{- (c) The University of Glasgow 2006 (c) The GRASP/AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1992-1998 TcInstDecls: Typechecking instance declarations -} {-# LANGUAGE CPP #-} module TcInstDcls ( tcInstDecls1, tcInstDecls2 ) where #include "HsVersions.h" import HsSyn import TcBinds import TcTyClsDecls import TcClassDcl( tcClassDecl2, HsSigFun, lookupHsSig, mkHsSigFun, findMethodBind, instantiateMethod, tcInstanceMethodBody ) import TcPat ( addInlinePrags ) import TcRnMonad import TcValidity import TcMType import TcType import BuildTyCl import Inst import InstEnv import FamInst import FamInstEnv import TcDeriv import TcEnv import TcHsType import TcUnify import Coercion ( pprCoAxiom ) import MkCore ( nO_METHOD_BINDING_ERROR_ID ) import Type import TcEvidence import TyCon import CoAxiom import DataCon import Class import Var import VarEnv import VarSet import PrelNames ( tYPEABLE_INTERNAL, typeableClassName, genericClassNames ) import Bag import BasicTypes import DynFlags import ErrUtils import FastString import HscTypes ( isHsBootOrSig ) import Id import MkId import Name import NameSet import Outputable import SrcLoc import Util import BooleanFormula ( isUnsatisfied, pprBooleanFormulaNice ) import Control.Monad import Maybes ( isNothing, isJust, whenIsJust ) import Data.List ( mapAccumL, partition ) {- Typechecking instance declarations is done in two passes. The first pass, made by @tcInstDecls1@, collects information to be used in the second pass. This pre-processed info includes the as-yet-unprocessed bindings inside the instance declaration. These are type-checked in the second pass, when the class-instance envs and GVE contain all the info from all the instance and value decls. Indeed that's the reason we need two passes over the instance decls. Note [How instance declarations are translated] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Here is how we translation instance declarations into Core Running example: class C a where op1, op2 :: Ix b => a -> b -> b op2 = <dm-rhs> instance C a => C [a] {-# INLINE [2] op1 #-} op1 = <rhs> ===> -- Method selectors op1,op2 :: forall a. C a => forall b. Ix b => a -> b -> b op1 = ... op2 = ... -- Default methods get the 'self' dictionary as argument -- so they can call other methods at the same type -- Default methods get the same type as their method selector $dmop2 :: forall a. C a => forall b. Ix b => a -> b -> b $dmop2 = /\a. \(d:C a). /\b. \(d2: Ix b). <dm-rhs> -- NB: type variables 'a' and 'b' are *both* in scope in <dm-rhs> -- Note [Tricky type variable scoping] -- A top-level definition for each instance method -- Here op1_i, op2_i are the "instance method Ids" -- The INLINE pragma comes from the user pragma {-# INLINE [2] op1_i #-} -- From the instance decl bindings op1_i, op2_i :: forall a. C a => forall b. Ix b => [a] -> b -> b op1_i = /\a. \(d:C a). let this :: C [a] this = df_i a d -- Note [Subtle interaction of recursion and overlap] local_op1 :: forall b. Ix b => [a] -> b -> b local_op1 = <rhs> -- Source code; run the type checker on this -- NB: Type variable 'a' (but not 'b') is in scope in <rhs> -- Note [Tricky type variable scoping] in local_op1 a d op2_i = /\a \d:C a. $dmop2 [a] (df_i a d) -- The dictionary function itself {-# NOINLINE CONLIKE df_i #-} -- Never inline dictionary functions df_i :: forall a. C a -> C [a] df_i = /\a. \d:C a. MkC (op1_i a d) (op2_i a d) -- But see Note [Default methods in instances] -- We can't apply the type checker to the default-method call -- Use a RULE to short-circuit applications of the class ops {-# RULE "op1@C[a]" forall a, d:C a. op1 [a] (df_i d) = op1_i a d #-} Note [Instances and loop breakers] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Note that df_i may be mutually recursive with both op1_i and op2_i. It's crucial that df_i is not chosen as the loop breaker, even though op1_i has a (user-specified) INLINE pragma. * Instead the idea is to inline df_i into op1_i, which may then select methods from the MkC record, and thereby break the recursion with df_i, leaving a *self*-recurisve op1_i. (If op1_i doesn't call op at the same type, it won't mention df_i, so there won't be recursion in the first place.) * If op1_i is marked INLINE by the user there's a danger that we won't inline df_i in it, and that in turn means that (since it'll be a loop-breaker because df_i isn't), op1_i will ironically never be inlined. But this is OK: the recursion breaking happens by way of a RULE (the magic ClassOp rule above), and RULES work inside InlineRule unfoldings. See Note [RULEs enabled in SimplGently] in SimplUtils Note [ClassOp/DFun selection] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ One thing we see a lot is stuff like op2 (df d1 d2) where 'op2' is a ClassOp and 'df' is DFun. Now, we could inline *both* 'op2' and 'df' to get case (MkD ($cop1 d1 d2) ($cop2 d1 d2) ... of MkD _ op2 _ _ _ -> op2 And that will reduce to ($cop2 d1 d2) which is what we wanted. But it's tricky to make this work in practice, because it requires us to inline both 'op2' and 'df'. But neither is keen to inline without having seen the other's result; and it's very easy to get code bloat (from the big intermediate) if you inline a bit too much. Instead we use a cunning trick. * We arrange that 'df' and 'op2' NEVER inline. * We arrange that 'df' is ALWAYS defined in the sylised form df d1 d2 = MkD ($cop1 d1 d2) ($cop2 d1 d2) ... * We give 'df' a magical unfolding (DFunUnfolding [$cop1, $cop2, ..]) that lists its methods. * We make CoreUnfold.exprIsConApp_maybe spot a DFunUnfolding and return a suitable constructor application -- inlining df "on the fly" as it were. * ClassOp rules: We give the ClassOp 'op2' a BuiltinRule that extracts the right piece iff its argument satisfies exprIsConApp_maybe. This is done in MkId mkDictSelId * We make 'df' CONLIKE, so that shared uses still match; eg let d = df d1 d2 in ...(op2 d)...(op1 d)... Note [Single-method classes] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If the class has just one method (or, more accurately, just one element of {superclasses + methods}), then we use a different strategy. class C a where op :: a -> a instance C a => C [a] where op = <blah> We translate the class decl into a newtype, which just gives a top-level axiom. The "constructor" MkC expands to a cast, as does the class-op selector. axiom Co:C a :: C a ~ (a->a) op :: forall a. C a -> (a -> a) op a d = d |> (Co:C a) MkC :: forall a. (a->a) -> C a MkC = /\a.