\section[Simplify]{The main module of the simplifier}
\begin{code}
-{-# OPTIONS -w #-}
--- The above warning supression flag is a temporary kludge.
--- While working on this module you are encouraged to remove it and fix
--- any warnings in the module. See
--- http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/CodingStyle#Warnings
--- for details
-
module Simplify ( simplTopBinds, simplExpr ) where
#include "HsVersions.h"
import DynFlags
import SimplMonad
-import Type hiding ( substTy, extendTvSubst )
+import Type hiding ( substTy, extendTvSubst, substTyVar )
import SimplEnv
import SimplUtils
+import FamInstEnv ( FamInstEnv )
import Id
+import MkId ( seqId, realWorldPrimId )
+import MkCore ( mkImpossibleExpr )
import Var
import IdInfo
+import Name ( mkSystemVarName, isExternalName )
import Coercion
+import OptCoercion ( optCoercion )
import FamInstEnv ( topNormaliseType )
-import DataCon ( dataConRepStrictness, dataConUnivTyVars )
+import DataCon ( DataCon, dataConWorkId, dataConRepStrictness )
+import CoreMonad ( Tick(..), SimplifierMode(..) )
import CoreSyn
-import NewDemand ( isStrictDmd )
+import Demand ( isStrictDmd )
import PprCore ( pprParendExpr, pprCoreExpr )
-import CoreUnfold ( mkUnfolding, callSiteInline, CallCtxt(..) )
+import CoreUnfold
import CoreUtils
-import Rules ( lookupRule )
-import BasicTypes ( isMarkedStrict )
-import CostCentre ( currentCCS )
+import qualified CoreSubst
+import CoreArity
+import Rules ( lookupRule, getRules )
+import BasicTypes ( isMarkedStrict, Arity )
+import CostCentre ( currentCCS, pushCCisNop )
import TysPrim ( realWorldStatePrimTy )
-import PrelInfo ( realWorldPrimId )
-import BasicTypes ( TopLevelFlag(..), isTopLevel,
- RecFlag(..), isNonRuleLoopBreaker )
-import Maybes ( orElse )
+import BasicTypes ( TopLevelFlag(..), isTopLevel, RecFlag(..) )
+import MonadUtils ( foldlM, mapAccumLM )
+import Maybes ( orElse, isNothing )
import Data.List ( mapAccumL )
import Outputable
-import Util
+import FastString
\end{code}
%************************************************************************
\begin{code}
-simplTopBinds :: SimplEnv -> [InBind] -> SimplM [OutBind]
+simplTopBinds :: SimplEnv -> [InBind] -> SimplM SimplEnv
-simplTopBinds env binds
+simplTopBinds env0 binds0
= do { -- Put all the top-level binders into scope at the start
-- so that if a transformation rule has unexpectedly brought
-- anything into scope, then we don't get a complaint about that.
-- It's rather as if the top-level binders were imported.
- ; env <- simplRecBndrs env (bindersOfBinds binds)
+ ; env1 <- simplRecBndrs env0 (bindersOfBinds binds0)
; dflags <- getDOptsSmpl
- ; let dump_flag = dopt Opt_D_dump_inlinings dflags ||
- dopt Opt_D_dump_rule_firings dflags
- ; env' <- simpl_binds dump_flag env binds
+ ; let dump_flag = dopt Opt_D_verbose_core2core dflags
+ ; env2 <- simpl_binds dump_flag env1 binds0
; freeTick SimplifierDone
- ; return (getFloats env') }
+ ; return env2 }
where
-- We need to track the zapped top-level binders, because
-- they should have their fragile IdInfo zapped (notably occurrence info)
-- The dump-flag emits a trace for each top-level binding, which
-- helps to locate the tracing for inlining and rule firing
simpl_binds :: Bool -> SimplEnv -> [InBind] -> SimplM SimplEnv
- simpl_binds dump env [] = return env
- simpl_binds dump env (bind:binds) = do { env' <- trace dump bind $
+ simpl_binds _ env [] = return env
+ simpl_binds dump env (bind:binds) = do { env' <- trace_bind dump bind $
simpl_bind env bind
; simpl_binds dump env' binds }
- trace True bind = pprTrace "SimplBind" (ppr (bindersOf bind))
- trace False bind = \x -> x
+ trace_bind True bind = pprTrace "SimplBind" (ppr (bindersOf bind))
+ trace_bind False _ = \x -> x
simpl_bind env (Rec pairs) = simplRecBind env TopLevel pairs
- simpl_bind env (NonRec b r) = simplRecOrTopPair env' TopLevel b b' r
+ simpl_bind env (NonRec b r) = simplRecOrTopPair env' TopLevel NonRecursive b b' r
where
(env', b') = addBndrRules env b (lookupRecBndr env b)
\end{code}
simplRecBind :: SimplEnv -> TopLevelFlag
-> [(InId, InExpr)]
-> SimplM SimplEnv
-simplRecBind env top_lvl pairs
- = do { let (env_with_info, triples) = mapAccumL add_rules env pairs
- ; env' <- go (zapFloats env_with_info) triples
- ; return (env `addRecFloats` env') }
- -- addFloats adds the floats from env',
- -- *and* updates env with the in-scope set from env'
+simplRecBind env0 top_lvl pairs0
+ = do { let (env_with_info, triples) = mapAccumL add_rules env0 pairs0
+ ; env1 <- go (zapFloats env_with_info) triples
+ ; return (env0 `addRecFloats` env1) }
+ -- addFloats adds the floats from env1,
+ -- _and_ updates env0 with the in-scope set from env1
where
add_rules :: SimplEnv -> (InBndr,InExpr) -> (SimplEnv, (InBndr, OutBndr, InExpr))
-- Add the (substituted) rules to the binder
go env [] = return env
go env ((old_bndr, new_bndr, rhs) : pairs)
- = do { env <- simplRecOrTopPair env top_lvl old_bndr new_bndr rhs
- ; go env pairs }
+ = do { env' <- simplRecOrTopPair env top_lvl Recursive old_bndr new_bndr rhs
+ ; go env' pairs }
\end{code}
simplOrTopPair is used for
\begin{code}
simplRecOrTopPair :: SimplEnv
- -> TopLevelFlag
+ -> TopLevelFlag -> RecFlag
-> InId -> OutBndr -> InExpr -- Binder and rhs
-> SimplM SimplEnv -- Returns an env that includes the binding
-simplRecOrTopPair env top_lvl old_bndr new_bndr rhs
+simplRecOrTopPair env top_lvl is_rec old_bndr new_bndr rhs
| preInlineUnconditionally env top_lvl old_bndr rhs -- Check for unconditional inline
= do { tick (PreInlineUnconditionally old_bndr)
; return (extendIdSubst env old_bndr (mkContEx env rhs)) }
| otherwise
- = simplLazyBind env top_lvl Recursive old_bndr new_bndr rhs env
- -- May not actually be recursive, but it doesn't matter
+ = simplLazyBind env top_lvl is_rec old_bndr new_bndr rhs env
\end{code}
-> SimplM SimplEnv
simplLazyBind env top_lvl is_rec bndr bndr1 rhs rhs_se
- = do { let rhs_env = rhs_se `setInScope` env
- (tvs, body) = collectTyBinders rhs
- ; (body_env, tvs') <- simplBinders rhs_env tvs
- -- See Note [Floating and type abstraction]
- -- in SimplUtils
+ = -- pprTrace "simplLazyBind" ((ppr bndr <+> ppr bndr1) $$ ppr rhs $$ ppr (seIdSubst rhs_se)) $
+ do { let rhs_env = rhs_se `setInScope` env
+ (tvs, body) = case collectTyBinders rhs of
+ (tvs, body) | not_lam body -> (tvs,body)
+ | otherwise -> ([], rhs)
+ not_lam (Lam _ _) = False
+ not_lam _ = True
+ -- Do not do the "abstract tyyvar" thing if there's
+ -- a lambda inside, becuase it defeats eta-reduction
+ -- f = /\a. \x. g a x
+ -- should eta-reduce
- -- Simplify the RHS; note the mkRhsStop, which tells
- -- the simplifier that this is the RHS of a let.
- ; let rhs_cont = mkRhsStop (applyTys (idType bndr1) (mkTyVarTys tvs'))
- ; (body_env1, body1) <- simplExprF body_env body rhs_cont
+ ; (body_env, tvs') <- simplBinders rhs_env tvs
+ -- See Note [Floating and type abstraction] in SimplUtils
+ -- Simplify the RHS
+ ; (body_env1, body1) <- simplExprF body_env body mkRhsStop
-- ANF-ise a constructor or PAP rhs
- ; (body_env2, body2) <- prepareRhs body_env1 body1
+ ; (body_env2, body2) <- prepareRhs top_lvl body_env1 bndr1 body1
; (env', rhs')
<- if not (doFloatFromRhs top_lvl is_rec False body2 body_env2)
- then -- No floating, just wrap up!
- do { rhs' <- mkLam tvs' (wrapFloats body_env2 body2)
+ then -- No floating, revert to body1
+ do { rhs' <- mkLam env tvs' (wrapFloats body_env1 body1)
; return (env, rhs') }
else if null tvs then -- Simple floating
else -- Do type-abstraction first
do { tick LetFloatFromLet
; (poly_binds, body3) <- abstractFloats tvs' body_env2 body2
- ; rhs' <- mkLam tvs' body3
- ; return (extendFloats env poly_binds, rhs') }
+ ; rhs' <- mkLam env tvs' body3
+ ; env' <- foldlM (addPolyBind top_lvl) env poly_binds
+ ; return (env', rhs') }
; completeBind env' top_lvl bndr bndr1 rhs' }
\end{code}
-> SimplM SimplEnv
simplNonRecX env bndr new_rhs
- = do { (env, bndr') <- simplBinder env bndr
- ; completeNonRecX env NotTopLevel NonRecursive
- (isStrictId bndr) bndr bndr' new_rhs }
-
-completeNonRecX :: SimplEnv
- -> TopLevelFlag -> RecFlag -> Bool
+ | isDeadBinder bndr -- Not uncommon; e.g. case (a,b) of b { (p,q) -> p }
+ = return env -- Here b is dead, and we avoid creating
+ | otherwise -- the binding b = (a,b)
+ = do { (env', bndr') <- simplBinder env bndr
+ ; completeNonRecX NotTopLevel env' (isStrictId bndr) bndr bndr' new_rhs }
+ -- simplNonRecX is only used for NotTopLevel things
+
+completeNonRecX :: TopLevelFlag -> SimplEnv
+ -> Bool
-> InId -- Old binder
-> OutId -- New binder
-> OutExpr -- Simplified RHS
-> SimplM SimplEnv
-completeNonRecX env top_lvl is_rec is_strict old_bndr new_bndr new_rhs
- = do { (env1, rhs1) <- prepareRhs (zapFloats env) new_rhs
- ; (env2, rhs2) <-
- if doFloatFromRhs top_lvl is_rec is_strict rhs1 env1
+completeNonRecX top_lvl env is_strict old_bndr new_bndr new_rhs
+ = do { (env1, rhs1) <- prepareRhs top_lvl (zapFloats env) new_bndr new_rhs
+ ; (env2, rhs2) <-
+ if doFloatFromRhs NotTopLevel NonRecursive is_strict rhs1 env1
then do { tick LetFloatFromLet
; return (addFloats env env1, rhs1) } -- Add the floats to the main env
else return (env, wrapFloats env1 rhs1) -- Wrap the floats around the RHS
That's what the 'go' loop in prepareRhs does
\begin{code}
-prepareRhs :: SimplEnv -> OutExpr -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
+prepareRhs :: TopLevelFlag -> SimplEnv -> OutId -> OutExpr -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
-- Adds new floats to the env iff that allows us to return a good RHS
-prepareRhs env (Cast rhs co) -- Note [Float coercions]
- | (ty1, ty2) <- coercionKind co -- Do *not* do this if rhs has an unlifted type
+prepareRhs top_lvl env id (Cast rhs co) -- Note [Float coercions]
+ | (ty1, _ty2) <- coercionKind co -- Do *not* do this if rhs has an unlifted type
, not (isUnLiftedType ty1) -- see Note [Float coercions (unlifted)]
- = do { (env', rhs') <- makeTrivial env rhs
+ = do { (env', rhs') <- makeTrivialWithInfo top_lvl env sanitised_info rhs
; return (env', Cast rhs' co) }
+ where
+ sanitised_info = vanillaIdInfo `setStrictnessInfo` strictnessInfo info
+ `setDemandInfo` demandInfo info
+ info = idInfo id
-prepareRhs env rhs
- = do { (is_val, env', rhs') <- go 0 env rhs
- ; return (env', rhs') }
+prepareRhs top_lvl env0 _ rhs0
+ = do { (_is_exp, env1, rhs1) <- go 0 env0 rhs0
+ ; return (env1, rhs1) }
where
go n_val_args env (Cast rhs co)
- = do { (is_val, env', rhs') <- go n_val_args env rhs
- ; return (is_val, env', Cast rhs' co) }
+ = do { (is_exp, env', rhs') <- go n_val_args env rhs
+ ; return (is_exp, env', Cast rhs' co) }
go n_val_args env (App fun (Type ty))
- = do { (is_val, env', rhs') <- go n_val_args env fun
- ; return (is_val, env', App rhs' (Type ty)) }
+ = do { (is_exp, env', rhs') <- go n_val_args env fun
+ ; return (is_exp, env', App rhs' (Type ty)) }
go n_val_args env (App fun arg)
- = do { (is_val, env', fun') <- go (n_val_args+1) env fun
- ; case is_val of
- True -> do { (env'', arg') <- makeTrivial env' arg
+ = do { (is_exp, env', fun') <- go (n_val_args+1) env fun
+ ; case is_exp of
+ True -> do { (env'', arg') <- makeTrivial top_lvl env' arg
; return (True, env'', App fun' arg') }
False -> return (False, env, App fun arg) }
go n_val_args env (Var fun)
- = return (is_val, env, Var fun)
+ = return (is_exp, env, Var fun)
where
- is_val = n_val_args > 0 -- There is at least one arg
- -- ...and the fun a constructor or PAP
- && (isDataConWorkId fun || n_val_args < idArity fun)
- go n_val_args env other
+ is_exp = isExpandableApp fun n_val_args -- The fun a constructor or PAP
+ -- See Note [CONLIKE pragma] in BasicTypes
+ -- The definition of is_exp should match that in
+ -- OccurAnal.occAnalApp
+
+ go _ env other
= return (False, env, other)
\end{code}
go n = case x of { T m -> go (n-m) }
-- This case should optimise
+Note [Preserve strictness when floating coercions]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+In the Note [Float coercions] transformation, keep the strictness info.
