{- (c) The GRASP/AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1992-1998 \section[FloatOut]{Float bindings outwards (towards the top level)} ``Long-distance'' floating of bindings towards the top level. -} {-# LANGUAGE CPP #-} module FloatOut ( floatOutwards ) where import GhcPrelude import CoreSyn import CoreUtils import MkCore import CoreArity ( etaExpand ) import CoreMonad ( FloatOutSwitches(..) ) import DynFlags import ErrUtils ( dumpIfSet_dyn ) import Id ( Id, idArity, idType, isBottomingId, isJoinId, isJoinId_maybe ) import SetLevels import UniqSupply ( UniqSupply ) import Bag import Util import Maybes import Outputable import Type import qualified Data.IntMap as M import Data.List ( partition ) #include "HsVersions.h" {- ----------------- Overall game plan ----------------- The Big Main Idea is: To float out sub-expressions that can thereby get outside a non-one-shot value lambda, and hence may be shared. To achieve this we may need to do two things: a) Let-bind the sub-expression: f (g x) ==> let lvl = f (g x) in lvl Now we can float the binding for 'lvl'. b) More than that, we may need to abstract wrt a type variable \x -> ... /\a -> let v = ...a... in .... Here the binding for v mentions 'a' but not 'x'. So we abstract wrt 'a', to give this binding for 'v': vp = /\a -> ...a... v = vp a Now the binding for vp can float out unimpeded. I can't remember why this case seemed important enough to deal with, but I certainly found cases where important floats didn't happen if we did not abstract wrt tyvars. With this in mind we can also achieve another goal: lambda lifting. We can make an arbitrary (function) binding float to top level by abstracting wrt *all* local variables, not just type variables, leaving a binding that can be floated right to top level. Whether or not this happens is controlled by a flag. Random comments ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ At the moment we never float a binding out to between two adjacent lambdas. For example: @ \x y -> let t = x+x in ... ===> \x -> let t = x+x in \y -> ... @ Reason: this is less efficient in the case where the original lambda is never partially applied. But there's a case I've seen where this might not be true. Consider: @ elEm2 x ys = elem' x ys where elem' _ [] = False elem' x (y:ys) = x==y || elem' x ys @ It turns out that this generates a subexpression of the form @ \deq x ys -> let eq = eqFromEqDict deq in ... @ which might usefully be separated to @ \deq -> let eq = eqFromEqDict deq in \xy -> ... @ Well, maybe. We don't do this at the moment. Note [Join points] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Every occurrence of a join point must be a tail call (see Note [Invariants on join points] in CoreSyn), so we must be careful with how far we float them. The mechanism for doing so is the *join ceiling*, detailed in Note [Join ceiling] in SetLevels. For us, the significance is that a binder might be marked to be dropped at the nearest boundary between tail calls and non-tail calls. For example: (< join j = ... in let x = < ... > in case < ... > of A -> ... B -> ... >) < ... > < ... > Here the join ceilings are marked with angle brackets. Either side of an application is a join ceiling, as is the scrutinee position of a case expression or the RHS of a let binding (but not a join point). Why do we *want* do float join points at all? After all, they're never allocated, so there's no sharing to be gained by floating them. However, the other benefit of floating is making RHSes small, and this can have a significant impact. In particular, stream