| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This MR makes the UM monad in GHC.Core.Unify into a one-shot
monad. See the long Note [The one-shot state monad trick].
See also #18202 and !3309, which applies this to all Reader/State-like
monads in GHC for compile-time perf improvements. The pattern used
here enables something similar to the state-hack, but is applicable to
user-defined monads, not just `IO`.
Metric Decrease 'runtime/bytes allocated' (test_env='i386-linux-deb9'):
haddock.Cabal
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We're now correctly computing allocated bytes on 32-bit arch, so we get
huge increases.
Metric Increase:
haddock.Cabal
haddock.base
haddock.compiler
space_leak_001
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While looking at #18348 I noticed that the treatment of HashLists are a
bit more complex than necessary (which lead to some initial confusion on
my part). Specifically, we allocate HashLists in chunks. Each chunk
allocation makes two allocations: one for the chunk itself and one for a
HashListChunk to link together the chunks for the purposes of freeing.
Simplify this (and hopefully make the relationship between these
clearer) but allocating the HashLists and HashListChunk in a single
malloc. This will both make the implementation easier to follow and
reduce C heap fragmentation.
Note that even after this patch we fail to bound the size of the free
HashList pool. However, this is a separate bug.
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Consider the Literal `[256] :: [Data.Word.Word8]`
When the `OverloadedLists` extension is not active, then the `ol_ext` field
in the `OverLitTc` record that is passed to the function `getIntegralLit`
contains the type `Word8`. This is a simple type, and we can use its
type constructor immediately for the `warnAboutOverflowedLiterals` function.
When the `OverloadedLists` extension is active, then the `ol_ext` field
contains the type family `Item [Word8]`. The function `nomaliseType` is used
to convert it to the needed type `Word8`.
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These instances are taken from
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/linear-1.21/docs/Linear-Instances.html
They are the unique possible, so let they be in `base`.
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This updates haddock comments only.
This patch focuses to update for hyperlinks in GHC API's haddock comments,
because broken links especially discourage newcomers.
This includes the following hierarchies:
- GHC.Iface.*
- GHC.Llvm.*
- GHC.Rename.*
- GHC.Tc.*
- GHC.HsToCore.*
- GHC.StgToCmm.*
- GHC.CmmToAsm.*
- GHC.Runtime.*
- GHC.Unit.*
- GHC.Utils.*
- GHC.SysTools.*
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This updates haddock comments only.
This patch focuses to update for hyperlinks in GHC API's haddock comments,
because broken links especially discourage newcomers.
This includes the following hierarchies:
- GHC.Hs.*
- GHC.Core.*
- GHC.Stg.*
- GHC.Cmm.*
- GHC.Types.*
- GHC.Data.*
- GHC.Builtin.*
- GHC.Parser.*
- GHC.Driver.*
- GHC top
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This lets us reuse these functions in haddock, avoiding synchronization bugs.
Also fixed some divergences with haddock in that file
Updates haddock submodule
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GHC.Hs.Extension had
type GhcPs = GhcPass 'Parsed
type GhcRn = GhcPass 'Renamed
type GhcTc = GhcPass 'Typechecked
type GhcTcId = GhcTc
The last of these, GhcTcId, is a vestige of the past.
This patch expunges it from GHC.
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Previously we would simply assume that makeindex was available.
Now we correctly detect it in `configure` and respect this conclusion in
hadrian and make.
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Previously we simply ignored the XELATEX variable when building
PDF documentation.
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This patch fixes the bug and implements the feature request of #3000.
1. If `Module` is a real module name and `identifier` a name of a
top-level function in `Module` then `:break Module.identifer` works
also for an `identifier` that is out of scope.
2. Extend the syntax for `:break identifier` to:
:break [ModQual.]topLevelIdent[.nestedIdent]...[.nestedIdent]
`ModQual` is optional and is either the effective name of a module or
the local alias of a qualified import statement.
`topLevelIdent` is the name of a top level function in the module
referenced by `ModQual`.
`nestedIdent` is optional and the name of a function nested in a let or
where clause inside the previously mentioned function `nestedIdent` or
`topLevelIdent`.
If `ModQual` is a module name, then `topLevelIdent` can be any top level
identifier in this module. If `ModQual` is missing or a local alias of a
qualified import, then `topLevelIdent` must be in scope.
Breakpoints can be set on arbitrarily deeply nested functions, but the
whole chain of nested function names must be specified.
3. To support the new functionality rewrite the code to tab complete `:break`.
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Starting with Win 8.1/Server 2012 windows no longer preallocates
page tables for reserverd memory eagerly, which prevented us from
using this approach in the past.
We also try to allocate the heap high in the memory space.
