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authorRyan Scott <ryan.gl.scott@gmail.com>2019-03-12 18:15:38 -0400
committerMarge Bot <ben+marge-bot@smart-cactus.org>2019-03-15 10:17:54 -0400
commit610ec224a49e092c802a336570fd9613ea15ef3c (patch)
treecc79ac561669b51099eb37f222e8179d48a54d59
parentafc80730fd235f5c5b2d0b9fc5a10c16ef9865f6 (diff)
downloadhaskell-610ec224a49e092c802a336570fd9613ea15ef3c.tar.gz
Update Trac ticket URLs to point to GitLab
This moves all URL references to Trac tickets to their corresponding GitLab counterparts.
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-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn062.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T12146.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2490.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2901.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2993.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T3265.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T4042.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail048.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail052.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail053.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/rts/T10590.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/T9646/readme.txt2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/Makefile4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T11562.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T2520.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3016.hs4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3118.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3234.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T4306.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702plugin/T7702plugin.cabal2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/rule1.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl-T1370.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl014.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl017.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl018.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl019.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/spec003.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T13429_2.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T2486.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3403.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3437.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T5587.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T9128.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/stage1/T2632.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T10482a.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T1988.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T9208.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/all.T4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/stranal/should_run/T11555a.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/Makefile4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/T11629.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/T2386.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/T2597a.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/T2597b.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/T2674.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/T3100.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/T3467.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/TH_1tuple.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/TH_emptycase.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/TH_reifyMkName.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/TH_runIO.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/th/TH_spliceGuard.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD1.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD2.hs4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD3.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD4.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/Makefile2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T12734a.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T13651.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1470.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1495.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2045.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2433.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494-2.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2497.hs4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2572.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2735.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3018.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3219.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3346.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3391.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3955.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9708.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9971.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9973.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/all.T2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/syn-perf2.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc208.hs4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc217.hs4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc220.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc226.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc227.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc228.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc230.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc231.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc232.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc235.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc239.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc241.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc242.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/FDsFromGivens.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T10715.hs4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T11948.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1633.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1899.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2126.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2307.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2414.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2538.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2714.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2806.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2994.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3155.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3176.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3323.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3406.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3613.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T5236.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8392a.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8806.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8883.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T9858a.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/TcCoercibleFail.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/all.T2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail138.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail169.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail175.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail177.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail178.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail185.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail186.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail187.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail188.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail204.hs2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_run/Defer01.hs2
-rw-r--r--utils/gen-dll/Main.hs2
-rw-r--r--utils/ghc-in-ghci/settings.ghci2
-rw-r--r--utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs2
-rw-r--r--utils/runghc/Main.hs2
490 files changed, 1226 insertions, 1226 deletions
diff --git a/HACKING.md b/HACKING.md
index cb68889904..0a532b4eff 100644
--- a/HACKING.md
+++ b/HACKING.md
@@ -8,9 +8,9 @@ information to help you get started right away.
The GHC Developer's Wiki
========================
-The home for GHC hackers is our Trac instance, located here:
+The home for GHC hackers is our GitLab instance, located here:
-<http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc>
+<https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc>
From here, you can file bugs (or look them up,) use the wiki, view the
`git` history, among other things. Of particular note is the building
@@ -64,8 +64,8 @@ Now, hack on your copy and rebuild (with `make`) as necessary.
Then start by making your commits however you want. When you're done, you can submit
a pull request on Github for small changes. For larger changes the patch needs to be
submitted to [Phabricator](https://phabricator.haskell.org/) for code review.
- The GHC Trac Wiki has a good summary for the [overall process](https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/WorkingConventions/FixingBugs)
- as well as a guide on
+ The GHC Wiki has a good summary for the [overall process](https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/WorkingConventions/FixingBugs)
+ as well as a guide on
[how to use Phabricator/arcanist](https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Phabricator).
diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile
index 73dc7ed8be..f172ab0b3f 100644
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ MAKEFLAGS += --no-builtin-rules
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Sanitize environment
-# See Trac #11530
+# See #11530
export GREP_OPTIONS :=
ifneq "$(filter maintainer-clean distclean clean clean_% help,$(MAKECMDGOALS))" ""
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index 02bf4a8f1a..ef6652a0ed 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ environment for the Haskell functional programming language.
For more information, visit [GHC's web site][1].
-Information for developers of GHC can be found on the [GHC Trac][2].
+Information for developers of GHC can be found on the [GHC issue tracker][2].
Getting the Source
diff --git a/aclocal.m4 b/aclocal.m4
index 1647119e03..1d19b30789 100644
--- a/aclocal.m4
+++ b/aclocal.m4
@@ -1483,7 +1483,7 @@ AC_SUBST([GhcPkgCmd])
# to compile .hc code.
#
# -fwrapv is needed for gcc to emit well-behaved code in the presence of
-# integer wrap around. (Trac #952)
+# integer wrap around. (#952)
#
AC_DEFUN([FP_GCC_EXTRA_FLAGS],
[AC_REQUIRE([FP_GCC_VERSION])
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/Demand.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/Demand.hs
index 52bdf67c63..184f3d5f39 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/Demand.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/Demand.hs
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ mkJointDmds ss as = zipWithEqual "mkJointDmds" mkJointDmd ss as
Note [Exceptions and strictness]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We used to smart about catching exceptions, but we aren't anymore.
-See Trac #14998 for the way it's resolved at the moment.
+See #14998 for the way it's resolved at the moment.
Here's a historic breakdown:
@@ -138,17 +138,17 @@ their argument, which is useful information for usage analysis. Still with a
In 7c0fff4 (July 15), Simon argued that giving `catch#` et al. a
'strictApply1Dmd' leads to substantial performance gains. That was at the cost
-of correctness, as Trac #10712 proved. So, back to 'lazyApply1Dmd' in
+of correctness, as #10712 proved. So, back to 'lazyApply1Dmd' in
28638dfe79e (Dec 15).
-Motivated to reproduce the gains of 7c0fff4 without the breakage of Trac #10712,
-Ben opened Trac #11222. Simon made the demand analyser "understand catch" in
+Motivated to reproduce the gains of 7c0fff4 without the breakage of #10712,
+Ben opened #11222. Simon made the demand analyser "understand catch" in
9915b656 (Jan 16) by adding a new 'catchArgDmd', which basically said to call
its argument strictly, but also swallow any thrown exceptions in
'postProcessDmdResult'. This was realized by extending the 'Str' constructor of
'ArgStr' with a 'ExnStr' field, indicating that it catches the exception, and
adding a 'ThrowsExn' constructor to the 'Termination' lattice as an element
-between 'Dunno' and 'Diverges'. Then along came Trac #11555 and finally #13330,
+between 'Dunno' and 'Diverges'. Then along came #11555 and finally #13330,
so we had to revert to 'lazyApply1Dmd' again in 701256df88c (Mar 17).
This left the other variants like 'catchRetry#' having 'catchArgDmd', which is
@@ -159,10 +159,10 @@ there was none. We removed the last usages of 'catchArgDmd' in 00b8ecb7
removed in ef6b283 (Jan 19): We got rid of 'ThrowsExn' and 'ExnStr' again and
removed any code that was dealing with the peculiarities.
-Where did the speed-ups vanish to? In Trac #14998, item 3 established that
+Where did the speed-ups vanish to? In #14998, item 3 established that
turning 'catch#' strict in its first argument didn't bring back any of the
alleged performance benefits. Item 2 of that ticket finally found out that it
-was entirely due to 'catchException's new (since Trac #11555) definition, which
+was entirely due to 'catchException's new (since #11555) definition, which
was simply
catchException !io handler = catch io handler
@@ -312,7 +312,7 @@ splitStrProdDmd n (SProd ds) = WARN( not (ds `lengthIs` n),
Just ds
splitStrProdDmd _ (SCall {}) = Nothing
-- This can happen when the programmer uses unsafeCoerce,
- -- and we don't then want to crash the compiler (Trac #9208)
+ -- and we don't then want to crash the compiler (#9208)
{-
************************************************************************
@@ -482,7 +482,7 @@ addCaseBndrDmd (JD { sd = ms, ud = mu }) alt_dmds
The demand on a binder in a case alternative comes
(a) From the demand on the binder itself
(b) From the demand on the case binder
-Forgetting (b) led directly to Trac #10148.
+Forgetting (b) led directly to #10148.
Example. Source code:
f x@(p,_) = if p then foo x else True
@@ -500,7 +500,7 @@ After strictness analysis:
True -> foo wild_X7 }
It's true that ds_dnz is *itself* absent, but the use of wild_X7 means
-that it is very much alive and demanded. See Trac #10148 for how the
+that it is very much alive and demanded. See #10148 for how the
consequences play out.
This is needed even for non-product types, in case the case-binder
@@ -603,7 +603,7 @@ splitUseProdDmd n (UProd ds) = WARN( not (ds `lengthIs` n),
Just ds
splitUseProdDmd _ (UCall _ _) = Nothing
-- This can happen when the programmer uses unsafeCoerce,
- -- and we don't then want to crash the compiler (Trac #9208)
+ -- and we don't then want to crash the compiler (#9208)
useCount :: Use u -> Count
useCount Abs = One
@@ -627,7 +627,7 @@ isStrictDmd returns true only of demands that are
both strict
and used
In particular, it is False for <HyperStr, Abs>, which can and does
-arise in, say (Trac #7319)
+arise in, say (#7319)
f x = raise# <some exception>
Then 'x' is not used, so f gets strictness <HyperStr,Abs> -> .
Now the w/w generates
@@ -637,7 +637,7 @@ At this point we really don't want to convert to
fx = case absentError "unused" of x -> raise <some exception>
Since the program is going to diverge, this swaps one error for another,
but it's really a bad idea to *ever* evaluate an absent argument.
-In Trac #7319 we get
+In #7319 we get
T7319.exe: Oops! Entered absent arg w_s1Hd{v} [lid] [base:GHC.Base.String{tc 36u}]
Note [Dealing with call demands]
@@ -844,7 +844,7 @@ Consider this:
where A,B are the constructors of a GADT. We'll get a U(U,U) demand
on x from the A branch, but that's a stupid demand for x itself, which
has type 'a'. Indeed we get ASSERTs going off (notably in
-splitUseProdDmd, Trac #8569).
+splitUseProdDmd, #8569).
Bottom line: we really don't want to have a binder whose demand is more
deeply-nested than its type. There are various ways to tackle this.
@@ -1501,7 +1501,7 @@ There are several wrinkles:
* In a previous incarnation of GHC we needed to be extra careful in the
case of an *unlifted type*, because unlifted values are evaluated
- even if they are not used. Example (see Trac #9254):
+ even if they are not used. Example (see #9254):
f :: (() -> (# Int#, () #)) -> ()
-- Strictness signature is
-- <C(S(LS)), 1*C1(U(A,1*U()))>
@@ -1696,7 +1696,7 @@ That's fine: if we are doing strictness analysis we are also doing inlining,
so we'll have inlined 'op' into a cast. So we can bale out in a conservative
way, returning nopDmdType.
-It is (just.. Trac #8329) possible to be running strictness analysis *without*
+It is (just.. #8329) possible to be running strictness analysis *without*
having inlined class ops from single-method classes. Suppose you are using
ghc --make; and the first module has a local -O0 flag. So you may load a class
without interface pragmas, ie (currently) without an unfolding for the class
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/Id.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/Id.hs
index 199842ceb1..04840c193f 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/Id.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/Id.hs
@@ -386,7 +386,7 @@ of reasons:
* Look them up in the current substitution when we come across
occurrences of them (in Subst.lookupIdSubst). Lacking this we
can get an out-of-date unfolding, which can in turn make the
- simplifier go into an infinite loop (Trac #9857)
+ simplifier go into an infinite loop (#9857)
* Ensure that for dfuns that the specialiser does not float dict uses
above their defns, which would prevent good simplifications happening.
@@ -560,7 +560,7 @@ un-saturated. Example:
This has a compulsory unfolding because we can't lambda-bind those
arguments. But the compulsory unfolding may leave levity-polymorphic
-lambdas if it is not applied to enough arguments; e.g. (Trac #14561)
+lambdas if it is not applied to enough arguments; e.g. (#14561)
bad :: forall (a :: TYPE r). a -> a
bad = unsafeCoerce#
@@ -569,7 +569,7 @@ And we want that magic to apply to levity-polymorphic compulsory-inline things.
The easiest way to do this is for hasNoBinding to return True of all things
that have compulsory unfolding. A very Ids with a compulsory unfolding also
have a binding, but it does not harm to say they don't here, and its a very
-simple way to fix Trac #14561.
+simple way to fix #14561.
Note [Primop wrappers]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -942,7 +942,7 @@ where the '*' means 'LoopBreaker'. Then if we float we must get
where g' is also marked as LoopBreaker. If not, terrible things
can happen if we re-simplify the binding (and the Simplifier does
-sometimes simplify a term twice); see Trac #4345.
+sometimes simplify a term twice); see #4345.
It's not so simple to retain
* worker info
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/Lexeme.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/Lexeme.hs
index d397deaea8..00559ab1c7 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/Lexeme.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/Lexeme.hs
@@ -159,9 +159,9 @@ okConIdOcc str = okIdOcc str ||
is_tuple_name1 True str ||
-- Is it a boxed tuple...
is_tuple_name1 False str ||
- -- ...or an unboxed tuple (Trac #12407)...
+ -- ...or an unboxed tuple (#12407)...
is_sum_name1 str
- -- ...or an unboxed sum (Trac #12514)?
+ -- ...or an unboxed sum (#12514)?
where
-- check for tuple name, starting at the beginning
is_tuple_name1 True ('(' : rest) = is_tuple_name2 True rest
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/MkId.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/MkId.hs
index e3b928c4c7..85e4905305 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/MkId.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/MkId.hs
@@ -746,7 +746,7 @@ constructor has no wrapper, but whether a constructor has a wrapper depends, for
instance, on the order of type argument of that constructors. Therefore changing
the order of type argument could make previously working RULEs fail.
-See also https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/15840 .
+See also https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/15840 .
Note [Bangs on imported data constructors]
@@ -778,7 +778,7 @@ We certainly do not want to make a wrapper
For a start, it's still to generate a no-op. But worse, since wrappers
are currently injected at TidyCore, we don't even optimise it away!
So the stupid case expression stays there. This actually happened for
-the Integer data type (see Trac #1600 comment:66)!
+the Integer data type (see #1600 comment:66)!
Note [Data con wrappers and GADT syntax]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -821,7 +821,7 @@ strictness/unpackedness to use for the fields of a data type constructor. But
there is an exception to this rule: newtype constructors. You might not think
that newtypes would pose a challenge, since newtypes are seemingly forbidden
from having strictness annotations in the first place. But consider this
-(from Trac #16141):
+(from #16141):
{-# LANGUAGE StrictData #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O #-}
@@ -1045,7 +1045,7 @@ And it'd be fine to unpack a product type with existential components
too, but that would require a bit more plumbing, so currently we don't.
So for now we require: null (dataConExTyCoVars data_con)
-See Trac #14978
+See #14978
Note [Unpack one-wide fields]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1175,7 +1175,7 @@ mkPrimOpId prim_op
-- We give PrimOps a NOINLINE pragma so that we don't
-- get silly warnings from Desugar.dsRule (the inline_shadows_rule
-- test) about a RULE conflicting with a possible inlining
- -- cf Trac #7287
+ -- cf #7287
-- For each ccall we manufacture a separate CCallOpId, giving it
-- a fresh unique, a type that is correct for this particular ccall,
@@ -1209,7 +1209,7 @@ mkFCallId dflags uniq fcall ty
strict_sig = mkClosedStrictSig (replicate arity topDmd) topRes
-- the call does not claim to be strict in its arguments, since they
-- may be lifted (foreign import prim) and the called code doesn't
- -- necessarily force them. See Trac #11076.
+ -- necessarily force them. See #11076.
{-
************************************************************************
* *
@@ -1499,7 +1499,7 @@ are truly used call-by-need, with no code motion. Key examples:
Again, it's clear that 'a' will be evaluated strictly (and indeed
applied to a state token) but we want to make sure that any exceptions
arising from the evaluation of 'a' are caught by the catch (see
- Trac #11555).
+ #11555).
Implementing 'lazy' is a bit tricky:
@@ -1513,7 +1513,7 @@ Implementing 'lazy' is a bit tricky:
are exposed in the interface file. Otherwise, the unfolding for
(say) pseq in the interface file will not mention 'lazy', so if we
inline 'pseq' we'll totally miss the very thing that 'lazy' was
- there for in the first place. See Trac #3259 for a real world
+ there for in the first place. See #3259 for a real world
example.
* Suppose CorePrep sees (catch# (lazy e) b). At all costs we must
@@ -1550,7 +1550,7 @@ if library authors could explicitly tell the compiler that a certain lambda is
called at most once. The oneShot function allows that.
'oneShot' is levity-polymorphic, i.e. the type variables can refer to unlifted
-types as well (Trac #10744); e.g.
+types as well (#10744); e.g.
oneShot (\x:Int# -> x +# 1#)
Like most magic functions it has a compulsory unfolding, so there is no need
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/Module.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/Module.hs
index ec3a9462cf..9c9547fef1 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/Module.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/Module.hs
@@ -199,7 +199,7 @@ import {-# SOURCE #-} Packages (componentIdString, improveUnitId, PackageConfigM
-- only ever ComponentIds, and some ComponentIds happen to have
-- more information (UnitIds).
-- - Same as Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax:PkgName, see
--- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10279
+-- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10279
-- - The same as PackageKey in GHC 7.10 (we renamed it because
-- they don't necessarily identify packages anymore.)
-- - Same as -this-package-key/-package-name flags
@@ -217,7 +217,7 @@ import {-# SOURCE #-} Packages (componentIdString, improveUnitId, PackageConfigM
-- PackageName: The "name" field in a Cabal file, something like "lens".
-- - Same as Distribution.Package.PackageName
-- - DIFFERENT FROM Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax:PkgName, see
--- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10279
+-- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10279
-- - DIFFERENT FROM -package-name flag
-- - DIFFERENT FROM the 'name' field in an installed package
-- information. This field could more accurately be described
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/NameCache.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/NameCache.hs
index 13fb1f57fe..f845bc9562 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/NameCache.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/NameCache.hs
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ are two reasons why we might look up an Orig RdrName for built-in syntax,
* Template Haskell turns a BuiltInSyntax Name into a TH.NameG
(DsMeta.globalVar), and parses a NameG into an Orig RdrName
(Convert.thRdrName). So, e.g. $(do { reify '(,); ... }) will
- go this route (Trac #8954).
+ go this route (#8954).
-}
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/OccName.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/OccName.hs
index cb846f74ec..bbd40f85a5 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/OccName.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/OccName.hs
@@ -790,7 +790,7 @@ type TidyOccEnv = UniqFM Int
- We use trailing digits to subtly indicate a unification variable
in typechecker error message; see TypeRep.tidyTyVarBndr
-We have to take care though! Consider a machine-generated module (Trac #10370)
+We have to take care though! Consider a machine-generated module (#10370)
module Foo where
a1 = e1
a2 = e2
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/PatSyn.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/PatSyn.hs
index 2f8cee4149..fe296bf054 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/PatSyn.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/PatSyn.hs
@@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ In a pattern synonym signature we write
Note that the "required" context comes first, then the "provided"
context. Moreover, the "required" context must not mention
existentially-bound type variables; that is, ones not mentioned in
-res_ty. See lots of discussion in Trac #10928.
+res_ty. See lots of discussion in #10928.
If there is no "provided" context, you can omit it; but you
can't omit the "required" part (unless you omit both).
diff --git a/compiler/basicTypes/RdrName.hs b/compiler/basicTypes/RdrName.hs
index 60e4e8476f..3dfe916b83 100644
--- a/compiler/basicTypes/RdrName.hs
+++ b/compiler/basicTypes/RdrName.hs
@@ -509,7 +509,7 @@ gre_lcl is True, or gre_imp is non-empty.
It is just possible to have *both* if there is a module loop: a Name
is defined locally in A, and also brought into scope by importing a
-module that SOURCE-imported A. Exapmle (Trac #7672):
+module that SOURCE-imported A. Exapmle (#7672):
A.hs-boot module A where
data T
@@ -1256,7 +1256,7 @@ Rationale for (a). Consider
The unqualified 'x' can only come from import #2. The qualified 'M.x'
could come from either, but bestImport picks import #2, because it is
more likely to be useful in other imports, as indeed it is in this
-case (see Trac #5211 for a concrete example).
+case (see #5211 for a concrete example).
But the rules are not perfect; consider
import qualified M -- Import #1
diff --git a/compiler/cmm/CmmSink.hs b/compiler/cmm/CmmSink.hs
index 6317cfe929..26d0a6fd9a 100644
--- a/compiler/cmm/CmmSink.hs
+++ b/compiler/cmm/CmmSink.hs
@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ elemLRegSet l = IntSet.member (getKey (getUnique l))
--
-- a nice loop, but we didn't eliminate the silly assignment at the end.
-- See Note [dependent assignments], which would probably fix this.
--- This is #8336 on Trac.
+-- This is #8336.
--
-- -----------
-- (2) From stg_atomically_frame in PrimOps.cmm
diff --git a/compiler/cmm/CmmUtils.hs b/compiler/cmm/CmmUtils.hs
index 5cfc5f482e..8a3b857ed9 100644
--- a/compiler/cmm/CmmUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/cmm/CmmUtils.hs
@@ -448,7 +448,7 @@ regsOverlap _ reg reg' = reg == reg'
--
-- We must check for overlapping registers and not just equal
-- registers here, otherwise CmmSink may incorrectly reorder
--- assignments that conflict due to overlap. See Trac #10521 and Note
+-- assignments that conflict due to overlap. See #10521 and Note
-- [Overlapping global registers].
regUsedIn :: DynFlags -> CmmReg -> CmmExpr -> Bool
regUsedIn dflags = regUsedIn_ where
diff --git a/compiler/cmm/PprC.hs b/compiler/cmm/PprC.hs
index 4763c5db31..bd019b13a8 100644
--- a/compiler/cmm/PprC.hs
+++ b/compiler/cmm/PprC.hs
@@ -179,7 +179,7 @@ pprAlignment words =
--
-- It's a reasonable assumption also known as natural alignment.
-- Although some architectures have different alignment rules.
--- One of known exceptions is m68k (Trac #11395, comment:16) where:
+-- One of known exceptions is m68k (#11395, comment:16) where:
-- __alignof__(StgWord) == 2, sizeof(StgWord) == 4
--
-- Thus we explicitly increase alignment by using
diff --git a/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmClosure.hs b/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmClosure.hs
index 8a32a7fff9..fff2078237 100644
--- a/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmClosure.hs
+++ b/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmClosure.hs
@@ -732,7 +732,7 @@ blackHoleOnEntry cl_info
{- Note [Black-holing non-updatable thunks]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We must not black-hole non-updatable (single-entry) thunks otherwise
-we run into issues like Trac #10414. Specifically:
+we run into issues like #10414. Specifically:
* There is no reason to black-hole a non-updatable thunk: it should
not be competed for by multiple threads
@@ -745,7 +745,7 @@ we run into issues like Trac #10414. Specifically:
- is not updated (of course)
- hence, if it is black-holed and another thread tries to evaluate
it, that thread will block forever
- This actually happened in Trac #10414. So we do not black-hole
+ This actually happened in #10414. So we do not black-hole
non-updatable thunks.
* How could two threads evaluate the same non-updatable (single-entry)
@@ -755,7 +755,7 @@ we run into issues like Trac #10414. Specifically:
thunk, because lazy black-holing only affects thunks with an
update frame on the stack.
-Here is and example due to Reid Barton (Trac #10414):
+Here is and example due to Reid Barton (#10414):
x = \u [] concat [[1], []]
with the following definitions,
diff --git a/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmExpr.hs b/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmExpr.hs
index 5ad2e98abc..70a044a7ab 100644
--- a/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmExpr.hs
+++ b/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmExpr.hs
@@ -375,7 +375,7 @@ Suppose we have this STG code:
f = \[s : State# RealWorld] ->
case s of _ -> blah
This is very odd. Why are we scrutinising a state token? But it
-can arise with bizarre NOINLINE pragmas (Trac #9964)
+can arise with bizarre NOINLINE pragmas (#9964)
crash :: IO ()
crash = IO (\s -> let {-# NOINLINE s' #-}
s' = s
@@ -532,7 +532,7 @@ See Note [case on bool]
It's odd, and it's flagrantly inconsistent with the rules described
Note [Compiling case expressions]. However, after eliminating the
-tagToEnum# (Trac #13397) we will have:
+tagToEnum# (#13397) we will have:
case (a>b) of ...
Rather than make it behave quite differently, I am testing for a
comparison operator here in in the general case as well.
diff --git a/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmHeap.hs b/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmHeap.hs
index 3b170eb3a1..da9e85f1e7 100644
--- a/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmHeap.hs
+++ b/compiler/codeGen/StgCmmHeap.hs
@@ -519,7 +519,7 @@ heapCheck checkStack checkYield do_gc code
[" Trying to allocate more than "++show mBLOCK_SIZE++" bytes.",
"",
"This is currently not possible due to a limitation of GHC's code generator.",
- "See http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/4505 for details.",
+ "See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/4505 for details.",
"Suggestion: read data from a file instead of having large static data",
"structures in code."]
| hpHw > 0 = Just (mkIntExpr dflags (hpHw * (wORD_SIZE dflags)))
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreArity.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreArity.hs
index afd6759571..5f7f5593ba 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreArity.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreArity.hs
@@ -220,7 +220,7 @@ Now suppose we have:
Now we want the built-in op/$dfList rule will fire to give
blah = $copList dCInt
-But with eta-expansion 'blah' might (and in Trac #3772, which is
+But with eta-expansion 'blah' might (and in #3772, which is
slightly more complicated, does) turn into
blah = op (\eta. ($dfList dCInt |> sym co) eta)
@@ -302,7 +302,7 @@ This isn't really right in the presence of seq. Consider
This should diverge! But if we eta-expand, it won't. We ignore this
"problem" (unless -fpedantic-bottoms is on), because being scrupulous
would lose an important transformation for many programs. (See
-Trac #5587 for an example.)
+#5587 for an example.)
Consider also
f = \x -> error "foo"
@@ -322,7 +322,7 @@ this transformation. So we try to limit it as much as possible:
(1) Do NOT move a lambda outside a known-bottom case expression
case undefined of { (a,b) -> \y -> e }
- This showed up in Trac #5557
+ This showed up in #5557
(2) Do NOT move a lambda outside a case if all the branches of
the case are known to return bottom.
@@ -334,7 +334,7 @@ this transformation. So we try to limit it as much as possible:
(3) Do NOT move a lambda outside a case unless
(a) The scrutinee is ok-for-speculation, or
(b) more liberally: the scrutinee is cheap (e.g. a variable), and
- -fpedantic-bottoms is not enforced (see Trac #2915 for an example)
+ -fpedantic-bottoms is not enforced (see #2915 for an example)
Of course both (1) and (2) are readily defeated by disguising the bottoms.
@@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ See also Id.isOneShotBndr.
Note [State hack and bottoming functions]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It's a terrible idea to use the state hack on a bottoming function.
-Here's what happens (Trac #2861):
+Here's what happens (#2861):
f :: String -> IO T
f = \p. error "..."
@@ -410,7 +410,7 @@ Extrude g1.g3
And now we can repeat the whole loop. Aargh! The bug is in applying the
state hack to a function which then swallows the argument.
-This arose in another guise in Trac #3959. Here we had
+This arose in another guise in #3959. Here we had
catch# (throw exn >> return ())
@@ -590,7 +590,7 @@ says it has arity "infinity" the first time round.
This example happens a lot; it first showed up in Andy Gill's thesis,
fifteen years ago! It also shows up in the code for 'rnf' on lists
-in Trac #4138.
+in #4138.
The analysis is easy to achieve because exprEtaExpandArity takes an
argument
@@ -726,7 +726,7 @@ arityType env (Cast e co)
-- See Note [exprArity invariant] (2); must be true of
-- arityType too, since that is how we compute the arity
-- of variables, and they in turn affect result of exprArity
- -- Trac #5441 is a nice demo
+ -- #5441 is a nice demo
-- However, do make sure that ATop -> ATop and ABot -> ABot!
-- Casts don't affect that part. Getting this wrong provoked #5475
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreFVs.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreFVs.hs
index 18e109a745..4674b21978 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreFVs.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreFVs.hs
@@ -346,14 +346,14 @@ orphNamesOfTyCon tycon = unitNameSet (getName tycon) `unionNameSet` case tyConCl
orphNamesOfType :: Type -> NameSet
orphNamesOfType ty | Just ty' <- coreView ty = orphNamesOfType ty'
- -- Look through type synonyms (Trac #4912)
+ -- Look through type synonyms (#4912)
orphNamesOfType (TyVarTy _) = emptyNameSet
orphNamesOfType (LitTy {}) = emptyNameSet
orphNamesOfType (TyConApp tycon tys) = orphNamesOfTyCon tycon
`unionNameSet` orphNamesOfTypes tys
orphNamesOfType (ForAllTy bndr res) = orphNamesOfType (binderType bndr)
`unionNameSet` orphNamesOfType res
-orphNamesOfType (FunTy _ arg res) = unitNameSet funTyConName -- NB! See Trac #8535
+orphNamesOfType (FunTy _ arg res) = unitNameSet funTyConName -- NB! See #8535
`unionNameSet` orphNamesOfType arg
`unionNameSet` orphNamesOfType res
orphNamesOfType (AppTy fun arg) = orphNamesOfType fun `unionNameSet` orphNamesOfType arg
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreLint.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreLint.hs
index 62ddb9f410..c29c113b54 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreLint.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreLint.hs
@@ -373,7 +373,7 @@ interactiveInScope :: HscEnv -> [Var]
-- When we are not in GHCi, the interactive context (hsc_IC hsc_env) is empty
-- so this is a (cheap) no-op.
--
--- See Trac #8215 for an example
+-- See #8215 for an example
interactiveInScope hsc_env
= tyvars ++ ids
where
@@ -806,7 +806,7 @@ lintCoreExpr e@(Case scrut var alt_ty alts) =
; checkL (not $ isFloatingTy scrut_ty && any isLitPat alts)
(ptext (sLit $ "Lint warning: Scrutinising floating-point " ++
"expression with literal pattern in case " ++
- "analysis (see Trac #9238).")
+ "analysis (see #9238).")
$$ text "scrut" <+> ppr scrut)
; case tyConAppTyCon_maybe (idType var) of
@@ -927,7 +927,7 @@ checkJoinOcc var n_args
Note [No alternatives lint check]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Case expressions with no alternatives are odd beasts, and it would seem
-like they would worth be looking at in the linter (cf Trac #10180). We
+like they would worth be looking at in the linter (cf #10180). We
used to check two things:
* exprIsHNF is false: it would *seem* to be terribly wrong if
@@ -937,7 +937,7 @@ used to check two things:
scrutinee is diverging for sure.
It was already known that the second test was not entirely reliable.
-Unfortunately (Trac #13990), the first test turned out not to be reliable
+Unfortunately (#13990), the first test turned out not to be reliable
either. Getting the checks right turns out to be somewhat complicated.
For example, suppose we have (comment 8)
@@ -1395,7 +1395,7 @@ lintType (CoercionTy co)
{- Note [Stupid type synonyms]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #14939)
+Consider (#14939)
type Alg cls ob = ob
f :: forall (cls :: * -> Constraint) (b :: Alg cls *). b
@@ -1572,18 +1572,18 @@ lintCoreRule fun fun_ty rule@(Rule { ru_name = name, ru_bndrs = bndrs
It's very bad if simplifying a rule means that one of the template
variables (ru_bndrs) that /is/ mentioned on the RHS becomes
not-mentioned in the LHS (ru_args). How can that happen? Well, in
-Trac #10602, SpecConstr stupidly constructed a rule like
+#10602, SpecConstr stupidly constructed a rule like
forall x,c1,c2.
f (x |> c1 |> c2) = ....
But simplExpr collapses those coercions into one. (Indeed in
-Trac #10602, it collapsed to the identity and was removed altogether.)
+#10602, it collapsed to the identity and was removed altogether.)
We don't have a great story for what to do here, but at least
this check will nail it.
-NB (Trac #11643): it's possible that a variable listed in the
+NB (#11643): it's possible that a variable listed in the
binders becomes not-mentioned on both LHS and RHS. Here's a silly
example:
RULE forall x y. f (g x y) = g (x+1) (y-1)
@@ -2088,7 +2088,7 @@ type WarnsAndErrs = (Bag MsgDoc, Bag MsgDoc)
{- Note [Checking for global Ids]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Before CoreTidy, all locally-bound Ids must be LocalIds, even
-top-level ones. See Note [Exported LocalIds] and Trac #9857.
+top-level ones. See Note [Exported LocalIds] and #9857.
Note [Checking StaticPtrs]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2124,7 +2124,7 @@ Note [Linting type synonym applications]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When linting a type-synonym, or type-family, application
S ty1 .. tyn
-we behave as follows (Trac #15057, #T15664):
+we behave as follows (#15057, #T15664):
* If lf_report_unsat_syns = True, and S has arity < n,
complain about an unsaturated type synonym or type family
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreMap.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreMap.hs
index 3d0693466a..d50dcbf1bc 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreMap.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreMap.hs
@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ Note [Empty case alternatives]
* For a key (Case e b ty []) we MUST look at the return type 'ty', because
otherwise (Case (error () "urk") _ Int []) would compare equal to
(Case (error () "urk") _ Bool [])
- which is utterly wrong (Trac #6097)
+ which is utterly wrong (#6097)
We could compare the return type regardless, but the wildly common case
is that it's unnecessary, so we have two fields (cm_case and cm_ecase)
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreOpt.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreOpt.hs
index d0dba81e3e..0f7f5fbf20 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreOpt.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreOpt.hs
@@ -312,7 +312,7 @@ simple_app env (Tick t e) as
-- The let might appear there as a result of inlining
-- e.g. let f = let x = e in b
-- in f a1 a2
--- (Trac #13208)
+-- (#13208)
simple_app env (Let bind body) as
= case simple_opt_bind env bind of
(env', Nothing) -> simple_app env' body as
@@ -490,7 +490,7 @@ rhss here.
Note [Preserve join-binding arity]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Be careful /not/ to eta-reduce the RHS of a join point, lest we lose
-the join-point arity invariant. Trac #15108 was caused by simplifying
+the join-point arity invariant. #15108 was caused by simplifying
the RHS with simple_opt_expr, which does eta-reduction. Solution:
simplify the RHS of a join point by simplifying under the lambdas
(which of course should be there).
@@ -710,7 +710,7 @@ A more common case is when
f = \x. error ".."
-and again its arity increses (Trac #15517)
+and again its arity increses (#15517)
-}
{- *********************************************************************
@@ -759,7 +759,7 @@ dealWithStringLiteral.
Note [Push coercions in exprIsConApp_maybe]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-In Trac #13025 I found a case where we had
+In #13025 I found a case where we had
op (df @t1 @t2) -- op is a ClassOp
where
df = (/\a b. K e1 e2) |> g
@@ -1181,7 +1181,7 @@ pushCoTyArg :: CoercionR -> Type -> Maybe (Type, MCoercionR)
-- it's faster not to compute it, though.
pushCoTyArg co ty
-- The following is inefficient - don't do `eqType` here, the coercion
- -- optimizer will take care of it. See Trac #14737.
+ -- optimizer will take care of it. See #14737.
-- -- | tyL `eqType` tyR
-- -- = Just (ty, Nothing)
@@ -1219,7 +1219,7 @@ pushCoValArg :: CoercionR -> Maybe (Coercion, MCoercion)
-- the returned coercion would have been reflexive.
pushCoValArg co
-- The following is inefficient - don't do `eqType` here, the coercion
- -- optimizer will take care of it. See Trac #14737.
+ -- optimizer will take care of it. See #14737.
-- -- | tyL `eqType` tyR
-- -- = Just (mkRepReflCo arg, Nothing)
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CorePrep.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CorePrep.hs
index cf37a8d93b..bf6182bc89 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CorePrep.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CorePrep.hs
@@ -344,7 +344,7 @@ partial applications. But it's easier to let them through.
Note [Dead code in CorePrep]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Imagine that we got an input program like this (see Trac #4962):
+Imagine that we got an input program like this (see #4962):
f :: Show b => Int -> (Int, b -> Maybe Int -> Int)
f x = (g True (Just x) + g () (Just x), g)
@@ -790,7 +790,7 @@ data ArgInfo = CpeApp CoreArg
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If we got, say
runRW# (case bot of {})
-which happened in Trac #11291, we do /not/ want to turn it into
+which happened in #11291, we do /not/ want to turn it into
(case bot of {}) realWorldPrimId#
because that gives a panic in CoreToStg.myCollectArgs, which expects
only variables in function position. But if we are sure to make
@@ -1051,7 +1051,7 @@ Note [Floating unlifted arguments]
Consider C (let v* = expensive in v)
where the "*" indicates "will be demanded". Usually v will have been
-inlined by now, but let's suppose it hasn't (see Trac #2756). Then we
+inlined by now, but let's suppose it hasn't (see #2756). Then we
do *not* want to get
let v* = expensive in C v
@@ -1183,7 +1183,7 @@ tryEtaReducePrep bndrs (Let bind@(NonRec _ r) body)
-- Otherwise we risk reducing
-- \x. (Tick (Breakpoint {x}) f x)
-- ==> Tick (breakpoint {x}) f
--- which is bogus (Trac #17228)
+-- which is bogus (#17228)
-- tryEtaReducePrep bndrs (Tick tickish e)
-- = fmap (mkTick tickish) $ tryEtaReducePrep bndrs e
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreSubst.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreSubst.hs
index 2df3fb1b52..8ba2e68446 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreSubst.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreSubst.hs
@@ -718,7 +718,7 @@ substTickish _subst other = other
The functions that substitute over IdInfo must be pretty lazy, because
they are knot-tied by substRecBndrs.
-One case in point was Trac #10627 in which a rule for a function 'f'
+One case in point was #10627 in which a rule for a function 'f'
referred to 'f' (at a different type) on the RHS. But instead of just
substituting in the rhs of the rule, we were calling simpleOptExpr, which
looked at the idInfo for 'f'; result <<loop>>.
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreSyn.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreSyn.hs
index c4fedbbad7..f48fef568e 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreSyn.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreSyn.hs
@@ -233,7 +233,7 @@ These data types are the heart of the compiler
-- can't be @Red@ at that program point.
--
-- 5. Floating-point values must not be scrutinised against literals.
--- See Trac #9238 and Note [Rules for floating-point comparisons]
+-- See #9238 and Note [Rules for floating-point comparisons]
-- in PrelRules for rationale.
--
-- * Cast an expression to a particular type.
@@ -338,7 +338,7 @@ Note [Literal alternatives]
Literal alternatives (LitAlt lit) are always for *un-lifted* literals.
We have one literal, a literal Integer, that is lifted, and we don't
allow in a LitAlt, because LitAlt cases don't do any evaluation. Also
-(see Trac #5603) if you say
+(see #5603) if you say
case 3 of
S# x -> ...
J# _ _ -> ...
@@ -348,7 +348,7 @@ literals are an opaque encoding of an algebraic data type, not of
an unlifted literal, like all the others.
Also, we do not permit case analysis with literal patterns on floating-point
-types. See Trac #9238 and Note [Rules for floating-point comparisons] in
+types. See #9238 and Note [Rules for floating-point comparisons] in
PrelRules for the rationale for this restriction.
-------------------------- CoreSyn INVARIANTS ---------------------------
@@ -386,7 +386,7 @@ Consider,
In order to be able to inline `f`, we would like to float `a` to the top.
Another option would be to inline `a`, but that would lead to duplicating string
-literals, which we want to avoid. See Trac #8472.
+literals, which we want to avoid. See #8472.
The solution is simply to allow top-level unlifted binders. We can't allow
arbitrary unlifted expression at the top-level though, unlifted binders cannot
@@ -395,7 +395,7 @@ be thunks, so we just allow string literals.
We allow the top-level primitive string literals to be wrapped in Ticks
in the same way they can be wrapped when nested in an expression.
CoreToSTG currently discards Ticks around top-level primitive string literals.
-See Trac #14779.
+See #14779.
Also see Note [Compilation plan for top-level string literals].
@@ -518,7 +518,7 @@ this exhaustive list can be empty!
we do NOT want to replace
case (x::T) of Bool {} --> error Bool "Inaccessible case"
because x might raise an exception, and *that*'s what we want to see!
- (Trac #6067 is an example.) To preserve semantics we'd have to say
+ (#6067 is an example.) To preserve semantics we'd have to say
x `seq` error Bool "Inaccessible case"
but the 'seq' is just a case, so we are back to square 1. Or I suppose
we could say
@@ -626,7 +626,7 @@ However, join points have simpler invariants in other ways
6. A join point can have a levity-polymorphic RHS
e.g. let j :: r :: TYPE l = fail void# in ...
- This happened in an intermediate program Trac #13394
+ This happened in an intermediate program #13394
Examples:
@@ -1113,7 +1113,7 @@ chooseOrphanAnchor :: NameSet -> IsOrphan
-- Something (rule, instance) is relate to all the Names in this
-- list. Choose one of them to be an "anchor" for the orphan. We make
-- the choice deterministic to avoid gratuitious changes in the ABI
--- hash (Trac #4012). Specifically, use lexicographic comparison of
+-- hash (#4012). Specifically, use lexicographic comparison of
-- OccName rather than comparing Uniques
--
-- NB: 'minimum' use Ord, and (Ord OccName) works lexicographically
@@ -1641,7 +1641,7 @@ ones are
OtherCon {} If we know this binder (say a lambda binder) will be
bound to an evaluated thing, we want to retain that
- info in simpleOptExpr; see Trac #13077.
+ info in simpleOptExpr; see #13077.
We consider even a StableUnfolding as fragile, because it needs substitution.
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreUnfold.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreUnfold.hs
index e55e12487b..1e4e39e289 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreUnfold.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreUnfold.hs
@@ -260,7 +260,7 @@ the `UnfoldingGuidance`.)
In the example, x's ug_arity is 0, so we should inline it at every use
site. It's rare to have such an INLINE pragma (usually INLINE Is on
-functions), but it's occasionally very important (Trac #15578, #15519).
+functions), but it's occasionally very important (#15578, #15519).
In #15519 we had something like
x = case (g a b) of I# r -> T r
{-# INLINE x #-}
@@ -357,7 +357,7 @@ But given this decision it's vital that we do
where g* is (for some strange reason) the loop breaker. If we don't
occ-anal it when reading it in, we won't mark g as a loop breaker, and
we may inline g entirely in body, dropping its binding, and leaving
-the occurrence in f out of scope. This happened in Trac #8892, where
+the occurrence in f out of scope. This happened in #8892, where
the unfolding in question was a DFun unfolding.
But more generally, the simplifier is designed on the
@@ -395,7 +395,7 @@ GlobalIds. That seems (just) tolerable for the occurrence analysis that happens
just before the Simplifier, but not for unfoldings, which are Linted
independently.
As a quick workaround, we disable binder swap in this module.
-See Trac #16288 and #16296 for further plans.
+See #16288 and #16296 for further plans.
Note [Calculate unfolding guidance on the non-occ-anal'd expression]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -910,7 +910,7 @@ Simon M tried a MUCH bigger discount: (10 * (10 + n_val_args)),
and said it was an "unambiguous win", but its terribly dangerous
because a function with many many case branches, each finishing with
a constructor, can have an arbitrarily large discount. This led to
-terrible code bloat: see Trac #6099.
+terrible code bloat: see #6099.
Note [Unboxed tuple size and result discount]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -936,10 +936,10 @@ monadic combinators with continuation arguments, where inlining is
quite important.
But we don't want a big discount when a function is called many times
-(see the detailed comments with Trac #6048) because if the function is
+(see the detailed comments with #6048) because if the function is
big it won't be inlined at its many call sites and no benefit results.
Indeed, we can get exponentially big inlinings this way; that is what
-Trac #6048 is about.
+#6048 is about.
On the other hand, for data-valued arguments, if there are lots of
case expressions in the body, each one will get smaller if we apply
@@ -1170,7 +1170,7 @@ certainlyWillInline dflags fn_info
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Don't claim that thunks will certainly inline, because that risks work
duplication. Even if the work duplication is not great (eg is_cheap
-holds), it can make a big difference in an inner loop In Trac #5623 we
+holds), it can make a big difference in an inner loop In #5623 we
found that the WorkWrap phase thought that
y = case x of F# v -> F# (v +# v)
was certainlyWillInline, so the addition got duplicated.
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreUtils.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreUtils.hs
index 5b161995ea..8e298adf6a 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/CoreUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/CoreUtils.hs
@@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ not much used, except in the output of the desugarer.
Example:
let a = Int in (\x:a. x)
Given this, exprType must be careful to substitute 'a' in the
-result type (Trac #8522).
+result type (#8522).
Note [Existential variables and silly type synonyms]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -202,7 +202,7 @@ Consider
Now, the type of 'x' is (Funny a), where 'a' is existentially quantified.
That means that 'exprType' and 'coreAltsType' may give a result that *appears*
-to mention an out-of-scope type variable. See Trac #3409 for a more real-world
+to mention an out-of-scope type variable. See #3409 for a more real-world
example.
Various possibilities suggest themselves:
@@ -571,7 +571,7 @@ that cannot match. For example:
Suppose that for some silly reason, x isn't substituted in the case
expression. (Perhaps there's a NOINLINE on it, or profiling SCC stuff
-gets in the way; cf Trac #3118.) Then the full-lazines pass might produce
+gets in the way; cf #3118.) Then the full-lazines pass might produce
this
x = Red
@@ -827,11 +827,11 @@ and similarly in cascade for all the join points!
NB: it's important that all this is done in [InAlt], *before* we work
on the alternatives themselves, because Simplify.simplAlt may zap the
occurrence info on the binders in the alternatives, which in turn
-defeats combineIdenticalAlts (see Trac #7360).
+defeats combineIdenticalAlts (see #7360).
Note [Care with impossible-constructors when combining alternatives]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Suppose we have (Trac #10538)
+Suppose we have (#10538)
data T = A | B | C | D
case x::T of (Imposs-default-cons {A,B})
@@ -867,7 +867,7 @@ Then when combining the A and C alternatives we get
Note that we have a new DEFAULT branch that we didn't have before. So
we need delete from the "impossible-default-constructors" all the
-known-con alternatives that we have eliminated. (In Trac #11172 we
+known-con alternatives that we have eliminated. (In #11172 we
missed the first one.)
-}
@@ -950,7 +950,7 @@ it as trivial we may land up with let-bindings like
let v = case x of {} in ...
and after CoreToSTG that gives
let v = x in ...
-and that confuses the code generator (Trac #11155). So best to kill
+and that confuses the code generator (#11155). So best to kill
it off at source.
-}
@@ -1102,7 +1102,7 @@ dupAppSize :: Int
dupAppSize = 8 -- Size of term we are prepared to duplicate
-- This is *just* big enough to make test MethSharing
-- inline enough join points. Really it should be
- -- smaller, and could be if we fixed Trac #4960.
+ -- smaller, and could be if we fixed #4960.
{-
************************************************************************
@@ -1116,7 +1116,7 @@ Note [exprIsWorkFree]
exprIsWorkFree is used when deciding whether to inline something; we
don't inline it if doing so might duplicate work, by peeling off a
complete copy of the expression. Here we do not want even to
-duplicate a primop (Trac #5623):
+duplicate a primop (#5623):
eg let x = a #+ b in x +# x
we do not want to inline/duplicate x
@@ -1276,7 +1276,7 @@ expansion. Specifically:
* False of case-expressions. If we have
let x = case ... in ...(case x of ...)...
- we won't simplify. We have to inline x. See Trac #14688.
+ we won't simplify. We have to inline x. See #14688.
* False of let-expressions (same reason); and in any case we
float lets out of an RHS if doing so will reveal an expandable
@@ -1657,7 +1657,7 @@ But we restrict it sharply:
add unlifted algebraic types in due course.
------ Historical note: Trac #15696: --------
+----- Historical note: #15696: --------
Previously SetLevels used exprOkForSpeculation to guide
floating of single-alternative cases; it now uses exprIsHNF
Note [Floating single-alternative cases].
@@ -1676,9 +1676,9 @@ But we restrict it sharply:
...(case x of y
A -> ...
_ -> ...blah...)...
- which is utterly bogus (seg fault); see Trac #5453.
+ which is utterly bogus (seg fault); see #5453.
------ Historical note: Trac #3717: --------
+----- Historical note: #3717: --------
foo :: Int -> Int
foo 0 = 0
foo n = (if n < 5 then 1 else 2) `seq` foo (n-1)
@@ -1703,7 +1703,7 @@ points do the job nicely.
Note [Primops with lifted arguments]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Is this ok-for-speculation (see Trac #13027)?
+Is this ok-for-speculation (see #13027)?
reallyUnsafePtrEq# a b
Well, yes. The primop accepts lifted arguments and does not
evaluate them. Indeed, in general primops are, well, primitive
@@ -2279,7 +2279,7 @@ There are some particularly delicate points here:
*keeps* arity 1 (perhaps also wrongly). So CorePrep eta-expands
the definition again, so that it does not termninate after all.
Result: seg-fault because the boolean case actually gets a function value.
- See Trac #1947.
+ See #1947.
So it's important to do the right thing.
@@ -2434,7 +2434,7 @@ to the rule that
* f is not bottom
we can eta-reduce \x. f x ===> f
-This turned up in Trac #7542.
+This turned up in #7542.
************************************************************************
diff --git a/compiler/coreSyn/MkCore.hs b/compiler/coreSyn/MkCore.hs
index 999cfc7db5..f9609f834d 100644
--- a/compiler/coreSyn/MkCore.hs
+++ b/compiler/coreSyn/MkCore.hs
@@ -840,7 +840,7 @@ used, and does a w/w split thus
After some simplification, the (absentError "blah") thunk goes away.
------ Tricky wrinkle -------
-Trac #14285 had, roughly
+#14285 had, roughly
data T a = MkT a !a
{-# INLINABLE f #-}
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/Check.hs b/compiler/deSugar/Check.hs
index 81832c8982..db3a501fcf 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/Check.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/Check.hs
@@ -1030,7 +1030,7 @@ translatePat fam_insts pat = case pat of
--
-- - Otherwise, we treat the `ListPat` as ordinary view pattern.
--
- -- See Trac #14547, especially comment#9 and comment#10.
+ -- See #14547, especially comment#9 and comment#10.
--
-- Here we construct CanFailPmPat directly, rather can construct a view
-- pattern and do further translation as an optimization, for the reason,
@@ -1100,7 +1100,7 @@ from translation in pattern matcher.
`HsOverLit` inside `NPat` to HsIntPrim/HsWordPrim. If we do
the same thing in `translatePat` as in `tidyNPat`, the exhaustiveness
checker will fail to match the literals patterns correctly. See
- Trac #14546.
+ #14546.
In Note [Undecidable Equality for Overloaded Literals], we say: "treat
overloaded literals that look different as different", but previously we
@@ -1121,7 +1121,7 @@ from translation in pattern matcher.
in value position as PmOLit, but translate the 0 and 1 in pattern position
as PmSLit. The inconsistency leads to the failure of eqPmLit to detect the
equality and report warning of "Pattern match is redundant" on pattern 0,
- as reported in Trac #14546. In this patch we remove the specialization of
+ as reported in #14546. In this patch we remove the specialization of
OverLit patterns, and keep the overloaded number literal in pattern as it
is to maintain the consistency. We know nothing about the `fromInteger`
method (see Note [Undecidable Equality for Overloaded Literals]). Now we
@@ -1141,7 +1141,7 @@ from translation in pattern matcher.
non-overloaded string values are translated to PmSLit. However the string
patterns, both overloaded and non-overloaded, are translated to list of
characters. The inconsistency leads to wrong warnings about redundant and
- non-exhaustive pattern matching warnings, as reported in Trac #14546.
+ non-exhaustive pattern matching warnings, as reported in #14546.
In order to catch the redundant pattern in following case:
@@ -1167,7 +1167,7 @@ from translation in pattern matcher.
We must ensure that doing the same translation to literal values and patterns
in `translatePat` and `hsExprToPmExpr`. The previous inconsistent work led to
- Trac #14546.
+ #14546.
-}
-- | Translate a list of patterns (Note: each pattern is translated
@@ -2511,7 +2511,7 @@ dsPmWarn dflags ctx@(DsMatchContext kind loc) pm_result
{- Note [Inaccessible warnings for record updates]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #12957)
+Consider (#12957)
data T a where
T1 :: { x :: Int } -> T Bool
T2 :: { x :: Int } -> T a
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/Desugar.hs b/compiler/deSugar/Desugar.hs
index aa9748ee35..128722d5b5 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/Desugar.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/Desugar.hs
@@ -533,7 +533,7 @@ by 'competesWith'
Class methods have a built-in RULE to select the method from the dictionary,
so you can't change the phase on this. That makes id very dubious to
-match on class methods in RULE lhs's. See Trac #10595. I'm not happy
+match on class methods in RULE lhs's. See #10595. I'm not happy
about this. For example in Control.Arrow we have
{-# RULES "compose/arr" forall f g .
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/DsBinds.hs b/compiler/deSugar/DsBinds.hs
index d62706ef00..cf94a5edf3 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/DsBinds.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/DsBinds.hs
@@ -776,7 +776,7 @@ we might have
We might want to specialise 'f' so that we in turn specialise '$wf'.
We can't even /name/ '$wf' in the source code, so we can't specialise
-it even if we wanted to. Trac #10721 is a case in point.
+it even if we wanted to. #10721 is a case in point.
Note [Activation pragmas for SPECIALISE]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -792,7 +792,7 @@ We need two pragma-like things:
* Activation of RULE: from SPECIALISE pragma (if activation given)
otherwise from f's inline pragma
-This is not obvious (see Trac #5237)!
+This is not obvious (see #5237)!
Examples Rule activation Inline prag on spec'd fn
---------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -875,7 +875,7 @@ decomposeRuleLhs dflags orig_bndrs orig_lhs
, not (v `elemVarSet` orig_bndr_set)
, not (v == fn_id) ]
-- fn_id: do not quantify over the function itself, which may
- -- itself be a dictionary (in pathological cases, Trac #10251)
+ -- itself be a dictionary (in pathological cases, #10251)
decompose (Var fn_id) args
| not (fn_id `elemVarSet` orig_bndr_set)
@@ -1018,7 +1018,7 @@ drop_dicts drops dictionary bindings on the LHS where possible.
NB3: In the common case of a non-overloaded, but perhaps-polymorphic
specialisation, we don't need to bind *any* dictionaries for use
- in the RHS. For example (Trac #8331)
+ in the RHS. For example (#8331)
{-# SPECIALIZE INLINE useAbstractMonad :: ReaderST s Int #-}
useAbstractMonad :: MonadAbstractIOST m => m Int
Here, deriving (MonadAbstractIOST (ReaderST s)) is a lot of code
@@ -1026,7 +1026,7 @@ drop_dicts drops dictionary bindings on the LHS where possible.
RULE forall s (d :: MonadAbstractIOST (ReaderT s)).
useAbstractMonad (ReaderT s) d = $suseAbstractMonad s
- Trac #8848 is a good example of where there are some interesting
+ #8848 is a good example of where there are some interesting
dictionary bindings to discard.
The drop_dicts algorithm is based on these observations:
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/DsExpr.hs b/compiler/deSugar/DsExpr.hs
index c6ba18b1eb..89ca815ed5 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/DsExpr.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/DsExpr.hs
@@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ ds_val_bind (NonRecursive, hsbinds) body
-- f x = let p@(Ptr y) = ... in ...
-- Here the binding for 'p' is polymorphic, but does
-- not mix with an unlifted binding for 'y'. You should
- -- use a bang pattern. Trac #6078.
+ -- use a bang pattern. #6078.
else do { when (looksLazyPatBind bind) $
warnIfSetDs Opt_WarnUnbangedStrictPatterns (unlifted_must_be_bang bind)
@@ -622,7 +622,7 @@ ds_expr _ expr@(RecordUpd { rupd_expr = record_expr, rupd_flds = fields
-- Clone the Id in the HsRecField, because its Name is that
-- of the record selector, and we must not make that a local binder
-- else we shadow other uses of the record selector
- -- Hence 'lcl_id'. Cf Trac #2735
+ -- Hence 'lcl_id'. Cf #2735
ds_field (dL->L _ rec_field)
= do { rhs <- dsLExpr (hsRecFieldArg rec_field)
; let fld_id = unLoc (hsRecUpdFieldId rec_field)
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/DsMeta.hs b/compiler/deSugar/DsMeta.hs
index 2aaafad29f..5de954ae7d 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/DsMeta.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/DsMeta.hs
@@ -524,7 +524,7 @@ repClsInstD (ClsInstDecl { cid_poly_ty = ty, cid_binds = binds
-- But we do NOT bring the binders of 'binds' into scope
-- because they are properly regarded as occurrences
-- For example, the method names should be bound to
- -- the selector Ids, not to fresh names (Trac #5410)
+ -- the selector Ids, not to fresh names (#5410)
--
do { cxt1 <- repLContext cxt
; inst_ty1 <- repLTy inst_ty
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/DsMonad.hs b/compiler/deSugar/DsMonad.hs
index f328322e68..8e3021fd8a 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/DsMonad.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/DsMonad.hs
@@ -486,7 +486,7 @@ askNoErrsDs thing_inside
; env <- getGblEnv
; mb_res <- tryM $ -- Be careful to catch exceptions
-- so that we propagate errors correctly
- -- (Trac #13642)
+ -- (#13642)
setGblEnv (env { ds_msgs = errs_var }) $
thing_inside
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/DsUsage.hs b/compiler/deSugar/DsUsage.hs
index a6b94c98a0..7c8e24bbec 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/DsUsage.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/DsUsage.hs
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ In this case, B's dep_orphs will contain A due to its SOURCE import of A.
Consequently, A will contain itself in its imp_orphs due to its import of B.
This fact would end up being recorded in A's interface file. This would then
break the invariant asserted by calculateAvails that a module does not itself in
-its dep_orphs. This was the cause of Trac #14128.
+its dep_orphs. This was the cause of #14128.
-}
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/DsUtils.hs b/compiler/deSugar/DsUtils.hs
index f39d0f2594..d4ceb523df 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/DsUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/DsUtils.hs
@@ -411,7 +411,7 @@ mkErrorAppDs err_id ty msg = do
{-
'mkCoreAppDs' and 'mkCoreAppsDs' hand the special-case desugaring of 'seq'.
-Note [Desugaring seq (1)] cf Trac #1031
+Note [Desugaring seq (1)] cf #1031
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
f x y = x `seq` (y `seq` (# x,y #))
@@ -427,7 +427,7 @@ But that is bad for two reasons:
Seq is very, very special! So we recognise it right here, and desugar to
case x of _ -> case y of _ -> (# x,y #)
-Note [Desugaring seq (2)] cf Trac #2273
+Note [Desugaring seq (2)] cf #2273
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider
let chp = case b of { True -> fst x; False -> 0 }
@@ -467,7 +467,7 @@ And now all is well.
The reason it's a hack is because if you define mySeq=seq, the hack
won't work on mySeq.
-Note [Desugaring seq (3)] cf Trac #2409
+Note [Desugaring seq (3)] cf #2409
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The isLocalId ensures that we don't turn
True `seq` e
@@ -879,7 +879,7 @@ Reason: we know that a failure point is always a "join point" and is
entered at most once. Adding a dummy 'realWorld' token argument makes
it clear that sharing is not an issue. And that in turn makes it more
CPR-friendly. This matters a lot: if you don't get it right, you lose
-the tail call property. For example, see Trac #3403.
+the tail call property. For example, see #3403.
************************************************************************
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/Match.hs b/compiler/deSugar/Match.hs
index 0930a6e6f4..c057298420 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/Match.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/Match.hs
@@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ Most of the matching functions take an Id or [Id] as argument. This Id
is the scrutinee(s) of the match. The desugared expression may
sometimes use that Id in a local binding or as a case binder. So it
should not have an External name; Lint rejects non-top-level binders
-with External names (Trac #13043).
+with External names (#13043).
