15. Known bugs and infelicities

15.1. Haskell standards vs. Glasgow Haskell: language non-compliance

This section lists Glasgow Haskell infelicities in its implementation of Haskell 98 and Haskell 2010. See also the “when things go wrong” section (What to do when something goes wrong) for information about crashes, space leaks, and other undesirable phenomena.

The limitations here are listed in Haskell Report order (roughly).

15.1.1. Divergence from Haskell 98 and Haskell 2010

GHC aims to be able to behave (mostly) like a Haskell 98 or Haskell 2010 compiler, if you tell it to try to behave like that with the Haskell98 and Haskell2010 flags. The known deviations from the standards are described below. Unless otherwise stated, the deviation applies in both Haskell 98 and Haskell 2010 mode.

15.1.1.1. Lexical syntax

  • Certain lexical rules regarding qualified identifiers are slightly different in GHC compared to the Haskell report. When you have ⟨module⟩.⟨reservedop⟩, such as M.\, GHC will interpret it as a single qualified operator rather than the two lexemes M and .\.

  • forall is always a reserved keyword at the type level, contrary to the Haskell Report, which allows type variables to be named forall. Note that this does not imply that GHC always enables the ExplicitForAll extension. Even without this extension enabled, reserving forall as a keyword has significance. For instance, GHC will not parse the type signature foo :: forall x.

  • The (!) operator, when written in prefix form (preceded by whitespace and not followed by whitespace, as in f !x = ...), is interpreted as a bang pattern, contrary to the Haskell Report, which prescribes to treat ! as an operator regardless of surrounding whitespace. Note that this does not imply that GHC always enables BangPatterns. Without the extension, GHC will issue a parse error on f !x, asking to enable the extension.

  • Irrefutable patterns must be written in prefix form:

    f ~a ~b = ...    -- accepted by both GHC and the Haskell Report
    f ~ a ~ b = ...  -- accepted by the Haskell Report but not GHC
    

    When written in non-prefix form, (~) is treated by GHC as a regular infix operator.

    See GHC Proposal #229 for the precise rules.

  • Strictness annotations in data declarations must be written in prefix form:

    data T = MkT !Int   -- accepted by both GHC and the Haskell Report
    data T = MkT ! Int  -- accepted by the Haskell Report but not GHC
    

    See GHC Proposal #229 for the precise rules.

  • As-patterns must not be surrounded by whitespace on either side:

    f p@(x, y, z) = ...    -- accepted by both GHC and the Haskell Report
    
    -- accepted by the Haskell Report but not GHC:
    f p @ (x, y, z) = ...
    f p @(x, y, z) = ...
    f p@ (x, y, z) = ...
    

    When surrounded by whitespace on both sides, (@) is treated by GHC as a regular infix operator.

    When preceded but not followed by whitespace, (@) is treated as a visible type application.

    See GHC Proposal #229 for the precise rules.

  • Haskell Report allows any Unicode Decimal Number in decimal literals. However, GHC accepts only ASCII numbers:

    ascDigit    →   0 | 1 | … | 9
    decimal     →   ascDigit {ascDigit}
    
  • GHC is more lenient in which characters are allowed in the identifiers. Unicode Other Letters are considered to be small letters, therefore variable identifiers can begin with them. Digit class contains all Unicode numbers instead of just Decimal Numbers. Modifier Letters and Non-Spacing Marks can appear in the tail of the identifiers.:

    uniSmall    →   any Unicode Lowercase Letter or Other Letter
    uniDigit    →   any Unicode Decimal Number, Letter Number or Other Number
    
    uniIdchar   →   any Unicode Modifier Letter or Non-Spacing Mark
    idchar      →   small | large | digit | uniIdchar | '
    
    varid       →   small {idchar} ⟨reservedid⟩
    conid       →   large {idchar}
    
  • GHC allows redundant parantheses around the function name in the funlhs part of declarations. That is GHC will succeed in parsing a declaration like ((f)) x = <rhs> for any number of parantheses around f.

15.1.1.2. Context-free syntax

  • In Haskell 98 mode (but not in Haskell 2010 mode), GHC is a little less strict about the layout rule when used in do expressions. Specifically, the restriction that “a nested context must be indented further to the right than the enclosing context” is relaxed to allow the nested context to be at the same level as the enclosing context, if the enclosing context is a do expression.

