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2. Using GHC

GHC is a command-line compiler: in order to compile a Haskell program, GHC must be invoked on the source file(s) by typing a command to the shell. The steps involved in compiling a program can be automated using the make tool (this is especially useful if the program consists of multiple source files which depend on each other). This section describes how to use GHC from the command-line.

2.1 Overall command-line structure

An invocation of GHC takes the following form:

ghc [argument...]

Command-line arguments are either options or file names.

Command-line options begin with -. They may not be grouped: -vO is different from -v -O. Options need not precede filenames: e.g., ghc *.o -o foo. All options are processed and then applied to all files; you cannot, for example, invoke ghc -c -O1 Foo.hs -O2 Bar.hs to apply different optimisation levels to the files Foo.hs and Bar.hs. For conflicting options, e.g., -c -S, we reserve the right to do anything we want. (Usually, the last one applies.)

2.2 Meaningful file suffixes

File names with ``meaningful'' suffixes (e.g., .lhs or .o) cause the ``right thing'' to happen to those files.

.lhs:

A ``literate Haskell'' module.

.hs:

A not-so-literate Haskell module.

.hi:

A Haskell interface file, probably compiler-generated.

.hc:

Intermediate C file produced by the Haskell compiler.

.c:

A C file not produced by the Haskell compiler.

.s:

An assembly-language source file, usually produced by the compiler.

.o:

An object file, produced by an assembler.

Files with other suffixes (or without suffixes) are passed straight to the linker.

2.3 Help and verbosity options

A good option to start with is the -help (or -?) option. GHC spews a long message to standard output and then exits.

The -v option makes GHC verbose: it reports its version number and shows (on stderr) exactly how it invokes each phase of the compilation system. Moreover, it passes the -v flag to most phases; each reports its version number (and possibly some other information).

Please, oh please, use the -v option when reporting bugs! Knowing that you ran the right bits in the right order is always the first thing we want to verify.

If you're just interested in the compiler version number, the --version option prints out a one-line string containing the requested info.

2.4 Running the right phases in the right order

The basic task of the ghc driver is to run each input file through the right phases (compiling, linking, etc.).

The first phase to run is determined by the input-file suffix, and the last phase is determined by a flag. If no relevant flag is present, then go all the way through linking. This table summarises:


Phase of the Suffix saying Flag saying (suffix of) compilation system ``start here'' ``stop after'' output file literate pre-processor .lhs - - C pre-processor (opt.) - - - Haskell compiler .hs -C, -S .hc, .s C compiler (opt.) .hc or .c -S .s assembler .s -c .o linker other - a.out

Thus, a common invocation would be: ghc -c Foo.hs

Note: What the Haskell compiler proper produces depends on whether a native-code generator is used (producing assembly language) or not (producing C).

The option -cpp must be given for the C pre-processor phase to be run, that is, the pre-processor will be run over your Haskell source file before continuing.

The option -E runs just the pre-processing passes of the compiler, outputting the result on stdout before stopping. If used in conjunction with -cpp, the output is the code blocks of the original (literal) source after having put it through the grinder that is the C pre-processor. Sans -cpp, the output is the de-litted version of the original source.

The option -optcpp-E runs just the pre-processing stage of the C-compiling phase, sending the result to stdout. (For debugging or obfuscation contests, usually.)

2.5 Re-directing the compilation output(s)

GHC's compiled output normally goes into a .hc, .o, etc., file, depending on the last-run compilation phase. The option -o foo re-directs the output of that last-run phase to file foo.

Note: this ``feature'' can be counterintuitive: ghc -C -o foo.o foo.hs will put the intermediate C code in the file foo.o, name notwithstanding!

EXOTICA: But the -o option isn't of much use if you have several input files... Non-interface output files are normally put in the same directory as their corresponding input file came from. You may specify that they be put in another directory using the -odir <dir> (the ``Oh, dear'' option). For example:

% ghc -c parse/Foo.hs parse/Bar.hs gurgle/Bumble.hs -odir `arch`

The output files, Foo.o, Bar.o, and Bumble.o would be put into a subdirectory named after the architecture of the executing machine (sun4, mips, etc). The directory must already exist; it won't be created.

Note that the -odir option does not affect where the interface files are put. In the above example, they would still be put in parse/Foo.hi, parse/Bar.hi, and gurgle/Bumble.hi.

MORE EXOTICA: The -osuf <suffix> will change the .o file suffix for object files to whatever you specify. (We use this in compiling the prelude.). Similarly, the -hisuf <suffix> will change the .hi file suffix for non-system interface files (see Section Other options related to interface files).

The -hisuf/-osuf game is useful if you want to compile a program with both GHC and HBC (say) in the same directory. Let HBC use the standard .hi/.o suffixes; add -hisuf g_hi -osuf g_o to your make rule for GHC compiling...

FURTHER EXOTICA: If you are doing a normal .hs-to-.o compilation but would like to hang onto the intermediate .hc C file, just throw in a -keep-hc-file-too option . If you would like to look at the assembler output, toss in a -keep-s-file-too, too.

Saving GHC's standard error output

Sometimes, you may cause GHC to be rather chatty on standard error; with -v, for example. You can instruct GHC to append this output to a particular log file with a -odump <blah> option.

Redirecting temporary files

If you have trouble because of running out of space in /tmp (or wherever your installation thinks temporary files should go), you may use the -tmpdir <dir> option to specify an alternate directory. For example, -tmpdir . says to put temporary files in the current working directory.

Alternatively, use your TMPDIR environment variable. Set it to the name of the directory where temporary files should be put. GCC and other programs will honour the TMPDIR variable as well.

Even better idea: Set the TMPDIR variable when building GHC, and never worry about TMPDIR again. (see the build documentation).

2.6 Warnings and sanity-checking

GHC has a number of options that select which types of non-fatal error messages, otherwise known as warnings, can be generated during compilation. By default, you get a standard set of warnings which are generally likely to indicate bugs in your program. These are: -fwarn-overlpapping-patterns, -fwarn-duplicate-exports, and -fwarn-missing-methods. The following flags are simple ways to select standard ``packages'' of warnings:

-Wnot:

Turns off all warnings, including the standard ones.

-w:

Synonym for -Wnot.

-W:

Provides the standard warnings plus -fwarn-incomplete-patterns, -fwarn-unused-imports and -fwarn-unused-binds.

-Wall:

Turns on all warning options.

The full set of warning options is described below. To turn off any warning, simply give the corresponding -fno-warn-... option on the command line.

-fwarn-name-shadowing:

This option causes a warning to be emitted whenever an inner-scope value has the same name as an outer-scope value, i.e. the inner value shadows the outer one. This can catch typographical errors that turn into hard-to-find bugs, e.g., in the inadvertent cyclic definition let x = ... x ... in.

Consequently, this option does not allow cyclic recursive definitions.

