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11739 commits behind the upstream repository.
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Simon Peyton Jones authored
There are two signficant changes here:

* Ticket #18815 showed that we were missing some opportunities for
  preInlineUnconditionally.  The one-line fix is in the code for
  GHC.Core.Opt.Simplify.Utils.preInlineUnconditionally, which now
  switches off only for INLINE pragmas.  I expanded
  Note [Stable unfoldings and preInlineUnconditionally] to explain.

* When doing this I discovered a way in which preInlineUnconditionally
  was occasionally /too/ eager.  It's all explained in
  Note [Occurrences in stable unfoldings] in GHC.Core.Opt.OccurAnal,
  and the one-line change adding markAllMany to occAnalUnfolding.

I also got confused about what NoUserInline meant, so I've renamed
it to NoUserInlinePrag, and changed its pretty-printing slightly.
That led to soem error messate wibbling, and touches quite a few
files, but there is no change in functionality.

I did a nofib run.  As expected, no significant changes.

        Program           Size    Allocs
----------------------------------------
         sphere          -0.0%     -0.4%
----------------------------------------
            Min          -0.0%     -0.4%
            Max          -0.0%     +0.0%
 Geometric Mean          -0.0%     -0.0%

I'm allowing a max-residency increase for T10370, which seems
very irreproducible. (See comments on !4241.)  There is always
sampling error for max-residency measurements; and in any case
the change shows up on some platforms but not others.

Metric Increase:
    T10370
15d2340c
History

The Glasgow Haskell Compiler

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This is the source tree for GHC, a compiler and interactive environment for the Haskell functional programming language.

For more information, visit GHC's web site.

Information for developers of GHC can be found on the GHC issue tracker.

Getting the Source

There are two ways to get a source tree:

  1. Download source tarballs

    Download the GHC source distribution:

    ghc-<version>-src.tar.xz

    which contains GHC itself and the "boot" libraries.

  2. Check out the source code from git

    $ git clone --recurse-submodules git@gitlab.haskell.org:ghc/ghc.git

    Note: cloning GHC from Github requires a special setup. See Getting a GHC repository from Github.

See the GHC team's working conventions regarding how to contribute a patch to GHC. First time contributors are encouraged to get started by just sending a Merge Request.

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For full information on building GHC, see the GHC Building Guide. Here follows a summary - if you get into trouble, the Building Guide has all the answers.

Before building GHC you may need to install some other tools and libraries. See, Setting up your system for building GHC.

NB. In particular, you need GHC installed in order to build GHC, because the compiler is itself written in Haskell. You also need Happy, Alex, and Cabal. For instructions on how to port GHC to a new platform, see the GHC Building Guide.

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Quick start: the following gives you a default build:

$ ./boot
$ ./configure
$ make         # can also say 'make -jX' for X number of jobs
$ make install

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$ ./configure --enable-tarballs-autodownload

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These steps give you the default build, which includes everything optimised and built in various ways (eg. profiling libs are built). It can take a long time. To customise the build, see the file HACKING.md.

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