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authorRyan Scott <ryan.gl.scott@gmail.com>2020-03-06 11:47:56 -0500
committerRyan Scott <ryan.gl.scott@gmail.com>2020-03-10 19:06:19 -0400
commit63c3658932d4be877c8f28de1e2fe26865568bb3 (patch)
treeeab3c65a92bbd62c67c0d56897a9758453945165 /testsuite/tests/deriving/should_compile/T4966.hs
parent067632342cf2f063b0f23c255740e2717e5e14c7 (diff)
downloadhaskell-63c3658932d4be877c8f28de1e2fe26865568bb3.tar.gz
Make DeriveFunctor-generated code require fewer beta reductionswip/T17880
Issue #17880 demonstrates that `DeriveFunctor`-generated code is surprisingly fragile when rank-_n_ types are involved. The culprit is that `$fmap` (the algorithm used to generate `fmap` implementations) was too keen on applying arguments with rank-_n_ types to lambdas, which fail to typecheck more often than not. In this patch, I change `$fmap` (both the specification and the implementation) to produce code that avoids creating as many lambdas, avoiding problems when rank-_n_ field types arise. See the comments titled "Functor instances" in `TcGenFunctor` for a more detailed description. Not only does this fix #17880, but it also ensures that the code that `DeriveFunctor` generates will continue to work after simplified subsumption is implemented (see #17775). What is truly amazing is that #17880 is actually a regression (introduced in GHC 7.6.3) caused by commit 49ca2a37bef18aa57235ff1dbbf1cc0434979b1e, the fix #7436. Prior to that commit, the version of `$fmap` that was used was almost identical to the one used in this patch! Why did that commit change `$fmap` then? It was to avoid severe performance issues that would arise for recursive `fmap` implementations, such as in the example below: ```hs data List a = Nil | Cons a (List a) deriving Functor -- ===> instance Functor List where fmap f Nil = Nil fmap f (Cons x xs) = Cons (f x) (fmap (\y -> f y) xs) ``` The fact that `\y -> f y` was eta expanded caused significant performance overheads. Commit 49ca2a37bef18aa57235ff1dbbf1cc0434979b1e fixed this performance issue, but it went too far. As a result, this patch partially reverts 49ca2a37bef18aa57235ff1dbbf1cc0434979b1e. To ensure that the performance issues pre-#7436 do not resurface, I have taken some precautionary measures: * I have added a special case to `$fmap` for situations where the last type variable in an application of some type occurs directly. If this special case fires, we avoid creating a lambda expression. This ensures that we generate `fmap f (Cons x xs) = Cons (f x) (fmap f xs)` in the derived `Functor List` instance above. For more details, see `Note [Avoid unnecessary eta expansion in derived fmap implementations]` in `TcGenFunctor`. * I have added a `T7436b` test case to ensure that the performance of this derived `Functor List`-style code does not regress. When implementing this, I discovered that `$replace`, the algorithm which generates implementations of `(<$)`, has a special case that is very similar to the `$fmap` special case described above. `$replace` marked this special case with a custom `Replacer` data type, which was a bit overkill. In order to use the same machinery for both `Functor` methods, I ripped out `Replacer` and instead implemented a simple way to detect the special case. See the updated commentary in `Note [Deriving <$]` for more details.
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