See also Note [Localise pattern binders] in DsUtils
-}
@@ -515,7 +515,7 @@ tidy_bang_pat v o _ p@(SumPat {}) = tidy1 v o p
tidy_bang_pat v o l p@(ConPatOut { pat_con = (dL->L _ (RealDataCon dc))
, pat_args = args
, pat_arg_tys = arg_tys })
- -- Newtypes: push bang inwards (Trac #9844)
+ -- Newtypes: push bang inwards (#9844)
=
if isNewTyCon (dataConTyCon dc)
then tidy1 v o (p { pat_args = push_bang_into_newtype_arg l ty args })
@@ -534,7 +534,7 @@ tidy_bang_pat v o l p@(ConPatOut { pat_con = (dL->L _ (RealDataCon dc))
-- NPlusKPat
--
-- For LazyPat, remember that it's semantically like a VarPat
--- i.e. !(~p) is not like ~p, or p! (Trac #8952)
+-- i.e. !(~p) is not like ~p, or p! (#8952)
--
-- NB: SigPatIn, ConPatIn should not happen
@@ -568,7 +568,7 @@ Note [Bang patterns and newtypes]
For the pattern !(Just pat) we can discard the bang, because
the pattern is strict anyway. But for !(N pat), where
newtype NT = N Int
-we definitely can't discard the bang. Trac #9844.
+we definitely can't discard the bang. #9844.
So what we do is to push the bang inwards, in the hope that it will
get discarded there. So we transform
@@ -926,7 +926,7 @@ If we see
...
where P is a pattern synonym, can we put (P a -> e1) and (P b -> e2) in the
same group? We can if P is a constructor, but /not/ if P is a pattern synonym.
-Consider (Trac #11224)
+Consider (#11224)
-- readMaybe :: Read a => String -> Maybe a
pattern PRead :: Read a => () => a -> String
pattern PRead a <- (readMaybe -> Just a)
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/MatchCon.hs b/compiler/deSugar/MatchCon.hs
index f699792910..ce1f19f560 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/MatchCon.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/MatchCon.hs
@@ -242,7 +242,7 @@ Consider
f (T { y=True, x=False }) = ...
We must match the patterns IN THE ORDER GIVEN, thus for the first
-one we match y=True before x=False. See Trac #246; or imagine
+one we match y=True before x=False. See #246; or imagine
matching against (T { y=False, x=undefined }): should fail without
touching the undefined.
diff --git a/compiler/deSugar/MatchLit.hs b/compiler/deSugar/MatchLit.hs
index d0db91d93a..d99ae7e443 100644
--- a/compiler/deSugar/MatchLit.hs
+++ b/compiler/deSugar/MatchLit.hs
@@ -287,7 +287,7 @@ warnAboutEmptyEnumerations dflags fromExpr mThnExpr toExpr
getLHsIntegralLit :: LHsExpr GhcTc -> Maybe (Integer, Name)
-- ^ See if the expression is an 'Integral' literal.
--- Remember to look through automatically-added tick-boxes! (Trac #8384)
+-- Remember to look through automatically-added tick-boxes! (#8384)
getLHsIntegralLit (dL->L _ (HsPar _ e)) = getLHsIntegralLit e
getLHsIntegralLit (dL->L _ (HsTick _ _ e)) = getLHsIntegralLit e
getLHsIntegralLit (dL->L _ (HsBinTick _ _ _ e)) = getLHsIntegralLit e
@@ -349,7 +349,7 @@ tidyNPat (OverLit (OverLitTc False ty) val _) mb_neg _eq outer_ty
-- Once that is settled, look for cases where the type of the
-- entire overloaded literal matches the type of the underlying literal,
-- and in that case take the short cut
- -- NB: Watch out for weird cases like Trac #3382
+ -- NB: Watch out for weird cases like #3382
-- f :: Int -> Int
-- f "blah" = 4
-- which might be ok if we have 'instance IsString Int'
@@ -363,7 +363,7 @@ tidyNPat (OverLit (OverLitTc False ty) val _) mb_neg _eq outer_ty
-- NB: do /not/ convert Float or Double literals to F# 3.8 or D# 5.3
-- If we do convert to the constructor form, we'll generate a case
-- expression on a Float# or Double# and that's not allowed in Core; see
- -- Trac #9238 and Note [Rules for floating-point comparisons] in PrelRules
+ -- #9238 and Note [Rules for floating-point comparisons] in PrelRules
where
-- Sometimes (like in test case
-- overloadedlists/should_run/overloadedlistsrun04), the SyntaxExprs include
diff --git a/compiler/ghci/ByteCodeGen.hs b/compiler/ghci/ByteCodeGen.hs
index 86bb72b550..c4a08c4e40 100644
--- a/compiler/ghci/ByteCodeGen.hs
+++ b/compiler/ghci/ByteCodeGen.hs
@@ -614,7 +614,7 @@ schemeE d s p exp@(AnnTick (Breakpoint _id _fvs) _rhs)
-- type and hence won't be bound in the environment, but the
-- breakpoint will otherwise work fine.
--
- -- NB (Trac #12007) this /also/ applies for if (ty :: TYPE r), where
+ -- NB (#12007) this /also/ applies for if (ty :: TYPE r), where
-- r :: RuntimeRep is a variable. This can happen in the
-- continuations for a pattern-synonym matcher
-- match = /\(r::RuntimeRep) /\(a::TYPE r).
@@ -962,7 +962,7 @@ doCase d s p (_,scrut) bndr alts is_unboxed_tuple
return (my_discr alt, rhs_code)
-- If an alt attempts to match on an unboxed tuple or sum, we must
-- bail out, as the bytecode compiler can't handle them.
- -- (See Trac #14608.)
+ -- (See #14608.)
| any (\bndr -> typePrimRep (idType bndr) `lengthExceeds` 1) bndrs
= multiValException
-- algebraic alt with some binders
@@ -1398,7 +1398,7 @@ to have an info-table, and the next word to have the value to be
tested. This is very weird, but it's the way it is right now. See
Interpreter.c. We don't acutally need an info-table here; we just
need to have the argument to be one-from-top on the stack, hence pushing
-a 1-word null. See Trac #8383.
+a 1-word null. See #8383.
-}
@@ -1825,7 +1825,7 @@ atomPrimRep e | Just e' <- bcView e = atomPrimRep e'
atomPrimRep (AnnVar v) = bcIdPrimRep v
atomPrimRep (AnnLit l) = typePrimRep1 (literalType l)
--- Trac #12128:
+-- #12128:
-- A case expression can be an atom because empty cases evaluate to bottom.
-- See Note [Empty case alternatives] in coreSyn/CoreSyn.hs
atomPrimRep (AnnCase _ _ ty _) = ASSERT(typePrimRep ty == [LiftedRep]) LiftedRep
diff --git a/compiler/ghci/Linker.hs b/compiler/ghci/Linker.hs
index dad13b7bbb..ef00a85e72 100644
--- a/compiler/ghci/Linker.hs
+++ b/compiler/ghci/Linker.hs
@@ -341,7 +341,7 @@ linkCmdLineLibs' hsc_env pls =
-- However because we don't know the actual name of pthread's dll we
-- need to defer this to the locateLib call so we can't initialize it
-- inside of the rts. Instead we do it here to be able to find the
- -- import library for pthreads. See Trac #13210.
+ -- import library for pthreads. See #13210.
let platform = targetPlatform dflags
os = platformOS platform
minus_ls = case os of
diff --git a/compiler/ghci/RtClosureInspect.hs b/compiler/ghci/RtClosureInspect.hs
index 82e0f88d26..436b756af6 100644
--- a/compiler/ghci/RtClosureInspect.hs
+++ b/compiler/ghci/RtClosureInspect.hs
@@ -1056,7 +1056,7 @@ getDataConArgTys dc con_app_ty
{- Note [Constructor arg types]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider a GADT (cf Trac #7386)
+Consider a GADT (cf #7386)
data family D a b
data instance D [a] a where
MkT :: a -> D [a] (Maybe a)
diff --git a/compiler/hsSyn/Convert.hs b/compiler/hsSyn/Convert.hs
index 7113905bd9..77ffebe021 100644
--- a/compiler/hsSyn/Convert.hs
+++ b/compiler/hsSyn/Convert.hs
@@ -1570,7 +1570,7 @@ points so that the code is readable with its original meaning.
So scattered through Convert.hs are various points where parens are added.
-See (among other closed issued) https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/14289
+See (among other closed issued) https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/14289
-}
-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -1730,7 +1730,7 @@ mkHsForAllTy tvs loc fvf tvs' rho_ty
-- It's important that we don't build an HsQualTy if the context is empty,
-- as the pretty-printer for HsType _always_ prints contexts, even if
--- they're empty. See Trac #13183.
+-- they're empty. See #13183.
mkHsQualTy :: TH.Cxt
-- ^ The original Template Haskell context
-> SrcSpan
@@ -1820,7 +1820,7 @@ thRdrName :: SrcSpan -> OccName.NameSpace -> String -> TH.NameFlavour -> RdrName
--
-- We pass in a SrcSpan (gotten from the monad) because this function
-- is used for *binders* and if we make an Exact Name we want it
--- to have a binding site inside it. (cf Trac #5434)
+-- to have a binding site inside it. (cf #5434)
--
-- ToDo: we may generate silly RdrNames, by passing a name space
-- that doesn't match the string, like VarName ":+",
@@ -1842,7 +1842,7 @@ thRdrName loc ctxt_ns th_occ th_name
occ = mk_occ ctxt_ns th_occ
-- Return an unqualified exact RdrName if we're dealing with built-in syntax.
--- See Trac #13776.
+-- See #13776.
thOrigRdrName :: String -> TH.NameSpace -> PkgName -> ModName -> RdrName
thOrigRdrName occ th_ns pkg mod =
let occ' = mk_occ (mk_ghc_ns th_ns) occ
diff --git a/compiler/hsSyn/HsBinds.hs b/compiler/hsSyn/HsBinds.hs
index 110c0fb488..8e3448d0f0 100644
--- a/compiler/hsSyn/HsBinds.hs
+++ b/compiler/hsSyn/HsBinds.hs
@@ -549,7 +549,7 @@ case we'd prefer to generate the (more direct)
(# fromInteger $dNum 3, fromInteger $dNum 4 #)
A similar thing happens with representation-polymorphic defns
-(Trac #11405):
+(#11405):
undef :: forall (r :: RuntimeRep) (a :: TYPE r). HasCallStack => a
undef = error "undef"
@@ -798,7 +798,7 @@ instance (idR ~ GhcPass pr,OutputableBndrId idL, OutputableBndrId idR,
pprTicks :: SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
-- Print stuff about ticks only when -dppr-debug is on, to avoid
--- them appearing in error messages (from the desugarer); see Trac # 3263
+-- them appearing in error messages (from the desugarer); see # 3263
-- Also print ticks in dumpStyle, so that -ddump-hpc actually does
-- something useful.
pprTicks pp_no_debug pp_when_debug
diff --git a/compiler/hsSyn/HsDecls.hs b/compiler/hsSyn/HsDecls.hs
index f8709fbe1e..d4742f5052 100644
--- a/compiler/hsSyn/HsDecls.hs
+++ b/compiler/hsSyn/HsDecls.hs
@@ -855,7 +855,7 @@ NOTE THAT
not be bound after it.)
This last point is much more debatable than the others; see
- Trac #15142 comment:22
+ #15142 comment:22
-}
diff --git a/compiler/hsSyn/HsExpr.hs b/compiler/hsSyn/HsExpr.hs
index 37d71821c0..bd63150c02 100644
--- a/compiler/hsSyn/HsExpr.hs
+++ b/compiler/hsSyn/HsExpr.hs
@@ -247,7 +247,7 @@ When it calls RnEnv.unknownNameSuggestions to identify these alternatives, the
typechecker must provide a GlobalRdrEnv. If it provided the current one, which
contains top-level declarations for the entire module, the error message would
incorrectly suggest the out-of-scope `bar` and `bad` as possible alternatives
-for `bar` (see Trac #11680). Instead, the typechecker must use the same
+for `bar` (see #11680). Instead, the typechecker must use the same
GlobalRdrEnv the renamer used when it determined that `bar` is out-of-scope.
To obtain this GlobalRdrEnv, can the typechecker simply use the out-of-scope
@@ -2012,7 +2012,7 @@ Note [The type of bind in Stmts]
Some Stmts, notably BindStmt, keep the (>>=) bind operator.
We do NOT assume that it has type
(>>=) :: m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
-In some cases (see Trac #303, #1537) it might have a more
+In some cases (see #303, #1537) it might have a more
exotic type, such as
(>>=) :: m i j a -> (a -> m j k b) -> m i k b
So we must be careful not to make assumptions about the type.
@@ -2306,7 +2306,7 @@ pprComp quals -- Prints: body | qual1, ..., qualn
-- one, we simply treat it like a normal list. This does arise
-- occasionally in code that GHC generates, e.g., in implementations of
-- 'range' for derived 'Ix' instances for product datatypes with exactly
- -- one constructor (e.g., see Trac #12583).
+ -- one constructor (e.g., see #12583).
then ppr body
else hang (ppr body <+> vbar) 2 (pprQuals initStmts)
| otherwise
diff --git a/compiler/hsSyn/HsPat.hs b/compiler/hsSyn/HsPat.hs
index 91be1492a8..bce65ba25a 100644
--- a/compiler/hsSyn/HsPat.hs
+++ b/compiler/hsSyn/HsPat.hs
@@ -292,7 +292,7 @@ type instance XParPat (GhcPass _) = NoExt
type instance XBangPat (GhcPass _) = NoExt
-- Note: XListPat cannot be extended when using GHC 8.0.2 as the bootstrap
--- compiler, as it triggers https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/14396 for
+-- compiler, as it triggers https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/14396 for
-- `SyntaxExpr`
type instance XListPat GhcPs = NoExt
type instance XListPat GhcRn = Maybe (SyntaxExpr GhcRn)
@@ -735,7 +735,7 @@ isIrrefutableHsPat
=
isJust (tyConSingleDataCon_maybe (dataConTyCon con))
-- NB: tyConSingleDataCon_maybe, *not* isProductTyCon, because
- -- the latter is false of existentials. See Trac #4439
+ -- the latter is false of existentials. See #4439
&& all goL (hsConPatArgs details)
go (ConPatOut
{ pat_con = (dL->L _ (PatSynCon _pat)) })
diff --git a/compiler/hsSyn/HsTypes.hs b/compiler/hsSyn/HsTypes.hs
index ba961b53d0..9bb73c361b 100644
--- a/compiler/hsSyn/HsTypes.hs
+++ b/compiler/hsSyn/HsTypes.hs
@@ -213,7 +213,7 @@ Note carefully:
Or even:
f :: forall _a. _a -> _b
Here _a is an ordinary forall'd binder, but (With NamedWildCards)
- _b is a named wildcard. (See the comments in Trac #10982)
+ _b is a named wildcard. (See the comments in #10982)
* Named wildcards are bound by the HsWildCardBndrs construct, which wraps
types that are allowed to have wildcards. Unnamed wildcards however are left
@@ -757,7 +757,7 @@ After renaming
Qualified currently behaves exactly as Implicit,
but it is deprecated to use it for implicit quantification.
In this case, GHC 7.10 gives a warning; see
-Note [Context quantification] in RnTypes, and Trac #4426.
+Note [Context quantification] in RnTypes, and #4426.
In GHC 8.0, Qualified will no longer bind variables
and this will become an error.
@@ -1065,7 +1065,7 @@ mkHsAppKindTy ext ty k
-- Breaks up any parens in the result type:
-- splitHsFunType (a -> (b -> c)) = ([a,b], c)
-- Also deals with (->) t1 t2; that is why it only works on LHsType Name
--- (see Trac #9096)
+-- (see #9096)
splitHsFunType :: LHsType GhcRn -> ([LHsType GhcRn], LHsType GhcRn)
splitHsFunType (L _ (HsParTy _ ty))
= splitHsFunType ty
@@ -1483,7 +1483,7 @@ pprConDeclFields fields = braces (sep (punctuate comma (map ppr_fld fields)))
{-
Note [Printing KindedTyVars]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Trac #3830 reminded me that we should really only print the kind
+#3830 reminded me that we should really only print the kind
signature on a KindedTyVar if the kind signature was put there by the
programmer. During kind inference GHC now adds a PostTcKind to UserTyVars,
rather than converting to KindedTyVars as before.
diff --git a/compiler/hsSyn/HsUtils.hs b/compiler/hsSyn/HsUtils.hs
index 62c153ef52..fa8ec1416c 100644
--- a/compiler/hsSyn/HsUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/hsSyn/HsUtils.hs
@@ -611,7 +611,7 @@ mkHsSigEnv get_info sigs
`extendNameEnvList` (mk_pairs gen_dm_sigs)
-- The subtlety is this: in a class decl with a
-- default-method signature as well as a method signature
- -- we want the latter to win (Trac #12533)
+ -- we want the latter to win (#12533)
-- class C x where
-- op :: forall a . x a -> x a
-- default op :: forall b . x b -> x b
@@ -693,7 +693,7 @@ typeToLHsType ty
go (CoercionTy co) = pprPanic "toLHsSigWcType" (ppr co)
-- Source-language types have _invisible_ kind arguments,
- -- so we must remove them here (Trac #8563)
+ -- so we must remove them here (#8563)
go_tv :: TyVar -> LHsTyVarBndr GhcPs
go_tv tv = noLoc $ KindedTyVar noExt (noLoc (getRdrName tv))
@@ -703,7 +703,7 @@ typeToLHsType ty
Note [Kind signatures in typeToLHsType]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are types that typeToLHsType can produce which require explicit kind
-signatures in order to kind-check. Here is an example from Trac #14579:
+signatures in order to kind-check. Here is an example from #14579:
-- type P :: forall {k} {t :: k}. Proxy t
type P = 'Proxy
@@ -1302,7 +1302,7 @@ main name (the TyCon of a type declaration etc), we want to give it
the @SrcSpan@ of the whole /declaration/, not just the name itself
(which is how it appears in the syntax tree). This SrcSpan (for the
entire declaration) is used as the SrcSpan for the Name that is
-finally produced, and hence for error messages. (See Trac #8607.)
+finally produced, and hence for error messages. (See #8607.)
Note [Binders in family instances]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
diff --git a/compiler/iface/BuildTyCl.hs b/compiler/iface/BuildTyCl.hs
index 4cbcb963d6..dc1c843889 100644
--- a/compiler/iface/BuildTyCl.hs
+++ b/compiler/iface/BuildTyCl.hs
@@ -370,7 +370,7 @@ Consider
We cannot represent this by a newtype, even though it's not
existential, because there are two value fields (the equality
-predicate and op. See Trac #2238
+predicate and op. See #2238
Moreover,
class (a ~ F b) => C a b where {}
diff --git a/compiler/iface/FlagChecker.hs b/compiler/iface/FlagChecker.hs
index 2ef369a5e9..a9ab4c97d7 100644
--- a/compiler/iface/FlagChecker.hs
+++ b/compiler/iface/FlagChecker.hs
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ fingerprintOptFlags :: DynFlags
-> IO Fingerprint
fingerprintOptFlags DynFlags{..} nameio =
let
- -- See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10923
+ -- See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10923
-- We used to fingerprint the optimisation level, but as Joachim
-- Breitner pointed out in comment 9 on that ticket, it's better
-- to ignore that and just look at the individual optimisation flags.
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ fingerprintHpcFlags :: DynFlags
-> IO Fingerprint
fingerprintHpcFlags dflags@DynFlags{..} nameio =
let
- -- -fhpc, see https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/11798
+ -- -fhpc, see https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/11798
-- hpcDir is output-only, so we should recompile if it changes
hpc = if gopt Opt_Hpc dflags then Just hpcDir else Nothing
diff --git a/compiler/iface/IfaceSyn.hs b/compiler/iface/IfaceSyn.hs
index 05f64dff5a..b066f5cf37 100644
--- a/compiler/iface/IfaceSyn.hs
+++ b/compiler/iface/IfaceSyn.hs
@@ -745,7 +745,7 @@ pprIfaceDecl ss (IfaceData { ifName = tycon, ifCType = ctype,
(occName tycon))
binders roles
-- Don't display roles for data family instances (yet)
- -- See discussion on Trac #8672.
+ -- See discussion on #8672.
add_bars [] = Outputable.empty
add_bars (c:cs) = sep ((equals <+> c) : map (vbar <+>) cs)
diff --git a/compiler/iface/IfaceType.hs b/compiler/iface/IfaceType.hs
index e2235ab01f..4488aef025 100644
--- a/compiler/iface/IfaceType.hs
+++ b/compiler/iface/IfaceType.hs
@@ -853,7 +853,7 @@ pretty-printing (defaultRuntimeRepVars, controlled by
This applies to /quantified/ variables like 'w' above. What about
variables that are /free/ in the type being printed, which certainly
-happens in error messages. Suppose (Trac #16074) we are reporting a
+happens in error messages. Suppose (#16074) we are reporting a
mismatch between two skolems
(a :: RuntimeRep) ~ (b :: RuntimeRep)
We certainly don't want to say "Can't match LiftedRep ~ LiftedRep"!
@@ -1169,7 +1169,7 @@ family instances as Specified.
Note [Printing promoted type constructors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this GHCi session (Trac #14343)
+Consider this GHCi session (#14343)
> _ :: Proxy '[ 'True ]
error:
Found hole: _ :: Proxy '['True]
diff --git a/compiler/iface/LoadIface.hs b/compiler/iface/LoadIface.hs
index 927c49b7be..497ddfc179 100644
--- a/compiler/iface/LoadIface.hs
+++ b/compiler/iface/LoadIface.hs
@@ -876,7 +876,7 @@ It is possible (though hard) to get this error through user behaviour.
is a home-package module which is not yet in the HPT! Disaster.
This actually happened with P=base, Q=ghc-prim, via the AMP warnings.
-See Trac #8320.
+See #8320.
-}
findAndReadIface :: SDoc
diff --git a/compiler/iface/MkIface.hs b/compiler/iface/MkIface.hs
index 1ea608e787..440f89fb4c 100644
--- a/compiler/iface/MkIface.hs
+++ b/compiler/iface/MkIface.hs
@@ -625,7 +625,7 @@ addFingerprints hsc_env mb_old_fingerprint iface0 new_decls
-- Note [Do not update EPS with your own hi-boot]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- -- (See also Trac #10182). When your hs-boot file includes an orphan
+ -- (See also #10182). When your hs-boot file includes an orphan
-- instance declaration, you may find that the dep_orphs of a module you
-- import contains reference to yourself. DO NOT actually load this module
-- or add it to the orphan hashes: you're going to provide the orphan
@@ -991,7 +991,7 @@ declExtras fix_fn ann_fn rule_env inst_env fi_env dm_env decl
insts = (map ifDFun $ (concatMap at_extras ats)
++ lookupOccEnvL inst_env n)
-- Include instances of the associated types
- -- as well as instances of the class (Trac #5147)
+ -- as well as instances of the class (#5147)
meths = [id_extras (getOccName op) | IfaceClassOp op _ _ <- sigs]
-- Names of all the default methods (see Note [default method Name])
defms = [ dmName
@@ -1136,7 +1136,7 @@ Note [Internal used_names]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Most of the used_names are External Names, but we can have Internal
Names too: see Note [Binders in Template Haskell] in Convert, and
-Trac #5362 for an example. Such Names are always
+#5362 for an example. Such Names are always
- Such Names are always for locally-defined things, for which we
don't gather usage info, so we can just ignore them in ent_map
- They are always System Names, hence the assert, just as a double check.
diff --git a/compiler/iface/TcIface.hs b/compiler/iface/TcIface.hs
index 3874d8d6a2..732ee1b61a 100644
--- a/compiler/iface/TcIface.hs
+++ b/compiler/iface/TcIface.hs
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ module TcIface (
typecheckIfaceForInstantiate,
tcIfaceDecl, tcIfaceInst, tcIfaceFamInst, tcIfaceRules,
tcIfaceAnnotations, tcIfaceCompleteSigs,
- tcIfaceExpr, -- Desired by HERMIT (Trac #7683)
+ tcIfaceExpr, -- Desired by HERMIT (#7683)
tcIfaceGlobal
) where
@@ -757,7 +757,7 @@ tc_iface_decl _parent ignore_prags
-- class C (T a) => D a where
-- data T a
-- Here the associated type T is knot-tied with the class, and
- -- so we must not pull on T too eagerly. See Trac #5970
+ -- so we must not pull on T too eagerly. See #5970
tc_sig :: IfaceClassOp -> IfL TcMethInfo
tc_sig (IfaceClassOp op_name rdr_ty dm)
@@ -789,7 +789,7 @@ tc_iface_decl _parent ignore_prags
; return (Just (tc_def, noSrcSpan)) }
-- Must be done lazily in case the RHS of the defaults mention
-- the type constructor being defined here
- -- e.g. type AT a; type AT b = AT [b] Trac #8002
+ -- e.g. type AT a; type AT b = AT [b] #8002
return (ATI tc mb_def)
mk_sc_doc pred = text "Superclass" <+> ppr pred
@@ -804,7 +804,7 @@ tc_iface_decl _ _ (IfaceAxiom { ifName = tc_name, ifTyCon = tc
-- a hs-boot declared type constructor that is going to be
-- defined by this module.
-- e.g. type instance F Int = ToBeDefined
- -- See Trac #13803
+ -- See #13803
; tc_branches <- forkM (text "Axiom branches" <+> ppr tc_name)
$ tc_ax_branches branches
; let axiom = CoAxiom { co_ax_unique = nameUnique tc_name
@@ -992,7 +992,7 @@ Note [Synonym kind loop]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Notice that we eagerly grab the *kind* from the interface file, but
build a forkM thunk for the *rhs* (and family stuff). To see why,
-consider this (Trac #2412)
+consider this (#2412)
M.hs: module M where { import X; data T = MkT S }
X.hs: module X where { import {-# SOURCE #-} M; type S = T }
diff --git a/compiler/iface/ToIface.hs b/compiler/iface/ToIface.hs
index 3779e394cc..aa4e53cfb4 100644
--- a/compiler/iface/ToIface.hs
+++ b/compiler/iface/ToIface.hs
@@ -322,7 +322,7 @@ toIfaceAppArgsX fr kind ty_args
-- e.g. kind = k, ty_args = [Int]
-- This is probably a compiler bug, so we print a trace and
-- carry on as if it were FunTy. Without the test for
- -- isEmptyTCvSubst we'd get an infinite loop (Trac #15473)
+ -- isEmptyTCvSubst we'd get an infinite loop (#15473)
WARN( True, ppr kind $$ ppr ty_args )
IA_Arg (toIfaceTypeX fr t1) Required (go env ty ts1)
@@ -522,7 +522,7 @@ toIfaceTickish (HpcTick modl ix) = Just (IfaceHpcTick modl ix)
toIfaceTickish (SourceNote src names) = Just (IfaceSource src names)
toIfaceTickish (Breakpoint {}) = Nothing
-- Ignore breakpoints, since they are relevant only to GHCi, and
- -- should not be serialised (Trac #8333)
+ -- should not be serialised (#8333)
---------------------
toIfaceBind :: Bind Id -> IfaceBinding
@@ -581,7 +581,7 @@ toIfaceVar v
{- Note [Inlining and hs-boot files]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this example (Trac #10083, #12789):
+Consider this example (#10083, #12789):
---------- RSR.hs-boot ------------
module RSR where
@@ -643,7 +643,7 @@ But how do we arrange for this to happen? There are two ingredients:
Here is a solution that doesn't work: when compiling RSR,
add a NOINLINE pragma to every function exported by the boot-file
for RSR (if it exists). Doing so makes the bootstrapped GHC itself
-slower by 8% overall (on Trac #9872a-d, and T1969: the reason
+slower by 8% overall (on #9872a-d, and T1969: the reason
is that these NOINLINE'd functions now can't be profitably inlined
outside of the hs-boot loop.
diff --git a/compiler/llvmGen/Llvm/Types.hs b/compiler/llvmGen/Llvm/Types.hs
index 975c361085..9bcceb599d 100644
--- a/compiler/llvmGen/Llvm/Types.hs
+++ b/compiler/llvmGen/Llvm/Types.hs
@@ -231,7 +231,7 @@ ppLit f@(LMFloatLit _ _) = sdocWithDynFlags (\dflags ->
error $ "Can't print this float literal!" ++ showSDoc dflags (ppr f))
ppLit (LMVectorLit ls ) = char '<' <+> ppCommaJoin ls <+> char '>'
ppLit (LMNullLit _ ) = text "null"
--- Trac 11487 was an issue where we passed undef for some arguments
+-- #11487 was an issue where we passed undef for some arguments
-- that were actually live. By chance the registers holding those
-- arguments usually happened to have the right values anyways, but
-- that was not guaranteed. To find such bugs reliably, we set the
diff --git a/compiler/llvmGen/LlvmCodeGen.hs b/compiler/llvmGen/LlvmCodeGen.hs
index b003cbc123..a24a416256 100644
--- a/compiler/llvmGen/LlvmCodeGen.hs
+++ b/compiler/llvmGen/LlvmCodeGen.hs
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ cmmDataLlvmGens statics
-- | LLVM can't handle entry blocks which loop back to themselves (could be
-- seen as an LLVM bug) so we rearrange the code to keep the original entry
-- label which branches to a newly generated second label that branches back
--- to itself. See: Trac #11649
+-- to itself. See: #11649
fixBottom :: RawCmmDecl -> LlvmM RawCmmDecl
fixBottom cp@(CmmProc hdr entry_lbl live g) =
maybe (pure cp) fix_block $ mapLookup (g_entry g) blk_map
diff --git a/compiler/main/Ar.hs b/compiler/main/Ar.hs
index 1f1b44ed35..73292d0ae3 100644
--- a/compiler/main/Ar.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/Ar.hs
@@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ getBSDArchEntries = do
return $ C.unpack $ C.takeWhile (/= ' ') name
off2 <- liftM fromIntegral bytesRead :: Get Int
file <- getByteString (st_size - (off2 - off1))
- -- data sections are two byte aligned (see Trac #15396)
+ -- data sections are two byte aligned (see #15396)
when (odd st_size) $
void (getByteString 1)
@@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ getGNUArchEntries extInfo = do
fail ("[BSD Archive] Invalid archive header end marker for name: " ++
C.unpack name)
file <- getByteString st_size
- -- data sections are two byte aligned (see Trac #15396)
+ -- data sections are two byte aligned (see #15396)
when (odd st_size) $
void (getByteString 1)
name <- return . C.unpack $
diff --git a/compiler/main/CmdLineParser.hs b/compiler/main/CmdLineParser.hs
index cb30b6fe6c..6763aed128 100644
--- a/compiler/main/CmdLineParser.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/CmdLineParser.hs
@@ -235,12 +235,12 @@ processOneArg opt_kind rest arg args
[] -> missingArgErr dash_arg
(L _ arg1:args1) -> Right (f arg1, args1)
- -- See Trac #9776
+ -- See #9776
SepArg f -> case args of
[] -> missingArgErr dash_arg
(L _ arg1:args1) -> Right (f arg1, args1)
- -- See Trac #12625
+ -- See #12625
Prefix f | notNull rest_no_eq -> Right (f rest_no_eq, args)
| otherwise -> missingArgErr dash_arg
@@ -277,7 +277,7 @@ arg_ok (NoArg _) rest _ = null rest
arg_ok (HasArg _) _ _ = True
arg_ok (SepArg _) rest _ = null rest
arg_ok (Prefix _) _ _ = True -- Missing argument checked for in processOneArg t
- -- to improve error message (Trac #12625)
+ -- to improve error message (#12625)
arg_ok (OptIntSuffix _) _ _ = True
arg_ok (IntSuffix _) _ _ = True
arg_ok (FloatSuffix _) _ _ = True
diff --git a/compiler/main/Constants.hs b/compiler/main/Constants.hs
index 7eda130917..cf3458507b 100644
--- a/compiler/main/Constants.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/Constants.hs
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ mAX_SUM_SIZE :: Int
mAX_SUM_SIZE = 62
-- | Default maximum depth for both class instance search and type family
--- reduction. See also Trac #5395.
+-- reduction. See also #5395.
mAX_REDUCTION_DEPTH :: Int
mAX_REDUCTION_DEPTH = 200
diff --git a/compiler/main/DriverPipeline.hs b/compiler/main/DriverPipeline.hs
index 998928709a..5866568619 100644
--- a/compiler/main/DriverPipeline.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/DriverPipeline.hs
@@ -329,7 +329,7 @@ compileEmptyStub dflags hsc_env basename location mod_name = do
-- valid) stub object file for signatures. However,
-- we make sure this object file has a unique symbol,
-- so that ranlib on OS X doesn't complain, see
- -- http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/12673
+ -- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/12673
-- and https://github.com/haskell/cabal/issues/2257
empty_stub <- newTempName dflags TFL_CurrentModule "c"
let src = text "int" <+> ppr (mkModule (thisPackage dflags) mod_name) <+> text "= 0;"
@@ -777,7 +777,7 @@ getOutputFilename stop_phase output basename dflags next_phase maybe_location
As _ | keep_s -> True
LlvmOpt | keep_bc -> True
HCc | keep_hc -> True
- HsPp _ | keep_hscpp -> True -- See Trac #10869
+ HsPp _ | keep_hscpp -> True -- See #10869
_other -> False
suffix = myPhaseInputExt next_phase
@@ -1958,7 +1958,7 @@ doCpp dflags raw input_fn output_fn = do
-- Include version macros for every *exposed* package.
-- Without -hide-all-packages and with a package database
-- size of 1000 packages, it takes cpp an estimated 2
- -- milliseconds to process this file. See Trac #10970
+ -- milliseconds to process this file. See #10970
-- comment 8.
return [SysTools.FileOption "-include" macro_stub]
else return []
@@ -2011,7 +2011,7 @@ getBackendDefs _ =
generatePackageVersionMacros :: [PackageConfig] -> String
generatePackageVersionMacros pkgs = concat
- -- Do not add any C-style comments. See Trac #3389.
+ -- Do not add any C-style comments. See #3389.
[ generateMacros "" pkgname version
| pkg <- pkgs
, let version = packageVersion pkg
diff --git a/compiler/main/DynFlags.hs b/compiler/main/DynFlags.hs
index b3cfa4860e..ba4cfe726a 100644
--- a/compiler/main/DynFlags.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/DynFlags.hs
@@ -324,7 +324,7 @@ import Foreign (Ptr) -- needed for 2nd stage
-- There is a change log tracking language extension additions and removals
-- on the GHC wiki: https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/LanguagePragmaHistory
--
--- See Trac #4437 and #8176.
+-- See #4437 and #8176.
-- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- DynFlags
@@ -727,7 +727,7 @@ data WarnReason
-- | Used to differentiate the scope an include needs to apply to.
-- We have to split the include paths to avoid accidentally forcing recursive
--- includes since -I overrides the system search paths. See Trac #14312.
+-- includes since -I overrides the system search paths. See #14312.
data IncludeSpecs
= IncludeSpecs { includePathsQuote :: [String]
, includePathsGlobal :: [String]
@@ -3005,7 +3005,7 @@ dynamic_flags_deps = [
, make_ord_flag defFlag "pgmc"
(hasArg (\f -> alterSettings (\s -> s { sPgm_c = (f,[]),
-- Don't pass -no-pie with -pgmc
- -- (see Trac #15319)
+ -- (see #15319)
sGccSupportsNoPie = False})))
, make_ord_flag defFlag "pgms"
(HasArg (\_ -> addWarn "Object splitting was removed in GHC 8.8"))
@@ -3753,7 +3753,7 @@ dynamic_flags_deps = [
"-XDeriveGeneric for generic programming support.") ]
-- | This is where we handle unrecognised warning flags. We only issue a warning
--- if -Wunrecognised-warning-flags is set. See Trac #11429 for context.
+-- if -Wunrecognised-warning-flags is set. See #11429 for context.
unrecognisedWarning :: String -> Flag (CmdLineP DynFlags)
unrecognisedWarning prefix = defHiddenFlag prefix (Prefix action)
where
@@ -4557,7 +4557,7 @@ impliedXFlags
, (LangExt.ExistentialQuantification, turnOn, LangExt.ExplicitForAll)
, (LangExt.FlexibleInstances, turnOn, LangExt.TypeSynonymInstances)
, (LangExt.FunctionalDependencies, turnOn, LangExt.MultiParamTypeClasses)
- , (LangExt.MultiParamTypeClasses, turnOn, LangExt.ConstrainedClassMethods) -- c.f. Trac #7854
+ , (LangExt.MultiParamTypeClasses, turnOn, LangExt.ConstrainedClassMethods) -- c.f. #7854
, (LangExt.TypeFamilyDependencies, turnOn, LangExt.TypeFamilies)
, (LangExt.RebindableSyntax, turnOff, LangExt.ImplicitPrelude) -- NB: turn off!
@@ -4675,7 +4675,7 @@ optLevelFlags -- see Note [Documenting optimisation flags]
{- Note [Eta-reduction in -O0]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Trac #11562 showed an example which tripped an ASSERT in CoreToStg; a
+#11562 showed an example which tripped an ASSERT in CoreToStg; a
function was marked as MayHaveCafRefs when in fact it obviously
didn't. Reason was:
* Eta reduction wasn't happening in the simplifier, but it was
@@ -5553,7 +5553,7 @@ picCCOpts dflags = pieOpts ++ picOpts
| gopt Opt_PIC dflags || WayDyn `elem` ways dflags ->
["-fPIC", "-U__PIC__", "-D__PIC__"]
-- gcc may be configured to have PIC on by default, let's be
- -- explicit here, see Trac #15847
+ -- explicit here, see #15847
| otherwise -> ["-fno-PIC"]
pieOpts
diff --git a/compiler/main/ErrUtils.hs b/compiler/main/ErrUtils.hs
index 9ee6856275..4f19437ce9 100644
--- a/compiler/main/ErrUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/ErrUtils.hs
@@ -485,7 +485,7 @@ withDumpFileHandle dflags flag action = do
-- We do not want the dump file to be affected by
-- environment variables, but instead to always use
-- UTF8. See:
- -- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10762
+ -- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10762
hSetEncoding handle utf8
action (Just handle)
diff --git a/compiler/main/GHC.hs b/compiler/main/GHC.hs
index 9e58f356f6..4e6e0f43c2 100644
--- a/compiler/main/GHC.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/GHC.hs
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ module GHC (
getDocs, GetDocsFailure(..),
-- ** Other
- runTcInteractive, -- Desired by some clients (Trac #8878)
+ runTcInteractive, -- Desired by some clients (#8878)
isStmt, hasImport, isImport, isDecl,
-- ** The debugger
@@ -516,7 +516,7 @@ initGhcMonad mb_top_dir
-- check should be more selective but there is currently no released
-- version where this bug is fixed.
-- See https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16177 and
--- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/4210#comment:29
+-- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/4210#note_78333
checkBrokenTablesNextToCode :: MonadIO m => DynFlags -> m ()
checkBrokenTablesNextToCode dflags
= do { broken <- checkBrokenTablesNextToCode' dflags
diff --git a/compiler/main/GhcMake.hs b/compiler/main/GhcMake.hs
index a6fe5c7f72..d730fe70f1 100644
--- a/compiler/main/GhcMake.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/GhcMake.hs
@@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ depanal excluded_mods allow_dup_roots = do
-- but "A" imports some other module "C", then GHC will issue a warning
-- about module "C" not being listed in a command line.
--
--- The warning in enabled by `-Wmissing-home-modules`. See Trac #13129
+-- The warning in enabled by `-Wmissing-home-modules`. See #13129
warnMissingHomeModules :: GhcMonad m => HscEnv -> ModuleGraph -> m ()
warnMissingHomeModules hsc_env mod_graph =
when (wopt Opt_WarnMissingHomeModules dflags && not (null missing)) $
@@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ warnMissingHomeModules hsc_env mod_graph =
-- For instance, `ghc --make src-exe/Main.hs` and
-- `ghc --make -isrc-exe Main` are supposed to be equivalent.
-- Note also that we can't always infer the associated module name
- -- directly from the filename argument. See Trac #13727.
+ -- directly from the filename argument. See #13727.
is_my_target mod (TargetModule name)
= moduleName (ms_mod mod) == name
is_my_target mod (TargetFile target_file _)
@@ -868,7 +868,7 @@ parUpsweep n_jobs mHscMessage old_hpt stable_mods cleanup sccs = do
n_cpus <- getNumProcessors
-- Setting number of capabilities more than
-- CPU count usually leads to high userspace
- -- lock contention. Trac #9221
+ -- lock contention. #9221
let n_caps = min n_jobs n_cpus
unless (n_capabilities /= 1) $ setNumCapabilities n_caps
return n_capabilities
@@ -1629,7 +1629,7 @@ Potential TODOS:
-- be any object code that we can compare against, nor should there
-- be: we're *just* generating interface files. In this case, we
-- want to check if the interface file is new, in lieu of the object
--- file. See also Trac #9243.
+-- file. See also #9243.
-- Filter modules in the HPT
retainInTopLevelEnvs :: [ModuleName] -> HomePackageTable -> HomePackageTable
diff --git a/compiler/main/HscTypes.hs b/compiler/main/HscTypes.hs
index 0ca7bdae45..add0ee95d2 100644
--- a/compiler/main/HscTypes.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/HscTypes.hs
@@ -703,7 +703,7 @@ hptSomeThingsBelowUs extract include_hi_boot hsc_env deps
Nothing -> pprTrace "WARNING in hptSomeThingsBelowUs" msg []
msg = vcat [text "missing module" <+> ppr mod,
text "Probable cause: out-of-date interface files"]
- -- This really shouldn't happen, but see Trac #962
+ -- This really shouldn't happen, but see #962
-- And get its dfuns
, thing <- things ]
@@ -1535,7 +1535,7 @@ e.g. Prelude> data T = A | B
Prelude> instance Eq T where ...
Prelude> instance Eq T where ... -- This one overrides
-It's exactly the same for type-family instances. See Trac #7102
+It's exactly the same for type-family instances. See #7102
-}
-- | Interactive context, recording information about the state of the
@@ -1658,7 +1658,7 @@ extendInteractiveContext :: InteractiveContext
extendInteractiveContext ictxt new_tythings new_cls_insts new_fam_insts defaults fix_env
= ictxt { ic_mod_index = ic_mod_index ictxt + 1
-- Always bump this; even instances should create
- -- a new mod_index (Trac #9426)
+ -- a new mod_index (#9426)
, ic_tythings = new_tythings ++ old_tythings
, ic_rn_gbl_env = ic_rn_gbl_env ictxt `icExtendGblRdrEnv` new_tythings
, ic_instances = ( new_cls_insts ++ old_cls_insts
@@ -1726,7 +1726,7 @@ icExtendGblRdrEnv env tythings
-- are not implicit-ids, and must appear in the TypeEnv. But they
-- will also be brought into scope by the corresponding (ATyCon
-- tc). And we want the latter, because that has the correct
- -- parent (Trac #10520)
+ -- parent (#10520)
is_sub_bndr (AnId f) = case idDetails f of
RecSelId {} -> True
ClassOpId {} -> True
diff --git a/compiler/main/InteractiveEval.hs b/compiler/main/InteractiveEval.hs
index 5ff1b03a97..2c04029e88 100644
--- a/compiler/main/InteractiveEval.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/InteractiveEval.hs
@@ -249,7 +249,7 @@ Things like the coercion axiom for newtypes. These bindings all get
OccNames that users can't write, to avoid the possibility of name
clashes (in linker symbols). That gives a convenient way to suppress
them. The relevant predicate is OccName.isDerivedOccName.
-See Trac #11051 for more background and examples.
+See #11051 for more background and examples.
-}
withVirtualCWD :: GhcMonad m => m a -> m a
@@ -756,7 +756,7 @@ moduleIsInterpreted modl = withSession $ \h ->
-- Filter the instances by the ones whose tycons (or clases resp)
-- are in scope (qualified or otherwise). Otherwise we list a whole lot too many!
-- The exact choice of which ones to show, and which to hide, is a judgement call.
--- (see Trac #1581)
+-- (see #1581)
getInfo :: GhcMonad m => Bool -> Name
-> m (Maybe (TyThing,Fixity,[ClsInst],[FamInst], SDoc))
getInfo allInfo name
@@ -800,7 +800,7 @@ getRdrNamesInScope = withSession $ \hsc_env -> do
ic = hsc_IC hsc_env
gbl_rdrenv = ic_rn_gbl_env ic
gbl_names = concatMap greRdrNames $ globalRdrEnvElts gbl_rdrenv
- -- Exclude internally generated names; see e.g. Trac #11328
+ -- Exclude internally generated names; see e.g. #11328
return (filter (not . isDerivedOccName . rdrNameOcc) gbl_names)
diff --git a/compiler/main/Packages.hs b/compiler/main/Packages.hs
index 44258de70c..8c81d82d78 100644
--- a/compiler/main/Packages.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/Packages.hs
@@ -1723,7 +1723,7 @@ mkUnusableModuleToPkgConfAll unusables =
-- | Add a list of key/value pairs to a nested map.
--
-- The outer map is processed with 'Data.Map.Strict' to prevent memory leaks
--- when reloading modules in GHCi (see Trac #4029). This ensures that each
+-- when reloading modules in GHCi (see #4029). This ensures that each
-- value is forced before installing into the map.
addListTo :: (Monoid a, Ord k1, Ord k2)
=> Map k1 (Map k2 a)
diff --git a/compiler/main/SysTools.hs b/compiler/main/SysTools.hs
index 543dd9ce3b..fddc4ac30f 100644
--- a/compiler/main/SysTools.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/SysTools.hs
@@ -314,7 +314,7 @@ initSysTools top_dir
{- Note [Windows stack usage]
-See: Trac #8870 (and #8834 for related info) and #12186
+See: #8870 (and #8834 for related info) and #12186
On Windows, occasionally we need to grow the stack. In order to do
this, we would normally just bump the stack pointer - but there's a
@@ -616,5 +616,5 @@ R_*_COPY relocations.
Unregisterised compiler can't evade R_*_COPY relocations easily thus we disable
-Bsymbolic linking there.
-See related Trac tickets: #4210, #15338
+See related tickets: #4210, #15338
-}
diff --git a/compiler/main/SysTools/Info.hs b/compiler/main/SysTools/Info.hs
index 420a2bf27f..2dcd39549f 100644
--- a/compiler/main/SysTools/Info.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/SysTools/Info.hs
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ import SysTools.Process
{- Note [Run-time linker info]
-See also: Trac #5240, Trac #6063, Trac #10110
+See also: #5240, #6063, #10110
Before 'runLink', we need to be sure to get the relevant information
about the linker we're using at runtime to see if we need any extra
@@ -127,8 +127,8 @@ getLinkerInfo' dflags = do
parseLinkerInfo stdo _stde _exitc
| any ("GNU ld" `isPrefixOf`) stdo =
-- GNU ld specifically needs to use less memory. This especially
- -- hurts on small object files. Trac #5240.
- -- Set DT_NEEDED for all shared libraries. Trac #10110.
+ -- hurts on small object files. #5240.
+ -- Set DT_NEEDED for all shared libraries. #10110.
-- TODO: Investigate if these help or hurt when using split sections.
return (GnuLD $ map Option ["-Wl,--hash-size=31",
"-Wl,--reduce-memory-overheads",
@@ -137,7 +137,7 @@ getLinkerInfo' dflags = do
"-Wl,--no-as-needed"])
| any ("GNU gold" `isPrefixOf`) stdo =
- -- GNU gold only needs --no-as-needed. Trac #10110.
+ -- GNU gold only needs --no-as-needed. #10110.
-- ELF specific flag, see Note [ELF needed shared libs]
return (GnuGold [Option "-Wl,--no-as-needed"])
diff --git a/compiler/main/SysTools/Process.hs b/compiler/main/SysTools/Process.hs
index cc8f67d139..2e0e502b63 100644
--- a/compiler/main/SysTools/Process.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/SysTools/Process.hs
@@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ runSomething dflags phase_name pgm args =
-- response files for passing them in. See:
--
-- https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Response_Files
--- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10777
+-- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10777
runSomethingResponseFile
:: DynFlags -> (String->String) -> String -> String -> [Option]
-> Maybe [(String,String)] -> IO ()
diff --git a/compiler/main/TidyPgm.hs b/compiler/main/TidyPgm.hs
index e9f3f85317..6e84530193 100644
--- a/compiler/main/TidyPgm.hs
+++ b/compiler/main/TidyPgm.hs
@@ -486,7 +486,7 @@ extendTypeEnvWithPatSyns tidy_patsyns type_env
Note [Don't attempt to trim data types]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For some time GHC tried to avoid exporting the data constructors
-of a data type if it wasn't strictly necessary to do so; see Trac #835.
+of a data type if it wasn't strictly necessary to do so; see #835.
But "strictly necessary" accumulated a longer and longer list
of exceptions, and finally I gave up the battle:
@@ -501,7 +501,7 @@ of exceptions, and finally I gave up the battle:
there are a lot of exceptions, notably when Template Haskell is
involved or, more recently, DataKinds.
- However Trac #7445 shows that even without TemplateHaskell, using
+ However #7445 shows that even without TemplateHaskell, using
the Data class and invoking Language.Haskell.TH.Quote.dataToExpQ
is enough to require us to expose the data constructors.
@@ -528,7 +528,7 @@ Then the unfolding looks like
This generates bad code unless it's first simplified a bit. That is
why CoreUnfold.mkImplicitUnfolding uses simpleOptExpr to do a bit of
optimisation first. (Only matters when the selector is used curried;
-eg map x ys.) See Trac #2070.
+eg map x ys.) See #2070.
[Oct 09: in fact, record selectors are no longer implicit Ids at all,
because we really do want to optimise them properly. They are treated
@@ -541,7 +541,7 @@ because GlobalIds are supposed to have *fixed* IdInfo, but the
simplifier and other core-to-core passes mess with IdInfo all the
time. The straw that broke the camels back was when a class selector
got the wrong arity -- ie the simplifier gave it arity 2, whereas
-importing modules were expecting it to have arity 1 (Trac #2844).
+importing modules were expecting it to have arity 1 (#2844).
It's much safer just to inject them right at the end, after tidying.
Oh: two other reasons for injecting them late:
@@ -1251,7 +1251,7 @@ tidyTopIdInfo dflags rhs_tidy_env name orig_rhs tidy_rhs idinfo show_unfold caf_
-- marked NOINLINE or something like that
-- This is important: if you expose the worker for a loop-breaker
-- then you can make the simplifier go into an infinite loop, because
- -- in effect the unfolding is exposed. See Trac #1709
+ -- in effect the unfolding is exposed. See #1709
--
-- You might think that if show_unfold is False, then the thing should
-- not be w/w'd in the first place. But a legitimate reason is this:
@@ -1371,7 +1371,7 @@ not exported, to reduce the size of interface files, at least without
-O. But that is not always possible: see the old Note [When we can't
trim types] below for exceptions.
-Then (Trac #7445) I realised that the TH problem arises for any data type
+Then (#7445) I realised that the TH problem arises for any data type
that we have deriving( Data ), because we can invoke
Language.Haskell.TH.Quote.dataToExpQ
to get a TH Exp representation of a value built from that data type.
@@ -1396,7 +1396,7 @@ now.
But there are some times we can't do that, indicated by the 'no_trim_types' flag.
-First, Template Haskell. Consider (Trac #2386) this
+First, Template Haskell. Consider (#2386) this
module M(T, makeOne) where
data T = Yay String
makeOne = [| Yay "Yep" |]
@@ -1405,7 +1405,7 @@ A module that splices in $(makeOne) will then look for a declaration of Yay,
so it'd better be there. Hence, brutally but simply, we switch off type
constructor trimming if TH is enabled in this module.
-Second, data kinds. Consider (Trac #5912)
+Second, data kinds. Consider (#5912)
{-# LANGUAGE DataKinds #-}
module M() where
data UnaryTypeC a = UnaryDataC a
diff --git a/compiler/nativeGen/PPC/Ppr.hs b/compiler/nativeGen/PPC/Ppr.hs
index c9d5c2df18..c4eb0811bd 100644
--- a/compiler/nativeGen/PPC/Ppr.hs
+++ b/compiler/nativeGen/PPC/Ppr.hs
@@ -754,12 +754,12 @@ pprInstr (SR II32 reg1 reg2 (RIImm (ImmInt i))) | i < 0 || i > 31 =
-- Handle the case where we are asked to shift a 32 bit register by
-- less than zero or more than 31 bits. We convert this into a clear
-- of the destination register.
- -- Fixes ticket http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/5900
+ -- Fixes ticket https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/5900
pprInstr (XOR reg1 reg2 (RIReg reg2))
pprInstr (SL II32 reg1 reg2 (RIImm (ImmInt i))) | i < 0 || i > 31 =
-- As above for SR, but for left shifts.
- -- Fixes ticket http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10870
+ -- Fixes ticket https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10870
pprInstr (XOR reg1 reg2 (RIReg reg2))
pprInstr (SRA II32 reg1 reg2 (RIImm (ImmInt i))) | i > 31 =
diff --git a/compiler/nativeGen/PprBase.hs b/compiler/nativeGen/PprBase.hs
index 84f9492032..80f3e6179b 100644
--- a/compiler/nativeGen/PprBase.hs
+++ b/compiler/nativeGen/PprBase.hs
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ pprASCII :: ByteString -> SDoc
pprASCII str
-- Transform this given literal bytestring to escaped string and construct
-- the literal SDoc directly.
- -- See Trac #14741
+ -- See #14741
-- and Note [Pretty print ASCII when AsmCodeGen]
= text $ BS.foldr (\w s -> do1 w ++ s) "" str
where
@@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ high memory usage.
Now we escape the given bytestring to string directly and construct
SDoc only once. This improvement could dramatically decrease the
memory allocation from 4.7GB to 1.3GB when embedding a 3MB literal
-string in source code. See Trac #14741 for profiling results.
+string in source code. See #14741 for profiling results.
-}
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git a/compiler/nativeGen/X86/Ppr.hs b/compiler/nativeGen/X86/Ppr.hs
index 2d099f9854..6ecd4cd170 100644
--- a/compiler/nativeGen/X86/Ppr.hs
+++ b/compiler/nativeGen/X86/Ppr.hs
@@ -726,7 +726,7 @@ pprInstr (TEST format src dst) = sdocWithPlatform $ \platform ->
-- The mask must have the high bit clear for this smaller encoding
-- to be completely equivalent to the original; in particular so
-- that the signed comparison condition bits are the same as they
- -- would be if doing a full word comparison. See Trac #13425.
+ -- would be if doing a full word comparison. See #13425.
(OpImm (ImmInteger mask), OpReg dstReg)
| 0 <= mask && mask < 128 -> minSizeOfReg platform dstReg
_ -> format
diff --git a/compiler/parser/Lexer.x b/compiler/parser/Lexer.x
index d77564e13a..7c08ceab78 100644
--- a/compiler/parser/Lexer.x
+++ b/compiler/parser/Lexer.x
@@ -1884,7 +1884,7 @@ lex_quasiquote start s = do
-- NB: The string "|]" terminates the quasiquote,
-- with absolutely no escaping. See the extensive
- -- discussion on Trac #5348 for why there is no
+ -- discussion on #5348 for why there is no
-- escape handling.
Just ('|',i)
| Just (']',i) <- alexGetChar' i
diff --git a/compiler/parser/Parser.y b/compiler/parser/Parser.y
index 739090f3f6..ed326eb730 100644
--- a/compiler/parser/Parser.y
+++ b/compiler/parser/Parser.y
@@ -3269,7 +3269,7 @@ fbind :: { LHsRecField GhcPs (LHsExpr GhcPs) }
: qvar '=' texp {% runExpCmdP $3 >>= \ $3 ->
ams (sLL $1 $> $ HsRecField (sL1 $1 $ mkFieldOcc $1) $3 False)
[mj AnnEqual $2] }
- -- RHS is a 'texp', allowing view patterns (Trac #6038)
+ -- RHS is a 'texp', allowing view patterns (#6038)
-- and, incidentally, sections. Eg
-- f (R { x = show -> s }) = ...
@@ -3960,7 +3960,7 @@ warnSpaceAfterBang span = do
-- When two single quotes don't followed by tyvar or gtycon, we report the
-- error as empty character literal, or TH quote that missing proper type
--- variable or constructor. See Trac #13450.
+-- variable or constructor. See #13450.
reportEmptyDoubleQuotes :: SrcSpan -> P a
reportEmptyDoubleQuotes span = do
thQuotes <- getBit ThQuotesBit
diff --git a/compiler/parser/RdrHsSyn.hs b/compiler/parser/RdrHsSyn.hs
index 480b7307dc..2fd47ac9b2 100644
--- a/compiler/parser/RdrHsSyn.hs
+++ b/compiler/parser/RdrHsSyn.hs
@@ -1304,7 +1304,7 @@ checkValSigLhs lhs@(dL->L l _)
= "Should be of form <variable> :: <type>"
-- A common error is to forget the ForeignFunctionInterface flag
- -- so check for that, and suggest. cf Trac #3805
+ -- so check for that, and suggest. cf #3805
-- Sadly 'foreign import' still barfs 'parse error' because
-- 'import' is a keyword
looks_like s (dL->L _ (HsVar _ (dL->L _ v))) = v == s
@@ -2132,7 +2132,7 @@ There are several issues with this:
HsCmd or HsPat with extra constructors instead?
* We cannot handle corner cases. For instance, the following function
- declaration LHS is not a valid expression (see Trac #1087):
+ declaration LHS is not a valid expression (see #1087):
!a + !b = ...
diff --git a/compiler/prelude/PrelRules.hs b/compiler/prelude/PrelRules.hs
index 3a0b1f7b9f..d9a1f8a023 100644
--- a/compiler/prelude/PrelRules.hs
+++ b/compiler/prelude/PrelRules.hs
@@ -344,7 +344,7 @@ to
case x of
3.8#::Float# -> this
_ -> that
-See Trac #9238. Reason: comparing floating-point values for equality
+See #9238. Reason: comparing floating-point values for equality
delicate, and we don't want to implement that delicacy in the code for
case expressions. So we make it an invariant of Core that a case
expression never scrutinises a Float# or Double#.
@@ -1070,7 +1070,7 @@ is:
case e of <transformed alts>
by PrelRules.caseRules; see Note [caseRules for dataToTag]
-See Trac #15696 for a long saga.
+See #15696 for a long saga.
************************************************************************
@@ -1103,7 +1103,7 @@ Things to note
why not instead say this?
case x of { DEFAULT -> blah)
- Reason (see Trac #5129): if we saw
+ Reason (see #5129): if we saw
catch# (\s -> case x of { DEFAULT -> raiseIO# exn s }) handler
then we'd drop the 'case x' because the body of the case is bottom
@@ -1511,7 +1511,7 @@ match_WordToNatural _ _ _ _ = Nothing
For most types the bitInteger operation can be implemented in terms of shifts.
The integer-gmp package, however, can do substantially better than this if
allowed to provide its own implementation. However, in so doing it previously lost
-constant-folding (see Trac #8832). The bitInteger rule above provides constant folding
+constant-folding (see #8832). The bitInteger rule above provides constant folding
specifically for this function.
There is, however, a bit of trickiness here when it comes to ranges. While the
@@ -1531,7 +1531,7 @@ match_bitInteger dflags id_unf fn [arg]
-- Make sure x is small enough to yield a decently small iteger
-- Attempting to construct the Integer for
-- (bitInteger 9223372036854775807#)
- -- would be a bad idea (Trac #14959)
+ -- would be a bad idea (#14959)
, let x_int = fromIntegral x :: Int
= case splitFunTy_maybe (idType fn) of
Just (_, integerTy)
@@ -1617,7 +1617,7 @@ match_Integer_shift_op binop _ id_unf _ [xl,yl]
, y >= 0
, y <= 4 -- Restrict constant-folding of shifts on Integers, somewhat
-- arbitrary. We can get huge shifts in inaccessible code
- -- (Trac #15673)
+ -- (#15673)
= Just (Lit (mkLitInteger (x `binop` fromIntegral y) i))
match_Integer_shift_op _ _ _ _ _ = Nothing
@@ -2114,7 +2114,7 @@ we generate
True -> e2
and it is nice to then get rid of the tagToEnum.