    For example, the following code is accepted by GHC:

    main = do args <- getArgs
              if null args then return [] else do
              ps <- mapM process args
              mapM print ps
    

    This behaviour is controlled by the NondecreasingIndentation extension.

NondecreasingIndentation
Since:7.2.1
Status:Included in Haskell98

Allow nested contexts to be at the same indentation level as its enclosing context.

  • GHC doesn’t do the fixity resolution in expressions during parsing as required by Haskell 98 (but not by Haskell 2010). For example, according to the Haskell 98 report, the following expression is legal:

    let x = 42 in x == 42 == True
    

    and parses as:

    (let x = 42 in x == 42) == True
    

    because according to the report, the let expression “extends as far to the right as possible”. Since it can’t extend past the second equals sign without causing a parse error (== is non-fix), the let-expression must terminate there. GHC simply gobbles up the whole expression, parsing like this:

    (let x = 42 in x == 42 == True)
    

15.1.1.3. Expressions and patterns

By default, GHC makes some programs slightly more defined than they should be. For example, consider

f :: [a] -> b -> b
f [] = error "urk"
f (x:xs) = \v -> v

main = print (f [] `seq` True)

This should call error but actually prints True. Reason: GHC eta-expands f to

f :: [a] -> b -> b
f []     v = error "urk"
f (x:xs) v = v

For most programs this improves efficiency enough to be enabled & bad only in few rare cases. To suppress this optimisation use -fpedantic-bottoms.

15.1.1.4. Failable patterns

Since the MonadFail Proposal (MFP), do-notation blocks that contain a failable pattern need a MonadFail constraint.

For example

mayFail :: (MonadIO m) => m ()
mayFail = do
  (Just value) <- fetchData
  putStrLn value

Will warn you with

• Could not deduce (MonadFail m)
    arising from a do statement
    with the failable pattern ‘(Just x)’
  from the context: MonadIO m
    bound by the type signature for:
               mayFail :: forall (m :: * -> *). MonadIO m => m ()

And indeed, since the Monad class does not have the fail method anymore, we need to explicitly add (MonadFail m) to the constraints of the function.

15.1.1.5. Typechecking of recursive binding groups

The Haskell Report specifies that a group of bindings (at top level, or in a let or where) should be sorted into strongly-connected components, and then type-checked in dependency order (Haskell Report, Section 4.5.1). As each group is type-checked, any binders of the group that have an explicit type signature are put in the type environment with the specified polymorphic type, and all others are monomorphic until the group is generalised (Haskell Report, Section 4.5.2).

Following a suggestion of Mark Jones, in his paper Typing Haskell in Haskell, GHC implements a more general scheme. In GHC the dependency analysis ignores references to variables that have an explicit type signature. As a result of this refined dependency analysis, the dependency groups are smaller, and more bindings will typecheck. For example, consider:

f :: Eq a => a -> Bool
f x = (x == x) || g True || g "Yes"

g y = (y <= y) || f True

This is rejected by Haskell 98, but under Jones’s scheme the definition for g is typechecked first, separately from that for f, because the reference to f in g’s right hand side is ignored by the dependency analysis. Then g’s type is generalised, to get

g :: Ord a => a -> Bool

Now, the definition for f is typechecked, with this type for g in the type environment.

The same refined dependency analysis also allows the type signatures of mutually-recursive functions to have different contexts, something that is illegal in Haskell 98 (Section 4.5.2, last sentence). GHC only insists that the type signatures of a refined group have identical type signatures; in practice this means that only variables bound by the same pattern binding must have the same context. For example, this is fine:

f :: Eq a => a -> Bool
f x = (x == x) || g True

g :: Ord a => a -> Bool
g y = (y <= y) || f True

15.1.1.6. Default Module headers with -main-is

The Haskell2010 Report specifies in <https://www.haskell.org/onlinereport/haskell2010/haskellch5.html#x11-990005.1> that

“An abbreviated form of module, consisting only of the module body,
is permitted. If this is used, the header is assumed to be module Main(main) where.”

