{- (c) The GRASP/AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1993-1998 \section[Specialise]{Stamping out overloading, and (optionally) polymorphism} -} {-# LANGUAGE CPP #-} module Specialise ( specProgram, specUnfolding ) where #include "HsVersions.h" import Id import TcType hiding( substTy ) import Type hiding( substTy, extendTvSubstList ) import Module( Module, HasModule(..) ) import Coercion( Coercion ) import CoreMonad import qualified CoreSubst import CoreUnfold import VarSet import VarEnv import CoreSyn import Rules import CoreUtils ( exprIsTrivial, applyTypeToArgs, mkCast ) import CoreFVs ( exprFreeVars, exprsFreeVars, idFreeVars, exprsFreeIdsList ) import UniqSupply import Name import MkId ( voidArgId, voidPrimId ) import Maybes ( catMaybes, isJust ) import BasicTypes import HscTypes import Bag import DynFlags import Util import Outputable import FastString import State import UniqDFM import TrieMap #if __GLASGOW_HASKELL__ < 709 import Control.Applicative (Applicative(..)) #endif import Control.Monad #if __GLASGOW_HASKELL__ > 710 import qualified Control.Monad.Fail as MonadFail #endif {- ************************************************************************ * * \subsection[notes-Specialise]{Implementation notes [SLPJ, Aug 18 1993]} * * ************************************************************************ These notes describe how we implement specialisation to eliminate overloading. The specialisation pass works on Core syntax, complete with all the explicit dictionary application, abstraction and construction as added by the type checker. The existing type checker remains largely as it is. One important thought: the {\em types} passed to an overloaded function, and the {\em dictionaries} passed are mutually redundant. If the same function is applied to the same type(s) then it is sure to be applied to the same dictionary(s)---or rather to the same {\em values}. (The arguments might look different but they will evaluate to the same value.) Second important thought: we know that we can make progress by treating dictionary arguments as static and worth specialising on. So we can do without binding-time analysis, and instead specialise on dictionary arguments and no others. The basic idea ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Suppose we have let f = <f_rhs> in <body> and suppose f is overloaded. STEP 1: CALL-INSTANCE COLLECTION We traverse <body>, accumulating all applications of f to types and dictionaries. (Might there be partial applications, to just some of its types and dictionaries? In principle yes, but in practice the type checker only builds applications of f to all its types and dictionaries, so partial applications could only arise as a result of transformation, and even then I think it's unlikely. In any case, we simply don't accumulate such partial applications.) STEP 2: EQUIVALENCES So now we have a collection of calls to f: f t1 t2 d1 d2 f t3 t4 d3 d4 ... Notice that f may take several type arguments. To avoid ambiguity, we say that f is called at type t1/t2 and t3/t4. We take equivalence classes using equality of the *types* (ignoring the dictionary args, which as mentioned previously are redundant). STEP 3: SPECIALISATION For each equivalence class, choose a representative (f t1 t2 d1 d2), and create a local instance of f, defined thus: f@t1/t2 = <f_rhs> t1 t2 d1 d2 f_rhs presumably has some big lambdas and dictionary lambdas, so lots of simplification will now result. However we don't actually *do* that simplification. Rather, we leave it for the simplifier to do. If we *did* do it, though, we'd get more call instances from the specialised RHS. We can work out what they are by instantiating the call-instance set from f's RHS with the types t1, t2. Add this new id to f's IdInfo, to record that f has a specialised version. Before doing any of this, check that f's IdInfo doesn't already tell us about an existing instance of f at the required type/s. (This might happen if specialisation was applied more than once, or it might arise from user SPECIALIZE pragmas.) Recursion ~~~~~~~~~ Wait a minute! What if f is recursive? Then we can't just plug in its right-hand side, can we? But it's ok. The type checker *always* creates non-recursive definitions for overloaded recursive functions. For example: f x = f (x+x) -- Yes I know its silly becomes f a (d::Num a) = let p = +.sel a d in letrec fl (y::a) = fl (p y y) in fl We still have recusion for non-overloaded functions which we speciailise, but the recursive call should get specialised to the same recursive version. Polymorphism 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ All this is crystal clear when the function is applied to *constant types*; that is, types which have no type variables inside. But what if it is applied to non-constant types? Suppose we find a call of f at type t1/t2. There are two possibilities: (a) The free type variables of t1, t2 are in scope at the definition point of f. In this case there's no problem, we proceed just as before. A common example is as follows. Here's the Haskell: g y = let f x = x+x in f y + f y After typechecking we have g a (d::Num a) (y::a) = let f b (d'::Num b) (x::b) = +.sel b d' x x in +.sel a d (f a d y) (f a d y) Notice that the call to f is at type type "a"; a non-constant type. Both calls to f are at the same type, so we can specialise to give: g a (d::Num a) (y::a) = let f@a (x::a) = +.sel a d x x in +.sel a d (f@a y) (f@a y) (b) The other case is when the type variables in the instance types are *not* in scope at the definition point of f. The example we are working with above is a good case. There are two instances of (+.sel a d), but "a" is not in scope at the definition of +.sel. Can we do anything? Yes, we can "common them up", a sort of limited common sub-expression deal. This would give: g a (d::Num a) (y::a) = let +.sel@a = +.sel a d f@a (x::a) = +.sel@a x x in +.sel@a (f@a y) (f@a y) This can save work, and can't be spotted by the type checker, because the two instances of +.sel weren't originally at the same type. Further notes on (b) * There are quite a few variations here. For example, the defn of +.sel could be floated ouside the \y, to attempt to gain laziness. It certainly mustn't be floated outside the \d because the d has to be in scope too. * We don't want to inline f_rhs in this case, because that will duplicate code. Just commoning up the call is the point. * Nothing gets added to +.sel's IdInfo. * Don't bother unless the equivalence class has more than one item! Not clear whether this is all worth it. It is of course OK to simply discard call-instances when passing a big lambda. Polymorphism 2 -- Overloading ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider a function whose most general type is f :: forall a b. Ord a => [a] -> b -> b There is really no point in making a version of g at Int/Int and another at Int/Bool, because it's only instancing the type variable "a" which buys us any efficiency. Since g is completely polymorphic in b there ain't much point in making separate versions of g for the different b types. That suggests that we should identify which of g's type variables are constrained (like "a") and which are unconstrained (like "b"). Then when taking equivalence classes in STEP 2, we ignore the type args corresponding to unconstrained type variable. In STEP 3 we make polymorphic versions. Thus: f@t1/ = /\b -> <f_rhs> t1 b d1 d2 We do this. Dictionary floating ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider this f a (d::Num a) = let g = ... in ...(let d1::Ord a = Num.Ord.sel a d in g a d1)... Here, g is only called at one type, but the dictionary isn't in scope at the definition point for g. Usually the type checker would build a definition for d1 which enclosed g, but the transformation system might have moved d1's defn inward. Solution: float dictionary bindings outwards along with call instances. Consider f x = let g p q = p==q h r s = (r+s, g r s) in h x x Before specialisation, leaving out type abstractions we have f df x = let g :: Eq a => a -> a -> Bool g dg p q = == dg p q h :: Num a => a -> a -> (a, Bool) h dh r s = let deq = eqFromNum dh in (+ dh r s, g deq r s) in h df x x After specialising h we get a specialised version of h, like this: h' r s = let deq = eqFromNum df in (+ df r s, g deq r s) But we can't naively make an instance for g from this, because deq is not in scope at the defn of g. Instead, we have to float out the (new) defn of deq to widen its scope. Notice that this floating can't be done in advance -- it only shows up when specialisation is done. User SPECIALIZE pragmas ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Specialisation pragmas can be digested by the type checker, and implemented by adding extra definitions along with that of f, in the same way as before f@t1/t2 = <f_rhs> t1 t2 d1 d2 Indeed the pragmas *have* to be dealt with by the type checker, because only it knows how to build the dictionaries d1 and d2! For example g :: Ord a => [a] -> [a] {-# SPECIALIZE f :: [Tree Int] -> [Tree Int] #-} Here, the specialised version of g is an application of g's rhs to the Ord dictionary for (Tree Int), which only the type checker can conjure up. There might not even *be* one, if (Tree Int) is not an instance of Ord! (All the other specialision has suitable dictionaries to hand from actual calls.) Problem. The type checker doesn't have to hand a convenient <f_rhs>, because it is buried in a complex (as-yet-un-desugared) binding group. Maybe we should say f@t1/t2 = f* t1 t2 d1 d2 where f* is the Id f with an IdInfo which says "inline me regardless!". Indeed all the specialisation could be done in this way. That in turn means that the simplifier has to be prepared to inline absolutely any in-scope let-bound thing. Again, the pragma should permit polymorphism in unconstrained variables: h :: Ord a => [a] -> b -> b {-# SPECIALIZE h :: [Int] -> b -> b #-} We *insist* that all overloaded type variables are specialised to ground types, (and hence there can be no context inside a SPECIALIZE pragma). We *permit* unconstrained type variables to be specialised to - a ground type - or left as a polymorphic type variable but nothing in between. So {-# SPECIALIZE h :: [Int] -> [c] -> [c] #-} is *illegal*. (It can be handled, but it adds complication, and gains the programmer nothing.) SPECIALISING INSTANCE DECLARATIONS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider instance Foo a => Foo [a] where ... {-# SPECIALIZE instance Foo [Int] #-} The original instance decl creates a dictionary-function definition: dfun.Foo.List :: forall a. Foo a -> Foo [a] The SPECIALIZE pragma just makes a specialised copy, just as for ordinary function definitions: dfun.Foo.List@Int :: Foo [Int] dfun.Foo.List@Int = dfun.Foo.List Int dFooInt The information about what instance of the dfun exist gets added to the dfun's IdInfo in the same way as a user-defined function too. Automatic instance decl specialisation? