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* TTG: Move MatchGroup Origin field and MatchGroupTc to GHC.Hswip/romes/ttg-matchgroup-originromes2022-05-261-1/+1
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* Change `Backend` type and remove direct dependencieswip/backend-as-recordNorman Ramsey2022-05-211-8/+10
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | With this change, `Backend` becomes an abstract type (there are no more exposed value constructors). Decisions that were formerly made by asking "is the current back end equal to (or different from) this named value constructor?" are now made by interrogating the back end about its properties, which are functions exported by `GHC.Driver.Backend`. There is a description of how to migrate code using `Backend` in the user guide. Clients using the GHC API can find a backdoor to access the Backend datatype in GHC.Driver.Backend.Internal. Bumps haddock submodule. Fixes #20927
* Don't store LlvmConfig into DynFlagsSylvain Henry2022-05-171-3/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | LlvmConfig contains information read from llvm-passes and llvm-targets files in GHC's top directory. Reading these files is done only when needed (i.e. when the LLVM backend is used) and cached for the whole compiler session. This patch changes the way this is done: - Split LlvmConfig into LlvmConfig and LlvmConfigCache - Store LlvmConfigCache in HscEnv instead of DynFlags: there is no good reason to store it in DynFlags. As it is fixed per session, we store it in the session state instead (HscEnv). - Initializing LlvmConfigCache required some changes to driver functions such as newHscEnv. I've used the opportunity to untangle initHscEnv from initGhcMonad (in top-level GHC module) and to move it to GHC.Driver.Main, close to newHscEnv. - I've also made `cmmPipeline` independent of HscEnv in order to remove the call to newHscEnv in regalloc_unit_tests.
* Fix several note references, part 2Krzysztof Gogolewski2022-05-051-1/+1
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* Enable eventlog support in all ways by defaultBen Gamari2022-04-272-14/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Here we deprecate the eventlogging RTS ways and instead enable eventlog support in the remaining ways. This simplifies packaging and reduces GHC compilation times (as we can eliminate two whole compilations of the RTS) while simplifying the end-user story. The trade-off is a small increase in binary sizes in the case that the user does not want eventlogging support, but we think that this is a fine trade-off. This also revealed a latent RTS bug: some files which included `Cmm.h` also assumed that it defined various macros which were in fact defined by `Config.h`, which `Cmm.h` did not include. Fixing this in turn revealed that `StgMiscClosures.cmm` failed to import various spinlock statistics counters, as evidenced by the failed unregisterised build. Closes #18948.
* Basic response file supportBen Gamari2022-04-271-4/+3
| | | | | | | | Here we introduce support into our command-line parsing infrastructure and driver for handling gnu-style response file arguments, typically used to work around platform command-line length limitations. Fixes #16476.
* driver: Introduce HomeModInfoCache abstractionMatthew Pickering2022-04-082-15/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The HomeModInfoCache is a mutable cache which is updated incrementally as the driver completes, this makes it robust to exceptions including (SIGINT) The interface for the cache is described by the `HomeMOdInfoCache` data type: ``` data HomeModInfoCache = HomeModInfoCache { hmi_clearCache :: IO [HomeModInfo] , hmi_addToCache :: HomeModInfo -> IO () } ``` The first operation clears the cache and returns its contents. This is designed so it's harder to end up in situations where the cache is retained throughout the execution of upsweep. The second operation allows a module to be added to the cache. The one slightly nasty part is in `interpretBuildPlan` where we have to be careful to ensure that the cache writes happen: 1. In parralel 2. Before the executation continues after upsweep. This requires some simple, localised MVar wrangling. Fixes #20780