GHC’s -main-is option can be used to change the name of the top-level entry point from main to any other variable. When compiling the main module and -main-is has been used to rename the default entry point, GHC will also use the alternate name in the default export list.

Consider the following program:

-- file: Main.hs
program :: IO ()
program = return ()

GHC will successfully compile this module with ghc -main-is Main.program Main.hs, because the default export list will include program rather than main, as the Haskell Report typically requires.

This change only applies to the main module. Other modules will still export main from a default export list, regardless of the -main-is flag. This allows use of -main-is with existing modules that export main via a default export list, even when -main-is points to a different entry point, as in this example (compiled with -main-is MainWrapper.program).

-- file MainWrapper.hs
module MainWrapper where
import Main

program :: IO ()
program = putStrLn "Redirecting..." >> main

-- file Main.hs
main :: IO ()
main = putStrLn "I am main."

15.1.1.7. Module system and interface files

GHC requires the use of hs-boot files to cut the recursive loops among mutually recursive modules as described in How to compile mutually recursive modules. This more of an infelicity than a bug: the Haskell Report says (Section 5.7)

“Depending on the Haskell implementation used, separate compilation of mutually recursive modules may require that imported modules contain additional information so that they may be referenced before they are compiled. Explicit type signatures for all exported values may be necessary to deal with mutual recursion. The precise details of separate compilation are not defined by this Report.”

15.1.1.8. Numbers, basic types, and built-in classes

Num superclasses

The Num class does not have Show or Eq superclasses.

You can make code that works with both Haskell98/Haskell2010 and GHC by:

  • Whenever you make a Num instance of a type, also make Show and Eq instances, and
  • Whenever you give a function, instance or class a Num t constraint, also give it Show t and Eq t constraints.
Bits superclass

The Bits class does not have a Num superclass. It therefore does not have default methods for the bit, testBit and popCount methods.

You can make code that works with both Haskell 2010 and GHC by:

  • Whenever you make a Bits instance of a type, also make a Num instance, and
  • Whenever you give a function, instance or class a Bits t constraint, also give it a Num t constraint, and
  • Always define the bit, testBit and popCount methods in Bits instances.
Read class methods
The Read class has two extra methods, readPrec and readListPrec, that are not found in the Haskell 2010 since they rely on the ReadPrec data type, which requires the RankNTypes extension. GHC also derives Read instances by implementing readPrec instead of readsPrec, and relies on a default implementation of readsPrec that is defined in terms of readPrec. GHC adds these two extra methods simply because ReadPrec is more efficient than ReadS (the type on which readsPrec is based).
Monad superclass
The Monad class has an Applicative superclass. You cannot write Monad instances that work for GHC and also for a Haskell 2010 implementation that does not define Applicative.
Extra instances

The following extra instances are defined:

instance Functor ((->) r)
instance Monad ((->) r)
instance Functor ((,) a)
instance Functor (Either a)
instance Monad (Either e)
Multiply-defined array elements not checked

This code fragment should elicit a fatal error, but it does not:

main = print (array (1,1) [(1,2), (1,3)])

GHC’s implementation of array takes the value of an array slot from the last (index,value) pair in the list, and does no checking for duplicates. The reason for this is efficiency, pure and simple.

15.1.1.9. In Prelude support

splitAt semantics

Data.List.splitAt is more strict than specified in the Report. Specifically, the Report specifies that

splitAt n xs = (take n xs, drop n xs)

which implies that

splitAt undefined undefined = (undefined, undefined)

but GHC’s implementation is strict in its first argument, so

splitAt undefined [] = undefined
Showing records

The Haskell 2010 definition of Show stipulates that the rendered string should only include parentheses which are necessary to unambiguously parse the result. For historical reasons, Show instances derived by GHC include parentheses around records despite the fact that record syntax binds more tightly than function application; e.g.,

data Hello = Hello { aField :: Int } deriving (Show)

-- GHC produces...
show (Just (Hello {aField=42})) == "Just (Hello {aField=42})"

-- whereas Haskell 2010 calls for...
show (Just (Hello {aField=42})) == "Just Hello {aField=42}"
Reading integers

GHC’s implementation of the Read class for integral types accepts hexadecimal and octal literals (the code in the Haskell 98 report doesn’t). So, for example,

read "0xf00" :: Int

works in GHC.

