{-
(c) The University of Glasgow 2006
(c) The AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1998


This module contains definitions for the IdInfo for things that
have a standard form, namely:

- data constructors
- record selectors
- method and superclass selectors
- primitive operations
-}

{-# LANGUAGE CPP #-}

module MkId (
        mkDictFunId, mkDictFunTy, mkDictSelId, mkDictSelRhs,

        mkPrimOpId, mkFCallId,

        unwrapNewTypeBody, wrapFamInstBody,
        DataConBoxer(..), mkDataConRep, mkDataConWorkId,

        -- And some particular Ids; see below for why they are wired in
        wiredInIds, ghcPrimIds,
        unsafeCoerceName, unsafeCoerceId, realWorldPrimId,
        voidPrimId, voidArgId,
        nullAddrId, seqId, lazyId, lazyIdKey,
        coercionTokenId, magicDictId, coerceId,
        proxyHashId, noinlineId, noinlineIdName,
        coerceName,

        -- Re-export error Ids
        module PrelRules
    ) where

#include "HsVersions.h"

import GhcPrelude

import Rules
import TysPrim
import TysWiredIn
import PrelRules
import Type
import FamInstEnv
import Coercion
import TcType
import MkCore
import CoreUtils        ( mkCast, mkDefaultCase )
import CoreUnfold
import Literal
import TyCon
import Class
import NameSet
import Name
import PrimOp
import ForeignCall
import DataCon
import Id
import IdInfo
import Demand
import CoreSyn
import Unique
import UniqSupply
import PrelNames
import BasicTypes       hiding ( SuccessFlag(..) )
import Util
import Pair
import DynFlags
import Outputable
import FastString
import ListSetOps
import Var (VarBndr(Bndr))
import qualified GHC.LanguageExtensions as LangExt

import Data.Maybe       ( maybeToList )

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Wired in Ids}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************

Note [Wired-in Ids]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A "wired-in" Id can be referred to directly in GHC (e.g. 'voidPrimId')
rather than by looking it up its name in some environment or fetching
it from an interface file.

There are several reasons why an Id might appear in the wiredInIds:

* ghcPrimIds: see Note [ghcPrimIds (aka pseudoops)]

* magicIds: see Note [magicIds]

* errorIds, defined in coreSyn/MkCore.hs.
  These error functions (e.g. rUNTIME_ERROR_ID) are wired in
  because the desugarer generates code that mentions them directly

In all cases except ghcPrimIds, there is a definition site in a
library module, which may be called (e.g. in higher order situations);
but the wired-in version means that the details are never read from
that module's interface file; instead, the full definition is right
here.

Note [ghcPrimIds (aka pseudoops)]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The ghcPrimIds

  * Are exported from GHC.Prim

  * Can't be defined in Haskell, and hence no Haskell binding site,
    but have perfectly reasonable unfoldings in Core

  * Either have a CompulsoryUnfolding (hence always inlined), or
        of an EvaldUnfolding and void representation (e.g. void#)

  * Are (or should be) defined in primops.txt.pp as 'pseudoop'
    Reason: that's how we generate documentation for them

Note [magicIds]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The magicIds

  * Are exported from GHC.Magic

  * Can be defined in Haskell (and are, in ghc-prim:GHC/Magic.hs).
    This definition at least generates Haddock documentation for them.

  * May or may not have a CompulsoryUnfolding.

  * But have some special behaviour that can't be done via an
    unfolding from an interface file
-}

wiredInIds :: [Id]
wiredInIds
  =  magicIds
  ++ ghcPrimIds
  ++ errorIds           -- Defined in MkCore

magicIds :: [Id]    -- See Note [magicIds]
magicIds = [lazyId, oneShotId, noinlineId]

ghcPrimIds :: [Id]  -- See Note [ghcPrimIds (aka pseudoops)]
ghcPrimIds
  = [ realWorldPrimId
    , voidPrimId
    , unsafeCoerceId
    , nullAddrId
    , seqId
    , magicDictId
    , coerceId
    , proxyHashId
    ]

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Data constructors}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************

The wrapper for a constructor is an ordinary top-level binding that evaluates
any strict args, unboxes any args that are going to be flattened, and calls
the worker.

We're going to build a constructor that looks like:

        data (Data a, C b) =>  T a b = T1 !a !Int b

        T1 = /\ a b ->
             \d1::Data a, d2::C b ->
             \p q r -> case p of { p ->
                       case q of { q ->
                       Con T1 [a,b] [p,q,r]}}

Notice that

* d2 is thrown away --- a context in a data decl is used to make sure
  one *could* construct dictionaries at the site the constructor
  is used, but the dictionary isn't actually used.

* We have to check that we can construct Data dictionaries for
  the types a and Int.  Once we've done that we can throw d1 away too.

* We use (case p of q -> ...) to evaluate p, rather than "seq" because
  all that matters is that the arguments are evaluated.  "seq" is
  very careful to preserve evaluation order, which we don't need
  to be here.

  You might think that we could simply give constructors some strictness
  info, like PrimOps, and let CoreToStg do the let-to-case transformation.
  But we don't do that because in the case of primops and functions strictness
  is a *property* not a *requirement*.  In the case of constructors we need to
  do something active to evaluate the argument.

  Making an explicit case expression allows the simplifier to eliminate
  it in the (common) case where the constructor arg is already evaluated.

Note [Wrappers for data instance tycons]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the case of data instances, the wrapper also applies the coercion turning
the representation type into the family instance type to cast the result of
the wrapper.  For example, consider the declarations

  data family Map k :: * -> *
  data instance Map (a, b) v = MapPair (Map a (Pair b v))

The tycon to which the datacon MapPair belongs gets a unique internal
name of the form :R123Map, and we call it the representation tycon.
In contrast, Map is the family tycon (accessible via
tyConFamInst_maybe). A coercion allows you to move between
representation and family type.  It is accessible from :R123Map via
tyConFamilyCoercion_maybe and has kind

  Co123Map a b v :: {Map (a, b) v ~ :R123Map a b v}

The wrapper and worker of MapPair get the types

        -- Wrapper
  $WMapPair :: forall a b v. Map a (Map a b v) -> Map (a, b) v
  $WMapPair a b v = MapPair a b v `cast` sym (Co123Map a b v)

        -- Worker
  MapPair :: forall a b v. Map a (Map a b v) -> :R123Map a b v

This coercion is conditionally applied by wrapFamInstBody.

It's a bit more complicated if the data instance is a GADT as well!

   data instance T [a] where
        T1 :: forall b. b -> T [Maybe b]

Hence we translate to

        -- Wrapper
  $WT1 :: forall b. b -> T [Maybe b]
  $WT1 b v = T1 (Maybe b) b (Maybe b) v
                        `cast` sym (Co7T (Maybe b))

        -- Worker
  T1 :: forall c b. (c ~ Maybe b) => b -> :R7T c

        -- Coercion from family type to representation type
  Co7T a :: T [a] ~ :R7T a

Newtype instances through an additional wrinkle into the mix. Consider the
following example (adapted from #15318, comment:2):

  data family T a
  newtype instance T [a] = MkT [a]

Within the newtype instance, there are three distinct types at play:

1. The newtype's underlying type, [a].
2. The instance's representation type, TList a (where TList is the
   representation tycon).
3. The family type, T [a].

We need two coercions in order to cast from (1) to (3):

(a) A newtype coercion axiom:

      axiom coTList a :: TList a ~ [a]

    (Where TList is the representation tycon of the newtype instance.)

(b) A data family instance coercion axiom:

      axiom coT a :: T [a] ~ TList a

When we translate the newtype instance to Core, we obtain:

    -- Wrapper
  $WMkT :: forall a. [a] -> T [a]
  $WMkT a x = MkT a x |> Sym (coT a)

    -- Worker
  MkT :: forall a. [a] -> TList [a]
  MkT a x = x |> Sym (coTList a)

Unlike for data instances, the worker for a newtype instance is actually an
executable function which expands to a cast, but otherwise, the general
strategy is essentially the same as for data instances. Also note that we have
a wrapper, which is unusual for a newtype, but we make GHC produce one anyway
for symmetry with the way data instances are handled.

Note [Newtype datacons]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The "data constructor" for a newtype should always be vanilla.  At one
point this wasn't true, because the newtype arising from
     class C a => D a
looked like
       newtype T:D a = D:D (C a)
so the data constructor for T:C had a single argument, namely the
predicate (C a).  But now we treat that as an ordinary argument, not
part of the theta-type, so all is well.