* Keep track of promotion ticks in HsOpTywip/no-c-stubswip/matt-merge-batchsheaf2022-04-011-5/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This patch adds a PromotionFlag field to HsOpTy, which is used in pretty-printing and when determining whether to emit warnings with -fwarn-unticked-promoted-constructors. This allows us to correctly report tick-related warnings for things like: type A = Int : '[] type B = [Int, Bool] Updates haddock submodule Fixes #19984
* Fix behaviour of -Wunused-packages in ghciMatthew Pickering2022-03-231-11/+30
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Ticket #21110 points out that -Wunused-packages behaves a bit unusually in GHCi. Now we define the semantics for -Wunused-packages in interactive mode as follows: * If you use -Wunused-packages on an initial load then the warning is reported. * If you explicitly set -Wunused-packages on the command line then the warning is displayed (until it is disabled) * If you then subsequently modify the set of available targets by using :load or :cd (:cd unloads everything) then the warning is (silently) turned off. This means that every :r the warning is printed if it's turned on (but you did ask for it). Fixes #21110
* hi haddock: Lex and store haddock docs in interface filesZubin Duggal2022-03-231-4/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Names appearing in Haddock docstrings are lexed and renamed like any other names appearing in the AST. We currently rename names irrespective of the namespace, so both type and constructor names corresponding to an identifier will appear in the docstring. Haddock will select a given name as the link destination based on its own heuristics. This patch also restricts the limitation of `-haddock` being incompatible with `Opt_KeepRawTokenStream`. The export and documenation structure is now computed in GHC and serialised in .hi files. This can be used by haddock to directly generate doc pages without reparsing or renaming the source. At the moment the operation of haddock is not modified, that's left to a future patch. Updates the haddock submodule with the minimum changes needed.
* Reinstallable GHCZubin Duggal2022-02-211-4/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This patch allows ghc and its dependencies to be built using a normal invocation of cabal-install. Each componenent which relied on generated files or additional configuration now has a Setup.hs file. There are also various fixes to the cabal files to satisfy cabal-install. There is a new hadrian command which will build a stage2 compiler and then a stage3 compiler by using cabal. ``` ./hadrian/build build-cabal ``` There is also a new CI job which tests running this command. For the 9.4 release we will upload all the dependent executables to hackage and then end users will be free to build GHC and GHC executables via cabal. There are still some unresolved questions about how to ensure soundness when loading plugins into a reinstalled GHC (#20742) which will be tighted up in due course. Fixes #19896
* Bump time submodule to 1.12.1Ben Gamari2022-02-201-1/+1
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* Track object file dependencies for TH accurately (#20604)Zubin Duggal2022-02-201-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | `hscCompileCoreExprHook` is changed to return a list of `Module`s required by a splice. These modules are accumulated in the TcGblEnv (tcg_th_needed_mods). Dependencies on the object files of these modules are recording in the interface. The data structures in `LoaderState` are replaced with more efficient versions to keep track of all the information required. The MultiLayerModulesTH_Make allocations increase slightly but runtime is faster. Fixes #20604 ------------------------- Metric Increase: MultiLayerModulesTH_Make -------------------------
* Don't try to build stage1 with -eventlog if stage0 doesn't provide itPHO2022-02-082-1/+13
| | | | Like -threaded, stage0 isn't guaranteed to have an event-logging RTS.
