-Fixities
-~~~~~~~~
-We count A.f as changing if its fixity changes
-
-Rules
-~~~~~
-If a rule changes, we want to recompile any module that might be
-affected by that rule. For non-orphan rules, this is relatively easy.
-If module M defines f, and a rule for f, just arrange that the fingerprint
-for M.f changes if any of the rules for M.f change. Any module
-that does not depend on M.f can't be affected by the rule-change
-either.
-
-Orphan rules (ones whose 'head function' is not defined in M) are
-harder. Here's what we do.
-
- * We have a per-module orphan-rule fingerprint which changes if
- any orphan rule changes. (It's unaffected by non-orphan rules.)
-
- * We record usage info for any orphan module 'below' this one,
- giving the orphan-rule fingerprint. We recompile if this
- changes.
-
-The net effect is that if an orphan rule changes, we recompile every
-module above it. That's very conservative, but it's devilishly hard
-to know what it might affect, so we just have to be conservative.
-
-Instance decls
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-In an iface file we have
- module A where
- instance Eq a => Eq [a] = dfun29
- dfun29 :: ...
-
-We have a fingerprint for dfun29, covering its unfolding
-etc. Suppose we are compiling a module M that imports A only
-indirectly. If typechecking M uses this instance decl, we record the
-dependency on A.dfun29 as if it were a free variable of the module
-(via the tcg_inst_usages accumulator). That means that A will appear
-in M's usage list. If the shape of the instance declaration changes,
-then so will dfun29's fingerprint, triggering a recompilation.
-
-Adding an instance declaration, or changing an instance decl that is
-not currently used, is more tricky. (This really only makes a
-difference when we have overlapping instance decls, because then the
-new instance decl might kick in to override the old one.) We handle
-this in a very similar way that we handle rules above.
-
- * For non-orphan instance decls, identify one locally-defined tycon/class
- mentioned in the decl. Treat the instance decl as part of the defn of that
- tycon/class, so that if the shape of the instance decl changes, so does the
- tycon/class; that in turn will force recompilation of anything that uses
- that tycon/class.
-
- * For orphan instance decls, act the same way as for orphan rules.
- Indeed, we use the same global orphan-rule version number.
-
-mkUsageInfo
-~~~~~~~~~~~
-mkUsageInfo figures out what the ``usage information'' for this
-moudule is; that is, what it must record in its interface file as the
-things it uses.
-
-We produce a line for every module B below the module, A, currently being
-compiled:
- import B <n> ;
-to record the fact that A does import B indirectly. This is used to decide
-to look for B.hi rather than B.hi-boot when compiling a module that
-imports A. This line says that A imports B, but uses nothing in it.
-So we'll get an early bale-out when compiling A if B's fingerprint changes.
-
-The usage information records:
-
-\begin{itemize}
-\item (a) anything reachable from its body code
-\item (b) any module exported with a @module Foo@
-\item (c) anything reachable from an exported item
-\end{itemize}
-
-Why (b)? Because if @Foo@ changes then this module's export list
-will change, so we must recompile this module at least as far as
-making a new interface file --- but in practice that means complete
-recompilation.
-
-Why (c)? Consider this:
-\begin{verbatim}
- module A( f, g ) where | module B( f ) where
- import B( f ) | f = h 3
- g = ... | h = ...
-\end{verbatim}
-
-Here, @B.f@ isn't used in A. Should we nevertheless record @B.f@ in
-@A@'s usages? Our idea is that we aren't going to touch A.hi if it is
-*identical* to what it was before. If anything about @B.f@ changes
-than anyone who imports @A@ should be recompiled in case they use
-@B.f@ (they'll get an early exit if they don't). So, if anything
-about @B.f@ changes we'd better make sure that something in A.hi
-changes, and the convenient way to do that is to record the version
-number @B.f@ in A.hi in the usage list. If B.f changes that'll force a
-complete recompiation of A, which is overkill but it's the only way to
-write a new, slightly different, A.hi.
-
-But the example is tricker. Even if @B.f@ doesn't change at all,
-@B.h@ may do so, and this change may not be reflected in @f@'s version
-number. But with -O, a module that imports A must be recompiled if
-@B.h@ changes! So A must record a dependency on @B.h@. So we treat
-the occurrence of @B.f@ in the export list *just as if* it were in the
-code of A, and thereby haul in all the stuff reachable from it.
-
- *** Conclusion: if A mentions B.f in its export list,
- behave just as if A mentioned B.f in its source code,
- and slurp in B.f and all its transitive closure ***
-
-[NB: If B was compiled with -O, but A isn't, we should really *still*
-haul in all the unfoldings for B, in case the module that imports A *is*
-compiled with -O. I think this is the case.]
-
-SimonM [30/11/2007]: I believe the above is all out of date; the
-current implementation doesn't do it this way. Instead, when any of
-the dependencies of a declaration changes, the version of the
-declaration itself changes.
-