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Can instance decls be specialised automatically? It's tricky. We could collect call-instance information for each dfun, but then when we specialised their bodies we'd get new call-instances for ordinary functions; and when we specialised their bodies, we might get new call-instances of the dfuns, and so on. This all arises because of the unrestricted mutual recursion between instance decls and value decls. Still, there's no actual problem; it just means that we may not do all the specialisation we could theoretically do. Furthermore, instance decls are usually exported and used non-locally, so we'll want to compile enough to get those specialisations done. Lastly, there's no such thing as a local instance decl, so we can survive solely by spitting out *usage* information, and then reading that back in as a pragma when next compiling the file. So for now, we only specialise instance decls in response to pragmas. SPITTING OUT USAGE INFORMATION ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To spit out usage information we need to traverse the code collecting call-instance information for all imported (non-prelude?) functions and data types. Then we equivalence-class it and spit it out. This is done at the top-level when all the call instances which escape must be for imported functions and data types. *** Not currently done *** Partial specialisation by pragmas ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ What about partial specialisation: k :: (Ord a, Eq b) => [a] -> b -> b -> [a] {-# SPECIALIZE k :: Eq b => [Int] -> b -> b -> [a] #-} or even {-# SPECIALIZE k :: Eq b => [Int] -> [b] -> [b] -> [a] #-} Seems quite reasonable. Similar things could be done with instance decls: instance (Foo a, Foo b) => Foo (a,b) where ... {-# SPECIALIZE instance Foo a => Foo (a,Int) #-} {-# SPECIALIZE instance Foo b => Foo (Int,b) #-} Ho hum. Things are complex enough without this. I pass. Requirements for the simplifer ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The simplifier has to be able to take advantage of the specialisation. * When the simplifier finds an application of a polymorphic f, it looks in f's IdInfo in case there is a suitable instance to call instead. This converts f t1 t2 d1 d2 ===> f_t1_t2 Note that the dictionaries get eaten up too! * Dictionary selection operations on constant dictionaries must be short-circuited: +.sel Int d ===> +Int The obvious way to do this is in the same way as other specialised calls: +.sel has inside it some IdInfo which tells that if it's applied to the type Int then it should eat a dictionary and transform to +Int. In short, dictionary selectors need IdInfo inside them for constant methods. * Exactly the same applies if a superclass dictionary is being extracted: Eq.sel Int d ===> dEqInt * Something similar applies to dictionary construction too. Suppose dfun.Eq.List is the function taking a dictionary for (Eq a) to one for (Eq [a]). Then we want dfun.Eq.List Int d ===> dEq.List_Int Where does the Eq [Int] dictionary come from? It is built in response to a SPECIALIZE pragma on the Eq [a] instance decl. In short, dfun Ids need IdInfo with a specialisation for each constant instance of their instance declaration. All this uses a single mechanism: the SpecEnv inside an Id What does the specialisation IdInfo look like? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The SpecEnv of an Id maps a list of types (the template) to an expression [Type] |-> Expr For example, if f has this RuleInfo: [Int, a] -> \d:Ord Int. f' a it means that we can replace the call f Int t ===> (\d. f' t) This chucks one dictionary away and proceeds with the specialised version of f, namely f'. What can't be done this way? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There is no way, post-typechecker, to get a dictionary for (say) Eq a from a dictionary for Eq [a]. So if we find ==.sel [t] d we can't transform to eqList (==.sel t d') where eqList :: (a->a->Bool) -> [a] -> [a] -> Bool Of course, we currently have no way to automatically derive eqList, nor to connect it to the Eq [a] instance decl, but you can imagine that it might somehow be possible. Taking advantage of this is permanently ruled out. Still, this is no great hardship, because we intend to eliminate overloading altogether anyway! A note about non-tyvar dictionaries ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Some Ids have types like forall a,b,c. Eq a -> Ord [a] -> tau This seems curious at first, because we usually only have dictionary args whose types are of the form (C a) where a is a type variable. But this doesn't hold for the functions arising from instance decls, which sometimes get arguments with types of form (C (T a)) for some type constructor T. Should we specialise wrt this compound-type dictionary? We used to say "no", saying: "This is a heuristic judgement, as indeed is the fact that we specialise wrt only dictionaries. We choose *not* to specialise wrt compound dictionaries because at the moment the only place they show up is in instance decls, where they are simply plugged into a returned dictionary. So nothing is gained by specialising wrt them." But it is simpler and more uniform to specialise wrt these dicts too; and in future GHC is likely to support full fledged type signatures like f :: Eq [(a,b)] => ... ************************************************************************ * * \subsubsection{The new specialiser} * * ************************************************************************ Our basic game plan is this. For let(rec) bound function f :: (C a, D c) => (a,b,c,d) -> Bool * Find any specialised calls of f, (f ts ds), where ts are the type arguments t1 .. t4, and ds are the dictionary arguments d1 .. d2. * Add a new definition for f1 (say): f1 = /\ b d -> (..body of f..) t1 b t3 d d1 d2 Note that we abstract over the unconstrained type arguments. * Add the mapping [t1,b,t3,d] |-> \d1 d2 -> f1 b d to the specialisations of f. This will be used by the simplifier to replace calls (f t1 t2 t3 t4) da db by (\d1 d1 -> f1 t2 t4) da db All the stuff about how many dictionaries to discard, and what types to apply the specialised function to, are handled by the fact that the SpecEnv contains a template for the result of the specialisation. We don't build *partial* specialisations for f. For example: f :: Eq a => a -> a -> Bool {-# SPECIALISE f :: (Eq b, Eq c) => (b,c) -> (b,c) -> Bool #-} Here, little is gained by making a specialised copy of f. There's a distinct danger that the specialised version would first build a dictionary for (Eq b, Eq c), and then select the (==) method from it! Even if it didn't, not a great deal is saved. We do, however, generate polymorphic, but not overloaded, specialisations: f :: Eq a => [a] -> b -> b -> b ... SPECIALISE f :: [Int] -> b -> b -> b ... Hence, the invariant is this: *** no specialised version is overloaded *** ************************************************************************ * * \subsubsection{The exported function} * * ************************************************************************ -} -- | Specialise calls to type-class overloaded functions occuring in a program. specProgram :: ModGuts -> CoreM ModGuts specProgram guts@(ModGuts { mg_module = this_mod , mg_rules = local_rules , mg_binds = binds }) = do { dflags <- getDynFlags -- Specialise the bindings of this module ; (binds', uds) <- runSpecM dflags this_mod (go binds) -- Specialise imported functions ; hpt_rules <- getRuleBase ; let rule_base = extendRuleBaseList hpt_rules local_rules ; (new_rules, spec_binds) <- specImports dflags this_mod top_env emptyVarSet [] rule_base (ud_calls uds) -- Don't forget to wrap the specialized bindings with bindings -- for the needed dictionaries. -- See Note [Wrap bindings returned by specImports] ; let spec_binds' = wrapDictBinds (ud_binds uds) spec_binds ; let final_binds | null spec_binds' = binds' | otherwise = Rec (flattenBinds spec_binds') : binds' -- Note [Glom the bindings if imported functions are specialised] ; return (guts { mg_binds = final_binds , mg_rules = new_rules ++ local_rules }) } where -- We need to start with a Subst that knows all the things -- that are in scope, so that the substitution engine doesn't -- accidentally re-use a unique that's already in use -- Easiest thing is to do it all at once, as if all the top-level -- decls were mutually recursive top_env = SE { se_subst = CoreSubst.mkEmptySubst $ mkInScopeSet $ mkVarSet $ bindersOfBinds binds , se_interesting = emptyVarSet } go [] = return ([], emptyUDs) go (bind:binds) = do (binds', uds) <- go binds (bind', uds') <- specBind top_env bind uds return (bind' ++ binds', uds') {- Note [Wrap bindings returned by specImports] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 'specImports' returns a set of specialized bindings. However, these are lacking necessary floated dictionary bindings, which are returned by UsageDetails(ud_binds). These dictionaries need to be brought into scope with 'wrapDictBinds' before the bindings returned by 'specImports' can be used. See, for instance, the 'specImports' call in 'specProgram'. Note [Disabling cross-module specialisation] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Since GHC 7.10 we have performed specialisation of INLINEABLE bindings living in modules outside of the current module. This can sometimes uncover user code which explodes in size when aggressively optimized. The -fno-cross-module-specialise option was introduced to allow users to being bitten by such instances to revert to the pre-7.10 behavior. See Trac #10491 -} -- | Specialise a set