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{-
(c) The University of Glasgow 2006
(c) The GRASP/AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1998
\section[Literal]{@Literal@: literals}
-}
{-# LANGUAGE CPP, DeriveDataTypeable, ScopedTypeVariables #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -Wno-incomplete-uni-patterns #-}
module GHC.Types.Literal
(
-- * Main data type
Literal(..) -- Exported to ParseIface
, LitNumType(..)
-- ** Creating Literals
, mkLitInt, mkLitIntWrap, mkLitIntWrapC, mkLitIntUnchecked
, mkLitWord, mkLitWordWrap, mkLitWordWrapC
, mkLitInt64, mkLitInt64Wrap
, mkLitWord64, mkLitWord64Wrap
, mkLitFloat, mkLitDouble
, mkLitChar, mkLitString
, mkLitInteger, mkLitNatural
, mkLitNumber, mkLitNumberWrap
-- ** Operations on Literals
, literalType
, absentLiteralOf
, pprLiteral
, litNumIsSigned
, litNumCheckRange
-- ** Predicates on Literals and their contents
, litIsDupable, litIsTrivial, litIsLifted
, inCharRange
, isZeroLit
, litFitsInChar
, litValue, isLitValue, isLitValue_maybe, mapLitValue
-- ** Coercions
, word2IntLit, int2WordLit
, narrowLit
, narrow8IntLit, narrow16IntLit, narrow32IntLit
, narrow8WordLit, narrow16WordLit, narrow32WordLit
, char2IntLit, int2CharLit
, float2IntLit, int2FloatLit, double2IntLit, int2DoubleLit
, nullAddrLit, rubbishLit, float2DoubleLit, double2FloatLit
) where
#include "GhclibHsVersions.h"
import GHC.Prelude
import GHC.Builtin.Types.Prim
import {-# SOURCE #-} GHC.Builtin.Types
import GHC.Builtin.Names
import GHC.Core.Type
import GHC.Core.TyCon
import GHC.Utils.Outputable
import GHC.Data.FastString
import GHC.Types.Basic
import GHC.Utils.Binary
import GHC.Settings.Constants
import GHC.Platform
import GHC.Types.Unique.FM
import GHC.Utils.Misc
import Data.ByteString (ByteString)
import Data.Int
import Data.Word
import Data.Char
import Data.Maybe ( isJust )
import Data.Data ( Data )
import Data.Proxy
import Numeric ( fromRat )
{-
************************************************************************
* *
\subsection{Literals}
* *
************************************************************************
-}
-- | So-called 'Literal's are one of:
--
-- * An unboxed numeric literal or floating-point literal which is presumed
-- to be surrounded by appropriate constructors (@Int#@, etc.), so that
-- the overall thing makes sense.
--
-- We maintain the invariant that the 'Integer' in the 'LitNumber'
-- constructor is actually in the (possibly target-dependent) range.
-- The mkLit{Int,Word}*Wrap smart constructors ensure this by applying
-- the target machine's wrapping semantics. Use these in situations
-- where you know the wrapping semantics are correct.
--
-- * The literal derived from the label mentioned in a \"foreign label\"
-- declaration ('LitLabel')
--
-- * A 'LitRubbish' to be used in place of values of 'UnliftedRep'
-- (i.e. 'MutVar#') when the value is never used.
--
-- * A character
-- * A string
-- * The NULL pointer
--
data Literal
= LitChar Char -- ^ @Char#@ - at least 31 bits. Create with
-- 'mkLitChar'
| LitNumber !LitNumType !Integer
-- ^ Any numeric literal that can be
-- internally represented with an Integer.
| LitString !ByteString -- ^ A string-literal: stored and emitted
-- UTF-8 encoded, we'll arrange to decode it
-- at runtime. Also emitted with a @\'\\0\'@
-- terminator. Create with 'mkLitString'
| LitNullAddr -- ^ The @NULL@ pointer, the only pointer value
-- that can be represented as a Literal. Create
-- with 'nullAddrLit'
| LitRubbish -- ^ A nonsense value, used when an unlifted
-- binding is absent and has type
-- @forall (a :: 'TYPE' 'UnliftedRep'). a@.
