| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Two `ASSERT`s in `reifyDataCon` were always using `arg_tys`, but
`arg_tys` is not meaningful for GADT constructors. In fact, it's
worse than non-meaningful, since using `arg_tys` when reifying a
GADT constructor can lead to failed `ASSERT`ions, as #17305
demonstrates.
This patch applies the simplest possible fix to the immediate
problem. The `ASSERT`s now use `r_arg_tys` instead of `arg_tys`, as
the former makes sure to give something meaningful for GADT
constructors. This makes the panic go away at the very least. There
is still an underlying issue with the way the internals of
`reifyDataCon` work, as described in
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/17305#note_227023, but we
leave that as future work, since fixing the underlying issue is
much trickier (see
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/17305#note_227087).
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Required in order to build hadrian using ghc-8.10
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As noted in #17970, these (e.g. `getFileSystemEncoding` and
`setFileSystemEncoding`) previously had unfoldings, which would
break their global-ness.
While not strictly necessary, I also add a NOINLINE on
`initLocaleEncoding` since it is used in `System.IO`, ensuring that we
only system's query the locale encoding once.
Fixes #17970.
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The combinator andM is used only once, and the code is shorter and
simpler if you inline it.
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The panic in #17963 happened to be fixed by commit
e3c374cc5bd7eb49649b9f507f9f7740697e3f70. This patch adds a
regression test to ensure that it remains fixed.
Fixes #17963.
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This allows us to remove several bits of CPP that are either always
true or no longer reachable. As an added bonus, we no longer need to
worry about importing `Control.Monad.Fail.fail` qualified to avoid
clashing with `Control.Monad.fail`, since the latter is now the same
as the former.
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Since 54250f2d8de910b094070c1b48f086030df634b1 we expected T4267 to
fail, but it passes on CI.
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- Simplify mkBuildExpr, the function newTyVars was called
only on a one-element list.
- TTG: use noExtCon in more places. This is more future-proof.
- In zonkExpr, panic instead of printing a warning.
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Within `checkValidDataCon`, we used to run `checkValidType` on the
argument types of a newtype constructor before running
`checkNewDataCon`, which ensures that the user does not attempt
non-sensical things such as newtypes with multiple arguments or
constraints. This works out in most situations, but this falls over
on a corner case revealed in #17955:
```hs
newtype T = Coercible () T => T ()
```
`checkValidType`, among other things, peforms an ambiguity check on
the context of a data constructor, and that it turn invokes the
constraint solver. It turns out that there is a special case in the
constraint solver for representational equalities (read: `Coercible`
constraints) that causes newtypes to be unwrapped (see
`Note [Unwrap newtypes first]` in `TcCanonical`). This special case
does not know how to cope with an ill formed newtype like `T`, so
it ends up panicking.
The solution is surprisingly simple: just invoke `checkNewDataCon`
before `checkValidType` to ensure that the illicit newtype
constructor context is detected before the constraint solver can
run amok with it.
Fixes #17955.
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It conflated the nth bit with the bit at offset n.
Now we instead give the definition in terms of `bit and `.&.`
on top of clearer phrasing.
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glibc 2.30 disallowed dlopening PIE objects, so just remove the test.
Fixes #17952.
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As far as GHC is concerned, installed package components ("units") are
identified by an opaque ComponentId string provided by Cabal. But we
don't want to display it to users (as it contains a hash) so GHC queries
the database to retrieve some infos about the original source package
(name, version, component name).
This patch caches these infos in the ComponentId itself so that we don't
need to provide DynFlags (which contains installed package informations)
to print a ComponentId.
In the future we want GHC to support several independent package states
(e.g. for plugins and for target code), hence we need to avoid
implicitly querying a single global package state.
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Due to #17945.
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Fix missing quoting and expected exit code.
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Fixes line ending normalization issue.
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Ticket #17932 showed that we were using a stupid demand for the RHS
of a let-binding, when the result is a product. This was the result
of a "fix" in 2013, which (happily) turns out to no longer be
necessary.
So I just deleted the code, which simplifies the demand analyser,
and fixes #17932. That in turn uncovered that the anticipation
of worker/wrapper in CPR analysis was inaccurate, hence the logic
that decides whether to unbox an argument in WW was extracted into
a function `wantToUnbox`, now consulted by CPR analysis.
I tried nofib, and got 0.0% perf changes.
All this came up when messing about with !2873 (ticket #17917),
but is idependent of it.