of calls to imported bindings specImports :: DynFlags -> Module -> SpecEnv -- Passed in so that all top-level Ids are in scope -> VarSet -- Don't specialise these ones -- See Note [Avoiding recursive specialisation] -> [Id] -- Stack of imported functions being specialised -> RuleBase -- Rules from this module and the home package -- (but not external packages, which can change) -> CallDetails -- Calls for imported things, and floating bindings -> CoreM ( [CoreRule] -- New rules , [CoreBind] ) -- Specialised bindings -- See Note [Wrapping bindings returned by specImports] specImports dflags this_mod top_env done callers rule_base cds -- See Note [Disabling cross-module specialisation] | not $ gopt Opt_CrossModuleSpecialise dflags = return ([], []) | otherwise = do { let import_calls = dVarEnvElts cds ; (rules, spec_binds) <- go rule_base import_calls ; return (rules, spec_binds) } where go :: RuleBase -> [CallInfoSet] -> CoreM ([CoreRule], [CoreBind]) go _ [] = return ([], []) go rb (cis@(CIS fn _calls_for_fn) : other_calls) = do { (rules1, spec_binds1) <- specImport dflags this_mod top_env done callers rb fn $ ciSetToList cis ; (rules2, spec_binds2) <- go (extendRuleBaseList rb rules1) other_calls ; return (rules1 ++ rules2, spec_binds1 ++ spec_binds2) } specImport :: DynFlags -> Module -> SpecEnv -- Passed in so that all top-level Ids are in scope -> VarSet -- Don't specialise these -- See Note [Avoiding recursive specialisation] -> [Id] -- Stack of imported functions being specialised -> RuleBase -- Rules from this module -> Id -> [CallInfo] -- Imported function and calls for it -> CoreM ( [CoreRule] -- New rules , [CoreBind] ) -- Specialised bindings specImport dflags this_mod top_env done callers rb fn calls_for_fn | fn `elemVarSet` done = return ([], []) -- No warning. This actually happens all the time -- when specialising a recursive function, because -- the RHS of the specialised function contains a recursive -- call to the original function | null calls_for_fn -- We filtered out all the calls in deleteCallsMentioning = return ([], []) | wantSpecImport dflags unfolding , Just rhs <- maybeUnfoldingTemplate unfolding = do { -- Get rules from the external package state -- We keep doing this in case we "page-fault in" -- more rules as we go along ; hsc_env <- getHscEnv ; eps <- liftIO $ hscEPS hsc_env ; vis_orphs <- getVisibleOrphanMods ; let full_rb = unionRuleBase rb (eps_rule_base eps) rules_for_fn = getRules (RuleEnv full_rb vis_orphs) fn ; (rules1, spec_pairs, uds) <- -- pprTrace "specImport1" (vcat [ppr fn, ppr calls_for_fn, ppr rhs]) $ runSpecM dflags this_mod $ specCalls (Just this_mod) top_env rules_for_fn calls_for_fn fn rhs ; let spec_binds1 = [NonRec b r | (b,r) <- spec_pairs] -- After the rules kick in we may get recursion, but -- we rely on a global GlomBinds to sort that out later -- See Note [Glom the bindings if imported functions are specialised] -- Now specialise any cascaded calls ; (rules2, spec_binds2) <- -- pprTrace "specImport 2" (ppr fn $$ ppr rules1 $$ ppr spec_binds1) $ specImports dflags this_mod top_env (extendVarSet done fn) (fn:callers) (extendRuleBaseList rb rules1) (ud_calls uds) -- Don't forget to wrap the specialized bindings with bindings -- for the needed dictionaries -- See Note [Wrap bindings returned by specImports] ; let final_binds = wrapDictBinds (ud_binds uds) (spec_binds2 ++ spec_binds1) ; return (rules2 ++ rules1, final_binds) } | warnMissingSpecs dflags callers = do { warnMsg (vcat [ hang (text "Could not specialise imported function" <+> quotes (ppr fn)) 2 (vcat [ text "when specialising" <+> quotes (ppr caller) | caller <- callers]) , ifPprDebug (text "calls:" <+> vcat (map (pprCallInfo fn) calls_for_fn)) , text "Probable fix: add INLINEABLE pragma on" <+> quotes (ppr fn) ]) ; return ([], []) } | otherwise = return ([], []) where unfolding = realIdUnfolding fn -- We want to see the unfolding even for loop breakers warnMissingSpecs :: DynFlags -> [Id] -> Bool -- See Note [Warning about missed specialisations] warnMissingSpecs dflags callers | wopt Opt_WarnAllMissedSpecs dflags = True | not (wopt Opt_WarnMissedSpecs dflags) = False | null callers = False | otherwise = all has_inline_prag callers where has_inline_prag id = isAnyInlinePragma (idInlinePragma id) wantSpecImport :: DynFlags -> Unfolding -> Bool -- See Note [Specialise imported INLINABLE things] wantSpecImport dflags unf = case unf of NoUnfolding -> False OtherCon {} -> False DFunUnfolding {} -> True CoreUnfolding { uf_src = src, uf_guidance = _guidance } | gopt Opt_SpecialiseAggressively dflags -> True | isStableSource src -> True -- Specialise even INLINE things; it hasn't inlined yet, -- so perhaps it never will. Moreover it may have calls -- inside it that we want to specialise | otherwise -> False -- Stable, not INLINE, hence INLINEABLE {- Note [Warning about missed specialisations] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Suppose * In module Lib, you carefully mark a function 'foo' INLINEABLE * Import Lib(foo) into another module M * Call 'foo' at some specialised type in M Then you jolly well expect it to be specialised in M. But what if 'foo' calls another fuction 'Lib.bar'. Then you'd like 'bar' to be specialised too. But if 'bar' is not marked INLINEABLE it may well not be specialised. The warning Opt_WarnMissedSpecs warns about this. It's more noisy to warning about a missed specialisation opportunity for /every/ overloaded imported function, but sometimes useful. That is what Opt_WarnAllMissedSpecs does. ToDo: warn about missed opportunities for local functions. Note [Specialise imported INLINABLE things] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ What imported functions do we specialise? The basic set is * DFuns and things with INLINABLE pragmas. but with -fspecialise-aggressively we add * Anything with an unfolding template Trac #8874 has a good example of why we want to auto-specialise DFuns. We have the -fspecialise-aggressively flag (usually off), because we risk lots of orphan modules from over-vigorous specialisation. However it's not a big deal: anything non-recursive with an unfolding-template will probably have been inlined already. Note [Glom the bindings if imported functions are specialised] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Suppose we have an imported, *recursive*, INLINABLE function f :: Eq a => a -> a f = /\a \d x. ...(f a d)... In the module being compiled we have g x = f (x::Int) Now we'll make a specialised function f_spec :: Int -> Int f_spec = \x -> ...(f Int dInt)... {-# RULE f Int _ = f_spec #-} g = \x. f Int dInt x Note that f_spec doesn't look recursive After rewriting with the RULE, we get f_spec = \x -> ...(f_spec)... BUT since f_spec was non-recursive before it'll *stay* non-recursive. The occurrence analyser never turns a NonRec into a Rec. So we must make sure that f_spec is recursive. Easiest thing is to make all the specialisations for imported bindings recursive. Note [Avoiding recursive specialisation] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When we specialise 'f' we may find new overloaded calls to 'g', 'h' in 'f's RHS. So we want to specialise g,h. But we don't want to specialise f any more! It's possible that f's RHS might have a recursive yet-more-specialised call, so we'd diverge in that case. And if the call is to the same type, one specialisation is enough. Avoiding this recursive specialisation loop is the reason for the 'done' VarSet passed to specImports and specImport. ************************************************************************ * * \subsubsection{@specExpr@: the main function} * * ************************************************************************ -} data SpecEnv = SE { se_subst :: CoreSubst.Subst -- We carry a substitution down: -- a) we must clone any binding that might float outwards, -- to avoid name clashes -- b) we carry a type substitution to use when analysing -- the RHS of specialised bindings (no type-let!) , se_interesting :: VarSet -- Dict Ids that we know something about -- and hence may be worth specialising against -- See Note [Interesting dictionary arguments] } specVar :: SpecEnv -> Id -> CoreExpr specVar env v = CoreSubst.lookupIdSubst (text "specVar") (se_subst env) v specExpr :: SpecEnv -> CoreExpr -> SpecM (CoreExpr, UsageDetails) ---------------- First the easy cases -------------------- specExpr env (Type ty) = return (Type (substTy env ty), emptyUDs) specExpr env (Coercion co) = return (Coercion (substCo env co), emptyUDs) specExpr env (Var v) = return (specVar env v, emptyUDs) specExpr _ (Lit lit) = return (Lit lit, emptyUDs) specExpr env (Cast e co) = do { (e', uds) <- specExpr env e ; return ((mkCast e' (substCo env co)), uds) } specExpr env (Tick tickish body) = do { (body', uds) <- specExpr env body ; return (Tick (specTickish env tickish) body', uds) } ---------------- Applications might generate a call instance -------------------- specExpr env expr@(App {}) = go expr [] where go (App fun arg) args = do (arg', uds_arg) <- specExpr env arg (fun', uds_app) <- go fun (arg':args) return (App fun' arg', uds_arg `plusUDs` uds_app) go (Var f) args = case specVar env f of Var f' -> return (Var f', mkCallUDs env f' args) e' -> return (e', emptyUDs) -- I don't expect this! go other _ = specExpr env other ---------------- Lambda/case require dumping of usage details -------------------- specExpr env e@(Lam _ _) = do (body', uds) <- specExpr env' body let (free_uds, dumped_dbs) = dumpUDs bndrs' uds return (mkLams bndrs' (wrapDictBindsE dumped_dbs body'), free_uds) where (bndrs, body) = collectBinders e (env', bndrs') = substBndrs env bndrs -- More efficient to collect a group of binders together all at once -- and we don't want to split a lambda group with dumped bindings specExpr env (Case scrut case_bndr ty alts) = do { (scrut', scrut_uds) <- specExpr env scrut ; (scrut'', case_bndr', alts', alts_uds) <- specCase env scrut' case_bndr alts ; return (Case scrut'' case_bndr' (substTy env ty) alts' , scrut_uds `plusUDs` alts_uds) } ---------------- Finally, let is the interesting case -------------------- specExpr env (Let bind body) = do { -- Clone binders (rhs_env, body_env, bind') <- cloneBindSM env bind -- Deal with the body ; (body', body_uds) <- specExpr body_env body -- Deal with the bindings ; (binds', uds) <- specBind rhs_env bind' body_uds -- All done ; return (foldr Let body' binds', uds) } specTickish :: SpecEnv -> Tickish Id -> Tickish Id specTickish env (Breakpoint ix ids) = Breakpoint ix [ id' | id <- ids, Var id' <- [specVar env id]] -- drop vars from the list if they have a non-variable substitution. -- should never happen, but it's harmless to drop them anyway. specTickish _ other_tickish = other_tickish specCase :: SpecEnv -> CoreExpr -- Scrutinee, already done -> Id -> [CoreAlt] -> SpecM ( CoreExpr -- New scrutinee , Id , [CoreAlt] , UsageDetails) specCase env scrut' case_bndr [(con, args, rhs)] | isDictId case_bndr -- See Note [Floating dictionaries out of cases] , interestingDict env scrut' , not (isDeadBinder case_bndr && null sc_args') = do { (case_bndr_flt : sc_args_flt) <- mapM clone_me (case_bndr' : sc_args') ; let sc_rhss = [ Case (Var case_bndr_flt) case_bndr' (idType sc_arg') [(con, args', Var sc_arg')] | sc_arg' <- sc_args' ] -- Extend the substitution for RHS to map the *original* binders -- to their floated verions. mb_sc_flts :: [Maybe DictId] mb_sc_flts = map (lookupVarEnv clone_env) args' clone_env = zipVarEnv sc_args' sc_args_flt subst_prs = (case_bndr, Var case_bndr_flt) : [ (arg, Var sc_flt) | (arg, Just sc_flt) <- args `zip` mb_sc_flts ] env_rhs' = env_rhs { se_subst = CoreSubst.extendIdSubstList (se_subst env_rhs) subst_prs , se_interesting = se_interesting env_rhs `extendVarSetList` (case_bndr_flt : sc_args_flt) } ; (rhs', rhs_uds) <- specExpr env_rhs' rhs ; let scrut_bind = mkDB (NonRec case_bndr_flt scrut') case_bndr_set = unitVarSet case_bndr_flt sc_binds = [(NonRec sc_arg_flt sc_rhs, case_bndr_set) | (sc_arg_flt, sc_rhs) <- sc_args_flt `zip` sc_rhss ] flt_binds = scrut_bind : sc_binds (free_uds, dumped_dbs) = dumpUDs (case_bndr':args') rhs_uds all_uds = flt_binds `addDictBinds` free_uds alt' = (con, args', wrapDictBindsE dumped_dbs rhs') ; return (Var case_bndr_flt, case_bndr', [alt'], all_uds) } where (env_rhs, (case_bndr':args')) = substBndrs env (case_bndr:args) sc_args' = filter is_flt_sc_arg args' clone_me bndr = do { uniq <- getUniqueM ; return (mkUserLocalOrCoVar occ uniq ty loc) } where name = idName bndr ty = idType bndr occ = nameOccName name loc = getSrcSpan name arg_set = mkVarSet args' is_flt_sc_arg var = isId var && not (isDeadBinder var) && isDictTy var_ty && not (tyCoVarsOfType var_ty `intersectsVarSet` arg_set) where var_ty = idType var specCase env scrut case_bndr alts = do { (alts', uds_alts) <- mapAndCombineSM spec_alt alts ; return (scrut, case_bndr', alts', uds_alts) } where (env_alt, case_bndr') = substBndr env case_bndr spec_alt (con, args, rhs) = do (rhs', uds) <- specExpr env_rhs rhs let (free_uds, dumped_dbs) = dumpUDs (case_bndr' : args') uds return ((con, args', wrapDictBindsE dumped_dbs rhs'), free_uds) where (env_rhs, args') = substBndrs env_alt args {- Note [Floating dictionaries out of cases] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider g = \d. case d of { MkD sc ... -> ...(f sc)... } Naively we can't float d2's binding out of the case expression, because 'sc' is bound by the case, and that in turn means we can't specialise f, which seems a pity. So we invert the case, by floating out a binding for 'sc_flt' thus: sc_flt = case d of { MkD sc ... -> sc } Now we can float the call instance for 'f'. Indeed this is just what'll happen if 'sc' was originally bound with a let binding, but case is more efficient, and necessary with equalities. So it's good to work with both. You might think that this won't make any difference, because the call instance will only get nuked by the \d. BUT if 'g' itself is specialised, then transitively we should be able to specialise f. In general, given case e of cb { MkD sc ... -> ...(f sc)... } we transform to let cb_flt = e sc_flt = case cb_flt of { MkD sc ... -> sc } in case cb_flt of bg { MkD sc ... -> ....(f sc_flt)... } The "_flt" things are the floated binds; we use the current substitution to substitute sc -> sc_flt in the RHS ************************************************************************ * * Dealing with a binding * * ************************************************************************ -} specBind :: SpecEnv -- Use this for RHSs -> CoreBind -> UsageDetails -- Info on how the scope of the binding -> SpecM ([CoreBind], -- New bindings UsageDetails) -- And info to pass upstream -- Returned UsageDetails: -- No calls for binders of this bind specBind rhs_env (NonRec fn rhs) body_uds = do { (rhs', rhs_uds) <- specExpr rhs_env rhs ; (fn', spec_defns, body_uds1) <- specDefn rhs_env body_uds fn rhs ; let pairs = spec_defns ++ [(fn', rhs')] -- fn' mentions the spec_defns in its rules, -- so put the latter first combined_uds = body_uds1 `plusUDs` rhs_uds -- This way round a call in rhs_uds of a function f -- at type T will override a call of f at T in body_uds1; and -- that is good because it'll tend to keep "earlier" calls -- See Note [Specialisation of dictionary functions] (free_uds, dump_dbs, float_all) = dumpBindUDs [fn] combined_uds -- See Note [From non-recursive to recursive] final_binds :: [DictBind] final_binds | isEmptyBag dump_dbs = [mkDB $ NonRec b r | (b,r) <- pairs] | otherwise = [flattenDictBinds dump_dbs pairs] ; if float_all then -- Rather than discard the calls mentioning the bound variables -- we float this binding along with the others return ([], free_uds `snocDictBinds` final_binds) else -- No call in final_uds mentions bound variables, -- so we can just leave the binding here return (map fst final_binds, free_uds) } specBind rhs_env (Rec pairs) body_uds -- Note [Specialising a recursive group] = do { let (bndrs,rhss) = unzip pairs ; (rhss', rhs_uds) <- mapAndCombineSM (specExpr rhs_env) rhss ; let scope_uds = body_uds `plusUDs` rhs_uds -- Includes binds and calls arising from rhss ; (bndrs1, spec_defns1, uds1) <- specDefns rhs_env scope_uds pairs ; (bndrs3, spec_defns3, uds3) <- if null spec_defns1 -- Common case: no specialisation then return (bndrs1, [], uds1) else do { -- Specialisation occurred; do it again (bndrs2, spec_defns2, uds2) <- specDefns rhs_env uds1 (bndrs1 `zip` rhss) ; return (bndrs2, spec_defns2 ++ spec_defns1, uds2) } ; let (final_uds, dumped_dbs, float_all) = dumpBindUDs bndrs uds3 bind = flattenDictBinds dumped_dbs (spec_defns3 ++ zip bndrs3 rhss') ; if float_all then return ([], final_uds `snocDictBind` bind) else return ([fst bind], final_uds) } --------------------------- specDefns :: SpecEnv -> UsageDetails -- Info on how it is used in its scope -> [(Id,CoreExpr)] -- The things being bound and their un-processed RHS -> SpecM ([Id], -- Original Ids with RULES added [(Id,CoreExpr)], -- Extra, specialised bindings UsageDetails) -- Stuff to fling upwards from the specialised versions -- Specialise a list of bindings (the contents of a Rec), but flowing usages -- upwards binding by binding. Example: { f = ...g ...; g = ...f .... } -- Then if the input CallDetails has a specialised call for 'g', whose specialisation -- in turn generates a specialised call for 'f', we catch that in this one sweep. -- But not vice versa (it's a fixpoint problem). specDefns _env uds [] = return ([], [], uds) specDefns env uds ((bndr,rhs):pairs) = do { (bndrs1, spec_defns1, uds1) <- specDefns env uds pairs ; (bndr1, spec_defns2, uds2) <- specDefn env uds1 bndr rhs ; return (bndr1 : bndrs1, spec_defns1 ++ spec_defns2, uds2) } --------------------------- specDefn :: SpecEnv -> UsageDetails -- Info on how it is used in its scope -> Id -> CoreExpr -- The thing being bound and its un-processed RHS -> SpecM (Id, -- Original Id with added RULES [(Id,CoreExpr)], -- Extra, specialised bindings UsageDetails) -- Stuff to fling upwards from the specialised versions specDefn env body_uds fn rhs = do { let (body_uds_without_me, calls_for_me) = callsForMe fn body_uds rules_for_me = idCoreRules fn ; (rules, spec_defns, spec_uds) <- specCalls Nothing env rules_for_me calls_for_me fn rhs ; return ( fn `addIdSpecialisations` rules , spec_defns , body_uds_without_me `plusUDs` spec_uds) } -- It's important that the `plusUDs` is this way -- round, because body_uds_without_me may bind -- dictionaries that are used in calls_for_me passed -- to specDefn. So the dictionary bindings in -- spec_uds may mention dictionaries bound in -- body_uds_without_me --------------------------- specCalls :: Maybe Module -- Just this_mod => specialising imported fn -- Nothing => specialising local fn -> SpecEnv -> [CoreRule] -- Existing RULES for the fn -> [CallInfo] -> Id -> CoreExpr -> SpecM ([CoreRule], -- New RULES for the fn [(Id,CoreExpr)], -- Extra, specialised bindings UsageDetails) -- New usage details from the specialised RHSs -- This function checks existing rules, and does not create -- duplicate ones. So the caller does not need to do this filtering. -- See 'already_covered' specCalls mb_mod env rules_for_me calls_for_me fn rhs -- The first case is the interesting one | rhs_tyvars `lengthIs` n_tyvars -- Rhs of fn's defn has right number of big lambdas && rhs_ids `lengthAtLeast` n_dicts -- and enough dict args && notNull calls_for_me -- And there are some calls to specialise && not (isNeverActive (idInlineActivation fn)) -- Don't specialise NOINLINE things -- See Note [Auto-specialisation and RULES] -- && not (certainlyWillInline (idUnfolding fn)) -- And it's not small -- See Note [Inline specialisation] for why we do not -- switch off specialisation for inline functions = -- pprTrace "specDefn: some" (ppr fn $$ ppr calls_for_me $$ ppr rules_for_me) $ do { stuff <- mapM spec_call calls_for_me ; let (spec_defns, spec_uds, spec_rules) = unzip3 (catMaybes stuff) ; return (spec_rules, spec_defns, plusUDList spec_uds) } | otherwise -- No calls or RHS doesn't fit our preconceptions = WARN( not (exprIsTrivial rhs) && notNull calls_for_me, text "Missed specialisation opportunity for" <+> ppr fn $$ _trace_doc ) -- Note [Specialisation shape] -- pprTrace "specDefn: none" (ppr fn <+> ppr calls_for_me) $ return ([], [], emptyUDs) where _trace_doc = sep [ ppr rhs_tyvars, ppr n_tyvars , ppr rhs_ids, ppr n_dicts , ppr (idInlineActivation fn) ] fn_type = idType fn fn_arity = idArity fn fn_unf = realIdUnfolding fn -- Ignore loop-breaker-ness here (tyvars, theta, _) = tcSplitSigmaTy fn_type n_tyvars = length tyvars n_dicts = length theta inl_prag = idInlinePragma fn