-- May be lowered by code-gen to any possible
-- value. Also see Note [Rubbish literals]
| LitFloat Rational -- ^ @Float#@. Create with 'mkLitFloat'
| LitDouble Rational -- ^ @Double#@. Create with 'mkLitDouble'
| LitLabel FastString (Maybe Int) FunctionOrData
-- ^ A label literal. Parameters:
--
-- 1) The name of the symbol mentioned in the
-- declaration
--
-- 2) The size (in bytes) of the arguments
-- the label expects. Only applicable with
-- @stdcall@ labels. @Just x@ => @\<x\>@ will
-- be appended to label name when emitting
-- assembly.
--
-- 3) Flag indicating whether the symbol
-- references a function or a data
deriving Data
-- | Numeric literal type
data LitNumType
= LitNumInteger -- ^ @Integer@ (see Note [BigNum literals])
| LitNumNatural -- ^ @Natural@ (see Note [BigNum literals])
| LitNumInt -- ^ @Int#@ - according to target machine
| LitNumInt64 -- ^ @Int64#@ - exactly 64 bits
| LitNumWord -- ^ @Word#@ - according to target machine
| LitNumWord64 -- ^ @Word64#@ - exactly 64 bits
deriving (Data,Enum,Eq,Ord)
-- | Indicate if a numeric literal type supports negative numbers
litNumIsSigned :: LitNumType -> Bool
litNumIsSigned nt = case nt of
LitNumInteger -> True
LitNumNatural -> False
LitNumInt -> True
LitNumInt64 -> True
LitNumWord -> False
LitNumWord64 -> False
{-
Note [BigNum literals]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GHC supports 2 kinds of arbitrary precision integers (a.k.a BigNum):
* Natural: natural represented as a Word# or as a BigNat
* Integer: integer represented a an Int# or as a BigNat (Integer's
constructors indicate the sign)
BigNum literal instances are removed from Core during the CorePrep phase. They
are replaced with expression to build them at runtime from machine literals
(Word#, Int#, etc.) or from a list of Word#s.
Note [String literals]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
String literals are UTF-8 encoded and stored into ByteStrings in the following
ASTs: Haskell, Core, Stg, Cmm. TH can also emit ByteString based string literals
with the BytesPrimL constructor (see #14741).
It wasn't true before as [Word8] was used in Cmm AST and in TH which was quite
bad for performance with large strings (see #16198 and #14741).
To include string literals into output objects, the assembler code generator has
to embed the UTF-8 encoded binary blob. See Note [Embedding large binary blobs]
for more details.
-}
instance Binary LitNumType where
put_ bh numTyp = putByte bh (fromIntegral (fromEnum numTyp))
get bh = do
h <- getByte bh
return (toEnum (fromIntegral h))
instance Binary Literal where
put_ bh (LitChar aa) = do putByte bh 0; put_ bh aa
put_ bh (LitString ab) = do putByte bh 1; put_ bh ab
put_ bh (LitNullAddr) = do putByte bh 2
put_ bh (LitFloat ah) = do putByte bh 3; put_ bh ah
put_ bh (LitDouble ai) = do putByte bh 4; put_ bh ai
put_ bh (LitLabel aj mb fod)
= do putByte bh 5
put_ bh aj
put_ bh mb
put_ bh fod
put_ bh (LitNumber nt i)
= do putByte bh 6
put_ bh nt
put_ bh i
put_ bh (LitRubbish) = do putByte bh 7
get bh = do
h <- getByte bh
case h of
0 -> do
aa <- get bh
return (LitChar aa)
1 -> do
ab <- get bh
return (LitString ab)
2 -> do
return (LitNullAddr)
3 -> do
ah <- get bh
return (LitFloat ah)
4 -> do
ai <- get bh
return (LitDouble ai)
5 -> do
aj <- get bh
mb <- get bh
fod <- get bh
return (LitLabel aj mb fod)
6 -> do
nt <- get bh
i <- get bh
return (LitNumber nt i)
_ -> do
return (LitRubbish)
instance Outputable Literal where
ppr = pprLiteral id
instance Eq Literal where
a == b = compare a b == EQ
-- | Needed for the @Ord@ instance of 'AltCon', which in turn is needed in
-- 'GHC.Data.TrieMap.CoreMap'.
