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authorBen Gamari <ben@smart-cactus.org>2022-01-30 08:45:49 -0500
committerMarge Bot <ben+marge-bot@smart-cactus.org>2022-02-01 12:29:26 -0500
commit88fba8a4b3c22e953a634b81dd0b67ec66eb5e72 (patch)
tree75a46332ad32cfeaf4f4d52b3b60fd452f2493b6
parent06185102bb06d6d56e00d40172a6a473fc228501 (diff)
downloadhaskell-88fba8a4b3c22e953a634b81dd0b67ec66eb5e72.tar.gz
Fix a few Note inconsistencies
-rw-r--r--.mailmap5
-rw-r--r--Makefile4
-rw-r--r--compiler/CodeGen.Platform.h4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Builtin/Types.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Builtin/Uniques.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Builtin/primops.txt.pp5
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Types.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/CLabel.hs8
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/ContFlowOpt.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Dataflow.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Expr.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Graph.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Info/Build.hs3
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/LayoutStack.hs13
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/MachOp.hs5
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Node.hs12
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Parser.y4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Pipeline.hs5
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/ProcPoint.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Sink.hs13
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch.hs7
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch/Implement.hs7
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/CodeGen.hs3
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/Ppr.hs13
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/BlockLayout.hs17
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/CFG.hs5
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf/Types.hs3
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/PPC/CodeGen.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Reg/Utils.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/CodeGen.hs12
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Instr.hs7
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Ppr.hs8
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToC.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/Base.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/CodeGen.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Coercion.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/FamInstEnv.hs3
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/InstEnv.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Lint.hs8
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Make.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Map/Expr.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Multiplicity.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Arity.hs12
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/CallArity.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/ConstantFold.hs11
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatIn.hs13
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatOut.hs5
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/LiberateCase.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify/Utils.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/SpecConstr.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Specialise.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap/Utils.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/TyCo/Subst.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/TyCon.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Unfold.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Core/Utils.hs12
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/CoreToStg/Prep.hs7
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Data/FastString.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Driver/CmdLine.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Driver/Flags.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Driver/Main.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Driver/Make.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline.hs5
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline/Execute.hs5
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Driver/Session.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Coverage.hs3
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Match.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Pmc/Solver.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Types.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Iface/Ext/Ast.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp/Flags.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Linker/Loader.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Rename/Env.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Rename/Expr.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Rename/Unbound.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Runtime/Eval.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Runtime/Interpreter.hs7
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/StgToByteCode.hs7
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Bind.hs7
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Foreign.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Heap.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Layout.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Monad.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Prim.hs3
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/SysTools.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/SysTools/BaseDir.hs3
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/SysTools/Info.hs10
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Tc/Errors.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Tc/Gen/Splice.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Tc/Instance/FunDeps.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Tc/Solver/Interact.hs6
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Tc/Types.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Tc/Types/Constraint.hs3
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Tc/Utils/TcMType.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/ThToHs.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Types/Name.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Types/Name/Occurrence.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Types/Tickish.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Types/Var.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Types/Var/Env.hs1
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Unit.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Unit/State.hs8
-rw-r--r--compiler/GHC/Utils/Ppr.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Decls.hs4
-rw-r--r--compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Expr.hs2
-rw-r--r--compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Type.hs1
-rw-r--r--ghc.mk7
-rw-r--r--ghc/GHCi/UI.hs3
-rw-r--r--ghc/Main.hs2
-rw-r--r--hadrian/src/Expression.hs1
-rw-r--r--hadrian/src/Flavour.hs1
-rw-r--r--hadrian/src/Rules/BinaryDist.hs1
-rw-r--r--hadrian/src/Rules/Libffi.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/Control/Concurrent/QSem.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs3
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Lazy/Imp.hs4
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Base.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Bits.hs5
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Enum.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows.hsc6
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows/FFI.hsc6
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Foreign.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/ForeignPtr.hs6
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/IO/Encoding/Failure.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/IO/FD.hs4
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Internals.hs3
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Text.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/IO/Unsafe.hs5
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/IO/Windows/Handle.hsc1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/IORef.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs25
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/List.hs18
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/TopHandler.hs9
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/GHC/TypeNats.hs5
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/System/IO.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/Unsafe/Coerce.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c2
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-bignum/src/GHC/Num/Primitives.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-boot/GHC/BaseDir.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/CString.hs8
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Classes.hs3
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/Exception.hs1
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/PtrEq.hs4
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Types.hs3
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c1
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/bitrev.c1
-rw-r--r--libraries/ghci/GHCi/TH.hs2
-rw-r--r--libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs1
-rw-r--r--m4/fptools_set_haskell_platform_vars.m41
-rw-r--r--mk/config.mk.in9
-rw-r--r--mk/warnings.mk2
-rw-r--r--rts/Apply.cmm6
-rw-r--r--rts/Capability.c3
-rw-r--r--rts/Compact.cmm2
-rw-r--r--rts/ForeignExports.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/IPE.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/Interpreter.c6
-rw-r--r--rts/Linker.c9
-rw-r--r--rts/LinkerInternals.h1
-rw-r--r--rts/PrimOps.cmm9
-rw-r--r--rts/ProfHeap.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/RaiseAsync.c2
-rw-r--r--rts/RtsFlags.c4
-rw-r--r--rts/RtsSymbols.c3
-rw-r--r--rts/Schedule.c3
-rw-r--r--rts/StablePtr.c2
-rw-r--r--rts/Stats.c9
-rw-r--r--rts/StgCRun.c3
-rw-r--r--rts/StgMiscClosures.cmm8
-rw-r--r--rts/StgStdThunks.cmm4
-rw-r--r--rts/Task.h2
-rw-r--r--rts/ThreadPaused.c2
-rw-r--r--rts/Threads.c2
-rw-r--r--rts/Timer.c3
-rw-r--r--rts/TraverseHeap.h1
-rw-r--r--rts/Updates.cmm2
-rw-r--r--rts/include/Stg.h4
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/Flags.h4
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/Libdw.h2
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/OSThreads.h1
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/prof/CCS.h1
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/storage/Block.h6
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/storage/ClosureMacros.h3
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/storage/Closures.h4
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/storage/InfoTables.h1
-rw-r--r--rts/include/rts/storage/TSO.h7
-rw-r--r--rts/include/stg/SMP.h1
-rw-r--r--rts/linker/Elf.c4
-rw-r--r--rts/linker/LoadArchive.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/linker/M32Alloc.c4
-rw-r--r--rts/linker/PEi386.c5
-rw-r--r--rts/linker/PEi386.h2
-rw-r--r--rts/linker/elf_plt_arm.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/linker/elf_reloc_aarch64.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/linker/elf_tlsgd.c2
-rw-r--r--rts/posix/OSMem.c2
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/CNF.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/Evac.c6
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/GC.c4
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/GCUtils.c2
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/NonMoving.c6
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/NonMovingMark.c4
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/NonMovingScav.c6
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/NonMovingSweep.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/Sanity.c1
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/Scav.c2
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/Storage.c9
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/Storage.h6
-rw-r--r--rts/win32/OSMem.c1
-rw-r--r--rules/build-package-way.mk2
-rw-r--r--rules/build-prog.mk4
-rw-r--r--rules/hs-suffix-way-rules.mk2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/driver/runtests.py2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/driver/testlib.py7
-rw-r--r--testsuite/mk/boilerplate.mk4
-rw-r--r--testsuite/mk/test.mk2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/perf/haddock/all.T2
-rw-r--r--testsuite/tests/stranal/sigs/T19871.hs2
-rw-r--r--utils/check-exact/ExactPrint.hs1
-rw-r--r--utils/genapply/Main.hs4
-rw-r--r--utils/ghc-cabal/Main.hs3
-rw-r--r--utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs3
-rw-r--r--utils/ghc-pkg/ghc.mk2
-rwxr-xr-xutils/llvm-targets/gen-data-layout.sh2
-rwxr-xr-xvalidate4
235 files changed, 428 insertions, 498 deletions
diff --git a/.mailmap b/.mailmap
index 831f8d2392..6106feede3 100644
--- a/.mailmap
+++ b/.mailmap
@@ -349,6 +349,7 @@ shelarcy <shelarcy@gmail.com> # Uses this name onl
Ömer Sinan Ağacan <omeragacan@gmail.com> <omer@well-typed.com>
# Note [geoffw]
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# From GHC wiki: "Geoff Washburn made the first implementation of GADTs in GHC"
# Other possibilities (but not such a direct connection with GHC):
# * Geoff W. Hamilton
@@ -357,14 +358,16 @@ shelarcy <shelarcy@gmail.com> # Uses this name onl
# PhD student, OCaml, "Dynamic ADTs"
#
# Note [uid245]
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# Circumstantial evidence only:
# * Commit fafe43, "Avoid divide by zero", by simonm.
# * Subsequent commit fd40a1, "avoid another divide by zero", by uid245.
# * Three commits later 15e6ea, "urk, extra parenthesis crept in", by simonm. Same file section.
#
# Note [usrbincc]
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# https://github.com/thlorenz/node-traceur/commit/59f97feae23763c456b70bb129dbe04004e9fe04
#
# Note [zhuang]
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lang.haskell.cvs.ghc/33473
-#EOF
diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile
index cf15d1c086..389bfd32f8 100644
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ install show:
$(MAKE) --no-print-directory -f ghc.mk $@ BINDIST=YES NO_INCLUDE_DEPS=YES
# Note [install-strip]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# install-strip is like install, but it strips the executable files while
# installing them.
#
@@ -191,7 +191,7 @@ endif
endif
# Note [validate and testsuite speed]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# There are 3 different validate and testsuite speed settings:
# fast, normal and slow.
#
diff --git a/compiler/CodeGen.Platform.h b/compiler/CodeGen.Platform.h
index ceccc38620..346dd0af03 100644
--- a/compiler/CodeGen.Platform.h
+++ b/compiler/CodeGen.Platform.h
@@ -834,7 +834,7 @@ freeReg :: RegNo -> Bool
# if defined(MACHREGS_i386)
freeReg esp = False -- %esp is the C stack pointer
-freeReg esi = False -- Note [esi/edi/ebp not allocatable]
+freeReg esi = False -- See Note [esi/edi/ebp not allocatable]
freeReg edi = False
freeReg ebp = False
# endif
@@ -844,7 +844,7 @@ freeReg rsp = False -- %rsp is the C stack pointer
{-
Note [esi/edi/ebp not allocatable]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
%esi is mapped to R1, so %esi would normally be allocatable while it
is not being used for R1. However, %esi has no 8-bit version on x86,
and the linear register allocator is not sophisticated enough to
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Builtin/Types.hs b/compiler/GHC/Builtin/Types.hs
index 2096e27a2b..347afad5c0 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Builtin/Types.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Builtin/Types.hs
@@ -762,7 +762,7 @@ constraintKind = mkTyConTy constraintKindTyCon
* *
************************************************************************
-Note [How tuples work] See also Note [Known-key names] in GHC.Builtin.Names
+Note [How tuples work]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* There are three families of tuple TyCons and corresponding
DataCons, expressed by the type BasicTypes.TupleSort:
@@ -814,6 +814,8 @@ Note [How tuples work] See also Note [Known-key names] in GHC.Builtin.Names
deserialization we lookup the Name associated with the unique with the logic
in GHC.Builtin.Uniques. See Note [Symbol table representation of names] for details.
+See also Note [Known-key names] in GHC.Builtin.Names.
+
Note [One-tuples]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GHC supports both boxed and unboxed one-tuples:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Builtin/Uniques.hs b/compiler/GHC/Builtin/Uniques.hs
index dc70ce3f5c..acf835c996 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Builtin/Uniques.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Builtin/Uniques.hs
@@ -143,7 +143,6 @@ getUnboxedSumName n
-- Note [Uniques for tuple type and data constructors]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Wired-in type constructor keys occupy *two* slots:
-- * u: the TyCon itself
-- * u+1: the TyConRepName of the TyCon
@@ -156,7 +155,6 @@ getUnboxedSumName n
{-
Note [Unique layout for constraint tuple selectors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Constraint tuples, like boxed and unboxed tuples, have their type and data
constructor Uniques wired in (see
Note [Uniques for tuple type and data constructors]). Constraint tuples are
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Builtin/primops.txt.pp b/compiler/GHC/Builtin/primops.txt.pp
index 32e185e3a9..772371235e 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Builtin/primops.txt.pp
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Builtin/primops.txt.pp
@@ -149,7 +149,6 @@ defaults
-- Note [When do out-of-line primops go in primops.txt.pp]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Out of line primops are those with a C-- implementation. But that
-- doesn't mean they *just* have an C-- implementation. As mentioned in
-- Note [Inlining out-of-line primops and heap checks], some out-of-line
@@ -2437,7 +2436,6 @@ primop WriteMutVarOp "writeMutVar#" GenPrimOp
-- Note [Why not an unboxed tuple in atomicModifyMutVar2#?]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Looking at the type of atomicModifyMutVar2#, one might wonder why
-- it doesn't return an unboxed tuple. e.g.,
--
@@ -3173,7 +3171,6 @@ primop ReallyUnsafePtrEqualityOp "reallyUnsafePtrEquality#" GenPrimOp
-- Note [reallyUnsafePtrEquality# can_fail]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- reallyUnsafePtrEquality# can't actually fail, per se, but we mark it
-- can_fail anyway. Until 5a9a1738023a, GHC considered primops okay for
-- speculation only when their arguments were known to be forced. This was
@@ -3264,7 +3261,7 @@ primop DataToTagOp "dataToTag#" GenPrimOp
a -> Int# -- Zero-indexed; the first constructor has tag zero
with
strictness = { \ _arity -> mkClosedDmdSig [evalDmd] topDiv }
- -- See Note [dataToTag# magic] in GHC.Core.Op.ConstantFold
+ -- See Note [dataToTag# magic] in GHC.Core.Opt.ConstantFold
primop TagToEnumOp "tagToEnum#" GenPrimOp
Int# -> a
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Types.hs b/compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Types.hs
index ed1bd9bf13..6eb661ac18 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Types.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/ByteCode/Types.hs
@@ -84,7 +84,6 @@ newtype RegBitmap = RegBitmap { unRegBitmap :: Word32 }
{- Note [GHCi TupleInfo]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
This contains the data we need for passing unboxed tuples between
bytecode and native code
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/CLabel.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/CLabel.hs
index fd9f019e04..3acace8be2 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/CLabel.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/CLabel.hs
@@ -478,7 +478,7 @@ data IdLabelInfo
-- Note [Bytes label].
| BlockInfoTable -- ^ Like LocalInfoTable but for a proc-point block
-- instead of a closure entry-point.
- -- See Note [Proc-point local block entry-point].
+ -- See Note [Proc-point local block entry-points].
deriving (Eq, Ord)
@@ -587,7 +587,7 @@ mkBytesLabel name = IdLabel name NoCafRefs Bytes
mkBlockInfoTableLabel :: Name -> CafInfo -> CLabel
mkBlockInfoTableLabel name c = IdLabel name c BlockInfoTable
- -- See Note [Proc-point local block entry-point].
+ -- See Note [Proc-point local block entry-points].
-- Constructing Cmm Labels
mkDirty_MUT_VAR_Label,
@@ -865,7 +865,7 @@ toEntryLbl platform lbl = case lbl of
IdLabel n c (ConInfoTable k) -> IdLabel n c (ConEntry k)
IdLabel n _ BlockInfoTable -> mkLocalBlockLabel (nameUnique n)
- -- See Note [Proc-point local block entry-point].
+ -- See Note [Proc-point local block entry-points].
IdLabel n c _ -> IdLabel n c Entry
CmmLabel m ext str CmmInfo -> CmmLabel m ext str CmmEntry
CmmLabel m ext str CmmRetInfo -> CmmLabel m ext str CmmRet
@@ -898,7 +898,6 @@ hasCAF _ = False
-- Note [ticky for LNE]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-- Until 14 Feb 2013, every ticky counter was associated with a
-- closure. Thus, ticky labels used IdLabel. It is odd that
-- GHC.Cmm.Info.Build.cafTransfers would consider such a ticky label
@@ -1465,7 +1464,6 @@ pprCLabel !platform !sty lbl = -- see Note [Bangs in CLabel]
-- Note [Internal proc labels]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Some tools (e.g. the `perf` utility on Linux) rely on the symbol table
-- for resolution of function names. To help these tools we provide the
-- (enabled by default) -fexpose-all-symbols flag which causes GHC to produce
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/ContFlowOpt.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/ContFlowOpt.hs
index 73c13d2040..350f94c818 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/ContFlowOpt.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/ContFlowOpt.hs
@@ -29,7 +29,6 @@ import Control.Monad
-- Note [What is shortcutting]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Consider this Cmm code:
--
-- L1: ...
@@ -53,7 +52,6 @@ import Control.Monad
-- Note [Control-flow optimisations]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- This optimisation does three things:
--
-- - If a block finishes in an unconditional branch to another block
@@ -80,7 +78,6 @@ import Control.Monad
-- Note [Shortcut call returns]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- We are going to maintain the "current" graph (LabelMap CmmBlock) as
-- we go, and also a mapping from BlockId to BlockId, representing
-- continuation labels that we have renamed. This latter mapping is
@@ -106,7 +103,6 @@ import Control.Monad
-- Note [Shortcut call returns and proc-points]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Consider this code that you might get from a recursive
-- let-no-escape:
--
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Dataflow.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Dataflow.hs
index 3e310fefcb..ad1c37ace2 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Dataflow.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Dataflow.hs
@@ -294,7 +294,7 @@ sortBlocks direction entry blockmap =
fwd = revPostorderFrom blockmap entry
-- Note [Backward vs forward analysis]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- The forward and backward cases are not dual. In the forward case, the entry
-- points are known, and one simply traverses the body blocks from those points.
-- In the backward case, something is known about the exit points, but a
@@ -350,7 +350,7 @@ updateFact
updateFact fact_join dep_blocks (todo, fbase) lbl new_fact
= case lookupFact lbl fbase of
Nothing ->
- -- Note [No old fact]
+ -- See Note [No old fact]
let !z = mapInsert lbl new_fact fbase in (changed, z)
Just old_fact ->
case fact_join (OldFact old_fact) (NewFact new_fact) of
@@ -362,7 +362,7 @@ updateFact fact_join dep_blocks (todo, fbase) lbl new_fact
{-
Note [No old fact]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We know that the new_fact is >= _|_, so we don't need to join. However,
if the new fact is also _|_, and we have already analysed its block,
we don't need to record a change. So there's a tradeoff here. It turns
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Expr.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Expr.hs
index 52cb63c901..f63ef62dab 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Expr.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Expr.hs
@@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ data CmmReg
data Area
= Old -- See Note [Old Area]
| Young {-# UNPACK #-} !BlockId -- Invariant: must be a continuation BlockId
- -- See Note [Continuation BlockId] in GHC.Cmm.Node.
+ -- See Note [Continuation BlockIds] in GHC.Cmm.Node.
deriving (Eq, Ord, Show)
{- Note [Old Area]
@@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ data CmmLit
| CmmBlock {-# UNPACK #-} !BlockId -- Code label
-- Invariant: must be a continuation BlockId
- -- See Note [Continuation BlockId] in GHC.Cmm.Node.
+ -- See Note [Continuation BlockIds] in GHC.Cmm.Node.
| CmmHighStackMark -- A late-bound constant that stands for the max
-- #bytes of stack space used during a procedure.
@@ -410,7 +410,7 @@ data VGcPtr = VGcPtr | VNonGcPtr deriving( Eq, Show )
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
{-
Note [Overlapping global registers]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The backend might not faithfully implement the abstraction of the STG
machine with independent registers for different values of type
GlobalReg. Specifically, certain pairs of registers (r1, r2) may
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Graph.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Graph.hs
index ef8ae7f26b..ff9391a7fe 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Graph.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Graph.hs
@@ -425,7 +425,7 @@ copyOutOflow profile conv transfer area actuals updfr_off extra_stack_stuff
-- Note [Width of parameters]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- Consider passing a small (< word width) primitive like Int8# to a function.
-- It's actually non-trivial to do this without extending/narrowing:
-- * Global registers are considered to have native word width (i.e., 64-bits on
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Info/Build.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Info/Build.hs
index 01f3c2a3ff..571a1faae7 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Info/Build.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Info/Build.hs
@@ -55,7 +55,6 @@ import GHC.Types.Name.Set
{- Note [SRTs]
~~~~~~~~~~~
-
SRTs are the mechanism by which the garbage collector can determine
the live CAFs in the program.
@@ -925,7 +924,7 @@ doSCC cfg staticFuns static_data (CyclicSCC nodes) = do
{- Note [recursive SRTs]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If the dependency analyser has found us a recursive group of
declarations, then we build a single SRT for the whole group, on the
grounds that everything in the group is reachable from everything
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/LayoutStack.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/LayoutStack.hs
index ad13e8f431..1bd00ed65a 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/LayoutStack.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/LayoutStack.hs
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ import Data.Array as Array
import Data.List (nub)
{- Note [Stack Layout]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The job of this pass is to
- replace references to abstract stack Areas with fixed offsets from Sp.
@@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ Pass 2:
Note [Two pass approach]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The main reason for Pass 2 is being able to insert only the reloads that are
needed and the fact that the two passes need different liveness information.
Let's consider an example:
@@ -510,7 +510,7 @@ handleLastNode cfg procpoints liveness cont_info stackmaps
, LabelMap StackMap )
handleBranches
- -- Note [diamond proc point]
+ -- See Note [diamond proc point]
| Just l <- futureContinuation middle
, (nub $ filter (`setMember` procpoints) $ successors last) == [l]
= do
@@ -644,9 +644,8 @@ setupStackFrame platform lbl liveness updfr_off ret_args stack0
}
--- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Note [diamond proc point]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- This special case looks for the pattern we get from a typical
-- tagged case expression:
--
@@ -895,7 +894,7 @@ maybeAddSpAdj cfg sp0 sp_off block =
where sp_unwind = CmmRegOff spReg (sp0 - platformWordSizeInBytes platform - sp_off)
{- Note [SP old/young offsets]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sp(L) is the Sp offset on entry to block L relative to the base of the
OLD area.
@@ -1098,7 +1097,7 @@ insertReloads platform stackmap live =
{-
Note [Lower safe foreign calls]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We start with
Sp[young(L1)] = L1
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/MachOp.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/MachOp.hs
index cd2d331a58..0bd3ac1111 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/MachOp.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/MachOp.hs
@@ -340,9 +340,8 @@ isFloatComparison mop =
MO_F_Lt {} -> True
_other -> False
--- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- Inverting conditions
-
+-- Note [Inverting conditions]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- Sometimes it's useful to be able to invert the sense of a
-- condition. Not all conditional tests are invertible: in
-- particular, floating point conditionals cannot be inverted, because
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Node.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Node.hs
index fe6eac3223..d7d35a8bfc 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Node.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Node.hs
@@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ data CmmNode e x where
CmmSwitch
:: CmmExpr -- Scrutinee, of some integral type
- -> SwitchTargets -- Cases. See [Note SwitchTargets]
+ -> SwitchTargets -- Cases. See Note [SwitchTargets]
-> CmmNode O C
CmmCall :: { -- A native call or tail call
@@ -114,7 +114,9 @@ data CmmNode e x where
cml_cont :: Maybe Label,
-- Label of continuation (Nothing for return or tail call)
--
- -- Note [Continuation BlockIds]: these BlockIds are called
+ -- Note [Continuation BlockIds]
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ -- These BlockIds are called
-- Continuation BlockIds, and are the only BlockIds that can
-- occur in CmmExprs, namely as (CmmLit (CmmBlock b)) or
-- (CmmStackSlot (Young b) _).
@@ -196,7 +198,6 @@ sequence.
{- Note [Unsafe foreign calls clobber caller-save registers]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
A foreign call is defined to clobber any GlobalRegs that are mapped to
caller-saves machine registers (according to the prevailing C ABI).
GHC.StgToCmm.Utils.callerSaves tells you which GlobalRegs are caller-saves.
@@ -386,7 +387,6 @@ instance DefinerOfRegs GlobalReg (CmmNode e x) where
-- Note [Safe foreign calls clobber STG registers]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- During stack layout phase every safe foreign call is expanded into a block
-- that contains unsafe foreign call (instead of safe foreign call) and ends
-- with a normal call (See Note [Foreign calls]). This means that we must
@@ -642,8 +642,8 @@ data CmmTickScope
-- the new block could have a combined tick scope a/c+b/d, which
-- both tick<2> and tick<3> apply to.
--- Note [CmmTick scoping details]:
---
+-- Note [CmmTick scoping details]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- The scope of a @CmmTick@ is given by the @CmmEntry@ node of the
-- same block. Note that as a result of this, optimisations making
-- tick scopes more specific can *reduce* the amount of code a tick
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Parser.y b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Parser.y
index ed9492aa32..68d5821309 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Parser.y
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Parser.y
@@ -6,9 +6,9 @@
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-{- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+{-
Note [Syntax of .cmm files]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NOTE: You are very much on your own in .cmm. There is very little
error checking at all:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Pipeline.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Pipeline.hs
index 270a281461..585606fcb2 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Pipeline.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Pipeline.hs
@@ -175,7 +175,6 @@ cpsTop logger platform cfg proc =
-- Note [Sinking after stack layout]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- In the past we considered running sinking pass also before stack
-- layout, but after making some measurements we realized that:
--
@@ -301,7 +300,7 @@ cpsTop logger platform cfg proc =
--
{- Note [inconsistent-pic-reg]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On x86/Darwin, PIC is implemented by inserting a sequence like
call 1f
@@ -329,7 +328,7 @@ _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_, regardless of which entry point we arrived via.
