X-Git-Url: http://git.megacz.com/?p=ghc-hetmet.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=compiler%2Ftypecheck%2FTcTyDecls.lhs;h=a9ea11aefa19ab6158959342eabfffdd92f90318;hp=236673163241e622688c3cf044c23d83e431cdb4;hb=6ea06bbf08517d9805feb82df65cc56ecbaf23a4;hpb=338cac018258e0c5540e18e0efe7dc84dfce8c86 diff --git a/compiler/typecheck/TcTyDecls.lhs b/compiler/typecheck/TcTyDecls.lhs index 2366731..a9ea11a 100644 --- a/compiler/typecheck/TcTyDecls.lhs +++ b/compiler/typecheck/TcTyDecls.lhs @@ -132,6 +132,42 @@ calcClassCycles decls %* * %************************************************************************ +Identification of recursive TyCons +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +The knot-tying parameters: @rec_details_list@ is an alist mapping @Name@s to +@TyThing@s. + +Identifying a TyCon as recursive serves two purposes + +1. Avoid infinite types. Non-recursive newtypes are treated as +"transparent", like type synonyms, after the type checker. If we did +this for all newtypes, we'd get infinite types. So we figure out for +each newtype whether it is "recursive", and add a coercion if so. In +effect, we are trying to "cut the loops" by identifying a loop-breaker. + +2. Avoid infinite unboxing. This is nothing to do with newtypes. +Suppose we have + data T = MkT Int T + f (MkT x t) = f t +Well, this function diverges, but we don't want the strictness analyser +to diverge. But the strictness analyser will diverge because it looks +deeper and deeper into the structure of T. (I believe there are +examples where the function does something sane, and the strictness +analyser still diverges, but I can't see one now.) + +Now, concerning (1), the FC2 branch currently adds a coercion for ALL +newtypes. I did this as an experiment, to try to expose cases in which +the coercions got in the way of optimisations. If it turns out that we +can indeed always use a coercion, then we don't risk recursive types, +and don't need to figure out what the loop breakers are. + +For newtype *families* though, we will always have a coercion, so they +are always loop breakers! So you can easily adjust the current +algorithm by simply treating all newtype families as loop breakers (and +indeed type families). I think. + + + For newtypes, we label some as "recursive" such that INVARIANT: there is no cycle of non-recursive newtypes @@ -160,6 +196,7 @@ T's source module is compiled. We don't want T's recursiveness to change. The "recursive" flag for algebraic data types is irrelevant (never consulted) for types with more than one constructor. + An algebraic data type M.T is "recursive" iff it has just one constructor, and (a) it is declared in an hi-boot file (see RdrHsSyn.hsIfaceDecl)