instance Ord Literal where
compare = cmpLit
{-
Construction
~~~~~~~~~~~~
-}
{- Note [Word/Int underflow/overflow]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
According to the Haskell Report 2010 (Sections 18.1 and 23.1 about signed and
unsigned integral types): "All arithmetic is performed modulo 2^n, where n is
the number of bits in the type."
GHC stores Word# and Int# constant values as Integer. Core optimizations such
as constant folding must ensure that the Integer value remains in the valid
target Word/Int range (see #13172). The following functions are used to
ensure this.
Note that we *don't* warn the user about overflow. It's not done at runtime
either, and compilation of completely harmless things like
((124076834 :: Word32) + (2147483647 :: Word32))
doesn't yield a warning. Instead we simply squash the value into the *target*
Int/Word range.
-}
-- | Wrap a literal number according to its type
wrapLitNumber :: Platform -> Literal -> Literal
wrapLitNumber platform v@(LitNumber nt i) = case nt of
LitNumInt -> case platformWordSize platform of
PW4 -> LitNumber nt (toInteger (fromIntegral i :: Int32))
PW8 -> LitNumber nt (toInteger (fromIntegral i :: Int64))
LitNumWord -> case platformWordSize platform of
PW4 -> LitNumber nt (toInteger (fromIntegral i :: Word32))
PW8 -> LitNumber nt (toInteger (fromIntegral i :: Word64))
LitNumInt64 -> LitNumber nt (toInteger (fromIntegral i :: Int64))
LitNumWord64 -> LitNumber nt (toInteger (fromIntegral i :: Word64))
LitNumInteger -> v
LitNumNatural -> v
wrapLitNumber _ x = x
-- | Create a numeric 'Literal' of the given type
mkLitNumberWrap :: Platform -> LitNumType -> Integer -> Literal
mkLitNumberWrap platform nt i = wrapLitNumber platform (LitNumber nt i)
-- | Check that a given number is in the range of a numeric literal
litNumCheckRange :: Platform -> LitNumType -> Integer -> Bool
litNumCheckRange platform nt i = case nt of
LitNumInt -> platformInIntRange platform i
LitNumWord -> platformInWordRange platform i
LitNumInt64 -> inInt64Range i
LitNumWord64 -> inWord64Range i
LitNumNatural -> i >= 0
LitNumInteger -> True
-- | Create a numeric 'Literal' of the given type
mkLitNumber :: Platform -> LitNumType -> Integer -> Literal
mkLitNumber platform nt i =
ASSERT2(litNumCheckRange platform nt i, integer i)
(LitNumber nt i)
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Int#@
mkLitInt :: Platform -> Integer -> Literal
mkLitInt platform x = ASSERT2( platformInIntRange platform x, integer x )
(mkLitIntUnchecked x)
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Int#@.
-- If the argument is out of the (target-dependent) range, it is wrapped.
-- See Note [Word/Int underflow/overflow]
mkLitIntWrap :: Platform -> Integer -> Literal
mkLitIntWrap platform i = wrapLitNumber platform $ mkLitIntUnchecked i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Int#@ without checking its range.
mkLitIntUnchecked :: Integer -> Literal
mkLitIntUnchecked i = LitNumber LitNumInt i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Int#@, as well as a 'Bool'ean flag indicating
-- overflow. That is, if the argument is out of the (target-dependent) range
-- the argument is wrapped and the overflow flag will be set.