-}
{- Note [unreachable blocks]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The control-flow optimiser sometimes leaves unreachable blocks behind
containing junk code. These aren't necessarily a problem, but
removing them is good because it might save time in the native code
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/ProcPoint.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/ProcPoint.hs
index 0cabea1536..cd55b4d255 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/ProcPoint.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/ProcPoint.hs
@@ -428,7 +428,7 @@ attachContInfoTables _ other_decl
{-
Note [Direct reachability]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Block B is directly reachable from proc point P iff control can flow
from P to B without passing through an intervening proc point.
-}
@@ -437,7 +437,7 @@ from P to B without passing through an intervening proc point.
{-
Note [No simple dataflow]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sadly, it seems impossible to compute the proc points using a single
dataflow pass. One might attempt to use this simple lattice:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Sink.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Sink.hs
index 7d90967132..0f3d979716 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Sink.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Sink.hs
@@ -472,7 +472,7 @@ tryToInline platform liveAfter node assigs =
go usages live node skipped (a@(l,rhs,_) : rest)
| cannot_inline = dont_inline
- | occurs_none = discard -- Note [discard during inlining]
+ | occurs_none = discard -- See Note [discard during inlining]
| occurs_once = inline_and_discard
| isTrivial platform rhs = inline_and_keep
| otherwise = dont_inline
@@ -496,7 +496,7 @@ tryToInline platform liveAfter node assigs =
live' = inline foldLocalRegsUsed platform (\m r -> insertLRegSet r m)
live rhs
- cannot_inline = skipped `regsUsedIn` rhs -- Note [dependent assignments]
+ cannot_inline = skipped `regsUsedIn` rhs -- See Note [dependent assignments]
|| l `elemLRegSet` skipped
|| not (okToInline platform rhs node)
@@ -519,8 +519,7 @@ tryToInline platform liveAfter node assigs =
inl_exp other = other
{- Note [Keeping assignemnts mentioned in skipped RHSs]
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If we have to assignments: [z = y, y = e1] and we skip
z we *must* retain the assignment y = e1. This is because
we might inline "z = y" into another node later on so we
@@ -541,7 +540,7 @@ tryToInline platform liveAfter node assigs =
-}
{- Note [improveConditional]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
cmmMachOpFold tries to simplify conditionals to turn things like
(a == b) != 1
into
@@ -579,7 +578,6 @@ improveConditional other = other
-- Note [dependent assignments]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- If our assignment list looks like
--
-- [ y = e, x = ... y ... ]
@@ -690,7 +688,6 @@ conflicts platform (r, rhs, addr) node
{- Note [Inlining foldRegsDefd]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
foldRegsDefd is, after optimization, *not* a small function so
it's only marked INLINEABLE, but not INLINE.
@@ -720,7 +717,6 @@ localRegistersConflict platform expr node =
-- Note [Sinking and calls]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- We have three kinds of calls: normal (CmmCall), safe foreign (CmmForeignCall)
-- and unsafe foreign (CmmUnsafeForeignCall). We perform sinking pass after
-- stack layout (see Note [Sinking after stack layout]) which leads to two
@@ -803,7 +799,6 @@ data AbsMem
-- Note [Foreign calls clobber heap]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- It is tempting to say that foreign calls clobber only
-- non-heap/stack memory, but unfortunately we break this invariant in
-- the RTS. For example, in stg_catch_retry_frame we call
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch.hs
index 7bef1e293a..f8c6c674ef 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch.hs
@@ -26,7 +26,6 @@ import qualified Data.Map as M
-- Note [Cmm Switches, the general plan]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Compiling a high-level switch statement, as it comes out of a STG case
-- expression, for example, allows for a surprising amount of design decisions.
-- Therefore, we cleanly separated this from the Stg → Cmm transformation, as
@@ -51,10 +50,9 @@ import qualified Data.Map as M
-- See Note [GHC.Cmm.Switch vs. GHC.Cmm.Switch.Implement] why the two module are
-- separated.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
-- Note [Magic Constants in GHC.Cmm.Switch]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- There are a lot of heuristics here that depend on magic values where it is
-- hard to determine the "best" value (for whatever that means). These are the
-- magic values:
@@ -83,7 +81,6 @@ minJumpTableOffset = 2
-- Note [SwitchTargets]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- The branches of a switch are stored in a SwitchTargets, which consists of an
-- (optional) default jump target, and a map from values to jump targets.
--
@@ -175,7 +172,6 @@ switchTargetsToTable (SwitchTargets _ (lo,hi) mbdef branches)
-- Note [Jump Table Offset]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Usually, the code for a jump table starting at x will first subtract x from
-- the value, to avoid a large amount of empty entries. But if x is very small,
-- the extra entries are no worse than the subtraction in terms of code size, and
@@ -239,7 +235,6 @@ data SwitchPlan
--
-- Note [createSwitchPlan]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- A SwitchPlan describes how a Switch statement is to be broken down into
-- smaller pieces suitable for code generation.
--
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch/Implement.hs b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch/Implement.hs
index 87dfc1cdaa..30265dc234 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch/Implement.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Cmm/Switch/Implement.hs
@@ -57,16 +57,15 @@ visitSwitches platform block
-- Note [Floating switch expressions]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-- When we translate a sparse switch into a search tree we would like
-- to compute the value we compare against only once.
-
+--
-- For this purpose we assign the switch expression to a local register
-- and then use this register when constructing the actual binary tree.
-
+--
-- This is important as the expression could contain expensive code like
-- memory loads or divisions which we REALLY don't want to duplicate.
-
+--
-- This happened in parts of the handwritten RTS Cmm code. See also #16933
-- See Note [Floating switch expressions]
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm.hs
index e7a392d822..88c72f6b16 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm.hs
@@ -192,7 +192,6 @@ data NativeGenAcc statics instr
{-
Note [Unwinding information in the NCG]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Unwind information is a type of metadata which allows a debugging tool
to reconstruct the values of machine registers at the time a procedure was
entered. For the most part, the production of unwind information is handled by
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/CodeGen.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/CodeGen.hs
index 65872c73be..2698e6f17f 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/CodeGen.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/CodeGen.hs
@@ -62,6 +62,7 @@ import GHC.Utils.Misc
import GHC.Utils.Panic
-- Note [General layout of an NCG]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- @cmmTopCodeGen@ will be our main entry point to code gen. Here we'll get
-- @RawCmmDecl@; see GHC.Cmm
--
@@ -846,7 +847,7 @@ getRegister' config plat expr
MO_Sub w -> intOp False w (\d x y -> unitOL $ annExpr expr (SUB d x y))
-- Note [CSET]
- --
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~
-- Setting conditional flags: the architecture internally knows the
-- following flag bits. And based on thsoe comparisons as in the
-- table below.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/Ppr.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/Ppr.hs
index 8d93a56395..5a48241c0b 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/Ppr.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/AArch64/Ppr.hs
@@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ pprBasicBlock config info_env (BasicBlock blockid instrs)
then ppr (mkAsmTempEndLabel info_lbl) <> char ':'
else empty)
-- Make sure the info table has the right .loc for the block
- -- coming right after it. See [Note: Info Offset]
+ -- coming right after it. See Note [Info Offset]
infoTableLoc = case instrs of
(l@LOCATION{} : _) -> pprInstr platform l
_other -> empty
@@ -187,11 +187,12 @@ pprGloblDecl platform lbl
| otherwise = text "\t.globl " <> pdoc platform lbl
-- Note [Always use objects for info tables]
--- See discussion in X86.Ppr
--- for why this is necessary. Essentially we need to ensure that we never
--- pass function symbols when we migth want to lookup the info table. If we
--- did, we could end up with procedure linking tables (PLT)s, and thus the
--- lookup wouldn't point to the function, but into the jump table.
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+-- See discussion in X86.Ppr for why this is necessary. Essentially we need to
+-- ensure that we never pass function symbols when we migth want to lookup the
+-- info table. If we did, we could end up with procedure linking tables
+-- (PLT)s, and thus the lookup wouldn't point to the function, but into the
+-- jump table.
--
-- Fun fact: The LLVMMangler exists to patch this issue su on the LLVM side as
-- well.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/BlockLayout.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/BlockLayout.hs
index 70e131c717..747702658e 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/BlockLayout.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/BlockLayout.hs
@@ -67,10 +67,9 @@ import GHC.Data.UnionFind
* Feed this CFG into the block layout code (`sequenceTop`) in this
module. Which will then produce a code layout based on the input weights.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~~~ Note [Chain based CFG serialization]
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ Note [Chain based CFG serialization]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For additional information also look at
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/commentary/compiler/code-layout
@@ -189,10 +188,9 @@ import GHC.Data.UnionFind
While E does not follow X it's still beneficial to place them near each other.
This can be advantageous if eg C,X,E will end up in the same cache line.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~~~ Note [Triangle Control Flow]
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ Note [Triangle Control Flow]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Checking if an argument is already evaluated leads to a somewhat
special case which looks like this:
@@ -240,10 +238,9 @@ import GHC.Data.UnionFind
Assuming that Lwork is large the chance that the "call" ends up
in the same cache line is also fairly small.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~~~ Note [Layout relevant edge weights]
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ Note [Layout relevant edge weights]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The input to the chain based code layout algorithm is a CFG
with edges annotated with their frequency. The frequency
of traversal corresponds quite well to the cost of not placing
@@ -373,9 +370,9 @@ takeL :: Int -> BlockChain -> [BlockId]
takeL n (BlockChain blks) =
take n . fromOL $ blks
+
-- Note [Combining neighborhood chains]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-- See also Note [Chain based CFG serialization]
-- We have the chains (A-B-C-D) and (E-F) and an Edge C->E.
--
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/CFG.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/CFG.hs
index 58041fef2c..0a662d7ff9 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/CFG.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/CFG.hs
@@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ instance Outputable CfgEdge where
-- or has it been introduced during assembly codegen. We use this to maintain
-- some information which would otherwise be lost during the
-- Cmm \<-> asm transition.
--- See also Note [Inverting Conditional Branches]
+-- See also Note [Inverting conditions]
data TransitionSource
= CmmSource { trans_cmmNode :: (CmmNode O C)
, trans_info :: BranchInfo }
@@ -248,7 +248,7 @@ filterEdges f cfg =
{- Note [Updating the CFG during shortcutting]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
See Note [What is shortcutting] in the control flow optimization
code (GHC.Cmm.ContFlowOpt) for a slightly more in depth explanation on shortcutting.
@@ -1013,7 +1013,6 @@ mkGlobalWeights root localCfg
{- Note [Static Branch Prediction]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The work here has been based on the paper
"Static Branch Prediction and Program Profile Analysis" by Y Wu, JR Larus.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf.hs
index fcff4be74e..07ca55d6d8 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf.hs
@@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ debugSplitProcs b = concat $ H.mapElems $ mergeMaps $ map (split Nothing) b
{-
Note [Splitting DebugBlocks]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
DWARF requires that we break up the nested DebugBlocks produced from
the C-- AST. For instance, we begin with tick trees containing nested procs.
For example,
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf/Types.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf/Types.hs
index f8f0ae5c44..e29f03e1d6 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf/Types.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Dwarf/Types.hs
@@ -257,7 +257,7 @@ pprDwarfARanges platform arngs unitU =
pprDwarfARange :: Platform -> DwarfARange -> SDoc
pprDwarfARange platform arng =
- -- Offset due to Note [Info offset].
+ -- Offset due to Note [Info Offset].
pprWord platform (pdoc platform (dwArngStartLabel arng) <> text "-1")
$$ pprWord platform length
where
@@ -410,7 +410,6 @@ pprFrameBlock platform (DwarfFrameBlock hasInfo uws0) =
-- Note [Info Offset]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- GDB was pretty much written with C-like programs in mind, and as a
-- result they assume that once you have a return address, it is a
-- good idea to look at (PC-1) to unwind further - as that's where the
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/PPC/CodeGen.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/PPC/CodeGen.hs
index 2184c0fc29..cd88a9f078 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/PPC/CodeGen.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/PPC/CodeGen.hs
@@ -738,6 +738,7 @@ temporary, then do the other computation, and then use the temporary:
-}
{- Note [Power instruction format]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In some instructions the 16 bit offset must be a multiple of 4, i.e.
the two least significant bits must be zero. The "Power ISA" specification
calls these instruction formats "DS-FORM" and the instructions with
@@ -1210,6 +1211,7 @@ genCCall (PrimTarget (MO_AtomicRead width)) [dst] [addr]
]
-- Note [Seemingly useless cmp and bne]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- In Power ISA, Book II, Section 4.4.1, Instruction Synchronize Instruction
-- the second paragraph says that isync may complete before storage accesses
-- "associated" with a preceding instruction have been performed. The cmp
@@ -2535,12 +2537,14 @@ coerceFP2Int' (ArchPPC_64 _) _ toRep x = do
coerceFP2Int' _ _ _ _ = panic "PPC.CodeGen.coerceFP2Int: unknown arch"
-- Note [.LCTOC1 in PPC PIC code]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- The .LCTOC1 label is defined to point 32768 bytes into the GOT table
-- to make the most of the PPC's 16-bit displacements.
-- As 16-bit signed offset is used (usually via addi/lwz instructions)
-- first element will have '-32768' offset against .LCTOC1.
-- Note [implicit register in PPC PIC code]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- PPC generates calls by labels in assembly
-- in form of:
-- bl puts+32768@plt
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Reg/Utils.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Reg/Utils.hs
index 3a832963fe..0a6bfabdbd 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Reg/Utils.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/Reg/Utils.hs
@@ -4,7 +4,6 @@ where
{- Note [UniqFM and the register allocator]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Before UniqFM had a key type the register allocator
wasn't picky about key types, using VirtualReg, Reg
and Unique at various use sites for the same map.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/CodeGen.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/CodeGen.hs
index 52f2a52123..028887a56f 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/CodeGen.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/CodeGen.hs
@@ -129,7 +129,6 @@ cmmTopCodeGen (CmmData sec dat) =
{- Note [Verifying basic blocks]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
We want to guarantee a few things about the results
of instruction selection.
@@ -231,7 +230,6 @@ addSpUnwindings instr = return $ unitOL instr
{- Note [Keeping track of the current block]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
When generating instructions for Cmm we sometimes require
the current block for things like retry loops.
@@ -2906,7 +2904,7 @@ evalArgs bid actuals
newLocalReg ty = LocalReg <$> getUniqueM <*> pure ty
-- Note [DIV/IDIV for bytes]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- IDIV reminder:
-- Size Dividend Divisor Quotient Remainder
-- byte %ax r/m8 %al %ah
@@ -2990,7 +2988,7 @@ genCCall32' target dest_regs args = do
let
-- Align stack to 16n for calls, assuming a starting stack
-- alignment of 16n - word_size on procedure entry. Which we
- -- maintiain. See Note [rts/StgCRun.c : Stack Alignment on X86]
+ -- maintiain. See Note [Stack Alignment on X86] in rts/StgCRun.c.
sizes = map (arg_size_bytes . cmmExprType platform) (reverse args)
raw_arg_size = sum sizes + platformWordSizeInBytes platform
arg_pad_size = (roundTo 16 $ raw_arg_size) - raw_arg_size
@@ -3605,10 +3603,8 @@ condIntReg cond x y = do
return (Any II32 code)
------------------------------------------------------------
---- Note [SSE Parity Checks] ---
------------------------------------------------------------
-
+-- Note [SSE Parity Checks]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- We have to worry about unordered operands (eg. comparisons
-- against NaN). If the operands are unordered, the comparison
-- sets the parity flag, carry flag and zero flag.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Instr.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Instr.hs
index 947a25b2d8..1f1515b0c9 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Instr.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Instr.hs
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ Hence GLDZ and GLD1. Bwahahahahahahaha!
{-
Note [x86 Floating point precision]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Intel's internal floating point registers are by default 80 bit
extended precision. This means that all operations done on values in
registers are done at 80 bits, and unless the intermediate values are
@@ -795,6 +795,8 @@ mkJumpInstr id
= [JXX ALWAYS id]
-- Note [Windows stack layout]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
-- | On most OSes the kernel will place a guard page after the current stack
-- page. If you allocate larger than a page worth you may jump over this
-- guard page. Not only is this a security issue, but on certain OSes such
@@ -896,9 +898,8 @@ mkStackDeallocInstr platform amount
_ -> panic "X86.mkStackDeallocInstr"
---
-- Note [extra spill slots]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- If the register allocator used more spill slots than we have
-- pre-allocated (rESERVED_C_STACK_BYTES), then we must allocate more
-- C stack space on entry and exit from this proc. Therefore we
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Ppr.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Ppr.hs
index 15e1b961df..49b6988c1d 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Ppr.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToAsm/X86/Ppr.hs
@@ -48,12 +48,8 @@ import GHC.Utils.Panic
import Data.Word
--- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- Printing this stuff out
---
---
-- Note [Subsections Via Symbols]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- If we are using the .subsections_via_symbols directive
-- (available on recent versions of Darwin),
-- we have to make sure that there is some kind of reference
@@ -163,7 +159,7 @@ pprBasicBlock config info_env (BasicBlock blockid instrs)
ppWhen (ncgDwarfEnabled config) (pdoc platform (mkAsmTempEndLabel infoLbl) <> colon)
-- Make sure the info table has the right .loc for the block
- -- coming right after it. See [Note: Info Offset]
+ -- coming right after it. See Note [Info Offset]
infoTableLoc = case instrs of
(l@LOCATION{} : _) -> pprInstr platform l
_other -> empty
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToC.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToC.hs
index 6528f63921..a6a036c290 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToC.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToC.hs
@@ -167,6 +167,7 @@ pprAlignment words =
text "__attribute__((aligned(" <> int (widthInBytes words) <> text ")))"
-- Note [StgWord alignment]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- C codegen builds static closures as StgWord C arrays (pprWordArray).
-- Their real C type is 'StgClosure'. Macros like UNTAG_CLOSURE assume
-- pointers to 'StgClosure' are aligned at pointer size boundary:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/Base.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/Base.hs
index b209c4cd67..cc4377240b 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/Base.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/Base.hs
@@ -591,7 +591,7 @@ aliasify (LMGlobal var val) = do
]
-- Note [Llvm Forward References]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- The issue here is that LLVM insists on being strongly typed at
-- every corner, so the first time we mention something, we have to
-- settle what type we assign to it. That makes things awkward, as Cmm
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/CodeGen.hs b/compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/CodeGen.hs
index 9e20b65a80..a57a6f79f0 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/CodeGen.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CmmToLlvm/CodeGen.hs
@@ -1255,7 +1255,6 @@ genExpectLit expLit expTy var = do
{- Note [Literals and branch conditions]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
It is important that whenever we generate branch conditions for
literals like '1', they are properly narrowed to an LLVM expression of
type 'i1' (for bools.) Otherwise, nobody is happy. So when we convert
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Coercion.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Coercion.hs
index 6f5c1ac338..ef6d4af5ec 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Coercion.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Coercion.hs
@@ -843,7 +843,7 @@ mkAppCos :: Coercion
mkAppCos co1 cos = foldl' mkAppCo co1 cos
{- Note [Unused coercion variable in ForAllCo]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
See Note [Unused coercion variable in ForAllTy] in GHC.Core.TyCo.Rep for the
motivation for checking coercion variable in types.
To lift the design choice to (ForAllCo cv kind_co body_co), we have two options:
@@ -2117,7 +2117,7 @@ liftCoSubstTyVar (LC subst env) r v
= Just $ mkReflCo r (substTyVar subst v)
{- Note [liftCoSubstVarBndr]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
callback:
'liftCoSubstVarBndrUsing' needs to be general enough to work in two
situations:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/FamInstEnv.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/FamInstEnv.hs
index c1715cc270..c0981ac9e1 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/FamInstEnv.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/FamInstEnv.hs
@@ -815,7 +815,7 @@ lookupFamInstEnvConflicts envs fam_inst@(FamInst { fi_axiom = new_axiom })
if compatibleBranches (coAxiomSingleBranch old_axiom) new_branch
then Nothing
else Just noSubst
- -- Note [Family instance overlap conflicts]
+ -- See Note [Family instance overlap conflicts]
noSubst = panic "lookupFamInstEnvConflicts noSubst"
new_branch = coAxiomSingleBranch new_axiom
@@ -826,7 +826,6 @@ lookupFamInstEnvConflicts envs fam_inst@(FamInst { fi_axiom = new_axiom })
{- Note [Verifying injectivity annotation]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Injectivity means that the RHS of a type family uniquely determines the LHS (see
Note [Type inference for type families with injectivity]). The user informs us about
injectivity using an injectivity annotation and it is GHC's task to verify that
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/InstEnv.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/InstEnv.hs
index 3bb9a32a50..ab23fcae2c 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/InstEnv.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/InstEnv.hs
@@ -869,7 +869,7 @@ lookupInstEnv' ie vis_mods cls tys
-- apply in the future. This covers an instance like C Int and
-- a target like [W] C (F a), where F is a type family.
SurelyApart -> find ms us rest
- -- Note [Infinitary substitution in lookup]
+ -- See Note [Infinitary substitution in lookup]
MaybeApart MARInfinite _ -> find ms us rest
_ -> find ms (item:us) rest
where
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Lint.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Lint.hs
index c098afd57c..ec9b024fc5 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Lint.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Lint.hs
@@ -640,8 +640,8 @@ lintLetBind top_lvl rec_flag binder rhs rhs_ty
(badBndrTyMsg binder (text "unlifted"))
-- Check that if the binder is at the top level and has type Addr#,
- -- that it is a string literal, see
- -- Note [Core top-level string literals].
+ -- that it is a string literal.
+ -- See Note [Core top-level string literals].
; checkL (not (isTopLevel top_lvl && binder_ty `eqType` addrPrimTy)
|| exprIsTickedString rhs)
(mkTopNonLitStrMsg binder)
@@ -1005,8 +1005,8 @@ lintCoreFun (Var var) nargs
= lintIdOcc var nargs
lintCoreFun (Lam var body) nargs
- -- Act like lintCoreExpr of Lam, but *don't* call markAllJoinsBad; see
- -- Note [Beta redexes]
+ -- Act like lintCoreExpr of Lam, but *don't* call markAllJoinsBad;
+ -- See Note [Beta redexes]
| nargs /= 0
= lintLambda var $ lintCoreFun body (nargs - 1)
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Make.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Make.hs
index 0ab8a151bc..06cb867c94 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Make.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Make.hs
@@ -836,7 +836,6 @@ tYPE_ERROR_ID = mkRuntimeErrorId typeErrorName
-- Note [aBSENT_SUM_FIELD_ERROR_ID]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Unboxed sums are transformed into unboxed tuples in GHC.Stg.Unarise.mkUbxSum
-- and fields that can't be reached are filled with rubbish values. It's easy to
-- come up with rubbish literal values: we use 0 (ints/words) and 0.0
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Map/Expr.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Map/Expr.hs
index 4c79cd880a..60ee2c94b5 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Map/Expr.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Map/Expr.hs
@@ -206,7 +206,6 @@ eqCoreExpr e1 e2 = eqDeBruijnExpr (deBruijnize e1) (deBruijnize e2)
{- Note [Alpha-equality for Coercion arguments]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The 'Coercion' constructor only appears in argument positions, and so, if the
functions are equal, then the arguments must have equal types. Because the
comparison for coercions (correctly) checks only their types, checking for
@@ -215,7 +214,6 @@ alpha-equality of the coercions is redundant.
{- Note [Alpha-equality for let-bindings]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
For /recursive/ let-bindings we need to check that the types of the binders
are alpha-equivalent. Otherwise
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Multiplicity.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Multiplicity.hs
index 2c3828c712..b3c268c356 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Multiplicity.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Multiplicity.hs
@@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ We have
The goal is to maximise reuse of types between linear code and traditional
code. This is argued at length in the proposal and the article (links in Note
-[Linear Types]).
+[Linear types]).
Note [Polymorphisation of linear fields]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Arity.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Arity.hs
index 9ff08b142b..ceef44afbf 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Arity.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Arity.hs
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ exprArity e = go e
| otherwise = go e
go (Tick t e) | not (tickishIsCode t) = go e
go (Cast e co) = trim_arity (go e) (coercionRKind co)
- -- Note [exprArity invariant]
+ -- See Note [exprArity invariant]
go (App e (Type _)) = go e
go (App f a) | exprIsTrivial a = (go f - 1) `max` 0
-- See Note [exprArity for applications]
@@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ typeArity ty
| Just (tc,tys) <- splitTyConApp_maybe ty
, Just (ty', _) <- instNewTyCon_maybe tc tys
- , Just rec_nts' <- checkRecTc rec_nts tc -- See Note [Expanding newtypes]
+ , Just rec_nts' <- checkRecTc rec_nts tc -- See Note [Expanding newtypes and products]
-- in GHC.Core.TyCon
-- , not (isClassTyCon tc) -- Do not eta-expand through newtype classes
-- -- See Note [Newtype classes and eta expansion]
@@ -708,7 +708,7 @@ until it finds a stable arity type. Two wrinkles
by the 'am_sigs' field in 'FindRhsArity', and 'lookupSigEnv' in the Var case
of 'arityType'.
