[Git][ghc/ghc][wip/andreask/deep_discounts] 122 commits: ci: enable parallel compression for xz

Andreas Klebinger (@AndreasK) gitlab at gitlab.haskell.org
Mon Oct 17 23:59:35 UTC 2022



Andreas Klebinger pushed to branch wip/andreask/deep_discounts at Glasgow Haskell Compiler / GHC


Commits:
a5f9c35f by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-12T13:29:05-04:00
ci: enable parallel compression for xz

- - - - -
3a815f30 by Ryan Scott at 2022-09-12T13:29:41-04:00
Windows: Always define _UCRT when compiling C code

As seen in #22159, this is required to ensure correct behavior when MinGW-w64
headers are in the `C_INCLUDE_PATH`.

Fixes #22159.

- - - - -
65a0bd69 by sheaf at 2022-09-13T10:27:52-04:00
Add diagnostic codes

This MR adds diagnostic codes, assigning unique numeric codes to
error and warnings, e.g.

  error: [GHC-53633]
  Pattern match is redundant

This is achieved as follows:

  - a type family GhcDiagnosticCode that gives the diagnostic code
    for each diagnostic constructor,
  - a type family ConRecursInto that specifies whether to recur into
    an argument of the constructor to obtain a more fine-grained code
    (e.g. different error codes for different 'deriving' errors),
  - generics machinery to generate the value-level function assigning
    each diagnostic its error code; see Note [Diagnostic codes using generics]
    in GHC.Types.Error.Codes.

The upshot is that, to add a new diagnostic code, contributors only need
to modify the two type families mentioned above. All logic relating to
diagnostic codes is thus contained to the GHC.Types.Error.Codes module,
with no code duplication.

This MR also refactors error message datatypes a bit, ensuring we can
derive Generic for them, and cleans up the logic around constraint
solver reports by splitting up 'TcSolverReportInfo' into separate
datatypes (see #20772).

Fixes #21684

- - - - -
362cca13 by sheaf at 2022-09-13T10:27:53-04:00
Diagnostic codes: acccept test changes

The testsuite output now contains diagnostic codes, so many tests need
to be updated at once.
We decided it was best to keep the diagnostic codes in the testsuite
output, so that contributors don't inadvertently make changes to the
diagnostic codes.

- - - - -
08f6730c by Adam Gundry at 2022-09-13T10:28:29-04:00
Allow imports to reference multiple fields with the same name (#21625)

If a module `M` exports two fields `f` (using DuplicateRecordFields), we can
still accept

    import M (f)
    import M hiding (f)

and treat `f` as referencing both of them.  This was accepted in GHC 9.0, but gave
rise to an ambiguity error in GHC 9.2.  See #21625.

This patch also documents this behaviour in the user's guide, and updates the
test for #16745 which is now treated differently.

- - - - -
c14370d7 by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-13T10:29:07-04:00
ci: remove unused appveyor config

- - - - -
dc6af9ed by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-13T10:29:45-04:00
compiler: remove unused lazy state monad

- - - - -
646d15ad by Eric Lindblad at 2022-09-14T03:13:56-04:00
Fix typos

This fixes various typos and spelling mistakes
in the compiler.

Fixes #21891

- - - - -
7d7e71b0 by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-14T03:14:32-04:00
hadrian: Bump index state

This bumps the index state so a build plan can also be found when
booting with 9.4.

Fixes #22165

- - - - -
98b62871 by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-14T17:17:04-04:00
hadrian: Use a stamp file to record when a package is built in a certain way

Before this patch which library ways we had built wasn't recorded
directly. So you would run into issues if you build the .conf file with
some library ways before switching the library ways which you wanted to
build.

Now there is one stamp file for each way, so in order to build a
specific way you can need that specific stamp file rather than going
indirectly via the .conf file.

- - - - -
b42cedbe by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-14T17:17:04-04:00
hadrian: Inplace/Final package databases

There are now two different package databases per stage. An inplace
package database contains .conf files which point directly into the
build directories. The final package database contains .conf files which
point into the installed locations. The inplace .conf files are created
before any building happens and have fake ABI hash values. The final
.conf files are created after a package finished building and contains
the proper ABI has.

The motivation for this is to make the dependency structure more
fine-grained when building modules. Now a module depends just depends
directly on M.o from package p rather than the .conf file depend on the
.conf file for package p. So when all of a modules direct dependencies
have finished building we can start building it rather than waiting for
the whole package to finish.

The secondary motivation is that the multi-repl doesn't need to build
everything before starting the multi-repl session. We can just configure
the inplace package-db and use that in order to start the repl.

- - - - -
6515c32b by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-14T17:17:04-04:00
hadrian: Add some more packages to multi-cradle

The main improvement here is to pass `-this-unit-id` for executables so
that they can be added to the multi-cradle if desired as well as normal
library packages.

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e470e91f by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-14T17:17:04-04:00
hadrian: Need builders needed by Cabal Configure in parallel

Because of the use of withStaged (which needs the necessary builder)
when configuring a package, the builds of stage1:exe:ghc-bin and
stage1:exe:ghc-pkg where being linearised when building a specific
target like `binary-dist-dir`.

Thankfully the fix is quite local, to supply all the `withStaged`
arguments together so the needs can be batched together and hence
performed in parallel.

Fixes #22093

- - - - -
c4438347 by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-14T17:17:04-04:00
Remove stage1:exe:ghc-bin pre-build from CI script

CI builds stage1:exe:ghc-bin before the binary-dist target which
introduces some quite bad linearisation (see #22093) because we don't
build stage1 compiler in parallel with anything. Then when the
binary-dist target is started we have to build stage1:exe:ghc-pkg before
doing anything.

Fixes #22094

- - - - -
71d8db86 by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-14T17:17:04-04:00
hadrian: Add extra implicit dependencies from DeriveLift

ghc -M should know that modules which use DeriveLift (or
TemplateHaskellQuotes) need TH.Lib.Internal but until it does, we have
to add these extra edges manually or the modules will be compiled before
TH.Lib.Internal is compiled which leads to a desugarer error.

- - - - -
43e574f0 by Greg Steuck at 2022-09-14T17:17:43-04:00
Repair c++ probing on OpenBSD

Failure without this change:
```
checking C++ standard library flavour... libc++
checking for linkage against 'c++ c++abi'... failed
checking for linkage against 'c++ cxxrt'... failed
configure: error: Failed to find C++ standard library
```

- - - - -
534b39ee by Douglas Wilson at 2022-09-14T17:18:21-04:00
libraries: template-haskell: vendor filepath differently

Vendoring with ../ in hs-source-dirs prevents upload to hackage.

(cherry picked from commit 1446be7586ba70f9136496f9b67f792955447842)

- - - - -
bdd61cd6 by M Farkas-Dyck at 2022-09-14T22:39:34-04:00
Unbreak Hadrian with Cabal 3.8.

