| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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In order to make the packages in this repo "reinstallable", we need to
associate source code with a specific packages. Having a top level
`/includes` dir that mixes concerns (which packages' includes?) gets in
the way of this.
To start, I have moved everything to `rts/`, which is mostly correct.
There are a few things however that really don't belong in the rts (like
the generated constants haskell type, `CodeGen.Platform.h`). Those
needed to be manually adjusted.
Things of note:
- No symlinking for sake of windows, so we hard-link at configure time.
- `CodeGen.Platform.h` no longer as `.hs` extension (in addition to
being moved to `compiler/`) so as not to confuse anyone, since it is
next to Haskell files.
- Blanket `-Iincludes` is gone in both build systems, include paths now
more strictly respect per-package dependencies.
- `deriveConstants` has been taught to not require a `--target-os` flag
when generating the platform-agnostic Haskell type. Make takes
advantage of this, but Hadrian has yet to.
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This moves all URL references to Trac Wiki to their corresponding
GitLab counterparts.
This substitution is classified as follows:
1. Automated substitution using sed with Ben's mapping rule [1]
Old: ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/XxxYyy...
New: gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/xxx-yyy...
2. Manual substitution for URLs containing `#` index
Old: ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/XxxYyy...#Zzz
New: gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/xxx-yyy...#zzz
3. Manual substitution for strings starting with `Commentary`
Old: Commentary/XxxYyy...
New: commentary/xxx-yyy...
See also !539
[1]: https://gitlab.haskell.org/bgamari/gitlab-migration/blob/master/wiki-mapping.json
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This both says what we mean and silences a bunch of spurious CPP linting
warnings. This pragma is supported by all CPP implementations which we
support.
Reviewers: austin, erikd, simonmar, hvr
Reviewed By: simonmar
Subscribers: rwbarton, thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3482
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Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <austin@well-typed.com>
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This patch adds support for 6 XMM registers on x86-64 which overlap with the F
and D registers and may hold 128-bit wide SIMD vectors. Because there is not a
good way to attach type information to STG registers, we aggressively bitcast in
the LLVM back-end.
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x86-64.
On x86-64 F and D registers are both drawn from SSE registers, so there is no
reason not to draw them from the same pool of available SSE registers. This
means that whereas previously a function could only receive two Double arguments
in registers even if it did not have any Float arguments, now it can receive up
to 6 arguments that are any mix of Float and Double in registers.
This patch breaks the LLVM back end. The next patch will fix this breakage.
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The main change here is that the Cmm parser now allows high-level cmm
code with argument-passing and function calls. For example:
foo ( gcptr a, bits32 b )
{
if (b > 0) {
// we can make tail calls passing arguments:
jump stg_ap_0_fast(a);
}
return (x,y);
}
More details on the new cmm syntax are in Note [Syntax of .cmm files]
in CmmParse.y.
The old syntax is still more-or-less supported for those occasional
code fragments that really need to explicitly manipulate the stack.
However there are a couple of differences: it is now obligatory to
give a list of live GlobalRegs on every jump, e.g.
jump %ENTRY_CODE(Sp(0)) [R1];
Again, more details in Note [Syntax of .cmm files].
I have rewritten most of the .cmm files in the RTS into the new
syntax, except for AutoApply.cmm which is generated by the genapply
program: this file could be generated in the new syntax instead and
would probably be better off for it, but I ran out of enthusiasm.
Some other changes in this batch:
- The PrimOp calling convention is gone, primops now use the ordinary
NativeNodeCall convention. This means that primops and "foreign
import prim" code must be written in high-level cmm, but they can
now take more than 10 arguments.
- CmmSink now does constant-folding (should fix #7219)
- .cmm files now go through the cmmPipeline, and as a result we
generate better code in many cases. All the object files generated
for the RTS .cmm files are now smaller. Performance should be
better too, but I haven't measured it yet.
- RET_DYN frames are removed from the RTS, lots of code goes away
- we now have some more canned GC points to cover unboxed-tuples with
2-4 pointers, which will reduce code size a little.
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also removed an unnecessary 'struct' tag (since the struct is
not recursive); this is in line with the other struct definitions
fixed a typo, updated copyright
it remains to remove the tabs and align the structure members
accordingly
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Needed by #5357
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Needed by #5357
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This means that both time and heap profiling work for parallel
programs. Main internal changes:
- CCCS is no longer a global variable; it is now another
pseudo-register in the StgRegTable struct. Thus every
Capability has its own CCCS.
- There is a new built-in CCS called "IDLE", which records ticks for
Capabilities in the idle state. If you profile a single-threaded
program with +RTS -N2, you'll see about 50% of time in "IDLE".
- There is appropriate locking in rts/Profiling.c to protect the
shared cost-centre-stack data structures.
This patch does enough to get it working, I have cut one big corner:
the cost-centre-stack data structure is still shared amongst all
Capabilities, which means that multiple Capabilities will race when
updating the "allocations" and "entries" fields of a CCS. Not only
does this give unpredictable results, but it runs very slowly due to
cache line bouncing.
It is strongly recommended that you use -fno-prof-count-entries to
disable the "entries" count when profiling parallel programs. (I shall
add a note to this effect to the docs).
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The GC had a two-level structure, G generations each of T steps.
Steps are for aging within a generation, mostly to avoid premature
promotion.
Measurements show that more than 2 steps is almost never worthwhile,
and 1 step is usually worse than 2. In theory fractional steps are
possible, so the ideal number of steps is somewhere between 1 and 3.
GHC's default has always been 2.
We can implement 2 steps quite straightforwardly by having each block
point to the generation to which objects in that block should be
promoted, so blocks in the nursery point to generation 0, and blocks
in gen 0 point to gen 1, and so on.
This commit removes the explicit step structures, merging generations
with steps, thus simplifying a lot of code. Performance is
unaffected. The tunable number of steps is now gone, although it may
be replaced in the future by a way to tune the aging in generation 0.
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I've updated the wiki page about the RTS headers
http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/SourceTree/Includes
to reflect the new layout and explain some of the rationale. All the
header files now point to this page.
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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.
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