[Git][ghc/ghc][wip/with2] 105 commits: Refactoring: use Platform instead of DynFlags when possible
Ben Gamari
gitlab at gitlab.haskell.org
Wed Apr 15 21:24:19 UTC 2020
Ben Gamari pushed to branch wip/with2 at Glasgow Haskell Compiler / GHC
Commits:
64f20756 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-03-19T12:16:49-04:00
Refactoring: use Platform instead of DynFlags when possible
Metric Decrease:
ManyConstructors
T12707
T13035
T1969
- - - - -
cb1785d9 by Ömer Sinan Ağacan at 2020-03-19T12:16:54-04:00
FastString: fix eager reading of string ptr in hashStr
This read causes NULL dereferencing when len is 0.
Fixes #17909
In the reproducer in #17909 this bug is triggered as follows:
- SimplOpt.dealWithStringLiteral is called with a single-char string
("=" in #17909)
- tailFS gets called on the FastString of the single-char string.
- tailFS checks the length of the string, which is 1, and calls
mkFastStringByteString on the tail of the ByteString, which is an
empty ByteString as the original ByteString has only one char.
- ByteString's unsafeUseAsCStringLen returns (NULL, 0) for the empty
ByteString, which is passed to mkFastStringWith.
- mkFastStringWith gets hash of the NULL pointer via hashStr, which
fails on empty strings because of this bug.
- - - - -
73a7383e by Richard Eisenberg at 2020-03-20T20:42:56-04:00
Simplify treatment of heterogeneous equality
Previously, if we had a [W] (a :: k1) ~ (rhs :: k2), we would
spit out a [D] k1 ~ k2 and part the W as irreducible, hoping for
a unification. But we needn't do this. Instead, we now spit out
a [W] co :: k2 ~ k1 and then use co to cast the rhs of the original
Wanted. This means that we retain the connection between the
spat-out constraint and the original.
The problem with this new approach is that we cannot use the
casted equality for substitution; it's too like wanteds-rewriting-
wanteds. So, we forbid CTyEqCans that mention coercion holes.
All the details are in Note [Equalities with incompatible kinds]
in TcCanonical.
There are a few knock-on effects, documented where they occur.
While debugging an error in this patch, Simon and I ran into
infelicities in how patterns and matches are printed; we made
small improvements.
This patch includes mitigations for #17828, which causes spurious
pattern-match warnings. When #17828 is fixed, these lines should
be removed.
- - - - -
faa36e5b by Sylvain Henry at 2020-03-20T20:43:41-04:00
Hadrian: ignore in-tree GMP objects with ``--lint``
- - - - -
9a96ff6b by Richard Eisenberg at 2020-03-20T20:44:17-04:00
Update core spec to reflect changes to Core.
Key changes:
* Adds a new rule for forall-coercions over coercion variables, which
was implemented but conspicuously missing from the spec.
* Adds treatment for FunCo.
* Adds treatment for ForAllTy over coercion variables.
* Improves commentary (including restoring a Note lost in
03d4852658e1b7407abb4da84b1b03bfa6f6db3b) in the source.
No changes to running code.
- - - - -
7e0451c6 by Sergej Jaskiewicz at 2020-03-20T20:44:55-04:00
Fix event message in withTiming'
This typo caused generating 'end' events without the corresponding 'begin' events.
- - - - -
1542a626 by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
fs.h: Add missing declarations on Windows
- - - - -
3bcf2ccd by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
Bump process submodule
Avoids redundant case alternative warning.
- - - - -
3b363ef9 by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
testsuite: Normalize slashes in ghc-api annotations output
Enable `normalise_slashes` on `annotations`, `listcomps`, and
`parseTree` to fix Windows failures.
