[project @ 2002-09-26 09:01:34 by simonpj]
[ghc-hetmet.git] / ghc / docs / users_guide / using.sgml
1 <chapter id="using-ghc">
2   <title>Using GHC</title>
3
4   <indexterm><primary>GHC, using</primary></indexterm>
5   <indexterm><primary>using GHC</primary></indexterm>
6
7   <para>GHC can work in one of three &ldquo;modes&rdquo;:</para>
8
9   <variablelist>
10     <varlistentry>
11       <term><cmdsynopsis><command>ghc</command>
12           <arg choice=plain>&ndash;&ndash;interactive</arg>
13         </cmdsynopsis></term>
14       <indexterm><primary>interactive mode</primary>
15       </indexterm>
16       <indexterm><primary>ghci</primary>
17       </indexterm>
18       <listitem>
19         <para>Interactive mode, which is also available as
20         <command>ghci</command>.  Interactive mode is described in
21         more detail in <xref linkend="ghci">.</para>
22       </listitem>
23     </varlistentry>
24
25     <varlistentry>
26       <term><cmdsynopsis><command>ghc</command>
27           <arg choice=plain>&ndash;&ndash;make</arg>
28         </cmdsynopsis></term>
29       <indexterm><primary>make mode</primary>
30       </indexterm>
31       <indexterm><primary><option>&ndash;&ndash;make</option></primary>
32       </indexterm>
33       <listitem>
34         <para>In this mode, GHC will build a multi-module Haskell
35         program automatically, figuring out dependencies for itself.
36         If you have a straightforward Haskell program, this is likely
37         to be much easier, and faster, than using
38         <command>make</command>.</para>
39       </listitem>
40     </varlistentry>
41
42     <varlistentry>
43       <term><cmdsynopsis>
44           <command>ghc</command>
45           <group>
46             <arg>-E</arg>
47             <arg>-C</arg>
48             <arg>-S</arg>
49             <arg>-c</arg>
50           </group>
51         </cmdsynopsis></term>
52       <indexterm><primary><option>-E</option></primary></indexterm>
53       <indexterm><primary><option>-C</option></primary></indexterm>
54       <indexterm><primary><option>-S</option></primary></indexterm>
55       <indexterm><primary><option>-c</option></primary></indexterm>
56       <listitem>
57         <para>This is the traditional batch-compiler mode, in which
58           GHC can compile source files one at a time, or link objects
59           together into an executable.</para>
60       </listitem>
61     </varlistentry>
62   </variablelist>
63   
64   <sect1>
65     <title>Options overview</title>
66     
67     <para>GHC's behaviour is controlled by
68     <firstterm>options</firstterm>, which for historical reasons are
69     also sometimes referred to as command-line flags or arguments.
70     Options can be specified in three ways:</para>
71
72     <sect2>
73       <title>Command-line arguments</title>
74       
75       <indexterm><primary>structure, command-line</primary></indexterm>
76       <indexterm><primary>command-line</primary><secondary>arguments</secondary></indexterm>
77       <indexterm><primary>arguments</primary><secondary>command-line</secondary></indexterm>
78       
79       <para>An invocation of GHC takes the following form:</para>
80
81 <Screen>
82 ghc [argument...]
83 </Screen>
84
85       <para>Command-line arguments are either options or file names.</para>
86
87       <para>Command-line options begin with <literal>-</literal>.
88       They may <emphasis>not</emphasis> be grouped:
89       <option>-vO</option> is different from <option>-v -O</option>.
90       Options need not precede filenames: e.g., <literal>ghc *.o -o
91       foo</literal>.  All options are processed and then applied to
92       all files; you cannot, for example, invoke <literal>ghc -c -O1
93       Foo.hs -O2 Bar.hs</literal> to apply different optimisation
94       levels to the files <filename>Foo.hs</filename> and
95       <filename>Bar.hs</filename>.</para>
96     </sect2>
97
98     <Sect2 id="source-file-options">
99       <title>Command line options in source files</title>
100     
101       <indexterm><primary>source-file options</primary></indexterm>
102
103       <para>Sometimes it is useful to make the connection between a
104       source file and the command-line options it requires quite
105       tight. For instance, if a Haskell source file uses GHC
106       extensions, it will always need to be compiled with the
107       <option>-fglasgow-exts</option> option.  Rather than maintaining
108       the list of per-file options in a <filename>Makefile</filename>,
109       it is possible to do this directly in the source file using the
110       <literal>OPTIONS</literal> pragma <indexterm><primary>OPTIONS
111       pragma</primary></indexterm>:</para>
112
113 <ProgramListing>
114 {-# OPTIONS -fglasgow-exts #-}
115 module X where
116 ...
117 </ProgramListing>
118       
119       <para><literal>OPTIONS</literal> pragmas are only looked for at
120       the top of your source files, upto the first
121       (non-literate,non-empty) line not containing
122       <literal>OPTIONS</literal>. Multiple <literal>OPTIONS</literal>
123       pragmas are recognised. Note that your command shell does not
124       get to the source file options, they are just included literally
125       in the array of command-line arguments the compiler driver
126       maintains internally, so you'll be desperately disappointed if
127       you try to glob etc. inside <literal>OPTIONS</literal>.</para>
128
129       <para>NOTE: the contents of OPTIONS are prepended to the
130       command-line options, so you <emphasis>do</emphasis> have the
131       ability to override OPTIONS settings via the command
132       line.</para>
133
134       <para>It is not recommended to move all the contents of your
135       Makefiles into your source files, but in some circumstances, the
136       <literal>OPTIONS</literal> pragma is the Right Thing. (If you
137       use <option>-keep-hc-file-too</option> and have OPTION flags in
138       your module, the OPTIONS will get put into the generated .hc
139       file).</para>
140     </sect2>
141
142     <sect2>
143       <title>Setting options in GHCi</title>
144
145       <para>Options may also be modified from within GHCi, using the
146       <literal>:set</literal> command.  See <xref linkend="ghci-set">
147       for more details.</para>
148     </sect2>
149   </sect1>
150     
151   <sect1 id="static-dynamic-flags">
152     <title>Static vs. Dynamic options</title>
153     <indexterm><primary>static</primary><secondary>options</secondary>
154     </indexterm>
155     <indexterm><primary>dynamic</primary><secondary>options</secondary>
156     </indexterm>
157
158     <para>Each of GHC's command line options is classified as either
159     <firstterm>static</firstterm> or <firstterm>dynamic</firstterm>.
160     A static flag may only be specified on the command line, whereas a
161     dynamic flag may also be given in an <literal>OPTIONS</literal>
162     pragma in a source file or set from the GHCi command-line with
163     <literal>:set</literal>.</para>
164
165     <para>As a rule of thumb, all the language options are dynamic, as
166     are the warning options and the debugging options.  The rest are
167     static, with the notable exceptions of <option>-v</option>,
168     <option>-cpp</option>, <option>-fasm</option>,
169     <option>-fvia-C</option>, and <option>-#include</option>.