-Note [Exciting Arity]
+Note [Exciting arity]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The fixed-point iteration in 'findRhsArity' stabilises very quickly in almost
all cases. To get notified of cases where we need an usual number of iterations,
@@ -1047,8 +1047,8 @@ arityType env (App fun arg )
--
arityType env (Case scrut bndr _ alts)
| exprIsDeadEnd scrut || null alts
- = botArityType -- Do not eta expand. See Note [Dealing with bottom (1)]
- | not (pedanticBottoms env) -- See Note [Dealing with bottom (2)]
+ = botArityType -- Do not eta expand. See (1) in Note [Dealing with bottom]
+ | not (pedanticBottoms env) -- See (2) in Note [Dealing with bottom]
, myExprIsCheap env scrut (Just (idType bndr))
= alts_type
| exprOkForSpeculation scrut
@@ -1514,7 +1514,7 @@ etaInfoApp in_scope expr eis
(subst', b') = Core.substBindSC subst b
-- Beta-reduction if possible, pushing any intervening casts past
- -- the argument. See Note [The EtaInfo mechansim]
+ -- the argument. See Note [The EtaInfo mechanism]
go subst (Lam v e) (EI (b:bs) mco)
| Just (arg,mco') <- pushMCoArg mco (varToCoreExpr b)
= go (Core.extendSubst subst v arg) e (EI bs mco')
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/CallArity.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/CallArity.hs
index c551227486..656d6a9fc1 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/CallArity.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/CallArity.hs
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ The two analysis are not completely independent, as a higher arity can improve
the information about what variables are being called once or multiple times.
Note [Analysis I: The arity analysis]
-------------------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The arity analysis is quite straightforward: The information about an
expression is an
@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ minimum (considering Nothing an infinity).
Note [Analysis II: The Co-Called analysis]
-------------------------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The second part is more sophisticated. For reasons explained below, it is not
sufficient to simply know how often an expression evaluates a variable. Instead
@@ -438,7 +438,7 @@ callArityAnalProgram binds = binds'
where
(_, binds') = callArityTopLvl [] emptyVarSet binds
--- See Note [Analysing top-level-binds]
+-- See Note [Analysing top-level binds]
callArityTopLvl :: [Var] -> VarSet -> [CoreBind] -> (CallArityRes, [CoreBind])
callArityTopLvl exported _ []
= ( calledMultipleTimes $ (emptyUnVarGraph, mkVarEnv $ [(v, 0) | v <- exported])
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/ConstantFold.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/ConstantFold.hs
index 8910257477..bb44ed4bd5 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/ConstantFold.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/ConstantFold.hs
@@ -1715,7 +1715,9 @@ guardDoubleDiv = do
[Lit (LitDouble d1), Lit (LitDouble d2)] <- getArgs
guard $ (d1 /=0 || d2 > 0) -- see Note [negative zero]
&& d2 /= 0 -- avoid NaN and Infinity/-Infinity
--- Note [negative zero] Avoid (0 / -d), otherwise 0/(-1) reduces to
+-- Note [negative zero]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+-- Avoid (0 / -d), otherwise 0/(-1) reduces to
-- zero, but we might want to preserve the negative zero here which
-- is representable in Float/Double but not in (normalised)
-- Rational. (#3676) Perhaps we should generate (0 :% (-1)) instead?
@@ -1732,14 +1734,12 @@ strengthReduction two_lit add_op = do -- Note [Strength reduction]
-- Note [Strength reduction]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- This rule turns floating point multiplications of the form 2.0 * x and
-- x * 2.0 into x + x addition, because addition costs less than multiplication.
-- See #7116
-- Note [What's true and false]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- trueValInt and falseValInt represent true and false values returned by
-- comparison primops for Char, Int, Word, Integer, Double, Float and Addr.
-- True is represented as an unboxed 1# literal, while false is represented
@@ -1820,7 +1820,7 @@ tagToEnumRule = do
------------------------------
dataToTagRule :: RuleM CoreExpr
--- See Note [dataToTag#] in primops.txt.pp
+-- See Note [dataToTag# magic].
dataToTagRule = a `mplus` b
where
-- dataToTag (tagToEnum x) ==> x
@@ -2465,7 +2465,6 @@ match_cstring_length rule_env env _ [lit1]
in Just (Lit (mkLitInt (roPlatform rule_env) (fromIntegral len)))
match_cstring_length _ _ _ _ = Nothing
----------------------------------------------------
{- Note [inlineId magic]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The call 'inline f' arranges that 'f' is inlined, regardless of
@@ -3306,7 +3305,7 @@ Instead, we deal with turning one branch into DEFAULT in GHC.Core.Opt.Simplify.U
Note [caseRules for dataToTag]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-See also Note [dataToTag#] in primops.txt.pp
+See also Note [dataToTag# magic].
We want to transform
case dataToTag x of
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatIn.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatIn.hs
index 6e4b724310..37cb23e338 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatIn.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatIn.hs
@@ -353,7 +353,7 @@ So: rather than drop \tr{w}'s binding here, we add it onto the list of
things to drop in the outer let's body, and let nature take its
course.
-Note [extra_fvs (1): avoid floating into RHS]
+Note [extra_fvs (1)]: avoid floating into RHS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider let x=\y....t... in body. We do not necessarily want to float
a binding for t into the RHS, because it'll immediately be floated out
@@ -371,7 +371,7 @@ can't have unboxed bindings.
So we make "extra_fvs" which is the rhs_fvs of such bindings, and
arrange to dump bindings that bind extra_fvs before the entire let.
-Note [extra_fvs (2): free variables of rules]
+Note [extra_fvs (2)]: free variables of rules
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider
let x{rule mentioning y} = rhs in body
@@ -504,7 +504,7 @@ fiBind :: Platform
fiBind platform to_drop (AnnNonRec id ann_rhs@(rhs_fvs, rhs)) body_fvs
= ( extra_binds ++ shared_binds -- Land these before
- -- See Note [extra_fvs (1,2)]
+ -- See Note [extra_fvs (1)] and Note [extra_fvs (2)]
, FB (unitDVarSet id) rhs_fvs' -- The new binding itself
(FloatLet (NonRec id rhs'))
, body_binds ) -- Land these after
@@ -512,12 +512,12 @@ fiBind platform to_drop (AnnNonRec id ann_rhs@(rhs_fvs, rhs)) body_fvs
where
body_fvs2 = body_fvs `delDVarSet` id
- rule_fvs = bndrRuleAndUnfoldingVarsDSet id -- See Note [extra_fvs (2): free variables of rules]
+ rule_fvs = bndrRuleAndUnfoldingVarsDSet id -- See Note [extra_fvs (2)]
extra_fvs | noFloatIntoRhs NonRecursive id rhs
= rule_fvs `unionDVarSet` rhs_fvs
| otherwise
= rule_fvs
- -- See Note [extra_fvs (1): avoid floating into RHS]
+ -- See Note [extra_fvs (1)]
-- No point in floating in only to float straight out again
-- We *can't* float into ok-for-speculation unlifted RHSs
-- But do float into join points
@@ -601,7 +601,7 @@ noFloatIntoArg expr expr_ty
|| all isTyVar (bndr:bndrs) -- Wrinkle 1 (b)
-- See Note [noFloatInto considerations] wrinkle 2
- | otherwise -- Note [noFloatInto considerations] wrinkle 2
+ | otherwise -- See Note [noFloatInto considerations] wrinkle 2
= exprIsTrivial deann_expr || exprIsHNF deann_expr
where
deann_expr = deAnnotate' expr
@@ -742,7 +742,6 @@ sepBindsByDropPoint platform is_case drop_pts floaters
{- Note [Duplicating floats]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
For case expressions we duplicate the binding if it is reasonably
small, and if it is not used in all the RHSs This is good for
situations like
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatOut.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatOut.hs
index fbed53fbf3..1a88c97d55 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatOut.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/FloatOut.hs
@@ -280,7 +280,7 @@ splitRecFloats fs
-- non-rec
installUnderLambdas :: Bag FloatBind -> CoreExpr -> CoreExpr
--- Note [Floating out of Rec rhss]
+-- See Note [Floating out of Rec rhss]
installUnderLambdas floats e
| isEmptyBag floats = e
| otherwise = go e
@@ -374,7 +374,6 @@ floatBody lvl arg -- Used rec rhss, and case-alternative rhss
{- Note [Floating past breakpoints]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
We used to disallow floating out of breakpoint ticks (see #10052). However, I
think this is too restrictive.
@@ -428,7 +427,7 @@ floatExpr (Tick tickish expr)
in
(fs, annotated_defns, Tick tickish expr') }
- -- Note [Floating past breakpoints]
+ -- See Note [Floating past breakpoints]
| Breakpoint{} <- tickish
= case (floatExpr expr) of { (fs, floating_defns, expr') ->
(fs, floating_defns, Tick tickish expr') }
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/LiberateCase.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/LiberateCase.hs
index 3c9eb5c3d0..1598526ada 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/LiberateCase.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/LiberateCase.hs
@@ -168,7 +168,7 @@ libCaseBind env (Rec pairs)
ok_pair (id,_)
= idArity id > 0 -- Note [Only functions!]
- && not (isDeadEndId id) -- Note [Not bottoming ids]
+ && not (isDeadEndId id) -- Note [Not bottoming Ids]
{- Note [Not bottoming Ids]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify.hs
index 4f5ece8fca..575512b7c8 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify.hs
@@ -1393,6 +1393,7 @@ simplTick env tickish expr cont
getDoneId other = pprPanic "getDoneId" (ppr other)
-- Note [case-of-scc-of-case]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- It's pretty important to be able to transform case-of-case when
-- there's an SCC in the way. For example, the following comes up
-- in nofib/real/compress/Encode.hs:
@@ -1992,6 +1993,7 @@ simplIdF env var cont
cont' = trimJoinCont var mb_join cont
in simplExprF env' e cont'
-- Note [zapSubstEnv]
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- The template is already simplified, so don't re-substitute.
-- This is VITAL. Consider
-- let x = e in
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify/Utils.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify/Utils.hs
index e288646d74..409f3176eb 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify/Utils.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Simplify/Utils.hs
@@ -1293,7 +1293,7 @@ preInlineUnconditionally env top_lvl bndr rhs rhs_env
| not (one_occ (idOccInfo bndr)) = Nothing
| not (isStableUnfolding unf) = Just $! (extend_subst_with rhs)
- -- Note [Stable unfoldings and preInlineUnconditionally]
+ -- See Note [Stable unfoldings and preInlineUnconditionally]
| not (isInlinePragma inline_prag)
, Just inl <- maybeUnfoldingTemplate unf = Just $! (extend_subst_with inl)
| otherwise = Nothing
@@ -1395,7 +1395,7 @@ our new view that inlining is like a RULE, so I'm sticking to the 'active'
story for now.
NB: unconditional inlining of this sort can introduce ticks in places that
-may seem surprising; for instance, the LHS of rules. See Note [Simplfying
+may seem surprising; for instance, the LHS of rules. See Note [Simplifying
rules] for details.
-}
@@ -2196,7 +2196,7 @@ prepareAlts scrut case_bndr' alts
mkCase tries these things
-* Note [Nerge nested cases]
+* Note [Merge nested cases]
* Note [Eliminate identity case]
* Note [Scrutinee constant folding]
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/SpecConstr.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/SpecConstr.hs
index 9c4c52107a..afd8afc5ea 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/SpecConstr.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/SpecConstr.hs
@@ -1181,8 +1181,8 @@ data ArgOcc = NoOcc -- Doesn't occur at all; or a type argument
| ScrutOcc -- See Note [ScrutOcc]
(DataConEnv [ArgOcc]) -- How the sub-components are used
-{- Note [ScrutOcc]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+{- Note [ScrutOcc]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
An occurrence of ScrutOcc indicates that the thing, or a `cast` version of the thing,
is *only* taken apart or applied.
@@ -1316,7 +1316,7 @@ scExpr' env (Let (NonRec bndr rhs) body)
; rhs_info <- scRecRhs env (bndr',rhs)
; let body_env2 = extendHowBound body_env [bndr'] RecFun
- -- Note [Local let bindings]
+ -- See Note [Local let bindings]
rhs' = ri_new_rhs rhs_info
body_env3 = extendValEnv body_env2 bndr' (isValue (sc_vals env) rhs')
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Specialise.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Specialise.hs
index 3c2d10823d..25e4859300 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Specialise.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/Specialise.hs
@@ -809,7 +809,7 @@ canSpecImport dflags fn
tryWarnMissingSpecs :: DynFlags -> [Id] -> Id -> [CallInfo] -> CoreM ()
-- See Note [Warning about missed specialisations]
tryWarnMissingSpecs dflags callers fn calls_for_fn
- | isClassOpId fn = return () -- See Note [Missed specialization for ClassOps]
+ | isClassOpId fn = return () -- See Note [Missed specialisation for ClassOps]
| wopt Opt_WarnMissedSpecs dflags
&& not (null callers)
&& allCallersInlined = doWarn $ WarningWithFlag Opt_WarnMissedSpecs
@@ -1434,7 +1434,7 @@ specCalls spec_imp env existing_rules calls_for_me fn rhs
-- See Note [Auto-specialisation and RULES]
-- && not (certainlyWillInline (idUnfolding fn)) -- And it's not small
--- See Note [Inline specialisation] for why we do not
+-- See Note [Inline specialisations] for why we do not
-- switch off specialisation for inline functions
= -- pprTrace "specDefn: some" (ppr fn $$ ppr calls_for_me $$ ppr existing_rules) $
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap.hs
index 5b31f76ed1..6180a69ab8 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap.hs
@@ -821,7 +821,7 @@ mkWWBindPair ww_opts fn_id fn_info fn_args fn_body work_uniq div
work_arity = length work_demands
- -- See Note [Demand on the Worker]
+ -- See Note [Demand on the worker]
single_call = saturatedByOneShots arity (demandInfo fn_info)
worker_demand | single_call = mkWorkerDemand work_arity
| otherwise = topDmd
@@ -845,7 +845,7 @@ mkStrWrapperInlinePrag :: InlinePragma -> [CoreRule] -> InlinePragma
-- See Note [Wrapper activation]
mkStrWrapperInlinePrag (InlinePragma { inl_act = act, inl_rule = rule_info }) rules
= InlinePragma { inl_src = SourceText "{-# INLINE"
- , inl_inline = NoUserInlinePrag -- See Note [Wrapper NoUserInline]
+ , inl_inline = NoUserInlinePrag -- See Note [Wrapper NoUserInlinePrag]
, inl_sat = Nothing
, inl_act = activeAfter wrapper_phase
, inl_rule = rule_info } -- RuleMatchInfo is (and must be) unaffected
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap/Utils.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap/Utils.hs
index 698a85988a..86e57286c1 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap/Utils.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Opt/WorkWrap/Utils.hs
@@ -576,7 +576,7 @@ wantToUnboxArg fam_envs ty (n :* sd)
| Just (tc, tc_args, co) <- normSplitTyConApp_maybe fam_envs ty
, Just dc <- tyConSingleAlgDataCon_maybe tc
, let arity = dataConRepArity dc
- , Just (Unboxed, ds) <- viewProd arity sd -- See Note [Boxity Analysis]
+ , Just (Unboxed, ds) <- viewProd arity sd -- See Note [Boxity analysis]
-- NB: No strictness or evaluatedness checks here. That is done by
-- 'finaliseBoxity'!
= Unbox (DataConPatContext dc tc_args co) ds
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/TyCo/Subst.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/TyCo/Subst.hs
index ec77cd2671..32817ca6c7 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/TyCo/Subst.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/TyCo/Subst.hs
@@ -179,8 +179,8 @@ variations happen to; for example [a -> (a, b)].
A TCvSubst is not idempotent, but, unlike the non-idempotent substitution
we use during unifications, it must not be repeatedly applied.
-Note [Extending the TvSubstEnv]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Note [Extending the TCvSubstEnv]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
See #tcvsubst_invariant# for the invariants that must hold.
This invariant allows a short-cut when the subst envs are empty:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/TyCon.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/TyCon.hs
index 7c4ad2dfcf..df8bf09fa0 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/TyCon.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/TyCon.hs
@@ -442,7 +442,7 @@ See #19367.
type TyConBinder = VarBndr TyVar TyConBndrVis
type TyConTyCoBinder = VarBndr TyCoVar TyConBndrVis
-- Only PromotedDataCon has TyConTyCoBinders
- -- See Note [Promoted GADT data construtors]
+ -- See Note [Promoted GADT data constructors]
data TyConBndrVis
= NamedTCB ArgFlag
@@ -1712,7 +1712,7 @@ isGcPtrRep UnliftedRep = True
isGcPtrRep _ = False
-- A PrimRep is compatible with another iff one can be coerced to the other.
--- See Note [bad unsafe coercion] in GHC.Core.Lint for when are two types coercible.
+-- See Note [Bad unsafe coercion] in GHC.Core.Lint for when are two types coercible.
primRepCompatible :: Platform -> PrimRep -> PrimRep -> Bool
primRepCompatible platform rep1 rep2 =
(isUnboxed rep1 == isUnboxed rep2) &&
@@ -2436,7 +2436,7 @@ setTcTyConKind :: TyCon -> Kind -> TyCon
-- Update the Kind of a TcTyCon
-- The new kind is always a zonked version of its previous
-- kind, so we don't need to update any other fields.
--- See Note [The Purely Kinded Invariant] in GHC.Tc.Gen.HsType
+-- See Note [The Purely Kinded Type Invariant (PKTI)] in GHC.Tc.Gen.HsType
setTcTyConKind tc@(TcTyCon {}) kind = let tc' = tc { tyConKind = kind
, tyConNullaryTy = mkNakedTyConTy tc'
-- see Note [Sharing nullary TyCons]
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Unfold.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Unfold.hs
index 08c5a10b30..c341107957 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Unfold.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Unfold.hs
@@ -1246,8 +1246,12 @@ tryUnfolding logger opts !case_depth id lone_variable
{-
-Note [Unfold into lazy contexts], Note [RHS of lets]
+Note [Unfold into lazy contexts]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Merged into Note [RHS of lets].
+
+Note [RHS of lets]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When the call is the argument of a function with a RULE, or the RHS of a let,
we are a little bit keener to inline. For example
f y = (y,y,y)
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Core/Utils.hs b/compiler/GHC/Core/Utils.hs
index 244f5f4b42..24ab87ac06 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Core/Utils.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Core/Utils.hs
@@ -1218,12 +1218,12 @@ there is only dictionary selection (no construction) involved
Note [exprIsCheap]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-See also Note [Interaction of exprIsCheap and lone variables] in GHC.Core.Unfold
+See also Note [Interaction of exprIsWorkFree and lone variables] in GHC.Core.Unfold
@exprIsCheap@ looks at a Core expression and returns \tr{True} if
it is obviously in weak head normal form, or is cheap to get to WHNF.
-[Note that that's not the same as exprIsDupable; an expression might be
-big, and hence not dupable, but still cheap.]
+Note that that's not the same as exprIsDupable; an expression might be
+big, and hence not dupable, but still cheap.
By ``cheap'' we mean a computation we're willing to:
push inside a lambda, or
@@ -1951,7 +1951,7 @@ exprIsHNFlike is_con is_con_unf = is_hnf_like
{-
Note [exprIsHNF Tick]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We can discard source annotations on HNFs as long as they aren't
tick-like:
@@ -2338,7 +2338,9 @@ There are some particularly delicate points here:
The above is correct, but eta-reducing g would yield g=f, the linter will
complain that g and f don't have the same type.
-* Note [Arity care]: we need to be careful if we just look at f's
+* Note [Arity care]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ We need to be careful if we just look at f's
arity. Currently (Dec07), f's arity is visible in its own RHS (see
Note [Arity robustness] in GHC.Core.Opt.Simplify.Env) so we must *not* trust the
arity when checking that 'f' is a value. Otherwise we will
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/CoreToStg/Prep.hs b/compiler/GHC/CoreToStg/Prep.hs
index afff96e6ed..99c4cd4e8c 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/CoreToStg/Prep.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/CoreToStg/Prep.hs
@@ -82,9 +82,8 @@ import Data.Functor.Identity
import Control.Monad
{-
--- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- Note [CorePrep Overview]
--- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Note [CorePrep Overview]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The goal of this pass is to prepare for code generation.
@@ -2173,7 +2172,7 @@ newVar ty
-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Note [Floating Ticks in CorePrep]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- It might seem counter-intuitive to float ticks by default, given
-- that we don't actually want to move them if we can help it. On the
-- other hand, nothing gets very far in CorePrep anyway, and we want
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Data/FastString.hs b/compiler/GHC/Data/FastString.hs
index 1b2f21c415..1d9e419418 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Data/FastString.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Data/FastString.hs
@@ -430,7 +430,7 @@ mkFastString# a# = mkFastStringBytes ptr (ptrStrLength ptr)
where ptr = Ptr a#
{- Note [Updating the FastString table]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We use a concurrent hashtable which contains multiple segments, each hash value
always maps to the same segment. Read is lock-free, write to the a segment
should acquire a lock for that segment to avoid race condition, writes to
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Driver/CmdLine.hs b/compiler/GHC/Driver/CmdLine.hs
index b1226ecdca..539f27c53e 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Driver/CmdLine.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Driver/CmdLine.hs
@@ -320,15 +320,15 @@ missingArgErr f = Left ("missing argument for flag: " ++ f)
--------------------------------------------------------
--- See Note [Handling errors when parsing flags]
+-- See Note [Handling errors when parsing command-line flags]
errorsToGhcException :: [(String, -- Location
String)] -- Error
-> GhcException
errorsToGhcException errs =
UsageError $ intercalate "\n" $ [ l ++ ": " ++ e | (l, e) <- errs ]
-{- Note [Handling errors when parsing commandline flags]
-
+{- Note [Handling errors when parsing command-line flags]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Parsing of static and mode flags happens before any session is started, i.e.,
before the first call to 'GHC.withGhc'. Therefore, to report errors for
invalid usage of these two types of flags, we can not call any function that
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Flags.hs b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Flags.hs
index df833b03d1..b8a82656e8 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Flags.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Flags.hs
@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@ data GeneralFlag
| Opt_ShowHoleConstraints
-- Options relating to the display of valid hole fits
-- when generating an error message for a typed hole
- -- See Note [Valid hole fits include] in GHC.Tc.Errors.Hole
+ -- See Note [Valid hole fits include ...] in GHC.Tc.Errors.Hole
| Opt_ShowValidHoleFits
| Opt_SortValidHoleFits
| Opt_SortBySizeHoleFits
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Main.hs b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Main.hs
index 5c088cc959..3e48771ace 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Main.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Main.hs
@@ -839,8 +839,7 @@ initModDetails hsc_env mod_summary iface =
{-
Note [ModDetails and --make mode]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
An interface file consists of two parts
* The `ModIface` which ends up getting written to disk.
@@ -957,7 +956,6 @@ hscDesugarAndSimplify summary (FrontendTypecheck tc_result) tc_warnings mb_old_h
{-
Note [Writing interface files]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
We write one interface file per module and per compilation, except with
-dynamic-too where we write two interface files (non-dynamic and dynamic).
@@ -1762,7 +1760,6 @@ hscCompileCmmFile hsc_env filename output_filename = runHsc hsc_env $ do
{-
Note [Forcing of stg_binds]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The two last steps in the STG pipeline are:
* Sorting the bindings in dependency order.
@@ -2073,7 +2070,6 @@ hscAddSptEntries hsc_env mnwib entries = do
{-
Note [Fixity declarations in GHCi]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
To support fixity declarations on types defined within GHCi (as requested
in #10018) we record the fixity environment in InteractiveContext.
When we want to evaluate something GHC.Tc.Module.runTcInteractive pulls out this
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Make.hs b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Make.hs
index fb823e842f..4ec6d13348 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Make.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Make.hs
@@ -447,7 +447,7 @@ loadWithCache cache how_much = do
else throwErrors (fmap GhcDriverMessage errs)
-- Note [Unused packages]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- Cabal passes `--package-id` flag for each direct dependency. But GHC
-- loads them lazily, so when compilation is done, we have a list of all
-- actually loaded packages. All the packages, specified on command line,
@@ -846,7 +846,6 @@ a pair of an `IO a` action and a `MVar a`, where to place the result.
Note [--make mode]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
There are two main parts to `--make` mode.
1. `downsweep`: Starts from the top of the module graph and computes dependencies.
@@ -857,7 +856,6 @@ computers how to build this ModuleGraph.
Note [Upsweep]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Upsweep takes a 'ModuleGraph' as input, computes a build plan and then executes
the plan in order to compile the project.
