Open Source Haskell Software

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Browse free open source Haskell Software and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Haskell Software by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

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  • 1
    Pandoc

    Pandoc

    The universal markup converter

    Pandoc is a universal document converter able to convert files from a multitude of markup formats into another. With Pandoc, you have a swiss-army knife of a converter, able to convert practically any markup format into any other. Pandoc contains a Haskell library for conversions as well as a command-line tool that uses this library. It can convert to and from just about anything-- lightweight markup formats, HTML formats, documentation formats, ebooks, TeX formats, word processor formats and so much more. It understands several useful markdown syntax extensions, such as document metadata, footnotes, tables, and more. If you want strict markdown compatibility however, these extensions can be turned off. Pandoc is no doubt powerful and customizable, but it is important to note that its intermediate representation of a document is less expressive than many of the formats, so it may not produce perfect conversions every time.
    Downloads: 204 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    SimpleX

    SimpleX

    The first messaging platform operating without user identifiers

    Other apps have user IDs: Signal, Matrix, Session, Briar, Jami, Cwtch, etc. SimpleX does not, not even random numbers. This radically improves your privacy. The video shows how you connect to your friend via their 1-time QR-code, in person or via a video link. You can also connect by sharing an invitation link. Temporary anonymous pairwise identifiers SimpleX uses temporary anonymous pairwise addresses and credentials for each user contact or group member. It allows to deliver messages without user profile identifiers, providing better meta-data privacy than alternatives. Many communication platforms are vulnerable to MITM attacks by servers or network providers. To prevent it SimpleX apps pass one-time keys out-of-band when you share an address as a link or a QR code. Double-ratchet protocol. OTR messaging with perfect forward secrecy and break-in recovery. NaCL cryptobox in each queue to prevent traffic correlation between message queues if TLS is compromised.
    Downloads: 126 This Week
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  • 3
    FOSSA CLI

    FOSSA CLI

    Fast, portable and reliable dependency analysis for any codebase

    FOSSA CLI is a command-line tool that scans your codebase to identify open-source dependencies and their associated licenses and vulnerabilities. It integrates into CI/CD pipelines to provide automated compliance checks, license audits, and security analysis. Designed for enterprise software teams, FOSSA CLI helps enforce open-source policies at scale and provides accurate, automated insights into third-party software usage through deep analysis of transitive dependencies and ecosystem-specific configurations.
    Downloads: 83 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    FreeArc combines best 7-zip and RAR features: auto-selected LZMA/PPMD/Multimedia compression, 1gb dictionary, exe/dict/delta data filters, updatable solid archives, SFXes, recovery record, AES+Twofish+Serpent encryption, Linux support and much more...
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    Downloads: 420 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 5
    PostgREST

    PostgREST

    REST API for any Postgres database

    PostgREST is a standalone web server that turns your PostgreSQL database directly into a RESTful API. The structural constraints and permissions in the database determine the API endpoints and operations. Using PostgREST is an alternative to manual CRUD programming. Custom API servers suffer problems. Writing business logic often duplicates, ignores or hobbles database structure. Object-relational mapping is a leaky abstraction leading to slow imperative code. The PostgREST philosophy establishes a single declarative source of truth: the data itself. It’s easier to ask PostgreSQL to join data for you and let its query planner figure out the details than to loop through rows yourself. It’s easier to assign permissions to db objects than to add guards in controllers. (This is especially true for cascading permissions in data dependencies.) It’s easier to set constraints than to litter code with sanity checks.
    Downloads: 22 This Week
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  • 6
    Extism

    Extism

    The Universal Plug-in System. Extend anything with WebAssembly

    Extism is a plug-in system for everyone. We've carefully designed it to be flexible, fitting into codebases of all shapes and sizes, but opinionated enough so that things Just Work™ the way they should. Extism's goal is to make all software programmable. You can use Extism in your codebase, regardless of the programming language. We support several environments through our official Host SDKs, and are adding more language support all the time. A plug-in system is software that enables your users or customers to add some logic into certain points in your application. You decide where this logic runs, and your users decide what the plug-in does. Many engineering teams face an ever-growing list of feature requests, often exceeding their bandwidth several times over. How can you ever keep up? Making your product extensible by its end-users is a great way to move some of those features outside the core, and empower customers to make your software more useful for them.
    Downloads: 18 This Week
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  • 7
    Wasp

