This page serves as a dumping ground for setup problems and their resolutions. We recommend everyone first runs ghcide
on the console to check what files in their project load, and only the moves on to using ghcide
through an editor (e.g. VS Code).
If you see a problem such as:
File: ./test/Spec.hs
Range: 1:0-1:0
Source: typecheck
Severity: DsError
Message:
test/Spec.hs:1:1: error:
Bad interface file:
/Users/daml/.stack/programs/x86_64-osx/ghc-8.6.4/lib/ghc-8.6.4/base-4.12.0.0/Prelude.hi
mismatched interface file versions (wanted "8065", got "8064")
The cause is that your program is configured to use a different GHC to the one you built ghcide
with. In ghcide
you can view the version number it was compiled with on the first line as:
ghcide version: 0.0.3 (GHC: 8.6.5)
You can see the version of GHC being used by this project in the second-last line of the output with ghc-8.6.4/
, or in in mismatch interfaces of wanted 8065
(aka 8.6.5), got 8064
(aka 8.6.4). The solution is to use the same GHC version in both places.
If you see a problem such as:
File: ./src/File/FileStream.hs
Range: 1:0-100001:0
Source: typecheck
Severity: DsError
Message:
Program error: Failed to load interface for ‘Data.DList’
Files that failed:
There are files missing in the ‘dlist-0.8.0.7’ package,
* ./src/File/FileStream.hs
try running 'ghc-pkg check'.
Use -v to see a list of the files searched for.
It might be caused by ghcide
picking up the wrong cradle. In
particular, this has been observed when running in a nix-shell
where
ghcide
picked up the default cradle. Try setting the cradle
explicitly, e.g., to use the cabal cradle create a hie.yaml
file
with the following content:
cradle: {cabal: {component: "mylibrary"}}
If you are using stack, find the list of names you can use:
$ stack ide targets
mypackage:lib
mypackage:exe:mypackage-exe
mypackage:test:mypackage-test
and create a hie.yaml
file as follows:
{stack: {component: "mypackage:lib"}}
On Linux: try stack exec ghcide`` instead of
ghcide` directly.
I was getting this in Windows: ghcide.exe: ghc: readCreateProcess: does not exist (No such file or directory)
And we figured a hack around for this:
VSCode user or workspace settings, add these:
"hic.executablePath": "stack",
"hic.arguments": "exec ghcide -- --lsp"
Since I use stack. Required if you don't have a ghc
on your path.
Try adding an explicit hie.yaml
file and see if that helps.
$ stack exec ghcide
...
ghcide: CradleError (ExitFailure 1) ["Failed to parse result of calling stack","","* * * * * * * *","The main module to load is ambiguous. Candidates are: ","1. Package `mypackage' component mypackage:exe:mypackage-exe with main-is file: /home/user/mypackage/app/Main.hs","2. Package `mypackage' component mypackage:exe:otherbin-exe with main-is file: /home/user/mypackage/app/otherbin.hs","You can specify which one to pick by: "," * Specifying targets to stack ghci e.g. stack ghci mypackage:exe:mypackage-exe"," * Specifying what the main is e.g. stack ghci --main-is mypackage:exe:mypackage-exe"," * Choosing from the candidate above [1..2]","* * * * * * * *","","<stdin>: hGetLine: end of file"]
Add a hie.yaml
file to specify the module, e.g.
cradle: {stack: {component: "mypackage:exe:mypackage-exe"}}
Does ghcide
alone work on the console? Did you first enter a Nix shell? Or run stack exec ghcide
? If so, there are two options:
- Run your editor via the same mechanism, e.g.
stack exec code
. - Change the extension to use the executable as
stack
and the arguments asexec -- ghcide --lsp
.
If you are using packages installed by Nix, then often Nix will set NIX_GHC_LIBDIR
to say where the libraries are installed. ghcide
can cope with that. However, sometimes the ghc
on your shell will actually be a shell script that sets NIX_GHC_LIBDIR
, which ghcide
can't find. If that happens, you need to either set NIX_GHC_LIBDIR
(so ghcide
can see it) or use a proper Nix compatible wrapper over ghcide
.
This can happen if you have a GHC compiled without GHC library support. This seems to be the case with haskell.nix
at the moment.
As described here and here, the default installation of lsp-mode
, lsp-ui
, lsp-ui-mode
and lsp-haskell
as described in ghcide's "Using with Emacs" section may result in the following error message:
Symbol’s value as variable is void: capability
This can be caused by either an old version of the Emacs package dash
, or a cached .elc
file for an old version. A fix consists of (re)moving the old package from ~/.emacs.d/elpa/ and installing it again, e.g. via M-x package-list-packages
RET and M-x package-install
RET dash
RET. If this is not enough,
find ~/.emacs.d -name '*.elc' -exec rm {} \;
(which causes recompilation of all bytecode-compiled scripts.)
You're likely to see ghcide: (ExitFailure 1,"","")
. Because ghcide can't get at the ghc installed inside Docker, your best bet is to stack exec ghcide
and make sure ghcide
is installed within the container. Full details at issue 221.
If you get an error like:
ghcide.exe: CradleError (ExitFailure 1) ["Failed to parse result of calling stack","'stty' is not recognized as an internal or external command,","operable program or batch file."
It is fixed for stack-2.3.1 so upgrading your stack installation is the recommended action. However, there is a workaround for earlier versions described here: haskell/haskell-ide-engine#1428 (comment).