Hi Volker, You may also want to check out ghc-musl project https://github.com/utdemir/ghc-musl which provides compiled docker images to build atatic executables for various ghc versions.
Cheers, -- aycan > On Aug 11, 2020, at 5:59 AM, Volker Wysk <p...@volker-wysk.de> wrote: > > Am Dienstag, den 11.08.2020, 10:26 +0200 schrieb Herrmann, Andreas: >> Hi Volker, > > Hi! > >>> Is it possible to link the remaining libraries statically too? >> >> Yes, it is possible to generate fully statically linked Haskell >> binaries. Though it requires a bit of setup. For example the GNU C >> library glibc is not really intended for fully static linking, but >> you can use musl as an alternative libc instead. >> >> Probably the easiest way is to use static-haskell-nix [1]. Usage >> instructions are available in the project README. See [2] if you're >> not familiar with Nix. > > This looks complicated, even though it is the easiest way. I've tried > to build it from the git sources, as well as from the latest release, > but that failed. I'd have to look into nix, which is new to me. > > Be it as it may, it isn't that important for me right now. > > But thank you very much for your tips. Maybe I'll be going back to them > later. > > > Cheers, > Volker > >> Recently, the Haskell extension to Bazel, rules_haskell, also gained >> the ability to generate fully statically linked binaries building on >> top of Nix, see [3]. >> >> Best, Andreas >> >> [1]: https://github.com/nh2/static-haskell-nix >> [2]: https://nixos.org/ >> [3]: >> https://rules-haskell.readthedocs.io/en/latest/haskell-use-cases.html#building-fully-statically-linked-binaries > > > _______________________________________________ > Glasgow-haskell-users mailing list > Glasgow-haskell-users@haskell.org > http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/glasgow-haskell-users
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