+Eg
+ f = e `cast` co -- f has strictness SSL
+When we transform to
+ f' = e -- f' also has strictness SSL
+ f = f' `cast` co -- f still has strictness SSL
+
+Its not wrong to drop it on the floor, but better to keep it.
+
Note [Float coercions (unlifted)]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BUT don't do [Float coercions] if 'e' has an unlifted type.
\begin{code}
-makeTrivial :: SimplEnv -> OutExpr -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
+makeTrivial :: TopLevelFlag -> SimplEnv -> OutExpr -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
-- Binds the expression to a variable, if it's not trivial, returning the variable
-makeTrivial env expr
- | exprIsTrivial expr
+makeTrivial top_lvl env expr = makeTrivialWithInfo top_lvl env vanillaIdInfo expr
+
+makeTrivialWithInfo :: TopLevelFlag -> SimplEnv -> IdInfo
+ -> OutExpr -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
+-- Propagate strictness and demand info to the new binder
+-- Note [Preserve strictness when floating coercions]
+-- Returned SimplEnv has same substitution as incoming one
+makeTrivialWithInfo top_lvl env info expr
+ | exprIsTrivial expr -- Already trivial
+ || not (bindingOk top_lvl expr expr_ty) -- Cannot trivialise
+ -- See Note [Cannot trivialise]
= return (env, expr)
| otherwise -- See Note [Take care] below
- = do { var <- newId FSLIT("a") (exprType expr)
- ; env <- completeNonRecX env NotTopLevel NonRecursive
- False var var expr
- ; return (env, substExpr env (Var var)) }
+ = do { uniq <- getUniqueM
+ ; let name = mkSystemVarName uniq (fsLit "a")
+ var = mkLocalIdWithInfo name expr_ty info
+ ; env' <- completeNonRecX top_lvl env False var var expr
+ ; expr' <- simplVar env' var
+ ; return (env', expr') }
+ -- The simplVar is needed becase we're constructing a new binding
+ -- a = rhs
+ -- And if rhs is of form (rhs1 |> co), then we might get
+ -- a1 = rhs1
+ -- a = a1 |> co
+ -- and now a's RHS is trivial and can be substituted out, and that
+ -- is what completeNonRecX will do
+ -- To put it another way, it's as if we'd simplified
+ -- let var = e in var
+ where
+ expr_ty = exprType expr
+
+bindingOk :: TopLevelFlag -> CoreExpr -> Type -> Bool
+-- True iff we can have a binding of this expression at this level
+-- Precondition: the type is the type of the expression
+bindingOk top_lvl _ expr_ty
+ | isTopLevel top_lvl = not (isUnLiftedType expr_ty)
+ | otherwise = True
\end{code}
+Note [Cannot trivialise]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Consider tih
+ f :: Int -> Addr#
+
+ foo :: Bar
+ foo = Bar (f 3)
+
+Then we can't ANF-ise foo, even though we'd like to, because
+we can't make a top-level binding for the Addr# (f 3). And if
+so we don't want to turn it into
+ foo = let x = f 3 in Bar x
+because we'll just end up inlining x back, and that makes the
+simplifier loop. Better not to ANF-ise it at all.
+
+A case in point is literal strings (a MachStr is not regarded as
+trivial):
+
+ foo = Ptr "blob"#
+
+We don't want to ANF-ise this.
%************************************************************************
%* *
-- * or by adding to the floats in the envt
completeBind env top_lvl old_bndr new_bndr new_rhs
- | postInlineUnconditionally env top_lvl new_bndr occ_info new_rhs unfolding
- -- Inline and discard the binding
- = do { tick (PostInlineUnconditionally old_bndr)
- ; -- pprTrace "postInlineUnconditionally" (ppr old_bndr <+> ppr new_bndr <+> ppr new_rhs) $
- return (extendIdSubst env old_bndr (DoneEx new_rhs)) }
- -- Use the substitution to make quite, quite sure that the
- -- substitution will happen, since we are going to discard the binding
-
- | otherwise
- = let
- -- Arity info
- new_bndr_info = idInfo new_bndr `setArityInfo` exprArity new_rhs
-
- -- Unfolding info
- -- Add the unfolding *only* for non-loop-breakers
- -- Making loop breakers not have an unfolding at all
- -- means that we can avoid tests in exprIsConApp, for example.
- -- This is important: if exprIsConApp says 'yes' for a recursive
- -- thing, then we can get into an infinite loop
-
- -- Demand info
- -- If the unfolding is a value, the demand info may
- -- go pear-shaped, so we nuke it. Example:
- -- let x = (a,b) in
- -- case x of (p,q) -> h p q x
- -- Here x is certainly demanded. But after we've nuked
- -- the case, we'll get just
- -- let x = (a,b) in h a b x
- -- and now x is not demanded (I'm assuming h is lazy)
- -- This really happens. Similarly
- -- let f = \x -> e in ...f..f...
- -- After inlining f at some of its call sites the original binding may
- -- (for example) be no longer strictly demanded.
- -- The solution here is a bit ad hoc...
- info_w_unf = new_bndr_info `setUnfoldingInfo` unfolding
- `setWorkerInfo` worker_info
-
- final_info | loop_breaker = new_bndr_info
- | isEvaldUnfolding unfolding = zapDemandInfo info_w_unf `orElse` info_w_unf
- | otherwise = info_w_unf
-
- final_id = new_bndr `setIdInfo` final_info
- in
- -- These seqs forces the Id, and hence its IdInfo,
- -- and hence any inner substitutions
- final_id `seq`
- -- pprTrace "Binding" (ppr final_id <+> ppr unfolding) $
- return (addNonRec env final_id new_rhs)
+ = ASSERT( isId new_bndr )
+ do { let old_info = idInfo old_bndr
+ old_unf = unfoldingInfo old_info
+ occ_info = occInfo old_info
+
+ -- Do eta-expansion on the RHS of the binding
+ -- See Note [Eta-expanding at let bindings] in SimplUtils
+ ; (new_arity, final_rhs) <- tryEtaExpand env new_bndr new_rhs
+
+ -- Simplify the unfolding
+ ; new_unfolding <- simplUnfolding env top_lvl old_bndr final_rhs old_unf
+
+ ; if postInlineUnconditionally env top_lvl new_bndr occ_info final_rhs new_unfolding
+ -- Inline and discard the binding
+ then do { tick (PostInlineUnconditionally old_bndr)
+ ; -- pprTrace "postInlineUnconditionally"
+ -- (ppr old_bndr <+> equals <+> ppr final_rhs $$ ppr occ_info) $
+ return (extendIdSubst env old_bndr (DoneEx final_rhs)) }
+ -- Use the substitution to make quite, quite sure that the
+ -- substitution will happen, since we are going to discard the binding
+ else
+ do { let info1 = idInfo new_bndr `setArityInfo` new_arity
+
+ -- Unfolding info: Note [Setting the new unfolding]
+ info2 = info1 `setUnfoldingInfo` new_unfolding
+
+ -- Demand info: Note [Setting the demand info]
+ info3 | isEvaldUnfolding new_unfolding = zapDemandInfo info2 `orElse` info2
+ | otherwise = info2
+
+ final_id = new_bndr `setIdInfo` info3
+
+ ; -- pprTrace "Binding" (ppr final_id <+> ppr unfolding) $
+ return (addNonRec env final_id final_rhs) } }
+ -- The addNonRec adds it to the in-scope set too
+
+------------------------------
+addPolyBind :: TopLevelFlag -> SimplEnv -> OutBind -> SimplM SimplEnv
+-- Add a new binding to the environment, complete with its unfolding
+-- but *do not* do postInlineUnconditionally, because we have already
+-- processed some of the scope of the binding
+-- We still want the unfolding though. Consider
+-- let
+-- x = /\a. let y = ... in Just y
+-- in body
+-- Then we float the y-binding out (via abstractFloats and addPolyBind)
+-- but 'x' may well then be inlined in 'body' in which case we'd like the
+-- opportunity to inline 'y' too.
+
+addPolyBind top_lvl env (NonRec poly_id rhs)
+ = do { unfolding <- simplUnfolding env top_lvl poly_id rhs noUnfolding
+ -- Assumes that poly_id did not have an INLINE prag
+ -- which is perhaps wrong. ToDo: think about this
+ ; let final_id = setIdInfo poly_id $
+ idInfo poly_id `setUnfoldingInfo` unfolding
+ `setArityInfo` exprArity rhs
+
+ ; return (addNonRec env final_id rhs) }
+
+addPolyBind _ env bind@(Rec _)
+ = return (extendFloats env bind)
+ -- Hack: letrecs are more awkward, so we extend "by steam"
+ -- without adding unfoldings etc. At worst this leads to
+ -- more simplifier iterations
+
+------------------------------
+simplUnfolding :: SimplEnv-> TopLevelFlag
+ -> InId
+ -> OutExpr
+ -> Unfolding -> SimplM Unfolding
+-- Note [Setting the new unfolding]
+simplUnfolding env _ _ _ (DFunUnfolding ar con ops)
+ = return (DFunUnfolding ar con ops')
+ where
+ ops' = map (fmap (substExpr (text "simplUnfolding") env)) ops
+
+simplUnfolding env top_lvl id _
+ (CoreUnfolding { uf_tmpl = expr, uf_arity = arity
+ , uf_src = src, uf_guidance = guide })
+ | isStableSource src
+ = do { expr' <- simplExpr rule_env expr
+ ; let src' = CoreSubst.substUnfoldingSource (mkCoreSubst (text "inline-unf") env) src
+ is_top_lvl = isTopLevel top_lvl
+ ; case guide of
+ UnfWhen sat_ok _ -- Happens for INLINE things
+ -> let guide' = UnfWhen sat_ok (inlineBoringOk expr')
+ -- Refresh the boring-ok flag, in case expr'
+ -- has got small. This happens, notably in the inlinings
+ -- for dfuns for single-method classes; see
+ -- Note [Single-method classes] in TcInstDcls.
+ -- A test case is Trac #4138
+ in return (mkCoreUnfolding src' is_top_lvl expr' arity guide')
+ -- See Note [Top-level flag on inline rules] in CoreUnfold
+
+ _other -- Happens for INLINABLE things
+ -> let bottoming = isBottomingId id
+ in bottoming `seq` -- See Note [Force bottoming field]
+ return (mkUnfolding src' is_top_lvl bottoming expr')
+ -- If the guidance is UnfIfGoodArgs, this is an INLINABLE
+ -- unfolding, and we need to make sure the guidance is kept up
+ -- to date with respect to any changes in the unfolding.
+ }
where
- unfolding = mkUnfolding (isTopLevel top_lvl) new_rhs
- worker_info = substWorker env (workerInfo old_info)
- loop_breaker = isNonRuleLoopBreaker occ_info
- old_info = idInfo old_bndr
- occ_info = occInfo old_info
+ act = idInlineActivation id
+ rule_env = updMode (updModeForInlineRules act) env
+ -- See Note [Simplifying inside InlineRules] in SimplUtils
+
+simplUnfolding _ top_lvl id new_rhs _
+ = let bottoming = isBottomingId id
+ in bottoming `seq` -- See Note [Force bottoming field]
+ return (mkUnfolding InlineRhs (isTopLevel top_lvl) bottoming new_rhs)
+ -- We make an unfolding *even for loop-breakers*.
+ -- Reason: (a) It might be useful to know that they are WHNF
+ -- (b) In TidyPgm we currently assume that, if we want to
+ -- expose the unfolding then indeed we *have* an unfolding
+ -- to expose. (We could instead use the RHS, but currently
+ -- we don't.) The simple thing is always to have one.
\end{code}
+Note [Force bottoming field]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+We need to force bottoming, or the new unfolding holds
+on to the old unfolding (which is part of the id).
+
+Note [Arity decrease]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Generally speaking the arity of a binding should not decrease. But it *can*
+legitimately happen becuase of RULES. Eg
+ f = g Int
+where g has arity 2, will have arity 2. But if there's a rewrite rule
+ g Int --> h
+where h has arity 1, then f's arity will decrease. Here's a real-life example,
+which is in the output of Specialise:
+
+ Rec {
+ $dm {Arity 2} = \d.\x. op d
+ {-# RULES forall d. $dm Int d = $s$dm #-}
+
+ dInt = MkD .... opInt ...
+ opInt {Arity 1} = $dm dInt
+
+ $s$dm {Arity 0} = \x. op dInt }
+
+Here opInt has arity 1; but when we apply the rule its arity drops to 0.
+That's why Specialise goes to a little trouble to pin the right arity
+on specialised functions too.
+
+Note [Setting the new unfolding]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+* If there's an INLINE pragma, we simplify the RHS gently. Maybe we
+ should do nothing at all, but simplifying gently might get rid of
+ more crap.
+
+* If not, we make an unfolding from the new RHS. But *only* for
+ non-loop-breakers. Making loop breakers not have an unfolding at all
+ means that we can avoid tests in exprIsConApp, for example. This is
+ important: if exprIsConApp says 'yes' for a recursive thing, then we
+ can get into an infinite loop
+
+If there's an InlineRule on a loop breaker, we hang on to the inlining.
+It's pretty dodgy, but the user did say 'INLINE'. May need to revisit
+this choice.
+
+Note [Setting the demand info]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+If the unfolding is a value, the demand info may
+go pear-shaped, so we nuke it. Example:
+ let x = (a,b) in
+ case x of (p,q) -> h p q x
+Here x is certainly demanded. But after we've nuked
+the case, we'll get just
+ let x = (a,b) in h a b x
+and now x is not demanded (I'm assuming h is lazy)
+This really happens. Similarly
+ let f = \x -> e in ...f..f...
+After inlining f at some of its call sites the original binding may
+(for example) be no longer strictly demanded.
+The solution here is a bit ad hoc...
%************************************************************************
\begin{code}
simplExpr :: SimplEnv -> CoreExpr -> SimplM CoreExpr
-simplExpr env expr = simplExprC env expr (mkBoringStop expr_ty')
- where
- expr_ty' = substTy env (exprType expr)
- -- The type in the Stop continuation, expr_ty', is usually not used
- -- It's only needed when discarding continuations after finding
- -- a function that returns bottom.