- - - - -
25fc9429 by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
testsuite: Update expected output on Windows
- - - - -
7f58ec6d by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
testsuite: Fix TOP of T17786
- - - - -
aadcd909 by GHC GitLab CI at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
testsuite: Update expected output on Windows
- - - - -
dc1eb10d by GHC GitLab CI at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
hadrian: Fix executable extension passed to testsuite driver
- - - - -
58f62e2c by GHC GitLab CI at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
gitlab-ci: Require that Windows-hadrian job passes
- - - - -
8dd2415d by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
hadrian: Eliminate redundant .exe from GHC path
Previously we were invoking:
bash -c
"c:/GitLabRunner/builds/eEQrxK4p/0/ghc/ghc/toolchain/bin/ghc.exe.exe
testsuite/mk/ghc-config.hs -o _build/test/bin/ghc-config.exe"
- - - - -
373621f6 by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-22T22:37:47-04:00
Bump hsc2hs submodule
- - - - -
abc02b40 by Hécate at 2020-03-22T22:38:33-04:00
Annotate the non-total function in Data.Foldable as such
- - - - -
19f12557 by Josef Svenningsson at 2020-03-23T14:05:33-04:00
Fix ApplicativeDo regression #17835
A previous fix for #15344 made sure that monadic 'fail' is used properly
when translating ApplicativeDo. However, it didn't properly account
for when a 'fail' will be inserted which resulted in some programs
failing with a type error.
- - - - -
2643ba46 by Paavo at 2020-03-24T08:31:32-04:00
Add example and doc for Arg (Fixes #17153)
- - - - -
703221f4 by Roland Senn at 2020-03-25T14:45:04-04:00
Use export list of Main module in function TcRnDriver.hs:check_main (Fix #16453)
- Provide the export list of the `Main` module as parameter to the
`compiler/typecheck/TcRnDriver.hs:check_main` function.
- Instead of `lookupOccRn_maybe` call the function `lookupInfoOccRn`.
It returns the list `mains_all` of all the main functions in scope.
- Select from this list `mains_all` all `main` functions that are in
the export list of the `Main` module.
- If this new list contains exactly one single `main` function, then
typechecking continues.
- Otherwise issue an appropriate error message.
- - - - -
3e27205a by Sebastian Graf at 2020-03-25T14:45:40-04:00
Remove -fkill-absence and -fkill-one-shot flags
They seem to be a benchmarking vestige of the Cardinality paper and
probably shouldn't have been merged to HEAD in the first place.
- - - - -
262e42aa by Peter Trommler at 2020-03-25T22:41:39-04:00
Do not panic on linker errors
- - - - -
0de03cd7 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-03-25T22:42:02-04:00
DynFlags refactoring III
Use Platform instead of DynFlags when possible:
* `tARGET_MIN_INT` et al. replaced with `platformMinInt` et al.
* no more DynFlags in PreRules: added a new `RuleOpts` datatype
* don't use `wORD_SIZE` in the compiler
* make `wordAlignment` use `Platform`
* make `dOUBLE_SIZE` a constant
Metric Decrease:
T13035
T1969
- - - - -
7a04920b by Tristan Cacqueray at 2020-03-25T22:42:06-04:00
Base: fix a typo in liftA doc
This change removes an extra '|' that should not be rendered in
the liftA documentation.
Tracking: #17929
- - - - -
1c5a15f7 by Tristan Cacqueray at 2020-03-25T22:42:06-04:00
Base: add Control.Applicative optional example
This change adds an optional example.
Tracking: #17929
- - - - -
6d172e63 by Tristan Cacqueray at 2020-03-25T22:42:06-04:00
Base: add markup around Except
- - - - -
eb2162c8 by John Ericson at 2020-03-26T12:37:08-04:00
Remove unused `ghciTablesNextToCode` from compiler proper
- - - - -
f51efc4b by Joachim Breitner at 2020-03-26T12:37:09-04:00
Prepare to use run-time tablesNextToCode in compiler exclusively
Factor out CPP as much as possible to prepare for runtime
determinattion.
Progress towards #15548
- - - - -
1c446220 by Joachim Breitner at 2020-03-26T12:37:09-04:00
Use run-time tablesNextToCode in compiler exclusively (#15548)
Summary:
- There is no more use of the TABLES_NEXT_TO_CODE CPP macro in
`compiler/`. GHCI_TABLES_NEXT_TO_CODE is also removed entirely.
The field within `PlatformMisc` within `DynFlags` is used instead.