inl_act = inlinePragmaActivation inl_prag is_local = isLocalId fn -- Figure out whether the function has an INLINE pragma -- See Note [Inline specialisations] (rhs_tyvars, rhs_ids, rhs_body) = collectTyAndValBinders rhs rhs_dict_ids = take n_dicts rhs_ids body = mkLams (drop n_dicts rhs_ids) rhs_body -- Glue back on the non-dict lambdas already_covered :: DynFlags -> [CoreExpr] -> Bool already_covered dflags args -- Note [Specialisations already covered] = isJust (lookupRule dflags (CoreSubst.substInScope (se_subst env), realIdUnfolding) (const True) fn args rules_for_me) mk_ty_args :: [Maybe Type] -> [TyVar] -> [CoreExpr] mk_ty_args [] poly_tvs = ASSERT( null poly_tvs ) [] mk_ty_args (Nothing : call_ts) (poly_tv : poly_tvs) = Type (mkTyVarTy poly_tv) : mk_ty_args call_ts poly_tvs mk_ty_args (Just ty : call_ts) poly_tvs = Type ty : mk_ty_args call_ts poly_tvs mk_ty_args (Nothing : _) [] = panic "mk_ty_args" ---------------------------------------------------------- -- Specialise to one particular call pattern spec_call :: CallInfo -- Call instance -> SpecM (Maybe ((Id,CoreExpr), -- Specialised definition UsageDetails, -- Usage details from specialised body CoreRule)) -- Info for the Id's SpecEnv spec_call _call_info@(CallKey call_ts, (call_ds, _)) = ASSERT( call_ts `lengthIs` n_tyvars && call_ds `lengthIs` n_dicts ) -- Suppose f's defn is f = /\ a b c -> \ d1 d2 -> rhs -- Suppose the call is for f [Just t1, Nothing, Just t3] [dx1, dx2] -- Construct the new binding -- f1 = SUBST[a->t1,c->t3, d1->d1', d2->d2'] (/\ b -> rhs) -- PLUS the rule -- RULE "SPEC f" forall b d1' d2'. f b d1' d2' = f1 b -- In the rule, d1' and d2' are just wildcards, not used in the RHS -- PLUS the usage-details -- { d1' = dx1; d2' = dx2 } -- where d1', d2' are cloned versions of d1,d2, with the type substitution -- applied. These auxiliary bindings just avoid duplication of dx1, dx2 -- -- Note that the substitution is applied to the whole thing. -- This is convenient, but just slightly fragile. Notably: -- * There had better be no name clashes in a/b/c do { let -- poly_tyvars = [b] in the example above -- spec_tyvars = [a,c] -- ty_args = [t1,b,t3] spec_tv_binds = [(tv,ty) | (tv, Just ty) <- rhs_tyvars `zip` call_ts] env1 = extendTvSubstList env spec_tv_binds (rhs_env, poly_tyvars) = substBndrs env1 [tv | (tv, Nothing) <- rhs_tyvars `zip` call_ts] -- Clone rhs_dicts, including instantiating their types ; inst_dict_ids <- mapM (newDictBndr rhs_env) rhs_dict_ids ; let (rhs_env2, dx_binds, spec_dict_args) = bindAuxiliaryDicts rhs_env rhs_dict_ids call_ds inst_dict_ids ty_args = mk_ty_args call_ts poly_tyvars ev_args = map varToCoreExpr inst_dict_ids -- ev_args, ev_bndrs: ev_bndrs = exprsFreeIdsList ev_args -- See Note [Evidence foralls] rule_args = ty_args ++ ev_args rule_bndrs = poly_tyvars ++ ev_bndrs ; dflags <- getDynFlags ; if already_covered dflags rule_args then return Nothing else -- pprTrace "spec_call" (vcat [ ppr _call_info, ppr fn, ppr rhs_dict_ids -- , text "rhs_env2" <+> ppr (se_subst rhs_env2) -- , ppr dx_binds ]) $ do { -- Figure out the type of the specialised function let body_ty = applyTypeToArgs rhs fn_type rule_args (lam_args, app_args) -- Add a dummy argument if body_ty is unlifted | isUnliftedType body_ty -- C.f. WwLib.mkWorkerArgs = (poly_tyvars ++ [voidArgId], poly_tyvars ++ [voidPrimId]) | otherwise = (poly_tyvars, poly_tyvars) spec_id_ty = mkPiTypes lam_args body_ty ; spec_f <- newSpecIdSM fn spec_id_ty ; (spec_rhs, rhs_uds) <- specExpr rhs_env2 (mkLams lam_args body) ; this_mod <- getModule ; let -- The rule to put in the function's specialisation is: -- forall b, d1',d2'. f t1 b t3 d1' d2' = f1 b herald = case mb_mod of Nothing -- Specialising local fn -> text "SPEC" Just this_mod -- Specialising imoprted fn -> text "SPEC/" <> ppr this_mod rule_name = mkFastString $ showSDocForUser dflags neverQualify $ herald <+> ppr fn <+> hsep (map ppr_call_key_ty call_ts) -- This name ends up in interface files, so use showSDocForUser, -- otherwise uniques end up there, making builds -- less deterministic (See #4012 comment:61 ff) spec_env_rule = mkRule this_mod True {- Auto generated -} is_local rule_name inl_act -- Note [Auto-specialisation and RULES] (idName fn) rule_bndrs rule_args (mkVarApps (Var spec_f) app_args) -- Add the { d1' = dx1; d2' = dx2 } usage stuff final_uds = foldr consDictBind rhs_uds dx_binds -------------------------------------- -- Add a suitable unfolding if the spec_inl_prag says so -- See Note [Inline specialisations] (spec_inl_prag, spec_unf) | not is_local && isStrongLoopBreaker (idOccInfo fn) = (neverInlinePragma, noUnfolding) -- See Note [Specialising imported functions] in OccurAnal | InlinePragma { inl_inline = Inlinable } <- inl_prag = (inl_prag { inl_inline = EmptyInlineSpec }, noUnfolding) | otherwise = (inl_prag, specUnfolding dflags spec_unf_subst poly_tyvars spec_unf_args fn_unf) spec_unf_args = ty_args ++ spec_dict_args spec_unf_subst = CoreSubst.setInScope (se_subst env) (CoreSubst.substInScope (se_subst rhs_env2)) -- Extend the in-scope set to satisfy the precondition of -- specUnfolding, namely that in-scope(unf_subst) includes -- the free vars of spec_unf_args. The in-scope set of rhs_env2 -- is just the ticket; but the actual substitution we want is -- the same old one from 'env' -------------------------------------- -- Adding arity information just propagates it a bit faster -- See Note [Arity decrease] in Simplify -- Copy InlinePragma information from the parent Id. -- So if f has INLINE[1] so does spec_f spec_f_w_arity = spec_f `setIdArity` max 0 (fn_arity - n_dicts) `setInlinePragma` spec_inl_prag `setIdUnfolding` spec_unf ; return (Just ((spec_f_w_arity, spec_rhs), final_uds, spec_env_rule)) } } {- Note [Evidence foralls] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Suppose (Trac #12212) that we are specialising f :: forall a b. (Num a, F a ~ F b) => blah with a=b=Int. Then the RULE will be something like RULE forall (d:Num Int) (g :: F Int ~ F Int). f Int Int d g = f_spec But both varToCoreExpr (when constructing the LHS args), and the simplifier (when simplifying the LHS args), will transform to RULE forall (d:Num Int) (g :: F Int ~ F Int). f Int Int d <F Int> = f_spec by replacing g with Refl. So now 'g' is unbound, which results in a later crash. So we use Refl right off the bat, and do not forall-quantify 'g': * varToCoreExpr generates a Refl * exprsFreeIdsList returns the Ids bound by the args, which won't include g You might wonder if this will match as often, but the simplifer replaces complicated Refl coercions with Refl pretty aggressively. Note [Orphans and auto-generated rules] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When we specialise an INLINEABLE function, or when we have -fspecialise-aggressively, we auto-generate RULES that are orphans. We don't want to warn about these, or we'd generate a lot of warnings. Thus, we only warn about user-specified orphan rules. Indeed, we don't even treat the module as an orphan module if it has auto-generated *rule* orphans. Orphan modules are read every time we compile, so they are pretty obtrusive and slow down every compilation, even non-optimised ones. (Reason: for type class instances it's a type correctness issue.) But specialisation rules are strictly for *optimisation* only so it's fine not to read the interface. What this means is that a SPEC rules from auto-specialisation in module M will be used in other modules only if M.hi has been read for some other reason, which is actually pretty likely. -} bindAuxiliaryDicts :: SpecEnv -> [DictId] -> [CoreExpr] -- Original dict bndrs, and the witnessing expressions -> [DictId] -- A cloned dict-id for each dict arg -> (SpecEnv, -- Substitute for all orig_dicts [DictBind], -- Auxiliary dict bindings [CoreExpr]) -- Witnessing expressions (all trivial) -- Bind any dictionary arguments to fresh names, to preserve sharing bindAuxiliaryDicts env@(SE { se_subst = subst, se_interesting = interesting }) orig_dict_ids call_ds inst_dict_ids = (env', dx_binds, spec_dict_args) where (dx_binds, spec_dict_args) = go call_ds inst_dict_ids env' = env { se_subst = subst `CoreSubst.extendSubstList` (orig_dict_ids `zip` spec_dict_args) `CoreSubst.extendInScopeList` dx_ids , se_interesting = interesting `unionVarSet` interesting_dicts } dx_ids = [dx_id | (NonRec dx_id _, _) <- dx_binds] interesting_dicts = mkVarSet [ dx_id | (NonRec dx_id dx, _) <- dx_binds , interestingDict env dx ] -- See Note [Make the new dictionaries interesting] go :: [CoreExpr] -> [CoreBndr] -> ([DictBind], [CoreExpr]) go [] _ = ([], []) go (dx:dxs) (dx_id:dx_ids) | exprIsTrivial dx = (dx_binds, dx : args) | otherwise = (mkDB (NonRec dx_id dx) : dx_binds, Var dx_id : args) where (dx_binds, args) = go dxs dx_ids -- In the first case extend the substitution but not bindings; -- in the latter extend the bindings but not the substitution. -- For the former, note that we bind the *original* dict in the substitution, -- overriding any d->dx_id binding put there by substBndrs go _ _ = pprPanic "bindAuxiliaryDicts" (ppr orig_dict_ids $$ ppr call_ds $$ ppr inst_dict_ids) {- Note [Make the new dictionaries interesting] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Important! We're going to substitute dx_id1 for d and we want it to look "interesting", else we won't gather *any* consequential calls. E.g. f d = ...g d.... If we specialise f for a call (f (dfun dNumInt)), we'll get a consequent call (g d') with an auxiliary definition d' = df dNumInt We want that consequent call to look interesting Note [From non-recursive to recursive] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Even in the non-recursive case, if any dict-binds depend on 'fn' we might have built a recursive knot f a d x = <blah> MkUD { ud_binds = d7 = MkD ..f.. , ud_calls = ...