HACKER TERRITORY. HACKER TERRITORY. (You were warned.)
Make a debugging dump after pass <pass> (may be common enough to need a short form…). You can get all of these at once (lots of output) by using -v5, or most of them with -v4. You can prevent them from clogging up your standard output by passing -ddump-to-file. Some of the most useful ones are:
Causes the output from all of the flags listed below to be dumped to a file. The file name depends upon the output produced; for instance, output from -ddump-simpl will end up in module.dump-simpl.
Dump parser output
Dump parser output as a syntax tree
Dump renamer output
Dump renamer output as a syntax tree
Dump typechecker output
Dump typechecker output as a syntax tree
Dump Template Haskell expressions that we splice in, and what Haskell code the expression evaluates to.
Dump expansions of all top-level Template Haskell splices into ⟨file⟩.
Dump a type signature for each value defined at the top level of the module. The list is sorted alphabetically. Using -dppr-debug dumps a type signature for all the imported and system-defined things as well; useful for debugging the compiler.
Dump derived instances
Dump desugarer output
Dump output of specialisation pass
Dumps all rewrite rules specified in this module; see Controlling what’s going on in rewrite rules.
Dumps the names of all rules that fired in this module
Dumps detailed information about all rules that fired in this module
Dumps the output of the vectoriser.
Dump simplifier output (Core-to-Core passes)
Dumps inlining info from the simplifier. Note that if used in conjunction with -dverbose-core2core the compiler will also dump the inlinings that it considers but passes up, along with its rationale.
Dump strictness analyser output
Dump strictness signatures
Dump common subexpression elimination (CSE) pass output
Dump worker/wrapper split output
Dump “occurrence analysis” output
Dump output of Core preparation pass
Dump output of STG-to-STG passes
Dump the result of the C– pipeline processing
Dump the result of STG-to-C– conversion
Dump output from all C– pipeline stages. In case of .cmm compilation this also dumps the result of file parsing.
Dump the results of C– to C– optimising passes.
Dump assembly language produced by the native code generator
Implies: | -fllvm |
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LLVM code from the LLVM code generator
Dump byte-code compiler output
dump foreign export stubs
Dump error messages as JSON documents. This is intended to be consumed by external tooling. A good way to use it is in conjunction with -ddump-to-file.
Show the output of each iteration of the simplifier (each run of the simplifier has a maximum number of iterations, normally 4). This outputs even more information than -ddump-simpl-phases.
Dump statistics about how many of each kind of transformation too place. If you add -dppr-debug you get more detailed information.
Make the interface loader be real chatty about what it is up to.
Make the type checker be real chatty about what it is up to.
Make the vectoriser be real chatty about what it is up to.
Make the renamer be real chatty about what it is up to.
Make the pattern match exhaustiveness checker be real chatty about what it is up to.
Print out summary of what kind of information the renamer had to bring in.
Show the output of the intermediate Core-to-Core and STG-to-STG passes, respectively. (lots of output!) So: when we’re really desperate:
% ghc -noC -O -ddump-simpl -dverbose-core2core -dcore-lint Foo.hs
Print out each pass name, its runtime and heap allocations as it happens. Note that this may come at a slight performance cost as the compiler will be a bit more eager in forcing pass results to more accurately account for their costs.
Two types of messages are produced: Those beginning with *** are denote the beginning of a compilation phase whereas those starting with !!! mark the end of a pass and are accompanied by allocation and runtime statistics.
Print a one-line summary of the size of the Core program at the end of the optimisation pipeline.
Show statistics on the usage of fast strings by the compiler.
Debugging output is in one of several “styles.” Take the printing of types, for example. In the “user” style (the default), the compiler’s internal ideas about types are presented in Haskell source-level syntax, insofar as possible. In the “debug” style (which is the default for debugging output), the types are printed in with explicit foralls, and variables have their unique-id attached (so you can check for things that look the same but aren’t). This flag makes debugging output appear in the more verbose debug style.
In error messages, expressions are printed to a certain “depth”, with subexpressions beyond the depth replaced by ellipses. This flag sets the depth. Its default value is 5.
Set the width of debugging output. Use this if your code is wrapping too much. For example: -dppr-cols=200.
Print single alternative case expressions as though they were strict let expressions. This is helpful when your code does a lot of unboxing.
Suppress any unsolicited debugging output. When GHC has been built with the DEBUG option it occasionally emits debug output of interest to developers. The extra output can confuse the testing framework and cause bogus test failures, so this flag is provided to turn it off.
Core dumps contain a large amount of information. Depending on what you are doing, not all of it will be useful. Use these flags to suppress the parts that you are not interested in.
Suppress everything that can be suppressed, except for unique ids as this often makes the printout ambiguous. If you just want to see the overall structure of the code, then start here.
Suppress “ticks” in the pretty-printer output.
Suppress the printing of uniques. This may make the printout ambiguous (e.g. unclear where an occurrence of ‘x’ is bound), but it makes the output of two compiler runs have many fewer gratuitous differences, so you can realistically apply diff. Once diff has shown you where to look, you can try again without -dsuppress-uniques
Suppress extended information about identifiers where they are bound. This includes strictness information and inliner templates. Using this flag can cut the size of the core dump in half, due to the lack of inliner templates
Suppress the printing of the stable unfolding of a variable at its binding site.
Suppress the printing of module qualification prefixes. This is the Data.List in Data.List.length.
Suppress the printing of type signatures.
Suppress the printing of type applications.
Suppress the printing of type coercions.
Turn on heavyweight intra-pass sanity-checking within GHC, at Core level. (It checks GHC’s sanity, not yours.)
Ditto for STG level. (note: currently doesn’t work).
Ditto for C– level.
Instructs the LLVM code generator to fill dead STG registers with garbage instead of undef in calls. This makes it easier to catch subtle code generator and runtime system bugs (e.g. see Trac #11487).
Start UniqSupply allocation from ⟨s⟩.
Set the increment for the generated Unique‘s to ⟨i⟩.
This is useful in combination with -dinitial-unique=⟨s⟩ to test if the generated files depend on the order of Unique‘s.
Some interesting values: