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<h3>
Peter Trommler pushed to branch wip/T11261
at <a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc">Glasgow Haskell Compiler / GHC</a>
</h3>
<h4>
Commits:
</h4>
<ul>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/dcfe29c8520244764146c7a5f336be1f9700db6c">dcfe29c8</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Ömer Sinan Ağacan</span>
<i>at 2020-04-06T13:16:08-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Don't override proc CafInfos in ticky builds
Fixes #17947
When we have a ticky label for a proc, IdLabels for the ticky counter
and proc entry share the same Name. This caused overriding proc CafInfos
with the ticky CafInfos (i.e. NoCafRefs) during SRT analysis.
We now ignore the ticky labels when building SRTMaps. This makes sense
because:
- When building the current module they don't need to be in SRTMaps as
they're initialized as non-CAFFY (see mkRednCountsLabel), so they
don't take part in the dependency analysis and they're never added to
SRTs.
(Reminder: a "dependency" in the SRT analysis is a CAFFY dependency,
non-CAFFY uses are not considered as dependencies for the algorithm)
- They don't appear in the interfaces as they're not exported, so it
doesn't matter for cross-module concerns whether they're in the SRTMap
or not.
See also the new Note [Ticky labels in SRT analysis].
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/cec2c71fe91c88649628c6e83416533b816b86a5">cec2c71f</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Simon Peyton Jones</span>
<i>at 2020-04-06T13:16:44-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Fix an tricky specialiser loop
Issue #17151 was a very tricky example of a bug in which the
specialiser accidentally constructs a recurive dictionary,
so that everything turns into bottom.
I have fixed variants of this bug at least twice before:
see Note [Avoiding loops]. It was a bit of a struggle
to isolate the problem, greatly aided by the work that
Alexey Kuleshevich did in distilling a test case.
Once I'd understood the problem, it was not difficult to fix,
though it did lead me a bit of refactoring in specImports.
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/e850d14ffbeea39ad386b1e888cd97375758d6d6">e850d14f</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Simon Peyton Jones</span>
<i>at 2020-04-06T13:16:44-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Refactoring only
This refactors DictBinds into a data type rather than a pair.
No change in behaviour, just better code
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/f38e8d61f066c3064c600c352eebcd87f28d989a">f38e8d61</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Daniel Gröber</span>
<i>at 2020-04-07T02:00:05-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">rts: ProfHeap: Fix memory leak when not compiled with profiling
If we're doing heap profiling on an unprofiled executable we keep
allocating new space in initEra via nextEra on each profiler run but we
don't have a corresponding freeEra call.
We do free the last era in endHeapProfiling but previous eras will have
been overwritten by initEra and will never get free()ed.
Metric Decrease:
space_leak_001
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/bcd668593e1c9e00c5d9c72960b4833dd526cb9a">bcd66859</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Sebastian Graf</span>
<i>at 2020-04-07T02:00:41-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Re-export GHC.Magic.noinline from base
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/3d2991f8b4c1b686323b2c9452ce845a60b8d94c">3d2991f8</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Ben Gamari</span>
<i>at 2020-04-07T18:36:09-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">simplifier: Kill off ufKeenessFactor
We used to have another factor, ufKeenessFactor, which would scale the
discounts before they were subtracted from the size. This was justified
with the following comment:
-- We multiple the raw discounts (args_discount and result_discount)
-- ty opt_UnfoldingKeenessFactor because the former have to do with
-- *size* whereas the discounts imply that there's some extra
-- *efficiency* to be gained (e.g. beta reductions, case reductions)
-- by inlining.
However, this is highly suspect since it means that we subtract a
*scaled* size from an absolute size, resulting in crazy (e.g. negative)
scores in some cases (#15304). We consequently killed off
ufKeenessFactor and bumped up the ufUseThreshold to compensate.
Adjustment of unfolding use threshold
=====================================
Since this removes a discount from our inlining heuristic, I revisited our
default choice of -funfolding-use-threshold to minimize the change in
overall inlining behavior. Specifically, I measured runtime allocations
and executable size of nofib and the testsuite performance tests built
using compilers (and core libraries) built with several values of
-funfolding-use-threshold.