170
171     The flag reference tables (<xref linkend="flag-reference">) lists
172     the status of each flag.</para>
173   </sect1>
174
175   <sect1 id="file-suffixes">
176     <title>Meaningful file suffixes</title>
177
178     <indexterm><primary>suffixes, file</primary></indexterm>
179     <indexterm><primary>file suffixes for GHC</primary></indexterm>
180
181     <para>File names with &ldquo;meaningful&rdquo; suffixes (e.g.,
182     <filename>.lhs</filename> or <filename>.o</filename>) cause the
183     &ldquo;right thing&rdquo; to happen to those files.</para>
184
185     <variablelist>
186
187       <varlistentry>
188         <term><filename>.lhs</filename></term>
189         <indexterm><primary><literal>lhs</literal> suffix</primary></indexterm>
190         <listitem>
191           <para>A &ldquo;literate Haskell&rdquo; module.</para>
192         </listitem>
193       </varlistentry>
194
195       <varlistentry>
196         <term><filename>.hs</filename></term>
197         <listitem>
198           <para>A not-so-literate Haskell module.</para>
199         </listitem>
200       </varlistentry>
201
202       <varlistentry>
203         <term><filename>.hi</filename></term>
204         <listitem>
205           <para>A Haskell interface file, probably
206           compiler-generated.</para>
207         </listitem>
208       </varlistentry>
209
210       <varlistentry>
211         <term><filename>.hc</filename></term>
212         <listitem>
213           <para>Intermediate C file produced by the Haskell
214           compiler.</para>
215         </listitem>
216       </varlistentry>
217
218       <varlistentry>
219         <term><filename>.c</filename></term>
220         <listitem>
221           <para>A C&nbsp;file not produced by the Haskell
222           compiler.</para>
223         </listitem>
224       </varlistentry>
225       
226       <varlistentry>
227         <term><filename>.s</filename></term>
228         <listitem>
229           <para>An assembly-language source file, usually produced by
230           the compiler.</para>
231         </listitem>
232       </varlistentry>
233
234       <varlistentry>
235         <term><filename>.o</filename></term>
236         <listitem>
237           <para>An object file, produced by an assembler.</para>
238         </listitem>
239       </varlistentry>
240     </variablelist>
241
242     <para>Files with other suffixes (or without suffixes) are passed
243     straight to the linker.</para>
244
245   </sect1>
246
247   <sect1 id="options-help">
248     <title>Help and verbosity options</title>
249
250     <IndexTerm><Primary>help options</Primary></IndexTerm>
251     <IndexTerm><Primary>verbosity options</Primary></IndexTerm>
252
253     <variablelist>
254       <varlistentry>
255         <term><option>&ndash;&ndash;help</option></term>
256         <term><option>-?</option></term>
257         <indexterm><primary><option>-?</option></primary></indexterm>
258         <indexterm><primary><option>&ndash;&ndash;help</option></primary></indexterm>
259         <listitem>
260           <para>Cause GHC to spew a long usage message to standard
261           output and then exit.</para>
262         </listitem>
263       </varlistentry>
264
265       <varlistentry>
266         <term><option>-v</option></term>
267         <indexterm><primary><option>-v</option></primary></indexterm>
268         <listitem>
269           <para>The <option>-v</option> option makes GHC
270           <emphasis>verbose</emphasis>: it reports its version number
271           and shows (on stderr) exactly how it invokes each phase of
272           the compilation system.  Moreover, it passes the
273           <option>-v</option> flag to most phases; each reports its
274           version number (and possibly some other information).</para>
275
276           <para>Please, oh please, use the <option>-v</option> option
277           when reporting bugs!  Knowing that you ran the right bits in
278           the right order is always the first thing we want to
279           verify.</para>
280         </listitem>
281       </varlistentry>
282         
283       <varlistentry>
284         <term><option>-v</option><replaceable>n</replaceable></term>
285         <indexterm><primary><option>-v</option></primary></indexterm>
286         <listitem>
287           <para>To provide more control over the compiler's verbosity,
288           the <option>-v</option> flag takes an optional numeric
289           argument.  Specifying <option>-v</option> on its own is
290           equivalent to <option>-v3</option>, and the other levels
291           have the following meanings:</para>
292           
293           <variablelist>
294             <varlistentry>
295               <term><option>-v0</option></term>
296               <listitem>
297                 <para>Disable all non-essential messages (this is the
298                 default).</para>
299               </listitem>
300             </varlistentry>
301
302             <varlistentry>
303               <term><option>-v1</option></term>
304               <listitem>
305                 <para>Minimal verbosity: print one line per
306                 compilation (this is the default when
307                 <option>&ndash;&ndash;make</option> or
308                 <option>&ndash;&ndash;interactive</option> is on).</para>
309               </listitem>
310             </varlistentry>
311
312             <varlistentry>
313               <term><option>-v2</option></term>
314               <listitem>
315                 <para>Print the name of each compilation phase as it
316                 is executed. (equivalent to
317                 <option>-dshow-passes</option>).</para>
318               </listitem>
319             </varlistentry>
320
321             <varlistentry>
322               <term><option>-v3</option></term>
323               <listitem>
324                 <para>The same as <option>-v2</option>, except that in
325                 addition the full command line (if appropriate) for
326                 each compilation phase is also printed.</para>
327               </listitem>
328             </varlistentry>
329
330             <varlistentry>
331               <term><option>-v4</option></term>
332               <listitem>
333                 <para>The same as <option>-v3</option> except that the
334                 intermediate program representation after each
335                 compilation phase is also printed (excluding
336                 preprocessed and C/assembly files).</para>
337               </listitem>
338             </varlistentry>
339           </variablelist>
340         </listitem>
341       </varlistentry>
342       
343       <varlistentry>
344         <term><option>&ndash;&ndash;version</option></term>
345         <indexterm><primary><option>&ndash;&ndash;version</option></primary></indexterm>
346         <listitem>
347           <para>Print a one-line string including GHC's version number.</para>
348         </listitem>
349       </varlistentry>
350
351       <varlistentry>
352         <term><option>&ndash;&ndash;numeric-version</option></term>
353         <indexterm><primary><option>&ndash;&ndash;numeric-version</option></primary></indexterm>
354         <listitem>
355           <para>Print GHC's numeric version number only.</para>
356         </listitem>
357       </varlistentry>
358
359       <varlistentry>
360         <term><option>&ndash;&ndash;print-libdir</option></term>
361         <indexterm><primary><option>&ndash;&ndash;print-libdir</option></primary></indexterm>
362         <listitem>
363           <para>Print the path to GHC's library directory.  This is
364           the top of the directory tree containing GHC's libraries,
365           interfaces, and include files (usually something like
366           <literal>/usr/local/lib/ghc-5.04</literal> on Unix).  This
367           is the value of
368           <literal>$libdir</literal><indexterm><primary><literal>libdir</literal></primary>
369           </indexterm>in the package configuration file (see <xref
370           linkend="packages">).</para>
371         </listitem>
372       </varlistentry>
373
374     </variablelist>
375   </sect1>
376
377   <sect1 id="make-mode">
378     <title>Using <command>ghc</command> <option>&ndash;&ndash;make</option></title>
379
380     <indexterm><primary><option>&ndash;&ndash;make</option></primary>
381     </indexterm>
382     <indexterm><primary>separate compilation</primary>
383     </indexterm>
384     
385     <para>When given the <option>&ndash;&ndash;make</option> option, GHC will
386     build a multi-module Haskell program by following dependencies
387     from a single root module (usually <literal>Main</literal>).  For
388     example, if your <literal>Main</literal> module is in a file
389     called <filename>Main.hs</filename>, you could compile and link
390     the program like this:</para>
391
392 <screen>
393 ghc &ndash;&ndash;make Main.hs
394 </screen>
395
396     <para>The command line must contain one source file or module
397     name; GHC will figure out all the modules in the program by
398     following the imports from this initial module.  It will then
399     attempt to compile each module which is out of date, and finally
400     if the top module is <literal>Main</literal>, the program
401     will also be linked into an executable.</para>
402
403     <para>The main advantages to using <literal>ghc &ndash;&ndash;make</literal>
404     over traditional <literal>Makefile</literal>s are:</para>
405
406     <itemizedlist>
407       <listitem>
408         <para>GHC doesn't have to be restarted for each compilation,
409         which means it can cache information between compilations.
410         Compiling a muli-module program with <literal>ghc
411         &ndash;&ndash;make</literal> can be up to twice as fast as running
412         <literal>ghc</literal> individually on each source
413         file.</para>
414       </listitem>
415       <listitem>
416         <para>You don't have to write a
417         <literal>Makefile</literal>.</para>
418       </listitem>
419       <indexterm><primary><literal>Makefile</literal>s</primary><secondary>avoiding</secondary>
420       </indexterm>
421       <listitem>
422         <para>GHC re-calculates the dependencies each time it is
423         invoked, so the dependencies never get out of sync with the
424         source.</para>
425       </listitem>
426     </itemizedlist>
427
428     <para>Any of the command-line options described in the rest of
429     this chapter can be used with <option>&ndash;&ndash;make</option>, but note
430     that any options you give on the command line will apply to all
431     the source files compiled, so if you want any options to apply to
432     a single source file only, you'll need to use an
433     <literal>OPTIONS</literal> pragma (see <xref
434     linkend="source-file-options">).</para>
435
436     <para>If the program needs to be linked with additional objects
437     (say, some auxilliary C code), these can be specified on the
438     command line as usual.</para>
439
440     <para>Note that GHC can only follow dependencies if it has the
441     source file available, so if your program includes a module for
442     which there is no source file, even if you have an object and an
443     interface file for the module, then GHC will complain.  The
444     exception to this rule is for package modules, which may or may
445     not have source files.</para>
446
447     <para>The source files for the program don't all need to be in the
448     same directory; the <option>-i</option> option can be used to add
449     directories to the search path (see <xref
450     linkend="options-finding-imports">).</para>
451
452   </sect1>
453   
454   <Sect1 id="options-order">
455     <title>GHC without <option>&ndash;&ndash;make</option></title>
456
457     <para>Without <option>&ndash;&ndash;make</option>, GHC will compile one or
458     more source files given on the command line.</para>
459
460     <para>The first phase to run is determined by each input-file
461     suffix, and the last phase is determined by a flag.  If no
462     relevant flag is present, then go all the way through linking.
463     This table summarises:</para>
464
465     <informaltable>
466       <tgroup cols="4">
467         <colspec align="left">
468         <colspec align="left">
469         <colspec align="left">
470         <colspec align="left">
471
472         <thead>
473           <row>
474             <entry>Phase of the compilation system</entry>
475             <entry>Suffix saying &ldquo;start here&rdquo;</entry>
476             <entry>Flag saying &ldquo;stop after&rdquo;</entry>
477             <entry>(suffix of) output file</entry>
478           </row>
479         </thead>
480         <tbody>
481           <row>
482             <entry>literate pre-processor</entry>
483             <entry><literal>.lhs</literal></entry>
484             <entry>-</entry>
485             <entry><literal>.hs</literal></entry>
486           </row>
487
488           <row>
489             <entry>C pre-processor (opt.)