Hopefully this makes it easier to allocate things in the low
4GB of memory that need to be there. Like jump islands for the
linker.
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These tweaks affect the inner loop of simplifyArgsWorker, which
in turn is called from the flattener in Flatten.hs. This is
a key perf bottleneck to T9872{a,b,c,d}.
These two small changes have a modest but useful benefit.
No change in functionality whatsoever.
Relates to #18354
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This bug, revealed by #18347, is just a missing update to
sc_hole_ty in simplCast. I'd missed a code path when I
made the recentchanges in
commit 6d49d5be904c0c01788fa7aae1b112d5b4dfaf1c
Author: Simon Peyton Jones <simonpj@microsoft.com>
Date: Thu May 21 12:53:35 2020 +0100
Implement cast worker/wrapper properly
The fix is very easy.
Two other minor changes
* Tidy up in SimpleOpt.simple_opt_expr. In fact I think this is an
outright bug, introduced in the fix to #18112: we were simplifying
the same coercion twice *with the same substitution*, which is just
wrong. It'd be a hard bug to trigger, so I just fixed it; less code
too.
* Better debug printing of ApplyToVal
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Zonk residual constraints in checkForExistence to reveal user type
errors.
Previously when `:instances` was used with instances that have TypeError
constraints the result would look something like:
instance [safe] s0 => Err 'A -- Defined at ../Bug2.hs:8:10
whereas after zonking, `:instances` now sees the `TypeError` and
properly eliminates the constraint from the results.
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Metric Decrease:
T12150
T12234
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Previously, if a .cmm file *not in the RTS* contained something like:
```cmm
section "rodata" { msg : bits8[] "Test\n"; }
```
It would get compiled by CmmToC into:
```c
ERW_(msg);
const char msg[] = "Test\012";
```
and fail with:
```
/tmp/ghc32129_0/ghc_4.hc:5:12: error:
error: conflicting types for \u2018msg\u2019
const char msg[] = "Test\012";
^~~
In file included from /tmp/ghc32129_0/ghc_4.hc:3:0: error:
/tmp/ghc32129_0/ghc_4.hc:4:6: error:
note: previous declaration of \u2018msg\u2019 was here
ERW_(msg);
^
/builds/hsyl20/ghc/_build/install/lib/ghc-8.11.0.20200605/lib/../lib/x86_64-linux-ghc-8.11.0.20200605/rts-1.0/include/Stg.h:253:46: error:
note: in definition of macro \u2018ERW_\u2019
#define ERW_(X) extern StgWordArray (X)
^
```
See the rationale for this on https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/wikis/commentary/compiler/backends/ppr-c#prototypes
Now we don't generate these extern declarations (ERW_, etc.) for
top-level data. It shouldn't change anything for the RTS (the only place
we use .cmm files) as it is already special cased in
`GHC.Cmm.CLabel.needsCDecl`. And hand-written Cmm can use explicit
extern declarations when needed.
Note that it allows `cgrun069` test to pass with CmmToC (cf #15467).
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We don't want to save both Fn and Dn register sets on x86-64 as they are
aliased to the same arch register (XMMn).
Moreover, when SAVE_STGREGS was used in conjunction with `jump foo [*]`
which makes a set of Cmm registers alive so that they cover all arch
registers used to pass parameter, we could have Fn, Dn and XMMn alive at
the same time. It made the LLVM code generator choke (see #17920).
Now `SAVE_REGS/RESTORE_REGS` and `jump foo [*]` use the same set of
registers.
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We look up modules by their name, and not their contents. There is no
way to separately reference a signature vs regular module; you get what
you get. Only boot files can be referenced indepenently with `import {-#
SOURCE #-}`.
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tablesNextToCode is a platform setting and doesn't belong into DynFlags
(#17957). Doing this is also a prerequisite to fix #14335 where we deal
with two platforms (target and host) that may have different platform
settings.
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It avoids having to use DynFlags to reach for pprUserLength.
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Valgrind report of the bug when running the test `linker_unload`:
==29666== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==29666== at 0x369C5B4: setOcInitialStatus (Linker.c:1305)
==29666== by 0x369C6C5: mkOc (Linker.c:1347)
==29666== by 0x36C027A: loadArchive_ (LoadArchive.c:522)
==29666== by 0x36C0600: loadArchive (LoadArchive.c:626)
==29666== by 0x2C144CD: ??? (in /home/omer/haskell/ghc_2/testsuite/tests/rts/linker/linker_unload.run/linker_unload)
==29666==
==29666== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==29666== at 0x369C5B4: setOcInitialStatus (Linker.c:1305)
==29666== by 0x369C6C5: mkOc (Linker.c:1347)
==29666== by 0x369C9F6: preloadObjectFile (Linker.c:1507)
==29666== by 0x369CA8D: loadObj_ (Linker.c:1536)
==29666== by 0x369CB17: loadObj (Linker.c:1557)
==29666== by 0x3866BC: main (linker_unload.c:33)
The problem is `mkOc` allocates a new `ObjectCode` and calls
`setOcInitialStatus` without initializing the `status` field.
