Cabal (software)

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The Cabal (common architecture for building applications and libraries) is a type of package manager to aid in packaging and distributing software packages, in the forms of application software and libraries, for the programming language Haskell.

Original authorIsaac Potoczny-Jones
DeveloperDuncan Coutts
Initial releaseJanuary 2005; 21 years ago (2005-01)
Stable release
3.14.2.0[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 7 April 2025; 11 months ago (7 April 2025)
Quick facts Original author, Developer ...
Cabal
Original authorIsaac Potoczny-Jones
DeveloperDuncan Coutts
Initial releaseJanuary 2005; 21 years ago (2005-01)
Stable release
3.14.2.0[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 7 April 2025; 11 months ago (7 April 2025)
Written inHaskell
Operating systemUnix, Unix-like, Windows
PlatformIA-32, x86-64
Available inEnglish
TypeApplication level package manager
LicenseBSD
Websitewww.haskell.org/cabal
Repository
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History

Cabal was introduced to simplify packaging of Haskell software and modules. It was added to the Glasgow Haskell Compiler in version 6.4 as the default package manager,[2] alongside GHC's internal manager ghc-pkg. Its approach has changed significantly over the course of its development, moving from global package installation to sandboxed builds, and eventually a Nix-inspired solution of local builds with global caching,[3] which became the default in 2019.

Use

Cabal packages provide a standard set of metadata and build process; thus, it is possible to develop tools to upload Cabal packages to the CPAN-like community repository of software, Hackage, or even allow automated downloading, compiling, and installing of desired packages from Hackage.[4]

References

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