Note [Newtype workers]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A newtype does not really have a worker. Instead, newtype constructors
just unfold into a cast. But we need *something* for, say, MkAge to refer
to. So, we do this:

* The Id used as the newtype worker will have a compulsory unfolding to
  a cast. See Note [Compulsory newtype unfolding]

* This Id is labeled as a DataConWrapId. We don't want to use a DataConWorkId,
  as those have special treatment in the back end.

* There is no top-level binding, because the compulsory unfolding
  means that it will be inlined (to a cast) at every call site.

We probably should have a NewtypeWorkId, but these Ids disappear as soon as
we desugar anyway, so it seems a step too far.

Note [Compulsory newtype unfolding]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Newtype wrappers, just like workers, have compulsory unfoldings.
This is needed so that two optimizations involving newtypes have the same
effect whether a wrapper is present or not:

(1) Case-of-known constructor.
    See Note [beta-reduction in exprIsConApp_maybe].

(2) Matching against the map/coerce RULE. Suppose we have the RULE

    {-# RULE "map/coerce" map coerce = ... #-}

    As described in Note [Getting the map/coerce RULE to work],
    the occurrence of 'coerce' is transformed into:

    {-# RULE "map/coerce" forall (c :: T1 ~R# T2).
                          map ((\v -> v) `cast` c) = ... #-}

    We'd like 'map Age' to match the LHS. For this to happen, Age
    must be unfolded, otherwise we'll be stuck. This is tested in T16208.

It also allows for the posssibility of levity polymorphic newtypes
with wrappers (with -XUnliftedNewtypes):

  newtype N (a :: TYPE r) = MkN a

With -XUnliftedNewtypes, this is allowed -- even though MkN is levity-
polymorphic. It's OK because MkN evaporates in the compiled code, becoming
just a cast. That is, it has a compulsory unfolding. As long as its
argument is not levity-polymorphic (which it can't be, according to
Note [Levity polymorphism invariants] in CoreSyn), and it's saturated,
no levity-polymorphic code ends up in the code generator. The saturation
condition is effectively checked by Note [Detecting forced eta expansion]
in DsExpr.

However, if we make a *wrapper* for a newtype, we get into trouble.
The saturation condition is no longer checked (because hasNoBinding
returns False) and indeed we generate a forbidden levity-polymorphic
binding.

The solution is simple, though: just make the newtype wrappers
as ephemeral as the newtype workers. In other words, give the wrappers
compulsory unfoldings and no bindings. The compulsory unfolding is given
in wrap_unf in mkDataConRep, and the lack of a binding happens in
TidyPgm.getTyConImplicitBinds, where we say that a newtype has no implicit
bindings.

************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Dictionary selectors}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************

Selecting a field for a dictionary.  If there is just one field, then
there's nothing to do.

Dictionary selectors may get nested forall-types.  Thus:

        class Foo a where
          op :: forall b. Ord b => a -> b -> b

Then the top-level type for op is

        op :: forall a. Foo a =>
              forall b. Ord b =>
              a -> b -> b

-}

mkDictSelId :: Name          -- Name of one of the *value* selectors
                             -- (dictionary superclass or method)
            -> Class -> Id
mkDictSelId name clas
  = mkGlobalId (ClassOpId clas) name sel_ty info
  where
    tycon          = classTyCon clas
    sel_names      = map idName (classAllSelIds clas)
    new_tycon      = isNewTyCon tycon
    [data_con]     = tyConDataCons tycon
    tyvars         = dataConUserTyVarBinders data_con
    n_ty_args      = length tyvars
    arg_tys        = dataConRepArgTys data_con  -- Includes the dictionary superclasses
    val_index      = assoc "MkId.mkDictSelId" (sel_names `zip` [0..]) name

    sel_ty = mkForAllTys tyvars $
             mkInvisFunTy (mkClassPred clas (mkTyVarTys (binderVars tyvars))) $
             getNth arg_tys val_index

    base_info = noCafIdInfo
                `setArityInfo`          1
                `setStrictnessInfo`     strict_sig
                `setLevityInfoWithType` sel_ty

    info | new_tycon
         = base_info `setInlinePragInfo` alwaysInlinePragma
                     `setUnfoldingInfo`  mkInlineUnfoldingWithArity 1
                                           (mkDictSelRhs clas val_index)
                   -- See Note [Single-method classes] in TcInstDcls
                   -- for why alwaysInlinePragma

         | otherwise
         = base_info `setRuleInfo` mkRuleInfo [rule]
                   -- Add a magic BuiltinRule, but no unfolding
                   -- so that the rule is always available to fire.
                   -- See Note [ClassOp/DFun selection] in TcInstDcls

    -- This is the built-in rule that goes
    --      op (dfT d1 d2) --->  opT d1 d2
    rule = BuiltinRule { ru_name = fsLit "Class op " `appendFS`
                                     occNameFS (getOccName name)
                       , ru_fn    = name
                       , ru_nargs = n_ty_args + 1
                       , ru_try   = dictSelRule val_index n_ty_args }

        -- The strictness signature is of the form U(AAAVAAAA) -> T
        -- where the V depends on which item we are selecting
        -- It's worth giving one, so that absence info etc is generated
        -- even if the selector isn't inlined

    strict_sig = mkClosedStrictSig [arg_dmd] topRes
    arg_dmd | new_tycon = evalDmd
            | otherwise = mkManyUsedDmd $
                          mkProdDmd [ if name == sel_name then evalDmd else absDmd
                                    | sel_name <- sel_names ]

mkDictSelRhs :: Class
             -> Int         -- 0-indexed selector among (superclasses ++ methods)
             -> CoreExpr
mkDictSelRhs clas val_index
  = mkLams tyvars (Lam dict_id rhs_body)
  where
    tycon          = classTyCon clas
    new_tycon      = isNewTyCon tycon
    [data_con]     = tyConDataCons tycon
    tyvars         = dataConUnivTyVars data_con
    arg_tys        = dataConRepArgTys data_con  -- Includes the dictionary superclasses

    the_arg_id     = getNth arg_ids val_index
    pred           = mkClassPred clas (mkTyVarTys tyvars)
    dict_id        = mkTemplateLocal 1 pred
    arg_ids        = mkTemplateLocalsNum 2 arg_tys

    rhs_body | new_tycon = unwrapNewTypeBody tycon (mkTyVarTys tyvars)
                                                   (Var dict_id)
             | otherwise = mkSingleAltCase (Var dict_id) dict_id (DataAlt data_con)
                                           arg_ids (varToCoreExpr the_arg_id)
                                -- varToCoreExpr needed for equality superclass selectors
                                --   sel a b d = case x of { MkC _ (g:a~b) _ -> CO g }

dictSelRule :: Int -> Arity -> RuleFun
-- Tries to persuade the argument to look like a constructor
-- application, using exprIsConApp_maybe, and then selects
-- from it
--       sel_i t1..tk (D t1..tk op1 ... opm) = opi
--
dictSelRule val_index n_ty_args _ id_unf _ args
  | (dict_arg : _) <- drop n_ty_args args
  , Just (_, floats, _, _, con_args) <- exprIsConApp_maybe id_unf dict_arg
  = Just (wrapFloats floats $ getNth con_args val_index)
  | otherwise
  = Nothing

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
        Data constructors
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

mkDataConWorkId :: Name -> DataCon -> Id
mkDataConWorkId wkr_name data_con
  | isNewTyCon tycon
  = mkGlobalId (DataConWrapId data_con) wkr_name wkr_ty nt_work_info
      -- See Note [Newtype workers]

  | otherwise
  = mkGlobalId (DataConWorkId data_con) wkr_name wkr_ty alg_wkr_info

  where
    tycon  = dataConTyCon data_con  -- The representation TyCon
    wkr_ty = dataConRepType data_con

        ----------- Workers for data types --------------
    alg_wkr_info = noCafIdInfo
                   `setArityInfo`          wkr_arity
                   `setStrictnessInfo`     wkr_sig
                   `setUnfoldingInfo`      evaldUnfolding  -- Record that it's evaluated,
                                                           -- even if arity = 0
                   `setLevityInfoWithType` wkr_ty
                     -- NB: unboxed tuples have workers, so we can't use
                     -- setNeverLevPoly

    wkr_arity = dataConRepArity data_con
    wkr_sig   = mkClosedStrictSig (replicate wkr_arity topDmd) (dataConCPR data_con)
        --      Note [Data-con worker strictness]
        -- Notice that we do *not* say the worker Id is strict
        -- even if the data constructor is declared strict
        --      e.g.    data T = MkT !(Int,Int)
        -- Why?  Because the *wrapper* $WMkT is strict (and its unfolding has
        -- case expressions that do the evals) but the *worker* MkT itself is
        --  not. If we pretend it is strict then when we see
        --      case x of y -> MkT y
        -- the simplifier thinks that y is "sure to be evaluated" (because
        -- the worker MkT is strict) and drops the case.  No, the workerId
        -- MkT is not strict.
        --
        -- However, the worker does have StrictnessMarks.  When the simplifier
        -- sees a pattern
        --      case e of MkT x -> ...
        -- it uses the dataConRepStrictness of MkT to mark x as evaluated;
        -- but that's fine... dataConRepStrictness comes from the data con
        -- not from the worker Id.