- -- Hence the lazy substitution
-
+simplExpr env expr = simplExprC env expr mkBoringStop
simplExprC :: SimplEnv -> CoreExpr -> SimplCont -> SimplM CoreExpr
-- Simplify an expression, given a continuation
= -- pprTrace "simplExprF" (ppr e $$ ppr cont $$ ppr (seTvSubst env) $$ ppr (seIdSubst env) {- $$ ppr (seFloats env) -} ) $
simplExprF' env e cont
-simplExprF' env (Var v) cont = simplVar env v cont
+simplExprF' :: SimplEnv -> InExpr -> SimplCont
+ -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
+simplExprF' env (Var v) cont = simplVarF env v cont
simplExprF' env (Lit lit) cont = rebuild env (Lit lit) cont
simplExprF' env (Note n expr) cont = simplNote env n expr cont
simplExprF' env (Cast body co) cont = simplCast env body co cont
ApplyTo NoDup arg env cont
simplExprF' env expr@(Lam _ _) cont
- = simplLam env (map zap bndrs) body cont
+ = simplLam env zapped_bndrs body cont
-- The main issue here is under-saturated lambdas
-- (\x1. \x2. e) arg1
-- Here x1 might have "occurs-once" occ-info, because occ-info
-- is computed assuming that a group of lambdas is applied
-- all at once. If there are too few args, we must zap the
- -- occ-info.
+ -- occ-info, UNLESS the remaining binders are one-shot
where
- n_args = countArgs cont
- n_params = length bndrs
(bndrs, body) = collectBinders expr
- zap | n_args >= n_params = \b -> b
- | otherwise = \b -> if isTyVar b then b
- else zapLamIdInfo b
- -- NB: we count all the args incl type args
- -- so we must count all the binders (incl type lambdas)
+ zapped_bndrs | need_to_zap = map zap bndrs
+ | otherwise = bndrs
+
+ need_to_zap = any zappable_bndr (drop n_args bndrs)
+ n_args = countArgs cont
+ -- NB: countArgs counts all the args (incl type args)
+ -- and likewise drop counts all binders (incl type lambdas)
+
+ zappable_bndr b = isId b && not (isOneShotBndr b)
+ zap b | isTyCoVar b = b
+ | otherwise = zapLamIdInfo b
simplExprF' env (Type ty) cont
= ASSERT( contIsRhsOrArg cont )
- do { ty' <- simplType env ty
+ do { ty' <- simplCoercion env ty
; rebuild env (Type ty') cont }
-simplExprF' env (Case scrut bndr case_ty alts) cont
- | not (switchIsOn (getSwitchChecker env) NoCaseOfCase)
+simplExprF' env (Case scrut bndr _ alts) cont
+ | sm_case_case (getMode env)
= -- Simplify the scrutinee with a Select continuation
simplExprF env scrut (Select NoDup bndr alts env cont)
| otherwise
= -- If case-of-case is off, simply simplify the case expression
-- in a vanilla Stop context, and rebuild the result around it
- do { case_expr' <- simplExprC env scrut case_cont
+ do { case_expr' <- simplExprC env scrut
+ (Select NoDup bndr alts env mkBoringStop)
; rebuild env case_expr' cont }
- where
- case_cont = Select NoDup bndr alts env (mkBoringStop case_ty')
- case_ty' = substTy env case_ty -- c.f. defn of simplExpr
simplExprF' env (Let (Rec pairs) body) cont
- = do { env <- simplRecBndrs env (map fst pairs)
+ = do { env' <- simplRecBndrs env (map fst pairs)
-- NB: bndrs' don't have unfoldings or rules
-- We add them as we go down
- ; env <- simplRecBind env NotTopLevel pairs
- ; simplExprF env body cont }
+ ; env'' <- simplRecBind env' NotTopLevel pairs
+ ; simplExprF env'' body cont }
simplExprF' env (Let (NonRec bndr rhs) body) cont
= simplNonRecE env bndr (rhs, env) ([], body) cont
-- Kept monadic just so we can do the seqType
simplType env ty
= -- pprTrace "simplType" (ppr ty $$ ppr (seTvSubst env)) $
- seqType new_ty `seq` return new_ty
+ seqType new_ty `seq` return new_ty
where
new_ty = substTy env ty
+
+---------------------------------
+simplCoercion :: SimplEnv -> InType -> SimplM OutType
+-- The InType isn't *necessarily* a coercion, but it might be
+-- (in a type application, say) and optCoercion is a no-op on types
+simplCoercion env co
+ = seqType new_co `seq` return new_co
+ where
+ new_co = optCoercion (getTvSubst env) co
\end{code}
-- At this point the substitution in the SimplEnv should be irrelevant
-- only the in-scope set and floats should matter
rebuild env expr cont
- = -- pprTrace "rebuild" (ppr expr $$ ppr cont $$ ppr (seFloats env)) $
- case cont of
+ = case cont of
Stop {} -> return (env, expr)
CoerceIt co cont -> rebuild env (mkCoerce co expr) cont
Select _ bndr alts se cont -> rebuildCase (se `setFloats` env) expr bndr alts cont
- StrictArg fun ty _ info cont -> rebuildCall env (fun `App` expr) (funResultTy ty) info cont
+ StrictArg info _ cont -> rebuildCall env (info `addArgTo` expr) cont
StrictBind b bs body se cont -> do { env' <- simplNonRecX (se `setFloats` env) b expr
; simplLam env' bs body cont }
- ApplyTo _ arg se cont -> do { arg' <- simplExpr (se `setInScope` env) arg
+ ApplyTo dup_flag arg se cont -- See Note [Avoid redundant simplification]
+ | isSimplified dup_flag -> rebuild env (App expr arg) cont
+ | otherwise -> do { arg' <- simplExpr (se `setInScope` env) arg
; rebuild env (App expr arg') cont }
\end{code}
\begin{code}
simplCast :: SimplEnv -> InExpr -> Coercion -> SimplCont
-> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
-simplCast env body co cont
- = do { co' <- simplType env co
- ; simplExprF env body (addCoerce co' cont) }
+simplCast env body co0 cont0
+ = do { co1 <- simplCoercion env co0
+ ; simplExprF env body (addCoerce co1 cont0) }
where
addCoerce co cont = add_coerce co (coercionKind co) cont
- add_coerce co (s1, k1) cont -- co :: ty~ty
+ add_coerce _co (s1, k1) cont -- co :: ty~ty
| s1 `coreEqType` k1 = cont -- is a no-op
- add_coerce co1 (s1, k2) (CoerceIt co2 cont)
- | (l1, t1) <- coercionKind co2
- -- coerce T1 S1 (coerce S1 K1 e)
+ add_coerce co1 (s1, _k2) (CoerceIt co2 cont)
+ | (_l1, t1) <- coercionKind co2
+ -- e |> (g1 :: S1~L) |> (g2 :: L~T1)
-- ==>
- -- e, if T1=K1
- -- coerce T1 K1 e, otherwise
+ -- e, if S1=T1
+ -- e |> (g1 . g2 :: S1~T1) otherwise
--
-- For example, in the initial form of a worker
-- we may find (coerce T (coerce S (\x.e))) y
, s1 `coreEqType` t1 = cont -- The coerces cancel out
| otherwise = CoerceIt (mkTransCoercion co1 co2) cont
- add_coerce co (s1s2, t1t2) (ApplyTo dup (Type arg_ty) arg_se cont)
- -- (f `cast` g) ty ---> (f ty) `cast` (g @ ty)
- -- This implements the PushT rule from the paper
+ add_coerce co (s1s2, _t1t2) (ApplyTo dup (Type arg_ty) arg_se cont)
+ -- (f |> g) ty ---> (f ty) |> (g @ ty)
+ -- This implements the PushT and PushC rules from the paper
| Just (tyvar,_) <- splitForAllTy_maybe s1s2
- , not (isCoVar tyvar)
- = ApplyTo dup (Type ty') (zapSubstEnv env) (addCoerce (mkInstCoercion co ty') cont)
+ = let
+ (new_arg_ty, new_cast)
+ | isCoVar tyvar = (new_arg_co, mkCselRCoercion co) -- PushC rule
+ | otherwise = (ty', mkInstCoercion co ty') -- PushT rule
+ in
+ ApplyTo dup (Type new_arg_ty) (zapSubstEnv arg_se) (addCoerce new_cast cont)
where
- ty' = substTy arg_se arg_ty
+ ty' = substTy (arg_se `setInScope` env) arg_ty
+ new_arg_co = mkCsel1Coercion co `mkTransCoercion`
+ ty' `mkTransCoercion`
+ mkSymCoercion (mkCsel2Coercion co)
- -- ToDo: the PushC rule is not implemented at all
-
- add_coerce co (s1s2, t1t2) (ApplyTo dup arg arg_se cont)
+ add_coerce co (s1s2, _t1t2) (ApplyTo dup arg arg_se cont)
| not (isTypeArg arg) -- This implements the Push rule from the paper
, isFunTy s1s2 -- t1t2 must be a function type, becuase it's applied
- -- co : s1s2 :=: t1t2
- -- (coerce (T1->T2) (S1->S2) F) E
+ -- (e |> (g :: s1s2 ~ t1->t2)) f
-- ===>
- -- coerce T2 S2 (F (coerce S1 T1 E))
+ -- (e (f |> (arg g :: t1~s1))
+ -- |> (res g :: s2->t2)
--
- -- t1t2 must be a function type, T1->T2, because it's applied
+ -- t1t2 must be a function type, t1->t2, because it's applied
-- to something but s1s2 might conceivably not be
--
-- When we build the ApplyTo we can't mix the out-types
-- But it isn't a common case.
--
-- Example of use: Trac #995
- = ApplyTo dup new_arg (zapSubstEnv env) (addCoerce co2 cont)
+ = ApplyTo dup new_arg (zapSubstEnv arg_se) (addCoerce co2 cont)
where
- -- we split coercion t1->t2 :=: s1->s2 into t1 :=: s1 and
- -- t2 :=: s2 with left and right on the curried form:
- -- (->) t1 t2 :=: (->) s1 s2
+ -- we split coercion t1->t2 ~ s1->s2 into t1 ~ s1 and
+ -- t2 ~ s2 with left and right on the curried form:
+ -- (->) t1 t2 ~ (->) s1 s2
[co1, co2] = decomposeCo 2 co
new_arg = mkCoerce (mkSymCoercion co1) arg'
- arg' = substExpr arg_se arg
+ arg' = substExpr (text "move-cast") (arg_se `setInScope` env) arg
add_coerce co _ cont = CoerceIt co cont
\end{code}
%* *
%************************************************************************
+Note [Zap unfolding when beta-reducing]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Lambda-bound variables can have stable unfoldings, such as
+ $j = \x. \b{Unf=Just x}. e
+See Note [Case binders and join points] below; the unfolding for lets
+us optimise e better. However when we beta-reduce it we want to
+revert to using the actual value, otherwise we can end up in the
+stupid situation of
+ let x = blah in
+ let b{Unf=Just x} = y
+ in ...b...
+Here it'd be far better to drop the unfolding and use the actual RHS.
+
\begin{code}
simplLam :: SimplEnv -> [InId] -> InExpr -> SimplCont
-> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
simplLam env [] body cont = simplExprF env body cont
- -- Type-beta reduction
-simplLam env (bndr:bndrs) body (ApplyTo _ (Type ty_arg) arg_se cont)
- = ASSERT( isTyVar bndr )
- do { tick (BetaReduction bndr)
- ; ty_arg' <- simplType (arg_se `setInScope` env) ty_arg
- ; simplLam (extendTvSubst env bndr ty_arg') bndrs body cont }
-
- -- Ordinary beta reduction
+ -- Beta reduction
simplLam env (bndr:bndrs) body (ApplyTo _ arg arg_se cont)
= do { tick (BetaReduction bndr)
- ; simplNonRecE env bndr (arg, arg_se) (bndrs, body) cont }
+ ; simplNonRecE env (zap_unfolding bndr) (arg, arg_se) (bndrs, body) cont }
+ where
+ zap_unfolding bndr -- See Note [Zap unfolding when beta-reducing]
+ | isId bndr, isStableUnfolding (realIdUnfolding bndr)
+ = setIdUnfolding bndr NoUnfolding
+ | otherwise = bndr
-- Not enough args, so there are real lambdas left to put in the result
simplLam env bndrs body cont
- = do { (env, bndrs') <- simplLamBndrs env bndrs
- ; body' <- simplExpr env body
- ; new_lam <- mkLam bndrs' body'
- ; rebuild env new_lam cont }
+ = do { (env', bndrs') <- simplLamBndrs env bndrs
+ ; body' <- simplExpr env' body
+ ; new_lam <- mkLam env' bndrs' body'
+ ; rebuild env' new_lam cont }
------------------
simplNonRecE :: SimplEnv
- -> InId -- The binder
+ -> InBndr -- The binder
-> (InExpr, SimplEnv) -- Rhs of binding (or arg of lambda)
- -> ([InId], InExpr) -- Body of the let/lambda
+ -> ([InBndr], InExpr) -- Body of the let/lambda
-- \xs.e
-> SimplCont
-> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
-- Why? Because of the binder-occ-info-zapping done before
-- the call to simplLam in simplExprF (Lam ...)
+ -- First deal with type applications and type lets
+ -- (/\a. e) (Type ty) and (let a = Type ty in e)
+simplNonRecE env bndr (Type ty_arg, rhs_se) (bndrs, body) cont
+ = ASSERT( isTyCoVar bndr )
+ do { ty_arg' <- simplType (rhs_se `setInScope` env) ty_arg
+ ; simplLam (extendTvSubst env bndr ty_arg') bndrs body cont }
+
simplNonRecE env bndr (rhs, rhs_se) (bndrs, body) cont
| preInlineUnconditionally env NotTopLevel bndr rhs
= do { tick (PreInlineUnconditionally bndr)
- ; simplLam (extendIdSubst env bndr (mkContEx rhs_se rhs)) bndrs body cont }
+ ; -- pprTrace "preInlineUncond" (ppr bndr <+> ppr rhs) $
+ simplLam (extendIdSubst env bndr (mkContEx rhs_se rhs)) bndrs body cont }
| isStrictId bndr
= do { simplExprF (rhs_se `setFloats` env) rhs
(StrictBind bndr bndrs body env cont) }
| otherwise
- = do { (env1, bndr1) <- simplNonRecBndr env bndr
+ = ASSERT( not (isTyCoVar bndr) )
+ do { (env1, bndr1) <- simplNonRecBndr env bndr
; let (env2, bndr2) = addBndrRules env1 bndr bndr1
; env3 <- simplLazyBind env2 NotTopLevel NonRecursive bndr bndr2 rhs rhs_se
; simplLam env3 bndrs body cont }
\begin{code}
-- Hack alert: we only distinguish subsumed cost centre stacks for the
-- purposes of inlining. All other CCCSs are mapped to currentCCS.