fusion has been known to produce nested loops like this: joinrec j1 x1 = joinrec j2 x2 = joinrec j3 x3 = ... jump j1 (x3 + 1) ... jump j2 (x3 + 1) ... in jump j3 x2 in jump j2 x1 in jump j1 x (Assume x1 and x2 do *not* occur free in j3.) Here j1 and j2 are wholly superfluous---each of them merely forwards its argument to j3. Since j3 only refers to x3, we can float j2 and j3 to make everything one big mutual recursion: joinrec j1 x1 = jump j2 x1 j2 x2 = jump j3 x2 j3 x3 = ... jump j1 (x3 + 1) ... jump j2 (x3 + 1) ... in jump j1 x Now the simplifier will happily inline the trivial j1 and j2, leaving only j3. Without floating, we're stuck with three loops instead of one. ************************************************************************ * * \subsection[floatOutwards]{@floatOutwards@: let-floating interface function} * * ************************************************************************ -} floatOutwards :: FloatOutSwitches -> DynFlags -> UniqSupply -> CoreProgram -> IO CoreProgram floatOutwards float_sws dflags us pgm = do { let { annotated_w_levels = setLevels float_sws pgm us ; (fss, binds_s') = unzip (map floatTopBind annotated_w_levels) } ; dumpIfSet_dyn dflags Opt_D_verbose_core2core "Levels added:" (vcat (map ppr annotated_w_levels)); let { (tlets, ntlets, lams) = get_stats (sum_stats fss) }; dumpIfSet_dyn dflags Opt_D_dump_simpl_stats "FloatOut stats:" (hcat [ int tlets, text " Lets floated to top level; ", int ntlets, text " Lets floated elsewhere; from ", int lams, text " Lambda groups"]); return (bagToList (unionManyBags binds_s')) } floatTopBind :: LevelledBind -> (FloatStats, Bag CoreBind) floatTopBind bind = case (floatBind bind) of { (fs, floats, bind') -> let float_bag = flattenTopFloats floats in case bind' of -- bind' can't have unlifted values or join points, so can only be one -- value bind, rec or non-rec (see comment on floatBind) [Rec prs] -> (fs, unitBag (Rec (addTopFloatPairs float_bag prs))) [NonRec b e] -> (fs, float_bag `snocBag` NonRec b e) _ -> pprPanic "floatTopBind" (ppr bind') } {- ************************************************************************ * * \subsection[FloatOut-Bind]{Floating in a binding (the business end)} * * ************************************************************************ -} floatBind :: LevelledBind -> (FloatStats, FloatBinds, [CoreBind]) -- Returns a list with either -- * A single non-recursive binding (value or join point), or -- * The following, in order: -- * Zero or more non-rec unlifted bindings -- * One or both of: -- * A recursive group of join binds -- * A recursive group of value binds -- See Note [Floating out of Rec rhss] for why things get arranged this way. floatBind (NonRec (TB var _) rhs) = case (floatRhs var rhs) of { (fs, rhs_floats, rhs') -> -- A tiresome hack: -- see Note [Bottoming floats: eta expansion] in SetLevels let rhs'' | isBottomingId var = etaExpand (idArity var) rhs' | otherwise = rhs' in (fs, rhs_floats, [NonRec var rhs'']) } floatBind (Rec pairs) = case floatList do_pair pairs of { (fs, rhs_floats, new_pairs) -> let (new_ul_pairss, new_other_pairss) = unzip new_pairs (new_join_pairs, new_l_pairs) = partition (isJoinId . fst) (concat new_other_pairss) -- Can't put the join points and the values in the same rec group new_rec_binds | null new_join_pairs = [ Rec new_l_pairs ] | null new_l_pairs = [ Rec new_join_pairs ] | otherwise = [ Rec new_l_pairs , Rec new_join_pairs ] new_non_rec_binds = [ NonRec b e | (b, e) <- concat new_ul_pairss ] in (fs, rhs_floats, new_non_rec_binds ++ new_rec_binds) } where do_pair :: (LevelledBndr, LevelledExpr) -> (FloatStats, FloatBinds, ([(Id,CoreExpr)], -- Non-recursive unlifted value bindings [(Id,CoreExpr)])) -- Join points and lifted value bindings do_pair (TB name spec, rhs) | isTopLvl dest_lvl -- See Note [floatBind for top level] = case (floatRhs name rhs) of { (fs, rhs_floats, rhs') -> (fs, emptyFloats, ([], addTopFloatPairs (flattenTopFloats rhs_floats) [(name, rhs')]))} | otherwise -- Note [Floating out of Rec rhss] = case (floatRhs name rhs) of { (fs, rhs_floats, rhs') -> case (partitionByLevel dest_lvl rhs_floats) of { (rhs_floats', heres) -> case (splitRecFloats heres) of { (ul_pairs, pairs, case_heres) -> let pairs' = (name, installUnderLambdas case_heres rhs') : pairs in (fs, rhs_floats', (ul_pairs, pairs')) }}} where dest_lvl = floatSpecLevel spec splitRecFloats :: Bag FloatBind -> ([(Id,CoreExpr)], -- Non-recursive unlifted value bindings [(Id,CoreExpr)], -- Join points and lifted value bindings Bag FloatBind) -- A tail of further bindings -- The "tail" begins with a case -- See Note [Floating out of Rec rhss] splitRecFloats fs = go [] [] (bagToList fs) where go ul_prs prs (FloatLet (NonRec b r) : fs) | isUnliftedType (idType b) , not (isJoinId b) = go ((b,r):ul_prs) prs fs | otherwise = go ul_prs ((b,r):prs) fs go ul_prs prs (FloatLet (Rec prs') : fs) = go ul_prs (prs' ++ prs) fs go ul_prs prs fs = (reverse ul_prs, prs, listToBag fs) -- Order only matters for -- non-rec installUnderLambdas :: Bag FloatBind -> CoreExpr -> CoreExpr -- Note [Floating out of Rec rhss] installUnderLambdas floats e | isEmptyBag floats = e | otherwise = go e where go (Lam b e) = Lam b (go e) go e = install floats e --------------- floatList :: (a -> (FloatStats, FloatBinds, b)) -> [a] -> (FloatStats, FloatBinds, [b]) floatList _ [] = (zeroStats, emptyFloats, []) floatList f (a:as) = case f a of { (fs_a, binds_a, b) -> case floatList f as of { (fs_as, binds_as, bs) -> (fs_a `add_stats` fs_as, binds_a `plusFloats` binds_as, b:bs) }} {- Note [Floating out of Rec rhss] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider Rec { f<1,0> = \xy. body } From the body we may get some floats. The ones with level <1,0> must stay here, since they may mention f. Ideally we'd like to make them part of the Rec block pairs -- but we can't if there are any FloatCases involved. Nor is it a good idea to dump them in the rhs, but outside the lambda f = case x of I# y -> \xy. body because now f's arity might get worse, which is Not Good. (And if there's an SCC around the RHS it might not get better again. See #5342.) So, gruesomely, we split the floats into * the outer FloatLets, which can join the Rec, and * an inner batch starting in a FloatCase, which are then pushed *inside* the lambdas. This loses full-laziness the rare situation where there is a FloatCase and a Rec interacting. If there are unlifted FloatLets (that *aren't* join points) among the floats, we can't add them to the recursive group without angering Core Lint, but since they must be ok-for-speculation, they can't actually be making any recursive calls, so we can safely pull them out and keep them non-recursive. (Why is something getting floated to <1,0> that doesn't make a recursive call? The case that came up in testing was that f *and* the unlifted binding were getting floated *to the same place*: \x<2,0> -> ... <3,0> letrec { f<F<2,0>> = ... let x'<F<2,0>> = x +# 1# in ... } in ... Everything gets labeled "float to <2,0>" because it all depends on x, but this makes f and x' look mutually recursive when they're not. The test was shootout/k-nucleotide, as compiled using commit 47d5dd68 on the