| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This is another step for fixing #13825 and is based on D38 by Simon
Marlow.
The change allows storing multiple constructor fields within the same
word. This currently applies only to `Float`s, e.g.,
```
data Foo = Foo {-# UNPACK #-} !Float {-# UNPACK #-} !Float
```
on 64-bit arch, will now store both fields within the same constructor
word. For `WordX/IntX` we'll need to introduce new primop types.
Main changes:
- We now use sizes in bytes when we compute the offsets for
constructor fields in `StgCmmLayout` and introduce padding if
necessary (word-sized fields are still word-aligned)
- `ByteCodeGen` had to be updated to correctly construct the data
types. This required some new bytecode instructions to allow pushing
things that are not full words onto the stack (and updating
`Interpreter.c`). Note that we only use the packed stuff when
constructing data types (i.e., for `PACK`), in all other cases the
behavior should not change.
- `RtClosureInspect` was changed to handle the new layout when
extracting subterms. This seems to be used by things like `:print`.
I've also added a test for this.
- I deviated slightly from Simon's approach and use `PrimRep` instead
of `ArgRep` for computing the size of fields. This seemed more
natural and in the future we'll probably want to introduce new
primitive types (e.g., `Int8#`) and `PrimRep` seems like a better
place to do that (where we already have `Int64Rep` for example).
`ArgRep` on the other hand seems to be more focused on calling
functions.
Signed-off-by: Michal Terepeta <michal.terepeta@gmail.com>
Test Plan: ./validate
Reviewers: bgamari, simonmar, austin, hvr, goldfire, erikd
Reviewed By: bgamari
Subscribers: maoe, rwbarton, thomie
GHC Trac Issues: #13825
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3809
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This switches the compiler/ component to get compiled with
-XNoImplicitPrelude and a `import GhcPrelude` is inserted in all
modules.
This is motivated by the upcoming "Prelude" re-export of
`Semigroup((<>))` which would cause lots of name clashes in every
modulewhich imports also `Outputable`
Reviewers: austin, goldfire, bgamari, alanz, simonmar
Reviewed By: bgamari
Subscribers: goldfire, rwbarton, thomie, mpickering, bgamari
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3989
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GHC 8.2.1 is out, so now GHC's support window only extends back to GHC
8.0. This means we can delete gobs of code that was only used for GHC
7.10 support. Hooray!
Test Plan: ./validate
Reviewers: hvr, bgamari, austin, goldfire, simonmar
Reviewed By: bgamari
Subscribers: Phyx, rwbarton, thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3781
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Reviewers: austin, hvr, erikd, simonmar
Reviewed By: simonmar
Subscribers: rwbarton, thomie
GHC Trac Issues: #8281, #13730.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3619
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Summary:
Now that we have -fexternal-interpreter, we can lose most of the GHCI ifdefs.
This was originally added in https://phabricator.haskell.org/D2826
but that led to a compatibility issue with ghc 7.10.x on Windows.
That's fixed here and the revert reverted.
Reviewers: goldfire, hvr, austin, bgamari, Phyx
Reviewed By: Phyx
Subscribers: thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D2884
GHC Trac Issues: #13008
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This reverts commit 52ba9470a7e85d025dc84a6789aa809cdd68b566.
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Now that we have -fexternal-interpreter, we can lose most of the GHCI ifdefs.
Reviewers: simonmar, goldfire, austin, hvr, bgamari
Reviewed By: simonmar
Subscribers: RyanGlScott, mpickering, angerman, thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D2826
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Summary:
In the past the canonical way for constructing an SDoc string literal was the
composition `ptext . sLit`. But for some time now we have function `text` that
does the same. Plus it has some rules that optimize its runtime behaviour.
This patch takes all uses of `ptext . sLit` in the compiler and replaces them
with calls to `text`. The main benefits of this patch are clener (shorter) code
and less dependencies between module, because many modules now do not need to
import `FastString`. I don't expect any performance benefits - we mostly use
SDocs to report errors and it seems there is little to be gained here.
Test Plan: ./validate
Reviewers: bgamari, austin, goldfire, hvr, alanz
Subscribers: goldfire, thomie, mpickering
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1784
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Summary:
The main goal here is enable stack traces in GHCi. After this change,
if you start GHCi like this:
ghci -fexternal-interpreter -prof
(which requires packages to be built for profiling, but not GHC
itself) then the interpreter manages cost-centre stacks during
execution and can produce a stack trace on request. Call locations
are available for all interpreted code, and any compiled code that was
built with the `-fprof-auto` familiy of flags.
