- Jul 19, 2023
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In #20740 I noticed that mkUniqSet does not fuse. In practice, allowing it to do so makes a considerable difference in allocations due to the backend. Metric Decrease: T12707 T13379 T3294 T4801 T5321FD T5321Fun T783
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- Jul 18, 2023
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This implements GHC proposal https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/pull/596 Also add support for Int64# and Word64#; see testcase ShowPrim.
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Lint messages were saying "in the body of letrec" even for non-recursive let. I've also renamed BodyOfLetRec to BodyOfLet in stg, since there's no separate letrec.
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This patch changes how we perform representation-polymorphism checking for primops (and other wired-in Ids such as coerce). When instantiating the primop, we check whether each type variable is required to instantiated to a concrete type, and if so we create a new concrete metavariable (a ConcreteTv) instead of a simple MetaTv. (A little subtlety is the need to apply the substitution obtained from instantiating to the ConcreteTvOrigins, see Note [substConcreteTvOrigin] in GHC.Tc.Utils.TcMType.) This allows us to prevent representation-polymorphism in non-argument position, as that is required for some of these primops. We can also remove the logic in tcRemainingValArgs, except for the part concerning representation-polymorphic unlifted newtypes. The function has been renamed rejectRepPolyNewtypes; all it does now is reject unsaturated occurrences of representation-polymorphic newtype constructors when the representation of its argument isn't a concrete RuntimeRep (i.e. still a PHASE 1 FixedRuntimeRep check). The Note [Eta-expanding rep-poly unlifted newtypes] in GHC.Tc.Gen.Head gives more explanation about a possible path to PHASE 2, which would be in line with the treatment for primops taken in this patch. We also update the Core Lint check to handle this new framework. This means Core Lint now checks representation-polymorphism in continuation position like needed for catch#. Fixes #21906 ------------------------- Metric Increase: LargeRecord -------------------------
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Split off the `GHC.Platform.ArchOS` module from the `ghc-boot` package into this reinstallable standalone package which abides by the PVP, in part motivated by the ongoing work on `ghc-toolchain` towards runtime retargetability.
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Some patterns introduce no new information to the pattern-match checker (such as plain variable or wildcard patterns). We can thus skip doing any pattern-match checking on them when the sole purpose for doing so was introducing new long-distance information. See Note [Boring patterns] in GHC.Hs.Pat. Doing this avoids regressing in performance now that we do additional pattern-match checking inside do notation.
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The preceding commit re-enabled pattern-match checking inside record updates. This revealed that #21360 was in fact NOT fixed by e74fc066. This commit makes sure we correctly propagate long-distance information in do blocks, e.g. in ```haskell data T = A { fld :: Int } | B f :: T -> Maybe T f r = do a@A{} <- Just r Just $ case a of { A _ -> A 9 } ``` we need to propagate the fact that "a" is headed by the constructor "A" to see that the case expression "case a of { A _ -> A 9 }" cannot fail. Fixes #21360
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Commit e74fc066 refactored the handling of record updates to use the HsExpanded mechanism. This meant that the pattern matching inherent to a record update was considered to be "generated code", and thus we stopped emitting "incomplete record update" warnings entirely. This commit changes the "data Origin = Source | Generated" datatype, adding a field to the Generated constructor to indicate whether we still want to perform pattern-match checking. We also have to do a bit of plumbing with HsCase, to record that the HsCase arose from an HsExpansion of a RecUpd, so that the error message continues to mention record updates as opposed to a generic "incomplete pattern matches in case" error. Finally, this patch also changes the way we handle inaccessible code warnings. Commit e74fc066 was also a regression in this regard, as we were emitting "inaccessible code" warnings for case statements spuriously generated when desugaring a record update (remember: the desugaring mechanism happens before typechecking; it thus can't take into account e.g. GADT information in order to decide which constructors to include in the RHS of the desugaring of the record update). We fix this by changing the mechanism through which we disable inaccessible code warnings: we now check whether we are in generated code in GHC.Tc.Utils.TcMType.newImplication in order to determine whether to emit inaccessible code warnings. Fixes #23520 Updates haddock submodule, to avoid incomplete record update warnings
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This implements CLC proposal #178, rectifying an oversight in the implementation of CLC proposal #134 which could lead to spurious pattern match warnings. https://github.com/haskell/core-libraries-committee/issues/178 https://github.com/haskell/core-libraries-committee/issues/134
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- Jul 17, 2023
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This simplifies the markAnnListA implementation in ExactPrint
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This commit adds similar name suggestions when importing. For example module A where { spelling = 'o' } module B where { import B ( speling ) } will give rise to the error message: Module ‘A’ does not export ‘speling’. Suggested fix: Perhaps use ‘spelling’ This also provides hints when users try to import record fields defined with NoFieldSelectors.