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df04d6ec by Krzysztof Gogolewski at 2022-09-14T22:40:09-04:00
Fix typos

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d6ea8356 by Andreas Klebinger at 2022-09-15T10:12:41+02:00
Tag inference: Fix #21954 by retaining tagsigs of vars in function position.

For an expression like:

    case x of y
      Con z -> z

If we also retain the tag sig for z we can generate code to immediately return
it rather than calling out to stg_ap_0_fast.

- - - - -
7cce7007 by Andreas Klebinger at 2022-09-15T10:12:42+02:00
Stg.InferTags.Rewrite - Avoid some thunks.

- - - - -
88c4cbdb by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-16T13:57:56-04:00
hadrian: enable -fprof-late only for profiling ways

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d7235831 by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-16T13:57:56-04:00
hadrian: add late_ccs flavour transformer

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ce203753 by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-16T13:58:34-04:00
configure: remove unused program checks

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9b4c1056 by Pierre Le Marre at 2022-09-16T13:59:16-04:00
Update to Unicode 15.0

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c6e9b89a by Bodigrim at 2022-09-16T13:59:55-04:00
Avoid partial head and tail in ghc-heap; replace with total pattern-matching

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616afde3 by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-16T14:00:33-04:00
hadrian: relax Cabal upper bound to allow building with Cabal-3.8

A follow up of !8910.

- - - - -
df35d994 by Alexis King at 2022-09-16T14:01:11-04:00
Add links to the continuations haddocks in the docs for each primop

fixes #22176

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383f7549 by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-16T21:42:10-04:00
-Wunused-pattern-binds: Recurse into patterns to check whether there's a splice

See the examples in #22057 which show we have to traverse deeply into a
pattern to determine whether it contains a splice or not. The original
implementation pointed this out but deemed this very shallow traversal
"too expensive".

Fixes #22057

I also fixed an oversight in !7821 which meant we lost a warning which
was present in 9.2.2.

Fixes #22067

- - - - -
5031bf49 by sheaf at 2022-09-16T21:42:49-04:00
Hadrian: Don't try to build terminfo on Windows

Commit b42cedbe introduced a dependency on terminfo on Windows,
but that package isn't available on Windows.

- - - - -
c9afe221 by M Farkas-Dyck at 2022-09-17T06:44:47-04:00
Clean up some. In particular:
• Delete some dead code, largely under `GHC.Utils`.
• Clean up a few definitions in `GHC.Utils.(Misc, Monad)`.
• Clean up `GHC.Types.SrcLoc`.
• Derive stock `Functor, Foldable, Traversable` for more types.
• Derive more instances for newtypes.

Bump haddock submodule.

- - - - -
85431ac3 by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-17T06:45:25-04:00
driver: pass original Cmm filename in ModLocation

When compiling Cmm, the ml_hs_file field is used to indicate Cmm
filename when later generating DWARF information. We should pass the
original filename here, otherwise for preprocessed Cmm files, the
filename will be a temporary filename which is confusing.

- - - - -
63aa0069 by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-17T06:46:04-04:00
rts: remove legacy logging cabal flag

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bd0f4184 by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-17T06:46:04-04:00
rts: make threaded ways optional

For certain targets (e.g. wasm32-wasi), the threaded rts is known not to
work. This patch adds a "threaded" cabal flag to rts to make threaded
rts ways optional. Hadrian enables this flag iff the flavour rtsWays
contains threaded ways.

- - - - -
8a666ad2 by Ryan Scott at 2022-09-18T08:00:44-04:00
DeriveFunctor: Check for last type variables using dataConUnivTyVars

Previously, derived instances of `Functor` (as well as the related classes
`Foldable`, `Traversable`, and `Generic1`) would determine which constraints to
infer by checking for fields that contain the last type variable. The problem
was that this last type variable was taken from `tyConTyVars`. For GADTs, the
type variables in each data constructor are _not_ the same type variables as
in `tyConTyVars`, leading to #22167.

This fixes the issue by instead checking for the last type variable using
`dataConUnivTyVars`. (This is very similar in spirit to the fix for #21185,
which also replaced an errant use of `tyConTyVars` with type variables from
each data constructor.)

Fixes #22167.

- - - - -
78037167 by Vladislav Zavialov at 2022-09-18T08:01:20-04:00
Lexer: pass updated buffer to actions (#22201)

In the lexer, predicates have the following type:
	{ ... } :: user       -- predicate state
		-> AlexInput  -- input stream before the token
		-> Int        -- length of the token
		-> AlexInput  -- input stream after the token
		-> Bool       -- True <=> accept the token
This is documented in the Alex manual.

There is access to the input stream both before and after the token.
But when the time comes to construct the token, GHC passes only the
initial string buffer to the lexer action. This patch fixes it:

	- type Action = PsSpan -> StringBuffer -> Int ->                 P (PsLocated Token)
	+ type Action = PsSpan -> StringBuffer -> Int -> StringBuffer -> P (PsLocated Token)

Now lexer actions have access to the string buffer both before and after
the token, just like the predicates. It's just a matter of passing an
additional function parameter throughout the lexer.

- - - - -
75746594 by Vladislav Zavialov at 2022-09-18T08:01:20-04:00
Lexer: define varsym without predicates (#22201)

Before this patch, the varsym lexing rules were defined as follows:

	<0> {
	  @varsym / { precededByClosingToken `alexAndPred` followedByOpeningToken } { varsym_tight_infix }
	  @varsym / { followedByOpeningToken }  { varsym_prefix }
	  @varsym / { precededByClosingToken }  { varsym_suffix }
	  @varsym                               { varsym_loose_infix }
	}

Unfortunately, this meant that the predicates 'precededByClosingToken' and
'followedByOpeningToken' were recomputed several times before we could figure
out the whitespace context.

With this patch, we check for whitespace context directly in the lexer
action:

	<0> {
	  @varsym { with_op_ws varsym }
	}

The checking for opening/closing tokens happens in 'with_op_ws' now,
which is part of the lexer action rather than the lexer predicate.

- - - - -
c1f81b38 by M Farkas-Dyck at 2022-09-19T09:07:05-04:00
Scrub partiality about `NewOrData`.

Rather than a list of constructors and a `NewOrData` flag, we define `data DataDefnCons a = NewTypeCon a | DataTypeCons [a]`, which enforces a newtype to have exactly one constructor.

Closes #22070.

Bump haddock submodule.

- - - - -
1e1ed8c5 by Cheng Shao at 2022-09-19T09:07:43-04:00
CmmToC: emit __builtin_unreachable() after noreturn ccalls

Emit a __builtin_unreachable() call after a foreign call marked as
CmmNeverReturns. This is crucial to generate correctly typed code for
wasm; as for other archs, this is also beneficial for the C compiler
optimizations.

