| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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I had forgotten to add the auxiliary dict bindings to the
/unfolding/ of a specialised function. This caused #22358,
which reports failures when compiling Hackage packages
fixed-vector
indexed-traversable
Regression test T22357 is snarfed from indexed-traversable
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Before this patch, GHC used withHsDocContext to attach an HsDocContext
to an error message:
addErr $ mkTcRnUnknownMessage $ mkPlainError noHints (withHsDocContext ctxt msg)
The problem with this approach is that it only works with
TcRnUnknownMessage. But could we attach an HsDocContext to a
structured error message in a generic way? This patch solves
the problem by introducing a new constructor to TcRnMessage:
data TcRnMessage where
...
TcRnWithHsDocContext :: !HsDocContext -> !TcRnMessage -> TcRnMessage
...
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This patch fixes two distinct (but closely related) buglets that were uncovered
in #22235:
* `liftEnvSubst` used an empty in-scope set, which was not wide enough to cover
the variables in the range of the substitution. This patch fixes this by
populating the in-scope set from the free variables in the range of the
substitution.
* `composeTCvSubst` applied the first substitution argument to the range of the
second substitution argument, but the first substitution's in-scope set was
not wide enough to cover the range of the second substutition. We similarly
fix this issue in this patch by widening the first substitution's in-scope set
before applying it.
Fixes #22235.
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Remove unused mkPtrString and isUnderscoreFS.
We no longer use mkPtrString since 1d03d8bef96.
Remove unnecessary conversions between FastString and String and back.
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Fixes #22311.
Thanks to @zeldin for the patch.
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Move doCpp out of the driver to be able to use it in the upcoming JS backend.
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The comment applies only when host's word size < target's word size.
So we can relax the guard.
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ghc-bignum needs a way to raise numerical exceptions defined in base
package. At the time we used FFI calls into primops defined in the RTS.
These FFI calls had to be wrapped into hacky bottoming functions because
"foreign import prim" syntax doesn't support giving a bottoming demand
to the foreign call (cf #16929).
These hacky wrapper functions trip up the JavaScript backend (#21078)
because they are polymorphic in their return type. This commit
replaces them with primops very similar to raise# but raising predefined
exceptions.
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Ticket #13873 unexpectedly showed that a SPECIALISE pragma made a
program run (a lot) slower, because less specialisation took place
overall. It turned out that the specialiser was missing opportunities
because of quantified type variables.
It was quite easy to fix. The story is given in
Note [Specialising polymorphic dictionaries]
Two other minor fixes in the specialiser
* There is no benefit in specialising data constructor /wrappers/.
(They can appear overloaded because they are given a dictionary
to store in the constructor.) Small guard in canSpecImport.
* There was a buglet in the UnspecArg case of specHeader, in the
case where there is a dead binder. We need a LitRubbish filler
for the specUnfolding stuff. I expanded
Note [Drop dead args from specialisations] to explain.
There is a 4% increase in compile time for T15164, because we generate
more specialised code. This seems OK.
Metric Increase:
T15164
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This patch fixes #21229 properly, by avoiding doing a
binder-swap on dictionary Ids. This is pretty subtle, and explained
in Note [Care with binder-swap on dictionaries].
Test is already in simplCore/should_run/T21229
This allows us to restore a feature to the specialiser that we had
to revert: see Note [Specialising polymorphic dictionaries].
(This is done in a separate patch.)
I also modularised things, using a new function scrutBinderSwap_maybe
in all the places where we are (effectively) doing a binder-swap,
notably
* Simplify.Iteration.addAltUnfoldings
* SpecConstr.extendCaseBndrs
In Simplify.Iteration.addAltUnfoldings I also eliminated a guard
Many <- idMult case_bndr
because we concluded, in #22123, that it was doing no good.
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It now properly lints cases where sums end up distributed
over multiple args after unarise.
Fixes #22026.
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Replaces uses of `TcRnUnknownMessage` in `GHC.Tc.Gen.Splice` with
structured diagnostics.
closes #20116
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cloneMyStack checks the order of closures on the cloned stack. This may
change for different ways. Thus we limit this test to one way (normal).
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Updates the haddock submodule.