        ----------- Workers for newtypes --------------
    univ_tvs = dataConUnivTyVars data_con
    arg_tys  = dataConRepArgTys  data_con  -- Should be same as dataConOrigArgTys
    nt_work_info = noCafIdInfo          -- The NoCaf-ness is set by noCafIdInfo
                  `setArityInfo` 1      -- Arity 1
                  `setInlinePragInfo`     alwaysInlinePragma
                  `setUnfoldingInfo`      newtype_unf
                  `setLevityInfoWithType` wkr_ty
    id_arg1      = mkTemplateLocal 1 (head arg_tys)
    res_ty_args  = mkTyCoVarTys univ_tvs
    newtype_unf  = ASSERT2( isVanillaDataCon data_con &&
                            isSingleton arg_tys
                          , ppr data_con  )
                              -- Note [Newtype datacons]
                   mkCompulsoryUnfolding $
                   mkLams univ_tvs $ Lam id_arg1 $
                   wrapNewTypeBody tycon res_ty_args (Var id_arg1)

dataConCPR :: DataCon -> DmdResult
dataConCPR con
  | isDataTyCon tycon     -- Real data types only; that is,
                          -- not unboxed tuples or newtypes
  , null (dataConExTyCoVars con)  -- No existentials
  , wkr_arity > 0
  , wkr_arity <= mAX_CPR_SIZE
  = if is_prod then vanillaCprProdRes (dataConRepArity con)
               else cprSumRes (dataConTag con)
  | otherwise
  = topRes
  where
    is_prod   = isProductTyCon tycon
    tycon     = dataConTyCon con
    wkr_arity = dataConRepArity con

    mAX_CPR_SIZE :: Arity
    mAX_CPR_SIZE = 10
    -- We do not treat very big tuples as CPR-ish:
    --      a) for a start we get into trouble because there aren't
    --         "enough" unboxed tuple types (a tiresome restriction,
    --         but hard to fix),
    --      b) more importantly, big unboxed tuples get returned mainly
    --         on the stack, and are often then allocated in the heap
    --         by the caller.  So doing CPR for them may in fact make
    --         things worse.

{-
-------------------------------------------------
--         Data constructor representation
--
-- This is where we decide how to wrap/unwrap the
-- constructor fields
--
--------------------------------------------------
-}

type Unboxer = Var -> UniqSM ([Var], CoreExpr -> CoreExpr)
  -- Unbox: bind rep vars by decomposing src var

data Boxer = UnitBox | Boxer (TCvSubst -> UniqSM ([Var], CoreExpr))
  -- Box:   build src arg using these rep vars

-- | Data Constructor Boxer
newtype DataConBoxer = DCB ([Type] -> [Var] -> UniqSM ([Var], [CoreBind]))
                       -- Bind these src-level vars, returning the
                       -- rep-level vars to bind in the pattern

{-
Note [Inline partially-applied constructor wrappers]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

We allow the wrapper to inline when partially applied to avoid
boxing values unnecessarily. For example, consider

   data Foo a = Foo !Int a

   instance Traversable Foo where
     traverse f (Foo i a) = Foo i <$> f a

This desugars to

   traverse f foo = case foo of
        Foo i# a -> let i = I# i#
                    in map ($WFoo i) (f a)

If the wrapper `$WFoo` is not inlined, we get a fruitless reboxing of `i`.
But if we inline the wrapper, we get

   map (\a. case i of I# i# a -> Foo i# a) (f a)

and now case-of-known-constructor eliminates the redundant allocation.

-}

mkDataConRep :: DynFlags
             -> FamInstEnvs
             -> Name
             -> Maybe [HsImplBang]
                -- See Note [Bangs on imported data constructors]
             -> DataCon
             -> UniqSM DataConRep
mkDataConRep dflags fam_envs wrap_name mb_bangs data_con
  | not wrapper_reqd
  = return NoDataConRep

  | otherwise
  = do { wrap_args <- mapM newLocal wrap_arg_tys
       ; wrap_body <- mk_rep_app (wrap_args `zip` dropList eq_spec unboxers)
                                 initial_wrap_app

       ; let wrap_id = mkGlobalId (DataConWrapId data_con) wrap_name wrap_ty wrap_info
             wrap_info = noCafIdInfo
                         `setArityInfo`         wrap_arity
                             -- It's important to specify the arity, so that partial
                             -- applications are treated as values
                         `setInlinePragInfo`    wrap_prag
                         `setUnfoldingInfo`     wrap_unf
                         `setStrictnessInfo`    wrap_sig
                             -- We need to get the CAF info right here because TidyPgm
                             -- does not tidy the IdInfo of implicit bindings (like the wrapper)
                             -- so it not make sure that the CAF info is sane
                         `setLevityInfoWithType` wrap_ty

             wrap_sig = mkClosedStrictSig wrap_arg_dmds (dataConCPR data_con)

             wrap_arg_dmds =
               replicate (length theta) topDmd ++ map mk_dmd arg_ibangs
               -- Don't forget the dictionary arguments when building
               -- the strictness signature (#14290).

             mk_dmd str | isBanged str = evalDmd
                        | otherwise           = topDmd

             wrap_prag = alwaysInlinePragma `setInlinePragmaActivation`
                         activeDuringFinal
                         -- See Note [Activation for data constructor wrappers]

             -- The wrapper will usually be inlined (see wrap_unf), so its
             -- strictness and CPR info is usually irrelevant. But this is
             -- not always the case; GHC may choose not to inline it. In
             -- particular, the wrapper constructor is not inlined inside
             -- an INLINE rhs or when it is not applied to any arguments.
             -- See Note [Inline partially-applied constructor wrappers]
             -- Passing Nothing here allows the wrapper to inline when
             -- unsaturated.
             wrap_unf | isNewTyCon tycon = mkCompulsoryUnfolding wrap_rhs
                        -- See Note [Compulsory newtype unfolding]
                      | otherwise        = mkInlineUnfolding wrap_rhs
             wrap_rhs = mkLams wrap_tvs $
                        mkLams wrap_args $
                        wrapFamInstBody tycon res_ty_args $
                        wrap_body

       ; return (DCR { dcr_wrap_id = wrap_id
                     , dcr_boxer   = mk_boxer boxers
                     , dcr_arg_tys = rep_tys
                     , dcr_stricts = rep_strs
                       -- For newtypes, dcr_bangs is always [HsLazy].
                       -- See Note [HsImplBangs for newtypes].
                     , dcr_bangs   = arg_ibangs }) }

  where
    (univ_tvs, ex_tvs, eq_spec, theta, orig_arg_tys, _orig_res_ty)
      = dataConFullSig data_con
    wrap_tvs     = dataConUserTyVars data_con
    res_ty_args  = substTyVars (mkTvSubstPrs (map eqSpecPair eq_spec)) univ_tvs

    tycon        = dataConTyCon data_con       -- The representation TyCon (not family)
    wrap_ty      = dataConUserType data_con
    ev_tys       = eqSpecPreds eq_spec ++ theta
    all_arg_tys  = ev_tys ++ orig_arg_tys
    ev_ibangs    = map (const HsLazy) ev_tys
    orig_bangs   = dataConSrcBangs data_con

    wrap_arg_tys = theta ++ orig_arg_tys
    wrap_arity   = count isCoVar ex_tvs + length wrap_arg_tys
             -- The wrap_args are the arguments *other than* the eq_spec
             -- Because we are going to apply the eq_spec args manually in the
             -- wrapper

    new_tycon = isNewTyCon tycon
    arg_ibangs
      | new_tycon
      = ASSERT( isSingleton orig_arg_tys )
        [HsLazy] -- See Note [HsImplBangs for newtypes]
      | otherwise
      = case mb_bangs of
          Nothing    -> zipWith (dataConSrcToImplBang dflags fam_envs)
                                orig_arg_tys orig_bangs
          Just bangs -> bangs

