Selda requires GHC 8.0+, as well as SQLite 3.7.11+ or PostgreSQL 9.4+.
To build the SQLite backend, you need a C compiler installed.
To build the PostgreSQL backend, you need the libpq development libraries
installed (libpq-dev on Debian-based Linux distributions).
Hacking
Contributing
All forms of contributions are welcome!
If you have a bug to report, please try to include as much information as
possible, preferably including:
A brief description (one or two sentences) of the bug.
The version of Selda+backend where the bug was found.
A step-by-step guide to reproduce the bug.
The expected result from following these steps.
What actually happens when following the steps.
Which component contains the bug (selda, selda-sqlite or selda-postgresql),
if you're reasonably sure about where the bug is.
Bonus points for a small code example that illustrates the problem.
If you want to contribute code, please consult the following checklist before
sending a pull request:
Does the code build with a recent version of GHC?
Do all the tests pass?
Have you added any tests covering your code?
If you want to contribute code but don't really know where to begin,
issues tagged good first issue are a good start.
Setting up the build environment
From the repository root:
Install libpq-dev from your package manager.
This is required to build the PostgreSQL backend.
Make sure you're running a cabal version that supports v2-style commands.
Familiarise yourself with the various targets in the makefile.
The dependencies between Selda, the backends and the tests are slightly
complex, so straight-up cabal is too quirky for day to day hacking.
PostgreSQL backend testing with Docker
To test the PostgreSQL backend, use the provided pgtest-compose.yml docker-compose file:
sudo docker-compose -f pgtest-compose.yml up -d
make pgtest
sudo docker-compose -f pgtest-compose.yml down
TODOs
Features that would be nice to have but are not yet implemented.
请发表评论