This comes as a result of a quantitative comparison of testsuite
performance and code size as a function of ufUseThreshold, comparing
GHC trees using values of 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, and 100. The test set
consisted of nofib and the testsuite performance tests.
A full summary of these measurements are found in the description of
!2608
Comparing executable sizes (relative to the base commit) across all
nofib tests, we see that sizes are similar to the baseline:
gmean min max median
thresh
50 -6.36% -7.04% -4.82% -6.46%
60 -5.04% -5.97% -3.83% -5.11%
70 -2.90% -3.84% -2.31% -2.92%
80 -0.75% -2.16% -0.42% -0.73%
90 +0.24% -0.41% +0.55% +0.26%
100 +1.36% +0.80% +1.64% +1.37%
baseline +0.00% +0.00% +0.00% +0.00%
Likewise, looking at runtime allocations we see that 80 gives slightly
better optimisation than the baseline:
gmean min max median
thresh
50 +0.16% -0.16% +4.43% +0.00%
60 +0.09% -0.00% +3.10% +0.00%
70 +0.04% -0.09% +2.29% +0.00%
80 +0.02% -1.17% +2.29% +0.00%
90 -0.02% -2.59% +1.86% +0.00%
100 +0.00% -2.59% +7.51% -0.00%
baseline +0.00% +0.00% +0.00% +0.00%
Finally, I had to add a NOINLINE in T4306 to ensure that `upd` is
worker-wrappered as the test expects. This makes me wonder whether the
inlining heuristic is now too liberal as `upd` is quite a large
function. The same measure was taken in T12600.
Wall clock time compiling Cabal with -O0
thresh 50 60 70 80 90 100 baseline
build-Cabal 93.88 89.58 92.59 90.09 100.26 94.81 89.13
Also, this change happens to avoid the spurious test output in
`plugin-recomp-change` and `plugin-recomp-change-prof` (see #17308).
Metric Decrease:
hie002
T12234
T13035
T13719
T14683
T4801
T5631
T5642
T9020
T9872d
T9961
Metric Increase:
T12150
T12425
T13701
T14697
T15426
T1969
T3064
T5837
T6048
T9203
T9872a
T9872b
T9872c
T9872d
haddock.Cabal
haddock.base
haddock.compiler
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/255418da5d264fb2758bc70925adb2094f34adc3">255418da</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Sylvain Henry</span>
<i>at 2020-04-07T18:36:49-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Modules: type-checker (#13009)
Update Haddock submodule
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/04b6cf947ea065a210a216cc91f918cc1660d430">04b6cf94</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Ryan Scott</span>
<i>at 2020-04-07T19:43:20-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Make NoExtCon fields strict
This changes every unused TTG extension constructor to be strict in
its field so that the pattern-match coverage checker is smart enough
any such constructors are unreachable in pattern matches. This lets
us remove nearly every use of `noExtCon` in the GHC API. The only
ones we cannot remove are ones underneath uses of `ghcPass`, but that
is only because GHC 8.8's and 8.10's coverage checkers weren't smart
enough to perform this kind of reasoning. GHC HEAD's coverage
checker, on the other hand, _is_ smart enough, so we guard these uses
of `noExtCon` with CPP for now.
Bumps the `haddock` submodule.
Fixes #17992.
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/7802fa17a9a1a0f02fbf95170c13d7a9711a681e">7802fa17</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Ryan Scott</span>
<i>at 2020-04-08T16:43:44-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Handle promoted data constructors in typeToLHsType correctly
Instead of using `nlHsTyVar`, which hardcodes `NotPromoted`, have
`typeToLHsType` pick between `Promoted` and `NotPromoted` by checking
if a type constructor is promoted using `isPromotedDataCon`.
Fixes #18020.
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/ce481361fc95405cfadcd8f930629381e80e7f84">ce481361</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Ben Gamari</span>
<i>at 2020-04-09T16:17:21-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">hadrian: Use --export-dynamic when linking iserv
As noticed in #17962, the make build system currently does this (see
3ce0e0ba) but the change was never ported to Hadrian.
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/fa66f143a61f2285618c611a27c23815ca588299">fa66f143</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Ben Gamari</span>
<i>at 2020-04-09T16:17:21-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">iserv: Don't pass --export-dynamic on FreeBSD
This is definitely a hack but it's probably the best we can do for now.
