Removed duplicate entry for derbugging flag -ddump-tc from the user guide
[ghc-hetmet.git] / docs / users_guide / debugging.xml
1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
2 <sect1 id="options-debugging">
3   <title>Debugging the compiler</title>
4
5   <indexterm><primary>debugging options (for GHC)</primary></indexterm>
6
7   <para>HACKER TERRITORY. HACKER TERRITORY.  (You were warned.)</para>
8
9   <sect2 id="dumping-output">
10     <title>Dumping out compiler intermediate structures</title>
11     
12     <indexterm><primary>dumping GHC intermediates</primary></indexterm>
13     <indexterm><primary>intermediate passes, output</primary></indexterm>
14     
15     <variablelist>
16       <varlistentry>
17         <term>
18           <option>-ddump-</option><replaceable>pass</replaceable>
19           <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump</option> options</primary></indexterm>
20         </term>
21         <listitem>
22           <para>Make a debugging dump after pass
23         <literal>&lt;pass&gt;</literal> (may be common enough to need
24         a short form&hellip;).  You can get all of these at once
25         (<emphasis>lots</emphasis> of output) by using
26         <option>-v5</option>, or most of them with
27         <option>-v4</option>.  Some of the most useful ones
28         are:</para>
29
30           <variablelist>
31             <varlistentry>
32               <term>
33                 <option>-ddump-parsed</option>:
34                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-parsed</option></primary></indexterm>
35               </term>
36               <listitem>
37                 <para>parser output</para>
38               </listitem>
39             </varlistentry>
40
41             <varlistentry>
42               <term>
43                 <option>-ddump-rn</option>:
44                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-rn</option></primary></indexterm>
45               </term>
46               <listitem>
47                 <para>renamer output</para>
48               </listitem>
49             </varlistentry>
50
51             <varlistentry>
52               <term>
53                 <option>-ddump-tc</option>:
54                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-tc</option></primary></indexterm>
55               </term>
56               <listitem>
57                 <para>typechecker output</para>
58               </listitem>
59             </varlistentry>
60
61             <varlistentry>
62               <term>
63                 <option>-ddump-splices</option>:
64                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-splices</option></primary></indexterm>
65               </term>
66               <listitem>
67                 <para>Dump Template Haskell expressions that we splice in,
68                 and what Haskell code the expression evaluates to.</para>
69               </listitem>
70             </varlistentry>
71
72             <varlistentry>
73               <term>
74                 <option>-ddump-types</option>:
75                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-types</option></primary></indexterm>
76               </term>
77               <listitem>
78                 <para>Dump a type signature for each value defined at
79               the top level of the module.  The list is sorted
80               alphabetically.  Using <option>-dppr-debug</option>
81               dumps a type signature for all the imported and
82               system-defined things as well; useful for debugging the
83               compiler.</para>
84               </listitem>
85             </varlistentry>
86
87             <varlistentry>
88               <term>
89                 <option>-ddump-deriv</option>:
90                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-deriv</option></primary></indexterm>
91               </term>
92               <listitem>
93                 <para>derived instances</para>
94               </listitem>
95             </varlistentry>
96
97             <varlistentry>
98               <term>
99                 <option>-ddump-ds</option>:
100                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-ds</option></primary></indexterm>
101               </term>
102               <listitem>
103                 <para>desugarer output</para>
104               </listitem>
105             </varlistentry>
106
107             <varlistentry>
108               <term>
109                 <option>-ddump-spec</option>:
110                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-spec</option></primary></indexterm>
111               </term>
112               <listitem>
113                 <para>output of specialisation pass</para>
114               </listitem>
115             </varlistentry>
116
117             <varlistentry>
118               <term>
119                 <option>-ddump-rules</option>:
120                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-rules</option></primary></indexterm>
121               </term>
122               <listitem>
123                 <para>dumps all rewrite rules (including those generated