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In an import declaration such as import M ( var ) the import of the variable "var" should **not** bring into scope record fields named "var" which are defined with NoFieldSelectors. Doing so can cause spurious "unused import" warnings, as reported in ticket #23557. Fixes #23557
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- Jul 16, 2023
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Andrei Borzenkov authored
Improved name resolution and type checking of type patterns in constructors: 1. HsTyPat: a new dedicated data type that represents type patterns in HsConPatDetails instead of reusing HsPatSigType 2. rnHsTyPat: a new function that renames a type pattern and collects its binders into three groups: - explicitly bound type variables, excluding locally bound variables - implicitly bound type variables from kind signatures (only if ScopedTypeVariables are enabled) - named wildcards (only from kind signatures) 2a. rnHsPatSigTypeBindingVars: removed in favour of rnHsTyPat 2b. rnImplcitTvBndrs: removed because no longer needed 3. collect_pat: updated to collect type variable binders from type patterns (this means that types and terms use the same infrastructure to detect conflicting bindings, unused variables and name shadowing) 3a. CollVarTyVarBinders: a new CollectFlag constructor that enables collection of type variables 4. tcHsTyPat: a new function that typechecks type patterns, capable of handling polymorphic kinds. See Note [Type patterns: binders and unifiers] Examples of code that is now accepted: f = \(P @a) -> \(P @a) -> ... -- triggers -Wname-shadowing g :: forall a. Proxy a -> ... g (P @a) = ... -- also triggers -Wname-shadowing h (P @($(TH.varT (TH.mkName "t")))) = ... -- t is bound at splice time j (P @(a :: (x,x))) = ... -- (x,x) is no longer rejected data T where MkT :: forall (f :: forall k. k -> Type). f Int -> f Maybe -> T k :: T -> () k (MkT @f (x :: f Int) (y :: f Maybe)) = () -- f :: forall k. k -> Type Examples of code that is rejected with better error messages: f (Left @a @a _) = ... -- new message: -- • Conflicting definitions for ‘a’ -- Bound at: Test.hs:1:11 -- Test.hs:1:14 Examples of code that is now rejected: {-# OPTIONS_GHC -Werror=unused-matches #-} f (P @a) = () -- Defined but not used: type variable ‘a’
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Add the missing changelog.md entries and @since-annotations.
- Jul 15, 2023
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This patch finally (I hope) nails the question of whether (forall a. ty) and (forall a -> ty) are `eqType`: they aren't! There is a long discussion in #22762, plus useful Notes: * Note [ForAllTy and type equality] in GHC.Core.TyCo.Compare * Note [Comparing visiblities] in GHC.Core.TyCo.Compare * Note [ForAllCo] in GHC.Core.TyCo.Rep It also establishes a helpful new invariant for ForAllCo, and ForAllTy, when the bound variable is a CoVar:in that case the visibility must be coreTyLamForAllTyFlag. All this is well documented in revised Notes.
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Follow up to !10743
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- Jul 14, 2023
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This reverts commit 59c5fe1d. This commit added two duplicate jobs on all validate pipelines, so we are reverting for now whilst we work out what the best way forward is. Ticket #23618
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- Jul 13, 2023
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We used to configure into settings a DllWrap command for windows builds and distributions, however, we no longer do, and dllwrap is effectively unused. This simplification is motivated in part by the larger toolchain-selection project (#19877, !9263)
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This commit consolidates all the logic for looking up something in the Global Reader Environment into the single function lookupGRE. This allows us to declaratively specify all the different modes of looking up in the GlobalRdrEnv, and avoids manually passing around filtering functions as was the case in e.g. the function GHC.Rename.Env.lookupSubBndrOcc_helper. ------------------------- Metric Decrease: T8095 ------------------------- ------------------------- Metric Increase: T8095 -------------------------
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Commit 3f374399 inadvertently broke the deprecation/warning mechanism for record fields due to its introduction of record field namespaces. This patch ensures that, when a top-level deprecation is applied to an identifier, it applies to all the record fields as well. This is achieved by refactoring GHC.Rename.Env.lookupLocalTcNames, and GHC.Rename.Env.lookupBindGroupOcc, to not look up a fixed number of NameSpaces but to look up all NameSpaces and filter out the irrelevant ones.
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Found by Simon in ghc/ghc#23567 (comment 507834) The testcase isn't ideal because it doesn't detect the bug in master, unless doNotUnbox is removed as in ghc/ghc#23567 (comment 507692). But I have confirmed that with that modification, it fails before and passes afterwards.
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deb9 is now EOL so it's time to upgrade the i386 bindist to use deb10 Fixes #23585
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- Jul 12, 2023
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Fixes #23636
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- Jul 11, 2023
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