The Glasgow Haskell Compiler User's Guide, Version 5.04

The GHC Team


Table of Contents
The Glasgow Haskell Compiler License
1. Introduction to GHC
1.1. Meta-information: Web sites, mailing lists, etc.
1.2. Reporting bugs in GHC
1.2.1. How do I tell if I should report my bug?
1.2.2. What to put in a bug report
1.3. GHC version numbering policy
1.4. Release notes for version 5.04
1.4.1. User-visible compiler changes
1.4.2. User-visible interpreter (GHCi) changes
1.4.3. User-visible library changes
1.4.4. New experimental features
1.4.5. Internal changes
2. Installing GHC
2.1. Installing on Unix-a-likes
2.1.1. When a platform-specific package is available
2.1.2. GHC binary distributions
2.2. Installing on Windows
2.2.1. Installing GHC on Windows
2.2.2. Moving GHC around
2.2.3. Installing ghc-win32 FAQ
2.3. The layout of installed files
2.3.1. Layout of the library directory
3. Using GHCi
3.1. Introduction to GHCi
3.2. Loading source files
3.2.1. Modules vs. filenames
3.2.2. Making changes and recompilation
3.3. Loading compiled code
3.4. Interactive evaluation at the prompt
3.4.1. What's really in scope at the prompt?
3.4.2. Using do-notation at the prompt
3.4.3. The it variable
3.5. Invoking GHCi
3.5.1. Packages
3.5.2. Extra libraries
3.6. GHCi commands
3.7. The :set command
3.7.1. GHCi options
3.7.2. Setting GHC command-line options in GHCi
3.8. The .ghci file
3.9. FAQ and Things To Watch Out For
4. Using GHC
4.1. Options overview
4.1.1. Command-line arguments
4.1.2. Command line options in source files
4.1.3. Setting options in GHCi
4.2. Static vs. Dynamic options
4.3. Meaningful file suffixes
4.4. Help and verbosity options
4.5. Using ghc ––make
4.6. GHC without ––make
4.7. Re-directing the compilation output(s)
4.7.1. Keeping Intermediate Files
4.7.2. Redirecting temporary files
4.8. Warnings and sanity-checking
4.9. Separate compilation
4.9.1. Interface files
4.9.2. Finding interface files
4.9.3. Finding interfaces for hierarchical modules
4.9.4. Other options related to interface files
4.9.5. The recompilation checker
4.9.6. Using make
4.9.7. How to compile mutually recursive modules
4.9.8. Orphan modules and instance declarations
4.10. Packages
4.10.1. Using a package
4.10.2. Maintaining a local set of packages
4.10.3. Building a package from Haskell source
4.10.4. Package management
4.11. Optimisation (code improvement)
4.11.1. -O*: convenient “packages” of optimisation flags.
4.11.2. -f*: platform-independent flags
4.12. Options related to a particular phase
4.12.1. Replacing the program for one or more phases
4.12.2. Forcing options to a particular phase
4.12.3. Options affecting the C pre-processor
4.12.4. Options affecting a Haskell pre-processor
4.12.5. Options affecting the C compiler (if applicable)
4.12.6. Options affecting code generation
4.12.7. Options affecting linking
4.13. Using Concurrent Haskell
4.14. Using Parallel Haskell
4.14.1. Dummy's guide to using PVM
4.14.2. Parallelism profiles
4.14.3. Other useful info about running parallel programs
4.14.4. RTS options for Concurrent/Parallel Haskell
4.15. Platform-specific Flags
4.16. Running a compiled program
4.16.1. Setting global RTS options
4.16.2. RTS options to control the garbage collector
4.16.3. RTS options for hackers, debuggers, and over-interested souls
4.16.4. “Hooks” to change RTS behaviour
4.17. Generating External Core Files
4.18. Debugging the compiler
4.18.1. Dumping out compiler intermediate structures
4.18.2. Checking for consistency
4.18.3. How to read Core syntax (from some -ddump flags)
4.18.4. Unregisterised compilation
4.19. Flag reference
4.19.1. Help and verbosity options (Section 4.4)
4.19.2. Which phases to run (Section 4.6)
4.19.3. Redirecting output (Section 4.7)
4.19.4. Keeping intermediate files (Section 4.7.1)
4.19.5. Temporary files (Section 4.7.2)
4.19.6. Finding imports (Section 4.9.2)
4.19.7. Interface file options (Section 4.9.4)
4.19.8. Recompilation checking (Section 4.9.5)