-Beware (Trac #14768): avoid the temptation to map constructor 0 to
+Beware (#14768): avoid the temptation to map constructor 0 to
DEFAULT, in the hope of getting this
case (x ># y) of
DEFAULT -> e1
@@ -2168,5 +2168,5 @@ out-of-range alterantive is dead code -- we know the range of tags for x.
Hence caseRules returns (AltCon -> Maybe AltCon), with Nothing indicating
an alternative that is unreachable.
-You may wonder how this can happen: check out Trac #15436.
+You may wonder how this can happen: check out #15436.
-}
diff --git a/compiler/prelude/PrimOp.hs b/compiler/prelude/PrimOp.hs
index fd1bab3386..edadf15d4c 100644
--- a/compiler/prelude/PrimOp.hs
+++ b/compiler/prelude/PrimOp.hs
@@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ data dependencies of the state token to enforce write-effect ordering
* NB1: if you inline unsafePerformIO, you may end up with
side-effecting ops whose 'state' output is discarded.
- And programmers may do that by hand; see Trac #9390.
+ And programmers may do that by hand; see #9390.
That is why we (conservatively) do not discard write-effecting
primops even if both their state and result is discarded.
@@ -367,13 +367,13 @@ Duplicate YES NO
Arguably you should be able to discard this, since the
returned stat token is not used, but that relies on NEVER
inlining unsafePerformIO, and programmers sometimes write
- this kind of stuff by hand (Trac #9390). So we (conservatively)
+ this kind of stuff by hand (#9390). So we (conservatively)
never discard a has_side_effects primop.
However, it's fine to discard a can_fail primop. For example
case (indexIntArray# a i) of _ -> True
We can discard indexIntArray#; it has can_fail, but not
- has_side_effects; see Trac #5658 which was all about this.
+ has_side_effects; see #5658 which was all about this.
Notice that indexIntArray# is (in a more general handling of
effects) read effect, but we don't care about that here, and
treat read effects as *not* has_side_effects.
@@ -424,7 +424,7 @@ Duplicate YES NO
(All these bindings are boxed.) If we inline p at its two call
sites, we get a catastrophe: because the read is performed once when
s' is demanded, and once when 'r' is demanded, which may be much
- later. Utterly wrong. Trac #3207 is real example of this happening.
+ later. Utterly wrong. #3207 is real example of this happening.
However, it's fine to duplicate a can_fail primop. That is really
the only difference between can_fail and has_side_effects.
diff --git a/compiler/prelude/TysPrim.hs b/compiler/prelude/TysPrim.hs
index d3fd0b949c..3e0d87fd35 100644
--- a/compiler/prelude/TysPrim.hs
+++ b/compiler/prelude/TysPrim.hs
@@ -132,8 +132,8 @@ primTyCons = unexposedPrimTyCons ++ exposedPrimTyCons
-- | Primitive 'TyCon's that are defined in "GHC.Prim" but not exposed.
-- It's important to keep these separate as we don't want users to be able to
--- write them (see Trac #15209) or see them in GHCi's @:browse@ output
--- (see Trac #12023).
+-- write them (see #15209) or see them in GHCi's @:browse@ output
+-- (see #12023).
unexposedPrimTyCons :: [TyCon]
unexposedPrimTyCons
= [ eqPrimTyCon
diff --git a/compiler/prelude/primops.txt.pp b/compiler/prelude/primops.txt.pp
index 2740ef7455..94de07f8e5 100644
--- a/compiler/prelude/primops.txt.pp
+++ b/compiler/prelude/primops.txt.pp
@@ -2584,7 +2584,7 @@ primop AtomicallyOp "atomically#" GenPrimOp
-- (# s2, a #) -> e
-- with:
-- retry# s1
--- where 'e' would be unreachable anyway. See Trac #8091.
+-- where 'e' would be unreachable anyway. See #8091.
primop RetryOp "retry#" GenPrimOp
State# RealWorld -> (# State# RealWorld, a #)
with
@@ -3079,7 +3079,7 @@ primop ReallyUnsafePtrEqualityOp "reallyUnsafePtrEquality#" GenPrimOp
-- conservative, but it prevented reallyUnsafePtrEquality# from floating out of
-- places where its arguments were known to be forced. Unfortunately, GHC could
-- sometimes lose track of whether those arguments were forced, leading to let/app
--- invariant failures (see Trac 13027 and the discussion in Trac 11444). Now that
+-- invariant failures (see #13027 and the discussion in #11444). Now that
-- ok_for_speculation skips over lifted arguments, we need to explicitly prevent
-- reallyUnsafePtrEquality# from floating out. Imagine if we had
--
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnBinds.hs b/compiler/rename/RnBinds.hs
index 3650fecf09..22f2cf3e9f 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnBinds.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnBinds.hs
@@ -307,7 +307,7 @@ rnValBindsRHS ctxt (ValBinds _ mbinds sigs)
-- Note [Pattern synonym builders don't yield dependencies]
-- But psb_fvs /does/ include those builder fvs. So we
-- add them back in here to avoid bogus warnings about
- -- unused variables (Trac #12548)
+ -- unused variables (#12548)
valbind'_dus = anal_dus `plusDU` usesOnly sig_fvs
`plusDU` usesOnly patsyn_fvs
@@ -536,7 +536,7 @@ because they don't do anything! But we have three exceptions:
* A strict pattern binding; that is, one with an outermost bang
!Just _ = e
This can fail, so unlike the lazy variant, it is not a no-op.
- Moreover, Trac #13646 argues that even for single constructor
+ Moreover, #13646 argues that even for single constructor
types, you might want to write the constructor. See also #9127.
* A splice pattern
@@ -805,7 +805,7 @@ So:
(which is then used for dependency analysis)
* But we /do/ include them in the psb_fvs for the PatSynBind
* In rnValBinds we record these builder uses, to avoid bogus
- unused-variable warnings (Trac #12548)
+ unused-variable warnings (#12548)
-}
{- *********************************************************************
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnEnv.hs b/compiler/rename/RnEnv.hs
index 87f8be7d4f..638f7dfa84 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnEnv.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnEnv.hs
@@ -220,7 +220,7 @@ Looking up a name in the RnEnv.
Note [Type and class operator definitions]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-We want to reject all of these unless we have -XTypeOperators (Trac #3265)
+We want to reject all of these unless we have -XTypeOperators (#3265)
data a :*: b = ...
class a :*: b where ...
data (:*:) a b = ....
@@ -518,7 +518,7 @@ Note [Fall back on lookupGlobalOccRn in lookupRecFieldOcc]
Whenever we fail to find the field or it is not in scope, mb_field
will be False, and we fall back on looking it up normally using
lookupGlobalOccRn. We don't report an error immediately because the
-actual problem might be located elsewhere. For example (Trac #9975):
+actual problem might be located elsewhere. For example (#9975):
data Test = Test { x :: Int }
pattern Test wat = Test { x = wat }
@@ -531,7 +531,7 @@ the environment first, we will try and fail to find `x` amongst the
(nonexistent) fields of the pattern synonym.
Alternatively, the scope check can fail due to Template Haskell.
-Consider (Trac #12130):
+Consider (#12130):
module Foo where
import M
@@ -844,7 +844,7 @@ This is guaranteed by extendGlobalRdrEnvRn (the dups check in add_gre).
So how can we get multiple gres in lookupExactOcc_maybe? Because in
TH we might use the same TH NameU in two different name spaces.
-eg (Trac #7241):
+eg (#7241):
$(newName "Foo" >>= \o -> return [DataD [] o [] [RecC o []] [''Show]])
Here we generate a type constructor and data constructor with the same
unique, but different name spaces.
@@ -972,7 +972,7 @@ badVarInType rdr_name
{- Note [Promoted variables in types]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this (Trac #12686):
+Consider this (#12686):
x = True
data Bad = Bad 'x
@@ -1054,7 +1054,7 @@ lookupInfoOccRn :: RdrName -> RnM [Name]
-- lookupInfoOccRn is intended for use in GHCi's ":info" command
-- It finds all the GREs that RdrName could mean, not complaining
-- about ambiguity, but rather returning them all
--- C.f. Trac #9881
+-- C.f. #9881
lookupInfoOccRn rdr_name =
lookupExactOrOrig rdr_name (:[]) $
do { rdr_env <- getGlobalRdrEnv
@@ -1188,7 +1188,7 @@ lookupGreAvailRn rdr_name
Note [Handling of deprecations]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* We report deprecations at each *occurrence* of the deprecated thing
- (see Trac #5867)
+ (see #5867)
* We do not report deprecations for locally-defined names. For a
start, we may be exporting a deprecated thing. Also we may use a
@@ -1203,7 +1203,7 @@ Note [Handling of deprecations]
-}
addUsedDataCons :: GlobalRdrEnv -> TyCon -> RnM ()
--- Remember use of in-scope data constructors (Trac #7969)
+-- Remember use of in-scope data constructors (#7969)
addUsedDataCons rdr_env tycon
= addUsedGREs [ gre
| dc <- tyConDataCons tycon
@@ -1660,6 +1660,6 @@ badOrigBinding name
--
-- $(pure [ValD (VarP 'succ) (NormalB (ConE 'True)) []])
--
- -- (See Trac #13968.)
+ -- (See #13968.)
where
occ = rdrNameOcc $ filterCTuple name
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnExpr.hs b/compiler/rename/RnExpr.hs
index bed53ece35..b74b557f49 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnExpr.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnExpr.hs
@@ -826,7 +826,7 @@ rnStmt ctxt rnBody (L loc (LastStmt _ body noret _)) thing_inside
-- The 'return' in a LastStmt is used only
-- for MonadComp; and we don't want to report
-- "non in scope: return" in other cases
- -- Trac #15607
+ -- #15607
; (thing, fvs3) <- thing_inside []
; return (([(L loc (LastStmt noExt body' noret ret_op), fv_expr)]
@@ -1305,7 +1305,7 @@ Note [Segmenting mdo]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NB. June 7 2012: We only glom segments that appear in an explicit mdo;
and leave those found in "do rec"'s intact. See
-http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/4148 for the discussion
+https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/4148 for the discussion
leading to this design choice. Hence the test in segmentRecStmts.
Note [Glomming segments]
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnFixity.hs b/compiler/rename/RnFixity.hs
index 19d8bb4c5a..1fa81c8fc2 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnFixity.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnFixity.hs
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ lookupFixityRn_help' name occ
= return (False, Fixity NoSourceText minPrecedence InfixL)
-- Minimise errors from ubound names; eg
-- a>0 `foo` b>0
- -- where 'foo' is not in scope, should not give an error (Trac #7937)
+ -- where 'foo' is not in scope, should not give an error (#7937)
| otherwise
= do { local_fix_env <- getFixityEnv
@@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ lookupTyFixityRn = lookupFixityRn . unLoc
-- | Look up the fixity of a (possibly ambiguous) occurrence of a record field
-- selector. We use 'lookupFixityRn'' so that we can specifiy the 'OccName' as
-- the field label, which might be different to the 'OccName' of the selector
--- 'Name' if @DuplicateRecordFields@ is in use (Trac #1173). If there are
+-- 'Name' if @DuplicateRecordFields@ is in use (#1173). If there are
-- multiple possible selectors with different fixities, generate an error.
lookupFieldFixityRn :: AmbiguousFieldOcc GhcRn -> RnM Fixity
lookupFieldFixityRn (Unambiguous n lrdr)
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnNames.hs b/compiler/rename/RnNames.hs
index 08f100750e..ba0b5f3e26 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnNames.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnNames.hs
@@ -239,7 +239,7 @@ convert it back to a list. One nice side effect of this approach is that
if there's a lot of overlap in the imp_finsts of imports, the
Set doesn't really need to grow and we don't need to allocate.
-Running generateModules from Trac #14693 with DEPTH=16, WIDTH=30 finishes in
+Running generateModules from #14693 with DEPTH=16, WIDTH=30 finishes in
23s before, and 11s after.
-}
@@ -280,7 +280,7 @@ rnImportDecl this_mod
let imp_mod_name = unLoc loc_imp_mod_name
doc = ppr imp_mod_name <+> text "is directly imported"
- -- Check for self-import, which confuses the typechecker (Trac #9032)
+ -- Check for self-import, which confuses the typechecker (#9032)
-- ghc --make rejects self-import cycles already, but batch-mode may not
-- at least not until TcIface.tcHiBootIface, which is too late to avoid
-- typechecker crashes. (Indirect self imports are not caught until
@@ -296,7 +296,7 @@ rnImportDecl this_mod
(case mb_pkg of -- If we have import "<pkg>" M, then we should
-- check that "<pkg>" is "this" (which is magic)
-- or the name of this_mod's package. Yurgh!
- -- c.f. GHC.findModule, and Trac #9997
+ -- c.f. GHC.findModule, and #9997
Nothing -> True
Just (StringLiteral _ pkg_fs) -> pkg_fs == fsLit "this" ||
fsToUnitId pkg_fs == moduleUnitId this_mod))
@@ -738,9 +738,9 @@ getLocalNonValBinders fixity_env
-- such as in the following examples:
--
-- (1) The class is headed by a bang pattern, such as in
- -- `instance !Show Int` (Trac #3811c)
+ -- `instance !Show Int` (#3811c)
-- (2) The class is headed by a type variable, such as in
- -- `instance c` (Trac #16385)
+ -- `instance c` (#16385)
--
-- If looking up the class name fails, then mb_cls_nm will
-- be Nothing.
@@ -905,7 +905,7 @@ filterImports iface decl_spec (Just (want_hiding, L l import_items))
-- 'combine' is only called for associated data types which appear
-- twice in the all_avails. In the example, we combine
-- T(T,T1,T2,T3) and C(C,T) to give (T, T(T,T1,T2,T3), Just C)
- -- NB: the AvailTC can have fields as well as data constructors (Trac #12127)
+ -- NB: the AvailTC can have fields as well as data constructors (#12127)
combine (name1, a1@(AvailTC p1 _ _), mp1)
(name2, a2@(AvailTC p2 _ _), mp2)
= ASSERT2( name1 == name2 && isNothing mp1 && isNothing mp2
@@ -1030,7 +1030,7 @@ filterImports iface decl_spec (Just (want_hiding, L l import_items))
-- We are trying to import T( a,b,c,d ), and failed
-- to find 'b' and 'd'. So we make up an import item
-- to report as failing, namely T( b, d ).
- -- c.f. Trac #15412
+ -- c.f. #15412
Succeeded (childnames, childflds) ->
case mb_parent of
@@ -1358,7 +1358,7 @@ findImportUsage imports used_gres
used_names = mkNameSet (map gre_name used_gres)
used_parents = mkNameSet (mapMaybe greParent_maybe used_gres)
- unused_imps -- Not trivial; see eg Trac #7454
+ unused_imps -- Not trivial; see eg #7454
= case imps of
Just (False, L _ imp_ies) ->
foldr (add_unused . unLoc) emptyNameSet imp_ies
@@ -1403,7 +1403,7 @@ declaration is actually used in the module.
The SrcLoc is the location of the END of a particular 'import'
declaration. Why *END*? Because we don't want to get confused
-by the implicit Prelude import. Consider (Trac #7476) the module
+by the implicit Prelude import. Consider (#7476) the module
import Foo( foo )
main = print foo
There is an implicit 'import Prelude(print)', and it gets a SrcSpan
@@ -1493,7 +1493,7 @@ Note [Do not warn about Prelude hiding]
We do not warn about
import Prelude hiding( x, y )
because even if nothing else from Prelude is used, it may be essential to hide
-x,y to avoid name-shadowing warnings. Example (Trac #9061)
+x,y to avoid name-shadowing warnings. Example (#9061)
import Prelude hiding( log )
f x = log where log = ()
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnPat.hs b/compiler/rename/RnPat.hs
index 3d5f3b92b7..ca8c665e28 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnPat.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnPat.hs
@@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ Consider
Arguably we should report T2 as unused, even though it appears in a
pattern, because it never occurs in a constructed position. See
-Trac #7336.
+#7336.
However, implementing this in the face of pattern synonyms would be
less straightforward, since given two pattern synonyms
@@ -258,7 +258,7 @@ Consider
Here the pattern binds 'r', and then uses it *only* in the view pattern.
We want to "see" this use, and in let-bindings we collect all uses and
report unused variables at the binding level. So we must use bindLocalNames
-here, *not* bindLocalNameFV. Trac #3943.
+here, *not* bindLocalNameFV. #3943.
Note [Don't report shadowing for pattern synonyms]
@@ -853,7 +853,7 @@ inside IntegralLit and FractionalLit. These types cannot represent negative
zero value. So we had to add explicit field 'neg' which would hold information
about literal sign. Here in rnOverLit we use it to detect negative zeroes and
in this case return not only literal itself but also negateName so that users
-can apply it explicitly. In this case it stays negative zero. Trac #13211
+can apply it explicitly. In this case it stays negative zero. #13211
-}
rnOverLit :: HsOverLit t ->
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnSource.hs b/compiler/rename/RnSource.hs
index 19f0d315d2..5181b7f2ed 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnSource.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnSource.hs
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ rnSrcDecls group@(HsGroup { hs_valds = val_decls,
-- (D1) Bring pattern synonyms into scope.
-- Need to do this before (D2) because rnTopBindsLHS
- -- looks up those pattern synonyms (Trac #9889)
+ -- looks up those pattern synonyms (#9889)
extendPatSynEnv val_decls local_fix_env $ \pat_syn_bndrs -> do {
@@ -660,7 +660,7 @@ rnClsInstDecl (ClsInstDecl { cid_poly_ty = inst_ty, cid_binds = mbinds
-- we report an error and continue for as long as we can.
-- Importantly, this error should be thrown before we reach the
-- typechecker, lest we encounter different errors that are
- -- hopelessly confusing (such as the one in Trac #16114).
+ -- hopelessly confusing (such as the one in #16114).
addErrAt (getLoc (hsSigType inst_ty)) $
hang (text "Illegal class instance:" <+> quotes (ppr inst_ty))
2 (vcat [ text "Class instances must be of the form"
@@ -955,7 +955,7 @@ bound on the LHS. For example, this is not ok
type F a x :: *
instance C (p,q) r where
type F (p,q) x = (x, r) -- BAD: mentions 'r'
-c.f. Trac #5515
+c.f. #5515
Kind variables, on the other hand, are allowed to be implicitly or explicitly
bound. As examples, this (#9574) is acceptable:
@@ -980,7 +980,7 @@ So for parity with type synonyms, we also allow:
All this applies only for *instance* declarations. In *class*
declarations there is no RHS to worry about, and the class variables
-can all be in scope (Trac #5862):
+can all be in scope (#5862):
class Category (x :: k -> k -> *) where
type Ob x :: k -> Constraint
id :: Ob x a => x a a
@@ -997,7 +997,7 @@ by a forall. For instance, the following is acceptable:
type forall b. T (Maybe a) b = Either a b
Even though `a` is not bound by the forall, this is still accepted because `a`
-was previously bound by the `instance C (Maybe a)` part. (see Trac #16116).
+was previously bound by the `instance C (Maybe a)` part. (see #16116).
In each case, the function which detects improperly bound variables on the RHS
is TcValidity.checkValidFamPats.
@@ -1225,7 +1225,7 @@ reasons:
This has a kind error, but the error message is better if you
check T first, (fixing its kind) and *then* S. If you do kind
inference together, you might get an error reported in S, which
- is jolly confusing. See Trac #4875
+ is jolly confusing. See #4875
* Increase kind polymorphism. See TcTyClsDecls
@@ -1233,7 +1233,7 @@ reasons:
Why do the instance declarations participate? At least two reasons
-* Consider (Trac #11348)
+* Consider (#11348)
type family F a
type instance F Int = Bool
@@ -1246,7 +1246,7 @@ Why do the instance declarations participate? At least two reasons
know that unless we've looked at the type instance declaration for F
before kind-checking Foo.
-* Another example is this (Trac #3990).
+* Another example is this (#3990).
data family Complex a
data instance Complex Double = CD {-# UNPACK #-} !Double
@@ -2064,7 +2064,7 @@ rnInjectivityAnn _ _ (dL->L srcSpan (InjectivityAnn injFrom injTo)) =
{-
Note [Stupid theta]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Trac #3850 complains about a regression wrt 6.10 for
+#3850 complains about a regression wrt 6.10 for
data Show a => T a
There is no reason not to allow the stupid theta if there are no data
constructors. It's still stupid, but does no harm, and I don't want
@@ -2142,7 +2142,7 @@ rnConDecl decl@(ConDeclGADT { con_names = names
-- order of their appearance in the constructor type.
-- That order governs the order the implicitly-quantified type
-- variable, and hence the order needed for visible type application
- -- See Trac #14808.
+ -- See #14808.
free_tkvs = extractHsTvBndrs explicit_tkvs $
extractHsTysRdrTyVarsDups (theta ++ arg_tys ++ [res_ty])
@@ -2325,7 +2325,7 @@ add gp loc (SpliceD _ splice@(SpliceDecl _ _ flag)) ds
-- The compiler should suggest the above, and not using
-- TemplateHaskell since the former suggestion is more
-- relevant to the larger base of users.
- -- See Trac #12146 for discussion.
+ -- See #12146 for discussion.
-- Class declarations: pull out the fixity signatures to the top
add gp@(HsGroup {hs_tyclds = ts, hs_fixds = fs}) l (TyClD _ d) ds
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnSplice.hs b/compiler/rename/RnSplice.hs
index a0c926d4e7..1d5c68fd5b 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnSplice.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnSplice.hs
@@ -447,16 +447,16 @@ rnSpliceExpr splice
{- Note [Running splices in the Renamer]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Splices used to be run in the typechecker, which led to (Trac #4364). Since the
+Splices used to be run in the typechecker, which led to (#4364). Since the
renamer must decide which expressions depend on which others, and it cannot
reliably do this for arbitrary splices, we used to conservatively say that
splices depend on all other expressions in scope. Unfortunately, this led to
-the problem of cyclic type declarations seen in (Trac #4364). Instead, by
+the problem of cyclic type declarations seen in (#4364). Instead, by
running splices in the renamer, we side-step the problem of determining
dependencies: by the time the dependency analysis happens, any splices have
already been run, and expression dependencies can be determined as usual.
-However, see (Trac #9813), for an example where we would like to run splices
+However, see (#9813), for an example where we would like to run splices
*after* performing dependency analysis (that is, after renaming). It would be
desirable to typecheck "non-splicy" expressions (those expressions that do not
contain splices directly or via dependence on an expression that does) before
@@ -477,7 +477,7 @@ we wish to first determine dependencies and typecheck certain expressions,
making them available to reify, but cannot accurately determine dependencies
without running splices in the renamer!
-Indeed, the conclusion of (Trac #9813) was that it is not worth the complexity
+Indeed, the conclusion of (#9813) was that it is not worth the complexity
to try and
a) implement and maintain the code for renaming/typechecking non-splicy
expressions before splicy expressions,
@@ -490,7 +490,7 @@ to try and
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When splices run in the renamer, 'reify' does not have access to the local
-type environment (Trac #11832, [1]).
+type environment (#11832, [1]).
For instance, in
@@ -856,7 +856,7 @@ ensures that 'f' stays as a top level binding.
This must be done by the renamer, not the type checker (as of old),
because the type checker doesn't typecheck the body of untyped
-brackets (Trac #8540).
+brackets (#8540).
A thing can have a bind_lvl of outerLevel, but have an internal name:
foo = [d| op = 3
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnTypes.hs b/compiler/rename/RnTypes.hs
index 53bcadee2a..755ed206f0 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnTypes.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnTypes.hs
@@ -352,7 +352,7 @@ Variables in type signatures are implicitly quantified
when (1) they are in a type signature not beginning
with "forall" or (2) in any qualified type T => R.
We are phasing out (2) since it leads to inconsistencies
-(Trac #4426):
+(#4426):
data A = A (a -> a) is an error
data A = A (Eq a => a -> a) binds "a"
@@ -1335,7 +1335,7 @@ checkSectionPrec direction section op arg
-- | Look up the fixity for an operator name. Be careful to use
-- 'lookupFieldFixityRn' for (possibly ambiguous) record fields
--- (see Trac #13132).
+-- (see #13132).
lookupFixityOp :: OpName -> RnM Fixity
lookupFixityOp (NormalOp n) = lookupFixityRn n
lookupFixityOp NegateOp = lookupFixityRn negateName
diff --git a/compiler/rename/RnUtils.hs b/compiler/rename/RnUtils.hs
index 9de4aacaba..a4715a23f6 100644
--- a/compiler/rename/RnUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/rename/RnUtils.hs
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ checkShadowedOccs (global_env,local_env) get_loc_occ ns
where
check_shadow n
| startsWithUnderscore occ = return () -- Do not report shadowing for "_x"
- -- See Trac #3262
+ -- See #3262
| Just n <- mb_local = complain [text "bound at" <+> ppr (nameSrcLoc n)]
| otherwise = do { gres' <- filterM is_shadowed_gre gres
; complain (map pprNameProvenance gres') }
@@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ checkShadowedOccs (global_env,local_env) get_loc_occ ns
is_shadowed_gre :: GlobalRdrElt -> RnM Bool
-- Returns False for record selectors that are shadowed, when
- -- punning or wild-cards are on (cf Trac #2723)
+ -- punning or wild-cards are on (cf #2723)
is_shadowed_gre gre | isRecFldGRE gre
= do { dflags <- getDynFlags
; return $ not (xopt LangExt.RecordPuns dflags
@@ -385,7 +385,7 @@ addNameClashErrRn rdr_name gres
-- It could refer to either ‘T15487a.null’,
-- imported from ‘Prelude’ at T15487.hs:1:8-13
-- or ...
- -- See Trac #15487
+ -- See #15487
pp_gre_name gre@(GRE { gre_name = name, gre_par = parent
, gre_lcl = lcl, gre_imp = iss })
| FldParent { par_lbl = Just lbl } <- parent
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/CSE.hs b/compiler/simplCore/CSE.hs
index 96fbd07454..0758ce930a 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/CSE.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/CSE.hs
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ Let-bindings have two cases, implemented by addBinding.
- First, the original RHS might have been (g z) which has CSE'd
with an enclosing (let y = g z in ...). This is super-important.
- See Trac #5996:
+ See #5996:
x1 = C a b
x2 = C x1 b
y1 = C a b
@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ Let-bindings have two cases, implemented by addBinding.
Note that we use EXTEND even for a trivial expression, provided it
is not a variable or literal. In particular this /includes/ type
- applications. This can be important (Trac #13156); e.g.
+ applications. This can be important (#13156); e.g.
case f @ Int of { r1 ->
case f @ Int of { r2 -> ...
Here we want to common-up the two uses of (f @ Int) so we can
@@ -419,7 +419,7 @@ addBinding env in_id out_id rhs'
-- Putting the Id into the cs_map makes it possible that
-- it'll become shared more than it is now, which would
-- invalidate (the usage part of) its demand info.
- -- This caused Trac #100218.
+ -- This caused #100218.
-- Easiest thing is to zap the usage info; subsequently
-- performing late demand-analysis will restore it. Don't zap
-- the strictness info; it's not necessary to do so, and losing
@@ -475,11 +475,11 @@ The net effect is that for the y-binding we want to
- Use SUBSTITUTE, by extending the substitution with y :-> x
- but leave the original binding for y undisturbed
-This is done by cse_bind. I got it wrong the first time (Trac #13367).
+This is done by cse_bind. I got it wrong the first time (#13367).
Note [Delay inlining after CSE]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Suppose (Trac #15445) we have
+Suppose (#15445) we have
f,g :: Num a => a -> a
f x = ...f (x-1).....
g y = ...g (y-1) ....
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/CallArity.hs b/compiler/simplCore/CallArity.hs
index ba1aa243ac..bd5b3a3055 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/CallArity.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/CallArity.hs
@@ -418,7 +418,7 @@ like normal functions. This is ok.
The analysis *could* make use of the fact that join points are always evaluated
in the same context as the join-binding they are defined in and are always
one-shot, and handle join points separately, as suggested in
-https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/13479#comment:10.
+https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/13479#note_134870.
This *might* be more efficient (for example, join points would not have to be
considered interesting variables), but it would also add redundant code. So for
now we do not do that.
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/CoreMonad.hs b/compiler/simplCore/CoreMonad.hs
index 0c5d8d9fd2..4cdb231bd8 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/CoreMonad.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/CoreMonad.hs
@@ -558,7 +558,7 @@ data CoreReader = CoreReader {
-- Note: CoreWriter used to be defined with data, rather than newtype. If it
-- is defined that way again, the cw_simpl_count field, at least, must be
--- strict to avoid a space leak (Trac #7702).
+-- strict to avoid a space leak (#7702).
newtype CoreWriter = CoreWriter {
cw_simpl_count :: SimplCount
}
@@ -589,7 +589,7 @@ instance Monad CoreM where
let w = w1 `plusWriter` w2
return $ seq w (y, s'', w)
-- forcing w before building the tuple avoids a space leak
- -- (Trac #7702)
+ -- (#7702)
instance Applicative CoreM where
pure x = CoreM $ \s -> nop s x
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/Exitify.hs b/compiler/simplCore/Exitify.hs
index 3e7d503d31..f5a4138566 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/Exitify.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/Exitify.hs
@@ -245,7 +245,7 @@ exitifyRec in_scope pairs
| otherwise = (fvs', acc)
-- We are going to abstract over these variables, so we must
- -- zap any IdInfo they have; see Trac #15005
+ -- zap any IdInfo they have; see #15005
-- cf. SetLevels.abstractVars
zap v | isId v = setIdInfo v vanillaIdInfo
| otherwise = v
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/FloatIn.hs b/compiler/simplCore/FloatIn.hs
index 07f05493eb..216e848889 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/FloatIn.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/FloatIn.hs
@@ -210,7 +210,7 @@ only way that can happen is if the binding wrapped the literal
/in the original input program/. e.g.
case x of { DEFAULT -> 1# }
But, while this may be unusual it is not actually wrong, and it did
-once happen (Trac #15696).
+once happen (#15696).
Note [Do not destroy the let/app invariant]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -307,7 +307,7 @@ be dropped right away.
fiExpr dflags to_drop lam@(_, AnnLam _ _)
| noFloatIntoLam bndrs -- Dump it all here
- -- NB: Must line up with noFloatIntoRhs (AnnLam...); see Trac #7088
+ -- NB: Must line up with noFloatIntoRhs (AnnLam...); see #7088
= wrapFloats to_drop (mkLams bndrs (fiExpr dflags [] body))
| otherwise -- Float inside
@@ -391,7 +391,7 @@ fiExpr dflags to_drop (_,AnnLet bind body)
{- Note [Floating primops]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We try to float-in a case expression over an unlifted type. The
-motivating example was Trac #5658: in particular, this change allows
+motivating example was #5658: in particular, this change allows
array indexing operations, which have a single DEFAULT alternative
without any binders, to be floated inward.
@@ -421,10 +421,10 @@ But there are wrinkles
Solution: only float cases into the branches of other cases, and
not into the arguments of an application, or the RHS of a let. This
is somewhat conservative, but it's simple. And it still hits the
- cases like Trac #5658. This is implemented in sepBindsByJoinPoint;
+ cases like #5658. This is implemented in sepBindsByJoinPoint;
if is_case is False we dump all floating cases right here.
-* Trac #14511 is another example of why we want to restrict float-in
+* #14511 is another example of why we want to restrict float-in
of case-expressions. Consider
case indexArray# a n of (# r #) -> writeArray# ma i (f r)
Now, floating that indexing operation into the (f r) thunk will
@@ -613,7 +613,7 @@ would destroy the let/app invariant.
(a) any non-one-shot value lambdas
or (b) all type lambdas
In both cases we'll float straight back out again
- NB: Must line up with fiExpr (AnnLam...); see Trac #7088
+ NB: Must line up with fiExpr (AnnLam...); see #7088
(a) is important: we /must/ float into a one-shot lambda group
(which includes join points). This makes a big difference
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/FloatOut.hs b/compiler/simplCore/FloatOut.hs
index 0aa48543de..1f1dd5c4ba 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/FloatOut.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/FloatOut.hs
@@ -305,7 +305,7 @@ Nor is it a good idea to dump them in the rhs, but outside the lambda
f = case x of I# y -> \xy. body
because now f's arity might get worse, which is Not Good. (And if
there's an SCC around the RHS it might not get better again.
-See Trac #5342.)
+See #5342.)
So, gruesomely, we split the floats into
* the outer FloatLets, which can join the Rec, and
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/OccurAnal.hs b/compiler/simplCore/OccurAnal.hs
index c3414b1fdb..ecad4a585f 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/OccurAnal.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/OccurAnal.hs
@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ occurAnalysePgm this_mod active_unf active_rule imp_rules binds
initial_uds
-- It's crucial to re-analyse the glommed-together bindings
-- so that we establish the right loop breakers. Otherwise
- -- we can easily create an infinite loop (Trac #9583 is an example)
+ -- we can easily create an infinite loop (#9583 is an example)
initial_uds = addManyOccsSet emptyDetails
(rulesFreeVars imp_rules)
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ occurAnalyseExpr' enable_binder_swap expr
{- Note [Plugin rules]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Conal Elliott (Trac #11651) built a GHC plugin that added some
+Conal Elliott (#11651) built a GHC plugin that added some
BuiltinRules (for imported Ids) to the mg_rules field of ModGuts, to
do some domain-specific transformations that could not be expressed
with an ordinary pattern-matching CoreRule. But then we can't extract
@@ -1020,7 +1020,7 @@ terminate in a constant number of iterations, rather than O(N)
iterations.
You might thing that it's very unlikely, but RULES make it much
-more likely. Here's a real example from Trac #1969:
+more likely. Here's a real example from #1969:
Rec { $dm = \d.\x. op d
{-# RULES forall d. $dm Int d = $s$dm1
forall d. $dm Bool d = $s$dm2 #-}
@@ -1439,7 +1439,7 @@ Note [Loop breakers, node scoring, and stability]
To choose a loop breaker, we give a NodeScore to each node in the SCC,
and pick the one with the best score (according to 'betterLB').
-We need to be jolly careful (Trac #12425, #12234) about the stability
+We need to be jolly careful (#12425, #12234) about the stability
of this choice. Suppose we have
let rec { f = ...g...g...
@@ -1610,10 +1610,10 @@ Consider
join j = Just x
We want to inline x into j right away, so we don't want to give
-the join point a RhsCtxt (Trac #14137). It's not a huge deal, because
+the join point a RhsCtxt (#14137). It's not a huge deal, because
the FloatIn pass knows to float into join point RHSs; and the simplifier
does not float things out of join point RHSs. But it's a simple, cheap
-thing to do. See Trac #14137.
+thing to do. See #14137.
Note [Cascading inlines]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1932,7 +1932,7 @@ A': Non-obviously saturated applications: eg build (f (\x y -> expensive))
that sense, f is saturated, and we may proceed as described above.
Hence the computation of 'guaranteed_val_args' in occAnalApp, using
- '(occ_one_shots env)'. See also Trac #13227, comment:9
+ '(occ_one_shots env)'. See also #13227, comment:9
B: Let-bindings: eg let f = \c. let ... in \n -> blah
in (build f, build f)
@@ -2322,7 +2322,7 @@ we will get
Core Lint never expects to find an *occurrence* of an Id marked
as Dead, so we must zap the OccInfo on cb before making the
-binding x = cb. See Trac #5028.
+binding x = cb. See #5028.
NB: the OccInfo on /occurrences/ really doesn't matter much; the simplifier
doesn't use it. So this is only to satisfy the perhpas-over-picky Lint.
@@ -2409,7 +2409,7 @@ mkAltEnv env@(OccEnv { occ_gbl_scrut = pe }) scrut case_bndr
, Just (localise v, rhs) )
-- ToDO: this isGlobalId stuff is a TEMPORARY FIX
-- to avoid the binder-swap for GlobalIds
- -- See Trac #16346
+ -- See #16346
case_bndr' = Var (zapIdOccInfo case_bndr)
-- See Note [Zap case binders in proxy bindings]
@@ -2556,7 +2556,7 @@ It's obviously wrong to mark CoVars as dead if they are used.
Currently we don't traverse types to gather usase info for CoVars,
so we had better treat them as having noOccInfo.
-This showed up in Trac #15696 we had something like
+This showed up in #15696 we had something like
case eq_sel d of co -> ...(typeError @(...co...) "urk")...
Then 'd' was substitued by a dictionary, so the expression
@@ -2828,7 +2828,7 @@ unfolding captured by the INLINE pragma has arity 1. If we try to
convert g to be a join point, its unfolding will still have arity 1
(since it is stable, and we don't meddle with stable unfoldings), and
Lint will complain (see Note [Invariants on join points], (2a), in
-CoreSyn. Trac #13413.
+CoreSyn. #13413.
Moreover, since g is going to be inlined anyway, there is no benefit
from making it a join point.
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/SetLevels.hs b/compiler/simplCore/SetLevels.hs
index 2f993b7148..fef15a47b2 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/SetLevels.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/SetLevels.hs
@@ -548,7 +548,7 @@ must be careful to test the *result* scrutinee ('x' in this case), not
the *input* one 'y'. The latter *is* in HNF here (because y is
evaluated), but the former is not -- and indeed we can't float the
inner case out, at least not unless x is also evaluated at its binding
-site. See Trac #5453.
+site. See #5453.
That's why we apply exprIsHNF to scrut' and not to scrut.
@@ -755,7 +755,7 @@ I think this is obselete; the flag seems always on.]
Note [Floating join point bindings]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mostly we only float a join point if it can /stay/ a join point. But
-there is one exception: if it can go to the top level (Trac #13286).
+there is one exception: if it can go to the top level (#13286).
Consider
f x = joinrec j y n = <...j y' n'...>
in jump j x 0
@@ -808,7 +808,7 @@ and replace the original (f x) with
case (case y of I# r -> r) of r -> blah
Being able to float unboxed expressions is sometimes important; see
-Trac #12603. I'm not sure how /often/ it is important, but it's
+#12603. I'm not sure how /often/ it is important, but it's
not hard to achieve.
We only do it for a fixed collection of types for which we have a
@@ -912,7 +912,7 @@ Id, *immediately*, for three reasons:
errors, e.g. via a case with empty alternatives: (case x of {})
Lint complains unless the scrutinee of such a case is clearly bottom.
- This was reported in Trac #11290. But since the whole bottoming-float
+ This was reported in #11290. But since the whole bottoming-float
thing is based on the cheap-and-cheerful exprIsBottom, I'm not sure
that it'll nail all such cases.
@@ -1267,7 +1267,7 @@ Conclusion: use lvlMFE if there are
* any value lambdas in the original function, and
* this is not a bottoming function (the is_bot argument)
Use lvlExpr otherwise. A little subtle, and I got it wrong at least twice
-(e.g. Trac #13369).
+(e.g. #13369).
-}
{-
@@ -1398,7 +1398,7 @@ That's why we have this as_far_as_poss stuff. Usually as_far_as_poss
is just tOP_LEVEL; but occasionally a coercion variable (which is an
Id) mentioned in type prevents this.
-Example Trac #14270 comment:15.
+Example #14270 comment:15.
-}
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/SimplCore.hs b/compiler/simplCore/SimplCore.hs
index 168ece971c..7f2a0ea589 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/SimplCore.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/SimplCore.hs
@@ -339,7 +339,7 @@ getCoreToDo dflags
-- really really one-shot thunks. Only needed if the demand analyser
-- has run at all. See Note [Final Demand Analyser run] in DmdAnal
-- It is EXTREMELY IMPORTANT to run this pass, otherwise execution
- -- can become /exponentially/ more expensive. See Trac #11731, #12996.
+ -- can become /exponentially/ more expensive. See #11731, #12996.
runWhen (strictness || late_dmd_anal) CoreDoStrictness,
maybe_rule_check (Phase 0)
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/SimplMonad.hs b/compiler/simplCore/SimplMonad.hs
index 81654e9af2..17a3232957 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/SimplMonad.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/SimplMonad.hs
@@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ computeMaxTicks dflags size
-- MAGIC NUMBER, multiplies the simplTickFactor
-- We can afford to be generous; this is really
-- just checking for loops, and shouldn't usually fire
- -- A figure of 20 was too small: see Trac #5539.
+ -- A figure of 20 was too small: see #5539.
{-# INLINE thenSmpl #-}
{-# INLINE thenSmpl_ #-}
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/SimplUtils.hs b/compiler/simplCore/SimplUtils.hs
index 265b0fb5f9..f42a5d9756 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/SimplUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/SimplUtils.hs
@@ -542,7 +542,7 @@ on its first argument -- it must be saturated for these to kick in
Note [Do not expose strictness if sm_inline=False]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Trac #15163 showed a case in which we had
+#15163 showed a case in which we had
{-# INLINE [1] zip #-}
zip = undefined
@@ -708,7 +708,7 @@ float, exposing the value, if we inline. That makes it different to
exprIsHNF.
Before 2009 we said it was interesting if the argument had *any* structure
-at all; i.e. (hasSomeUnfolding v). But does too much inlining; see Trac #3016.
+at all; i.e. (hasSomeUnfolding v). But does too much inlining; see #3016.
But we don't regard (f x y) as interesting, unless f is unsaturated.
If it's saturated and f hasn't inlined, then it's probably not going
@@ -822,12 +822,12 @@ When simplifying a rule LHS, refrain from /any/ inlining or applying
of other RULES.
Doing anything to the LHS is plain confusing, because it means that what the
-rule matches is not what the user wrote. c.f. Trac #10595, and #10528.
+rule matches is not what the user wrote. c.f. #10595, and #10528.
Moreover, inlining (or applying rules) on rule LHSs risks introducing
-Ticks into the LHS, which makes matching trickier. Trac #10665, #10745.
+Ticks into the LHS, which makes matching trickier. #10665, #10745.
Doing this to either side confounds tools like HERMIT, which seek to reason
-about and apply the RULES as originally written. See Trac #10829.
+about and apply the RULES as originally written. See #10829.
Note [No eta expansion in stable unfoldings]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -844,7 +844,7 @@ we do not want to eta-expand to
-- = (/\a \(d:Ord a) (x:a) (eta:State#). bla eta) |> co
because not specialisation of the overloading doesn't work properly
-(see Note [Specialisation shape] in Specialise), Trac #9509.
+(see Note [Specialisation shape] in Specialise), #9509.
So we disable eta-expansion in stable unfoldings.
@@ -1109,7 +1109,7 @@ it might make fInt look big, and we'll lose the opportunity to inline f
at each of fInt's call sites. The INLINE pragma will only inline when
the application is saturated for exactly this reason; and we don't
want PreInlineUnconditionally to second-guess it. A live example is
-Trac #3736.
+#3736.
c.f. Note [Stable unfoldings and postInlineUnconditionally]
NB: if the pragma is INLINEABLE, then we don't want to behave in
@@ -1516,7 +1516,7 @@ tryEtaExpandRhs mode bndr rhs
; return (count isId join_bndrs, exprIsBottom join_body, rhs) }
-- Note [Do not eta-expand join points]
-- But do return the correct arity and bottom-ness, because
- -- these are used to set the bndr's IdInfo (Trac #15517)
+ -- these are used to set the bndr's IdInfo (#15517)
| otherwise
= do { (new_arity, is_bot, new_rhs) <- try_expand
@@ -1614,7 +1614,7 @@ Note [Do not eta-expand PAPs]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We used to have old_arity = manifestArity rhs, which meant that we
would eta-expand even PAPs. But this gives no particular advantage,
-and can lead to a massive blow-up in code size, exhibited by Trac #9020.
+and can lead to a massive blow-up in code size, exhibited by #9020.
Suppose we have a PAP
foo :: IO ()
foo = returnIO ()
@@ -1731,7 +1731,7 @@ new binding is abstracted. Note that
poly_t = /\ a b -> (e1, e2)
poly_x = /\ a -> fst (poly_t a *b*)
- * We must do closeOverKinds. Example (Trac #10934):
+ * We must do closeOverKinds. Example (#10934):
f = /\k (f:k->*) (a:k). let t = AccFailure @ (f a) in ...
Here we want to float 't', but we must remember to abstract over
'k' as well, even though it is not explicitly mentioned in the RHS,
diff --git a/compiler/simplCore/Simplify.hs b/compiler/simplCore/Simplify.hs
index 2156dc55b8..0130e06469 100644
--- a/compiler/simplCore/Simplify.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplCore/Simplify.hs
@@ -746,7 +746,7 @@ arity computation it performs (via CoreArity.findRhsArity) already
does a simple bottoming-expression analysis. So all we need to do
is propagate that info to the binder's IdInfo.
-This showed up in Trac #12150; see comment:16.
+This showed up in #12150; see comment:16.
Note [Setting the demand info]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1218,7 +1218,7 @@ rebuild env expr cont
{- Note [Optimising reflexivity]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It's important (for compiler performance) to get rid of reflexivity as soon
-as it appears. See Trac #11735, #14737, and #15019.
+as it appears. See #11735, #14737, and #15019.
In particular, we want to behave well on
@@ -1232,7 +1232,7 @@ In particular, we want to behave well on
build up NthCo stacks. Silly to do that if co is reflexive.
However, we don't want to call isReflexiveCo too much, because it uses
-type equality which is expensive on big types (Trac #14737 comment:7).
+type equality which is expensive on big types (#14737 comment:7).
A good compromise (determined experimentally) seems to be to call
isReflexiveCo
@@ -1240,7 +1240,7 @@ isReflexiveCo
* at the end
In investigating this I saw missed opportunities for on-the-fly
-coercion shrinkage. See Trac #15090.
+coercion shrinkage. See #15090.
-}
@@ -1292,7 +1292,7 @@ simplCast env body co0 cont0
-- 'co' with the InExpr 'arg', so we simplify
-- to make it all consistent. It's a bit messy.
-- But it isn't a common case.
- -- Example of use: Trac #995
+ -- Example of use: #995
; return (ApplyToVal { sc_arg = mkCast arg' co1
, sc_env = arg_se'
, sc_dup = dup'
@@ -1524,7 +1524,7 @@ Simplifying rules and stable-unfoldings happens a bit after
simplifying the right-hand side, so we remember whether or not it
is a join point, and what 'cont' is, in a value of type MaybeJoinCont
-Trac #13900 wsa caused by forgetting to push 'cont' into the RHS
+#13900 wsa caused by forgetting to push 'cont' into the RHS
of a SpecConstr-generated RULE for a join point.
-}
@@ -2269,7 +2269,7 @@ where 'r' is used strictly in (..r..), we can safely transform to
This is a Good Thing, because 'r' might be dead (if the body just
calls error), or might be used just once (in which case it can be
inlined); or we might be able to float the let-binding up or down.
-E.g. Trac #15631 has an example.
+E.g. #15631 has an example.
Note that this can change the error behaviour. For example, we might
transform
@@ -2280,7 +2280,7 @@ let-bound to (error "good").
Nevertheless, the paper "A semantics for imprecise exceptions" allows
this transformation. If you want to fix the evaluation order, use
-'pseq'. See Trac #8900 for an example where the loss of this
+'pseq'. See #8900 for an example where the loss of this
transformation bit us in practice.
See also Note [Empty case alternatives] in CoreSyn.
@@ -2298,7 +2298,7 @@ There have been various earlier versions of this patch:
scrut_is_demanded_var _ = False
This only fired if the scrutinee was a /variable/, which seems
- an unnecessary restriction. So in Trac #15631 I relaxed it to allow
+ an unnecessary restriction. So in #15631 I relaxed it to allow
arbitrary scrutinees. Less code, less to explain -- but the change
had 0.00% effect on nofib.
@@ -2313,7 +2313,7 @@ There have been various earlier versions of this patch:
case_bndr_evald_next (Case e _ _ _) = case_bndr_evald_next e
case_bndr_evald_next _ = False
- This patch was part of fixing Trac #7542. See also
+ This patch was part of fixing #7542. See also
Note [Eta reduction of an eval'd function] in CoreUtils.)
@@ -2562,7 +2562,7 @@ We'd like to transform
so that 'rhs' can take advantage of the form of x'. Notice that Note
[Case of cast] (in OccurAnal) may then apply to the result.
-We'd also like to eliminate empty types (Trac #13468). So if
+We'd also like to eliminate empty types (#13468). So if
data Void
type instance F Bool = Void
@@ -2698,7 +2698,7 @@ NB: simplLamBinders preserves this eval info
In addition to handling data constructor fields with !s, addEvals
also records the fact that the result of seq# is always in WHNF.
-See Note [seq# magic] in PrelRules. Example (Trac #15226):
+See Note [seq# magic] in PrelRules. Example (#15226):
case seq# v s of
(# s', v' #) -> E
@@ -2707,7 +2707,7 @@ we want the compiler to be aware that v' is in WHNF in E.
Open problem: we don't record that v itself is in WHNF (and we can't
do it here). The right thing is to do some kind of binder-swap;
-see Trac #15226 for discussion.
+see #15226 for discussion.
-}
addEvals :: Maybe OutExpr -> DataCon -> [Id] -> [Id]
@@ -2799,7 +2799,7 @@ The let/app invariant requires that y is evaluated in the call to
reallyUnsafePtrEq#, which it is. But we still want that to be true if we
propagate binders to occurrences.
-This showed up in Trac #13027.
+This showed up in #13027.
Note [Add unfolding for scrutinee]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2975,7 +2975,7 @@ When we have
of alts
then we can just duplicate those alts because the A and C cases
will disappear immediately. This is more direct than creating
-join points and inlining them away. See Trac #4930.
+join points and inlining them away. See #4930.
-}
--------------------
@@ -3208,7 +3208,7 @@ Supposing that body is big, we end up with
This is just what we want because the rn produces a box that
the case rn cancels with.
-See Trac #4957 a fuller example.
+See #4957 a fuller example.
Note [Case binders and join points]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -3306,7 +3306,7 @@ them. Thus:
Now if the thing in the hole is a case expression (which is when
we'll call mkDupableCont), we'll push the function call into the
branches, which is what we want. Now RULES for f may fire, and
-call-pattern specialisation. Here's an example from Trac #3116
+call-pattern specialisation. Here's an example from #3116
go (n+1) (case l of
1 -> bs'
_ -> Chunk p fpc (o+1) (l-1) bs')
@@ -3489,7 +3489,7 @@ simplStableUnfolding env top_lvl mb_cont id unf rhs_ty
-- has got small. This happens, notably in the inlinings
-- for dfuns for single-method classes; see
-- Note [Single-method classes] in TcInstDcls.
- -- A test case is Trac #4138
+ -- A test case is #4138
-- But retain a previous boring_ok of True; e.g. see
-- the way it is set in calcUnfoldingGuidanceWithArity
in return (mkCoreUnfolding src is_top_lvl expr' guide')
diff --git a/compiler/simplStg/StgCse.hs b/compiler/simplStg/StgCse.hs
index fbccf80b64..386515ee27 100644
--- a/compiler/simplStg/StgCse.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplStg/StgCse.hs
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ Consider two unboxed sum terms:
These two terms are not equal as they unarise to different unboxed
tuples. However if we run StgCse before Unarise, it'll think the two
terms (# 1 | #) are equal, and replace one of these with a binder to
-the other. That's bad -- Trac #15300.
+the other. That's bad -- #15300.
Solution: do unarise first.
diff --git a/compiler/simplStg/StgLiftLams.hs b/compiler/simplStg/StgLiftLams.hs
index d46e641a5a..db85b994cf 100644
--- a/compiler/simplStg/StgLiftLams.hs
+++ b/compiler/simplStg/StgLiftLams.hs
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ import qualified StgLiftLams.Transformation as Transformation
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- $note
-- See also the <https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/LateLamLift wiki page>
--- and Trac #9476.
+-- and #9476.
--
-- The basic idea behind lambda lifting is to turn locally defined functions
-- into top-level functions. Free variables are then passed as additional
diff --git a/compiler/specialise/Rules.hs b/compiler/specialise/Rules.hs
index ad6a0757cb..df6196a655 100644
--- a/compiler/specialise/Rules.hs
+++ b/compiler/specialise/Rules.hs
@@ -440,7 +440,7 @@ isMoreSpecific :: CoreRule -> CoreRule -> Bool
-- anything else, because we want user-define rules to "win"
-- In particular, class ops have a built-in rule, but we
-- any user-specific rules to win
--- eg (Trac #4397)
+-- eg (#4397)
-- truncate :: (RealFrac a, Integral b) => a -> b
-- {-# RULES "truncate/Double->Int" truncate = double2Int #-}
-- double2Int :: Double -> Int
@@ -619,7 +619,7 @@ It can be the case that the binder in a rule is not actually
bound on the LHS:
* Type variables. Type synonyms with phantom args can give rise to
- unbound template type variables. Consider this (Trac #10689,
+ unbound template type variables. Consider this (#10689,
simplCore/should_compile/T10689):
type Foo a b = b
@@ -653,7 +653,7 @@ bound on the LHS:
fires we can substitute <t> for c.
This actually happened (in a RULE for a local function)
- in Trac #13410, and also in test T10602.
+ in #13410, and also in test T10602.
Note [Cloning the template binders]
@@ -674,11 +674,11 @@ binders if they are already in scope.
------ Historical note -------
At one point I tried simply adding the template binders to the
in-scope set /without/ cloning them, but that failed in a horribly
-obscure way in Trac #14777. Problem was that during matching we look
+obscure way in #14777. Problem was that during matching we look
up target-term variables in the in-scope set (see Note [Lookup
in-scope]). If a target-term variable happens to name-clash with a
template variable, that lookup will find the template variable, which
-is /utterly/ bogus. In Trac #14777, this transformed a term variable
+is /utterly/ bogus. In #14777, this transformed a term variable
into a type variable, and then crashed when we wanted its idInfo.
------ End of historical note -------
diff --git a/compiler/specialise/SpecConstr.hs b/compiler/specialise/SpecConstr.hs
index b07e480ff5..8ced5a87c0 100644
--- a/compiler/specialise/SpecConstr.hs
+++ b/compiler/specialise/SpecConstr.hs
@@ -506,13 +506,13 @@ sc_force to True when calling specLoop. This flag does four things:
* Ignore specConstrCount, to make arbitrary numbers of specialisations
(see specialise)
* Specialise even for arguments that are not scrutinised in the loop
- (see argToPat; Trac #4448)
+ (see argToPat; #4448)
* Only specialise on recursive types a finite number of times
- (see is_too_recursive; Trac #5550; Note [Limit recursive specialisation])
+ (see is_too_recursive; #5550; Note [Limit recursive specialisation])
The flag holds only for specialising a single binding group, and NOT
for nested bindings. (So really it should be passed around explicitly
-and not stored in ScEnv.) Trac #14379 turned out to be caused by
+and not stored in ScEnv.) #14379 turned out to be caused by
f SPEC x = let g1 x = ...
in ...
We force-specialise f (because of the SPEC), but that generates a specialised
@@ -599,7 +599,7 @@ more than N times (controlled by -fspec-constr-recursive=N) we check
specialisations. If sc_count is "no limit" then we arbitrarily
choose 10 as the limit (ugh).
-See Trac #5550. Also Trac #13623, where this test had become over-aggressive,
+See #5550. Also #13623, where this test had become over-aggressive,
and we lost a wonderful specialisation that we really wanted!
Note [NoSpecConstr]
@@ -746,7 +746,7 @@ because the x-binding still exists and we've now duplicated (expensive v).
This seldom happens because let-bound constructor applications are
ANF-ised, but it can happen as a result of on-the-fly transformations in
-SpecConstr itself. Here is Trac #7865:
+SpecConstr itself. Here is #7865:
let {
a'_shr =
@@ -946,7 +946,7 @@ extendBndr env bndr = (env { sc_subst = subst' }, bndr')
extendValEnv :: ScEnv -> Id -> Maybe Value -> ScEnv
extendValEnv env _ Nothing = env
extendValEnv env id (Just cv)
- | valueIsWorkFree cv -- Don't duplicate work!! Trac #7865
+ | valueIsWorkFree cv -- Don't duplicate work!! #7865
= env { sc_vals = extendVarEnv (sc_vals env) id cv }
extendValEnv env _ _ = env
@@ -1048,7 +1048,7 @@ So in extendCaseBndrs we must *also* add the binding
else we lose a useful specialisation for f. This is necessary even
though the simplifier has systematically replaced uses of 'x' with 'y'
and 'b' with 'c' in the code. The use of 'b' in the ValueEnv came
-from outside the case. See Trac #4908 for the live example.
+from outside the case. See #4908 for the live example.
Note [Avoiding exponential blowup]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1786,7 +1786,7 @@ the passed-in SpecInfo, unless there are no calls at all to the function.
The caller can, indeed must, assume this. He should not combine in rhs_usg
himself, or he'll get rhs_usg twice -- and that can lead to an exponential
blowup of duplicates in the CallEnv. This is what gave rise to the massive
-performance loss in Trac #8852.
+performance loss in #8852.
Note [Specialise original body]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1827,7 +1827,7 @@ Now we want f_spec to have strictness LLS, otherwise we'll use call-by-need
when calling f_spec instead of call-by-value. And that can result in
unbounded worsening in space (cf the classic foldl vs foldl')
-See Trac #3437 for a good example.
+See #3437 for a good example.
The function calcSpecStrictness performs the calculation.
@@ -1862,7 +1862,7 @@ via 'a' itself, or be in scope at f's defn. Hence we just take
BUT phantom type synonyms can mess this reasoning up,
eg x::T b with type T b = Int
So we apply expandTypeSynonyms to the bound Ids.
-See Trac # 5458. Yuk.
+See # 5458. Yuk.
Note [SpecConstr call patterns]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1875,7 +1875,7 @@ because both of these will be optimised by Simplify.simplRule. In the
former case such optimisation benign, because the rule will match more
terms; but in the latter we may lose a binding of 'g1' or 'g2', and
end up with a rule LHS that doesn't bind the template variables
-(Trac #10602).
+(#10602).
The simplifier eliminates such things, but SpecConstr itself constructs
new terms by substituting. So the 'mkCast' in the Cast case of scExpr
@@ -1902,7 +1902,7 @@ by trim_pats.
Note [SpecConstr and casts]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #14270) a call like
+Consider (#14270) a call like
let f = e
in ... f (K @(a |> co)) ...
@@ -1925,7 +1925,7 @@ call patterns that
I think this is very rare.
-It is important (e.g. Trac #14936) that this /only/ applies to
+It is important (e.g. #14936) that this /only/ applies to
coercions mentioned in casts. We don't want to be discombobulated
by casts in terms! For example, consider
f ((e1,e2) |> sym co)
@@ -2049,7 +2049,7 @@ trim_pats env fn (SI { si_n_specs = done_spec_count }) pats
emit_trace result
| debugIsOn || hasPprDebug (sc_dflags env)
- -- Suppress this scary message for ordinary users! Trac #5125
+ -- Suppress this scary message for ordinary users! #5125
= pprTrace "SpecConstr" msg result
| otherwise
= result
diff --git a/compiler/specialise/Specialise.hs b/compiler/specialise/Specialise.hs
index f391781c43..c62789017f 100644
--- a/compiler/specialise/Specialise.hs
+++ b/compiler/specialise/Specialise.hs
@@ -628,7 +628,7 @@ which explodes in size when aggressively optimized. The
-fno-cross-module-specialise option was introduced to allow users to being
bitten by such instances to revert to the pre-7.10 behavior.
-See Trac #10491
+See #10491
-}
-- | Specialise a set of calls to imported bindings
@@ -793,7 +793,7 @@ What imported functions do we specialise? The basic set is
but with -fspecialise-aggressively we add
* Anything with an unfolding template
-Trac #8874 has a good example of why we want to auto-specialise DFuns.
+#8874 has a good example of why we want to auto-specialise DFuns.
We have the -fspecialise-aggressively flag (usually off), because we
risk lots of orphan modules from over-vigorous specialisation.
@@ -1384,7 +1384,7 @@ defeated specialisation! Hence the use of collectBindersPushingCo.
Note [Evidence foralls]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Suppose (Trac #12212) that we are specialising
+Suppose (#12212) that we are specialising
f :: forall a b. (Num a, F a ~ F b) => blah
with a=b=Int. Then the RULE will be something like
RULE forall (d:Num Int) (g :: F Int ~ F Int).
@@ -1506,7 +1506,7 @@ In general, we need only make this Rec if
Note [Avoiding loops]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When specialising /dictionary functions/ we must be very careful to
-avoid building loops. Here is an example that bit us badly: Trac #3591
+avoid building loops. Here is an example that bit us badly: #3591
class Eq a => C a
instance Eq [a] => C [a]
@@ -1547,7 +1547,7 @@ Solution:
--------------
Here's another example, this time for an imported dfun, so the call
-to filterCalls is in specImports (Trac #13429). Suppose we have
+to filterCalls is in specImports (#13429). Suppose we have
class Monoid v => C v a where ...
We start with a call
@@ -1785,7 +1785,7 @@ all they should be inlined, right? Two reasons:
This particular example had a huge effect on the call to replicateM_
in nofib/shootout/n-body.
-Why (b): discard INLINABLE pragmas? See Trac #4874 for persuasive examples.
+Why (b): discard INLINABLE pragmas? See #4874 for persuasive examples.
Suppose we have
{-# INLINABLE f #-}
f :: Ord a => [a] -> Int
@@ -1803,7 +1803,7 @@ So we simply drop INLINABLE pragmas when specialising. It's not really
a complete solution; ignoring specialisation for now, INLINABLE functions
don't get properly strictness analysed, for example. But it works well
for examples involving specialisation, which is the dominant use of
-INLINABLE. See Trac #4874.
+INLINABLE. See #4874.
************************************************************************
@@ -2009,7 +2009,7 @@ mkCallUDs' env f args
ClassPred cls _ -> not (isIPClass cls) -- Superclasses can't be IPs
EqPred {} -> True
IrredPred {} -> True -- Things like (D []) where D is a
- -- Constraint-ranged family; Trac #7785
+ -- Constraint-ranged family; #7785
ForAllPred {} -> True
{-
@@ -2018,7 +2018,7 @@ Note [Type determines value]
Only specialise if all overloading is on non-IP *class* params,
because these are the ones whose *type* determines their *value*. In
parrticular, with implicit params, the type args *don't* say what the
-value of the implicit param is! See Trac #7101
+value of the implicit param is! See #7101
However, consider
type family D (v::*->*) :: Constraint
@@ -2032,7 +2032,7 @@ So the question is: can an implicit parameter "hide inside" a
type-family constraint like (D a). Well, no. We don't allow
type instance D Maybe = ?x:Int
Hence the IrredPred case in type_determines_value.
-See Trac #7785.
+See #7785.
Note [Interesting dictionary arguments]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2058,7 +2058,7 @@ variables?
We accidentally lost accurate tracking of local variables for a long
time, because cloned variables don't have unfoldings. But makes a
-massive difference in a few cases, eg Trac #5113. For nofib as a
+massive difference in a few cases, eg #5113. For nofib as a
whole it's only a small win: 2.2% improvement in allocation for ansi,
1.2% for bspt, but mostly 0.0! Average 0.1% increase in binary size.
-}
@@ -2117,7 +2117,7 @@ pair_fvs (bndr, rhs) = exprSomeFreeVars interesting rhs
-- involving an imported dfun. We must know whether
-- a dictionary binding depends on an imported dfun,
-- in case we try to specialise that imported dfun
- -- Trac #13429 illustrates
+ -- #13429 illustrates
-- | Flatten a set of "dumped" 'DictBind's, and some other binding
-- pairs, into a single recursive binding.
diff --git a/compiler/stgSyn/CoreToStg.hs b/compiler/stgSyn/CoreToStg.hs
index e8f159b569..1cb02bfb19 100644
--- a/compiler/stgSyn/CoreToStg.hs
+++ b/compiler/stgSyn/CoreToStg.hs
@@ -336,7 +336,7 @@ coreToTopStgRhs dflags ccs this_mod (bndr, rhs)
-- It's vital that the arity on a top-level Id matches
-- the arity of the generated STG binding, else an importing
-- module will use the wrong calling convention
- -- (Trac #2844 was an example where this happened)
+ -- (#2844 was an example where this happened)
-- NB1: we can't move the assertion further out without
-- blocking the "knot" tied in coreTopBindsToStg
-- NB2: the arity check is only needed for Ids with External
diff --git a/compiler/stranal/DmdAnal.hs b/compiler/stranal/DmdAnal.hs
index 6e10c987a9..762ec49605 100644
--- a/compiler/stranal/DmdAnal.hs
+++ b/compiler/stranal/DmdAnal.hs
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ seqBinds over the output before returning it, to ensure that there are
no references holding on to the input Core program.
This makes a ~30% reduction in peak memory usage when compiling
-DynFlags (cf Trac #9675 and #13426).
+DynFlags (cf #9675 and #13426).
This is particularly important when we are doing late demand analysis,
since we don't do a seqBinds at any point thereafter. Hence code
@@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ dmdAnal' env dmd (App fun (Type ty))
dmdAnal' env dmd (App fun arg)
= -- This case handles value arguments (type args handled above)
-- Crucially, coercions /are/ handled here, because they are
- -- value arguments (Trac #10288)
+ -- value arguments (#10288)
let
call_dmd = mkCallDmd dmd
(fun_ty, fun') = dmdAnal env call_dmd fun
@@ -376,7 +376,7 @@ as if we had
other -> return ()
So the 'y' isn't necessarily going to be evaluated
-A more complete example (Trac #148, #1592) where this shows up is:
+A more complete example (#148, #1592) where this shows up is:
do { let len = <expensive> ;
; when (...) (exitWith ExitSuccess)
; print len }
@@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ dmdAnalTrivialRhs env id rhs fn
-- Note [Remember to demand the function itself]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- fn_fv: don't forget to produce a demand for fn itself
- -- Lacking this caused Trac #9128
+ -- Lacking this caused #9128
-- The demand is very conservative (topDmd), but that doesn't
-- matter; trivial bindings are usually inlined, so it only
-- kicks in for top-level bindings and NOINLINE bindings
@@ -726,7 +726,7 @@ The implementation is easy. When analysing a join point, we can
analyse its body with the demand from the entire join-binding (written
let_dmd here).
-Another win for join points! Trac #13543.
+Another win for join points! #13543.
Note [Demand analysis for trivial right-hand sides]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -743,7 +743,7 @@ Note that this can mean that 'foo' has an arity that is smaller than that
indicated by its demand info. e.g. if co :: (Int->Int->Int) ~ T, then
foo's arity will be zero (see Note [exprArity invariant] in CoreArity),
but its demand signature will be that of plusInt. A small example is the
-test case of Trac #8963.
+test case of #8963.
Note [Product demands for function body]
@@ -1304,7 +1304,7 @@ binders the CPR property. Specifically
Slightly ad-hoc, because even if the scrutinee *is* a variable it
might not be a onre of the arguments to the original function, or a
sub-component thereof. But it's simple, and nothing terrible
- happens if we get it wrong. e.g. Trac #10694.
+ happens if we get it wrong. e.g. #10694.
Note [Initial CPR for strict binders]
diff --git a/compiler/stranal/WorkWrap.hs b/compiler/stranal/WorkWrap.hs
index 8f34b3b2ec..6b98ffe4be 100644
--- a/compiler/stranal/WorkWrap.hs
+++ b/compiler/stranal/WorkWrap.hs
@@ -185,7 +185,7 @@ f. But that would make a new unfolding which would overwrite the old
one! So the function would no longer be INLNABLE, and in particular
will not be specialised at call sites in other modules.
-This comes in practice (Trac #6056).
+This comes in practice (#6056).
Solution: do the w/w for strictness analysis, but transfer the Stable
unfolding to the *worker*. So we will get something like this:
@@ -240,9 +240,9 @@ will happen on every call of g. Disaster.
Solution: do worker/wrapper even on NOINLINE things; but move the
NOINLINE pragma to the worker.
-(See Trac #13143 for a real-world example.)
+(See #13143 for a real-world example.)
-It is crucial that we do this for *all* NOINLINE functions. Trac #10069
+It is crucial that we do this for *all* NOINLINE functions. #10069
demonstrates what happens when we promise to w/w a (NOINLINE) leaf function, but
fail to deliver:
@@ -388,7 +388,7 @@ When should the wrapper inlining be active?
Note [Worker-wrapper for NOINLINE functions]
3. For ordinary functions with no pragmas we want to inline the
- wrapper as early as possible (Trac #15056). Suppose another module
+ wrapper as early as possible (#15056). Suppose another module
defines f x = g x x
and suppose there is some RULE for (g True True). Then if we have
a call (f True), we'd expect to inline 'f' and the RULE will fire.
diff --git a/compiler/stranal/WwLib.hs b/compiler/stranal/WwLib.hs
index 9112ddc3bf..7b15ca7f90 100644
--- a/compiler/stranal/WwLib.hs
+++ b/compiler/stranal/WwLib.hs
@@ -214,12 +214,12 @@ Note [CPR for thunks] in DmdAnal.
And if something *has* been given the CPR property and we don't w/w, it's
a disaster, because then the enclosing function might say it has the CPR
property, but now doesn't and there a cascade of disaster. A good example
-is Trac #5920.
+is #5920.
Note [Limit w/w arity]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Guard against high worker arity as it generates a lot of stack traffic.
-A simplified example is Trac #11565#comment:6
+A simplified example is #11565#comment:6
Current strategy is very simple: don't perform w/w transformation at all
if the result produces a wrapper with arity higher than -fmax-worker-args=.
@@ -483,7 +483,7 @@ To avoid this:
* We use a fresh unique for both type-variable and term-variable binders
Originally we lacked this freshness for type variables, and that led
- to the very obscure Trac #12562. (A type variable in the worker shadowed
+ to the very obscure #12562. (A type variable in the worker shadowed
an outer term-variable binding.)
* Because of this cloning we have to substitute in the type/kind of the
@@ -621,7 +621,7 @@ unbox_one dflags fam_envs arg cs
data_con unpk_args
arg_no_unf = zapStableUnfolding arg
-- See Note [Zap unfolding when beta-reducing]
- -- in Simplify.hs; and see Trac #13890
+ -- in Simplify.hs; and see #13890
rebox_fn = Let (NonRec arg_no_unf con_app)
con_app = mkConApp2 data_con inst_tys unpk_args `mkCast` mkSymCo co
; (_, worker_args, wrap_fn, work_fn) <- mkWWstr dflags fam_envs False unpk_args
@@ -836,7 +836,7 @@ the case on `x` up through the case on `burble`.
Note [mkWWstr and unsafeCoerce]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
By using unsafeCoerce, it is possible to make the number of demands fail to
-match the number of constructor arguments; this happened in Trac #8037.
+match the number of constructor arguments; this happened in #8037.
If so, the worker/wrapper split doesn't work right and we get a Core Lint
bug. The fix here is simply to decline to do w/w if that happens.
@@ -875,10 +875,10 @@ opportunities for optimisation.
Solution: use setCaseBndrEvald when creating
(A) The arg binders x1,x2 in mkWstr_one
- See Trac #13077, test T13077
+ See #13077, test T13077
(B) The result binders r1,r2 in mkWWcpr_help
See Trace #13077, test T13077a
- And Trac #13027 comment:20, item (4)
+ And #13027 comment:20, item (4)
to record that the relevant binder is evaluated.
@@ -901,13 +901,13 @@ can still be specialised by the type-class specialiser, something like
BUT if f is strict in the Ord dictionary, we might unpack it, to get
fw :: (a->a->Bool) -> [a] -> Int# -> a
and the type-class specialiser can't specialise that. An example is
-Trac #6056.
+#6056.
But in any other situation a dictionary is just an ordinary value,
and can be unpacked. So we track the INLINABLE pragma, and switch
off the unpacking in mkWWstr_one (see the isClassPred test).
-Historical note: Trac #14955 describes how I got this fix wrong
+Historical note: #14955 describes how I got this fix wrong
the first time.
-}
@@ -1030,7 +1030,7 @@ mkWWcpr_help (data_con, inst_tys, arg_tys, co)
, \ wkr_call -> Case wkr_call arg (exprType con_app) [(DEFAULT, [], con_app)]
, \ body -> mkUnpackCase body co work_uniq data_con [arg] (varToCoreExpr arg)
-- varToCoreExpr important here: arg can be a coercion
- -- Lacking this caused Trac #10658
+ -- Lacking this caused #10658
, arg_ty1 ) }
| otherwise -- The general case
@@ -1115,7 +1115,7 @@ The idea is that this binding will never be used; but if it
buggily is used we'll get a runtime error message.
Coping with absence for *unlifted* types is important; see, for
-example, Trac #4306 and Trac #15627. In the UnliftedRep case, we can
+example, #4306 and #15627. In the UnliftedRep case, we can
use LitRubbish, which we need to apply to the required type.
For the unlifted types of singleton kind like Float#, Addr#, etc. we
also find a suitable literal, using Literal.absentLiteralOf. We don't
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/ClsInst.hs b/compiler/typecheck/ClsInst.hs
index 9f58a0323a..58b9734b05 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/ClsInst.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/ClsInst.hs
@@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ matchInstEnv dflags short_cut_solver clas tys
, isOverlappable ispec
-- If the instance has OVERLAPPABLE or OVERLAPS or INCOHERENT
-- then don't let the short-cut solver choose it, because a
- -- later instance might overlap it. Trac #14434 is an example
+ -- later instance might overlap it. #14434 is an example
-- See Note [Shortcut solving: overlap]
-> do { traceTc "matchClass: ignoring overlappable" (ppr pred)
; return NotSure }
@@ -206,13 +206,13 @@ and we are typechecking
We don't want to solve the wanted constraint with the overlappable
instance; rather we want to use the supplied (C a)! That was the whole
-point of it being overlappable! Trac #14434 wwas an example.
+point of it being overlappable! #14434 wwas an example.
Alas even if the instance has no overlap flag, thus
instance C a where ...
there is nothing to stop it being overlapped. GHC provides no way to
declare an instance as "final" so it can't be overlapped. But really
-only final instances are OK for short-cut solving. Sigh. Trac #15135
+only final instances are OK for short-cut solving. Sigh. #15135
was a puzzling example.
-}
@@ -513,7 +513,7 @@ We do not support impredicative typeable, such as
Typeable (() => Int)
Typeable (((),()) => Int)
-See Trac #9858. For forall's the case is clear: we simply don't have
+See #9858. For forall's the case is clear: we simply don't have
a TypeRep for them. For qualified but not polymorphic types, like
(Eq a => a -> a), things are murkier. But:
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/FunDeps.hs b/compiler/typecheck/FunDeps.hs
index 94525e8294..14399df4a6 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/FunDeps.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/FunDeps.hs
@@ -322,7 +322,7 @@ improveClsFD clas_tvs fd
-- (b) we must apply 'subst' to the kinds, in case we have
-- matched out a kind variable, but not a type variable
-- whose kind mentions that kind variable!
- -- Trac #6015, #6068
+ -- #6015, #6068
where
(ltys1, rtys1) = instFD fd clas_tvs tys_inst
(ltys2, rtys2) = instFD fd clas_tvs tys_actual
@@ -427,15 +427,15 @@ Then if 'a' is instantiated to (x y), where x:k2->*, y:k2,
then fixing x really fixes k2 as well, and so k2 should be added to
the lhs tyvars in the fundep check.
-Example (Trac #8391), using liberal coverage
+Example (#8391), using liberal coverage
data Foo a = ... -- Foo :: forall k. k -> *
class Bar a b | a -> b
instance Bar a (Foo a)
In the instance decl, (a:k) does fix (Foo k a), but only if we notice
- that (a:k) fixes k. Trac #10109 is another example.
+ that (a:k) fixes k. #10109 is another example.
-Here is a more subtle example, from HList-0.4.0.0 (Trac #10564)
+Here is a more subtle example, from HList-0.4.0.0 (#10564)
class HasFieldM (l :: k) r (v :: Maybe *)
| l r -> v where ...
@@ -468,7 +468,7 @@ Is the instance OK? Does {l,r,xs} determine v? Well:
* And that fixes v.
However, we must closeOverKinds whenever augmenting the seed set
-in oclose! Consider Trac #10109:
+in oclose! Consider #10109:
data Succ a -- Succ :: forall k. k -> *
class Add (a :: k1) (b :: k2) (ab :: k3) | a b -> ab
@@ -516,11 +516,11 @@ Remember from Note [The equality types story] in TysPrim, that
So when oclose expands superclasses we'll get a (a ~# [b]) superclass.
But that's an EqPred not a ClassPred, and we jolly well do want to
account for the mutual functional dependencies implied by (t1 ~# t2).
-Hence the EqPred handling in oclose. See Trac #10778.
+Hence the EqPred handling in oclose. See #10778.
Note [Care with type functions]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #12803)
+Consider (#12803)
class C x y | x -> y
type family F a b
type family G c d = r | r -> d
@@ -603,7 +603,7 @@ Note [Bogus consistency check]
In checkFunDeps we check that a new ClsInst is consistent with all the
ClsInsts in the environment.
-The bogus aspect is discussed in Trac #10675. Currenty it if the two
+The bogus aspect is discussed in #10675. Currenty it if the two
types are *contradicatory*, using (isNothing . tcUnifyTys). But all
the papers say we should check if the two types are *equal* thus
not (substTys subst rtys1 `eqTypes` substTys subst rtys2)
@@ -638,7 +638,7 @@ checkFunDeps inst_envs (ClsInst { is_tvs = qtvs1, is_cls = cls
= case tcUnifyTyKis bind_fn ltys1 ltys2 of
Nothing -> False
Just subst
- -> isNothing $ -- Bogus legacy test (Trac #10675)
+ -> isNothing $ -- Bogus legacy test (#10675)
-- See Note [Bogus consistency check]
tcUnifyTyKis bind_fn (substTysUnchecked subst rtys1) (substTysUnchecked subst rtys2)
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/Inst.hs b/compiler/typecheck/Inst.hs
index 77e8cdf0b2..89e5569c1e 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/Inst.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/Inst.hs
@@ -287,7 +287,7 @@ deeply_instantiate orig subst ty
instTyVarsWith :: CtOrigin -> [TyVar] -> [TcType] -> TcM TCvSubst
-- Use this when you want to instantiate (forall a b c. ty) with
-- types [ta, tb, tc], but when the kinds of 'a' and 'ta' might
--- not yet match (perhaps because there are unsolved constraints; Trac #14154)
+-- not yet match (perhaps because there are unsolved constraints; #14154)
-- If they don't match, emit a kind-equality to promise that they will
-- eventually do so, and thus make a kind-homongeneous substitution.
instTyVarsWith orig tvs tys
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcAnnotations.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcAnnotations.hs
index 4d246efc23..050c5db977 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcAnnotations.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcAnnotations.hs
@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ tcAnnotations anns = do
True -> tcAnnotations' anns
False -> warnAnns anns
warnAnns :: [LAnnDecl GhcRn] -> TcM [Annotation]
---- No GHCI; emit a warning (not an error) and ignore. cf Trac #4268
+--- No GHCI; emit a warning (not an error) and ignore. cf #4268
warnAnns [] = return []
warnAnns anns@(L loc _ : _)
= do { setSrcSpan loc $ addWarnTc NoReason $
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ tcAnnotation (L loc ann@(HsAnnotation _ _ provenance expr)) = do
runAnnotation target expr
where
safeHsErr = vcat [ text "Annotations are not compatible with Safe Haskell."
- , text "See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10826" ]
+ , text "See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10826" ]
tcAnnotation (L _ (XAnnDecl _)) = panic "tcAnnotation"
annProvenanceToTarget :: Module -> AnnProvenance Name
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcBinds.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcBinds.hs
index 05fe393b98..b4803fc043 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcBinds.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcBinds.hs
@@ -637,7 +637,7 @@ forall_a_a :: TcType
-- Another alternative would be (forall (a :: TYPE kappa). a), where
-- kappa is a unification variable. But I don't think we need that
-- complication here. I'm going to just use (forall (a::*). a).
--- See Trac #15276
+-- See #15276
forall_a_a = mkSpecForAllTys [alphaTyVar] alphaTy
{- *********************************************************************
@@ -917,7 +917,7 @@ mkInferredPolyId insoluble qtvs inferred_theta poly_name mb_sig_inst mono_ty
checkValidType (InfSigCtxt poly_name) inferred_poly_ty
-- See Note [Validity of inferred types]
-- If we found an insoluble error in the function definition, don't
- -- do this check; otherwise (Trac #14000) we may report an ambiguity
+ -- do this check; otherwise (#14000) we may report an ambiguity
-- error for a rather bogus type.
; return (mkLocalIdOrCoVar poly_name inferred_poly_ty) }
@@ -931,7 +931,7 @@ chooseInferredQuantifiers :: TcThetaType -- inferred
chooseInferredQuantifiers inferred_theta tau_tvs qtvs Nothing
= -- No type signature (partial or complete) for this binder,
do { let free_tvs = closeOverKinds (growThetaTyVars inferred_theta tau_tvs)
- -- Include kind variables! Trac #7916
+ -- Include kind variables! #7916
my_theta = pickCapturedPreds free_tvs inferred_theta
binders = [ mkTyVarBinder Inferred tv
| tv <- qtvs
@@ -1085,7 +1085,7 @@ checkOverloadedSig :: Bool -> TcIdSigInst -> TcM ()
-- K f = e
-- The MR applies, but the signature is overloaded, and it's
-- best to complain about this directly
--- c.f Trac #11339
+-- c.f #11339
checkOverloadedSig monomorphism_restriction_applies sig
| not (null (sig_inst_theta sig))
, monomorphism_restriction_applies
@@ -1123,7 +1123,7 @@ doesn't seem much point. Indeed, adding a partial type signature is a
way to get per-binding inferred generalisation.
We apply the MR if /all/ of the partial signatures lack a context.
-In particular (Trac #11016):
+In particular (#11016):
f2 :: (?loc :: Int) => _
f2 = ?loc
It's stupid to apply the MR here. This test includes an extra-constraints
@@ -1149,7 +1149,7 @@ But now consider:
We want to get an error from this, because 'a' and 'b' get unified.
So we make a test, one per parital signature, to check that the
explicitly-quantified type variables have not been unified together.
-Trac #14449 showed this up.
+#14449 showed this up.
Note [Validity of inferred types]
@@ -1199,7 +1199,7 @@ Then we want to check that
forall qtvs. theta => f_mono_ty is more polymorphic than f's polytype
and the proof is the impedance matcher.
-Notice that the impedance matcher may do defaulting. See Trac #7173.
+Notice that the impedance matcher may do defaulting. See #7173.
It also cleverly does an ambiguity check; for example, rejecting
f :: F a -> F a
@@ -1486,7 +1486,7 @@ getMonoBindInfo tc_binds
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Look at:
- typecheck/should_compile/ExPat
- - Trac #12427, typecheck/should_compile/T12427{a,b}
+ - #12427, typecheck/should_compile/T12427{a,b}
data T where
MkT :: Integral a => a -> Int -> T
@@ -1565,7 +1565,7 @@ We typecheck pattern bindings as follows. First tcLhs does this:
CheckGen), then the let_bndr_spec will be LetLclBndr. In that case
we want to bind a cloned, local version of the variable, with the
type given by the pattern context, *not* by the signature (even if
- there is one; see Trac #7268). The mkExport part of the
+ there is one; see #7268). The mkExport part of the
generalisation step will do the checking and impedance matching
against the signature.
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcCanonical.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcCanonical.hs
index 9abc04809d..765abc7c47 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcCanonical.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcCanonical.hs
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ canonicalize (CQuantCan (QCI { qci_ev = ev, qci_pend_sc = pend_sc }))
canonicalize (CIrredCan { cc_ev = ev })
| EqPred eq_rel ty1 ty2 <- classifyPredType (ctEvPred ev)
= -- For insolubles (all of which are equalities, do /not/ flatten the arguments
- -- In Trac #14350 doing so led entire-unnecessary and ridiculously large
+ -- In #14350 doing so led entire-unnecessary and ridiculously large
-- type function expansion. Instead, canEqNC just applies
-- the substitution to the predicate, and may do decomposition;
-- e.g. a ~ [a], where [G] a ~ [Int], can decompose
@@ -248,7 +248,7 @@ Givens and Wanteds. But:
is a waste of time.
* (Major) if we want recursive superclasses, there would be an infinite
- number of them. Here is a real-life example (Trac #10318);
+ number of them. Here is a real-life example (#10318);
class (Frac (Frac a) ~ Frac a,
Fractional (Frac a),
@@ -275,7 +275,7 @@ So here's the plan:
solveSimpleWanteds; Note [Danger of adding superclasses during solving]
However, /do/ continue to eagerly expand superlasses for new /given/
- /non-canonical/ constraints (canClassNC does this). As Trac #12175
+ /non-canonical/ constraints (canClassNC does this). As #12175
showed, a type-family application can expand to a class constraint,
and we want to see its superclasses for just the same reason as
Note [Eagerly expand given superclasses].
@@ -296,7 +296,7 @@ So here's the plan:
of the implication tree
- We may be inside a type where we can't create term-level
evidence anyway, so we can't superclass-expand, say,
- (a ~ b) to get (a ~# b). This happened in Trac #15290.
+ (a ~ b) to get (a ~# b). This happened in #15290.
4. Go round to (2) again. This loop (2,3,4) is implemented
in TcSimplify.simpl_loop.
@@ -409,7 +409,7 @@ Examples of how adding superclasses can help:
Note [Danger of adding superclasses during solving]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Here's a serious, but now out-dated example, from Trac #4497:
+Here's a serious, but now out-dated example, from #4497:
class Num (RealOf t) => Normed t
type family RealOf x
@@ -509,7 +509,7 @@ mk_strict_superclasses rec_clss ev tvs theta cls tys
= loc -- For tuple predicates, just take them apart, without
-- adding their (large) size into the chain. When we
-- get down to a base predicate, we'll include its size.
- -- Trac #10335
+ -- #10335
| GivenOrigin skol_info <- ctLocOrigin loc
-- See Note [Solving superclass constraints] in TcInstDcls
@@ -582,7 +582,7 @@ mk_superclasses_of rec_clss ev tvs theta cls tys
{- Note [Equality superclasses in quantified constraints]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #15359, #15593, #15625)
+Consider (#15359, #15593, #15625)
f :: (forall a. theta => a ~ b) => stuff
It's a bit odd to have a local, quantified constraint for `(a~b)`,
@@ -964,7 +964,7 @@ If we have an unsolved equality like
(a b ~R# Int)
that is not necessarily insoluble! Maybe 'a' will turn out to be a newtype.
So we want to make it a potentially-soluble Irred not an insoluble one.
-Missing this point is what caused Trac #15431
+Missing this point is what caused #15431
-}
---------------------------------
@@ -977,7 +977,7 @@ can_eq_nc_forall :: CtEvidence -> EqRel
-- But remember also to unify the kinds of as and bs
-- (this is the 'go' loop), and actually substitute phi2[as |> cos / bs]
-- Remember also that we might have forall z (a:z). blah
--- so we must proceed one binder at a time (Trac #13879)
+-- so we must proceed one binder at a time (#13879)
can_eq_nc_forall ev eq_rel s1 s2
| CtWanted { ctev_loc = loc, ctev_dest = orig_dest } <- ev
@@ -1096,7 +1096,7 @@ zonk_eq_types = go
-- the same kind. E.g go (Proxy * (Maybe Int))
-- (Proxy (*->*) Maybe)
-- We'll call (go (Maybe Int) Maybe)
- -- See Trac #13083
+ -- See #13083
then tycon tc1 tys1 tys2
else bale_out ty1 ty2
@@ -1198,7 +1198,7 @@ which in turn gives us
which is easier to satisfy.
Bottom line: unwrap newtypes before decomposing them!
-c.f. Trac #9123 comment:52,53 for a compelling example.
+c.f. #9123 comment:52,53 for a compelling example.
Note [Newtypes can blow the stack]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1768,7 +1768,7 @@ allow more constraints to be solved.
We use `isTcReflexiveCo`, to ensure that we only use the hetero-kinded case
if we really need to. Of course `flattenArgsNom` should return `Refl`
-whenever possible, but Trac #15577 was an infinite loop because even
+whenever possible, but #15577 was an infinite loop because even
though the coercion was homo-kinded, `kind_co` was not `Refl`, so we
made a new (identical) CFunEqCan, and then the entire process repeated.
-}
@@ -2003,7 +2003,7 @@ canEqTyVar2 dflags ev eq_rel swapped tv1 rhs
| Just rhs' <- metaTyVarUpdateOK dflags tv1 rhs -- No occurs check
-- Must do the occurs check even on tyvar/tyvar
-- equalities, in case have x ~ (y :: ..x...)
- -- Trac #12593
+ -- #12593
= do { new_ev <- rewriteEqEvidence ev swapped lhs rhs' rewrite_co1 rewrite_co2
; continueWith (CTyEqCan { cc_ev = new_ev, cc_tyvar = tv1
, cc_rhs = rhs', cc_eq_rel = eq_rel }) }
@@ -2268,7 +2268,7 @@ rewriteEvidence old_ev@(CtDerived {}) new_pred _co
-- Why? Because for *Derived* constraints, c, the coercion, which
-- was produced by flattening, may contain suspended calls to
-- (ctEvExpr c), which fails for Derived constraints.
- -- (Getting this wrong caused Trac #7384.)
+ -- (Getting this wrong caused #7384.)
continueWith (old_ev { ctev_pred = new_pred })
rewriteEvidence old_ev new_pred co
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcDeriv.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcDeriv.hs
index 4736ded2f2..736f44e211 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcDeriv.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcDeriv.hs
@@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ And then translate it to:
Note [Newtype deriving superclasses]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-(See also Trac #1220 for an interesting exchange on newtype
+(See also #1220 for an interesting exchange on newtype
deriving and superclasses.)
The 'tys' here come from the partial application in the deriving
@@ -184,7 +184,7 @@ when the dict is constructed in TcInstDcls.tcInstDecl2
Note [Unused constructors and deriving clauses]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-See Trac #3221. Consider
+See #3221. Consider
data T = T1 | T2 deriving( Show )
Are T1 and T2 unused? Well, no: the deriving clause expands to mention
both of them. So we gather defs/uses from deriving just like anything else.
@@ -373,7 +373,7 @@ renameDeriv is_boot inst_infos bagBinds
{-
Note [Newtype deriving and unused constructors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this (see Trac #1954):
+Consider this (see #1954):
module Bug(P) where
newtype P a = MkP (IO a) deriving Monad
@@ -392,7 +392,7 @@ of genInst.
Note [Staging of tcDeriving]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Here's a tricky corner case for deriving (adapted from Trac #2721):
+Here's a tricky corner case for deriving (adapted from #2721):
class C a where
type T a
@@ -468,7 +468,7 @@ Note [Avoid RebindableSyntax when deriving]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The RebindableSyntax extension interacts awkwardly with the derivation of
any stock class whose methods require the use of string literals. The Show
-class is a simple example (see Trac #12688):
+class is a simple example (see #12688):
{-# LANGUAGE RebindableSyntax, OverloadedStrings #-}
newtype Text = Text String
@@ -532,7 +532,7 @@ makeDerivSpecs is_boot deriv_infos deriv_decls
{-
Note [Flattening deriving clauses]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider what happens if you run this program (from Trac #10684) without
+Consider what happens if you run this program (from #10684) without
DeriveGeneric enabled:
data A = A deriving (Show, Generic)
@@ -914,7 +914,7 @@ Notice that the arg tys might not be the same as the family tycon arity
Note [Unify kinds in deriving]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #8534)
+Consider (#8534)
data T a b = MkT a deriving( Functor )
-- where Functor :: (*->*) -> Constraint
@@ -923,7 +923,7 @@ So T :: forall k. * -> k -> *. We want to get
Notice the '*' argument to T.
Moreover, as well as instantiating T's kind arguments, we may need to instantiate
-C's kind args. Consider (Trac #8865):
+C's kind args. Consider (#8865):
newtype T a b = MkT (Either a b) deriving( Category )
where
Category :: forall k. (k -> k -> *) -> Constraint
@@ -957,7 +957,7 @@ Now we get a kind substitution. We then need to:
3. Apply that extended substitution to the non-dropped args (types and
kinds) of the type and class
-Forgetting step (2) caused Trac #8893:
+Forgetting step (2) caused #8893:
data V a = V [a] deriving Functor
data P (x::k->*) (a:k) = P (x a) deriving Functor
data C (x::k->*) (a:k) = C (V (P x a)) deriving Functor
@@ -969,7 +969,7 @@ and occurrence sites.
This can lead to some surprising results when *visible* kind binder is
unified (in contrast to the above examples, in which only non-visible kind
-binders were considered). Consider this example from Trac #11732:
+binders were considered). Consider this example from #11732:
data T k (a :: k) = MkT deriving Functor
@@ -1000,7 +1000,7 @@ The only distinction is that GHC instantiates equality constraints directly
during the deriving process.
Another quirk of this design choice manifests when typeclasses have visible
-kind parameters. Consider this code (also from Trac #11732):
+kind parameters. Consider this code (also from #11732):
class Cat k (cat :: k -> k -> *) where
catId :: cat a a
@@ -1027,7 +1027,7 @@ Functor (* -> *). But that's not enough: the `via` type, Proxy, has the kind
unify (k -> *) with (* -> *).
Currently, all of this unification is implemented kludgily with the pure
-unifier, which is rather tiresome. Trac #14331 lays out a plan for how this
+unifier, which is rather tiresome. #14331 lays out a plan for how this
might be made cleaner.
Note [Unification of two kind variables in deriving]
@@ -1061,7 +1061,7 @@ This is bad, because applying that substitution yields the following instance:
instance Category k_new (T k1 c) where ...
In other words, keeping k1 in unmapped_tvks taints the substitution, resulting
-in an ill-kinded instance (this caused Trac #11837).
+in an ill-kinded instance (this caused #11837).
To prevent this, we need to filter out any variable from all_tkvs which either
@@ -1089,7 +1089,7 @@ When deriving, we need to perform eta-reduction analysis to ensure that none of
the eta-reduced type variables are mentioned elsewhere in the declaration. But
we need to be careful, because if we don't expand through the Const type
synonym, we will mistakenly believe that f is an eta-reduced type variable and
-fail to derive Functor, even though the code above is correct (see Trac #11416,
+fail to derive Functor, even though the code above is correct (see #11416,
where this was first noticed). For this reason, we expand the type synonyms in
the eta-reduced types before doing any analysis.
-}
@@ -1317,7 +1317,7 @@ mk_coerce_based_eqn mk_mechanism coerced_ty
meths = classMethods cls
meth_preds ty
| null meths = [] -- No methods => no constraints
- -- (Trac #12814)
+ -- (#12814)
| otherwise = rep_pred_o ty : coercible_constraints ty
coercible_constraints ty
= [ mkPredOrigin (DerivOriginCoerce meth t1 t2 sa_wildcard)
@@ -1612,7 +1612,7 @@ mkNewTypeEqn
-- (such as Functor)
--
-- and the previous cases won't catch it. This fixes the bug
- -- reported in Trac #10598.
+ -- reported in #10598.
| might_be_newtype_derivable && newtype_deriving
-> mk_eqn_newtype rep_inst_ty
-- Otherwise, throw an error for a stock class
@@ -1627,7 +1627,7 @@ mkNewTypeEqn
| newtype_deriving -> bale_out cant_derive_err
-- Try newtype deriving!
-- Here we suggest GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving even in cases
- -- where it may not be applicable. See Trac #9600.
+ -- where it may not be applicable. See #9600.
| otherwise -> bale_out (non_std $$ suggest_gnd)
-- DeriveAnyClass
@@ -2063,7 +2063,7 @@ Note [Deriving strategies]
GHC has a notion of deriving strategies, which allow the user to explicitly
request which approach to use when deriving an instance (enabled with the
-XDerivingStrategies language extension). For more information, refer to the
-original Trac ticket (#10598) or the associated wiki page:
+original issue (#10598) or the associated wiki page:
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/Compiler/DerivingStrategies
A deriving strategy can be specified in a deriving clause:
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcDerivInfer.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcDerivInfer.hs
index d38c922879..d834b09bbe 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcDerivInfer.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcDerivInfer.hs
@@ -365,7 +365,7 @@ Note [Simplifying the instance context].
In the functor-like case, we may need to unify some kind variables with * in
order for the generated instance to be well-kinded. An example from
-Trac #10524:
+#10524:
newtype Compose (f :: k2 -> *) (g :: k1 -> k2) (a :: k1)
= Compose (f (g a)) deriving Functor
@@ -848,7 +848,7 @@ Here:
Note that it is vital that we instantiate the `c` in $gdm_bar's type with a new
unification variable for each iteration of simplifyDeriv. If we re-use the same
unification variable across multiple iterations, then bad things can happen,
-such as Trac #14933.
+such as #14933.
Similarly for 'baz', givng the constraint C2
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcDerivUtils.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcDerivUtils.hs
index 32a7aca922..cb5f6da02d 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcDerivUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcDerivUtils.hs
@@ -474,7 +474,7 @@ hasStockDeriving clas
{-
Note [Deriving and unused record selectors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this (see Trac #13919):
+Consider this (see #13919):
module Main (main) where
@@ -505,7 +505,7 @@ getDataConFixityFun :: TyCon -> TcM (Name -> Fixity)
-- If the TyCon is locally defined, we want the local fixity env;
-- but if it is imported (which happens for standalone deriving)
-- we need to get the fixity env from the interface file
--- c.f. RnEnv.lookupFixity, and Trac #9830
+-- c.f. RnEnv.lookupFixity, and #9830
getDataConFixityFun tc
= do { this_mod <- getModule
; if nameIsLocalOrFrom this_mod name
@@ -938,7 +938,7 @@ of the type constructor is used truly universally quantified. Example
T6 :: T a (b,b) -- No! 'b' is constrained
Notice that only the first of these constructors is vanilla H-98. We only
-need to take care about the last argument (b in this case). See Trac #8678.
+need to take care about the last argument (b in this case). See #8678.
Eg. for T1-T3 we can write
fmap f (T1 a b) = T1 a (f b)
@@ -970,5 +970,5 @@ Here, the existential context (C (Show a) b) does technically mention the last
type variable b. But this is OK, because expanding the type synonym C would
give us the context (Show a), which doesn't mention b. Therefore, we must make
sure to expand type synonyms before performing this check. Not doing so led to
-Trac #13813.
+#13813.
-}
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcEnv.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcEnv.hs
index 7337345ed0..f0be9a83ab 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcEnv.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcEnv.hs
@@ -671,7 +671,7 @@ tcInitTidyEnv
; tyvar2 <- zonkTcTyVarToTyVar tyvar1
-- Be sure to zonk here! Tidying applies to zonked
-- types, so if we don't zonk we may create an
- -- ill-kinded type (Trac #14175)
+ -- ill-kinded type (#14175)
; go (env', extendVarEnv subst tyvar tyvar2) bs }
| otherwise
= go (env, subst) bs
@@ -758,20 +758,20 @@ So to check for this we put in the TcLclEnv a binding for all the family
constructors, bound to AFamDataCon, so that if we trip over 'MkT' when
type checking 'S' we'll produce a decent error message.
-Trac #12088 describes this limitation. Of course, when MkT and S live in
+#12088 describes this limitation. Of course, when MkT and S live in
different modules then all is well.
Note [Don't promote pattern synonyms]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We never promote pattern synonyms.
-Consider this (Trac #11265):
+Consider this (#11265):
pattern A = True
instance Eq A
We want a civilised error message from the occurrence of 'A'
in the instance, yet 'A' really has not yet been type checked.
-Similarly (Trac #9161)
+Similarly (#9161)
{-# LANGUAGE PatternSynonyms, DataKinds #-}
pattern A = ()
b :: A
@@ -879,7 +879,7 @@ tcGetDefaultTys
= do { dflags <- getDynFlags
; let ovl_strings = xopt LangExt.OverloadedStrings dflags
extended_defaults = xopt LangExt.ExtendedDefaultRules dflags
- -- See also Trac #1974
+ -- See also #1974
flags = (ovl_strings, extended_defaults)
; mb_defaults <- getDeclaredDefaultTys
@@ -913,7 +913,7 @@ This has type (forall a. IO a); it prints "hello", and returns 'undefined'. We
want the GHCi repl loop to try to print that 'undefined'. The neatest thing is to
default the 'a' to (), rather than to Integer (which is what would otherwise happen;
and then GHCi doesn't attempt to print the (). So in interactive mode, we add
-() to the list of defaulting types. See Trac #1200.
+() to the list of defaulting types. See #1200.
Additionally, the list type [] is added as a default specialization for
Traversable and Foldable. As such the default default list now has types of
@@ -1112,7 +1112,7 @@ notFound name
; case stage of -- See Note [Out of scope might be a staging error]
Splice {}
| isUnboundName name -> failM -- If the name really isn't in scope
- -- don't report it again (Trac #11941)
+ -- don't report it again (#11941)
| otherwise -> stageRestrictionError (quotes (ppr name))
_ -> failWithTc $
vcat[text "GHC internal error:" <+> quotes (ppr name) <+>
@@ -1145,5 +1145,5 @@ This is really a staging error, because we can't run code involving 'x'.
But in fact the type checker processes types first, so 'x' won't even be
in the type envt when we look for it in $(foo x). So inside splices we
report something missing from the type env as a staging error.
-See Trac #5752 and #5795.
+See #5752 and #5795.
-}
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcErrors.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcErrors.hs
index 3f0f82cb1d..b5d98d07c9 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcErrors.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcErrors.hs
@@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ report_unsolved type_errors expr_holes
-- See Note [Suppressing error messages]
-- Suppress low-priority errors if there
-- are insolule errors anywhere;
- -- See Trac #15539 and c.f. setting ic_status
+ -- See #15539 and c.f. setting ic_status
-- in TcSimplify.setImplicationStatus
, cec_warn_redundant = warn_redundant
, cec_binds = binds_var }
@@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ ReportErrorSpec, as used in reportWanteds.
But we need to take care: flags can turn errors into warnings, and we
don't want those warnings to suppress subsequent errors (including
-suppressing the essential addTcEvBind for them: Trac #15152). So in
+suppressing the essential addTcEvBind for them: #15152). So in
tryReporter we use askNoErrs to see if any error messages were
/actually/ produced; if not, we don't switch on suppression.
@@ -424,7 +424,7 @@ reportImplic ctxt implic@(Implic { ic_skols = tvs, ic_telescope = m_telescope
-- type errors. You could imagine using the /enclosing/
-- bindings (in cec_binds), but that may not have enough stuff
-- in scope for the bindings to be well typed. So we just
- -- switch off deferred type errors altogether. See Trac #14605.
+ -- switch off deferred type errors altogether. See #14605.
ctxt' = ctxt1 { cec_tidy = env1
, cec_encl = implic' : cec_encl ctxt
@@ -433,7 +433,7 @@ reportImplic ctxt implic@(Implic { ic_skols = tvs, ic_telescope = m_telescope
-- Suppress inessential errors if there
-- are insolubles anywhere in the
-- tree rooted here, or we've come across
- -- a suppress-worthy constraint higher up (Trac #11541)
+ -- a suppress-worthy constraint higher up (#11541)
, cec_binds = evb }
@@ -497,7 +497,7 @@ reportBadTelescope _ _ Nothing skols
{- Note [Redundant constraints in instance decls]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For instance declarations, we don't report unused givens if
-they can give rise to improvement. Example (Trac #10100):
+they can give rise to improvement. Example (#10100):
class Add a b ab | a b -> ab, a ab -> b
instance Add Zero b b
instance Add a b ab => Add (Succ a) b (Succ ab)
@@ -627,7 +627,7 @@ reportWanteds ctxt tc_lvl (WC { wc_simple = simples, wc_impl = implics })
-- Reason: we don't report all given errors
-- (see mkGivenErrorReporter), and we should only suppress
-- subsequent errors if we actually report this one!
- -- Trac #13446 is an example
+ -- #13446 is an example
-- See Note [Given errors]
has_gadt_match [] = False
@@ -816,7 +816,7 @@ reportGroup mk_err ctxt cts =
-- Add deferred bindings for all
-- Redundant if we are going to abort compilation,
-- but that's hard to know for sure, and if we don't
- -- abort, we need bindings for all (e.g. Trac #12156)
+ -- abort, we need bindings for all (e.g. #12156)
where
isMonadFailInstanceMissing ct =
case ctLocOrigin (ctLoc ct) of
@@ -842,7 +842,7 @@ maybeReportHoleError ctxt ct err
-- Always report an error for out-of-scope variables
-- Unless -fdefer-out-of-scope-variables is on,
-- in which case the messages are discarded.
- -- See Trac #12170, #12406
+ -- See #12170, #12406
| isOutOfScopeCt ct
= -- If deferring, report a warning only if -Wout-of-scope-variables is on
case cec_out_of_scope_holes ctxt of
@@ -1157,7 +1157,7 @@ mkHoleError _ _ ct@(CHoleCan { cc_hole = ExprHole (OutOfScope occ rdr_env0) })
mkHoleError tidy_simples ctxt ct@(CHoleCan { cc_hole = hole })
-- Explicit holes, like "_" or "_f"
= do { (ctxt, binds_msg, ct) <- relevantBindings False ctxt ct
- -- The 'False' means "don't filter the bindings"; see Trac #8191
+ -- The 'False' means "don't filter the bindings"; see #8191
; show_hole_constraints <- goptM Opt_ShowHoleConstraints
; let constraints_msg
@@ -1431,13 +1431,13 @@ Consider
Here the second equation is unreachable. The original constraint
(a~Int) from the signature gets rewritten by the pattern-match to
(Bool~Int), so the danger is that we report the error as coming from
-the *signature* (Trac #7293). So, for Given errors we replace the
+the *signature* (#7293). So, for Given errors we replace the
env (and hence src-loc) on its CtLoc with that from the immediately
enclosing implication.
Note [Error messages for untouchables]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #9109)
+Consider (#9109)
data G a where { GBool :: G Bool }
foo x = case x of GBool -> True
@@ -1745,7 +1745,7 @@ mkTyVarEqErr' dflags ctxt report ct oriented tv1 co1 ty2
| otherwise
= reportEqErr ctxt report ct oriented (mkTyVarTy tv1) ty2
- -- This *can* happen (Trac #6123, and test T2627b)
+ -- This *can* happen (#6123, and test T2627b)
-- Consider an ambiguous top-level constraint (a ~ F a)
-- Not an occurs check, because F is a type function.
where
@@ -2106,7 +2106,7 @@ mkExpectedActualMsg _ _ _ _ _ = panic "mkExpectedAcutalMsg"
{- Note [Insoluble occurs check wins]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider [G] a ~ [a], [W] a ~ [a] (Trac #13674). The Given is insoluble
+Consider [G] a ~ [a], [W] a ~ [a] (#13674). The Given is insoluble
so we don't use it for rewriting. The Wanted is also insoluble, and
we don't solve it from the Given. It's very confusing to say
Cannot solve a ~ [a] from given constraints a ~ [a]
@@ -2317,11 +2317,11 @@ untouchable type variable. So suggestAddSig sees if the offending
type variable is bound by an *inferred* signature, and suggests
adding a declared signature instead.
-This initially came up in Trac #8968, concerning pattern synonyms.
+This initially came up in #8968, concerning pattern synonyms.
Note [Disambiguating (X ~ X) errors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-See Trac #8278
+See #8278
Note [Reporting occurs-check errors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2669,7 +2669,7 @@ something like
No instance for (Num Int) arising from the literal ‘3’
There are instances for similar types:
instance Num GHC.Types.Int -- Defined in ‘GHC.Num’
-Discussion in Trac #9611.
+Discussion in #9611.
Note [Highlighting ambiguous type variables]
~-------------------------------------------
@@ -2835,7 +2835,7 @@ the TcS monad, and we are in TcM here.
Note [Kind arguments in error messages]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-It can be terribly confusing to get an error message like (Trac #9171)
+It can be terribly confusing to get an error message like (#9171)
Couldn't match expected type ‘GetParam Base (GetParam Base Int)’
with actual type ‘GetParam Base (GetParam Base Int)’
@@ -2939,10 +2939,10 @@ getSkolemInfo (implic:implics) tvs
-- We must be careful to pass it a zonked type variable, too.
--
-- We always remove closed top-level bindings, though,
--- since they are never relevant (cf Trac #8233)
+-- since they are never relevant (cf #8233)
relevantBindings :: Bool -- True <=> filter by tyvar; False <=> no filtering
- -- See Trac #8191
+ -- See #8191
-> ReportErrCtxt -> Ct
-> TcM (ReportErrCtxt, SDoc, Ct)
-- Also returns the zonked and tidied CtOrigin of the constraint
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcEvidence.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcEvidence.hs
index 9ee23ebfea..b5209a4791 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcEvidence.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcEvidence.hs
@@ -584,7 +584,7 @@ data EvTypeable
-- ^ Dictionary for a type literal,
-- e.g. @Typeable "foo"@ or @Typeable 3@
-- The 'EvTerm' is evidence of, e.g., @KnownNat 3@
- -- (see Trac #10348)
+ -- (see #10348)
deriving Data.Data
-- | Evidence for @CallStack@ implicit parameters.
@@ -633,7 +633,7 @@ Instead we make a binding
g1 :: a~Bool = g |> ax7 a
and the constraint
[G] g1 :: a~Bool
-See Trac [7238] and Note [Bind new Givens immediately] in TcRnTypes
+See #7238 and Note [Bind new Givens immediately] in TcRnTypes
Note [EvBinds/EvTerm]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcExpr.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcExpr.hs
index d8c53aade2..4d813b0086 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcExpr.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcExpr.hs
@@ -382,10 +382,10 @@ tcExpr expr@(OpApp fix arg1 op arg2) res_ty
-- Make sure that the argument type has kind '*'
-- ($) :: forall (r:RuntimeRep) (a:*) (b:TYPE r). (a->b) -> a -> b
- -- Eg we do not want to allow (D# $ 4.0#) Trac #5570
+ -- Eg we do not want to allow (D# $ 4.0#) #5570
-- (which gives a seg fault)
--
- -- The *result* type can have any kind (Trac #8739),
+ -- The *result* type can have any kind (#8739),
-- so we don't need to check anything for that
; _ <- unifyKind (Just (XHsType $ NHsCoreTy arg2_sigma))
(tcTypeKind arg2_sigma) liftedTypeKind
@@ -447,7 +447,7 @@ tcExpr expr@(SectionR x op arg2) res_ty
fn_orig = lexprCtOrigin op
-- It's important to use the origin of 'op', so that call-stacks
-- come out right; they are driven by the OccurrenceOf CtOrigin
- -- See Trac #13285
+ -- See #13285
tcExpr expr@(SectionL x arg1 op) res_ty
= do { (op', op_ty) <- tcInferFun op
@@ -467,7 +467,7 @@ tcExpr expr@(SectionL x arg1 op) res_ty
fn_orig = lexprCtOrigin op
-- It's important to use the origin of 'op', so that call-stacks
-- come out right; they are driven by the OccurrenceOf CtOrigin
- -- See Trac #13285
+ -- See #13285
tcExpr expr@(ExplicitTuple x tup_args boxity) res_ty
| all tupArgPresent tup_args
@@ -700,7 +700,7 @@ The result type should be (T a b' c)
not (T a b c), because 'b' *is not* mentioned in a non-updated field
not (T a b' c'), because 'c' *is* mentioned in a non-updated field
NB that it's not good enough to look at just one constructor; we must
-look at them all; cf Trac #3219
+look at them all; cf #3219
After all, upd should be equivalent to:
upd t x = case t of
@@ -1362,7 +1362,7 @@ tcArgs fun orig_fun_ty fun_orig orig_args herald
{- Note [Required quantifiers in the type of a term]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #15859)
+Consider (#15859)
data A k :: k -> Type -- A :: forall k -> k -> Type
type KindOf (a :: k) = k -- KindOf :: forall k. k -> Type
@@ -1390,7 +1390,7 @@ Note [Visible type application zonk]
So we must zonk inner_ty as well, to guarantee consistency between zonk(tv)
and inner_ty. Otherwise we can build an ill-kinded type. An example was
-Trac #14158, where we had:
+#14158, where we had:
id :: forall k. forall (cat :: k -> k -> *). forall (a :: k). cat a a
and we had the visible type application
id @(->)
@@ -1405,7 +1405,7 @@ and we had the visible type application
but we must first zonk the inner_ty to get
forall (a :: TYPE q1). cat a a
so that the result of substitution is well-kinded
- Failing to do so led to Trac #14158.
+ Failing to do so led to #14158.
-}
----------------
@@ -1704,7 +1704,7 @@ So for partial signatures we apply the MR if no context is given. So
e :: _ => IO _ do not apply the MR
just like in TcBinds.decideGeneralisationPlan
-This makes a difference (Trac #11670):
+This makes a difference (#11670):
peek :: Ptr a -> IO CLong
peek ptr = peekElemOff undefined 0 :: _
from (peekElemOff undefined 0) we get
@@ -1844,7 +1844,7 @@ tcUnboundId :: HsExpr GhcRn -> UnboundVar -> ExpRhoType -> TcM (HsExpr GhcTcId)
-- Id; and indeed the evidence for the CHoleCan does bind it, so it's
-- not unbound any more!
tcUnboundId rn_expr unbound res_ty
- = do { ty <- newOpenFlexiTyVarTy -- Allow Int# etc (Trac #12531)
+ = do { ty <- newOpenFlexiTyVarTy -- Allow Int# etc (#12531)
; let occ = unboundVarOcc unbound
; name <- newSysName occ
; let ev = mkLocalId name ty
@@ -2691,7 +2691,7 @@ with update
r { x=e1, y=e2, z=e3 }, we
Finding the smallest subset is hard, so the code here makes
-a decent stab, no more. See Trac #7989.
+a decent stab, no more. See #7989.
-}
naughtyRecordSel :: RdrName -> SDoc
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcFlatten.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcFlatten.hs
index 80202b7cbc..39a33f3fd7 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcFlatten.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcFlatten.hs
@@ -222,7 +222,7 @@ v:alpha in common envt).)
Note [Unflattening can force the solver to iterate]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Look at Trac #10340:
+Look at #10340:
type family Any :: * -- No instances
get :: MonadState s m => m s
instance MonadState s (State s) where ...
@@ -426,7 +426,7 @@ Maybe that doesn't matter: we would still be left with unsolved
G a ~ Bool.
--------------------------
-Trac #9318 has a very simple program leading to
+#9318 has a very simple program leading to
[W] F Int ~ Int
[W] F Int ~ Bool
@@ -625,7 +625,7 @@ is this. Consider flattening (Eq (F (G Int) (H Bool)):
* Processing w3 first is BAD, because we can't reduce i t,so it'll
get put into the inert set, and later kicked out when w1, w2 are
- solved. In Trac #9872 this led to inert sets containing hundreds
+ solved. In #9872 this led to inert sets containing hundreds
of suspended calls.
* So we want to process w1, w2 first.
@@ -894,7 +894,7 @@ faster. This doesn't seem quite worth it, yet.
Note [flatten_exact_fam_app_fully performance]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-The refactor of GRefl seems to cause performance trouble for T9872x: the allocation of flatten_exact_fam_app_fully_performance increased. See note [Generalized reflexive coercion] in TyCoRep for more information about GRefl and Trac #15192 for the current state.
+The refactor of GRefl seems to cause performance trouble for T9872x: the allocation of flatten_exact_fam_app_fully_performance increased. See note [Generalized reflexive coercion] in TyCoRep for more information about GRefl and #15192 for the current state.
The explicit pattern match in homogenise_result helps with T9872a, b, c.
@@ -1269,7 +1269,7 @@ the (F a) to a skolem, and return (T fsk). We don't need to expand the
synonym. This works because TcTyConAppCo can deal with synonyms
(unlike TyConAppCo), see Note [TcCoercions] in TcEvidence.
-But (Trac #8979) for
+But (#8979) for
type T a = (F a, a) where F is a type function
we must expand the synonym in (say) T Int, to expose the type function
to the flattener.
@@ -1617,7 +1617,7 @@ only if (a) the work item can rewrite the inert AND
(b) the inert cannot rewrite the work item
This is significantly harder to think about. It can save a LOT of work
-in occurs-check cases, but we don't care about them much. Trac #5837
+in occurs-check cases, but we don't care about them much. #5837
is an example; all the constraints here are Givens
[G] a ~ TF (a,Int)
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcForeign.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcForeign.hs
index 4e5feb4d43..877ba805f2 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcForeign.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcForeign.hs
@@ -206,7 +206,7 @@ used even though it is not mentioned expclitly in the source, so we don't
want to report it as "defined but not used" or "imported but not used".
eg newtype D = MkD Int
foreign import foo :: D -> IO ()
-Here 'MkD' us used. See Trac #7408.
+Here 'MkD' us used. See #7408.
GHC also expands type functions during this process, so it's not enough
just to look at the free variables of the declaration.
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcGenDeriv.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcGenDeriv.hs
index e4f50ddaf7..4d731db15c 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcGenDeriv.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcGenDeriv.hs
@@ -217,7 +217,7 @@ gen_Eq_binds loc tycon = do
nested_eq_expr tys as bs
= foldr1 and_Expr (zipWith3Equal "nested_eq" nested_eq tys as bs)
-- Using 'foldr1' here ensures that the derived code is correctly
- -- associated. See Trac #10859.
+ -- associated. See #10859.
where
nested_eq ty a b = nlHsPar (eq_Expr ty (nlHsVar a) (nlHsVar b))
@@ -278,7 +278,7 @@ Several special cases:
Note [Game plan for deriving Ord]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It's a bad idea to define only 'compare', and build the other binary
-comparisons on top of it; see Trac #2130, #4019. Reason: we don't
+comparisons on top of it; see #2130, #4019. Reason: we don't
want to laboriously make a three-way comparison, only to extract a
binary result, something like this:
(>) (I# x) (I# y) = case <# x y of
@@ -870,7 +870,7 @@ gen_Ix_binds loc tycon = do
con_pat cs_needed] $
if con_arity == 0
-- If the product type has no fields, inRange is trivially true
- -- (see Trac #12853).
+ -- (see #12853).
then true_Expr
else foldl1 and_Expr (zipWith3Equal "single_con_inRange" in_range
as_needed bs_needed cs_needed)
@@ -927,12 +927,12 @@ rather than
Ident "T1" <- lexP
The latter desugares to inline code for matching the Ident and the
string, and this can be very voluminous. The former is much more
-compact. Cf Trac #7258, although that also concerned non-linearity in
+compact. Cf #7258, although that also concerned non-linearity in
the occurrence analyser, a separate issue.
Note [Read for empty data types]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-What should we get for this? (Trac #7931)
+What should we get for this? (#7931)
data Emp deriving( Read ) -- No data constructors
Here we want
@@ -1060,7 +1060,7 @@ gen_Read_binds get_fixity loc tycon
-- For constructors and field labels ending in '#', we hackily
-- let the lexer generate two tokens, and look for both in sequence
- -- Thus [Ident "I"; Symbol "#"]. See Trac #5041
+ -- Thus [Ident "I"; Symbol "#"]. See #5041
ident_h_pat s | Just (ss, '#') <- snocView s = [ ident_pat ss, symbol_pat "#" ]
| otherwise = [ ident_pat s ]
@@ -1313,7 +1313,7 @@ gen_Data_binds loc rep_tc
-- Make unique names for the data type and constructor
-- auxiliary bindings. Start with the name of the TyCon/DataCon
- -- but that might not be unique: see Trac #12245.
+ -- but that might not be unique: see #12245.
; dt_occ <- chooseUniqueOccTc (mkDataTOcc (getOccName rep_tc))
; dc_occs <- mapM (chooseUniqueOccTc . mkDataCOcc . getOccName)
(tyConDataCons rep_tc)
@@ -1430,7 +1430,7 @@ gen_data dflags data_type_name constr_names loc rep_tc
-- because D :: * -> *
-- even though rep_tc has kind * -> * -> * -> *
-- Hence looking for the kind of fam_tc not rep_tc
- -- See Trac #4896
+ -- See #4896
tycon_kind = case tyConFamInst_maybe rep_tc of
Just (fam_tc, _) -> tyConKind fam_tc
Nothing -> tyConKind rep_tc
@@ -1684,7 +1684,7 @@ TcDeriv.genInst. See #8503 for more discussion.
