Summary: I've just released shake v0.16. A lot has changed, but it's probably only visible if you have defined your own rules or oracles.

Shake-0.16 is now out, 8 months since the last release, and with a lot of improvements. For full details read the changelog, but in this post I'm going to go through a few of the things that might have the biggest impact on users.

Rule types redefined

Since the first version of Shake there has been a Rule key value type class defining all rule types - for instance the file rule type has key of filename and value of modification time. With version 0.16 the type class is gone, rules are harder to write, but offer higher performance and more customisation. For people using the builtin rule types, you'll see those advantages, and in the future see additional features that weren't previously possible. For people defining custom rule types, those will require rewriting - read the docs and if things get tough, ask on StackOverflow.

The one place many users might encounter the changes are that oracle rules now require a type instance defining between the key and value types. For example, if defining an oracle for the CompilerVersion given the CompilerName , you would have to add:

type instance RuleResult CompilerName = CompilerVersion

As a result of this type instance the previously problematic askOracle can now infer the result type, removing possible sources of error and simplifying callers.

The redefining of rule types represents most of the work in this release.

Add cmd_

The cmd_ function is not much code, but I suspect will turn out to be remarkably useful. The cmd function in Shake is variadic (can take multiple arguments) and polymorphic in the return type (you can run it in multiple monads with multiple results). However, because of the overloading, if you didn't use the result of cmd it couldn't be resolved, leading to ugly code such as () <- cmd args . With cmd_ the result is constrained to be m () , so cmd_ args can be used.

Rework Skip/Rebuild