\op. op |> (sym Co:C a) The clever RULE stuff doesn't work now, because ($df a d) isn't a constructor application, so exprIsConApp_maybe won't return Just <blah>. Instead, we simply rely on the fact that casts are cheap: $df :: forall a. C a => C [a] {-# INLINE df #-} -- NB: INLINE this $df = /\a. \d. MkC [a] ($cop_list a d) = $cop_list |> forall a. C a -> (sym (Co:C [a])) $cop_list :: forall a. C a => [a] -> [a] $cop_list = <blah> So if we see (op ($df a d)) we'll inline 'op' and '$df', since both are simply casts, and good things happen. Why do we use this different strategy? Because otherwise we end up with non-inlined dictionaries that look like $df = $cop |> blah which adds an extra indirection to every use, which seems stupid. See Trac #4138 for an example (although the regression reported there wasn't due to the indirection). There is an awkward wrinkle though: we want to be very careful when we have instance C a => C [a] where {-# INLINE op #-} op = ... then we'll get an INLINE pragma on $cop_list but it's important that $cop_list only inlines when it's applied to *two* arguments (the dictionary and the list argument). So we must not eta-expand $df above. We ensure that this doesn't happen by putting an INLINE pragma on the dfun itself; after all, it ends up being just a cast. There is one more dark corner to the INLINE story, even more deeply buried. Consider this (Trac #3772): class DeepSeq a => C a where gen :: Int -> a instance C a => C [a] where gen n = ... class DeepSeq a where deepSeq :: a -> b -> b instance DeepSeq a => DeepSeq [a] where {-# INLINE deepSeq #-} deepSeq xs b = foldr deepSeq b xs That gives rise to these defns: $cdeepSeq :: DeepSeq a -> [a] -> b -> b -- User INLINE( 3 args )! $cdeepSeq a (d:DS a) b (x:[a]) (y:b) = ... $fDeepSeq[] :: DeepSeq a -> DeepSeq [a] -- DFun (with auto INLINE pragma) $fDeepSeq[] a d = $cdeepSeq a d |> blah $cp1 a d :: C a => DeepSep [a] -- We don't want to eta-expand this, lest -- $cdeepSeq gets inlined in it! $cp1 a d = $fDeepSep[] a (scsel a d) $fC[] :: C a => C [a] -- Ordinary DFun $fC[] a d = MkC ($cp1 a d) ($cgen a d) Here $cp1 is the code that generates the superclass for C [a]. The issue is this: we must not eta-expand $cp1 either, or else $fDeepSeq[] and then $cdeepSeq will inline there, which is definitely wrong. Like on the dfun, we solve this by adding an INLINE pragma to $cp1. Note [Subtle interaction of recursion and overlap] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider this class C a where { op1,op2 :: a -> a } instance C a => C [a] where op1 x = op2 x ++ op2 x op2 x = ... instance C [Int] where ... When type-checking the C [a] instance, we need a C [a] dictionary (for the call of op2). If we look up in the instance environment, we find an overlap. And in *general* the right thing is to complain (see Note [Overlapping instances] in InstEnv). But in *this* case it's wrong to complain, because we just want to delegate to the op2 of this same instance. Why is this justified? Because we generate a (C [a]) constraint in a context in which 'a' cannot be instantiated to anything that matches other overlapping instances, or else we would not be executing this version of op1 in the first place. It might even be a bit disguised: nullFail :: C [a] => [a] -> [a] nullFail x = op2 x ++ op2 x instance C a => C [a] where op1 x = nullFail x Precisely this is used in package 'regex-base', module Context.hs. See the overlapping instances for RegexContext, and the fact that they call 'nullFail' just like the example above. The DoCon package also does the same thing; it shows up in module Fraction.hs. Conclusion: when typechecking the methods in a C [a] instance, we want to treat the 'a' as an *existential* type variable, in the sense described by Note [Binding when looking up instances]. That is why isOverlappableTyVar responds True to an InstSkol, which is the kind of skolem we use in tcInstDecl2. Note [Tricky type variable scoping] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In our example class C a where op1, op2 :: Ix b => a -> b -> b op2 = <dm-rhs> instance C a => C [a] {-# INLINE [2] op1 #-} op1 = <rhs> note that 'a' and 'b' are *both* in scope in <dm-rhs>, but only 'a' is in scope in <rhs>. In particular, we must make sure that 'b' is in scope when typechecking <dm-rhs>. This is achieved by subFunTys, which brings appropriate tyvars into scope. This happens for both <dm-rhs> and for <rhs>, but that doesn't matter: the *renamer* will have complained if 'b' is mentioned in <rhs>. ************************************************************************ * * \subsection{Extracting instance decls} * * ************************************************************************ Gather up the instance declarations from their various sources -} tcInstDecls1 -- Deal with both source-code and imported instance decls :: [LTyClDecl Name] -- For deriving stuff -> [LInstDecl Name] -- Source code instance decls -> [LDerivDecl Name] -- Source code stand-alone deriving decls -> TcM (TcGblEnv, -- The full inst env [InstInfo Name], -- Source-code instance decls to process; -- contains all dfuns for this module HsValBinds Name) -- Supporting bindings for derived instances tcInstDecls1 tycl_decls inst_decls deriv_decls = checkNoErrs $ do { -- Stop if addInstInfos etc discovers any errors -- (they recover, so that we get more than one error each -- round) -- Do class and family instance declarations ; env <- getGblEnv ; stuff <- mapAndRecoverM tcLocalInstDecl inst_decls ; let (local_infos_s, fam_insts_s) = unzip stuff fam_insts = concat fam_insts_s local_infos' = concat local_infos_s -- Handwritten instances of the poly-kinded Typeable class are -- forbidden, so we handle those separately (typeable_instances, local_infos) = partition (bad_typeable_instance env) local_infos' ; addClsInsts local_infos $ addFamInsts fam_insts $ do { -- Compute instances from "deriving" clauses; -- This stuff computes a context for the derived instance -- decl, so it needs to know about all the instances possible -- NB: class instance declarations can contain derivings as -- part of associated data type declarations failIfErrsM -- If the addInsts stuff gave any errors, don't -- try the deriving stuff, because that may give -- more errors still ; traceTc "tcDeriving" Outputable.empty ; th_stage <- getStage -- See Note [Deriving inside TH brackets ] ; (gbl_env, deriv_inst_info, deriv_binds) <- if isBrackStage th_stage then do { gbl_env <- getGblEnv ; return (gbl_env, emptyBag, emptyValBindsOut) } else tcDeriving tycl_decls inst_decls deriv_decls -- Fail if there are any handwritten instance of poly-kinded Typeable ; mapM_ typeable_err typeable_instances -- Check that if the module is compiled with -XSafe, there are no -- hand written instances of old Typeable as then unsafe casts could be -- performed. Derived instances are OK. ; dflags <- getDynFlags ; when (safeLanguageOn dflags) $ forM_ local_infos $ \x -> case x of _ | genInstCheck x -> addErrAt (getSrcSpan $ iSpec x) (genInstErr x) _ -> return () -- As above but for Safe Inference mode. ; when (safeInferOn dflags) $ forM_ local_infos $ \x -> case x of _ | genInstCheck x -> recordUnsafeInfer _ | overlapCheck x -> recordUnsafeInfer _ -> return () ; return ( gbl_env , bagToList deriv_inst_info ++ local_infos , deriv_binds) }} where -- Separate the Typeable instances from the rest bad_typeable_instance env i = -- Class name is Typeable typeableClassName == is_cls_nm (iSpec i) -- but not those that come from Data.Typeable.Internal && tcg_mod env /= tYPEABLE_INTERNAL -- nor those from an .hs-boot or .hsig file -- (deriving can't be used there) && not (isHsBootOrSig (tcg_src env)) overlapCheck ty = case overlapMode (is_flag $ iSpec ty) of NoOverlap _ -> False _ -> True genInstCheck ty = is_cls_nm (iSpec ty) `elem` genericClassNames genInstErr i = hang (ptext (sLit $ "Generic instances can only be " ++ "derived in Safe Haskell.") $+$ ptext (sLit "Replace the following instance:")) 2 (pprInstanceHdr (iSpec i)) typeable_err i = setSrcSpan (getSrcSpan ispec) $ addErrTc $ hang (ptext (sLit "Typeable instances can only be derived")) 2 (vcat [ ptext (sLit "Try") <+> quotes (ptext (sLit "deriving instance Typeable") <+> pp_tc) , ptext (sLit "(requires StandaloneDeriving)") ]) where ispec = iSpec i pp_tc | [_kind, ty] <- is_tys ispec , Just (tc,_) <- tcSplitTyConApp_maybe ty = ppr tc | otherwise = ptext (sLit "<tycon>") addClsInsts :: [InstInfo Name] -> TcM a -> TcM a addClsInsts infos thing_inside = tcExtendLocalInstEnv (map iSpec infos) thing_inside addFamInsts :: [FamInst] -> TcM a -> TcM a -- Extend (a) the family instance envt -- (b) the type envt with stuff from data type decls addFamInsts fam_insts thing_inside = tcExtendLocalFamInstEnv fam_insts $ tcExtendGlobalEnv things $ do { traceTc "addFamInsts" (pprFamInsts fam_insts) ; tcg_env <- tcAddImplicits things ; setGblEnv tcg_env thing_inside } where axioms = map (toBranchedAxiom . famInstAxiom) fam_insts tycons = famInstsRepTyCons fam_insts things = map ATyCon tycons ++ map ACoAxiom axioms {- Note [Deriving inside TH brackets] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Given a declaration bracket [d| data T = A | B deriving( Show ) |] there is really no point in generating the derived code for deriving( Show) and then type-checking it. This will happen at the call site anyway, and the type check should never fail! Moreover (Trac #6005) the scoping of the generated code inside the bracket does not seem to work out. The easy solution is simply not to generate the derived instances at all. (A less brutal solution would be to generate them with no bindings.) This will become moot when we shift to the new TH plan, so the brutal solution will do. -} tcLocalInstDecl :: LInstDecl Name -> TcM ([InstInfo Name], [FamInst]) -- A source-file instance declaration -- Type-check all the stuff before the "where" -- -- We check for respectable instance type, and context tcLocalInstDecl (L loc (TyFamInstD { tfid_inst = decl })) = do { fam_inst <- tcTyFamInstDecl Nothing (L loc decl) ; return ([], [fam_inst]) } tcLocalInstDecl (L loc (DataFamInstD { dfid_inst = decl })) = do { fam_inst <- tcDataFamInstDecl Nothing (L loc decl) ; return ([], [fam_inst]) } tcLocalInstDecl (L loc (ClsInstD { cid_inst = decl })) = do { (insts, fam_insts) <- tcClsInstDecl (L loc decl) ; return (insts, fam_insts) } tcClsInstDecl :: LClsInstDecl Name -> TcM ([InstInfo Name], [FamInst]) tcClsInstDecl (L loc (ClsInstDecl { cid_poly_ty = poly_ty, cid_binds = binds , cid_sigs = uprags, cid_tyfam_insts = ats , cid_overlap_mode = overlap_mode , cid_datafam_insts = adts })) = setSrcSpan loc $ addErrCtxt (instDeclCtxt1 poly_ty) $ do { is_boot <- tcIsHsBootOrSig ; checkTc (not is_boot || (isEmptyLHsBinds binds && null uprags)) badBootDeclErr ; (tyvars, theta, clas, inst_tys) <- tcHsInstHead InstDeclCtxt poly_ty ; let mini_env = mkVarEnv (classTyVars clas `zip` inst_tys) mini_subst = mkTvSubst (mkInScopeSet (mkVarSet tyvars)) mini_env mb_info = Just (clas, mini_env) -- Next, process any associated types. ; traceTc "tcLocalInstDecl" (ppr poly_ty) ; tyfam_insts0 <- tcExtendTyVarEnv tyvars $ mapAndRecoverM (tcTyFamInstDecl mb_info) ats ; datafam_insts <- tcExtendTyVarEnv tyvars $ mapAndRecoverM (tcDataFamInstDecl mb_info) adts -- Check for missing associated types and build them -- from their defaults (if available) ; let defined_ats = mkNameSet (map (tyFamInstDeclName . unLoc) ats) `unionNameSet` mkNameSet (map (unLoc . dfid_tycon . unLoc) adts) ; tyfam_insts1 <- mapM (tcATDefault mini_subst defined_ats) (classATItems clas) -- Finally, construct the Core representation of the instance. -- (This no longer includes the associated types.) ; dfun_name <- newDFunName clas inst_tys (getLoc poly_ty) -- Dfun location is that of instance *header* ; ispec <- newClsInst (fmap unLoc overlap_mode) dfun_name tyvars theta clas inst_tys ; let inst_info = InstInfo { iSpec = ispec , iBinds = InstBindings { ib_binds = binds , ib_tyvars = map Var.varName tyvars -- Scope over bindings , ib_pragmas = uprags , ib_extensions = [] , ib_derived = False } } ; return ( [inst_info], tyfam_insts0 ++ concat tyfam_insts1 ++ datafam_insts) } tcATDefault :: TvSubst -> NameSet -> ClassATItem -> TcM [FamInst] -- ^ Construct default instances for any associated types that -- aren't given a user definition -- Returns [] or singleton tcATDefault inst_subst defined_ats (ATI fam_tc defs) -- User supplied instances ==> everything is OK | tyConName fam_tc `elemNameSet` defined_ats = return [] -- No user instance, have defaults ==> instatiate them -- Example: class C a where { type F a b :: *; type F a b = () } -- instance C [x] -- Then we want to generate the decl: type F [x] b = () | Just rhs_ty <- defs = do { let (subst', pat_tys') = mapAccumL subst_tv inst_subst (tyConTyVars fam_tc) rhs' = substTy subst' rhs_ty tv_set' = tyVarsOfTypes pat_tys' tvs' = varSetElemsKvsFirst tv_set' ; rep_tc_name <- newFamInstTyConName (noLoc (tyConName fam_tc)) pat_tys' ; let axiom = mkSingleCoAxiom rep_tc_name tvs' fam_tc pat_tys' rhs' ; traceTc "mk_deflt_at_instance" (vcat [ ppr fam_tc, ppr rhs_ty , pprCoAxiom axiom ]) ; fam_inst <- ASSERT( tyVarsOfType rhs' `subVarSet` tv_set' ) newFamInst SynFamilyInst axiom ; return [fam_inst] } -- No defaults ==> generate a warning | otherwise -- defs = Nothing = do { warnMissingMethodOrAT "associated type" (tyConName fam_tc) ; return [] } where subst_tv subst tc_tv | Just ty <- lookupVarEnv (getTvSubstEnv subst) tc_tv = (subst, ty) | otherwise = (extendTvSubst subst tc_tv ty', ty') where ty' = mkTyVarTy (updateTyVarKind (substTy subst) tc_tv) {- ************************************************************************ * * Type checking family instances * * ************************************************************************ Family instances are somewhat of a hybrid. They are processed together with class instance heads, but can contain data constructors and hence they share a lot of kinding and type checking code with ordinary algebraic data types (and GADTs). -} tcFamInstDeclCombined :: Maybe (Class, VarEnv Type) -- the class & mini_env if applicable -> Located Name -> TcM TyCon tcFamInstDeclCombined mb_clsinfo fam_tc_lname = do { -- Type family instances require -XTypeFamilies -- and can't (currently) be in an hs-boot file ; traceTc "tcFamInstDecl" (ppr fam_tc_lname) ; type_families <- xoptM Opt_TypeFamilies ; is_boot <- tcIsHsBootOrSig -- Are we compiling an hs-boot file? ; checkTc type_families $ badFamInstDecl fam_tc_lname ; checkTc (not is_boot) $ badBootFamInstDeclErr -- Look up the family TyCon and check for validity including -- check that toplevel type instances are not for associated types. ; fam_tc <- tcLookupLocatedTyCon fam_tc_lname ; when (isNothing mb_clsinfo && -- Not in a class decl isTyConAssoc fam_tc) -- but an associated type (addErr $ assocInClassErr fam_tc_lname) ; return fam_tc } tcTyFamInstDecl :: Maybe (Class, VarEnv Type) -- the class & mini_env if applicable -> LTyFamInstDecl Name -> TcM FamInst -- "type instance" tcTyFamInstDecl mb_clsinfo (L loc decl@(TyFamInstDecl { tfid_eqn = eqn })) = setSrcSpan loc $ tcAddTyFamInstCtxt decl $ do { let fam_lname = tfe_tycon (unLoc eqn) ; fam_tc <- tcFamInstDeclCombined mb_clsinfo fam_lname -- (0) Check it's an open type family ; checkTc (isFamilyTyCon fam_tc) (notFamily fam_tc) ; checkTc (isTypeFamilyTyCon fam_tc) (wrongKindOfFamily fam_tc) ; checkTc (isOpenTypeFamilyTyCon fam_tc) (notOpenFamily fam_tc) -- (1) do the work of verifying the synonym group ; co_ax_branch <- tcTyFamInstEqn (famTyConShape fam_tc) eqn -- (2) check for validity ; checkValidTyFamInst mb_clsinfo fam_tc co_ax_branch -- (3) construct coercion axiom ; rep_tc_name <- newFamInstAxiomName loc (unLoc fam_lname) [co_ax_branch] ; let axiom = mkUnbranchedCoAxiom rep_tc_name fam_tc co_ax_branch ; newFamInst SynFamilyInst axiom } tcDataFamInstDecl :: Maybe (Class, VarEnv Type) -> LDataFamInstDecl Name -> TcM FamInst -- "newtype instance" and "data instance" tcDataFamInstDecl mb_clsinfo (L loc decl@(DataFamInstDecl { dfid_pats = pats , dfid_tycon = fam_tc_name , dfid_defn = defn@HsDataDefn { dd_ND = new_or_data, dd_cType = cType , dd_ctxt = ctxt, dd_cons = cons } })) = setSrcSpan loc $ tcAddDataFamInstCtxt decl $ do { fam_tc <- tcFamInstDeclCombined mb_clsinfo fam_tc_name -- Check that the family declaration is for the right kind ; checkTc (isFamilyTyCon fam_tc) (notFamily fam_tc) ; checkTc (isAlgTyCon fam_tc) (wrongKindOfFamily fam_tc) -- Kind check type patterns ; tcFamTyPats (famTyConShape fam_tc) pats (kcDataDefn defn) $ \tvs' pats' res_kind -> do { -- Check that left-hand side contains no type family applications -- (vanilla synonyms are fine, though, and we checked for -- foralls earlier) checkValidFamPats fam_tc tvs' pats' -- Check that type patterns match class instance head, if any ; checkConsistentFamInst mb_clsinfo fam_tc tvs' pats' -- Result kind must be '*' (otherwise, we have too few patterns) ; checkTc (isLiftedTypeKind res_kind) $ tooFewParmsErr (tyConArity fam_tc) ; stupid_theta <- tcHsContext ctxt ; gadt_syntax <- dataDeclChecks (tyConName fam_tc) new_or_data stupid_theta cons -- Construct representation tycon ; rep_tc_name <- newFamInstTyConName fam_tc_name pats' ; axiom_name <- newImplicitBinder rep_tc_name mkInstTyCoOcc ; let orig_res_ty = mkTyConApp fam_tc pats' ; (rep_tc, fam_inst) <- fixM $ \ ~(rec_rep_tc, _) -> do { data_cons <- tcConDecls new_or_data rec_rep_tc (tvs', orig_res_ty) cons ; tc_rhs <- case new_or_data of DataType -> return (mkDataTyConRhs data_cons) NewType -> ASSERT( not (null data_cons) ) mkNewTyConRhs rep_tc_name rec_rep_tc (head data_cons) -- freshen tyvars ; let (eta_tvs, eta_pats) = eta_reduce tvs' pats' axiom = mkSingleCoAxiom axiom_name eta_tvs fam_tc eta_pats (mkTyConApp rep_tc (mkTyVarTys eta_tvs)) parent = FamInstTyCon axiom fam_tc pats' roles = map (const Nominal) tvs' rep_tc = buildAlgTyCon rep_tc_name tvs' roles (fmap unLoc cType) stupid_theta tc_rhs Recursive False -- No promotable to the kind level gadt_syntax parent -- We always assume that indexed types are recursive. Why? -- (1) Due to their open nature, we can never be sure that a -- further instance might not introduce a new recursive -- dependency. (2) They are always valid loop breakers as -- they involve a coercion. ; fam_inst <- newFamInst (DataFamilyInst rep_tc) axiom ; return (rep_tc, fam_inst) } -- Remember to check validity; no recursion to worry about here ; checkValidTyCon rep_tc ; return fam_inst } } where -- See Note [Eta reduction for data family axioms] -- [a,b,c,d].T [a] c Int c d ==> [a,b,c]. T [a] c Int c eta_reduce tvs pats = go (reverse tvs) (reverse pats) go (tv:tvs) (pat:pats) | Just tv' <- getTyVar_maybe pat , tv == tv' , not (tv `elemVarSet` tyVarsOfTypes pats) = go tvs pats go tvs pats = (reverse tvs, reverse pats) {- Note [Eta reduction for data family axioms] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider this data family T a b :: * newtype instance T Int a = MkT (IO a) deriving( Monad ) We'd like this to work. From the 'newtype instance' you might think we'd get: newtype TInt a = MkT (IO a) axiom ax1 a :: T Int a ~ TInt a -- The type-instance part axiom ax2 a :: TInt a ~ IO a -- The newtype part But now what can we do? We have this problem Given: d :: Monad IO Wanted: d' :: Monad (T Int) = d |> ???? What coercion can we use for the ??? Solution: eta-reduce both axioms, thus: axiom ax1 :: T Int ~ TInt axiom ax2 :: TInt ~ IO Now d' = d |> Monad (sym (ax2 ; ax1)) This eta reduction happens both for data instances and newtype instances. See Note [Newtype eta] in TyCon. ************************************************************************ * * Type-checking instance declarations, pass 2 * * ************************************************************************ -} tcInstDecls2 :: [LTyClDecl Name] -> [InstInfo Name] -> TcM (LHsBinds Id) -- (a) From each class declaration, -- generate any default-method bindings -- (b) From each instance decl -- generate the dfun binding tcInstDecls2 tycl_decls inst_decls = do { -- (a) Default methods from class decls let class_decls = filter (isClassDecl . unLoc) tycl_decls ; dm_binds_s <- mapM tcClassDecl2 class_decls ; let dm_binds = unionManyBags dm_binds_s -- (b) instance