-fwarn-overlapping-patterns:

By default, the compiler will warn you if a set of patterns are overlapping, i.e.,

f :: String -> Int
f []     = 0
f (_:xs) = 1
f "2"    = 2

where the last pattern match in f won't ever be reached, as the second pattern overlaps it. More often than not, redundant patterns is a programmer mistake/error, so this option is enabled by default.

-fwarn-incomplete-patterns:

Similarly for incomplete patterns, the function g below will fail when applied to non-empty lists, so the compiler will emit a warning about this when -fwarn-incomplete-patterns is enabled.

g [] = 2

This option isn't enabled be default because it can be a bit noisy, and it doesn't always indicate a bug in the program. However, it's generally considered good practice to cover all the cases in your functions.

-fwarn-missing-methods:

This option is on by default, and warns you whenever an instance declaration is missing one or more methods, and the corresponding class declaration has no default declaration for them.

-fwarn-unused-imports:

Report any objects that are explicitly imported but never used.

-fwarn-unused-binds:

Report any function definitions (and local bindings) which are unused. For top-level functions, the warning is only given if the binding is not exported.

-fwarn-unused-matches:

Report all unused variables which arise from pattern matches, including patterns consisting of a single variable. For instance f x y = [] would report x and y as unused. To eliminate the warning, all unused variables can be replaced with wildcards.

-fwarn-duplicate-exports:

Have the compiler warn about duplicate entries in export lists. This is useful information if you maintain large export lists, and want to avoid the continued export of a definition after you've deleted (one) mention of it in the export list.

This option is on by default.

-fwarn-type-defaults:

Have the compiler warn/inform you where in your source the Haskell defaulting mechanism for numeric types kicks in. This is useful information when converting code from a context that assumed one default into one with another, e.g., the 'default default' for Haskell 1.4 caused the otherwise unconstrained value 1 to be given the type Int, whereas Haskell 98 defaults it to Integer. This may lead to differences in performance and behaviour, hence the usefulness of being non-silent about this.

This warning is off by default.

-fwarn-missing-signatures:

If you would like GHC to check that every top-level function/value has a type signature, use the -fwarn-missing-signatures option. This option is off by default.

If you're feeling really paranoid, the -dcore-lint option is a good choice. It turns on heavyweight intra-pass sanity-checking within GHC. (It checks GHC's sanity, not yours.)

2.7 Separate compilation

This section describes how GHC supports separate compilation.

Interface files

When GHC compiles a source file F which contains a module A, say, it generates an object F.o, and a companion interface file A.hi. The interface file is not intended for human consumption, as you'll see if you take a look at one. It's merely there to help the compiler compile other modules in the same program.

NOTE: Having the name of the interface file follow the module name and not the file name, means that working with tools such as make(1) become harder. make implicitly assumes that any output files produced by processing a translation unit will have file names that can be derived from the file name of the translation unit. For instance, pattern rules becomes unusable. For this reason, we recommend you stick to using the same file name as the module name.

The interface file for A contains information needed by the compiler when it compiles any module B that imports A, whether directly or indirectly. When compiling B, GHC will read A.hi to find the details that it needs to know about things defined in A.

Furthermore, when compiling module C which imports B, GHC may decide that it needs to know something about A --- for example, B might export a function that involves a type defined in A. In this case, GHC will go and read A.hi even though C does not explicitly import A at all.

The interface file may contain all sorts of things that aren't explicitly exported from A by the programmer. For example, even though a data type is exported abstractly, A.hi will contain the full data type definition. For small function definitions, A.hi will contain the complete definition of the function. For bigger functions, A.hi will contain strictness information about the function. And so on. GHC puts much more information into .hi files when optimisation is turned on with the -O flag. Without -O it puts in just the minimum; with -O it lobs in a whole pile of stuff.

A.hi should really be thought of as a compiler-readable version of A.o. If you use a .hi file that wasn't generated by the same compilation run that generates the .o file the compiler may assume all sorts of incorrect things about A, resulting in core dumps and other unpleasant happenings.

Finding interface files

In your program, you import a module Foo by saying import Foo. GHC goes looking for an interface file, Foo.hi. It has a builtin list of directories (notably including .) where it looks.

-i<dirs>

This flag prepends a colon-separated list of dirs to the ``import directories'' list.

-i

resets the ``import directories'' list back to nothing.

-fno-implicit-prelude

GHC normally imports Prelude.hi files for you. If you'd rather it didn't, then give it a -fno-implicit-prelude option. You are unlikely to get very far without a Prelude, but, hey, it's a free country.

-syslib <lib>

If you are using a system-supplied non-Prelude library (e.g., the POSIX library), just use a -syslib posix option (for example). The right interface files should then be available. Section The GHC Prelude and Libraries lists the libraries available by this mechanism.

-I<dir>

Once a Haskell module has been compiled to C (.hc file), you may wish to specify where GHC tells the C compiler to look for .h files. (Or, if you are using the -cpp option , where it tells the C pre-processor to look...) For this purpose, use a -I option in the usual C-ish way.

Other options related to interface files

The interface output may be directed to another file bar2/Wurble.iface with the option -ohi bar2/Wurble.iface (not recommended).

To avoid generating an interface file at all, use a -nohi option.

The compiler does not overwrite an existing .hi interface file if the new one is byte-for-byte the same as the old one; this is friendly to make. When an interface does change, it is often enlightening to be informed. The -hi-diffs option will make ghc run diff on the old and new .hi files. You can also record the difference in the interface file itself, the -keep-hi-diffs option takes care of that.

The .hi files from GHC contain ``usage'' information which changes often and uninterestingly. If you really want to see these changes reported, you need to use the -hi-diffs-with-usages option.

Interface files are normally jammed full of compiler-produced pragmas, which record arities, strictness info, etc. If you think these pragmas are messing you up (or you are doing some kind of weird experiment), you can tell GHC to ignore them with the -fignore-interface-pragmas option.

When compiling without optimisations on, the compiler is extra-careful about not slurping in data constructors and instance declarations that it will not need. If you believe it is getting it wrong and not importing stuff which you think it should, this optimisation can be turned off with -fno-prune-tydecls and -fno-prune-instdecls.

See also Section Linking and consistency-checking, which describes how the linker finds standard Haskell libraries.

The recompilation checker

In the olden days, GHC compared the newly-generated .hi file with the previous version; if they were identical, it left the old one alone and didn't change its modification date. In consequence, importers of a module with an unchanged output .hi file were not recompiled.

This doesn't work any more. In our earlier example, module C does not import module A directly, yet changes to A.hi should force a recompilation of C. And some changes to A (changing the definition of a function that appears in an inlining of a function exported by B, say) may conceivably not change B.hi one jot. So now...