A possible reason for this is that readLitChar accepts hex and octal escapes, so it seems inconsistent not to do so for integers too.

isAlpha

The Haskell 98 definition of isAlpha is:

isAlpha c = isUpper c || isLower c

GHC’s implementation diverges from the Haskell 98 definition in the sense that Unicode alphabetic characters which are neither upper nor lower case will still be identified as alphabetic by isAlpha.

hGetContents
Lazy I/O throws an exception if an error is encountered, in contrast to the Haskell 98 spec which requires that errors are discarded (see Section 21.2.2 of the Haskell 98 report). The exception thrown is the usual IO exception that would be thrown if the failing IO operation was performed in the IO monad, and can be caught by System.IO.Error.catch or Control.Exception.catch.

15.1.1.10. The Foreign Function Interface

hs_init(), hs_exit()
The FFI spec requires the implementation to support re-initialising itself after being shut down with hs_exit(), but GHC does not currently support that. See %s13693.

15.1.2. GHC’s interpretation of undefined behaviour in Haskell 98 and Haskell 2010

This section documents GHC’s take on various issues that are left undefined or implementation specific in Haskell 98.

Char

Following the ISO-10646 standard, maxBound :: Char in GHC is 0x10FFFF.

Int

In GHC the Int type follows the size of an address on the host architecture; in other words it holds 32 bits on a 32-bit machine, and 64-bits on a 64-bit machine.

Arithmetic on Int is unchecked for overflowInt, so all operations on Int happen modulo 2⟨n⟩ where ⟨n⟩ is the size in bits of the Int type.

The fromInteger (and hence also fromIntegral) is a special case when converting to Int. The value of fromIntegral x :: Int is given by taking the lower ⟨n⟩ bits of (abs x), multiplied by the sign of x (in 2’s complement ⟨n⟩-bit arithmetic). This behaviour was chosen so that for example writing 0xffffffff :: Int preserves the bit-pattern in the resulting Int.

Negative literals, such as -3, are specified by (a careful reading of) the Haskell Report as meaning Prelude.negate (Prelude.fromInteger 3). So -2147483648 means negate (fromInteger 2147483648). Since fromInteger takes the lower 32 bits of the representation, fromInteger (2147483648::Integer), computed at type Int is -2147483648::Int. The negate operation then overflows, but it is unchecked, so negate (-2147483648::Int) is just -2147483648. In short, one can write minBound::Int as a literal with the expected meaning (but that is not in general guaranteed).

The fromIntegral function also preserves bit-patterns when converting between the sized integral types (Int8, Int16, Int32, Int64 and the unsigned Word variants), see the modules Data.Int and Data.Word in the library documentation.

Unchecked floating-point arithmetic
Operations on Float and Double numbers are unchecked for overflow, underflow, and other sad occurrences. (note, however, that some architectures trap floating-point overflow and loss-of-precision and report a floating-point exception, probably terminating the program)
Large tuple support
The Haskell Report only requires implementations to provide tuple types and their accompanying standard instances up to size 15. GHC limits the size of tuple types to 62 and provides instances of Eq, Ord, Bounded, Read, Show, and Ix for tuples up to size 15.

15.2. Known bugs or infelicities

The bug tracker lists bugs that have been reported in GHC but not yet fixed: see the GHC issue tracker. In addition to those, GHC also has the following known bugs or infelicities. These bugs are more permanent; it is unlikely that any of them will be fixed in the short term.

15.2.1. Bugs in GHC

  • GHC’s runtime system implements cooperative multitasking, with context switching potentially occurring only when a program allocates. This means that programs that do not allocate may never context switch. This is especially true of programs using STM, which may deadlock after observing inconsistent state. See %s367 for further discussion.

    If you are hit by this, you may want to compile the affected module with -fno-omit-yields (see -f*: platform-independent flags). This flag ensures that yield points are inserted at every function entrypoint (at the expense of a bit of performance).