+simplNote :: SimplEnv -> Note -> CoreExpr -> SimplCont
+ -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
simplNote env (SCC cc) e cont
+ | pushCCisNop cc (getEnclosingCC env) -- scc "f" (...(scc "f" e)...)
+ = simplExprF env e cont -- ==> scc "f" (...e...)
+ | otherwise
= do { e' <- simplExpr (setEnclosingCC env currentCCS) e
; rebuild env (mkSCC cc e') cont }
--- See notes with SimplMonad.inlineMode
-simplNote env InlineMe e cont
- | Just (inside, outside) <- splitInlineCont cont -- Boring boring continuation; see notes above
- = do { -- Don't inline inside an INLINE expression
- e' <- simplExprC (setMode inlineMode env) e inside
- ; rebuild env (mkInlineMe e') outside }
-
- | otherwise -- Dissolve the InlineMe note if there's
- -- an interesting context of any kind to combine with
- -- (even a type application -- anything except Stop)
- = simplExprF env e cont
-
-simplNote env (CoreNote s) e cont = do
- e' <- simplExpr env e
- rebuild env (Note (CoreNote s) e') cont
+simplNote env (CoreNote s) e cont
+ = do { e' <- simplExpr env e
+ ; rebuild env (Note (CoreNote s) e') cont }
\end{code}
%************************************************************************
%* *
-\subsection{Dealing with calls}
+ Variables
%* *
%************************************************************************
\begin{code}
-simplVar env var cont
+simplVar :: SimplEnv -> InVar -> SimplM OutExpr
+-- Look up an InVar in the environment
+simplVar env var
+ | isTyCoVar var
+ = return (Type (substTyVar env var))
+ | otherwise
+ = case substId env var of
+ DoneId var1 -> return (Var var1)
+ DoneEx e -> return e
+ ContEx tvs ids e -> simplExpr (setSubstEnv env tvs ids) e
+
+simplVarF :: SimplEnv -> InId -> SimplCont -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
+simplVarF env var cont
= case substId env var of
DoneEx e -> simplExprF (zapSubstEnv env) e cont
ContEx tvs ids e -> simplExprF (setSubstEnv env tvs ids) e cont
- DoneId var1 -> completeCall (zapSubstEnv env) var1 cont
+ DoneId var1 -> completeCall env var1 cont
-- Note [zapSubstEnv]
-- The template is already simplified, so don't re-substitute.
-- This is VITAL. Consider
---------------------------------------------------------
-- Dealing with a call site
+completeCall :: SimplEnv -> Id -> SimplCont -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
completeCall env var cont
- = do { dflags <- getDOptsSmpl
- ; let (args,call_cont) = contArgs cont
+ = do { ------------- Try inlining ----------------
+ dflags <- getDOptsSmpl
+ ; let (lone_variable, arg_infos, call_cont) = contArgs cont
-- The args are OutExprs, obtained by *lazily* substituting
-- in the args found in cont. These args are only examined
-- to limited depth (unless a rule fires). But we must do
-- the substitution; rule matching on un-simplified args would
-- be bogus
- ------------- First try rules ----------------
- -- Do this before trying inlining. Some functions have
- -- rules *and* are strict; in this case, we don't want to
- -- inline the wrapper of the non-specialised thing; better
- -- to call the specialised thing instead.
- --
- -- We used to use the black-listing mechanism to ensure that inlining of
- -- the wrapper didn't occur for things that have specialisations till a
- -- later phase, so but now we just try RULES first
- --
- -- Note [Rules for recursive functions]
- -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- -- You might think that we shouldn't apply rules for a loop breaker:
- -- doing so might give rise to an infinite loop, because a RULE is
- -- rather like an extra equation for the function:
- -- RULE: f (g x) y = x+y
- -- Eqn: f a y = a-y
- --
- -- But it's too drastic to disable rules for loop breakers.
- -- Even the foldr/build rule would be disabled, because foldr
- -- is recursive, and hence a loop breaker:
- -- foldr k z (build g) = g k z
- -- So it's up to the programmer: rules can cause divergence
- ; rules <- getRules
- ; let in_scope = getInScope env
- maybe_rule = case activeRule dflags env of
- Nothing -> Nothing -- No rules apply
- Just act_fn -> lookupRule act_fn in_scope
- rules var args
- ; case maybe_rule of {
- Just (rule, rule_rhs) -> do
- tick (RuleFired (ru_name rule))
- (if dopt Opt_D_dump_rule_firings dflags then
- pprTrace "Rule fired" (vcat [
- text "Rule:" <+> ftext (ru_name rule),
- text "Before:" <+> ppr var <+> sep (map pprParendExpr args),
- text "After: " <+> pprCoreExpr rule_rhs,
- text "Cont: " <+> ppr call_cont])
- else
- id) $
- simplExprF env rule_rhs (dropArgs (ruleArity rule) cont)
- -- The ruleArity says how many args the rule consumed
-
- ; Nothing -> do -- No rules
-
- ------------- Next try inlining ----------------
- { let arg_infos = [interestingArg arg | arg <- args, isValArg arg]
- n_val_args = length arg_infos
- interesting_cont = interestingCallContext call_cont
- active_inline = activeInline env var
- maybe_inline = callSiteInline dflags active_inline var
- (null args) arg_infos interesting_cont
+ n_val_args = length arg_infos
+ interesting_cont = interestingCallContext call_cont
+ unfolding = activeUnfolding env var
+ maybe_inline = callSiteInline dflags var unfolding
+ lone_variable arg_infos interesting_cont
; case maybe_inline of {
- Just unfolding -- There is an inlining!
+ Just expr -- There is an inlining!
-> do { tick (UnfoldingDone var)
- ; (if dopt Opt_D_dump_inlinings dflags then
- pprTrace ("Inlining done" ++ showSDoc (ppr var)) (vcat [
- text "Before:" <+> ppr var <+> sep (map pprParendExpr args),
- text "Inlined fn: " <+> nest 2 (ppr unfolding),
- text "Cont: " <+> ppr call_cont])
- else
- id)
- simplExprF env unfolding cont }
-
- ; Nothing -> -- No inlining!
-
- ------------- No inlining! ----------------
- -- Next, look for rules or specialisations that match
- --
- rebuildCall env (Var var) (idType var)
- (mkArgInfo var n_val_args call_cont) cont
- }}}}
+ ; trace_inline dflags expr cont $
+ simplExprF (zapSubstEnv env) expr cont }
+
+ ; Nothing -> do -- No inlining!
+
+ { rule_base <- getSimplRules
+ ; let info = mkArgInfo var (getRules rule_base var) n_val_args call_cont
+ ; rebuildCall env info cont
+ }}}
+ where
+ trace_inline dflags unfolding cont stuff
+ | not (dopt Opt_D_dump_inlinings dflags) = stuff
+ | not (dopt Opt_D_verbose_core2core dflags)
+ = if isExternalName (idName var) then
+ pprDefiniteTrace "Inlining done:" (ppr var) stuff
+ else stuff
+ | otherwise
+ = pprDefiniteTrace ("Inlining done: " ++ showSDoc (ppr var))
+ (vcat [text "Inlined fn: " <+> nest 2 (ppr unfolding),
+ text "Cont: " <+> ppr cont])
+ stuff
rebuildCall :: SimplEnv
- -> OutExpr -> OutType -- Function and its type
-> ArgInfo
-> SimplCont
-> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
-rebuildCall env fun fun_ty (ArgInfo { ai_strs = [] }) cont
+rebuildCall env (ArgInfo { ai_fun = fun, ai_args = rev_args, ai_strs = [] }) cont
-- When we run out of strictness args, it means
-- that the call is definitely bottom; see SimplUtils.mkArgInfo
-- Then we want to discard the entire strict continuation. E.g.
-- the continuation, leaving just the bottoming expression. But the
-- type might not be right, so we may have to add a coerce.
| not (contIsTrivial cont) -- Only do this if there is a non-trivial
- = return (env, mk_coerce fun) -- contination to discard, else we do it
+ = return (env, mk_coerce res) -- contination to discard, else we do it
where -- again and again!
- cont_ty = contResultType cont
- co = mkUnsafeCoercion fun_ty cont_ty
- mk_coerce expr | cont_ty `coreEqType` fun_ty = fun
- | otherwise = mkCoerce co fun
-
-rebuildCall env fun fun_ty info (ApplyTo _ (Type arg_ty) se cont)
- = do { ty' <- simplType (se `setInScope` env) arg_ty
- ; rebuildCall env (fun `App` Type ty') (applyTy fun_ty ty') info cont }
-
-rebuildCall env fun fun_ty
- (ArgInfo { ai_rules = has_rules, ai_strs = str:strs, ai_discs = disc:discs })
- (ApplyTo _ arg arg_se cont)
- | str || isStrictType arg_ty -- Strict argument
+ res = mkApps (Var fun) (reverse rev_args)
+ res_ty = exprType res
+ cont_ty = contResultType env res_ty cont
+ co = mkUnsafeCoercion res_ty cont_ty
+ mk_coerce expr | cont_ty `coreEqType` res_ty = expr
+ | otherwise = mkCoerce co expr
+
+rebuildCall env info (ApplyTo _ (Type arg_ty) se cont)
+ = do { ty' <- simplCoercion (se `setInScope` env) arg_ty
+ ; rebuildCall env (info `addArgTo` Type ty') cont }
+
+rebuildCall env info@(ArgInfo { ai_encl = encl_rules
+ , ai_strs = str:strs, ai_discs = disc:discs })
+ (ApplyTo dup_flag arg arg_se cont)
+ | isSimplified dup_flag -- See Note [Avoid redundant simplification]
+ = rebuildCall env (addArgTo info' arg) cont
+
+ | str -- Strict argument
= -- pprTrace "Strict Arg" (ppr arg $$ ppr (seIdSubst env) $$ ppr (seInScope env)) $
simplExprF (arg_se `setFloats` env) arg
- (StrictArg fun fun_ty cci arg_info' cont)
+ (StrictArg info' cci cont)
-- Note [Shadowing]
| otherwise -- Lazy argument
-- have to be very careful about bogus strictness through
-- floating a demanded let.
= do { arg' <- simplExprC (arg_se `setInScope` env) arg
- (mkLazyArgStop arg_ty cci)
- ; rebuildCall env (fun `App` arg') res_ty arg_info' cont }
+ (mkLazyArgStop cci)
+ ; rebuildCall env (addArgTo info' arg') cont }
where
- (arg_ty, res_ty) = splitFunTy fun_ty
- arg_info' = ArgInfo { ai_rules = has_rules, ai_strs = strs, ai_discs = discs }
- cci | has_rules || disc > 0 = ArgCtxt has_rules disc -- Be keener here
- | otherwise = BoringCtxt -- Nothing interesting
-
-rebuildCall env fun fun_ty info cont
- = rebuild env fun cont
+ info' = info { ai_strs = strs, ai_discs = discs }
+ cci | encl_rules || disc > 0 = ArgCtxt encl_rules -- Be keener here
+ | otherwise = BoringCtxt -- Nothing interesting
+
+rebuildCall env (ArgInfo { ai_fun = fun, ai_args = rev_args, ai_rules = rules }) cont
+ = do { -- We've accumulated a simplified call in <fun,rev_args>
+ -- so try rewrite rules; see Note [RULEs apply to simplified arguments]
+ -- See also Note [Rules for recursive functions]
+ ; let args = reverse rev_args
+ env' = zapSubstEnv env
+ ; mb_rule <- tryRules env rules fun args cont
+ ; case mb_rule of {
+ Just (n_args, rule_rhs) -> simplExprF env' rule_rhs $
+ pushSimplifiedArgs env' (drop n_args args) cont ;
+ -- n_args says how many args the rule consumed
+ ; Nothing -> rebuild env (mkApps (Var fun) args) cont -- No rules
+ } }
\end{code}
+Note [RULES apply to simplified arguments]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+It's very desirable to try RULES once the arguments have been simplified, because
+doing so ensures that rule cascades work in one pass. Consider
+ {-# RULES g (h x) = k x
+ f (k x) = x #-}
+ ...f (g (h x))...
+Then we want to rewrite (g (h x)) to (k x) and only then try f's rules. If
+we match f's rules against the un-simplified RHS, it won't match. This
+makes a particularly big difference when superclass selectors are involved:
+ op ($p1 ($p2 (df d)))
+We want all this to unravel in one sweeep.
+
+Note [Avoid redundant simplification]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Because RULES apply to simplified arguments, there's a danger of repeatedly
+simplifying already-simplified arguments. An important example is that of
+ (>>=) d e1 e2
+Here e1, e2 are simplified before the rule is applied, but don't really
+participate in the rule firing. So we mark them as Simplified to avoid
+re-simplifying them.
+
Note [Shadowing]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This part of the simplifier may break the no-shadowing invariant
discard the entire application and replace it with (error "foo"). Getting
all this at once is TOO HARD!
+
%************************************************************************
%* *
- Rebuilding a cse expression
+ Rewrite rules
%* *
%************************************************************************
-Blob of helper functions for the "case-of-something-else" situation.
-
\begin{code}
----------------------------------------------------------
--- Eliminate the case if possible
-
-rebuildCase :: SimplEnv
- -> OutExpr -- Scrutinee
- -> InId -- Case binder
- -> [InAlt] -- Alternatives (inceasing order)
- -> SimplCont
- -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
-
---------------------------------------------------
--- 1. Eliminate the case if there's a known constructor
---------------------------------------------------
-
-rebuildCase env scrut case_bndr alts cont
- | Just (con,args) <- exprIsConApp_maybe scrut
- -- Works when the scrutinee is a variable with a known unfolding
- -- as well as when it's an explicit constructor application
- = knownCon env scrut (DataAlt con) args case_bndr alts cont
-
- | Lit lit <- scrut -- No need for same treatment as constructors
- -- because literals are inlined more vigorously
- = knownCon env scrut (LitAlt lit) [] case_bndr alts cont
-
-
---------------------------------------------------
--- 2. Eliminate the case if scrutinee is evaluated
---------------------------------------------------
-
-rebuildCase env scrut case_bndr [(con,bndrs,rhs)] cont
- -- See if we can get rid of the case altogether
- -- See the extensive notes on case-elimination above
- -- mkCase made sure that if all the alternatives are equal,
- -- then there is now only one (DEFAULT) rhs
- | all isDeadBinder bndrs -- bndrs are [InId]
-
- -- Check that the scrutinee can be let-bound instead of case-bound
- , exprOkForSpeculation scrut
- -- OK not to evaluate it
- -- This includes things like (==# a# b#)::Bool
- -- so that we simplify
- -- case ==# a# b# of { True -> x; False -> x }
- -- to just
- -- x
- -- This particular example shows up in default methods for
- -- comparision operations (e.g. in (>=) for Int.Int32)
- || exprIsHNF scrut -- It's already evaluated
- || var_demanded_later scrut -- It'll be demanded later
-
--- || not opt_SimplPedanticBottoms) -- Or we don't care!