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19f45a25 by Jan Hrček at 2022-09-20T03:49:29-04:00
Document :unadd GHCi command in user guide

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545ff490 by sheaf at 2022-09-20T03:50:06-04:00
Hadrian: merge archives even in stage 0

We now always merge .a archives when ar supports -L.
This change is necessary in order to bootstrap GHC using GHC 9.4
on Windows, as nested archives aren't supported.
Not doing so triggered bug #21990 when trying to use the Win32
package, with errors such as:

  Not a x86_64 PE+ file.
  Unknown COFF 4 type in getHeaderInfo.

  ld.lld: error: undefined symbol: Win32zm2zi12zi0zi0_SystemziWin32ziConsoleziCtrlHandler_withConsoleCtrlHandler1_info

We have to be careful about which ar is meant: in stage 0, the check
should be done on the system ar (system-ar in system.config).

- - - - -
59fe128c by Vladislav Zavialov at 2022-09-20T03:50:42-04:00
Fix -Woperator-whitespace for consym (part of #19372)

Due to an oversight, the initial specification and implementation of
-Woperator-whitespace focused on varsym exclusively and completely
ignored consym.

This meant that expressions such as "x+ y" would produce a warning,
while "x:+ y" would not.

The specification was corrected in ghc-proposals pull request #404,
and this patch updates the implementation accordingly.

Regression test included.

- - - - -
c4c2cca0 by John Ericson at 2022-09-20T13:11:49-04:00
Add `Eq` and `Ord` instances for `Generically1`

These are needed so the subsequent commit overhauling the `*1` classes
type-checks.

- - - - -
7beb356e by John Ericson at 2022-09-20T13:11:50-04:00
Relax instances for Functor combinators; put superclass on Class1 and Class2 to make non-breaking

This change is approved by the Core Libraries commitee in
https://github.com/haskell/core-libraries-committee/issues/10

The first change makes the `Eq`, `Ord`, `Show`, and `Read` instances for
`Sum`, `Product`, and `Compose` match those for `:+:`, `:*:`, and `:.:`.
These have the proper flexible contexts that are exactly what the
instance needs:

For example, instead of
```haskell
instance (Eq1 f, Eq1 g, Eq a) => Eq (Compose f g a) where
  (==) = eq1
```
we do
```haskell
deriving instance Eq (f (g a)) => Eq (Compose f g a)
```

But, that change alone is rather breaking, because until now `Eq (f a)`
and `Eq1 f` (and respectively the other classes and their `*1`
equivalents too) are *incomparable* constraints. This has always been an
annoyance of working with the `*1` classes, and now it would rear it's
head one last time as an pesky migration.

Instead, we give the `*1` classes superclasses, like so:
```haskell
(forall a. Eq a => Eq (f a)) => Eq1 f
```
along with some laws that canonicity is preserved, like:
```haskell
liftEq (==) = (==)
```

and likewise for `*2` classes:
```haskell
(forall a. Eq a => Eq1 (f a)) => Eq2 f
```
and laws:
```haskell
liftEq2 (==) = liftEq1
```

The `*1` classes also have default methods using the `*2` classes where
possible.

What this means, as explained in the docs, is that `*1` classes really
are generations of the regular classes, indicating that the methods can
be split into a canonical lifting combined with a canonical inner, with
the super class "witnessing" the laws[1] in a fashion.

Circling back to the pragmatics of migrating, note that the superclass
means evidence for the old `Sum`, `Product`, and `Compose` instances is
(more than) sufficient, so breakage is less likely --- as long no
instances are "missing", existing polymorphic code will continue to
work.

Breakage can occur when a datatype implements the `*1` class but not the
corresponding regular class, but this is almost certainly an oversight.
For example, containers made that mistake for `Tree` and `Ord`, which I
fixed in https://github.com/haskell/containers/pull/761, but fixing the
issue by adding `Ord1` was extremely *un*controversial.

`Generically1` was also missing `Eq`, `Ord`, `Read,` and `Show`
instances. It is unlikely this would have been caught without
implementing this change.

-----

[1]: In fact, someday, when the laws are part of the language and not
only documentation, we might be able to drop the superclass field of the
dictionary by using the laws to recover the superclass in an
instance-agnostic manner, e.g. with a *non*-overloaded function with
type:

```haskell
DictEq1 f -> DictEq a -> DictEq (f a)
```

But I don't wish to get into optomizations now, just demonstrate the
close relationship between the law and the superclass.

Bump haddock submodule because of test output changing.

- - - - -
6a8c6b5e by Tom Ellis at 2022-09-20T13:12:27-04:00
Add notes to ghc-prim Haddocks that users should not import it

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ee9d0f5c by matoro at 2022-09-20T13:13:06-04:00
docs: clarify that LLVM codegen is not available in unregisterised mode

The current docs are misleading and suggest that it is possible to use
LLVM codegen from an unregisterised build.  This is not the case;
attempting to pass `-fllvm` to an unregisterised build warns:

```
when making flags consistent: warning:
    Target platform uses unregisterised ABI, so compiling via C
```

and uses the C codegen anyway.

- - - - -
854224ed by Nicolas Trangez at 2022-09-20T20:14:29-04:00
rts: remove copy-paste error from `cabal.rts.in`

This was, likely accidentally, introduced in 4bf542bf1c.

See: 4bf542bf1cdf2fa468457fc0af21333478293476

- - - - -
c8ae3add by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-20T20:15:04-04:00
hadrian: Add extra_dependencies edges for all different ways

The hack to add extra dependencies needed by DeriveLift extension missed
the cases for profiles and dynamic ways. For the profiled way this leads
to errors like:

```
GHC error in desugarer lookup in Data.IntSet.Internal:
  Failed to load interface for ‘Language.Haskell.TH.Lib.Internal’
  Perhaps you haven't installed the profiling libraries for package ‘template-haskell’?
  Use -v (or `:set -v` in ghci) to see a list of the files searched for.
ghc: panic! (the 'impossible' happened)
  GHC version 9.5.20220916:
        initDs
```

Therefore the fix is to add these extra edges in.

Fixes #22197

- - - - -
a971657d by Mon Aaraj at 2022-09-21T06:41:24+03:00
users-guide: fix incorrect ghcappdata folder for unix and windows

- - - - -
06ccad0d by sheaf at 2022-09-21T08:28:49-04:00
Don't use isUnliftedType in isTagged

The function GHC.Stg.InferTags.Rewrite.isTagged can be given
the Id of a join point, which might be representation polymorphic.
This would cause the call to isUnliftedType to crash. It's better
to use typeLevity_maybe instead.

Fixes #22212

- - - - -
c0ba775d by Teo Camarasu at 2022-09-21T14:30:37-04:00
Add fragmentation statistic to GHC.Stats

Implements #21537

- - - - -
2463df2f by Torsten Schmits at 2022-09-21T14:31:24-04:00
Rename Solo[constructor] to MkSolo

Part of proposal 475 (https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/blob/master/proposals/0475-tuple-syntax.rst)

Moves all tuples to GHC.Tuple.Prim
Updates ghc-prim version (and bumps bounds in dependents)

updates haddock submodule
updates deepseq submodule
updates text submodule

- - - - -
9034fada by Matthew Pickering at 2022-09-22T09:25:29-04:00
Update filepath to filepath-1.4.100.0

Updates submodule

* Always rely on vendored filepath
* filepath must be built as stage0 dependency because it uses
  template-haskell.