wip/join-points branch. TODO: This can probably be solved somehow in SetLevels. The difference between "this *is at* level <2,0>" and "this *depends on* level <2,0>" is very important.) Note [floatBind for top level] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We may have a *nested* binding whose destination level is (FloatMe tOP_LEVEL), thus letrec { foo <0,0> = .... (let bar<0,0> = .. in ..) .... } The binding for bar will be in the "tops" part of the floating binds, and thus not partioned by floatBody. We could perhaps get rid of the 'tops' component of the floating binds, but this case works just as well. ************************************************************************ \subsection[FloatOut-Expr]{Floating in expressions} * * ************************************************************************ -} floatBody :: Level -> LevelledExpr -> (FloatStats, FloatBinds, CoreExpr) floatBody lvl arg -- Used rec rhss, and case-alternative rhss = case (floatExpr arg) of { (fsa, floats, arg') -> case (partitionByLevel lvl floats) of { (floats', heres) -> -- Dump bindings are bound here (fsa, floats', install heres arg') }} ----------------- {- Note [Floating past breakpoints] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We used to disallow floating out of breakpoint ticks (see #10052). However, I think this is too restrictive. Consider the case of an expression scoped over by a breakpoint tick, tick<...> (let x = ... in f x) In this case it is completely legal to float out x, despite the fact that breakpoint ticks are scoped, let x = ... in (tick<...> f x) The reason here is that we know that the breakpoint will still be hit when the expression is entered since the tick still scopes over the RHS. -} floatExpr :: LevelledExpr -> (FloatStats, FloatBinds, CoreExpr) floatExpr (Var v) = (zeroStats, emptyFloats, Var v) floatExpr (Type ty) = (zeroStats, emptyFloats, Type ty) floatExpr (Coercion co) = (zeroStats, emptyFloats, Coercion co) floatExpr (Lit lit) = (zeroStats, emptyFloats, Lit lit) floatExpr (App e a) = case (atJoinCeiling $ floatExpr e) of { (fse, floats_e, e') -> case (atJoinCeiling $ floatExpr a) of { (fsa, floats_a, a') -> (fse `add_stats` fsa, floats_e `plusFloats` floats_a, App e' a') }} floatExpr lam@(Lam (TB _ lam_spec) _) = let (bndrs_w_lvls, body) = collectBinders lam bndrs = [b | TB b _ <- bndrs_w_lvls] bndr_lvl = asJoinCeilLvl (floatSpecLevel lam_spec) -- All the binders have the same level -- See SetLevels.lvlLamBndrs -- Use asJoinCeilLvl to make this the join ceiling in case (floatBody bndr_lvl body) of { (fs, floats, body') -> (add_to_stats fs floats, floats, mkLams bndrs body') } floatExpr (Tick tickish expr) | tickish `tickishScopesLike` SoftScope -- not scoped, can just float = case (atJoinCeiling $ floatExpr expr) of { (fs, floating_defns, expr') -> (fs, floating_defns, Tick tickish expr') } | not (tickishCounts tickish) || tickishCanSplit tickish = case (atJoinCeiling $ floatExpr expr) of { (fs, floating_defns, expr') -> let -- Annotate bindings floated outwards past an scc expression -- with the cc. We mark that cc as "duplicated", though. annotated_defns = wrapTick (mkNoCount tickish) floating_defns in (fs, annotated_defns, Tick tickish expr') } -- Note [Floating past breakpoints] | Breakpoint{} <- tickish = case (floatExpr expr) of { (fs, floating_defns, expr') -> (fs, floating_defns, Tick tickish expr') } | otherwise = pprPanic "floatExpr tick" (ppr tickish) floatExpr (Cast expr co) = case (atJoinCeiling $ floatExpr expr) of { (fs, floating_defns, expr') -> (fs, floating_defns, Cast expr' co) } floatExpr (Let bind body) = case bind_spec of FloatMe dest_lvl -> case (floatBind bind) of { (fsb, bind_floats, binds') -> case (floatExpr body) of { (fse, body_floats, body') -> let new_bind_floats = foldr plusFloats emptyFloats (map (unitLetFloat dest_lvl) binds') in ( add_stats fsb fse , bind_floats `plusFloats` new_bind_floats `plusFloats` body_floats , body') }} StayPut bind_lvl -- See Note [Avoiding unnecessary floating] -> case (floatBind bind) of { (fsb, bind_floats, binds') -> case (floatBody bind_lvl body) of { (fse, body_floats, body') -> ( add_stats fsb fse , bind_floats `plusFloats` body_floats , foldr Let body' binds' ) }} where bind_spec = case bind of NonRec (TB _ s) _ -> s Rec ((TB _ s, _) : _) -> s Rec [] -> panic "floatExpr:rec" floatExpr (Case scrut (TB case_bndr case_spec) ty alts) = case case_spec of FloatMe dest_lvl -- Case expression moves | [(con@(DataAlt {}), bndrs, rhs)] <- alts -> case atJoinCeiling $ floatExpr scrut of { (fse, fde, scrut') -> case floatExpr rhs of { (fsb, fdb, rhs') -> let float = unitCaseFloat dest_lvl scrut' case_bndr con [b | TB b _ <- bndrs] in (add_stats fse fsb, fde `plusFloats` float `plusFloats` fdb, rhs') }} | otherwise -> pprPanic "Floating multi-case" (ppr alts) StayPut bind_lvl -- Case expression stays put -> case atJoinCeiling $ floatExpr scrut of { (fse, fde, scrut') -> case floatList (float_alt bind_lvl) alts of { (fsa, fda, alts') -> (add_stats fse fsa, fda `plusFloats` fde, Case scrut' case_bndr ty alts') }} where float_alt bind_lvl (con, bs, rhs) = case (floatBody bind_lvl rhs) of { (fs, rhs_floats, rhs') -> (fs, rhs_floats, (con, [b | TB b _ <- bs], rhs')) } floatRhs :: CoreBndr -> LevelledExpr -> (FloatStats, FloatBinds, CoreExpr) floatRhs bndr rhs | Just join_arity <- isJoinId_maybe bndr , Just (bndrs, body) <- try_collect join_arity rhs [] = case bndrs of [] -> floatExpr rhs (TB _ lam_spec):_ -> let lvl = floatSpecLevel lam_spec in case floatBody lvl body of { (fs, floats, body') -> (fs, floats, mkLams [b | TB b _ <- bndrs] body') } | otherwise = atJoinCeiling $ floatExpr rhs where try_collect 0 expr acc = Just (reverse acc, expr) try_collect n (Lam b e) acc = try_collect (n-1) e (b:acc) try_collect _ _ _ = Nothing {- Note [Avoiding unnecessary floating] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In general we want to avoid floating a let unnecessarily, because it might worsen strictness: let x = ...(let y = e in y+y).... Here y is demanded. If we float it outside the lazy 'x=..' then we'd have to zap its demand info, and it may never be restored. So at a 'let' we leave the binding right where the are unless the binding will escape a value lambda, e.g. (\x -> let y = fac 100 in y) That's what the partitionByMajorLevel does in the floatExpr (Let ...) case. Notice, though, that we must take care to drop any bindings from the body of the let that depend on the staying-put bindings. We used instead to do the partitionByMajorLevel on the RHS of an '=', in floatRhs. But that was quite tiresome. We needed to test for values or trival rhss, because (in particular) we don't want to insert new bindings between the "=" and the "\". E.g. f = \x -> let <bind> in <body> We do not want f = let <bind> in \x -> <body> (a) The simplifier will immediately float it further out, so we may as well do so right now; in general, keeping rhss as manifest values is good (b) If a float-in pass follows immediately, it might add yet more bindings just after the '='. And some of them might (correctly) be strict even though the 'let f' is lazy, because f, being a value, gets its demand-info