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Currently for a top-level closure in the form
hey = unpackCString# x
we generate code like this:
Main.hey_entry() // [R1]
{ info_tbls: [(c2T4,
label: Main.hey_info
rep: HeapRep static { Thunk }
srt: Nothing)]
stack_info: arg_space: 8 updfr_space: Just 8
}
{offset
c2T4: // global
_rqm::P64 = R1;
if ((Sp + 8) - 24 < SpLim) (likely: False) goto c2T5; else goto c2T6;
c2T5: // global
R1 = _rqm::P64;
call (stg_gc_enter_1)(R1) args: 8, res: 0, upd: 8;
c2T6: // global
(_c2T1::I64) = call "ccall" arg hints: [PtrHint,
PtrHint] result hints: [PtrHint] newCAF(BaseReg, _rqm::P64);
if (_c2T1::I64 == 0) goto c2T3; else goto c2T2;
c2T3: // global
call (I64[_rqm::P64])() args: 8, res: 0, upd: 8;
c2T2: // global
I64[Sp - 16] = stg_bh_upd_frame_info;
I64[Sp - 8] = _c2T1::I64;
R2 = hey1_r2Gg_bytes;
Sp = Sp - 16;
call GHC.CString.unpackCString#_info(R2) args: 24, res: 0, upd: 24;
}
}
This code is generated for every string literal. Only difference between
top-level closures like this is the argument for the bytes of the string
(hey1_r2Gg_bytes in the code above).
With this patch we introduce a standard thunk in the RTS, called
stg_MK_STRING_info, that does what `unpackCString# x` does, except it
gets the bytes address from the payload. Using this, for the closure
above, we generate this:
Main.hey_closure" {
Main.hey_closure:
const stg_MK_STRING_info;
const 0; // padding for indirectee
const 0; // static link
const 0; // saved info
const hey1_r1Gg_bytes; // the payload
}
This is much smaller in code.
Metric Decrease:
T10421
T11195
T12150
T12425
T16577
T18282
T18698a
T18698b
Co-Authored By: Ben Gamari <ben@well-typed.com>
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Before it was undocumentated that DecidedLazy can be returned by
reifyConStrictness for strict fields. This can happen when a field has
an unlifted type or its the single field of a newtype constructor.
Fixes #21380
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This reverts the workaround introduced in
f63c8ef33ec9666688163abe4ccf2d6c0428a7e7, which taught our response file
logic to write response files with the `latin1` encoding to workaround
`gcc`'s lacking Unicode support. This is now no longer necessary (and in
fact actively unhelpful) since we rather use Clang.
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As noted in #12971, we previously used `show` which resulted in
inappropriate escaping of non-ASCII characters.
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Quoting a name for Template Haskell is a bit tricky if the second
character of that name is a single quote. The User's Guide falsely
claimed that it was impossible. Document how to do it.
Fixes #22236
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`autoreconf` will insert an `m4_warning` when the obsolescent
`AC_HEADER_TIME` macro is used:
> Update your code to rely only on HAVE_SYS_TIME_H,
> then remove this warning and the obsolete code below it.
> All current systems provide time.h; it need not be checked for.
> Not all systems provide sys/time.h, but those that do, all allow
> you to include it and time.h simultaneously.
Presence of `sys/time.h` was already checked in an earlier
`AC_CHECK_HEADERS` invocation, so `AC_HEADER_TIME` can be dropped and
guards relying on `TIME_WITH_SYS_TIME` can be reworked to
(unconditionally) include `time.h` and include `sys/time.h` based on
`HAVE_SYS_TIME_H`.
Note the documentation of `AC_HEADER_TIME` in (at least) Autoconf 2.67
says
> This macro is obsolescent, as current systems can include both files
> when they exist. New programs need not use this macro.
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As advertized by `autoreconf`:
> All current systems provide time.h; it need not be checked for.
Hence, remove the check for it in `configure.ac` and remove conditional
inclusion of the header in `HAVE_TIME_H` blocks where applicable.
The `time.h` header was being included in various source files without a
`HAVE_TIME_H` guard already anyway.
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This patch is motivated by the desire to remove the {-# OPTIONS_GHC
-fno-warn-incomplete-patterns #-} directive at the top of
GHC.Cmm.ContFlowOpt. (Based on the text in this coding standards doc, I
understand it's a goal of the project to remove such directives.) I
chose this task because I'm a new contributor to GHC, and it seemed like
a good way to get acquainted with the patching process.