@@ -2638,7 +2636,7 @@ waitMakeAction :: MakeAction -> IO ()
waitMakeAction (MakeAction _ mvar) = () <$ readMVar mvar
{- Note [GHC Heap Invariants]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This note is a general place to explain some of the heap invariants which should
hold for a program compiled with --make mode. These invariants are all things
which can be checked easily using ghc-debug.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline.hs b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline.hs
index 3aaf9f298e..56e188395e 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline.hs
@@ -303,7 +303,7 @@ compileOne' mHscMessage
= (Interpreter, gopt_set (dflags2 { backend = Interpreter }) Opt_ForceRecomp)
| otherwise
= (backend dflags, dflags2)
- -- Note [Filepaths and Multiple Home Units]
+ -- See Note [Filepaths and Multiple Home Units]
dflags = dflags3 { includePaths = offsetIncludePaths dflags3 $ addImplicitQuoteInclude old_paths [current_dir] }
upd_summary = summary { ms_hspp_opts = dflags }
hsc_env = hscSetFlags dflags hsc_env0
@@ -314,7 +314,6 @@ compileOne' mHscMessage
--
-- Note [Dynamic linking on macOS]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Since macOS Sierra (10.14), the dynamic system linker enforces
-- a limit on the Load Commands. Specifically the Load Command Size
-- Limit is at 32K (32768). The Load Commands contain the install
@@ -906,10 +905,8 @@ pipelineStart pipe_env hsc_env input_fn =
fromSuffix _ = return (Just input_fn)
{-
-
Note [The Pipeline Monad]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The pipeline is represented as a free monad by the `TPipelineClass` type synonym,
which stipulates the general monadic interface for the pipeline and `MonadUse`, instantiated
to `TPhase`, which indicates the actions available in the pipeline.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline/Execute.hs b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline/Execute.hs
index 970c00eab2..6bc9df7c6f 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline/Execute.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Pipeline/Execute.hs
@@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ runMergeForeign _pipe_env hsc_env input_fn foreign_os = do
runLlvmLlcPhase :: PipeEnv -> HscEnv -> FilePath -> IO FilePath
runLlvmLlcPhase pipe_env hsc_env input_fn = do
-- Note [Clamping of llc optimizations]
- --
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- See #13724
--
-- we clamp the llc optimization between [1,2]. This is because passing -O0
@@ -1077,7 +1077,6 @@ compileStub hsc_env stub_c = compileForeign hsc_env LangC stub_c
{-
Note [Produce big objects on Windows]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The Windows Portable Executable object format has a limit of 32k sections, which
we tend to blow through pretty easily. Thankfully, there is a "big object"
extension, which raises this limit to 2^32. However, it must be explicitly
@@ -1272,7 +1271,7 @@ getGhcVersionPathName dflags unit_env = do
-- + 3c: R_SPARC_HI22 _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_-0x8
{- Note [Don't normalise input filenames]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Summary
We used to normalise input filenames when starting the unlit phase. This
broke hpc in `--make` mode with imported literate modules (#2991).
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Session.hs b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Session.hs
index 0c4503a085..838f0bf3b7 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Driver/Session.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Driver/Session.hs
@@ -1883,7 +1883,7 @@ parseDynamicFlagsFull activeFlags cmdline dflags0 args = do
let ((leftover, errs, warns), dflags1)
= runCmdLine (processArgs activeFlags args) dflags0
- -- See Note [Handling errors when parsing commandline flags]
+ -- See Note [Handling errors when parsing command-line flags]
let rdr = renderWithContext (initSDocContext dflags0 defaultUserStyle)
unless (null errs) $ liftIO $ throwGhcExceptionIO $ errorsToGhcException $
map ((rdr . ppr . getLoc &&& unLoc) . errMsg) $ errs
@@ -4586,8 +4586,8 @@ pieCCLDOpts dflags
{-
-Note [No PIE while linking]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Note [No PIE when linking]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As of 2016 some Linux distributions (e.g. Debian) have started enabling -pie by
default in their gcc builds. This is incompatible with -r as it implies that we
are producing an executable. Consequently, we must manually pass -no-pie to gcc
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Coverage.hs b/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Coverage.hs
index 2e45539fba..20086620e5 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Coverage.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Coverage.hs
@@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ bindTick density name pos fvs = do
-- Note [inline sccs]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- The reason not to add ticks to INLINE functions is that this is
-- sometimes handy for avoiding adding a tick to a particular function
-- (see #6131)
@@ -1080,6 +1080,7 @@ noFVs :: FreeVars
noFVs = emptyOccEnv
-- Note [freevars]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- For breakpoints we want to collect the free variables of an
-- expression for pinning on the HsTick. We don't want to collect
-- *all* free variables though: in particular there's no point pinning
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Match.hs b/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Match.hs
index 28391fa815..7719e14192 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Match.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Match.hs
@@ -254,7 +254,7 @@ match (v:vs) ty eqns -- Eqns *can* be empty
maybeWarn $ filter (not . null) gs
matchEmpty :: MatchId -> Type -> DsM (NonEmpty (MatchResult CoreExpr))
--- See Note [Empty case expressions]
+-- See Note [Empty case alternatives]
matchEmpty var res_ty
= return [MR_Fallible mk_seq]
where
@@ -343,7 +343,7 @@ We do *not* desugar simply to
error "empty case"
or some such, because 'x' might be bound to (error "hello"), in which
case we want to see that "hello" exception, not (error "empty case").
-See also Note [Case elimination: lifted case] in GHC.Core.Opt.Simplify.
+See also the "lifted case" discussion in Note [Case elimination] in GHC.Core.Opt.Simplify.
************************************************************************
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Pmc/Solver.hs b/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Pmc/Solver.hs
index 7623c6e710..b19ce0c475 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Pmc/Solver.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Pmc/Solver.hs
@@ -1004,7 +1004,7 @@ The term oracle state is never obviously (i.e., without consulting the type
oracle or doing inhabitation testing) contradictory. This implies a few
invariants:
* Whenever vi_pos overlaps with vi_neg according to 'eqPmAltCon', we refute.
- This is implied by the Note [Pos/Neg invariant].
+ This is implied by the Note [The Pos/Neg invariant].
* Whenever vi_neg subsumes a COMPLETE set, we refute. We consult vi_rcm to
detect this, but we could just compare whole COMPLETE sets to vi_neg every
time, if it weren't for performance.
@@ -1496,7 +1496,7 @@ matchConLikeResTy _ (TySt _ inert) ty (PatSynCon ps) = {-# SCC "matchConLikeRe
then pure subst
else mzero
-{- Note [Soundness and completeness]
+{- Note [Soundness and Completeness]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Soundness and completeness of the pattern-match checker depend entirely on the
soundness and completeness of the inhabitation test.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Types.hs b/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Types.hs
index bc9d7b4c1d..e147758260 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Types.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/HsToCore/Types.hs
@@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ data DsLclEnv
{ dsl_meta :: DsMetaEnv -- ^ Template Haskell bindings
, dsl_loc :: RealSrcSpan -- ^ To put in pattern-matching error msgs
, dsl_nablas :: Nablas
- -- ^ See Note [Note [Long-distance information] in "GHC.HsToCore.Pmc".
+ -- ^ See Note [Long-distance information] in "GHC.HsToCore.Pmc".
-- The set of reaching values Nablas is augmented as we walk inwards, refined
-- through each pattern match in turn
}
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Iface/Ext/Ast.hs b/compiler/GHC/Iface/Ext/Ast.hs
index 83eb475a78..cc694f249f 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Iface/Ext/Ast.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Iface/Ext/Ast.hs
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ import Control.Monad.Trans.Class ( lift )
import Control.Applicative ( (<|>) )
{- Note [Updating HieAst for changes in the GHC AST]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When updating the code in this file for changes in the GHC AST, you
need to pay attention to the following things:
@@ -210,6 +210,7 @@ type TypecheckedSource = LHsBinds GhcTc
{- Note [Name Remapping]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Typechecker introduces new names for mono names in AbsBinds.
We don't care about the distinction between mono and poly bindings,
so we replace all occurrences of the mono name with the poly name.
@@ -415,6 +416,7 @@ concatM :: Monad m => [m [a]] -> m [a]
concatM xs = concat <$> sequence xs
{- Note [Capturing Scopes and other non local information]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
toHie is a local transformation, but scopes of bindings cannot be known locally,
hence we have to push the relevant info down into the binding nodes.
We use the following types (*Context and *Scoped) to wrap things and
@@ -459,6 +461,7 @@ data PScoped a = PS (Maybe Span)
deriving (Typeable, Data) -- Pattern Scope
{- Note [TyVar Scopes]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Due to -XScopedTypeVariables, type variables can be in scope quite far from
their original binding. We resolve the scope of these type variables
in a separate pass
@@ -512,6 +515,7 @@ tvScopes tvScope rhsScope xs =
map (\(RS sc a)-> TVS tvScope sc a) $ listScopes rhsScope xs
{- Note [Scoping Rules for SigPat]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Explicitly quantified variables in pattern type signatures are not
brought into scope in the rhs, but implicitly quantified variables
are (HsWC and HsIB).
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp.hs b/compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp.hs
index fc12701b61..2c1943074c 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp.hs
@@ -1474,6 +1474,7 @@ declExtras fix_fn ann_fn rule_env inst_env fi_env dm_env decl
{- Note [default method Name] (see also #15970)
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Names for the default methods aren't available in Iface syntax.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp/Flags.hs b/compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp/Flags.hs
index ace07c5977..90f3afebbc 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp/Flags.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Iface/Recomp/Flags.hs
@@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ fingerprintHpcFlags dflags@DynFlags{..} nameio =
{- Note [path flags and recompilation]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are several flags that we deliberately omit from the
recompilation check; here we explain why.
@@ -140,7 +140,6 @@ The only path-related flag left is -hcsuf.
{- Note [Ignoring some flag changes]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Normally, --make tries to reuse only compilation products that are
the same as those that would have been produced compiling from
scratch. Sometimes, however, users would like to be more aggressive
@@ -159,7 +158,6 @@ options out of the flag hash, hashing them separately.
{- Note [Repeated -optP hashing]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
We invoke fingerprintDynFlags for each compiled module to include
the hash of relevant DynFlags in the resulting interface file.
-optP (preprocessor) flags are part of that hash.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Linker/Loader.hs b/compiler/GHC/Linker/Loader.hs
index a3a2059f07..046ec5ffd7 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Linker/Loader.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Linker/Loader.hs
@@ -444,7 +444,7 @@ mergeStaticObjects specs = go [] specs
go [] [] = []
{- Note [preload packages]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Why do we need to preload packages from the command line? This is an
explanation copied from #2437:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Rename/Env.hs b/compiler/GHC/Rename/Env.hs
index a3c126222f..e19697bb40 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Rename/Env.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Rename/Env.hs
@@ -1430,7 +1430,7 @@ lookupGreRn_maybe fos rdr_name
{-
Note [ Unbound vs Ambiguous Names ]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lookupGreRn_maybe deals with failures in two different ways. If a name
is unbound then we return a `Nothing` but if the name is ambiguous
then we raise an error and return a dummy name.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Rename/Expr.hs b/compiler/GHC/Rename/Expr.hs
index 837d2b55e8..bb529c8066 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Rename/Expr.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Rename/Expr.hs
@@ -1720,7 +1720,7 @@ ApplicativeDo
************************************************************************
Note [ApplicativeDo]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
= Example =
For a sequence of statements
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Rename/Unbound.hs b/compiler/GHC/Rename/Unbound.hs
index 5bbc2927ab..6d48ea3074 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Rename/Unbound.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Rename/Unbound.hs
@@ -232,6 +232,7 @@ similarNameSuggestions looking_for@(LF what_look where_look) dflags global_env
([], []) -> [] ]
-- Note [Only-quals]
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- The second alternative returns those names with the same
-- OccName as the one we tried, but live in *qualified* imports
-- e.g. if you have:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Runtime/Eval.hs b/compiler/GHC/Runtime/Eval.hs
index b99ffe905a..f95ef3a5d0 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Runtime/Eval.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Runtime/Eval.hs
@@ -691,7 +691,7 @@ pushResume hsc_env resume = hsc_env { hsc_IC = ictxt1 }
{-
Note [Syncing breakpoint info]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To display the values of the free variables for a single breakpoint, the
function `GHC.Runtime.Eval.bindLocalsAtBreakpoint` pulls
out the information from the fields `modBreaks_breakInfo` and
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Runtime/Interpreter.hs b/compiler/GHC/Runtime/Interpreter.hs
index 10d2520f18..2c84980513 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Runtime/Interpreter.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Runtime/Interpreter.hs
@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ import System.Process
import GHC.Conc (pseq, par)
{- Note [Remote GHCi]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When the flag -fexternal-interpreter is given to GHC, interpreted code
is run in a separate process called iserv, and we communicate with the
external process over a pipe using Binary-encoded messages.
@@ -200,7 +200,7 @@ interpCmd interp msg = case interpInstance interp of
-- Note [uninterruptibleMask_ and interpCmd]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- If we receive an async exception, such as ^C, while communicating
-- with the iserv process then we will be out-of-sync and not be able
-- to recover. Thus we use uninterruptibleMask_ during
@@ -510,6 +510,7 @@ unloadObj interp path = do
interpCmd interp (UnloadObj path')
-- Note [loadObj and relative paths]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- the iserv process might have a different current directory from the
-- GHC process, so we must make paths absolute before sending them
-- over.
@@ -635,7 +636,7 @@ runWithPipes createProc prog opts = do
-- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
{- Note [External GHCi pointers]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We have the following ways to reference things in GHCi:
HValue
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/StgToByteCode.hs b/compiler/GHC/StgToByteCode.hs
index a69fe69872..ab5d0fb5bc 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/StgToByteCode.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/StgToByteCode.hs
@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ allocateTopStrings interp topStrings = do
{-
Note [generating code for top-level string literal bindings]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here is a summary on how the byte code generator deals with top-level string
literals:
@@ -1102,7 +1102,6 @@ layoutTuple profile start_off arg_ty reps =
{- Note [unboxed tuple bytecodes and tuple_BCO]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
We have the bytecode instructions RETURN_TUPLE and PUSH_ALTS_TUPLE to
return and receive arbitrary unboxed tuples, respectively. These
instructions use the helper data tuple_BCO and tuple_info.
@@ -1782,7 +1781,9 @@ mkMultiBranch maybe_ncons raw_ways = do
| otherwise
= return (testEQ (fst val) lbl_default `consOL` snd val)
- -- Note [CASEFAIL] It may be that this case has no default
+ -- Note [CASEFAIL]
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ -- It may be that this case has no default
-- branch, but the alternatives are not exhaustive - this
-- happens for GADT cases for example, where the types
-- prove that certain branches are impossible. We could
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Bind.hs b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Bind.hs
index 3f935c848d..435f55106b 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Bind.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Bind.hs
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ cgBind (StgRec pairs)
; emit (catAGraphs inits <*> body) }
{- Note [cgBind rec]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Recursive let-bindings are tricky.
Consider the following pseudocode:
@@ -268,7 +268,7 @@ for semi-obvious reasons.
-}
----------- Note [Selectors] ------------------
+---------- See Note [Selectors] ------------------
mkRhsClosure profile bndr _cc
[NonVoid the_fv] -- Just one free var
upd_flag -- Updatable thunk
@@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ mkRhsClosure profile bndr _cc
let lf_info = mkSelectorLFInfo bndr offset_into_int (isUpdatable upd_flag)
in cgRhsStdThunk bndr lf_info [StgVarArg the_fv]
----------- Note [Ap thunks] ------------------
+---------- See Note [Ap thunks] ------------------
mkRhsClosure profile bndr _cc
fvs
upd_flag
@@ -526,7 +526,6 @@ closureCodeBody top_lvl bndr cl_info cc args@(arg0:_) body fv_details
-- Note [NodeReg clobbered with loopification]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Previously we used to pass nodeReg (aka R1) here. With profiling, upon
-- entering a closure, enterFunCCS was called with R1 passed to it. But since R1
-- may get clobbered inside the body of a closure, and since a self-recursive
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Foreign.hs b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Foreign.hs
index 4c414df9e9..a1ee175bad 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Foreign.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Foreign.hs
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ cgForeignCall (CCall (CCallSpec target cconv safety)) typ stg_args res_ty
}
{- Note [safe foreign call convention]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The simple thing to do for a safe foreign call would be the same as an
unsafe one: just
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Heap.hs b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Heap.hs
index 39a7812b70..ec61ef2406 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Heap.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Heap.hs
@@ -491,6 +491,7 @@ cannedGCEntryPoint platform regs
_otherwise -> Nothing
-- Note [stg_gc arguments]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- It might seem that we could avoid passing the arguments to the
-- stg_gc function, because they are already in the right registers.
-- While this is usually the case, it isn't always. Sometimes the
@@ -670,7 +671,6 @@ do_checks mb_stk_hwm checkYield mb_alloc_lit do_gc = do
-- Note [Self-recursive loop header]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Self-recursive loop header is required by loopification optimization (See
-- Note [Self-recursive tail calls] in GHC.StgToCmm.Expr). We emit it if:
--
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Layout.hs b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Layout.hs
index 9e14d1e766..5664be908e 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Layout.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Layout.hs
@@ -212,7 +212,7 @@ slowCall fun stg_args
" with pat " ++ unpackFS rts_fun)
return r
- -- Note [avoid intermediate PAPs]
+ -- See Note [avoid intermediate PAPs]
let n_args = length stg_args
if n_args > arity && fast_pap
then do
@@ -261,7 +261,7 @@ slowCall fun stg_args
-- Note [avoid intermediate PAPs]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- A slow call which needs multiple generic apply patterns will be
-- almost guaranteed to create one or more intermediate PAPs when
-- applied to a function that takes the correct number of arguments.
@@ -339,7 +339,7 @@ nonVArgs ((_,Just arg) : args) = arg : nonVArgs args
{-
Note [over-saturated calls]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The natural thing to do for an over-saturated call would be to call
the function with the correct number of arguments, and then apply the
remaining arguments to the value returned, e.g.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Monad.hs b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Monad.hs
index d8d6600268..5ab12a4634 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Monad.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Monad.hs
@@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ data ReturnKind
| ReturnedTo BlockId ByteOff
-- Note [sharing continuations]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- ReturnKind says how the expression being compiled returned its
-- results: either by assigning directly to the registers specified
-- by the Sequel, or by returning to a continuation that does the
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Prim.hs b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Prim.hs
index 766a6e8a9c..b980c0aacd 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Prim.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/StgToCmm/Prim.hs
@@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ cgOpApp :: StgOp -- The op
-- Foreign calls
cgOpApp (StgFCallOp fcall ty) stg_args res_ty
= cgForeignCall fcall ty stg_args res_ty
- -- Note [Foreign call results]
+ -- See Note [Foreign call results]
cgOpApp (StgPrimOp primop) args res_ty = do
cfg <- getStgToCmmConfig
@@ -1716,7 +1716,6 @@ emitPrimOp cfg primop =
alwaysExternal = \_ -> PrimopCmmEmit_External
-- Note [QuotRem optimization]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- --
-- `quot` and `rem` with constant divisor can be implemented with fast bit-ops
-- (shift, .&.).
--
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/SysTools.hs b/compiler/GHC/SysTools.hs
index 0b19d50825..adc6e6c241 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/SysTools.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/SysTools.hs
@@ -156,8 +156,8 @@ initSysTools top_dir = do
Left (SettingsError_MissingData msg) -> pgmError msg
Left (SettingsError_BadData msg) -> pgmError msg
-{- Note [Windows stack usage]
-
+{- Note [Windows stack allocations]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
See: #8870 (and #8834 for related info) and #12186
On Windows, occasionally we need to grow the stack. In order to do
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/SysTools/BaseDir.hs b/compiler/GHC/SysTools/BaseDir.hs
index 54c42e7c52..312c029dd9 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/SysTools/BaseDir.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/SysTools/BaseDir.hs
@@ -35,7 +35,6 @@ import System.Directory (doesDirectoryExist)
{-
Note [topdir: How GHC finds its files]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
GHC needs various support files (library packages, RTS etc), plus
various auxiliary programs (cp, gcc, etc). It starts by finding topdir,
the root of GHC's support files
@@ -54,7 +53,7 @@ from topdir we can find package.conf, ghc-asm, etc.
Note [tooldir: How GHC finds mingw on Windows]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GHC has some custom logic on Windows for finding the mingw
toolchain and perl. Depending on whether GHC is built
with the make build system or Hadrian, and on whether we're
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/SysTools/Info.hs b/compiler/GHC/SysTools/Info.hs
index 83a76b9efb..81650495ba 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/SysTools/Info.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/SysTools/Info.hs
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ import GHC.Prelude
import GHC.SysTools.Process
{- Note [Run-time linker info]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
See also: #5240, #6063, #10110
Before 'runLink', we need to be sure to get the relevant information
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ circular dependency.
-}
{- Note [ELF needed shared libs]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Some distributions change the link editor's default handling of
ELF DT_NEEDED tags to include only those shared objects that are
needed to resolve undefined symbols. For Template Haskell we need
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ The flag is only needed on ELF systems. On Windows (PE) and Mac OS X
-}
{- Note [Windows static libGCC]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The GCC versions being upgraded to in #10726 are configured with
dynamic linking of libgcc supported. This results in libgcc being
linked dynamically when a shared library is created.
@@ -177,10 +177,10 @@ getLinkerInfo' logger dflags = do
"-Wl,--hash-size=31"
, "-Wl,--reduce-memory-overheads"
-- Emit gcc stack checks
- -- Note [Windows stack usage]
+ -- See Note [Windows stack allocations]
, "-fstack-check"
-- Force static linking of libGCC
- -- Note [Windows static libGCC]
+ -- See Note [Windows static libGCC]
, "-static-libgcc" ]
_ -> do
-- In practice, we use the compiler as the linker here. Pass
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Errors.hs b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Errors.hs
index 2901078004..70f5d0ddd7 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Errors.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Errors.hs
@@ -1910,7 +1910,7 @@ mkDictErr ctxt cts
-- but we really only want to report the latter
elim_superclasses cts = mkMinimalBySCs ctPred cts
--- [Note: mk_dict_err]
+-- Note [mk_dict_err]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- Different dictionary error messages are reported depending on the number of
-- matches and unifiers:
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Gen/Splice.hs b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Gen/Splice.hs
index fe6ec75568..747b3a7d98 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Gen/Splice.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Gen/Splice.hs
@@ -1553,7 +1553,7 @@ readQResult i = do
QFail str -> fail str
{- Note [TH recover with -fexternal-interpreter]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Recover is slightly tricky to implement.
The meaning of "recover a b" is
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Instance/FunDeps.hs b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Instance/FunDeps.hs
index 9abfc31f0b..4b45f2fa38 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Instance/FunDeps.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Instance/FunDeps.hs
@@ -374,7 +374,7 @@ checkInstCoverage :: Bool -- Be liberal
-> Class -> [PredType] -> [Type]
-> Validity
-- "be_liberal" flag says whether to use "liberal" coverage of
--- See Note [Coverage Condition] below
+-- See Note [Coverage condition] below
--
-- Return values
-- Nothing => no problems
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Solver/Interact.hs b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Solver/Interact.hs
index a088637e46..36e9afae98 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Solver/Interact.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Solver/Interact.hs
@@ -1632,8 +1632,8 @@ Now the second wanted comes along, but it cannot rewrite the given, so we simply
At the end we spontaneously solve that guy, *reunifying* [alpha := Int]
We avoid this problem by orienting the resulting given so that the unification
-variable is on the left. [Note that alternatively we could attempt to
-enforce this at canonicalization]
+variable is on the left (note that alternatively we could attempt to
+enforce this at canonicalization).
See also Note [No touchables as FunEq RHS] in GHC.Tc.Solver.Monad; avoiding
double unifications is the main reason we disallow touchable
@@ -2177,7 +2177,7 @@ chooseInstance work_item
; if isDerived ev
then -- Use type-class instances for Deriveds, in the hope
-- of generating some improvements
- -- C.f. Example 3 of Note [The improvement story]
+ -- C.f. Example 3 of Note [The improvement story and derived shadows]
-- It's easy because no evidence is involved
do { dflags <- getDynFlags
; unless (subGoalDepthExceeded dflags (ctLocDepth deeper_loc)) $
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Types.hs b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Types.hs
index 2de119b416..a784eb5719 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Types.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Types.hs
@@ -1046,7 +1046,7 @@ thLevel (Brack s _) = thLevel s + 1
thLevel (RunSplice _) = panic "thLevel: called when running a splice"
-- See Note [RunSplice ThLevel].
-{- Node [RunSplice ThLevel]
+{- Note [RunSplice ThLevel]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The 'RunSplice' stage is set when executing a splice, and only when running a
splice. In particular it is not set when the splice is renamed or typechecked.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Types/Constraint.hs b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Types/Constraint.hs
index ffe14b3d62..f1d59bf04b 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Types/Constraint.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Types/Constraint.hs
@@ -2093,7 +2093,8 @@ but we do not want to complain about Bool ~ Char!
Note [Deriveds do rewrite Deriveds]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
However we DO allow Deriveds to rewrite Deriveds, because that's how
-improvement works; see Note [The improvement story] in GHC.Tc.Solver.Interact.
+improvement works; see Note [The improvement story and derived shadows] in
+GHC.Tc.Solver.Interact.
However, for now at least I'm only letting (Derived,NomEq) rewrite
(Derived,NomEq) and not doing anything for ReprEq. If we have
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Utils/TcMType.hs b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Utils/TcMType.hs
index c510d29f63..22f9b14d26 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Tc/Utils/TcMType.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Tc/Utils/TcMType.hs
@@ -2257,7 +2257,7 @@ Consider this:
* So we get a dict binding for Num (C d a), which is zonked to give
a = ()
- [Note Sept 04: now that we are zonking quantified type variables
+ Note (Sept 04): now that we are zonking quantified type variables
on construction, the 'a' will be frozen as a regular tyvar on
quantification, so the floated dict will still have type (C d a).
Which renders this whole note moot; happily!]
