––help
,
-?
Cause GHC to spew a long usage message to standard output and then exit.
-v
The -v
option makes GHC
verbose: it reports its version number
and shows (on stderr) exactly how it invokes each phase of
the compilation system. Moreover, it passes the
-v
flag to most phases; each reports its
version number (and possibly some other information).
Please, oh please, use the -v
option
when reporting bugs! Knowing that you ran the right bits in
the right order is always the first thing we want to
verify.
-v
n
To provide more control over the compiler's verbosity,
the -v
flag takes an optional numeric
argument. Specifying -v
on its own is
equivalent to -v3
, and the other levels
have the following meanings:
-v0
Disable all non-essential messages (this is the default).
-v1
Minimal verbosity: print one line per
compilation (this is the default when
––make
or
––interactive
is on).
-v2
Print the name of each compilation phase as it
is executed. (equivalent to
-dshow-passes
).
-v3
The same as -v2
, except that in
addition the full command line (if appropriate) for
each compilation phase is also printed.
-v4
The same as -v3
except that the
intermediate program representation after each
compilation phase is also printed (excluding
preprocessed and C/assembly files).
-V
,
––version
Print a one-line string including GHC's version number.
––numeric-version
Print GHC's numeric version number only.
––print-libdir
Print the path to GHC's library directory. This is
the top of the directory tree containing GHC's libraries,
interfaces, and include files (usually something like
/usr/local/lib/ghc-5.04
on Unix). This
is the value of
$libdir
in the package configuration file (see Section 4.8, “
Packages
”).
-ferror-spans
Causes GHC to emit the full source span of the syntactic entity relating to an error message. Normally, GHC emits the source location of the start of the syntactic entity only.
For example:
test.hs:3:6: parse error on input `where'
becomes:
test296.hs:3:6-10: parse error on input `where'
And multi-line spans are possible too:
test.hs:(5,4)-(6,7): Conflicting definitions for `a' Bound at: test.hs:5:4 test.hs:6:7 In the binding group for: a, b, a
Note that line numbers start counting at one, but column numbers start at zero. This choice was made to follow existing convention (i.e. this is how Emacs does it).