Towards #22098

- - - - -
615e2278 by Krzysztof Gogolewski at 2022-09-22T09:26:05-04:00
Minor refactor around Outputable

* Replace 'text . show' and 'ppr' with 'int'.
* Remove Outputable.hs-boot, no longer needed
* Use pprWithCommas
* Factor out instructions in AArch64 codegen

- - - - -
aeafdba5 by Sebastian Graf at 2022-09-27T15:14:54+02:00
Demand: Clear distinction between Call SubDmd and eval Dmd (#21717)

In #21717 we saw a reportedly unsound strictness signature due to an unsound
definition of plusSubDmd on Calls. This patch contains a description and the fix
to the unsoundness as outlined in `Note [Call SubDemand vs. evaluation Demand]`.

This fix means we also get rid of the special handling of `-fpedantic-bottoms`
in eta-reduction. Thanks to less strict and actually sound strictness results,
we will no longer eta-reduce the problematic cases in the first place, even
without `-fpedantic-bottoms`.

So fixing the unsoundness also makes our eta-reduction code simpler with less
hacks to explain. But there is another, more unfortunate side-effect:
We *unfix* #21085, but fortunately we have a new fix ready:
See `Note [mkCall and plusSubDmd]`.

There's another change:
I decided to make `Note [SubDemand denotes at least one evaluation]` a lot
simpler by using `plusSubDmd` (instead of `lubPlusSubDmd`) even if both argument
demands are lazy. That leads to less precise results, but in turn rids ourselves
from the need for 4 different `OpMode`s and the complication of
`Note [Manual specialisation of lub*Dmd/plus*Dmd]`. The result is simpler code
that is in line with the paper draft on Demand Analysis.

I left the abandoned idea in `Note [Unrealised opportunity in plusDmd]` for
posterity. The fallout in terms of regressions is negligible, as the testsuite
and NoFib shows.

```
        Program         Allocs    Instrs
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         hidden          +0.2%     -0.2%
         linear          -0.0%     -0.7%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Min          -0.0%     -0.7%
            Max          +0.2%     +0.0%
 Geometric Mean          +0.0%     -0.0%
```

Fixes #21717.

- - - - -
9b1595c8 by Ross Paterson at 2022-09-27T14:12:01-04:00
implement proposal 106 (Define Kinds Without Promotion) (fixes #6024)

includes corresponding changes to haddock submodule

- - - - -
c2d73cb4 by Andreas Klebinger at 2022-09-28T15:07:30-04:00
Apply some tricks to speed up core lint.

Below are the noteworthy changes and if given their impact on compiler
allocations for a type heavy module:

* Use the oneShot trick on LintM
* Use a unboxed tuple for the result of LintM: ~6% reduction
* Avoid a thunk for the result of typeKind in lintType: ~5% reduction
* lint_app: Don't allocate the error msg in the hot code path: ~4%
  reduction
* lint_app: Eagerly force the in scope set: ~4%
* nonDetCmpType: Try to short cut using reallyUnsafePtrEquality#: ~2%
* lintM: Use a unboxed maybe for the `a` result: ~12%
* lint_app: make go_app tail recursive to avoid allocating the go function
            as heap closure: ~7%
* expandSynTyCon_maybe: Use a specialized data type

For a less type heavy module like nofib/spectral/simple compiled with
-O -dcore-lint allocations went down by ~24% and compile time by ~9%.

-------------------------
Metric Decrease:
    T1969
-------------------------

- - - - -
b74b6191 by sheaf at 2022-09-28T15:08:10-04:00
matchLocalInst: do domination analysis

When multiple Given quantified constraints match a Wanted, and there is
a quantified constraint that dominates all others, we now pick it
to solve the Wanted.

See Note [Use only the best matching quantified constraint].

For example:

  [G] d1: forall a b. ( Eq a, Num b, C a b  ) => D a b
  [G] d2: forall a  .                C a Int  => D a Int
  [W] {w}: D a Int

When solving the Wanted, we find that both Givens match, but we pick
the second, because it has a weaker precondition, C a Int, compared
to (Eq a, Num Int, C a Int). We thus say that d2 dominates d1;
see Note [When does a quantified instance dominate another?].

This domination test is done purely in terms of superclass expansion,
in the function GHC.Tc.Solver.Interact.impliedBySCs. We don't attempt
to do a full round of constraint solving; this simple check suffices
for now.

Fixes #22216 and #22223

- - - - -
2a53ac18 by Simon Peyton Jones at 2022-09-28T17:49:09-04:00
Improve aggressive specialisation

This patch fixes #21286, by not unboxing dictionaries in
worker/wrapper (ever). The main payload is tiny:

* In `GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal.finaliseArgBoxities`, do not unbox
  dictionaries in `get_dmd`.  See Note [Do not unbox class dictionaries]
  in that module

* I also found that imported wrappers were being fruitlessly
  specialised, so I fixed that too, in canSpecImport.
  See Note [Specialising imported functions] point (2).

In doing due diligence in the testsuite I fixed a number of
other things:

* Improve Note [Specialising unfoldings] in GHC.Core.Unfold.Make,
  and Note [Inline specialisations] in GHC.Core.Opt.Specialise,
  and remove duplication between the two. The new Note describes
  how we specialise functions with an INLINABLE pragma.

  And simplify the defn of `spec_unf` in `GHC.Core.Opt.Specialise.specCalls`.

* Improve Note [Worker/wrapper for INLINABLE functions] in
  GHC.Core.Opt.WorkWrap.

  And (critially) make an actual change which is to propagate the
  user-written pragma from the original function to the wrapper; see
  `mkStrWrapperInlinePrag`.

* Write new Note [Specialising imported functions] in
  GHC.Core.Opt.Specialise

All this has a big effect on some compile times. This is
compiler/perf, showing only changes over 1%:

Metrics: compile_time/bytes allocated
-------------------------------------
                LargeRecord(normal)  -50.2% GOOD
           ManyConstructors(normal)   +1.0%
MultiLayerModulesTH_OneShot(normal)   +2.6%
                  PmSeriesG(normal)   -1.1%
                     T10547(normal)   -1.2%
                     T11195(normal)   -1.2%
                     T11276(normal)   -1.0%
                    T11303b(normal)   -1.6%
                     T11545(normal)   -1.4%
                     T11822(normal)   -1.3%
                     T12150(optasm)   -1.0%
                     T12234(optasm)   -1.2%
                     T13056(optasm)   -9.3% GOOD
                     T13253(normal)   -3.8% GOOD
                     T15164(normal)   -3.6% GOOD
                     T16190(normal)   -2.1%
                     T16577(normal)   -2.8% GOOD
                     T16875(normal)   -1.6%
                     T17836(normal)   +2.2%
                    T17977b(normal)   -1.0%
                     T18223(normal)  -33.3% GOOD
                     T18282(normal)   -3.4% GOOD
                     T18304(normal)   -1.4%
                    T18698a(normal)   -1.4% GOOD
                    T18698b(normal)   -1.3% GOOD
                     T19695(normal)   -2.5% GOOD
                      T5837(normal)   -2.3%
                      T9630(normal)  -33.0% GOOD
                      WWRec(normal)   -9.7% GOOD
             hard_hole_fits(normal)   -2.1% GOOD
                     hie002(normal)   +1.6%

                          geo. mean   -2.2%
                          minimum    -50.2%
                          maximum     +2.6%

I diligently investigated some of the big drops.