124               by the specialisation pass)</para>
125               </listitem>
126             </varlistentry>
127
128             <varlistentry>
129               <term>
130                 <option>-ddump-simpl</option>:
131                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-simpl</option></primary></indexterm>
132               </term>
133               <listitem>
134                 <para>simplifier output (Core-to-Core passes)</para>
135               </listitem>
136             </varlistentry>
137
138             <varlistentry>
139               <term>
140                 <option>-ddump-inlinings</option>:
141                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-inlinings</option></primary></indexterm>
142               </term>
143               <listitem>
144                 <para>inlining info from the simplifier</para>
145               </listitem>
146             </varlistentry>
147
148             <varlistentry>
149               <term>
150                 <option>-ddump-cpranal</option>:
151                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-cpranal</option></primary></indexterm>
152               </term>
153               <listitem>
154                 <para>CPR analyser output</para>
155               </listitem>
156             </varlistentry>
157
158             <varlistentry>
159               <term>
160                 <option>-ddump-stranal</option>:
161                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-stranal</option></primary></indexterm>
162               </term>
163               <listitem>
164                 <para>strictness analyser output</para>
165               </listitem>
166             </varlistentry>
167
168             <varlistentry>
169               <term>
170                 <option>-ddump-cse</option>:
171                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-cse</option></primary></indexterm>
172               </term>
173               <listitem>
174                 <para>CSE pass output</para>
175               </listitem>
176             </varlistentry>
177
178             <varlistentry>
179               <term>
180                 <option>-ddump-workwrap</option>:
181                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-workwrap</option></primary></indexterm>
182               </term>
183               <listitem>
184                 <para>worker/wrapper split output</para>
185               </listitem>
186             </varlistentry>
187
188             <varlistentry>
189               <term>
190                 <option>-ddump-occur-anal</option>:
191                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-occur-anal</option></primary></indexterm>
192               </term>
193               <listitem>
194                 <para>`occurrence analysis' output</para>
195               </listitem>
196             </varlistentry>
197
198             <varlistentry>
199               <term>
200                 <option>-ddump-prep</option>:
201                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-prep</option></primary></indexterm>
202               </term>
203               <listitem>
204                 <para>output of core preparation pass</para>
205               </listitem>
206             </varlistentry>
207
208             <varlistentry>
209               <term>
210                 <option>-ddump-stg</option>:
211                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-stg</option></primary></indexterm>
212               </term>
213               <listitem>
214                 <para>output of STG-to-STG passes</para>
215               </listitem>
216             </varlistentry>
217
218             <varlistentry>
219               <term>
220                 <option>-ddump-flatC</option>:
221                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-flatC</option></primary></indexterm>
222               </term>
223               <listitem>
224                 <para><emphasis>flattened</emphasis> Abstract&nbsp;C</para>
225               </listitem>
226             </varlistentry>
227
228             <varlistentry>
229               <term>
230                 <option>-ddump-cmm</option>:
231                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-cmm</option></primary></indexterm>
232               </term>
233               <listitem>
234                 <para>Print the C-- code out.</para>
235               </listitem>
236             </varlistentry>
237
238             <varlistentry>
239               <term>
240                 <option>-ddump-opt-cmm</option>:
241                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-opt-cmm</option></primary></indexterm>
242               </term>
243               <listitem>
244                 <para>Dump the results of C-- to C-- optimising passes.</para>
245               </listitem>
246             </varlistentry>
247
248             <varlistentry>
249               <term>
250                 <option>-ddump-asm</option>:
251                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-asm</option></primary></indexterm>