`setOcInitialStatus` reads the field as first thing:
static void setOcInitialStatus(ObjectCode* oc) {
if (oc->status == OBJECT_DONT_RESOLVE)
return;
if (oc->archiveMemberName == NULL) {
oc->status = OBJECT_NEEDED;
} else {
oc->status = OBJECT_LOADED;
}
}
`setOcInitialStatus` is unsed in two places for two different purposes:
in `mkOc` where we don't have the `status` field initialized yet (`mkOc`
is supposed to initialize it), and `loadOc` where we do have `status`
field initialized and we want to update it. Instead of splitting the
function into two functions which are both called just once I inline the
functions in the use sites and remove it.
Fixes #18342
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This test performs little work, so the most minor allocation
changes often cause the test to fail.
Increasing the threshold to 2% should help with this.
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[skip ci]
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* support ghc-bignum backend selection in flavours and command-line
* support ghc-bignum "--check" flag (compare results of selected backend
against results of the native one) in flavours and command-line (e.g.
pass --bignum=check-gmp" to check the "gmp" backend)
* remove the hack to workaround #15286
* build GMP only when the gmp backend is used
* remove hacks to workaround `text` package flags about integer-*. We
fix `text` to use ghc-bignum unconditionally in another patch
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* support detection of slow ghc-bignum backend (to replace the detection
of integer-simple use). There are still some test cases that the
native backend doesn't handle efficiently enough.
* remove tests for GMP only functions that have been removed from
ghc-bignum
* fix test results showing dependent packages (e.g. integer-gmp) or
showing suggested instances
* fix test using Integer/Natural API or showing internal names
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* replace integer-* package selection with ghc-bignum backend selection
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* GHC.Natural isn't implemented in `base` anymore. It is provided by
ghc-bignum in GHC.Num.Natural. It means that we can safely use Natural
primitives in `base` without fearing issues with built-in rewrite
rules (cf #15286)
* `base` doesn't conditionally depend on an integer-* package anymore,
it depends on ghc-bignum
* Some duplicated code in integer-* can now be factored in GHC.Float
* ghc-bignum tries to use a uniform naming convention so most of the
other changes are renaming
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Thanks to ghc-bignum, the compiler can be simplified:
* Types and constructors of Integer and Natural can be wired-in. It
means that we don't have to query them from interfaces. It also means
that numeric literals don't have to carry their type with them.
* The same code is used whatever ghc-bignum backend is enabled. In
particular, conversion of bignum literals into final Core expressions
is now much more straightforward. Bignum closure inspection too.
* GHC itself doesn't depend on any integer-* package anymore
* The `integerLibrary` setting is gone.
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ghc-bignum is a newer package that aims to replace the legacy
integer-simple and integer-gmp packages.
* it supports several backends. In particular GMP is still supported and
most of the code from integer-gmp has been merged in the "gmp"
backend.
* the pure Haskell "native" backend is new and is much faster than the
previous pure Haskell implementation provided by integer-simple
* new backends are easier to write because they only have to provide a
few well defined functions. All the other code is common to all
backends. In particular they all share the efficient small/big number
distinction previously used only in integer-gmp.
* backends can all be tested against the "native" backend with a simple
Cabal flag. Backends are only allowed to differ in performance, their
results should be the same.
* Add `integer-gmp` compat package: provide some pattern synonyms and
function aliases for those in `ghc-bignum`. It is intended to avoid
breaking packages that depend on `integer-gmp` internals.
Update submodules: text, bytestring
Metric Decrease:
Conversions
ManyAlternatives
ManyConstructors
Naperian
T10359
T10547
T10678
T12150
T12227
T12234
T12425
T13035
T13719
T14936
T1969
T4801
T4830
T5237
T5549
T5837
T8766
T9020
parsing001
space_leak_001
T16190
haddock.base
On ARM and i386, T17499 regresses (+6% > 5%).
On x86_64 unregistered, T13701 sometimes regresses (+2.2% > 2%).
Metric Increase:
T17499
T13701
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integer-simple uses lists of words (`[Word]`) to represent big numbers
instead of ByteArray#:
* it is less efficient than the newer ghc-bignum native backend
* it isn't compatible with the big number representation that is now
shared by all the ghc-bignum backends (based on the one that was
used only in integer-gmp before).