* Exit with failure when -e fails (fixes #18411 #9916 #17560)nineonine2022-02-052-60/+101
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* Fix a few Note inconsistenciesBen Gamari2022-02-012-3/+2
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* Consistently upper-case "Note ["Ben Gamari2022-02-011-1/+1
| | | | | | This was achieved with git ls-tree --name-only HEAD -r | xargs sed -i -e 's/note \[/Note \[/g'
* Improve migration strategy for the XDG compliance change to the GHC applicationZubin Duggal2022-01-311-27/+26
| | | | | | | | | | | directory. We want to always use the old path (~/.ghc/..) if it exists. But we never want to create the old path. This ensures that the migration can eventually be completed once older GHC versions are no longer in circulation. Fixes #20684, #20669, #20660
* Enable :seti in a multi component replMatthew Pickering2022-01-111-2/+2
| | | | Part of #20889
* Use interactive flags when printing expressions in GHCiMatthew Pickering2022-01-111-4/+4
| | | | | | | | | The documentation states that the interactive flags should be use for any interactive expressions. The interactive flags are used when typechecking these expressions but not when printing. The session flags (modified by :set) are only used when loading a module. Fixes #20909
* Multiple Home UnitsMatthew Pickering2021-12-283-101/+337
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Multiple home units allows you to load different packages which may depend on each other into one GHC session. This will allow both GHCi and HLS to support multi component projects more naturally. Public Interface ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In order to specify multiple units, the -unit @⟨filename⟩ flag is given multiple times with a response file containing the arguments for each unit. The response file contains a newline separated list of arguments. ``` ghc -unit @unitLibCore -unit @unitLib ``` where the `unitLibCore` response file contains the normal arguments that cabal would pass to `--make` mode. ``` -this-unit-id lib-core-0.1.0.0 -i -isrc LibCore.Utils LibCore.Types ``` The response file for lib, can specify a dependency on lib-core, so then modules in lib can use modules from lib-core. ``` -this-unit-id lib-0.1.0.0 -package-id lib-core-0.1.0.0 -i -isrc Lib.Parse Lib.Render ``` Then when the compiler starts in --make mode it will compile both units lib and lib-core. There is also very basic support for multiple home units in GHCi, at the moment you can start a GHCi session with multiple units but only the :reload is supported. Most commands in GHCi assume a single home unit, and so it is additional work to work out how to modify the interface to support multiple loaded home units. Options used when working with Multiple Home Units There are a few extra flags which have been introduced specifically for working with multiple home units. The flags allow a home unit to pretend it’s more like an installed package, for example, specifying the package name, module visibility and reexported modules. -working-dir ⟨dir⟩ It is common to assume that a package is compiled in the directory where its cabal file resides. Thus, all paths used in the compiler are assumed to be relative to this directory. When there are multiple home units the compiler is often not operating in the standard directory and instead where the cabal.project file is located. In this case the -working-dir option can be passed which specifies the path from the current directory to the directory the unit assumes to be it’s root, normally the directory which contains the cabal file. When the flag is passed, any relative paths used by the compiler are offset by the working directory. Notably this includes -i and -I⟨dir⟩ flags. -this-package-name ⟨name⟩ This flag papers over the awkward interaction of the PackageImports and multiple home units. When using PackageImports you can specify the name of the package in an import to disambiguate between modules which appear in multiple packages with the same name. This flag allows a home unit to be given a package name so that you can also disambiguate between multiple home units which provide modules with the same name. -hidden-module ⟨module name⟩ This flag can be supplied multiple times in order to specify which modules in a home unit should not be visible outside of the unit it belongs to. The main use of this flag is to be able to recreate the difference between an exposed and hidden module for installed packages. -reexported-module ⟨module name⟩ This flag can be supplied multiple times in order to specify which modules are not defined in a unit but should be reexported. The effect is that other units will see this module as if it was defined in this unit. The use of this flag is to be able to replicate the reexported modules feature of packages with multiple home units. Offsetting Paths in Template Haskell splices ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When using Template Haskell to embed files into your program, traditionally the paths have been interpreted relative to the directory where the .cabal file resides. This causes problems for multiple home units as we are compiling many different libraries at once which have .cabal files in different directories. For this purpose we have introduced a way to query the value of the -working-dir flag to the Template Haskell API. By using this function we can implement a makeRelativeToProject function which offsets a path which is relative to the original project root by the value of -working-dir. ``` import Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax ( makeRelativeToProject ) foo = $(makeRelativeToProject "./relative/path" >>= embedFile) ``` > If you write a relative path in a Template Haskell splice you should use the makeRelativeToProject