490            </entry> 
491             <entry><literal>.hs</literal> (with
492             <option>-cpp</option>)</entry>
493             <entry><option>-E</option></entry>
494             <entry><literal>.hspp</literal></entry>
495           </row>
496           
497           <row>
498             <entry>Haskell compiler</entry>
499             <entry><literal>.hs</literal></entry>
500             <entry><option>-C</option>, <option>-S</option></entry>
501             <entry><literal>.hc</literal>, <literal>.s</literal></entry>
502           </row>
503
504           <row>
505             <entry>C compiler (opt.)</entry>
506             <entry><literal>.hc</literal> or <literal>.c</literal></entry>
507             <entry><option>-S</option></entry>
508             <entry><literal>.s</literal></entry>
509           </row>
510
511           <row>
512             <entry>assembler</entry>
513             <entry><literal>.s</literal></entry>
514             <entry><option>-c</option></entry>
515             <entry><literal>.o</literal></entry>
516           </row>
517           
518           <row>
519             <entry>linker</entry>
520             <entry><replaceable>other</replaceable></entry>
521             <entry>-</entry>
522             <entry><filename>a.out</filename></entry>
523           </row>
524         </tbody>
525       </tgroup>
526     </informaltable>
527
528     <indexterm><primary><option>-C</option></primary></indexterm>
529     <indexterm><primary><option>-E</option></primary></indexterm>
530     <indexterm><primary><option>-S</option></primary></indexterm>
531     <indexterm><primary><option>-c</option></primary></indexterm>
532
533     <para>Thus, a common invocation would be: <literal>ghc -c
534     Foo.hs</literal></para>
535
536     <para>Note: What the Haskell compiler proper produces depends on
537     whether a native-code generator<indexterm><primary>native-code
538     generator</primary></indexterm> is used (producing assembly
539     language) or not (producing C).  See <xref
540     linkend="options-codegen"> for more details.</para>
541
542     <para>Note: C pre-processing is optional, the
543     <option>-ccp</option><indexterm><primary><option>-cpp</option></primary>
544       </indexterm>flag turns it on.  See <xref
545     linkend="c-pre-processor"> for more details.</para>
546
547     <para>Note: The option <option>-E</option><IndexTerm><Primary>-E
548     option</Primary></IndexTerm> runs just the pre-processing passes
549     of the compiler, dumping the result in a file.  Note that this
550     differs from the previous behaviour of dumping the file to
551     standard output.</para>
552   </sect1>
553
554   <sect1 id="options-output">
555     <title>Re-directing the compilation output(s)</title>
556
557     <indexterm><primary>output-directing options</primary></indexterm>
558     <indexterm><primary>redirecting compilation output</primary></indexterm>
559
560
561     <variablelist>
562       <varlistentry>
563         <term><option>-o</option></term>
564         <indexterm><primary><option>-o</option></primary></indexterm>
565         <listitem>
566           <para>GHC's compiled output normally goes into a
567           <filename>.hc</filename>, <filename>.o</filename>, etc.,
568           file, depending on the last-run compilation phase.  The
569           option <option>-o foo</option><IndexTerm><Primary>-o
570           option</Primary></IndexTerm> re-directs the output of that
571           last-run phase to file <filename>foo</filename>.</para>
572
573           <para>Note: this &ldquo;feature&rdquo; can be
574           counterintuitive: <command>ghc -C -o foo.o foo.hs</command>
575           will put the intermediate C code in the file
576           <filename>foo.o</filename>, name notwithstanding!</para>
577
578           <para>Note: on Windows, if the result is an executable file, the
579           extension "<filename>.exe</filename>" is added if the specified filename
580             does not already have an extension.  Thus
581            <programlisting>
582                 ghc -o foo Main.hs
583            </programlisting>
584           will compile and link the module <filename>Main.hs</filename>, and put the
585           resulting executable in <filename>foo.exe</filename> (not <filename>foo</filename>).
586           </para>
587         </listitem>
588       </varlistentry>
589
590       <varlistentry>
591         <term><option>-odir</option></term>
592         <indexterm><primary><option>-odir</option></primary></indexterm>
593         <listitem>
594           <para>The <option>-o</option> option isn't of much use if
595           you have <emphasis>several</emphasis> input files&hellip;
596           Non-interface output files are normally put in the same
597           directory as their corresponding input file came from.  You
598           may specify that they be put in another directory using the
599           <option>-odir &lt;dir&gt;</option><IndexTerm><Primary>-odir
600           &lt;dir&gt; option</Primary></IndexTerm> (the &ldquo;Oh,
601           dear&rdquo; option).  For example:</para>
602
603 <Screen>
604 % ghc -c parse/Foo.hs parse/Bar.hs gurgle/Bumble.hs -odir `arch`
605 </Screen>
606
607           <para>The output files, <filename>Foo.o</filename>,
608           <filename>Bar.o</filename>, and
609           <filename>Bumble.o</filename> would be put into a
610           subdirectory named after the architecture of the executing
611           machine (<filename>sun4</filename>,
612           <filename>mips</filename>, etc).  The directory must already
613           exist; it won't be created.</para>
614
615           <para>Note that the <option>-odir</option> option does
616           <emphasis>not</emphasis> affect where the interface files
617           are put.  In the above example, they would still be put in
618           <filename>parse/Foo.hi</filename>,
619           <filename>parse/Bar.hi</filename>, and
620           <filename>gurgle/Bumble.hi</filename>.</para>
621         </listitem>
622       </varlistentry>
623
624       <varlistentry>
625         <term><option>-ohi</option>  <replaceable>file</replaceable></term>
626         <indexterm><primary><option>-ohi</option></primary>
627         </indexterm>
628         <listitem>
629           <para>The interface output may be directed to another file
630           <filename>bar2/Wurble.iface</filename> with the option
631           <option>-ohi bar2/Wurble.iface</option> (not
632           recommended).</para>
633
634           <para>WARNING: if you redirect the interface file somewhere
635           that GHC can't find it, then the recompilation checker may
636           get confused (at the least, you won't get any recompilation
637           avoidance).  We recommend using a combination of
638           <option>-hidir</option> and <option>-hisuf</option> options
639           instead, if possible.</para>
640
641           <para>To avoid generating an interface at all, you could use
642           this option to redirect the interface into the bit bucket:
643           <literal>-ohi /dev/null</literal>, for example.</para>
644         </listitem>
645       </varlistentry>
646       
647       <varlistentry>
648         <term><option>-hidir</option>  <replaceable>directory</replaceable></term>
649         <indexterm><primary><option>-hidir</option></primary>
650         </indexterm>
651         <listitem>
652           <para>Redirects all generated interface files into
653           <replaceable>directory</replaceable>, instead of the default
654           which is to place the interface file in the same directory
655           as the source file.</para>
656         </listitem>
657       </varlistentry>
658
659       <varlistentry>
660         <term><option>-osuf</option> <replaceable>suffix</replaceable></term>
661         <term><option>-hisuf</option> <replaceable>suffix</replaceable></term>
662         <term><option>-hcsuf</option> <replaceable>suffix</replaceable></term>
663         <indexterm><primary><option>-osuf</option></primary></indexterm>
664         <indexterm><primary><option>-hisuf</option></primary></indexterm>
665         <indexterm><primary><option>-hcsuf</option></primary></indexterm>
666         <listitem>
667           <para>EXOTICA: The <option>-osuf</option>
668           <replaceable>suffix</replaceable> will change the
669           <literal>.o</literal> file suffix for object files to
670           whatever you specify.  We use this when compiling libraries,
671           so that objects for the profiling versions of the libraries
672           don't clobber the normal ones.</para>
673
674           <para>Similarly, the <option>-hisuf</option>
675           <replaceable>suffix</replaceable> will change the
676           <literal>.hi</literal> file suffix for non-system interface
677           files (see <XRef LinkEnd="hi-options">).</para>
678
679           <para>Finally, the option <option>-hcsuf</option>
680           <replaceable>suffix</replaceable> will change the
681           <literal>.hc</literal> file suffix for compiler-generated
682           intermediate C files.</para>
683
684           <para>The <option>-hisuf</option>/<option>-osuf</option>
685           game is useful if you want to compile a program with both
686           GHC and HBC (say) in the same directory.  Let HBC use the
687           standard <filename>.hi</filename>/<filename>.o</filename>
688           suffixes; add <option>-hisuf g&lowbar;hi -osuf
689           g&lowbar;o</option> to your <command>make</command> rule for
690           GHC compiling&hellip;</para>
691         </listitem>
692       </varlistentry>
693     </variablelist>
694         
695     <sect2 id="keeping-intermediates">
696       <title>Keeping Intermediate Files</title>
697       <indexterm><primary>intermediate files, saving</primary>
698       </indexterm>
699       <indexterm><primary><literal>.hc</literal> files, saving</primary>
700       </indexterm>
701       <indexterm><primary><literal>.s</literal> files, saving</primary>
702       </indexterm>
703
704
705       <para>The following options are useful for keeping certain
706       intermediate files around, when normally GHC would throw these
707       away after compilation:</para>
708
709       <variablelist>
710         <varlistentry>
711           <term><option>-keep-hc-files</option></term>
712           <indexterm>
713             <primary><option>-keep-hc-files</option></primary>
714           </indexterm>
715           <listitem>
716             <para>Keep intermediate <literal>.hc</literal> files when
717             doing <literal>.hs</literal>-to-<literal>.o</literal>
718             compilations via C (NOTE: <literal>.hc</literal> files
719             aren't generated when using the native code generator, you
720             may need to use <option>-fvia-C</option> to force them
721             to be produced).</para>
722           </listitem>
723         </varlistentry>
724
725         <varlistentry>
726           <term><option>-keep-s-files</option></term>
727           <indexterm>
728             <primary><option>-keep-s-files</option></primary>
729           </indexterm>
730           <listitem>
731             <para>Keep intermediate <literal>.s</literal> files.</para>
732           </listitem>
733         </varlistentry>
734
735         <varlistentry>
736           <term><option>-keep-raw-s-files</option></term>
737           <indexterm>
738             <primary><option>-keep-raw-s-files</option></primary>
739           </indexterm>
740           <listitem>
741             <para>Keep intermediate <literal>.raw-s</literal> files.