  • GHC does not allow you to have a data type with a context that mentions type variables that are not data type parameters. For example:

    data C a b => T a = MkT a
    

    so that MkT’s type is

    MkT :: forall a b. C a b => a -> T a
    

    In principle, with a suitable class declaration with a functional dependency, it’s possible that this type is not ambiguous; but GHC nevertheless rejects it. The type variables mentioned in the context of the data type declaration must be among the type parameters of the data type.

  • GHC’s inliner can be persuaded into non-termination using the standard way to encode recursion via a data type:

    data U = MkU (U -> Bool)
    
    russel :: U -> Bool
    russel u@(MkU p) = not $ p u
    
    x :: Bool
    x = russel (MkU russel)
    

    The non-termination is reported like this:

    ghc: panic! (the 'impossible' happened)
      (GHC version 8.2.1 for x86_64-unknown-linux):
        Simplifier ticks exhausted
      When trying UnfoldingDone x_alB
      To increase the limit, use -fsimpl-tick-factor=N (default 100)
    

    with the panic being reported no matter how high a -fsimpl-tick-factor you supply.

    We have never found another class of programs, other than this contrived one, that makes GHC diverge, and fixing the problem would impose an extra overhead on every compilation. So the bug remains un-fixed. There is more background in Secrets of the GHC inliner.

  • On 32-bit x86 platforms when using the native code generator, the -fexcess-precision option is always on. This means that floating-point calculations are non-deterministic, because depending on how the program is compiled (optimisation settings, for example), certain calculations might be done at 80-bit precision instead of the intended 32-bit or 64-bit precision. Floating-point results may differ when optimisation is turned on. In the worst case, referential transparency is violated, because for example let x = E1 in E2 can evaluate to a different value than E2[E1/x].

    One workaround is to use the -msse2 option (see Platform-specific Flags), which generates code to use the SSE2 instruction set instead of the x87 instruction set. SSE2 code uses the correct precision for all floating-point operations, and so gives deterministic results. However, note that this only works with processors that support SSE2 (Intel Pentium 4 or AMD Athlon 64 and later), which is why the option is not enabled by default. The libraries that come with GHC are probably built without this option, unless you built GHC yourself.

  • The state hack optimization can result in non-obvious changes in evaluation ordering which may hide exceptions, even with -fpedantic-bottoms (see, e.g., %s7411). For instance,

    import Control.Exception
    import Control.DeepSeq
    main = do
        evaluate (('a' : undefined) `deepseq` return () :: IO ())
        putStrLn "Hello"
    

    Compiling this program with -O results in Hello to be printed, despite the fact that evaluate should have bottomed. Compiling with -O -fno-state-hack results in the exception one would expect.

  • Programs compiled with -fdefer-type-errors may fail a bit more eagerly than one might expect. For instance,

    {-# OPTIONS_GHC -fdefer-type-errors #-}
    main = do
      putStrLn "Hi there."
      putStrLn True
    

    Will emit no output, despite the fact that the ill-typed term appears after the well-typed putStrLn "Hi there.". See %s11197.

  • Despite appearances * and Constraint aren’t really distinct kinds in the compiler’s internal representation and can be unified producing unexpected results. See %s11715 for one example.

  • Because of a toolchain limitation we are unable to support full Unicode paths on Windows. On Windows we support up to Latin-1. See %s12971 for more.

15.2.2. Bugs in GHCi (the interactive GHC)

  • GHCi does not respect the default declaration in the module whose scope you are in. Instead, for expressions typed at the command line, you always get the default default-type behaviour; that is, default(Int,Double).

    It would be better for GHCi to record what the default settings in each module are, and use those of the ‘current’ module (whatever that is).

  • On Windows, there’s a GNU ld/BFD bug whereby it emits bogus PE object files that have more than 0xffff relocations. When GHCi tries to load a package affected by this bug, you get an error message of the form

    Loading package javavm ... linking ... WARNING: Overflown relocation field (# relocs found: 30765)
    

    The last time we looked, this bug still wasn’t fixed in the BFD codebase, and there wasn’t any noticeable interest in fixing it when we reported the bug back in 2001 or so.

    The workaround is to split up the .o files that make up your package into two or more .o’s, along the lines of how the base package does it.