GHC keeps a version number on each interface file, and on each type signature within the interface file. It also keeps in every interface file a list of the version numbers of everything it used when it last compiled the file. If the source file's modification date is earlier than the .o file's date (i.e. the source hasn't changed since the file was last compiled), and you give GHC the -recomp flag, then GHC will be clever. It compares the version numbers on the things it needs this time with the version numbers on the things it needed last time (gleaned from the interface file of the module being compiled); if they are all the same it stops compiling rather early in the process saying ``Compilation IS NOT required''. What a beautiful sight!

It's still an experimental feature (that's why -recomp is off by default), so tell us if you think it doesn't work.

Patrick Sansom has a workshop paper about how all this is done. Ask him (email: sansom@dcs.gla.ac.uk) if you want a copy.

Using make

It is reasonably straightforward to set up a Makefile to use with GHC, assuming you name your source files the same as your modules. Thus:

HC      = ghc
HC_OPTS = -cpp $(EXTRA_HC_OPTS)

SRCS = Main.lhs Foo.lhs Bar.lhs
OBJS = Main.o   Foo.o   Bar.o

.SUFFIXES : .o .hi .lhs .hc .s

cool_pgm : $(OBJS)
        rm $@
        $(HC) -o $@ $(HC_OPTS) $(OBJS)

# Standard suffix rules
.o.hi:
        @:

.lhs.o:
        $(HC) -c $< $(HC_OPTS)

.hs.o:
        $(HC) -c $< $(HC_OPTS)

# Inter-module dependencies
Foo.o Foo.hc Foo.s    : Baz.hi          # Foo imports Baz
Main.o Main.hc Main.s : Foo.hi Baz.hi   # Main imports Foo and Baz

(Sophisticated make variants may achieve some of the above more elegantly. Notably, gmake's pattern rules let you write the more comprehensible:

%.o : %.lhs
        $(HC) -c $< $(HC_OPTS)

What we've shown should work with any make.)

Note the cheesy .o.hi rule: It records the dependency of the interface (.hi) file on the source. The rule says a .hi file can be made from a .o file by doing... nothing. Which is true.

Note the inter-module dependencies at the end of the Makefile, which take the form

Foo.o Foo.hc Foo.s    : Baz.hi          # Foo imports Baz

They tell make that if any of Foo.o, Foo.hc or Foo.s have an earlier modification date than Baz.hi, then the out-of-date file must be brought up to date. To bring it up to date, make looks for a rule to do so; one of the preceding suffix rules does the job nicely.

Putting inter-dependencies of the form Foo.o : Bar.hi into your Makefile by hand is rather error-prone. Don't worry---never fear, mkdependHS is here! (and is distributed as part of GHC) Add the following to your Makefile:

depend :
        mkdependHS -- $(HC_OPTS) -- $(SRCS)

Now, before you start compiling, and any time you change the imports in your program, do make depend before you do make cool_pgm. mkdependHS will append the needed dependencies to your Makefile. mkdependHS is fully describe in Section Makefile dependencies in Haskell: using mkdependHS.

A few caveats about this simple scheme:

How to compile mutually recursive modules

Currently, the compiler does not have proper support for dealing with mutually recursive modules:

module A where

import B

newtype TA = MkTA Int

f :: TB -> TA
f (MkTB x) = MkTA x
--------
module B where

import A

data TB = MkTB !Int

g :: TA -> TB
g (MkTA x) = MkTB x

When compiling either module A and B, the compiler will try (in vain) to look for the interface file of the other. So, to get mutually recursive modules off the ground, you need to hand write an interface file for A or B, so as to break the loop. These hand-written interface files are called hi-boot files, and are placed in a file called <module>.hi-boot. To import from an hi-boot file instead of the standard .hi file, use the following syntax in the importing module:

import {-# SOURCE #-} A

The hand-written interface need only contain the bare minimum of information needed to get the bootstrapping process started. For example, it doesn't need to contain declarations for everything that module A exports, only the things required by the module that imports A recursively.

For the example at hand, the boot interface file for A would look like the following:

__interface A 1 404 where
__export A TA{MkTA} ;
1 newtype TA = MkTA PrelBase.Int ;

The syntax is essentially the same as a normal .hi file (unfortunately), but you can usually tailor an existing .hi file to make a .hi-boot file.

Notice that we only put the declaration for the newtype TA in the hi-boot file, not the signature for f, since f isn't used by B.

The number ``1'' after ``__interface A'' gives the version number of module A; it is incremented whenever anything in A's interface file changes. The ``404'' is the version number of the interface file syntax; we change it when we change the syntax of interface files so that you get a better error message when you try to read an old-format file with a new-format compiler.

The number ``1'' at the beginning of a declaration is the version number of that declaration: for the purposes of .hi-boot files these can all be set to 1. All names must be fully qualified with the original module that an object comes from: for example, the reference to Int in the interface for A comes from PrelBase, which is a module internal to GHC's prelude. It's a pain, but that's the way it is.

If you want an hi-boot file to export a data type, but you don't want to give its constructors (because the constructors aren't used by the SOURCE-importing module), you can write simply:

__interface A 1 404 where
__export A TA;
1 data TA

(You must write all the type parameters, but leave out the '=' and everything that follows it.)

Note: This is all a temporary solution, a version of the compiler that handles mutually recursive properly without the manual construction of interface files, is (allegedly) in the works.

2.8 Optimisation (code improvement)

The -O* options specify convenient ``packages'' of optimisation flags; the -f* options described later on specify individual optimisations to be turned on/off; the -m* options specify machine-specific optimisations to be turned on/off.

-O*: convenient ``packages'' of optimisation flags.

There are many options that affect the quality of code produced by GHC. Most people only have a general goal, something like ``Compile quickly'' or ``Make my program run like greased lightning.'' The following ``packages'' of optimisations (or lack thereof) should suffice.

Once you choose a -O* ``package,'' stick with it---don't chop and change. Modules' interfaces will change with a shift to a new -O* option, and you may have to recompile a large chunk of all importing modules before your program can again be run safely (see Section The recompilation checker).

No -O*-type option specified:

This is taken to mean: ``Please compile quickly; I'm not over-bothered about compiled-code quality.'' So, for example: ghc -c Foo.hs

-O or -O1:

Means: ``Generate good-quality code without taking too long about it.'' Thus, for example: ghc -c -O Main.lhs

-O2:

Means: ``Apply every non-dangerous optimisation, even if it means significantly longer compile times.''

The avoided ``dangerous'' optimisations are those that can make runtime or space worse if you're unlucky. They are normally turned on or off individually.

At the moment, -O2 is unlikely to produce better code than -O.

-O2-for-C:

Says to run GCC with -O2, which may be worth a few percent in execution speed. Don't forget -fvia-C, lest you use the native-code generator and bypass GCC altogether!

-Onot:

This option will make GHC ``forget'' any -Oish options it has seen so far. Sometimes useful; for example: make all EXTRA_HC_OPTS=-Onot.

-Ofile <file>:

For those who need absolute control over exactly what options are used (e.g., compiler writers, sometimes :-), a list of options can be put in a file and then slurped in with -Ofile.

