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Glasgow Haskell Compiler / GHC
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Matthew Pickering
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This commit adds three new flags * -fwrite-if-simplified-core: Writes the whole core program into an interface file * -fbyte-code-and-object-code: Generate both byte code and object code when compiling a file * -fprefer-byte-code: Prefer to use byte-code if it's available when running TH splices. The goal for including the core bindings in an interface file is to be able to restart the compiler pipeline at the point just after simplification and before code generation. Once compilation is restarted then code can be created for the byte code backend. This can significantly speed up start-times for projects in GHCi. HLS already implements its own version of these extended interface files for this reason. Preferring to use byte-code means that we can avoid some potentially expensive code generation steps (see #21700) * Producing object code is much slower than producing bytecode, and normally you need to compile with `-dynamic-too` to produce code in the static and dynamic way, the dynamic way just for Template Haskell execution when using a dynamically linked compiler. * Linking many large object files, which happens once per splice, can be quite expensive compared to linking bytecode. And you can get GHC to compile the necessary byte code so `-fprefer-byte-code` has access to it by using `-fbyte-code-and-object-code`. Fixes #21067
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