There are a couple of ways to get a stack trace:
* `error`/`undefined` automatically get one attached
* `Debug.Trace.traceStack` can be used anywhere, and prints the current
stack
Because the interpreter is running in a separate process, only the
interpreted code is running in profiled mode and the compiler itself
isn't slowed down by profiling.
The GHCi debugger still doesn't work with -fexternal-interpreter,
although this patch gets it a step closer. Most of the functionality
of breakpoints is implemented, but the runtime value introspection is
still not supported.
Along the way I also did some refactoring and added type arguments to
the various remote pointer types in `GHCi.RemotePtr`, so there's
better type safety and documentation in the bridge code between GHC
and ghc-iserv.
Test Plan: validate
Reviewers: bgamari, ezyang, austin, hvr, goldfire, erikd
Subscribers: thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1747
GHC Trac Issues: #11047, #11100
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Summary:
Breakpoints become SCCs, so we have detailed call-stack info for
interpreted code. Currently this only works when GHC is compiled with
-prof, but D1562 (Remote GHCi) removes this constraint so that in the
future call stacks will be available without building your own GHCi.
How can you get a stack trace?
* programmatically: GHC.Stack.currentCallStack
* I've added an experimental :where command that shows the stack when
stopped at a breakpoint
* `error` attaches a call stack automatically, although since calls to
`error` are often lifted out to the top level, this is less useful
than it might be (ImplicitParams still works though).
* Later we might attach call stacks to all exceptions
Other related changes in this diff:
* I reduced the number of places that get ticks attached for
breakpoints. In particular there was a breakpoint around the whole
declaration, which was often redundant because it bound no variables.
This reduces clutter in the stack traces and speeds up compilation.
* I tidied up some RealSrcSpan stuff in InteractiveUI, and made a few
other small cleanups
Test Plan: validate
Reviewers: ezyang, bgamari, austin, hvr
Subscribers: thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1595
GHC Trac Issues: #11047
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Summary:
(Apologies for the size of this patch, I couldn't make a smaller one
that was validate-clean and also made sense independently)
(Some of this code is derived from GHCJS.)
This commit adds support for running interpreted code (for GHCi and
TemplateHaskell) in a separate process. The functionality is
experimental, so for now it is off by default and enabled by the flag
-fexternal-interpreter.
Reaosns we want this:
* compiling Template Haskell code with -prof does not require
building the code without -prof first
* when GHC itself is profiled, it can interpret unprofiled code, and
the same applies to dynamic linking. We would no longer need to
force -dynamic-too with TemplateHaskell, and we can load ordinary
objects into a dynamically-linked GHCi (and vice versa).
* An unprofiled GHCi can load and run profiled code, which means it
can use the stack-trace functionality provided by profiling without
taking the performance hit on the compiler that profiling would
entail.
Amongst other things; see
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/RemoteGHCi for more details.
Notes on the implementation are in Note [Remote GHCi] in the new
module compiler/ghci/GHCi.hs. It probably needs more documenting,
feel free to suggest things I could elaborate on.
Things that are not currently implemented for -fexternal-interpreter:
* The GHCi debugger
* :set prog, :set args in GHCi
* `recover` in Template Haskell
* Redirecting stdin/stdout for the external process
These are all doable, I just wanted to get to a working validate-clean
patch first.
I also haven't done any benchmarking yet. I expect there to be slight hit
to link times for byte code and some penalty due to having to
serialize/deserialize TH syntax, but I don't expect it to be a serious
problem. There's also lots of low-hanging fruit in the byte code
generator/linker that we could exploit to speed things up.
Test Plan:
* validate
* I've run parts of the test suite with
EXTRA_HC_OPTS=-fexternal-interpreter, notably tests/ghci and tests/th.
There are a few failures due to the things not currently implemented
(see above).
Reviewers: simonpj, goldfire, ezyang, austin, alanz, hvr, niteria, bgamari, gibiansky, luite
Subscribers: thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1562
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I've run into situations where I need deterministic `tyVarsOfType` and
this implementation achieves that and also brings an algorithmic
improvement. Union of two `VarSet`s takes linear time the size of the
sets and in the worst case we can have `n` unions of sets of sizes
`(n-1, 1), (n-2, 1)...` making it quadratic.
One reason why we need deterministic `tyVarsOfType` is in `abstractVars`
in `SetLevels`. When we abstract type variables when floating we want
them to be abstracted in deterministic order.
Test Plan: harbormaster
Reviewers: simonpj, goldfire, austin, hvr, simonmar, bgamari
Reviewed By: simonmar
Subscribers: thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1468
GHC Trac Issues: #4012
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Summary: Signed-off-by: Rodlogic <admin@rodlogic.net>
Test Plan: Does it compile?
Reviewers: hvr, austin
Reviewed By: austin
Subscribers: thomie, carter, simonmar
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D319
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