    (rep_tys_w_strs, wrappers)
      = unzip (zipWith dataConArgRep all_arg_tys (ev_ibangs ++ arg_ibangs))

    (unboxers, boxers) = unzip wrappers
    (rep_tys, rep_strs) = unzip (concat rep_tys_w_strs)

    wrapper_reqd =
        (not new_tycon
                     -- (Most) newtypes have only a worker, with the exception
                     -- of some newtypes written with GADT syntax. See below.
         && (any isBanged (ev_ibangs ++ arg_ibangs)
                     -- Some forcing/unboxing (includes eq_spec)
             || (not $ null eq_spec))) -- GADT
      || isFamInstTyCon tycon -- Cast result
      || dataConUserTyVarsArePermuted data_con
                     -- If the data type was written with GADT syntax and
                     -- orders the type variables differently from what the
                     -- worker expects, it needs a data con wrapper to reorder
                     -- the type variables.
                     -- See Note [Data con wrappers and GADT syntax].

    initial_wrap_app = Var (dataConWorkId data_con)
                       `mkTyApps`  res_ty_args
                       `mkVarApps` ex_tvs
                       `mkCoApps`  map (mkReflCo Nominal . eqSpecType) eq_spec

    mk_boxer :: [Boxer] -> DataConBoxer
    mk_boxer boxers = DCB (\ ty_args src_vars ->
                      do { let (ex_vars, term_vars) = splitAtList ex_tvs src_vars
                               subst1 = zipTvSubst univ_tvs ty_args
                               subst2 = extendTCvSubstList subst1 ex_tvs
                                                           (mkTyCoVarTys ex_vars)
                         ; (rep_ids, binds) <- go subst2 boxers term_vars
                         ; return (ex_vars ++ rep_ids, binds) } )

    go _ [] src_vars = ASSERT2( null src_vars, ppr data_con ) return ([], [])
    go subst (UnitBox : boxers) (src_var : src_vars)
      = do { (rep_ids2, binds) <- go subst boxers src_vars
           ; return (src_var : rep_ids2, binds) }
    go subst (Boxer boxer : boxers) (src_var : src_vars)
      = do { (rep_ids1, arg)  <- boxer subst
           ; (rep_ids2, binds) <- go subst boxers src_vars
           ; return (rep_ids1 ++ rep_ids2, NonRec src_var arg : binds) }
    go _ (_:_) [] = pprPanic "mk_boxer" (ppr data_con)

    mk_rep_app :: [(Id,Unboxer)] -> CoreExpr -> UniqSM CoreExpr
    mk_rep_app [] con_app
      = return con_app
    mk_rep_app ((wrap_arg, unboxer) : prs) con_app
      = do { (rep_ids, unbox_fn) <- unboxer wrap_arg
           ; expr <- mk_rep_app prs (mkVarApps con_app rep_ids)
           ; return (unbox_fn expr) }

{- Note [Activation for data constructor wrappers]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Activation on a data constructor wrapper allows it to inline only in Phase
0. This way rules have a chance to fire if they mention a data constructor on
the left
   RULE "foo"  f (K a b) = ...
Since the LHS of rules are simplified with InitialPhase, we won't
inline the wrapper on the LHS either.

On the other hand, this means that exprIsConApp_maybe must be able to deal
with wrappers so that case-of-constructor is not delayed; see
Note [exprIsConApp_maybe on data constructors with wrappers] for details.

It used to activate in phases 2 (afterInitial) and later, but it makes it
awkward to write a RULE[1] with a constructor on the left: it would work if a
constructor has no wrapper, but whether a constructor has a wrapper depends, for
instance, on the order of type argument of that constructors. Therefore changing
the order of type argument could make previously working RULEs fail.

See also https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/issues/15840 .


Note [Bangs on imported data constructors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

We pass Maybe [HsImplBang] to mkDataConRep to make use of HsImplBangs
from imported modules.

- Nothing <=> use HsSrcBangs
- Just bangs <=> use HsImplBangs

For imported types we can't work it all out from the HsSrcBangs,
because we want to be very sure to follow what the original module
(where the data type was declared) decided, and that depends on what
flags were enabled when it was compiled. So we record the decisions in
the interface file.

The HsImplBangs passed are in 1-1 correspondence with the
dataConOrigArgTys of the DataCon.

Note [Data con wrappers and unlifted types]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider
   data T = MkT !Int#

We certainly do not want to make a wrapper
   $WMkT x = case x of y { DEFAULT -> MkT y }

For a start, it's still to generate a no-op.  But worse, since wrappers
are currently injected at TidyCore, we don't even optimise it away!
So the stupid case expression stays there.  This actually happened for
the Integer data type (see #1600 comment:66)!

Note [Data con wrappers and GADT syntax]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider these two very similar data types:

  data T1 a b = MkT1 b

  data T2 a b where
    MkT2 :: forall b a. b -> T2 a b

Despite their similar appearance, T2 will have a data con wrapper but T1 will
not. What sets them apart? The types of their constructors, which are:

  MkT1 :: forall a b. b -> T1 a b
  MkT2 :: forall b a. b -> T2 a b

MkT2's use of GADT syntax allows it to permute the order in which `a` and `b`
would normally appear. See Note [DataCon user type variable binders] in DataCon
for further discussion on this topic.

The worker data cons for T1 and T2, however, both have types such that `a` is
expected to come before `b` as arguments. Because MkT2 permutes this order, it
needs a data con wrapper to swizzle around the type variables to be in the
order the worker expects.

A somewhat surprising consequence of this is that *newtypes* can have data con
wrappers! After all, a newtype can also be written with GADT syntax:

  newtype T3 a b where
    MkT3 :: forall b a. b -> T3 a b

Again, this needs a wrapper data con to reorder the type variables. It does
mean that this newtype constructor requires another level of indirection when
being called, but the inliner should make swift work of that.

Note [HsImplBangs for newtypes]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Most of the time, we use the dataConSrctoImplBang function to decide what
strictness/unpackedness to use for the fields of a data type constructor. But
there is an exception to this rule: newtype constructors. You might not think
that newtypes would pose a challenge, since newtypes are seemingly forbidden
from having strictness annotations in the first place. But consider this
(from #16141):

  {-# LANGUAGE StrictData #-}
  {-# OPTIONS_GHC -O #-}
  newtype T a b where
    MkT :: forall b a. Int -> T a b

Because StrictData (plus optimization) is enabled, invoking
dataConSrcToImplBang would sneak in and unpack the field of type Int to Int#!
This would be disastrous, since the wrapper for `MkT` uses a coercion involving
Int, not Int#.