-- See Note [Word/Int underflow/overflow]
mkLitIntWrapC :: Platform -> Integer -> (Literal, Bool)
mkLitIntWrapC platform i = (n, i /= i')
where
n@(LitNumber _ i') = mkLitIntWrap platform i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Word#@
mkLitWord :: Platform -> Integer -> Literal
mkLitWord platform x = ASSERT2( platformInWordRange platform x, integer x )
(mkLitWordUnchecked x)
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Word#@.
-- If the argument is out of the (target-dependent) range, it is wrapped.
-- See Note [Word/Int underflow/overflow]
mkLitWordWrap :: Platform -> Integer -> Literal
mkLitWordWrap platform i = wrapLitNumber platform $ mkLitWordUnchecked i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Word#@ without checking its range.
mkLitWordUnchecked :: Integer -> Literal
mkLitWordUnchecked i = LitNumber LitNumWord i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Word#@, as well as a 'Bool'ean flag indicating
-- carry. That is, if the argument is out of the (target-dependent) range
-- the argument is wrapped and the carry flag will be set.
-- See Note [Word/Int underflow/overflow]
mkLitWordWrapC :: Platform -> Integer -> (Literal, Bool)
mkLitWordWrapC platform i = (n, i /= i')
where
n@(LitNumber _ i') = mkLitWordWrap platform i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Int64#@
mkLitInt64 :: Integer -> Literal
mkLitInt64 x = ASSERT2( inInt64Range x, integer x ) (mkLitInt64Unchecked x)
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Int64#@.
-- If the argument is out of the range, it is wrapped.
mkLitInt64Wrap :: Platform -> Integer -> Literal
mkLitInt64Wrap platform i = wrapLitNumber platform $ mkLitInt64Unchecked i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Int64#@ without checking its range.
mkLitInt64Unchecked :: Integer -> Literal
mkLitInt64Unchecked i = LitNumber LitNumInt64 i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Word64#@
mkLitWord64 :: Integer -> Literal
mkLitWord64 x = ASSERT2( inWord64Range x, integer x ) (mkLitWord64Unchecked x)
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Word64#@.
-- If the argument is out of the range, it is wrapped.
mkLitWord64Wrap :: Platform -> Integer -> Literal
mkLitWord64Wrap platform i = wrapLitNumber platform $ mkLitWord64Unchecked i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Word64#@ without checking its range.
mkLitWord64Unchecked :: Integer -> Literal
mkLitWord64Unchecked i = LitNumber LitNumWord64 i
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Float#@
mkLitFloat :: Rational -> Literal
mkLitFloat = LitFloat
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Double#@
mkLitDouble :: Rational -> Literal
mkLitDouble = LitDouble
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Char#@
mkLitChar :: Char -> Literal
mkLitChar = LitChar
-- | Creates a 'Literal' of type @Addr#@, which is appropriate for passing to
-- e.g. some of the \"error\" functions in GHC.Err such as @GHC.Err.runtimeError@
mkLitString :: String -> Literal
-- stored UTF-8 encoded
mkLitString s = LitString (bytesFS $ mkFastString s)
mkLitInteger :: Integer -> Literal
mkLitInteger x = LitNumber LitNumInteger x
mkLitNatural :: Integer -> Literal
mkLitNatural x = ASSERT2( inNaturalRange x, integer x )
(LitNumber LitNumNatural x)
inNaturalRange :: Integer -> Bool
inNaturalRange x = x >= 0
inInt64Range, inWord64Range :: Integer -> Bool
inInt64Range x = x >= toInteger (minBound :: Int64) &&
x <= toInteger (maxBound :: Int64)
inWord64Range x = x >= toInteger (minBound :: Word64) &&
x <= toInteger (maxBound :: Word64)
inCharRange :: Char -> Bool
inCharRange c = c >= '\0' && c <= chr tARGET_MAX_CHAR
-- | Tests whether the literal represents a zero of whatever type it is
isZeroLit :: Literal -> Bool
isZeroLit (LitNumber _ 0) = True
isZeroLit (LitFloat 0) = True
isZeroLit (LitDouble 0) = True
isZeroLit _ = False
-- | Returns the 'Integer' contained in the 'Literal', for when that makes
-- sense, i.e. for 'Char', 'Int', 'Word', 'LitInteger' and 'LitNatural'.