(f T d7)... } The we generate Rec { fs x = <blah>[T/a, d7/d] f a d x = <blah> RULE f T _ = fs d7 = ...f... } Here the recursion is only through the RULE. Note [Specialisation of dictionary functions] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Here is a nasty example that bit us badly: see Trac #3591 class Eq a => C a instance Eq [a] => C [a] --------------- dfun :: Eq [a] -> C [a] dfun a d = MkD a d (meth d) d4 :: Eq [T] = <blah> d2 :: C [T] = dfun T d4 d1 :: Eq [T] = $p1 d2 d3 :: C [T] = dfun T d1 None of these definitions is recursive. What happened was that we generated a specialisation: RULE forall d. dfun T d = dT :: C [T] dT = (MkD a d (meth d)) [T/a, d1/d] = MkD T d1 (meth d1) But now we use the RULE on the RHS of d2, to get d2 = dT = MkD d1 (meth d1) d1 = $p1 d2 and now d1 is bottom! The problem is that when specialising 'dfun' we should first dump "below" the binding all floated dictionary bindings that mention 'dfun' itself. So d2 and d3 (and hence d1) must be placed below 'dfun', and thus unavailable to it when specialising 'dfun'. That in turn means that the call (dfun T d1) must be discarded. On the other hand, the call (dfun T d4) is fine, assuming d4 doesn't mention dfun. But look at this: class C a where { foo,bar :: [a] -> [a] } instance C Int where foo x = r_bar x bar xs = reverse xs r_bar :: C a => [a] -> [a] r_bar xs = bar (xs ++ xs) That translates to: r_bar a (c::C a) (xs::[a]) = bar a d (xs ++ xs) Rec { $fCInt :: C Int = MkC foo_help reverse foo_help (xs::[Int]) = r_bar Int $fCInt xs } The call (r_bar $fCInt) mentions $fCInt, which mentions foo_help, which mentions r_bar But we DO want to specialise r_bar at Int: Rec { $fCInt :: C Int = MkC foo_help reverse foo_help (xs::[Int]) = r_bar Int $fCInt xs r_bar a (c::C a) (xs::[a]) = bar a d (xs ++ xs) RULE r_bar Int _ = r_bar_Int r_bar_Int xs = bar Int $fCInt (xs ++ xs) } Note that, because of its RULE, r_bar joins the recursive group. (In this case it'll unravel a short moment later.) Conclusion: we catch the nasty case using filter_dfuns in callsForMe. To be honest I'm not 100% certain that this is 100% right, but it works. Sigh. Note [Specialising a recursive group] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider let rec { f x = ...g x'... ; g y = ...f y'.... } in f 'a' Here we specialise 'f' at Char; but that is very likely to lead to a specialisation of 'g' at Char. We must do the latter, else the whole point of specialisation is lost. But we do not want to keep iterating to a fixpoint, because in the presence of polymorphic recursion we might generate an infinite number of specialisations. So we use the following heuristic: * Arrange the rec block in dependency order, so far as possible (the occurrence analyser already does this) * Specialise it much like a sequence of lets * Then go through the block a second time, feeding call-info from the RHSs back in the bottom, as it were In effect, the ordering maxmimises the effectiveness of each sweep, and we do just two sweeps. This should catch almost every case of monomorphic recursion -- the exception could be a very knotted-up recursion with multiple cycles tied up together. This plan is implemented in the Rec case of specBindItself. Note [Specialisations already covered] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We obviously don't want to generate two specialisations for the same argument pattern. There are two wrinkles 1. We do the already-covered test in specDefn, not when we generate the CallInfo in mkCallUDs. We used to test in the latter place, but we now iterate the specialiser somewhat, and the Id at the call site might therefore not have all the RULES that we can see in specDefn 2. What about two specialisations where the second is an *instance* of the first? If the more specific one shows up first, we'll generate specialisations for both. If the *less* specific one shows up first, we *don't* currently generate a specialisation for the more specific one. (See the call to lookupRule in already_covered.) Reasons: (a) lookupRule doesn't say which matches are exact (bad reason) (b) if the earlier specialisation is user-provided, it's far from clear that we should auto-specialise further Note [Auto-specialisation and RULES] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider: g :: Num a => a -> a g = ... f :: (Int -> Int) -> Int f w = ... {-# RULE f g = 0 #-} Suppose that auto-specialisation makes a specialised version of g::Int->Int That version won't appear in the LHS of the RULE for f. So if the specialisation rule fires too early, the rule for f may never fire. It might be possible to add new rules, to "complete" the rewrite system. Thus when adding RULE forall d. g Int d = g_spec also add RULE f g_spec = 0 But that's a bit complicated. For now we ask the programmer's help, by *copying the INLINE activation pragma* to the auto-specialised rule. So if g says {-# NOINLINE[2] g #-}, then the auto-spec rule will also not be active until phase 2. And that's what programmers should jolly well do anyway, even aside from specialisation, to ensure that g doesn't inline too early. This in turn means that the RULE would never fire for a NOINLINE thing so not much point in generating a specialisation at all. Note [Specialisation shape] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We only specialise a function if it has visible top-level lambdas corresponding to its overloading. E.g. if f :: forall a. Eq a => .... then its body must look like f = /\a. \d. ... Reason: when specialising the body for a call (f ty dexp), we want to substitute dexp for d, and pick up specialised calls in the body of f. This doesn't always work. One example I came across was this: newtype Gen a = MkGen{ unGen :: Int -> a } choose :: Eq a => a -> Gen a choose n = MkGen (\r -> n) oneof = choose (1::Int) It's a silly exapmle, but we get choose = /\a. g `cast` co where choose doesn't have any dict arguments. Thus far I have not tried to fix this (wait till there's a real example). Mind you, then 'choose' will be inlined (since RHS is trivial) so it doesn't matter. This comes up with single-method classes class C a where { op :: a -> a } instance C a => C [a] where .... ==> $fCList :: C a => C [a] $fCList = $copList |> (...coercion>...) ....(uses of $fCList at particular types)... So we suppress the WARN if the rhs is trivial. Note [Inline specialisations] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Here is what we do with the InlinePragma of the original function * Activation/RuleMatchInfo: both transferred to the specialised function * InlineSpec: (a) An INLINE pragma is transferred (b) An INLINABLE pragma is *not* transferred Why (a): transfer INLINE pragmas? The point of INLINE was precisely to specialise the function at its call site, and arguably that's not so important for the specialised copies. BUT *pragma-directed* specialisation now takes place in the typechecker/desugarer, with manually specified INLINEs. The specialisation here is automatic. It'd be very odd if a function marked INLINE was specialised (because of some local use), and then forever after (including importing modules) the specialised version wasn't INLINEd. After all, the programmer said INLINE! You might wonder why we specialise INLINE functions at all. After all they should be inlined, right? Two reasons: * Even INLINE functions are sometimes not inlined, when they aren't applied to interesting arguments. But perhaps the type arguments alone are enough to specialise (even though the args are too boring to trigger inlining), and it's certainly better to call the specialised version. * The RHS of an INLINE function might call another overloaded function, and we'd like to generate a specialised version of that function too. This actually happens a lot. Consider replicateM_ :: (Monad m) => Int -> m a -> m () {-# INLINABLE replicateM_ #-} replicateM_ d x ma = ... The strictness analyser may transform to replicateM_ :: (Monad m) => Int -> m a -> m () {-# INLINE replicateM_ #-} replicateM_ d x ma = case x of I# x' -> $wreplicateM_ d x' ma $wreplicateM_ :: (Monad m) => Int# -> m a -> m () {-# INLINABLE $wreplicateM_ #-} $wreplicateM_ = ... Now an importing module has a specialised call to replicateM_, say (replicateM_ dMonadIO). We certainly want to specialise $wreplicateM_! This particular example had a huge effect on the call to replicateM_ in nofib/shootout/n-body. Why (b): discard INLINEABLE pragmas? See Trac #4874 for persuasive examples. Suppose we have {-# INLINABLE f #-} f :: Ord a => [a] -> Int f xs = letrec f' = ...f'... in f' Then, when f is specialised and optimised we might get wgo :: [Int] -> Int# wgo = ...wgo... f_spec :: [Int] -> Int f_spec xs = case wgo xs of { r -> I# r } and we clearly want to inline f_spec at call sites. But if we still have the big, un-optimised of f (albeit specialised) captured in an INLINABLE pragma for f_spec, we won't get that optimisation. So we simply drop INLINABLE pragmas when specialising. It's not really a complete solution; ignoring specalisation for now, INLINABLE functions don't get properly strictness analysed, for example. But it works well for examples involving specialisation, which is the dominant use of INLINABLE. See Trac #4874. ************************************************************************ * * \subsubsection{UsageDetails and suchlike} * * ************************************************************************ -} data UsageDetails = MkUD { ud_binds :: !