Bottom line: dataConSrcToImplBang should never be invoked for newtypes. In the
case of a newtype constructor, we simply hardcode its dcr_bangs field to
[HsLazy].
-}

-------------------------
newLocal :: Type -> UniqSM Var
newLocal ty = do { uniq <- getUniqueM
                 ; return (mkSysLocalOrCoVar (fsLit "dt") uniq ty) }

-- | Unpack/Strictness decisions from source module.
--
-- This function should only ever be invoked for data constructor fields, and
-- never on the field of a newtype constructor.
-- See @Note [HsImplBangs for newtypes]@.
dataConSrcToImplBang
   :: DynFlags
   -> FamInstEnvs
   -> Type
   -> HsSrcBang
   -> HsImplBang

dataConSrcToImplBang dflags fam_envs arg_ty
                     (HsSrcBang ann unpk NoSrcStrict)
  | xopt LangExt.StrictData dflags -- StrictData => strict field
  = dataConSrcToImplBang dflags fam_envs arg_ty
                  (HsSrcBang ann unpk SrcStrict)
  | otherwise -- no StrictData => lazy field
  = HsLazy

dataConSrcToImplBang _ _ _ (HsSrcBang _ _ SrcLazy)
  = HsLazy

dataConSrcToImplBang dflags fam_envs arg_ty
                     (HsSrcBang _ unpk_prag SrcStrict)
  | isUnliftedType arg_ty
  = HsLazy  -- For !Int#, say, use HsLazy
            -- See Note [Data con wrappers and unlifted types]

  | not (gopt Opt_OmitInterfacePragmas dflags) -- Don't unpack if -fomit-iface-pragmas
          -- Don't unpack if we aren't optimising; rather arbitrarily,
          -- we use -fomit-iface-pragmas as the indication
  , let mb_co   = topNormaliseType_maybe fam_envs arg_ty
                     -- Unwrap type families and newtypes
        arg_ty' = case mb_co of { Just (_,ty) -> ty; Nothing -> arg_ty }
  , isUnpackableType dflags fam_envs arg_ty'
  , (rep_tys, _) <- dataConArgUnpack arg_ty'
  , case unpk_prag of
      NoSrcUnpack ->
        gopt Opt_UnboxStrictFields dflags
            || (gopt Opt_UnboxSmallStrictFields dflags
                && rep_tys `lengthAtMost` 1) -- See Note [Unpack one-wide fields]
      srcUnpack -> isSrcUnpacked srcUnpack
  = case mb_co of
      Nothing     -> HsUnpack Nothing
      Just (co,_) -> HsUnpack (Just co)

  | otherwise -- Record the strict-but-no-unpack decision
  = HsStrict


-- | Wrappers/Workers and representation following Unpack/Strictness
-- decisions
dataConArgRep
  :: Type
  -> HsImplBang
  -> ([(Type,StrictnessMark)] -- Rep types
     ,(Unboxer,Boxer))

dataConArgRep arg_ty HsLazy
  = ([(arg_ty, NotMarkedStrict)], (unitUnboxer, unitBoxer))

dataConArgRep arg_ty HsStrict
  = ([(arg_ty, MarkedStrict)], (seqUnboxer, unitBoxer))

dataConArgRep arg_ty (HsUnpack Nothing)
  | (rep_tys, wrappers) <- dataConArgUnpack arg_ty
  = (rep_tys, wrappers)

dataConArgRep _ (HsUnpack (Just co))
  | let co_rep_ty = pSnd (coercionKind co)
  , (rep_tys, wrappers) <- dataConArgUnpack co_rep_ty
  = (rep_tys, wrapCo co co_rep_ty wrappers)


-------------------------
wrapCo :: Coercion -> Type -> (Unboxer, Boxer) -> (Unboxer, Boxer)
wrapCo co rep_ty (unbox_rep, box_rep)  -- co :: arg_ty ~ rep_ty
  = (unboxer, boxer)
  where
    unboxer arg_id = do { rep_id <- newLocal rep_ty
                        ; (rep_ids, rep_fn) <- unbox_rep rep_id
                        ; let co_bind = NonRec rep_id (Var arg_id `Cast` co)
                        ; return (rep_ids, Let co_bind . rep_fn) }
    boxer = Boxer $ \ subst ->
            do { (rep_ids, rep_expr)
                    <- case box_rep of
                         UnitBox -> do { rep_id <- newLocal (TcType.substTy subst rep_ty)
                                       ; return ([rep_id], Var rep_id) }
                         Boxer boxer -> boxer subst
               ; let sco = substCoUnchecked subst co
               ; return (rep_ids, rep_expr `Cast` mkSymCo sco) }

------------------------
seqUnboxer :: Unboxer
seqUnboxer v = return ([v], mkDefaultCase (Var v) v)

unitUnboxer :: Unboxer
unitUnboxer v = return ([v], \e -> e)

unitBoxer :: Boxer
unitBoxer = UnitBox

-------------------------
dataConArgUnpack
   :: Type
   ->  ( [(Type, StrictnessMark)]   -- Rep types
       , (Unboxer, Boxer) )

dataConArgUnpack arg_ty
  | Just (tc, tc_args) <- splitTyConApp_maybe arg_ty
  , Just con <- tyConSingleAlgDataCon_maybe tc
      -- NB: check for an *algebraic* data type
      -- A recursive newtype might mean that
      -- 'arg_ty' is a newtype
  , let rep_tys = dataConInstArgTys con tc_args
  = ASSERT( null (dataConExTyCoVars con) )
      -- Note [Unpacking GADTs and existentials]
    ( rep_tys `zip` dataConRepStrictness con
    ,( \ arg_id ->
       do { rep_ids <- mapM newLocal rep_tys
          ; let unbox_fn body
                  = mkSingleAltCase (Var arg_id) arg_id
                             (DataAlt con) rep_ids body
          ; return (rep_ids, unbox_fn) }
     , Boxer $ \ subst ->
       do { rep_ids <- mapM (newLocal . TcType.substTyUnchecked subst) rep_tys
          ; return (rep_ids, Var (dataConWorkId con)
                             `mkTyApps` (substTysUnchecked subst tc_args)
                             `mkVarApps` rep_ids ) } ) )
  | otherwise
  = pprPanic "dataConArgUnpack" (ppr arg_ty)
    -- An interface file specified Unpacked, but we couldn't unpack it

isUnpackableType :: DynFlags -> FamInstEnvs -> Type -> Bool
-- True if we can unpack the UNPACK the argument type
-- See Note [Recursive unboxing]
-- We look "deeply" inside rather than relying on the DataCons
-- we encounter on the way, because otherwise we might well
-- end up relying on ourselves!
isUnpackableType dflags fam_envs ty
  | Just data_con <- unpackable_type ty
  = ok_con_args emptyNameSet data_con
  | otherwise
  = False
  where
    ok_con_args dcs con
       | dc_name `elemNameSet` dcs
       = False
       | otherwise
       = all (ok_arg dcs')
             (dataConOrigArgTys con `zip` dataConSrcBangs con)
          -- NB: dataConSrcBangs gives the *user* request;
          -- We'd get a black hole if we used dataConImplBangs
       where
         dc_name = getName con
         dcs' = dcs `extendNameSet` dc_name

    ok_arg dcs (ty, bang)
      = not (attempt_unpack bang) || ok_ty dcs norm_ty
      where
        norm_ty = topNormaliseType fam_envs ty

    ok_ty dcs ty
      | Just data_con <- unpackable_type ty
      = ok_con_args dcs data_con
      | otherwise
      = True        -- NB True here, in contrast to False at top level

    attempt_unpack (HsSrcBang _ SrcUnpack NoSrcStrict)
      = xopt LangExt.StrictData dflags
    attempt_unpack (HsSrcBang _ SrcUnpack SrcStrict)
      = True
    attempt_unpack (HsSrcBang _  NoSrcUnpack SrcStrict)
      = True  -- Be conservative
    attempt_unpack (HsSrcBang _  NoSrcUnpack NoSrcStrict)
      = xopt LangExt.StrictData dflags -- Be conservative
    attempt_unpack _ = False

    unpackable_type :: Type -> Maybe DataCon
    -- Works just on a single level
    unpackable_type ty
      | Just (tc, _) <- splitTyConApp_maybe ty
      , Just data_con <- tyConSingleAlgDataCon_maybe tc
      , null (dataConExTyCoVars data_con)
          -- See Note [Unpacking GADTs and existentials]
      = Just data_con
      | otherwise
      = Nothing

{-
Note [Unpacking GADTs and existentials]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There is nothing stopping us unpacking a data type with equality
components, like
  data Equal a b where
    Equal :: Equal a a

And it'd be fine to unpack a product type with existential components
too, but that would require a bit more plumbing, so currently we don't.

So for now we require: null (dataConExTyCoVars data_con)
See #14978

Note [Unpack one-wide fields]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The flag UnboxSmallStrictFields ensures that any field that can
(safely) be unboxed to a word-sized unboxed field, should be so unboxed.
For example:

    data A = A Int#
    newtype B = B A
    data C = C !B
    data D = D !C
    data E = E !()
    data F = F !D
    data G = G !F !F

All of these should have an Int# as their representation, except
G which should have two Int#s.

However

    data T = T !(S Int)
    data S = S !a

Here we can represent T with an Int#.

Note [Recursive unboxing]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider
  data R = MkR {-# UNPACK #-} !S Int
  data S = MkS {-# UNPACK #-} !Int
The representation arguments of MkR are the *representation* arguments
of S (plus Int); the rep args of MkS are Int#.  This is all fine.