litValue :: Literal -> Integer
litValue l = case isLitValue_maybe l of
Just x -> x
Nothing -> pprPanic "litValue" (ppr l)
-- | Returns the 'Integer' contained in the 'Literal', for when that makes
-- sense, i.e. for 'Char' and numbers.
isLitValue_maybe :: Literal -> Maybe Integer
isLitValue_maybe (LitChar c) = Just $ toInteger $ ord c
isLitValue_maybe (LitNumber _ i) = Just i
isLitValue_maybe _ = Nothing
-- | Apply a function to the 'Integer' contained in the 'Literal', for when that
-- makes sense, e.g. for 'Char' and numbers.
-- For fixed-size integral literals, the result will be wrapped in accordance
-- with the semantics of the target type.
-- See Note [Word/Int underflow/overflow]
mapLitValue :: Platform -> (Integer -> Integer) -> Literal -> Literal
mapLitValue _ f (LitChar c) = mkLitChar (fchar c)
where fchar = chr . fromInteger . f . toInteger . ord
mapLitValue platform f (LitNumber nt i) = wrapLitNumber platform (LitNumber nt (f i))
mapLitValue _ _ l = pprPanic "mapLitValue" (ppr l)
-- | Indicate if the `Literal` contains an 'Integer' value, e.g. 'Char',
-- 'Int', 'Word', 'LitInteger' and 'LitNatural'.
isLitValue :: Literal -> Bool
isLitValue = isJust . isLitValue_maybe
{-
Coercions
~~~~~~~~~
-}
narrow8IntLit, narrow16IntLit, narrow32IntLit,
narrow8WordLit, narrow16WordLit, narrow32WordLit,
char2IntLit, int2CharLit,
float2IntLit, int2FloatLit, double2IntLit, int2DoubleLit,
float2DoubleLit, double2FloatLit
:: Literal -> Literal
word2IntLit, int2WordLit :: Platform -> Literal -> Literal
word2IntLit platform (LitNumber LitNumWord w)
-- Map Word range [max_int+1, max_word]
-- to Int range [min_int , -1]
-- Range [0,max_int] has the same representation with both Int and Word
| w > platformMaxInt platform = mkLitInt platform (w - platformMaxWord platform - 1)
| otherwise = mkLitInt platform w
word2IntLit _ l = pprPanic "word2IntLit" (ppr l)
int2WordLit platform (LitNumber LitNumInt i)
-- Map Int range [min_int , -1]
-- to Word range [max_int+1, max_word]
-- Range [0,max_int] has the same representation with both Int and Word
| i < 0 = mkLitWord platform (1 + platformMaxWord platform + i)
| otherwise = mkLitWord platform i
int2WordLit _ l = pprPanic "int2WordLit" (ppr l)
-- | Narrow a literal number (unchecked result range)
narrowLit :: forall a. Integral a => Proxy a -> Literal -> Literal
narrowLit _ (LitNumber nt i) = LitNumber nt (toInteger (fromInteger i :: a))
narrowLit _ l = pprPanic "narrowLit" (ppr l)
narrow8IntLit = narrowLit (Proxy :: Proxy Int8)
narrow16IntLit = narrowLit (Proxy :: Proxy Int16)
narrow32IntLit = narrowLit (Proxy :: Proxy Int32)