Note [Newtype-deriving trickiness]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #12768):
+Consider (#12768):
class C a where { op :: D a => a -> a }
instance C a => C [a] where { op = opList }
@@ -2091,7 +2091,7 @@ mkRdrFunBindEC arity catch_all
-- foldMap _ z = mempty
-- It's needed if there no data cons at all,
-- which can happen with -XEmptyDataDecls
- -- See Trac #4302
+ -- See #4302
matches' = if null matches
then [mkMatch (mkPrefixFunRhs fun)
(replicate (arity - 1) nlWildPat ++ [z_Pat])
@@ -2111,7 +2111,7 @@ mkRdrFunBindSE arity
-- compare _ _ = error "Void compare"
-- It's needed if there no data cons at all,
-- which can happen with -XEmptyDataDecls
- -- See Trac #4302
+ -- See #4302
matches' = if null matches
then [mkMatch (mkPrefixFunRhs fun)
(replicate arity nlWildPat)
@@ -2425,7 +2425,7 @@ We often want to make a top-level auxiliary binding. E.g. for comparison we hae
Of course these top-level bindings should all have distinct name, and we are
generating RdrNames here. We can't just use the TyCon or DataCon to distinguish
because with standalone deriving two imported TyCons might both be called T!
-(See Trac #7947.)
+(See #7947.)
So we use package name, module name and the name of the parent
(T in this example) as part of the OccName we generate for the new binding.
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcGenFunctor.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcGenFunctor.hs
index 02f45ad316..240fc27103 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcGenFunctor.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcGenFunctor.hs
@@ -391,7 +391,7 @@ functorLikeTraverse var (FT { ft_triv = caseTrivial, ft_var = caseVar
-- When folding over an unboxed tuple, we must explicitly drop the
-- runtime rep arguments, or else GHC will generate twice as many
-- variables in a unboxed tuple pattern match and expression as it
- -- actually needs. See Trac #12399
+ -- actually needs. See #12399
(xrs,xcs) = unzip (map (go co) (dropRuntimeRepArgs args))
go co (ForAllTy (Bndr v vis) x)
| isVisibleArgFlag vis = panic "unexpected visible binder"
@@ -1051,7 +1051,7 @@ Only E1's argument is an occurrence of a universally quantified type variable
that is syntactically equivalent to the last type parameter, so only E1's
argument will be folded over in a derived Foldable instance.
-See Trac #10447 for the original discussion on this feature. Also see
+See #10447 for the original discussion on this feature. Also see
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/Compiler/DeriveFunctor
for a more in-depth explanation.
@@ -1154,7 +1154,7 @@ This is unsatisfying for two reasons:
1. The Traversable instance doesn't typecheck! Int# is of kind #, but pure
expects an argument whose type is of kind *. This effectively prevents
Traversable from being derived for any datatype with an unlifted argument
- type (Trac #11174).
+ type (#11174).
2. The generated code contains superfluous expressions. By the Monoid laws,
we can reduce (f a <> mempty) to (f a), and by the Applicative laws, we can
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcGenGenerics.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcGenGenerics.hs
index 123cfd3535..8e328b0eed 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcGenGenerics.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcGenGenerics.hs
@@ -906,7 +906,7 @@ a Generic(1) instance is being derived, not the fully instantiated type. As a
result, tc_mkRepTy builds the most generalized Rep(1) instance possible using
the type variables it learns from the TyCon (i.e., it uses tyConTyVars). This
can cause problems when the instance has instantiated type variables
-(see Trac #11732). As an example:
+(see #11732). As an example:
data T a = MkT a
deriving instance Generic (T Int)
@@ -990,7 +990,7 @@ Note [Generics compilation speed tricks]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Deriving Generic(1) is known to have a large constant factor during
compilation, which contributes to noticeable compilation slowdowns when
-deriving Generic(1) for large datatypes (see Trac #5642).
+deriving Generic(1) for large datatypes (see #5642).
To ease the pain, there is a trick one can play when generating definitions for
to(1) and from(1). If you have a datatype like:
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcHoleErrors.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcHoleErrors.hs
index 3f2556c8c4..db47450aa1 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcHoleErrors.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcHoleErrors.hs
@@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ If -XScopedTypeVariables is enabled, this hole fit can even be copied verbatim.
Note [Relevant Constraints]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-As highlighted by Trac #14273, we need to check any relevant constraints as well
+As highlighted by #14273, we need to check any relevant constraints as well
as checking for subsumption. Relevant constraints are the simple constraints
whose free unification variables are mentioned in the type of the hole.
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcHsSyn.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcHsSyn.hs
index 7755daf44b..52783e7210 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcHsSyn.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcHsSyn.hs
@@ -1686,7 +1686,7 @@ zonkEvBind env bind@(EvBind { eb_lhs = var, eb_rhs = term })
-- Optimise the common case of Refl coercions
-- See Note [Optimise coercion zonking]
- -- This has a very big effect on some programs (eg Trac #5030)
+ -- This has a very big effect on some programs (eg #5030)
; term' <- case getEqPredTys_maybe (idType var') of
Just (r, ty1, ty2) | ty1 `eqType` ty2
@@ -1708,7 +1708,7 @@ Rather, we can zonk the variable, and if its type is (ty ~ ty), we can just
use Refl on the right, ignoring the actual coercion on the RHS.
This can have a very big effect, because the constraint solver sometimes does go
-to a lot of effort to prove Refl! (Eg when solving 10+3 = 10+3; cf Trac #5030)
+to a lot of effort to prove Refl! (Eg when solving 10+3 = 10+3; cf #5030)
************************************************************************
@@ -1724,7 +1724,7 @@ Problem:
In TcMType.zonkTcTyVar, we short-circuit (Indirect ty) to
(Indirect zty), see Note [Sharing in zonking] in TcMType. But we
- /can't/ do this when zonking a TcType to a Type (Trac #15552, esp
+ /can't/ do this when zonking a TcType to a Type (#15552, esp
comment:3). Suppose we have
alpha -> alpha
@@ -1752,7 +1752,7 @@ Problem:
the same as zonkTcTypeToType. (If we distinguished TcType from
Type, this issue would have been a type error!)
-Solution: (see Trac #15552 for other variants)
+Solution: (see #15552 for other variants)
One possible solution is simply not to do the short-circuiting.
That has less sharing, but maybe sharing is rare. And indeed,
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcHsType.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcHsType.hs
index 0357c1046d..7438c4823b 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcHsType.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcHsType.hs
@@ -458,7 +458,7 @@ Consider this GHCi command
We will only get the 'forall' if we /refrain/ from saturating those
invisible binders. But generally we /do/ saturate those invisible
binders (see tcInferApps), and we want to do so for nested application
-even in GHCi. Consider for example (Trac #16287)
+even in GHCi. Consider for example (#16287)
ghci> type family F :: k
ghci> data T :: (forall k. k) -> Type
ghci> :kind T F
@@ -585,7 +585,7 @@ tc_infer_hs_type mode (HsKindSig _ ty sig)
-- We must typecheck the kind signature, and solve all
-- its equalities etc; from this point on we may do
-- things like instantiate its foralls, so it needs
- -- to be fully determined (Trac #14904)
+ -- to be fully determined (#14904)
; traceTc "tc_infer_hs_type:sig" (ppr ty $$ ppr sig')
; ty' <- tc_lhs_type mode ty sig'
; return (ty', sig') }
@@ -721,7 +721,7 @@ tc_hs_type mode rn_ty@(HsTupleTy _ HsBoxedOrConstraintTuple hs_tys) exp_kind
; (tys, kinds) <- mapAndUnzipM (tc_infer_lhs_type mode) hs_tys
; kinds <- mapM zonkTcType kinds
-- Infer each arg type separately, because errors can be
- -- confusing if we give them a shared kind. Eg Trac #7410
+ -- confusing if we give them a shared kind. Eg #7410
-- (Either Int, Int), we do not want to get an error saying
-- "the second argument of a tuple should have kind *->*"
@@ -1244,7 +1244,7 @@ a's kind, so we'll call matchExpectedFunKind, and unify
At this point we must zonk the function type to expose the arrrow, so
that (a Int) will satisfy (PKTI).
-The absence of this caused Trac #14174 and #14520.
+The absence of this caused #14174 and #14520.
The calls to mkAppTyM is the other place we are very careful.
@@ -1427,7 +1427,7 @@ tcTyVar mode name -- Could be a tyvar, a tycon, or a datacon
; unless (data_kinds || specialPromotedDc dc) $
promotionErr name NoDataKindsDC
; when (isFamInstTyCon (dataConTyCon dc)) $
- -- see Trac #15245
+ -- see #15245
promotionErr name FamDataConPE
; let (_, _, _, theta, _, _) = dataConFullSig dc
; traceTc "tcTyVar" (ppr dc <+> ppr theta $$ ppr (dc_theta_illegal_constraint theta))
@@ -1460,7 +1460,7 @@ Note [GADT kind self-reference]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A promoted type cannot be used in the body of that type's declaration.
-Trac #11554 shows this example, which made GHC loop:
+#11554 shows this example, which made GHC loop:
import Data.Kind
data P (x :: k) = Q
@@ -1473,7 +1473,7 @@ TyConPE promotion error is given when tcTyVar checks an ATcTyCon in kind mode.
Any ATcTyCon is a TyCon being defined in the current recursive group (see data
type decl for TcTyThing), and all such TyCons are illegal in kinds.
-Trac #11962 proposes checking the head of a data declaration separately from
+#11962 proposes checking the head of a data declaration separately from
its constructors. This would allow the example above to pass.
Note [Body kind of a HsForAllTy]
@@ -1920,7 +1920,7 @@ monomorphic kind, with no quantification whatsoever. That's why
we use mkAnonTyConBinder for all arguments when figuring out
tc_binders.
-But notice that (Trac #16322 comment:3)
+But notice that (#16322 comment:3)
* The algorithm successfully kind-checks this declaration:
data T2 ka (a::ka) = MkT2 (T2 Type a)
@@ -2437,7 +2437,7 @@ And also see Note [Avoid name clashes for associated data types].
For (b) suppose we have
data T :: forall k. k -> forall k. k -> *
where the two k's are identical even up to their uniques. Surprisingly,
-this can happen: see Trac #14515.
+this can happen: see #14515.
It's reasonably easy to solve all this; just run down the list with a
substitution; hence the recursive 'go' function. But it has to be
@@ -2564,7 +2564,7 @@ An annoying difficulty happens if there are more than 62 inferred
constraints. Then we need to fill in the TcTyVar with (say) a 70-tuple.
Where do we find the TyCon? For good reasons we only have constraint
tuples up to 62 (see Note [How tuples work] in TysWiredIn). So how
-can we make a 70-tuple? This was the root cause of Trac #14217.
+can we make a 70-tuple? This was the root cause of #14217.
It's incredibly tiresome, because we only need this type to fill
in the hole, to communicate to the error reporting machinery. Nothing
@@ -2612,7 +2612,7 @@ tcHsPatSigType ctxt sig_ty
<- solveLocalEqualities "tcHsPatSigType" $
-- Always solve local equalities if possible,
-- else casts get in the way of deep skolemisation
- -- (Trac #16033)
+ -- (#16033)
tcWildCardBinders sig_wcs $ \ wcs ->
tcExtendNameTyVarEnv sig_tkv_prs $
do { sig_ty <- tcHsOpenType hs_ty
@@ -2733,7 +2733,7 @@ Here
* Finally, in '<blah>' we have the envt "b" :-> beta, "c" :-> gamma,
so we return the pairs ("b" :-> beta, "c" :-> gamma) from tcHsPatSigType,
-Another example (Trac #13881):
+Another example (#13881):
fl :: forall (l :: [a]). Sing l -> Sing l
fl (SNil :: Sing (l :: [y])) = SNil
When we reach the pattern signature, 'l' is in scope from the
@@ -2854,7 +2854,7 @@ tcLHsKindSig ctxt hs_kind
-- No generalization, so we must promote
; kind <- zonkPromoteType kind
-- This zonk is very important in the case of higher rank kinds
- -- E.g. Trac #13879 f :: forall (p :: forall z (y::z). <blah>).
+ -- E.g. #13879 f :: forall (p :: forall z (y::z). <blah>).
-- <more blah>
-- When instantiating p's kind at occurrences of p in <more blah>
-- it's crucial that the kind we instantiate is fully zonked,
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcInstDcls.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcInstDcls.hs
index 7314dd7f0e..9642756b99 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcInstDcls.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcInstDcls.hs
@@ -239,7 +239,7 @@ Why do we use this different strategy? Because otherwise we
end up with non-inlined dictionaries that look like
$df = $cop |> blah
which adds an extra indirection to every use, which seems stupid. See
-Trac #4138 for an example (although the regression reported there
+#4138 for an example (although the regression reported there
wasn't due to the indirection).
There is an awkward wrinkle though: we want to be very
@@ -254,7 +254,7 @@ above. We ensure that this doesn't happen by putting an INLINE
pragma on the dfun itself; after all, it ends up being just a cast.
There is one more dark corner to the INLINE story, even more deeply
-buried. Consider this (Trac #3772):
+buried. Consider this (#3772):
class DeepSeq a => C a where
gen :: Int -> a
@@ -433,7 +433,7 @@ Given a declaration bracket
there is really no point in generating the derived code for deriving(
Show) and then type-checking it. This will happen at the call site
-anyway, and the type check should never fail! Moreover (Trac #6005)
+anyway, and the type check should never fail! Moreover (#6005)
the scoping of the generated code inside the bracket does not seem to
work out.
@@ -677,7 +677,7 @@ tcDataFamInstDecl mb_clsinfo
-- Put the eta-removed tyvars at the end
-- Remember, qtvs is in arbitrary order, except kind vars are
-- first, so there is no reason to suppose that the eta_tvs
- -- (obtained from the pats) are at the end (Trac #11148)
+ -- (obtained from the pats) are at the end (#11148)
-- Eta-expand the representation tycon until it has reult kind *
-- See also Note [Arity of data families] in FamInstEnv
@@ -910,7 +910,7 @@ There are several fiddly subtleties lurking here
the TyConBndrVis on Drep's arguments. In particular do we have
(forall (k::*). blah) or (* -> blah)?
- We must match whatever D does! In Trac #15817 we had
+ We must match whatever D does! In #15817 we had
data family X a :: forall k. * -> * -- Note: a forall that is not used
data instance X Int b = MkX
@@ -1257,11 +1257,11 @@ checkInstConstraints thing_inside
{-
Note [Recursive superclasses]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-See Trac #3731, #4809, #5751, #5913, #6117, #6161, which all
+See #3731, #4809, #5751, #5913, #6117, #6161, which all
describe somewhat more complicated situations, but ones
encountered in practice.
-See also tests tcrun020, tcrun021, tcrun033, and Trac #11427.
+See also tests tcrun020, tcrun021, tcrun033, and #11427.
----- THE PROBLEM --------
The problem is that it is all too easy to create a class whose
@@ -1326,7 +1326,7 @@ since it is smaller than the thing we are building (UserOfRegs r (Maybe a).
But for (i2) that isn't the case, so we must add an explicit, and
perhaps surprising, (Ord r) argument to the instance declaration.
-Here's another example from Trac #6161:
+Here's another example from #6161:
class Super a => Duper a where ...
class Duper (Fam a) => Foo a where ...
@@ -1934,8 +1934,8 @@ to disambiguate:
fooIntInt = $dmfoo @Int @Int
Lacking VTA we'd get ambiguity errors involving the default method. This applies
-equally to vanilla default methods (Trac #1061) and generic default methods
-(Trac #12220).
+equally to vanilla default methods (#1061) and generic default methods
+(#12220).
Historical note: before we had VTA we had to generate
post-type-checked code, which took a lot more code, and didn't work for
@@ -2052,7 +2052,7 @@ Note that
* The specialised dictionary $s$dfIxPair is very much needed, in case we
call a function that takes a dictionary, but in a context where the
- specialised dictionary can be used. See Trac #7797.
+ specialised dictionary can be used. See #7797.
* The ClassOp rule for 'range' works equally well on $s$dfIxPair, because
it still has a DFunUnfolding. See Note [ClassOp/DFun selection]
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcInteract.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcInteract.hs
index 277e3249d4..3a80d5a62c 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcInteract.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcInteract.hs
@@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ to float. This means that
* When floating an equality outwards, we don't need to worry about floating its
associated flattening constraints.
- * Another tricky case becomes easy: Trac #4935
+ * Another tricky case becomes easy: #4935
type instance F True a b = a
type instance F False a b = b
@@ -628,7 +628,7 @@ we keep? More subtle than you might think!
Binds: d3 = sc_sel d2, d2 = sc_sel d1
Work item: d3 :: C a
Then it'd be ridiculous to replace d1 with d3 in the inert set!
- Hence the findNeedEvVars test. See Trac #14774.
+ Hence the findNeedEvVars test. See #14774.
* Finally, when there is still a choice, use KeepInert rather than
KeepWork, for two reasons:
@@ -744,7 +744,7 @@ findMatchingIrreds irreds ev
{- Note [Solving irreducible equalities]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #14333)
+Consider (#14333)
[G] a b ~R# c d
[W] c d ~R# a b
Clearly we should be able to solve this! Even though the constraints are
@@ -905,7 +905,7 @@ Which, because solving `Eq [a]` demands `Eq a` which we cannot solve, produces:
Note [Shortcut solving: type families]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Suppose we have (Trac #13943)
+Suppose we have (#13943)
class Take (n :: Nat) where ...
instance {-# OVERLAPPING #-} Take 0 where ..
instance {-# OVERLAPPABLE #-} (Take (n - 1)) => Take n where ..
@@ -1008,7 +1008,7 @@ Passing along the solved_dicts important for two reasons:
solved_dicts state ensures that we remember what we have already
tried to solve to avoid looping.
-* As Trac #15164 showed, it can be important to exploit sharing between
+* As #15164 showed, it can be important to exploit sharing between
goals. E.g. To solve G we may need G1 and G2. To solve G1 we may need H;
and to solve G2 we may need H. If we don't spot this sharing we may
solve H twice; and if this pattern repeats we may get exponentially bad
@@ -1671,7 +1671,7 @@ where
newtype N b = MkN b
and we want to get alpha := N b.
-See also Trac #15144, which was caused by unifying a representational
+See also #15144, which was caused by unifying a representational
equality (in the unflattener).
@@ -1688,7 +1688,7 @@ constraint right away. This avoids two dangers
Danger 1: If we send the original constraint on down the pipeline
it may react with an instance declaration, and in delicate
situations (when a Given overlaps with an instance) that
- may produce new insoluble goals: see Trac #4952
+ may produce new insoluble goals: see #4952
Danger 2: If we don't rewrite the constraint, it may re-react
with the same thing later, and produce the same equality
@@ -1763,7 +1763,7 @@ And there's a risk of complaining about Bool ~ [a]. But in fact
the Wanted matches the second instance, so we never get as far
as the fundeps.
-Trac #7875 is a case in point.
+#7875 is a case in point.
-}
emitFunDepDeriveds :: [FunDepEqn CtLoc] -> TcS ()
@@ -1924,7 +1924,7 @@ improveTopFunEqs ev fam_tc args fsk
; mapM_ (unifyDerived loc Nominal) eqns }
where
loc = ctEvLoc ev -- ToDo: this location is wrong; it should be FunDepOrigin2
- -- See Trac #14778
+ -- See #14778
improve_top_fun_eqs :: FamInstEnvs
-> TyCon -> [TcType] -> TcType
@@ -1988,7 +1988,7 @@ improve_top_fun_eqs fam_envs fam_tc args rhs_ty
-- If the current substitution bind [k -> *], and
-- one of the un-substituted tyvars is (a::k), we'd better
-- be sure to apply the current substitution to a's kind.
- -- Hence instFlexiX. Trac #13135 was an example.
+ -- Hence instFlexiX. #13135 was an example.
; return [ Pair (substTyUnchecked subst ax_arg) arg
-- NB: the ax_arg part is on the left
@@ -2100,12 +2100,12 @@ very well is this:
Examples:
-* Trac #5837 has [G] a ~ TF (a,Int), with an instance
+* #5837 has [G] a ~ TF (a,Int), with an instance
type instance TF (a,b) = (TF a, TF b)
This readily loops when solving givens. But with the FunEq occurs
check principle, it rapidly gets stuck which is fine.
-* Trac #12444 is a good example, explained in comment:2. We have
+* #12444 is a good example, explained in comment:2. We have
type instance F (Succ x) = Succ (F x)
[W] alpha ~ Succ (F alpha)
If we allow the reduction to happen, we get an infinite loop
@@ -2127,7 +2127,7 @@ we do *not* need to expand type synonyms because the matcher will do that for us
Note [Improvement orientation]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A very delicate point is the orientation of derived equalities
-arising from injectivity improvement (Trac #12522). Suppse we have
+arising from injectivity improvement (#12522). Suppse we have
type family F x = t | t -> x
type instance F (a, Int) = (Int, G a)
where G is injective; and wanted constraints
@@ -2342,7 +2342,7 @@ checkInstanceOK loc what pred
{- Note [Instances in no-evidence implications]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-In Trac #15290 we had
+In #15290 we had
[G] forall p q. Coercible p q => Coercible (m p) (m q))
[W] forall <no-ev> a. m (Int, IntStateT m a)
~R#
@@ -2441,7 +2441,7 @@ The partial solution is that:
The end effect is that, much as we do for overlapping instances, we
delay choosing a class instance if there is a possibility of another
instance OR a given to match our constraint later on. This fixes
-Trac #4981 and #5002.
+#4981 and #5002.
Other notes:
@@ -2463,10 +2463,10 @@ Other notes:
constraints, but it is possible. I've added a test case in
typecheck/should-compile/GivenOverlapping.hs
-* Another "live" example is Trac #10195; another is #10177.
+* Another "live" example is #10195; another is #10177.
* We ignore the overlap problem if -XIncoherentInstances is in force:
- see Trac #6002 for a worked-out example where this makes a
+ see #6002 for a worked-out example where this makes a
difference.
* Moreover notice that our goals here are different than the goals of
@@ -2487,7 +2487,7 @@ Other notes:
and suppose we have -XNoMonoLocalBinds, so that we attempt to find the most
general type for 'v'. When generalising v's type we'll simplify its
Q [alpha] constraint, but we don't have Q [a] in the 'givens', so we
- will use the instance declaration after all. Trac #11948 was a case
+ will use the instance declaration after all. #11948 was a case
in point.
All of this is disgustingly delicate, so to discourage people from writing
@@ -2530,7 +2530,7 @@ And less obviously to:
superclasses invert the instance; e.g.
class (c1, c2) => (% c1, c2 %)
instance (c1, c2) => (% c1, c2 %)
- Example in Trac #14218
+ Example in #14218
Exammples: T5853, T10432, T5315, T9222, T2627b, T3028b
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcMType.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcMType.hs
index 0c9e0e223e..d6a753f76b 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcMType.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcMType.hs
@@ -683,7 +683,7 @@ influences the way it is tidied; see TypeRep.tidyTyVarBndr.
Note [Unification variables need fresh Names]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Whenever we allocate a unification variable (MetaTyVar) we give
-it a fresh name. Trac #16221 is a very tricky case that illustrates
+it a fresh name. #16221 is a very tricky case that illustrates
why this is important:
data SameKind :: k -> k -> *
@@ -996,14 +996,14 @@ new_meta_tv_x info subst tv
; return (subst1, new_tv) }
where
substd_kind = substTyUnchecked subst (tyVarKind tv)
- -- NOTE: Trac #12549 is fixed so we could use
+ -- NOTE: #12549 is fixed so we could use
-- substTy here, but the tc_infer_args problem
-- is not yet fixed so leaving as unchecked for now.
-- OLD NOTE:
-- Unchecked because we call newMetaTyVarX from
-- tcInstTyBinder, which is called from tcInferApps
-- which does not yet take enough trouble to ensure
- -- the in-scope set is right; e.g. Trac #12785 trips
+ -- the in-scope set is right; e.g. #12785 trips
-- if we use substTy here
newMetaTyVarTyAtLevel :: TcLevel -> TcKind -> TcM TcType
@@ -1255,7 +1255,7 @@ collect_cand_qtvs is_dep bound dvs ty
= do { tv_kind <- zonkTcType (tyVarKind tv)
-- This zonk is annoying, but it is necessary, both to
-- ensure that the collected candidates have zonked kinds
- -- (Trac #15795) and to make the naughty check
+ -- (#15795) and to make the naughty check
-- (which comes next) works correctly
; if intersectsVarSet bound (tyCoVarsOfType tv_kind)
@@ -1364,7 +1364,7 @@ non-dependent variables) and
Step (2) is often unimportant, because the kind variable is often
also free in the type. Eg
Typeable k (a::k)
-has free vars {k,a}. But the type (see Trac #7916)
+has free vars {k,a}. But the type (see #7916)
(f::k->*) (a::k)
has free vars {f,a}, but we must add 'k' as well! Hence step (2).
@@ -1553,7 +1553,7 @@ defaultTyVar default_kind tv
| isTyVarTyVar tv
-- Do not default TyVarTvs. Doing so would violate the invariants
-- on TyVarTvs; see Note [Signature skolems] in TcType.
- -- Trac #13343 is an example; #14555 is another
+ -- #13343 is an example; #14555 is another
-- See Note [Inferring kinds for type declarations] in TcTyClsDecls
= return False
@@ -1848,7 +1848,7 @@ zonkImplication implic@(Implic { ic_skols = skols
, ic_wanted = wanted
, ic_info = info })
= do { skols' <- mapM zonkTyCoVarKind skols -- Need to zonk their kinds!
- -- as Trac #7230 showed
+ -- as #7230 showed
; given' <- mapM zonkEvVar given
; info' <- zonkSkolemInfo info
; wanted' <- zonkWCRec wanted
@@ -1892,7 +1892,7 @@ Why?, for example:
simple wanted and plugin loop, looks for @CDictCan@s. If a plugin is in use,
constraints are zonked before being passed to the plugin. This means if we
don't preserve a canonical form, @expandSuperClasses@ fails to expand
- superclasses. This is what happened in Trac #11525.
+ superclasses. This is what happened in #11525.
- For CHoleCan, once we forget that it's a hole, we can never recover that info.
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcMatches.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcMatches.hs
index 4286a5463a..48410e0a7c 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcMatches.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcMatches.hs
@@ -823,7 +823,7 @@ tcDoStmt ctxt (BindStmt _ pat rhs bind_op fail_op) res_ty thing_inside
= do { -- Deal with rebindable syntax:
-- (>>=) :: rhs_ty -> (pat_ty -> new_res_ty) -> res_ty
-- This level of generality is needed for using do-notation
- -- in full generality; see Trac #1537
+ -- in full generality; see #1537
((rhs', pat', new_res_ty, thing), bind_op')
<- tcSyntaxOp DoOrigin bind_op [SynRho, SynFun SynAny SynRho] res_ty $
@@ -987,7 +987,7 @@ we want to typecheck 'bar' in the knowledge that it should be an IO thing,
pushing info from the context into the RHS. To do this, we check the
rebindable syntax first, and push that information into (tcMonoExprNC rhs).
Otherwise the error shows up when checking the rebindable syntax, and
-the expected/inferred stuff is back to front (see Trac #3613).
+the expected/inferred stuff is back to front (see #3613).
Note [typechecking ApplicativeStmt]
@@ -1084,7 +1084,7 @@ tcApplicativeStmts ctxt pairs rhs_ty thing_inside
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
An applicative-do is supposed to take place in parallel, so
constraints bound in one arm can't possibly be available in another
-(Trac #13242). Our current rule is this (more details and discussion
+(#13242). Our current rule is this (more details and discussion
on the ticket). Consider
...stmts...
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcPat.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcPat.hs
index f24fb4a3d0..38ca85969a 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcPat.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcPat.hs
@@ -743,7 +743,7 @@ tcDataConPat penv (dL->L con_span con_name) data_con pat_ty
; checkExistentials ex_tvs all_arg_tys penv
; tenv <- instTyVarsWith PatOrigin univ_tvs ctxt_res_tys
- -- NB: Do not use zipTvSubst! See Trac #14154
+ -- NB: Do not use zipTvSubst! See #14154
-- We want to create a well-kinded substitution, so
-- that the instantiated type is well-kinded
@@ -795,7 +795,7 @@ tcDataConPat penv (dL->L con_span con_name) data_con pat_ty
; checkTc (no_equalities || gadts_on || families_on)
(text "A pattern match on a GADT requires the" <+>
text "GADTs or TypeFamilies language extension")
- -- Trac #2905 decided that a *pattern-match* of a GADT
+ -- #2905 decided that a *pattern-match* of a GADT
-- should require the GADT language flag.
-- Re TypeFamilies see also #7156
@@ -1006,7 +1006,7 @@ tcConArgs con_like arg_tys (RecCon (HsRecFields rpats dd)) penv thing_inside
-- No matching field; chances are this field label comes from some
-- other record type (or maybe none). If this happens, just fail,
- -- otherwise we get crashes later (Trac #8570), and similar:
+ -- otherwise we get crashes later (#8570), and similar:
-- f (R { foo = (a,b) }) = a+b
-- If foo isn't one of R's fields, we don't want to crash when
-- typechecking the "a+b".
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcPatSyn.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcPatSyn.hs
index 50721dc67a..5dcee99bfd 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcPatSyn.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcPatSyn.hs
@@ -110,14 +110,14 @@ If type inference for a pattern synonym fails, we can't continue with
the rest of tc_patsyn_finish, because we may get knock-on errors, or
even a crash. E.g. from
pattern What = True :: Maybe
-we get a kind error; and we must stop right away (Trac #15289).
+we get a kind error; and we must stop right away (#15289).
We stop if there are /any/ unsolved constraints, not just insoluble
ones; because pattern synonyms are top-level things, we will never
solve them later if we can't solve them now. And if we were to carry
on, tc_patsyn_finish does zonkTcTypeToType, which defaults any
unsolved unificatdion variables to Any, which confuses the error
-reporting no end (Trac #15685).
+reporting no end (#15685).
So we use simplifyTop to completely solve the constraint, report
any errors, throw an exception.
@@ -151,7 +151,7 @@ tcInferPatSynDecl (PSB { psb_id = lname@(dL->L _ name), psb_args = details
named_taus = (name, pat_ty) : map mk_named_tau args
mk_named_tau arg
= (getName arg, mkSpecForAllTys ex_tvs (varType arg))
- -- The mkSpecForAllTys is important (Trac #14552), albeit
+ -- The mkSpecForAllTys is important (#14552), albeit
-- slightly artifical (there is no variable with this funny type).
-- We do not want to quantify over variable (alpha::k)
-- that mention the existentially-bound type variables
@@ -246,7 +246,7 @@ No problem. But note that 's' is not fixed by the type of the
pattern (AST a), nor is it existentially bound. It's really only
fixed by the type of the continuation.
-Trac #14552 showed that this can go wrong if the kind of 's' mentions
+#14552 showed that this can go wrong if the kind of 's' mentions
existentially bound variables. We obviously can't make a type like
$mP :: forall (s::k->*) a. Prj s => AST a -> (forall k. s a -> r)
-> r -> r
@@ -270,7 +270,7 @@ Recall that
(NB: technically the (k1~k2) existential dictionary is not necessary,
but it's there at the moment.)
-Now consider (Trac #14394):
+Now consider (#14394):
pattern Foo = HRefl
in a non-poly-kinded module. We don't want to get
pattern Foo :: () => (* ~ *, b ~ a) => a :~~: b
@@ -310,7 +310,7 @@ See also Note [Lift equality constaints when quantifying] in TcType
Note [Coercions that escape]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Trac #14507 showed an example where the inferred type of the matcher
+#14507 showed an example where the inferred type of the matcher
for the pattern synonym was somethign like
$mSO :: forall (r :: TYPE rep) kk (a :: k).
TypeRep k a
@@ -409,7 +409,7 @@ tcCheckPatSynDecl psb@PSB{ psb_id = lname@(dL->L _ name), psb_args = details
; (implics, ev_binds) <- buildImplicationFor tclvl skol_info univ_tvs req_dicts wanted
-- Solve the constraints now, because we are about to make a PatSyn,
- -- which should not contain unification variables and the like (Trac #10997)
+ -- which should not contain unification variables and the like (#10997)
; simplifyTopImplic implics
-- ToDo: in the bidirectional case, check that the ex_tvs' are all distinct
@@ -446,7 +446,7 @@ Consider
This should work. But in the matcher we must match against MkT, and then
instantiate its argument 'x', to get a function of type (Int -> Int).
-Equality is not enough! Trac #13752 was an example.
+Equality is not enough! #13752 was an example.
Note [The pattern-synonym signature splitting rule]
@@ -455,7 +455,7 @@ Given a pattern signature, we must split
the kind-generalised variables, and
the implicitly-bound variables
into universal and existential. The rule is this
-(see discussion on Trac #11224):
+(see discussion on #11224):
The universal tyvars are the ones mentioned in
- univ_tvs: the user-specified (forall'd) universals
@@ -476,7 +476,7 @@ how do we split the arg_tys from req_ty? Consider
This is an odd example because Q has only one syntactic argument, and
so presumably is defined by a view pattern matching a function. But
-it can happen (Trac #11977, #12108).
+it can happen (#11977, #12108).
We don't know Q's arity from the pattern signature, so we have to wait
until we see the pattern declaration itself before deciding res_ty is,
@@ -549,7 +549,7 @@ a pattern synonym. What about the /building/ side?
TauTvs) in tcCheckPatSynDecl. But (a) strengthening the check here
is redundant since tcPatSynBuilderBind does the job, (b) it was
still incomplete (TyVarTvs can unify with each other), and (c) it
- didn't even work (Trac #13441 was accepted with
+ didn't even work (#13441 was accepted with
ExplicitBidirectional, but rejected if expressed in
ImplicitBidirectional form. Conclusion: trying to be too clever is
a bad idea.
@@ -1007,12 +1007,12 @@ tcPatToExpr name args pat = go pat
-- We should really be able to invert list patterns, even when
-- rebindable syntax is on, but doing so involves a bit of
- -- refactoring; see Trac #14380. Until then we reject with a
+ -- refactoring; see #14380. Until then we reject with a
-- helpful error message.
notInvertibleListPat p
= Left (vcat [ not_invertible_msg p
, text "Reason: rebindable syntax is on."
- , text "This is fixable: add use-case to Trac #14380" ])
+ , text "This is fixable: add use-case to #14380" ])
{- Note [Builder for a bidirectional pattern synonym]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1081,7 +1081,7 @@ When making the binding for the *builder*, though, we don't want
$buildL x = Left x :: Either [a] [b]
because that wil either mean (forall a b. Either [a] [b]), or we'll
get a complaint that 'a' and 'b' are out of scope. (Actually the
-latter; Trac #9867.) No, the job of the signature is done, so when
+latter; #9867.) No, the job of the signature is done, so when
converting the pattern to an expression (for the builder RHS) we
simply discard the signature.
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcRnDriver.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcRnDriver.hs
index 9c60709d3c..60ff3335dd 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcRnDriver.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcRnDriver.hs
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ module TcRnDriver (
getModuleInterface,
tcRnDeclsi,
isGHCiMonad,
- runTcInteractive, -- Used by GHC API clients (Trac #8878)
+ runTcInteractive, -- Used by GHC API clients (#8878)
tcRnLookupName,
tcRnGetInfo,
tcRnModule, tcRnModuleTcRnM,
@@ -535,7 +535,7 @@ tc_rn_src_decls ds
-- Get TH-generated top-level declarations and make sure they don't
-- contain any splices since we don't handle that at the moment
--
- -- The plumbing here is a bit odd: see Trac #10853
+ -- The plumbing here is a bit odd: see #10853
; th_topdecls_var <- fmap tcg_th_topdecls getGblEnv
; th_ds <- readTcRef th_topdecls_var
; writeTcRef th_topdecls_var []
@@ -763,7 +763,7 @@ type env, do a setGloblaTypeEnv etc; but that all seems very indirect.
It is much more directly simply to extract the DFunIds from the
md_types of the SelfBootInfo.
-See Trac #4003, #16038 for why we need to take care here.
+See #4003, #16038 for why we need to take care here.
-}
checkHiBootIface' :: [ClsInst] -> TypeEnv -> [AvailInfo]
@@ -854,12 +854,12 @@ checkHiBootIface'
-- That ensures that the TyCon etc inside the type are
-- the ones defined in this module, not the ones gotten
-- from the hi-boot file, which may have a lot less info
- -- (Trac #8743, comment:10).
+ -- (#8743, comment:10).
--
-- * The DFunIds from boot_details are /GlobalIds/, because
-- they come from typechecking M.hi-boot.
-- But all bindings in this module should be for /LocalIds/,
- -- otherwise dependency analysis fails (Trac #16038). This
+ -- otherwise dependency analysis fails (#16038). This
-- is another reason for using mkExportedVanillaId, rather
-- that modifying boot_dfun, to make local_boot_fun.
@@ -1754,7 +1754,7 @@ check_main dflags tcg_env explicit_mod_hdr
-- The ev_binds of the `main` function may contain deferred
-- type error when type of `main` is not `IO a`. The `ev_binds`
-- must be put inside `runMainIO` to ensure the deferred type
- -- error can be emitted correctly. See Trac #13838.
+ -- error can be emitted correctly. See #13838.
; rhs = nlHsApp (mkLHsWrap co (nlHsVar run_main_id)) $
mkHsDictLet ev_binds main_expr
; main_bind = mkVarBind root_main_id rhs }
@@ -2154,10 +2154,10 @@ naked expressions. Deferring type errors here is unhelpful because the
expression gets evaluated right away anyway. It also would potentially emit
two redundant type-error warnings, one from each plan.
-Trac #14963 reveals another bug that when deferred type errors is enabled
+#14963 reveals another bug that when deferred type errors is enabled
in GHCi, any reference of imported/loaded variables (directly or indirectly)
in interactively issued naked expressions will cause ghc panic. See more
-detailed dicussion in Trac #14963.
+detailed dicussion in #14963.
The interactively issued declarations, statements, as well as the modules
loaded into GHCi, are not affected. That means, for declaration, you could
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcRnExports.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcRnExports.hs
index ea52b12741..f584a7fceb 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcRnExports.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcRnExports.hs
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ it re-exports @GHC@, which includes @takeMVar#@, whose type includes
Note [Exports of data families]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Suppose you see (Trac #5306)
+Suppose you see (#5306)
module M where
import X( F )
data instance F Int = FInt
@@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ You just have to use an explicit export list:
Note [Avails of associated data families]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Suppose you have (Trac #16077)
+Suppose you have (#16077)
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
module A (module A) where
@@ -718,12 +718,12 @@ dupExport_ok :: Name -> IE GhcPs -> IE GhcPs -> Bool
-- import A( f )
-- import B( f )
--
--- Example of "yes" (Trac #2436)
+-- Example of "yes" (#2436)
-- module M( C(..), T(..) ) where
-- class C a where { data T a }
-- instance C Int where { data T Int = TInt }
--
--- Example of "yes" (Trac #2436)
+-- Example of "yes" (#2436)
-- module Foo ( T ) where
-- data family T a
-- module Bar ( T(..), module Foo ) where
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcRnMonad.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcRnMonad.hs
index 8b720d6b62..951cc7a5a6 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcRnMonad.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcRnMonad.hs
@@ -358,7 +358,7 @@ initTcWithGbl hsc_env gbl_env loc do_this
-- If we succeed (maybe_res = Just r), there should be
-- no unsolved constraints. But if we exit via an
-- exception (maybe_res = Nothing), we may have skipped
- -- solving, so don't panic then (Trac #13466)
+ -- solving, so don't panic then (#13466)
; lie <- readIORef (tcl_lie lcl_env)
; when (isJust maybe_res && not (isEmptyWC lie)) $
pprPanic "initTc: unsolved constraints" (ppr lie)
@@ -1645,7 +1645,7 @@ emitWildCardHoleConstraints wcs
{- Note [Constraints and errors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this (Trac #12124):
+Consider this (#12124):
foo :: Maybe Int
foo = return (case Left 3 of
@@ -1673,7 +1673,7 @@ However suppose we throw an exception inside an invocation of
captureConstraints, and discard all the constraints. Some of those
constraints might be "variable out of scope" Hole constraints, and that
might have been the actual original cause of the exception! For
-example (Trac #12529):
+example (#12529):
f = p @ Int
Here 'p' is out of scope, so we get an insolube Hole constraint. But
the visible type application fails in the monad (thows an exception).
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcRnTypes.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcRnTypes.hs
index 9cf338b9d0..bfedaf2ccc 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcRnTypes.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcRnTypes.hs
@@ -2021,7 +2021,7 @@ dropDerivedCt ct
When we discard Derived constraints, in dropDerivedSimples, we must
set the cc_pend_sc flag to True, so that if we re-process this
CDictCan we will re-generate its derived superclasses. Otherwise
-we might miss some fundeps. Trac #13662 showed this up.
+we might miss some fundeps. #13662 showed this up.
See Note [The superclass story] in TcCanonical.
-}
@@ -2108,15 +2108,15 @@ But (tiresomely) we do keep *some* Derived constraints:
Others not-definitely-insoluble ones like [D] a ~ Int do not
reflect unreachable code; indeed if fundeps generated proofs, it'd
- be a useful equality. See Trac #14763. So we discard them.
+ be a useful equality. See #14763. So we discard them.
- Given/Wanted interacGiven or Wanted interacting with an
instance declaration (FunDepOrigin2)
- - Given/Wanted interactions (FunDepOrigin1); see Trac #9612
+ - Given/Wanted interactions (FunDepOrigin1); see #9612
- But for Wanted/Wanted interactions we do /not/ want to report an
- error (Trac #13506). Consider [W] C Int Int, [W] C Int Bool, with
+ error (#13506). Consider [W] C Int Int, [W] C Int Bool, with
a fundep on class C. We don't want to report an insoluble Int~Bool;
c.f. "wanteds do not rewrite wanteds".
@@ -2302,7 +2302,7 @@ Note that
* Superclasses help only for Wanted constraints. Derived constraints
are not really "unsolved" and we certainly don't want them to
trigger superclass expansion. This was a good part of the loop
- in Trac #11523
+ in #11523
* Even for Wanted constraints, we say "no" for implicit parameters.
we have [W] ?x::ty, expanding superclasses won't help:
@@ -2315,7 +2315,7 @@ Note that
is low because the unsolved set is usually empty anyway (errors
aside), and the first non-imlicit-parameter will terminate the search.
- The special case is worth it (Trac #11480, comment:2) because it
+ The special case is worth it (#11480, comment:2) because it
applies to CallStack constraints, which aren't type errors. If we have
f :: (C a) => blah
f x = ...undefined...
@@ -2492,7 +2492,7 @@ ppr_bag doc bag
{- Note [Given insolubles]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #14325, comment:)
+Consider (#14325, comment:)
class (a~b) => C a b
foo :: C a c => a -> c
@@ -2516,7 +2516,7 @@ The same applies to Derived constraints that /arise from/ Givens.
E.g. f :: (C Int [a]) => blah
where a fundep means we get
[D] Int ~ [a]
-By the same reasoning we must not suppress other errors (Trac #15767)
+By the same reasoning we must not suppress other errors (#15767)
Bottom line: insolubleWC (called in TcSimplify.setImplicationStatus)
should ignore givens even if they are insoluble.
@@ -3015,7 +3015,7 @@ a representational equality to rewrite a nominal one.
Note [Wanteds do not rewrite Wanteds]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We don't allow Wanteds to rewrite Wanteds, because that can give rise
-to very confusing type error messages. A good example is Trac #8450.
+to very confusing type error messages. A good example is #8450.
Here's another
f :: a -> Bool
f x = ( [x,'c'], [x,True] ) `seq` True
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcRules.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcRules.hs
index 2955704e56..f1d549568a 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcRules.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcRules.hs
@@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ generateRuleConstraints ty_bndrs tm_bndrs lhs rhs
-- bndr_wanted constraints can include wildcard hole
-- constraints, which we should not forget about.
-- It may mention the skolem type variables bound by
- -- the RULE. c.f. Trac #10072
+ -- the RULE. c.f. #10072
; tcExtendTyVarEnv tv_bndrs $
tcExtendIdEnv id_bndrs $
@@ -412,7 +412,7 @@ getRuleQuantCts :: WantedConstraints -> (Cts, WantedConstraints)
--
-- NB: we must look inside implications, because with
-- -fdefer-type-errors we generate implications rather eagerly;
--- see TcUnify.implicationNeeded. Not doing so caused Trac #14732.
+-- see TcUnify.implicationNeeded. Not doing so caused #14732.
--
-- Unlike simplifyInfer, we don't leave the WantedConstraints unchanged,
-- and attempt to solve them from the quantified constraints. That
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcSMonad.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcSMonad.hs
index d4d3d03b40..c52e624d8d 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcSMonad.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcSMonad.hs
@@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ It's very important to process equalities /first/:
and then kicking it out later. That's extra work compared to just
doing the equality first.
-* (Avoiding fundep iteration) As Trac #14723 showed, it's possible to
+* (Avoiding fundep iteration) As #14723 showed, it's possible to
get non-termination if we
- Emit the Derived fundep equalities for a class constraint,
generating some fresh unification variables.
@@ -244,7 +244,7 @@ see Note [The equality types story] in TysPrim.
Failing to prioritise these is inefficient (more kick-outs etc).
But, worse, it can prevent us spotting a "recursive knot" among
-Wanted constraints. See comment:10 of Trac #12734 for a worked-out
+Wanted constraints. See comment:10 of #12734 for a worked-out
example.
So we arrange to put these particular class constraints in the wl_eqs.
@@ -978,7 +978,7 @@ head of the top-level application chain (a t1 .. tn). See
TcType.isTyVarHead. This is encoded in (K3b).
Beware: if we make this test succeed too often, we kick out too much,
-and the solver might loop. Consider (Trac #14363)
+and the solver might loop. Consider (#14363)
work item: [G] a ~R f b
inert item: [G] b ~R f a
In GHC 8.2 the completeness tests more aggressive, and kicked out
@@ -1234,7 +1234,7 @@ This is triggered by test case typecheck/should_compile/SplitWD.
Note [Examples of how Derived shadows helps completeness]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Trac #10009, a very nasty example:
+#10009, a very nasty example:
f :: (UnF (F b) ~ b) => F b -> ()
@@ -1274,7 +1274,7 @@ useful unification.
But (a) I have been unable to come up with an example of this
happening
- (b) see Trac #12660 for how adding the derived shadows
+ (b) see #12660 for how adding the derived shadows
of a Given led to an infinite loop.
(c) It's unlikely that rewriting derived Givens will lead
to a unification because Givens don't mention touchable
@@ -1314,7 +1314,7 @@ because we've already added its superclasses. So we won't re-add
them. If we forget the pend_sc flag, our cunning scheme for avoiding
generating superclasses repeatedly will fail.
-See Trac #11379 for a case of this.
+See #11379 for a case of this.
Note [Do not do improvement for WOnly]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1345,7 +1345,7 @@ Reasons:
with the inert [W] C Int b in the inert set; after all,
it's the very constraint from which the [D] C Int Bool
was split! We can avoid this by not doing improvement
- on [W] constraints. This came up in Trac #12860.
+ on [W] constraints. This came up in #12860.
-}
maybeEmitShadow :: InertCans -> Ct -> TcS Ct
@@ -1498,7 +1498,7 @@ addInertForAll new_qci
{- Note [Do not add duplicate quantified instances]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this (Trac #15244):
+Consider this (#15244):
f :: (C g, D g) => ....
class S g => C g where ...
@@ -1549,7 +1549,7 @@ rewrite the inerts. But we *must* kick out the first one, to get:
[D] fmv1 ~ fmv2
and now improvement will discover [D] alpha ~ beta. This is important;
-eg in Trac #9587.
+eg in #9587.
So in kickOutRewritable we look at all the tyvars of the
CFunEqCan, including the fsk.
@@ -1808,7 +1808,7 @@ constructors match.
Similarly, if we have a CHoleCan, we'd like to rewrite it with any
Givens, to give as informative an error messasge as possible
-(Trac #12468, #11325).
+(#12468, #11325).
Hence:
* In the main simlifier loops in TcSimplify (solveWanteds,
@@ -2155,7 +2155,7 @@ where beta is a unification variable that has already been unified
to () in an outer scope. Then we can float the (alpha ~ Int) out
just fine. So when deciding whether the givens contain an equality,
we should canonicalise first, rather than just looking at the original
-givens (Trac #8644).
+givens (#8644).
So we simply look at the inert, canonical Givens and see if there are
any equalities among them, the calculation of has_given_eqs. There
@@ -2207,7 +2207,7 @@ b) 'a' will have been completely substituted out in the inert set,
so we can safely discard it. Notably, it doesn't need to be
returned as part of 'fsks'
-For an example, see Trac #9211.
+For an example, see #9211.
See also TcUnify Note [Deeper level on the left] for how we ensure
that the right variable is on the left of the equality when both are
@@ -2215,7 +2215,7 @@ tyvars.
You might wonder whether the skokem really needs to be bound "in the
very same implication" as the equuality constraint.
-(c.f. Trac #15009) Consider this:
+(c.f. #15009) Consider this:
data S a where
MkS :: (a ~ Int) => S a
@@ -2400,7 +2400,7 @@ Consider
The call to 'g' gives rise to a Wanted constraint (?x::Int, C a).
We must /not/ solve this from the Given (?x::Int, C a), because of
-the intervening binding for (?x::Int). Trac #14218.
+the intervening binding for (?x::Int). #14218.
We deal with this by arranging that we always fail when looking up a
tuple constraint that hides an implicit parameter. Not that this applies
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcSigs.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcSigs.hs
index 7b00165c52..d2e4a62546 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcSigs.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcSigs.hs
@@ -321,7 +321,7 @@ which is over-conservative
Note [Pattern synonym signatures]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Pattern synonym signatures are surprisingly tricky (see Trac #11224 for example).
+Pattern synonym signatures are surprisingly tricky (see #11224 for example).
In general they look like this:
pattern P :: forall univ_tvs. req_theta
@@ -347,7 +347,7 @@ It's important that we solve /all/ the equalities in a pattern
synonym signature, because we are going to zonk the signature to
a Type (not a TcType), in TcPatSyn.tc_patsyn_finish, and that
fails if there are un-filled-in coercion variables mentioned
-in the type (Trac #15694).
+in the type (#15694).
The best thing is simply to use solveEqualities to solve all the
equalites, rather than leaving them in the ambient constraints
@@ -379,7 +379,7 @@ tcPatSynSig name sig_ty
; prov <- tcHsContext hs_prov
; body_ty <- tcHsOpenType hs_body_ty
-- A (literal) pattern can be unlifted;
- -- e.g. pattern Zero <- 0# (Trac #12094)
+ -- e.g. pattern Zero <- 0# (#12094)
; return (req, prov, body_ty) }
; let ungen_patsyn_ty = build_patsyn_type [] implicit_tvs univ_tvs
@@ -495,7 +495,7 @@ tcInstSig hs_sig@(PartialSig { psig_hs_ty = hs_ty
-- two separate signatures. Cloning here seems like
-- the easiest way to do so, and is very similar to
-- the tcInstType in the CompleteSig case
- -- See Trac #14643
+ -- See #14643
; (subst, tvs') <- newMetaTyVarTyVars tvs
-- Why newMetaTyVarTyVars? See TcBinds
-- Note [Quantified variables in partial type signatures]
@@ -687,7 +687,7 @@ Some wrinkles
the "deeply" stuff may be too much, because it introduces lambdas,
though I think it can be made to work without too much trouble.)
-2. We need to take care with type families (Trac #5821). Consider
+2. We need to take care with type families (#5821). Consider
type instance F Int = Bool
f :: Num a => a -> F a
{-# SPECIALISE foo :: Int -> Bool #-}
@@ -754,7 +754,7 @@ tcSpecPrag poly_id prag@(SpecSig _ fun_name hs_tys inl)
-- Example: SPECIALISE for a class method: the Name in the SpecSig is
-- for the selector Id, but the poly_id is something like $cop
-- However we want to use fun_name in the error message, since that is
--- what the user wrote (Trac #8537)
+-- what the user wrote (#8537)
= addErrCtxt (spec_ctxt prag) $
do { warnIf (not (isOverloadedTy poly_ty || isInlinePragma inl))
(text "SPECIALISE pragma for non-overloaded function"
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcSimplify.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcSimplify.hs
index 418aa987e4..cd9d8585f5 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcSimplify.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcSimplify.hs
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ captureTopConstraints :: TcM a -> TcM (a, WantedConstraints)
-- other things too) throws an exception without adding any error
-- messages; it just puts the unsolved constraints back into the
-- monad. See TcRnMonad Note [Constraints and errors]
--- Trac #16376 is an example of what goes wrong if you don't do this.
+-- #16376 is an example of what goes wrong if you don't do this.
--
-- NB: the caller should bring any environments into scope before
-- calling this, so that the reportUnsolved has access to the most
@@ -321,7 +321,7 @@ than just accumulate an error message, for two reasons:
<type> |> co-hole
where co-hole is not filled in. Eeek! That un-filled-in
hole actually causes GHC to crash with "fvProv falls into a hole"
- See Trac #11563, #11520, #11516, #11399
+ See #11563, #11520, #11516, #11399
So it's important to use 'checkNoErrs' here!
@@ -333,12 +333,12 @@ constraints. But if we *don't* do defaulting we may report a whole
lot of errors that would be solved by defaulting; these errors are
quite spurious because fixing the single insoluble error means that
defaulting happens again, which makes all the other errors go away.
-This is jolly confusing: Trac #9033.
+This is jolly confusing: #9033.
So it seems better to always do type-class defaulting.
However, always doing defaulting does mean that we'll do it in
-situations like this (Trac #5934):
+situations like this (#5934):
run :: (forall s. GenST s) -> Int
run = fromInteger 0
We don't unify the return type of fromInteger with the given function
@@ -359,7 +359,7 @@ We may have a deeply buried constraint
which we couldn't solve because of the kind incompatibility, and 'a' is free.
Then when we default 'a' we can solve the constraint. And we want to do
that before starting in on type classes. We MUST do it before reporting
-errors, because it isn't an error! Trac #7967 was due to this.
+errors, because it isn't an error! #7967 was due to this.
Note [Top-level Defaulting Plan]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -510,7 +510,7 @@ Note [No defaulting in the ambiguity check]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When simplifying constraints for the ambiguity check, we use
solveWantedsAndDrop, not simpl_top, so that we do no defaulting.
-Trac #11947 was an example:
+#11947 was an example:
f :: Num a => Int -> Int
This is ambiguous of course, but we don't want to default the
(Num alpha) constraint to (Num Int)! Doing so gives a defaulting
@@ -623,11 +623,11 @@ If we fail to prove unsatisfiability we (arbitrarily) try just once to
find superclasses, using try_harder. Reason: we might have a type
signature
f :: F op (Implements push) => ..
-where F is a type function. This happened in Trac #3972.
+where F is a type function. This happened in #3972.
We could do more than once but we'd have to have /some/ limit: in the
the recursive case, we would go on forever in the common case where
-the constraints /are/ satisfiable (Trac #10592 comment:12!).
+the constraints /are/ satisfiable (#10592 comment:12!).
For stratightforard situations without type functions the try_harder
step does nothing.
@@ -780,7 +780,7 @@ simplifyInfer rhs_tclvl infer_mode sigs name_taus wanteds
-- We must produce bindings for the psig_theta_vars, because we may have
-- used them in evidence bindings constructed by solveWanteds earlier
- -- Easiest way to do this is to emit them as new Wanteds (Trac #14643)
+ -- Easiest way to do this is to emit them as new Wanteds (#14643)
; ct_loc <- getCtLocM AnnOrigin Nothing
; let psig_wanted = [ CtWanted { ctev_pred = idType psig_theta_var
, ctev_dest = EvVarDest psig_theta_var
@@ -880,11 +880,11 @@ That is the reason for the partitionBag in emitResidualConstraints,
which takes the CoVars free in the inferred type, and pulls their
constraints out. (NB: this set of CoVars should be closed-over-kinds.)
-All rather subtle; see Trac #14584.
+All rather subtle; see #14584.
Note [Add signature contexts as givens]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this (Trac #11016):
+Consider this (#11016):
f2 :: (?x :: Int) => _
f2 = ?x
or this
@@ -934,7 +934,7 @@ If the monomorphism restriction does not apply, then we quantify as follows:
not going to become further constrained), and re-simplify the
candidate constraints.
- Motivation for re-simplification (Trac #7857): imagine we have a
+ Motivation for re-simplification (#7857): imagine we have a
constraint (C (a->b)), where 'a :: TYPE l1' and 'b :: TYPE l2' are
not free in the envt, and instance forall (a::*) (b::*). (C a) => C
(a -> b) The instance doesn't match while l1,l2 are polymorphic, but
@@ -991,7 +991,7 @@ decideQuantification infer_mode rhs_tclvl name_taus psigs candidates
= pickQuantifiablePreds (mkVarSet qtvs) candidates
-- NB: do /not/ run pickQuantifiablePreds over psig_theta,
-- because we always want to quantify over psig_theta, and not
- -- drop any of them; e.g. CallStack constraints. c.f Trac #14658
+ -- drop any of them; e.g. CallStack constraints. c.f #14658
theta = mkMinimalBySCs id $ -- See Note [Minimize by Superclasses]
(psig_theta ++ quantifiable_candidates)
@@ -1056,13 +1056,13 @@ decideMonoTyVars infer_mode name_taus psigs candidates
--
-- (`minusVarSet` mono_tvs1`): a type variable is only
-- "constrained" (so that the MR bites) if it is not
- -- free in the environment (Trac #13785)
+ -- free in the environment (#13785)
--
-- (`delVarSetList` psig_qtvs): if the user has explicitly
-- asked for quantification, then that request "wins"
-- over the MR. Note: do /not/ delete psig_qtvs from
-- mono_tvs1, because mono_tvs1 cannot under any circumstances
- -- be quantified (Trac #14479); see
+ -- be quantified (#14479); see
-- Note [Quantification and partial signatures], Wrinkle 3, 4
mono_tvs = mono_tvs2 `unionVarSet` constrained_tvs
@@ -1194,7 +1194,7 @@ decideQuantifiedTyVars mono_tvs name_taus psigs candidates
--
-- Keep the psig_tys first, so that candidateQTyVarsOfTypes produces
-- them in that order, so that the final qtvs quantifies in the same
- -- order as the partial signatures do (Trac #13524)
+ -- order as the partial signatures do (#13524)
; dv@DV {dv_kvs = cand_kvs, dv_tvs = cand_tvs} <- candidateQTyVarsOfTypes $
psig_tys ++ candidates ++ tau_tys
; let pick = (`dVarSetIntersectVarSet` grown_tcvs)
@@ -1290,14 +1290,14 @@ sure to quantify over them. This leads to several wrinkles:
Bottom line: Try to quantify over any variable free in psig_theta,
just like the tau-part of the type.
-* Wrinkle 3 (Trac #13482). Also consider
+* Wrinkle 3 (#13482). Also consider
f :: forall a. _ => Int -> Int
f x = if (undefined :: a) == undefined then x else 0
Here we get an (Eq a) constraint, but it's not mentioned in the
psig_theta nor the type of 'f'. But we still want to quantify
over 'a' even if the monomorphism restriction is on.
-* Wrinkle 4 (Trac #14479)
+* Wrinkle 4 (#14479)
foo :: Num a => a -> a
foo xxx = g xxx
where
@@ -1340,7 +1340,7 @@ Reasons:
- Avoid downstream errors
- Do not perform an ambiguity test on a bogus type, which might well
fail spuriously, thereby obfuscating the original insoluble error.
- Trac #14000 is an example
+ #14000 is an example
I tried an alternative approach: simply failM, after emitting the
residual implication constraint; the exception will be caught in
@@ -1353,7 +1353,7 @@ NB that we must include *derived* errors in the check for insolubles.
Example:
(a::*) ~ Int#
We get an insoluble derived error *~#, and we don't want to discard
-it before doing the isInsolubleWC test! (Trac #8262)
+it before doing the isInsolubleWC test! (#8262)
Note [Default while Inferring]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1405,7 +1405,7 @@ to check the original wanted.
Note [Avoid unnecessary constraint simplification]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-------- NB NB NB (Jun 12) -------------
- This note not longer applies; see the notes with Trac #4361.
+ This note not longer applies; see the notes with #4361.
But I'm leaving it in here so we remember the issue.)
----------------------------------------
When inferring the type of a let-binding, with simplifyInfer,
@@ -1768,7 +1768,7 @@ warnRedundantGivens (SigSkol ctxt _ _)
_ -> False
-- To think about: do we want to report redundant givens for
- -- pattern synonyms, PatSynSigSkol? c.f Trac #9953, comment:21.