    Wasp

    A programming language that understands what a web app is

    Wasp (Web Application Specification Language) is a declarative DSL (domain-specific language) for developing, building and deploying modern full-stack web apps with less code. Concepts such as app, page, user, login, frontend, production, etc. are baked into the language, bringing a new level of expressiveness and allowing you to get more work done with fewer lines of code. While describing high-level features with Wasp, you still write the rest of your logic in your favorite technologies (currently React, NodeJS, Prisma). Wasp is in alpha and is therefore likely to change a lot, have bugs and miss important features. Due to its expressiveness, you can create and deploy a production-ready web app from scratch with very few lines of concise, consistent, declarative code. When you need more control than Wasp offers, you can write code in existing technologies such as js/html/css/... and combine it with Wasp code!
    Downloads: 18 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 8
    Stack

    Stack

    The Haskell Tool Stack

    Stack is a cross-platform build tool for Haskell projects that simplifies dependency management, project setup, and reproducible builds. It provides curated package sets (Stackage), isolated project environments, and consistent tooling for compiling and testing Haskell applications. Stack streamlines workflows for developers by automating many parts of the Haskell toolchain, making it easier to get started and maintain complex codebases. It supports integration with GHC (Glasgow Haskell Compiler) and Hackage.
    Downloads: 16 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 9
    ShellCheck

    ShellCheck

    A static analysis tool for shell scripts

    ShellCheck is a GPLv3 tool that provides warnings and possible suggestions for bash/sh shell scripts. ShellCheck finds bugs in your shell scripts. You can cabal, apt, dnf, pkg or brew install it locally right now. ShellCheck highlights and clarifies typical beginner's syntax mistakes and issues that cause a shell to give a cryptic error message. It shows typical intermediate level semantic problems that cause a shell to behave in a abnormally and counter-intuitively. It can also discover ssubtle caveats, corner cases and pitfalls that may cause an user's working script to fail under probable future circumstances. ShellCheck.net is always synchronized to the latest git version, and is the simplest way to give ShellCheck a go.
    Downloads: 15 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 10
    Matterhorn

    Matterhorn

    A feature-rich Unix terminal client for the Mattermost chat system

    Matterhorn is a terminal client for the Mattermost chat system. We provide pre-built binary releases for some platforms. Please see the release list to download a binary release for your platform that matches your server version. When you run Matterhorn you'll be prompted for your server URL and credentials. To connect, just paste your web client's Mattermost URL into the Server URL box and enter your credentials. See the Matterhorn User Guide on the details for providing each kind of supported credentials. For most of our binary releases, no additional packages need to be installed; they should just work out of the box. But here are some additional requirements that may apply for your platform. Matterhorn version strings will be of the form ABBCC.X.Y where ABBCC corresponds to the lowest Mattermost server version expected to be supported by the release. For example, if a release supports Mattermost server version 1.2.3, the ABBCC portion of the matterhorn version will be 10203.
    Downloads: 13 This Week
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  • 11
    Cardano Node

    Cardano Node

    The core component that is used to participate in a Cardano

    Cardano Node is the core software that powers the Cardano blockchain, a decentralized, proof-of-stake platform for smart contracts and digital assets. Developed in Haskell, the node allows participation in Cardano’s network by validating transactions, producing blocks, and maintaining the ledger. It supports Shelley, Goguen, Basho, and other phases of Cardano’s roadmap, and plays a crucial role in network security and consensus. The node is configurable for different use cases, including running full nodes, relay nodes, or stake pool operators.
    Downloads: 12 This Week
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  • 12
    BSC

    BSC

    Bluespec Compiler (BSC)

    BSC is the open source compiler toolchain for Bluespec SystemVerilog, a high-level, rule-based hardware design language. It translates Bluespec descriptions into synthesizable Verilog, letting developers bring typed, modular abstractions into mainstream FPGA/ASIC flows. The compiler performs scheduling of atomic rules, elaborates parameterized modules, and enforces interface contracts, producing predictable RTL that integrates with existing EDA tools. A companion simulator enables fast functional execution and debugging before handing designs to traditional verification and synthesis stages. The ecosystem includes standard libraries, FIFOs, interfaces, and utilities that encourage reuse and clean separation of datapaths and control. By raising the abstraction for hardware architecture while preserving efficient output, BSC helps teams explore complex designs—such as RISC-V cores or accelerators—more productively.
    Downloads: 11 This Week
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  • 13
    Echidna