4.19.9. Interactive-mode options (Section 3.8)
4.19.10. Packages (Section 4.10)
4.19.11. Language options (Section 7.1)
4.19.12. Warnings (Section 4.8)
4.19.13. Optimisation levels (Section 4.11)
4.19.14. Individual optimisations (Section 4.11.2)
4.19.15. Profiling options (Chapter 5)
4.19.16. Parallelism options (Section 4.14)
4.19.17. C pre-processor options (Section 4.12.3)
4.19.18. C compiler options (Section 4.12.5)
4.19.19. Code generation options (Section 4.12.6)
4.19.20. Linking options (Section 4.12.7)
4.19.21. Replacing phases (Section 4.12.1)
4.19.22. Forcing options to particular phases (Section 4.12.2)
4.19.23. Platform-specific options (Section 4.15)
4.19.24. External core file options (Section 4.17)
4.19.25. Compiler debugging options (Section 4.18)
4.19.26. Misc compiler options
5. Profiling
5.1. Cost centres and cost-centre stacks
5.1.1. Inserting cost centres by hand
5.1.2. Rules for attributing costs
5.2. Compiler options for profiling
5.3. Time and allocation profiling
5.4. Profiling memory usage
5.4.1. RTS options for heap profiling
5.4.2. Retainer Profiling
5.4.3. Biographical Profiling
5.5. Graphical time/allocation profile
5.6. hp2ps––heap profile to PostScript
5.7. Using “ticky-ticky” profiling (for implementors)
6. Advice on: sooner, faster, smaller, thriftier
6.1. Sooner: producing a program more quickly
6.2. Faster: producing a program that runs quicker
6.3. Smaller: producing a program that is smaller
6.4. Thriftier: producing a program that gobbles less heap space
7. GHC Language Features
7.1. Language options
7.2. Unboxed types and primitive operations
7.2.1. Unboxed types
7.2.2. Unboxed Tuples
7.3. Type system extensions
7.3.1. Data types with no constructors
7.3.2. Infix type constructors
7.3.3. Explicitly-kinded quantification
7.3.4. Class method types
7.3.5. Multi-parameter type classes
7.3.6. Implicit parameters
7.3.7. Linear implicit parameters
7.3.8. Functional dependencies
7.3.9. Arbitrary-rank polymorphism
7.3.10. Liberalised type synonyms
7.3.11. For-all hoisting
7.3.12. Existentially quantified data constructors
7.3.13. Scoped type variables
7.4. Assertions
7.5. Syntactic extensions
7.5.1. Hierarchical Modules
7.5.2. Pattern guards
7.5.3. Parallel List Comprehensions
7.5.4. Rebindable syntax
7.6. Pragmas
7.6.1. INLINE pragma
7.6.2. NOINLINE pragma
7.6.3. SPECIALIZE pragma
7.6.4. SPECIALIZE instance pragma
7.6.5. LINE pragma
7.6.6. RULES pragma
7.6.7. DEPRECATED pragma
7.7. Rewrite rules
7.7.1. Syntax
7.7.2. Semantics
7.7.3. List fusion
7.7.4. Specialisation
7.7.5. Controlling what's going on
7.8. Generic classes
7.8.1. Using generics
7.8.2. Changes wrt the paper
7.8.3. Terminology and restrictions
7.8.4. Another example
7.9. Generalised derived instances for newtypes
7.9.1. Generalising the deriving clause
7.9.2. A more precise specification
7.10. Concurrent and Parallel Haskell
7.10.1. Features specific to Parallel Haskell
8. Foreign function interface (FFI)
8.1. GHC extensions to the FFI Addendum
8.1.1. Arrays
8.1.2. Unboxed types
8.2. Using the FFI with GHC
8.2.1. Using foreign export and foreign import ccall "wrapper" with GHC
8.2.2. Using function headers
9. What to do when something goes wrong
9.1. When the compiler “does the wrong thing”
9.2. When your program “does the wrong thing”
10. Other Haskell utility programs
10.1. Ctags and Etags for Haskell: hasktags
10.1.1. Using tags with your editor
10.2. “Yacc for Haskell”: happy
10.3. Writing Haskell interfaces to C code: hsc2hs
10.3.1. Command line syntax
10.3.2. Input syntax
10.3.3. Custom constructs
11. Building and using Win32 DLLs
11.1. Linking with DLLs
11.2. Not linking with DLLs
11.3. Creating a DLL
11.4. Making DLLs to be called from other languages
12. Known bugs and infelicities
12.1. Haskell 98 vs. Glasgow Haskell: language non-compliance
12.1.1. Divergence from Haskell 98
12.1.2. GHC's interpretation of undefined behaviour in Haskell 98
12.2. Known bugs or infelicities
13. GHC FAQ