252               </term>
253               <listitem>
254                 <para>assembly language from the native-code generator</para>
255               </listitem>
256             </varlistentry>
257
258             <varlistentry>
259               <term>
260                 <option>-ddump-bcos</option>:
261                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-bcos</option></primary></indexterm>
262               </term>
263               <listitem>
264                 <para>byte code compiler output</para>
265               </listitem>
266             </varlistentry>
267
268             <varlistentry>
269               <term>
270                 <option>-ddump-foreign</option>:
271                 <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-foreign</option></primary></indexterm>
272               </term>
273               <listitem>
274                 <para>dump foreign export stubs</para>
275               </listitem>
276             </varlistentry>
277           </variablelist>
278         </listitem>
279       </varlistentry>
280       
281       <varlistentry>
282         <term>
283           <option>-ddump-simpl-iterations</option>:
284           <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-simpl-iterations</option></primary></indexterm>
285         </term>
286         <listitem>
287           <para>Show the output of each <emphasis>iteration</emphasis>
288         of the simplifier (each run of the simplifier has a maximum
289         number of iterations, normally 4).  Used when even
290         <option>-dverbose-simpl</option> doesn't cut it.</para>
291         </listitem>
292       </varlistentry>
293
294       <varlistentry>
295         <term>
296           <option>-ddump-simpl-stats</option>
297           <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-simpl-stats option</option></primary></indexterm>
298         </term>
299         <listitem>
300           <para>Dump statistics about how many of each kind of
301         transformation too place.  If you add
302         <option>-dppr-debug</option> you get more detailed
303         information.</para>
304         </listitem>
305       </varlistentry>
306
307       <varlistentry>
308         <term>
309           <option>-ddump-if-trace</option>
310           <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-if-trace</option></primary></indexterm>
311         </term>
312         <listitem>
313           <para>Make the interface loader be *real* chatty about what it is
314         upto.</para>
315         </listitem>
316       </varlistentry>
317
318       <varlistentry>
319         <term>
320           <option>-ddump-tc-trace</option>
321           <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-tc-trace</option></primary></indexterm>
322         </term>
323         <listitem>
324           <para>Make the type checker be *real* chatty about what it is
325         upto.</para>
326         </listitem>
327       </varlistentry>
328
329       <varlistentry>
330         <term>
331           <option>-ddump-rn-trace</option>
332           <indexterm><primary><option>-ddump-rn-trace</option></primary></indexterm>
333         </term>
334         <listitem>
335           <para>Make the renamer be *real* chatty about what it is
336         upto.</para>
337         </listitem>
338       </varlistentry>
339
340       <varlistentry>
341         <term>
342           <option>-ddump-rn-stats</option>
343           <indexterm><primary><option>-dshow-rn-stats</option></primary></indexterm>
344         </term>
345         <listitem>
346           <para>Print out summary of what kind of information the renamer
347         had to bring in.</para>
348         </listitem>
349       </varlistentry>
350
351       <varlistentry>
352         <term>
353           <option>-dverbose-core2core</option>
354           <indexterm><primary><option>-dverbose-core2core</option></primary></indexterm>
355         </term>
356         <term>
357           <option>-dverbose-stg2stg</option>
358           <indexterm><primary><option>-dverbose-stg2stg</option></primary></indexterm>
359         </term>
360         <listitem>
361           <para>Show the output of the intermediate Core-to-Core and
362         STG-to-STG passes, respectively.  (<emphasis>Lots</emphasis>
363         of output!) So: when we're really desperate:</para>
364
365           <screen>
366 % ghc -noC -O -ddump-simpl -dverbose-simpl -dcore-lint Foo.hs
367 </screen>
368
369         </listitem>
370       </varlistentry>
371       
372       <varlistentry>
373         <term>
374           <option>-dshow-passes</option>
375           <indexterm><primary><option>-dshow-passes</option></primary></indexterm>
376         </term>
377         <listitem>
378           <para>Print out each pass name as it happens.</para>
379         </listitem>
380       </varlistentry>
381
382       <varlistentry>
383         <term>
384           <option>-dfaststring-stats</option>
385           <indexterm><primary><option>-dfaststring-stats</option></primary></indexterm>
386         </term>
387         <listitem>
388           <para>Show statistics for the usage of fast strings by the