* Caused by not doing w/w for dictionaries:
    T13056, T15164, WWRec, T18223

* Caused by not fruitlessly specialising wrappers
    LargeRecord, T9630

For runtimes, here is perf/should+_run:

Metrics: runtime/bytes allocated
--------------------------------
               T12990(normal)   -3.8%
                T5205(normal)   -1.3%
                T9203(normal)  -10.7% GOOD
        haddock.Cabal(normal)   +0.1%
         haddock.base(normal)   -1.1%
     haddock.compiler(normal)   -0.3%
        lazy-bs-alloc(normal)   -0.2%
------------------------------------------
                    geo. mean   -0.3%
                    minimum    -10.7%
                    maximum     +0.1%

I did not investigate exactly what happens in T9203.

Nofib is a wash:

+-------------------------------++--+-----------+-----------+
|                               ||  | tsv (rel) | std. err. |
+===============================++==+===========+===========+
|                     real/anna ||  |    -0.13% |      0.0% |
|                      real/fem ||  |    +0.13% |      0.0% |
|                   real/fulsom ||  |    -0.16% |      0.0% |
|                     real/lift ||  |    -1.55% |      0.0% |
|                  real/reptile ||  |    -0.11% |      0.0% |
|                  real/smallpt ||  |    +0.51% |      0.0% |
|          spectral/constraints ||  |    +0.20% |      0.0% |
|               spectral/dom-lt ||  |    +1.80% |      0.0% |
|               spectral/expert ||  |    +0.33% |      0.0% |
+===============================++==+===========+===========+
|                     geom mean ||  |           |           |
+-------------------------------++--+-----------+-----------+

I spent quite some time investigating dom-lt, but it's pretty
complicated.  See my note on !7847.  Conclusion: it's just a delicate
inlining interaction, and we have plenty of those.

Metric Decrease:
    LargeRecord
    T13056
    T13253
    T15164
    T16577
    T18223
    T18282
    T18698a
    T18698b
    T19695
    T9630
    WWRec
    hard_hole_fits
    T9203

- - - - -
addeefc0 by Simon Peyton Jones at 2022-09-28T17:49:09-04:00
Refactor UnfoldingSource and IfaceUnfolding

I finally got tired of the way that IfaceUnfolding reflected
a previous structure of unfoldings, not the current one. This
MR refactors UnfoldingSource and IfaceUnfolding to be simpler
and more consistent.

It's largely just a refactor, but in UnfoldingSource (which moves
to GHC.Types.Basic, since it is now used in IfaceSyn too), I
distinguish between /user-specified/ and /system-generated/ stable
unfoldings.

    data UnfoldingSource
      = VanillaSrc
      | StableUserSrc   -- From a user-specified pragma
      | StableSystemSrc -- From a system-generated unfolding
      | CompulsorySrc

This has a minor effect in CSE (see the use of isisStableUserUnfolding
in GHC.Core.Opt.CSE), which I tripped over when working on
specialisation, but it seems like a Good Thing to know anyway.

- - - - -
7be6f9a4 by Simon Peyton Jones at 2022-09-28T17:49:09-04:00
INLINE/INLINEABLE pragmas in Foreign.Marshal.Array

Foreign.Marshal.Array contains many small functions, all of which are
overloaded, and which are critical for performance. Yet none of them
had pragmas, so it was a fluke whether or not they got inlined.

This patch makes them all either INLINE (small ones) or
INLINEABLE and hence specialisable (larger ones).

See Note [Specialising array operations] in that module.

- - - - -
b0c89dfa by Jade Lovelace at 2022-09-28T17:49:49-04:00
Export OnOff from GHC.Driver.Session

I was working on fixing an issue where HLS was trying to pass its
DynFlags to HLint, but didn't pass any of the disabled language
extensions, which HLint would then assume are on because of their
default values.

Currently it's not possible to get any of the "No" flags because the
`DynFlags.extensions` field can't really be used since it is [OnOff
Extension] and OnOff is not exported.

So let's export it.

- - - - -
2f050687 by Bodigrim at 2022-09-28T17:50:28-04:00
Avoid Data.List.group; prefer Data.List.NonEmpty.group

This allows to avoid further partiality, e. g., map head . group is
replaced by map NE.head . NE.group, and there are less panic calls.

- - - - -
bc0020fa by M Farkas-Dyck at 2022-09-28T22:51:59-04:00
Clean up `findWiredInUnit`. In particular, avoid `head`.

- - - - -
6a2eec98 by Bodigrim at 2022-09-28T22:52:38-04:00
Eliminate headFS, use unconsFS instead

A small step towards #22185 to avoid partial functions + safe implementation
of `startsWithUnderscore`.

- - - - -
5a535172 by Sebastian Graf at 2022-09-29T17:04:20+02:00
Demand: Format Call SubDemands `Cn(sd)` as `C(n,sd)` (#22231)

Justification in #22231. Short form: In a demand like `1C1(C1(L))`
it was too easy to confuse which `1` belongs to which `C`. Now
that should be more obvious.

Fixes #22231

- - - - -
ea0083bf by Bryan Richter at 2022-09-29T15:48:38-04:00
Revert "ci: enable parallel compression for xz"

Combined wxth XZ_OPT=9, this blew the memory capacity of CI runners.

This reverts commit a5f9c35f5831ef5108e87813a96eac62803852ab.

- - - - -
f5e8f493 by Sebastian Graf at 2022-09-30T18:42:13+02:00
Boxity: Don't update Boxity unless worker/wrapper follows (#21754)

A small refactoring in our Core Opt pipeline and some new functions for
transfering argument boxities from one signature to another to facilitate
`Note [Don't change boxity without worker/wrapper]`.

Fixes #21754.

- - - - -
4baf7b1c by M Farkas-Dyck at 2022-09-30T17:45:47-04:00
Scrub various partiality involving empty lists.

Avoids some uses of `head` and `tail`, and some panics when an argument is null.