As a consequence, we simply drop integer-simple
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This implements several general performance improvements to GHC,
to offset the effect of the linear types change.
General optimisations:
- Add a `coreFullView` function which iterates `coreView` on the
head. This avoids making function recursive solely because the
iterate `coreView` themselves. As a consequence, this functions can
be inlined, and trigger case-of-known constructor (_e.g._
`kindRep_maybe`, `isLiftedRuntimeRep`, `isMultiplicityTy`,
`getTyVar_maybe`, `splitAppTy_maybe`, `splitFunType_maybe`,
`tyConAppTyCon_maybe`). The common pattern about all these functions
is that they are almost always used as views, and immediately
consumed by a case expression. This commit also mark them asx `INLINE`.
- In `subst_ty` add a special case for nullary `TyConApp`, which avoid
allocations altogether.
- Use `mkTyConApp` in `subst_ty` for the general `TyConApp`. This
required quite a bit of module shuffling.
case. `myTyConApp` enforces crucial sharing, which was lost during
substitution. See also !2952 .
- Make `subst_ty` stricter.
- In `eqType` (specifically, in `nonDetCmpType`), add a special case,
tested first, for the very common case of nullary `TyConApp`.
`nonDetCmpType` has been made `INLINE` otherwise it is actually a
regression. This is similar to the optimisations in !2952.
Linear-type specific optimisations:
- Use `tyConAppTyCon_maybe` instead of the more complex `eqType` in
the definition of the pattern synonyms `One` and `Many`.
- Break the `hs-boot` cycles between `Multiplicity.hs` and `Type.hs`:
`Multiplicity` now import `Type` normally, rather than from the
`hs-boot`. This way `tyConAppTyCon_maybe` can inline properly in the
`One` and `Many` pattern synonyms.
- Make `updateIdTypeAndMult` strict in its type and multiplicity
- The `scaleIdBy` gets a specialised definition rather than being an
alias to `scaleVarBy`
- `splitFunTy_maybe` is given the type `Type -> Maybe (Mult, Type,
Type)` instead of `Type -> Maybe (Scaled Type, Type)`
- Remove the `MultMul` pattern synonym in favour of a view `isMultMul`
because pattern synonyms appear not to inline well.
- in `eqType`, in a `FunTy`, compare multiplicities last: they are
almost always both `Many`, so it helps failing faster.
- Cache `manyDataConTy` in `mkTyConApp`, to make sure that all the
instances of `TyConApp ManyDataConTy []` are physically the same.
This commit has been authored by
* Richard Eisenberg
* Krzysztof Gogolewski
* Arnaud Spiwack
Metric Decrease:
haddock.base
T12227
T12545
T12990
T1969
T3064
T5030
T9872b
Metric Increase:
haddock.base
haddock.Cabal
haddock.compiler
T12150
T12234
T12425
T12707
T13035
T13056
T15164
T16190
T18304
T1969
T3064
T3294
T5631
T5642
T5837
T6048
T9020
T9233
T9675
T9872a
T9961
WWRec
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This is the first step towards implementation of the linear types proposal
(https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/pull/111).
It features
* A language extension -XLinearTypes
* Syntax for linear functions in the surface language
* Linearity checking in Core Lint, enabled with -dlinear-core-lint
* Core-to-core passes are mostly compatible with linearity
* Fields in a data type can be linear or unrestricted; linear fields
have multiplicity-polymorphic constructors.
If -XLinearTypes is disabled, the GADT syntax defaults to linear fields
The following items are not yet supported:
* a # m -> b syntax (only prefix FUN is supported for now)
* Full multiplicity inference (multiplicities are really only checked)
* Decent linearity error messages
* Linear let, where, and case expressions in the surface language
(each of these currently introduce the unrestricted variant)
* Multiplicity-parametric fields
* Syntax for annotating lambda-bound or let-bound with a multiplicity
* Syntax for non-linear/multiple-field-multiplicity records
* Linear projections for records with a single linear field
* Linear pattern synonyms
* Multiplicity coercions (test LinearPolyType)
A high-level description can be found at
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/LinearTypes/Implementation
Following the link above you will find a description of the changes made to Core.
This commit has been authored by
* Richard Eisenberg
* Krzysztof Gogolewski
* Matthew Pickering
* Arnaud Spiwack
With contributions from:
* Mark Barbone
* Alexander Vershilov
Updates haddock submodule.
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The latter is apparently not supported by busybox.
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It avoids using DynFlags in the Outputable instance of Clabel to check
assertions at pretty-printing time.
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Just adding `{-# LANGUAGE BangPatterns #-}` makes the two other metrics
fluctuate by 13%.
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