| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The `splitFV` function implements the highly dubious hack
described in `Note [Lazy und unleashable free variables]` in
GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal. It arranges it so that demand signatures only
carry strictness info on free variables. Usage info is released through
other means, see the Note. It's purely for analysis performance reasons.
It turns out that `splitFV` has a quite involved case for thunks that
produces slightly different usage signatures and it's not clear why we
need it: `splitFV` is only relevant in the LetDown case and the only
time we call it on thunks is for top-level or local recursive thunks.
Since usage signatures of top-level thunks can only reference other
top-level bindings and we completely discard demand info we have on
top-level things (see the lack of `setIdDemandInfo` in
`dmdAnalTopBind`), the `is_thunk` case is completely irrelevant here.
For local, recursive thunks, the added benefit of the `is_thunk` test
is marginal: We get used-multiple-times in some cases where previously
we had used-once if a recursive thunk has multiple call sites. It's
very unlikely and not a case to optimise for.
So we kill the `is_thunk` case and inline `splitFV` at its call site,
exposing `isWeakDmd` from `GHC.Types.Demand` instead.
The NoFib summary supports this decision:
```
Min 0.0% -0.0%
Max 0.0% +0.0%
Geometric Mean -0.0% -0.0%
```
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Bumps bootstrap compiler to 8.10.1.
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For the case
foo :: a %p -> b
The location of the '%' is captured, separate from the 'p'
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Noticed 'make sdist' failure seen as:
```
"rm" -rf sdistprep/ghc/ghc-9.1.0.20201020/hadrian/_build/ (SRC_DIST_GHC_DIR)/hadrian/dist-newstyle/
/bin/sh: -c: line 0: syntax error near unexpected token `('
```
commit 9657f6f34
("sdist: Include hadrian sources in source distribution")
added a new cleanup path without a variable expantion.
The change adds variable reference. While at it move directory
cleanup to a separate statement.
Amends #18794
Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyfox@gentoo.org>
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This patch fixes two problems in the constraint solver.
* An actual bug #18555: we were floating out a constraint to eagerly,
and that was ultimately fatal. It's explained in
Note [Do not float blocked constraints] in GHC.Core.Constraint.
This is all very delicate, but it's all going to become irrelevant
when we stop floating constraints (#17656).
* A major performance infelicity in the flattener. When flattening
(ty |> co) we *never* generated Refl, even when there was nothing
at all to do. Result: we would gratuitously rewrite the constraint
to exactly the same thing, wasting work. Described in #18413, and
came up again in #18855.
Solution: exploit the special case by calling the new function
castCoercionKind1. See Note [castCoercionKind1] in
GHC.Core.Coercion
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Tamar noticed in !4293 that the build systems fail to clean up the mingw
tarballs directory (`ghc-tarballs`). Fix this in both the make build
system and Hadrian.
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As noted in #18835, xelatex produces an absurd amount of output, nearly
all of which is meaningless. Silence this.
Fixes #18835.
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Also bumps upper bounds on base in boot libraries (incl. submodules).
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* Flip `minBound` and `maxBound` to respect the change in ordering
* Remove awkward `Enum` (and hence `Integral`) instances for
`Data.Ord.Down`
* Update changelog
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Ticket #18856 showed that we were failing to set the right location
for an error message. Easy to fix, happily.
Turns out that this also improves the error location in test T11010,
which was bogus before but we had never noticed.
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These issues were fixed by earlier parser changes, most likely related
to whitespace-sensitive parsing.
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Due to #17945.
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The linear arrow can be parsed as `%1 ->` or a direct single token unicode
equivalent.
Make sure that this distinction is captured in the parsed AST by using
IsUnicodeSyntax where it appears, and introduce a new API Annotation,
AnnMult to represent its location when unicode is not used.
Updated haddock submodule
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Previously the Hadrian jobs used the `FLAVOUR` environment variable to
communicate which flavour `ci.sh` should build whereas `make` used
`BUILD_FLAVOUR`. This caused unnecessary confusion. Consolidate these
two.
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`*` prefix in ghci (#8042)
The documentation states that when using :add and :load, the `*` prefix forces a module
to be loaded as byte-code. However, this seems to be ignored when -fobject-code has been
enabled. In that case, the compiled code is always used, regardless of whether the *-form
is used.
The idea is to consult the Targets in HscEnv and check the 'targetAllowObjCode' flag. If
the flag for given module is set, then patch up DynFlags and select compilation backend
accordingly.
This would require a linear scan of course, but that shouldn't be too costly.
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- Update comments: placeHolderTypeTc no longer exists
"another level check problem" was a temporary comment from linear types
- Use Mult type synonym (reported in #18676)
- Mention multiplicity-polymorphic fields in linear types docs
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This was fixed by 4291bddaea3148908c55f235ee8978e1d9aa6f20.