narrow8WordLit = narrowLit (Proxy :: Proxy Word8)
narrow16WordLit = narrowLit (Proxy :: Proxy Word16)
narrow32WordLit = narrowLit (Proxy :: Proxy Word32)
char2IntLit (LitChar c) = mkLitIntUnchecked (toInteger (ord c))
char2IntLit l = pprPanic "char2IntLit" (ppr l)
int2CharLit (LitNumber _ i) = LitChar (chr (fromInteger i))
int2CharLit l = pprPanic "int2CharLit" (ppr l)
float2IntLit (LitFloat f) = mkLitIntUnchecked (truncate f)
float2IntLit l = pprPanic "float2IntLit" (ppr l)
int2FloatLit (LitNumber _ i) = LitFloat (fromInteger i)
int2FloatLit l = pprPanic "int2FloatLit" (ppr l)
double2IntLit (LitDouble f) = mkLitIntUnchecked (truncate f)
double2IntLit l = pprPanic "double2IntLit" (ppr l)
int2DoubleLit (LitNumber _ i) = LitDouble (fromInteger i)
int2DoubleLit l = pprPanic "int2DoubleLit" (ppr l)
float2DoubleLit (LitFloat f) = LitDouble f
float2DoubleLit l = pprPanic "float2DoubleLit" (ppr l)
double2FloatLit (LitDouble d) = LitFloat d
double2FloatLit l = pprPanic "double2FloatLit" (ppr l)
nullAddrLit :: Literal
nullAddrLit = LitNullAddr
-- | A nonsense literal of type @forall (a :: 'TYPE' 'UnliftedRep'). a@.
rubbishLit :: Literal
rubbishLit = LitRubbish
{-
Predicates
~~~~~~~~~~
-}
-- | True if there is absolutely no penalty to duplicating the literal.
-- False principally of strings.
--
-- "Why?", you say? I'm glad you asked. Well, for one duplicating strings would
-- blow up code sizes. Not only this, it's also unsafe.
--
-- Consider a program that wants to traverse a string. One way it might do this
-- is to first compute the Addr# pointing to the end of the string, and then,
-- starting from the beginning, bump a pointer using eqAddr# to determine the
-- end. For instance,
--
-- @
-- -- Given pointers to the start and end of a string, count how many zeros
-- -- the string contains.
-- countZeros :: Addr# -> Addr# -> -> Int
-- countZeros start end = go start 0
-- where
-- go off n
-- | off `addrEq#` end = n
-- | otherwise = go (off `plusAddr#` 1) n'
-- where n' | isTrue# (indexInt8OffAddr# off 0# ==# 0#) = n + 1
-- | otherwise = n
-- @
--
-- Consider what happens if we considered strings to be trivial (and therefore
-- duplicable) and emitted a call like @countZeros "hello"# ("hello"#
-- `plusAddr`# 5)@. The beginning and end pointers do not belong to the same
-- string, meaning that an iteration like the above would blow up terribly.
-- This is what happened in #12757.
--
-- Ultimately the solution here is to make primitive strings a bit more
-- structured, ensuring that the compiler can't inline in ways that will break
-- user code. One approach to this is described in #8472.