declarations ; let dm_ids = collectHsBindsBinders dm_binds -- Add the default method Ids (again) -- See Note [Default methods and instances] ; inst_binds_s <- tcExtendLetEnv TopLevel TopLevel dm_ids $ mapM tcInstDecl2 inst_decls -- Done ; return (dm_binds `unionBags` unionManyBags inst_binds_s) } {- See Note [Default methods and instances] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The default method Ids are already in the type environment (see Note [Default method Ids and Template Haskell] in TcTyClsDcls), BUT they don't have their InlinePragmas yet. Usually that would not matter, because the simplifier propagates information from binding site to use. But, unusually, when compiling instance decls we *copy* the INLINE pragma from the default method to the method for that particular operation (see Note [INLINE and default methods] below). So right here in tcInstDecls2 we must re-extend the type envt with the default method Ids replete with their INLINE pragmas. Urk. -} tcInstDecl2 :: InstInfo Name -> TcM (LHsBinds Id) -- Returns a binding for the dfun tcInstDecl2 (InstInfo { iSpec = ispec, iBinds = ibinds }) = recoverM (return emptyLHsBinds) $ setSrcSpan loc $ addErrCtxt (instDeclCtxt2 (idType dfun_id)) $ do { -- Instantiate the instance decl with skolem constants ; (inst_tyvars, dfun_theta, inst_head) <- tcSkolDFunType (idType dfun_id) -- We instantiate the dfun_id with superSkolems. -- See Note [Subtle interaction of recursion and overlap] -- and Note [Binding when looking up instances] ; let (clas, inst_tys) = tcSplitDFunHead inst_head (class_tyvars, sc_theta, _, op_items) = classBigSig clas sc_theta' = substTheta (zipOpenTvSubst class_tyvars inst_tys) sc_theta ; dfun_ev_vars <- newEvVars dfun_theta ; sc_ev_vars <- tcSuperClasses dfun_id inst_tyvars dfun_ev_vars sc_theta' -- Deal with 'SPECIALISE instance' pragmas -- See Note [SPECIALISE instance pragmas] ; spec_inst_info@(spec_inst_prags,_) <- tcSpecInstPrags dfun_id ibinds -- Typecheck the methods ; (meth_ids, meth_binds) <- tcInstanceMethods dfun_id clas inst_tyvars dfun_ev_vars inst_tys spec_inst_info op_items ibinds -- Create the result bindings ; self_dict <- newDict clas inst_tys ; let class_tc = classTyCon clas [dict_constr] = tyConDataCons class_tc dict_bind = mkVarBind self_dict (L loc con_app_args) -- We don't produce a binding for the dict_constr; instead we -- rely on the simplifier to unfold this saturated application -- We do this rather than generate an HsCon directly, because -- it means that the special cases (e.g. dictionary with only one -- member) are dealt with by the common MkId.mkDataConWrapId -- code rather than needing to be repeated here. -- con_app_tys = MkD ty1 ty2 -- con_app_scs = MkD ty1 ty2 sc1 sc2 -- con_app_args = MkD ty1 ty2 sc1 sc2 op1 op2 con_app_tys = wrapId (mkWpTyApps inst_tys) (dataConWrapId dict_constr) con_app_scs = mkHsWrap (mkWpEvApps (map EvId sc_ev_vars)) con_app_tys con_app_args = foldl app_to_meth con_app_scs meth_ids app_to_meth :: HsExpr Id -> Id -> HsExpr Id app_to_meth fun meth_id = L loc fun `HsApp` L loc (wrapId arg_wrapper meth_id) inst_tv_tys = mkTyVarTys inst_tyvars arg_wrapper = mkWpEvVarApps dfun_ev_vars <.> mkWpTyApps inst_tv_tys -- Do not inline the dfun; instead give it a magic DFunFunfolding dfun_spec_prags | isNewTyCon class_tc = SpecPrags [] -- Newtype dfuns just inline unconditionally, -- so don't attempt to specialise them | otherwise = SpecPrags spec_inst_prags export = ABE { abe_wrap = idHsWrapper, abe_poly = dfun_id , abe_mono = self_dict, abe_prags = dfun_spec_prags } -- NB: see Note [SPECIALISE instance pragmas] main_bind = AbsBinds { abs_tvs = inst_tyvars , abs_ev_vars = dfun_ev_vars , abs_exports = [export] , abs_ev_binds = emptyTcEvBinds , abs_binds = unitBag dict_bind } ; return (unitBag (L loc main_bind) `unionBags` listToBag meth_binds) } where dfun_id = instanceDFunId ispec loc = getSrcSpan dfun_id ------------------------------ tcSuperClasses :: DFunId -> [TcTyVar] -> [EvVar] -> TcThetaType -> TcM [EvVar] -- See Note [Silent superclass arguments] tcSuperClasses dfun_id inst_tyvars dfun_ev_vars sc_theta | null inst_tyvars && null dfun_ev_vars = emitWanteds ScOrigin sc_theta | otherwise = do { -- Check that all superclasses can be deduced from -- the originally-specified dfun arguments ; _ <- checkConstraints InstSkol inst_tyvars orig_ev_vars $ emitWanteds ScOrigin sc_theta ; return (map (find dfun_ev_vars) sc_theta) } where n_silent = dfunNSilent dfun_id orig_ev_vars = drop n_silent dfun_ev_vars find [] pred = pprPanic "tcInstDecl2" (ppr dfun_id $$ ppr (idType dfun_id) $$ ppr pred) find (ev:evs) pred | pred `eqPred` evVarPred ev = ev | otherwise = find evs pred ---------------------- mkMethIds :: HsSigFun -> Class -> [TcTyVar] -> [EvVar] -> [TcType] -> Id -> TcM (TcId, TcSigInfo, HsWrapper) mkMethIds sig_fn clas tyvars dfun_ev_vars inst_tys sel_id = do { poly_meth_name <- newName (mkClassOpAuxOcc sel_occ) ; local_meth_name <- newName sel_occ -- Base the local_meth_name on the selector name, because -- type errors from tcInstanceMethodBody come from here ; let poly_meth_id = mkLocalId poly_meth_name poly_meth_ty local_meth_id = mkLocalId local_meth_name local_meth_ty ; case lookupHsSig sig_fn sel_name of Just lhs_ty -- There is a signature in the instance declaration -- See Note [Instance method signatures] -> setSrcSpan (getLoc lhs_ty) $ do { inst_sigs <- xoptM Opt_InstanceSigs ; checkTc inst_sigs (misplacedInstSig sel_name lhs_ty) ; sig_ty <- tcHsSigType (FunSigCtxt sel_name) lhs_ty ; let poly_sig_ty = mkSigmaTy tyvars theta sig_ty ; tc_sig <- instTcTySig lhs_ty sig_ty Nothing [] local_meth_name ; hs_wrap <- addErrCtxtM (methSigCtxt sel_name poly_sig_ty poly_meth_ty) $ tcSubType (FunSigCtxt sel_name) poly_sig_ty poly_meth_ty ; return (poly_meth_id, tc_sig, hs_wrap) } Nothing -- No type signature -> do { tc_sig <- instTcTySigFromId local_meth_id ; return (poly_meth_id, tc_sig, idHsWrapper) } } -- Absent a type sig, there are no new scoped type variables here -- Only the ones from the instance decl itself, which are already -- in scope. Example: -- class C a where { op :: forall b. Eq b => ... } -- instance C [c] where { op = <rhs> } -- In <rhs>, 'c' is scope but 'b' is not! where sel_name = idName sel_id sel_occ = nameOccName sel_name local_meth_ty = instantiateMethod clas sel_id inst_tys poly_meth_ty = mkSigmaTy tyvars theta local_meth_ty theta = map idType dfun_ev_vars methSigCtxt :: Name -> TcType -> TcType -> TidyEnv -> TcM (TidyEnv, MsgDoc) methSigCtxt sel_name sig_ty meth_ty env0 = do { (env1, sig_ty) <- zonkTidyTcType env0 sig_ty ; (env2, meth_ty) <- zonkTidyTcType env1 meth_ty ; let msg = hang (ptext (sLit "When checking that