In that file, comments are of the #-to-end-of-line variety; blank lines and most whitespace is ignored.

Please ask if you are baffled and would like an example of -Ofile!

At Glasgow, we don't use a -O* flag for day-to-day work. We use -O to get respectable speed; e.g., when we want to measure something. When we want to go for broke, we tend to use -O -fvia-C -O2-for-C (and we go for lots of coffee breaks).

The easiest way to see what -O (etc.) ``really mean'' is to run with -v, then stand back in amazement. Alternatively, just look at the HsC_minus<blah> lists in the ghc driver script.

-f*: platform-independent flags

Flags can be turned off individually. (NB: I hope you have a good reason for doing this....) To turn off the -ffoo flag, just use the -fno-foo flag. So, for example, you can say -O2 -fno-strictness, which will then drop out any running of the strictness analyser.

The options you are most likely to want to turn off are: -fno-strictness (strictness analyser [because it is sometimes slow]), -fno-specialise (automatic specialisation of overloaded functions [because it makes your code bigger]) [US spelling also accepted], and -fno-update-analysis (update analyser, because it sometimes takes a long time). This one is only enabled with -O2 anyway.

Should you wish to turn individual flags on, you are advised to use the -Ofile option, described above. Because the order in which optimisation passes are run is sometimes crucial, it's quite hard to do with command-line options.

Here are some ``dangerous'' optimisations you might want to try:

-fvia-C:

Compile via C, and don't use the native-code generator. (There are many cases when GHC does this on its own.) You might pick up a little bit of speed by compiling via C. If you use _ccall_gc_s or _casm_s, you probably have to use -fvia-C.

The lower-case incantation, -fvia-c, is synonymous.

Compiling via C will probably be slower (in compilation time) than using GHC's native code generator.

-funfolding-interface-threshold<n>:

(Default: 30) By raising or lowering this number, you can raise or lower the amount of pragmatic junk that gets spewed into interface files. (An unfolding has a ``size'' that reflects the cost in terms of ``code bloat'' of expanding that unfolding in another module. A bigger function would be assigned a bigger cost.)

-funfolding-creation-threshold<n>:

(Default: 30) This option is similar to -funfolding-interface-threshold, except that it governs unfoldings within a single module. Increasing this figure is more likely to result in longer compile times than faster code. The next option is more useful:

-funfolding-use-threshold<n>:

(Default: 8) This is the magic cut-off figure for unfolding: below this size, a function definition will be unfolded at the call-site, any bigger and it won't. The size computed for a function depends on two things: the actual size of the expression minus any discounts that apply (see -funfolding-con-discount).

-funfolding-con-discount<n>:

(Default: 2) If the compiler decides that it can eliminate some computation by performing an unfolding, then this is a discount factor that it applies to the funciton size before deciding whether to unfold it or not.

OK, folks, these magic numbers `30', `8', and '2' are mildly arbitrary; they are of the ``seem to be OK'' variety. The `8' is the more critical one; it's what determines how eager GHC is about expanding unfoldings.

-funbox-strict-fields:

This option causes all constructor fields which are marked strict (i.e. ``!'') to be unboxed or unpacked if possible. For example:

data T = T !Float !Float

will create a constructor T containing two unboxed floats if the -funbox-strict-fields flag is given. This may not always be an optimisation: if the T constructor is scrutinised and the floats passed to a non-strict function for example, they will have to be reboxed (this is done automatically by the compiler).

This option should only be used in conjunction with -O, in order to expose unfoldings to the compiler so the reboxing can be removed as often as possible. For example:

f :: T -> Float
f (T f1 f2) = f1 + f2

The compiler will avoid reboxing f1 and f2 by inlining + on floats, but only when -O is on.

Any single-constructor data is eligible for unpacking; for example

data T = T !(Int,Int)

will store the two Ints directly in the T constructor, by flattening the pair. Multi-level unpacking is also supported:

data T = T !S
data S = S !Int !Int

will store two unboxed Int#s directly in the T constructor.

-fsemi-tagging:

This option (which does not work with the native-code generator) tells the compiler to add extra code to test for already-evaluated values. You win if you have lots of such values during a run of your program, you lose otherwise. (And you pay in extra code space.)

We have not played with -fsemi-tagging enough to recommend it. (For all we know, it doesn't even work anymore... Sigh.)

-m*: platform-specific flags

Some flags only make sense for particular target platforms.

-mv8:

(SPARC machines) Means to pass the like-named option to GCC; it says to use the Version 8 SPARC instructions, notably integer multiply and divide. The similiar -m* GCC options for SPARC also work, actually.

-mlong-calls:

(HPPA machines) Means to pass the like-named option to GCC. Required for Very Big modules, maybe. (Probably means you're in trouble...)

-monly-[32]-regs:

(iX86 machines) GHC tries to ``steal'' four registers from GCC, for performance reasons; it almost always works. However, when GCC is compiling some modules with four stolen registers, it will crash, probably saying:

Foo.hc:533: fixed or forbidden register was spilled.
This may be due to a compiler bug or to impossible asm
statements or clauses.
Just give some registers back with -monly-N-regs. Try `3' first, then `2'. If `2' doesn't work, please report the bug to us.

Code improvement by the C compiler.

The C compiler (GCC) is run with -O turned on. (It has to be, actually).

If you want to run GCC with -O2---which may be worth a few percent in execution speed---you can give a -O2-for-C option.

2.9 Options related to a particular phase

The C pre-processor

The C pre-processor cpp is run over your Haskell code only if the -cpp option is given. Unless you are building a large system with significant doses of conditional compilation, you really shouldn't need it.

-D<foo>:

Define macro <foo> in the usual way. NB: does not affect -D macros passed to the C compiler when compiling via C! For those, use the -optc-Dfoo hack... (see Section Forcing options to a particular phase.).

-U<foo>:

Undefine macro <foo> in the usual way.

-I<dir>:

Specify a directory in which to look for #include files, in the usual C way.

The ghc driver pre-defines several macros:

__HASKELL98__:

If defined, this means that GHC supports the language defined by the Haskell 98 report.

NB. This macro is only set when pre-processing Haskell source (ie. .hs or .lhs files).

__HASKELL1__:

If defined to n, that means GHC supports the Haskell language defined in the Haskell report version 1.n. Currently 5.

NB. As with __HASKELL98__, this macro is only set when pre-processing Haskell source (ie. .hs or .lhs files).

__GLASGOW_HASKELL__:

For version n of the GHC system, this will be #defined to 100n. So, for version 4.00, it is 400.

With any luck, __GLASGOW_HASKELL__ will be undefined in all other implementations that support C-style pre-processing.

(For reference: the comparable symbols for other systems are: __HUGS__ for Hugs and __HBC__ for Chalmers.)

NB. This macro is set when pre-processing both Haskell source and C source, including the C source generated from a Haskell module (ie. .hs, .lhs, .c and .hc files).