- - - - -
95ead839 by Alexis King at 2022-10-01T00:37:43-04:00
Fix a bug in continuation capture across multiple stack chunks

- - - - -
22096652 by Bodigrim at 2022-10-01T00:38:22-04:00
Enforce internal invariant of OrdList and fix bugs in viewCons / viewSnoc

`viewCons` used to ignore `Many` constructor completely, returning `VNothing`.
`viewSnoc` violated internal invariant of `Many` being a non-empty list.

- - - - -
48ab9ca5 by Nicolas Trangez at 2022-10-04T20:34:10-04:00
chore: extend `.editorconfig` for C files

- - - - -
b8df5c72 by Brandon Chinn at 2022-10-04T20:34:46-04:00
Fix docs for pattern synonyms
- - - - -
463ffe02 by Oleg Grenrus at 2022-10-04T20:35:24-04:00
Use sameByteArray# in sameByteArray

- - - - -
fbe1e86e by Pierre Le Marre at 2022-10-05T15:58:43+02:00
Minor fixes following Unicode 15.0.0 update

- Fix changelog for Unicode 15.0.0
- Fix the checksums of the downloaded Unicode files, in base's tool: "ucd2haskell".

- - - - -
8a31d02e by Cheng Shao at 2022-10-05T20:40:41-04:00
rts: don't enforce aligned((8)) on 32-bit targets

We simply need to align to the word size for pointer tagging to work. On
32-bit targets, aligned((8)) is wasteful.

- - - - -
532de368 by Ryan Scott at 2022-10-06T07:45:46-04:00
Export symbolSing, SSymbol, and friends (CLC#85)

This implements this Core Libraries Proposal:
https://github.com/haskell/core-libraries-committee/issues/85

In particular, it:

1. Exposes the `symbolSing` method of `KnownSymbol`,
2. Exports the abstract `SSymbol` type used in `symbolSing`, and
3. Defines an API for interacting with `SSymbol`.

This also makes corresponding changes for `natSing`/`KnownNat`/`SNat` and
`charSing`/`KnownChar`/`SChar`. This fixes #15183 and addresses part (2)
of #21568.

- - - - -
d83a92e6 by sheaf at 2022-10-07T07:36:30-04:00
Remove mention of make from README.md

- - - - -
945e8e49 by Bodigrim at 2022-10-10T17:13:31-04:00
Add a newline before since pragma in Data.Array.Byte

- - - - -
44fcdb04 by Vladislav Zavialov at 2022-10-10T17:14:06-04:00
Parser/PostProcess: rename failOp* functions

There are three functions named failOp* in the parser:
	failOpNotEnabledImportQualifiedPost
	failOpImportQualifiedTwice
	failOpFewArgs
Only the last one has anything to do with operators. The other two
were named this way either by mistake or due to a misunderstanding of
what "op" stands for. This small patch corrects this.

- - - - -
96d32ff2 by Simon Peyton Jones at 2022-10-10T22:30:21+01:00
Make rewrite rules "win" over inlining

If a rewrite rule and a rewrite rule compete in the simplifier, this
patch makes sure that the rewrite rule "win".  That is, in general
a bit fragile, but it's a huge help when making specialisation work
reliably, as #21851 and #22097 showed.

The change is fairly straightforwad, and documented in
   Note [Rewrite rules and inlining]
in GHC.Core.Opt.Simplify.Iteration.

Compile-times change, up and down a bit -- in some cases because
we get better specialisation.  But the payoff (more reliable
specialisation) is large.

Metrics: compile_time/bytes allocated
-----------------------------------------------
    T10421(normal)   +3.7% BAD
   T10421a(normal)   +5.5%
    T13253(normal)   +1.3%
      T14052(ghci)   +1.8%
    T15304(normal)   -1.4%
    T16577(normal)   +3.1% BAD
    T17516(normal)   +2.3%
    T17836(normal)   -1.9%
    T18223(normal)   -1.8%
     T8095(normal)   -1.3%
     T9961(normal)   +2.5% BAD

         geo. mean   +0.0%
         minimum     -1.9%
         maximum     +5.5%

Nofib results are (bytes allocated)

+-------------------------------++----------+
|                               ||tsv (rel) |
+===============================++==========+
|           imaginary/paraffins ||   +0.27% |
|                imaginary/rfib ||   -0.04% |
|                     real/anna ||   +0.02% |
|                      real/fem ||   -0.04% |
|                    real/fluid ||   +1.68% |
|                   real/gamteb ||   -0.34% |
|                       real/gg ||   +1.54% |
|                   real/hidden ||   -0.01% |
|                      real/hpg ||   -0.03% |
|                    real/infer ||   -0.03% |
|                   real/prolog ||   +0.02% |
|                  real/veritas ||   -0.47% |
|       shootout/fannkuch-redux ||   -0.03% |
|         shootout/k-nucleotide ||   -0.02% |
|               shootout/n-body ||   -0.06% |
|        shootout/spectral-norm ||   -0.01% |
|         spectral/cryptarithm2 ||   +1.25% |
|             spectral/fibheaps ||  +18.33% |
|           spectral/last-piece ||   -0.34% |
+===============================++==========+
|                     geom mean ||   +0.17% |

There are extensive notes in !8897 about the regressions.
Briefly

* fibheaps: there was a very delicately balanced inlining that
  tipped over the wrong way after this change.

* cryptarithm2 and paraffins are caused by #22274, which is
  a separate issue really.  (I.e. the right fix is *not* to
  make inlining "win" over rules.)

So I'm accepting these changes

Metric Increase:
    T10421
    T16577
    T9961

- - - - -
ed4b5885 by Joachim Breitner at 2022-10-10T23:16:11-04:00
Utils.JSON: do not escapeJsonString in ToJson String instance

as `escapeJsonString` is used in `renderJSON`, so the `JSString`
constructor is meant to carry the unescaped string.

- - - - -
fbb88740 by Matthew Pickering at 2022-10-11T12:48:45-04:00
Tidy implicit binds

We want to put implicit binds into fat interface files, so the easiest
thing to do seems to be to treat them uniformly with other binders.

- - - - -
e058b138 by Matthew Pickering at 2022-10-11T12:48:45-04:00
Interface Files with Core Definitions

This commit adds three new flags

* -fwrite-if-simplified-core: Writes the whole core program into an interface
  file
* -fbyte-code-and-object-code: Generate both byte code and object code
  when compiling a file
* -fprefer-byte-code: Prefer to use byte-code if it's available when
  running TH splices.

The goal for including the core bindings in an interface file is to be able to restart the compiler pipeline
at the point just after simplification and before code generation. Once compilation is
restarted then code can be created for the byte code backend.
This can significantly speed up
start-times for projects in GHCi. HLS already implements its own version of these extended interface
files for this reason.

Preferring to use byte-code means that we can avoid some potentially
expensive code generation steps (see #21700)

* Producing object code is much slower than producing bytecode, and normally you
  need to compile with `-dynamic-too` to produce code in the static and dynamic way, the
  dynamic way just for Template Haskell execution when using a dynamically linked compiler.

