HaskellDirect is an IDL compiler for Haskell, which offers a helping
hand to the Haskell programmer that wants to better interact with
and reuse external code.
Interfacing Haskell code to external code involves the conversion of
values between the Haskell world and the outside, as data
representations and details of how memory is managed, are worlds
apart at times. Manually writing the boilerplate code that takes
care of this conversion is about as exciting as watching grass grow
and, as a result, error prone.
Using an Interface Definition Language (IDL) as basis, HaskellDirect
automates the generation of such impedance matching code, generating
all the necessary marshaling code for you.
With IDL, the functionality provided by a programming interface is
specified in a programming language neutral framework. The
HaskellDirect IDL compiler converts this specification into a set of
method stubs. Depending on how the compiler is invoked, these stubs
can be used to:
Call upon external functions from within Haskell, HaskellDirect creates bindings to external (C-callable) libraries.
Let external code call upon Haskell functions, HaskellDirect creates foreign/external language interfaces to Haskell libraries.
Call COM (Microsoft's Component Object Model) methods from Haskell, HaskellDirect helps you use Microsoft COM components from within Haskell. The generated stubs can be used with Hugs98 or GHC.
Create COM method wrappers, HaskellDirect packages up Haskell code as COM components.
The HaskellDirect IDL compiler currently groks both the OSF DCE
dialect of IDL (including the various extensions introduced by the
Microsoft IDL compiler) and the OMG IIOP/CORBA dialect. (Only the
former can be used for describing COM interfaces.)