summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/includes/InfoTables.h
Commit message (Collapse)AuthorAgeFilesLines
* RTS tidyup sweep, first phaseSimon Marlow2009-08-021-413/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The first phase of this tidyup is focussed on the header files, and in particular making sure we are exposinng publicly exactly what we need to, and no more. - Rts.h now includes everything that the RTS exposes publicly, rather than a random subset of it. - Most of the public header files have moved into subdirectories, and many of them have been renamed. But clients should not need to include any of the other headers directly, just #include the main public headers: Rts.h, HsFFI.h, RtsAPI.h. - All the headers needed for via-C compilation have moved into the stg subdirectory, which is self-contained. Most of the headers for the rest of the RTS APIs have moved into the rts subdirectory. - I left MachDeps.h where it is, because it is so widely used in Haskell code. - I left a deprecated stub for RtsFlags.h in place. The flag structures are now exposed by Rts.h. - Various internal APIs are no longer exposed by public header files. - Various bits of dead code and declarations have been removed - More gcc warnings are turned on, and the RTS code is more warning-clean. - More source files #include "PosixSource.h", and hence only use standard POSIX (1003.1c-1995) interfaces. There is a lot more tidying up still to do, this is just the first pass. I also intend to standardise the names for external RTS APIs (e.g use the rts_ prefix consistently), and declare the internal APIs as hidden for shared libraries.
* Remove old GUM/GranSim codeSimon Marlow2009-06-021-67/+0
|
* Pointer TaggingSimon Marlow2007-07-271-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This patch implements pointer tagging as per our ICFP'07 paper "Faster laziness using dynamic pointer tagging". It improves performance by 10-15% for most workloads, including GHC itself. The original patches were by Alexey Rodriguez Yakushev <mrchebas@gmail.com>, with additions and improvements by me. I've re-recorded the development as a single patch. The basic idea is this: we use the low 2 bits of a pointer to a heap object (3 bits on a 64-bit architecture) to encode some information about the object pointed to. For a constructor, we encode the "tag" of the constructor (e.g. True vs. False), for a function closure its arity. This enables some decisions to be made without dereferencing the pointer, which speeds up some common operations. In particular it enables us to avoid costly indirect jumps in many cases. More information in the commentary: http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/Rts/HaskellExecution/PointerTagging
* FIX #1418 (partially)Simon Marlow2007-06-131-31/+52
| | | | | | | | | | | | | When the con_desc field of an info table was made into a relative reference, this had the side effect of making the profiling fields (closure_desc and closure_type) also relative, but only when compiling via C, and the heap profiler was still treating them as absolute, leading to crashes when profiling with -hd or -hy. This patch fixes up the story to be consistent: these fields really should be relative (otherwise we couldn't make shared versions of the profiling libraries), so I've made them relative and fixed up the RTS to know about this.
* improve comments about x86-64 relative-offset hackerySimon Marlow2007-05-101-0/+10
|
* Basic heap profile support without -profSimon Marlow2007-04-271-0/+10
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | Now that constructor info tables contain the name of the constructor, we can generate useful heap profiles without requiring the whole program and libraries to be compiled with -prof. So now, "+RTS -hT" generates a heap profile for any program, dividing the profile by constructor. It wouldn't be hard to add support for grouping constructors by module, or to restrict the profile to certain constructors/modules/packages. This means that for the first time we can get heap profiles for GHCi, which was previously impossible because the byte-code interpreter and linker don't work with -prof.
* con_desc should be an OFFSET_FIELDSimon Marlow2007-04-171-1/+2
|
* Remove vectored returns.Simon Marlow2007-02-281-1/+0
| | | | | We recently discovered that they aren't a win any more, and just cost code size.
* Constructor names in info tablesbjpop@csse.unimelb.edu.au2007-02-201-0/+16
| | | | | | | This patch adds data constructor names into their info tables. This is useful in the ghci debugger. It replaces the old scheme which was based on tracking data con names in the linker.
* Reorganisation of the source treeSimon Marlow2006-04-071-0/+423
Most of the other users of the fptools build system have migrated to Cabal, and with the move to darcs we can now flatten the source tree without losing history, so here goes. The main change is that the ghc/ subdir is gone, and most of what it contained is now at the top level. The build system now makes no pretense at being multi-project, it is just the GHC build system. No doubt this will break many things, and there will be a period of instability while we fix the dependencies. A straightforward build should work, but I haven't yet fixed binary/source distributions. Changes to the Building Guide will follow, too.