742             These are the direct output from the C compiler, before
743             GHC does &ldquo;assembly mangling&rdquo; to produce the
744             <literal>.s</literal> file.  Again, these are not produced
745             when using the native code generator.</para>
746           </listitem>
747         </varlistentry>
748
749         <varlistentry>
750           <term><option>-keep-tmp-files</option></term>
751           <indexterm>
752             <primary><option>-keep-tmp-files</option></primary>
753           </indexterm>
754           <indexterm>
755             <primary>temporary files</primary>
756             <secondary>keeping</secondary>
757           </indexterm>
758           <listitem>
759             <para>Instructs the GHC driver not to delete any of its
760             temporary files, which it normally keeps in
761             <literal>/tmp</literal> (or possibly elsewhere; see <xref
762             linkend="temp-files">).  Running GHC with
763             <option>-v</option> will show you what temporary files
764             were generated along the way.</para>
765           </listitem>
766         </varlistentry>
767       </variablelist>
768     </sect2>
769
770     <sect2 id="temp-files">
771       <title>Redirecting temporary files</title>
772
773       <indexterm>
774         <primary>temporary files</primary>
775         <secondary>redirecting</secondary>
776       </indexterm>
777
778       <variablelist>
779         <varlistentry>
780           <term><option>-tmpdir</option></term>
781           <indexterm><primary><option>-tmpdir</option></primary></indexterm>
782           <listitem>
783             <para>If you have trouble because of running out of space
784             in <filename>/tmp</filename> (or wherever your
785             installation thinks temporary files should go), you may
786             use the <option>-tmpdir
787             &lt;dir&gt;</option><IndexTerm><Primary>-tmpdir
788             &lt;dir&gt; option</Primary></IndexTerm> option to specify
789             an alternate directory.  For example, <option>-tmpdir
790             .</option> says to put temporary files in the current
791             working directory.</para>
792
793             <para>Alternatively, use your <Constant>TMPDIR</Constant>
794             environment variable.<IndexTerm><Primary>TMPDIR
795             environment variable</Primary></IndexTerm> Set it to the
796             name of the directory where temporary files should be put.
797             GCC and other programs will honour the
798             <Constant>TMPDIR</Constant> variable as well.</para>
799
800             <para>Even better idea: Set the
801             <Constant>DEFAULT_TMPDIR</Constant> make variable when
802             building GHC, and never worry about
803             <Constant>TMPDIR</Constant> again. (see the build
804             documentation).</para>
805           </listitem>
806         </varlistentry>
807       </variablelist>
808     </sect2>
809
810   </sect1>
811
812   <sect1 id="options-sanity">
813     <title>Warnings and sanity-checking</title>
814
815     <indexterm><primary>sanity-checking options</primary></indexterm>
816     <indexterm><primary>warnings</primary></indexterm>
817
818
819     <para>GHC has a number of options that select which types of
820     non-fatal error messages, otherwise known as warnings, can be
821     generated during compilation.  By default, you get a standard set
822     of warnings which are generally likely to indicate bugs in your
823     program.  These are:
824     <option>-fwarn-overlpapping-patterns</option>,
825     <option>-fwarn-deprecations</option>,
826     <option>-fwarn-duplicate-exports</option>,
827     <option>-fwarn-missing-fields</option>, and
828     <option>-fwarn-missing-methods</option>.  The following flags are
829     simple ways to select standard &ldquo;packages&rdquo; of warnings:
830     </para>
831
832     <VariableList>
833
834       <varlistentry>
835         <term><option>-W</option>:</term>
836         <listitem>
837           <IndexTerm><Primary>-W option</Primary></IndexTerm>
838           <para>Provides the standard warnings plus
839           <option>-fwarn-incomplete-patterns</option>,
840           <option>-fwarn-unused-matches</option>,
841           <option>-fwarn-unused-imports</option>,
842           <option>-fwarn-misc</option>, and
843           <option>-fwarn-unused-binds</option>.</para>
844         </listitem>
845       </varlistentry>
846
847       <varlistentry>
848         <term><option>-w</option>:</term>
849         <listitem>
850           <IndexTerm><Primary><option>-w</option></Primary></IndexTerm>
851           <para>Turns off all warnings, including the standard ones.</para>
852         </listitem>
853       </varlistentry>
854
855       <varlistentry>
856         <term><option>-Wall</option>:</term>
857         <listitem>
858           <indexterm><primary><option>-Wall</option></primary></indexterm>
859           <para>Turns on all warning options.</para>
860         </listitem>
861       </varlistentry>
862
863     </variablelist>
864
865     <para>The full set of warning options is described below.  To turn
866     off any warning, simply give the corresponding
867     <option>-fno-warn-...</option> option on the command line.</para>
868
869     <variablelist>
870
871       <varlistentry>
872         <term><option>-fwarn-deprecations</option>:</term>
873         <listitem>
874           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-deprecations</option></primary>
875           </indexterm>
876           <indexterm><primary>deprecations</primary></indexterm>
877           <para>Causes a warning to be emitted when a deprecated
878           function or type is used.  Entities can be marked as
879           deprecated using a pragma, see <xref
880           linkend="deprecated-pragma">.</para>
881         </listitem>
882       </varlistentry>
883
884       <varlistentry>
885         <term><option>-fwarn-duplicate-exports</option>:</term>
886         <listitem>
887           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-duplicate-exports</option></primary></indexterm>
888           <indexterm><primary>duplicate exports, warning</primary></indexterm>
889           <indexterm><primary>export lists, duplicates</primary></indexterm>
890
891           <para>Have the compiler warn about duplicate entries in
892           export lists. This is useful information if you maintain
893           large export lists, and want to avoid the continued export
894           of a definition after you've deleted (one) mention of it in
895           the export list.</para>
896
897           <para>This option is on by default.</para>
898         </listitem>
899       </varlistentry>
900
901       <varlistentry>
902         <term><option>-fwarn-hi-shadowing</option>:</term>
903         <listitem>
904           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-hi-shadowing</option></primary></indexterm>
905           <indexterm><primary>shadowing</primary>
906             <secondary>interface files</secondary></indexterm>
907
908           <para>Causes the compiler to emit a warning when a module or
909           interface file in the current directory is shadowing one
910           with the same module name in a library or other
911           directory.</para>
912         </listitem>
913       </varlistentry>
914
915       <varlistentry>
916         <term><option>-fwarn-incomplete-patterns</option>:</term>
917         <listitem>
918           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-incomplete-patterns</option></primary></indexterm>
919           <indexterm><primary>incomplete patterns, warning</primary></indexterm>
920           <indexterm><primary>patterns, incomplete</primary></indexterm>
921
922           <para>Similarly for incomplete patterns, the function
923           <function>g</function> below will fail when applied to
924           non-empty lists, so the compiler will emit a warning about
925           this when <option>-fwarn-incomplete-patterns</option> is
926           enabled.</para>
927
928 <programlisting>
929 g [] = 2
930 </programlisting>
931
932           <para>This option isn't enabled be default because it can be
933           a bit noisy, and it doesn't always indicate a bug in the
934           program.  However, it's generally considered good practice
935           to cover all the cases in your functions.</para>
936         </listitem>
937       </varlistentry>
938
939       <varlistentry>
940         <term><option>-fwarn-misc</option>:</term>
941         <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-misc</option></primary></indexterm>
942         <listitem>
943           <para>Turns on warnings for various harmless but untidy
944           things.  This currently includes: importing a type with
945           <literal>(..)</literal> when the export is abstract, and
946           listing duplicate class assertions in a qualified type.</para>
947         </listitem>
948       </varlistentry>
949
950       <varlistentry>
951         <term><option>-fwarn-missing-fields</option>:</term>
952         <listitem>
953           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-missing-fields</option></primary></indexterm>
954           <indexterm><primary>missing fields, warning</primary></indexterm>
955           <indexterm><primary>fields, missing</primary></indexterm>
956
957           <para>This option is on by default, and warns you whenever
958           the construction of a labelled field constructor isn't
959           complete, missing initializers for one or more fields. While
960           not an error (the missing fields are initialised with
961           bottoms), it is often an indication of a programmer error.</para>
962         </listitem>
963       </varlistentry>
964
965       <varlistentry>
966         <term><option>-fwarn-missing-methods</option>:</term>
967         <listitem>
968           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-missing-methods</option></primary></indexterm>
969           <indexterm><primary>missing methods, warning</primary></indexterm>
970           <indexterm><primary>methods, missing</primary></indexterm>
971
972           <para>This option is on by default, and warns you whenever
973           an instance declaration is missing one or more methods, and
974           the corresponding class declaration has no default
975           declaration for them.</para>
976         </listitem>
977       </varlistentry>
978
979       <varlistentry>
980         <term><option>-fwarn-missing-signatures</option>:</term>
981         <listitem>
982           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-missing-signatures</option></primary></indexterm>
983           <indexterm><primary>type signatures, missing</primary></indexterm>
984
985           <para>If you would like GHC to check that every top-level
986           function/value has a type signature, use the
987           <option>-fwarn-missing-signatures</option> option.  This
988           option is off by default.</para>
989         </listitem>
990       </varlistentry>
991
992       <varlistentry>
993         <term><option>-fwarn-name-shadowing</option>:</term>
994         <listitem>
995           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-name-shadowing</option></primary></indexterm>
996           <indexterm><primary>shadowing, warning</primary></indexterm>
997           
998           <para>This option causes a warning to be emitted whenever an
999           inner-scope value has the same name as an outer-scope value,
1000           i.e. the inner value shadows the outer one.  This can catch
1001           typographical errors that turn into hard-to-find bugs, e.g.,
1002           in the inadvertent cyclic definition <literal>let x = ... x
1003           ... in</literal>.</para>
1004
1005           <para>Consequently, this option does
1006           <emphasis>will</emphasis> complain about cyclic recursive
1007           definitions.</para>
1008         </listitem>
1009       </varlistentry>
1010
1011       <varlistentry>
1012         <term><option>-fwarn-overlapping-patterns</option>:</term>
1013         <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-overlapping-patterns</option></primary></indexterm>
1014         <indexterm><primary>overlapping patterns, warning</primary></indexterm>
1015         <indexterm><primary>patterns, overlapping</primary></indexterm>
1016         <listitem>
1017           <para>By default, the compiler will warn you if a set of
1018           patterns are overlapping, i.e.,</para>
1019
1020 <programlisting>
1021 f :: String -&#62; Int
1022 f []     = 0
1023 f (_:xs) = 1
1024 f "2"    = 2
1025 </programlisting>
1026
1027           <para>where the last pattern match in <Function>f</Function>
1028           won't ever be reached, as the second pattern overlaps
1029           it. More often than not, redundant patterns is a programmer
1030           mistake/error, so this option is enabled by default.</para>
1031         </listitem>
1032       </varlistentry>
1033
1034       <varlistentry>
1035         <term><option>-fwarn-simple-patterns</option>:</term>
1036         <listitem>
1037           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-simple-patterns</option></primary>
1038           </indexterm>
1039           <para>Causes the compiler to warn about lambda-bound
1040           patterns that can fail, eg. <literal>\(x:xs)->...</literal>.
