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Haskell on Bash/WSL

I’ve recently received a couple of questions asking when Haskell support would be added to WSL, and was surprised since I thought Bash/WSL users were aware of the fact that Haskell has been working for the last few weeks, ever since #14986 in fact, but it appears that we’d not explicitly communicated the fact, so … here we are! 

Haskell now runs in Bash on Windows!*

* You’ll need to be running Windows 10 Insider build #14986 or later.

Background

Haskell is a popular and powerful functional programming language which wasn’t able to run on Bash/WSL in Anniversary Update or earlier Insider builds, because WSL had not yet implemented the timer_create() syscall. Now that WSL builds >= #14986 do support timer_create() we can run Haskell and many other tools (e.g. Elm, Cabal, Pandoc, Agda, etc.)

Note: As with most modern dev tools, you can run Haskell very happily on native Windows, although you may find some packages and add-ons require Linux, which is where the ability to run on Bash/WSL comes in!

Either way, we’ve got you covered!

Hello World in Haskell

Let’s create a Haskell Hello World sample:

First, install the Glasgow Haskell Compiler:

$ sudo apt install ghc

While we could run the Haskell interactive REPL, the GHC compiler can, of course, also compile Linux executables:

Open your favorite Linux editor (mine is Vim) creating a new hello.hs file

$ vim hello.hs

Now enter the following Haskell code:

main = putStrLn "Hello World!"

This declares a main function whose implementation calls putStrLn that writes “Hello World” to stdout.

After exiting your editor (:wq[Enter] in Vim ;)), compile this file by typing the following:

$ ghc hello.hs -o hello
[1 of 1] Compiling Main             ( hello.hs, hello.o )
Linking hello ...

This will generate a Linux ELF64 binary file called hello, along with hello.hi and hello.o, which are just intermediate compilation files. You can check the hello binary using the file tool:

$ file hello
hello: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, for GNU/Linux 2.6.32, BuildID[sha1]=0296a5fedb69302e0310bbcb7a8bea8f860a52c5, not stripped

You can now run the binary (note: the ./ prefix is required when executing a local binary):

$ ./hello  Hello World!

Congratulations, you’re now on your way to being a Haskell guru

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Haskell on Bash/WSL

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