Hadrian does the right thing here by passing --export-dynamic only to
the linker.
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/390751768104cd3d2cb57e2037062916476ebd10">39075176</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Ömer Sinan Ağacan</span>
<i>at 2020-04-09T16:18:00-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Fix CNF handling in compacting GC
Fixes #17937
Previously compacting GC simply ignored CNFs. This is mostly fine as
most (see "What about small compacts?" below) CNF objects don't have
outgoing pointers, and are "large" (allocated in large blocks) and large
objects are not moved or compacted.
However if we do GC *during* sharing-preserving compaction then the CNF
will have a hash table mapping objects that have been moved to the CNF
to their location in the CNF, to be able to preserve sharing.
This case is handled in the copying collector, in `scavenge_compact`,
where we evacuate hash table entries and then rehash the table.
Compacting GC ignored this case.
We now visit CNFs in all generations when threading pointers to the
compacted heap and thread hash table keys. A visited CNF is added to the
list `nfdata_chain`. After compaction is done, we re-visit the CNFs in
that list and rehash the tables.
The overhead is minimal: the list is static in `Compact.c`, and link
field is added to `StgCompactNFData` closure. Programs that don't use
CNFs should not be affected.
To test this CNF tests are now also run in a new way 'compacting_gc',
which just passes `-c` to the RTS, enabling compacting GC for the oldest
generation. Before this patch the result would be:
Unexpected failures:
compact_gc.run compact_gc [bad exit code (139)] (compacting_gc)
compact_huge_array.run compact_huge_array [bad exit code (1)] (compacting_gc)
With this patch all tests pass. I can also pass `-c -DS` without any
failures.
What about small compacts? Small CNFs are still not handled by the
compacting GC. However so far I'm unable to write a test that triggers a
runtime panic ("update_fwd: unknown/strange object") by allocating a
small CNF in a compated heap. It's possible that I'm missing something
and it's not possible to have a small CNF.
NoFib Results:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program Size Allocs Instrs Reads Writes
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CS +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
CSD +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
FS +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
S +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
VS +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
VSD +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% -0.0%
VSM +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% -0.0% 0.0%
anna +0.0% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
ansi +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
atom +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
awards +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
banner +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
bernouilli +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0%
binary-trees +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% 0.0%
boyer +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
boyer2 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
bspt +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
cacheprof +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
calendar +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
cichelli +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
circsim +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
clausify +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
comp_lab_zift +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
compress +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
compress2 +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
constraints +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
cryptarithm1 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
cryptarithm2 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
cse +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
digits-of-e1 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
digits-of-e2 +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
dom-lt +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
eliza +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
event +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
exact-reals +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
exp3_8 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% -0.0% 0.0%
expert +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
fannkuch-redux +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
fasta +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
fem +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
fft +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
fft2 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
fibheaps +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
fish +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
fluid +0.0% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
fulsom +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
gamteb +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
gcd +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
gen_regexps +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
genfft +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
gg +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
grep +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
hidden +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% -0.0% 0.0%
hpg +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
ida +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
infer +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% 0.0% -0.0%
integer +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
integrate +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
k-nucleotide +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
kahan +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
knights +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
lambda +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% -0.0%
last-piece +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
lcss +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
life +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
lift +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
linear +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
listcompr +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
listcopy +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
maillist +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
mandel +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% 0.0%
mandel2 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
mate +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% 0.0% +0.0%
minimax +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% 0.0% -0.0%
mkhprog +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
multiplier +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
n-body +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
nucleic2 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
para +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
paraffins +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% -0.0% 0.0%
parser +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
parstof +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
pic +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% 0.0%
pidigits +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
power +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
pretty +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.1%
primes +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
primetest +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
prolog +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
puzzle +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
queens +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
reptile +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% +0.0%
reverse-complem +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% 0.0% -0.0%
rewrite +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
rfib +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
rsa +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% +0.0% -0.0%
scc +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.1%
sched +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
scs +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
simple +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
solid +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
sorting +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
spectral-norm +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
sphere +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
symalg +0.1% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
tak +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
transform +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
treejoin +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
typecheck +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
veritas +0.0% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
wang +0.1% 0.0% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
wave4main +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
wheel-sieve1 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
wheel-sieve2 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
x2n1 +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Min +0.0% 0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.1%
Max +0.1% 0.0% +0.0% +0.0% +0.0%
Geometric Mean +0.1% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0% -0.0%
Bumping numbers of nonsensical perf tests:
Metric Increase:
T12150
T12234
T12425
T13035
T5837
T6048
It's simply not possible for this patch to increase allocations, and
I've wasted enough time on these test in the past (see #17686). I think
these tests should not be perf tests, but for now I'll bump the numbers.
