Luite, Neat! That sounds perfect. If it can build/install the compiler, then it's also ready to go for validation of patches.
I've never used vagrant myself but I'll give it a try. Is this the absolute easiest thing for people to do? Or should I just put a (sadly multi GB) virtual box image on my website? -Ryan On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 10:51 AM, Luite Stegeman <stege...@gmail.com> wrote: > We've been using Vagrant and puppet for building GHC HEAD with some > patches and GHCJS on 32 and 64 bit ubuntu. This way, rebuilding the whole > VM from scratch is just one command (vagrant up), the VM can either copy > files to the host, through a shared filesystem, or just use the network to > report results. > > I'd be happy to help setting this up for GHC > > https://github.com/ghcjs/ghcjs-build > > > On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 4:44 PM, Ryan Newton <rrnew...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> Returning to the topic discussed by Simon M. and others here: >> >> >> http://projects.haskell.org/pipermail/haskell-platform/2009-July/000572.html >> >> This is my attempt at a script for bootstrapping a GHC-validating VM: >> >> >> http://parfunk.blogspot.com/2013/08/zero-to-ghc-development-in-ubuntu-vm-in.html >> >> Let me know if there's a better way, or if you'd like to help get this >> kind of thing into an even more accessible form (Amazon AMI, Chef recipe, >> etc). >> >> Cheers, >> -Ryan >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> ghc-devs mailing list >> ghc-devs@haskell.org >> http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs >> >> >
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