- The field is still not exposed as a CLI flag. We might consider some
way to ensure the right RTS / libraries are used before doing that.
Original reviewers:
Original subscribers: TerrorJack, rwbarton, carter
Original Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D5082
- - - - -
1941ef4f by Sylvain Henry at 2020-03-29T17:28:51-04:00
Modules: Types (#13009)
Update Haddock submodule
Metric Increase:
haddock.compiler
- - - - -
1c7c6f1a by Sylvain Henry at 2020-03-29T17:28:51-04:00
Remove GHC.Types.Unique.Map module
This module isn't used anywhere in GHC.
- - - - -
f1a6c73d by Sylvain Henry at 2020-03-29T17:28:51-04:00
Merge GHC.Types.CostCentre.Init into GHC.Driver.CodeOutput
- - - - -
54250f2d by Simon Peyton Jones at 2020-03-29T17:29:30-04:00
Demand analysis: simplify the demand for a RHS
Ticket #17932 showed that we were using a stupid demand for the RHS
of a let-binding, when the result is a product. This was the result
of a "fix" in 2013, which (happily) turns out to no longer be
necessary.
So I just deleted the code, which simplifies the demand analyser,
and fixes #17932. That in turn uncovered that the anticipation
of worker/wrapper in CPR analysis was inaccurate, hence the logic
that decides whether to unbox an argument in WW was extracted into
a function `wantToUnbox`, now consulted by CPR analysis.
I tried nofib, and got 0.0% perf changes.
All this came up when messing about with !2873 (ticket #17917),
but is idependent of it.
Unfortunately, this patch regresses #4267 and realised that it is now
blocked on #16335.
- - - - -
03060b2f by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-29T17:30:05-04:00
testsuite: Fix T17786 on Windows
Fixes line ending normalization issue.
- - - - -
1f7995ba by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-29T17:30:05-04:00
testsuite: Fix T17786
Fix missing quoting and expected exit code.
- - - - -
ef9c608e by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-29T17:30:05-04:00
testsuite: Mark T12971 as broken on Windows
Due to #17945.
- - - - -
e54500c1 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-03-29T17:30:47-04:00
Store ComponentId details
As far as GHC is concerned, installed package components ("units") are
identified by an opaque ComponentId string provided by Cabal. But we
don't want to display it to users (as it contains a hash) so GHC queries
the database to retrieve some infos about the original source package
(name, version, component name).
This patch caches these infos in the ComponentId itself so that we don't
need to provide DynFlags (which contains installed package informations)
to print a ComponentId.
In the future we want GHC to support several independent package states
(e.g. for plugins and for target code), hence we need to avoid
implicitly querying a single global package state.
- - - - -
7e7cb714 by Marius Bakke at 2020-03-29T17:31:27-04:00
testsuite: Remove test that dlopens a PIE object.
glibc 2.30 disallowed dlopening PIE objects, so just remove the test.
Fixes #17952.
- - - - -
6c8f80d8 by Andreas Klebinger at 2020-03-29T17:32:04-04:00
Correct haddocks for testBit in Data.Bits
It conflated the nth bit with the bit at offset n.
Now we instead give the definition in terms of `bit and `.&.`
on top of clearer phrasing.
- - - - -
c916f190 by Andreas Klebinger at 2020-03-29T17:32:04-04:00
Apply suggestion to libraries/base/Data/Bits.hs
- - - - -
64bf7f51 by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-29T17:32:41-04:00
gitlab-ci: Add FreeBSD release job
- - - - -
a0d8e92e by Ryan Scott at 2020-03-29T17:33:20-04:00
Run checkNewDataCon before constraint-solving newtype constructors
Within `checkValidDataCon`, we used to run `checkValidType` on the
argument types of a newtype constructor before running
`checkNewDataCon`, which ensures that the user does not attempt
non-sensical things such as newtypes with multiple arguments or
constraints. This works out in most situations, but this falls over
on a corner case revealed in #17955:
```hs
newtype T = Coercible () T => T ()
```
`checkValidType`, among other things, peforms an ambiguity check on
the context of a data constructor, and that it turn invokes the
constraint solver. It turns out that there is a special case in the
constraint solver for representational equalities (read: `Coercible`
constraints) that causes newtypes to be unwrapped (see
`Note [Unwrap newtypes first]` in `TcCanonical`). This special case
does not know how to cope with an ill formed newtype like `T`, so
it ends up panicking.