__CONCURRENT_HASKELL__:

This symbol is defined when pre-processing Haskell (input) and pre-processing C (GHC output). Since GHC from verion 4.00 now supports concurrent haskell by default, this symbol is always defined.

__PARALLEL_HASKELL__:

Only defined when -parallel is in use! This symbol is defined when pre-processing Haskell (input) and pre-processing C (GHC output).

Options other than the above can be forced through to the C pre-processor with the -opt flags (see Section Forcing options to a particular phase.).

A small word of warning: -cpp is not friendly to ``string gaps''. . In other words, strings such as the following:

        strmod = "\
        \ p \
        \ "

don't work with -cpp; /usr/bin/cpp elides the backslash-newline pairs.

However, it appears that if you add a space at the end of the line, then cpp (at least GNU cpp and possibly other cpps) leaves the backslash-space pairs alone and the string gap works as expected.

Options affecting the C compiler (if applicable)

At the moment, quite a few common C-compiler options are passed on quietly to the C compilation of Haskell-compiler-generated C files. THIS MAY CHANGE. Meanwhile, options so sent are:


-ansi do ANSI C (not K&R) -pedantic be so -dgcc-lint (hack) short for ``make GCC very paranoid''

If you are compiling with lots of ccalls, etc., you may need to tell the C compiler about some #include files. There is no real pretty way to do this, but you can use this hack from the command-line:

% ghc -c '-#include <X/Xlib.h>' Xstuff.lhs

Linking and consistency-checking

GHC has to link your code with various libraries, possibly including: user-supplied, GHC-supplied, and system-supplied (-lm math library, for example).

-l<FOO>:

Link in a library named lib<FOO>.a which resides somewhere on the library directories path.

Because of the sad state of most UNIX linkers, the order of such options does matter. Thus: ghc -lbar *.o is almost certainly wrong, because it will search libbar.a before it has collected unresolved symbols from the *.o files. ghc *.o -lbar is probably better.

The linker will of course be informed about some GHC-supplied libraries automatically; these are:


-l equivalent description -lHSrts,-lHSclib basic runtime libraries -lHS standard Prelude library -lHS_cbits C support code for standard Prelude library -lgmp GNU multi-precision library (for Integers)

-syslib <name>:

If you are using a Haskell ``system library'' (e.g., the POSIX library), just use the -syslib posix option, and the correct code should be linked in.

-L<dir>:

Where to find user-supplied libraries... Prepend the directory <dir> to the library directories path.

-static:

Tell the linker to avoid shared libraries.

-no-link-chk and -link-chk:

By default, immediately after linking an executable, GHC verifies that the pieces that went into it were compiled with compatible flags; a ``consistency check''. (This is to avoid mysterious failures caused by non-meshing of incompatibly-compiled programs; e.g., if one .o file was compiled for a parallel machine and the others weren't.) You may turn off this check with -no-link-chk. You can turn it (back) on with -link-chk (the default).

-no-hs-main:

In the event you want to include ghc-compiled code as part of another (non-Haskell) program, the RTS will not be supplying its definition of main() at link-time, you will have to. To signal that to the driver script when linking, use -no-hs-main.

Notice that since the command-line passed to the linker is rather involved, you probably want to use the ghc driver script to do the final link of your `mixed-language' application. This is not a requirement though, just try linking once with -v on to see what options the driver passes through to the linker.

2.10 Using Concurrent Haskell

GHC (as of version 4.00) supports Concurrent Haskell by default, without requiring a special option or libraries compiled in a certain way. To get access to the support libraries for Concurrent Haskell (ie. Concurrent and friends), use the -syslib concurrent option.

Three RTS options are provided for modifying the behaviour of the threaded runtime system. See the descriptions of -C[<us>], -q, and -t<num> in Section RTS options for Concurrent/Parallel Haskell.

Concurrent Haskell is described in more detail in Section Concurrent and Parallel Haskell.

2.11 Using Parallel Haskell

[You won't be able to execute parallel Haskell programs unless PVM3 (Parallel Virtual Machine, version 3) is installed at your site.]

To compile a Haskell program for parallel execution under PVM, use the -parallel option, both when compiling and linking. You will probably want to import Parallel into your Haskell modules.

To run your parallel program, once PVM is going, just invoke it ``as normal''. The main extra RTS option is -N<n>, to say how many PVM ``processors'' your program to run on. (For more details of all relevant RTS options, please see Section RTS options for Concurrent/Parallel Haskell.)

In truth, running Parallel Haskell programs and getting information out of them (e.g., parallelism profiles) is a battle with the vagaries of PVM, detailed in the following sections.

Dummy's guide to using PVM

Before you can run a parallel program under PVM, you must set the required environment variables (PVM's idea, not ours); something like, probably in your .cshrc or equivalent:

setenv PVM_ROOT /wherever/you/put/it
setenv PVM_ARCH `$PVM_ROOT/lib/pvmgetarch`
setenv PVM_DPATH $PVM_ROOT/lib/pvmd

Creating and/or controlling your ``parallel machine'' is a purely-PVM business; nothing specific to Parallel Haskell.

You use the pvm command to start PVM on your machine. You can then do various things to control/monitor your ``parallel machine;'' the most useful being:

\begin{tabular}{ll} Control-D & exit pvm, leaving it running \\ halt & kill off this ``parallel machine'' \& exit \\ add <host> & add <host> as a processor \\ delete <host> & delete <host> \\ reset & kill what's going, but leave PVM up \\ conf & list the current configuration \\ ps & report processes' status \\ pstat <pid> & status of a particular process \\ \end{tabular}

The PVM documentation can tell you much, much more about pvm!

Parallelism profiles

With Parallel Haskell programs, we usually don't care about the results---only with ``how parallel'' it was! We want pretty pictures.

Parallelism profiles (\`a la hbcpp) can be generated with the -q RTS option. The per-processor profiling info is dumped into files named <full-path><program>.gr. These are then munged into a PostScript picture, which you can then display. For example, to run your program a.out on 8 processors, then view the parallelism profile, do:

% ./a.out +RTS -N8 -q
% grs2gr *.???.gr > temp.gr     # combine the 8 .gr files into one
% gr2ps -O temp.gr              # cvt to .ps; output in temp.ps
% ghostview -seascape temp.ps   # look at it!

The scripts for processing the parallelism profiles are distributed in ghc/utils/parallel/.

Other useful info about running parallel programs

The ``garbage-collection statistics'' RTS options can be useful for seeing what parallel programs are doing. If you do either +RTS -Sstderr or +RTS -sstderr, then you'll get mutator, garbage-collection, etc., times on standard error. The standard error of all PE's other than the `main thread' appears in /tmp/pvml.nnn, courtesy of PVM.

Whether doing +RTS -Sstderr or not, a handy way to watch what's happening overall is: tail -f /tmp/pvml.nnn.