litIsTrivial :: Literal -> Bool
-- c.f. GHC.Core.Utils.exprIsTrivial
litIsTrivial (LitString _) = False
litIsTrivial (LitNumber nt _) = case nt of
LitNumInteger -> False
LitNumNatural -> False
LitNumInt -> True
LitNumInt64 -> True
LitNumWord -> True
LitNumWord64 -> True
litIsTrivial _ = True
-- | True if code space does not go bad if we duplicate this literal
litIsDupable :: Platform -> Literal -> Bool
-- c.f. GHC.Core.Utils.exprIsDupable
litIsDupable platform x = case x of
(LitNumber nt i) -> case nt of
LitNumInteger -> platformInIntRange platform i
LitNumNatural -> platformInWordRange platform i
LitNumInt -> True
LitNumInt64 -> True
LitNumWord -> True
LitNumWord64 -> True
(LitString _) -> False
_ -> True
litFitsInChar :: Literal -> Bool
litFitsInChar (LitNumber _ i) = i >= toInteger (ord minBound)
&& i <= toInteger (ord maxBound)
litFitsInChar _ = False
litIsLifted :: Literal -> Bool
litIsLifted (LitNumber nt _) = case nt of
LitNumInteger -> True
LitNumNatural -> True
LitNumInt -> False
LitNumInt64 -> False
LitNumWord -> False
LitNumWord64 -> False
litIsLifted _ = False
{-
Types
~~~~~
-}
-- | Find the Haskell 'Type' the literal occupies
literalType :: Literal -> Type
literalType LitNullAddr = addrPrimTy
literalType (LitChar _) = charPrimTy
literalType (LitString _) = addrPrimTy
literalType (LitFloat _) = floatPrimTy
literalType (LitDouble _) = doublePrimTy
literalType (LitLabel _ _ _) = addrPrimTy
literalType (LitNumber lt _) = case lt of
LitNumInteger -> integerTy
LitNumNatural -> naturalTy
LitNumInt -> intPrimTy
LitNumInt64 -> int64PrimTy
LitNumWord -> wordPrimTy
LitNumWord64 -> word64PrimTy
literalType (LitRubbish) = mkForAllTy a Inferred (mkTyVarTy a)
where
a = alphaTyVarUnliftedRep
absentLiteralOf :: TyCon -> Maybe Literal
-- Return a literal of the appropriate primitive
-- TyCon, to use as a placeholder when it doesn't matter
-- Rubbish literals are handled in GHC.Core.Opt.WorkWrap.Utils, because
-- 1. Looking at the TyCon is not enough, we need the actual type
-- 2. This would need to return a type application to a literal
absentLiteralOf tc = lookupUFM absent_lits tc
absent_lits :: UniqFM TyCon Literal
absent_lits = listToUFM_Directly
-- Explicitly construct the mape from the known
-- keys of these tyCons.
[ (addrPrimTyConKey, LitNullAddr)
, (charPrimTyConKey, LitChar 'x')
, (intPrimTyConKey, mkLitIntUnchecked 0)
, (int64PrimTyConKey, mkLitInt64Unchecked 0)
, (wordPrimTyConKey, mkLitWordUnchecked 0)
, (word64PrimTyConKey, mkLitWord64Unchecked 0)
, (floatPrimTyConKey, LitFloat 0)
, (doublePrimTyConKey, LitDouble 0)
]
{-
Comparison
~~~~~~~~~~
-}
cmpLit :: Literal -> Literal -> Ordering
cmpLit (LitChar a) (LitChar b) = a `compare` b
cmpLit (LitString a) (LitString b) = a `compare` b
cmpLit (LitNullAddr) (LitNullAddr) = EQ
cmpLit (LitFloat a) (LitFloat b) = a `compare` b
cmpLit (LitDouble a) (LitDouble b) = a `compare` b
cmpLit (LitLabel a _ _) (LitLabel b _ _) = a `compare` b
cmpLit (LitNumber nt1 a) (LitNumber nt2 b)
| nt1 == nt2 = a `compare` b
| otherwise = nt1 `compare` nt2
cmpLit (LitRubbish) (LitRubbish) = EQ
cmpLit lit1 lit2
| litTag lit1 < litTag lit2 = LT
| otherwise = GT
litTag :: Literal -> Int
litTag (LitChar _) = 1
litTag (LitString _) = 2
litTag (LitNullAddr) = 3
litTag (LitFloat _) = 4
litTag (LitDouble _) = 5
litTag (LitLabel _ _ _) = 6
litTag (LitNumber {}) = 7
litTag (LitRubbish) = 8
{-
Printing
~~~~~~~~
* See Note [Printing of literals in Core]
-}
pprLiteral :: (SDoc -> SDoc) -> Literal -> SDoc
pprLiteral _ (LitChar c) = pprPrimChar c
pprLiteral _ (LitString s) = pprHsBytes s
pprLiteral _ (LitNullAddr) = text "__NULL"
pprLiteral _ (LitFloat f) = float (fromRat f) <> primFloatSuffix
pprLiteral _ (LitDouble d) = double (fromRat d) <> primDoubleSuffix
pprLiteral add_par (LitNumber nt i)
= case nt of
LitNumInteger -> pprIntegerVal add_par i
LitNumNatural -> pprIntegerVal add_par i
LitNumInt -> pprPrimInt i
LitNumInt64 -> pprPrimInt64 i
LitNumWord -> pprPrimWord i
LitNumWord64 -> pprPrimWord64 i
pprLiteral add_par (LitLabel l mb fod) =
add_par (text "__label" <+> b <+> ppr fod)
where b = case mb of
Nothing -> pprHsString l
Just x -> doubleQuotes (text (unpackFS l ++ '@':show x))
pprLiteral _ (LitRubbish) = text "__RUBBISH"
pprIntegerVal :: (SDoc -> SDoc) -> Integer -> SDoc
-- See Note [Printing of literals in Core].