instance signature for") <+> quotes (ppr sel_name)) 2 (vcat [ ptext (sLit "is more general than its signature in the class") , ptext (sLit "Instance sig:") <+> ppr sig_ty , ptext (sLit " Class sig:") <+> ppr meth_ty ]) ; return (env2, msg) } misplacedInstSig :: Name -> LHsType Name -> SDoc misplacedInstSig name hs_ty = vcat [ hang (ptext (sLit "Illegal type signature in instance declaration:")) 2 (hang (pprPrefixName name) 2 (dcolon <+> ppr hs_ty)) , ptext (sLit "(Use InstanceSigs to allow this)") ] ------------------------------ tcSpecInstPrags :: DFunId -> InstBindings Name -> TcM ([Located TcSpecPrag], PragFun) tcSpecInstPrags dfun_id (InstBindings { ib_binds = binds, ib_pragmas = uprags }) = do { spec_inst_prags <- mapM (wrapLocM (tcSpecInst dfun_id)) $ filter isSpecInstLSig uprags -- The filter removes the pragmas for methods ; return (spec_inst_prags, mkPragFun uprags binds) } {- Note [Instance method signatures] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ With -XInstanceSigs we allow the user to supply a signature for the method in an instance declaration. Here is an artificial example: data Age = MkAge Int instance Ord Age where compare :: a -> a -> Bool compare = error "You can't compare Ages" The instance signature can be *more* polymorphic than the instantiated class method (in this case: Age -> Age -> Bool), but it cannot be less polymorphic. Moreover, if a signature is given, the implementation code should match the signature, and type variables bound in the singature should scope over the method body. We achieve this by building a TcSigInfo for the method, whether or not there is an instance method signature, and using that to typecheck the declaration (in tcInstanceMethodBody). That means, conveniently, that the type variables bound in the signature will scope over the body. What about the check that the instance method signature is more polymorphic than the instantiated class method type? We just do a tcSubType call in mkMethIds, and use the HsWrapper thus generated in the method AbsBind. It's very like the tcSubType impedence-matching call in mkExport. We have to pass the HsWrapper into tcInstanceMethodBody. Note [Silent superclass arguments] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ See Trac #3731, #4809, #5751, #5913, #6117, which all describe somewhat more complicated situations, but ones encountered in practice. THE PROBLEM The problem is that it is all too easy to create a class whose superclass is bottom when it should not be. Consider the following (extreme) situation: class C a => D a where ... instance D [a] => D [a] where ... (dfunD) instance C [a] => C [a] where ... (dfunC) Although this looks wrong (assume D [a] to prove D [a]), it is only a more extreme case of what happens with recursive dictionaries, and it can, just about, make sense because the methods do some work before recursing. To implement the dfunD we must generate code for the superclass C [a], which we had better not get by superclass selection from the supplied argument: dfunD :: forall a. D [a] -> D [a] dfunD = \d::D [a] -> MkD (scsel d) .. Otherwise if we later encounter a situation where we have a [Wanted] dw::D [a] we might solve it thus: dw := dfunD dw Which is all fine except that now ** the superclass C is bottom **! The instance we want is: dfunD :: forall a. D [a] -> D [a] dfunD = \d::D [a] -> MkD (dfunC (scsel d)) ... THE SOLUTION Our solution to this problem "silent superclass arguments". We pass to each dfun some ``silent superclass arguments’’, which are the immediate superclasses of the dictionary we are trying to construct. In our example: dfun :: forall a. C [a] -> D [a] -> D [a] dfun = \(dc::C [a]) (dd::D [a]) -> DOrd dc ... Notice the extra (dc :: C [a]) argument compared to the previous version. This gives us: ----------------------------------------------------------- DFun Superclass Invariant ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In the body of a DFun, every superclass argument to the returned dictionary is either * one of the arguments of the DFun, or * constant, bound at top level ----------------------------------------------------------- This net effect is that it is safe to treat a dfun application as wrapping a dictionary constructor around its arguments (in particular, a dfun never picks superclasses from the arguments under the dictionary constructor). No superclass is hidden inside a dfun application. The extra arguments required to satisfy the DFun Superclass Invariant always come first, and are called the "silent" arguments. You can find out how many silent arguments there are using Id.dfunNSilent; and then you can just drop that number of arguments to see the ones that were in the original instance declaration. DFun types are built (only) by MkId.mkDictFunId, so that is where we decide what silent arguments are to be added. In our example, if we had [Wanted] dw :: D [a] we would get via the instance: dw := dfun d1 d2 [Wanted] (d1 :: C [a]) [Wanted] (d2 :: D [a]) And now, though we *can* solve: d2 := dw That's fine; and we solve d1:C[a] separately. Test case SCLoop tests this fix. Note [SPECIALISE instance pragmas] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider instance (Ix a, Ix b) => Ix (a,b) where {-# SPECIALISE instance Ix (Int,Int) #-} range (x,y) = ... We make a specialised version of the dictionary function, AND specialised versions of each *method*. Thus we should generate something like this: $dfIxPair :: (Ix a, Ix b) => Ix (a,b) {-# DFUN [$crangePair, ...] #-} {-# SPECIALISE $dfIxPair :: Ix (Int,Int) #-} $dfIxPair da db = Ix ($crangePair da db) (...other methods...) $crange :: (Ix a, Ix b) -> ((a,b),(a,b)) -> [(a,b)] {-# SPECIALISE $crange :: ((Int,Int),(Int,Int)) -> [(Int,Int)] #-} $crange da db = <blah> The SPECIALISE pragmas are acted upon by the desugarer, which generate dii :: Ix Int dii = ... $s$dfIxPair :: Ix ((Int,Int),(Int,Int)) {-# DFUN [$crangePair di di, ...] #-} $s$dfIxPair = Ix ($crangePair di di) (...) {-# RULE forall (d1,d2:Ix Int). $dfIxPair Int Int d1 d2 = $s$dfIxPair #-} $s$crangePair :: ((Int,Int),(Int,Int)) -> [(Int,Int)] $c$crangePair = ...specialised RHS of $crangePair... {-# RULE forall (d1,d2:Ix Int). $crangePair Int Int d1 d2 = $s$crangePair #-} Note that * The specialised dictionary $s$dfIxPair is very much needed, in case we call a function that takes a dictionary, but in a context where the specialised dictionary can be used. See Trac #7797. * The ClassOp rule for 'range' works equally well on $s$dfIxPair, because it still has a DFunUnfolding. See Note [ClassOp/DFun selection] * A call (range ($dfIxPair Int Int d1 d2)) might simplify two ways: --> {ClassOp rule for