    Echidna

    Ethereum smart contract fuzzer

    Echidna is a weird creature that eats bugs and is highly electrosensitive (with apologies to Jacob Stanley) More seriously, Echidna is a Haskell program designed for fuzzing/property-based testing of Ethereum smarts contracts. It uses sophisticated grammar-based fuzzing campaigns based on a contract ABI to falsify user-defined predicates or Solidity assertions. We designed Echidna with modularity in mind, so it can be easily extended to include new mutations or test specific contracts in specific cases. Optional corpus collection, mutation and coverage guidance to find deeper bugs. Powered by Slither to extract useful information before the fuzzing campaign. Source code integration to identify which lines are covered after the fuzzing campaign. Curses-based retro UI, text-only or JSON output.
    Downloads: 11 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 14
    Clash

    Clash

    Haskell to VHDL/Verilog/SystemVerilog compiler

    Clash is a functional hardware description language that borrows both its syntax and semantics from the functional programming language Haskell. It provides a familiar structural design approach to both combinational and synchronous sequential circuits. The Clash compiler transforms these high-level descriptions to low-level synthesizable VHDL, Verilog, or SystemVerilog. Clash is an open-source project, licensed under the permissive BSD2 license, and actively maintained by QBayLogic. The Clash project is a Haskell Foundation affiliated project. Clash is built on Haskell which provides an excellent foundation for well-typed code. Together with Clash's standard library it is easy to build scalable and reusable hardware designs. Load your designs in an interpreter and easily test all your component without needing to setup a test bench. Although Clash offers many features, you sometimes need to directly access VHDL, Verilog, or SystemVerilog directly.
    Downloads: 10 This Week
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  • 15
    The Fission CL

    The Fission CL

    Command-line interface for Fission

    The Fission CLI is now part of the main fission-suite/fission repo. We construct identity, data, and compute solutions for the future of the Internet. Users want data ownership and privacy without compromising on a seamless experience. You want to build a resilient application that is fast, cost-effective, and efficient. We build local-first and edge computing tools that make all of this possible. Fission builds open source protocols and managed solutions that empower developers to construct humane software applications.
    Downloads: 9 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 16
    tetris

    tetris

    A terminal interface for Tetris

    A terminal interface for Tetris. Installation on MacOS and Linux is outlined below. Windows support is questionable, but you can try to install from source. The default game is run by simply executing the tetris command. If the unicode characters look a bit wonky in your terminal, you can also run. People seem to have varying levels of success with the linux binary. Please note that it is compiled dynamically and hence should not be expected to work on most distros. This code is built on top of brick which makes building terminal user interfaces very accessible.
    Downloads: 9 This Week
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  • 17
    Cryptol

    Cryptol

    Cryptol: The Language of Cryptography

    Cryptol is a domain-specific language (DSL) for specifying and verifying cryptographic algorithms. Developed by Galois, Cryptol provides a high-level mathematical syntax for describing cryptographic primitives and enables formal verification of algorithm properties. It is used in academic, research, and defense sectors to validate correctness and security through symbolic execution and model checking, ensuring critical cryptographic code is free of design flaws.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 18
    Haskell Dockerfile Linter

    Haskell Dockerfile Linter

    Dockerfile linter, validate inline bash, written in Haskell

    A smarter Dockerfile linter that helps you build best practice Docker images. The linter parses the Dockerfile into an AST and performs rules on top of the AST. It stands on the shoulders of ShellCheck to lint the Bash code inside RUN instructions. You can run hadolint locally to lint your Dockerfile. You can download prebuilt binaries for OSX, Windows and Linux from the latest release page. However, if this does not work for you, please fall back to container (Docker), brew or source installation. Configuration files can be used globally or per project.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • 19
    Hasura GraphQL Engine