* Linking many large object files, which happens once per splice, can be quite
  expensive compared to linking bytecode.

And you can get GHC to compile the necessary byte code so
`-fprefer-byte-code` has access to it by using
`-fbyte-code-and-object-code`.

Fixes #21067

- - - - -
9789ea8e by Matthew Pickering at 2022-10-11T12:48:45-04:00
Teach -fno-code about -fprefer-byte-code

This patch teachs the code generation logic of -fno-code about
-fprefer-byte-code, so that if we need to generate code for a module
which prefers byte code, then we generate byte code rather than object
code.

We keep track separately which modules need object code and which byte
code and then enable the relevant code generation for each. Typically
the option will be enabled globally so one of these sets should be empty
and we will just turn on byte code or object code generation.

We also fix the bug where we would generate code for a module which
enables Template Haskell despite the fact it was unecessary.

Fixes #22016

- - - - -
caced757 by Simon Peyton Jones at 2022-10-11T12:49:21-04:00
Don't keep exit join points so much

We were religiously keeping exit join points throughout, which
had some bad effects (#21148, #22084).

This MR does two things:

* Arranges that exit join points are inhibited from inlining
  only in /one/ Simplifier pass (right after Exitification).

  See Note [Be selective about not-inlining exit join points]
  in GHC.Core.Opt.Exitify

  It's not a big deal, but it shaves 0.1% off compile times.

* Inline used-once non-recursive join points very aggressively
  Given join j x = rhs in
        joinrec k y = ....j x....

  where this is the only occurrence of `j`, we want to inline `j`.
  (Unless sm_keep_exits is on.)

  See Note [Inline used-once non-recursive join points] in
  GHC.Core.Opt.Simplify.Utils

  This is just a tidy-up really.  It doesn't change allocation, but
  getting rid of a binding is always good.

Very effect on nofib -- some up and down.

- - - - -
284cf387 by Simon Peyton Jones at 2022-10-11T12:49:21-04:00
Make SpecConstr bale out less often

When doing performance debugging on #22084 / !8901, I found that the
algorithm in SpecConstr.decreaseSpecCount was so aggressive that if
there were /more/ specialisations available for an outer function,
that could more or less kill off specialisation for an /inner/
function.  (An example was in nofib/spectral/fibheaps.)

This patch makes it a bit more aggressive, by dividing by 2, rather
than by the number of outer specialisations.

This makes the program bigger, temporarily:

   T19695(normal) ghc/alloc   +11.3% BAD

because we get more specialisation.  But lots of other programs
compile a bit faster and the geometric mean in perf/compiler
is 0.0%.

Metric Increase:
    T19695

- - - - -
66af1399 by Cheng Shao at 2022-10-11T12:49:59-04:00
CmmToC: emit explicit tail calls when the C compiler supports it

Clang 13+ supports annotating a return statement using the musttail
attribute, which guarantees that it lowers to a tail call if compilation
succeeds.

This patch takes advantage of that feature for the unregisterised code
generator. The configure script tests availability of the musttail
attribute, if it's available, the Cmm tail calls will become C tail
calls that avoids the mini interpreter trampoline overhead. Nothing is
affected if the musttail attribute is not supported.

Clang documentation:
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#musttail

- - - - -
7f0decd5 by Matthew Pickering at 2022-10-11T12:50:40-04:00
Don't include BufPos in interface files

Ticket #22162 pointed out that the build directory was leaking into the
ABI hash of a module because the BufPos depended on the location of the
build tree.

BufPos is only used in GHC.Parser.PostProcess.Haddock, and the
information doesn't need to be propagated outside the context of a
module.

Fixes #22162

- - - - -
dce9f320 by Cheng Shao at 2022-10-11T12:51:19-04:00
CLabel: fix isInfoTableLabel

isInfoTableLabel does not take Cmm info table into account. This patch is required for data section layout of wasm32 NCG to work.

- - - - -
da679f2e by Bodigrim at 2022-10-11T18:02:59-04:00
Extend documentation for Data.List, mostly wrt infinite lists

- - - - -
9c099387 by jwaldmann at 2022-10-11T18:02:59-04:00
Expand comment for Data.List.permutations
- - - - -
d3863cb7 by Bodigrim at 2022-10-11T18:03:37-04:00
ByteArray# is unlifted, not unboxed

- - - - -
f6260e8b by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-11T23:45:10-04:00
rts: Add missing declaration of stg_noDuplicate

- - - - -
69ccec2c by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-11T23:45:10-04:00
base: Move CString, CStringLen to GHC.Foreign

- - - - -
f6e8feb4 by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-11T23:45:10-04:00
base: Move IPE helpers to GHC.InfoProv

- - - - -
866c736e by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-11T23:45:10-04:00
rts: Refactor IPE tracing support

- - - - -
6b0d2022 by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-11T23:45:10-04:00
Refactor IPE initialization

Here we refactor the representation of info table provenance information
in object code to significantly reduce its size and link-time impact.
Specifically, we deduplicate strings and represent them as 32-bit
offsets into a common string table.

In addition, we rework the registration logic to eliminate allocation
from the registration path, which is run from a static initializer where
things like allocation are technically undefined behavior (although it
did previously seem to work). For similar reasons we eliminate lock
usage from registration path, instead relying on atomic CAS.

Closes #22077.

- - - - -
9b572d54 by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-11T23:45:10-04:00
Separate IPE source file from span

The source file name can very often be shared across many IPE entries
whereas the source coordinates are generally unique. Separate the two to
exploit sharing of the former.

- - - - -
27978ceb by Krzysztof Gogolewski at 2022-10-11T23:45:46-04:00
Make Cmm Lint messages use dump style

Lint errors indicate an internal error in GHC, so it makes sense to use
it instead of the user style. This is consistent with Core Lint and STG Lint:

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/blob/22096652/compiler/GHC/Core/Lint.hs#L429

https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/blob/22096652/compiler/GHC/Stg/Lint.hs#L144

Fixes #22218.

- - - - -
64a390d9 by Bryan Richter at 2022-10-12T09:52:51+03:00
Mark T7919 as fragile

On x86_64-linux, T7919 timed out ~30 times during July 2022.

And again ~30 times in September 2022.

- - - - -
481467a5 by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-12T08:08:37-04:00
rts: Don't hint inlining of appendToRunQueue

These hints have resulted in compile-time warnings due to failed
inlinings for quite some time. Moreover, it's quite unlikely that
inlining them is all that beneficial given that they are rather sizeable
functions.

Resolves #22280.

- - - - -
81915089 by Curran McConnell at 2022-10-12T16:32:26-04:00
remove name shadowing

- - - - -
626652f7 by Tamar Christina at 2022-10-12T16:33:13-04:00
winio: do not re-translate input when handle is uncooked

- - - - -
5172789a by Charles Taylor at 2022-10-12T16:33:57-04:00
Unrestricted OverloadedLabels (#11671)

Implements GHC proposal:
https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/blob/master/proposals/0170-unrestricted-overloadedlabels.rst

- - - - -
ce293908 by Andreas Klebinger at 2022-10-13T05:58:19-04:00
Add a perf test for the generics code pattern from #21839.