(Bag DictBind), -- Floated dictionary bindings -- The order is important; -- in ds1 `union` ds2, bindings in ds2 can depend on those in ds1 -- (Remember, Bags preserve order in GHC.) ud_calls :: !CallDetails -- INVARIANT: suppose bs = bindersOf ud_binds -- Then 'calls' may *mention* 'bs', -- but there should be no calls *for* bs } instance Outputable UsageDetails where ppr (MkUD { ud_binds = dbs, ud_calls = calls }) = text "MkUD" <+> braces (sep (punctuate comma [text "binds" <+> equals <+> ppr dbs, text "calls" <+> equals <+> ppr calls])) -- | A 'DictBind' is a binding along with a cached set containing its free -- variables (both type variables and dictionaries) type DictBind = (CoreBind, VarSet) type DictExpr = CoreExpr emptyUDs :: UsageDetails emptyUDs = MkUD { ud_binds = emptyBag, ud_calls = emptyDVarEnv } ------------------------------------------------------------ type CallDetails = DIdEnv CallInfoSet -- The order of specialized binds and rules depends on how we linearize -- CallDetails, so to get determinism we must use a deterministic set here. -- See Note [Deterministic UniqFM] in UniqDFM newtype CallKey = CallKey [Maybe Type] -- Nothing => unconstrained type argument data CallInfoSet = CIS Id (Bag CallInfo) -- The list of types and dictionaries is guaranteed to -- match the type of f {- Note [CallInfoSet determinism] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CallInfoSet holds a Bag of (CallKey, [DictExpr], VarSet) triplets for a given Id. They represent the types that the function is instantiated at along with the dictionaries and free variables. We use this information to generate specialized versions of a given function. CallInfoSet used to be defined as: data CallInfoSet = CIS Id (Map CallKey ([DictExpr], VarSet)) Unfortunately this was not deterministic. The Ord instance of CallKey was defined in terms of cmpType which is not deterministic. See Note [cmpType nondeterminism]. The end result was that if the function had multiple specializations they would be generated in arbitrary order. We need a container that: a) when turned into a list has only one element per each CallKey and the list has deterministic order b) supports union c) supports singleton d) supports filter We can't use UniqDFM here because there's no one Unique that we can key on. The current approach is to implement the set as a Bag with duplicates. This makes b), c), d) trivial and pushes a) towards the end. The deduplication is done by using a TrieMap for membership tests on CallKey. This lets us delete the nondeterministic Ord CallKey instance. An alternative approach would be to augument the Map the same way that UniqDFM is augumented, by keeping track of insertion order and using it to order the resulting lists. It would mean keeping the nondeterministic Ord CallKey instance making it easy to reintroduce nondeterminism in the future. -} ciSetToList :: CallInfoSet -> [CallInfo] ciSetToList (CIS _ b) = snd $ foldrBag combine (emptyTM, []) b where -- This is where we eliminate duplicates, recording the CallKeys we've -- already seen in the TrieMap. See Note [CallInfoSet determinism]. combine :: CallInfo -> (CallKeySet, [CallInfo]) -> (CallKeySet, [CallInfo]) combine ci@(CallKey key, _) (set, acc) | Just _ <- lookupTM key set = (set, acc) | otherwise = (insertTM key () set, ci:acc) type CallKeySet = ListMap (MaybeMap TypeMap) () -- We only use it in ciSetToList to check for membership ciSetFilter :: (CallInfo -> Bool) -> CallInfoSet -> CallInfoSet ciSetFilter p (CIS id a) = CIS id (filterBag p a) type CallInfo = (CallKey, ([DictExpr], VarSet)) -- Range is dict args and the vars of the whole -- call (including tyvars) -- [*not* include the main id itself, of course] instance Outputable CallInfoSet where ppr (CIS fn map) = hang (text "CIS" <+> ppr fn) 2 (ppr map) pprCallInfo :: Id -> CallInfo -> SDoc pprCallInfo fn (CallKey mb_tys, (_dxs, _)) = hang (ppr fn) 2 (fsep (map ppr_call_key_ty mb_tys {- ++ map pprParendExpr _dxs -})) ppr_call_key_ty :: Maybe Type -> SDoc ppr_call_key_ty Nothing = char '_' ppr_call_key_ty (Just ty) = char '@' <+> pprParendType ty instance Outputable CallKey where ppr (CallKey ts) = ppr ts unionCalls :: CallDetails -> CallDetails -> CallDetails unionCalls c1 c2 = plusDVarEnv_C unionCallInfoSet c1 c2 unionCallInfoSet :: CallInfoSet -> CallInfoSet -> CallInfoSet unionCallInfoSet (CIS f calls1) (CIS _ calls2) = CIS f (calls1 `unionBags` calls2) callDetailsFVs :: CallDetails -> VarSet callDetailsFVs calls = nonDetFoldUDFM (unionVarSet . callInfoFVs) emptyVarSet calls -- It's OK to use nonDetFoldUDFM here because we forget the ordering -- immediately by converting to a nondeterministic set. callInfoFVs :: CallInfoSet -> VarSet callInfoFVs (CIS _ call_info) = foldrBag (\(_, (_,fv)) vs -> unionVarSet fv vs) emptyVarSet call_info ------------------------------------------------------------ singleCall :: Id -> [Maybe Type] -> [DictExpr] -> UsageDetails singleCall id tys dicts = MkUD {ud_binds = emptyBag, ud_calls = unitDVarEnv id $ CIS id $ unitBag (CallKey tys, (dicts, call_fvs)) } where call_fvs = exprsFreeVars dicts `unionVarSet` tys_fvs tys_fvs = tyCoVarsOfTypes (catMaybes tys) -- The type args (tys) are guaranteed to be part of the dictionary -- types, because they are just the constrained types, -- and the dictionary is therefore sure to be bound -- inside the binding for any type variables free in the type; -- hence it's safe to neglect tyvars free in tys when making -- the free-var set for this call -- BUT I don't trust this reasoning; play safe and include tys_fvs -- -- We don't include the 'id' itself. mkCallUDs, mkCallUDs' :: SpecEnv -> Id -> [CoreExpr] -> UsageDetails mkCallUDs env f args = -- pprTrace "mkCallUDs" (vcat [ ppr f, ppr args, ppr res ]) res where res = mkCallUDs' env f args mkCallUDs' env f args | not (want_calls_for f) -- Imported from elsewhere || null theta -- Not overloaded = emptyUDs | not (all type_determines_value theta) || not (spec_tys `lengthIs` n_tyvars) || not ( dicts `lengthIs` n_dicts) || not (any (interestingDict env) dicts) -- Note [Interesting dictionary arguments] -- See also Note [Specialisations already covered] = -- pprTrace "mkCallUDs: discarding" _trace_doc emptyUDs -- Not overloaded, or no specialisation wanted | otherwise = -- pprTrace "mkCallUDs: keeping" _trace_doc singleCall f spec_tys dicts where _trace_doc = vcat [ppr f, ppr args, ppr n_tyvars, ppr n_dicts , ppr (map (interestingDict env) dicts)] (tyvars, theta, _) = tcSplitSigmaTy (idType f) constrained_tyvars = tyCoVarsOfTypes theta n_tyvars = length tyvars n_dicts = length theta spec_tys = [mk_spec_ty tv ty | (tv, ty) <- tyvars `type_zip` args] dicts = [dict_expr | (_, dict_expr) <- theta `zip` (drop n_tyvars args)] -- ignores Coercion arguments type_zip :: [TyVar] -> [CoreExpr] -> [(TyVar, Type)] type_zip tvs (Coercion _ : args) = type_zip tvs args type_zip (tv:tvs) (Type ty : args) = (tv, ty) : type_zip tvs args type_zip _ _ = [] mk_spec_ty tyvar ty | tyvar `elemVarSet` constrained_tyvars = Just ty | otherwise = Nothing want_calls_for f = isLocalId f || isJust (maybeUnfoldingTemplate (realIdUnfolding f)) -- For imported things, we gather call instances if -- there is an unfolding that we could in principle specialise -- We might still decide not to use it (consulting dflags) -- in specImports -- Use 'realIdUnfolding' to ignore the loop-breaker flag! type_determines_value pred -- See Note [Type determines value] = case classifyPredType pred of ClassPred cls _ -> not (isIPClass cls) -- Superclasses can't be IPs EqPred {} -> True IrredPred {} -> True -- Things like (D []) where D is a -- Constraint-ranged family; Trac #7785 {- Note [Type determines value] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Only specialise if all overloading is on non-IP *class* params, because these are the ones whose *type* determines their *value*. In parrticular, with implicit params, the type args *don't* say what the value of the implicit param is! See Trac #7101 However, consider type family D (v::*->*) :: Constraint type instance D [] = () f :: D v => v Char -> Int If we see a call (f "foo"), we'll pass a "dictionary" () |> (g :: () ~ D []) and it's good to specialise f at this dictionary. So the question is: can an implicit parameter "hide inside" a type-family constraint like (D a). Well, no. We don't allow type instance D Maybe = ?x:Int Hence the IrredPred case in type_determines_value. See Trac #7785. Note [Interesting dictionary arguments] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider this \a.\d:Eq a. let f = ... in ...(f d)... There really is not much point in specialising f wrt the dictionary d, because the code for the specialised f is not improved at all, because d is lambda-bound. We simply get junk specialisations. What is "interesting"? Just that it has *some* structure. But what about variables? * A variable might be imported, in which case its unfolding will tell us whether it has useful structure * Local variables are cloned on the way down (to avoid clashes when we float dictionaries), and cloning drops the unfolding (cloneIdBndr). Moreover, we make up some new bindings, and it's a nuisance to give them unfoldings. So we keep track of the "interesting" dictionaries as a VarSet in SpecEnv. We have to take care to put any new interesting dictionary bindings in the set. We accidentally lost accurate tracking of local variables for a long time, because cloned variables don't have unfoldings. But makes a massive difference in a few cases, eg Trac #5113. For nofib as a whole it's only a small win: 2.2% improvement in allocation for ansi, 1.2% for bspt, but mostly 0.0! Average 0.1% increase in binary size. -} interestingDict :: SpecEnv -> CoreExpr -> Bool -- A dictionary argument is interesting if it has *some* structure -- NB: "dictionary" arguments include constraints of all sorts, -- including equality constraints; hence the Coercion case interestingDict env (Var v) = hasSomeUnfolding (idUnfolding v) || isDataConWorkId v || v `elemVarSet` se_interesting env interestingDict _ (Type _) = False interestingDict _ (Coercion _) = False interestingDict env (App fn (Type _)) = interestingDict env fn interestingDict env (App fn (Coercion _)) = interestingDict env fn interestingDict env (Tick _ a) = interestingDict env a interestingDict env (Cast e _) = interestingDict env e interestingDict _ _ = True plusUDs :: UsageDetails -> UsageDetails -> UsageDetails plusUDs (MkUD {ud_binds = db1, ud_calls = calls1}) (MkUD {ud_binds = db2, ud_calls = calls2}) = MkUD { ud_binds = db1 `unionBags` db2 , ud_calls = calls1 `unionCalls` calls2 } plusUDList :: [UsageDetails] -> UsageDetails plusUDList = foldr plusUDs emptyUDs ----------------------------- _dictBindBndrs :: Bag DictBind -> [Id] _dictBindBndrs dbs = foldrBag ((++) . bindersOf . fst) [] dbs -- | Construct a 'DictBind' from a 'CoreBind' mkDB :: CoreBind -> DictBind mkDB bind = (bind, bind_fvs bind) -- | Identify the free variables of a 'CoreBind' bind_fvs :: CoreBind -> VarSet bind_fvs (NonRec bndr rhs) = pair_fvs (bndr,rhs) bind_fvs (Rec prs) = foldl delVarSet rhs_fvs bndrs where bndrs = map fst prs rhs_fvs = unionVarSets (map pair_fvs prs) pair_fvs :: (Id, CoreExpr) -> VarSet pair_fvs (bndr, rhs) = exprFreeVars rhs `unionVarSet` idFreeVars bndr -- Don't forget variables mentioned in the -- rules of the bndr. C.f. OccAnal.addRuleUsage -- Also tyvars mentioned in its type; they may not appear in the RHS -- type T a = Int -- x :: T a = 3 -- | Flatten a set of 'DictBind's and some other binding pairs into a single -- recursive binding, including some additional bindings. flattenDictBinds :: Bag DictBind -> [(Id,CoreExpr)] -> DictBind flattenDictBinds dbs pairs = (Rec bindings, fvs) where (bindings, fvs) = foldrBag add ([], emptyVarSet) (dbs `snocBag` mkDB (Rec pairs)) add (NonRec b r, fvs') (pairs, fvs) = ((b,r) : pairs, fvs `unionVarSet` fvs') add (Rec prs1, fvs') (pairs, fvs) = (prs1 ++ pairs, fvs `unionVarSet` fvs') snocDictBinds :: UsageDetails -> [DictBind] -> UsageDetails -- Add ud_binds to the tail end of the bindings in uds snocDictBinds uds dbs = uds { ud_binds = ud_binds uds `unionBags` foldr consBag emptyBag dbs } consDictBind :: DictBind -> UsageDetails -> UsageDetails consDictBind bind uds = uds { ud_binds = bind `consBag` ud_binds uds } addDictBinds :: [DictBind] -> UsageDetails -> UsageDetails addDictBinds binds uds = uds { ud_binds = listToBag binds `unionBags` ud_binds uds } snocDictBind :: UsageDetails -> DictBind -> UsageDetails snocDictBind uds bind = uds { ud_binds = ud_binds uds `snocBag` bind } wrapDictBinds :: Bag DictBind -> [CoreBind] -> [CoreBind] wrapDictBinds dbs binds = foldrBag add binds dbs where add (bind,_) binds = bind : binds wrapDictBindsE :: Bag DictBind -> CoreExpr -> CoreExpr wrapDictBindsE dbs expr = foldrBag add expr dbs where add (bind,_) expr = Let bind expr ---------------------- dumpUDs :: [CoreBndr] -> UsageDetails -> (UsageDetails, Bag DictBind) -- Used at a lambda or case binder; just dump anything mentioning the binder dumpUDs bndrs uds@(MkUD { ud_binds = orig_dbs, ud_calls = orig_calls }) | null bndrs = (uds, emptyBag) -- Common in case alternatives | otherwise = -- pprTrace "dumpUDs" (ppr bndrs $$ ppr free_uds $$ ppr dump_dbs) $ (free_uds, dump_dbs) where free_uds = MkUD { ud_binds = free_dbs, ud_calls = free_calls } bndr_set = mkVarSet bndrs (free_dbs, dump_dbs, dump_set) = splitDictBinds orig_dbs bndr_set free_calls = deleteCallsMentioning dump_set $ -- Drop calls mentioning bndr_set on the floor deleteCallsFor bndrs orig_calls -- Discard calls for bndr_set; there should be -- no calls for any of the dicts in dump_dbs dumpBindUDs :: [CoreBndr] -> UsageDetails -> (UsageDetails, Bag DictBind, Bool) -- Used at a lambda or case binder; just dump anything mentioning the binder dumpBindUDs bndrs (MkUD { ud_binds = orig_dbs, ud_calls = orig_calls }) = -- pprTrace "dumpBindUDs" (ppr bndrs $$ ppr free_uds $$ ppr dump_dbs) $ (free_uds, dump_dbs, float_all) where free_uds = MkUD { ud_binds = free_dbs, ud_calls = free_calls } bndr_set = mkVarSet bndrs (free_dbs, dump_dbs, dump_set) = splitDictBinds orig_dbs bndr_set free_calls = deleteCallsFor bndrs orig_calls float_all = dump_set `intersectsVarSet` callDetailsFVs free_calls callsForMe :: Id -> UsageDetails -> (UsageDetails, [CallInfo]) callsForMe fn (MkUD { ud_binds = orig_dbs, ud_calls = orig_calls }) = -- pprTrace ("callsForMe") -- (vcat [ppr fn, -- text "Orig dbs =" <+> ppr (_dictBindBndrs orig_dbs), -- text "Orig calls =" <+> ppr orig_calls, -- text "Dep set =" <+> ppr dep_set, -- text "Calls for me =" <+> ppr calls_for_me]) $ (uds_without_me, calls_for_me) where uds_without_me = MkUD { ud_binds = orig_dbs , ud_calls = delDVarEnv orig_calls fn } calls_for_me = case lookupDVarEnv orig_calls fn of Nothing -> [] Just cis -> filter_dfuns (ciSetToList cis) dep_set = foldlBag go (unitVarSet fn) orig_dbs go dep_set (db,fvs) | fvs `intersectsVarSet` dep_set = extendVarSetList dep_set (bindersOf db) | otherwise = dep_set -- Note [Specialisation of dictionary functions] filter_dfuns | isDFunId fn = filter ok_call | otherwise = \cs -> cs ok_call (_, (_,fvs)) = not (fvs `intersectsVarSet` dep_set) ---------------------- splitDictBinds :: Bag DictBind -> IdSet -> (Bag DictBind, Bag DictBind, IdSet) -- Returns (free_dbs, dump_dbs, dump_set) splitDictBinds dbs bndr_set = foldlBag split_db (emptyBag, emptyBag, bndr_set) dbs -- Important that it's foldl not foldr; -- we're accumulating the set of dumped ids in dump_set where split_db (free_dbs, dump_dbs, dump_idset) db@(bind, fvs) | dump_idset `intersectsVarSet` fvs -- Dump it = (free_dbs, dump_dbs `snocBag` db, extendVarSetList dump_idset (bindersOf bind)) | otherwise -- Don't dump it = (free_dbs `snocBag` db, dump_dbs, dump_idset) ---------------------- deleteCallsMentioning :: VarSet -> CallDetails -> CallDetails -- Remove calls *mentioning* bs deleteCallsMentioning bs calls = mapDVarEnv (ciSetFilter keep_call) calls where keep_call (_, (_, fvs)) = not (fvs `intersectsVarSet` bs) deleteCallsFor :: [Id] -> CallDetails -> CallDetails -- Remove calls *for* bs deleteCallsFor bs calls = delDVarEnvList calls bs {- ************************************************************************ * * \subsubsection{Boring helper functions} * * ************************************************************************ -} newtype SpecM a = SpecM (State SpecState a) data SpecState = SpecState { spec_uniq_supply :: UniqSupply, spec_module :: Module, spec_dflags :: DynFlags } instance Functor SpecM where fmap = liftM instance Applicative SpecM where pure x = SpecM $ return x (<*>) = ap instance Monad SpecM where SpecM x >>= f = SpecM $ do y <- x case f y of SpecM z -> z return = pure fail str = SpecM $ fail str #if __GLASGOW_HASKELL__ > 710 instance MonadFail.MonadFail SpecM where fail str = SpecM $ fail str #endif instance MonadUnique SpecM where getUniqueSupplyM = SpecM $ do st <- get let (us1, us2) = splitUniqSupply $ spec_uniq_supply st put $ st { spec_uniq_supply = us2 } return us1 getUniqueM = SpecM $ do st <- get let (u,us') = takeUniqFromSupply $ spec_uniq_supply st put $ st { spec_uniq_supply = us' } return u instance HasDynFlags SpecM where getDynFlags = SpecM $ liftM spec_dflags get instance HasModule SpecM where getModule = SpecM $ liftM spec_module get runSpecM :: DynFlags -> Module -> SpecM a -> CoreM a runSpecM dflags this_mod (SpecM spec) = do us <- getUniqueSupplyM let initialState = SpecState { spec_uniq_supply = us, spec_module = this_mod, spec_dflags = dflags } return $ evalState spec initialState mapAndCombineSM :: (a -> SpecM (b, UsageDetails)) -> [a] -> SpecM ([b], UsageDetails) mapAndCombineSM _ [] = return ([], emptyUDs) mapAndCombineSM f (x:xs) = do (y, uds1) <- f x (ys, uds2) <- mapAndCombineSM f xs return (y:ys, uds1 `plusUDs` uds2) extendTvSubstList :: SpecEnv -> [(TyVar,Type)] -> SpecEnv extendTvSubstList env tv_binds = env { se_subst = CoreSubst.extendTvSubstList (se_subst env) tv_binds } substTy :: SpecEnv -> Type -> Type substTy env ty = CoreSubst.substTy (se_subst env) ty substCo :: SpecEnv -> Coercion -> Coercion substCo env co = CoreSubst.substCo (se_subst env) co substBndr :: SpecEnv -> CoreBndr -> (SpecEnv, CoreBndr) substBndr env bs = case CoreSubst.substBndr (se_subst env) bs of (subst', bs') -> (env { se_subst = subst' }, bs') substBndrs :: SpecEnv -> [CoreBndr] -> (SpecEnv, [CoreBndr]) substBndrs env bs = case CoreSubst.substBndrs (se_subst env) bs of (subst', bs') -> (env { se_subst = subst' }, bs') cloneBindSM :: SpecEnv -> CoreBind -> SpecM (SpecEnv, SpecEnv, CoreBind) -- Clone the binders of the bind; return new bind with the cloned binders -- Return the substitution to use for RHSs, and the one to use for the body cloneBindSM env@(SE { se_subst = subst, se_interesting = interesting }) (NonRec bndr rhs) = do { us <- getUniqueSupplyM ; let (subst', bndr') = CoreSubst.cloneIdBndr subst us bndr interesting' | interestingDict env rhs = interesting `extendVarSet` bndr' | otherwise = interesting ; return (env, env { se_subst = subst', se_interesting = interesting' } , NonRec bndr' rhs) } cloneBindSM env@(SE { se_subst = subst, se_interesting = interesting }) (Rec pairs) = do { us <- getUniqueSupplyM ; let (subst', bndrs') = CoreSubst.cloneRecIdBndrs subst us (map fst pairs) env' = env { se_subst = subst' , se_interesting = interesting `extendVarSetList` [ v | (v,r) <- pairs, interestingDict env r ] } ; return (env', env', Rec (bndrs' `zip` map snd pairs)) } newDictBndr :: SpecEnv -> CoreBndr -> SpecM CoreBndr -- Make up completely fresh binders for the dictionaries -- Their bindings are going to float outwards newDictBndr env b = do { uniq <- getUniqueM ; let n = idName b ty' = substTy env (idType b) ; return (mkUserLocalOrCoVar (nameOccName n) uniq ty' (getSrcSpan n)) } newSpecIdSM :: Id -> Type -> SpecM Id -- Give the new Id a similar occurrence name to the old one newSpecIdSM old_id new_ty = do { uniq <- getUniqueM ; let name = idName old_id new_occ = mkSpecOcc (nameOccName name) new_id = mkUserLocalOrCoVar new_occ uniq new_ty (getSrcSpan name) ; return new_id } {- Old (but interesting) stuff about unboxed bindings ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ What should we do when a value is specialised to a *strict* unboxed value? map_*_* f (x:xs) = let h = f x t = map f xs in h:t Could convert let to case: map_*_Int# f (x:xs) = case f x of h# -> let t = map f xs in h#:t This may be undesirable since it forces evaluation here, but the value may not be used in all branches of the body. In the general case this transformation is impossible since the mutual recursion in a letrec cannot be expressed as a case. There is also a problem with top-level unboxed values, since our implementation cannot handle unboxed values at the top level. Solution: Lift the binding of the unboxed value and extract it when it is used: map_*_Int# f (x:xs) = let h = case (f x) of h# -> _Lift h# t = map f xs in case h of _Lift h# -> h#:t Now give it to the simplifier and the _Lifting will be optimised away. The benfit is that we have given the specialised "unboxed" values a very simplep lifted semantics and then leave it up to the simplifier to optimise it --- knowing that the overheads will be removed in nearly all cases. In particular, the value will only be evaluted in the branches of the program which use it, rather than being forced at the point where the value is bound. For example: filtermap_*_* p f (x:xs) = let h = f x t = ... in case p x of True -> h:t False -> t ==> filtermap_*_Int# p f (x:xs) = let h = case (f x) of h# -> _Lift h# t = ... in case p x of True -> case h of _Lift h# -> h#:t False -> t The binding for h can still be inlined in the one branch and the _Lifting eliminated. Question: When won't the _Lifting be eliminated? Answer: When they at the top-level (where it is necessary) or when inlining would duplicate work (or possibly code depending on options). However, the _Lifting will still be eliminated if the strictness analyser deems the lifted binding strict. -}