But be careful not to try to unbox this!
        data T = MkT {-# UNPACK #-} !T Int
Because then we'd get an infinite number of arguments.

Here is a more complicated case:
        data S = MkS {-# UNPACK #-} !T Int
        data T = MkT {-# UNPACK #-} !S Int
Each of S and T must decide independently whether to unpack
and they had better not both say yes. So they must both say no.

Also behave conservatively when there is no UNPACK pragma
        data T = MkS !T Int
with -funbox-strict-fields or -funbox-small-strict-fields
we need to behave as if there was an UNPACK pragma there.

But it's the *argument* type that matters. This is fine:
        data S = MkS S !Int
because Int is non-recursive.

************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
        Wrapping and unwrapping newtypes and type families
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

wrapNewTypeBody :: TyCon -> [Type] -> CoreExpr -> CoreExpr
-- The wrapper for the data constructor for a newtype looks like this:
--      newtype T a = MkT (a,Int)
--      MkT :: forall a. (a,Int) -> T a
--      MkT = /\a. \(x:(a,Int)). x `cast` sym (CoT a)
-- where CoT is the coercion TyCon associated with the newtype
--
-- The call (wrapNewTypeBody T [a] e) returns the
-- body of the wrapper, namely
--      e `cast` (CoT [a])
--
-- If a coercion constructor is provided in the newtype, then we use
-- it, otherwise the wrap/unwrap are both no-ops

wrapNewTypeBody tycon args result_expr
  = ASSERT( isNewTyCon tycon )
    mkCast result_expr (mkSymCo co)
  where
    co = mkUnbranchedAxInstCo Representational (newTyConCo tycon) args []

-- When unwrapping, we do *not* apply any family coercion, because this will
-- be done via a CoPat by the type checker.  We have to do it this way as
-- computing the right type arguments for the coercion requires more than just
-- a spliting operation (cf, TcPat.tcConPat).

unwrapNewTypeBody :: TyCon -> [Type] -> CoreExpr -> CoreExpr
unwrapNewTypeBody tycon args result_expr
  = ASSERT( isNewTyCon tycon )
    mkCast result_expr (mkUnbranchedAxInstCo Representational (newTyConCo tycon) args [])

-- If the type constructor is a representation type of a data instance, wrap
-- the expression into a cast adjusting the expression type, which is an
-- instance of the representation type, to the corresponding instance of the
-- family instance type.
-- See Note [Wrappers for data instance tycons]
wrapFamInstBody :: TyCon -> [Type] -> CoreExpr -> CoreExpr
wrapFamInstBody tycon args body
  | Just co_con <- tyConFamilyCoercion_maybe tycon
  = mkCast body (mkSymCo (mkUnbranchedAxInstCo Representational co_con args []))
  | otherwise
  = body

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Primitive operations}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

mkPrimOpId :: PrimOp -> Id
mkPrimOpId prim_op
  = id
  where
    (tyvars,arg_tys,res_ty, arity, strict_sig) = primOpSig prim_op
    ty   = mkSpecForAllTys tyvars (mkVisFunTys arg_tys res_ty)
    name = mkWiredInName gHC_PRIM (primOpOcc prim_op)
                         (mkPrimOpIdUnique (primOpTag prim_op))
                         (AnId id) UserSyntax
    id   = mkGlobalId (PrimOpId prim_op) name ty info

    info = noCafIdInfo
           `setRuleInfo`           mkRuleInfo (maybeToList $ primOpRules name prim_op)
           `setArityInfo`          arity
           `setStrictnessInfo`     strict_sig
           `setInlinePragInfo`     neverInlinePragma
           `setLevityInfoWithType` res_ty
               -- We give PrimOps a NOINLINE pragma so that we don't
               -- get silly warnings from Desugar.dsRule (the inline_shadows_rule
               -- test) about a RULE conflicting with a possible inlining
               -- cf #7287

-- For each ccall we manufacture a separate CCallOpId, giving it
-- a fresh unique, a type that is correct for this particular ccall,
-- and a CCall structure that gives the correct details about calling
-- convention etc.
--
-- The *name* of this Id is a local name whose OccName gives the full
-- details of the ccall, type and all.  This means that the interface
-- file reader can reconstruct a suitable Id

mkFCallId :: DynFlags -> Unique -> ForeignCall -> Type -> Id
mkFCallId dflags uniq fcall ty
  = ASSERT( noFreeVarsOfType ty )
    -- A CCallOpId should have no free type variables;
    -- when doing substitutions won't substitute over it
    mkGlobalId (FCallId fcall) name ty info
  where
    occ_str = showSDoc dflags (braces (ppr fcall <+> ppr ty))
    -- The "occurrence name" of a ccall is the full info about the
    -- ccall; it is encoded, but may have embedded spaces etc!

    name = mkFCallName uniq occ_str

    info = noCafIdInfo
           `setArityInfo`          arity
           `setStrictnessInfo`     strict_sig
           `setLevityInfoWithType` ty

    (bndrs, _) = tcSplitPiTys ty
    arity      = count isAnonTyCoBinder bndrs
    strict_sig = mkClosedStrictSig (replicate arity topDmd) topRes
    -- the call does not claim to be strict in its arguments, since they
    -- may be lifted (foreign import prim) and the called code doesn't
    -- necessarily force them. See #11076.
{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{DictFuns and default methods}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************

Note [Dict funs and default methods]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dict funs and default methods are *not* ImplicitIds.  Their definition
involves user-written code, so we can't figure out their strictness etc
based on fixed info, as we can for constructors and record selectors (say).

NB: See also Note [Exported LocalIds] in Id
-}

mkDictFunId :: Name      -- Name to use for the dict fun;
            -> [TyVar]
            -> ThetaType
            -> Class
            -> [Type]
            -> Id
-- Implements the DFun Superclass Invariant (see TcInstDcls)
-- See Note [Dict funs and default methods]

mkDictFunId dfun_name tvs theta clas tys
  = mkExportedLocalId (DFunId is_nt)
                      dfun_name
                      dfun_ty
  where
    is_nt = isNewTyCon (classTyCon clas)
    dfun_ty = mkDictFunTy tvs theta clas tys

mkDictFunTy :: [TyVar] -> ThetaType -> Class -> [Type] -> Type
mkDictFunTy tvs theta clas tys
 = mkSpecSigmaTy tvs theta (mkClassPred clas tys)

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Un-definable}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************

These Ids can't be defined in Haskell.  They could be defined in
unfoldings in the wired-in GHC.Prim interface file, but we'd have to
ensure that they were definitely, definitely inlined, because there is
no curried identifier for them.  That's what mkCompulsoryUnfolding
does.  If we had a way to get a compulsory unfolding from an interface
file, we could do that, but we don't right now.

unsafeCoerce# isn't so much a PrimOp as a phantom identifier, that
just gets expanded into a type coercion wherever it occurs.  Hence we
add it as a built-in Id with an unfolding here.

The type variables we use here are "open" type variables: this means
they can unify with both unlifted and lifted types.  Hence we provide
another gun with which to shoot yourself in the foot.
-}

unsafeCoerceName, nullAddrName, seqName,
   realWorldName, voidPrimIdName, coercionTokenName,
   magicDictName, coerceName, proxyName :: Name
unsafeCoerceName  = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "unsafeCoerce#")  unsafeCoerceIdKey  unsafeCoerceId
nullAddrName      = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "nullAddr#")      nullAddrIdKey      nullAddrId
seqName           = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "seq")            seqIdKey           seqId
realWorldName     = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "realWorld#")     realWorldPrimIdKey realWorldPrimId
voidPrimIdName    = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "void#")          voidPrimIdKey      voidPrimId
coercionTokenName = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "coercionToken#") coercionTokenIdKey coercionTokenId
magicDictName     = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "magicDict")      magicDictKey       magicDictId
coerceName        = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "coerce")         coerceKey          coerceId
proxyName         = mkWiredInIdName gHC_PRIM  (fsLit "proxy#")         proxyHashKey       proxyHashId

lazyIdName, oneShotName, noinlineIdName :: Name
lazyIdName        = mkWiredInIdName gHC_MAGIC (fsLit "lazy")           lazyIdKey          lazyId
oneShotName       = mkWiredInIdName gHC_MAGIC (fsLit "oneShot")        oneShotKey         oneShotId
noinlineIdName    = mkWiredInIdName gHC_MAGIC (fsLit "noinline")       noinlineIdKey      noinlineId