    Hasura GraphQL Engine

    Blazing fast, instant realtime GraphQL APIs on your DB

    Hasura is an open-source product that accelerates API development by 10x by giving you GraphQL or REST APIs with built-in authorization on your data, instantly. Run Hasura, locally or in the cloud, and connect it to your new or existing databases to instantly get a production-grade GraphQL API. Developers and architects love Hasura because it takes no time to get started, doesn’t need them to be a GraphQL expert upfront, and saves their teams months of recurring effort in building, shipping, and maintaining their APIs. Hasura’s built-in RLS style authorization engine allows you to conveniently specify authorization rules at a model level, and safely expose the GraphQL API to developers inside or outside your organization. Hasura’s authz engine is enabling agile teams in fast-growing startups as well as powering mission-critical data access in highly regulated environments such as Fortune 500 healthcare, financial services and US federal agencies.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 20
    Kmonad

    Kmonad

    An advanced keyboard manager

    KMonad is a cross-platform, advanced keyboard remapping tool written in Haskell. It provides low-level key control, supporting layers, tap-hold combos, multi-tap, macros, and more—even for keyboards without firmware-level customization.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • 21
    Neuron

    Neuron

    Future-proof note-taking and publishing based on Zettelkasten

    Neuron is a Zettelkasten-based note-taking system and static site generator built in Haskell. It allows users to manage interlinked notes using plain-text Markdown files, which are automatically rendered into a web-based knowledge base. Neuron supports incremental builds, backlinks, and efficient navigation across linked content, making it ideal for personal knowledge management, digital gardens, and wikis. It emphasizes speed, simplicity, and easy version control with Git.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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    See Project
  • 22
    PureScript

    PureScript

    A strongly-typed language that compiles to JavaScript

    Compile to readable JavaScript and reuse existing JavaScript code easily. An extensive collection of libraries for development of web applications, web servers, apps and more. Excellent tooling and editor support with instant rebuilds. An active community with many learning resources. Build real-world applications using functional techniques and expressive types, such as: Algebraic data types and pattern matching. Row polymorphism and extensible records. Higher kinded types and type classes with functional dependencies, as well as higher-rank polymorphism. Precompiled binaries are available for OSX, Linux, and Windows. The Pursuit package database hosts searchable documentation for PureScript packages. The recommended build tool for PureScript is Spago, which can be installed using npm.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 23
    Rome

    Rome

    Carthage cache for S3, Minio, Ceph, Google Storage, Artifactory, etc.

    Carthage cache for S3, Minio, Ceph, Google Storage, Artifactory and many others. Rome is a tool that allows developers on Apple platforms to use Amazon's S3, Minio, Ceph, other S3-compatible object stores or/and a local folder. The Rome binary is also attached as a zip to each release on the releases page here on GitHub. Suppose you're working a number of frameworks for your project and want to share those with your team. A great way to do so is to use Carthage and have team members point the Cartfile to the new framework version (or branch, tag, commit) and run Carthage update. Unfortunately, this will require them to build from scratch a new framework. This is particularly annoying if the dependency tree for that framework is big and/or takes a long time to build. Use a cache. The first team member (or a CI) can build the framework and share it, while all other developers can get it from the cache with no waiting time.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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    See Project
  • 24
    SimpleXMQ

    SimpleXMQ

    A reference implementation of the SimpleX Messaging Protocol

    A reference implementation of the SimpleX Messaging Protocol for simplex queues over public networks. SimpleXMQ is a message broker for managing message queues and sending messages over a public network. It consists of an SMP server, SMP client library, and SMP agent that implements SMP protocol for client-server communication and SMP agent protocol to manage duplex connections via simplex queues on multiple SMP servers. SMP protocol is inspired by Redis serialization protocol, but it is much simpler - it currently has only 10 client commands and 8 server responses.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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    See Project
  • 25
    Summoner

    Summoner

    Tool for scaffolding batteries-included production-level Haskell

    Summoner is a tool for scaffolding fully configured batteries-included production-level Haskell projects. Do you want to create a library that is to be uploaded to Hackage/Stackage, that builds with both Cabal and Stack and supports the latest three major GHC versions? Or are you building a production application that uses a custom prelude and has CI with GitHub Actions or Travis Linux and AppVeyors Windows checks? Maybe do you want to play with your idea in a single module without introducing the whole complexity of the Haskell projects. Summoner can help you do all that with minimal effort from you - it can even upload the project to GitHub if you wish! By the way, Summoner operates as either CLI or TUI application, so you can choose what you are more comfortable with and install only the required one.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
    Last Update:
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