The solution is surprisingly simple: just invoke `checkNewDataCon`
before `checkValidType` to ensure that the illicit newtype
constructor context is detected before the constraint solver can
run amok with it.
Fixes #17955.
- - - - -
45eb9d8c by Krzysztof Gogolewski at 2020-03-29T17:33:59-04:00
Minor cleanup
- Simplify mkBuildExpr, the function newTyVars was called
only on a one-element list.
- TTG: use noExtCon in more places. This is more future-proof.
- In zonkExpr, panic instead of printing a warning.
- - - - -
f024b6e3 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-03-30T12:48:39+02:00
Expect T4267 to pass
Since 54250f2d8de910b094070c1b48f086030df634b1 we expected T4267 to
fail, but it passes on CI.
- - - - -
57b888c0 by Ryan Scott at 2020-03-31T10:54:20-04:00
Require GHC 8.8 as the minimum compiler for bootstrapping
This allows us to remove several bits of CPP that are either always
true or no longer reachable. As an added bonus, we no longer need to
worry about importing `Control.Monad.Fail.fail` qualified to avoid
clashing with `Control.Monad.fail`, since the latter is now the same
as the former.
- - - - -
33f09551 by Ryan Scott at 2020-03-31T10:54:57-04:00
Add regression test for #17963
The panic in #17963 happened to be fixed by commit
e3c374cc5bd7eb49649b9f507f9f7740697e3f70. This patch adds a
regression test to ensure that it remains fixed.
Fixes #17963.
- - - - -
09a36e80 by Ömer Sinan Ağacan at 2020-03-31T10:55:37-04:00
Simplify stderrSupportsAnsiColors
The combinator andM is used only once, and the code is shorter and
simpler if you inline it.
- - - - -
95bccdd0 by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-31T10:56:19-04:00
base: Ensure that encoding global variables aren't inlined
As noted in #17970, these (e.g. `getFileSystemEncoding` and
`setFileSystemEncoding`) previously had unfoldings, which would
break their global-ness.
While not strictly necessary, I also add a NOINLINE on
`initLocaleEncoding` since it is used in `System.IO`, ensuring that we
only system's query the locale encoding once.
Fixes #17970.
- - - - -
982aaa83 by Andreas Klebinger at 2020-03-31T10:56:55-04:00
Update hadrian index revision.
Required in order to build hadrian using ghc-8.10
- - - - -
4b9c5864 by Ben Gamari at 2020-03-31T10:57:32-04:00
integer-gmp: Bump version and add changelog entry
- - - - -
9b39f2e6 by Ryan Scott at 2020-04-01T01:20:00-04:00
Clean up "Eta reduction for data families" Notes
Before, there were two distinct Notes named
"Eta reduction for data families". This renames one of them to
"Implementing eta reduction for data families" to disambiguate the
two and fixes references in other parts of the codebase to ensure
that they are pointing to the right place.
Fixes #17313.
[ci skip]
- - - - -
7627eab5 by Ryan Scott at 2020-04-01T01:20:38-04:00
Fix the changelog/@since information for hGetContents'/getContents'/readFile'
Fixes #17979.
[ci skip]
- - - - -
0002db1b by Sylvain Henry at 2020-04-01T01:21:27-04:00
Kill wORDS_BIGENDIAN and replace it with platformByteOrder (#17957)
Metric Decrease:
T13035
T1969
- - - - -
7b217179 by Sebastian Graf at 2020-04-01T15:03:24-04:00
PmCheck: Adjust recursion depth for inhabitation test
In #17977, we ran into the reduction depth limit of the typechecker.
That was only a symptom of a much broader issue: The recursion depth
of the coverage checker for trying to instantiate strict fields in the
`nonVoid` test was far too high (100, the `defaultMaxTcBound`).
As a result, we were performing quite poorly on `T17977`.
