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Clone my git repository.
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Run "make" with elevated privs so that it can install.
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Laugh at how much work you've saved compared to the real way of getting camp.
Here's my story about my trying to actually install and use Camp.
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Google for Camp, or Camp+Haskell. Get nothing useful in the first page or so.
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Finally find the official page on it.
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Stumble around the page until you find the link to their source code repository.
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Install darcs on my computer (I normally use git instead).
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Run
darcs get http://code.haskell.org/camp/devel/src/ camp
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Watch it 404. Swear a bit.
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Stumble around the luckily HTTP-indexed filesystem on code.haskell.org until finding the right folder.
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darcs get http://code.haskell.org/camp/src/ camp
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Get darcs warnings about non-cached repositories and CRC check fails.
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Run darcs CRC fixing program, (
darcs gzcrcs
) which doesn't find any issues. Swear a bit more. -
Look at the camp README.txt. See that it contains no information at all except for already well-named sub-directories are. That's alright, we're smart people, we can figure it out ourselves.
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cd into the camp-bin directory, and attempt to run
runhaskell Setup configure
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Watch it fail because it has dependencies on other parts of the project.
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Try to build other parts of the project, and have that mostly fail because each of the parts has dependencies on other parts of the project. Swear a bit.
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Write my own makefile to deal with the dependencies.
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Start a git repo in order to put Makefile and some other utilities on the web, along with some changes to camp.
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Go to sleep for a while.
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Try to pull in the darcs repo into git, using someone else's git repo.
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Realize that while you were busy sleeping, the code server on haskell.org has gone down, so you can't even retrieve the code again to test anything. Swear a bit.
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Wait a few days for code.haskell.org to be up again.
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Make this repository.