389           compiler.</para>
390         </listitem>
391       </varlistentry>
392
393       <varlistentry>
394         <term>
395           <option>-dppr-debug</option>
396           <indexterm><primary><option>-dppr-debug</option></primary></indexterm>
397         </term>
398         <listitem>
399           <para>Debugging output is in one of several
400           &ldquo;styles.&rdquo; Take the printing of types, for
401           example.  In the &ldquo;user&rdquo; style (the default), the
402           compiler's internal ideas about types are presented in
403           Haskell source-level syntax, insofar as possible.  In the
404           &ldquo;debug&rdquo; style (which is the default for
405           debugging output), the types are printed in with explicit
406           foralls, and variables have their unique-id attached (so you
407           can check for things that look the same but aren't).  This
408           flag makes debugging output appear in the more verbose debug
409           style.</para>
410         </listitem>
411       </varlistentry>
412
413       <varlistentry>
414         <term>
415           <option>-dppr-user-length</option>
416           <indexterm><primary><option>-dppr-user-length</option></primary></indexterm>
417         </term>
418         <listitem>
419           <para>In error messages, expressions are printed to a
420           certain &ldquo;depth&rdquo;, with subexpressions beyond the
421           depth replaced by ellipses.  This flag sets the
422           depth.  Its default value is 5.</para>
423         </listitem>
424       </varlistentry>
425
426       <varlistentry>
427         <term>
428           <option>-dshow-unused-imports</option>
429           <indexterm><primary><option>-dshow-unused-imports</option></primary></indexterm>
430         </term>
431         <listitem>
432           <para>Have the renamer report what imports does not
433         contribute.</para>
434         </listitem>
435       </varlistentry>
436     </variablelist>
437   </sect2>
438
439   <sect2 id="checking-consistency">
440     <title>Checking for consistency</title>
441
442     <indexterm><primary>consistency checks</primary></indexterm>
443     <indexterm><primary>lint</primary></indexterm>
444
445     <variablelist>
446
447       <varlistentry>
448         <term>
449           <option>-dcore-lint</option>
450           <indexterm><primary><option>-dcore-lint</option></primary></indexterm>
451         </term>
452         <listitem>
453           <para>Turn on heavyweight intra-pass sanity-checking within
454           GHC, at Core level.  (It checks GHC's sanity, not yours.)</para>
455         </listitem>
456       </varlistentry>
457
458       <varlistentry>
459         <term>
460           <option>-dstg-lint</option>:
461           <indexterm><primary><option>-dstg-lint</option></primary></indexterm>
462         </term>
463         <listitem>
464           <para>Ditto for STG level. (NOTE: currently doesn't work).</para>
465         </listitem>
466       </varlistentry>
467
468       <varlistentry>
469         <term>
470           <option>-dcmm-lint</option>:
471           <indexterm><primary><option>-dcmm-lint</option></primary></indexterm>
472         </term>
473         <listitem>
474           <para>Ditto for C-- level.</para>
475         </listitem>
476       </varlistentry>
477
478     </variablelist>
479   </sect2>
480
481   <sect2>
482     <title>How to read Core syntax (from some <option>-ddump</option>
483     flags)</title>
484
485     <indexterm><primary>reading Core syntax</primary></indexterm>
486     <indexterm><primary>Core syntax, how to read</primary></indexterm>
487
488     <para>Let's do this by commenting an example.  It's from doing
489     <option>-ddump-ds</option> on this code:
490
491 <programlisting>
492 skip2 m = m : skip2 (m+2)
493 </programlisting>
494
495     Before we jump in, a word about names of things.  Within GHC,
496     variables, type constructors, etc., are identified by their
497     &ldquo;Uniques.&rdquo; These are of the form `letter' plus
498     `number' (both loosely interpreted).  The `letter' gives some idea
499     of where the Unique came from; e.g., <literal>&lowbar;</literal>
500     means &ldquo;built-in type variable&rdquo;; <literal>t</literal>
501     means &ldquo;from the typechecker&rdquo;; <literal>s</literal>
502     means &ldquo;from the simplifier&rdquo;; and so on.  The `number'
503     is printed fairly compactly in a `base-62' format, which everyone
504     hates except me (WDP).</para>
505
506     <para>Remember, everything has a &ldquo;Unique&rdquo; and it is
507     usually printed out when debugging, in some form or another.  So
508     here we go&hellip;</para>
509
510 <programlisting>
511 Desugared:
512 Main.skip2{-r1L6-} :: _forall_ a$_4 =&#62;{{Num a$_4}} -&#62; a$_4 -&#62; [a$_4]
513
514 --# `r1L6' is the Unique for Main.skip2;
515 --# `_4' is the Unique for the type-variable (template) `a'
516 --# `{{Num a$_4}}' is a dictionary argument
517
518 _NI_
519
520 --# `_NI_' means "no (pragmatic) information" yet; it will later
521 --# evolve into the GHC_PRAGMA info that goes into interface files.