function so that your library works correctly with multiple home units. A similar function already exists in the file-embed library. The function in template-haskell implements this function in a more robust manner by honouring the -working-dir flag rather than searching the file system. Closure Property for Home Units ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ For tools or libraries using the API there is one very important closure property which must be adhered to: > Any dependency which is not a home unit must not (transitively) depend on a home unit. For example, if you have three packages p, q and r, then if p depends on q which depends on r then it is illegal to load both p and r as home units but not q, because q is a dependency of the home unit p which depends on another home unit r. If you are using GHC by the command line then this property is checked, but if you are using the API then you need to check this property yourself. If you get it wrong you will probably get some very confusing errors about overlapping instances. Limitations of Multiple Home Units ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There are a few limitations of the initial implementation which will be smoothed out on user demand. * Package thinning/renaming syntax is not supported * More complicated reexports/renaming are not yet supported. * It’s more common to run into existing linker bugs when loading a large number of packages in a session (for example #20674, #20689) * Backpack is not yet supported when using multiple home units. * Dependency chasing can be quite slow with a large number of modules and packages. * Loading wired-in packages as home units is currently not supported (this only really affects GHC developers attempting to load template-haskell). * Barely any normal GHCi features are supported, it would be good to support enough for ghcid to work correctly. Despite these limitations, the implementation works already for nearly all packages. It has been testing on large dependency closures, including the whole of head.hackage which is a total of 4784 modules from 452 packages. Internal Changes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * The biggest change is that the HomePackageTable is replaced with the HomeUnitGraph. The HomeUnitGraph is a map from UnitId to HomeUnitEnv, which contains information specific to each home unit. * The HomeUnitEnv contains: - A unit state, each home unit can have different package db flags - A set of dynflags, each home unit can have different flags - A HomePackageTable * LinkNode: A new node type is added to the ModuleGraph, this is used to place the linking step into the build plan so linking can proceed in parralel with other packages being built. * New invariant: Dependencies of a ModuleGraphNode can be completely determined by looking at the value of the node. In order to achieve this, downsweep now performs a more complete job of downsweeping and then the dependenices are recorded forever in the node rather than being computed again from the ModSummary. * Some transitive module calculations are rewritten to use the ModuleGraph which is more efficient. * There is always an active home unit, which simplifies modifying a lot of the existing API code which is unit agnostic (for example, in the driver). The road may be bumpy for a little while after this change but the basics are well-tested. One small metric increase, which we accept and also submodule update to haddock which removes ExtendedModSummary. Closes #10827 ------------------------- Metric Increase: MultiLayerModules ------------------------- Co-authored-by: Fendor <power.walross@gmail.com>
* package imports: Take into account package visibility when renamingMatthew Pickering2021-12-091-3/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | In 806e49ae the package imports refactoring code was modified to rename package imports. There was a small oversight which meant the code didn't account for module visibility. This patch fixes that oversight. In general the "lookupPackageName" function is unsafe to use as it doesn't account for package visiblity/thinning/renaming etc, there is just one use in the compiler which would be good to audit. Fixes #20779
* Dump non-module specific info to file #20316Carrie Xu2021-12-011-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | - Change the dumpPrefix to FilePath, and default to non-module - Add dot to seperate dump-file-prefix and suffix - Modify user guide to introduce how dump files are named - This commit does not affect Ghci dump file naming. See also #17500
* Misc cleanupKrzysztof Gogolewski2021-11-251-1/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Remove `getTag_RDR` (unused), `tidyKind` and `tidyOpenKind` (already available as `tidyType` and `tidyOpenType`) * Remove Note [Explicit Case Statement for Specificity]. Since 0a709dd9876e40 we require GHC 8.10 for bootstrapping. * Change the warning to `cmpAltCon` to a panic. This shouldn't happen. If it ever does, the code was wrong anyway: it shouldn't always return `LT`, but rather `LT` in one case and `GT` in the other case. * Rename `verifyLinearConstructors` to `verifyLinearFields` * Fix `Note [Local record selectors]` which was not referenced * Remove vestiges of `type +v` * Minor fixes to StaticPointers documentation, part of #15603
* More support for optional home-unitSylvain Henry2021-11-202-7/+8
| | | | | | | | | This is a preliminary refactoring for #14335 (supporting plugins in cross-compilers). In many places the home-unit must be optional because there won't be one available in the plugin environment (we won't be compiling anything in this environment). Hence we replace "HomeUnit" with "Maybe HomeUnit" in a few places and we avoid the use of "hsc_home_unit" (which is partial) in some few others.
