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18162 commits behind the upstream repository.
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Ben Gamari authored
When we allocate the heap on POSIX platforms we generally just ask for a
1TB chunk of address space and call it a day. However, if the user has
set a ulimit then this request will fail. In this case we would
previously try successively smaller allocation requests, reducing the
request size by a factor of two each time.

However, this means that GHC will significantly allocate a significantly
smaller heap than the available physical memory size in some
circumstances.  Imagine, for instance, a machine with 512 GB of physical
memory but a ulimit of 511 GB: we would be limited to a 256 GB heap.

We now use a less aggressive back-off policy, reducing by one-eighth the
last allocation size each try.

Thanks to luispedro for the suggested approach.

Test Plan: Validate

Reviewers: simonmar, erikd

Subscribers: rwbarton, thomie

GHC Trac Issues: #14492

Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4215
730781b4
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The Glasgow Haskell Compiler

Build Status

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 Trac.

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.bz2

which contains GHC itself and the "boot" libraries.

  1. Check out the source code from git

    $ git clone --recursive git://git.haskell.org/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 Pull Request.

Building & Installing

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.

For building library documentation, you'll need Haddock. To build the compiler documentation, you need Sphinx and Xelatex (only for PDF output).

Quick start: the following gives you a default build:

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

On Windows, you need an extra repository containing some build tools. These can be downloaded for you by configure. This only needs to be done once by running:

$ ./configure --enable-tarballs-autodownload

(NB: Do you have multiple cores? Be sure to tell that to make! This can save you hours of build time depending on your system configuration, and is almost always a win regardless of how many cores you have. As a simple rule, you should have about N+1 jobs, where N is the amount of cores you have.)

The ./boot step is only necessary if this is a tree checked out from git. For source distributions downloaded from GHC's web site, this step has already been performed.

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.

Filing bugs and feature requests

If you've encountered what you believe is a bug in GHC, or you'd like to propose a feature request, please let us know! Submit a ticket in our bug tracker and we'll be sure to look into it. Remember: Filing a bug is the best way to make sure your issue isn't lost over time, so please feel free.

If you're an active user of GHC, you may also be interested in joining the glasgow-haskell-users mailing list, where developers and GHC users discuss various topics and hang out.

Hacking & Developing GHC

Once you've filed a bug, maybe you'd like to fix it yourself? That would be great, and we'd surely love your company! If you're looking to hack on GHC, check out the guidelines in the HACKING.md file in this directory - they'll get you up to speed quickly.

Contributors & Acknowledgements

GHC in its current form wouldn't exist without the hard work of its many contributors. Over time, it has grown to include the efforts and research of many institutions, highly talented people, and groups from around the world. We'd like to thank them all, and invite you to join!