1041           Normally, these aren't treated as incomplete patterns by
1042           <option>-fwarn-incomplete-patterns</option>.</para>
1043         </listitem>
1044       </varlistentry>
1045
1046       <varlistentry>
1047         <term><option>-fwarn-type-defaults</option>:</term>
1048         <listitem>
1049           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-type-defaults</option></primary></indexterm>
1050           <indexterm><primary>defaulting mechanism, warning</primary></indexterm>
1051           <para>Have the compiler warn/inform you where in your source
1052           the Haskell defaulting mechanism for numeric types kicks
1053           in. This is useful information when converting code from a
1054           context that assumed one default into one with another,
1055           e.g., the `default default' for Haskell 1.4 caused the
1056           otherwise unconstrained value <Constant>1</Constant> to be
1057           given the type <literal>Int</literal>, whereas Haskell 98
1058           defaults it to <literal>Integer</literal>.  This may lead to
1059           differences in performance and behaviour, hence the
1060           usefulness of being non-silent about this.</para>
1061
1062           <para>This warning is off by default.</para>
1063         </listitem>
1064       </varlistentry>
1065
1066       <varlistentry>
1067         <term><option>-fwarn-unused-binds</option>:</term>
1068         <listitem>
1069           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-unused-binds</option></primary></indexterm>
1070           <indexterm><primary>unused binds, warning</primary></indexterm>
1071           <indexterm><primary>binds, unused</primary></indexterm>
1072           <para>Report any function definitions (and local bindings)
1073           which are unused.  For top-level functions, the warning is
1074           only given if the binding is not exported.</para>
1075         </listitem>
1076       </varlistentry>
1077
1078       <varlistentry>
1079         <term><option>-fwarn-unused-imports</option>:</term>
1080         <listitem>
1081           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-unused-imports</option></primary></indexterm>
1082           <indexterm><primary>unused imports, warning</primary></indexterm>
1083           <indexterm><primary>imports, unused</primary></indexterm>
1084
1085           <para>Report any objects that are explicitly imported but
1086           never used.</para>
1087         </listitem>
1088       </varlistentry>
1089
1090       <varlistentry>
1091         <term><option>-fwarn-unused-matches</option>:</term>
1092         <listitem>
1093           <indexterm><primary><option>-fwarn-unused-matches</option></primary></indexterm>
1094           <indexterm><primary>unused matches, warning</primary></indexterm>
1095           <indexterm><primary>matches, unused</primary></indexterm>
1096
1097           <para>Report all unused variables which arise from pattern
1098           matches, including patterns consisting of a single variable.
1099           For instance <literal>f x y = []</literal> would report
1100           <VarName>x</VarName> and <VarName>y</VarName> as unused.  To
1101           eliminate the warning, all unused variables can be replaced
1102           with wildcards.</para>
1103         </listitem>
1104       </varlistentry>
1105
1106     </VariableList>
1107
1108     <para>If you're feeling really paranoid, the
1109     <option>-dcore-lint</option>
1110     option<indexterm><primary><option>-dcore-lint</option></primary></indexterm>
1111     is a good choice.  It turns on heavyweight intra-pass
1112     sanity-checking within GHC.  (It checks GHC's sanity, not
1113     yours.)</para>
1114
1115   </sect1>
1116
1117   &separate;
1118   &packages;
1119
1120   <sect1 id="options-optimise">
1121     <title>Optimisation (code improvement)</title>
1122
1123     <indexterm><primary>optimisation</primary></indexterm>
1124     <indexterm><primary>improvement, code</primary></indexterm>
1125
1126     <para>The <option>-O*</option> options specify convenient
1127     &ldquo;packages&rdquo; of optimisation flags; the
1128     <option>-f*</option> options described later on specify
1129     <emphasis>individual</emphasis> optimisations to be turned on/off;
1130     the <option>-m*</option> options specify
1131     <emphasis>machine-specific</emphasis> optimisations to be turned
1132     on/off.</para>
1133
1134     <sect2 id="optimise-pkgs">
1135       <title><option>-O*</option>: convenient &ldquo;packages&rdquo; of optimisation flags.</title>
1136
1137       <para>There are <emphasis>many</emphasis> options that affect
1138       the quality of code produced by GHC.  Most people only have a
1139       general goal, something like &ldquo;Compile quickly&rdquo; or
1140       &ldquo;Make my program run like greased lightning.&rdquo; The
1141       following &ldquo;packages&rdquo; of optimisations (or lack
1142       thereof) should suffice.</para>
1143
1144       <para>Once you choose a <option>-O*</option>
1145       &ldquo;package,&rdquo; stick with it&mdash;don't chop and
1146       change.  Modules' interfaces <emphasis>will</emphasis> change
1147       with a shift to a new <option>-O*</option> option, and you may
1148       have to recompile a large chunk of all importing modules before
1149       your program can again be run safely (see <XRef
1150       LinkEnd="recomp">).</para>
1151
1152       <variablelist>
1153
1154         <varlistentry>
1155           <term>No <option>-O*</option>-type option specified:</term>
1156           <indexterm><primary>-O* not specified</primary></indexterm>
1157           <listitem>
1158             <para>This is taken to mean: &ldquo;Please compile
1159             quickly; I'm not over-bothered about compiled-code
1160             quality.&rdquo; So, for example: <command>ghc -c
1161             Foo.hs</command></para>
1162           </listitem>
1163         </varlistentry>
1164
1165         <varlistentry>
1166           <term><option>-O0</option>:</term>
1167           <indexterm><primary><option>-O0</option></primary></indexterm>
1168           <listitem>
1169             <para>Means &ldquo;turn off all optimisation&rdquo;,
1170             reverting to the same settings as if no
1171             <option>-O</option> options had been specified.  Saying
1172             <option>-O0</option> can be useful if
1173             eg. <command>make</command> has inserted a
1174             <option>-O</option> on the command line already.</para>
1175           </listitem>
1176         </varlistentry>
1177
1178         <varlistentry>
1179           <term><option>-O</option> or <option>-O1</option>:</term>
1180           <indexterm><primary>-O option</primary></indexterm>
1181           <indexterm><primary>-O1 option</primary></indexterm>
1182           <indexterm><primary>optimise</primary><secondary>normally</secondary></indexterm>
1183           <listitem>
1184             <para>Means: &ldquo;Generate good-quality code without
1185             taking too long about it.&rdquo; Thus, for example:
1186             <command>ghc -c -O Main.lhs</command></para>
1187           </listitem>
1188         </varlistentry>
1189
1190         <varlistentry>
1191           <term><option>-O2</option>:</term>
1192           <indexterm><primary>-O2 option</primary></indexterm>
1193           <indexterm><primary>optimise</primary><secondary>aggressively</secondary></indexterm>
1194           <listitem>
1195             <para>Means: &ldquo;Apply every non-dangerous
1196             optimisation, even if it means significantly longer
1197             compile times.&rdquo;</para>
1198
1199             <para>The avoided &ldquo;dangerous&rdquo; optimisations
1200             are those that can make runtime or space
1201             <emphasis>worse</emphasis> if you're unlucky.  They are
1202             normally turned on or off individually.</para>
1203
1204             <para>At the moment, <option>-O2</option> is
1205             <emphasis>unlikely</emphasis> to produce better code than
1206             <option>-O</option>.</para>
1207           </listitem>
1208         </varlistentry>
1209
1210         <varlistentry>
1211           <term><option>-Ofile &lt;file&gt;</option>:</term>
1212           <indexterm><primary>-Ofile &lt;file&gt; option</primary></indexterm>
1213           <indexterm><primary>optimising, customised</primary></indexterm>
1214           <listitem>
1215             <para>(NOTE: not supported yet in GHC 5.x.  Please ask if
1216             you're interested in this.)</para>
1217             
1218             <para>For those who need <emphasis>absolute</emphasis>
1219             control over <emphasis>exactly</emphasis> what options are
1220             used (e.g., compiler writers, sometimes :-), a list of
1221             options can be put in a file and then slurped in with
1222             <option>-Ofile</option>.</para>
1223
1224             <para>In that file, comments are of the
1225             <literal>&num;</literal>-to-end-of-line variety; blank
1226             lines and most whitespace is ignored.</para>
1227
1228             <para>Please ask if you are baffled and would like an
1229             example of <option>-Ofile</option>!</para>
1230           </listitem>
1231         </varlistentry>
1232       </variablelist>
1233
1234       <para>We don't use a <option>-O*</option> flag for day-to-day
1235       work.  We use <option>-O</option> to get respectable speed;
1236       e.g., when we want to measure something.  When we want to go for
1237       broke, we tend to use <option>-O -fvia-C</option> (and we go for
1238       lots of coffee breaks).</para>
1239
1240       <para>The easiest way to see what <option>-O</option> (etc.)