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/ThToHs.hs b/compiler/GHC/ThToHs.hs
index 1020b5af3f..6703719797 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/ThToHs.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/ThToHs.hs
@@ -1110,6 +1110,7 @@ cvt_tup es boxity = do { let cvtl_maybe Nothing = return (missingTupArg noAnn)
boxity }
{- Note [Operator association]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We must be quite careful about adding parens:
* Infix (UInfix ...) op arg Needs parens round the first arg
* Infix (Infix ...) op arg Needs parens round the first arg
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Types/Name.hs b/compiler/GHC/Types/Name.hs
index b34f32de43..d919919e81 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Types/Name.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Types/Name.hs
@@ -199,6 +199,7 @@ TL;DR: we make the `n_occ` field lazy.
{-
Note [About the NameSorts]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1. Initially, top-level Ids (including locally-defined ones) get External names,
and all other local Ids get Internal names
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Types/Name/Occurrence.hs b/compiler/GHC/Types/Name/Occurrence.hs
index cb98413279..7aabf83dd9 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Types/Name/Occurrence.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Types/Name/Occurrence.hs
@@ -132,6 +132,7 @@ data NameSpace = VarName -- Variables, including "real" data constructors
deriving( Eq, Ord )
-- Note [Data Constructors]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- see also: Note [Data Constructor Naming] in GHC.Core.DataCon
--
-- $real_vs_source_data_constructors
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Types/Tickish.hs b/compiler/GHC/Types/Tickish.hs
index 30827bb1fb..480bb2befd 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Types/Tickish.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Types/Tickish.hs
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ data TickishPass
{-
Note [Tickish passes]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tickish annotations store different information depending on
where they are used. Here's a summary of the differences
between the passes.
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Types/Var.hs b/compiler/GHC/Types/Var.hs
index 5ca0d00028..0a6dc6079a 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Types/Var.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Types/Var.hs
@@ -620,7 +620,7 @@ Currently there are nine different uses of 'VarBndr':
* TyCon.TyConTyCoBinder = VarBndr TyCoVar TyConBndrVis
Binders of a PromotedDataCon
- See Note [Promoted GADT data construtors] in GHC.Core.TyCon
+ See Note [Promoted GADT data constructors] in GHC.Core.TyCon
* IfaceType.IfaceForAllBndr = VarBndr IfaceBndr ArgFlag
* IfaceType.IfaceForAllSpecBndr = VarBndr IfaceBndr Specificity
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Types/Var/Env.hs b/compiler/GHC/Types/Var/Env.hs
index 683face5c9..55ea2a0dda 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Types/Var/Env.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Types/Var/Env.hs
@@ -324,6 +324,7 @@ rnBndr2_var (RV2 { envL = envL, envR = envR, in_scope = in_scope }) bL bR
| otherwise = uniqAway' in_scope bL
-- Note [Rebinding]
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- If the new var is the same as the old one, note that
-- the extendVarEnv *deletes* any current renaming
-- E.g. (\x. \x. ...) ~ (\y. \z. ...)
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Unit.hs b/compiler/GHC/Unit.hs
index 155d5b3525..4affdc33c8 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Unit.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Unit.hs
@@ -20,10 +20,8 @@ import GHC.Unit.Home
import GHC.Unit.State
{-
-
-Note [About Units]
+Note [About units]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Haskell users are used to manipulating Cabal packages. These packages are
identified by:
- a package name :: String
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Unit/State.hs b/compiler/GHC/Unit/State.hs
index 8644848310..3e74ae9936 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Unit/State.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Unit/State.hs
@@ -318,8 +318,8 @@ data UnitConfig = UnitConfig
, unitConfigWays :: !Ways -- ^ Ways to use
, unitConfigAllowVirtual :: !Bool -- ^ Allow virtual units
- -- ^ Do we allow the use of virtual units instantiated on-the-fly (see Note
- -- [About units] in GHC.Unit). This should only be true when we are
+ -- ^ Do we allow the use of virtual units instantiated on-the-fly (see
+ -- Note [About units] in GHC.Unit). This should only be true when we are
-- type-checking an indefinite unit (not producing any code).
, unitConfigProgramName :: !String
@@ -1148,7 +1148,7 @@ findWiredInUnits logger prec_map pkgs vis_map = do
-- every non instantiated unit is an instance of
-- itself (required by Backpack...)
--
- -- See Note [About Units] in GHC.Unit
+ -- See Note [About units] in GHC.Unit
}
| otherwise
= pkg
@@ -2180,7 +2180,7 @@ renameHoleModule :: UnitState -> ShHoleSubst -> Module -> Module
renameHoleModule state = renameHoleModule' (unitInfoMap state) (preloadClosure state)
-- | Substitutes holes in a 'Unit', suitable for renaming when
--- an include occurs; see Note [Representation of module/name variable].
+-- an include occurs; see Note [Representation of module/name variables].
--
-- @p[A=\<A>]@ maps to @p[A=\<B>]@ with @A=\<B>@.
renameHoleUnit :: UnitState -> ShHoleSubst -> Unit -> Unit
diff --git a/compiler/GHC/Utils/Ppr.hs b/compiler/GHC/Utils/Ppr.hs
index 9b5b55658f..af2b6f977a 100644
--- a/compiler/GHC/Utils/Ppr.hs
+++ b/compiler/GHC/Utils/Ppr.hs
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
{-
Note [Differences between libraries/pretty and compiler/GHC/Utils/Ppr.hs]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For historical reasons, there are two different copies of `Pretty` in the GHC
source tree:
* `libraries/pretty` is a submodule containing
@@ -441,7 +441,7 @@ braces p = char '{' <> p <> char '}'
{-
Note [Print Hexadecimal Literals]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Relevant discussions:
* Phabricator: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4465
* GHC Trac: https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/14872
diff --git a/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Decls.hs b/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Decls.hs
index fbeebf9213..b668d7fbff 100644
--- a/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Decls.hs
+++ b/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Decls.hs
@@ -430,7 +430,7 @@ data TyClDecl pass
DataDecl { tcdDExt :: XDataDecl pass -- ^ Post renamer, CUSK flag, FVs
, tcdLName :: LIdP pass -- ^ Type constructor
, tcdTyVars :: LHsQTyVars pass -- ^ Type variables
- -- See Note [TyVar binders for associated declarations]
+ -- See Note [TyVar binders for associated decls]
, tcdFixity :: LexicalFixity -- ^ Fixity used in the declaration
, tcdDataDefn :: HsDataDefn pass }
@@ -826,7 +826,7 @@ data FamilyDecl pass = FamilyDecl
, fdTopLevel :: TopLevelFlag -- used for printing only
, fdLName :: LIdP pass -- type constructor
, fdTyVars :: LHsQTyVars pass -- type variables
- -- See Note [TyVar binders for associated declarations]
+ -- See Note [TyVar binders for associated decls]
, fdFixity :: LexicalFixity -- Fixity used in the declaration
, fdResultSig :: LFamilyResultSig pass -- result signature
, fdInjectivityAnn :: Maybe (LInjectivityAnn pass) -- optional injectivity ann
diff --git a/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Expr.hs b/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Expr.hs
index 418aa59f84..049d511318 100644
--- a/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Expr.hs
+++ b/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Expr.hs
@@ -1508,7 +1508,7 @@ In any other context than 'MonadComp', the fields for most of these
Note [Applicative BodyStmt]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
(#12143) For the purposes of ApplicativeDo, we treat any BodyStmt
as if it was a BindStmt with a wildcard pattern. For example,
diff --git a/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Type.hs b/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Type.hs
index 173b75c4c2..10c2c03b48 100644
--- a/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Type.hs
+++ b/compiler/Language/Haskell/Syntax/Type.hs
@@ -1261,6 +1261,7 @@ instance (Outputable tm, Outputable ty) => Outputable (HsArg tm ty) where
ppr (HsArgPar sp) = text "HsArgPar" <+> ppr sp
{-
Note [HsArgPar]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A HsArgPar indicates that everything to the left of this in the argument list is
enclosed in parentheses together with the function itself. It is necessary so
that we can recreate the parenthesis structure in the original source after
diff --git a/ghc.mk b/ghc.mk
index 961935f70d..4e6e0c2a12 100644
--- a/ghc.mk
+++ b/ghc.mk
@@ -515,9 +515,8 @@ INSTALL_PACKAGES += $(addprefix libraries/,$(PACKAGES_STAGE2))
endif # CLEANING
-# -------------------------------------------
-# Note [Dependencies between package-data.mk files].
-
+# Note [Dependencies between package-data.mk files]
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# We cannot run ghc-cabal to configure a package until we have
# configured and registered all of its dependencies. So the following
# hack forces all the configure steps to happen in exactly the following order:
@@ -1497,7 +1496,7 @@ endif
cd libraries/xhtml && rm -f Setup Setup.exe Setup.hi Setup.o
# Note [No stage2 packages when CrossCompiling or Stage1Only]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# (first read Note [CrossCompiling vs Stage1Only] and
# Note [Stage1Only vs stage=1] in mk/config.mk.in)
#
diff --git a/ghc/GHCi/UI.hs b/ghc/GHCi/UI.hs
index 53838f39eb..9a62d53d17 100644
--- a/ghc/GHCi/UI.hs
+++ b/ghc/GHCi/UI.hs
@@ -579,7 +579,7 @@ interactiveUI config srcs maybe_exprs = do
{-
Note [Changing language extensions for interactive evaluation]
---------------------------------------------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GHCi maintains two sets of options:
- The "loading options" apply when loading modules
@@ -3353,7 +3353,6 @@ printTyThing tyth = printForUser (pprTyThing showToHeader tyth)
{-
Note [Filter bindings]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
If we don't filter the bindings returned by the function GHC.getBindings,
then the :show bindings command will also show unwanted bound names,
internally generated by GHC, eg:
diff --git a/ghc/Main.hs b/ghc/Main.hs
index 69ec3a8593..cb701e24e2 100644
--- a/ghc/Main.hs
+++ b/ghc/Main.hs
@@ -567,7 +567,7 @@ parseModeFlags args = do
Nothing -> doMakeMode
Just (m, _) -> m
- -- See Note [Handling errors when parsing commandline flags]
+ -- See Note [Handling errors when parsing command-line flags]
unless (null errs1 && null errs2) $ throwGhcException $ errorsToGhcException $
map (("on the commandline", )) $ map (unLoc . errMsg) errs1 ++ errs2
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Expression.hs b/hadrian/src/Expression.hs
index 62e83ccecb..a70aa75e9d 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Expression.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Expression.hs
@@ -100,7 +100,6 @@ way w = (w ==) <$> getWay
{-
Note [Stage Names]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Code referring to specific stages can be a bit tricky. In Hadrian, the stages
have the same names they carried in the autoconf build system, but they are
often referred to by the stage used to construct them. For example, the stage 1
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Flavour.hs b/hadrian/src/Flavour.hs
index f31e7667e1..c46f77a2fb 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Flavour.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Flavour.hs
@@ -267,7 +267,6 @@ collectTimings =
{-
Note [Hadrian settings]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Hadrian lets one customize GHC builds through the UserSettings module,
where Hadrian users can override existing 'Flavour's or create entirely
new ones, overriding/extending the options passed to some builder
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Rules/BinaryDist.hs b/hadrian/src/Rules/BinaryDist.hs
index da6f27d1de..a6693a75f3 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Rules/BinaryDist.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Rules/BinaryDist.hs
@@ -463,7 +463,6 @@ createVersionWrapper versioned_exe install_path = do
{-
Note [Two Types of Wrappers]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
There are two different types of wrapper scripts.
1. The wrapper scripts installed
diff --git a/hadrian/src/Rules/Libffi.hs b/hadrian/src/Rules/Libffi.hs
index df7529ffc5..e37faee5dc 100644
--- a/hadrian/src/Rules/Libffi.hs
+++ b/hadrian/src/Rules/Libffi.hs
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ import Target
import Utilities
{- Note [Libffi indicating inputs]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
First see https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/Developing-Hadrian for an
explanation of "indicating input". Part of the definition is copied here for
your convenience:
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Concurrent/QSem.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Concurrent/QSem.hs
index 9f53eef826..08524323e2 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Concurrent/QSem.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Concurrent/QSem.hs
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ signalQSem (QSem m) =
putMVar m r'
-- Note [signal uninterruptible]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- If we have
--
-- bracket waitQSem signalQSem (...)
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs
index 86c15daf00..d2d0e29e43 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Monad.hs
@@ -222,7 +222,7 @@ zipWithM f xs ys = sequenceA (zipWith f xs ys)
zipWithM_ :: (Applicative m) => (a -> b -> m c) -> [a] -> [b] -> m ()
{-# INLINE zipWithM_ #-}
-- Inline so that fusion with zipWith and sequenceA have a chance to fire
--- See Note [Fusion for zipN/zipWithN] in List.hs]
+-- See Note [Fusion for zipN/zipWithN] in List.hs.
zipWithM_ f xs ys = sequenceA_ (zipWith f xs ys)
{- | The 'foldM' function is analogous to 'Data.Foldable.foldl', except that its result is
@@ -262,7 +262,6 @@ foldM_ f a xs = foldlM f a xs >> return ()
{-
Note [Worker/wrapper transform on replicateM/replicateM_]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The implementations of replicateM and replicateM_ both leverage the
worker/wrapper transform. The simpler implementation of replicateM_, as an
example, would be:
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs
index cbcee8dd90..9658fbd635 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Imp.hs
@@ -62,7 +62,6 @@ fixST k = unsafeIOToST $ do
{- Note [fixST]
~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
For many years, we implemented fixST much like a pure fixpoint,
using liftST:
diff --git a/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Lazy/Imp.hs b/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Lazy/Imp.hs
index de8310c76d..888839132e 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Lazy/Imp.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Control/Monad/ST/Lazy/Imp.hs
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ newtype ST s a = ST { unST :: State s -> (a, State s) }
data State s = S# (State# s)
{- Note [Lazy ST and multithreading]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We used to imagine that passing a polymorphic state token was all that we
needed to keep state threads separate (see Launchbury and Peyton Jones, 1994:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/publication/lazy-functional-state-threads/).
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ one we get from the previous computation, and the unlifted one we pull out of
thin air. -}
{- Note [Lazy ST: not producing lazy pairs]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The fixST and strictToLazyST functions used to construct functions that
produced lazy pairs. Why don't we need that laziness? The ST type is kept
abstract, so no one outside this module can ever get their hands on a (result,
diff --git a/libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs b/libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs
index 2a50de3ee5..5ffdd84ad3 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Data/OldList.hs
@@ -1361,6 +1361,7 @@ singleton x = [x]
--
-- Note [INLINE unfoldr]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- We treat unfoldr a little differently from some other forms for list fusion
-- for two reasons:
--
diff --git a/libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs b/libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs
index 13853c9301..e9cb1a1937 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Data/Typeable/Internal.hs
@@ -275,7 +275,6 @@ having to walk their full structures.
{- Note [Kind caching]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
We cache the kind of the TypeRep in each TrTyCon and TrApp constructor.
This is necessary to ensure that typeRepKind (which is used, at least, in
deserialization and dynApply) is cheap. There are two reasons for this:
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Base.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Base.hs
index 21ad469d27..bf1527076c 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Base.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Base.hs
@@ -150,7 +150,6 @@ default () -- Double isn't available yet
{-
Note [Depend on GHC.Num.Integer]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The Integer type is special because GHC.CoreToStg.Prep.mkConvertNumLiteral
lookups names in ghc-bignum interfaces to construct Integer literal values.
Currently it reads the interface file whether or not the current module *has*
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Bits.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Bits.hs
index 012550a60b..201340f348 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Bits.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Bits.hs
@@ -668,8 +668,9 @@ isBitSubType x y
ySigned = isSigned y
{-# INLINE isBitSubType #-}
-{- Note [Constant folding for rotate]
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+{-
+Note [Constant folding for rotate]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The INLINE on the Int instance of rotate enables it to be constant
folded. For example:
sumU . mapU (`rotate` 3) . replicateU 10000000 $ (7 :: Int)
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Enum.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Enum.hs
index 5c184256f4..d80689423c 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Enum.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Enum.hs
@@ -179,7 +179,6 @@ boundedEnumFromThen n1 n2
{-
Note [Stable Unfolding for list producers]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The INLINABLE/INLINE pragmas ensure that we export stable (unoptimised)
unfoldings in the interface file so we can do list fusion at usage sites.
-}
@@ -892,6 +891,7 @@ instance Enum Integer where
#-}
{- Note [Enum Integer rules for literal 1]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The "1" rules above specialise for the common case where delta = 1,
so that we can avoid the delta>=0 test in enumDeltaToIntegerFB.
Then enumDeltaToInteger1FB is nice and small and can be inlined,
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows.hsc b/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows.hsc
index 973f25722b..97a224fdc7 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows.hsc
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows.hsc
@@ -495,9 +495,8 @@ associateHandle Manager{..} h =
FFI.associateHandleWithIOCP mgrIOCP h (fromIntegral $ ptrToWordPtr h)
-{- Note [Why use non-waiting getOverlappedResult requests.]
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
+{- Note [Why use non-waiting getOverlappedResult requests]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When waiting for a request that is bound to be done soon
we spin inside waitForCompletion. There are multiple reasons
for this.
@@ -549,6 +548,7 @@ withOverlappedEx mgr fname h async offset startCB completionCB = do
IOFailed err -> signalThrow err
-- Note [Memory Management]
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- These callback data and especially the overlapped structs have to keep
-- alive throughout the entire lifetime of the requests. Since this
-- function will block until done so it can call completionCB at the end
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows/FFI.hsc b/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows/FFI.hsc
index c087f94eb1..e6ae168d3f 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows/FFI.hsc
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Event/Windows/FFI.hsc
@@ -136,6 +136,7 @@ foreign import WINDOWS_CCONV safe "windows.h GetQueuedCompletionStatusEx"
-> Ptr ULONG -> DWORD -> BOOL -> IO BOOL
-- | Note [Completion Ports]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- When an I/O operation has been queued by an operation
-- (ReadFile/WriteFile/etc) it is placed in a queue that the driver uses when
-- servicing IRQs. This queue has some important properties:
@@ -343,7 +344,8 @@ pokeEventOverlapped lpol event = do
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Request management
--- [Note AsyncHandles]
+-- Note [AsyncHandles]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- In `winio` we have designed it to work in asynchronous mode always.
-- According to the MSDN documentation[1][2], when a handle is not opened
-- in asynchronous mode then the operation would simply work but operate
@@ -392,7 +394,7 @@ pokeEventOverlapped lpol event = do
-- invalid. This is an issue because to pass `HANDLE`s we have to pass
-- the native OS Handle not the Haskell one. i.e. remote-iserv.
--- See [Note AsyncHandles]
+-- See Note [AsyncHandles]
withRequest :: Bool -> Word64 -> HANDLE -> IOCallback
-> (Ptr HASKELL_OVERLAPPED -> Ptr CompletionData -> IO a)
-> IO a
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Foreign.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Foreign.hs
index 658f5c3515..042745ce11 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Foreign.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Foreign.hs
@@ -295,7 +295,6 @@ tryFillBuffer encoder null_terminate from0 to_p to_sz_bytes = do
{-
Note [Check *before* fill in withEncodedCString]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
It's very important that the size check and readjustment peformed by tryFillBuffer
happens before the continuation is called. The size check is the part which can
fail, the call to the continuation never fails and so the caller should respond
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/ForeignPtr.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/ForeignPtr.hs
index a7061152dc..0361857bcc 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/ForeignPtr.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/ForeignPtr.hs
@@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ data ForeignPtrContents
-- The invariants that apply to 'MallocPtr' apply to 'PlainPtr' as well.
-- Note [Why FinalPtr]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- FinalPtr exists as an optimization for foreign pointers created
-- from Addr# literals. Most commonly, this happens in the bytestring
-- library, where the combination of OverloadedStrings and a rewrite
@@ -376,7 +376,9 @@ addForeignPtrFinalizer (FunPtr fp) (ForeignPtr p c) = case c of
MallocPtr _ r -> insertCFinalizer r fp 0# nullAddr# p c
_ -> errorWithoutStackTrace "GHC.ForeignPtr: attempt to add a finalizer to a plain pointer or a final pointer"
--- Note [MallocPtr finalizers] (#10904)
+-- Note [MallocPtr finalizers]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+-- Ticket: #10904
--
-- When we have C finalizers for a MallocPtr, the memory is
-- heap-resident and would normally be recovered by the GC before the
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Encoding/Failure.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Encoding/Failure.hs
index 271d66b35f..a26e3f8fcc 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Encoding/Failure.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Encoding/Failure.hs
@@ -58,7 +58,6 @@ data CodingFailureMode
-- Note [Roundtripping]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Roundtripping is based on the ideas of PEP383.
--
-- We used to use the range of private-use characters from 0xEF80 to
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/FD.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/FD.hs
index 9e9fa428b8..e97229704c 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/FD.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/FD.hs
@@ -537,8 +537,8 @@ fdWriteNonBlocking fd ptr _offset bytes = do
#if !defined(mingw32_HOST_OS)
{-
-NOTE [nonblock]:
-
+Note [nonblock]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unix has broken semantics when it comes to non-blocking I/O: you can
set the O_NONBLOCK flag on an FD, but it applies to the all other FDs
attached to the same underlying file, pipe or TTY; there's no way to
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Internals.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Internals.hs
index 1bdb47b7ca..cbd43c1666 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Internals.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Internals.hs
@@ -188,7 +188,7 @@ do_operation fun h act m = do
throwIO e
-- Note [async]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- If an asynchronous exception is raised during an I/O operation,
-- normally it is fine to just re-throw the exception synchronously.
-- However, if we are inside an unsafePerformIO or an
@@ -644,7 +644,6 @@ flushByteReadBuffer h_@Handle__{..} = do
{- Note [Making offsets for append]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The WINIO subysstem keeps track of offsets for handles
on the Haskell side of things instead of letting the OS
handle it. This requires us to establish the correct offset
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Text.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Text.hs
index bb576bcfd1..0e3dcd709e 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Text.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Handle/Text.hs
@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@ unpack_nl !buf !r !w acc0
return (str, w)
-- Note [#5536]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- We originally had
--
-- let c' = desurrogatifyRoundtripCharacter c in
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Unsafe.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Unsafe.hs
index e6c43e920c..98d2e12345 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Unsafe.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Unsafe.hs
@@ -27,8 +27,9 @@ module GHC.IO.Unsafe (
import GHC.Base
-{- Note [unsafePerformIO and strictness]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+{-
+Note [unsafePerformIO and strictness]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider this sub-expression (from tests/lib/should_run/memo002)
unsafePerformIO (do { lockMemoTable
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Windows/Handle.hsc b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Windows/Handle.hsc
index bee7bc73a2..784a08f9d2 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Windows/Handle.hsc
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/IO/Windows/Handle.hsc
@@ -526,6 +526,7 @@ hwndWriteNonBlocking hwnd ptr offset bytes
| otherwise = Mgr.ioFailed err
-- Note [ReadFile/WriteFile]
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- The results of these functions are somewhat different when working in an
-- asynchronous manner. The returning bool has two meaning.
--
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/IORef.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/IORef.hs
index 616950c3c0..db932fca90 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/IORef.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/IORef.hs
@@ -127,7 +127,6 @@ atomicModifyIORef' ref f = do
-- Note [atomicModifyIORef' definition]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- atomicModifyIORef' was historically defined
--
-- atomicModifyIORef' ref f = do
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs
index a514f4d35b..bde52848fd 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Int.hs
@@ -160,13 +160,13 @@ instance Integral Int8 where
| otherwise = I8# (x# `modInt8#` y#)
quotRem x@(I8# x#) y@(I8# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- -- Note [Order of tests]
+ -- See Note [Order of tests]
| y == (-1) && x == minBound = (overflowError, 0)
| otherwise = case x# `quotRemInt8#` y# of
(# q, r #) -> (I8# q, I8# r)
divMod x@(I8# x#) y@(I8# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- -- Note [Order of tests]
+ -- See Note [Order of tests]
| y == (-1) && x == minBound = (overflowError, 0)
| otherwise = case x# `divModInt8#` y# of
(# d, m #) -> (I8# d, I8# m)
@@ -371,13 +371,13 @@ instance Integral Int16 where
| otherwise = I16# (x# `modInt16#` y#)
quotRem x@(I16# x#) y@(I16# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- -- Note [Order of tests]
+ -- See Note [Order of tests]
| y == (-1) && x == minBound = (overflowError, 0)
| otherwise = case x# `quotRemInt16#` y# of
(# q, r #) -> (I16# q, I16# r)
divMod x@(I16# x#) y@(I16# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- -- Note [Order of tests]
+ -- See Note [Order of tests]
| y == (-1) && x == minBound = (overflowError, 0)
| otherwise = case x# `divModInt16#` y# of
(# d, m #) -> (I16# d, I16# m)
@@ -579,13 +579,13 @@ instance Integral Int32 where
| otherwise = I32# (x# `modInt32#` y#)
quotRem x@(I32# x#) y@(I32# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- -- Note [Order of tests]
+ -- See Note [Order of tests]
| y == (-1) && x == minBound = (overflowError, 0)
| otherwise = case x# `quotRemInt32#` y# of
(# q, r #) -> (I32# q, I32# r)
divMod x@(I32# x#) y@(I32# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- -- Note [Order of tests]
+ -- See Note [Order of tests]
| y == (-1) && x == minBound = (overflowError, 0)
| otherwise = case x# `divModInt32#` y# of
(# d, m #) -> (I32# d, I32# m)
@@ -779,7 +779,7 @@ instance Enum Int64 where
instance Integral Int64 where
quot x@(I64# x#) y@(I64# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- | y == (-1) && x == minBound = overflowError -- Note [Order of tests]
+ | y == (-1) && x == minBound = overflowError -- See Note [Order of tests]
| otherwise = I64# (x# `quotInt64#` y#)
rem (I64# x#) y@(I64# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
@@ -791,7 +791,7 @@ instance Integral Int64 where
| otherwise = I64# (x# `remInt64#` y#)
div x@(I64# x#) y@(I64# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- | y == (-1) && x == minBound = overflowError -- Note [Order of tests]
+ | y == (-1) && x == minBound = overflowError -- See Note [Order of tests]
| otherwise = I64# (x# `divInt64#` y#)
mod (I64# x#) y@(I64# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
@@ -803,7 +803,7 @@ instance Integral Int64 where
| otherwise = I64# (x# `modInt64#` y#)
quotRem x@(I64# x#) y@(I64# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- -- Note [Order of tests]
+ -- See Note [Order of tests]
| y == (-1) && x == minBound = (overflowError, 0)
#if WORD_SIZE_IN_BITS < 64
-- we don't have quotRemInt64# primop yet
@@ -814,7 +814,7 @@ instance Integral Int64 where
#endif
divMod x@(I64# x#) y@(I64# y#)
| y == 0 = divZeroError
- -- Note [Order of tests]
+ -- See Note [Order of tests]
| y == (-1) && x == minBound = (overflowError, 0)
#if WORD_SIZE_IN_BITS < 64
-- we don't have divModInt64# primop yet
@@ -952,8 +952,9 @@ instance Ix Int64 where
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-{- Note [Order of tests]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+{-
+Note [Order of tests]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
(See #3065, #5161.) Suppose we had a definition like:
quot x y
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/List.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/List.hs
index 677d0fe7c1..8dc897c73c 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/List.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/List.hs
@@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ foldl k z0 xs =
{-
Note [Left folds via right fold]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Implementing foldl et. al. via foldr is only a good idea if the compiler can
optimize the resulting code (eta-expand the recursive "go"). See #7994.