--- We used to allow improving termination by discarding cases, unless -fpedantic-bottoms was on,
--- but that breaks badly for the dataToTag# primop, which relies on a case to evaluate
--- its argument: case x of { y -> dataToTag# y }
--- Here we must *not* discard the case, because dataToTag# just fetches the tag from
--- the info pointer. So we'll be pedantic all the time, and see if that gives any
--- other problems
--- Also we don't want to discard 'seq's
- = do { tick (CaseElim case_bndr)
- ; env <- simplNonRecX env case_bndr scrut
- ; simplExprF env rhs cont }
+tryRules :: SimplEnv -> [CoreRule]
+ -> Id -> [OutExpr] -> SimplCont
+ -> SimplM (Maybe (Arity, CoreExpr)) -- The arity is the number of
+ -- args consumed by the rule
+tryRules env rules fn args call_cont
+ | null rules
+ = return Nothing
+ | otherwise
+ = do { dflags <- getDOptsSmpl
+ ; case activeRule dflags env of {
+ Nothing -> return Nothing ; -- No rules apply
+ Just act_fn ->
+ case lookupRule act_fn (getUnfoldingInRuleMatch env) (getInScope env) fn args rules of {
+ Nothing -> return Nothing ; -- No rule matches
+ Just (rule, rule_rhs) ->
+
+ do { tick (RuleFired (ru_name rule))
+ ; trace_dump dflags rule rule_rhs $
+ return (Just (ruleArity rule, rule_rhs)) }}}}
where
- -- The case binder is going to be evaluated later,
- -- and the scrutinee is a simple variable
- var_demanded_later (Var v) = isStrictDmd (idNewDemandInfo case_bndr)
- && not (isTickBoxOp v)
- -- ugly hack; covering this case is what
- -- exprOkForSpeculation was intended for.
- var_demanded_later other = False
-
-
---------------------------------------------------
--- 3. Catch-all case
---------------------------------------------------
-
-rebuildCase env scrut case_bndr alts cont
- = do { -- Prepare the continuation;
- -- The new subst_env is in place
- (env, dup_cont, nodup_cont) <- prepareCaseCont env alts cont
-
- -- Simplify the alternatives
- ; (scrut', case_bndr', alts') <- simplAlts env scrut case_bndr alts dup_cont
- ; let res_ty' = contResultType dup_cont
- ; case_expr <- mkCase scrut' case_bndr' res_ty' alts'
-
- -- Notice that rebuildDone returns the in-scope set from env, not alt_env
- -- The case binder *not* scope over the whole returned case-expression
- ; rebuild env case_expr nodup_cont }
+ trace_dump dflags rule rule_rhs stuff
+ | not (dopt Opt_D_dump_rule_firings dflags)
+ , not (dopt Opt_D_dump_rule_rewrites dflags) = stuff
+
+ | not (dopt Opt_D_dump_rule_rewrites dflags)
+ = pprDefiniteTrace "Rule fired:" (ftext (ru_name rule)) stuff
+
+ | otherwise
+ = pprDefiniteTrace "Rule fired"
+ (vcat [text "Rule:" <+> ftext (ru_name rule),
+ text "Before:" <+> hang (ppr fn) 2 (sep (map pprParendExpr args)),
+ text "After: " <+> pprCoreExpr rule_rhs,
+ text "Cont: " <+> ppr call_cont])
+ stuff
\end{code}
-simplCaseBinder checks whether the scrutinee is a variable, v. If so,
-try to eliminate uses of v in the RHSs in favour of case_bndr; that
-way, there's a chance that v will now only be used once, and hence
-inlined.
-
-Note [no-case-of-case]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-There is a time we *don't* want to do that, namely when
--fno-case-of-case is on. This happens in the first simplifier pass,
-and enhances full laziness. Here's the bad case:
- f = \ y -> ...(case x of I# v -> ...(case x of ...) ... )
-If we eliminate the inner case, we trap it inside the I# v -> arm,
-which might prevent some full laziness happening. I've seen this
-in action in spectral/cichelli/Prog.hs:
- [(m,n) | m <- [1..max], n <- [1..max]]
-Hence the check for NoCaseOfCase.
-
-Note [Suppressing the case binder-swap]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-There is another situation when it might make sense to suppress the
-case-expression binde-swap. If we have
-
- case x of w1 { DEFAULT -> case x of w2 { A -> e1; B -> e2 }
- ...other cases .... }
-
-We'll perform the binder-swap for the outer case, giving
-
- case x of w1 { DEFAULT -> case w1 of w2 { A -> e1; B -> e2 }
- ...other cases .... }
-
-But there is no point in doing it for the inner case, because w1 can't
-be inlined anyway. Furthermore, doing the case-swapping involves
-zapping w2's occurrence info (see paragraphs that follow), and that
-forces us to bind w2 when doing case merging. So we get
-
- case x of w1 { A -> let w2 = w1 in e1
- B -> let w2 = w1 in e2
- ...other cases .... }
-
-This is plain silly in the common case where w2 is dead.
-
-Even so, I can't see a good way to implement this idea. I tried
-not doing the binder-swap if the scrutinee was already evaluated
-but that failed big-time:
-
- data T = MkT !Int
-
- case v of w { MkT x ->
- case x of x1 { I# y1 ->
- case x of x2 { I# y2 -> ...
-
-Notice that because MkT is strict, x is marked "evaluated". But to
-eliminate the last case, we must either make sure that x (as well as
-x1) has unfolding MkT y1. THe straightforward thing to do is to do
-the binder-swap. So this whole note is a no-op.
-
-Note [zapOccInfo]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-If we replace the scrutinee, v, by tbe case binder, then we have to nuke
-any occurrence info (eg IAmDead) in the case binder, because the
-case-binder now effectively occurs whenever v does. AND we have to do
-the same for the pattern-bound variables! Example:
-
- (case x of { (a,b) -> a }) (case x of { (p,q) -> q })
-
-Here, b and p are dead. But when we move the argment inside the first
-case RHS, and eliminate the second case, we get
-
- case x of { (a,b) -> a b }
-
-Urk! b is alive! Reason: the scrutinee was a variable, and case elimination
-happened.
-
-Indeed, this can happen anytime the case binder isn't dead:
- case <any> of x { (a,b) ->
- case x of { (p,q) -> p } }
-Here (a,b) both look dead, but come alive after the inner case is eliminated.
-The point is that we bring into the envt a binding
- let x = (a,b)
-after the outer case, and that makes (a,b) alive. At least we do unless
-the case binder is guaranteed dead.
-
-Note [Case of cast]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider case (v `cast` co) of x { I# ->
- ... (case (v `cast` co) of {...}) ...
-We'd like to eliminate the inner case. We can get this neatly by
-arranging that inside the outer case we add the unfolding
- v |-> x `cast` (sym co)
-to v. Then we should inline v at the inner case, cancel the casts, and away we go
-
-Note [Improving seq]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Consider
- type family F :: * -> *
- type instance F Int = Int
-
- ... case e of x { DEFAULT -> rhs } ...
-
-where x::F Int. Then we'd like to rewrite (F Int) to Int, getting
-
- case e `cast` co of x'::Int
- I# x# -> let x = x' `cast` sym co
- in rhs
+Note [Rules for recursive functions]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+You might think that we shouldn't apply rules for a loop breaker:
+doing so might give rise to an infinite loop, because a RULE is
+rather like an extra equation for the function:
+ RULE: f (g x) y = x+y
+ Eqn: f a y = a-y
-so that 'rhs' can take advantage of the form of x'. Notice that Note
-[Case of cast] may then apply to the result.
+But it's too drastic to disable rules for loop breakers.
+Even the foldr/build rule would be disabled, because foldr
+is recursive, and hence a loop breaker:
+ foldr k z (build g) = g k z
+So it's up to the programmer: rules can cause divergence
-This showed up in Roman's experiments. Example:
- foo :: F Int -> Int -> Int
- foo t n = t `seq` bar n
- where
- bar 0 = 0
- bar n = bar (n - case t of TI i -> i)
-Here we'd like to avoid repeated evaluating t inside the loop, by
-taking advantage of the `seq`.
-At one point I did transformation in LiberateCase, but it's more robust here.
-(Otherwise, there's a danger that we'll simply drop the 'seq' altogether, before
-LiberateCase gets to see it.)
+%************************************************************************
+%* *
+ Rebuilding a case expression
+%* *
+%************************************************************************
Note [Case elimination]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The case-elimination transformation discards redundant case expressions.
Start with a simple situation:
- case x# of ===> e[x#/y#]
+ case x# of ===> let y# = x# in e
y# -> e
(when x#, y# are of primitive type, of course). We can't (in general)
DEFAULT, after which it's an instance of the previous case. This
really only shows up in eliminating error-checking code.
-We also make sure that we deal with this very common case:
+Note that SimplUtils.mkCase combines identical RHSs. So
+
+ case e of ===> case e of DEFAULT -> r
+ True -> r
+ False -> r
+
+Now again the case may be elminated by the CaseElim transformation.
+This includes things like (==# a# b#)::Bool so that we simplify
+ case ==# a# b# of { True -> x; False -> x }
+to just
+ x
+This particular example shows up in default methods for
+comparision operations (e.g. in (>=) for Int.Int32)
+
+Note [CaseElimination: lifted case]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+We also make sure that we deal with this very common case,
+where x has a lifted type:
case e of
x -> ...x...
then we want to inline it. We have to be careful that this doesn't
make the program terminate when it would have diverged before, so we
check that
- - e is already evaluated (it may so if e is a variable)
- - x is used strictly, or
-
-Lastly, the code in SimplUtils.mkCase combines identical RHSs. So
-
- case e of ===> case e of DEFAULT -> r
- True -> r
- False -> r
-
-Now again the case may be elminated by the CaseElim transformation.
+ (a) 'e' is already evaluated (it may so if e is a variable)
+ Specifically we check (exprIsHNF e)
+or
+ (b) the scrutinee is a variable and 'x' is used strictly
+or
+ (c) 'x' is not used at all and e is ok-for-speculation
+
+For the (c), consider
+ case (case a ># b of { True -> (p,q); False -> (q,p) }) of
+ r -> blah
+The scrutinee is ok-for-speculation (it looks inside cases), but we do
+not want to transform to
+ let r = case a ># b of { True -> (p,q); False -> (q,p) }
+ in blah
+because that builds an unnecessary thunk.
Further notes about case elimination
may be a result of 'seq' so we *definitely* don't want to drop those.
I don't really know how to improve this situation.
-
\begin{code}
-simplCaseBinder :: SimplEnv -> OutExpr -> OutId -> [InAlt]
- -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr, OutId)
-simplCaseBinder env scrut case_bndr alts
- = do { (env1, case_bndr1) <- simplBinder env case_bndr
+---------------------------------------------------------
+-- Eliminate the case if possible
- ; fam_envs <- getFamEnvs
- ; (env2, scrut2, case_bndr2) <- improve_seq fam_envs env1 scrut
- case_bndr case_bndr1 alts
- -- Note [Improving seq]
+rebuildCase, reallyRebuildCase
+ :: SimplEnv
+ -> OutExpr -- Scrutinee
+ -> InId -- Case binder
+ -> [InAlt] -- Alternatives (inceasing order)
+ -> SimplCont
+ -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
- ; let (env3, case_bndr3) = improve_case_bndr env2 scrut2 case_bndr2
- -- Note [Case of cast]
+--------------------------------------------------
+-- 1. Eliminate the case if there's a known constructor
+--------------------------------------------------
- ; return (env3, scrut2, case_bndr3) }
+rebuildCase env scrut case_bndr alts cont
+ | Lit lit <- scrut -- No need for same treatment as constructors
+ -- because literals are inlined more vigorously
+ = do { tick (KnownBranch case_bndr)
+ ; case findAlt (LitAlt lit) alts of
+ Nothing -> missingAlt env case_bndr alts cont
+ Just (_, bs, rhs) -> simple_rhs bs rhs }
+
+ | Just (con, ty_args, other_args) <- exprIsConApp_maybe (getUnfoldingInRuleMatch env) scrut
+ -- Works when the scrutinee is a variable with a known unfolding
+ -- as well as when it's an explicit constructor application
+ = do { tick (KnownBranch case_bndr)
+ ; case findAlt (DataAlt con) alts of
+ Nothing -> missingAlt env case_bndr alts cont
+ Just (DEFAULT, bs, rhs) -> simple_rhs bs rhs
+ Just (_, bs, rhs) -> knownCon env scrut con ty_args other_args
+ case_bndr bs rhs cont
+ }
where
+ simple_rhs bs rhs = ASSERT( null bs )
+ do { env' <- simplNonRecX env case_bndr scrut
+ ; simplExprF env' rhs cont }
- improve_seq fam_envs env1 scrut case_bndr case_bndr1 [(DEFAULT,_,_)]
- | Just (co, ty2) <- topNormaliseType fam_envs (idType case_bndr1)
- = do { case_bndr2 <- newId FSLIT("nt") ty2
- ; let rhs = DoneEx (Var case_bndr2 `Cast` mkSymCoercion co)
- env2 = extendIdSubst env1 case_bndr rhs
- ; return (env2, scrut `Cast` co, case_bndr2) }
- improve_seq fam_envs env1 scrut case_bndr case_bndr1 alts
- = return (env1, scrut, case_bndr1)
+--------------------------------------------------
+-- 2. Eliminate the case if scrutinee is evaluated
+--------------------------------------------------
+rebuildCase env scrut case_bndr [(_, bndrs, rhs)] cont
+ -- See if we can get rid of the case altogether
+ -- See Note [Case elimination]
+ -- mkCase made sure that if all the alternatives are equal,
+ -- then there is now only one (DEFAULT) rhs
+ | all isDeadBinder bndrs -- bndrs are [InId]
- improve_case_bndr env scrut case_bndr
- | switchIsOn (getSwitchChecker env) NoCaseOfCase
- -- See Note [no-case-of-case]
- = (env, case_bndr)
+ , if isUnLiftedType (idType case_bndr)
+ then ok_for_spec -- Satisfy the let-binding invariant
+ else elim_lifted
+ = do { tick (CaseElim case_bndr)
+ ; env' <- simplNonRecX env case_bndr scrut
+ -- If case_bndr is deads, simplNonRecX will discard
+ ; simplExprF env' rhs cont }
+ where
+ elim_lifted -- See Note [Case elimination: lifted case]
+ = exprIsHNF scrut
+ || (strict_case_bndr && scrut_is_var scrut)
+ -- The case binder is going to be evaluated later,
+ -- and the scrutinee is a simple variable
- | otherwise -- Failed try; see Note [Suppressing the case binder-swap]
- -- not (isEvaldUnfolding (idUnfolding v))
- = case scrut of
- Var v -> (modifyInScope env1 v case_bndr', case_bndr')
- -- Note about using modifyInScope for v here
- -- We could extend the substitution instead, but it would be
- -- a hack because then the substitution wouldn't be idempotent
- -- any more (v is an OutId). And this does just as well.