range} $crangePair Int Int d1 d2 --> {SPEC rule for $crangePair} $s$crangePair or thus: --> {SPEC rule for $dfIxPair} range $s$dfIxPair --> {ClassOpRule for range} $s$crangePair It doesn't matter which way. * We want to specialise the RHS of both $dfIxPair and $crangePair, but the SAME HsWrapper will do for both! We can call tcSpecPrag just once, and pass the result (in spec_inst_info) to tcInstanceMethods. -} tcSpecInst :: Id -> Sig Name -> TcM TcSpecPrag tcSpecInst dfun_id prag@(SpecInstSig _src hs_ty) = addErrCtxt (spec_ctxt prag) $ do { (tyvars, theta, clas, tys) <- tcHsInstHead SpecInstCtxt hs_ty ; let (_, spec_dfun_ty) = mkDictFunTy tyvars theta clas tys ; co_fn <- tcSubType SpecInstCtxt (idType dfun_id) spec_dfun_ty ; return (SpecPrag dfun_id co_fn defaultInlinePragma) } where spec_ctxt prag = hang (ptext (sLit "In the SPECIALISE pragma")) 2 (ppr prag) tcSpecInst _ _ = panic "tcSpecInst" {- ************************************************************************ * * Type-checking an instance method * * ************************************************************************ tcInstanceMethod - Make the method bindings, as a [(NonRec, HsBinds)], one per method - Remembering to use fresh Name (the instance method Name) as the binder - Bring the instance method Ids into scope, for the benefit of tcInstSig - Use sig_fn mapping instance method Name -> instance tyvars - Ditto prag_fn - Use tcValBinds to do the checking -} tcInstanceMethods :: DFunId -> Class -> [TcTyVar] -> [EvVar] -> [TcType] -> ([Located TcSpecPrag], PragFun) -> [(Id, DefMeth)] -> InstBindings Name -> TcM ([Id], [LHsBind Id]) -- The returned inst_meth_ids all have types starting -- forall tvs. theta => ... tcInstanceMethods dfun_id clas tyvars dfun_ev_vars inst_tys (spec_inst_prags, prag_fn) op_items (InstBindings { ib_binds = binds , ib_tyvars = lexical_tvs , ib_pragmas = sigs , ib_extensions = exts , ib_derived = is_derived }) = tcExtendTyVarEnv2 (lexical_tvs `zip` tyvars) $ -- The lexical_tvs scope over the 'where' part do { traceTc "tcInstMeth" (ppr sigs $$ ppr binds) ; let hs_sig_fn = mkHsSigFun sigs ; checkMinimalDefinition ; set_exts exts $ mapAndUnzipM (tc_item hs_sig_fn) op_items } where set_exts :: [ExtensionFlag] -> TcM a -> TcM a set_exts es thing = foldr setXOptM thing es ---------------------- tc_item :: HsSigFun -> (Id, DefMeth) -> TcM (Id, LHsBind Id) tc_item sig_fn (sel_id, dm_info) = case findMethodBind (idName sel_id) binds of Just (user_bind, bndr_loc) -> tc_body sig_fn sel_id user_bind bndr_loc Nothing -> do { traceTc "tc_def" (ppr sel_id) ; tc_default sig_fn sel_id dm_info } ---------------------- tc_body :: HsSigFun -> Id -> LHsBind Name -> SrcSpan -> TcM (TcId, LHsBind Id) tc_body sig_fn sel_id rn_bind bndr_loc = add_meth_ctxt sel_id rn_bind $ do { traceTc "tc_item" (ppr sel_id <+> ppr (idType sel_id)) ; (meth_id, local_meth_sig, hs_wrap) <- setSrcSpan bndr_loc $ mkMethIds sig_fn clas tyvars dfun_ev_vars inst_tys sel_id ; let prags = prag_fn (idName sel_id) ; meth_id1 <- addInlinePrags meth_id prags ; spec_prags <- tcSpecPrags meth_id1 prags ; bind <- tcInstanceMethodBody InstSkol tyvars dfun_ev_vars meth_id1 local_meth_sig hs_wrap (mk_meth_spec_prags meth_id1 spec_prags) rn_bind ; return (meth_id1, bind) } ---------------------- tc_default :: HsSigFun -> Id -> DefMeth -> TcM (TcId, LHsBind Id) tc_default sig_fn sel_id (GenDefMeth dm_name) = do { meth_bind <- mkGenericDefMethBind clas inst_tys sel_id dm_name ; tc_body sig_fn sel_id meth_bind inst_loc } tc_default sig_fn sel_id NoDefMeth -- No default method at all = do { traceTc "tc_def: warn" (ppr sel_id) ; (meth_id, _, _) <- mkMethIds sig_fn clas tyvars dfun_ev_vars inst_tys sel_id ; dflags <- getDynFlags ; return (meth_id, mkVarBind meth_id $ mkLHsWrap lam_wrapper (error_rhs dflags)) } where error_rhs dflags = L inst_loc $ HsApp error_fun (error_msg dflags) error_fun = L inst_loc $ wrapId (WpTyApp meth_tau) nO_METHOD_BINDING_ERROR_ID error_msg dflags = L inst_loc (HsLit (HsStringPrim "" (unsafeMkByteString (error_string dflags)))) meth_tau = funResultTy (applyTys (idType sel_id) inst_tys) error_string dflags = showSDoc dflags (hcat [ppr inst_loc, text "|", ppr sel_id ]) lam_wrapper = mkWpTyLams tyvars <.> mkWpLams dfun_ev_vars tc_default sig_fn sel_id (DefMeth dm_name) -- A polymorphic default method = do { -- Build the typechecked version directly, -- without calling typecheck_method; -- see Note [Default methods in instances] -- Generate /\as.\ds. let self = df as ds -- in $dm inst_tys self -- The 'let' is necessary only because HsSyn doesn't allow -- you to apply a function to a dictionary *expression*. ; self_dict <- newDict clas inst_tys ; let self_ev_bind = EvBind self_dict (EvDFunApp dfun_id (mkTyVarTys tyvars) (map EvId dfun_ev_vars)) ; (meth_id, local_meth_sig, hs_wrap) <- mkMethIds sig_fn clas tyvars dfun_ev_vars inst_tys sel_id ; dm_id <- tcLookupId dm_name ; let dm_inline_prag = idInlinePragma dm_id rhs = HsWrap (mkWpEvVarApps [self_dict] <.> mkWpTyApps inst_tys) $ HsVar dm_id local_meth_id = sig_id local_meth_sig meth_bind = mkVarBind local_meth_id (L inst_loc rhs) meth_id1 = meth_id `setInlinePragma` dm_inline_prag -- Copy the inline pragma (if any) from the default -- method to this version. Note [INLINE and default methods] export = ABE { abe_wrap = hs_wrap, abe_poly = meth_id1 , abe_mono = local_meth_id , abe_prags = mk_meth_spec_prags meth_id1 [] } bind = AbsBinds { abs_tvs = tyvars, abs_ev_vars = dfun_ev_vars , abs_exports = [export] , abs_ev_binds = EvBinds (unitBag self_ev_bind) , abs_binds = unitBag meth_bind } -- Default methods in an instance declaration can't have their own -- INLINE or SPECIALISE pragmas. It'd be possible to allow them, but -- currently they are rejected with -- "INLINE pragma lacks an accompanying binding" ; return (meth_id1, L inst_loc bind) } ---------------------- mk_meth_spec_prags :: Id -> [LTcSpecPrag] -> TcSpecPrags -- Adapt the 'SPECIALISE instance' pragmas to work for this method Id -- There are two sources: -- * spec_prags_for_me: {-# SPECIALISE op :: <blah> #-} -- * spec_prags_from_inst: derived from {-# SPECIALISE instance :: <blah> #-} -- These ones have the dfun inside, but [perhaps surprisingly] -- the correct wrapper. mk_meth_spec_prags meth_id spec_prags_for_me = SpecPrags (spec_prags_for_me ++ spec_prags_from_inst) where spec_prags_from_inst | isInlinePragma (idInlinePragma meth_id) = [] -- Do not inherit SPECIALISE from the instance if the -- method is marked INLINE, because then it'll be inlined -- and the specialisation would do nothing. (Indeed it'll provoke -- a warning from the desugarer | otherwise = [ L inst_loc (SpecPrag meth_id wrap inl) | L inst_loc (SpecPrag _ wrap