+ -- pattern synonyms, PatSynSigSkol? c.f #9953, comment:21.
warnRedundantGivens (InstSkol {}) = True
warnRedundantGivens _ = False
@@ -1854,7 +1854,7 @@ Now d2 is available for solving. But it may not be needed! Usually
such dead superclass selections will eventually be dropped as dead
code, but:
- * It won't always be dropped (Trac #13032). In the case of an
+ * It won't always be dropped (#13032). In the case of an
unlifted-equality superclass like d2 above, we generate
case heq_sc d1 of d2 -> ...
and we can't (in general) drop that case exrpession in case
@@ -1877,7 +1877,7 @@ This led to a remarkable 25% overall compiler allocation decrease in
test T12227.
But we don't get to discard all redundant equality superclasses, alas;
-see Trac #15205.
+see #15205.
Note [Tracking redundant constraints]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1969,7 +1969,7 @@ works:
----- Shortcomings
-Consider (see Trac #9939)
+Consider (see #9939)
f2 :: (Eq a, Ord a) => a -> a -> Bool
-- Ord a redundant, but Eq a is reported
f2 x y = (x == y)
@@ -1981,7 +1981,7 @@ really not easy to detect that!
Note [Cutting off simpl_loop]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It is very important not to iterate in simpl_loop unless there is a chance
-of progress. Trac #8474 is a classic example:
+of progress. #8474 is a classic example:
* There's a deeply-nested chain of implication constraints.
?x:alpha => ?y1:beta1 => ... ?yn:betan => [W] ?x:Int
@@ -2117,12 +2117,12 @@ There is one caveat:
float out of such implications, which meant it would happily infer
non-principal types.)
- HOWEVER (Trac #12797) in findDefaultableGroups we are not worried about
+ HOWEVER (#12797) in findDefaultableGroups we are not worried about
the most-general type; and we /do/ want to float out of equalities.
Hence the boolean flag to approximateWC.
------ Historical note -----------
-There used to be a second caveat, driven by Trac #8155
+There used to be a second caveat, driven by #8155
2. We do not float out an inner constraint that shares a type variable
(transitively) with one that is trapped by a skolem. Eg
@@ -2141,7 +2141,7 @@ There used to be a second caveat, driven by Trac #8155
But this transitive closure stuff gives rise to a complex rule for
when defaulting actually happens, and one that was never documented.
-Moreover (Trac #12923), the more complex rule is sometimes NOT what
+Moreover (#12923), the more complex rule is sometimes NOT what
you want. So I simply removed the extra code to implement the
contamination stuff. There was zero effect on the testsuite (not even
#8155).
@@ -2185,8 +2185,8 @@ To see (b), suppose the constraint is (C ((a :: OpenKind) -> Int)), and we
have an instance (C ((x:*) -> Int)). The instance doesn't match -- but it
should! If we don't solve the constraint, we'll stupidly quantify over
(C (a->Int)) and, worse, in doing so skolemiseQuantifiedTyVar will quantify over
-(b:*) instead of (a:OpenKind), which can lead to disaster; see Trac #7332.
-Trac #7641 is a simpler example.
+(b:*) instead of (a:OpenKind), which can lead to disaster; see #7332.
+#7641 is a simpler example.
Note [Promoting unification variables]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2482,7 +2482,7 @@ Here (1,2,3) are handled by the "seed_skols" calculation, and
(4) is done by the transCloVarSet call.
The possible dependence on givens, and evidence bindings, is more
-subtle than we'd realised at first. See Trac #14584.
+subtle than we'd realised at first. See #14584.
*********************************************************************************
@@ -2541,7 +2541,7 @@ findDefaultableGroups (default_tys, (ovl_strings, extended_defaults)) wanteds
-- Finds unary type-class constraints
-- But take account of polykinded classes like Typeable,
- -- which may look like (Typeable * (a:*)) (Trac #8931)
+ -- which may look like (Typeable * (a:*)) (#8931)
find_unary :: Ct -> Either (Ct, Class, TyVar) Ct
find_unary cc
| Just (cls,tys) <- getClassPredTys_maybe (ctPred cc)
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcSplice.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcSplice.hs
index 1aba34e802..c495a72d49 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcSplice.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcSplice.hs
@@ -572,7 +572,7 @@ tcTopSpliceExpr isTypedSplice tc_action
-- going to run this code, but we do an unsafe
-- coerce, so we get a seg-fault if, say we
-- splice a type into a place where an expression
- -- is expected (Trac #7276)
+ -- is expected (#7276)
setStage (Splice isTypedSplice) $
do { -- Typecheck the expression
(expr', wanted) <- captureConstraints tc_action
@@ -753,7 +753,7 @@ runMeta' show_code ppr_hs run_and_convert expr
-- recovered giving it type f :: forall a.a, it'd be very dodgy
-- to carry ont. Mind you, the staging restrictions mean we won't
-- actually run f, but it still seems wrong. And, more concretely,
- -- see Trac #5358 for an example that fell over when trying to
+ -- see #5358 for an example that fell over when trying to
-- reify a function with a "?" kind in it. (These don't occur
-- in type-correct programs.
; failIfErrsM
@@ -888,7 +888,7 @@ like that. Here's how it's processed:
* 'qReport' forces the message to ensure any exception hidden in unevaluated
thunk doesn't get into the bag of errors. Otherwise the following splice
- will triger panic (Trac #8987):
+ will triger panic (#8987):
$(fail undefined)
See also Note [Concealed TH exceptions]
@@ -1270,11 +1270,11 @@ reifyInstances th_nm th_tys
; ty <- zonkTcTypeToType ty
-- Substitute out the meta type variables
-- In particular, the type might have kind
- -- variables inside it (Trac #7477)
+ -- variables inside it (#7477)
; traceTc "reifyInstances" (ppr ty $$ ppr (tcTypeKind ty))
; case splitTyConApp_maybe ty of -- This expands any type synonyms
- Just (tc, tys) -- See Trac #7910
+ Just (tc, tys) -- See #7910
| Just cls <- tyConClass_maybe tc
-> do { inst_envs <- tcGetInstEnvs
; let (matches, unifies, _) = lookupInstEnv False inst_envs cls tys
@@ -1790,7 +1790,7 @@ reifyFamilyInstance is_poly_tvs (FamInst { fi_flavor = flavor
DataFamilyInst rep_tc ->
do { let -- eta-expand lhs types, because sometimes data/newtype
- -- instances are eta-reduced; See Trac #9692
+ -- instances are eta-reduced; See #9692
-- See Note [Eta reduction for data families] in FamInstEnv
(ee_tvs, ee_lhs, _) = etaExpandCoAxBranch branch
fam' = reifyName fam
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcTyClsDecls.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcTyClsDecls.hs
index 2c9a672e8e..a3e39adfe4 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcTyClsDecls.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcTyClsDecls.hs
@@ -715,7 +715,7 @@ Associated types
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For associated types everything above is determined by the
associated-type declaration alone, ignoring the class header.
-Here is an example (Trac #15592)
+Here is an example (#15592)
class C (a :: k) b where
type F (x :: b a)
@@ -755,11 +755,11 @@ Design alternatives
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* For associated types we considered putting the class variables
before the local variables, in a nod to the treatment for class
- methods. But it got too compilicated; see Trac #15592, comment:21ff.
+ methods. But it got too compilicated; see #15592, comment:21ff.
* We rigidly require the ordering above, even though we could be much more
permissive. Relevant musings are at
- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/15743#comment:7
+ https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/15743#note_161623
The bottom line conclusion is that, if the user wants a different ordering,
then can specify it themselves, and it is better to be predictable and dumb
than clever and capricious.
@@ -850,13 +850,13 @@ There are some wrinkles
TyVarTvs, and /not/ default them to Type. By definition a TyVarTv is
not allowed to unify with a type; it must stand for a type
variable. Hence the check in TcSimplify.defaultTyVarTcS, and
- TcMType.defaultTyVar. Here's another example (Trac #14555):
+ TcMType.defaultTyVar. Here's another example (#14555):
data Exp :: [TYPE rep] -> TYPE rep -> Type where
Lam :: Exp (a:xs) b -> Exp xs (a -> b)
We want to kind-generalise over the 'rep' variable.
- Trac #14563 is another example.
+ #14563 is another example.
-* Duplicate type variables. Consider Trac #11203
+* Duplicate type variables. Consider #11203
data SameKind :: k -> k -> *
data Q (a :: k1) (b :: k2) c = MkQ (SameKind a b)
Here we will unify k1 with k2, but this time doing so is an error,
@@ -884,7 +884,7 @@ There are some wrinkles
Note [Tricky scoping in generaliseTcTyCon]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider Trac #16342
+Consider #16342
class C (a::ka) x where
cop :: D a x => x -> Proxy a -> Proxy a
cop _ x = x :: Proxy (a::ka)
@@ -1557,7 +1557,7 @@ However we store the default rhs (Proxy x -> y) in F's TyCon, using
F's own type variables, so we need to convert it to (Proxy a -> b).
We do this by calling tcMatchTys to match them up. This also ensures
that x's kind matches a's and similarly for y and b. The error
-message isn't great, mind you. (Trac #11361 was caused by not doing a
+message isn't great, mind you. (#11361 was caused by not doing a
proper tcMatchTys here.)
Recall also that the left-hand side of an associated type family
@@ -1823,7 +1823,7 @@ kcTyFamInstEqn tc_fam_tc
bindExplicitTKBndrs_Q_Tv AnyKind (mb_expl_bndrs `orElse` []) $
do { (_fam_app, res_kind) <- tcFamTyPats tc_fam_tc hs_pats
; tcCheckLHsType hs_rhs_ty res_kind }
- -- Why "_Tv" here? Consider (Trac #14066
+ -- Why "_Tv" here? Consider (#14066
-- type family Bar x y where
-- Bar (x :: a) (y :: b) = Int
-- Bar (x :: c) (y :: d) = Bool
@@ -2448,7 +2448,7 @@ checkValidDataCon needs), but the first three fields may be bogus if
the return type isn't valid (the last equation for rejigConRes).
This is better than an earlier solution which reduced the number of
-errors reported in one pass. See Trac #7175, and #10836.
+errors reported in one pass. See #7175, and #10836.
-}
-- Example
@@ -2721,7 +2721,7 @@ mkGADTVars tmpl_tvs dc_tvs subst
_ -> choose (t_tv':univs) (mkEqSpec t_tv' r_ty : eqs)
(extendTvSubst t_sub t_tv (mkTyVarTy t_tv'))
-- We've updated the kind of t_tv,
- -- so add it to t_sub (Trac #14162)
+ -- so add it to t_sub (#14162)
r_sub t_tvs
where
t_tv' = updateTyVarKind (substTy t_sub) t_tv
@@ -2838,11 +2838,11 @@ TyCon of the right kind, but with no interesting behaviour
where Fun is a type family of arity 1. The RHS is invalid, but we
want to go on checking validity of subsequent type declarations.
So we replace T with an abstract TyCon which will do no harm.
-See indexed-types/should_fail/BadSock and Trac #10896
+See indexed-types/should_fail/BadSock and #10896
Some notes:
-* We must make fakes for promoted DataCons too. Consider (Trac #15215)
+* We must make fakes for promoted DataCons too. Consider (#15215)
data T a = MkT ...
data S a = ...T...MkT....
If there is an error in the definition of 'T' we add a "fake type
@@ -3162,7 +3162,7 @@ checkValidClass cls
-- Check that the class is unary, unless multiparameter type classes
-- are enabled; also recognize deprecated nullary type classes
- -- extension (subsumed by multiparameter type classes, Trac #8993)
+ -- extension (subsumed by multiparameter type classes, #8993)
; checkTc (multi_param_type_classes || cls_arity == 1 ||
(nullary_type_classes && cls_arity == 0))
(classArityErr cls_arity cls)
@@ -3238,7 +3238,7 @@ checkValidClass cls
-- Check that the associated type mentions at least
-- one of the class type variables
-- The check is disabled for nullary type classes,
- -- since there is no possible ambiguity (Trac #10020)
+ -- since there is no possible ambiguity (#10020)
-- Check that any default declarations for associated types are valid
; whenIsJust m_dflt_rhs $ \ (rhs, loc) ->
@@ -3253,7 +3253,7 @@ checkValidClass cls
-- E.g for class C a where
-- default op :: forall b. (a~b) => blah
-- we do not want to do an ambiguity check on a type with
- -- a free TyVar 'a' (Trac #11608). See TcType
+ -- a free TyVar 'a' (#11608). See TcType
-- Note [TyVars and TcTyVars during type checking] in TcType
-- Hence the mkDefaultMethodType to close the type.
check_dm ctxt sel_id vanilla_cls_pred vanilla_tau
@@ -3346,7 +3346,7 @@ where the method type constrains only the class variable(s). (The extension
we should not reject
class C a where
op :: (?x::Int) => a -> a
-as pointed out in Trac #11793. So the test here rejects the program if
+as pointed out in #11793. So the test here rejects the program if
* -XConstrainedClassMethods is off
* the tyvars of the constraint are non-empty
* all the tyvars are class tyvars, none are locally quantified
@@ -3363,13 +3363,13 @@ representative example:
meth :: D a => ()
class C a => D a
-This fixes Trac #9415, #9739
+This fixes #9415, #9739
Note [Default method type signatures must align]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GHC enforces the invariant that a class method's default type signature
must "align" with that of the method's non-default type signature, as per
-GHC Trac #12918. For instance, if you have:
+GHC #12918. For instance, if you have:
class Foo a where
bar :: forall b. Context => a -> b
@@ -3498,7 +3498,7 @@ signature for `each`, it would return (a -> f b) -> s -> f t like we desired.
Note [Checking partial record field]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-This check checks the partial record field selector, and warns (Trac #7169).
+This check checks the partial record field selector, and warns (#7169).
For example:
@@ -3758,7 +3758,7 @@ badDataConTyCon data_con res_ty_tmpl actual_res_ty
2 (text "instead of an instance of its parent type" <+> quotes (ppr res_ty_tmpl))
where
-- This suggestion is useful for suggesting how to correct code like what
- -- was reported in Trac #12087:
+ -- was reported in #12087:
--
-- data F a where
-- MkF :: Ord a => Eq a => a -> F a
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcTyDecls.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcTyDecls.hs
index e40fd3abf4..205771b2db 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcTyDecls.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcTyDecls.hs
@@ -792,7 +792,7 @@ mkDefaultMethodType cls _ (GenericDM dm_ty) = mkSigmaTy tv_bndrs [pred] dm_ty
-- used in code generated by the fill-in for missing
-- methods in instances (TcInstDcls.mkDefMethBind), and
-- then typechecked. So we need the right visibilty info
- -- (Trac #13998)
+ -- (#13998)
{-
************************************************************************
@@ -805,7 +805,7 @@ mkDefaultMethodType cls _ (GenericDM dm_ty) = mkSigmaTy tv_bndrs [pred] dm_ty
{-
Note [Default method Ids and Template Haskell]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider this (Trac #4169):
+Consider this (#4169):
class Numeric a where
fromIntegerNum :: a
fromIntegerNum = ...
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcType.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcType.hs
index d4bac5c12b..14807da8eb 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcType.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcType.hs
@@ -325,7 +325,7 @@ in addition to type variables! As a result, there are some places in TcType
where we must take care to check that a variable is a _type_ variable (using
isTyVar) before calling tcTyVarDetails--a partial function that is not defined
for coercion variables--on the variable. Failing to do so led to
-GHC Trac #12785.
+GHC #12785.
-}
-- See Note [TcTyVars and TyVars in the typechecker]
@@ -863,7 +863,7 @@ promoteSkolemsX tclvl = mapAccumL (promoteSkolemX tclvl)
-- (F, [Int]), not (F, [Int,Bool])
--
-- This is important for its use in deciding termination of type
--- instances (see Trac #11581). E.g.
+-- instances (see #11581). E.g.
-- type instance G [Int] = ...(F Int <big type>)...
-- we don't need to take <big type> into account when asking if
-- the calls on the RHS are smaller than the LHS
@@ -970,7 +970,7 @@ which type variables are mentioned in a type. It only matters
occasionally -- see the calls to exactTyCoVarsOfType.
Historical note: years and years ago this function was used during
-generalisation -- see Trac #1813. But that code has long since died.
+generalisation -- see #1813. But that code has long since died.
-}
exactTyCoVarsOfType :: Type -> TyCoVarSet
@@ -1077,7 +1077,7 @@ free in [G] b ~R f a. But because the role of a type variable ('f' in
this case) is nominal, the work item can't actually rewrite the inert item.
Moreover, if we were to kick out the inert item the exact same situation
would re-occur and we end up with an infinite loop in which each kicks
-out the other (Trac #14363).
+out the other (#14363).
-}
{-
@@ -1813,7 +1813,7 @@ pickQuantifiablePreds
-- quantified over, given the type variables that are being quantified
pickQuantifiablePreds qtvs theta
= let flex_ctxt = True in -- Quantify over non-tyvar constraints, even without
- -- -XFlexibleContexts: see Trac #10608, #10351
+ -- -XFlexibleContexts: see #10608, #10351
-- flex_ctxt <- xoptM Opt_FlexibleContexts
mapMaybe (pick_me flex_ctxt) theta
where
@@ -1852,7 +1852,7 @@ pickQuantifiablePreds qtvs theta
= tyCoVarsOfTypes tys `intersectsVarSet` qtvs
&& (checkValidClsArgs flex_ctxt cls tys)
-- Only quantify over predicates that checkValidType
- -- will pass! See Trac #10351.
+ -- will pass! See #10351.
-- See Note [Quantifying over equality constraints]
quantify_equality NomEq ty1 ty2 = quant_fun ty1 || quant_fun ty2
@@ -2557,11 +2557,11 @@ this actually is. There are two main tricks:
2. Once we get into an implicit parameter or equality we
can't get back to a class constraint, so it's safe
- to say "size 0". See Trac #4200.
+ to say "size 0". See #4200.
NB: we don't want to detect PredTypes in sizeType (and then call
sizePred on them), or we might get an infinite loop if that PredType
-is irreducible. See Trac #5581.
+is irreducible. See #5581.
-}
type TypeSize = IntWithInf
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcUnify.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcUnify.hs
index 8a3e03c09e..29aff60921 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcUnify.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcUnify.hs
@@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ matchExpectedFunTys herald arity orig_ty thing_inside
-- However unlike the meta-tyvar case, we are sure that the
-- number of arguments doesn't match arity of the original
-- type, so we can add a bit more context to the error message
- -- (cf Trac #7869).
+ -- (cf #7869).
--
-- It is not always an error, because specialized type may have
-- different arity, for example:
@@ -184,7 +184,7 @@ matchExpectedFunTys herald arity orig_ty thing_inside
-- > f2 = undefined
--
-- But in that case we add specialized type into error context
- -- anyway, because it may be useful. See also Trac #9605.
+ -- anyway, because it may be useful. See also #9605.
go acc_arg_tys n ty = addErrCtxtM mk_ctxt $
defer acc_arg_tys n (mkCheckExpType ty)
@@ -302,7 +302,7 @@ matchActualFunTysPart herald ct_orig mb_thing arity orig_ty
-- However unlike the meta-tyvar case, we are sure that the
-- number of arguments doesn't match arity of the original
-- type, so we can add a bit more context to the error message
- -- (cf Trac #7869).
+ -- (cf #7869).
--
-- It is not always an error, because specialized type may have
-- different arity, for example:
@@ -312,7 +312,7 @@ matchActualFunTysPart herald ct_orig mb_thing arity orig_ty
-- > f2 = undefined
--
-- But in that case we add specialized type into error context
- -- anyway, because it may be useful. See also Trac #9605.
+ -- anyway, because it may be useful. See also #9605.
go n acc_args ty = addErrCtxtM (mk_ctxt (reverse acc_args) ty) $
defer n ty
@@ -399,7 +399,7 @@ matchExpectedTyConApp tc orig_ty
-- Then we don't want to instantiate T's data constructors with
-- (a::*) ~ Maybe
-- because that'll make types that are utterly ill-kinded.
- -- This happened in Trac #7368
+ -- This happened in #7368
defer
= do { (_, arg_tvs) <- newMetaTyVars (tyConTyVars tc)
; traceTc "matchExpectedTyConApp" (ppr tc $$ ppr (tyConTyVars tc) $$ ppr arg_tvs)
@@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ tcSubTypeDS_NC_O, and is the sole reason for the WpFun form of
HsWrapper.
Another powerful reason for doing this co/contra stuff is visible
-in Trac #9569, involving instantiation of constraint variables,
+in #9569, involving instantiation of constraint variables,
and again involving eta-expansion.
Wrinkle 3: Note [Higher rank types]
@@ -714,7 +714,7 @@ These examples are all fine:
ty_expected isn't really polymorphic
If we prematurely go to equality we'll reject a program we should
-accept (e.g. Trac #13752). So the test (which is only to improve
+accept (e.g. #13752). So the test (which is only to improve
error message) is very conservative:
* ty_actual is /definitely/ monomorphic
* ty_expected is /definitely/ polymorphic
@@ -751,7 +751,7 @@ tc_sub_type_ds eq_orig inst_orig ctxt ty_actual ty_expected
-- which, in the impredicative case unified alpha := ty_a
-- where th_a is a polytype. Not only is this probably bogus (we
-- simply do not have decent story for impredicative types), but it
- -- caused Trac #12616 because (also bizarrely) 'deriving' code had
+ -- caused #12616 because (also bizarrely) 'deriving' code had
-- -XImpredicativeTypes on. I deleted the entire case.
go (FunTy { ft_af = VisArg, ft_arg = act_arg, ft_res = act_res })
@@ -1003,7 +1003,7 @@ promoteTcType dest_lvl ty
{- Note [Promoting a type]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider (Trac #12427)
+Consider (#12427)
data T where
MkT :: (Int -> Int) -> a -> T
@@ -1213,7 +1213,7 @@ alwaysBuildImplication :: SkolemInfo -> Bool
alwaysBuildImplication _ = False
{- Commmented out for now while I figure out about error messages.
- See Trac #14185
+ See #14185
alwaysBuildImplication (SigSkol ctxt _ _)
= case ctxt of
@@ -1269,7 +1269,7 @@ take care:
top-level unlifted bindings, which are verboten. This only matters
at top level, so we check for that
See also Note [Deferred errors for coercion holes] in TcErrors.
- cf Trac #14149 for an example of what goes wrong.
+ cf #14149 for an example of what goes wrong.
* If you have
f :: Int; f = f_blah
@@ -1280,7 +1280,7 @@ take care:
[W] C Int b1 -- from f_blah
[W] C Int b2 -- from g_blan
and fundpes can yield [D] b1 ~ b2, even though the two functions have
- literally nothing to do with each other. Trac #14185 is an example.
+ literally nothing to do with each other. #14185 is an example.
Building an implication keeps them separage.
-}
@@ -1409,7 +1409,7 @@ uType t_or_k origin orig_ty1 orig_ty2
-- type Foo = Int
-- and we try to unify Foo ~ Bool
-- we'll end up saying "can't match Foo with Bool"
- -- rather than "can't match "Int with Bool". See Trac #4535.
+ -- rather than "can't match "Int with Bool". See #4535.
go ty1 ty2
| Just ty1' <- tcView ty1 = go ty1' ty2
| Just ty2' <- tcView ty2 = go ty1 ty2'
@@ -1509,7 +1509,7 @@ are guaranteed equal length. But they aren't. Consider matching
w (T x) ~ Foo (T x y)
We do match (w ~ Foo) first, but in some circumstances we simply create
a deferred constraint; and then go ahead and match (T x ~ T x y).
-This came up in Trac #3950.
+This came up in #3950.
So either
(a) either we must check for identical argument kinds
@@ -1768,7 +1768,7 @@ Wanteds and Givens, but either way, deepest wins! Simple.
skolems, so it's important that skolems have (accurate) level
numbers.
-See Trac #15009 for an further analysis of why "deepest on the left"
+See #15009 for an further analysis of why "deepest on the left"
is a good plan.
Note [Fmv Orientation Invariant]
@@ -1824,7 +1824,7 @@ then we'll reduce the second constraint to
and then replace all uses of 'a' with fsk. That's bad because
in error messages instead of saying 'a' we'll say (F [a]). In all
places, including those where the programmer wrote 'a' in the first
-place. Very confusing! See Trac #7862.
+place. Very confusing! See #7862.
Solution: re-orient a~fsk to fsk~a, so that we preferentially eliminate
the fsk.
@@ -1852,7 +1852,7 @@ an existing inert constraint, and hence we are less likely to be forced
into kicking out and rewriting inert constraints.
This is a performance optimisation only. It turns out to fix
-Trac #14723 all by itself, but clearly not reliably so!
+#14723 all by itself, but clearly not reliably so!
It's simple to implement (see nicer_to_update_tv2 in swapOverTyVars).
But, to my surprise, it didn't seem to make any significant difference
diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcValidity.hs b/compiler/typecheck/TcValidity.hs
index e7ca2e2caa..b267547dd7 100644
--- a/compiler/typecheck/TcValidity.hs
+++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcValidity.hs
@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ in the forall case of check_type, but that had two bad consequences:
* If we try to check for ambiguity of a nested forall like
(forall a. Eq a => b), the implication constraint doesn't bind
all the skolems, which results in "No skolem info" in error
- messages (see Trac #10432).
+ messages (see #10432).
To avoid this, we call checkAmbiguity once, at the top, in checkValidType.
(I'm still a bit worried about unbound skolems when the type mentions
@@ -237,7 +237,7 @@ checkUserTypeError :: Type -> TcM ()
-- Check to see if the type signature mentions "TypeError blah"
-- anywhere in it, and fail if so.
--
--- Very unsatisfactorily (Trac #11144) we need to tidy the type
+-- Very unsatisfactorily (#11144) we need to tidy the type
-- because it may have come from an /inferred/ signature, not a
-- user-supplied one. This is really only a half-baked fix;
-- the other errors in checkValidType don't do tidying, and so
@@ -269,7 +269,7 @@ In a few places we do not want to check a user-specified type for ambiguity
It may be that when we /use/ T, we'll give an 'a' or 'b' that somehow
cure the ambiguity. So we defer the ambiguity check to the use site.
- There is also an implementation reason (Trac #11608). In the RHS of
+ There is also an implementation reason (#11608). In the RHS of
a type synonym we don't (currently) instantiate 'a' and 'b' with
TcTyVars before calling checkValidType, so we get asertion failures
from doing an ambiguity check on a type with TyVars in it. Fixing this
@@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ Note [Higher rank types]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Technically
Int -> forall a. a->a
-is still a rank-1 type, but it's not Haskell 98 (Trac #5957). So the
+is still a rank-1 type, but it's not Haskell 98 (#5957). So the
validity checker allow a forall after an arrow only if we allow it
before -- that is, with Rank2Types or RankNTypes
-}
@@ -549,7 +549,7 @@ exclusively `NoExpand` 100% of the time:
If we expand `Bar Foo` immediately, we'll miss the fact that the `Foo` type
synonyms is unsaturated.
* If one never expands and only checks the arguments, then one can miss
- erroneous programs like the one in Trac #16059:
+ erroneous programs like the one in #16059:
type Foo b = Eq b => b
f :: forall b (a :: Foo b). Int
@@ -927,7 +927,7 @@ checkConstraintsOK ve theta ty
| allConstraintsAllowed (ve_ctxt ve) = return ()
| otherwise
= -- We are in a kind, where we allow only equality predicates
- -- See Note [Constraints in kinds] in TyCoRep, and Trac #16263
+ -- See Note [Constraints in kinds] in TyCoRep, and #16263
checkTcM (all isEqPred theta) $
constraintTyErr (ve_tidy_env ve) ty
@@ -1015,7 +1015,7 @@ then when we saw
(e :: (?x::Int) => t)
it would be unclear how to discharge all the potential uses of the ?x
in e. For example, a constraint Foo [Int] might come out of e, and
-applying the instance decl would show up two uses of ?x. Trac #8912.
+applying the instance decl would show up two uses of ?x. #8912.
-}
checkValidTheta :: UserTypeCtxt -> ThetaType -> TcM ()
@@ -1055,7 +1055,7 @@ the context.
But we record, in 'under_syn', whether we have looked under a synonym
to avoid requiring language extensions at the use site. Main example
-(Trac #9838):
+(#9838):
{-# LANGUAGE ConstraintKinds #-}
module A where
@@ -1093,7 +1093,7 @@ check_pred_help :: Bool -- True <=> under a type synonym
-> PredType -> TcM ()
check_pred_help under_syn env dflags ctxt pred
| Just pred' <- tcView pred -- Switch on under_syn when going under a
- -- synonym (Trac #9838, yuk)
+ -- synonym (#9838, yuk)
= check_pred_help True env dflags ctxt pred'
| otherwise -- A bit like classifyPredType, but not the same
@@ -1158,7 +1158,7 @@ check_irred_pred under_syn env dflags ctxt pred
= do { -- If it looks like (x t1 t2), require ConstraintKinds
-- see Note [ConstraintKinds in predicates]
-- But (X t1 t2) is always ok because we just require ConstraintKinds
- -- at the definition site (Trac #9838)
+ -- at the definition site (#9838)
failIfTcM (not under_syn && not (xopt LangExt.ConstraintKinds dflags)
&& hasTyVarHead pred)
(predIrredErr env pred)
@@ -1179,7 +1179,7 @@ check_irred_pred under_syn env dflags ctxt pred
{- Note [ConstraintKinds in predicates]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Don't check for -XConstraintKinds under a type synonym, because that
-was done at the type synonym definition site; see Trac #9838
+was done at the type synonym definition site; see #9838
e.g. module A where
type C a = (Eq a, Ix a) -- Needs -XConstraintKinds
module B where
@@ -1281,7 +1281,7 @@ Note [Instance and Given overlap]. As that Note discusses, for the
most part the clever stuff in TcInteract means that we don't use a
top-level instance if a local Given might fire, so there is no
fragility. But if we /infer/ the type of a local let-binding, things
-can go wrong (Trac #11948 is an example, discussed in the Note).
+can go wrong (#11948 is an example, discussed in the Note).
So this warning is switched on only if we have NoMonoLocalBinds; in
that case the warning discourages users from writing simplifiable
@@ -1291,7 +1291,7 @@ The warning only fires if the constraint in the signature
matches the top-level instances in only one way, and with no
unifiers -- that is, under the same circumstances that
TcInteract.matchInstEnv fires an interaction with the top
-level instances. For example (Trac #13526), consider
+level instances. For example (#13526), consider
instance {-# OVERLAPPABLE #-} Eq (T a) where ...
instance Eq (T Char) where ..
@@ -1325,7 +1325,7 @@ okIPCtxt SigmaCtxt = True
okIPCtxt (DataTyCtxt {}) = True
okIPCtxt (PatSynCtxt {}) = True
okIPCtxt (TySynCtxt {}) = True -- e.g. type Blah = ?x::Int
- -- Trac #11466
+ -- #11466
okIPCtxt (KindSigCtxt {}) = False
okIPCtxt (ClassSCCtxt {}) = False
@@ -1420,7 +1420,7 @@ tyConArityErr :: TyCon -> [TcType] -> SDoc
-- For type-constructor arity errors, be careful to report
-- the number of /visible/ arguments required and supplied,
-- ignoring the /invisible/ arguments, which the user does not see.
--- (e.g. Trac #10516)
+-- (e.g. #10516)
tyConArityErr tc tks
= arityErr (ppr (tyConFlavour tc)) (tyConName tc)
tc_type_arity tc_type_args
@@ -1484,7 +1484,7 @@ entirely different meaning. Suppose in M.hsig we see
That says that any module satisfying M.hsig must provide a KnownNat
instance for T. We absolultely need that instance when compiling a
-module that imports M.hsig: see Trac #15379 and
+module that imports M.hsig: see #15379 and
Note [Fabricating Evidence for Literals in Backpack] in ClsInst.
Hence, checkValidInstHead accepts a user-written instance declaration
@@ -1632,7 +1632,7 @@ tcInstHeadTyAppAllTyVars :: Type -> Bool
tcInstHeadTyAppAllTyVars ty
| Just (tc, tys) <- tcSplitTyConApp_maybe (dropCasts ty)
= ok (filterOutInvisibleTypes tc tys) -- avoid kinds
- | LitTy _ <- ty = True -- accept type literals (Trac #13833)
+ | LitTy _ <- ty = True -- accept type literals (#13833)
| otherwise
= False
where
@@ -1742,7 +1742,7 @@ It checks for three things
newtype T (c :: * -> * -> *) a b = MkT (c a b)
instance Category c => Category (T c) where ...
since the first argument to Category is a non-visible *, which sizeTypes
- would count as a constructor! See Trac #11833.
+ would count as a constructor! See #11833.
* Also check for a bizarre corner case, when the derived instance decl
would look like
@@ -1750,7 +1750,7 @@ It checks for three things
Note that 'b' isn't a parameter of T. This gives rise to all sorts of
problems; in particular, it's hard to compare solutions for equality
when finding the fixpoint, and that means the inferContext loop does
- not converge. See Trac #5287.
+ not converge. See #5287.
Note [Equality class instances]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1790,7 +1790,7 @@ validDerivPred tv_set pred
{- Note [Instances and constraint synonyms]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Currently, we don't allow instances for constraint synonyms at all.
-Consider these (Trac #13267):
+Consider these (#13267):
type C1 a = Show (a -> Bool)
instance C1 Int where -- I1
show _ = "ur"
@@ -1901,13 +1901,13 @@ checkInstTermination theta head_pred
check :: VarSet -> PredType -> TcM ()
check foralld_tvs pred
= case classifyPredType pred of
- EqPred {} -> return () -- See Trac #4200.
+ EqPred {} -> return () -- See #4200.
IrredPred {} -> check2 foralld_tvs pred (sizeType pred)
ClassPred cls tys
| isTerminatingClass cls
-> return ()
- | isCTupleClass cls -- Look inside tuple predicates; Trac #8359
+ | isCTupleClass cls -- Look inside tuple predicates; #8359
-> check_preds foralld_tvs tys
| otherwise -- Other ClassPreds
@@ -1965,7 +1965,7 @@ Are these OK?
No: the type family in the instance head might blow up to an
arbitrarily large type, depending on how 'a' is instantiated.
So we require UndecidableInstances if we have a type family
-in the instance head. Trac #15172.
+in the instance head. #15172.
Note [Invisible arguments and termination]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1978,7 +1978,7 @@ in the instance head and constraints. Question: Do we look at
I think both will ensure termination, provided we are consistent.
Currently we are /not/ consistent, which is really a bug. It's
-described in Trac #15177, which contains a number of examples.
+described in #15177, which contains a number of examples.
The suspicious bits are the calls to filterOutInvisibleTypes.
-}
@@ -2084,7 +2084,7 @@ checkValidTyFamEqn fam_tc qvs typats rhs
-- type instance F Int# = ...
-- type instance F Int = forall a. a->a
-- type instance F Int = Int#
- -- See Trac #9357
+ -- See #9357
; checkValidMonoType rhs
-- We have a decidable instance unless otherwise permitted
@@ -2177,7 +2177,7 @@ checkFamPatBinders fam_tc qtvs pats rhs
2 (vcat [ text "but not" <+> what2 <+> text "the family instance"
, mk_extra tvs ])
- -- mk_extra: Trac #7536: give a decent error message for
+ -- mk_extra: #7536: give a decent error message for
-- type T a = Int
-- type instance F (T a) = a
mk_extra tvs = ppWhen (any (`elemVarSet` dodgy_tvs) tvs) $
@@ -2336,7 +2336,7 @@ so inside of GHC, the instance looks closer to this:
type instance T @(Maybe a) = (Nothing :: Maybe a)
Here, we can see that `a` really is bound by a LHS type pattern, so `a` is in
-fact not unbound. Contrast that with this example (Trac #13985)
+fact not unbound. Contrast that with this example (#13985)
type instance T = Proxy (Nothing :: Maybe a)
@@ -2365,7 +2365,7 @@ obvious, one can also write the instance like so:
Note [Matching in the consistent-instantation check]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Matching the class-instance header to family-instance tyvars is
-tricker than it sounds. Consider (Trac #13972)
+tricker than it sounds. Consider (#13972)
class C (a :: k) where
type T k :: Type
instance C Left where
@@ -2380,7 +2380,7 @@ from the class-instance header.
We track the lexically-scoped type variables from the
class-instance header in ai_tyvars.
-Here's another example (Trac #14045a)
+Here's another example (#14045a)
class C (a :: k) where
data S (a :: k)
instance C (z :: Bool) where
@@ -2398,7 +2398,7 @@ somewhere deep inside the type
Note [Checking consistent instantiation]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-See Trac #11450 for background discussion on this check.
+See #11450 for background discussion on this check.
class C a b where
type T a x b
@@ -2420,7 +2420,7 @@ Note that
instance C [p] Int
type T [q] y Int = ...
But from GHC 8.2 onwards, we don't. It's much simpler this way.
- See Trac #11450.
+ See #11450.
* When the class variable isn't used on the RHS of the type instance,
it's tempting to allow wildcards, thus
@@ -2467,7 +2467,7 @@ Note that
CAux (Either x y) = x -> y
We decided that this restriction wasn't buying us much, so we opted not
- to pursue that design (see also GHC Trac #13398).
+ to pursue that design (see also GHC #13398).
Implementation
* Form the mini-envt from the class type variables a,b
@@ -2802,7 +2802,7 @@ sizeTyConAppArgs _tc tys = sizeTypes tys -- (filterOutInvisibleTypes tc tys)
-- We are considering whether class constraints terminate.
-- Equality constraints and constraints for the implicit
-- parameter class always terminate so it is safe to say "size 0".
--- See Trac #4200.
+-- See #4200.
sizePred :: PredType -> Int
sizePred ty = goClass ty
where
diff --git a/compiler/types/Coercion.hs b/compiler/types/Coercion.hs
index 254f76ca31..8e4efbac50 100644
--- a/compiler/types/Coercion.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/Coercion.hs
@@ -209,7 +209,7 @@ pprCoAxBranchLHS :: TyCon -> CoAxBranch -> SDoc
-- a conflict between equations (FamInst.conflictInstErr)
-- For type families the RHS is important; for data families not so.
-- Indeed for data families the RHS is a mysterious internal
--- type constructor, so we suppress it (Trac #14179)
+-- type constructor, so we suppress it (#14179)
-- See FamInstEnv Note [Family instance overlap conflicts]
pprCoAxBranchLHS = ppr_co_ax_branch pp_rhs
where
@@ -342,7 +342,7 @@ Notes:
where co :: (forall a. ty) ~ (ty1 -> ty2)
Here 'co' is insoluble, but we don't want to crash in decoposePiCos.
So decomposePiCos carefully tests both sides of the coercion to check
- they are both foralls or both arrows. Not doing this caused Trac #15343.
+ they are both foralls or both arrows. Not doing this caused #15343.
-}
decomposePiCos :: HasDebugCallStack
@@ -718,7 +718,7 @@ mkAppCo co arg
| Just (ty1, r) <- isReflCo_maybe co
, Just (tc, tys) <- splitTyConApp_maybe ty1
- -- Expand type synonyms; a TyConAppCo can't have a type synonym (Trac #9102)
+ -- Expand type synonyms; a TyConAppCo can't have a type synonym (#9102)
= mkTyConAppCo r tc (zip_roles (tyConRolesX r tc) tys)
where
zip_roles (r1:_) [] = [downgradeRole r1 Nominal arg]
@@ -2292,10 +2292,10 @@ Suppose we need `coercionKind (ForAllCo a1 (ForAllCo a2 ... (ForAllCo an
co)...) )`. We do not want to perform `n` single-type-variable
substitutions over the kind of `co`; rather we want to do one substitution
which substitutes for all of `a1`, `a2` ... simultaneously. If we do one
-at a time we get the performance hole reported in Trac #11735.
+at a time we get the performance hole reported in #11735.
Solution: gather up the type variables for nested `ForAllCos`, and
-substitute for them all at once. Remarkably, for Trac #11735 this single
+substitute for them all at once. Remarkably, for #11735 this single
change reduces /total/ compile time by a factor of more than ten.
-}
@@ -2334,7 +2334,7 @@ coercionRole = go
{-
Note [Nested InstCos]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-In Trac #5631 we found that 70% of the entire compilation time was
+In #5631 we found that 70% of the entire compilation time was
being spent in coercionKind! The reason was that we had
(g @ ty1 @ ty2 .. @ ty100) -- The "@s" are InstCos
where
@@ -2342,7 +2342,7 @@ where
If we deal with the InstCos one at a time, we'll do this:
1. Find the kind of (g @ ty1 .. @ ty99) : forall a100. phi'
2. Substitute phi'[ ty100/a100 ], a single tyvar->type subst
-But this is a *quadratic* algorithm, and the blew up Trac #5631.
+But this is a *quadratic* algorithm, and the blew up #5631.
So it's very important to do the substitution simultaneously;
cf Type.piResultTys (which in fact we call here).
diff --git a/compiler/types/FamInstEnv.hs b/compiler/types/FamInstEnv.hs
index 88f64bfc87..8387f112cb 100644
--- a/compiler/types/FamInstEnv.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/FamInstEnv.hs
@@ -589,7 +589,7 @@ Like types and classes, we build axioms fully quantified over all
their variables, and tidy them when we build them. For example,
we print out axioms and don't want to print stuff like
F k k a b = ...
-Instead we must tidy those kind variables. See Trac #7524.
+Instead we must tidy those kind variables. See #7524.
We could instead tidy when we print, but that makes it harder to get
things like injectivity errors to come out right. Danger of
@@ -1233,7 +1233,7 @@ That's what the CoercionTy case is doing within normalise_type.
Note [Normalisation and type synonyms]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We need to be a bit careful about normalising in the presence of type
-synonyms (Trac #13035). Suppose S is a type synonym, and we have
+synonyms (#13035). Suppose S is a type synonym, and we have
S t1 t2
If S is family-free (on its RHS) we can just normalise t1 and t2 and
reconstruct (S t1' t2'). Expanding S could not reveal any new redexes
@@ -1241,7 +1241,7 @@ because type families are saturated.
But if S has a type family on its RHS we expand /before/ normalising
the args t1, t2. If we normalise t1, t2 first, we'll re-normalise them
-after expansion, and that can lead to /exponential/ behavour; see Trac #13035.
+after expansion, and that can lead to /exponential/ behavour; see #13035.
Notice, though, that expanding first can in principle duplicate t1,t2,
which might contain redexes. I'm sure you could conjure up an exponential
diff --git a/compiler/types/InstEnv.hs b/compiler/types/InstEnv.hs
index c45aa7cccd..ebfd1213ca 100644
--- a/compiler/types/InstEnv.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/InstEnv.hs
@@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ We avoid this as follows:
inside the DFunId. The rough-match fields allow us to say "definitely does not
match", based only on Names.
- This laziness is very important; see Trac #12367. Try hard to avoid pulling on
+ This laziness is very important; see #12367. Try hard to avoid pulling on
the structured fields unless you really need the instance.
* Another place to watch is InstEnv.instIsVisible, which needs the module to
@@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ match in module 'X' from package 'p', should be "in scope"; that is,
The difficulty is that the "zillion packages" might include ones loaded
through earlier invocations of the GHC API, or earlier module loads in GHCi.
They might not be in the dependencies of M itself; and if not, the instances
-in them should not be visible. Trac #2182, #8427.
+in them should not be visible. #2182, #8427.
There are two cases:
* If the instance is *not an orphan*, then module X defines C, T, or W.
@@ -939,8 +939,8 @@ insert_overlapping new_item@(new_inst,_) (old_item@(old_inst,_) : old_items)
-- Overlap permitted if either the more specific instance
-- is marked as overlapping, or the more general one is
-- marked as overlappable.
- -- Latest change described in: Trac #9242.
- -- Previous change: Trac #3877, Dec 10.
+ -- Latest change described in: #9242.
+ -- Previous change: #3877, Dec 10.
{-
Note [Incoherent instances]
diff --git a/compiler/types/Kind.hs b/compiler/types/Kind.hs
index 7989265ce0..f59d23e1dc 100644
--- a/compiler/types/Kind.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/Kind.hs
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ For this single-method class we may generate a newtype, which in turn
generates an axiom witnessing
C a ~ (a -> a)
so on the left we have Constraint, and on the right we have Type.
-See Trac #7451.
+See #7451.
Bottom line: although 'Type' and 'Constraint' are distinct TyCons, with
distinct uniques, they are treated as equal at all times except
diff --git a/compiler/types/OptCoercion.hs b/compiler/types/OptCoercion.hs
index c521a85635..eb7ecb10ea 100644
--- a/compiler/types/OptCoercion.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/OptCoercion.hs
@@ -484,7 +484,7 @@ of arguments in a `CoTyConApp` can differ. Consider
Any * Int :: *
Any (*->*) Maybe Int :: *
-Hence the need to compare argument lengths; see Trac #13658
+Hence the need to compare argument lengths; see #13658
-}
opt_univ :: LiftingContext -> SymFlag -> UnivCoProvenance -> Role
@@ -1164,7 +1164,7 @@ etaTyConAppCo_maybe tc co
, let n = length tys1
, tys2 `lengthIs` n -- This can fail in an erroneous progam
-- E.g. T a ~# T a b
- -- Trac #14607
+ -- #14607
= ASSERT( tc == tc1 )
Just (decomposeCo n co (tyConRolesX r tc1))
-- NB: n might be <> tyConArity tc
diff --git a/compiler/types/TyCoRep.hs b/compiler/types/TyCoRep.hs
index 27fde88613..dc64ce139a 100644
--- a/compiler/types/TyCoRep.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/TyCoRep.hs
@@ -371,7 +371,7 @@ about it!
{- -----------------------
Commented out until the pattern match
- checker can handle it; see Trac #16185
+ checker can handle it; see #16185
For now we use the CPP macro #define FunTy FFunTy _
(see HsVersions.h) to allow pattern matching on a
@@ -1279,7 +1279,7 @@ have no coercion variables.
Note [Generalized reflexive coercion]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-GRefl is a generalized reflexive coercion (see Trac #15192). It wraps a kind
+GRefl is a generalized reflexive coercion (see #15192). It wraps a kind
coercion, which might be reflexive (MRefl) or any coercion (MCo co). The typing
rules for GRefl:
@@ -1436,7 +1436,7 @@ See Simplify.simplCoercionF, which generates such selections.
Note [Roles]
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Roles are a solution to the GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving problem, articulated
-in Trac #1496. The full story is in docs/core-spec/core-spec.pdf. Also, see
+in #1496. The full story is in docs/core-spec/core-spec.pdf. Also, see
http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/RolesImplementation
Here is one way to phrase the problem:
@@ -1587,7 +1587,7 @@ which makes the code complicated and inefficient.
This only happens for NthCo. Caching the role solves the problem, and
allows coercionKind and coercionRole to be simple.
-See Trac #11735
+See #11735
Note [InstCo roles]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1756,7 +1756,7 @@ Note [CoercionHoles and coercion free variables]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Why does a CoercionHole contain a CoVar, as well as reference to
fill in? Because we want to treat that CoVar as a free variable of
-the coercion. See Trac #14584, and Note [What prevents a
+the coercion. See #14584, and Note [What prevents a
constraint from floating] in TcSimplify, item (4):
forall k. [W] co1 :: t1 ~# t2 |> co2
@@ -1849,14 +1849,14 @@ so we profiled several versions, exploring different implementation strategies.
"in-scope set" filter found in the internals of FV, but without the
determinism overhead.
-See Trac #14880.
+See #14880.
Note [Closing over free variable kinds]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
tyCoVarsOfType and tyCoFVsOfType, while traversing a type, will also close over
free variable kinds. In previous GHC versions, this happened naively: whenever
we would encounter an occurrence of a free type variable, we would close over
-its kind. This, however is wrong for two reasons (see Trac #14880):
+its kind. This, however is wrong for two reasons (see #14880):
1. Efficiency. If we have Proxy (a::k) -> Proxy (a::k) -> Proxy (a::k), then
we don't want to have to traverse k more than once.
@@ -2182,7 +2182,7 @@ This is because FV includes the InterestingVarFun, which is useful here,
because we can cleverly use it to restrict our calculations to CoVars - this
is what getCoVarSet achieves.
-See Trac #14880.
+See #14880.
-}
@@ -3814,7 +3814,7 @@ Note [When to print foralls]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mostly we want to print top-level foralls when (and only when) the user specifies
-fprint-explicit-foralls. But when kind polymorphism is at work, that suppresses
-too much information; see Trac #9018.
+too much information; see #9018.
So I'm trying out this rule: print explicit foralls if
a) User specifies -fprint-explicit-foralls, or
@@ -3844,7 +3844,7 @@ remember to parenthesise the operator, thus
(~>) a b -> b
-See Trac #2766.
+See #2766.
-}
pprDataCons :: TyCon -> SDoc
diff --git a/compiler/types/TyCon.hs b/compiler/types/TyCon.hs
index ce40d74278..a943284612 100644
--- a/compiler/types/TyCon.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/TyCon.hs
@@ -972,7 +972,7 @@ data AlgTyConRhs
-- Invariant: arity = #tvs in nt_etad_rhs;
-- See Note [Newtype eta]
-- Watch out! If any newtypes become transparent
- -- again check Trac #1072.
+ -- again check #1072.
}
mkSumTyConRhs :: [DataCon] -> AlgTyConRhs
@@ -1193,7 +1193,7 @@ For example consider
T2 :: T Bool
T3 :: T a
What would [T1 ..] be? [T1,T3] :: T Int? Easiest thing is to exclude them.
-See Trac #4528.
+See #4528.
Note [Newtype coercions]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2642,7 +2642,7 @@ strictness analyser doesn't unbox infinitely deeply.
More precisely, we keep a *count* of how many times we've seen it.
This is to account for
data instance T (a,b) = MkT (T a) (T b)
-Then (Trac #10482) if we have a type like
+Then (#10482) if we have a type like
T (Int,(Int,(Int,(Int,Int))))
we can still unbox deeply enough during strictness analysis.
We have to treat T as potentially recursive, but it's still
diff --git a/compiler/types/Type.hs b/compiler/types/Type.hs
index 555e73f390..4426148967 100644
--- a/compiler/types/Type.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/Type.hs
@@ -349,7 +349,7 @@ We implement this by making 'coreView' convert 'Constraint' to 'TYPE
LiftedRep' on the fly. The function tcView (used in the type checker)
does not do this.
-See also Trac #11715, which tracks removing this inconsistency.
+See also #11715, which tracks removing this inconsistency.
-}
@@ -415,7 +415,7 @@ expandTypeSynonyms ty
-- /idempotent/ substitution, even in the nested case
-- type T a b = a -> b
-- type S x y = T y x
- -- (Trac #11665)
+ -- (#11665)
in mkAppTys (go subst' rhs) tys'
| otherwise
= TyConApp tc expanded_tys
@@ -686,7 +686,7 @@ Note [Decomposing fat arrow c=>t]
Can we unify (a b) with (Eq a => ty)? If we do so, we end up with
a partial application like ((=>) Eq a) which doesn't make sense in
source Haskell. In contrast, we *can* unify (a b) with (t1 -> t2).
-Here's an example (Trac #9858) of how you might do it:
+Here's an example (#9858) of how you might do it:
i :: (Typeable a, Typeable b) => Proxy (a b) -> TypeRep
i p = typeRep p
@@ -1066,7 +1066,7 @@ piResultTys ty orig_args@(arg:args)
-- have the right kind to apply to them; so panic.
-- Without the explicit isEmptyVarEnv test, an ill-kinded type
-- would give an infniite loop, which is very unhelpful
- -- c.f. Trac #15473
+ -- c.f. #15473
pprPanic "piResultTys2" (ppr ty $$ ppr orig_args $$ ppr all_args)
applyTysX :: [TyVar] -> Type -> [Type] -> Type
@@ -1098,7 +1098,7 @@ So
In other words we must intantiate the forall!
-Similarly (Trac #15428)
+Similarly (#15428)
S :: forall k f. k -> f k
and we are finding the kind of
S * (* ->) Int Bool
@@ -1400,7 +1400,7 @@ with a fat arrow; that is, using mkInvisFunTy, not mkVisFunTy.
Why? After all, we are in Core, where (=>) and (->) behave the same.
Yes, but the /specialiser/ does treat dictionary arguments specially.
-Suppose we do w/w on 'foo' in module A, thus (Trac #11272, #6056)
+Suppose we do w/w on 'foo' in module A, thus (#11272, #6056)
foo :: Ord a => Int -> blah
foo a d x = case x of I# x' -> $wfoo @a d x'
@@ -1679,7 +1679,7 @@ tyConArgFlags tc = fun_kind_arg_flags (tyConKind tc)
-- 'Specified' and the second argument (@Bool@) is 'Required'. It is precisely
-- this sort of higher-rank situation in which 'appTyArgFlags' comes in handy,
-- since @f Type Bool@ would be represented in Core using 'AppTy's.
--- (See also Trac #15792).
+-- (See also #15792).
appTyArgFlags :: Type -> [Type] -> [ArgFlag]
appTyArgFlags ty = fun_kind_arg_flags (typeKind ty)
@@ -2429,7 +2429,7 @@ and now we can make f' a join point:
in ... jump f' 1 'b' ... jump f' 2 'c' ...
It's not clear that this comes up often, however. TODO: Measure how often and
-add this analysis if necessary. See Trac #14620.
+add this analysis if necessary. See #14620.
************************************************************************
diff --git a/compiler/types/Unify.hs b/compiler/types/Unify.hs
index 9720afc582..3bcf521603 100644
--- a/compiler/types/Unify.hs
+++ b/compiler/types/Unify.hs
@@ -330,7 +330,7 @@ failure.
tcUnifyTysFG ("fine-grained") returns one of three results: success, occurs-check
failure ("MaybeApart"), or general failure ("SurelyApart").
-See also Trac #8162.
+See also #8162.
It's worth noting that unification in the presence of infinite types is not
complete. This means that, sometimes, a closed type family does not reduce
@@ -554,9 +554,9 @@ We also want to substitute inside f's kind, to get
, g -> H k (f:*) ]
If we don't do this, we may apply the substitution to something,
and get an ill-formed type, i.e. one where typeKind will fail.
-This happened, for example, in Trac #9106.
+This happened, for example, in #9106.
-It gets worse. In Trac #14164 we wanted to take the fixpoint of
+It gets worse. In #14164 we wanted to take the fixpoint of
this substitution
[ xs_asV :-> F a_aY6 (z_aY7 :: a_aY6)
(rest_aWF :: G a_aY6 (z_aY7 :: a_aY6))
@@ -887,7 +887,7 @@ Previously, wrongly, we pushed 'co' in the (horrid) accumulating
But that is obviously wrong because 'co' (from the template) ends
up in 'kco', which in turn ends up in the range of the substitution.
-This all came up in Trac #13910. Because we match tycon arguments
+This all came up in #13910. Because we match tycon arguments
left-to-right, the ambient substitution will already have a matching
substitution for any kinds; so there is an easy fix: just apply
the substitution-so-far to the coercion from the LHS.
@@ -901,7 +901,7 @@ Note that
better way.
* One better way is to ensure that type patterns (the template
- in the matching process) have no casts. See Trac #14119.
+ in the matching process) have no casts. See #14119.
Note [Polykinded tycon applications]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -913,7 +913,7 @@ and we are unifying
These two TyConApps have the same TyCon at the front but they
(legitimately) have different numbers of arguments. They
are surelyApart, so we can report that without looking any
-further (see Trac #15704).
+further (see #15704).
-}
-------------- unify_ty: the main workhorse -----------
@@ -1141,7 +1141,7 @@ bindTv env tv1 ty2
; checkRnEnv env free_tvs2
-- Occurs check, see Note [Fine-grained unification]
- -- Make sure you include 'kco' (which ty2 does) Trac #14846
+ -- Make sure you include 'kco' (which ty2 does) #14846
; occurs <- occursCheck env tv1 free_tvs2
; if occurs then maybeApart
diff --git a/compiler/utils/Binary.hs b/compiler/utils/Binary.hs
index d7b446c6ea..623ba00244 100644
--- a/compiler/utils/Binary.hs
+++ b/compiler/utils/Binary.hs
@@ -539,7 +539,7 @@ instance Binary Integer where
{-
-- This code is currently commented out.
- -- See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/3379#comment:10 for
+ -- See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/3379#note_104346 for
-- discussion.
put_ bh (S# i#) = do putByte bh 0; put_ bh (I# i#)
diff --git a/compiler/utils/MonadUtils.hs b/compiler/utils/MonadUtils.hs
index f4320ecb4d..1cfb943464 100644
--- a/compiler/utils/MonadUtils.hs
+++ b/compiler/utils/MonadUtils.hs
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ The 'zipWithM'/'zipWithM_' functions are inlined so that the `zipWith` and
Furthermore, 'zipWith3M'/'zipWith4M' and 'zipWith3M_' have been explicitly
rewritten in a non-recursive way similarly to 'zipWithM'/'zipWithM_', and for
more than just uniformity: after [D5241](https://phabricator.haskell.org/D5241)
-for Trac ticket #14037, all @zipN@/@zipWithN@ functions fuse, meaning
+for issue #14037, all @zipN@/@zipWithN@ functions fuse, meaning
'zipWith3M'/'zipWIth4M' and 'zipWith3M_'@ now behave like 'zipWithM' and
'zipWithM_', respectively, with regards to fusion.
diff --git a/compiler/utils/Pretty.hs b/compiler/utils/Pretty.hs
index 7d06d74016..66518f95b6 100644
--- a/compiler/utils/Pretty.hs
+++ b/compiler/utils/Pretty.hs
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ source tree:
* `compiler/utils/Pretty.hs` (this module). It is used by GHC only.
There is an ongoing effort in https://github.com/haskell/pretty/issues/1 and
-https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10735 to try to get rid of GHC's copy
+https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10735 to try to get rid of GHC's copy
of Pretty.
Currently, GHC's copy of Pretty resembles pretty-1.1.2.0, with the following
@@ -435,7 +435,7 @@ Note [Print Hexadecimal Literals]
Relevant discussions:
* Phabricator: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4465
- * GHC Trac: https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/14872
+ * GHC Trac: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/14872
There is a flag `-dword-hex-literals` that causes literals of
type `Word#` or `Word64#` to be displayed in hexadecimal instead
diff --git a/configure.ac b/configure.ac
index a803a1faed..00304463d4 100644
--- a/configure.ac
+++ b/configure.ac
@@ -558,14 +558,14 @@ if test "$TargetOS_CPP" = "darwin"
then
AC_MSG_CHECKING(whether nm program is broken)
# Some versions of XCode ship a broken version of `nm`. Detect and work
- # around this issue. See : https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/11744
+ # around this issue. See : https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/11744
nmver=$(${NM} --version | grep version | sed 's/ //g')
case "$nmver" in
LLVMversion7.3.0|LLVMversion7.3.1)
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
echo "The detected nm program is broken."
echo
- echo "See: https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/11744"
+ echo "See: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/11744"
echo
echo "Try re-running configure with:"
echo
@@ -936,7 +936,7 @@ dnl ** check for math library
dnl Keep that check as early as possible.
dnl as we need to know whether we need libm
dnl for math functions or not
-dnl (see http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/3730)
+dnl (see https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/3730)
AC_CHECK_LIB(m, atan, HaveLibM=YES, HaveLibM=NO)
if test $HaveLibM = YES
then
diff --git a/distrib/remilestoning.pl b/distrib/remilestoning.pl
index 60a23af518..51eb19c66c 100644
--- a/distrib/remilestoning.pl
+++ b/distrib/remilestoning.pl
@@ -101,11 +101,11 @@ EOF
my $title = $ticketsfor{$email}{$ticket}{"title"};
print FH "\n";
print FH "#$ticket $title:\n";
- print FH " http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/$ticket\n";
+ print FH " https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/$ticket\n";
}
print FH <<'EOF';
---
+--
The GHC Team
http://www.haskell.org/ghc/
EOF
diff --git a/docs/users_guide/bugs.rst b/docs/users_guide/bugs.rst
index c563083cd6..9222a68b15 100644
--- a/docs/users_guide/bugs.rst
+++ b/docs/users_guide/bugs.rst
@@ -487,7 +487,7 @@ Known bugs or infelicities
--------------------------
The bug tracker lists bugs that have been reported in GHC but not yet
-fixed: see the `GHC Trac <http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/>`__. In
+fixed: see the `GHC issue tracker <https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues>`__. In
addition to those, GHC also has the following known bugs or
infelicities. These bugs are more permanent; it is unlikely that any of
them will be fixed in the short term.
diff --git a/docs/users_guide/editing-guide.rst b/docs/users_guide/editing-guide.rst
index 27ddbd2e29..fcff03b6fe 100644
--- a/docs/users_guide/editing-guide.rst
+++ b/docs/users_guide/editing-guide.rst
@@ -180,10 +180,10 @@ from other points in the document,
See :ref:`options-platform` for details.