* Improve handling of import statements in GHCi (#20473)Morrow2021-11-171-17/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Currently in GHCi, when given a line of user input we: 1. Attempt to parse and handle it as a statement 2. Otherwise, attempt to parse and handle a single import 3. Otherwise, check if there are imports present (and if so display an error message) 4. Otherwise, attempt to parse a module and only handle the declarations This patch simplifies the process to: Attempt to parse and handle it as a statement Otherwise, attempt to parse a module and handle the imports and declarations This means that multiple imports in a multiline are now accepted, and a multiline containing both imports and declarations is now accepted (as well as when separated by semicolons).
* Delete dead code knobs for building GHC itselfJohn Ericson2021-11-151-3/+0
| | | | | As GHC has become target agnostic, we've left behind some now-useless logic in both build systems.
* Refactor package importsSylvain Henry2021-10-222-10/+14
| | | | | | | | | Use an (Raw)PkgQual datatype instead of `Maybe FastString` to represent package imports. Factorize the code that renames RawPkgQual into PkgQual in function `rnPkgQual`. Renaming consists in checking if the FastString is the magic "this" keyword, the home-unit unit-id or something else. Bump haddock submodule
* Fix #19884: add warning to tags command, drop T10989Emily Martins2021-10-191-0/+2
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* ghci: Explicitly store and restore interface file cacheMatthew Pickering2021-10-173-6/+26
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | In the old days the old HPT was used as an interface file cache when using ghci. The HPT is a `ModuleEnv HomeModInfo` and so if you were using hs-boot files then the interface file from compiling the .hs file would be present in the cache but not the hi-boot file. This used to be ok, because the .hi file used to just be a better version of the .hi-boot file, with more information so it was fine to reuse it. Now the source hash of a module is kept track of in the interface file and the source hash for the .hs and .hs-boot file are correspondingly different so it's no longer safe to reuse an interface file. I took the decision to move the cache management of interface files to GHCi itself, and provide an API where `load` can be provided with a list of interface files which can be used as a cache. An alternative would be to manage this cache somewhere in the HscEnv but it seemed that an API user should be responsible for populating and suppling the cache rather than having it managed implicitly. Fixes #20217
* Ensure .dyn_hi doesn't overwrite .hiZiyang Liu2021-09-171-0/+5
| | | | | | | | This commit fixes the following bug: when `outputHi` is set, and both `.dyn_hi` and `.hi` are needed, both would be written to `outputHi`, causing `.dyn_hi` to overwrite `.hi`. This causes subsequent `readIface` to fail - "mismatched interface file profile tag (wanted "", got "dyn")" - triggering unnecessary rebuild.
* Minor doc fixesKrzysztof Gogolewski2021-09-081-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | - Fix markup in 9.4 release notes - Document -ddump-cs-trace - Mention that ImpredicativeTypes is really supported only since 9.2 - Remove "There are some restrictions on the use of unboxed tuples". This used to be a list, but all those restrictions were removed. - Mark -fimplicit-import-qualified as documented - Remove "The :main and :run command" - duplicated verbatim in options - Avoid calling "main" a function (cf. #7816) - Update System.getArgs: the old location was before hierarchical modules - Note that multiplicity multiplication is not supported (#20319)
* Fix GHCi completion (#20101)Zubin Duggal2021-08-041-13/+20
| | | | Updates haskeline submodule
* Remove hschooks.c and -no-hs-main for ghc-binZubin Duggal2021-08-034-104/+2
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* ghc: Introduce --run modeBen Gamari2021-08-021-3/+22
| | | | | | As described in #18011, this mode provides similar functionality to the `runhaskell` command, but doesn't require that the user know the path of yet another executable, simplifying interactions with upstream tools.