RTS options for Concurrent/Parallel Haskell

Besides the usual runtime system (RTS) options (Section Running a compiled program), there are a few options particularly for concurrent/parallel execution.

-N<N>:

(PARALLEL ONLY) Use <N> PVM processors to run this program; the default is 2.

-C[<us>]:

Sets the context switch interval to <us> microseconds. A context switch will occur at the next heap allocation after the timer expires. With -C0 or -C, context switches will occur as often as possible (at every heap allocation). By default, context switches occur every 10 milliseconds. Note that many interval timers are only capable of 10 millisecond granularity, so the default setting may be the finest granularity possible, short of a context switch at every heap allocation.

[NOTE: this option currently has no effect (version 4.00). Context switches happen when the current heap block is full, i.e. every 4k of allocation].

-q[v]:

(PARALLEL ONLY) Produce a quasi-parallel profile of thread activity, in the file <program>.qp. In the style of hbcpp, this profile records the movement of threads between the green (runnable) and red (blocked) queues. If you specify the verbose suboption (-qv), the green queue is split into green (for the currently running thread only) and amber (for other runnable threads). We do not recommend that you use the verbose suboption if you are planning to use the hbcpp profiling tools or if you are context switching at every heap check (with -C).

-t<num>:

(PARALLEL ONLY) Limit the number of concurrent threads per processor to <num>. The default is 32. Each thread requires slightly over 1K words in the heap for thread state and stack objects. (For 32-bit machines, this translates to 4K bytes, and for 64-bit machines, 8K bytes.)

-d:

(PARALLEL ONLY) Turn on debugging. It pops up one xterm (or GDB, or something...) per PVM processor. We use the standard debugger script that comes with PVM3, but we sometimes meddle with the debugger2 script. We include ours in the GHC distribution, in ghc/utils/pvm/.

-e<num>:

(PARALLEL ONLY) Limit the number of pending sparks per processor to <num>. The default is 100. A larger number may be appropriate if your program generates large amounts of parallelism initially.

-Q<num>:

(PARALLEL ONLY) Set the size of packets transmitted between processors to <num>. The default is 1024 words. A larger number may be appropriate if your machine has a high communication cost relative to computation speed.

2.12 Running a compiled program

To make an executable program, the GHC system compiles your code and then links it with a non-trivial runtime system (RTS), which handles storage management, profiling, etc.

You have some control over the behaviour of the RTS, by giving special command-line arguments to your program.

When your Haskell program starts up, its RTS extracts command-line arguments bracketed between +RTS and -RTS as its own. For example:

% ./a.out -f +RTS -p -S -RTS -h foo bar

The RTS will snaffle -p -S for itself, and the remaining arguments -f -h foo bar will be handed to your program if/when it calls System.getArgs.

No -RTS option is required if the runtime-system options extend to the end of the command line, as in this example:

% hls -ltr /usr/etc +RTS -A5m

If you absolutely positively want all the rest of the options in a command line to go to the program (and not the RTS), use a --RTS .

As always, for RTS options that take <size>s: If the last character of size is a K or k, multiply by 1000; if an M or m, by 1,000,000; if a G or G, by 1,000,000,000. (And any wraparound in the counters is your fault!)

Giving a +RTS -f option will print out the RTS options actually available in your program (which vary, depending on how you compiled).

NOTE: to send RTS options to the compiler itself, you need to prefix the option with -optCrts, eg. to increase the maximum heap size for a compilation to 128M, you would add -optCrts-M128m to the command line. The compiler understands some options directly without needing -optCrts: these are -H and -K.

RTS options to control the garbage-collector

There are several options to give you precise control over garbage collection. Hopefully, you won't need any of these in normal operation, but there are several things that can be tweaked for maximum performance.

-A<size>:

[Default: 256k] Set the allocation area size used by the garbage collector. The allocation area (actually generation 0 step 0) is fixed and is never resized (unless you use -H, below).

Increasing the allocation area size may or may not give better performance (a bigger allocation area means worse cache behaviour but fewer garbage collections and less promotion).

With only 1 generation (-G1) the -A option specifies the minimum allocation area, since the actual size of the allocation area will be resized according to the amount of data in the heap (see -F, below).

-F<factor>:

[Default: 2] This option controls the amount of memory reserved for the older generations (and in the case of a two space collector the size of the allocation area) as a factor of the amount of live data. For example, if there was 2M of live data in the oldest generation when we last collected it, then by default we'll wait until it grows to 4M before collecting it again.

The default seems to work well here. If you have plenty of memory, it is usually better to use -H<size> than to increase -F<factor>.

The -F setting will be automatically reduced by the garbage collector when the maximum heap size (the -M<size> setting) is approaching.

-G<generations>:

[Default: 2] Set the number of generations used by the garbage collector. The default of 2 seems to be good, but the garbage collector can support any number of generations. Anything larger than about 4 is probably not a good idea unless your program runs for a long time, because the oldest generation will never get collected.

Specifying 1 generation with +RTS -G1 gives you a simple 2-space collector, as you would expect. In a 2-space collector, the -A option (see above) specifies the minimum allocation area size, since the allocation area will grow with the amount of live data in the heap. In a multi-generational collector the allocation area is a fixed size (unless you use the -H option, see below).

-H<size>:

[Default: 0] This option provides a "suggested heap size" for the garbage collector. The garbage collector will use about this much memory until the program residency grows and the heap size needs to be expanded to retain reasonable performance.

By default, the heap will start small, and grow and shrink as necessary. This can be bad for performance, so if you have plenty of memory it's worthwhile supplying a big -H<size>. For improving GC performance, using -H<size> is usually a better bet than -A<size>.

-k<size>:

[Default: 1k] Set the initial stack size for new threads. Thread stacks (including the main thread's stack) live on the heap, and grow as required. The default value is good for concurrent applications with lots of small threads; if your program doesn't fit this model then increasing this option may help performance.

The main thread is normally started with a slightly larger heap to cut down on unnecessary stack growth while the program is starting up.

-K<size>:

[Default: 1M] Set the maximum stack size for an individual thread to <size> bytes. This option is there purely to stop the program eating up all the available memory in the machine if it gets into an infinite loop.

-m<n>:

Minimum % <n> of heap which must be available for allocation. The default is 3%.

-M<size>:

[Default: 64M] Set the maximum heap size to <size> bytes. The heap normally grows and shrinks according to the memory requirements of the program. The only reason for having this option is to stop the heap growing without bound and filling up all the available swap space, which at the least will result in the program being summarily killed by the operating system.

-s<file> or -S<file>:

Write modest (-s) or verbose (-S) garbage-collector statistics into file <file>. The default <file> is <program>@.stat. The <file> stderr is treated specially, with the output really being sent to stderr.

This option is useful for watching how the storage manager adjusts the heap size based on the current amount of live data.

RTS options for profiling and Concurrent/Parallel Haskell

The RTS options related to profiling are described in Section How to control your profiled program at runtime; and those for concurrent/parallel stuff, in Section RTS options for Concurrent/Parallel Haskell.