In order to address the warning that arose when I removed the no-warn
directive, I added a case to removeUnreachableBlocksProc to handle the
CmmData constructor. Clearly, since this partial function has not been
erroring out in the wild, its inputs are always in practice wrapped by
the CmmProc constructor. Therefore the CmmData case is handled by a
precise panic (which is an improvement over the partial pattern match
from before).
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For some reason I implemented this as a makefile test rather than a
ghci_script test. Hopefully making it a ghci_script test makes it more
robust.
Fixes #22313
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The assertion that checked TyEq:N in canEqCanLHSFinish incorrectly
triggered in the case of an unsaturated newtype TyCon heading the RHS,
even though we can't unwrap such an application. Now, we only trigger
an assertion failure in case of a saturated application of a newtype
TyCon.
Fixes #22310
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This test checks that typed splices and quotes get the right type
information when used in hiefiles.
See #21619
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TcSolverReportMsg
It's clear from asserts in `GHC.Tc.Errors` that `overlappingInstances_matches`
and `unsafeOverlapped` are supposed to be non-empty, and `unsafeOverlap_matches`
contains a single instance, but these invariants are immediately lost afterwards
and not encoded in types. This patch enforces the invariants by pattern matching
and makes types more precise, avoiding asserts and partial functions such as `head`.
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Lets us avoid some use of `head` and `tail`, and some panics.
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As noted in #22297, SIMD vector registers can be used
to store different kinds of values, e.g. xmm1 can be used
both to store integer and floating point values.
The Cmm type system doesn't properly account for this, so
we weaken the Cmm register assignment lint check to only
compare widths when comparing a vector type with its
allocated vector register.
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This patch makes it so that packing/unpacking SIMD
vectors always uses the right sized types, e.g.
unpacking a Word16X4# will give a tuple of Word16#s.
As a result, we can get rid of the conversion instructions
that were previously required.
Fixes #22296
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This patch adds the missing `VecRep` case to `primRepSlot` function and
all the necessary machinery to carry this new `VecSlot` through code
generation. This allows programs involving unboxed sums of SIMD vectors
to be written and compiled.
Fixes #22187
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In many development environments, the source span is the primary means
of seeing what an error message relates to, and the In the expression:
and In an equation for: clauses are not particularly relevant. However,
they can grow to be quite long, which can make the message itself both
feel overwhelming and interact badly with limited-space areas.
It's simple to implement this flag so we might as well do it and give
the user control about how they see their messages.
Fixes #21722
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This MR implements the idea of #21731 that the printing of a diagnostic
method should be configurable at the printing time.
The interface of the `Diagnostic` class is modified from:
```
class Diagnostic a where
diagnosticMessage :: a -> DecoratedSDoc
diagnosticReason :: a -> DiagnosticReason
diagnosticHints :: a -> [GhcHint]
```
to
```
class Diagnostic a where
type DiagnosticOpts a
defaultDiagnosticOpts :: DiagnosticOpts a
diagnosticMessage :: DiagnosticOpts a -> a -> DecoratedSDoc
diagnosticReason :: a -> DiagnosticReason
diagnosticHints :: a -> [GhcHint]
```
and so each `Diagnostic` can implement their own configuration record
which can then be supplied by a client in order to dictate how to print
out the error message.
At the moment this only allows us to implement #21722 nicely but in
future it is more natural to separate the configuration of how much
information we put into an error message and how much we decide to print
out of it.
Updates Haddock submodule
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Both make and hadrian interleave compilation of modules of different
modules and don't respect the package boundaries. Therefore I just
remove this comment which points out this "difference".
Fixes #22253
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Fixes #22245
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functions.
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I had assumed that wrappers were not inlined in interactive mode.
Meaning we would always execute the compiled wrapper which properly
takes care of upholding the strict field invariant.
This turned out to be wrong. So instead we now run tag inference even
when we generate bytecode. In that case only for correctness not
performance reasons although it will be still beneficial for runtime
in some cases.
I further fixed a bug where GHCi didn't tag nullary constructors
properly when used as arguments. Which caused segfaults when calling
into compiled functions which expect the strict field invariant to
be upheld.
Fixes #22042 and #21083
-------------------------
Metric Increase:
T4801
Metric Decrease:
T13035
-------------------------
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Since 2014 llvm_ways has been set to [] so none of the tests which use
only_ways(llvm_ways) have worked as expected.
Hopefully the tests still pass with this typo fix!
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