+ || (is_plain_seq && ok_for_spec)
+ -- Note: not the same as exprIsHNF
- Cast (Var v) co -> (addBinderUnfolding env1 v rhs, case_bndr')
- where
- rhs = Cast (Var case_bndr') (mkSymCoercion co)
+ ok_for_spec = exprOkForSpeculation scrut
+ is_plain_seq = isDeadBinder case_bndr -- Evaluation *only* for effect
+ strict_case_bndr = isStrictDmd (idDemandInfo case_bndr)
- other -> (env, case_bndr)
- where
- case_bndr' = zapOccInfo case_bndr
- env1 = modifyInScope env case_bndr case_bndr'
+ scrut_is_var (Cast s _) = scrut_is_var s
+ scrut_is_var (Var v) = not (isTickBoxOp v)
+ -- ugly hack; covering this case is what
+ -- exprOkForSpeculation was intended for.
+ scrut_is_var _ = False
-zapOccInfo :: InId -> InId -- See Note [zapOccInfo]
-zapOccInfo b = b `setIdOccInfo` NoOccInfo
-\end{code}
+--------------------------------------------------
+-- 3. Try seq rules; see Note [User-defined RULES for seq] in MkId
+--------------------------------------------------
+rebuildCase env scrut case_bndr alts@[(_, bndrs, rhs)] cont
+ | all isDeadBinder (case_bndr : bndrs) -- So this is just 'seq'
+ = do { let rhs' = substExpr (text "rebuild-case") env rhs
+ out_args = [Type (substTy env (idType case_bndr)),
+ Type (exprType rhs'), scrut, rhs']
+ -- Lazily evaluated, so we don't do most of this
+
+ ; rule_base <- getSimplRules
+ ; mb_rule <- tryRules env (getRules rule_base seqId) seqId out_args cont
+ ; case mb_rule of
+ Just (n_args, res) -> simplExprF (zapSubstEnv env)
+ (mkApps res (drop n_args out_args))
+ cont
+ Nothing -> reallyRebuildCase env scrut case_bndr alts cont }
-simplAlts does two things:
+rebuildCase env scrut case_bndr alts cont
+ = reallyRebuildCase env scrut case_bndr alts cont
-1. Eliminate alternatives that cannot match, including the
- DEFAULT alternative.
+--------------------------------------------------
+-- 3. Catch-all case
+--------------------------------------------------
-2. If the DEFAULT alternative can match only one possible constructor,
- then make that constructor explicit.
- e.g.
- case e of x { DEFAULT -> rhs }
- ===>
- case e of x { (a,b) -> rhs }
- where the type is a single constructor type. This gives better code
- when rhs also scrutinises x or e.
+reallyRebuildCase env scrut case_bndr alts cont
+ = do { -- Prepare the continuation;
+ -- The new subst_env is in place
+ (env', dup_cont, nodup_cont) <- prepareCaseCont env alts cont
-Here "cannot match" includes knowledge from GADTs
+ -- Simplify the alternatives
+ ; (scrut', case_bndr', alts') <- simplAlts env' scrut case_bndr alts dup_cont
+
+ -- Check for empty alternatives
+ ; if null alts' then missingAlt env case_bndr alts cont
+ else do
+ { dflags <- getDOptsSmpl
+ ; case_expr <- mkCase dflags scrut' case_bndr' alts'
+
+ -- Notice that rebuild gets the in-scope set from env', not alt_env
+ -- (which in any case is only build in simplAlts)
+ -- The case binder *not* scope over the whole returned case-expression
+ ; rebuild env' case_expr nodup_cont } }
+\end{code}
-It's a good idea do do this stuff before simplifying the alternatives, to
-avoid simplifying alternatives we know can't happen, and to come up with
-the list of constructors that are handled, to put into the IdInfo of the
-case binder, for use when simplifying the alternatives.
+simplCaseBinder checks whether the scrutinee is a variable, v. If so,
+try to eliminate uses of v in the RHSs in favour of case_bndr; that
+way, there's a chance that v will now only be used once, and hence
+inlined.
-Eliminating the default alternative in (1) isn't so obvious, but it can
-happen:
+Historical note: we use to do the "case binder swap" in the Simplifier
+so there were additional complications if the scrutinee was a variable.
+Now the binder-swap stuff is done in the occurrence analyer; see
+OccurAnal Note [Binder swap].
-data Colour = Red | Green | Blue
+Note [zapOccInfo]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+If the case binder is not dead, then neither are the pattern bound
+variables:
+ case <any> of x { (a,b) ->
+ case x of { (p,q) -> p } }
+Here (a,b) both look dead, but come alive after the inner case is eliminated.
+The point is that we bring into the envt a binding
+ let x = (a,b)
+after the outer case, and that makes (a,b) alive. At least we do unless
+the case binder is guaranteed dead.
-f x = case x of
- Red -> ..
- Green -> ..
- DEFAULT -> h x
+In practice, the scrutinee is almost always a variable, so we pretty
+much always zap the OccInfo of the binders. It doesn't matter much though.
-h y = case y of
- Blue -> ..
- DEFAULT -> [ case y of ... ]
+Note [Improving seq]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Consider
+ type family F :: * -> *
+ type instance F Int = Int
-If we inline h into f, the default case of the inlined h can't happen.
-If we don't notice this, we may end up filtering out *all* the cases
-of the inner case y, which give us nowhere to go!
+ ... case e of x { DEFAULT -> rhs } ...
+where x::F Int. Then we'd like to rewrite (F Int) to Int, getting
+
+ case e `cast` co of x'::Int
+ I# x# -> let x = x' `cast` sym co
+ in rhs
+
+so that 'rhs' can take advantage of the form of x'.
+
+Notice that Note [Case of cast] (in OccurAnal) may then apply to the result.
+
+Nota Bene: We only do the [Improving seq] transformation if the
+case binder 'x' is actually used in the rhs; that is, if the case
+is *not* a *pure* seq.
+ a) There is no point in adding the cast to a pure seq.
+ b) There is a good reason not to: doing so would interfere
+ with seq rules (Note [Built-in RULES for seq] in MkId).
+ In particular, this [Improving seq] thing *adds* a cast
+ while [Built-in RULES for seq] *removes* one, so they
+ just flip-flop.
+
+You might worry about
+ case v of x { __DEFAULT ->
+ ... case (v `cast` co) of y { I# -> ... }}
+This is a pure seq (since x is unused), so [Improving seq] won't happen.
+But it's ok: the simplifier will replace 'v' by 'x' in the rhs to get
+ case v of x { __DEFAULT ->
+ ... case (x `cast` co) of y { I# -> ... }}
+Now the outer case is not a pure seq, so [Improving seq] will happen,
+and then the inner case will disappear.
+
+The need for [Improving seq] showed up in Roman's experiments. Example:
+ foo :: F Int -> Int -> Int
+ foo t n = t `seq` bar n
+ where
+ bar 0 = 0
+ bar n = bar (n - case t of TI i -> i)
+Here we'd like to avoid repeated evaluating t inside the loop, by
+taking advantage of the `seq`.
+
+At one point I did transformation in LiberateCase, but it's more
+robust here. (Otherwise, there's a danger that we'll simply drop the
+'seq' altogether, before LiberateCase gets to see it.)
\begin{code}
simplAlts :: SimplEnv
-> OutExpr
-> InId -- Case binder
- -> [InAlt] -> SimplCont
+ -> [InAlt] -- Non-empty
+ -> SimplCont
-> SimplM (OutExpr, OutId, [OutAlt]) -- Includes the continuation
-- Like simplExpr, this just returns the simplified alternatives;
--- it not return an environment
+-- it does not return an environment
simplAlts env scrut case_bndr alts cont'
- = -- pprTrace "simplAlts" (ppr alts $$ ppr (seIdSubst env)) $
- do { let alt_env = zapFloats env
- ; (alt_env, scrut', case_bndr') <- simplCaseBinder alt_env scrut case_bndr alts
+ = -- pprTrace "simplAlts" (ppr alts $$ ppr (seTvSubst env)) $
+ do { let env0 = zapFloats env
+
+ ; (env1, case_bndr1) <- simplBinder env0 case_bndr
+
+ ; fam_envs <- getFamEnvs
+ ; (alt_env', scrut', case_bndr') <- improveSeq fam_envs env1 scrut
+ case_bndr case_bndr1 alts
- ; (imposs_deflt_cons, in_alts) <- prepareAlts alt_env scrut case_bndr' alts
+ ; (imposs_deflt_cons, in_alts) <- prepareAlts scrut' case_bndr' alts
- ; alts' <- mapM (simplAlt alt_env imposs_deflt_cons case_bndr' cont') in_alts
+ ; let mb_var_scrut = case scrut' of { Var v -> Just v; _ -> Nothing }
+ ; alts' <- mapM (simplAlt alt_env' mb_var_scrut
+ imposs_deflt_cons case_bndr' cont') in_alts
; return (scrut', case_bndr', alts') }
+
+------------------------------------
+improveSeq :: (FamInstEnv, FamInstEnv) -> SimplEnv
+ -> OutExpr -> InId -> OutId -> [InAlt]
+ -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr, OutId)
+-- Note [Improving seq]
+improveSeq fam_envs env scrut case_bndr case_bndr1 [(DEFAULT,_,_)]
+ | not (isDeadBinder case_bndr) -- Not a pure seq! See Note [Improving seq]
+ , Just (co, ty2) <- topNormaliseType fam_envs (idType case_bndr1)
+ = do { case_bndr2 <- newId (fsLit "nt") ty2
+ ; let rhs = DoneEx (Var case_bndr2 `Cast` mkSymCoercion co)
+ env2 = extendIdSubst env case_bndr rhs
+ ; return (env2, scrut `Cast` co, case_bndr2) }
+
+improveSeq _ env scrut _ case_bndr1 _
+ = return (env, scrut, case_bndr1)
+
+
------------------------------------
simplAlt :: SimplEnv
- -> [AltCon] -- These constructors can't be present when
- -- matching the DEFAULT alternative
- -> OutId -- The case binder
+ -> Maybe OutId -- Scrutinee
+ -> [AltCon] -- These constructors can't be present when
+ -- matching the DEFAULT alternative
+ -> OutId -- The case binder
-> SimplCont
-> InAlt
-> SimplM OutAlt
-simplAlt env imposs_deflt_cons case_bndr' cont' (DEFAULT, bndrs, rhs)
+simplAlt env scrut imposs_deflt_cons case_bndr' cont' (DEFAULT, bndrs, rhs)
= ASSERT( null bndrs )
- do { let env' = addBinderOtherCon env case_bndr' imposs_deflt_cons
+ do { let env' = addBinderUnfolding env scrut case_bndr'
+ (mkOtherCon imposs_deflt_cons)
-- Record the constructors that the case-binder *can't* be.
; rhs' <- simplExprC env' rhs cont'
; return (DEFAULT, [], rhs') }
-simplAlt env imposs_deflt_cons case_bndr' cont' (LitAlt lit, bndrs, rhs)
+simplAlt env scrut _ case_bndr' cont' (LitAlt lit, bndrs, rhs)
= ASSERT( null bndrs )
- do { let env' = addBinderUnfolding env case_bndr' (Lit lit)
+ do { let env' = addBinderUnfolding env scrut case_bndr'
+ (mkSimpleUnfolding (Lit lit))
; rhs' <- simplExprC env' rhs cont'
; return (LitAlt lit, [], rhs') }
-simplAlt env imposs_deflt_cons case_bndr' cont' (DataAlt con, vs, rhs)
+simplAlt env scrut _ case_bndr' cont' (DataAlt con, vs, rhs)
= do { -- Deal with the pattern-bound variables
-- Mark the ones that are in ! positions in the
-- data constructor as certainly-evaluated.
-- NB: simplLamBinders preserves this eval info
- let vs_with_evals = add_evals vs (dataConRepStrictness con)
- ; (env, vs') <- simplLamBndrs env vs_with_evals
+ let vs_with_evals = add_evals (dataConRepStrictness con)
+ ; (env', vs') <- simplLamBndrs env vs_with_evals
-- Bind the case-binder to (con args)
; let inst_tys' = tyConAppArgs (idType case_bndr')
con_args = map Type inst_tys' ++ varsToCoreExprs vs'
- env' = addBinderUnfolding env case_bndr' (mkConApp con con_args)
+ unf = mkSimpleUnfolding (mkConApp con con_args)
+ env'' = addBinderUnfolding env' scrut case_bndr' unf
- ; rhs' <- simplExprC env' rhs cont'
+ ; rhs' <- simplExprC env'' rhs cont'
; return (DataAlt con, vs', rhs') }
where
-- add_evals records the evaluated-ness of the bound variables of
-- We really must record that b is already evaluated so that we don't
-- go and re-evaluate it when constructing the result.