zapped by the simplifier. And even all that turned out to be very fragile, and broke altogether when profiling got in the way. So now we do the partition right at the (Let..) itself. ************************************************************************ * * \subsection{Utility bits for floating stats} * * ************************************************************************ I didn't implement this with unboxed numbers. I don't want to be too strict in this stuff, as it is rarely turned on. (WDP 95/09) -} data FloatStats = FlS Int -- Number of top-floats * lambda groups they've been past Int -- Number of non-top-floats * lambda groups they've been past Int -- Number of lambda (groups) seen get_stats :: FloatStats -> (Int, Int, Int) get_stats (FlS a b c) = (a, b, c) zeroStats :: FloatStats zeroStats = FlS 0 0 0 sum_stats :: [FloatStats] -> FloatStats sum_stats xs = foldr add_stats zeroStats xs add_stats :: FloatStats -> FloatStats -> FloatStats add_stats (FlS a1 b1 c1) (FlS a2 b2 c2) = FlS (a1 + a2) (b1 + b2) (c1 + c2) add_to_stats :: FloatStats -> FloatBinds -> FloatStats add_to_stats (FlS a b c) (FB tops ceils others) = FlS (a + lengthBag tops) (b + lengthBag ceils + lengthBag (flattenMajor others)) (c + 1) {- ************************************************************************ * * \subsection{Utility bits for floating} * * ************************************************************************ Note [Representation of FloatBinds] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The FloatBinds types is somewhat important. We can get very large numbers of floating bindings, often all destined for the top level. A typical example is x = [4,2,5,2,5, .... ] Then we get lots of small expressions like (fromInteger 4), which all get lifted to top level. The trouble is that (a) we partition these floating bindings *at every binding site* (b) SetLevels introduces a new bindings site for every float So we had better not look at each binding at each binding site! That is why MajorEnv is represented as a finite map. We keep the bindings destined for the *top* level separate, because we float them out even if they don't escape a *value* lambda; see partitionByMajorLevel. -} type FloatLet = CoreBind -- INVARIANT: a FloatLet is always lifted type MajorEnv = M.IntMap MinorEnv -- Keyed by major level type MinorEnv = M.IntMap (Bag FloatBind) -- Keyed by minor level data FloatBinds = FB !(Bag FloatLet) -- Destined for top level !(Bag FloatBind) -- Destined for join ceiling !MajorEnv -- Other levels -- See Note [Representation of FloatBinds] instance Outputable FloatBinds where ppr (FB fbs ceils defs) = text "FB" <+> (braces $ vcat [ text "tops =" <+> ppr fbs , text "ceils =" <+> ppr ceils , text "non-tops =" <+> ppr defs ]) flattenTopFloats :: FloatBinds -> Bag CoreBind flattenTopFloats (FB tops ceils defs) = ASSERT2( isEmptyBag (flattenMajor defs), ppr defs ) ASSERT2( isEmptyBag ceils, ppr ceils ) tops addTopFloatPairs :: Bag CoreBind -> [(Id,CoreExpr)] -> [(Id,CoreExpr)] addTopFloatPairs float_bag prs = foldr add prs float_bag where add (NonRec b r) prs = (b,r):prs add (Rec prs1) prs2 = prs1 ++ prs2 flattenMajor :: MajorEnv -> Bag FloatBind flattenMajor = M.foldr (unionBags . flattenMinor) emptyBag flattenMinor :: MinorEnv -> Bag FloatBind flattenMinor = M.foldr unionBags emptyBag emptyFloats :: FloatBinds emptyFloats = FB emptyBag emptyBag M.empty unitCaseFloat :: Level -> CoreExpr -> Id -> AltCon -> [Var] -> FloatBinds unitCaseFloat (Level major minor t) e b con bs | t == JoinCeilLvl = FB emptyBag floats M.empty | otherwise = FB emptyBag