Short of a proper termination analysis to prove emptyness of a type,
we just arbitrarily default to a much lower recursion limit of 3.
Fixes #17977.
- - - - -
3c09f636 by Andreas Klebinger at 2020-04-01T15:03:59-04:00
Make hadrian pass on the no-colour setting to GHC.
Fixes #17983.
- - - - -
b943b25d by Simon Peyton Jones at 2020-04-02T01:45:58-04:00
Re-engineer the binder-swap transformation
The binder-swap transformation is implemented by the occurrence
analyser -- see Note [Binder swap] in OccurAnal. However it had
a very nasty corner in it, for the case where the case scrutinee
was a GlobalId. This led to trouble and hacks, and ultimately
to #16296.
This patch re-engineers how the occurrence analyser implements
the binder-swap, by actually carrying out a substitution rather
than by adding a let-binding. It's all described in
Note [The binder-swap substitution].
I did a few other things along the way
* Fix a bug in StgCse, which could allow a loop breaker to be CSE'd
away. See Note [Care with loop breakers] in StgCse. I think it can
only show up if occurrence analyser sets up bad loop breakers, but
still.
* Better commenting in SimplUtils.prepareAlts
* A little refactoring in CoreUnfold; nothing significant
e.g. rename CoreUnfold.mkTopUnfolding to mkFinalUnfolding
* Renamed CoreSyn.isFragileUnfolding to hasCoreUnfolding
* Move mkRuleInfo to CoreFVs
We observed respectively 4.6% and 5.9% allocation decreases for the following
tests:
Metric Decrease:
T9961
haddock.base
- - - - -
42d68364 by Sebastian Graf at 2020-04-02T01:46:34-04:00
Preserve precise exceptions in strictness analysis
Fix #13380 and #17676 by
1. Changing `raiseIO#` to have `topDiv` instead of `botDiv`
2. Give it special treatment in `Simplifier.Util.mkArgInfo`, treating it
as if it still had `botDiv`, to recover dead code elimination.
This is the first commit of the plan outlined in
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/merge_requests/2525#note_260886.
- - - - -
0a88dd11 by Ömer Sinan Ağacan at 2020-04-02T01:47:25-04:00
Fix a pointer format string in RTS
- - - - -
5beac042 by Ömer Sinan Ağacan at 2020-04-02T01:48:05-04:00
Remove unused closure stg_IND_direct
- - - - -
88f38b03 by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-02T01:48:42-04:00
Session: Memoize stderrSupportsAnsiColors
Not only is this a reasonable efficiency measure but it avoids making
reentrant calls into ncurses, which is not thread-safe. See #17922.
- - - - -
27740f24 by Ryan Scott at 2020-04-02T01:49:21-04:00
Make Hadrian build with Cabal-3.2
GHC 8.10 ships with `Cabal-3.2.0.0`, so it would be convenient to
make Hadrian supporting building against 3.2.* instead of having to
rebuild the entirety of `Cabal-3.0.0.0`. There is one API change in
`Cabal-3.2.*` that affects Hadrian: the `synopsis` and `description`
functions now return `ShortText` instead of `String`. Since Hadrian
manipulates these `String`s in various places, I found that the
simplest fix was to use CPP to convert `ShortText` to `String`s
where appropriate.
- - - - -
49802002 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-04-02T01:50:00-04:00
Update Stack resolver for hadrian/build-stack
Broken by 57b888c0e90be7189285a6b078c30b26d0923809
- - - - -
30a63e79 by Ryan Scott at 2020-04-02T01:50:36-04:00
Fix two ASSERT buglets in reifyDataCon
Two `ASSERT`s in `reifyDataCon` were always using `arg_tys`, but
`arg_tys` is not meaningful for GADT constructors. In fact, it's
worse than non-meaningful, since using `arg_tys` when reifying a
GADT constructor can lead to failed `ASSERT`ions, as #17305
demonstrates.
This patch applies the simplest possible fix to the immediate
problem. The `ASSERT`s now use `r_arg_tys` instead of `arg_tys`, as
the former makes sure to give something meaningful for GADT
constructors. This makes the panic go away at the very least. There
is still an underlying issue with the way the internals of
`reifyDataCon` work, as described in
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/17305#note_227023, but we
leave that as future work, since fixing the underlying issue is
much trickier (see
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/17305#note_227087).