-- See Note [Data-con worker strictness] in MkId.lhs
- add_evals vs strs
- = go vs strs
+ add_evals the_strs
+ = go vs the_strs
where
go [] [] = []
- go (v:vs) strs | isTyVar v = v : go vs strs
- go (v:vs) (str:strs)
- | isMarkedStrict str = evald_v : go vs strs
- | otherwise = zapped_v : go vs strs
+ go (v:vs') strs | isTyCoVar v = v : go vs' strs
+ go (v:vs') (str:strs)
+ | isMarkedStrict str = evald_v : go vs' strs
+ | otherwise = zapped_v : go vs' strs
where
- zapped_v = zap_occ_info v
+ zapped_v = zapBndrOccInfo keep_occ_info v
evald_v = zapped_v `setIdUnfolding` evaldUnfolding
- go _ _ = pprPanic "cat_evals" (ppr con $$ ppr vs $$ ppr strs)
+ go _ _ = pprPanic "cat_evals" (ppr con $$ ppr vs $$ ppr the_strs)
+ -- See Note [zapOccInfo]
-- zap_occ_info: if the case binder is alive, then we add the unfolding
-- case_bndr = C vs
-- to the envt; so vs are now very much alive
-- case e of t { (a,b) -> ...(case t of (p,q) -> p)... }
-- ==> case e of t { (a,b) -> ...(a)... }
-- Look, Ma, a is alive now.
- zap_occ_info | isDeadBinder case_bndr' = \id -> id
- | otherwise = zapOccInfo
-
-addBinderUnfolding :: SimplEnv -> Id -> CoreExpr -> SimplEnv
-addBinderUnfolding env bndr rhs
- = modifyInScope env bndr (bndr `setIdUnfolding` mkUnfolding False rhs)
+ keep_occ_info = isDeadBinder case_bndr' && isNothing scrut
-addBinderOtherCon :: SimplEnv -> Id -> [AltCon] -> SimplEnv
-addBinderOtherCon env bndr cons
- = modifyInScope env bndr (bndr `setIdUnfolding` mkOtherCon cons)
+addBinderUnfolding :: SimplEnv -> Maybe OutId -> Id -> Unfolding -> SimplEnv
+addBinderUnfolding env scrut bndr unf
+ = case scrut of
+ Just v -> modifyInScope env1 (v `setIdUnfolding` unf)
+ _ -> env1
+ where
+ env1 = modifyInScope env bndr_w_unf
+ bndr_w_unf = bndr `setIdUnfolding` unf
+
+zapBndrOccInfo :: Bool -> Id -> Id
+-- Consider case e of b { (a,b) -> ... }
+-- Then if we bind b to (a,b) in "...", and b is not dead,
+-- then we must zap the deadness info on a,b
+zapBndrOccInfo keep_occ_info pat_id
+ | keep_occ_info = pat_id
+ | otherwise = zapIdOccInfo pat_id
\end{code}
+Note [Add unfolding for scrutinee]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+In general it's unlikely that a variable scrutinee will appear
+in the case alternatives case x of { ...x unlikely to appear... }
+because the binder-swap in OccAnal has got rid of all such occcurrences
+See Note [Binder swap] in OccAnal.
+
+BUT it is still VERY IMPORTANT to add a suitable unfolding for a
+variable scrutinee, in simplAlt. Here's why
+ case x of y
+ (a,b) -> case b of c
+ I# v -> ...(f y)...
+There is no occurrence of 'b' in the (...(f y)...). But y gets
+the unfolding (a,b), and *that* mentions b. If f has a RULE
+ RULE f (p, I# q) = ...
+we want that rule to match, so we must extend the in-scope env with a
+suitable unfolding for 'y'. It's *essential* for rule matching; but
+it's also good for case-elimintation -- suppose that 'f' was inlined
+and did multi-level case analysis, then we'd solve it in one
+simplifier sweep instead of two.
+
+Exactly the same issue arises in SpecConstr;
+see Note [Add scrutinee to ValueEnv too] in SpecConstr
%************************************************************************
%* *
All this should happen in one sweep.
\begin{code}
-knownCon :: SimplEnv -> OutExpr -> AltCon -> [OutExpr]
- -> InId -> [InAlt] -> SimplCont
+knownCon :: SimplEnv
+ -> OutExpr -- The scrutinee
+ -> DataCon -> [OutType] -> [OutExpr] -- The scrutinee (in pieces)
+ -> InId -> [InBndr] -> InExpr -- The alternative
+ -> SimplCont
-> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
-knownCon env scrut con args bndr alts cont
- = do { tick (KnownBranch bndr)
- ; knownAlt env scrut args bndr (findAlt con alts) cont }
-
-knownAlt env scrut args bndr (DEFAULT, bs, rhs) cont
- = ASSERT( null bs )
- do { env <- simplNonRecX env bndr scrut
- -- This might give rise to a binding with non-atomic args
- -- like x = Node (f x) (g x)
- -- but simplNonRecX will atomic-ify it
- ; simplExprF env rhs cont }
-
-knownAlt env scrut args bndr (LitAlt lit, bs, rhs) cont
- = ASSERT( null bs )
- do { env <- simplNonRecX env bndr scrut
- ; simplExprF env rhs cont }
-
-knownAlt env scrut args bndr (DataAlt dc, bs, rhs) cont
- = do { let dead_bndr = isDeadBinder bndr -- bndr is an InId
- n_drop_tys = length (dataConUnivTyVars dc)
- ; env <- bind_args env dead_bndr bs (drop n_drop_tys args)
- ; let
- -- It's useful to bind bndr to scrut, rather than to a fresh
- -- binding x = Con arg1 .. argn
- -- because very often the scrut is a variable, so we avoid
- -- creating, and then subsequently eliminating, a let-binding
- -- BUT, if scrut is a not a variable, we must be careful
- -- about duplicating the arg redexes; in that case, make
- -- a new con-app from the args
- bndr_rhs = case scrut of
- Var v -> scrut
- other -> con_app
- con_app = mkConApp dc (take n_drop_tys args ++ con_args)
- con_args = [substExpr env (varToCoreExpr b) | b <- bs]
- -- args are aready OutExprs, but bs are InIds
-
- ; env <- simplNonRecX env bndr bndr_rhs
- ; -- pprTrace "knownCon2" (ppr bs $$ ppr rhs $$ ppr (seIdSubst env)) $
- simplExprF env rhs cont }
+knownCon env scrut dc dc_ty_args dc_args bndr bs rhs cont
+ = do { env' <- bind_args env bs dc_args
+ ; env'' <- bind_case_bndr env'
+ ; simplExprF env'' rhs cont }
where
- -- Ugh!
- bind_args env dead_bndr [] _ = return env
+ zap_occ = zapBndrOccInfo (isDeadBinder bndr) -- bndr is an InId
- bind_args env dead_bndr (b:bs) (Type ty : args)
- = ASSERT( isTyVar b )
- bind_args (extendTvSubst env b ty) dead_bndr bs args
+ -- Ugh!
+ bind_args env' [] _ = return env'
- bind_args env dead_bndr (b:bs) (arg : args)
+ bind_args env' (b:bs') (Type ty : args)
+ = ASSERT( isTyCoVar b )
+ bind_args (extendTvSubst env' b ty) bs' args
+
+ bind_args env' (b:bs') (arg : args)
= ASSERT( isId b )
- do { let b' = if dead_bndr then b else zapOccInfo b
- -- Note that the binder might be "dead", because it doesn't occur
- -- in the RHS; and simplNonRecX may therefore discard it via postInlineUnconditionally
- -- Nevertheless we must keep it if the case-binder is alive, because it may
- -- be used in the con_app. See Note [zapOccInfo]
- ; env <- simplNonRecX env b' arg
- ; bind_args env dead_bndr bs args }
-
- bind_args _ _ _ _ =
- pprPanic "bind_args" $ ppr dc $$ ppr bs $$ ppr args $$
+ do { let b' = zap_occ b
+ -- Note that the binder might be "dead", because it doesn't
+ -- occur in the RHS; and simplNonRecX may therefore discard
+ -- it via postInlineUnconditionally.
+ -- Nevertheless we must keep it if the case-binder is alive,
+ -- because it may be used in the con_app. See Note [zapOccInfo]
+ ; env'' <- simplNonRecX env' b' arg
+ ; bind_args env'' bs' args }
+
+ bind_args _ _ _ =
+ pprPanic "bind_args" $ ppr dc $$ ppr bs $$ ppr dc_args $$
text "scrut:" <+> ppr scrut
+
+ -- It's useful to bind bndr to scrut, rather than to a fresh
+ -- binding x = Con arg1 .. argn
+ -- because very often the scrut is a variable, so we avoid
+ -- creating, and then subsequently eliminating, a let-binding
+ -- BUT, if scrut is a not a variable, we must be careful
+ -- about duplicating the arg redexes; in that case, make
+ -- a new con-app from the args
+ bind_case_bndr env
+ | isDeadBinder bndr = return env
+ | exprIsTrivial scrut = return (extendIdSubst env bndr (DoneEx scrut))
+ | otherwise = do { dc_args <- mapM (simplVar env) bs
+ -- dc_ty_args are aready OutTypes,
+ -- but bs are InBndrs
+ ; let con_app = Var (dataConWorkId dc)
+ `mkTyApps` dc_ty_args
+ `mkApps` dc_args
+ ; simplNonRecX env bndr con_app }
+
+-------------------
+missingAlt :: SimplEnv -> Id -> [InAlt] -> SimplCont -> SimplM (SimplEnv, OutExpr)
+ -- This isn't strictly an error, although it is unusual.
+ -- It's possible that the simplifer might "see" that
+ -- an inner case has no accessible alternatives before
+ -- it "sees" that the entire branch of an outer case is
+ -- inaccessible. So we simply put an error case here instead.
+missingAlt env case_bndr alts cont
+ = WARN( True, ptext (sLit "missingAlt") <+> ppr case_bndr )
+ return (env, mkImpossibleExpr res_ty)
+ where
+ res_ty = contResultType env (substTy env (coreAltsType alts)) cont
\end{code}
\begin{code}
prepareCaseCont :: SimplEnv
-> [InAlt] -> SimplCont
- -> SimplM (SimplEnv, SimplCont,SimplCont)
- -- Return a duplicatable continuation, a non-duplicable part
- -- plus some extra bindings (that scope over the entire
- -- continunation)
-
- -- No need to make it duplicatable if there's only one alternative
-prepareCaseCont env [alt] cont = return (env, cont, mkBoringStop (contResultType cont))
-prepareCaseCont env alts cont = mkDupableCont env cont
+ -> SimplM (SimplEnv, SimplCont, SimplCont)
+-- We are considering
+-- K[case _ of { p1 -> r1; ...; pn -> rn }]
+-- where K is some enclosing continuation for the case
+-- Goal: split K into two pieces Kdup,Knodup so that
+-- a) Kdup can be duplicated
+-- b) Knodup[Kdup[e]] = K[e]
+-- The idea is that we'll transform thus:
+-- Knodup[ (case _ of { p1 -> Kdup[r1]; ...; pn -> Kdup[rn] }
+--
+-- We also return some extra bindings in SimplEnv (that scope over
+-- the entire continuation)
+
+prepareCaseCont env alts cont
+ | many_alts alts = mkDupableCont env cont
+ | otherwise = return (env, cont, mkBoringStop)
+ where
+ many_alts :: [InAlt] -> Bool -- True iff strictly > 1 non-bottom alternative
+ many_alts [] = False -- See Note [Bottom alternatives]
+ many_alts [_] = False
+ many_alts (alt:alts)
+ | is_bot_alt alt = many_alts alts
+ | otherwise = not (all is_bot_alt alts)
+
+ is_bot_alt (_,_,rhs) = exprIsBottom rhs
\end{code}
+Note [Bottom alternatives]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+When we have
+ case (case x of { A -> error .. ; B -> e; C -> error ..)
+ of alts
+then we can just duplicate those alts because the A and C cases
+will disappear immediately. This is more direct than creating
+join points and inlining them away; and in some cases we would
+not even create the join points (see Note [Single-alternative case])
+and we would keep the case-of-case which is silly. See Trac #4930.
+
\begin{code}
mkDupableCont :: SimplEnv -> SimplCont
-> SimplM (SimplEnv, SimplCont, SimplCont)
mkDupableCont env cont
| contIsDupable cont
- = return (env, cont, mkBoringStop (contResultType cont))
+ = return (env, cont, mkBoringStop)
-mkDupableCont env (Stop {}) = panic "mkDupableCont" -- Handled by previous eqn
+mkDupableCont _ (Stop {}) = panic "mkDupableCont" -- Handled by previous eqn
mkDupableCont env (CoerceIt ty cont)
- = do { (env, dup, nodup) <- mkDupableCont env cont
- ; return (env, CoerceIt ty dup, nodup) }
+ = do { (env', dup, nodup) <- mkDupableCont env cont
+ ; return (env', CoerceIt ty dup, nodup) }
-mkDupableCont env cont@(StrictBind bndr _ _ se _)
- = return (env, mkBoringStop (substTy se (idType bndr)), cont)
- -- See Note [Duplicating strict continuations]
+mkDupableCont env cont@(StrictBind {})
+ = return (env, mkBoringStop, cont)
+ -- See Note [Duplicating StrictBind]
-mkDupableCont env cont@(StrictArg _ fun_ty _ _ _)
- = return (env, mkBoringStop (funArgTy fun_ty), cont)
- -- See Note [Duplicating strict continuations]
+mkDupableCont env (StrictArg info cci cont)
+ -- See Note [Duplicating StrictArg]
+ = do { (env', dup, nodup) <- mkDupableCont env cont
+ ; (env'', args') <- mapAccumLM (makeTrivial NotTopLevel) env' (ai_args info)
+ ; return (env'', StrictArg (info { ai_args = args' }) cci dup, nodup) }
mkDupableCont env (ApplyTo _ arg se cont)
= -- e.g. [...hole...] (...arg...)
-- ==>
-- let a = ...arg...