We hope that one of the two measure kick in:
@@ -309,7 +309,7 @@ inline FB functions because:
* They are higher-order functions and therefore benefit from inlining.
* When the final consumer is a left fold, inlining the FB functions is the only
- way to make arity expansion happen. See Note [Left fold via right fold].
+ way to make arity expansion happen. See Note [Left folds via right fold].
For this reason we mark all FB functions INLINE [0]. The [0] phase-specifier
ensures that calls to FB functions can be written back to the original form
@@ -458,7 +458,7 @@ scanl = scanlGo
[] -> []
x:xs -> scanlGo f (f q x) xs)
--- Note [scanl rewrite rules]
+-- See Note [scanl rewrite rules]
{-# RULES
"scanl" [~1] forall f a bs . scanl f a bs =
build (\c n -> a `c` foldr (scanlFB f c) (constScanl n) bs a)
@@ -509,7 +509,7 @@ scanl' = scanlGo'
[] -> []
x:xs -> scanlGo' f (f q x) xs)
--- Note [scanl rewrite rules]
+-- See Note [scanl rewrite rules]
{-# RULES
"scanl'" [~1] forall f a bs . scanl' f a bs =
build (\c n -> a `c` foldr (scanlFB' f c) (flipSeqScanl' n) bs a)
@@ -529,7 +529,6 @@ flipSeqScanl' a !_b = a
{-
Note [scanl rewrite rules]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
In most cases, when we rewrite a form to one that can fuse, we try to rewrite it
back to the original form if it does not fuse. For scanl, we do something a
little different. In particular, we rewrite
@@ -651,7 +650,9 @@ scanrFB f c = \x ~(r, est) -> (f x r, r `c` est)
scanr f q0 ls
#-}
-{- Note [scanrFB and evaluation]
+{-
+Note [scanrFB and evaluation]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In a previous Version, the pattern match on the tuple in scanrFB used to be
strict. If scanr is called with a build expression, the following would happen:
The rule "scanr" would fire, and we obtain
@@ -1417,8 +1418,9 @@ foldr3_left _ z _ _ _ _ = z
foldr3 k z (build g) = g (foldr3_left k z) (\_ _ -> z)
#-}
-{- Note [Fusion for foldrN]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+{-
+Note [Fusion for foldrN]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We arrange that foldr2, foldr3, etc is a good consumer for its first
(left) list argument. Here's how. See below for the second, third
etc list arguments
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs
index 7f698ec498..2c9aec08cd 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Read.hs
@@ -410,7 +410,7 @@ readSymField fieldName readVal = do
-- Note [Why readField]
---
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- Previously, the code for automatically deriving Read instance (in
-- typecheck/GHC.Tc.Deriv.Generate.hs) would generate inline code for parsing fields;
-- this, however, turned out to produce massive amounts of intermediate code,
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs
index d970a3e1ed..e8cfbfbc57 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/Real.hs
@@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ numericEnumFromThenTo e1 e2 e3
| otherwise = (>= e3 + mid)
{- Note [Numeric Stability of Enumerating Floating Numbers]
------------------------------------------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When enumerate floating numbers, we could add the increment to the last number
at every run (as what we did previously):
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/TopHandler.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/TopHandler.hs
index ba86798091..6a4e0325a6 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/TopHandler.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/TopHandler.hs
@@ -52,14 +52,13 @@ import Data.Dynamic (toDyn)
-- Note [rts_setMainThread must be called unsafely]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- rts_setMainThread must be called as unsafe, because it
-- dereferences the Weak# and manipulates the raw Haskell value
-- behind it. Therefore, it must not race with a garbage collection.
+
-- Note [rts_setMainThread has an unsound type]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- 'rts_setMainThread' is imported with type Weak# ThreadId -> IO (),
-- but this is an unsound type for it: it grabs the /key/ of the
-- 'Weak#' object, which isn't tracked by the type at all.
@@ -212,9 +211,9 @@ disasterHandler exit _ =
"encode an error message. Check that your locale is configured " ++
"properly."
-{- Note [Disaster with iconv]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
+{-
+Note [Disaster with iconv]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When using iconv, it's possible for things like iconv_open to fail in
restricted environments (like an initram or restricted container), but
when this happens the error raised inevitably calls `peekCString`,
diff --git a/libraries/base/GHC/TypeNats.hs b/libraries/base/GHC/TypeNats.hs
index 4325f3a8bf..ef4a5a8817 100644
--- a/libraries/base/GHC/TypeNats.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/GHC/TypeNats.hs
@@ -92,8 +92,9 @@ someNatVal :: Natural -> SomeNat
someNatVal n = withSNat SomeNat (SNat n) Proxy
{-# NOINLINE someNatVal #-} -- See Note [NOINLINE someNatVal]
-{- Note [NOINLINE someNatVal]
-
+{-
+Note [NOINLINE someNatVal]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
`someNatVal` converts a natural number to an existentially quantified
dictionary for `KnownNat` (aka `SomeNat`). The existential quantification
is very important, as it captures the fact that we don't know the type
diff --git a/libraries/base/System/IO.hs b/libraries/base/System/IO.hs
index f831df6cb4..6e8c4308d1 100644
--- a/libraries/base/System/IO.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/System/IO.hs
@@ -434,7 +434,6 @@ fixIO k = do
-- Note [Blackholing in fixIO]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- We do our own explicit black holing here, because GHC's lazy
-- blackholing isn't enough. In an infinite loop, GHC may run the IO
-- computation a few times before it notices the loop, which is wrong.
diff --git a/libraries/base/Unsafe/Coerce.hs b/libraries/base/Unsafe/Coerce.hs
index 9504eb13e2..930514ce81 100644
--- a/libraries/base/Unsafe/Coerce.hs
+++ b/libraries/base/Unsafe/Coerce.hs
@@ -286,7 +286,7 @@ unsafeCoerce# :: forall (r1 :: RuntimeRep) (r2 :: RuntimeRep)
(a :: TYPE r1) (b :: TYPE r2).
a -> b
unsafeCoerce# = error "GHC internal error: unsafeCoerce# not unfolded"
--- See (U10) of Note [Implementing unsafeCorece]
+-- See (U10) of Note [Implementing unsafeCoerce]
-- The RHS is updated by Desugar.patchMagicDefns
-- See Desugar Note [Wiring in unsafeCoerce#]
diff --git a/libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c b/libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c
index 46b5577cfc..3f636c6b28 100644
--- a/libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c
+++ b/libraries/base/cbits/inputReady.c
@@ -168,7 +168,7 @@ fdReady(int fd, bool write, int64_t msecs, bool isSock)
Time remaining = MSToTime(msecs);
// Note [Guaranteed syscall time spent]
- //
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// The implementation ensures that if fdReady() is called with N `msecs`,
// it will not return before an FD-polling syscall *returns*
// with `endTime` having passed.
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-bignum/src/GHC/Num/Primitives.hs b/libraries/ghc-bignum/src/GHC/Num/Primitives.hs
index d286a8d933..a33fd68b23 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-bignum/src/GHC/Num/Primitives.hs
+++ b/libraries/ghc-bignum/src/GHC/Num/Primitives.hs
@@ -598,7 +598,6 @@ ioBool (IO io) s = case io s of
-- Note [ghc-bignum exceptions]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- `ghc-bignum` package can't depend on `base` package (it would create a cyclic
-- dependency). Hence it can't import "Control.Exception" and throw exceptions
-- the usual way. Instead it uses some wired-in functions from `ghc-prim` which
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-boot/GHC/BaseDir.hs b/libraries/ghc-boot/GHC/BaseDir.hs
index db470425c0..dbbf61d02e 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-boot/GHC/BaseDir.hs
+++ b/libraries/ghc-boot/GHC/BaseDir.hs
@@ -2,7 +2,6 @@
-- | Note [Base Dir]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- GHC's base directory or top directory containers miscellaneous settings and
-- the package database. The main compiler of course needs this directory to
-- read those settings and read and write packages. ghc-pkg uses it to find the
@@ -12,6 +11,7 @@
-- will expand `${top_dir}` inside strings so GHC doesn't need to know it's on
-- installation location at build time. ghc-pkg also can expand those variables
-- and so needs the top dir location to do that too.
+
module GHC.BaseDir where
import Prelude -- See Note [Why do we import Prelude here?]
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/CString.hs b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/CString.hs
index 1edeecbbfa..680d3c8a39 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/CString.hs
+++ b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/CString.hs
@@ -135,9 +135,9 @@ Moreover, we want to make it CONLIKE, so that:
All of this goes for unpackCStringUtf8# too.
-}
-{- Note [Inlining of unpackFoldrCString]
+{-
+Note [Inlining of unpackFoldrCString]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Usually the unpack-list rule turns unpackFoldrCString# into unpackCString#
It also has a BuiltInRule in PrelRules.hs:
unpackFoldrCString# "foo" c (unpackFoldrCString# "baz" c n)
@@ -154,9 +154,8 @@ when looking at nofib.
This is especially important for elem which then results in an
allocation free loop.
- Note [unpackCString# iterating over addr]
+Note [unpackCString# iterating over addr]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
When unpacking unpackCString# and friends repeatedly return a cons cell
containing:
* The current character we just unpacked.
@@ -175,7 +174,6 @@ the string and the current offset, saving a word for each character unpacked.
This has the additional advantage the we can guarantee that only the
increment will happen in the loop.
-
-}
unpackCString# :: Addr# -> [Char]
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Classes.hs b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Classes.hs
index 13e9556864..aa1c1b2d8b 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Classes.hs
+++ b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Classes.hs
@@ -587,7 +587,6 @@ x# `divInt32#` y# = ((x# `plusInt32#` bias#) `quotInt32#` y#) `subInt32#` hard#
-- Note [divInt# implementation]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- divInt# (truncated toward zero) is implemented with quotInt# (truncated
-- toward negative infinity). They differ when inputs x and y have different signs:
-- - x `rem` y has the sign of x and (x `quot` y)*y + (x `rem` y) == x
@@ -705,7 +704,6 @@ x# `modInt32#` y# = r# `plusInt32#` k#
-- Note [modInt# implementation]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- Similarly to divInt# (see Note [divInt# implementation]), we can derive the
-- branchless implementation of modInt# as follows:
--
@@ -823,7 +821,6 @@ x# `divModInt32#` y# = case (x# `plusInt32#` bias#) `quotRemInt32#` y# of
-- Note [divModInt# implementation]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- divModInt# is written by deriving the following code similarly to divInt# and
-- modInt# (see Note [divInt# implementation] and Note [modInt#
-- implementation]).
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/Exception.hs b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/Exception.hs
index 592d597f44..9d496d397c 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/Exception.hs
+++ b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/Exception.hs
@@ -20,7 +20,6 @@ default () -- Double and Integer aren't available yet
-- Note [Arithmetic exceptions]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- ghc-prim provides several functions to raise arithmetic exceptions
-- (raiseDivZero, raiseUnderflow, raiseOverflow) that are wired-in the RTS.
-- These exceptions are meant to be used by the package implementing arbitrary
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/PtrEq.hs b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/PtrEq.hs
index 5cc3e511e6..ba58857868 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/PtrEq.hs
+++ b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Prim/PtrEq.hs
@@ -45,7 +45,6 @@ default () -- Double and Integer aren't available yet
{- Note [Pointer equality operations]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Many primitive types - such as Array#, ByteArray#, MVar#, ... - are boxed:
they are represented by pointers to the underlying data. It is thus possible
to directly compare these pointers for equality, as opposed to comparing
@@ -55,7 +54,7 @@ two arrays element-wise).
To do this, GHC provides the primop reallyUnsafePtrEquality#, which is
both levity-polymorphic and heterogeneous. As its name indicates, it is an
unsafe operation which can yield unpredictable results, as explained in
- Note [Pointer comparison operations] in primops.txt.pp
+Note [Pointer comparison operations] in primops.txt.pp
For a more user-friendly interface, this module defines specialisations of
the reallyUnsafePtrEquality# primop at various primitive types, such as
@@ -116,7 +115,6 @@ sameIOPort# = reallyUnsafePtrEquality#
-- Note [Comparing stable names]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- A StableName# is actually a pointer to a stable name object (SNO)
-- containing an index into the stable name table (SNT). We
-- used to compare StableName#s by following the pointers to the
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Types.hs b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Types.hs
index 22e637af6e..eaffc5c6d0 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Types.hs
+++ b/libraries/ghc-prim/GHC/Types.hs
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ This declaration is important for :info (->) command (issue #10145)
-- | The regular function type
type (->) = FUN 'Many
--- See Note [Linear Types] in Multiplicity
+-- See Note [Linear types] in Multiplicity
{- *********************************************************************
* *
@@ -261,7 +261,6 @@ newtype IO a = IO (State# RealWorld -> (# State# RealWorld, a #))
{-
Note [Kind-changing of (~) and Coercible]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
(~) and Coercible are tricky to define. To the user, they must appear as
constraints, but we cannot define them as such in Haskell. But we also cannot
just define them only in GHC.Prim (like (->)), because we need a real module
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c b/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c
index af26e16268..2ac6d26e1f 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c
+++ b/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/atomic.c
@@ -110,7 +110,6 @@ hs_atomic_and64(StgWord x, StgWord64 val)
// Note [__sync_fetch_and_nand usage]
// ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-//
// The __sync_fetch_and_nand builtin is a bit of a disaster. It was introduced
// in GCC long ago with silly semantics. Specifically:
//
diff --git a/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/bitrev.c b/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/bitrev.c
index eecbfe5ac5..2fcbd192b3 100644
--- a/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/bitrev.c
+++ b/libraries/ghc-prim/cbits/bitrev.c
@@ -3,7 +3,6 @@
/*
Note [Bit reversal primop]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
There are two main ways of reversing the bit order of a word: bit twiddling
and using a lookup table.
See [this excellent](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/746171/most-efficient-algorithm-for-bit-reversal-from-msb-lsb-to-lsb-msb-in-c this)
diff --git a/libraries/ghci/GHCi/TH.hs b/libraries/ghci/GHCi/TH.hs
index 723e966095..77ddd0ccc8 100644
--- a/libraries/ghci/GHCi/TH.hs
+++ b/libraries/ghci/GHCi/TH.hs
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ module GHCi.TH
) where
{- Note [Remote Template Haskell]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here is an overview of how TH works with -fexternal-interpreter.
Initialisation
diff --git a/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs b/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs
index f30bb0ef87..7446297762 100644
--- a/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs
+++ b/libraries/template-haskell/Language/Haskell/TH/Syntax.hs
@@ -2592,7 +2592,6 @@ data Con = NormalC Name [BangType] -- ^ @C Int a@
-- Note [GADT return type]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
-- The return type of a GADT constructor does not necessarily match the name of
-- the data type:
--
diff --git a/m4/fptools_set_haskell_platform_vars.m4 b/m4/fptools_set_haskell_platform_vars.m4
index cd44838358..62563633f5 100644
--- a/m4/fptools_set_haskell_platform_vars.m4
+++ b/m4/fptools_set_haskell_platform_vars.m4
@@ -116,7 +116,6 @@ AC_DEFUN([FPTOOLS_SET_HASKELL_PLATFORM_VARS_SHELL_FUNCTIONS],
# Note [autoconf assembler checks and -flto]
# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
# Autoconf's AC_COMPILE_IFELSE macro is fragile in the case of checks
# which require that the assembler is run. Specifically, GCC does not run
# the assembler if invoked with `-c -flto`; it merely dumps its internal
diff --git a/mk/config.mk.in b/mk/config.mk.in
index c13332169d..9476179606 100644
--- a/mk/config.mk.in
+++ b/mk/config.mk.in
@@ -74,8 +74,8 @@ GhcStage2HcOpts=-O2 -haddock
GhcStage3HcOpts=-O2 -haddock
-# Note [Stage number in build variables].
-#
+# Note [Stage number in build variables]
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# There are (unfortunately) two different naming schemes for build variables
# specific to a certain stage.
#
@@ -551,7 +551,7 @@ CrossCompilePrefix = $(if $(filter YES,$(Stage1Only)),@CrossCompilePrefix@,)
INSTALL_GHC_STAGE= $(if $(filter YES,$(Stage1Only)),1,2)
# Note [CrossCompiling vs Stage1Only]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# There are 4 possible settings:
#
# 1 CrossCompiling=NO Stage1Only=NO
@@ -570,7 +570,7 @@ INSTALL_GHC_STAGE= $(if $(filter YES,$(Stage1Only)),1,2)
# [1] https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/building/cross-compiling
# Note [Stage1Only vs stage=1]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# Stage1Only=YES means:
# - don't build ghc-stage2 (the executable)
# - don't build utils that rely on ghc-stage2
@@ -891,6 +891,7 @@ GhcLibHcOpts=
endif
# Note [Disable -O2 in unregisterised mode]
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# Disable -O2 optimization in unregisterised mode. Otherwise amount
# of generated C code # makes things very slow to compile (~5 minutes
# on core-i7 for 'compiler/GHC/Hs/Expr.hs') and sometimes not compile
diff --git a/mk/warnings.mk b/mk/warnings.mk
index ed549aa33a..bdbdc79213 100644
--- a/mk/warnings.mk
+++ b/mk/warnings.mk
@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ GhcLibExtraHcOpts += -Wno-deprecated-flags
GhcBootLibExtraHcOpts += -fno-warn-deprecated-flags
# Note [Order of warning flags]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# In distdir-way-opts, build flags are added in the following order (this
# list is not exhaustive):
#
diff --git a/rts/Apply.cmm b/rts/Apply.cmm
index a706c68194..4c3177ae2f 100644
--- a/rts/Apply.cmm
+++ b/rts/Apply.cmm
@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ stg_ap_0_fast ( P_ fun )
/*
Note [Evaluating functions with profiling]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If we evaluate something like
let f = {-# SCC "f" #-} g
@@ -461,8 +461,8 @@ for:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/*
- Note [AP_STACKs must be eagerly blackholed]
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Note [AP_STACKs must be eagerly blackholed]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#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
diff --git a/rts/Capability.c b/rts/Capability.c
index 374dfe8de7..7ebe51609f 100644
--- a/rts/Capability.c
+++ b/rts/Capability.c
@@ -660,7 +660,6 @@ enqueueWorker (Capability* cap USED_IF_THREADS)
/*
* Note [Benign data race due to work-pushing]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* #17276 points out a tricky data race (noticed by ThreadSanitizer) between
* waitForWorkerCapability and schedulePushWork. In short, schedulePushWork
* works as follows:
@@ -1039,7 +1038,6 @@ yieldCapability
/*
* Note [migrated bound threads]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* There's a tricky case where:
* - cap A is running an unbound thread T1
* - there is a bound thread T2 at the head of the run queue on cap A
@@ -1060,7 +1058,6 @@ yieldCapability
*
* Note [migrated bound threads 2]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* Second tricky case;
* - A bound Task becomes a GC thread
* - scheduleDoGC() migrates the thread belonging to this Task,
diff --git a/rts/Compact.cmm b/rts/Compact.cmm
index bae94a03cd..8a358e1da5 100644
--- a/rts/Compact.cmm
+++ b/rts/Compact.cmm
@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ stg_compactAddWithSharingzh (P_ compact, P_ p)
StgCompactNFData_hash(compact) = hash;
// Note [compactAddWorker result]
- //
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// compactAddWorker needs somewhere to store the result - this is
// so that it can be tail-recursive. It must be an address that
// doesn't move during GC, so we can't use heap or stack.
diff --git a/rts/ForeignExports.c b/rts/ForeignExports.c
index e218281b51..e4d7d9a39a 100644
--- a/rts/ForeignExports.c
+++ b/rts/ForeignExports.c
@@ -17,7 +17,6 @@ static ObjectCode *loading_obj = NULL;
/*
* Note [Tracking foreign exports]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* Foreign exports are garbage collection roots. That is, things (e.g. CAFs)
* depended upon by a module's `foreign export`s need to be kept alive for as
* long an module is loaded. To ensure this we create a stable pointer to each
diff --git a/rts/IPE.c b/rts/IPE.c
index 3557b0f33f..5ab8a861fd 100644
--- a/rts/IPE.c
+++ b/rts/IPE.c
@@ -27,7 +27,6 @@
/*
Note [The Info Table Provenance Entry (IPE) Map]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
IPEs are stored in a hash map from info table address (pointer) to IPE. This
ensures cheap lookup and traversal.
diff --git a/rts/Interpreter.c b/rts/Interpreter.c
index bcda08018a..c911d99367 100644
--- a/rts/Interpreter.c
+++ b/rts/Interpreter.c
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@
#endif
// Note [Not true: ASSERT(Sp > SpLim)]
-//
+// ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// SpLim has some headroom (RESERVED_STACK_WORDS) to allow for saving
// any necessary state on the stack when returning to the scheduler
// when a stack check fails.. The upshot of this is that Sp could be
@@ -117,7 +117,7 @@
return cap;
// Note [avoiding threadPaused]
-//
+// ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// Switching between the interpreter to compiled code can happen very
// frequently, so we don't want to call threadPaused(), which is
// expensive. BUT we must be careful not to violate the invariant
@@ -1678,7 +1678,7 @@ run_BCO:
SET_HDR(con, (StgInfoTable*)BCO_LIT(o_itbl), cap->r.rCCCS);
// Note [Data constructor dynamic tags]
- //
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// compute the pointer tag for the constructor and tag the pointer
//
// - 1..(TAG_MASK-1): for first TAG_MASK-1 constructors
diff --git a/rts/Linker.c b/rts/Linker.c
index e30fadb262..6c13213092 100644
--- a/rts/Linker.c
+++ b/rts/Linker.c
@@ -80,7 +80,7 @@
#endif
/*
Note [runtime-linker-support]
- -----------------------------
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When adding support for a new platform to the runtime linker please
update `$TOP/configure.ac` under heading `Does target have runtime
linker support?`.
@@ -94,7 +94,7 @@
addresses of unloaded symbols.
Note [runtime-linker-phases]
- --------------------------------------
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Broadly the behavior of the runtime linker can be
split into the following four phases:
@@ -247,7 +247,7 @@ static void ghciRemoveSymbolTable(StrHashTable *table, const SymbolName* key,
*/
/*
Note [weak-symbols-support]
- -------------------------------------
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
While ghciInsertSymbolTable does implement extensive
logic for weak symbol support, weak symbols are not currently
fully supported by the RTS. This code is mostly here for COMDAT
@@ -610,7 +610,7 @@ internal_dlopen(const char *dll_name)
/*
Note [RTLD_LOCAL]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In GHCi we want to be able to override previous .so's with newly
loaded .so's when we recompile something. This further implies that
when we look up a symbol in internal_dlsym() we have to iterate
@@ -1716,6 +1716,7 @@ HsInt loadOc (ObjectCode* oc)
}
/* Note [loadOc orderings]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The order of `ocAllocateExtras` and `ocGetNames` matters. For MachO
and ELF, `ocInit` and `ocGetNames` initialize a bunch of pointers based
on the offset to `oc->image`, but `ocAllocateExtras` may relocate
diff --git a/rts/LinkerInternals.h b/rts/LinkerInternals.h
index 7058ad355b..f3d918e355 100644
--- a/rts/LinkerInternals.h
+++ b/rts/LinkerInternals.h
@@ -118,6 +118,7 @@ typedef enum {
/*
* Note [No typedefs for customizable types]
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Some pointer-to-struct types are defined opaquely
* first, and customized later to architecture/ABI-specific
* instantiations. Having the usual
diff --git a/rts/PrimOps.cmm b/rts/PrimOps.cmm
index c5b6065ec2..84c5850f97 100644
--- a/rts/PrimOps.cmm
+++ b/rts/PrimOps.cmm
@@ -166,7 +166,6 @@ stg_isMutableByteArrayPinnedzh ( gcptr mba )
/* Note [LDV profiling and resizing arrays]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* As far as the LDV profiler is concerned arrays are "inherently used" which
* means we don't track their time of use and eventual destruction. We just
* assume they get used.