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pdocPrec was only used in GHC.Cmm.DebugBlock.pprUnwindExpr, so remove
it. OutputableP becomes a one-function class which might be better for
performance.
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This patch implements two related warnings:
-Woperator-whitespace-ext-conflict
warns on uses of infix operators that would be parsed
differently were a particular GHC extension enabled
-Woperator-whitespace
warns on prefix, suffix, and tight infix uses of infix
operators
Updates submodules: haddock, containers.
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* Bring back LANGUAGE pragmas in GHC.IO.Handle.Lock.Windows
* Exclude some modules that are wrongfully reported
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To correctly perform a linking hack for Windows we need to link with the
RTS GHC is currently using. We used to query the RTS ways via the
"settings" file but it is fragile (#18651). The hack hasn't been fixed
to take into account all the ways (Tracing) and it makes linking of GHC
with another RTS more difficult (we need to link with another RTS and to
regenerate the settings file).
So this patch uses the ways reported by the RTS itself
(GHC.Platform.Ways.hostWays) instead of the "settings" file.
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This diff makes sure that incall threads, when using `rts_setInCallCapability`, will be created as locked.
If the thread is not locked, the thread might end up being scheduled to a different capability.
While this is mentioned in the docs for `rts_setInCallCapability,`, it makes the method significantly less useful as there is no guarantees on the capability being used.
This commit also adds a test to make sure things stay on the correct capability.
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We didn't seem to test these old tests at all, judging from their
expected output.
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In #18793, we saw a compelling example which requires us to look at
non-recursive let-bindings during arity analysis and unleash their arity
types at use sites.
After the refactoring in the previous patch, the needed change is quite
simple and very local to `arityType`'s defn for non-recurisve `Let`.
Apart from that, we had to get rid of the second item of
`Note [Dealing with bottoms]`, which was entirely a safety measure and
hindered optimistic fixed-point iteration.
Fixes #18793.
The following metric increases are all caused by this commit and a
result of the fact that we just do more work now:
Metric Increase:
T3294
T12545
T12707
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Arity analysis used to propagate optimistic arity types during
fixed-point interation through the `ArityEnv`'s `ae_cheap_fun` field,
which is like `GHC.Core.Utils.exprIsCheap`, but also considers the
current iteration's optimistic arity, for the binder in question only.
In #18793, we have seen that this is a problematic design, because it
doesn't allow us to look through PAP bindings of that binder.
Hence this patch refactors to a more traditional form with an explicit
signature environment, in which we record the optimistic `ArityType` of
the binder in question (and at the moment is the *only* binder that is
recorded in the arity environment).
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Works around #17190, possible resolution for #17224. New design is is
according to accepted [GHC Propoal 320].
Instances in signatures currently unconditionally opt into associated
family defaults if no explicit instance is given. This is bad for two
reasons:
1. It constrains possible instantiations to use the default, rather
than possibly define the associated family differently.
2. It breaks compilation as type families are unsupported in
signatures.
This PR simply turns off the filling in of defaults in those cases.
Additionally, it squelches a missing definition warning for hs-boot too
that was only squelched for hsig before.
The downsides are:
1. There is no way to opt into the default, other than copying its
definition.
2. If we fixed type classes in signatures, and wanted instances to
have to explicitly *out of* rather than into the default, that would
now be a breaking change.
The change that is most unambiguously goood is harmonizing the warning
squelching between hs-boot or hsig. Maybe they should have the warning
(opt out of default) maybe they shouldn't (opt in to default), but
surely it should be the same for both.
Add hs-boot version of a backpack test regarding class-specified
defaults in instances that appear in an hs-boot file.
The metrics increase is very slight and makes no sense --- at least no
one has figured anything out after this languishing for a while, so I'm
just going to accept it.
Metric Increase:
T10421a
[GHC proposal 320]: https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/pull/320
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Silly mistake on my part.
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Currently the Hadrian build appears not to package documentation correctly,
causing doc-tarball to fail due to the Windows build.
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Following the model of the other printf symbols. See Note [Symbols for
MinGW's printf].
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Closes #18838.
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These were incorrectly removed in a recent cleanup commit.
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This should have been done when the toolchain was bumped.
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This widens LocalLabel to 2^16, avoiding the crash observed in #14334.
Closes #14334.
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As well a ctuples and sums.
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Makes it possible for GHC to optimize away intermediate Generic representation
for more types.
Metric Increase:
T12227
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This otherwise fails on newer Clangs, which warn
more aggressively on undeclared symbols.
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-fPIE and -fno-PIE flags were (un)setting Opt_PIC instead of Opt_PIE.
Original commit: 3625728a0e3a9b56c2b85ae7ea8bcabdd83ece6a
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No longer neccessary - TypeRep is now indexed, there is no ambiguity.
Also fix a comment in Evidence.hs, IsLabel no longer takes a Proxy#.
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