- - - - -
ef7576c4 by Zubin Duggal at 2020-04-03T06:24:56-04:00
Add outputable instances for the types in GHC.Iface.Ext.Types, add -ddump-hie
flag to dump pretty printed contents of the .hie file
Metric Increase:
hie002
Because of the regression on i386:
compile_time/bytes allocated increased from i386-linux-deb9 baseline @ HEAD~10:
Expected hie002 (normal) compile_time/bytes allocated: 583014888.0 +/-10%
Lower bound hie002 (normal) compile_time/bytes allocated: 524713399
Upper bound hie002 (normal) compile_time/bytes allocated: 641316377
Actual hie002 (normal) compile_time/bytes allocated: 877986292
Deviation hie002 (normal) compile_time/bytes allocated: 50.6 %
*** unexpected stat test failure for hie002(normal)
- - - - -
9462452a by Andreas Klebinger at 2020-04-03T06:25:33-04:00
Improve and refactor StgToCmm codegen for DataCons.
We now differentiate three cases of constructor bindings:
1)Bindings which we can "replace" with a reference to
an existing closure. Reference the replacement closure
when accessing the binding.
2)Bindings which we can "replace" as above. But we still
generate a closure which will be referenced by modules
importing this binding.
3)For any other binding generate a closure. Then reference
it.
Before this patch 1) did only apply to local bindings and we
didn't do 2) at all.
- - - - -
a214d214 by Moritz Bruder at 2020-04-03T06:26:11-04:00
Add singleton to NonEmpty in libraries/base
This adds a definition to construct a singleton non-empty list
(Data.List.NonEmpty) according to issue #17851.
- - - - -
f7597aa0 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-04-03T06:26:54-04:00
Testsuite: measure compiler stats for T16190
We were mistakenly measuring program stats
- - - - -
a485c3c4 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-04-03T06:26:54-04:00
Move blob handling into StgToCmm
Move handling of big literal strings from CmmToAsm to StgToCmm. It
avoids the use of `sdocWithDynFlags` (cf #10143). We might need to move
this handling even higher in the pipeline in the future (cf #17960):
this patch will make it easier.
- - - - -
cc2918a0 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-04-03T06:26:54-04:00
Refactor CmmStatics
In !2959 we noticed that there was some redundant code (in GHC.Cmm.Utils
and GHC.Cmm.StgToCmm.Utils) used to deal with `CmmStatics` datatype
(before SRT generation) and `RawCmmStatics` datatype (after SRT
generation).
This patch removes this redundant code by using a single GADT for
(Raw)CmmStatics.
- - - - -
9e60273d by Maxim Koltsov at 2020-04-03T06:27:32-04:00
Fix haddock formatting in Control.Monad.ST.Lazy.Imp.hs
- - - - -
1b7e8a94 by Andreas Klebinger at 2020-04-03T06:28:08-04:00
Turn newlines into spaces for hadrian/ghci.
The newlines break the command on windows.
- - - - -
4291bdda by Simon Peyton Jones at 2020-04-03T06:28:44-04:00
Major improvements to the specialiser
This patch is joint work of Alexis King and Simon PJ. It does some
significant refactoring of the type-class specialiser. Main highlights:
* We can specialise functions with types like
f :: Eq a => a -> Ord b => b => blah
where the classes aren't all at the front (#16473). Here we can
correctly specialise 'f' based on a call like
f @Int @Bool dEqInt x dOrdBool
This change really happened in an earlier patch
commit 2d0cf6252957b8980d89481ecd0b79891da4b14b
Author: Sandy Maguire <sandy at sandymaguire.me>
Date: Thu May 16 12:12:10 2019 -0400
work that this new patch builds directly on that work, and refactors
it a bit.
* We can specialise functions with implicit parameters (#17930)
g :: (?foo :: Bool, Show a) => a -> String
Previously we could not, but now they behave just like a non-class
argument as in 'f' above.