@@ -1562,7 +1561,7 @@ stg_writeTVarzh (P_ tvar, /* :: TVar a */
* exception and never perform its take or put, and we'd end up with a
* deadlock.
*
- * Note [Nonmoving write barrier in Perform{Take,Put}]
+ * Note [Nonmoving write barrier in Perform{Put,Take}]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* As noted in Note [Non-moving garbage collector] in NonMoving.c, the
* non-moving GC requires that all overwritten pointers be pushed to the update
@@ -1825,7 +1824,7 @@ stg_putMVarzh ( P_ mvar, /* :: MVar a */
StgMVarTSOQueue_tso(q) = CurrentTSO;
SET_HDR(q, stg_MVAR_TSO_QUEUE_info, CCS_SYSTEM);
- //See Note [Heap memory barriers]
+ // See Note [Heap memory barriers]
prim_write_barrier;
if (StgMVar_head(mvar) == stg_END_TSO_QUEUE_closure) {
@@ -2036,7 +2035,7 @@ stg_readMVarzh ( P_ mvar, /* :: MVar a */ )
StgMVarTSOQueue_tso(q) = CurrentTSO;
SET_HDR(q, stg_MVAR_TSO_QUEUE_info, CCS_SYSTEM);
- //See Note [Heap memory barriers]
+ // See Note [Heap memory barriers]
prim_write_barrier;
StgTSO__link(CurrentTSO) = q;
@@ -2169,7 +2168,7 @@ stg_readIOPortzh ( P_ ioport /* :: IOPort a */ )
StgMVarTSOQueue_tso(q) = CurrentTSO;
SET_HDR(q, stg_MVAR_TSO_QUEUE_info, CCS_SYSTEM);
- //See Note [Heap memory barriers]
+ // See Note [Heap memory barriers]
prim_write_barrier;
StgMVar_head(ioport) = q;
diff --git a/rts/ProfHeap.c b/rts/ProfHeap.c
index 82d9059f24..7921041a5a 100644
--- a/rts/ProfHeap.c
+++ b/rts/ProfHeap.c
@@ -1228,7 +1228,6 @@ heapCensusBlock(Census *census, bdescr *bd)
while (p < bd->free && !*p) p++;
/* Note [skipping slop in the heap profiler]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* We make sure to zero slop that can remain after a major GC so
* here we can assume any slop words we see until the block's free
* pointer are zero. Since info pointers are always nonzero we can
diff --git a/rts/RaiseAsync.c b/rts/RaiseAsync.c
index 39f39a22b4..b668b6a178 100644
--- a/rts/RaiseAsync.c
+++ b/rts/RaiseAsync.c
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ suspendComputation (Capability *cap, StgTSO *tso, StgUpdateFrame *stop_here)
throwTo().
Note [Throw to self when masked]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When a StackOverflow occurs when the thread is masked, we want to
defer the exception to when the thread becomes unmasked/hits an
interruptible point. We already have a mechanism for doing this,
diff --git a/rts/RtsFlags.c b/rts/RtsFlags.c
index c200dcde5d..29664831f8 100644
--- a/rts/RtsFlags.c
+++ b/rts/RtsFlags.c
@@ -552,7 +552,7 @@ usage_text[] = {
/**
Note [Windows Unicode Arguments]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On Windows argv is usually encoded in the current Codepage which might not
support unicode.
@@ -2587,7 +2587,7 @@ void freeRtsArgs(void)
/*
Note [OPTION_SAFE vs OPTION_UNSAFE]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ticket #3910 originally pointed out that the RTS options are a potential
security problem. For example the -t -s or -S flags can be used to
overwrite files. This would be bad in the context of CGI scripts or
diff --git a/rts/RtsSymbols.c b/rts/RtsSymbols.c
index b2c85b591c..e186830b4e 100644
--- a/rts/RtsSymbols.c
+++ b/rts/RtsSymbols.c
@@ -93,7 +93,6 @@ extern char **environ;
/*
* Note [Strong symbols]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* The notion of a *weak* symbol is fairly common in linking: a symbol is weak
* if it is declared but not defined, allowing it to be defined by an object
* which is loaded later. GHC generalizes this notion, allowing symbol
@@ -112,7 +111,6 @@ extern char **environ;
/*
* Note [Symbols for MinGW's printf]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* The printf offered by Microsoft's libc implementation, msvcrt, is quite
* incomplete, lacking support for even %ull. Consequently mingw-w64 offers its
* own implementation which we enable. However, to be thread-safe the
@@ -132,7 +130,6 @@ extern char **environ;
*/
/* Note [_iob_func symbol]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* Microsoft in VS2013 to VS2015 transition made a backwards incompatible change
* to the stdio function __iob_func.
*
diff --git a/rts/Schedule.c b/rts/Schedule.c
index b9b15811c9..fa48bef1a7 100644
--- a/rts/Schedule.c
+++ b/rts/Schedule.c
@@ -224,6 +224,7 @@ schedule (Capability *initialCapability, Task *task)
}
// Note [shutdown]: The interruption / shutdown sequence.
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
//
// In order to cleanly shut down the runtime, we want to:
// * make sure that all main threads return to their callers
@@ -649,7 +650,7 @@ shouldYieldCapability (Capability *cap, Task *task, bool didGcLast)
// and this task it bound).
//
// Note [GC livelock]
- //
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// If we are interrupted to do a GC, then we do not immediately do
// another one. This avoids a starvation situation where one
// Capability keeps forcing a GC and the other Capabilities make no
diff --git a/rts/StablePtr.c b/rts/StablePtr.c
index 8f860d480c..ffd1d0775a 100644
--- a/rts/StablePtr.c
+++ b/rts/StablePtr.c
@@ -200,7 +200,7 @@ enlargeStablePtrTable(void)
}
/* Note [Enlarging the stable pointer table]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* To enlarge the stable pointer table, we allocate a new table, copy the
* existing entries, and then store the old version of the table in old_SPTs
* until we free it during GC. By not immediately freeing the old version
diff --git a/rts/Stats.c b/rts/Stats.c
index 7abe2f7417..ea57f60e70 100644
--- a/rts/Stats.c
+++ b/rts/Stats.c
@@ -764,8 +764,7 @@ StgInt TOTAL_CALLS=1;
/*
Note [RTS Stats Reporting]
-==========================
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are currently three reporting functions:
* report_summary:
Responsible for producing '+RTS -s' output.
@@ -948,7 +947,7 @@ static void report_summary(const RTSSummaryStats* sum)
sum->productivity_cpu_percent * 100,
sum->productivity_elapsed_percent * 100);
- // See Note [Internal Counter Stats] for a description of the
+ // See Note [Internal Counters Stats] for a description of the
// following counters. If you add a counter here, please remember
// to update the Note.
if (RtsFlags.MiscFlags.internalCounters) {
@@ -1474,7 +1473,7 @@ void stat_exit()
}
/* Note [Work Balance]
-----------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Work balance is a measure of how evenly the work done during parallel garbage
collection is spread across threads. To compute work balance we must take care
to account for the number of GC threads changing between GCs. The statistics we
@@ -1553,7 +1552,7 @@ See #13830
/*
Note [Internal Counters Stats]
------------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What do the counts at the end of a '+RTS -s --internal-counters' report mean?
They are detailed below. Most of these counters are used by multiple threads
with no attempt at synchronisation. This means that reported values may be
diff --git a/rts/StgCRun.c b/rts/StgCRun.c
index 8e536ad6c2..7f5b6d169b 100644
--- a/rts/StgCRun.c
+++ b/rts/StgCRun.c
@@ -113,7 +113,6 @@ StgFunPtr StgReturn(void)
/*
* Note [Stack Alignment on X86]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* On X86 (both 32bit and 64bit) we keep the stack aligned on function calls at
* a 16-byte boundary. This is done because on a number of architectures the
* ABI requires this (x64, Mac OSX 32bit/64bit) as well as interfacing with
@@ -149,7 +148,7 @@ StgFunPtr StgReturn(void)
* for stg_stop_thread in StgStartup.cmm.
*
* Note [Windows Stack allocations]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* On windows the stack has to be allocated 4k at a time, otherwise
* we get a segfault. This is done by using a helper ___chkstk_ms that is
* provided by libgcc. The Haskell side already knows how to handle this
diff --git a/rts/StgMiscClosures.cmm b/rts/StgMiscClosures.cmm
index b78fca74cc..e9186e3500 100644
--- a/rts/StgMiscClosures.cmm
+++ b/rts/StgMiscClosures.cmm
@@ -193,7 +193,7 @@ INFO_TABLE_RET( stg_ctoi_V, RET_BCO )
}
/* Note [GHCi unboxed tuples stack spills]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the calling convention for compiled code, a tuple is returned
in registers, with everything that doesn't fit spilled onto the STG
stack.
@@ -334,7 +334,7 @@ MK_STG_CTOI_T(62)
/*
Note [GHCi tuple layout]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
the tuple_info word describes the register and stack usage of the tuple:
[ ssss ssss rrrr rrrr rrrr rrrr rrrr rrrr ]
@@ -900,8 +900,8 @@ INFO_TABLE( stg_COMPACT_NFDATA_DIRTY, 0, 9, COMPACT_NFDATA, "COMPACT_NFDATA", "C
{ foreign "C" barf("COMPACT_NFDATA_DIRTY object (%p) entered!", R1) never returns; }
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Note [CHARLIKE and INTLIKE closures.]
-
+ Note [CHARLIKE and INTLIKE closures]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
These are static representations of Chars and small Ints, so that
we can remove dynamic Chars and Ints during garbage collection and
replace them with references to the static objects.
diff --git a/rts/StgStdThunks.cmm b/rts/StgStdThunks.cmm
index 5239496be5..3c528f662f 100644
--- a/rts/StgStdThunks.cmm
+++ b/rts/StgStdThunks.cmm
@@ -53,7 +53,9 @@
* because LDV profiling relies on entering closures to mark them as
* "used".
*
- * Note [untag for prof]: when we enter a closure, the convention is
+ * Note [untag for prof]
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ * When we enter a closure, the convention is
* that the closure pointer passed in the first argument is
* *untagged*. Without profiling we don't have to worry about this,
* because we never enter a tagged pointer.
diff --git a/rts/Task.h b/rts/Task.h
index 9b6a8e8d7b..fd7b68aecf 100644
--- a/rts/Task.h
+++ b/rts/Task.h
@@ -18,7 +18,6 @@
/*
Note [Definition of a Task]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
A task is an OSThread that runs Haskell code. Every OSThread that
runs inside the RTS, whether as a worker created by the RTS or via
an in-call from C to Haskell, has an associated Task. The first
@@ -35,7 +34,6 @@
Note [Ownership of Task]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Task ownership is a little tricky. The default situation is that
the Task is an OS-thread-local structure that is owned by the OS
thread named in task->id. An OS thread not currently executing
diff --git a/rts/ThreadPaused.c b/rts/ThreadPaused.c
index c94b95afab..ffa1168a27 100644
--- a/rts/ThreadPaused.c
+++ b/rts/ThreadPaused.c
@@ -252,7 +252,7 @@ threadPaused(Capability *cap, StgTSO *tso)
retry:
#endif
// Note [suspend duplicate work]
- //
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// If the info table is a WHITEHOLE or a BLACKHOLE, then
// another thread has claimed it (via the SET_INFO()
// below), or is in the process of doing so. In that case
diff --git a/rts/Threads.c b/rts/Threads.c
index ab7af2e52c..1972f14895 100644
--- a/rts/Threads.c
+++ b/rts/Threads.c
@@ -570,7 +570,7 @@ threadStackOverflow (Capability *cap, StgTSO *tso)
stg_min(tso->stackobj->stack + tso->stackobj->stack_size,
tso->stackobj->sp+64)));
- // Note [Throw to self when masked], also #767 and #8303.
+ // See Note [Throw to self when masked], also #767 and #8303.
throwToSelf(cap, tso, (StgClosure *)stackOverflow_closure);
return;
}
diff --git a/rts/Timer.c b/rts/Timer.c
index ec3dff0a5c..e6666856a6 100644
--- a/rts/Timer.c
+++ b/rts/Timer.c
@@ -44,8 +44,7 @@ static int ticks_to_eventlog_flush = 0;
/*
Note [GC During Idle Time]
- --------------------------
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the threaded RTS, a major GC can be performed during idle time (i.e., when
no Haskell computations are ready to run). This can be beneficial for two
reasons. First, running the GC during idle time makes it less likely that a GC
diff --git a/rts/TraverseHeap.h b/rts/TraverseHeap.h
index 0bc553e094..2ac20e9cc5 100644
--- a/rts/TraverseHeap.h
+++ b/rts/TraverseHeap.h
@@ -97,7 +97,6 @@ typedef struct stackElement_ {
typedef struct traverseState_ {
/** Note [Profiling heap traversal visited bit]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* If the RTS is compiled with profiling enabled StgProfHeader can be used
* by profiling code to store per-heap object information. Specifically the
* 'hp_hdr' field is used to store heap profiling information.
diff --git a/rts/Updates.cmm b/rts/Updates.cmm
index d459607752..57839216c4 100644
--- a/rts/Updates.cmm
+++ b/rts/Updates.cmm
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ INFO_TABLE_RET ( stg_bh_upd_frame, UPDATE_FRAME,
}
/* Note [HpAlloc]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* HpAlloc is required to be zero unless we just bumped Hp and failed
* the heap check: see HeapStackCheck.cmm. Failures that result from
* HpAlloc being non-zero are very hard to track down, because they
diff --git a/rts/include/Stg.h b/rts/include/Stg.h
index 156c3a283c..be0995445b 100644
--- a/rts/include/Stg.h
+++ b/rts/include/Stg.h
@@ -268,8 +268,10 @@ typedef StgFunPtr F_;
/* foreign functions: */
#define EFF_(f) void f() /* See Note [External function prototypes] */
-/* Note [External function prototypes] See #8965, #11395
+/* Note [External function prototypes]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+(see #8965, #11395)
+
In generated C code we need to distinct between two types
of external symbols:
1. Cmm functions declared by 'EF_' macro (External Functions)
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/Flags.h b/rts/include/rts/Flags.h
index 2936876b7a..eb38e80794 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/Flags.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/Flags.h
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
/* For defaults, see the @initRtsFlagsDefaults@ routine. */
/* Note [Synchronization of flags and base APIs]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* We provide accessors to RTS flags in base. (GHC.RTS module)
* The API should be updated whenever RTS flags are modified.
*/
@@ -230,7 +230,7 @@ typedef struct _MISC_FLAGS {
memory management for non-GC related
tasks in the future, we'd respect it
there as well. */
- bool internalCounters; /* See Note [Internal Counter Stats] */
+ bool internalCounters; /* See Note [Internal Counters Stats] */
bool linkerAlwaysPic; /* Assume the object code is always PIC */
StgWord linkerMemBase; /* address to ask the OS for memory
* for the linker, NULL ==> off */
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/Libdw.h b/rts/include/rts/Libdw.h
index d7bd55d06e..7076611dfd 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/Libdw.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/Libdw.h
@@ -18,8 +18,8 @@
/*
* Note [Chunked stack representation]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* Consider the stack,
+ *
* main calls (bottom of stack)
* func1 which in turn calls
* func2 which calls
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/OSThreads.h b/rts/include/rts/OSThreads.h
index d24a1313a6..77241341b7 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/OSThreads.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/OSThreads.h
@@ -114,6 +114,7 @@ typedef DWORD ThreadLocalKey;
#define INIT_COND_VAR 0
/* Note [SRW locks]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We have a choice for implementing Mutexes on Windows. Standard
Mutexes are kernel objects that require kernel calls to
acquire/release, whereas CriticalSections are spin-locks that block
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/prof/CCS.h b/rts/include/rts/prof/CCS.h
index 7685f03003..a155e1385b 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/prof/CCS.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/prof/CCS.h
@@ -18,6 +18,7 @@
* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/*
* Note [struct alignment]
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* NB. be careful to avoid unwanted padding between fields, by
* putting the 8-byte fields on an 8-byte boundary. Padding can
* vary between C compilers, and we don't take into account any
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/storage/Block.h b/rts/include/rts/storage/Block.h
index 730947e375..141ec777be 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/storage/Block.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/storage/Block.h
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@
#define BLOCK_SIZE (1<<BLOCK_SHIFT)
#else
#define BLOCK_SIZE (UNIT<<BLOCK_SHIFT)
-// Note [integer overflow]
+// See Note [integer overflow]
#endif
#define BLOCK_SIZE_W (BLOCK_SIZE/sizeof(W_))
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@
#define MBLOCK_SIZE (1<<MBLOCK_SHIFT)
#else
#define MBLOCK_SIZE (UNIT<<MBLOCK_SHIFT)
-// Note [integer overflow]
+// See Note [integer overflow]
#endif
#define MBLOCK_SIZE_W (MBLOCK_SIZE/sizeof(W_))
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@
/*
* Note [integer overflow]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* The UL suffix in BLOCK_SIZE and MBLOCK_SIZE promotes the expression
* to an unsigned long, which means that expressions involving these
* will be promoted to unsigned long, which makes integer overflow
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/storage/ClosureMacros.h b/rts/include/rts/storage/ClosureMacros.h
index b841ef8be0..393bee3a9f 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/storage/ClosureMacros.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/storage/ClosureMacros.h
@@ -480,10 +480,11 @@ INLINE_HEADER StgWord8 *mutArrPtrsCard (StgMutArrPtrs *a, W_ n)
Replacing a closure with a different one. We must call
OVERWRITING_CLOSURE(p) on the old closure that is about to be
overwritten.
+ */
+ /*
Note [zeroing slop when overwriting closures]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
When we overwrite a closure in the heap with a smaller one, in some scenarios
we need to write zero words into "slop"; the memory that is left
unoccupied. See Note [slop on the heap]
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/storage/Closures.h b/rts/include/rts/storage/Closures.h
index b28315f76a..44188f3394 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/storage/Closures.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/storage/Closures.h
@@ -491,6 +491,6 @@ typedef struct StgCompactNFData_ {
// Used temporarily to store the result of compaction. Doesn't need to be
// a GC root.
struct StgCompactNFData_ *link;
- // Used by compacting GC for linking CNFs with threaded hash tables. See
- // Note [CNFs in compacting GC] in Compact.c for details.
+ // Used by compacting GC for linking CNFs with threaded hash tables.
+ // See Note [CNFs in compacting GC] in Compact.c for details.
} StgCompactNFData;
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/storage/InfoTables.h b/rts/include/rts/storage/InfoTables.h
index 55d9ad6542..55aba6b4d7 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/storage/InfoTables.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/storage/InfoTables.h
@@ -235,7 +235,6 @@ typedef struct StgInfoTable_ {
/*
* Note [Encoding static reference tables]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
* As static reference tables appear frequently in code, we use a special
* compact encoding for the common case of a module defining only a few CAFs: We
* produce one table containing a list of CAFs in the module and then include a
diff --git a/rts/include/rts/storage/TSO.h b/rts/include/rts/storage/TSO.h
index 874d61ab60..d21cd7a645 100644
--- a/rts/include/rts/storage/TSO.h
+++ b/rts/include/rts/storage/TSO.h
@@ -191,10 +191,9 @@ typedef struct StgTSO_ {
/* Note [StgStack dirtiness flags and concurrent marking]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
- * Without concurrent collection by the nonmoving collector the stack dirtiness story
- * is quite simple: The stack is either STACK_DIRTY (meaning it has been added to mut_list)
- * or not.
+ * Without concurrent collection by the nonmoving collector the stack dirtiness
+ * story is quite simple: The stack is either STACK_DIRTY (meaning it has been
+ * added to mut_list) or not.
*
* However, things are considerably more complicated with concurrent collection
* (namely, when nonmoving_write_barrier_enabled is set): In addition to adding
diff --git a/rts/include/stg/SMP.h b/rts/include/stg/SMP.h
index a1a714f4c9..f672009c76 100644
--- a/rts/include/stg/SMP.h
+++ b/rts/include/stg/SMP.h
@@ -107,7 +107,6 @@ EXTERN_INLINE void load_load_barrier(void);
/*
* Note [Heap memory barriers]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* Machines with weak memory ordering semantics have consequences for how
* closures are observed and mutated. For example, consider a thunk that needs
* to be updated to an indirection. In order for the indirection to be safe for
diff --git a/rts/linker/Elf.c b/rts/linker/Elf.c
index c5d009639e..76145dbbf4 100644
--- a/rts/linker/Elf.c
+++ b/rts/linker/Elf.c
@@ -110,9 +110,8 @@
#endif
/*
-
Note [Many ELF Sections]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The normal section number fields in ELF are limited to 16 bits, which runs
out of bits when you try to cram in more sections than that.
@@ -1245,6 +1244,7 @@ do_Elf_Rel_relocations ( ObjectCode* oc, char* ehdrC,
if(needs_veneer) { /* overflow or thum interworking */
// Note [PC bias]
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// From the ELF for the ARM Architecture documentation:
// > 4.6.1.1 Addends and PC-bias compensation
// > A binary file may use REL or RELA relocations or a mixture
diff --git a/rts/linker/LoadArchive.c b/rts/linker/LoadArchive.c
index 041ebef4b6..ff8630d57e 100644
--- a/rts/linker/LoadArchive.c
+++ b/rts/linker/LoadArchive.c
@@ -468,6 +468,7 @@ static HsInt loadArchive_ (pathchar *path)
#if defined(OBJFORMAT_PEi386)
/*
* Note [MSVC import files (ext .lib)]
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* MSVC compilers store the object files in
* the import libraries with extension .dll
* so on Windows we should look for those too.
diff --git a/rts/linker/M32Alloc.c b/rts/linker/M32Alloc.c
index cd8751b3b0..69613d8d7c 100644
--- a/rts/linker/M32Alloc.c
+++ b/rts/linker/M32Alloc.c
@@ -18,10 +18,8 @@
#include <stdio.h>
/*
-
Note [Compile Time Trickery]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
This file implements two versions of each of the `m32_*` functions. At the top
of the file there is the real implementation (compiled in when
`NEED_M32` is true) and a dummy implementation that exists only to
@@ -45,10 +43,8 @@ still check the call for syntax and correct function parameter types.
#if defined(NEED_M32)
/*
-
Note [M32 Allocator]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
A memory allocator that allocates only pages in the 32-bit range (lower 2GB).
This is useful on 64-bit platforms to ensure that addresses of allocated
objects can be referenced with a 32-bit relative offset.
diff --git a/rts/linker/PEi386.c b/rts/linker/PEi386.c
index f186da0af8..011e47a21b 100644
--- a/rts/linker/PEi386.c
+++ b/rts/linker/PEi386.c
@@ -59,7 +59,6 @@
Note [BFD import library]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
On Windows, compilers don't link directly to dynamic libraries.
The reason for this is that the exports are not always by symbol, the
Import Address Table (IAT) also allows exports by ordinal number
@@ -128,7 +127,6 @@
Note [Memory allocation]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Previously on Windows we would use VirtualAlloc to allocate enough space for
loading the entire object file into memory and keep it there for the duration
until the entire object file has been unloaded.
@@ -166,7 +164,6 @@
Note [Section alignment]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The Windows linker aligns memory to it's section alignment requirement by
aligning it during the copying to the private heap. We also ensure that the
trampoline "region" we reserve is 8 bytes aligned.
@@ -1996,7 +1993,7 @@ ocResolve_PEi386 ( ObjectCode* oc )
/*
Note [ELF constant in PE file]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For some reason, the PE files produced by GHC contain a linux
relocation constant 17 (0x11) in the object files. As far as I (Phyx-) can tell
this constant doesn't seem like it's coming from GHC, or at least I could not find
diff --git a/rts/linker/PEi386.h b/rts/linker/PEi386.h
index 4c33dfd4d9..8e6e844efb 100644
--- a/rts/linker/PEi386.h
+++ b/rts/linker/PEi386.h
@@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ uint8_t* getSymShortName ( COFF_HEADER_INFO *info, COFF_symbol* sym );
/*
Note [mingw-w64 name decoration scheme]
-
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What's going on with name decoration? Well, original code
have some crufty and ad-hocish paths related mostly to very old
mingw gcc/binutils/runtime combinations. Now mingw-w64 offers pretty
diff --git a/rts/linker/elf_plt_arm.c b/rts/linker/elf_plt_arm.c
index bd21243ec4..5b67bf8ac4 100644
--- a/rts/linker/elf_plt_arm.c
+++ b/rts/linker/elf_plt_arm.c
@@ -58,7 +58,6 @@ bool makeStubArmThm(Stub * s);
/*
Note [The ARM/Thumb Story]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Support for the ARM architecture is complicated by the fact that ARM has not
one but several instruction encodings. The two relevant ones here are the
original ARM encoding and Thumb, a more dense variant of ARM supporting only
diff --git a/rts/linker/elf_reloc_aarch64.c b/rts/linker/elf_reloc_aarch64.c
index d8c4f8b724..790378ab0e 100644
--- a/rts/linker/elf_reloc_aarch64.c
+++ b/rts/linker/elf_reloc_aarch64.c
@@ -229,6 +229,7 @@ computeAddend(Section * section, Elf_Rel * rel,
/* note: we are encoding bits [27:2] */
if(!isInt64(26+2, V)) {
// Note [PC bias aarch64]
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// There is no PC bias to accommodate in the
// relocation of a place containing an instruction
// that formulates a PC-relative address. The program
diff --git a/rts/linker/elf_tlsgd.c b/rts/linker/elf_tlsgd.c
index ec42e29ac6..a22ed0b731 100644
--- a/rts/linker/elf_tlsgd.c
+++ b/rts/linker/elf_tlsgd.c
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
/*
* Note [TLSGD relocation]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Quick background: FreeBSD's <ctype.h> is poisoned with static inline code
* that gets compiled into every program that uses functions like isdigit(3).