* Introduce FinderLocations for decoupling Finder from DynFlagsFendor2021-07-232-2/+6
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* Avoid unsafePerformIO for getProgNameSylvain Henry2021-07-091-4/+6
| | | | | | | | getProgName was used to append the name of the program (e.g. "ghc") to printed error messages in the Show instance of GhcException. It doesn't belong here as GHCi and GHC API users may want to override this behavior by setting a different error handler. So we now call it in the defaultErrorHandler instead.
* driver: Convert runPipeline to use a free monadMatthew Pickering2021-07-071-13/+14
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This patch converts the runPipeline function to be implemented in terms of a free monad rather than the previous CompPipeline. The advantages of this are three-fold: 1. Different parts of the pipeline can return different results, the limits of runPipeline were being pushed already by !5555, this opens up futher fine-grainedism of the pipeline. 2. The same mechanism can be extended to build-plan at the module level so the whole build plan can be expressed in terms of one computation which can then be treated uniformly. 3. The pipeline monad can now be interpreted in different ways, for example, you may want to interpret the `TPhase` action into the monad for your own build system (such as shake). That bit will probably require a bit more work, but this is a step in the right directin. There are a few more modules containing useful functions for interacting with the pipelines. * GHC.Driver.Pipeline: Functions for building pipelines at a high-level * GHC.Driver.Pipeline.Execute: Functions for providing the default interpretation of TPhase, in terms of normal IO. * GHC.Driver.Pipeline.Phases: The home for TPhase, the typed phase data type which dictates what the phases are. * GHC.Driver.Pipeline.Monad: Definitions to do with the TPipelineClass and MonadUse class. Hooks consumers may notice the type of the `phaseHook` has got slightly more restrictive, you can now no longer control the continuation of the pipeline by returning the next phase to execute but only override individual phases. If this is a problem then please open an issue and we will work out a solution. ------------------------- Metric Decrease: T4029 -------------------------
* Unify primary and secondary GHCi promptEmily Martins2021-07-011-1/+1
| | | | | | | Fixes #20042 Signed-off-by: Emily Martins <emily.flakeheart@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Hécate Moonlight <hecate@glitchbra.in>
* Dynflags: introduce DiagOptsSylvain Henry2021-07-012-2/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Use DiagOpts for diagnostic options instead of directly querying DynFlags (#17957). Surprising performance improvements on CI: T4801(normal) ghc/alloc 313236344.0 306515216.0 -2.1% GOOD T9961(normal) ghc/alloc 384502736.0 380584384.0 -1.0% GOOD ManyAlternatives(normal) ghc/alloc 797356128.0 786644928.0 -1.3% ManyConstructors(normal) ghc/alloc 4389732432.0 4317740880.0 -1.6% T783(normal) ghc/alloc 408142680.0 402812176.0 -1.3% Metric Decrease: T4801 T9961 T783 ManyAlternatives ManyConstructors Bump haddock submodule
* Remove useless .hs-bootSylvain Henry2021-07-011-1/+0
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* Introduce `hsExprType :: HsExpr GhcTc -> Type` in the new modulewip/hsExprTypeRyan Scott2021-06-081-24/+18
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | `GHC.Hs.Syn.Type` The existing `hsPatType`, `hsLPatType` and `hsLitType` functions have also been moved to this module This is a less ambitious take on the same problem that !2182 and !3866 attempt to solve. Rather than have the `hsExprType` function attempt to efficiently compute the `Type` of every subexpression in an `HsExpr`, this simply computes the overall `Type` of a single `HsExpr`. - Explicitly forbids the `SplicePat` `HsIPVar`, `HsBracket`, `HsRnBracketOut` and `HsTcBracketOut` constructors during the typechecking phase by using `Void` as the TTG extension field - Also introduces `dataConCantHappen` as a domain specific alternative to `absurd` to handle cases where the TTG extension points forbid a constructor. - Turns HIE file generation into a pure function that doesn't need access to the `DsM` monad to compute types, but uses `hsExprType` instead. - Computes a few more types during HIE file generation - Makes GHCi's `:set +c` command also use `hsExprType` instead of going through the desugarer to compute types. Updates haddock submodule Co-authored-by: Zubin Duggal <zubin.duggal@gmail.com>