1241       &ldquo;really mean&rdquo; is to run with <option>-v</option>,
1242       then stand back in amazement.</para>
1243     </sect2>
1244
1245     <sect2 id="options-f">
1246       <title><option>-f*</option>: platform-independent flags</title>
1247
1248       <indexterm><primary>-f* options (GHC)</primary></indexterm>
1249       <indexterm><primary>-fno-* options (GHC)</primary></indexterm>
1250
1251       <para>These flags turn on and off individual optimisations.
1252       They are normally set via the <option>-O</option> options
1253       described above, and as such, you shouldn't need to set any of
1254       them explicitly (indeed, doing so could lead to unexpected
1255       results).  However, there are one or two that may be of
1256       interest:</para>
1257
1258       <variablelist>
1259         <varlistentry>
1260           <term><option>-fexcess-precision</option>:</term>
1261           <listitem>
1262             <indexterm><primary><option>-fexcess-precision</option></primary></indexterm>
1263             <para>When this option is given, intermediate floating
1264             point values can have a <emphasis>greater</emphasis>
1265             precision/range than the final type.  Generally this is a
1266             good thing, but some programs may rely on the exact
1267             precision/range of
1268             <literal>Float</literal>/<literal>Double</literal> values
1269             and should not use this option for their compilation.</para>
1270           </listitem>
1271         </varlistentry>
1272
1273         <varlistentry>
1274           <term><option>-fignore-asserts</option>:</term>
1275           <listitem>
1276             <indexterm><primary><option>-fignore-asserts</option></primary></indexterm>
1277             <para>Causes GHC to ignore uses of the function
1278             <literal>Exception.assert</literal> in source code (in
1279             other words, rewriting <literal>Exception.assert p
1280             e</literal> to <literal>e</literal> (see <xref
1281             linkend="sec-assertions">).  This flag is turned on by
1282             <option>-O</option>.
1283             </para>
1284           </listitem>
1285         </varlistentry>
1286
1287         <varlistentry>
1288           <term><option>-fno-strictness</option></term>
1289           <indexterm><primary><option>-fno-strictness</option></primary>
1290           </indexterm>
1291           <listitem>
1292             <para>Turns off the strictness analyser; sometimes it eats
1293             too many cycles.</para>
1294           </listitem>
1295         </varlistentry>
1296
1297         <varlistentry>
1298           <term><option>-fno-cpr-analyse</option></term>
1299           <indexterm><primary><option>-fno-cpr-analyse</option></primary>
1300           </indexterm>
1301           <listitem>
1302             <para>Turns off the CPR (constructed product result)
1303             analysis; it is somewhat experimental.</para>
1304           </listitem>
1305         </varlistentry>
1306
1307         <varlistentry>
1308           <term><option>-funbox-strict-fields</option>:</term>
1309           <listitem>
1310             <indexterm><primary><option>-funbox-strict-fields</option></primary></indexterm>
1311             <indexterm><primary>strict constructor fields</primary></indexterm>
1312             <indexterm><primary>constructor fields, strict</primary></indexterm>
1313
1314             <para>This option causes all constructor fields which are
1315             marked strict (i.e. &ldquo;!&rdquo;) to be unboxed or
1316             unpacked if possible.  For example:</para>
1317
1318 <ProgramListing>
1319 data T = T !Float !Float
1320 </ProgramListing>
1321
1322             <para>will create a constructor <literal>T</literal>
1323             containing two unboxed floats if the
1324             <option>-funbox-strict-fields</option> flag is given.
1325             This may not always be an optimisation: if the
1326             <Function>T</Function> constructor is scrutinised and the
1327             floats passed to a non-strict function for example, they
1328             will have to be reboxed (this is done automatically by the
1329             compiler).</para>
1330
1331             <para>This option should only be used in conjunction with
1332             <option>-O</option>, in order to expose unfoldings to the
1333             compiler so the reboxing can be removed as often as
1334             possible.  For example:</para>
1335
1336 <ProgramListing>
1337 f :: T -&#62; Float
1338 f (T f1 f2) = f1 + f2
1339 </ProgramListing>
1340
1341             <para>The compiler will avoid reboxing
1342             <Function>f1</Function> and <Function>f2</Function> by
1343             inlining <Function>+</Function> on floats, but only when
1344             <option>-O</option> is on.</para>
1345
1346             <para>Any single-constructor data is eligible for
1347             unpacking; for example</para>
1348
1349 <ProgramListing>
1350 data T = T !(Int,Int)
1351 </ProgramListing>
1352
1353             <para>will store the two <literal>Int</literal>s directly
1354             in the <Function>T</Function> constructor, by flattening
1355             the pair.  Multi-level unpacking is also supported:</para>
1356
1357 <ProgramListing>
1358 data T = T !S
1359 data S = S !Int !Int
1360 </ProgramListing>
1361
1362             <para>will store two unboxed <literal>Int&num;</literal>s
1363             directly in the <Function>T</Function> constructor.</para>
1364           </listitem>
1365         </varlistentry>
1366
1367         <varlistentry>
1368           <term><option>-funfolding-update-in-place&lt;n&gt;</option></term>
1369           <indexterm><primary><option>-funfolding-update-in-place</option></primary></indexterm>
1370           <listitem>
1371             <para>Switches on an experimental "optimisation".
1372             Switching it on makes the compiler a little keener to
1373             inline a function that returns a constructor, if the
1374             context is that of a thunk.
1375 <ProgramListing>
1376    x = plusInt a b
1377 </ProgramListing>
1378             If we inlined plusInt we might get an opportunity to use
1379             update-in-place for the thunk 'x'.</para>
1380           </listitem>
1381         </varlistentry>
1382
1383         <varlistentry>
1384           <term><option>-funfolding-creation-threshold&lt;n&gt;</option>:</term>
1385           <listitem>
1386             <indexterm><primary><option>-funfolding-creation-threshold</option></primary></indexterm>
1387             <indexterm><primary>inlining, controlling</primary></indexterm>
1388             <indexterm><primary>unfolding, controlling</primary></indexterm>
1389             
1390             <para>(Default: 45) Governs the maximum size that GHC will 
1391             allow a function unfolding to be.   (An unfolding has a
1392             &ldquo;size&rdquo; that reflects the cost in terms of
1393             &ldquo;code bloat&rdquo; of expanding that unfolding at
1394             at a call site. A bigger function would be assigned a
1395             bigger cost.) </para>
1396
1397             <para> Consequences: (a) nothing larger than this will be
1398             inlined (unless it has an INLINE pragma); (b) nothing
1399             larger than this will be spewed into an interface
1400             file. </para>
1401
1402
1403             <para> Increasing this figure is more likely to result in longer
1404             compile times than faster code.  The next option is more
1405             useful:</para>
1406           </listitem>
1407         </varlistentry>
1408
1409         <varlistentry>
1410           <term><option>-funfolding-use-threshold&lt;n&gt;</option>:</term>
1411           <listitem>
1412             <indexterm><primary><option>-funfolding-use-threshold</option></primary></indexterm>
1413             <indexterm><primary>inlining, controlling</primary></indexterm>
1414             <indexterm><primary>unfolding, controlling</primary></indexterm>
1415
1416             <para>(Default: 8) This is the magic cut-off figure for
1417             unfolding: below this size, a function definition will be
1418             unfolded at the call-site, any bigger and it won't.  The
1419             size computed for a function depends on two things: the
1420             actual size of the expression minus any discounts that
1421             apply (see <option>-funfolding-con-discount</option>).</para>
1422           </listitem>
1423         </varlistentry>
1424       </variablelist>
1425
1426     </sect2>
1427     
1428   </sect1>
1429   
1430   &phases;  
1431   
1432   <sect1 id="sec-using-concurrent">
1433 <title>Using Concurrent Haskell</title>
1434
1435              <indexterm><primary>Concurrent Haskell&mdash;use</primary></indexterm>
1436
1437 <para>
1438 GHC supports Concurrent Haskell by default, without requiring a
1439 special option or libraries compiled in a certain way.  To get access
1440 to the support libraries for Concurrent Haskell, just import
1441 <literal>Control.Concurrent</literal> (details are in the accompanying
1442 library documentation).</para>
1443
1444 <para>
1445 RTS options are provided for modifying the behaviour of the threaded
1446 runtime system.  See <XRef LinkEnd="parallel-rts-opts">.
1447 </para>
1448
1449 <para>
1450 Concurrent Haskell is described in more detail in the documentation
1451 for the <literal>Control.Concurrent</literal> module.