-- in [...hole...] a
- do { (env, dup_cont, nodup_cont) <- mkDupableCont env cont
- ; arg <- simplExpr (se `setInScope` env) arg
- ; (env, arg) <- makeTrivial env arg
- ; let app_cont = ApplyTo OkToDup arg (zapSubstEnv env) dup_cont
- ; return (env, app_cont, nodup_cont) }
+ do { (env', dup_cont, nodup_cont) <- mkDupableCont env cont
+ ; arg' <- simplExpr (se `setInScope` env') arg
+ ; (env'', arg'') <- makeTrivial NotTopLevel env' arg'
+ ; let app_cont = ApplyTo OkToDup arg'' (zapSubstEnv env'') dup_cont
+ ; return (env'', app_cont, nodup_cont) }
-mkDupableCont env cont@(Select _ case_bndr [(_,bs,rhs)] se case_cont)
+mkDupableCont env cont@(Select _ case_bndr [(_, bs, _rhs)] _ _)
-- See Note [Single-alternative case]
-- | not (exprIsDupable rhs && contIsDupable case_cont)
-- | not (isDeadBinder case_bndr)
- | all isDeadBinder bs -- InIds
- = return (env, mkBoringStop scrut_ty, cont)
- where
- scrut_ty = substTy se (idType case_bndr)
+ | all isDeadBinder bs -- InIds
+ && not (isUnLiftedType (idType case_bndr))
+ -- Note [Single-alternative-unlifted]
+ = return (env, mkBoringStop, cont)
mkDupableCont env (Select _ case_bndr alts se cont)
= -- e.g. (case [...hole...] of { pi -> ei })
-- let ji = \xij -> ei
-- in case [...hole...] of { pi -> ji xij }
do { tick (CaseOfCase case_bndr)
- ; (env, dup_cont, nodup_cont) <- mkDupableCont env cont
- -- NB: call mkDupableCont here, *not* prepareCaseCont
- -- We must make a duplicable continuation, whereas prepareCaseCont
- -- doesn't when there is a single case branch
-
- ; let alt_env = se `setInScope` env
- ; (alt_env, case_bndr') <- simplBinder alt_env case_bndr
- ; alts' <- mapM (simplAlt alt_env [] case_bndr' dup_cont) alts
+ ; (env', dup_cont, nodup_cont) <- prepareCaseCont env alts cont
+ -- NB: We call prepareCaseCont here. If there is only one
+ -- alternative, then dup_cont may be big, but that's ok
+ -- becuase we push it into the single alternative, and then
+ -- use mkDupableAlt to turn that simplified alternative into
+ -- a join point if it's too big to duplicate.
+ -- And this is important: see Note [Fusing case continuations]
+
+ ; let alt_env = se `setInScope` env'
+ ; (alt_env', case_bndr') <- simplBinder alt_env case_bndr
+ ; alts' <- mapM (simplAlt alt_env' Nothing [] case_bndr' dup_cont) alts
-- Safe to say that there are no handled-cons for the DEFAULT case
-- NB: simplBinder does not zap deadness occ-info, so
-- a dead case_bndr' will still advertise its deadness
-- NB: we don't use alt_env further; it has the substEnv for
-- the alternatives, and we don't want that
- ; (env, alts') <- mkDupableAlts env case_bndr' alts'
- ; return (env, -- Note [Duplicated env]
- Select OkToDup case_bndr' alts' (zapSubstEnv env)
- (mkBoringStop (contResultType dup_cont)),
+ ; (env'', alts'') <- mkDupableAlts env' case_bndr' alts'
+ ; return (env'', -- Note [Duplicated env]
+ Select OkToDup case_bndr' alts'' (zapSubstEnv env'') mkBoringStop,
nodup_cont) }
-> SimplM (SimplEnv, [InAlt])
-- Absorbs the continuation into the new alternatives
-mkDupableAlts env case_bndr' alts
- = go env alts
+mkDupableAlts env case_bndr' the_alts
+ = go env the_alts
where
- go env [] = return (env, [])
- go env (alt:alts)
- = do { (env, alt') <- mkDupableAlt env case_bndr' alt
- ; (env, alts') <- go env alts
- ; return (env, alt' : alts' ) }
-
-mkDupableAlt env case_bndr' (con, bndrs', rhs')
+ go env0 [] = return (env0, [])
+ go env0 (alt:alts)
+ = do { (env1, alt') <- mkDupableAlt env0 case_bndr' alt
+ ; (env2, alts') <- go env1 alts
+ ; return (env2, alt' : alts' ) }
+
+mkDupableAlt :: SimplEnv -> OutId -> (AltCon, [CoreBndr], CoreExpr)
+ -> SimplM (SimplEnv, (AltCon, [CoreBndr], CoreExpr))
+mkDupableAlt env case_bndr (con, bndrs', rhs')
| exprIsDupable rhs' -- Note [Small alternative rhs]
= return (env, (con, bndrs', rhs'))
| otherwise
- = do { let rhs_ty' = exprType rhs'
- used_bndrs' = filter abstract_over (case_bndr' : bndrs')
+ = do { let rhs_ty' = exprType rhs'
+ scrut_ty = idType case_bndr
+ case_bndr_w_unf
+ = case con of
+ DEFAULT -> case_bndr
+ DataAlt dc -> setIdUnfolding case_bndr unf
+ where
+ -- See Note [Case binders and join points]
+ unf = mkInlineUnfolding Nothing rhs
+ rhs = mkConApp dc (map Type (tyConAppArgs scrut_ty)
+ ++ varsToCoreExprs bndrs')
+
+ LitAlt {} -> WARN( True, ptext (sLit "mkDupableAlt")
+ <+> ppr case_bndr <+> ppr con )
+ case_bndr
+ -- The case binder is alive but trivial, so why has
+ -- it not been substituted away?
+
+ used_bndrs' | isDeadBinder case_bndr = filter abstract_over bndrs'
+ | otherwise = bndrs' ++ [case_bndr_w_unf]
+
abstract_over bndr
- | isTyVar bndr = True -- Abstract over all type variables just in case
+ | isTyCoVar bndr = True -- Abstract over all type variables just in case
| otherwise = not (isDeadBinder bndr)
-- The deadness info on the new Ids is preserved by simplBinders
; (final_bndrs', final_args) -- Note [Join point abstraction]
<- if (any isId used_bndrs')
then return (used_bndrs', varsToCoreExprs used_bndrs')
- else do { rw_id <- newId FSLIT("w") realWorldStatePrimTy
+ else do { rw_id <- newId (fsLit "w") realWorldStatePrimTy
; return ([rw_id], [Var realWorldPrimId]) }
- ; join_bndr <- newId FSLIT("$j") (mkPiTypes final_bndrs' rhs_ty')
+ ; join_bndr <- newId (fsLit "$j") (mkPiTypes final_bndrs' rhs_ty')
-- Note [Funky mkPiTypes]
; let -- We make the lambdas into one-shot-lambdas. The
join_rhs = mkLams really_final_bndrs rhs'
join_call = mkApps (Var join_bndr) final_args
- ; return (addNonRec env join_bndr join_rhs, (con, bndrs', join_call)) }
+ ; env' <- addPolyBind NotTopLevel env (NonRec join_bndr join_rhs)
+ ; return (env', (con, bndrs', join_call)) }
-- See Note [Duplicated env]
\end{code}
+Note [Fusing case continuations]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+It's important to fuse two successive case continuations when the
+first has one alternative. That's why we call prepareCaseCont here.
+Consider this, which arises from thunk splitting (see Note [Thunk
+splitting] in WorkWrap):
+
+ let
+ x* = case (case v of {pn -> rn}) of
+ I# a -> I# a
+ in body
+
+The simplifier will find
+ (Var v) with continuation
+ Select (pn -> rn) (
+ Select [I# a -> I# a] (
+ StrictBind body Stop
+
+So we'll call mkDupableCont on
+ Select [I# a -> I# a] (StrictBind body Stop)
+There is just one alternative in the first Select, so we want to
+simplify the rhs (I# a) with continuation (StricgtBind body Stop)
+Supposing that body is big, we end up with
+ let $j a = <let x = I# a in body>
+ in case v of { pn -> case rn of
+ I# a -> $j a }
+This is just what we want because the rn produces a box that
+the case rn cancels with.
+
+See Trac #4957 a fuller example.
+
+Note [Case binders and join points]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Consider this
+ case (case .. ) of c {
+ I# c# -> ....c....
+
+If we make a join point with c but not c# we get
+ $j = \c -> ....c....
+
+But if later inlining scrutines the c, thus
+
+ $j = \c -> ... case c of { I# y -> ... } ...
+
+we won't see that 'c' has already been scrutinised. This actually
+happens in the 'tabulate' function in wave4main, and makes a significant
+difference to allocation.
+
+An alternative plan is this:
+
+ $j = \c# -> let c = I# c# in ...c....
+
+but that is bad if 'c' is *not* later scrutinised.
+
+So instead we do both: we pass 'c' and 'c#' , and record in c's inlining
+(an InlineRule) that it's really I# c#, thus
+
+ $j = \c# -> \c[=I# c#] -> ...c....
+
+Absence analysis may later discard 'c'.
+
+NB: take great care when doing strictness analysis;
+ see Note [Lamba-bound unfoldings] in DmdAnal.
+
+Also note that we can still end up passing stuff that isn't used. Before
+strictness analysis we have
+ let $j x y c{=(x,y)} = (h c, ...)
+ in ...
+After strictness analysis we see that h is strict, we end up with
+ let $j x y c{=(x,y)} = ($wh x y, ...)
+and c is unused.
+
Note [Duplicated env]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Some of the alternatives are simplified, but have not been turned into a join point
but zapping it (as we do in mkDupableCont, the Select case) is safe, and
at worst delays the join-point inlining.
-Note [Small alterantive rhs]
+Note [Small alternative rhs]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It is worth checking for a small RHS because otherwise we
get extra let bindings that may cause an extra iteration of the simplifier to
True -> $j s
(the \v alone is enough to make CPR happy) but I think it's rare
-Note [Duplicating strict continuations]
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Do *not* duplicate StrictBind and StritArg continuations. We gain
-nothing by propagating them into the expressions, and we do lose a
-lot. Here's an example:
- && (case x of { T -> F; F -> T }) E
+Note [Duplicating StrictArg]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+The original plan had (where E is a big argument)
+e.g. f E [..hole..]
+ ==> let $j = \a -> f E a
+ in $j [..hole..]
+
+But this is terrible! Here's an example:
+ && E (case x of { T -> F; F -> T })
Now, && is strict so we end up simplifying the case with
an ArgOf continuation. If we let-bind it, we get
-
- let $j = \v -> && v E
+ let $j = \v -> && E v
in simplExpr (case x of { T -> F; F -> T })
(ArgOf (\r -> $j r)
And after simplifying more we get
-
- let $j = \v -> && v E
+ let $j = \v -> && E v
in case x of { T -> $j F; F -> $j T }
Which is a Very Bad Thing
+What we do now is this
+ f E [..hole..]
+ ==> let a = E
+ in f a [..hole..]
+Now if the thing in the hole is a case expression (which is when
+we'll call mkDupableCont), we'll push the function call into the
+branches, which is what we want. Now RULES for f may fire, and
+call-pattern specialisation. Here's an example from Trac #3116
+ go (n+1) (case l of
+ 1 -> bs'
+ _ -> Chunk p fpc (o+1) (l-1) bs')
+If we can push the call for 'go' inside the case, we get
+call-pattern specialisation for 'go', which is *crucial* for
+this program.
+
+Here is the (&&) example:
+ && E (case x of { T -> F; F -> T })
+ ==> let a = E in
+ case x of { T -> && a F; F -> && a T }
+Much better!
+
+Notice that
+ * Arguments to f *after* the strict one are handled by
+ the ApplyTo case of mkDupableCont. Eg
+ f [..hole..] E
+
+ * We can only do the let-binding of E because the function
+ part of a StrictArg continuation is an explicit syntax
+ tree. In earlier versions we represented it as a function
+ (CoreExpr -> CoreEpxr) which we couldn't take apart.
+
+Do *not* duplicate StrictBind and StritArg continuations. We gain
+nothing by propagating them into the expressions, and we do lose a
+lot.
+
The desire not to duplicate is the entire reason that
mkDupableCont returns a pair of continuations.
-The original plan had:
-e.g. (...strict-fn...) [...hole...]
- ==>
- let $j = \a -> ...strict-fn...
- in $j [...hole...]
+Note [Duplicating StrictBind]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Unlike StrictArg, there doesn't seem anything to gain from
+duplicating a StrictBind continuation, so we don't.
+
Note [Single-alternative cases]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"see" the MkT any more, because it's big and won't get duplicated.
And, what is worse, nothing was gained by the case-of-case transform.
-When should use this case of mkDupableCont?
-However, matching on *any* single-alternative case is a *disaster*;
+So, in circumstances like these, we don't want to build join points
+and push the outer case into the branches of the inner one. Instead,
+don't duplicate the continuation.
+
+When should we use this strategy? We should not use it on *every*
+single-alternative case:
e.g. case (case ....) of (a,b) -> (# a,b #)
- We must push the outer case into the inner one!
+Here we must push the outer case into the inner one!
Other choices:
* Match [(DEFAULT,_,_)], but in the common case of Int,
the *un-simplified* rhs, which is fine. It might get bigger or
smaller after simplification; if it gets smaller, this case might
fire next time round. NB also that we must test contIsDupable
- case_cont *btoo, because case_cont might be big!
+ case_cont *too, because case_cont might be big!
HOWEVER: I found that this version doesn't work well, because
we can get let x = case (...) of { small } in ...case x...
When x is inlined into its full context, we find that it was a bad
idea to have pushed the outer case inside the (...) case.
+Note [Single-alternative-unlifted]
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Here's another single-alternative where we really want to do case-of-case:
+
+data Mk1 = Mk1 Int# | Mk2 Int#
+
+M1.f =
+ \r [x_s74 y_s6X]
+ case
+ case y_s6X of tpl_s7m {
+ M1.Mk1 ipv_s70 -> ipv_s70;
+ M1.Mk2 ipv_s72 -> ipv_s72;
+ }
+ of
+ wild_s7c
+ { __DEFAULT ->
+ case
+ case x_s74 of tpl_s7n {
+ M1.Mk1 ipv_s77 -> ipv_s77;
+ M1.Mk2 ipv_s79 -> ipv_s79;
+ }
+ of
+ wild1_s7b
+ { __DEFAULT -> ==# [wild1_s7b wild_s7c];
+ };
+ };
+
+So the outer case is doing *nothing at all*, other than serving as a
+join-point. In this case we really want to do case-of-case and decide
+whether to use a real join point or just duplicate the continuation:
+
+ let $j s7c = case x of
+ Mk1 ipv77 -> (==) s7c ipv77
+ Mk1 ipv79 -> (==) s7c ipv79
+ in
+ case y of
+ Mk1 ipv70 -> $j ipv70
+ Mk2 ipv72 -> $j ipv72
+
+Hence: check whether the case binder's type is unlifted, because then
+the outer case is *not* a seq.