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/dce50062e35d3246b63fba9357dea6313c23c780">dce50062</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Sylvain Henry</span>
<i>at 2020-04-09T16:18:44-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Rts: show errno on failure (#18033)
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/045139f40089f288866c1c59c7379be82ecdaf34">045139f4</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Hécate</span>
<i>at 2020-04-09T23:10:44-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Add an example to liftIO and explain its purpose
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/101fab6ee6cee72b9ffce40e45ebf39466d1c01a">101fab6e</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Sebastian Graf</span>
<i>at 2020-04-09T23:11:21-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Special case `isConstraintKindCon` on `AlgTyCon`
Previously, the `tyConUnique` record selector would unfold into a huge
case expression that would be inlined in all call sites, such as the
`INLINE`-annotated `coreView`, see #18026. `constraintKindTyConKey` only
occurs as the `Unique` of an `AlgTyCon` anyway, so we can make the code
a lot more compact, but have to move it to GHC.Core.TyCon.
Metric Decrease:
T12150
T12234
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/f5212dfc10414212e42247c2f2dcc45252f7e1d2">f5212dfc</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Sebastian Graf</span>
<i>at 2020-04-09T23:11:57-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">DmdAnal: No need to attach a StrictSig to DataCon workers
In GHC.Types.Id.Make we were giving a strictness signature to every data
constructor wrapper Id that we weren't looking at in demand analysis
anyway. We used to use its CPR info, but that has its own CPR signature
now.
`Note [Data-con worker strictness]` then felt very out of place, so I
moved it to GHC.Core.DataCon.
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/75a185dc2a648ab1f592d401daa5efcacb451c83">75a185dc</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Sylvain Henry</span>
<i>at 2020-04-09T23:12:37-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Hadrian: fix --summary
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/723062edf6191084a99787d3f235183cf6b7d051">723062ed</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Ömer Sinan Ağacan</span>
<i>at 2020-04-10T09:18:14+03:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">testsuite: Move no_lint to the top level, tweak hie002
- We don't want to benchmark linting so disable lints in hie002 perf
test
- Move no_lint to the top-level to be able to use it in tests other than
those in `testsuite/tests/perf/compiler`.
- Filter out -dstg-lint in no_lint.
- hie002 allocation numbers on 32-bit are unstable, so skip it on 32-bit
Metric Decrease:
hie002
ManyConstructors
T12150
T12234
T13035
T1969
T4801
T9233
T9961
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/bcafaa82a0223afd5d103e052ab9a097a676e5ea">bcafaa82</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Peter Trommler</span>
<i>at 2020-04-10T19:29:33-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">Testsuite: mark T11531 fragile
The test depends on a link editor allowing undefined symbols in an ELF
shared object. This is the standard but it seems some distributions
patch their link editor. See the report by @hsyl20 in #11531.
Fixes #11531
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<strong><a href="https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/commit/374a2ff8cb2abf076b8eae3ceac96cf4a55f48ac">374a2ff8</a></strong>
<div>
<span>by Peter Trommler</span>
<i>at 2020-04-11T14:33:51-04:00</i>
</div>
<pre class="commit-message" style="white-space: pre-wrap; margin: 0;">PPC NCG: Add DWARF constants and debug labels
Fixes #11261
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
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CODEOWNERS
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compiler/GHC/Cmm/Expr.hs
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compiler/GHC/Core/InstEnv.hs
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compiler/GHC/Core/Lint.hs
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compiler/GHC/Core/Op/Simplify.hs
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compiler/GHC/Core/Predicate.hs
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compiler/GHC/Core/Rules.hs
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