522
523 Main.skip2{-r1L6-} =
524     /\ _4 -&#62; \ d.Num.t4Gt -&#62;
525         let {
526           {- CoRec -}
527           +.t4Hg :: _4 -&#62; _4 -&#62; _4
528           _NI_
529           +.t4Hg = (+{-r3JH-} _4) d.Num.t4Gt
530
531           fromInt.t4GS :: Int{-2i-} -&#62; _4
532           _NI_
533           fromInt.t4GS = (fromInt{-r3JX-} _4) d.Num.t4Gt
534
535 --# The `+' class method (Unique: r3JH) selects the addition code
536 --# from a `Num' dictionary (now an explicit lambda'd argument).
537 --# Because Core is 2nd-order lambda-calculus, type applications
538 --# and lambdas (/\) are explicit.  So `+' is first applied to a
539 --# type (`_4'), then to a dictionary, yielding the actual addition
540 --# function that we will use subsequently...
541
542 --# We play the exact same game with the (non-standard) class method
543 --# `fromInt'.  Unsurprisingly, the type `Int' is wired into the
544 --# compiler.
545
546           lit.t4Hb :: _4
547           _NI_
548           lit.t4Hb =
549               let {
550                 ds.d4Qz :: Int{-2i-}
551                 _NI_
552                 ds.d4Qz = I#! 2#
553               } in  fromInt.t4GS ds.d4Qz
554
555 --# `I# 2#' is just the literal Int `2'; it reflects the fact that
556 --# GHC defines `data Int = I# Int#', where Int# is the primitive
557 --# unboxed type.  (see relevant info about unboxed types elsewhere...)
558
559 --# The `!' after `I#' indicates that this is a *saturated*
560 --# application of the `I#' data constructor (i.e., not partially
561 --# applied).
562
563           skip2.t3Ja :: _4 -&#62; [_4]
564           _NI_
565           skip2.t3Ja =
566               \ m.r1H4 -&#62;
567                   let { ds.d4QQ :: [_4]
568                         _NI_
569                         ds.d4QQ =
570                     let {
571                       ds.d4QY :: _4
572                       _NI_
573                       ds.d4QY = +.t4Hg m.r1H4 lit.t4Hb
574                     } in  skip2.t3Ja ds.d4QY
575                   } in
576                   :! _4 m.r1H4 ds.d4QQ
577
578           {- end CoRec -}
579         } in  skip2.t3Ja
580 </programlisting>
581
582     <para>(&ldquo;It's just a simple functional language&rdquo; is an
583     unregisterised trademark of Peyton Jones Enterprises, plc.)</para>
584
585   </sect2>
586
587   <sect2 id="unreg">
588     <title>Unregisterised compilation</title>
589     <indexterm><primary>unregisterised compilation</primary></indexterm>
590
591     <para>The term "unregisterised" really means "compile via vanilla
592     C", disabling some of the platform-specific tricks that GHC
593     normally uses to make programs go faster.  When compiling
594     unregisterised, GHC simply generates a C file which is compiled
595     via gcc.</para>
596
597     <para>Unregisterised compilation can be useful when porting GHC to
598     a new machine, since it reduces the prerequisite tools to
599     <command>gcc</command>, <command>as</command>, and
600     <command>ld</command> and nothing more, and furthermore the amount
601     of platform-specific code that needs to be written in order to get
602     unregisterised compilation going is usually fairly small.</para>
603
604     <variablelist>
605       <varlistentry>
606         <term>
607           <option>-unreg</option>:
608           <indexterm><primary><option>-unreg</option></primary></indexterm>
609         </term>
610         <listitem>
611           <para>Compile via vanilla ANSI C only, turning off
612           platform-specific optimisations.  NOTE: in order to use
613           <option>-unreg</option>, you need to have a set of libraries
614           (including the RTS) built for unregisterised compilation.
615           This amounts to building GHC with way "u" enabled.</para>
616         </listitem>
617       </varlistentry>
618     </variablelist>
619   </sect2>
620
621 </sect1>
622
623 <!-- Emacs stuff:
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626      ;;; sgml-parent-document: ("users_guide.xml" "book" "chapter" "sect1") ***
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