Unfortunately, this patch regresses #4267 and realised that it is now
blocked on #16335.
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This module isn't used anywhere in GHC.
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Update Haddock submodule
Metric Increase:
haddock.compiler
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Summary:
- There is no more use of the TABLES_NEXT_TO_CODE CPP macro in
`compiler/`. GHCI_TABLES_NEXT_TO_CODE is also removed entirely.
The field within `PlatformMisc` within `DynFlags` is used instead.
- The field is still not exposed as a CLI flag. We might consider some
way to ensure the right RTS / libraries are used before doing that.
Original reviewers:
Original subscribers: TerrorJack, rwbarton, carter
Original Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D5082
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Factor out CPP as much as possible to prepare for runtime
determinattion.
Progress towards #15548
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This change adds an optional example.
Tracking: #17929
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This change removes an extra '|' that should not be rendered in
the liftA documentation.
Tracking: #17929
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Use Platform instead of DynFlags when possible:
* `tARGET_MIN_INT` et al. replaced with `platformMinInt` et al.
* no more DynFlags in PreRules: added a new `RuleOpts` datatype
* don't use `wORD_SIZE` in the compiler
* make `wordAlignment` use `Platform`
* make `dOUBLE_SIZE` a constant
Metric Decrease:
T13035
T1969
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They seem to be a benchmarking vestige of the Cardinality paper and
probably shouldn't have been merged to HEAD in the first place.
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- Provide the export list of the `Main` module as parameter to the
`compiler/typecheck/TcRnDriver.hs:check_main` function.
- Instead of `lookupOccRn_maybe` call the function `lookupInfoOccRn`.
It returns the list `mains_all` of all the main functions in scope.
- Select from this list `mains_all` all `main` functions that are in
the export list of the `Main` module.
- If this new list contains exactly one single `main` function, then
typechecking continues.
- Otherwise issue an appropriate error message.
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A previous fix for #15344 made sure that monadic 'fail' is used properly
when translating ApplicativeDo. However, it didn't properly account
for when a 'fail' will be inserted which resulted in some programs
failing with a type error.
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Previously we were invoking:
bash -c
"c:/GitLabRunner/builds/eEQrxK4p/0/ghc/ghc/toolchain/bin/ghc.exe.exe
testsuite/mk/ghc-config.hs -o _build/test/bin/ghc-config.exe"
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Enable `normalise_slashes` on `annotations`, `listcomps`, and
`parseTree` to fix Windows failures.
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Avoids redundant case alternative warning.
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This typo caused generating 'end' events without the corresponding 'begin' events.
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Key changes:
* Adds a new rule for forall-coercions over coercion variables, which
was implemented but conspicuously missing from the spec.
* Adds treatment for FunCo.
* Adds treatment for ForAllTy over coercion variables.
* Improves commentary (including restoring a Note lost in
03d4852658e1b7407abb4da84b1b03bfa6f6db3b) in the source.
No changes to running code.
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Previously, if we had a [W] (a :: k1) ~ (rhs :: k2), we would
spit out a [D] k1 ~ k2 and part the W as irreducible, hoping for
a unification. But we needn't do this. Instead, we now spit out
a [W] co :: k2 ~ k1 and then use co to cast the rhs of the original
Wanted. This means that we retain the connection between the
spat-out constraint and the original.
The problem with this new approach is that we cannot use the
casted equality for substitution; it's too like wanteds-rewriting-
wanteds. So, we forbid CTyEqCans that mention coercion holes.
All the details are in Note [Equalities with incompatible kinds]
in TcCanonical.
There are a few knock-on effects, documented where they occur.
While debugging an error in this patch, Simon and I ran into
infelicities in how patterns and matches are printed; we made
small improvements.
This patch includes mitigations for #17828, which causes spurious
pattern-match warnings. When #17828 is fixed, these lines should
be removed.
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This read causes NULL dereferencing when len is 0.
Fixes #17909
In the reproducer in #17909 this bug is triggered as follows:
- SimplOpt.dealWithStringLiteral is called with a single-char string
("=" in #17909)
- tailFS gets called on the FastString of the single-char string.
- tailFS checks the length of the string, which is 1, and calls
mkFastStringByteString on the tail of the ByteString, which is an
empty ByteString as the original ByteString has only one char.
- ByteString's unsafeUseAsCStringLen returns (NULL, 0) for the empty
ByteString, which is passed to mkFastStringWith.
- mkFastStringWith gets hash of the NULL pointer via hashStr, which
fails on empty strings because of this bug.
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