code and then links it with a non-trivial runtime system (RTS),
which handles storage management, profiling, etc.</para>
- <para>You have some control over the behaviour of the RTS, by giving
+ <para>If you use the <literal>-rtsopts</literal> flag when linking,
+ you have some control over the behaviour of the RTS, by giving
special command-line arguments to your program.</para>
<para>When your Haskell program starts up, its RTS extracts
<literal>+RTS -M128m -RTS</literal>
to the command line.</para>
- <sect2 id="rts-optinos-environment">
+ <sect2 id="rts-options-environment">
<title>Setting global RTS options</title>
<indexterm><primary>RTS options</primary><secondary>from the environment</secondary></indexterm>
<indexterm><primary>environment variable</primary><secondary>for
setting RTS options</secondary></indexterm>
- <para>RTS options are also taken from the environment variable
+ <para>When the <literal>-rtsopts</literal> flag is used when linking,
+ RTS options are also taken from the environment variable
<envar>GHCRTS</envar><indexterm><primary><envar>GHCRTS</envar></primary>
</indexterm>. For example, to set the maximum heap size
to 128M for all GHC-compiled programs (using an
things like ctrl-C. This option is primarily useful for when
you are using the Haskell code as a DLL, and want to set your
own signal handlers.</para>
+
+ <para>Note that even
+ with <option>--install-signal-handlers=no</option>, the RTS
+ interval timer signal is still enabled. The timer signal
+ is either SIGVTALRM or SIGALRM, depending on the RTS
+ configuration and OS capabilities. To disable the timer
+ signal, use the <literal>-V0</literal> RTS option (see
+ above).
+ </para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
- <option>-l<optional><replaceable>type</replaceable></optional></option>
+ <option>-l<optional><replaceable>flags</replaceable></optional></option>
<indexterm><primary><option>-l</option></primary><secondary>RTS option</secondary></indexterm>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Log events in binary format to the
file <filename><replaceable>program</replaceable>.eventlog</filename>,
- where <replaceable>type</replaceable> indicates the type
- of events to log. Currently there is only one type
+ where <replaceable>flags</replaceable> is a sequence of
+ zero or more characters indicating which kinds of events
+ to log. Currently there is only one type
supported: <literal>-ls</literal>, for scheduler events.
</para>
<varlistentry>
<term>
- <option>-v</option>
+ <option>-v</option><optional><replaceable>flags</replaceable></optional>
<indexterm><primary><option>-v</option></primary><secondary>RTS option</secondary></indexterm>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Log events as text to standard output, instead of to
the <literal>.eventlog</literal> file.
+ The <replaceable>flags</replaceable> are the same as
+ for <option>-l</option>, with the additional
+ option <literal>t</literal> which indicates that the
+ each event printed should be preceded by a timestamp value
+ (in the binary <literal>.eventlog</literal> file, all
+ events are automatically associated with a timestamp).
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>Produce “ticky-ticky” statistics at the
- end of the program run. The <replaceable>file</replaceable>
- business works just like on the <option>-S</option> RTS
- option (above).</para>
-
- <para>“Ticky-ticky” statistics are counts of
- various program actions (updates, enters, etc.) The program
- must have been compiled using
- <option>-ticky</option><indexterm><primary><option>-ticky</option></primary></indexterm>
- (a.k.a. “ticky-ticky profiling”), and, for it to
- be really useful, linked with suitable system libraries.
- Not a trivial undertaking: consult the installation guide on
- how to set things up for easy “ticky-ticky”
- profiling. For more information, see <xref
- linkend="ticky-ticky"/>.</para>
+ end of the program run (only available if the program was
+ linked with <option>-debug</option>).
+ The <replaceable>file</replaceable> business works just like
+ on the <option>-S</option> RTS option, above.</para>
+
+ <para>For more information on ticky-ticky profiling, see
+ <xref linkend="ticky-ticky"/>.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</sect2>
+ <sect2>
+ <title>Linker flags to change RTS behaviour</title>
+
+ <indexterm><primary>RTS behaviour, changing</primary></indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ GHC lets you exercise rudimentary control over the RTS settings
+ for any given program, by using the <literal>-with-rtsopts</literal>
+ linker flag. For example, to set <literal>-H128m -K1m</literal>,
+ link with <literal>-with-rtsopts="-H128m -K1m"</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ </sect2>
+
<sect2 id="rts-hooks">
<title>“Hooks” to change RTS behaviour</title>
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