* We can specialise under-saturated calls, where some (but not all of
the dictionary arguments are provided (#17966). For example, we can
specialise the above 'f' based on a call
map (f @Int dEqInt) xs
even though we don't (and can't) give Ord dictionary.
This may sound exotic, but #17966 is a program from the wild, and
showed significant perf loss for functions like f, if you need
saturation of all dictionaries.
* We fix a buglet in which a floated dictionary had a bogus demand
(#17810), by using zapIdDemandInfo in the NonRec case of specBind.
* A tiny side benefit: we can drop dead arguments to specialised
functions; see Note [Drop dead args from specialisations]
* Fixed a bug in deciding what dictionaries are "interesting"; see
Note [Keep the old dictionaries interesting]
This is all achieved by by building on Sandy Macguire's work in
defining SpecArg, which mkCallUDs uses to describe the arguments of
the call. Main changes:
* Main work is in specHeader, which marched down the [InBndr] from the
function definition and the [SpecArg] from the call site, together.
* specCalls no longer has an arity check; the entire mechanism now
handles unders-saturated calls fine.
* mkCallUDs decides on an argument-by-argument basis whether to
specialise a particular dictionary argument; this is new.
See mk_spec_arg in mkCallUDs.
It looks as if there are many more lines of code, but I think that
all the extra lines are comments!
- - - - -
40a85563 by Ömer Sinan Ağacan at 2020-04-03T18:26:19+03:00
Revert accidental change in 9462452
[ci skip]
- - - - -
bd75e5da by Ryan Scott at 2020-04-04T07:07:58-04:00
Enable ImpredicativeTypes internally when typechecking selector bindings
This is necessary for certain record selectors with higher-rank
types, such as the examples in #18005. See
`Note [Impredicative record selectors]` in `TcTyDecls`.
Fixes #18005.
- - - - -
dcfe29c8 by Ömer Sinan Ağacan at 2020-04-06T13:16:08-04:00
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].
- - - - -
cec2c71f by Simon Peyton Jones at 2020-04-06T13:16:44-04:00
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.
- - - - -
e850d14f by Simon Peyton Jones at 2020-04-06T13:16:44-04:00
Refactoring only
This refactors DictBinds into a data type rather than a pair.
No change in behaviour, just better code
- - - - -
f38e8d61 by Daniel Gröber at 2020-04-07T02:00:05-04:00
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
- - - - -
bcd66859 by Sebastian Graf at 2020-04-07T02:00:41-04:00
Re-export GHC.Magic.noinline from base
- - - - -
3d2991f8 by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-07T18:36:09-04:00
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
- - - - -
255418da by Sylvain Henry at 2020-04-07T18:36:49-04:00
Modules: type-checker (#13009)
Update Haddock submodule
- - - - -
04b6cf94 by Ryan Scott at 2020-04-07T19:43:20-04:00
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.
- - - - -
7802fa17 by Ryan Scott at 2020-04-08T16:43:44-04:00
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.
- - - - -
ce481361 by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-09T16:17:21-04:00
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.
- - - - -
fa66f143 by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-09T16:17:21-04:00
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.
- - - - -
39075176 by Ömer Sinan Ağacan at 2020-04-09T16:18:00-04:00
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.
- - - - -
dce50062 by Sylvain Henry at 2020-04-09T16:18:44-04:00
Rts: show errno on failure (#18033)
- - - - -
045139f4 by Hécate at 2020-04-09T23:10:44-04:00
Add an example to liftIO and explain its purpose
- - - - -
101fab6e by Sebastian Graf at 2020-04-09T23:11:21-04:00
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
- - - - -
f5212dfc by Sebastian Graf at 2020-04-09T23:11:57-04:00
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.
- - - - -
75a185dc by Sylvain Henry at 2020-04-09T23:12:37-04:00
Hadrian: fix --summary
- - - - -
723062ed by Ömer Sinan Ağacan at 2020-04-10T09:18:14+03:00
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
- - - - -
bcafaa82 by Peter Trommler at 2020-04-10T19:29:33-04:00
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
- - - - -
0889f5ee by Takenobu Tani at 2020-04-12T11:44:52+09:00
testsuite: Fix comment for a language extension
[skip ci]
- - - - -
cd4f92b5 by Simon Peyton Jones at 2020-04-12T11:20:58-04:00
Significant refactor of Lint
This refactoring of Lint was triggered by #17923, which is
fixed by this patch.