RTS options for hackers, debuggers, and over-interested souls

These RTS options might be used (a) to avoid a GHC bug, (b) to see ``what's really happening'', or (c) because you feel like it. Not recommended for everyday use!

-B:

Sound the bell at the start of each (major) garbage collection.

Oddly enough, people really do use this option! Our pal in Durham (England), Paul Callaghan, writes: ``Some people here use it for a variety of purposes---honestly!---e.g., confirmation that the code/machine is doing something, infinite loop detection, gauging cost of recently added code. Certain people can even tell what stage [the program] is in by the beep pattern. But the major use is for annoying others in the same office...''

-r<file>:

Produce ``ticky-ticky'' statistics at the end of the program run. The <file> business works just like on the -S RTS option (above).

``Ticky-ticky'' statistics are counts of various program actions (updates, enters, etc.) The program must have been compiled using -ticky (a.k.a. ``ticky-ticky profiling''), and, for it to be really useful, linked with suitable system libraries. Not a trivial undertaking: consult the installation guide on how to set things up for easy ``ticky-ticky'' profiling. For more information, see Section Using ``ticky-ticky'' profiling (for implementors).

-D<num>:

An RTS debugging flag; varying quantities of output depending on which bits are set in <num>. Only works if the RTS was compiled with the DEBUG option.

-Z:

Turn off ``update-frame squeezing'' at garbage-collection time. (There's no particularly good reason to turn it off, except to ensure the accuracy of certain data collected regarding thunk entry counts.)

``Hooks'' to change RTS behaviour

GHC lets you exercise rudimentary control over the RTS settings for any given program, by compiling in a ``hook'' that is called by the run-time system. The RTS contains stub definitions for all these hooks, but by writing your own version and linking it on the GHC command line, you can override the defaults.

The function defaultsHook lets you change various RTS options. The commonest use for this is to give your program a default heap and/or stack size that is greater than the default. For example, to set -H8m -K1m:

#include "Rts.h"
#include "RtsFlags.h"
void defaultsHook (void) {
   RTSflags.GcFlags.stksSize =  1000002 / sizeof(W_);
   RTSflags.GcFlags.heapSize =  8000002 / sizeof(W_);
}

Don't use powers of two for heap/stack sizes: these are more likely to interact badly with direct-mapped caches. The full set of flags is defined in ghc/rts/RtsFlags.h the the GHC source tree.

You can also change the messages printed when the runtime system ``blows up,'' e.g., on stack overflow. The hooks for these are as follows:

void ErrorHdrHook (FILE *):

What's printed out before the message from error.

void OutOfHeapHook (unsigned long, unsigned long):

The heap-overflow message.

void StackOverflowHook (long int):

The stack-overflow message.

void MallocFailHook (long int):

The message printed if malloc fails.

void PatErrorHdrHook (FILE *):

The message printed if a pattern-match fails (the failures that were not handled by the Haskell programmer).

void PreTraceHook (FILE *):

What's printed out before a trace message.

void PostTraceHook (FILE *):

What's printed out after a trace message.

For example, here is the ``hooks'' code used by GHC itself:

#include <stdio.h>
#define W_ unsigned long int
#define I_ long int

void
ErrorHdrHook (FILE *where)
{
    fprintf(where, "\n"); /* no "Fail: " */
}

void
OutOfHeapHook (W_ request_size, W_ heap_size) /* both sizes in bytes */
{
    fprintf(stderr, "GHC's heap exhausted;\nwhile trying to 
        allocate %lu bytes in a %lu-byte heap;\nuse the `-H<size>'
        option to increase the total heap size.\n",
        request_size,
        heap_size);
}

void
StackOverflowHook (I_ stack_size)    /* in bytes */
{
    fprintf(stderr, "GHC stack-space overflow: current size
        %ld bytes.\nUse the `-K<size>' option to increase it.\n",
        stack_size);
}

void
PatErrorHdrHook (FILE *where)
{
    fprintf(where, "\n*** Pattern-matching error within GHC!\n\n
        This is a compiler bug; please report it to
        glasgow-haskell-bugs@haskell.org.\n\nFail: ");
}

void
PreTraceHook (FILE *where)
{
    fprintf(where, "\n"); /* not "Trace On" */
}

void
PostTraceHook (FILE *where)
{
    fprintf(where, "\n"); /* not "Trace Off" */
}

2.13 Debugging the compiler

HACKER TERRITORY. HACKER TERRITORY. (You were warned.)

Replacing the program for one or more phases.

You may specify that a different program be used for one of the phases of the compilation system, in place of whatever the driver ghc has wired into it. For example, you might want to try a different assembler. The -pgm<phase-code><program-name> option to ghc will cause it to use <program-name> for phase <phase-code>, where the codes to indicate the phases are:


code phase L literate pre-processor P C pre-processor (if -cpp only) C Haskell compiler c C compiler a assembler l linker dep Makefile dependency generator

Forcing options to a particular phase.

The preceding sections describe driver options that are mostly applicable to one particular phase. You may also force a specific option <option> to be passed to a particular phase <phase-code> by feeding the driver the option -opt<phase-code><option>. The codes to indicate the phases are the same as in the previous section.

So, for example, to force an -Ewurble option to the assembler, you would tell the driver -opta-Ewurble (the dash before the E is required).

Besides getting options to the Haskell compiler with -optC<blah>, you can get options through to its runtime system with -optCrts<blah> .

So, for example: when I want to use my normal driver but with my profiled compiler binary, I use this script:

#! /bin/sh
exec /local/grasp_tmp3/simonpj/ghc-BUILDS/working-alpha/ghc/driver/ghc \
     -pgmC/local/grasp_tmp3/simonpj/ghc-BUILDS/working-hsc-prof/hsc \
     -optCrts-i0.5 \
     -optCrts-PT \
     "$@"

Dumping out compiler intermediate structures

-noC:

Don't bother generating C output or an interface file. Usually used in conjunction with one or more of the -ddump-* options; for example: ghc -noC -ddump-simpl Foo.hs

-hi:

Do generate an interface file. This would normally be used in conjunction with -noC, which turns off interface generation; thus: -noC -hi.

-dshow-passes:

Prints a message to stderr as each pass starts. Gives a warm but undoubtedly misleading feeling that GHC is telling you what's happening.