------------------------------------------------
proxyHashId :: Id
proxyHashId
  = pcMiscPrelId proxyName ty
       (noCafIdInfo `setUnfoldingInfo` evaldUnfolding -- Note [evaldUnfoldings]
                    `setNeverLevPoly`  ty )
  where
    -- proxy# :: forall {k} (a:k). Proxy# k a
    --
    -- The visibility of the `k` binder is Inferred to match the type of the
    -- Proxy data constructor (#16293).
    [kv,tv] = mkTemplateKiTyVars [liftedTypeKind] id
    kv_ty   = mkTyVarTy kv
    tv_ty   = mkTyVarTy tv
    ty      = mkInvForAllTy kv $ mkSpecForAllTy tv $ mkProxyPrimTy kv_ty tv_ty

------------------------------------------------
unsafeCoerceId :: Id
unsafeCoerceId
  = pcMiscPrelId unsafeCoerceName ty info
  where
    info = noCafIdInfo `setInlinePragInfo` alwaysInlinePragma
                       `setUnfoldingInfo`  mkCompulsoryUnfolding rhs

    -- unsafeCoerce# :: forall (r1 :: RuntimeRep) (r2 :: RuntimeRep)
    --                         (a :: TYPE r1) (b :: TYPE r2).
    --                         a -> b
    bndrs = mkTemplateKiTyVars [runtimeRepTy, runtimeRepTy]
                               (\ks -> map tYPE ks)

    [_, _, a, b] = mkTyVarTys bndrs

    ty  = mkSpecForAllTys bndrs (mkVisFunTy a b)

    [x] = mkTemplateLocals [a]
    rhs = mkLams (bndrs ++ [x]) $
          Cast (Var x) (mkUnsafeCo Representational a b)

------------------------------------------------
nullAddrId :: Id
-- nullAddr# :: Addr#
-- The reason it is here is because we don't provide
-- a way to write this literal in Haskell.
nullAddrId = pcMiscPrelId nullAddrName addrPrimTy info
  where
    info = noCafIdInfo `setInlinePragInfo` alwaysInlinePragma
                       `setUnfoldingInfo`  mkCompulsoryUnfolding (Lit nullAddrLit)
                       `setNeverLevPoly`   addrPrimTy

------------------------------------------------
seqId :: Id     -- See Note [seqId magic]
seqId = pcMiscPrelId seqName ty info
  where
    info = noCafIdInfo `setInlinePragInfo` inline_prag
                       `setUnfoldingInfo`  mkCompulsoryUnfolding rhs

    inline_prag
         = alwaysInlinePragma `setInlinePragmaActivation` ActiveAfter
                 NoSourceText 0
                  -- Make 'seq' not inline-always, so that simpleOptExpr
                  -- (see CoreSubst.simple_app) won't inline 'seq' on the
                  -- LHS of rules.  That way we can have rules for 'seq';
                  -- see Note [seqId magic]

    -- seq :: forall (r :: RuntimeRep) a (b :: TYPE r). a -> b -> b
    ty  =
      mkInvForAllTy runtimeRep2TyVar
      $ mkSpecForAllTys [alphaTyVar, openBetaTyVar]
      $ mkVisFunTy alphaTy (mkVisFunTy openBetaTy openBetaTy)

    [x,y] = mkTemplateLocals [alphaTy, openBetaTy]
    rhs = mkLams ([runtimeRep2TyVar, alphaTyVar, openBetaTyVar, x, y]) $
          Case (Var x) x openBetaTy [(DEFAULT, [], Var y)]

------------------------------------------------
lazyId :: Id    -- See Note [lazyId magic]
lazyId = pcMiscPrelId lazyIdName ty info
  where
    info = noCafIdInfo `setNeverLevPoly` ty
    ty  = mkSpecForAllTys [alphaTyVar] (mkVisFunTy alphaTy alphaTy)

noinlineId :: Id -- See Note [noinlineId magic]
noinlineId = pcMiscPrelId noinlineIdName ty info
  where
    info = noCafIdInfo `setNeverLevPoly` ty
    ty  = mkSpecForAllTys [alphaTyVar] (mkVisFunTy alphaTy alphaTy)

oneShotId :: Id -- See Note [The oneShot function]
oneShotId = pcMiscPrelId oneShotName ty info
  where
    info = noCafIdInfo `setInlinePragInfo` alwaysInlinePragma
                       `setUnfoldingInfo`  mkCompulsoryUnfolding rhs
    ty  = mkSpecForAllTys [ runtimeRep1TyVar, runtimeRep2TyVar
                          , openAlphaTyVar, openBetaTyVar ]
                          (mkVisFunTy fun_ty fun_ty)
    fun_ty = mkVisFunTy openAlphaTy openBetaTy
    [body, x] = mkTemplateLocals [fun_ty, openAlphaTy]
    x' = setOneShotLambda x  -- Here is the magic bit!
    rhs = mkLams [ runtimeRep1TyVar, runtimeRep2TyVar
                 , openAlphaTyVar, openBetaTyVar
                 , body, x'] $
          Var body `App` Var x

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
magicDictId :: Id  -- See Note [magicDictId magic]
magicDictId = pcMiscPrelId magicDictName ty info
  where
  info = noCafIdInfo `setInlinePragInfo` neverInlinePragma
                     `setNeverLevPoly`   ty
  ty   = mkSpecForAllTys [alphaTyVar] alphaTy

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

coerceId :: Id
coerceId = pcMiscPrelId coerceName ty info
  where
    info = noCafIdInfo `setInlinePragInfo` alwaysInlinePragma
                       `setUnfoldingInfo`  mkCompulsoryUnfolding rhs
    eqRTy     = mkTyConApp coercibleTyCon [ tYPE r , a, b ]
    eqRPrimTy = mkTyConApp eqReprPrimTyCon [ tYPE r, tYPE r, a, b ]
    ty        = mkForAllTys [ Bndr rv Inferred
                            , Bndr av Specified
                            , Bndr bv Specified
                            ] $
                mkInvisFunTy eqRTy $
                mkVisFunTy a b

    bndrs@[rv,av,bv] = mkTemplateKiTyVar runtimeRepTy
                        (\r -> [tYPE r, tYPE r])

    [r, a, b] = mkTyVarTys bndrs

    [eqR,x,eq] = mkTemplateLocals [eqRTy, a, eqRPrimTy]
    rhs = mkLams (bndrs ++ [eqR, x]) $
          mkWildCase (Var eqR) eqRTy b $
          [(DataAlt coercibleDataCon, [eq], Cast (Var x) (mkCoVarCo eq))]

{-
Note [Unsafe coerce magic]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We define a *primitive*
   GHC.Prim.unsafeCoerce#
and then in the base library we define the ordinary function
   Unsafe.Coerce.unsafeCoerce :: forall (a:*) (b:*). a -> b
   unsafeCoerce x = unsafeCoerce# x

Notice that unsafeCoerce has a civilized (albeit still dangerous)
polymorphic type, whose type args have kind *.  So you can't use it on
unboxed values (unsafeCoerce 3#).

In contrast unsafeCoerce# is even more dangerous because you *can* use
it on unboxed things, (unsafeCoerce# 3#) :: Int. Its type is
   forall (r1 :: RuntimeRep) (r2 :: RuntimeRep) (a: TYPE r1) (b: TYPE r2). a -> b

Note [seqId magic]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'GHC.Prim.seq' is special in several ways.

a) Its fixity is set in LoadIface.ghcPrimIface

b) It has quite a bit of desugaring magic.
   See DsUtils.hs Note [Desugaring seq (1)] and (2) and (3)

c) There is some special rule handing: Note [User-defined RULES for seq]

Historical note:
    In TcExpr we used to need a special typing rule for 'seq', to handle calls
    whose second argument had an unboxed type, e.g.  x `seq` 3#

    However, with levity polymorphism we can now give seq the type seq ::
    forall (r :: RuntimeRep) a (b :: TYPE r). a -> b -> b which handles this
    case without special treatment in the typechecker.