-To GHC Trac resources
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+To GHC resources
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-There are special macros for conveniently linking to GHC Trac
+There are special macros for conveniently linking to GHC
Wiki articles and tickets,
.. code-block:: rest
@@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ Index entries
Index entries can be included anywhere in the document as a block element.
They look like,
-
+
.. code-block:: rest
Here is some discussion on the Strict Haskell extension.
@@ -374,7 +374,7 @@ must match the definition exactly, including the arguments. A quick way to find
the exact names and special characters is,
.. code-block:: sh
-
+
$ git grep -- "flag:: -o "
which will generate the appropriate,
diff --git a/docs/users_guide/ghc_config.py.in b/docs/users_guide/ghc_config.py.in
index 4ff77adc9d..dee8039a5a 100644
--- a/docs/users_guide/ghc_config.py.in
+++ b/docs/users_guide/ghc_config.py.in
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
extlinks = {
- 'ghc-ticket': ('https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/%s', 'Trac #'),
- 'ghc-wiki': ('https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/%s', 'Trac #'),
+ 'ghc-ticket': ('https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/%s', '#'),
+ 'ghc-wiki': ('https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/%s', '#'),
}
libs_base_uri = '../libraries'
diff --git a/docs/users_guide/glasgow_exts.rst b/docs/users_guide/glasgow_exts.rst
index 67be116ae4..2b4eb481f9 100644
--- a/docs/users_guide/glasgow_exts.rst
+++ b/docs/users_guide/glasgow_exts.rst
@@ -5737,7 +5737,7 @@ Note also the following points
pattern P x y v <- MkT True x y (v::a)
Here the universal type variable `a` scopes over the definition of `P`,
- but the existential `b` does not. (c.f. discussion on Trac #14998.)
+ but the existential `b` does not. (c.f. discussion on #14998.)
- For a bidirectional pattern synonym, a use of the pattern synonym as
an expression has the type
@@ -7422,7 +7422,7 @@ But superclass constraints like these are sometimes useful, and the conservative
check is annoying where no actual recursion is involved.
Moreover genuninely-recursive superclasses are sometimes useful. Here's a real-life
-example (Trac #10318) ::
+example (#10318) ::
class (Frac (Frac a) ~ Frac a,
Fractional (Frac a),
@@ -10045,7 +10045,7 @@ Notes:
instance (forall xx. c (Free c xx)) => Monad (Free c) where
Free f >>= g = f g
- See `Iceland Jack's summary <https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/14733#comment:6>`_. The key point is that the bit to the right of the ``=>`` may be headed by a type *variable* (``c`` in this case), rather than a class. It should not be one of the forall'd variables, though.
+ See `Iceland Jack's summary <https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/14733#note_148352>`_. The key point is that the bit to the right of the ``=>`` may be headed by a type *variable* (``c`` in this case), rather than a class. It should not be one of the forall'd variables, though.
(NB: this goes beyond what is described in `the paper <http://i.cs.hku.hk/~bruno//papers/hs2017.pdf>`_, but does not seem to introduce any new technical difficulties.)
@@ -12600,7 +12600,7 @@ In a few cases, even equality constraints cannot be deferred. Specifically:
This type signature contains a kind error which cannot be deferred.
-- Type equalities under a forall cannot be deferred (c.f. Trac #14605).
+- Type equalities under a forall cannot be deferred (c.f. #14605).
.. _template-haskell:
diff --git a/docs/users_guide/using-optimisation.rst b/docs/users_guide/using-optimisation.rst
index d6240bc5cb..9571c7e4aa 100644
--- a/docs/users_guide/using-optimisation.rst
+++ b/docs/users_guide/using-optimisation.rst
@@ -509,7 +509,7 @@ by saying ``-fno-wombat``.
that were not visible earlier; and optimisations like
:ghc-flag:`-fspec-constr` can create functions with unused arguments which
are eliminated by late demand analysis. Improvements are modest, but
- so is the cost. See notes on the :ghc-wiki:`Trac wiki page <LateDmd>`.
+ so is the cost. See notes on the :ghc-wiki:`wiki page <LateDmd>`.
.. ghc-flag:: -fliberate-case
:shortdesc: Turn on the liberate-case transformation. Implied by :ghc-flag:`-O2`.
diff --git a/ghc/GHCi/UI.hs b/ghc/GHCi/UI.hs
index 5e26685a69..e386fe6058 100644
--- a/ghc/GHCi/UI.hs
+++ b/ghc/GHCi/UI.hs
@@ -657,7 +657,7 @@ runGHCi paths maybe_exprs = do
$ topHandler e
-- this used to be topHandlerFastExit, see #2228
runInputTWithPrefs defaultPrefs defaultSettings $ do
- -- make `ghc -e` exit nonzero on invalid input, see Trac #7962
+ -- make `ghc -e` exit nonzero on invalid input, see #7962
_ <- runCommands' hdle
(Just $ hdle (toException $ ExitFailure 1) >> return ())
(return Nothing)
@@ -3068,16 +3068,16 @@ internally generated by GHC, eg:
$tcFoo :: GHC.Types.TyCon = _
$trModule :: GHC.Types.Module = _ .
-The filter was introduced as a fix for Trac #12525 [1]. Comment:1 [2] to this
+The filter was introduced as a fix for #12525 [1]. Comment:1 [2] to this
ticket contains an analysis of the situation and suggests the solution
implemented above.
-The same filter was also implemented to fix Trac #11051 [3]. See the
+The same filter was also implemented to fix #11051 [3]. See the
Note [What to show to users] in compiler/main/InteractiveEval.hs
-[1] https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/12525
-[2] https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/12525#comment:1
-[3] https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/11051
+[1] https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/12525
+[2] https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/12525#note_123489
+[3] https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/11051
-}
diff --git a/ghc/Main.hs b/ghc/Main.hs
index 2202f7116a..f5836f5fe6 100644
--- a/ghc/Main.hs
+++ b/ghc/Main.hs
@@ -872,7 +872,7 @@ to get a hash of the package's ABI.
-- | Print ABI hash of input modules.
--
--- The resulting hash is the MD5 of the GHC version used (Trac #5328,
+-- The resulting hash is the MD5 of the GHC version used (#5328,
-- see 'hiVersion') and of the existing ABI hash from each module (see
-- 'mi_mod_hash').
abiHash :: [String] -- ^ List of module names
diff --git a/hadrian/README.md b/hadrian/README.md
index 77c3cd0950..9531bdb667 100644
--- a/hadrian/README.md
+++ b/hadrian/README.md
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ messages by Shake oracles.
* `--lint`: run [Shake Lint](https://shakebuild.com/manual#lint) during the
build to check that the build system is well formed. Note that the Lint check
currently fails under certain circumstances, as discussed in
-[this ticket](https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/15971).
+[this ticket](https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/15971).
#### User settings
@@ -254,7 +254,7 @@ Here are a few simple suggestions that might help you fix the build:
[wiki](https://github.com/snowleopard/hadrian/wiki)
and Shake's [debugging tutorial](https://shakebuild.com/debugging).
-If nothing helps, don't hesitate to create a GHC Trac ticket, choosing the
+If nothing helps, don't hesitate to create a GHC issue, choosing the
component `Build System (Hadrian)`.
Current limitations
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Rules/Gmp.hs b/hadrian/src/Rules/Gmp.hs
index e4f7e53b48..5666ab3905 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Rules/Gmp.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Rules/Gmp.hs
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ gmpObjects = do
need [gmpPath -/- gmpLibraryH]
-- The line below causes a Shake Lint failure on Windows, which forced us to
-- disable Lint by default. See more details here:
- -- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/15971.
+ -- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/15971.
map (unifyPath . (gmpPath -/-)) <$>
liftIO (getDirectoryFilesIO gmpPath [gmpObjectsDir -/- "*.o"])
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Rules/Register.hs b/hadrian/src/Rules/Register.hs
index d215938385..f278cc76f9 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Rules/Register.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Rules/Register.hs
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ buildConf _ context@Context {..} conf = do
-- The above two steps produce an entry in the package database, with copies
-- of many of the files we have build, e.g. Haskell interface files. We need
-- to record this side effect so that Shake can cache these files too.
- -- See why we need 'fixWindows': https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/16073
+ -- See why we need 'fixWindows': https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/16073
let fixWindows path = do
win <- windowsHost
version <- setting GhcVersion
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Rules/Test.hs b/hadrian/src/Rules/Test.hs
index 55ef19a57b..f7e5c45051 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Rules/Test.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Rules/Test.hs
@@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ testRules = do
-- Execute the test target.
-- We override the verbosity setting to make sure the user can see
- -- the test output: https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/15951.
+ -- the test output: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/15951.
withVerbosity Loud $ buildWithCmdOptions env $
target (vanillaContext Stage2 compiler) RunTest [] []
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Settings/Builders/RunTest.hs b/hadrian/src/Settings/Builders/RunTest.hs
index 837e688425..d4e6a244e8 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Settings/Builders/RunTest.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Settings/Builders/RunTest.hs
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ runTestGhcFlags = do
, ifMinGhcVer "711" "-fshow-warning-groups"
, ifMinGhcVer "801" "-fdiagnostics-color=never"
, ifMinGhcVer "801" "-fno-diagnostics-show-caret"
- , pure "-Werror=compat" -- See Trac #15278
+ , pure "-Werror=compat" -- See #15278
, pure "-dno-debug-output"
]
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Settings/Flavours/Common.hs b/hadrian/src/Settings/Flavours/Common.hs
index a1eb2fbba9..054633ffe2 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Settings/Flavours/Common.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Settings/Flavours/Common.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ module Settings.Flavours.Common where
import Expression
--- See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/15286 and
+-- See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/15286 and
-- https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4880
naturalInBaseFixArgs :: Args
naturalInBaseFixArgs = mconcat
diff --git a/includes/MachDeps.h b/includes/MachDeps.h
index 2be4ee0b4f..d6f329f19f 100644
--- a/includes/MachDeps.h
+++ b/includes/MachDeps.h
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
/* Don't allow stage1 (cross-)compiler embed assumptions about target
* platform. When ghc-stage1 is being built by ghc-stage0 is should not
* refer to target defines. A few past examples:
- * - https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/13491
+ * - https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/13491
* - https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3122
* - https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3405
*
diff --git a/includes/Stg.h b/includes/Stg.h
index 57cb00d0a4..547b36aaeb 100644
--- a/includes/Stg.h
+++ b/includes/Stg.h
@@ -262,7 +262,7 @@ typedef StgFunPtr F_;
/* foreign functions: */
#define EFF_(f) void f() /* See Note [External function prototypes] */
-/* Note [External function prototypes] See Trac #8965, #11395
+/* Note [External function prototypes] See #8965, #11395
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In generated C code we need to distinct between two types
of external symbols:
@@ -289,7 +289,7 @@ believe that all functions declared this way can be called without an
argument save area, but if the callee has sufficiently many arguments then
it will expect that area to be present, and will thus corrupt the caller's
stack. This happens in particular with calls to runInteractiveProcess in
-libraries/process/cbits/runProcess.c, and led to Trac #8965.
+libraries/process/cbits/runProcess.c, and led to #8965.
The simplest fix appears to be to declare these external functions with an
unspecified argument list rather than a void argument list. This is no
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Arrow.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Arrow.hs
index 8d910277a2..13759dbbb4 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Arrow.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Arrow.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE NoImplicitPrelude #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Wno-inline-rule-shadowing #-}
-- The RULES for the methods of class Arrow may never fire
- -- e.g. compose/arr; see Trac #10528
+ -- e.g. compose/arr; see #10528
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- |
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Category.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Category.hs
index 37305bff1d..e8184956f2 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Category.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Category.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE PolyKinds #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Wno-inline-rule-shadowing #-}
-- The RULES for the methods of class Category may never fire
- -- e.g. identity/left, identity/right, association; see Trac #10528
+ -- e.g. identity/left, identity/right, association; see #10528
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- |
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@
-- Stability : experimental
-- Portability : portable
--- http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/1773
+-- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/1773
module Control.Category where
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs
index fbdb99e5f4..8223ec73d1 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs
@@ -260,8 +260,8 @@ By contrast, the implementation below with a local loop makes it possible to
inline the entire definition (as happens for foldr, for example) thereby
specialising for the particular action.
-For further information, see this Trac comment, which includes side-by-side
-Core: https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/11795#comment:6
+For further information, see this issue comment, which includes side-by-side
+Core: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/11795#note_118976
-}
-- | @'replicateM' n act@ performs the action @n@ times,
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs
index 666b535fd0..cbcee8dd90 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs
@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ using liftST:
We knew that lazy blackholing could cause the computation to be re-run if the
result was demanded strictly, but we thought that would be okay in the case of
-ST. However, that is not the case (see Trac #15349). Notably, the first time
+ST. However, that is not the case (see #15349). Notably, the first time
the computation is executed, it may mutate variables that cause it to behave
*differently* the second time it's run. That may allow it to terminate when it
should not. More frighteningly, Arseniy Alekseyev produced a somewhat contrived
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Monad/Zip.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Monad/Zip.hs
index 0fada6f5a2..dc192bfc81 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Monad/Zip.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Monad/Zip.hs
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ class Monad m => MonadZip m where
munzip mab = (liftM fst mab, liftM snd mab)
-- munzip is a member of the class because sometimes
-- you can implement it more efficiently than the
- -- above default code. See Trac #4370 comment by giorgidze
+ -- above default code. See #4370 comment by giorgidze
-- | @since 4.3.1.0
instance MonadZip [] where
diff --git a/libraries/base/Data/Data.hs b/libraries/base/Data/Data.hs
index fa199f1117..dfa55676f6 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Data/Data.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Data/Data.hs
@@ -1108,7 +1108,7 @@ ratioDataType = mkDataType "GHC.Real.Ratio" [ratioConstr]
-- NB: This Data instance intentionally uses the (%) smart constructor instead
-- of the internal (:%) constructor to preserve the invariant that a Ratio
--- value is reduced to normal form. See Trac #10011.
+-- value is reduced to normal form. See #10011.
-- | @since 4.0.0.0
instance (Data a, Integral a) => Data (Ratio a) where
diff --git a/libraries/base/Data/Foldable.hs b/libraries/base/Data/Foldable.hs
index 9a031212f0..037a44b99e 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Data/Foldable.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Data/Foldable.hs
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ class Foldable t where
-- and combine the results.
foldMap :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> t a -> m
{-# INLINE foldMap #-}
- -- This INLINE allows more list functions to fuse. See Trac #9848.
+ -- This INLINE allows more list functions to fuse. See #9848.
foldMap f = foldr (mappend . f) mempty
-- | A variant of 'foldMap' that is strict in the accumulator.
@@ -718,7 +718,7 @@ GHC used to proceed like this:
in ...(c x1 y1)...(c x2 y2)....n...
The trouble is that `c`, being big, will not be inlined. And that can
-be absolutely terrible for performance, as we saw in Trac #8763.
+be absolutely terrible for performance, as we saw in #8763.
It's much better to define
@@ -776,7 +776,7 @@ foldr1. This was problematic for space usage, as the semantics of maximumBy
and minimumBy essentially require that they examine every element of the
data structure. Using foldr1 to examine every element results in space usage
proportional to the size of the data structure. For the common case of lists,
-this could be particularly bad (see Trac #10830).
+this could be particularly bad (see #10830).
For the common case of lists, switching the implementations of maximumBy and
minimumBy to foldl1 solves the issue, as GHC's strictness analysis can then
@@ -784,7 +784,7 @@ make these functions only use O(1) stack space. It is perhaps not the optimal
way to fix this problem, as there are other conceivable data structures
(besides lists) which might benefit from specialized implementations for
maximumBy and minimumBy (see
-https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10830#comment:26 for a further
+https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10830#note_129843 for a further
discussion). But using foldl1 is at least always better than using foldr1, so
GHC has chosen to adopt that approach for now.
-}
diff --git a/libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs b/libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs
index 132ee14673..82cc9faa3b 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs
@@ -1112,7 +1112,7 @@ and possibly to bear similarities to a 1982 paper by Richard O'Keefe:
"A smooth applicative merge sort".
Benchmarks show it to be often 2x the speed of the previous implementation.
-Fixes ticket http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/2143
+Fixes ticket https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/2143
-}
sort = sortBy compare
diff --git a/libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs b/libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs
index 1be6e27b74..1775871034 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs
@@ -830,7 +830,7 @@ splitApps = go []
-- appropriate module and constructor names.
--
-- The ticket to find a better way to deal with this is
--- Trac #14480.
+-- #14480.
tyConTYPE :: TyCon
tyConTYPE = mkTyCon (tyConPackage liftedRepTyCon) "GHC.Prim" "TYPE" 0
(KindRepFun (KindRepTyConApp liftedRepTyCon []) (KindRepTYPE LiftedRep))
diff --git a/libraries/base/Debug/Trace.hs b/libraries/base/Debug/Trace.hs
index 7f40b10156..8e15416384 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Debug/Trace.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Debug/Trace.hs
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ traceIO :: String -> IO ()
traceIO msg = do
withCString "%s\n" $ \cfmt -> do
-- NB: debugBelch can't deal with null bytes, so filter them
- -- out so we don't accidentally truncate the message. See Trac #9395
+ -- out so we don't accidentally truncate the message. See #9395
let (nulls, msg') = partition (=='\0') msg
withCString msg' $ \cmsg ->
debugBelch cfmt cmsg
diff --git a/libraries/base/Foreign/Ptr.hs b/libraries/base/Foreign/Ptr.hs
index 45e6cf5483..6a8170baea 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Foreign/Ptr.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Foreign/Ptr.hs
@@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ Note [Exporting constructors of marshallable foreign types]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One might expect that IntPtr, WordPtr, and the other newtypes in the
Foreign.C.Types and System.Posix.Types modules to be abstract, but this is not
-the case in GHC (see Trac #5229 and #11983). In fact, we deliberately export
+the case in GHC (see #5229 and #11983). In fact, we deliberately export
the constructors for these datatypes in order to satisfy a requirement of the
Haskell 2010 Report (§ 8.4.2) that if a newtype is used in a foreign
declaration, then its constructor must be visible.
@@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ declaration, then its constructor must be visible.
This requirement was motivated by the fact that using a type in a foreign
declaration necessarily exposes some information about the type to the user,
so being able to use abstract types in a foreign declaration breaks their
-abstraction (see Trac #3008). As a result, the constructors of all FFI-related
+abstraction (see #3008). As a result, the constructors of all FFI-related
newtypes in base must be exported in order to be useful for FFI programming,
even at the cost of exposing their underlying, architecture-dependent types.
-}
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Arr.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Arr.hs
index b08180d6fd..cc0397ec07 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Arr.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Arr.hs
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ Note [Inlining index]
We inline the 'index' operation,
* Partly because it generates much faster code
- (although bigger); see Trac #1216
+ (although bigger); see #1216
* Partly because it exposes the bounds checks to the simplifier which
might help a big.
@@ -151,13 +151,13 @@ is a property of the particular instances of index, bounds, and inRange,
so GHC cannot guarantee it.
* If you do (A) and not (B), then you might get a seg-fault,
- by indexing at some bizarre location. Trac #1610
+ by indexing at some bizarre location. #1610
* If you do (B) but not (A), you may get no complaint when you index
- an array out of its semantic bounds. Trac #2120
+ an array out of its semantic bounds. #2120
At various times we have had (A) and not (B), or (B) and not (A); both
-led to complaints. So now we implement *both* checks (Trac #2669).
+led to complaints. So now we implement *both* checks (#2669).
For 1-d, 2-d, and 3-d arrays of Int we have specialised instances to avoid this.
@@ -787,7 +787,7 @@ There are two problems:
2. This implementation relies on list fusion for efficiency. In order
to implement the "amap/coerce" rule, we need to delay inlining amap
until simplifier phase 1, which is when the eftIntList rule kicks
- in and makes that impossible. (c.f. Trac #8767)
+ in and makes that impossible. (c.f. #8767)
-}
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Manager.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Manager.hs
index 3ee9116812..eda3e61490 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Manager.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Manager.hs
@@ -372,7 +372,7 @@ registerFd mgr cb fd evs lt = do
when we register an event.
For more information, please read:
- http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/7651
+ https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/7651
-}
-- | Wake up the event manager.
wakeManager :: EventManager -> IO ()
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Float.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Float.hs
index 75f6f8bd68..0929421c5c 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Float.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Float.hs
@@ -1294,7 +1294,7 @@ And with the rule:
The running time of the program goes from 120 seconds to 0.198 seconds
with the native backend, and 0.143 seconds with the C backend.
-A few more details in Trac #2251, and the patch message
+A few more details in #2251, and the patch message
"Add RULES for realToFrac from Int".
-}
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/IO.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/IO.hs
index 33113627a6..0c28cf0352 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/IO.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/IO.hs
@@ -440,7 +440,7 @@ evaluate a = IO $ \s -> seq# a s -- NB. see #2273, #5129
{- $exceptions_and_strictness
Laziness can interact with @catch@-like operations in non-obvious ways (see,
-e.g. GHC Trac #11555 and #13330). For instance, consider these subtly-different
+e.g. GHC #11555 and #13330). For instance, consider these subtly-different
examples:
> test1 = Control.Exception.catch (error "uh oh") (\(_ :: SomeException) -> putStrLn "it failed")
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs
index d87d352cb7..3185418d54 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs
@@ -1148,7 +1148,7 @@ instance Ix Int64 where
{- Note [Order of tests]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-(See Trac #3065, #5161.) Suppose we had a definition like:
+(See #3065, #5161.) Suppose we had a definition like:
quot x y
| y == 0 = divZeroError
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/List.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/List.hs
index d9b32ea9df..531669acd0 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/List.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/List.hs
@@ -226,7 +226,7 @@ ensures that calls to FB functions can be written back to the original form
when no fusion happens.
Without these inline pragmas, the loop in perf/should_run/T13001 won't be
-allocation-free. Also see Trac #13001.
+allocation-free. Also see #13001.
-}
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs
index 2283942a8f..a79f405079 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs
@@ -383,7 +383,7 @@ readField fieldName readVal = do
-- second argument is a parser for the field value.
--
-- Note that 'readField' does not suffice for this purpose due to
--- <https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/5041 Trac #5041>.
+-- <https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/5041 #5041>.
readFieldHash :: String -> ReadPrec a -> ReadPrec a
readFieldHash fieldName readVal = do
expectP (L.Ident fieldName)
@@ -420,7 +420,7 @@ readSymField fieldName readVal = do
-- parsers. For large record types (e.g. 500 fields), this produces a
-- significant performance boost.
--
--- See also Trac #14364.
+-- See also #14364.
--------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs
index 2a9494f5b1..8a47720fe1 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs
@@ -295,7 +295,7 @@ never reach the condition in `numericEnumFromTo`
9007199254740990 + 1 + 1 + ... > 9007199254740991 + 1/2
-We would fall into infinite loop (as reported in Trac #15081).
+We would fall into infinite loop (as reported in #15081).
To remedy the situation, we record the number of `1` that needed to be added
to the start number, rather than increasing `1` at every time. This approach
@@ -313,7 +313,7 @@ The benchmark on T7954.hs shows that this approach leads to significant
degeneration on performance (33% increase allocation and 300% increase on
elapsed time).
-See Trac #15081 and Phab:D4650 for the related discussion about this problem.
+See #15081 and Phab:D4650 for the related discussion about this problem.
-}
--------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git a/libraries/base/System/Environment/ExecutablePath.hsc b/libraries/base/System/Environment/ExecutablePath.hsc
index 095b25c236..2e213319bb 100644
--- a/libraries/base/System/Environment/ExecutablePath.hsc
+++ b/libraries/base/System/Environment/ExecutablePath.hsc
@@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ getFinalPath path = withCWString path $ \s ->
| "\\\\?\\" `isPrefixOf` s = drop 4 s
| otherwise = s
- -- see https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/14460
+ -- see https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/14460
rejectUNCPath s
| "\\\\?\\UNC\\" `isPrefixOf` s = path
| otherwise = s
diff --git a/libraries/base/System/Mem/Weak.hs b/libraries/base/System/Mem/Weak.hs
index 3a00696a48..8d21eb59d9 100644
--- a/libraries/base/System/Mem/Weak.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/System/Mem/Weak.hs
@@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ unreachable. There are two situations that can cause this:
* If a finalizer throws an exception, subsequent finalizers that had
been queued to run after it do not get run. This behavior may change
- in a future release. See issue <https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/13167 13167>
+ in a future release. See issue <https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/13167 13167>
on the issue tracker. Writing a finalizer that throws exceptions is
discouraged.
diff --git a/libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c b/libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c
index cfbced914f..8d100e8fbe 100644
--- a/libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c
+++ b/libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
* Thus we raise it here (before any #include of network-related headers)
* to 1024 so that at least those programs would work that would work on
* Linux if that used select() (luckily it uses poll() by now).
- * See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/13497#comment:23
+ * See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/13497#note_140304
* The real solution would be to remove all uses of select()
* on Windows, too, and use IO Completion Ports instead.
* Note that on Windows, one can simply define FD_SETSIZE to the desired
@@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ compute_WaitForSingleObject_timeout(bool infinite, Time remaining)
* reliably on Linux when the fd is a not-O_NONBLOCK socket, so if you pass
* socket fds to this function, ensure they have O_NONBLOCK;
* see `man 2 poll` and `man 2 select`, and
- * https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/13497#comment:26).
+ * https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/13497#note_140309).
*
* This function blocks until either `msecs` have passed, or input is
* available.
diff --git a/libraries/base/tests/IO/hReady001.hs b/libraries/base/tests/IO/hReady001.hs
index bb7be1c78b..ef206876d6 100644
--- a/libraries/base/tests/IO/hReady001.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/tests/IO/hReady001.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
-- !!! hReady test
- -- hReady should throw and EOF exception at the end of a file. Trac #1063.
+ -- hReady should throw and EOF exception at the end of a file. #1063.
import System.IO
import System.IO.Error
diff --git a/libraries/base/tests/T11760.hs b/libraries/base/tests/T11760.hs
index 875c15916d..0582c7e37d 100644
--- a/libraries/base/tests/T11760.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/tests/T11760.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
-- Written by Bertram Felgenhauer
--
--- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/11760#comment:14
+-- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/11760#note_131217
--
-- Compile with -threaded -with-rtsopts=-N2
diff --git a/libraries/base/tests/fromJust.hs b/libraries/base/tests/fromJust.hs
index 2da524ffed..7c52807b42 100644
--- a/libraries/base/tests/fromJust.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/tests/fromJust.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
module Main where
--- Trac #15559: Add HasCallStack to fromJust
+-- #15559: Add HasCallStack to fromJust
import Data.Maybe ( fromJust )
diff --git a/libraries/base/tests/genericNegative001.hs b/libraries/base/tests/genericNegative001.hs
index 7fb8192557..98457e282c 100644
--- a/libraries/base/tests/genericNegative001.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/tests/genericNegative001.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test for http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/2533
+-- Test for https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/2533
import System.Environment
import Data.List
main = do
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c b/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c
index 0a471b31ad..a7d7544b4f 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c
+++ b/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c
@@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ hs_atomic_and64(StgWord x, StgWord64 val)
// See also:
//
// * https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8842
-// * https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/9678
+// * https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/9678
//
#define CAS_NAND(x, val) \
diff --git a/libraries/integer-gmp/changelog.md b/libraries/integer-gmp/changelog.md
index a70f214ed9..036b14cdcd 100644
--- a/libraries/integer-gmp/changelog.md
+++ b/libraries/integer-gmp/changelog.md
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@
* Reduce short-lived heap allocation and try to demote `J#` back
to `S#` more aggressively. See also
- [#8647](https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/8647)
+ [#8647](https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/8647)
for more details.
* New GMP-specific binary (de)serialization primitives added to
diff --git a/libraries/integer-gmp/src/GHC/Integer/Logarithms/Internals.hs b/libraries/integer-gmp/src/GHC/Integer/Logarithms/Internals.hs
index b8b55e486a..5f50c79e41 100644
--- a/libraries/integer-gmp/src/GHC/Integer/Logarithms/Internals.hs
+++ b/libraries/integer-gmp/src/GHC/Integer/Logarithms/Internals.hs
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@
-- in "GHC.Float", we must expose this module, but it should not show
-- up in the docs.
--
--- See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/5122
+-- See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/5122
-- for the origin of the code in this module
module GHC.Integer.Logarithms.Internals
( wordLog2#
diff --git a/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Ppr.hs b/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Ppr.hs
index bc9efe6e3d..84fc740426 100644
--- a/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Ppr.hs
+++ b/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Ppr.hs
@@ -789,7 +789,7 @@ GHC's parser only recognises a kind signature in a type when there are
parens around it. E.g. the parens are required here:
f :: (Int :: *)
type instance F Int = (Bool :: *)
-So we always print a SigT with parens (see Trac #10050). -}
+So we always print a SigT with parens (see #10050). -}
pprTyApp :: (Type, [TypeArg]) -> Doc
pprTyApp (ArrowT, [TANormal arg1, TANormal arg2]) = sep [pprFunArgType arg1 <+> text "->", ppr arg2]
diff --git a/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs b/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs
index 690d63807c..31422a1b66 100644
--- a/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs
+++ b/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs
@@ -255,7 +255,7 @@ unsafeTExpCoerce m = do { e <- m
{- Note [Role of TExp]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TExp's argument must have a nominal role, not phantom as would
-be inferred (Trac #8459). Consider
+be inferred (#8459). Consider
e :: TExp Age
e = MkAge 3
@@ -912,12 +912,12 @@ function. Two complications
* In such a case, we must take care to build the Name using
mkNameG_v (for values), not mkNameG_d (for data constructors).
- See Trac #10796.
+ See #10796.
* The pseudo-constructor is named only by its string, here "pack".
But 'dataToQa' needs the TyCon of its defining module, and has
to assume it's defined in the same module as the TyCon itself.
- But nothing enforces that; Trac #12596 shows what goes wrong if
+ But nothing enforces that; #12596 shows what goes wrong if
"pack" is defined in a different module than the data type "Text".
-}
@@ -933,7 +933,7 @@ dataToExpQ = dataToQa varOrConE litE (foldl appE)
where
-- Make sure that VarE is used if the Constr value relies on a
-- function underneath the surface (instead of a constructor).
- -- See Trac #10796.
+ -- See #10796.
varOrConE s =
case nameSpace s of
Just VarName -> return (VarE s)
@@ -1226,7 +1226,7 @@ mkName str
-- mkName "&." = Name "&." NameS
-- The 'is_rev_mod' guards ensure that
-- mkName ".&" = Name ".&" NameS
- -- mkName "^.." = Name "^.." NameS -- Trac #8633
+ -- mkName "^.." = Name "^.." NameS -- #8633
-- mkName "Data.Bits..&" = Name ".&" (NameQ "Data.Bits")
-- This rather bizarre case actually happened; (.&.) is in Data.Bits
split occ (c:rev) = split (c:occ) rev
diff --git a/mk/build.mk.sample b/mk/build.mk.sample
index 601ab028e5..0f5bc222f2 100644
--- a/mk/build.mk.sample
+++ b/mk/build.mk.sample
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@
# Even faster build. NOT RECOMMENDED: the libraries will be
# completely unoptimised, so any code built with this compiler
# (including stage2) will run very slowly, and many GHC tests
-# will fail with this profile (see Trac #12141):
+# will fail with this profile (see #12141):
#BuildFlavour = quickest
# Profile the stage2 compiler:
diff --git a/mk/flavours/validate.mk b/mk/flavours/validate.mk
index ba33584488..3fd916afb0 100644
--- a/mk/flavours/validate.mk
+++ b/mk/flavours/validate.mk
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
SRC_HC_OPTS = -O0 -H64m
-SRC_HC_OPTS_STAGE1 = -fllvm-fill-undef-with-garbage # See Trac 11487
+SRC_HC_OPTS_STAGE1 = -fllvm-fill-undef-with-garbage # See #11487
GhcStage1HcOpts = -O2 -DDEBUG
GhcStage2HcOpts = -O -dcore-lint -dno-debug-output
GhcLibHcOpts = -O -dcore-lint -dno-debug-output
diff --git a/mk/install.mk.in b/mk/install.mk.in
index aa3afea2b9..f3f9ce0507 100644
--- a/mk/install.mk.in
+++ b/mk/install.mk.in
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@
#
# NOTE: The default e.g. ${docdir} above means that autoconf substitutes the
# string "${docdir}", not the value of docdir! This is crucial for the GNU
-# coding standards. See Trac #1924.
+# coding standards. See #1924.
define set_default
# $1 = variable to set
diff --git a/packages b/packages
index 40141ac217..34e78c3e35 100644
--- a/packages
+++ b/packages
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
# * rules/foreachLibrary.mk
#
# Some of this information is duplicated elsewhere in the build system:
-# See Trac #3896
+# See #3896
# In particular when adding libraries to this file, you also need to add
# the library to the SUBDIRS variable in libraries/Makefile so that they
# actually get built
diff --git a/rts/Apply.cmm b/rts/Apply.cmm
index 0454fd69e2..b08a8bf538 100644
--- a/rts/Apply.cmm
+++ b/rts/Apply.cmm
@@ -461,7 +461,7 @@ for:
/*
Note [AP_STACKs must be eagerly blackholed]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Trac #13615 describes a nasty concurrency issue where we can enter into the
+#13615 describes a nasty concurrency issue where we can enter into the
middle of an ST action multiple times, resulting in duplication of effects.
In short, the construction of an AP_STACK allows us to suspend a computation
which should not be duplicated. When running with lazy blackholing, we can then
diff --git a/rts/Linker.c b/rts/Linker.c
index 06b36ca88e..b293b6a839 100644
--- a/rts/Linker.c
+++ b/rts/Linker.c
@@ -249,7 +249,7 @@ static void ghciRemoveSymbolTable(HashTable *table, const SymbolName* key,
Some test have been written for weak symbols but have been disabled
mostly because it's unsure how the weak symbols support should look.
- See Trac #11223
+ See #11223
*/
int ghciInsertSymbolTable(
pathchar* obj_name,
@@ -679,7 +679,7 @@ addDLL( pathchar *dll_name )
return NULL;
}
- // GHC Trac ticket #2615
+ // GHC #2615
// On some systems (e.g., Gentoo Linux) dynamic files (e.g. libc.so)
// contain linker scripts rather than ELF-format object code. This
// code handles the situation by recognizing the real object code
diff --git a/rts/ProfHeap.c b/rts/ProfHeap.c
index 9ab4ff1c9d..5e3f8940a0 100644
--- a/rts/ProfHeap.c
+++ b/rts/ProfHeap.c
@@ -414,7 +414,7 @@ initHeapProfiling(void)
stg_exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
#if defined(THREADED_RTS)
- // See Trac #12019.
+ // See #12019.
if (doingLDVProfiling() && RtsFlags.ParFlags.nCapabilities > 1) {
errorBelch("-hb cannot be used with multiple capabilities");
stg_exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
diff --git a/rts/RtsAPI.c b/rts/RtsAPI.c
index 9396dccc07..26433ac209 100644
--- a/rts/RtsAPI.c
+++ b/rts/RtsAPI.c
@@ -464,7 +464,7 @@ void rts_evalIO (/* inout */ Capability **cap,
* rts_evalStableIOMain() is suitable for calling main Haskell thread
* stored in (StablePtr (IO a)) it calls rts_evalStableIO but wraps
* function in GHC.TopHandler.runMainIO that installs top_handlers.
- * See Trac #12903.
+ * See #12903.
*/
void rts_evalStableIOMain(/* inout */ Capability **cap,
/* in */ HsStablePtr s,
diff --git a/rts/RtsFlags.c b/rts/RtsFlags.c
index 37eafa5c55..0fb6ed6d9b 100644
--- a/rts/RtsFlags.c
+++ b/rts/RtsFlags.c
@@ -797,7 +797,7 @@ static void procRtsOpts (int rts_argc0,
} else {
/* 0 is dash, 1 is first letter */
- /* see Trac #9839 */
+ /* see #9839 */
unchecked_arg_start = 1;
switch(rts_argv[arg][1]) {
@@ -1566,12 +1566,12 @@ error = true;
break; /* defensive programming */
/* check the rest to be sure there is nothing afterwards.*/
- /* see Trac #9839 */
+ /* see #9839 */
check_rest:
{
/* start checking from the first unchecked position,
* not from index 2*/
- /* see Trac #9839 */
+ /* see #9839 */
if (rts_argv[arg][unchecked_arg_start] != '\0') {
errorBelch("flag -%c given an argument"
" when none was expected: %s",
@@ -1687,7 +1687,7 @@ static void normaliseRtsOpts (void)
// If allocation area is larger that CPU cache
// we can finish scanning quicker doing work-stealing
- // scan. Trac #9221
+ // scan. #9221
// 32M looks big enough not to fit into L2 cache
// of popular modern CPUs.
if (alloc_area_bytes >= 32 * 1024 * 1024) {
diff --git a/rts/RtsUtils.c b/rts/RtsUtils.c
index 618815de76..d5fa16874c 100644
--- a/rts/RtsUtils.c
+++ b/rts/RtsUtils.c
@@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ void printRtsInfo(const RtsConfig rts_config) {
mkRtsInfoPair("Word size", TOSTRING(WORD_SIZE_IN_BITS));
mkRtsInfoPair("Compiler unregisterised", GhcUnregisterised);
mkRtsInfoPair("Tables next to code", GhcEnableTablesNextToCode);
- mkRtsInfoPair("Flag -with-rtsopts", /* See Trac #15261 */
+ mkRtsInfoPair("Flag -with-rtsopts", /* See #15261 */
rts_config.rts_opts != NULL ? rts_config.rts_opts : "");
printf(" ]\n");
}
diff --git a/rts/Schedule.c b/rts/Schedule.c
index 02055d2566..7ffd44d22f 100644
--- a/rts/Schedule.c
+++ b/rts/Schedule.c
@@ -2122,7 +2122,7 @@ forkProcess(HsStablePtr *entry
// Install toplevel exception handlers, so interruption
// signal will be sent to the main thread.
- // See Trac #12903
+ // See #12903
rts_evalStableIOMain(&cap, entry, NULL); // run the action
rts_checkSchedStatus("forkProcess",cap);
diff --git a/rts/StablePtr.c b/rts/StablePtr.c
index 0f53ffcdc4..2181b83d90 100644
--- a/rts/StablePtr.c
+++ b/rts/StablePtr.c
@@ -85,7 +85,7 @@
Future plans for stable ptrs include distinguishing them by the
generation of the pointed object. See
- http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/7670 for details.
+ https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/7670 for details.
*/
spEntry *stable_ptr_table = NULL;
diff --git a/rts/StgPrimFloat.c b/rts/StgPrimFloat.c
index f1f6736e01..b7b0f10332 100644
--- a/rts/StgPrimFloat.c
+++ b/rts/StgPrimFloat.c
@@ -48,7 +48,7 @@
#define __abs(a) (( (a) >= 0 ) ? (a) : (-(a)))
-/** Trac #15271: Some large ratios are converted into double incorrectly.
+/** #15271: Some large ratios are converted into double incorrectly.
* This occurs when StgInt has 64 bits and C int has 32 bits, where wrapping
* occurs and an incorrect signed value is passed into ldexp */
STATIC_INLINE int
diff --git a/rts/linker/LoadArchive.c b/rts/linker/LoadArchive.c
index d03b416f1e..a92f86fff0 100644
--- a/rts/linker/LoadArchive.c
+++ b/rts/linker/LoadArchive.c
@@ -459,7 +459,7 @@ static HsInt loadArchive_ (pathchar *path)
DEBUG_LOG("Found member file `%s'\n", fileName);
/* TODO: Stop relying on file extensions to determine input formats.
- Instead try to match file headers. See Trac #13103. */
+ Instead try to match file headers. See #13103. */
isObject = (thisFileNameSize >= 2 && strncmp(fileName + thisFileNameSize - 2, ".o" , 2) == 0)
|| (thisFileNameSize >= 4 && strncmp(fileName + thisFileNameSize - 4, ".p_o", 4) == 0)
|| (thisFileNameSize >= 4 && strncmp(fileName + thisFileNameSize - 4, ".obj", 4) == 0);
diff --git a/rts/posix/OSMem.c b/rts/posix/OSMem.c
index 347c7c1a5c..6bec6b8602 100644
--- a/rts/posix/OSMem.c
+++ b/rts/posix/OSMem.c
@@ -242,7 +242,7 @@ my_mmap (void *addr, W_ size, int operation)
if (ret == MAP_FAILED && errno == EPERM) {
// Linux may return EPERM if it tried to give us
// a chunk of address space below mmap_min_addr,
- // See Trac #7500.
+ // See #7500.
ret = linux_retry_mmap(operation, size, ret, addr, prot, flags);
}
# endif
diff --git a/rts/posix/Select.c b/rts/posix/Select.c
index 270e6ff45c..211d47dbec 100644
--- a/rts/posix/Select.c
+++ b/rts/posix/Select.c
@@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ awaitEvent(bool wait)
case RTS_FD_IS_INVALID:
/*
* Don't let RTS loop on such descriptors,
- * pass an IOError to blocked threads (Trac #4934)
+ * pass an IOError to blocked threads (#4934)
*/
IF_DEBUG(scheduler,
debugBelch("Killing blocked thread %lu on bad fd=%i\n",
diff --git a/rts/sm/Storage.c b/rts/sm/Storage.c
index dcc5b3a3c7..4636bf45e3 100644
--- a/rts/sm/Storage.c
+++ b/rts/sm/Storage.c
@@ -1372,7 +1372,7 @@ extern void __clear_cache(void * begin, void * end);
#elif defined(__GNUC__)
/* __clear_cache is a libgcc function.
* It existed before __builtin___clear_cache was introduced.
- * See Trac #8562.
+ * See #8562.
*/
extern void __clear_cache(char * begin, char * end);
#endif /* __GNUC__ */
diff --git a/rts/win32/GetTime.c b/rts/win32/GetTime.c
index 014a676e99..61a978e2aa 100644
--- a/rts/win32/GetTime.c
+++ b/rts/win32/GetTime.c
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ getMonotonicNSec()
// TODO: Remove this code path, it cannot be taken because
// `QueryPerformanceFrequency` cannot fail on Windows >= XP
// and GHC no longer supports Windows <= XP.
- // See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/14233
+ // See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/14233
// NOTE: GetTickCount is a 32-bit millisecond value, so it wraps around
// every 49 days.
diff --git a/rules/build-prog.mk b/rules/build-prog.mk
index 82c55a70e1..4ea93e93d5 100644
--- a/rules/build-prog.mk
+++ b/rules/build-prog.mk
@@ -200,7 +200,7 @@ $1/$2/build/tmp/$$($1_$2_PROG) $1/$2/build/tmp/$$($1_$2_PROG).dll : \
$$(foreach dep,$$($1_$2_TRANSITIVE_DEP_COMPONENT_IDS),\
$$$$($$(dep)_dist-$(if $(filter 0,$3),boot,install)_PROGRAM_DEP_LIB))
# Workaround: We use TRANSITIVE_DEP_COMPONENT_IDS here as a workaround for
-# Trac #12078.
+# #12078.
$1_$2_PROG_NEEDS_C_WRAPPER = NO
$1_$2_PROG_INPLACE = $$($1_$2_PROG)
diff --git a/testsuite/driver/testlib.py b/testsuite/driver/testlib.py
index 309a910dcf..ed336c922a 100644
--- a/testsuite/driver/testlib.py
+++ b/testsuite/driver/testlib.py
@@ -1820,7 +1820,7 @@ def normalise_errmsg( str ):
str = str.replace(bullet, '')
# Windows only, this is a bug in hsc2hs but it is preventing
- # stable output for the testsuite. See Trac #9775. For now we filter out this
+ # stable output for the testsuite. See #9775. For now we filter out this
# warning message to get clean output.
if config.msys:
str = re.sub('Failed to remove file (.*); error= (.*)$', '', str)
@@ -2091,7 +2091,7 @@ if config.msys:
# still locked then abort the current test by throwing an exception, this so it won't fail
# with an even more cryptic error.
#
- # See Trac #13162
+ # See #13162
exception = None
while retries > 0 and os.path.exists(testdir):
time.sleep((max_attempts-retries)*6)
diff --git a/testsuite/mk/test.mk b/testsuite/mk/test.mk
index a517698fe1..b1d716fd77 100644
--- a/testsuite/mk/test.mk
+++ b/testsuite/mk/test.mk
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ TEST_HC_OPTS += -fdiagnostics-color=never
TEST_HC_OPTS += -fno-diagnostics-show-caret
endif
-# See Trac #15278.
+# See #15278.
TEST_HC_OPTS += -Werror=compat
# Add the no-debug-output last as it is often convenient to copy the test invocation
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/annotations/should_fail/T10826.stderr b/testsuite/tests/annotations/should_fail/T10826.stderr
index 0e2bed5d8b..465715ad3e 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/annotations/should_fail/T10826.stderr
+++ b/testsuite/tests/annotations/should_fail/T10826.stderr
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
T10826.hs:6:1: error:
Annotations are not compatible with Safe Haskell.
- See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10826
+ See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/10826
In the annotation:
{-# ANN hook (unsafePerformIO (putStrLn "Woops.")) #-}
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_compile/arrowpat.hs b/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_compile/arrowpat.hs
index dda06cfedf..7e117f9c86 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_compile/arrowpat.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_compile/arrowpat.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE Arrows #-}
{-# OPTIONS -fno-warn-redundant-constraints #-}
--- Test for Trac #1662
+-- Test for #1662
module Arrow where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/T2111.hs b/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/T2111.hs
index 352afe2abe..2123773a35 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/T2111.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/T2111.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -XArrows -XRecursiveDo#-}
--- Test Trac #2111
+-- Test #2111
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/all.T b/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/all.T
index cc3d7d5369..4445ecd165 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/all.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/all.T
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ test('arrowfail001',
[''])
# arrowfail001 got an ASSERT error in the stage1 compiler
# because we simply are not typechecking arrow commands
- # correctly. See Trac #5267, #5609, #5605
+ # correctly. See #5267, #5609, #5605
# The fix is patch 'Fix the scope-nesting for arrows' Dec 2014
test('arrowfail002', normal, compile_fail, [''])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/arrowfail004.hs b/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/arrowfail004.hs
index 3e0835a0e4..dafe087cda 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/arrowfail004.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/arrows/should_fail/arrowfail004.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE Arrows, ExistentialQuantification #-}
--- Trac #1662
+-- #1662
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/boxy/Compose.hs b/testsuite/tests/boxy/Compose.hs
index 0caa84cbe1..f3d3a10b28 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/boxy/Compose.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/boxy/Compose.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -XImpredicativeTypes -fno-warn-deprecated-flags -XEmptyDataDecls -XGADTs #-}
--- Trac #1118
+-- #1118
module Compose where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun058.hs b/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun058.hs
index 9bdd551acf..164fa8a850 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun058.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun058.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-- Not really a code-gen test, but this program gave
--- incorrect results in Hugs (Hugs Trac #37), so I
+-- incorrect results in Hugs (Hugs #37), so I
-- thought I'd add it to GHC's test suite.
module Main where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun063.hs b/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun063.hs
index 14f3cb8d14..8439d3abf0 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun063.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun063.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-
Check that we aren't making gcc misinterpret our strings as trigraphs.
-Trac #2968.
+#2968.
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/cpp/Initial-processing.html
-}
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun071.hs b/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun071.hs
index d55ee65e01..c8ee2d17f9 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun071.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/codeGen/should_run/cgrun071.hs
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ popcnt64 (W64# w#) =
W# (popCnt# w#)
#endif
--- Cribbed from http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/3563
+-- Cribbed from https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/3563
slowPopcnt :: Word -> Word
slowPopcnt x = count' (bitSize x) x 0
where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T2409.hs b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T2409.hs
index 163786bb58..bde05cd3e1 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T2409.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T2409.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2409
+-- #2409
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T3263-1.hs b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T3263-1.hs
index 74249cd663..42ae811084 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T3263-1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T3263-1.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #3263. New kind of warning on ignored monadic bindings
+-- #3263. New kind of warning on ignored monadic bindings
module T3263 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T3263-2.hs b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T3263-2.hs
index 71288062c5..f018ddb4d9 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T3263-2.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T3263-2.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #3263. New kind of warning on monadic bindings that discard a monadic result
+-- #3263. New kind of warning on monadic bindings that discard a monadic result
module T3263 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T5252.hs b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T5252.hs
index 70a4531688..ec7399d3cf 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T5252.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/T5252.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #5252
+-- #5252
-- Killed 7.03 when compiled witout -O,
-- because it could not see that x had a product type
-- but MkS still unpacked it
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/ds062.hs b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/ds062.hs
index 18bd5d53e5..724c1bf768 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/ds062.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/ds062.hs
@@ -7,5 +7,5 @@ f x | null x = 1
| otherwise = 2
-- Should not give a non-exhaustive-patterns error
--- See Trac #1759
+-- See #1759
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/ds063.hs b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/ds063.hs
index 74bde90887..9c39bd6d4c 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/ds063.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_compile/ds063.hs
@@ -8,4 +8,4 @@ f ((+1) -> 1) = 5
f _ = 3
-- Should not give an overlapping-patterns or non-exhaustive-patterns error
--- See Trac #2395
+-- See #2395
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_run/T12595.hs b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_run/T12595.hs
index 86e0419f65..7adb07cb00 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_run/T12595.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_run/T12595.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ module Main where
import GHC.Base
--- In Trac #12595 a bogus desugaring led (bizarrely)
+-- In #12595 a bogus desugaring led (bizarrely)
-- to a top-level binding maxInt = maxInt
-- This test just checks that doesn't happen again
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_run/T246.hs b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_run/T246.hs
index 448141cd65..2845db3ab0 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_run/T246.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deSugar/should_run/T246.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ScopedTypeVariables #-}
--- Test Trac #246
+-- Test #246
module Main where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/dependent/should_compile/T16326_Compile1.hs b/testsuite/tests/dependent/should_compile/T16326_Compile1.hs
index 789798b370..138ab486ca 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/dependent/should_compile/T16326_Compile1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/dependent/should_compile/T16326_Compile1.hs
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ type DComp a
f (g x)
-- Ensure that ElimList has a CUSK, beuas it is
--- is used polymorphically its RHS (c.f. Trac #16344)
+-- is used polymorphically its RHS (c.f. #16344)
type family ElimList (a :: Type)
(p :: [a] -> Type)
(s :: [a])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2378.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2378.hs
index 4f12313fc0..cd5d35128e 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2378.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2378.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE StandaloneDeriving, DeriveDataTypeable #-}
module Foo( T ) where
--- Trac 2378
+-- #2378
import Data.Data
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2721.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2721.hs
index 916916d250..53a51d3c06 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2721.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2721.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies, GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving #-}
{-# LANGUAGE UndecidableInstances #-}
--- Trac #2721
+-- #2721
module T2721 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2856.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2856.hs
index fc309585fe..0e91e4e747 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2856.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T2856.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS -fno-warn-redundant-constraints #-}
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies, GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving, StandaloneDeriving, FlexibleInstances #-}
--- Test Trac #2856
+-- Test #2856
module T2856 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/all.T b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/all.T
index 5aa102b871..23f152e195 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/all.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/all.T
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ test('drv-foldable-traversable1', normal, compile, [''])
test('deriving-via-compile', normal, compile, [''])
test('deriving-via-standalone', normal, compile, [''])
test('T6031', [], multimod_compile, ['T6031', '-v0 -O'])
-# Adding -O on T6031 to expose Trac #11245 regardless of way
+# Adding -O on T6031 to expose #11245 regardless of way
test('T1133', [], makefile_test, [])
test('T7704', normal, compile, [''])
test('T7710', normal, compile, [''])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/deriving-1935.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/deriving-1935.hs
index 8bccd58182..add1f73590 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/deriving-1935.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/deriving-1935.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -XDeriveDataTypeable #-}
--- Trac #1935
+-- #1935
-- See Note [Superclasses of derived instance] in TcDeriv
{-# OPTIONS -fno-warn-redundant-constraints #-}
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/drv012.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/drv012.hs
index 1d07a4ee96..c7e696fa49 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/drv012.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/drv012.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
-- !!! deriving for GADTs which declare Haskell98 data types.
--- bug reported as http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/902
+-- bug reported as https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/902
module ShouldSucceed where
data Maybe1 a where {
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/T2394.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/T2394.hs
index 6e62bc364e..32cbe0edcc 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/T2394.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/T2394.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -XDeriveDataTypeable -XStandaloneDeriving #-}
--- Test Trac #2394
+-- Test #2394
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/T2851.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/T2851.hs
index bc7239af0a..9973780760 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/T2851.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/T2851.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
--- Test Trac #2851
+-- Test #2851
module T2851 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/drvfail012.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/drvfail012.hs
index 4a073bbed1..e2bedc7abf 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/drvfail012.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_fail/drvfail012.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #1608
+-- #1608
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_run/T2529.hs b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_run/T2529.hs
index d3c3a4b0a3..c818c3697c 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_run/T2529.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/deriving/should_run/T2529.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2529
+-- #2529
-- The example below successfully performed the {{{show}}}, but {{{reads}}}
-- returns an empty list. It fails in both GHCi and GHC. It succeeds if you
-- replaces the infix symbol with a name.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/eyeball/T3116.hs b/testsuite/tests/eyeball/T3116.hs
index ba2439c897..b193715dbd 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/eyeball/T3116.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/eyeball/T3116.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
-- The thing to look for here is that the implementation
-- of 'length' does not allocate in the inner loop
--
--- See Trac #3116
+-- See #3116
module T3116 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/eyeball/record1.hs b/testsuite/tests/eyeball/record1.hs
index dde6f5ee25..8e3bd92471 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/eyeball/record1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/eyeball/record1.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
-- Check that the record selector for maskMB unfolds in the body of f
-- At one stage it didn't because the implicit unfolding looked too big
--- Trac #2581
+-- #2581
module ShouldCompile where
import Data.Array.Base
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ffi/should_fail/ccfail001.hs b/testsuite/tests/ffi/should_fail/ccfail001.hs
index cd8eb83665..0b7d5e8c7f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ffi/should_fail/ccfail001.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ffi/should_fail/ccfail001.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ForeignFunctionInterface, MagicHash #-}
--- Trac #1037
+-- #1037
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ffi/should_fail/ccfail002.hs b/testsuite/tests/ffi/should_fail/ccfail002.hs
index 86d5e9a1ba..bb089b2106 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ffi/should_fail/ccfail002.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ffi/should_fail/ccfail002.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ForeignFunctionInterface, UnboxedTuples, MagicHash, UnliftedFFITypes #-}
--- Test for Trac #1680
+-- Test for #1680
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/CasePrune.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/CasePrune.hs
index 4048c94c5f..8055bdd8ff 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/CasePrune.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/CasePrune.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving #-}
--- See Trac #1251 and the comments
+-- See #1251 and the comments
-- Note [Pruning dead case alternatives] in types/Unify.lhs
module Main( main ) where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/Session.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/Session.hs
index 2a9b3da6ef..bf50115d77 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/Session.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/Session.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, KindSignatures #-}
--- See Trac #1323; crashed GHC 6.6
+-- See #1323; crashed GHC 6.6
module Main where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/T1999a.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/T1999a.hs
index d8dbc077b9..494812ca29 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/T1999a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/T1999a.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
--- Trac #1999
+-- #1999
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/T2587.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/T2587.hs
index cea1c092d3..e6424d6228 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/T2587.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/T2587.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, ExistentialQuantification #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O -fno-warn-overlapping-patterns #-}
--- Trac #2587
+-- #2587
-- Actually this bug related to free variables and
-- type lets, but ostensibly it has a GADT flavour
-- Hence being in the GADT directory.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/T3013.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/T3013.hs
index 3b123a0d80..4aaf452464 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/T3013.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/T3013.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
--- Trac 3013.
+-- #3013.
-- This isn't strictly a GADT test, but it uses GADT syntax
module T3013 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/T3163.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/T3163.hs
index 13e5ff7de6..985ef9b110 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/T3163.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/T3163.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, RankNTypes, ImpredicativeTypes #-}
--- Test Trac #3163
+-- Test #3163
module Report where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/data1.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/data1.hs
index b9c6ffe19c..7b999c4e80 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/data1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/data1.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
--- Trac #289
+-- #289
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/data2.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/data2.hs
index fcac05880b..29579a89c3 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/data2.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/data2.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, ExistentialQuantification #-}
--- Trac #289
+-- #289
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt-fd.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt-fd.hs
index 7d966c35eb..0899e3ba74 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt-fd.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt-fd.hs
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE FunctionalDependencies #-}
{-# LANGUAGE UndecidableInstances #-}
--- Trac #345
+-- #345
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt17.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt17.hs
index 26eeda9b2a..de99d3888e 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt17.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt17.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
-- This one showed up a bug that required type refinement in TcIface
-- See the call to coreRefineTys in TcIface
--
--- Tests for bug: http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/685
+-- Tests for bug: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/685
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt24.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt24.hs
index 86cece09dd..748b2f19c3 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt24.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/gadt24.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
--- Test for Trac #1396
+-- Test for #1396
-- Panics in GHC 6.6.1
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/karl1.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/karl1.hs
index e201a711f6..8080381b18 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/karl1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/karl1.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, KindSignatures #-}
--- See Trac #301
+-- See #301
-- This particular one doesn't use GADTs per se,
-- but it does use dictionaries in constructors
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/karl2.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/karl2.hs
index 1f46df37ee..de8390f042 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/karl2.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/karl2.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
module Expr0 where
--- See Trac #301
+-- See #301
-- This one *does* use GADTs (Fct)
import Data.Kind (Type)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/gadt/records-fail1.hs b/testsuite/tests/gadt/records-fail1.hs
index 12bb3e0cd3..23f9189090 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/gadt/records-fail1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/gadt/records-fail1.hs
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
-- Record syntax in GADTs has been deprecated since July 2009
-- see commit 432b9c9322181a3644083e3c19b7e240d90659e7 by simonpj:
-- "New syntax for GADT-style record declarations, and associated refactoring"
--- and Trac #3306
+-- and #3306
-- It's been removed in August 2015
-- see Phab D1118
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/prog003/prog003.T b/testsuite/tests/ghci/prog003/prog003.T
index d649f34e80..b824445a96 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/prog003/prog003.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/prog003/prog003.T
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
# This test is very flaky on Windows.
# It is a genuine bug that should be looked at, but
# for the sake of stability of the build bot we disable it for now.
-# See Trac 11317.