-ddump-<pass>:

Make a debugging dump after pass <pass> (may be common enough to need a short form...). You can get all of these at once (lots of output) by using -ddump-all, or most of them with -ddump-most. Some of the most useful ones are:

-ddump-parsed:

oarser output

-ddump-rn:

renamer output

-ddump-tc:

typechecker output

-ddump-deriv:

derived instances

-ddump-ds:

desugarer output

-ddump-spec:

output of specialisation pass

-ddump-rules:

dumps all rewrite rules (including those generated by the specialisation pass)

-ddump-simpl:

simplifer output (Core-to-Core passes)

-ddump-usagesp:

UsageSP inference pre-inf and output

-ddump-cpranal:

CPR analyser output

-ddump-stranal:

strictness analyser output

-ddump-workwrap:

worker/wrapper split output

-ddump-occur-anal:

`occurrence analysis' output

-ddump-stg:

output of STG-to-STG passes

-ddump-absC:

unflattened Abstract C

-ddump-flatC:

flattened Abstract C

-ddump-realC:

same as what goes to the C compiler

-ddump-asm:

assembly language from the native-code generator

-dverbose-simpl and -dverbose-stg:

Show the output of the intermediate Core-to-Core and STG-to-STG passes, respectively. (Lots of output!) So: when we're really desperate:

% ghc -noC -O -ddump-simpl -dverbose-simpl -dcore-lint Foo.hs

-ddump-simpl-iterations:

Show the output of each iteration of the simplifier (each run of the simplifier has a maximum number of iterations, normally 4). Used when even -dverbose-simpl doesn't cut it.

-dppr-{user,debug}:

Debugging output is in one of several ``styles.'' Take the printing of types, for example. In the ``user'' style, the compiler's internal ideas about types are presented in Haskell source-level syntax, insofar as possible. In the ``debug'' style (which is the default for debugging output), the types are printed in with explicit foralls, and variables have their unique-id attached (so you can check for things that look the same but aren't).

-ddump-simpl-stats:

Dump statistics about how many of each kind of transformation too place. If you add -dppr-debug you get more detailed information.

-ddump-raw-asm:

Dump out the assembly-language stuff, before the ``mangler'' gets it.

-ddump-rn-trace:

Make the renamer be *real* chatty about what it is upto.

-dshow-rn-stats:

Print out summary of what kind of information the renamer had to bring in.

-dshow-unused-imports:

Have the renamer report what imports does not contribute.

Checking for consistency

-dcore-lint:

Turn on heavyweight intra-pass sanity-checking within GHC, at Core level. (It checks GHC's sanity, not yours.)

-dstg-lint:

Ditto for STG level.

-dusagesp-lint:

Turn on checks around UsageSP inference (-fusagesp). This verifies various simple properties of the results of the inference, and also warns if any identifier with a used-once annotation before the inference has a used-many annotation afterwards; this could indicate a non-worksafe transformation is being applied.

How to read Core syntax (from some -ddump-* flags)

Let's do this by commenting an example. It's from doing -ddump-ds on this code:

skip2 m = m : skip2 (m+2)

Before we jump in, a word about names of things. Within GHC, variables, type constructors, etc., are identified by their ``Uniques.'' These are of the form `letter' plus `number' (both loosely interpreted). The `letter' gives some idea of where the Unique came from; e.g., _ means ``built-in type variable''; t means ``from the typechecker''; s means ``from the simplifier''; and so on. The `number' is printed fairly compactly in a `base-62' format, which everyone hates except me (WDP).

Remember, everything has a ``Unique'' and it is usually printed out when debugging, in some form or another. So here we go...

Desugared:
Main.skip2{-r1L6-} :: _forall_ a$_4 =>{{Num a$_4}} -> a$_4 -> [a$_4]

--# `r1L6' is the Unique for Main.skip2;
--# `_4' is the Unique for the type-variable (template) `a'
--# `{{Num a$_4}}' is a dictionary argument

_NI_

--# `_NI_' means "no (pragmatic) information" yet; it will later
--# evolve into the GHC_PRAGMA info that goes into interface files.

Main.skip2{-r1L6-} =
    /\ _4 -> \ d.Num.t4Gt ->
        let {
          {- CoRec -}
          +.t4Hg :: _4 -> _4 -> _4
          _NI_
          +.t4Hg = (+{-r3JH-} _4) d.Num.t4Gt

          fromInt.t4GS :: Int{-2i-} -> _4
          _NI_
          fromInt.t4GS = (fromInt{-r3JX-} _4) d.Num.t4Gt

--# The `+' class method (Unique: r3JH) selects the addition code
--# from a `Num' dictionary (now an explicit lamba'd argument).
--# Because Core is 2nd-order lambda-calculus, type applications
--# and lambdas (/\) are explicit.  So `+' is first applied to a
--# type (`_4'), then to a dictionary, yielding the actual addition
--# function that we will use subsequently...

--# We play the exact same game with the (non-standard) class method
--# `fromInt'.  Unsurprisingly, the type `Int' is wired into the
--# compiler.

          lit.t4Hb :: _4
          _NI_
          lit.t4Hb =
              let {
                ds.d4Qz :: Int{-2i-}
                _NI_
                ds.d4Qz = I#! 2#
              } in  fromInt.t4GS ds.d4Qz

--# `I# 2#' is just the literal Int `2'; it reflects the fact that
--# GHC defines `data Int = I# Int#', where Int# is the primitive
--# unboxed type.  (see relevant info about unboxed types elsewhere...)

--# The `!' after `I#' indicates that this is a *saturated*
--# application of the `I#' data constructor (i.e., not partially
--# applied).

          skip2.t3Ja :: _4 -> [_4]
          _NI_
          skip2.t3Ja =
              \ m.r1H4 ->
                  let { ds.d4QQ :: [_4]
                        _NI_
                        ds.d4QQ =
                    let {
                      ds.d4QY :: _4
                      _NI_
                      ds.d4QY = +.t4Hg m.r1H4 lit.t4Hb
                    } in  skip2.t3Ja ds.d4QY
                  } in
                  :! _4 m.r1H4 ds.d4QQ

          {- end CoRec -}
        } in  skip2.t3Ja

(``It's just a simple functional language'' is an unregisterised trademark of Peyton Jones Enterprises, plc.)

Command line options in source files

Sometimes it is useful to make the connection between a source file and the command-line options it requires quite tight. For instance, if a (Glasgow) Haskell source file uses casms, the C back-end often needs to be told about which header files to include. Rather than maintaining the list of files the source depends on in a Makefile (using the -#include command-line option), it is possible to do this directly in the source file using the OPTIONS pragma :

{-# OPTIONS -#include "foo.h" #-}
module X where

...

OPTIONS pragmas are only looked for at the top of your source files, upto the first (non-literate,non-empty) line not containing OPTIONS. Multiple OPTIONS pragmas are recognised. Note that your command shell does not get to the source file options, they are just included literally in the array of command-line arguments the compiler driver maintains internally, so you'll be desperately disappointed if you try to glob etc. inside OPTIONS.

NOTE: the contents of OPTIONS are prepended to the command-line options, so you *do* have the ability to override OPTIONS settings via the command line.

It is not recommended to move all the contents of your Makefiles into your source files, but in some circumstances, the OPTIONS pragma is the Right Thing. (If you use -keep-hc-file-too and have OPTION flags in your module, the OPTIONS will get put into the generated .hc file).


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