#include "HsVersions.h"
-import CmdLineOpts ( DynFlags, DynFlag(..), opt_MaxWorkerArgs )
+import DynFlags ( DynFlags, DynFlag(..) )
+import StaticFlags ( opt_MaxWorkerArgs )
import NewDemand -- All of it
import CoreSyn
import PprCore
-import CoreUtils ( exprIsValue, exprArity )
+import CoreUtils ( exprIsValue, exprIsTrivial, exprArity )
import DataCon ( dataConTyCon )
import TyCon ( isProductTyCon, isRecursiveTyCon )
import Id ( Id, idType, idInlinePragma,
- isDataConId, isGlobalId, idArity,
+ isDataConWorkId, isGlobalId, idArity,
#ifdef OLD_STRICTNESS
- idDemandInfo, idStrictness, idCprInfo,
+ idDemandInfo, idStrictness, idCprInfo, idName,
#endif
idNewStrictness, idNewStrictness_maybe,
setIdNewStrictness, idNewDemandInfo,
idNewDemandInfo_maybe,
- setIdNewDemandInfo, idName
+ setIdNewDemandInfo
)
#ifdef OLD_STRICTNESS
import IdInfo ( newStrictnessFromOld, newDemand )
#endif
import Var ( Var )
import VarEnv
+import TysWiredIn ( unboxedPairDataCon )
+import TysPrim ( realWorldStatePrimTy )
import UniqFM ( plusUFM_C, addToUFM_Directly, lookupUFM_Directly,
keysUFM, minusUFM, ufmToList, filterUFM )
-import Type ( isUnLiftedType )
+import Type ( isUnLiftedType, coreEqType )
import CoreLint ( showPass, endPass )
import Util ( mapAndUnzip, mapAccumL, mapAccumR, lengthIs )
import BasicTypes ( Arity, TopLevelFlag(..), isTopLevel, isNeverActive,
* Consider f x = x+1 `fatbar` error (show x)
We'd like to unbox x, even if that means reboxing it in the error case.
-\begin{code}
-instance Outputable TopLevelFlag where
- ppr flag = empty
-\end{code}
%************************************************************************
%* *
in
(deferType lam_ty, Lam var' body')
-dmdAnal sigs dmd (Case scrut case_bndr [alt@(DataAlt dc,bndrs,rhs)])
+dmdAnal sigs dmd (Case scrut case_bndr ty [alt@(DataAlt dc,bndrs,rhs)])
| let tycon = dataConTyCon dc,
isProductTyCon tycon,
not (isRecursiveTyCon tycon)
(scrut_ty, scrut') = dmdAnal sigs scrut_dmd scrut
in
- (alt_ty1 `bothType` scrut_ty, Case scrut' case_bndr' [alt'])
+ (alt_ty1 `bothType` scrut_ty, Case scrut' case_bndr' ty [alt'])
-dmdAnal sigs dmd (Case scrut case_bndr alts)
+dmdAnal sigs dmd (Case scrut case_bndr ty alts)
= let
(alt_tys, alts') = mapAndUnzip (dmdAnalAlt sigs dmd) alts
(scrut_ty, scrut') = dmdAnal sigs evalDmd scrut
(alt_ty, case_bndr') = annotateBndr (foldr1 lubType alt_tys) case_bndr
in
-- pprTrace "dmdAnal:Case" (ppr alts $$ ppr alt_tys)
- (alt_ty `bothType` scrut_ty, Case scrut' case_bndr' alts')
+ (alt_ty `bothType` scrut_ty, Case scrut' case_bndr' ty alts')
dmdAnal sigs dmd (Let (NonRec id rhs) body)
= let
(body_ty1, id2) = annotateBndr body_ty id1
body_ty2 = addLazyFVs body_ty1 lazy_fv
in
-#ifdef DEBUG
- -- If the actual demand is better than the vanilla
- -- demand, we might do better to re-analyse with the
- -- stronger demand.