+# See #11317.
test('prog003',
[extra_files(['../shell.hs', 'A.hs', 'B.hs', 'C.hs', 'D1.hs', 'D2.hs']),
when(opsys('mingw32'), skip),
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T11098.script b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T11098.script
index fc0fbe8c9e..dadfac74ef 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T11098.script
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T11098.script
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- See Trac #11098
+-- See #11098
:set -XTemplateHaskell
:set -XNamedWildCards
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T2766.script b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T2766.script
index 84b83461b7..9d86258f02 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T2766.script
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T2766.script
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test Trac #2766
+-- Test #2766
:set -XTypeOperators
:m Control.Arrow
:t first :: Arrow to => b `to` c -> (b, d) `to` (c, d)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T3263.hs b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T3263.hs
index 237cf42c6d..1b1d5df082 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T3263.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/T3263.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Wall #-}
--- Test Trac #3263
+-- Test #3263
module T3263 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci019.hs b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci019.hs
index 1cb9fef1a2..14cf726c86 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci019.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci019.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #1581
+-- #1581
-- Even though Eq is not in scope unqualified, we want to
-- see the Eq instance of Foo when we say :i Foo
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci030.hs b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci030.hs
index ed95ea9661..743aa986ea 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci030.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci030.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2082
+-- #2082
-- If we :i D or C, we should see parentheses around (Int -> a)
{-# LANGUAGE ExistentialQuantification #-}
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci031.hs b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci031.hs
index ef5d985f75..f6c6699a24 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci031.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci031.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE DatatypeContexts #-}
--- Trac #2138
+-- #2138
-- If we :i D, we should see the Eq constraint
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci033.hs b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci033.hs
index b67960068d..7f047cda05 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci033.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci033.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test Trac #1930: display of infix constructors
+-- Test #1930: display of infix constructors
module Test where
data Foo = Foo1 Int
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci063.script b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci063.script
index 377f65934c..6cba37b9ab 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci063.script
+++ b/testsuite/tests/ghci/scripts/ghci063.script
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
:! echo module A where {} >A.hs
:! echo module B where { import A } >B.hs
--- Workaround for Trac #16201. We use "touch -r" to set modification
+-- Workaround for #16201. We use "touch -r" to set modification
-- timestamps, which leads to precision loss on Darwin. For example,
--
-- before: 2019-02-25 01:11:23.807627350 +0300
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/IndTypesPerfMerge.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/IndTypesPerfMerge.hs
index 743a41145c..a022c36a85 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/IndTypesPerfMerge.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/IndTypesPerfMerge.hs
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ merge x y = mkMerge (merger x y) x y
{- ------------- NASTY TYPE FOR merge -----------------
- -- See Trac #11408
+ -- See #11408
x:tx, y:ty
mkMerge @ gamma
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/PushedInAsGivens.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/PushedInAsGivens.hs
index 4537d3a21c..844b6ef5c1 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/PushedInAsGivens.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/PushedInAsGivens.hs
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ bar y = let foo :: (F Int ~ [a]) => a -> Int
-- we will not be able to solve the implication constraint.
-- Oct 14: actually this example is _really_ strange, and doesn't illustrate
--- the real issue in Trac #4935, for which there is a separate test
+-- the real issue in #4935, for which there is a separate test
--
-- The example here requires us to infer a type
-- bar :: F Int ~ [a] => ...
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/Records.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/Records.hs
index 8508c66f65..adcc72a459 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/Records.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/Records.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
--- See Trac #1204
+-- See #1204
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T2238.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T2238.hs
index 8e77283d77..f2407ac623 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T2238.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T2238.hs
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE FunctionalDependencies #-}
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses #-}
--- Trac #2238
+-- #2238
-- Notice that class CTF has just one value field, but
-- it also has an equality predicate.
-- See Note [Class newtypes and equality predicates] in BuildTyCl
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T2944.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T2944.hs
index 8470a9dc95..81eb00d51b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T2944.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T2944.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
--- Test Trac #2944
+-- Test #2944
module T2944 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T3017.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T3017.hs
index 8e4e5bd999..cc9fbc9ee8 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T3017.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T3017.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
--- Trac #3017
+-- #3017
module Foo where
class Coll c where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T3590.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T3590.hs
index 6cc79a6f02..ec2caf9564 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T3590.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T3590.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies, FlexibleContexts #-}
--- Trac #3590: a bug in typechecking of sections
+-- #3590: a bug in typechecking of sections
module T3590 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T4178.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T4178.hs
index 96d339dc68..e5bbccc6ee 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T4178.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/T4178.hs
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
MultiParamTypeClasses,
FlexibleInstances #-}
--- See Trac #4178
+-- See #4178
module T4178 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/UnusedTyVarWarnings.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/UnusedTyVarWarnings.hs
index e286f76e3f..bbd0ba922a 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/UnusedTyVarWarnings.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/UnusedTyVarWarnings.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies, PolyKinds #-}
--- See Trac #10982
+-- See #10982
module UnusedTyVarWarnings where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/UnusedTyVarWarningsNamedWCs.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/UnusedTyVarWarningsNamedWCs.hs
index 6d3a48e746..b78626f402 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/UnusedTyVarWarningsNamedWCs.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_compile/UnusedTyVarWarningsNamedWCs.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies, PolyKinds, NamedWildCards #-}
--- See Trac #10982
+-- See #10982
module UnusedTyVarWarningsNamedWCs where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T2334A.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T2334A.hs
index c73402e2d5..79d4c7c890 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T2334A.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T2334A.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
--- Trac #2334
+-- #2334
module Test where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T4272.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T4272.hs
index bc5922b062..d3f1c54581 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T4272.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T4272.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies, ScopedTypeVariables, FlexibleContexts #-}
--- See also Trac #5763 for why we don't really want to see
+-- See also #5763 for why we don't really want to see
-- an occurs-check error from this program
module T4272 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T9357.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T9357.hs
index 9365663523..c03254484f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T9357.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_fail/T9357.hs
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ type family F (a :: k1) :: k2
type instance F Int# = Int
-- This one is actually OK (F is poly-kinded;
- -- c.f. Trac #11120 comment:19
+ -- c.f. #11120 comment:19
type instance F (forall a. a->a) = Int
-- But this one is not (impredicative)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_run/T2985.hs b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_run/T2985.hs
index 6ae6e12c50..161021c6df 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_run/T2985.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/indexed-types/should_run/T2985.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
module Main where
-- See http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lang.haskell.general/16796
--- and Trac #2985
+-- and #2985
instance (Num a, Num b, a ~ b) => Num (a,b) where
(x,y) * (u,v) = (x*u-y*v, x*v+y*u)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/lib/integer/integerGmpInternals.hs b/testsuite/tests/lib/integer/integerGmpInternals.hs
index e45c6f4a48..24780cc2ac 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/lib/integer/integerGmpInternals.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/lib/integer/integerGmpInternals.hs
@@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ main = do
print $ gcdExtInteger (-x) y
print $ gcdExtInteger (-x) (-y)
- -- see Trac #15350
+ -- see #15350
do
let a = 2
b = 2^65 + 1
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_compile/T5486.hs b/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_compile/T5486.hs
index 730a7c2854..ff5d24ca16 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_compile/T5486.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_compile/T5486.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ForeignFunctionInterface, UnliftedFFITypes, UnboxedTuples,
BangPatterns, MagicHash #-}
--- | Test case for Trac #5486
+-- | Test case for #5486
-- Test case reduced from HsOpenSSL package BN module
module Bad where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_compile/T5681.hs b/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_compile/T5681.hs
index 8a94fb44ce..1ce84b6ccb 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_compile/T5681.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_compile/T5681.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE MagicHash, UnboxedTuples #-}
--- Test case for Trac #5681
+-- Test case for #5681
module Main where
import GHC.Prim
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_run/subsections_via_symbols/all.T b/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_run/subsections_via_symbols/all.T
index ef586bc6a0..68ade25e99 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_run/subsections_via_symbols/all.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/llvm/should_run/subsections_via_symbols/all.T
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ setTestOpts(f)
# Note [_ffi_call_unix64]
#
-# Please refer to https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/5019
+# Please refer to https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/5019
# for the subsections_via_symbols.stderr
test('subsections_via_symbols', [only_darwin], makefile_test, [])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/module/T3776.hs b/testsuite/tests/module/T3776.hs
index b522cfe0e0..195fc8ac04 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/module/T3776.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/module/T3776.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
-- Check that although 'index' is apparently only used
-- unqualified, we nevertheless do not get a redundant-import warning
--- Trac #3776
+-- #3776
module T3776 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_compile/read066.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_compile/read066.hs
index 374f76126c..d4adec88ae 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_compile/read066.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_compile/read066.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_NO_SUCH_PRAGMA --no-such-flag #-}
-- We should parse the above as an unrecognised pragma, not as an OPTIONS
--- pragma containing "_NO_SUCH_PRAGMA -wibble". Trac #2847.
+-- pragma containing "_NO_SUCH_PRAGMA -wibble". #2847.
module Test where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_compile/read_1821.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_compile/read_1821.hs
index f9669ab053..8cf39b87e7 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_compile/read_1821.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_compile/read_1821.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
--- Trac #1821
+-- #1821
module Par where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NoNumericUnderscores0.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NoNumericUnderscores0.hs
index 5e6821124a..0c5ddd5723 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NoNumericUnderscores0.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NoNumericUnderscores0.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE NoNumericUnderscores #-}
-- Test for NumericUnderscores extension.
--- See Trac #14473
+-- See #14473
-- This is a testcase for integer literal
-- in NO NumericUnderscores extension.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NoNumericUnderscores1.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NoNumericUnderscores1.hs
index 017f20528b..62594a24a6 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NoNumericUnderscores1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NoNumericUnderscores1.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE NoNumericUnderscores #-}
-- Test for NumericUnderscores extension.
--- See Trac #14473
+-- See #14473
-- This is a testcase for floating literal
-- in NO NumericUnderscores extension.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NumericUnderscoresFail0.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NumericUnderscoresFail0.hs
index 1f04184365..734e07b146 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NumericUnderscoresFail0.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NumericUnderscoresFail0.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE NumericUnderscores #-}
-- Test for NumericUnderscores extension.
--- See Trac #14473
+-- See #14473
-- This is a testcase for invalid case of NumericUnderscores.
main :: IO ()
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NumericUnderscoresFail1.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NumericUnderscoresFail1.hs
index 0a6a3051d6..dc4e8bc854 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NumericUnderscoresFail1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/NumericUnderscoresFail1.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE NumericUnderscores #-}
-- Test for NumericUnderscores extension.
--- See Trac #14473
+-- See #14473
-- This is a testcase for invalid case of NumericUnderscores.
main :: IO ()
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/T3095.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/T3095.hs
index fc7889f7bf..9c508eb81b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/T3095.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_fail/T3095.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE KindSignatures #-}
--- Trac #3095
+-- #3095
module T3095 where
import Data.Kind (Type)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/NumericUnderscores0.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/NumericUnderscores0.hs
index 7aefce95c6..0bc5ee03ec 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/NumericUnderscores0.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/NumericUnderscores0.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE NegativeLiterals #-}
-- Test for NumericUnderscores extension.
--- See Trac #14473
+-- See #14473
-- This is a testcase for boxed literals.
main :: IO ()
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/NumericUnderscores1.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/NumericUnderscores1.hs
index b9d0dca725..638e5353a6 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/NumericUnderscores1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/NumericUnderscores1.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE NegativeLiterals #-}
-- Test for NumericUnderscores extension.
--- See Trac #14473
+-- See #14473
-- This is a testcase for unboxed literals.
import GHC.Types
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/readRun004.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/readRun004.hs
index 5e6545adb1..698aa151af 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/readRun004.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/should_run/readRun004.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
-- should_run to make sure linking succeeds
-- (curried unboxed tuples with both boxed
-- and unboxed components).
--- See Trac #1509; also Note [Primop wrappers] in Id.lhs
+-- See #1509; also Note [Primop wrappers] in Id.lhs
import GHC.Exts
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/parser/unicode/brackets.hs b/testsuite/tests/parser/unicode/brackets.hs
index 33c8e3f44f..72c41524d5 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/parser/unicode/brackets.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/parser/unicode/brackets.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
{-# LANGUAGE UnicodeSyntax #-}
--- See Trac #10162 and #11743 for details
+-- See #10162 and #11743 for details
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_compile/NamedWildcardsAsTyVars.hs b/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_compile/NamedWildcardsAsTyVars.hs
index 8d824f5fec..fdd79394e2 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_compile/NamedWildcardsAsTyVars.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_compile/NamedWildcardsAsTyVars.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
-- enabled and the identifiers starting with _ are parsed as type variables.
-- They should remain valid when the extension is on.
--
--- See Trac #11098 and comments in #10982
+-- See #11098 and comments in #10982
module NamedWildcardsAsTyVars where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_compile/T12033.hs b/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_compile/T12033.hs
index 9d47ec6541..f426b9cdd5 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_compile/T12033.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_compile/T12033.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies, PartialTypeSignatures #-}
--- In Trac #12033 this was called HsakellBug.hs
+-- In #12033 this was called HsakellBug.hs
module T12033 where
tripleStoreToRuleSet :: v -> v
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_fail/NamedWildcardExplicitForall.hs b/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_fail/NamedWildcardExplicitForall.hs
index d0e6e8a14d..4c3852e72c 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_fail/NamedWildcardExplicitForall.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/partial-sigs/should_fail/NamedWildcardExplicitForall.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE RankNTypes, NamedWildCards #-}
--- See Trac #11098
+-- See #11098
module NamedWildcardExplicitForall where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/patsyn/should_fail/T14380.stderr b/testsuite/tests/patsyn/should_fail/T14380.stderr
index 4228d2955c..47dcc93d81 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/patsyn/should_fail/T14380.stderr
+++ b/testsuite/tests/patsyn/should_fail/T14380.stderr
@@ -5,5 +5,5 @@ T14380.hs:8:15: error:
Suggestion: instead use an explicitly bidirectional pattern synonym, e.g.
pattern Bar <- Foo [] where Bar = ...
Reason: rebindable syntax is on.
- This is fixable: add use-case to Trac #14380
+ This is fixable: add use-case to #14380
RHS pattern: Foo []
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/perf/compiler/T9872d.hs b/testsuite/tests/perf/compiler/T9872d.hs
index 5c859eefdc..22d6912aef 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/perf/compiler/T9872d.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/perf/compiler/T9872d.hs
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -freduction-depth=0 #-} -- this should terminate!
module T9872d where
--- Code from Jan Stolarek, labelled "exp-tyfams.hs" on Trac #9872,
+-- Code from Jan Stolarek, labelled "exp-tyfams.hs" on #9872,
-- generated by a Template Haskell program
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T14936.hs b/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T14936.hs
index 187404cc56..90a4412e54 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T14936.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T14936.hs
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ intSize :: Int
intSize = Storable.sizeOf (undefined :: Int)
-- This 'go' loop should allocate nothing, because it specialises
--- for the shape of the state. But in 8.4 it did (Trac #14936)
+-- for the shape of the state. But in 8.4 it did (#14936)
slow :: Int -> IO ()
slow i = do let go 0 = pure ()
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T149_A.hs b/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T149_A.hs
index 22ec276ebc..8065fb1139 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T149_A.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T149_A.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
module Main (main) where
--- See Trac #149
+-- See #149
-- Currently (with GHC 7.0) the CSE works, just,
-- but it's delicate.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T149_B.hs b/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T149_B.hs
index 514fd16a9c..2439efbe4f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T149_B.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T149_B.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
module Main (main) where
--- See Trac #149
+-- See #149
-- Currently (with GHC 7.0) the CSE works, just,
-- but it's delicate.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T5549.hs b/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T5549.hs
index cab0dc0226..9109318056 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T5549.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/perf/should_run/T5549.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
module Main where
--- See Trac #5549
+-- See #5549
-- The issue here is allocating integer constants inside a loop
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/pmcheck/should_compile/T12957a.hs b/testsuite/tests/pmcheck/should_compile/T12957a.hs
index 72330e98e0..d804548480 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/pmcheck/should_compile/T12957a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/pmcheck/should_compile/T12957a.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
{-# LANGUAGE KindSignatures #-}
--- The original test case for Trac #12957
+-- The original test case for #12957
module T12957a where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T11248.hs b/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T11248.hs
index b3a32e3097..cd780d1211 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T11248.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T11248.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O #-}
- -- Trac #11248, comment:6 showed that this tests failed with -O
+ -- #11248, comment:6 showed that this tests failed with -O
{-# LANGUAGE DataKinds, TypeOperators, TypeFamilies,
KindSignatures, ConstraintKinds #-}
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T11480b.hs b/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T11480b.hs
index 2684c6de4e..0ec19753a0 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T11480b.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T11480b.hs
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
-- This code, supplied by Edward Kmett, uses UndecidableSuperClasses along
-- with a bunch of other stuff, so it's a useful stress test.
--- See Trac #11480 comment:12.
+-- See #11480 comment:12.
module T11480b where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T7594.hs b/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T7594.hs
index 925b3f9ace..3b941151e5 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T7594.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T7594.hs
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ q :: ColD (Show :&: Real)
q = ColD (1.2 :: Double)
bar = app print q
--- This one works, as a result of fixing Trac #8644,
+-- This one works, as a result of fixing #8644,
-- because the given constraint is
-- (Show :&: Real) a, which has no equality superclasses
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T8566a.hs b/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T8566a.hs
index 22b628553f..7a4c658ffb 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T8566a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/polykinds/T8566a.hs
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ type family ExpandField (args :: [Field]) :: [Type]
type family AppVars (t :: k) (vs :: [Type]) :: Type
-- This function fails to compile, because we discard
--- 'given' kind equalities. See comment 7 in Trac #8566
+-- 'given' kind equalities. See comment 7 in #8566
-- This is really a bug, I claim
unA :: InField (APP t args) -> AppVars t (ExpandField args)
unA (A x) = x
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/quotes/T2931.hs b/testsuite/tests/quotes/T2931.hs
index 43aeda0ece..9ad6825929 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/quotes/T2931.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/quotes/T2931.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2931
+-- #2931
module Foo where
a = 1
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/quotes/T3572.hs b/testsuite/tests/quotes/T3572.hs
index 4717fd2735..d2a2c67838 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/quotes/T3572.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/quotes/T3572.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE EmptyDataDecls #-}
--- Trac #3572
+-- #3572
module Main where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/quotes/TH_scope.hs b/testsuite/tests/quotes/TH_scope.hs
index 7674a5d1c0..34caa586ff 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/quotes/TH_scope.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/quotes/TH_scope.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test for Trac #2188
+-- Test for #2188
module TH_scope where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rebindable/T303.hs b/testsuite/tests/rebindable/T303.hs
index c9be12469c..23772efeef 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rebindable/T303.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rebindable/T303.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE RebindableSyntax #-}
--- Trac #303
+-- #303
module T where
import qualified Prelude as P
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rebindable/all.T b/testsuite/tests/rebindable/all.T
index 1484dd73d9..7c8caea438 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rebindable/all.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rebindable/all.T
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ test('rebindable4', normal, compile_and_run, [''])
test('rebindable5', normal, compile_and_run, [''])
# rebindable6 has become expected failures
-# following Trac #1537
+# following #1537
test('rebindable6', normal, compile_fail, [''])
test('rebindable7', normal, compile_and_run, [''])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rebindable/rebindable8.hs b/testsuite/tests/rebindable/rebindable8.hs
index 2c1f484f47..f78479202d 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rebindable/rebindable8.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rebindable/rebindable8.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE RebindableSyntax, MultiParamTypeClasses #-}
--- Trac #1537
+-- #1537
module Foo where
import Prelude hiding (Monad(..))
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rebindable/rebindable9.hs b/testsuite/tests/rebindable/rebindable9.hs
index cd3c95ab62..53f408223f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rebindable/rebindable9.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rebindable/rebindable9.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE RebindableSyntax, FlexibleInstances,
MultiParamTypeClasses, FunctionalDependencies #-}
--- Trac #1537
+-- #1537
module Foo where
import qualified Prelude
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1789.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1789.hs
index efe3840e4f..d33ab40c82 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1789.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1789.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-missing-import-lists #-}
--- Test Trac #1789
+-- Test #1789
module T1789 where
import Prelude
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1789_2.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1789_2.hs
index 2ac2a509fe..5fb3c92cfd 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1789_2.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1789_2.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-missing-import-lists #-}
--- Test Trac #1789
+-- Test #1789
module T1789_2 where
import Data.Map (size)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17a.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17a.hs
index a58a766340..998be111dc 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17a.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-unused-top-binds #-}
--- Trac #17
+-- #17
module Temp (foo, bar, quux) where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17b.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17b.hs
index 7946f16deb..d3983fd25d 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17b.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17b.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-unused-local-binds #-}
--- Trac #17
+-- #17
module Temp (foo, bar, quux) where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17c.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17c.hs
index 091524c95a..85ad72e4dd 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17c.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17c.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-unused-pattern-binds #-}
--- Trac #17
+-- #17
module Temp (foo, bar, quux) where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17d.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17d.hs
index 1a4b44d717..5e43c58e47 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17d.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17d.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-unused-matches #-}
--- Trac #17
+-- #17
module Temp (foo, bar, quux) where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17e.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17e.hs
index 93ed1f7344..c64f008f89 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17e.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T17e.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-unused-binds #-}
--- Trac #17
+-- #17
module Temp (foo, bar, quux) where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1972.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1972.hs
index 09dd8acaf4..d4da5f41aa 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1972.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T1972.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-name-shadowing -fwarn-unused-binds #-}
--- Trac #1972
+-- #1972
module Temp where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T2205.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T2205.hs
index 580dea247a..c35c13d9d6 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T2205.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T2205.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -XTypeOperators #-}
-- Test fixity of type operators
--- Trac #2205
+-- #2205
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T2506.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T2506.hs
index 1e31a12c12..e12ebe3822 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T2506.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T2506.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2506
+-- #2506
module ShouldCompile where
import Control.Exception (assert)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T3221.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T3221.hs
index 970abfb403..83b7a72bef 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T3221.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T3221.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Werror -fwarn-unused-binds #-}
--- Test Trac #3221: the constructors are used by the deriving
+-- Test #3221: the constructors are used by the deriving
-- clause, even though they are not exported
module T3221( Foo ) where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T3262.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T3262.hs
index 01437d8d2f..b56226c846 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T3262.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/T3262.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS -fwarn-name-shadowing #-}
--- Trac #3262: report shadowing in g but not f
+-- #3262: report shadowing in g but not f
module T3262 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn051.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn051.hs
index ee5b53ee8e..ff326e26ef 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn051.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn051.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS -XNoImplicitPrelude #-}
-- This one crashed GHC 6.6 in lookupDeprec
--- See Trac #1128
+-- See #1128
-- and Note [Used names with interface not loaded]
-- in RnNames
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn058.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn058.hs
index 838f58b1c7..4d6576b094 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn058.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn058.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ForeignFunctionInterface #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fwarn-unused-imports #-}
--- Trac #1386
+-- #1386
-- We do not want a warning about unused imports
module Foo () where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn062.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn062.hs
index dbb5493fb9..92fd480345 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn062.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_compile/rn062.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2055
+-- #2055
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T12146.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T12146.hs
index e44be13f04..f9161606f3 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T12146.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T12146.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test Trac #12146
+-- Test #12146
module T12146 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2490.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2490.hs
index 31afc0987a..052ee5c859 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2490.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2490.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2490
+-- #2490
module ShouldFail where
-- All these sections are illegal
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2901.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2901.hs
index a703a5e53d..ca9730a0d1 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2901.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2901.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE DisambiguateRecordFields #-}
--- Trac #2901
+-- #2901
module T2901 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2993.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2993.hs
index d5de095461..f8c7488812 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2993.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T2993.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeOperators #-}
--- Trac #2993
+-- #2993
module T2993 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T3265.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T3265.hs
index e938bbc34d..8e34fc2849 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T3265.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T3265.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses #-}
--- Test Trac #3265
+-- Test #3265
module T3265 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T4042.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T4042.hs
index 6f920edd6e..fec8282788 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T4042.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/T4042.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test Trac #4042
+-- Test #4042
module T4042 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail048.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail048.hs
index d1c8d73eb0..9d1c4d4e0f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail048.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail048.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #1888
+-- #1888
-- Pretty printing for pragmas
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail052.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail052.hs
index 63a0dfd6d1..bffb7e0d96 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail052.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail052.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-- Error messages when you use 'forall' *without* the RankN flags
--- Test cases similar to Trac #2114
+-- Test cases similar to #2114
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail053.hs b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail053.hs
index dbc219271b..1135f42b8a 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail053.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rename/should_fail/rnfail053.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test Trac #2114 (error message)
+-- Test #2114 (error message)
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/rts/T10590.hs b/testsuite/tests/rts/T10590.hs
index 24198abb30..96309efff0 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/rts/T10590.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/rts/T10590.hs
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ main = do
yield -- kick RTS IO manager
{-
- Trac #10590 exposed a bug as:
+ #10590 exposed a bug as:
T10590: internal error: removeThreadFromDeQueue: not found
(GHC version 7.11.20150702 for x86_64_unknown_linux)
Please report this as a GHC bug: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/reportabug
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/T9646/readme.txt b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/T9646/readme.txt
index 3109c17b6d..3dd6b6fcba 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/T9646/readme.txt
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/T9646/readme.txt
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-This is a test for https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/9646
+This is a test for https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/9646
The problem addressed in that ticket was that under some circumstances,
GHC < 7.10.3 was failing to perform eta reduction deterministically.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/Makefile b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/Makefile
index e9f00a526f..edb74eed24 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/Makefile
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/Makefile
@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ T3055:
T5658b:
$(RM) -f T5658b.o T5658b.hi
'$(TEST_HC)' $(TEST_HC_OPTS) -O -c T5658b.hs -ddump-simpl | grep -c indexIntArray
-# Trac 5658 meant that there were three calls to indexIntArray instead of two
+# #5658 meant that there were three calls to indexIntArray instead of two
# (now four due to join-point discount causing W/W to stabilize unfolding)
T5776:
@@ -255,4 +255,4 @@ T14140:
T15631:
$(RM) -f T15631.o T15631.hi
'$(TEST_HC)' $(TEST_HC_OPTS) -O -c -ddump-simpl -dsuppress-uniques -dsuppress-ticks T15631.hs | grep 'case'
-# Expecting one fewwer case expressions after fixing Trac #15631
+# Expecting one fewwer case expressions after fixing #15631
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T11562.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T11562.hs
index e273f6002e..72093a7180 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T11562.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T11562.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
{-# LANGUAGE NoImplicitPrelude #-}
--- Trac #11562 reported an ASSERT error
+-- #11562 reported an ASSERT error
-- It only showed up /without/ -O, and obviously
-- with a compiler built with -DDEBUG
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T2520.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T2520.hs
index f0115474ea..a081c42988 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T2520.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T2520.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
--- Trac #2520: a bug in the specialiser when we tried to
+-- #2520: a bug in the specialiser when we tried to
-- quantify over an Internal Name
module Types where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3016.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3016.hs
index bfe11a80a0..aeb43ad87e 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3016.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3016.hs
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
--- Test Trac #3016.
+-- Test #3016.
-- The issue here is whether it compiles in a reasonable time
-- With GHC 6.10 it took hours! After fixing the bug (which
-- was too much inlining) it went down to 30s.
--- This also tests Trac #5652, a complexity issue with the LLVM
+-- This also tests #5652, a complexity issue with the LLVM
-- backend for this module. Compile time down from 10 min to
-- 12 seconds.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3118.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3118.hs
index 8ee50b342a..4193e7db4c 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3118.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3118.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test Trac #3118
+-- Test #3118
-- The test is quite delicate. It aims to get 'f' to look like
-- f y = case x of
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3234.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3234.hs
index 7969bf60fa..ce215ec4d7 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3234.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T3234.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #3234
+-- #3234
-- Should give a use of foldr/single
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T4306.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T4306.hs
index ba32981f61..548e132497 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T4306.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T4306.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #4306
+-- #4306
-- Check that the worker for 'upd' has only one argument
module T4306 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702.hs
index 771ace0202..761463f381 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
-- The contents of this file are irrelevant. It is merely
-- the target for compilation by the T7702Plugin, which
--- exhibits the space leak in Trac #7702
+-- exhibits the space leak in #7702
module Main where
main :: IO ()
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702plugin/T7702plugin.cabal b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702plugin/T7702plugin.cabal
index 953ba3c5d3..36be93149f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702plugin/T7702plugin.cabal
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/T7702plugin/T7702plugin.cabal
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
Name: T7702plugin
Version: 0.1
-Synopsis: Plugin which tests space leak fix in Trac #7702
+Synopsis: Plugin which tests space leak fix in #7702
Cabal-Version: >= 1.2
Build-Type: Simple
Author: Andrew Farmer
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/rule1.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/rule1.hs
index 6894f827c9..47b21c9681 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/rule1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/rule1.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
--- This one triggers the bug reported in Trac #1092
+-- This one triggers the bug reported in #1092
-- The problem is that the rule
-- forall w. f (\v->w) = w
-- erroneously matches the call
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl-T1370.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl-T1370.hs
index 7524f13bac..a0a75e0dee 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl-T1370.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl-T1370.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
--- See Trac #1370
+-- See #1370
-- THis made GHC 6.6 diverge!
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl014.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl014.hs
index 4e03b401a8..34aba15a95 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl014.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl014.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
-- This one make SpecConstr generate bogus code (hence -O2),
-- with a lint error, in GHC 6.4.1
--- C.f. http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/737
+-- C.f. https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/737
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl017.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl017.hs
index ecb48cce14..9a9da06263 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl017.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl017.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS -XImpredicativeTypes -fno-warn-deprecated-flags -XEmptyDataDecls -XGADTs -XLiberalTypeSynonyms -XFlexibleInstances -XScopedTypeVariables #-}
--- See Trac #1627. The point is that we should get nice
+-- See #1627. The point is that we should get nice
-- compact code for Foo
-- In GHC 7.0 this fails, and rightly so.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl018.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl018.hs
index a4cb6a80b8..613c612c25 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl018.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl018.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
-- See Note [Float coercions (unlifted)] in Simplify
-- This one gave a CoreLint error when compiled optimised
--
--- See also Trac #1718, of which this is a simplified version
+-- See also #1718, of which this is a simplified version
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl019.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl019.hs
index 66b8fc4764..cdac0cfaf2 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl019.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/simpl019.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, FlexibleInstances #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O2 #-}
--- See Trac #1746
+-- See #1746
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/spec003.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/spec003.hs
index 5ea6d33283..15f6bd7b20 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/spec003.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_compile/spec003.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-redundant-constraints #-}
--- Trac #1402
+-- #1402
-- Broke the specialiser
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T13429_2.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T13429_2.hs
index 45b3e9c34d..585c059250 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T13429_2.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T13429_2.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- This one come from lehins, between comment:22 and 23 of Trac #13429
+-- This one come from lehins, between comment:22 and 23 of #13429
module Main where
import T13429_2a as Array
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T2486.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T2486.hs
index 2f5df48532..a6d5112d7b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T2486.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T2486.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O -ddump-rules #-}
--- Trac #2486
+-- #2486
--
-- The thing to look for here is that specialisations for fib and tak
-- at both Int and Double are indeed generated; hence -ddump-rules
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3403.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3403.hs
index 276aae88b2..21c30f2d33 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3403.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3403.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE BangPatterns #-}
--- See Trac #3403: interaction of pattern match failure and CPR
+-- See #3403: interaction of pattern match failure and CPR
-- The point is that this should run in constant space, with no
-- stack growth. In GHC 6.10 the tail call optimisation didn't work.
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3437.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3437.hs
index 9ef6ee8b82..6875bebd55 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3437.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T3437.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE BangPatterns #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O2 #-}
--- Trac #3437
+-- #3437
-- When we do SpecConstr on 'go', we want the specialised
-- function to *still* be strict in k. Otherwise we get
-- a bad space leak!
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T5587.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T5587.hs
index 4909154dab..8dc74604e3 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T5587.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T5587.hs
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ hiddenError = error "hidden error"
main = print $ seq (head (map (\a -> \b -> hiddenError) (hiddenError::[] Bool))) id [1]
-{- See notes in Trac #5587
+{- See notes in #5587
f a b = a
he = hiddenError::[Bool]
main = print $ seq (head (map f he)) id [1]
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T9128.hs b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T9128.hs
index 73aa39b31b..cccda53c41 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T9128.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/simplCore/should_run/T9128.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ module Main where
newtype T a = MkT a
--- Trac #9128: we treated x as absent!!!!
+-- #9128: we treated x as absent!!!!
f x = let {-# NOINLINE h #-}
h = case x of MkT g -> g
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/stage1/T2632.hs b/testsuite/tests/stage1/T2632.hs
index 71f6350cc2..64349c926d 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/stage1/T2632.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/stage1/T2632.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2632
+-- #2632
module MkData where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T10482a.hs b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T10482a.hs
index e633ebe6b7..2f5a0e0665 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T10482a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T10482a.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-unbox-small-strict-fields #-}
-- Makes f2 a bit more challenging
--- Tests inspired by Note [CPR examples] in DmdAnal, and Trac #10482
+-- Tests inspired by Note [CPR examples] in DmdAnal, and #10482
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T1988.hs b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T1988.hs
index a27fdd8da5..c6c498b710 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T1988.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T1988.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O2 #-}
--- Trac #1988: this one killed GHC 6.8.2
+-- #1988: this one killed GHC 6.8.2
-- at least with -O2
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T9208.hs b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T9208.hs
index 5243445c96..2a4f5b40ad 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T9208.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/T9208.hs
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
-- and unsafe-coerces it to a function, and applies it.
-- This is caught by an ASSERT with a debug compiler.
--
--- See Trac #9208 for discussion
+-- See #9208 for discussion
--
--------------------------------------------
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/all.T b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/all.T
index 3cff3c7888..970417e11c 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/all.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_compile/all.T
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ test('T8743', [], multimod_compile, ['T8743', '-v0'])
# T10482
# The intent here is to check that $wfoo has type
# $wfoo :: Int# -> Int# -> Int
-# with two unboxed args. See Trac #10482 for background
+# with two unboxed args. See #10482 for background
#
# Set -dppr-cols to ensure output doesn't wrap
test('T10482', [ grep_errmsg(r'wfoo.*Int#') ], compile, ['-dppr-cols=200 -ddump-simpl'])
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ test('T10482a', [ grep_errmsg(r'wf.*Int#') ], compile, ['-dppr-cols=200 -ddump
test('T9208', when(compiler_debugged(), expect_broken(9208)), compile, [''])
# T9208 fails (and should do so) if you have assertion checking on in the compiler
-# Hence the above expect_broken. See comments in the Trac ticket
+# Hence the above expect_broken. See comments in the ticket
test('T10694', [ grep_errmsg(r'Str=') ], compile, ['-dppr-cols=200 -ddump-simpl'])
test('T11770', [ check_errmsg('OneShot') ], compile, ['-ddump-simpl'])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_run/T11555a.hs b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_run/T11555a.hs
index 29f2a49680..fc2e8b83ba 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_run/T11555a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/stranal/should_run/T11555a.hs
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ import GHC.Exts
type RAW a = ContT () IO a
--- See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/11555
+-- See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/11555
catchSafe1, catchSafe2 :: IO a -> (SomeException -> IO a) -> IO a
catchSafe1 a b = lazy a `catch` b
catchSafe2 a b = join (evaluate a) `catch` b
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/Makefile b/testsuite/tests/th/Makefile
index 87a6738160..2962327c3f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/Makefile
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/Makefile
@@ -2,8 +2,8 @@ TOP=../..
include $(TOP)/mk/boilerplate.mk
include $(TOP)/mk/test.mk
-# Trac 2386 requires batch-compile not --make
-# Very important: without -O
+# #2386 requires batch-compile not --make
+# Very important: without -O
T2386:
'$(TEST_HC)' $(TEST_HC_OPTS) $(ghcThWayFlags) -v0 -c T2386_Lib.hs
'$(TEST_HC)' $(TEST_HC_OPTS) $(ghcThWayFlags) -v0 -c T2386.hs
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/T11629.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/T11629.hs
index b22365fe60..4fcc093823 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/T11629.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/T11629.hs
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ do
let [ty3', ty4'] = map (withoutSig . getType) insts
when (ty3 /= ty3') $ failMsg "C" ty3 ty3'
- -- The following won't work. See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/12853
+ -- The following won't work. See https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/12853
-- when (ty4 /= ty4') $ failMsg "D" ty4 ty4'
-- test #3: type quotations and reified types should agree wrt to
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/T2386.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/T2386.hs
index b7a03469cf..a52df28513 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/T2386.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/T2386.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
--- Test Trac #2386
+-- Test #2386
module T2386 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/T2597a.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/T2597a.hs
index d403723e43..b279f04bb2 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/T2597a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/T2597a.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
--- Test Trac #2597 (first bug)
+-- Test #2597 (first bug)
module ShouldCompile where
import T2597a_Lib
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/T2597b.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/T2597b.hs
index 0e1551ea22..ac04207436 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/T2597b.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/T2597b.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
--- Test Trac #2597 (second bug)
+-- Test #2597 (second bug)
module ShouldCompile where
import T2597b_Lib
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/T2674.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/T2674.hs
index 3413193343..7687bad4da 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/T2674.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/T2674.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
--- Trac #2674
+-- #2674
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/T3100.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/T3100.hs
index 40adf6a7b6..0f211e3b13 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/T3100.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/T3100.hs
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
-- there is a predicate but no 'forall'
--
-- There are two tests in here; both should be fine
--- Trac ticket: #3100
+-- Ticket: #3100
module T3100 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/T3467.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/T3467.hs
index cf495b9673..f2c72c46a4 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/T3467.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/T3467.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
--- Test Trac #3467
+-- Test #3467
module T3467 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_1tuple.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_1tuple.hs
index ea1a1195ab..c1314b0bb9 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_1tuple.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_1tuple.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
--- Trac #2358
+-- #2358
module ShouldFail where
import Language.Haskell.TH
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_emptycase.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_emptycase.hs
index fc75cfe5b0..cf947d827d 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_emptycase.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_emptycase.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell, EmptyCase #-}
--- Trac #2431: empty case expression
+-- #2431: empty case expression
-- now accepted
module Main where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_reifyMkName.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_reifyMkName.hs
index 7c4d7196e0..5fed9b44f2 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_reifyMkName.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_reifyMkName.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2339
+-- #2339
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_runIO.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_runIO.hs
index 7a1f4c3d70..9d9b485113 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_runIO.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_runIO.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
--- See Trac #1678
+-- See #1678
module TH where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_spliceGuard.hs b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_spliceGuard.hs
index 4c220e85b5..c349150c20 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/th/TH_spliceGuard.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/th/TH_spliceGuard.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -XTemplateHaskell #-}
--- Trac #2017
+-- #2017
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD1.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD1.hs
index 0c8942ad95..ef458e1ff5 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD1.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD1.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses, FunctionalDependencies #-}
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances, FlexibleContexts #-}
--- Trac #1781
+-- #1781
-- This one should really succeed, because 'plus' can only
-- be called with a = Int->Int, but the old fundep story
-- certainly made it fail, and so that's what we expect for now
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD2.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD2.hs
index 571d2daece..f8732c846d 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD2.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD2.hs
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses, FunctionalDependencies #-}
{-# LANGUAGE ScopedTypeVariables, FlexibleContexts #-}
--- Trac #1783
--- Like Trac #1781 you could argue that this one should succeed
+-- #1783
+-- Like #1781 you could argue that this one should succeed
-- but we stick with the old behaviour for now. When we do
-- fundeps properly it'll probably start to work
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD3.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD3.hs
index a2f7d003a7..475e379c10 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD3.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD3.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses, FunctionalDependencies, FlexibleInstances #-}
--- Trac #1795
+-- #1795
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD4.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD4.hs
index 51650324ca..88444772ec 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD4.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/FD4.hs
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
FlexibleInstances,
EmptyDataDecls #-}
--- Trac #1797
+-- #1797
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/Makefile b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/Makefile
index ac18b2f4b3..5255485601 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/Makefile
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/Makefile
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ tc245:
$(RM) -f tc245.hi tc245.o
'$(TEST_HC)' $(TEST_HC_OPTS) --make tc245
-# Trac #5792 gave an error on the second compilation,
+# #5792 gave an error on the second compilation,
# presumably because of the .hi file
T5792:
$(RM) -f T5792.o T5792.hi
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T12734a.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T12734a.hs
index 5f1da8b818..d535300994 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T12734a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T12734a.hs
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ test_ghc_err = test_gr @(KT A '[Ty] IO)
@(Expr Net '[Ty])
-}
-{- Some notes. See comment:10 on Trac #12734
+{- Some notes. See comment:10 on #12734
[W] Con m (TStk t lrs)
[W] Inferable A lrs m
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T13651.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T13651.hs
index 63bd88eb5c..57e627aa71 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T13651.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T13651.hs
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ foo :: (F cr cu ~ Bar h (Bar r u),
foo = undefined
{- Typechecking this program used to /just/ succeed in GHC 8.2,
- (see Trac #14745 for why), but doesn't in 8.4.
+ (see #14745 for why), but doesn't in 8.4.
[G] F cr cu ~ Bar h (Bar r u),
F cu cs ~ Bar (Foo h) (Bar u s))
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1470.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1470.hs
index b8009f2bc3..c19a520bf4 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1470.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1470.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-redundant-constraints #-}
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses, FlexibleContexts, FlexibleInstances, UndecidableInstances, KindSignatures #-}
--- Trac #1470
+-- #1470
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1495.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1495.hs
index 0de4e456de..7865ee6543 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1495.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T1495.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test Trac #1495
+-- Test #1495
module CompilerBug where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2045.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2045.hs
index 78b924a6ea..00e17edfa2 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2045.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2045.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE EmptyDataDecls #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-type-defaults #-}
--- Trac #2045
+-- #2045
-- ghc -fhpc --make Vhdl.hs -o gencirc -Wall
module ShouleCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2433.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2433.hs
index 727ec6bb9b..e916e91b07 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2433.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2433.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE StandaloneDeriving #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveDataTypeable #-}
--- Test Trac #2433
+-- Test #2433
module T2433 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494-2.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494-2.hs
index 543f8f47fe..094cd10fb6 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494-2.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494-2.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE RankNTypes, ScopedTypeVariables #-}
--- Trac #2494, should compile ok
+-- #2494, should compile ok
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494.hs
index 3e6c09c39c..cbcc5352b0 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2494.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE RankNTypes, ScopedTypeVariables #-}
--- Trac #2494, should generate an error message
+-- #2494, should generate an error message
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2497.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2497.hs
index 55c390dbed..12abe8e798 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2497.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2497.hs
@@ -5,13 +5,13 @@ module ShouldCompile() where
foo x = x
{-# NOINLINE [1] foo #-}
--- Trac #2497; test should compile without language
+-- #2497; test should compile without language
-- pragmas to switch on the forall
{-# RULES "id" forall (x :: a). foo x = x #-}
--- Trac #2213; eq should not be reported as unused
+-- #2213; eq should not be reported as unused
eq,beq :: Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
{-# NOINLINE [0] eq #-}
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2572.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2572.hs
index 0360749c2c..7856890f06 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2572.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2572.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE RankNTypes, ScopedTypeVariables #-}
--- Trac #2572
+-- #2572
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2735.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2735.hs
index 81deb7dda4..f9bc784a7b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2735.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T2735.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2735
+-- #2735
module Bug where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3018.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3018.hs
index f584f1bacc..77b656af17 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3018.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3018.hs
@@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ instance Data (SubstD_B a t) t' => Subst_B a t t' where
subst_B = undefined
-{- Commentary from Trac #3018
+{- Commentary from #3018
Here are the key lines of code:
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3219.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3219.hs
index 5c23c1727d..52182c6d3b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3219.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3219.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #3219. Lint error in GHC 6.10
+-- #3219. Lint error in GHC 6.10
module T3219 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3346.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3346.hs
index c163cecd09..30b49f731d 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3346.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3346.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
--- Trac #3346
+-- #3346
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3391.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3391.hs
index eb569366b5..f773af32ac 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3391.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3391.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
-- We should only generate one set of generic to/from functions
-- for T, despite the multiple chunks caused by the TH splices
--- See Trac #3391
+-- See #3391
module T3391 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3955.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3955.hs
index 220c4e7c25..dc594c1b7b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3955.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T3955.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving #-}
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses, FlexibleInstances #-}
--- Test for Trac #3955
+-- Test for #3955
module T3955 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9708.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9708.hs
index 38788574fc..e87b8e8094 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9708.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9708.hs
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ import Data.Proxy
type family SomeFun (n :: Nat)
--- See the Trac ticket; whether this succeeds or fails is distinctly random
+-- See the ticket; whether this succeeds or fails is distinctly random
-- upon creation, commit f861fc6ad8e5504a4fecfc9bb0945fe2d313687c, this failed
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9971.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9971.hs
index e02b21e398..57f8d3bc5b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9971.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9971.hs
@@ -11,5 +11,5 @@ foo = error "urk"
bar x = [op foo, op foo]
-- This gives rise to a [D] Vertex a1 ~ Vertex a2
- -- And that made the canonicaliser go into a loop (Trac #9971)
+ -- And that made the canonicaliser go into a loop (#9971)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9973.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9973.hs
index 1a2148f4fa..4639a6c768 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9973.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/T9973.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
module T9973 where
duplicateDecl :: (Eq t) => t -> IO ()
--- Trac #9973 was a bogus "redundant constraint" here
+-- #9973 was a bogus "redundant constraint" here
duplicateDecl sigs
= do { newSpan <- return typeSig
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/all.T b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/all.T
index 81a63c594f..9d8f905bf3 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/all.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/all.T
@@ -368,7 +368,7 @@ test('PolytypeDecomp', normal, compile, [''])
test('T6011', normal, compile, [''])
test('T6055', normal, compile, [''])
test('DfltProb1', normal, compile, ['-O'])
-# Add -O for DfltProb1 to expose Trac #11291
+# Add -O for DfltProb1 to expose #11291
test('DfltProb2', normal, compile, [''])
test('T6134', normal, compile, [''])
test('T6018', [], multimod_compile, ['T6018', ''])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/syn-perf2.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/syn-perf2.hs
index 7a07bfa643..6f9a9430ae 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/syn-perf2.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/syn-perf2.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-- Another type-synonym performance test
--- (Trac 323)
+-- (#323)
-- Fails in GHC up to 6.6
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc208.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc208.hs
index 6fad1b21f4..8d9bb3636e 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc208.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc208.hs
@@ -4,11 +4,11 @@
-- This program failed to typecheck in an early version of
-- GHC with impredicative polymorphism, but it was fixed by
-- doing pre-subsumption in the subsumption check.
--- Trac bug #821
+-- bug #821
module ShouldCompile where
type PPDoc = (?env :: Int) => Char
f :: Char -> PPDoc
-f = succ
+f = succ
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc217.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc217.hs
index c42c1eb33b..9835da8df1 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc217.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc217.hs
@@ -12,9 +12,9 @@ instance Eq (a -> b) where
instance Show (a -> b) where
show = const "<fun>"
--- This is the example from Trac #179
+-- This is the example from #179
foo x = show (\_ -> True)
--- This is the example from Trac #963
+-- This is the example from #963
instance (Num a, Monad m, Eq (m a), Show (m a)) => Num (m a) where
test = 1 True
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc220.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc220.hs
index f9f5443bc0..7c87742ba6 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc220.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc220.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveDataTypeable #-}
--- See Trac #1033
+-- See #1033
module Pointful' where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc226.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc226.hs
index d9c94c2c43..fa67a4525f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc226.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc226.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O -funbox-strict-fields #-}
-- The combination of unboxing and a recursive newtype crashed GHC 6.6.1
--- Trac #1255
+-- #1255
-- Use -O to force the unboxing to happen
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc227.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc227.hs
index 5a4736eccc..cf439cf49f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc227.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc227.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-- Ensure that tuple instances are brought into scope
--- See Trac #1385
+-- See #1385
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc228.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc228.hs
index a3d1c2f464..7989674847 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc228.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc228.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ExistentialQuantification #-}
-- Without a type sig this is slightly tricky.
--- See Trac #1430
+-- See #1430
-- Reason: we get an implication constraint (forall a. Typeable a => Typeable b),
-- when generalising unExTypeable. We want to infer a context for the
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc230.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc230.hs
index 0371ec904f..f6bd86e892 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc230.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc230.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-redundant-constraints #-}
{-# LANGUAGE ImplicitParams, RankNTypes #-}
--- Trac #1445
+-- #1445
module Bug where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc231.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc231.hs
index 1c00294009..9d0fc8316b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc231.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc231.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -ddump-types -dsuppress-module-prefixes #-}
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses, FunctionalDependencies, FlexibleContexts #-}
--- See Trac #1456
+-- See #1456
-- The key thing here is that foo should get the type
-- foo :: forall b s t1. (Zork s (Z [Char]) b)
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc232.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc232.hs
index 2fc8544ab3..0f3294cac7 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc232.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc232.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-redundant-constraints #-}
-- This one fixed the constraint solver (Lint error)
--- See Trac #1494
+-- See #1494
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc235.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc235.hs
index 39bda75168..57381fabea 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc235.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc235.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE AllowAmbiguousTypes #-}
-- 'x' and 'v' are ambiguous
--- Trac #1564
+-- #1564
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc239.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc239.hs
index f3941d3427..fef339c0db 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc239.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc239.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-redundant-constraints #-}
--- Trac #1072
+-- #1072
module ShouldCompile where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc241.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc241.hs
index 8dca34314a..dd986b5c51 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc241.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc241.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -XGADTs -XRankNTypes -O1 #-}
--- Trac #2018
+-- #2018
module Bug1 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc242.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc242.hs
index eda338bc8a..1faa70734d 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc242.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_compile/tc242.hs
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ f1 (x:xs) = xs ++ [ x :: a ] -- OK
f2 :: forall a. [a] -> [a]
f2 = \(x:xs) -> xs ++ [ x :: a ] -- OK
--- This pair is a cut-down version of Trac #2030
+-- This pair is a cut-down version of #2030
isSafe alts = isSafeAlts alts
isSafeAlts :: forall m . Int -> m Int
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/FDsFromGivens.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/FDsFromGivens.hs
index 110199b97b..39333f6614 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/FDsFromGivens.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/FDsFromGivens.hs
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ class C a b | a -> b where
{- Failing, as it righteously should! It's inaccessible code -}
-- But (c.f. test T5236) we no longer reject this in the
--- typechecker (see Trac #12466)
+-- typechecker (see #12466)
-- Instead we get a redundant pattern-match warning,
-- in the post-typechecking pattern-match checks
g1 :: (C Char [a], C Char Bool) => a -> ()
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T10715.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T10715.hs
index 801ec4a5d7..a3d5d261c9 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T10715.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T10715.hs
@@ -6,10 +6,10 @@ import Data.Ord ( Down ) -- convenient newtype
data X a
--- See Trac #10715 for a long discussion about whether
+-- See #10715 for a long discussion about whether
-- this should be accepted or not.
--
--- But in Trac #12466 we decided to accept contradictory
+-- But in #12466 we decided to accept contradictory
-- type signatures, so definition is now accepeted even
-- though you can never call it. Instead we get a
-- redundant pattern-match warning, in the
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T11948.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T11948.hs
index 2b737be0ad..13ecce5d8e 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T11948.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T11948.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses, TypeFamilies, NoMonoLocalBinds #-}
-- The NoMonoLocalBinds is crucial to making inference fail
--- See Trac #11948 comment:2
+-- See #11948 comment:2
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleContexts, ScopedTypeVariables #-}
module T11948 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1633.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1633.hs
index fb95956774..d76bd71298 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1633.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1633.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances #-}
-- This just tests what the kind error message looks like
--- Trac #1633
+-- #1633
module T1633 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1899.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1899.hs
index a49b647be7..835d8f1aa2 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1899.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T1899.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test for Trac #1899
+-- Test for #1899
module T1899 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2126.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2126.hs
index 0720565b0c..9abfe10a20 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2126.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2126.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #2126
+-- #2126
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2307.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2307.hs
index 5bf508679c..6ca238b097 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2307.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2307.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
IncoherentInstances,
FlexibleInstances #-}
--- Trac #2307
+-- #2307
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2414.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2414.hs
index fba628db27..205a525af9 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2414.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2414.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Test for Trac #2414
+-- Test for #2414
-- Should provoke an occurs-check error
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2538.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2538.hs
index 11d9c479b5..849256ad3a 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2538.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2538.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
--- Trac #2538
+-- #2538
module ShouldFail where
import Data.Ix
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2714.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2714.hs
index b5e8d9c8b9..52d67e38ec 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2714.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2714.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ScopedTypeVariables, RankNTypes #-}
--- Trac #2714
+-- #2714
module T2714 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2806.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2806.hs
index ac95542c94..e348d25e9b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2806.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2806.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE MagicHash #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Wunbanged-strict-patterns #-}
--- Trac #2806
+-- #2806
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2994.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2994.hs
index cd09745aba..aed2c4aa21 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2994.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T2994.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses #-}
--- Trac #2994
+-- #2994
module T2994 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3155.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3155.hs
index 3a4c0d2f77..81f8c7d139 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3155.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3155.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, TypeOperators #-}
module T3155 where
--- Test Trac #3155
+-- Test #3155
-- Gave bad error message in GHC 6.10
data Any s where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3176.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3176.hs
index 0235ad712f..e87f86b64f 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3176.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3176.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ExistentialQuantification #-}
--- Trac #3176
+-- #3176
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3323.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3323.hs
index 22ed520806..3a5f27eccc 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3323.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3323.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #3323
+-- #3323
module T3323 where
import GHC.IO.Handle.Types
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3406.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3406.hs
index e31a32a79c..fbc314061c 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3406.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3406.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE ScopedTypeVariables #-}
--- Trac #3406
+-- #3406
-- A pattern signature that discards the bound variables
module T3406 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3613.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3613.hs
index 8b6f745027..fe68db520e 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3613.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T3613.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- c.f Trac #3613
+-- c.f #3613
module T3613 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T5236.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T5236.hs
index f32c06dcdb..9f617826c3 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T5236.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T5236.hs
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ instance Id B B
-- The fundeps mean that this type signature
-- has a (derived) insoluble Given, A~B, but
--- we now ignore that (Trac #12466)
+-- we now ignore that (#12466)
loop :: Id A B => Bool
loop = True
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8392a.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8392a.hs
index 940f8b6a99..40fd339805 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8392a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8392a.hs
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ module T8392a where
-- Should complain even with AllowAmbiguousTypes
--
--- But (Trac #12466) we now don't complain about
+-- But (#12466) we now don't complain about
-- contradictory signatures
-- Instead we get a redundant pattern-match warning,
-- in the post-typechecking pattern-match checks
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8806.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8806.hs
index 6b80f15ee1..f2bda3b6ca 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8806.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8806.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #8806
+-- #8806
module T8806 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8883.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8883.hs
index 5b0fc5922c..c3af3af513 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8883.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T8883.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
--- Trac #8883
+-- #8883
module T8883 where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T9858a.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T9858a.hs
index fda55c20db..b9cbf8fa1a 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T9858a.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/T9858a.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- From comment:76 in Trac #9858
+-- From comment:76 in #9858
-- This exploit still works in GHC 7.10.1.
-- By Shachaf Ben-Kiki, Ørjan Johansen and Nathan van Doorn
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/TcCoercibleFail.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/TcCoercibleFail.hs
index 833609d48a..3967c3c0bd 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/TcCoercibleFail.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/TcCoercibleFail.hs
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ foo5 = coerce :: Void -> ()
------------------------------------
-- This next one generates an exponentally big type as it
--- tries to unwrap. See comment:15 in Trac #11518
+-- tries to unwrap. See comment:15 in #11518
-- Adding asserions that force the types can make us
-- run out of space.
newtype VoidBad a = VoidBad (VoidBad (a,a))
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/all.T b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/all.T
index bd13b2f8ce..6344d74c7a 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/all.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/all.T
@@ -140,7 +140,7 @@ test('tcfail154', normal, compile_fail, [''])
test('tcfail155', normal, compile_fail, [''])
test('tcfail156', normal, compile_fail, [''])
test('tcfail157', normal, compile_fail, [''])
-# Skip tcfail158 until Trac ticket #15899 fixes the broken test
+# Skip tcfail158 until #15899 fixes the broken test
test('tcfail158', skip, compile_fail, [''])
test('tcfail159', normal, compile_fail, [''])
test('tcfail160', normal, compile_fail, [''])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail138.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail138.hs
index 31cde734ec..1c628a1b5b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail138.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail138.hs
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
-- So, today, this program fails. It's trivial to fix by adding a fundep for C
-- class (G a, L a b) => C a b | a -> b
--- Note: Sept 08: when fixing Trac #1470, tc138 started working!
+-- Note: Sept 08: when fixing #1470, tc138 started working!
-- This test is a very strange one (fundeps, undecidable instances),
-- so I'm just marking it as "should-succeed". It's not very clear to
-- me what the "right" answer should be; when we have the type equality
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail169.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail169.hs
index 46606a838d..510e61212c 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail169.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail169.hs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
--- Trac #958
+-- #958
module ShoulFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail175.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail175.hs
index 5eacd24291..09e7dc3c9b 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail175.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail175.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
-- Crashed GHC 6.6!
--- Trac #1153
+-- #1153
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail177.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail177.hs
index 8d264db53d..4cbe12bfbc 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail177.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail177.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
module ShouldFail where
--- See Trac #1176
+-- See #1176
-- This is really a pretty-printer test, not a typechecker test
--
-- Before ghc-7.2 the error messages looked like this (notice the wrong
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail178.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail178.hs
index 8071def02e..74174ce249 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail178.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail178.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- See Trac #1221
+-- See #1221
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail185.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail185.hs
index d6026368ec..c717936ce7 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail185.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail185.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- See Trac #1606
+-- See #1606
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail186.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail186.hs
index 6148517a6d..647fbe33ae 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail186.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail186.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #1814
+-- #1814
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail187.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail187.hs
index eb508066ec..d863b54e41 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail187.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail187.hs
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- Trac #1806
+-- #1806
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail188.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail188.hs
index 821f0c69dc..fef1676e50 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail188.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail188.hs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{-# LANGUAGE RankNTypes, KindSignatures #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Werror #-}
--- Trac #959
+-- #959
module ShouldFail where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail204.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail204.hs
index ed561c3290..321098cbd0 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail204.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_fail/tcfail204.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Wall #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Werror #-}
--- Trac #3261
+-- #3261
module Foo where
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_run/Defer01.hs b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_run/Defer01.hs
index 135fd837ca..551c626f7c 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_run/Defer01.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/typecheck/should_run/Defer01.hs
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ class MyClass a where myOp :: a -> String
j = myOp 23 -- Two errors, should not combine them
--- No longer reported as an error: Trac #12466
+-- No longer reported as an error: #12466
k :: (Int ~ Bool) => Int -> Bool
k x = x
diff --git a/utils/gen-dll/Main.hs b/utils/gen-dll/Main.hs
index 7cc965bd7d..39f8ed9c13 100644
--- a/utils/gen-dll/Main.hs
+++ b/utils/gen-dll/Main.hs
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
gen-dll is a replacement for dll-split which aims to solve a simple problem
during the building of stage2. The issue is that the PE image format only has
a 16-bit field for the symbol count. This means we can't have more than 2^16-1
- symbols in a single PE file. See Trac #5987.
+ symbols in a single PE file. See #5987.
gen-dll solves this issue by partitioning the object files in such a way that
a single dll never has more than the allowed amount of symbols. The general
diff --git a/utils/ghc-in-ghci/settings.ghci b/utils/ghc-in-ghci/settings.ghci
index f6a6843afb..d2e2e1f520 100644
--- a/utils/ghc-in-ghci/settings.ghci
+++ b/utils/ghc-in-ghci/settings.ghci
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@
:set -i_build/stage1/compiler/build
-- -fobject-code is required because bytecode doesn't support unboxed tuples
--- https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/1257
+-- https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/1257
:set -odir ./.ghci-objects
:set -hidir ./.ghci-objects
:set -fobject-code
diff --git a/utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs b/utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs
index 534bbac6dd..4886d85f74 100644
--- a/utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs
+++ b/utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs
@@ -1312,7 +1312,7 @@ So, instead, we do two things here:
- We recompute it: we simply look up the unit ID of the package in the original
database, and use *its* abi-depends.
-See Trac #14381, and Cabal issue #4728.
+See #14381, and Cabal issue #4728.
Additionally, because we are throwing away the original (declared) ABI deps, we
return a boolean that indicates whether any abi-depends were actually
diff --git a/utils/runghc/Main.hs b/utils/runghc/Main.hs
index dec53eefb0..f0ccb27c83 100644
--- a/utils/runghc/Main.hs
+++ b/utils/runghc/Main.hs
@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ main = do
-- a scenario, we must guess where ghc lives. Given a path where ghc might
-- live, we check for the existence of ghc. If we can't find it, we assume that
-- we're building ghc from source, in which case we fall back on ghc-stage2.
--- (See Trac #1185.)
+-- (See #1185.)
findGhc :: FilePath -> IO FilePath
findGhc path = do
let ghcDir = takeDirectory (normalise path)