* When compiled "-c -fpic" for inclusion in position-independent ".a" files
diff --git a/rts/posix/OSMem.c b/rts/posix/OSMem.c
index fff2f1e590..822546d5d1 100644
--- a/rts/posix/OSMem.c
+++ b/rts/posix/OSMem.c
@@ -652,7 +652,7 @@ void osCommitMemory(void *at, W_ size)
}
/* Note [MADV_FREE and MADV_DONTNEED]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* madvise() provides flags with which one can release no longer needed pages
* back to the kernel without having to munmap() (which is expensive).
*
diff --git a/rts/sm/CNF.c b/rts/sm/CNF.c
index a6bd3b69f0..1f40402c63 100644
--- a/rts/sm/CNF.c
+++ b/rts/sm/CNF.c
@@ -36,7 +36,6 @@
/*
Note [Compact Normal Forms]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
A compact normal form (CNF) is a region of memory containing one or more
Haskell data structures. The goals are:
diff --git a/rts/sm/Evac.c b/rts/sm/Evac.c
index 0e0e887b1e..834df459b4 100644
--- a/rts/sm/Evac.c
+++ b/rts/sm/Evac.c
@@ -43,7 +43,6 @@
/* Note [Selector optimisation depth limit]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* MAX_THUNK_SELECTOR_DEPTH is used to avoid long recursion of
* eval_thunk_selector due to nested selector thunks. Note that this *only*
* counts nested selector thunks, e.g. `fst (fst (... (fst x)))`. The collector
@@ -174,7 +173,6 @@ alloc_for_copy (uint32_t size, uint32_t gen_no)
/*
* Note [Non-moving GC: Marking evacuated objects]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* When the non-moving collector is in use we must be careful to ensure that any
* references to objects in the non-moving generation from younger generations
* are pushed to the mark queue.
@@ -695,7 +693,7 @@ loop:
if (!HEAP_ALLOCED_GC(q)) {
if (!major_gc) return;
- // Note [Object unloading] in CheckUnload.c
+ // See Note [Object unloading] in CheckUnload.c
if (RTS_UNLIKELY(unload_mark_needed)) {
markObjectCode(q);
}
@@ -933,7 +931,7 @@ loop:
return;
}
// Note [BLACKHOLE pointing to IND]
- //
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// BLOCKING_QUEUE can be overwritten by IND (see
// wakeBlockingQueue()). However, when this happens we must
// be updating the BLACKHOLE, so the BLACKHOLE's indirectee
diff --git a/rts/sm/GC.c b/rts/sm/GC.c
index 64d0924059..15aef3a9fc 100644
--- a/rts/sm/GC.c
+++ b/rts/sm/GC.c
@@ -158,6 +158,7 @@ StgWord8 the_gc_thread[sizeof(gc_thread) + 64 * sizeof(gen_workspace)]
#endif // THREADED_RTS
/* Note [n_gc_threads]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This is a global variable that originally tracked the number of threads
participating in the current gc. It's meaning has diverged from this somewhat,
as it does not distinguish betweeen idle and non-idle threads. An idle thread
@@ -2197,7 +2198,7 @@ bool doIdleGCWork(Capability *cap STG_UNUSED, bool all)
/* Note [Synchronising work stealing]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* During parallel garbage collections, idle gc threads will steal work from
* other threads. If they see no work to steal then they will wait on a
* condition variabl(gc_running_cv).
@@ -2243,6 +2244,7 @@ bool doIdleGCWork(Capability *cap STG_UNUSED, bool all)
* */
/* Note [Scaling retained memory]
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Tickets: #19381 #19359 #14702
*
* After a spike in memory usage we have been conservative about returning
diff --git a/rts/sm/GCUtils.c b/rts/sm/GCUtils.c
index 627c95fb42..9d57bf7d9e 100644
--- a/rts/sm/GCUtils.c
+++ b/rts/sm/GCUtils.c
@@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ push_todo_block(bdescr *bd, gen_workspace *ws)
}
/* Note [big objects]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We can get an ordinary object (CONSTR, FUN, THUNK etc.) that is
larger than a block (see #7919). Let's call these "big objects".
These objects don't behave like large objects - they live in
diff --git a/rts/sm/NonMoving.c b/rts/sm/NonMoving.c
index dd019ec18b..a918f422cf 100644
--- a/rts/sm/NonMoving.c
+++ b/rts/sm/NonMoving.c
@@ -229,7 +229,7 @@ Mutex concurrent_coll_finished_lock;
* - Note [StgStack dirtiness flags and concurrent marking] (TSO.h) describes
* the protocol for concurrent marking of stacks.
*
- * - Note [Nonmoving write barrier in Perform{Take,Put}] (PrimOps.cmm) describes
+ * - Note [Nonmoving write barrier in Perform{Put,Take}] (PrimOps.cmm) describes
* a tricky barrier necessary when resuming threads blocked on MVar
* operations.
*
@@ -328,8 +328,8 @@ Mutex concurrent_coll_finished_lock;
* The implementation details of this are described in Note [Non-moving GC:
* Marking evacuated objects] in Evac.c.
*
- * Note [Deadlock detection under the non-moving collector]
- * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ * Note [Deadlock detection under nonmoving collector]
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* In GHC the garbage collector is responsible for identifying deadlocked
* programs. Providing for this responsibility is slightly tricky in the
* non-moving collector due to the existence of aging. In particular, the
diff --git a/rts/sm/NonMovingMark.c b/rts/sm/NonMovingMark.c
index 2fd85dc4f0..87b8f774bd 100644
--- a/rts/sm/NonMovingMark.c
+++ b/rts/sm/NonMovingMark.c
@@ -159,7 +159,6 @@ StgIndStatic *debug_caf_list_snapshot = (StgIndStatic*)END_OF_CAF_LIST;
*
* Note [Eager update remembered set flushing]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* We eagerly flush update remembered sets during minor GCs to avoid scenarios
* like the following which could result in long sync pauses:
*
@@ -199,7 +198,6 @@ StgIndStatic *debug_caf_list_snapshot = (StgIndStatic*)END_OF_CAF_LIST;
*
* Note [Concurrent read barrier on deRefWeak#]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* In general the non-moving GC assumes that all pointers reachable from a
* marked object are themselves marked (or in the mark queue). However,
* weak pointers are an obvious exception to this rule. In particular,
@@ -596,7 +594,7 @@ inline void updateRemembSetPushThunk(Capability *cap, StgThunk *thunk)
* we update the indirectee to ensure that the thunk's free variables remain
* visible to the concurrent collector.
*
- * See Note [Update rememembered set].
+ * See Note [Update remembered set].
*/
void updateRemembSetPushThunkEager(Capability *cap,
const StgThunkInfoTable *info,
diff --git a/rts/sm/NonMovingScav.c b/rts/sm/NonMovingScav.c
index 4fcbc5881c..56ebe5ffe4 100644
--- a/rts/sm/NonMovingScav.c
+++ b/rts/sm/NonMovingScav.c
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ nonmovingScavengeOne (StgClosure *q)
if (gct->failed_to_evac) {
mvar->header.info = &stg_MVAR_DIRTY_info;
- // Note [Dirty flags in the non-moving collector] in NonMoving.c
+ // See Note [Dirty flags in the non-moving collector] in NonMoving.c
markQueuePushClosureGC(&gct->cap->upd_rem_set.queue, (StgClosure *) mvar->head);
markQueuePushClosureGC(&gct->cap->upd_rem_set.queue, (StgClosure *) mvar->tail);
markQueuePushClosureGC(&gct->cap->upd_rem_set.queue, (StgClosure *) mvar->value);
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ nonmovingScavengeOne (StgClosure *q)
if (gct->failed_to_evac) {
tvar->header.info = &stg_TVAR_DIRTY_info;
- // Note [Dirty flags in the non-moving collector] in NonMoving.c
+ // See Note [Dirty flags in the non-moving collector] in NonMoving.c
markQueuePushClosureGC(&gct->cap->upd_rem_set.queue, (StgClosure *) tvar->current_value);
markQueuePushClosureGC(&gct->cap->upd_rem_set.queue, (StgClosure *) tvar->first_watch_queue_entry);
} else {
@@ -177,7 +177,7 @@ nonmovingScavengeOne (StgClosure *q)
if (gct->failed_to_evac) {
((StgClosure *)q)->header.info = &stg_MUT_VAR_DIRTY_info;
- // Note [Dirty flags in the non-moving collector] in NonMoving.c
+ // See Note [Dirty flags in the non-moving collector] in NonMoving.c
markQueuePushClosureGC(&gct->cap->upd_rem_set.queue, (StgClosure *) mv->var);
} else {
((StgClosure *)q)->header.info = &stg_MUT_VAR_CLEAN_info;
diff --git a/rts/sm/NonMovingSweep.c b/rts/sm/NonMovingSweep.c
index 1a7c97b7e6..5c4752d4a3 100644
--- a/rts/sm/NonMovingSweep.c
+++ b/rts/sm/NonMovingSweep.c
@@ -370,7 +370,6 @@ void nonmovingSweepStableNameTable()
/* Note [Sweeping stable names in the concurrent collector]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* When collecting concurrently we need to take care to avoid freeing
* stable names the we didn't sweep this collection cycle. For instance,
* consider the following situation:
diff --git a/rts/sm/Sanity.c b/rts/sm/Sanity.c
index cf4e2dfea6..9c2ccc2c41 100644
--- a/rts/sm/Sanity.c
+++ b/rts/sm/Sanity.c
@@ -909,7 +909,6 @@ static void checkGeneration (generation *gen,
#if defined(THREADED_RTS)
// Note [heap sanity checking with SMP]
// ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- //
// heap sanity checking doesn't work with SMP for two reasons:
//
// * We can't zero the slop. However, we can sanity-check the heap after a
diff --git a/rts/sm/Scav.c b/rts/sm/Scav.c
index a36ebbb331..b121c010ca 100644
--- a/rts/sm/Scav.c
+++ b/rts/sm/Scav.c
@@ -1858,7 +1858,7 @@ scavenge_stack(StgPtr p, StgPtr stack_end)
case UPDATE_FRAME:
// Note [upd-black-hole]
- //
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// In SMP, we can get update frames that point to indirections
// when two threads evaluate the same thunk. We do attempt to
// discover this situation in threadPaused(), but it's
diff --git a/rts/sm/Storage.c b/rts/sm/Storage.c
index ede47d3eb2..c592595737 100644
--- a/rts/sm/Storage.c
+++ b/rts/sm/Storage.c
@@ -399,7 +399,6 @@ void listAllBlocks (ListBlocksCb cb, void *user)
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note [CAF management]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The entry code for every CAF does the following:
- calls newCAF, which builds a CAF_BLACKHOLE on the heap and atomically
@@ -434,7 +433,6 @@ void listAllBlocks (ListBlocksCb cb, void *user)
------------------
Note [atomic CAF entry]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
With THREADED_RTS, newCAF() is required to be atomic (see
#5558). This is because if two threads happened to enter the same
CAF simultaneously, they would create two distinct CAF_BLACKHOLEs,
@@ -448,7 +446,6 @@ void listAllBlocks (ListBlocksCb cb, void *user)
------------------
Note [GHCi CAFs]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
For GHCI, we have additional requirements when dealing with CAFs:
- we must *retain* all dynamically-loaded CAFs ever entered,
@@ -470,7 +467,6 @@ void listAllBlocks (ListBlocksCb cb, void *user)
------------------
Note [Static objects under the nonmoving collector]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Static object management is a bit tricky under the nonmoving collector as we
need to maintain a bit more state than in the moving collector. In
particular, the moving collector uses the low bits of the STATIC_LINK field
@@ -597,6 +593,7 @@ newCAF(StgRegTable *reg, StgIndStatic *caf)
if(keepCAFs && !(highMemDynamic && (void*) caf > (void*) 0x80000000))
{
// Note [dyn_caf_list]
+ // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// If we are in GHCi _and_ we are using dynamic libraries,
// then we can't redirect newCAF calls to newRetainedCAF (see below),
// so we make newCAF behave almost like newRetainedCAF.
@@ -990,7 +987,6 @@ accountAllocation(Capability *cap, W_ n)
/* Note [slop on the heap]
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
* We use the term "slop" to refer to allocated memory on the heap which isn't
* occupied by any closure. Usually closures are packet tightly into the heap
* blocks, storage for one immediately following another. However there are
@@ -1549,7 +1545,7 @@ dirty_MVAR(StgRegTable *reg, StgClosure *p, StgClosure *old_val)
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Note [allocation accounting]
- *
+ * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* - When cap->r.rCurrentNusery moves to a new block in the nursery,
* we add the size of the used portion of the previous block to
* cap->total_allocated. (see finishedNurseryBlock())
@@ -1825,7 +1821,6 @@ _bdescr (StgPtr p)
/*
Note [Sources of Block Level Fragmentation]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Block level fragmentation is when there is unused space in megablocks.
The amount of fragmentation can be calculated as the difference between the
total size of allocated blocks and the total size of allocated megablocks.
diff --git a/rts/sm/Storage.h b/rts/sm/Storage.h
index 48ddcf35f5..00f2943a51 100644
--- a/rts/sm/Storage.h
+++ b/rts/sm/Storage.h
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ bool doYouWantToGC(Capability *cap)
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allocation accounting
- See [Note allocation accounting] in Storage.c
+ See Note [allocation accounting] in Storage.c
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
//
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ void move_STACK (StgStack *src, StgStack *dest);
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note [STATIC_LINK fields]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The low 2 bits of the static link field have the following meaning:
00 we haven't seen this static object before
@@ -175,7 +175,7 @@ extern uint32_t prev_static_flag, static_flag;
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note [CAF lists]
-
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
dyn_caf_list (CAFs chained through static_link)
This is a chain of all CAFs in the program, used for
dynamically-linked GHCi.
diff --git a/rts/win32/OSMem.c b/rts/win32/OSMem.c
index dde1a74bbb..c192fb5923 100644
--- a/rts/win32/OSMem.c
+++ b/rts/win32/OSMem.c
@@ -547,6 +547,7 @@ void osBindMBlocksToNode(
void* temp;
if (RtsFlags.GcFlags.numa) {
/* Note [base memory]
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I would like to use addr here to specify the base
memory of allocation. The problem is that the address
we are requesting is too high. I can't figure out if it's
diff --git a/rules/build-package-way.mk b/rules/build-package-way.mk
index 5ac137635e..2f7af28ecb 100644
--- a/rules/build-package-way.mk
+++ b/rules/build-package-way.mk
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ $1_$2_$3_LIB = $1/$2/build/$$($1_$2_$3_LIB_FILE)
$$($1_$2_COMPONENT_ID)_$2_$3_LIB = $$($1_$2_$3_LIB)
# Note [inconsistent distdirs]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# hack: the DEPS_LIBS mechanism assumes that the distdirs for packages
# that depend on each other are the same, but that is not the case for
# ghc where we use stage1/stage2 rather than dist/dist-install.
diff --git a/rules/build-prog.mk b/rules/build-prog.mk
index e7764d75a1..8d2bcd25c5 100644
--- a/rules/build-prog.mk
+++ b/rules/build-prog.mk
@@ -277,7 +277,9 @@ $1/$2/build/tmp/$$($1_$2_PROG) : $$($1_$2_$$($1_$2_PROGRAM_WAY)_HS_OBJS) $$($1_$
endif
endif # $1_$2_PROG_NEEDS_C_WRAPPER
-# Note [lib-depends] if this program is built with stage1 or greater, we
+# Note [lib-depends]
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+# If this program is built with stage1 or greater, we
# need to depend on the libraries too. NB. since $(ALL_STAGE1_LIBS) and
# $(ALL_RTS_LIBS) are not defined until after libraries/*/ghc.mk have
# been included, this introduces an ordering dependency.
diff --git a/rules/hs-suffix-way-rules.mk b/rules/hs-suffix-way-rules.mk
index da3d368c0b..e75d7b458e 100644
--- a/rules/hs-suffix-way-rules.mk
+++ b/rules/hs-suffix-way-rules.mk
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ $1/$2/build/%.$$(dyn_osuf)-boot: $1/$2/build/%.$$(v_hisuf)-boot
else
# Note [Implicit rule search algorithm]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# The order in which implicit rules are defined can influence a build.
#
# Case study: genprimops/Lexer.hs
diff --git a/testsuite/driver/runtests.py b/testsuite/driver/runtests.py
index 00564a48dc..219fb41001 100644
--- a/testsuite/driver/runtests.py
+++ b/testsuite/driver/runtests.py
@@ -601,7 +601,7 @@ else:
cleanup_and_exit(exitcode)
# Note [Running tests in /tmp]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# Use LOCAL=0 to run tests in /tmp, to catch tests that use files from
# the source directory without copying them to the test directory first.
#
diff --git a/testsuite/driver/testlib.py b/testsuite/driver/testlib.py
index 6b6462f527..423cd99313 100644
--- a/testsuite/driver/testlib.py
+++ b/testsuite/driver/testlib.py
@@ -992,6 +992,7 @@ def test(name: TestName,
return
else:
# Note [Mutating config.only]
+ # ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# config.only is initially the set of tests requested by
# the user (via 'make TEST='). We then remove all tests that
# we've already seen (in .T files), so that we can later
@@ -2006,7 +2007,7 @@ def write_file(f: Path, s: str) -> None:
h.write(s)
# Note [Universal newlines]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# We don't want to write any Windows style line endings ever, because
# it would mean that `make accept` would touch every line of the file
# when switching between Linux and Windows.
@@ -2202,7 +2203,7 @@ def grep_output(normaliser: OutputNormalizer, pattern_file, actual_file, is_subs
return success
# Note [Output comparison]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# We do two types of output comparison:
#
# 1. To decide whether a test has failed. We apply a `normaliser` and an
@@ -2218,7 +2219,7 @@ def grep_output(normaliser: OutputNormalizer, pattern_file, actual_file, is_subs
# possible (#10152).
# Note [Null device handling]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# On windows the null device is 'nul' instead of '/dev/null'.
# This can in principle be easily solved by using os.devnull.
# Not doing so causes issues when python tries to read/write/open
diff --git a/testsuite/mk/boilerplate.mk b/testsuite/mk/boilerplate.mk
index 9b66ee1d1e..c3be669636 100644
--- a/testsuite/mk/boilerplate.mk
+++ b/testsuite/mk/boilerplate.mk
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ endef
ifeq "$(TEST_HC)" ""
# Note [Spaces in TEST_HC]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# Tests should be able to handle paths with spaces.
#
# One of the things ./validate (without --fast) does is check if binary
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ endif
IN_TREE_COMPILER = NO
# Note [The TEST_HC variable]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# As values of TEST_HC passed in by the user, we want to support:
# * both "ghc" and "/usr/bin/ghc"
# We use 'which' to convert the former to the latter.
diff --git a/testsuite/mk/test.mk b/testsuite/mk/test.mk
index 483d17c051..e01a76eb29 100644
--- a/testsuite/mk/test.mk
+++ b/testsuite/mk/test.mk
@@ -384,7 +384,7 @@ list_broken:
$(MAKE) list_broken=YES
# Note [Communicating options and variables to a submake]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# Consider the following scenario:
# * A test foo is defined as
# test('foo', [], run_command, ['$MAKE footarget'])
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/perf/haddock/all.T b/testsuite/tests/perf/haddock/all.T
index 5e90fd05a3..e2f3346898 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/perf/haddock/all.T
+++ b/testsuite/tests/perf/haddock/all.T
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
# Note [Haddock runtime stats files]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# When one of the build systems builds a complete GHC distribution,
# haddock gets built and then used to generate .haddock files for each
# library. For that last step, both build systems pass an extra
diff --git a/testsuite/tests/stranal/sigs/T19871.hs b/testsuite/tests/stranal/sigs/T19871.hs
index 564a055df4..ac9e813836 100644
--- a/testsuite/tests/stranal/sigs/T19871.hs
+++ b/testsuite/tests/stranal/sigs/T19871.hs
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -O2 -fforce-recomp #-}
--- | From Note [Boxity Analysis] and related Notes
+-- | From Note [Boxity analysis] and related Notes
module T19871 where
data Huge
diff --git a/utils/check-exact/ExactPrint.hs b/utils/check-exact/ExactPrint.hs
index 967ae61035..95a0348593 100644
--- a/utils/check-exact/ExactPrint.hs
+++ b/utils/check-exact/ExactPrint.hs
@@ -868,7 +868,6 @@ exactDataFamInstDecl an top_lvl
{-
Note [an and an2 in exactDataFamInstDecl]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
The exactDataFamInstDecl function is called to render a
DataFamInstDecl within its surrounding context. This context is
rendered via the 'pp_hdr' function, which uses the exact print
diff --git a/utils/genapply/Main.hs b/utils/genapply/Main.hs
index a0209966db..7166968ddd 100644
--- a/utils/genapply/Main.hs
+++ b/utils/genapply/Main.hs
@@ -509,8 +509,8 @@ genMkPAP regstatus macro jump live ticker disamb
-- Note [jump_SAVE_CCCS]
-
--- when profiling, if we have some extra arguments to apply that we
+-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+-- When profiling, if we have some extra arguments to apply that we
-- save to the stack, we must also save the current cost centre stack
-- and restore it when applying the extra arguments. This is all
-- handled by the macro jump_SAVE_CCCS(target), defined in
diff --git a/utils/ghc-cabal/Main.hs b/utils/ghc-cabal/Main.hs
index e6df477238..0514af148d 100644
--- a/utils/ghc-cabal/Main.hs
+++ b/utils/ghc-cabal/Main.hs
@@ -390,7 +390,8 @@ generate directory distdir config_args
fixupRtsLibName x = x
transitiveDepNames = map (display . packageName) transitive_dep_ids
- -- Note [Msys2 path translation bug].
+ -- Note [Msys2 path translation bug]
+ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- Msys2 has an annoying bug in their path conversion code.
-- Officially anything starting with a drive letter should not be
-- subjected to path translations, however it seems to only consider
diff --git a/utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs b/utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs
index bb6ee4d9fa..c977cb89c0 100644
--- a/utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs
+++ b/utils/ghc-pkg/Main.hs
@@ -1292,7 +1292,7 @@ updateDBCache verbosity db db_stack = do
hasAnyAbiDepends x = length (abiDepends x) > 0
-- warn when we find any (possibly-)bogus abi-depends fields;
- -- Note [Recompute abi-depends]
+ -- See Note [Recompute abi-depends]
when (verbosity >= Normal) $ do
let definitelyBrokenPackages =
nub
@@ -1341,7 +1341,6 @@ type PackageCacheFormat = GhcPkg.GenericUnitInfo
{- Note [Recompute abi-depends]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Like most fields, `ghc-pkg` relies on who-ever is performing package
registration to fill in fields; this includes the `abi-depends` field present
for the package.
diff --git a/utils/ghc-pkg/ghc.mk b/utils/ghc-pkg/ghc.mk
index e3740723d2..029d0b86e6 100644
--- a/utils/ghc-pkg/ghc.mk
+++ b/utils/ghc-pkg/ghc.mk
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@
utils/ghc-pkg_PACKAGE = ghc-pkg
# Note [Why build certain utils twice?]
-#
+# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# We build certain utils twice: once with stage0, and once with stage1.
# Examples are ghc-pkg and hsc2hs.
#
diff --git a/utils/llvm-targets/gen-data-layout.sh b/utils/llvm-targets/gen-data-layout.sh
index 982e178a47..a5dfb0bf5a 100755
--- a/utils/llvm-targets/gen-data-layout.sh
+++ b/utils/llvm-targets/gen-data-layout.sh
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@
# Add missing targets to the list below to have them included in
# llvm-targets file.
#
-# See Note [LLVM Configuration] in SysTools for the whole story regarding LLVM
+# See Note [LLVM Configuration] in GHC.SysTools for the whole story regarding LLVM
# configuration data.
# Target sets for which to generate the llvm-targets file
diff --git a/validate b/validate
index 0f0f5814cb..2ecf37117f 100755
--- a/validate
+++ b/validate
@@ -251,8 +251,8 @@ if [ $build_only -eq 1 ] ||
echo "ValidateSpeed=$speed" >> mk/are-validating.mk
echo "ValidateHpc=$hpc" >> mk/are-validating.mk
- # Note [Default build system verbosity].
- #
+ # Note [Default build system verbosity]
+ # ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# From https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/design/build-system:
#
# "The build system should clearly report what it's doing (and sometimes