell.toolchain": {
    "ghc": null,
    "cabal": null,
    "stack": null
  }
}

Supported GHC versions

You can check each GHC version's support status and the policy followed for deprecations here.

Building from source may support more versions!

The exact list of binaries can be checked in the last release of haskell-language-server: https://github.com/haskell/haskell-language-server/releases/latest

Using multi-root workspaces

First, check out what multi-root workspaces are. The idea of using multi-root workspaces, is to be able to work on several different Haskell projects, where the GHC version or stackage LTS could differ, and have it work smoothly.

The language server is now started for each workspace folder you have in your multi-root workspace, and several configurations are on a resource (i.e. folder) scope, instead of window (i.e. global) scope.

Investigating and reporting problems

  1. Go to extensions and right click Haskell and choose Extensions Settings
  2. Scroll down to Haskell › Trace: Server and set it to messages.
  3. Set Haskell › Trace: Client to debug. It will print all the environment variables so take care it does not contain any sensitive information before sharing it.
  4. Restart vscode and reproduce your problem
  5. Go to the main menu and choose View -> Output (Ctrl + Shift + U)
  6. On the new Output panel that opens on the right side in the drop down menu choose Haskell (<your project>)

Please include the output when filing any issues on the haskell-language-server issue tracker.

FAQ

Troubleshooting

Check issues and tips in the haskell-language-server project

Restarting the language server

Failed to get project GHC version on darwin M1 with stack

If you have installed stack via the official cannels, the binary will not be M1 native, but x86 and trigger the rosetta compatibility layer. GHCup provides real stack/HLS M1 binaries, so make sure you install stack via GHCup. Also see https://github.com/haskell/haskell-language-server/issues/2864

GHC ABIs don't match

If you are using certain versions of GHC (such as 9.0.2 or 9.2.4) while running Stack, you may encounter this issue due to an outdated GHC bindist installed by Stack. The vscode-haskell extension does not support the use of GHC binaries managed by Stack. Therefore, it is recommended to configure Stack to allow GHCup to install these binaries instead. Please refer to the instructions provided by ghcup for this purpose.

If you really want to use GHC 9.0.2 managed by Stack, force it to install the fixed bindist (that includes profiling libs) by adding this to your stack.yaml (depending on your platform):

setup-info:
  ghc:
    linux64-tinfo6:
      9.0.2:
        url: 'https://downloads.haskell.org/ghc/9.0.2/ghc-9.0.2a-x86_64-fedora27-linux.tar.xz'

Now make sure to remove cached/installed libraries to avoid getting segfaults at runtime.

As a final workaround, you can try to compile HLS from source (the extension should pick it up) via ghcup, see https://haskell-language-server.readthedocs.io/en/stable/installation.html#ghcup. In any case, the recommended approach is to let GHCup install the GHC binaries.

hGetContents: invalid argument (invalid byte sequence)

This problem was encountered on darwin M2 with ghcup. Should you see the error that the "Haskell server crashed 5 times in the last 3 minutes," you can check the Haskell output to see whether this was due to an error mentioning hGetContents: invalid argument (invalid byte sequence). If this is the case, setting terminal.integrated.detectLocale to off might resolve your issue.

Using an old configuration

If something just doesn't work, but you recall an old configuration that did, you may try forcing a particular setting, e.g. by disabling all automatic installations except HLS:

    "haskell.toolchain": {
        "hls": "1.6.1.0",
        "ghc": null,
        "cabal": null,
        "stack": null
    }

Stack/Cabal/GHC can not be found

Also make sure GHCup is installed and in $PATH. If you're not starting VSCode from the terminal, you might need to add ${HOME}/.ghcup/bin to PATH like so:

  "haskell.serverEnvironment": {
    "PATH": "${HOME}/.ghcup/bin:$PATH"
  }

Contributing

If you want to help, get started by reading Contributing for more details.

Release Notes

See the Changelog for more details.