* Make Logger independent of DynFlagsSylvain Henry2021-06-073-28/+34
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Introduce LogFlags as a independent subset of DynFlags used for logging. As a consequence in many places we don't have to pass both Logger and DynFlags anymore. The main reason for this refactoring is that I want to refactor the systools interfaces: for now many systools functions use DynFlags both to use the Logger and to fetch their parameters (e.g. ldInputs for the linker). I'm interested in refactoring the way they fetch their parameters (i.e. use dedicated XxxOpts data types instead of DynFlags) for #19877. But if I did this refactoring before refactoring the Logger, we would have duplicate parameters (e.g. ldInputs from DynFlags and linkerInputs from LinkerOpts). Hence this patch first. Some flags don't really belong to LogFlags because they are subsystem specific (e.g. most DumpFlags). For example -ddump-asm should better be passed in NCGConfig somehow. This patch doesn't fix this tight coupling: the dump flags are part of the UI but they are passed all the way down for example to infer the file name for the dumps. Because LogFlags are a subset of the DynFlags, we must update the former when the latter changes (not so often). As a consequence we now use accessors to read/write DynFlags in HscEnv instead of using `hsc_dflags` directly. In the process I've also made some subsystems less dependent on DynFlags: - CmmToAsm: by passing some missing flags via NCGConfig (see new fields in GHC.CmmToAsm.Config) - Core.Opt.*: - by passing -dinline-check value into UnfoldingOpts - by fixing some Core passes interfaces (e.g. CallArity, FloatIn) that took DynFlags argument for no good reason. - as a side-effect GHC.Core.Opt.Pipeline.doCorePass is much less convoluted.
* ghci: Enable -fkeep-going by defaultMatthew Pickering2021-05-291-0/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | This also demotes the error message about -fkeep-going to a trace message which matches the behaviour of other build systems (such as cabal-install and nix) which don't print any message like this on a failure. We want to remove the stable module check in a future patch, which is an approximation of `-fkeep-going`. At the moment this change shouldn't do very much.
* Introduce Strict.Maybe, Strict.Pair (#19156)Vladislav Zavialov2021-05-232-4/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | This patch fixes a space leak related to the use of Maybe in RealSrcSpan by introducing a strict variant of Maybe. In addition to that, it also introduces a strict pair and uses the newly introduced strict data types in a few other places (e.g. the lexer/parser state) to reduce allocations. Includes a regression test.
* Implement :info for record pattern synonyms (#19462)nineonine2021-05-191-1/+1
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* Remove useless {-# LANGUAGE CPP #-} pragmasSylvain Henry2021-05-122-2/+2
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* Fully remove HsVersions.hSylvain Henry2021-05-122-9/+6
| | | | | | | | | | Replace uses of WARN macro with calls to: warnPprTrace :: Bool -> SDoc -> a -> a Remove the now unused HsVersions.h Bump haddock submodule
* Remove duplicate modules in GHCi %s promptPhilipp Dargel2021-05-031-1/+1
| | | | fixes #19757
* Replace (ptext .. sLit) with `text`Sylvain Henry2021-04-291-6/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 1. `text` is as efficient as `ptext . sLit` thanks to the rewrite rules 2. `text` is visually nicer than `ptext . sLit` 3. `ptext . sLit` encourages using one `ptext` for several `sLit` as in: ptext $ case xy of ... -> sLit ... ... -> sLit ... which may allocate SDoc's TextBeside constructors at runtime instead of sharing them into CAFs.