- (let vanilla_dmd = vanillaCall (idArity id)
- actual_dmd = idNewDemandInfo id2
- in
- if actual_dmd `betterDemand` vanilla_dmd && actual_dmd /= vanilla_dmd then
- pprTrace "dmdLet: better demand" (ppr id <+> vcat [text "vanilla" <+> ppr vanilla_dmd,
- text "actual" <+> ppr actual_dmd])
- else \x -> x)
-#endif
+ -- If the actual demand is better than the vanilla call
+ -- demand, you might think that we might do better to re-analyse
+ -- the RHS with the stronger demand.
+ -- But (a) That seldom happens, because it means that *every* path in
+ -- the body of the let has to use that stronger demand
+ -- (b) It often happens temporarily in when fixpointing, because
+ -- the recursive function at first seems to place a massive demand.
+ -- But we don't want to go to extra work when the function will
+ -- probably iterate to something less demanding.
+ -- In practice, all the times the actual demand on id2 is more than
+ -- the vanilla call demand seem to be due to (b). So we don't
+ -- bother to re-analyse the RHS.
(body_ty2, Let (NonRec id2 rhs') body')
dmdAnal sigs dmd (Let (Rec pairs) body)
= let
(rhs_ty, rhs') = dmdAnal sigs dmd rhs
(alt_ty, bndrs') = annotateBndrs rhs_ty bndrs
- in
- (alt_ty, (con, bndrs', rhs'))
+ final_alt_ty | io_hack_reqd = alt_ty `lubType` topDmdType
+ | otherwise = alt_ty
+
+ -- There's a hack here for I/O operations. Consider
+ -- case foo x s of { (# s, r #) -> y }
+ -- Is this strict in 'y'. Normally yes, but what if 'foo' is an I/O
+ -- operation that simply terminates the program (not in an erroneous way)?
+ -- In that case we should not evaluate y before the call to 'foo'.
+ -- Hackish solution: spot the IO-like situation and add a virtual branch,
+ -- as if we had
+ -- case foo x s of
+ -- (# s, r #) -> y
+ -- other -> return ()
+ -- So the 'y' isn't necessarily going to be evaluated
+ --
+ -- A more complete example where this shows up is:
+ -- do { let len = <expensive> ;
+ -- ; when (...) (exitWith ExitSuccess)
+ -- ; print len }
+
+ io_hack_reqd = con == DataAlt unboxedPairDataCon &&
+ idType (head bndrs) `coreEqType` realWorldStatePrimTy
+ in
+ (final_alt_ty, (con, bndrs', rhs'))
\end{code}
%************************************************************************
-> [(Id,CoreExpr)]
-> (SigEnv, DmdEnv, [(Id,CoreExpr)])
loop n sigs pairs
- | all (same_sig sigs sigs') bndrs
+ | found_fixpoint
= (sigs', lazy_fv, pairs')
-- Note: use pairs', not pairs. pairs' is the result of
-- processing the RHSs with sigs (= sigs'), whereas pairs
-- is the result of processing the RHSs with the *previous*
-- iteration of sigs.
- | n >= 10 = pprTrace "dmdFix loop" (ppr n <+> (vcat
+
+ | n >= 10 = pprTrace "dmdFix loop" (ppr n <+> (vcat
[ text "Sigs:" <+> ppr [(id,lookup sigs id, lookup sigs' id) | (id,_) <- pairs],
text "env:" <+> ppr (ufmToList sigs),
text "binds:" <+> pprCoreBinding (Rec pairs)]))
- (emptySigEnv, emptyDmdEnv, orig_pairs) -- Safe output
+ (emptySigEnv, lazy_fv, orig_pairs) -- Safe output
+ -- The lazy_fv part is really important! orig_pairs has no strictness
+ -- info, including nothing about free vars. But if we have
+ -- letrec f = ....y..... in ...f...
