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language-ninja

Hackage Stackage License

language-ninja is a Haskell library for parsing, pretty-printing, and compiling the Ninja build language.

Motivation

language-ninja was written as a part of Awake Security's efforts in creating incremental build infrastructure for the Nix package manager, and in particular for Haskell packages. This library is the basis for a tool, ninja2nix, that, given a Ninja file, will output a JSON file containing information that a Nix function can use to compute a derivation representing an incremental build using one derivation per build edge in the parsed Ninja build graph.

In conjunction with an as-of-yet unwritten tool, cabal2ninja, that will generate a Ninja file based on information from cabal and ghc -M, we will have incremental builds for any Haskell package that uses a default Setup.hs file.

Using Ninja as an intermediate representation has advantages here, since it means that ninja2nix could be useful for building other projects that use a build system that can output Ninja, like the Linux kernel (with kninja), Chromium, any CMake project, any Bazel project, or some Make-based projects (with kati).

Parsing

Originally, language-ninja used the Ninja lexer/parser from Neil Mitchell's shake project. However, we now use a megaparsec-based lexer and a highly modified version of the old parser. There is still work to be done on improving the diagnostic data and pretty-printability of the AST from this parser. In my view, it is very important that a parser output an AST that can be pretty-printed exactly to same sequence of bytes that were in the parsed file, as this makes tests and diagnostics much easier to write.

Pretty-printing

Currently there is a rudimentary pretty-printer in Language.Ninja.Pretty. It simply outputs text such that if that text is parsed and the parsed data is pretty-printed again, the resulting text will be identical to the original text (this is tested on a variety of Ninja files in the test suite).

Compiling

The Ninja type from Language.Ninja.IR.Ninja contains precisely the data that must be acted on dynamically in a Ninja. In converting from the parsed AST to the intermediate representation using Language.Ninja.Compile.compile, you are eliminating all statically-dischargeable language features in Ninja, like variables. It also "monomorphizes" Ninja rules, since rule-level $out references are a kind of parametric polymorphism. This IR is thus far more suitable for processing than the original parsed AST.

Miscellaneous

The staging branch is used for active development; i.e.: force pushes may happen on staging but will not happen on master.

To build this, I recommend installing the Nix package manager and running nix-build release.nix -A language-ninja.