1452 </para>
1453
1454 </Sect1>
1455
1456 <Sect1 id="sec-using-parallel">
1457 <title>Using Parallel Haskell</title>
1458
1459 <para>
1460 <indexterm><primary>Parallel Haskell&mdash;use</primary></indexterm>
1461 </para>
1462
1463 <para>
1464 &lsqb;You won't be able to execute parallel Haskell programs unless PVM3
1465 (Parallel Virtual Machine, version 3) is installed at your site.&rsqb;
1466 </Para>
1467
1468 <para>
1469 To compile a Haskell program for parallel execution under PVM, use the
1470 <Option>-parallel</Option> option,<IndexTerm><Primary>-parallel
1471 option</Primary></IndexTerm> both when compiling <Emphasis>and
1472 linking</Emphasis>.  You will probably want to <Literal>import
1473 Parallel</Literal> into your Haskell modules.
1474 </Para>
1475
1476 <para>
1477 To run your parallel program, once PVM is going, just invoke it
1478 &ldquo;as normal&rdquo;.  The main extra RTS option is
1479 <Option>-qp&lt;n&gt;</Option>, to say how many PVM
1480 &ldquo;processors&rdquo; your program to run on.  (For more details of
1481 all relevant RTS options, please see <XRef
1482 LinkEnd="parallel-rts-opts">.)
1483 </para>
1484
1485 <para>
1486 In truth, running Parallel Haskell programs and getting information
1487 out of them (e.g., parallelism profiles) is a battle with the vagaries of
1488 PVM, detailed in the following sections.
1489 </para>
1490
1491 <Sect2 id="pvm-dummies">
1492 <Title>Dummy's guide to using PVM</Title>
1493
1494 <para>
1495 <indexterm><primary>PVM, how to use</primary></indexterm>
1496 <indexterm><primary>Parallel Haskell&mdash;PVM use</primary></indexterm>
1497 Before you can run a parallel program under PVM, you must set the
1498 required environment variables (PVM's idea, not ours); something like,
1499 probably in your <filename>.cshrc</filename> or equivalent:
1500
1501 <ProgramListing>
1502 setenv PVM_ROOT /wherever/you/put/it
1503 setenv PVM_ARCH `$PVM_ROOT/lib/pvmgetarch`
1504 setenv PVM_DPATH $PVM_ROOT/lib/pvmd
1505 </ProgramListing>
1506
1507 </para>
1508
1509 <para>
1510 Creating and/or controlling your &ldquo;parallel machine&rdquo; is a purely-PVM
1511 business; nothing specific to Parallel Haskell. The following paragraphs
1512 describe how to configure your parallel machine interactively.
1513 </Para>
1514
1515 <Para>
1516 If you use parallel Haskell regularly on the same machine configuration it
1517 is a good idea to maintain a file with all machine names and to make the
1518 environment variable PVM_HOST_FILE point to this file. Then you can avoid
1519 the interactive operations described below by just saying
1520 </Para>
1521
1522 <ProgramListing>
1523 pvm $PVM_HOST_FILE
1524 </ProgramListing>
1525
1526 <Para>
1527 You use the <Command>pvm</Command><IndexTerm><Primary>pvm command</Primary></IndexTerm> command to start PVM on your
1528 machine.  You can then do various things to control/monitor your
1529 &ldquo;parallel machine;&rdquo; the most useful being:
1530 </para>
1531
1532 <para>
1533 <InformalTable>
1534 <TGroup Cols=2>
1535 <ColSpec Align="Left">
1536 <TBody>
1537
1538 <row>
1539 <entry><KeyCombo><KeyCap>Control</KeyCap><KeyCap>D</KeyCap></KeyCombo></entry>
1540 <entry>exit <command>pvm</command>, leaving it running</entry>
1541 </row>
1542
1543 <row>
1544 <entry><command>halt</command></entry>
1545 <entry>kill off this &ldquo;parallel machine&rdquo; &amp; exit</entry>
1546 </row>
1547
1548 <row>
1549 <entry><command>add &lt;host&gt;</command></entry>
1550 <entry>add <command>&lt;host&gt;</command> as a processor</entry>
1551 </row>
1552
1553 <row>
1554 <entry><command>delete &lt;host&gt;</command></entry>
1555 <entry>delete <command>&lt;host&gt;</command></entry>
1556 </row>
1557
1558 <row>
1559 <entry><command>reset</command></entry>
1560 <entry>kill what's going, but leave PVM up</entry>
1561 </row>
1562
1563 <row>
1564 <entry><command>conf</command></entry>
1565 <entry>list the current configuration</entry>
1566 </row>
1567
1568 <row>
1569 <entry><command>ps</command></entry>
1570 <entry>report processes' status</entry>
1571 </row>
1572
1573 <row>
1574 <entry><command>pstat &lt;pid&gt;</command></entry>
1575 <entry>status of a particular process</entry>
1576 </row>
1577
1578 </TBody>
1579 </TGroup>
1580 </InformalTable>
1581 </para>
1582
1583 <para>
1584 The PVM documentation can tell you much, much more about <command>pvm</command>!
1585 </para>
1586
1587 </sect2>
1588
1589 <Sect2 id="par-profiles">
1590 <Title>Parallelism profiles</Title>
1591
1592 <para>
1593 <indexterm><primary>parallelism profiles</primary></indexterm>
1594 <indexterm><primary>profiles, parallelism</primary></indexterm>
1595 <indexterm><primary>visualisation tools</primary></indexterm>
1596 </para>
1597
1598 <para>
1599 With Parallel Haskell programs, we usually don't care about the
1600 results&mdash;only with &ldquo;how parallel&rdquo; it was!  We want pretty pictures.
1601 </para>
1602
1603 <Para>
1604 Parallelism profiles (&agrave; la <Command>hbcpp</Command>) can be generated with the
1605 <Option>-qP</Option><IndexTerm><Primary>-qP RTS option (concurrent, parallel)</Primary></IndexTerm> RTS option.  The
1606 per-processor profiling info is dumped into files named
1607 <Filename>&lt;full-path&gt;&lt;program&gt;.gr</Filename>.  These are then munged into a PostScript picture,
1608 which you can then display.  For example, to run your program
1609 <Filename>a.out</Filename> on 8 processors, then view the parallelism profile, do:
1610 </Para>
1611
1612 <Para>
1613
1614 <Screen>
1615 <prompt>&dollar;</prompt> ./a.out +RTS -qP -qp8
1616 <prompt>&dollar;</prompt> grs2gr *.???.gr &#62; temp.gr # combine the 8 .gr files into one
1617 <prompt>&dollar;</prompt> gr2ps -O temp.gr              # cvt to .ps; output in temp.ps
1618 <prompt>&dollar;</prompt> ghostview -seascape temp.ps   # look at it!
1619 </Screen>
1620
1621 </Para>
1622
1623 <para>
1624 The scripts for processing the parallelism profiles are distributed
1625 in <filename>ghc/utils/parallel/</filename>.
1626 </para>
1627
1628 </sect2>
1629
1630 <Sect2>
1631 <Title>Other useful info about running parallel programs</Title>
1632
1633 <Para>
1634 The &ldquo;garbage-collection statistics&rdquo; RTS options can be useful for
1635 seeing what parallel programs are doing.  If you do either
1636 <Option>+RTS -Sstderr</Option><IndexTerm><Primary>-Sstderr RTS option</Primary></IndexTerm> or <Option>+RTS -sstderr</Option>, then
1637 you'll get mutator, garbage-collection, etc., times on standard
1638 error. The standard error of all PE's other than the `main thread'
1639 appears in <filename>/tmp/pvml.nnn</filename>, courtesy of PVM.
1640 </para>
1641
1642 <para>
1643 Whether doing <option>+RTS -Sstderr</option> or not, a handy way to watch
1644 what's happening overall is: <command>tail -f /tmp/pvml.nnn</command>.
1645 </para>
1646
1647 </sect2>
1648
1649 <Sect2 id="parallel-rts-opts">
1650 <title>RTS options for Concurrent/Parallel Haskell
1651 </title>
1652
1653 <para>
1654 <indexterm><primary>RTS options, concurrent</primary></indexterm>
1655 <indexterm><primary>RTS options, parallel</primary></indexterm>
1656 <indexterm><primary>Concurrent Haskell&mdash;RTS options</primary></indexterm>
1657 <indexterm><primary>Parallel Haskell&mdash;RTS options</primary></indexterm>
1658 </para>
1659
1660 <para>
1661 Besides the usual runtime system (RTS) options
1662 (<XRef LinkEnd="runtime-control">), there are a few options particularly
1663 for concurrent/parallel execution.
1664 </para>
1665
1666 <para>
1667 <VariableList>
1668
1669 <VarListEntry>
1670 <Term><Option>-qp&lt;N&gt;</Option>:</Term>
1671 <ListItem>
1672 <Para>
1673 <IndexTerm><Primary>-qp&lt;N&gt; RTS option</Primary></IndexTerm>
1674 (PARALLEL ONLY) Use <Literal>&lt;N&gt;</Literal> PVM processors to run this program;
1675 the default is 2.
1676 </para>
1677 </listitem>
1678 </varlistentry>
1679 <varlistentry>
1680 <term><option>-C[&lt;us&gt;]</option>:</term>
1681 <listitem>
1682 <para>
1683 <indexterm><primary>-C&lt;us&gt; RTS option</primary></indexterm> Sets
1684 the context switch interval to <literal>&lt;s&gt;</literal> seconds.