The main change is this. Instead of
lintType :: Type -> LintM LintedKind
we now have
lintType :: Type -> LintM LintedType
Previously, all of typeKind was effectively duplicate in lintType.
Moreover, since we have an ambient substitution, we still had to
apply the substition here and there, sometimes more than once. It
was all very tricky, in the end, and made my head hurt.
Now, lintType returns a fully linted type, with all substitutions
performed on it. This is much simpler.
The same thing is needed for Coercions. Instead of
lintCoercion :: OutCoercion
-> LintM (LintedKind, LintedKind,
LintedType, LintedType, Role)
we now have
lintCoercion :: Coercion -> LintM LintedCoercion
Much simpler! The code is shorter and less bug-prone.
There are a lot of knock on effects. But life is now better.
Metric Decrease:
T1969
- - - - -
0efaf301 by Josh Meredith at 2020-04-12T11:21:34-04:00
Implement extensible interface files
- - - - -
54ca66a7 by Ryan Scott at 2020-04-12T11:22:10-04:00
Use conLikeUserTyVarBinders to quantify field selector types
This patch:
1. Writes up a specification for how the types of top-level field
selectors should be determined in a new section of the GHC User's
Guide, and
2. Makes GHC actually implement that specification by using
`conLikeUserTyVarBinders` in `mkOneRecordSelector` to preserve the
order and specificity of type variables written by the user.
Fixes #18023.
- - - - -
35799dda by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-12T11:22:50-04:00
hadrian: Don't --export-dynamic on Darwin
When fixing #17962 I neglected to consider that --export-dynamic is only
supported on ELF platforms.
- - - - -
e8029816 by Alexis King at 2020-04-12T11:23:27-04:00
Add an INLINE pragma to Control.Category.>>>
This fixes #18013 by adding INLINE pragmas to both Control.Category.>>>
and GHC.Desugar.>>>. The functional change in this patch is tiny (just
two lines of pragmas!), but an accompanying Note explains in gory
detail what’s going on.
- - - - -
1d2e1f0c by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-14T12:04:07-04:00
Introduce with#
- - - - -
eee8ac07 by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-14T12:47:08-04:00
Rename to keepAlive#
- - - - -
235bf316 by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-15T15:02:44-04:00
Things
- - - - -
24d0d597 by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-15T15:11:52-04:00
Use with#
- - - - -
62fca4e1 by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-15T16:13:00-04:00
Fix it
- - - - -
1938fe8e by Ben Gamari at 2020-04-15T17:23:52-04:00
It works
- - - - -
30 changed files:
- .gitlab-ci.yml
- .gitlab/linters/check-cpp.py
- CODEOWNERS
- compiler/GHC.hs
- compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Asm.hs
- compiler/GHC/ByteCode/InfoTable.hs
- compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Instr.hs
- compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Linker.hs
- compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Types.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/BlockId.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/BlockId.hs-boot
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/CLabel.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/CallConv.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/CommonBlockElim.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Dataflow.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Dataflow/Label.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/DebugBlock.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Expr.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Graph.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Info.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Info/Build.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/LayoutStack.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Lexer.x
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Lint.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/MachOp.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Node.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Opt.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Parser.y
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Pipeline.hs
The diff was not included because it is too large.
View it on GitLab: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/compare/c402471377ac14014a46c6029d31d4d8d3571d21...1938fe8e81da5bb822ceec920d91ef3e80d2272a
--
View it on GitLab: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/compare/c402471377ac14014a46c6029d31d4d8d3571d21...1938fe8e81da5bb822ceec920d91ef3e80d2272a
You're receiving this email because of your account on gitlab.haskell.org.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mail.haskell.org/pipermail/ghc-commits/attachments/20200415/2488b911/attachment-0001.html>
More information about the ghc-commits
mailing list