This code showed a strong shift between compile time (got worse) and
run time (got a lot better) recently which is perfectly acceptable.

However it wasn't clear why the compile time regression was happening
initially so I'm adding this test to make it easier to track such changes
in the future.

- - - - -
78ab7afe by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-13T05:58:56-04:00
rts/linker: Consolidate initializer/finalizer handling

Here we extend our treatment of initializer/finalizer priorities to
include ELF and in so doing refactor things to share the implementation
with PEi386. As well, I fix a subtle misconception of the ordering
behavior for `.ctors`.

Fixes #21847.

- - - - -
44692713 by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-13T05:58:56-04:00
rts/linker: Add support for .fini sections

- - - - -
beebf546 by Simon Hengel at 2022-10-13T05:59:37-04:00
Update phases.rst

(the name of the original source file is $1, not $2)
- - - - -
eda6c05e by Finley McIlwaine at 2022-10-13T06:00:17-04:00
Clearer error msg for newtype GADTs with defaulted kind

When a newtype introduces GADT eq_specs due to a defaulted
RuntimeRep, we detect this and print the error message with
explicit kinds.

This also refactors newtype type checking to use the new
diagnostic infra.

Fixes #21447

- - - - -
43ab435a by Pierre Le Marre at 2022-10-14T07:45:43-04:00
Add standard Unicode case predicates isUpperCase and isLowerCase.

These predicates use the standard Unicode case properties and are more intuitive than isUpper and isLower.

Approved by CLC in https://github.com/haskell/core-libraries-committee/issues/90#issuecomment-1276649403.

Fixes #14589

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aec5a443 by Bodigrim at 2022-10-14T07:46:21-04:00
Add type signatures in where-clause of Data.List.permutations

The type of interleave' is very much revealing, otherwise it's extremely tough to decipher.

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ee0deb80 by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-14T18:29:20-04:00
rts: Use pthread_setname_np correctly on Darwin

As noted in #22206, pthread_setname_np on Darwin only supports
setting the name of the calling thread. Consequently we must introduce
a trampoline which first sets the thread name before entering the thread
entrypoint.
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8eff62a4 by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-14T18:29:57-04:00
testsuite: Add test for #22282

This will complement mpickering's more general port of foundation's
numerical testsuite, providing a test for the specific case found
in #22282.

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62a55001 by Ben Gamari at 2022-10-14T18:29:57-04:00
ncg/aarch64: Fix sub-word sign extension yet again

In adc7f108141a973b6dcb02a7836eed65d61230e8 we fixed a number of issues
to do with sign extension in the AArch64 NCG found by ghc/test-primops>.
However, this patch made a critical error, assuming that getSomeReg
would allocate a fresh register for the result of its evaluation.
However, this is not the case as `getSomeReg (CmmReg r) == r`.
Consequently, any mutation of the register returned by `getSomeReg` may
have unwanted side-effects on other expressions also mentioning `r`. In
the fix listed above, this manifested as the registers containing the
operands of binary arithmetic operations being incorrectly
sign-extended. This resulted in #22282.

Sadly, the rather simple structure of the tests generated
by `test-primops` meant that this particular case was not exercised.
Even more surprisingly, none of our testsuite caught this case.

Here we fix this by ensuring that intermediate sign extension is
performed in a fresh register.

Fixes #22282.

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54e41b16 by Teo Camarasu at 2022-10-15T18:09:24+01:00
rts: ensure we are below maxHeapSize after returning megablocks

When the heap is heavily block fragmented the live byte size might be
low while the memory usage is high. We want to ensure that heap overflow
triggers in these cases.

We do so by checking that we can return enough megablocks to
under maxHeapSize at the end of GC.

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29bb90db by Teo Camarasu at 2022-10-15T18:09:24+01:00
rts: trigger a major collection if megablock usage exceeds maxHeapSize

When the heap is suffering from block fragmentation, live bytes might be
low while megablock usage is high.

If megablock usage exceeds maxHeapSize, we want to trigger a major GC to
try to recover some memory otherwise we will die from a heapOverflow at
the end of the GC.

Fixes #21927

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4a4641ca by Teo Camarasu at 2022-10-15T18:11:29+01:00
Add realease note for #21927

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c1e5719a by Sebastian Graf at 2022-10-17T11:58:46-04:00
DmdAnal: Look through unfoldings of DataCon wrappers (#22241)

Previously, the demand signature we computed upfront for a DataCon wrapper

lacked boxity information and was much less precise than the demand transformer

for the DataCon worker.

In this patch we adopt the solution to look through unfoldings of DataCon

wrappers during Demand Analysis, but still attach a demand signature for other

passes such as the Simplifier.

See `Note [DmdAnal for DataCon wrappers]` for more details.

Fixes #22241.

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005ed79f by Andreas Klebinger at 2022-10-18T00:54:16+02:00
Separate core inlining logic from `Unfolding` type.

This seems like a good idea either way, but is mostly motivated by a
patch where this avoids a module loop.

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e6a52f1e by Andreas Klebinger at 2022-10-18T01:55:21+02:00
Prototype for deep inlining discounts.

This is very much not finished but the basic idea is the allow for
reasonably accurate estimates how much smaller a inlined function will
be if applied to a certain argument.

See #21938 for a proper description of the idea.

Optimize UnVarSet slightly

min discount of 10 if the arg is a value

Add a depth discount to nested argInfo/argGuidance

Move some functions around to avoid a module loop

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b95caae5 by Andreas Klebinger at 2022-10-18T01:55:26+02:00
Remove one flag

- - - - -


30 changed files:

- − .appveyor.sh
- .editorconfig
- .gitlab/ci.sh
- README.md
- − appveyor.yml
- compiler/GHC.hs
- compiler/GHC/Builtin/Names.hs
- compiler/GHC/Builtin/PrimOps.hs
- compiler/GHC/Builtin/Types.hs
- compiler/GHC/Builtin/Uniques.hs
- compiler/GHC/Builtin/primops.txt.pp
- compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Instr.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/CLabel.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/CommonBlockElim.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/ContFlowOpt.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Dataflow.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/DebugBlock.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Lint.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Liveness.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Node.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Parser.y
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Reg.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Sink.hs
- compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch.hs
- compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm.hs
- compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/CodeGen.hs
- compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/Instr.hs
- compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/Ppr.hs
- compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/BlockLayout.hs
- compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/CFG.hs


The diff was not included because it is too large.


View it on GitLab: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/compare/f0919c83e3ef82ad63e44723631b672e4580fb29...b95caae5a4beca361c002e231b58e9f76bcc23d2

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