pprIntegerVal add_par i | i < 0 = add_par (integer i)
| otherwise = integer i
{-
Note [Printing of literals in Core]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The function `add_par` is used to wrap parenthesis around negative integers
(`LitInteger`) and labels (`LitLabel`), if they occur in a context requiring
an atomic thing (for example function application).
Although not all Core literals would be valid Haskell, we are trying to stay
as close as possible to Haskell syntax in the printing of Core, to make it
easier for a Haskell user to read Core.
To that end:
* We do print parenthesis around negative `LitInteger`, because we print
`LitInteger` using plain number literals (no prefix or suffix), and plain
number literals in Haskell require parenthesis in contexts like function
application (i.e. `1 - -1` is not valid Haskell).
* We don't print parenthesis around other (negative) literals, because they
aren't needed in GHC/Haskell either (i.e. `1# -# -1#` is accepted by GHC's
parser).
Literal Output Output if context requires
an atom (if different)
------- ------- ----------------------
LitChar 'a'#
LitString "aaa"#
LitNullAddr "__NULL"
LitInt -1#
LitInt64 -1L#
LitWord 1##
LitWord64 1L##
LitFloat -1.0#
LitDouble -1.0##
LitInteger -1 (-1)
LitLabel "__label" ... ("__label" ...)
LitRubbish "__RUBBISH"
Note [Rubbish literals]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
During worker/wrapper after demand analysis, where an argument
is unused (absent) we do the following w/w split (supposing that
y is absent):
f x y z = e
===>
f x y z = $wf x z
$wf x z = let y = <absent value>
in e
Usually the binding for y is ultimately optimised away, and
even if not it should never be evaluated -- but that's the
way the w/w split starts off.
What is <absent value>?
* For lifted values <absent value> can be a call to 'error'.
* For primitive types like Int# or Word# we can use any random
value of that type.
* But what about /unlifted/ but /boxed/ types like MutVar# or
Array#? We need a literal value of that type.
That is 'LitRubbish'. Since we need a rubbish literal for
many boxed, unlifted types, we say that LitRubbish has type
LitRubbish :: forall (a :: TYPE UnliftedRep). a
So we might see a w/w split like
$wf x z = let y :: Array# Int = LitRubbish @(Array# Int)
in e
Recall that (TYPE UnliftedRep) is the kind of boxed, unlifted
heap pointers.
Here are the moving parts:
* We define LitRubbish as a constructor in GHC.Types.Literal.Literal
* It is given its polymorphic type by Literal.literalType
* GHC.Core.Opt.WorkWrap.Utils.mk_absent_let introduces a LitRubbish for absent
arguments of boxed, unlifted type.
* In CoreToSTG we convert (RubishLit @t) to just (). STG is
untyped, so it doesn't matter that it points to a lifted
value. The important thing is that it is a heap pointer,
which the garbage collector can follow if it encounters it.
We considered maintaining LitRubbish in STG, and lowering
it in the code generators, but it seems simpler to do it
once and for all in CoreToSTG.
In GHC.ByteCode.Asm we just lower it as a 0 literal, because
it's all boxed and lifted to the host GC anyway.
-}
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