emptyBag (M.singleton major (M.singleton minor floats)) where floats = unitBag (FloatCase e b con bs) unitLetFloat :: Level -> FloatLet -> FloatBinds unitLetFloat lvl@(Level major minor t) b | isTopLvl lvl = FB (unitBag b) emptyBag M.empty | t == JoinCeilLvl = FB emptyBag floats M.empty | otherwise = FB emptyBag emptyBag (M.singleton major (M.singleton minor floats)) where floats = unitBag (FloatLet b) plusFloats :: FloatBinds -> FloatBinds -> FloatBinds plusFloats (FB t1 c1 l1) (FB t2 c2 l2) = FB (t1 `unionBags` t2) (c1 `unionBags` c2) (l1 `plusMajor` l2) plusMajor :: MajorEnv -> MajorEnv -> MajorEnv plusMajor = M.unionWith plusMinor plusMinor :: MinorEnv -> MinorEnv -> MinorEnv plusMinor = M.unionWith unionBags install :: Bag FloatBind -> CoreExpr -> CoreExpr install defn_groups expr = foldr wrapFloat expr defn_groups partitionByLevel :: Level -- Partitioning level -> FloatBinds -- Defns to be divided into 2 piles... -> (FloatBinds, -- Defns with level strictly < partition level, Bag FloatBind) -- The rest {- -- ---- partitionByMajorLevel ---- -- Float it if we escape a value lambda, -- *or* if we get to the top level -- *or* if it's a case-float and its minor level is < current -- -- If we can get to the top level, say "yes" anyway. This means that -- x = f e -- transforms to -- lvl = e -- x = f lvl -- which is as it should be partitionByMajorLevel (Level major _) (FB tops defns) = (FB tops outer, heres `unionBags` flattenMajor inner) where (outer, mb_heres, inner) = M.splitLookup major defns heres = case mb_heres of Nothing -> emptyBag Just h -> flattenMinor h -} partitionByLevel (Level major minor typ) (FB tops ceils defns) = (FB tops ceils' (outer_maj `plusMajor` M.singleton major outer_min), here_min `unionBags` here_ceil `unionBags` flattenMinor inner_min `unionBags` flattenMajor inner_maj) where (outer_maj, mb_here_maj, inner_maj) = M.splitLookup major defns (outer_min, mb_here_min, inner_min) = case mb_here_maj of Nothing -> (M.empty, Nothing, M.empty) Just min_defns -> M.splitLookup minor min_defns here_min = mb_here_min `orElse` emptyBag (here_ceil, ceils') | typ == JoinCeilLvl = (ceils, emptyBag) | otherwise = (emptyBag, ceils) -- Like partitionByLevel, but instead split out the bindings that are marked -- to float to the nearest join ceiling (see Note [Join points]) partitionAtJoinCeiling :: FloatBinds -> (FloatBinds, Bag FloatBind) partitionAtJoinCeiling (FB tops ceils defs) = (FB tops emptyBag defs, ceils) -- Perform some action at a join ceiling, i.e., don't let join points float out -- (see Note [Join points]) atJoinCeiling :: (FloatStats, FloatBinds, CoreExpr) -> (FloatStats, FloatBinds, CoreExpr) atJoinCeiling (fs, floats, expr') = (fs, floats', install ceils expr') where (floats', ceils) = partitionAtJoinCeiling floats wrapTick :: Tickish Id -> FloatBinds -> FloatBinds wrapTick t (FB tops ceils defns) = FB (mapBag wrap_bind tops) (wrap_defns ceils) (M.map (M.map wrap_defns) defns) where wrap_defns = mapBag wrap_one wrap_bind (NonRec binder rhs) = NonRec binder (maybe_tick rhs) wrap_bind (Rec pairs) = Rec (mapSnd maybe_tick pairs) wrap_one (FloatLet bind) = FloatLet (wrap_bind bind) wrap_one (FloatCase e b c bs) = FloatCase (maybe_tick e) b c bs maybe_tick e | exprIsHNF e = tickHNFArgs t e | otherwise = mkTick t e -- we don't need to wrap a tick around an HNF when we float it -- outside a tick: that is an invariant of the tick semantics -- Conversely, inlining of HNFs inside an SCC is allowed, and -- indeed the HNF we're floating here might well be inlined back -- again, and we don't want to end up with duplicate ticks.