1685 A context switch will occur at the next heap block allocation after
1686 the timer expires (a heap block allocation occurs every 4k of
1687 allocation).  With <option>-C0</option> or <option>-C</option>,
1688 context switches will occur as often as possible (at every heap block
1689 allocation).  By default, context switches occur every 20ms
1690 milliseconds.  Note that GHC's internal timer ticks every 20ms, and
1691 the context switch timer is always a multiple of this timer, so 20ms
1692 is the maximum granularity available for timed context switches.
1693 </para>
1694 </listitem>
1695 </varlistentry>
1696 <varlistentry>
1697 <term><option>-q[v]</option>:</term>
1698 <listitem>
1699 <para>
1700 <indexterm><primary>-q RTS option</primary></indexterm>
1701 (PARALLEL ONLY) Produce a quasi-parallel profile of thread activity,
1702 in the file <FIlename>&lt;program&gt;.qp</FIlename>.  In the style of <command>hbcpp</command>, this profile
1703 records the movement of threads between the green (runnable) and red
1704 (blocked) queues.  If you specify the verbose suboption (<option>-qv</option>), the
1705 green queue is split into green (for the currently running thread
1706 only) and amber (for other runnable threads).  We do not recommend
1707 that you use the verbose suboption if you are planning to use the
1708 <Command>hbcpp</Command> profiling tools or if you are context switching at every heap
1709 check (with <Option>-C</Option>).
1710 -->
1711 </Para>
1712 </ListItem>
1713 </VarListEntry>
1714 <VarListEntry>
1715 <Term><Option>-qt&lt;num&gt;</Option>:</Term>
1716 <ListItem>
1717 <Para>
1718 <IndexTerm><Primary>-qt&lt;num&gt; RTS option</Primary></IndexTerm>
1719 (PARALLEL ONLY) Limit the thread pool size, i.e. the number of concurrent
1720 threads per processor to <Literal>&lt;num&gt;</Literal>.  The default is
1721 32.  Each thread requires slightly over 1K <Emphasis>words</Emphasis> in
1722 the heap for thread state and stack objects.  (For 32-bit machines, this
1723 translates to 4K bytes, and for 64-bit machines, 8K bytes.)
1724 </Para>
1725 </ListItem>
1726 </VarListEntry>
1727 <!-- no more -HWL
1728 <VarListEntry>
1729 <Term><Option>-d</Option>:</Term>
1730 <ListItem>
1731 <Para>
1732 <IndexTerm><Primary>-d RTS option (parallel)</Primary></IndexTerm>
1733 (PARALLEL ONLY) Turn on debugging.  It pops up one xterm (or GDB, or
1734 something&hellip;) per PVM processor.  We use the standard <Command>debugger</Command>
1735 script that comes with PVM3, but we sometimes meddle with the
1736 <Command>debugger2</Command> script.  We include ours in the GHC distribution,
1737 in <Filename>ghc/utils/pvm/</Filename>.
1738 </Para>
1739 </ListItem>
1740 </VarListEntry>
1741 -->
1742 <VarListEntry>
1743 <Term><Option>-qe&lt;num&gt;</Option>:</Term>
1744 <ListItem>
1745 <Para>
1746 <IndexTerm><Primary>-qe&lt;num&gt; RTS option
1747 (parallel)</Primary></IndexTerm> (PARALLEL ONLY) Limit the spark pool size
1748 i.e. the number of pending sparks per processor to
1749 <Literal>&lt;num&gt;</Literal>. The default is 100. A larger number may be
1750 appropriate if your program generates large amounts of parallelism
1751 initially.
1752 </Para>
1753 </ListItem>
1754 </VarListEntry>
1755 <VarListEntry>
1756 <Term><Option>-qQ&lt;num&gt;</Option>:</Term>
1757 <ListItem>
1758 <Para>
1759 <IndexTerm><Primary>-qQ&lt;num&gt; RTS option (parallel)</Primary></IndexTerm>
1760 (PARALLEL ONLY) Set the size of packets transmitted between processors
1761 to <Literal>&lt;num&gt;</Literal>. The default is 1024 words. A larger number may be
1762 appropriate if your machine has a high communication cost relative to
1763 computation speed.
1764 </Para>
1765 </ListItem>
1766 </VarListEntry>
1767 <VarListEntry>
1768 <Term><Option>-qh&lt;num&gt;</Option>:</Term>
1769 <ListItem>
1770 <Para>
1771 <IndexTerm><Primary>-qh&lt;num&gt; RTS option (parallel)</Primary></IndexTerm>
1772 (PARALLEL ONLY) Select a packing scheme. Set the number of non-root thunks to pack in one packet to
1773 &lt;num&gt;-1 (0 means infinity). By default GUM uses full-subgraph
1774 packing, i.e. the entire subgraph with the requested closure as root is
1775 transmitted (provided it fits into one packet). Choosing a smaller value
1776 reduces the amount of pre-fetching of work done in GUM. This can be
1777 advantageous for improving data locality but it can also worsen the balance
1778 of the load in the system. 
1779 </Para>
1780 </ListItem>
1781 </VarListEntry>
1782 <VarListEntry>
1783 <Term><Option>-qg&lt;num&gt;</Option>:</Term>
1784 <ListItem>
1785 <Para>
1786 <IndexTerm><Primary>-qg&lt;num&gt; RTS option
1787 (parallel)</Primary></IndexTerm> (PARALLEL ONLY) Select a globalisation
1788 scheme. This option affects the
1789 generation of global addresses when transferring data. Global addresses are
1790 globally unique identifiers required to maintain sharing in the distributed
1791 graph structure. Currently this is a binary option. With &lt;num&gt;=0 full globalisation is used
1792 (default). This means a global address is generated for every closure that
1793 is transmitted. With &lt;num&gt;=1 a thunk-only globalisation scheme is
1794 used, which generated global address only for thunks. The latter case may
1795 lose sharing of data but has a reduced overhead in packing graph structures
1796 and maintaining internal tables of global addresses.
1797 </Para>
1798 </ListItem>
1799 </VarListEntry>
1800 </VariableList>
1801 </para>
1802
1803 </sect2>
1804
1805 </Sect1>
1806
1807   <sect1 id="options-platform">
1808     <title>Platform-specific Flags</title>
1809
1810     <indexterm><primary>-m* options</primary></indexterm>
1811     <indexterm><primary>platform-specific options</primary></indexterm>
1812     <indexterm><primary>machine-specific options</primary></indexterm>
1813
1814     <para>Some flags only make sense for particular target
1815     platforms.</para>
1816
1817     <variablelist>
1818
1819       <varlistentry>
1820         <term><option>-mv8</option>:</term>
1821         <listitem>
1822           <para>(SPARC machines)<indexterm><primary>-mv8 option (SPARC
1823           only)</primary></indexterm> Means to pass the like-named
1824           option to GCC; it says to use the Version 8 SPARC
1825           instructions, notably integer multiply and divide.  The
1826           similiar <option>-m*</option> GCC options for SPARC also
1827           work, actually.</para>
1828         </listitem>
1829       </varlistentry>
1830
1831       <varlistentry>
1832         <term><option>-monly-[32]-regs</option>:</term>
1833         <listitem>
1834           <para>(iX86 machines)<indexterm><primary>-monly-N-regs
1835           option (iX86 only)</primary></indexterm> GHC tries to
1836           &ldquo;steal&rdquo; four registers from GCC, for performance
1837           reasons; it almost always works.  However, when GCC is
1838           compiling some modules with four stolen registers, it will
1839           crash, probably saying:
1840
1841 <Screen>
1842 Foo.hc:533: fixed or forbidden register was spilled.
1843 This may be due to a compiler bug or to impossible asm
1844 statements or clauses.
1845 </Screen>
1846
1847           Just give some registers back with
1848           <option>-monly-N-regs</option>.  Try `3' first, then `2'.
1849           If `2' doesn't work, please report the bug to us.</para>
1850         </listitem>
1851       </varlistentry>
1852     </variablelist>
1853
1854   </sect1>
1855
1856 &runtime;
1857
1858 <sect1 id="ext-core">
1859   <title>Generating External Core Files</title>
1860
1861   <indexterm><primary>intermediate code generation</primary></indexterm>
1862
1863   <para>GHC can dump its optimized intermediate code (said to be in &ldquo;Core&rdquo; format) 
1864   to a file as a side-effect of compilation. Core files, which are given the suffix
1865   <filename>.hcr</filename>, can be read and processed by non-GHC back-end
1866   tools.  The Core format is formally described in <ulink url="http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/papers/core.ps.gz"
1867   <citetitle>An External Representation for the GHC Core Language</citetitle></ulink>, 
1868   and sample tools (in Haskell)
1869   for manipulating Core files are available in the GHC source distribution 
1870   directory <literal>/fptools/ghc/utils/ext-core</literal>.  
1871   Note that the format of <literal>.hcr</literal> 
1872   files is <emphasis>different</emphasis> (though similar) to the Core output format generated 
1873   for debugging purposes (<xref linkend="options-debugging">).</para>
1874
1875     <variablelist>
1876
1877         <varlistentry>
1878           <term><option>-fext-core</option></term>
1879           <indexterm>
1880             <primary><option>-fext-core</option></primary>
1881           </indexterm>
1882           <listitem>
1883             <para>Generate <literal>.hcr</literal> files.</para>
1884           </listitem>
1885         </varlistentry>
1886
1887     </variablelist>
1888
1889 </sect1>
1890
1891 &debug;
1892 &flags;
1893
1894 </Chapter>
1895
1896 <!-- Emacs stuff:
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