inl) <- spec_inst_prags] inst_loc = getSrcSpan dfun_id -- For instance decls that come from deriving clauses -- we want to print out the full source code if there's an error -- because otherwise the user won't see the code at all add_meth_ctxt sel_id rn_bind thing | is_derived = addLandmarkErrCtxt (derivBindCtxt sel_id clas inst_tys rn_bind) thing | otherwise = thing ---------------------- -- check if one of the minimal complete definitions is satisfied checkMinimalDefinition = whenIsJust (isUnsatisfied methodExists (classMinimalDef clas)) $ warnUnsatisifiedMinimalDefinition where methodExists meth = isJust (findMethodBind meth binds) mkGenericDefMethBind :: Class -> [Type] -> Id -> Name -> TcM (LHsBind Name) mkGenericDefMethBind clas inst_tys sel_id dm_name = -- A generic default method -- If the method is defined generically, we only have to call the -- dm_name. do { dflags <- getDynFlags ; liftIO (dumpIfSet_dyn dflags Opt_D_dump_deriv "Filling in method body" (vcat [ppr clas <+> ppr inst_tys, nest 2 (ppr sel_id <+> equals <+> ppr rhs)])) ; return (noLoc $ mkTopFunBind Generated (noLoc (idName sel_id)) [mkSimpleMatch [] rhs]) } where rhs = nlHsVar dm_name ---------------------- wrapId :: HsWrapper -> id -> HsExpr id wrapId wrapper id = mkHsWrap wrapper (HsVar id) derivBindCtxt :: Id -> Class -> [Type ] -> LHsBind Name -> SDoc derivBindCtxt sel_id clas tys _bind = vcat [ ptext (sLit "When typechecking the code for ") <+> quotes (ppr sel_id) , nest 2 (ptext (sLit "in a derived instance for") <+> quotes (pprClassPred clas tys) <> colon) , nest 2 $ ptext (sLit "To see the code I am typechecking, use -ddump-deriv") ] warnMissingMethodOrAT :: String -> Name -> TcM () warnMissingMethodOrAT what name = do { warn <- woptM Opt_WarnMissingMethods ; traceTc "warn" (ppr name <+> ppr warn <+> ppr (not (startsWithUnderscore (getOccName name)))) ; warnTc (warn -- Warn only if -fwarn-missing-methods && not (startsWithUnderscore (getOccName name))) -- Don't warn about _foo methods (ptext (sLit "No explicit") <+> text what <+> ptext (sLit "or default declaration for") <+> quotes (ppr name)) } warnUnsatisifiedMinimalDefinition :: ClassMinimalDef -> TcM () warnUnsatisifiedMinimalDefinition mindef = do { warn <- woptM Opt_WarnMissingMethods ; warnTc warn message } where message = vcat [ptext (sLit "No explicit implementation for") ,nest 2 $ pprBooleanFormulaNice mindef ] {- Note [Export helper functions] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We arrange to export the "helper functions" of an instance declaration, so that they are not subject to preInlineUnconditionally, even if their RHS is trivial. Reason: they are mentioned in the DFunUnfolding of the dict fun as Ids, not as CoreExprs, so we can't substitute a non-variable for them. We could change this by making DFunUnfoldings have CoreExprs, but it seems a bit simpler this way. Note [Default methods in instances] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Consider this class Baz v x where foo :: x -> x foo y = <blah> instance Baz Int Int From the class decl we get $dmfoo :: forall v x. Baz v x => x -> x $dmfoo y = <blah> Notice that the type is ambiguous. That's fine, though. The instance decl generates $dBazIntInt = MkBaz fooIntInt fooIntInt = $dmfoo Int Int $dBazIntInt BUT this does mean we must generate the dictionary translation of fooIntInt directly, rather than generating source-code and type-checking it. That was the bug in Trac #1061. In any case it's less work to generate the translated version! Note [INLINE and default methods] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Default methods need special case. They are supposed to behave rather like macros. For exmample class Foo a where op1, op2 :: Bool -> a -> a {-# INLINE op1 #-} op1 b x = op2 (not b) x instance Foo Int where -- op1 via default method op2 b x = <blah> The instance declaration should behave just as if 'op1' had been defined with the code, and INLINE pragma, from its original definition. That is, just as if you'd written instance Foo Int where op2 b x = <blah> {-# INLINE op1 #-} op1 b x = op2 (not b) x So for the above example we generate: {-# INLINE $dmop1 #-} -- $dmop1 has an InlineCompulsory unfolding $dmop1 d b x = op2 d (not b) x $fFooInt = MkD $cop1 $cop2 {-# INLINE $cop1 #-} $cop1 = $dmop1 $fFooInt $cop2 = <blah> Note carefully: * We *copy* any INLINE pragma from the default method $dmop1 to the instance $cop1. Otherwise we'll just inline the former in the latter and stop, which isn't what the user expected * Regardless of its pragma, we give the default method an unfolding with an InlineCompulsory source. That means that it'll be inlined at every use site, notably in each instance declaration, such as $cop1. This inlining must happen even though a) $dmop1 is not saturated in $cop1 b) $cop1 itself has an INLINE pragma It's vital that $dmop1 *is* inlined in this way, to allow the mutual recursion between $fooInt and $cop1 to be broken * To communicate the need for an InlineCompulsory to the desugarer (which makes the Unfoldings), we use the IsDefaultMethod constructor in TcSpecPrags. ************************************************************************ * * \subsection{Error messages} * * ************************************************************************ -} instDeclCtxt1 :: LHsType Name -> SDoc instDeclCtxt1 hs_inst_ty = inst_decl_ctxt (case unLoc hs_inst_ty of HsForAllTy _ _ _ _ (L _ ty') -> ppr ty' _ -> ppr hs_inst_ty) -- Don't expect this instDeclCtxt2 :: Type -> SDoc instDeclCtxt2 dfun_ty = inst_decl_ctxt (ppr (mkClassPred cls tys)) where (_,_,cls,tys) = tcSplitDFunTy dfun_ty inst_decl_ctxt :: SDoc -> SDoc inst_decl_ctxt doc = hang (ptext (sLit "In the instance declaration for")) 2 (quotes doc) badBootFamInstDeclErr :: SDoc badBootFamInstDeclErr = ptext (sLit "Illegal family instance in hs-boot file") notFamily :: TyCon -> SDoc notFamily tycon = vcat [ ptext (sLit "Illegal family instance for") <+> quotes (ppr tycon) , nest 2 $ parens (ppr tycon <+> ptext (sLit "is not an indexed type family"))] tooFewParmsErr :: Arity -> SDoc tooFewParmsErr arity = ptext (sLit "Family instance has too few parameters; expected") <+> ppr arity assocInClassErr :: Located Name -> SDoc assocInClassErr name = ptext (sLit "Associated type") <+> quotes (ppr name) <+> ptext (sLit "must be inside a class instance") badFamInstDecl :: Located Name -> SDoc badFamInstDecl tc_name = vcat [ ptext (sLit "Illegal family instance for") <+> quotes (ppr tc_name) , nest 2 (parens $ ptext (sLit "Use TypeFamilies to allow indexed type families")) ] notOpenFamily :: TyCon -> SDoc notOpenFamily tc = ptext (sLit "Illegal instance for closed family") <+> quotes (ppr tc)