+ -- where 'y' is free in f, we must record that y is mentioned,
+ -- otherwise y will get recorded as absent altogether
+
| otherwise = loop (n+1) sigs' pairs'
where
+ found_fixpoint = all (same_sig sigs sigs') bndrs
-- Use the new signature to do the next pair
-- The occurrence analyser has arranged them in a good order
-- so this can significantly reduce the number of iterations needed
arity = idArity id -- The idArity should be up to date
-- The simplifier was run just beforehand
(rhs_dmd_ty, rhs') = dmdAnal sigs (vanillaCall arity) rhs
- (lazy_fv, sig_ty) = WARN( arity /= dmdTypeDepth rhs_dmd_ty, ppr id )
+ (lazy_fv, sig_ty) = WARN( arity /= dmdTypeDepth rhs_dmd_ty && not (exprIsTrivial rhs), ppr id )
+ -- The RHS can be eta-reduced to just a variable,
+ -- in which case we should not complain.
mkSigTy top_lvl rec_flag id rhs rhs_dmd_ty
id' = id `setIdNewStrictness` sig_ty
sigs' = extendSigEnv top_lvl sigs id sig_ty
In the first iteration we'd have no demand info for x, so assume
not-demanded; then we'd get TopRes for f's CPR info. Next iteration
-we'd see that t was demanded, and so give it the CPR property, but
-by now f has TopRes, so it will stay TopRes.
-ever_in
-Instead, with the Nothing setting the first time round, we say
-'yes t is demanded' the first time.
+we'd see that t was demanded, and so give it the CPR property, but by
+now f has TopRes, so it will stay TopRes. Instead, with the Nothing
+setting the first time round, we say 'yes t is demanded' the first
+time.
However, this does mean that for non-recursive bindings we must
iterate twice to be sure of not getting over-optimistic CPR info,
extendSigsWithLam :: SigEnv -> Id -> SigEnv
-- Extend the SigEnv when we meet a lambda binder
--- If the binder is marked demanded with a product demand, then give it a CPR
+-- If the binder is marked demanded with a product demand, then give it a CPR
-- signature, because in the likely event that this is a lambda on a fn defn
-- [we only use this when the lambda is being consumed with a call demand],
--- it'll be w/w'd and so it will be CPR-ish.
+-- it'll be w/w'd and so it will be CPR-ish. E.g.
+-- f = \x::(Int,Int). if ...strict in x... then
+-- x
+-- else
+-- (a,b)
+-- We want f to have the CPR property because x does, by the time f has been w/w'd
--
-- NOTE: see notes [CPR-AND-STRICTNESS]
--
dmdTransform sigs var dmd
------ DATA CONSTRUCTOR
- | isDataConId var -- Data constructor
+ | isDataConWorkId var -- Data constructor
= let
StrictSig dmd_ty = idNewStrictness var -- It must have a strictness sig
DmdType _ _ con_res = dmd_ty
argDemand (Eval ds) = Eval (mapDmds argDemand ds)
argDemand (Box Bot) = evalDmd
argDemand (Box d) = box (argDemand d)
-argDemand Bot = Abs -- Don't pass args that are consumed by bottom/err
+argDemand Bot = Abs -- Don't pass args that are consumed (only) by bottom
argDemand d = d
\end{code}
\begin{code}
-betterStrictness :: StrictSig -> StrictSig -> Bool
-betterStrictness (StrictSig t1) (StrictSig t2) = betterDmdType t1 t2
-
-betterDmdType t1 t2 = (t1 `lubType` t2) == t2
-
-betterDemand :: Demand -> Demand -> Bool
--- If d1 `better` d2, and d2 `better` d2, then d1==d2
-betterDemand d1 d2 = (d1 `lub` d2) == d2
-\end{code}
-
-\begin{code}
-------------------------
-- Consider (if x then y else []) with demand V
-- Then the first branch gives {y->V} and the second
old = newDemand (idDemandInfo id)
new_better = new `betterDemand` old
old_better = old `betterDemand` new
-#endif
+
+betterStrictness :: StrictSig -> StrictSig -> Bool
+betterStrictness (StrictSig t1) (StrictSig t2) = betterDmdType t1 t2
+
+betterDmdType t1 t2 = (t1 `lubType` t2) == t2
+
+betterDemand :: Demand -> Demand -> Bool
+-- If d1 `better` d2, and d2 `better` d2, then d1==d2
+betterDemand d1 d2 = (d1 `lub` d2) == d2
squashSig (StrictSig (DmdType fv ds res))
= StrictSig (DmdType emptyDmdEnv (map squashDmd ds) res)
squashDmd (Eval ds) = Eval (mapDmds squashDmd ds)
squashDmd (Defer ds) = Defer (mapDmds squashDmd ds)
squashDmd d = d
+#endif
\end{code}