Dependency-Injecting Eval for Haskell
This Haskell package is a crude implementation of eval
, as found in dynamic
languages like Lisp, Python, Javascript, etc. It lets us construct Haskell
code programatically (either at run time, or in Template Haskell), and attempt
to evaluate it.
What sets this package apart from other eval
implementations, is the ability
to control which packages and modules are available during evaluation. This is
achieved by calling out to the Nix package manager.
Implementation Details
Expr
is the type of expressions, which contains a list of package names, a
list of modules to import, a list of compiler flags, a list of String
s to
put in the generated module and a String
of Haskell code to evaluate. All of
these are just String
s internally, but we use wrappers to prevent accidentally
using packages as modules, etc.
A few combinators are provided for common manipulations, for example
qualified "Foo" "bar"
will produce the expression "Foo.bar"
with "Foo"
in
its module list. The OverloadedStrings
extension allows packages, modules,
flags and expressions to be written as literals. Note that literal expressions
are given an empty context; you will have to specify any required modules,
packages, etc. separately.
When evaluated, the Haskell code is prefixed by an import of each module, the
"preamble" strings (if any) and wrapped in main = putStr (..)
. This code is
piped into runhaskell
. If any flags are specified, they are appended as
arguments to the runhaskell
command.
The runhaskell
process itself is invoked via the nix-shell
command, which
provides all of the required packages via the ghcWithPackages
mechanism of
nixpkgs. Packages are taken from nixpkgs's haskellPackages
set by default,
which can be overridden by setting the NIX_EVAL_HASKELL_PKGS
environment
variable to the path of a Nix file. Note that the package names used in your
Haskell code should correspond to the keys in this package set, which might
differ from those used on Hackage.
If the process exits successfully, its stdout will be returned wrapped in
Just
; otherwise Nothing
is returned. If you wish to alter the main
implementation, use Language.Eval.Internal.eval'
This implementation is a little rough; for example, you may prefer to use Text
rather than String
; use a better representation like the syntax trees from
TemplateHaskell or haskell-src-exts
instead; or accumulate packages and
modules monadically.
The intention of this library is to provide a simple, minimal base to support
such design choices, and String
is the lowest common denominator. You're
welcome, and encouraged, to build more sophisticated APIs; as long as you can
pretty-print to a String
, they should work out of the box.
This is also why we return the contents of stdout, rather than trying to parse
it into a more appropriate type: it's not our place to choose how the result
should be parsed, so we avoid the problem; by that point, our job is done.
Limitations
- Since evaluation takes place in a separate GHC process, there can be no
sharing of data outside the strings provided (unless you provide a separate
mechanism like a FIFO)
- Expressions are wrapped in
putStr
, so the expression must be a String
.
You may need to marshall your data into a form which is more amenable to
serialising/deserialising via String
.
- Evaluation is SLOW! More specifically,
eval
has a very high latency, so
it's much more efficient to eval
one big collection of values than it is
to eval
each individually.
- Evaluation time is highly variable, since the required packages may need to
be compiled. Nix caches build products, so subsequent calls using the same
packages will be quicker; however, my machine still takes about 2 seconds to
instantiate a cached environment.
- Output is captured from stdout, so if your expression triggers side-effects
they'll appear in your result (this may be desirable, but keep it in mind).
- Evaluation doesn't always compose, ie. just because
x
and y
evaluate
successfully doesn't mean that some combination of them will. Obviously an
ill-typed combination will fail, but other reasons include:
- Combining both import lists can make names ambiguous. For this reason you
should always try to qualify your expressions.
- Global properties may conflict between modules, like overlapping typeclass
instances.
- Combining both package lists can make modules ambiguous.
- If the dependencies of two packages conflict, evaluation will fail.
- As with any kind of
eval
, there is absolutely no security. Do not pass
potentially-malicious user input to this library! Not only can arbitrary
Haskell code be run (eg. using unsafePerformIO
, but the flags are also a
shell injection vector.