Note [User-defined RULES for seq]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Roman found situations where he had
      case (f n) of _ -> e
where he knew that f (which was strict in n) would terminate if n did.
Notice that the result of (f n) is discarded. So it makes sense to
transform to
      case n of _ -> e

Rather than attempt some general analysis to support this, I've added
enough support that you can do this using a rewrite rule:

  RULE "f/seq" forall n.  seq (f n) = seq n

You write that rule.  When GHC sees a case expression that discards
its result, it mentally transforms it to a call to 'seq' and looks for
a RULE.  (This is done in Simplify.trySeqRules.)  As usual, the
correctness of the rule is up to you.

VERY IMPORTANT: to make this work, we give the RULE an arity of 1, not 2.
If we wrote
  RULE "f/seq" forall n e.  seq (f n) e = seq n e
with rule arity 2, then two bad things would happen:

  - The magical desugaring done in Note [seqId magic] item (b)
    for saturated application of 'seq' would turn the LHS into
    a case expression!

  - The code in Simplify.rebuildCase would need to actually supply
    the value argument, which turns out to be awkward.

See also: Note [User-defined RULES for seq] in Simplify.


Note [lazyId magic]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lazy :: forall a?. a? -> a?   (i.e. works for unboxed types too)

'lazy' is used to make sure that a sub-expression, and its free variables,
are truly used call-by-need, with no code motion.  Key examples:

* pseq:    pseq a b = a `seq` lazy b
  We want to make sure that the free vars of 'b' are not evaluated
  before 'a', even though the expression is plainly strict in 'b'.

* catch:   catch a b = catch# (lazy a) b
  Again, it's clear that 'a' will be evaluated strictly (and indeed
  applied to a state token) but we want to make sure that any exceptions
  arising from the evaluation of 'a' are caught by the catch (see
  #11555).

Implementing 'lazy' is a bit tricky:

* It must not have a strictness signature: by being a built-in Id,
  all the info about lazyId comes from here, not from GHC.Base.hi.
  This is important, because the strictness analyser will spot it as
  strict!

* It must not have an unfolding: it gets "inlined" by a HACK in
  CorePrep. It's very important to do this inlining *after* unfoldings
  are exposed in the interface file.  Otherwise, the unfolding for
  (say) pseq in the interface file will not mention 'lazy', so if we
  inline 'pseq' we'll totally miss the very thing that 'lazy' was
  there for in the first place. See #3259 for a real world
  example.

* Suppose CorePrep sees (catch# (lazy e) b).  At all costs we must
  avoid using call by value here:
     case e of r -> catch# r b
  Avoiding that is the whole point of 'lazy'.  So in CorePrep (which
  generate the 'case' expression for a call-by-value call) we must
  spot the 'lazy' on the arg (in CorePrep.cpeApp), and build a 'let'
  instead.

* lazyId is defined in GHC.Base, so we don't *have* to inline it.  If it
  appears un-applied, we'll end up just calling it.

Note [noinlineId magic]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
noinline :: forall a. a -> a

'noinline' is used to make sure that a function f is never inlined,
e.g., as in 'noinline f x'.  Ordinarily, the identity function with NOINLINE
could be used to achieve this effect; however, this has the unfortunate
result of leaving a (useless) call to noinline at runtime.  So we have
a little bit of magic to optimize away 'noinline' after we are done
running the simplifier.

'noinline' needs to be wired-in because it gets inserted automatically
when we serialize an expression to the interface format. See
Note [Inlining and hs-boot files] in ToIface

Note that noinline as currently implemented can hide some simplifications since
it hides strictness from the demand analyser. Specifically, the demand analyser
will treat 'noinline f x' as lazy in 'x', even if the demand signature of 'f'
specifies that it is strict in its argument. We considered fixing this this by adding a
special case to the demand analyser to address #16588. However, the special
case seemed like a large and expensive hammer to address a rare case and
consequently we rather opted to use a more minimal solution.

Note [The oneShot function]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the context of making left-folds fuse somewhat okish (see ticket #7994
and Note [Left folds via right fold]) it was determined that it would be useful
if library authors could explicitly tell the compiler that a certain lambda is
called at most once. The oneShot function allows that.

'oneShot' is levity-polymorphic, i.e. the type variables can refer to unlifted
types as well (#10744); e.g.
   oneShot (\x:Int# -> x +# 1#)

Like most magic functions it has a compulsory unfolding, so there is no need
for a real definition somewhere. We have one in GHC.Magic for the convenience
of putting the documentation there.

It uses `setOneShotLambda` on the lambda's binder. That is the whole magic:

A typical call looks like
     oneShot (\y. e)
after unfolding the definition `oneShot = \f \x[oneshot]. f x` we get
     (\f \x[oneshot]. f x) (\y. e)
 --> \x[oneshot]. ((\y.e) x)
 --> \x[oneshot] e[x/y]
which is what we want.

It is only effective if the one-shot info survives as long as possible; in
particular it must make it into the interface in unfoldings. See Note [Preserve
OneShotInfo] in CoreTidy.

Also see https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/one-shot.


Note [magicDictId magic]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The identifier `magicDict` is just a place-holder, which is used to
implement a primitive that we cannot define in Haskell but we can write
in Core.  It is declared with a place-holder type:

    magicDict :: forall a. a

The intention is that the identifier will be used in a very specific way,
to create dictionaries for classes with a single method.  Consider a class
like this:

   class C a where
     f :: T a

We are going to use `magicDict`, in conjunction with a built-in Prelude
rule, to cast values of type `T a` into dictionaries for `C a`.  To do
this, we define a function like this in the library:

  data WrapC a b = WrapC (C a => Proxy a -> b)

  withT :: (C a => Proxy a -> b)
        ->  T a -> Proxy a -> b
  withT f x y = magicDict (WrapC f) x y

The purpose of `WrapC` is to avoid having `f` instantiated.
Also, it avoids impredicativity, because `magicDict`'s type
cannot be instantiated with a forall.  The field of `WrapC` contains
a `Proxy` parameter which is used to link the type of the constraint,
`C a`, with the type of the `Wrap` value being made.

Next, we add a built-in Prelude rule (see prelude/PrelRules.hs),
which will replace the RHS of this definition with the appropriate
definition in Core.  The rewrite rule works as follows:

  magicDict @t (wrap @a @b f) x y
---->
  f (x `cast` co a) y

The `co` coercion is the newtype-coercion extracted from the type-class.
The type class is obtain by looking at the type of wrap.


-------------------------------------------------------------
@realWorld#@ used to be a magic literal, \tr{void#}.  If things get
nasty as-is, change it back to a literal (@Literal@).

voidArgId is a Local Id used simply as an argument in functions
where we just want an arg to avoid having a thunk of unlifted type.
E.g.
        x = \ void :: Void# -> (# p, q #)

This comes up in strictness analysis

Note [evaldUnfoldings]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The evaldUnfolding makes it look that some primitive value is
evaluated, which in turn makes Simplify.interestingArg return True,
which in turn makes INLINE things applied to said value likely to be
inlined.
-}

realWorldPrimId :: Id   -- :: State# RealWorld
realWorldPrimId = pcMiscPrelId realWorldName realWorldStatePrimTy
                     (noCafIdInfo `setUnfoldingInfo` evaldUnfolding    -- Note [evaldUnfoldings]
                                  `setOneShotInfo` stateHackOneShot
                                  `setNeverLevPoly` realWorldStatePrimTy)

voidPrimId :: Id     -- Global constant :: Void#
voidPrimId  = pcMiscPrelId voidPrimIdName voidPrimTy
                (noCafIdInfo `setUnfoldingInfo` evaldUnfolding     -- Note [evaldUnfoldings]
                             `setNeverLevPoly`  voidPrimTy)

voidArgId :: Id       -- Local lambda-bound :: Void#
voidArgId = mkSysLocal (fsLit "void") voidArgIdKey voidPrimTy

coercionTokenId :: Id         -- :: () ~ ()
coercionTokenId -- Used to replace Coercion terms when we go to STG
  = pcMiscPrelId coercionTokenName
                 (mkTyConApp eqPrimTyCon [liftedTypeKind, liftedTypeKind, unitTy, unitTy])
                 noCafIdInfo

pcMiscPrelId :: Name -> Type -> IdInfo -> Id
pcMiscPrelId name ty info
  = mkVanillaGlobalWithInfo name ty info
    -- We lie and say the thing is imported; otherwise, we get into
    -- a mess with dependency analysis; e.g., core2stg may heave in
    -- random calls to GHCbase.unpackPS__.  If GHCbase is the module
    -- being compiled, then it's just a matter of luck if the definition
    -- will be in "the right place" to be in scope.