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plutarch-csa

Plutarch dev environment for EMURGO CSA

1. Install nix

  • If you're setting up Nix on your system for the first time, try Determinate Systems' Zero-to-Nix in lieu of the official installer, as it provides an easier tool for installing and uninstalling Nix.
  • Alternatively, you may follow the instructions for multi-user installation for your OS at nixos.org. This approach will require some additional configuration and it will be harder to uninstall Nix should you need to. It is only recommended if you've previously installed Nix on your system, as it will detect and repair a previous installation as needed.
  • When you are finished installing Nix, close the terminal session and open a fresh one.

2. Configure nix.conf

  • Edit /etc/nix/nix.conf: this requires root access to edit. Use a terminal-based editor like nano (i.e.):

    sudo nano /etc/nix/nix.conf

    Note: if no configuration file exists at /etc/nix/nix.conf it's possible the file is located elsewhere, depending on your OS. Run find / -name "nix.conf" 2>/dev/null to find the location of the file (this may take several minutes).

  • Modify the file following the instructions below:

    # Sample /etc/nix/nix.conf
    
    # Step 2a: Add this line to enable required features if missing (if you used the Zero-to-Nix installer this should already be added)
    experimental-features = nix-command flakes ca-derivations
    
    # Step 2b: Add your username to trusted-users (also include 'root' to prevent overriding default setting)
    trusted-users = root your-username
    
    # Step 2c: Avoid unwanted garbage collection with nix-direnv
    keep-outputs = true
    
  • 🚨 IMPORTANT! You must restart the nix-daemon to apply the changes

    Linux:

    sudo systemctl restart nix-daemon

    MacOS:

    sudo launchctl stop org.nixos.nix-daemon
    sudo launchctl start org.nixos.nix-daemon

3. Install direnv (Optional)

  • This repository is designed to work with the direnv utility to provide convenient automatic loading of the Nix development environment via the .envrc file.
  • The .envrc file also configures environment variables to build cabal outputs in a local directory (.cabal) and generates a symlink to the environment's installation of Haskell Language Server (HLS), mitigating potential conflicts with system-wide Haskell tooling in VS Code/Codium.
  • While the environment can be loaded manually without direnv (using nix develop --accept-flake-config), it is recommended to install and use direnv for best experience.
  • You can install direnv using Nix with the command nix profile install nixpkgs#direnv. This is the recommended method, as versions of direnv provided by other package managers (like apt on Linux) may be outdated and not support usage with nix-direnv. Alternative installation methods are explained here.
  • After installation, direnv must be "hooked" into your preferred terminal shell by adding a snippet to the shell configuration file(s).
    • For Linux users using bash, the following snippet should be added to the bottom of your ~/.bashrc file:
      eval "$(direnv hook bash)"
      
    • For MacOS users using zsh, the following snippet should be added to the bottom of your ~/.zprofile and ~/.zshrc files:
      eval "$(direnv hook zsh)"
      
    • Instructions for alternative shells are provided here.
  • After completing installation and hooking direnv into your preferred terminal shell, open a new terminal session, enter the project directory and run direnv allow to allow direnv to load the .envrc file.

4. Build Haskell project with cabal

  • After entering the project directory in your terminal session and allowing the environment to load via direnv (or run nix develop --accept-flake-config if not using direnv), run cabal user-config init; cabal update; cabal build to update cabal and build the Haskell (Plutarch) project.
  • You can use cabal run to run the project's executable (in app/Main.hs) and serialize the sample contracts to the compiled directory.

5. Use bundled VS Codium editor (Optional)

  • The Nix environment for this project includes a preconfigured instance of VS Codium, which is set up to work out of the box with several preinstalled extensions for completing CSA coursework.
  • The bundled editor can only be used with setups that allow the use of GUI applications (this excludes WSL/WSL2 and remote setups that connect via SSH). If needed, your system-wide installation of VS Code/Codium can be used instead, but may require additional configuration. When you launch VS Code/Codium and open the project folder for the first time, you should receive a popup prompt to install some recommended extensions.
  • To use the bundled editor, after entering the project directory in your terminal session and allowing the environment to load via direnv (or run nix develop --accept-flake-config if not using direnv), run codium . to launch the bundled VS Codium instance.

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