This program is to assist in debugging GHC's native code generator. Finding out which particular code block the native code block has mis-compiled is like finding a needle in a haystack. This program solves that problem. Given an assembly file created by the NCG (call it Foo.s-nat) and one created by gcc (Foo.s-gcc), then diff_gcc_nat Foo.s will pair up corresponding code blocks, wrap each one in an #if and spew the entire result out to stdout, along with a load of #defines at the top, which you can use to switch between the gcc and ncg versions of each code block. Pipe this into a .S file (I use the name synth.S). Then you can used the #defines to do a binary search to quickly arrive at the code block(s) which have been mis-compiled. Note that the .S suffix tells ghc that this assembly file needs to be cpp'd; so you should be sure to use .S and not .s. The pattern matching can cope with the fact that the code blocks are in different orders in the two files. The result synth.S is ordered by in the order of the -nat input; the -gcc input is searched for the corresponding stuff. The search relies on spotting artefacts like section changes, so is fragile and susceptible to minor changes in the gcc's assembly output. If that happens, it's well worth the effort fixing this program, rather than trying to infer what's wrong with the NCG directly from the -nat input. This is only known to work on x86 linux, sparc-solaris (and possibly cygwin). No idea if the same matching heuristics will work on other archs -- if not, we need to have multiple versions of this program, on a per-arch basis. One other IMPORTANT thing: you *must* enable stg-split-markers in the native code generator output, otherwise this won't work at all -- since it won't be able to find out where the code blocks start and end. Enable these markers by compiling ghc (or at least ghc/compiler/nativeGen/AsmCodeGen.lhs, function nativeCodeGen) with -DDEBUG_NCG enabled. Matching is simple but inefficient; diff-ing a large module could take a minute or two. JRS, 29 June 2000