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GHC (Platform-specific Issues)

Porting GHC

How do I port GHC to platform X?

There are two distinct possibilities: either

The hardware architecture for your system is already supported by GHC, but you're running an OS that isn't supported (or perhaps has been supported in the past, but currently isn't). This is the easiest type of porting job, but it still requires some careful bootstrapping.

Your system's hardware architecture isn't supported by GHC. This will be a more difficult port (though by comparison perhaps not as difficult as porting gcc).

Both ways require you to bootstrap from intermediate HC files: these are the stylised C files generated by GHC when it compiles Haskell source. Basically the idea is to take the HC files for GHC itself to the target machine and compile them with gcc to get a working GHC, and go from there.

The Building Guide has all the details on how to bootstrap GHC on a new platform.





Linux-related

Missing libreadline.so.x Errors

I Can't run GHCi on Linux, because it complains about a missing libreadline.so.3 .

The "correct" fix for this problem is to install the correct package for the particular flavour of Linux on your machine. If this isn't an option, however, there is a hack that might work: make a symbolic link from libreadline.so.4 to libreadline.so.3 in /usr/lib . We tried this on a SuSE 7.1 box and it seemed to work, but YMMV.

Linking Errors

Linking a program causes the following error on Linux: /usr/bin/ld: cannot open -lgmp: No such file or directory

The problem is that your system doesn't have the GMP library installed. If this is a RedHat distribution, install the RedHat-supplied gmp-devel package, and the gmp package if you don't already have it. There have been reports that installing the RedHat packages also works for SuSE (SuSE doesn't supply a shared gmp library).

SELinux-related

Memory Allocation Errors

If you have SELinux enabled on your system, then GHC may fail with a memory allocation error:

ghc-6.4.1: internal error: mallocBytesRWX: failed to protect 0x0x1660730

or maybe

ghc: internal error: getMBlock: mmap: Permission denied

The reason for this is that SELinux prevents allocation of writeable/executable memory regions, which GHC needs in order to implement certain parts of the FFI that require dynamic code generation. (See this bug report).

In GHC 6.4.2 we improved the situation somewhat, but not completely.

Workarounds:

Set allow_execmem to 0, with the setsebool command.

to 0, with the command. do this on a per-program basis, for GHC and GHC-compiled programs. Apparently this is done by:

/usr/bin/chcon -t unconfined_execmem_exec_t /path/to/binary/prog

Solaris-related

Link Errors

Solaris users may sometimes get link errors due to libraries needed by GNU Readline.

We suggest you try linking in some combination of the termcap, curses and ncurses libraries, by giving -ltermcap , -lcurses and -lncurses respectively. If you encounter this problem, we would appreciate feedback on it, since we don't fully understand what's going on here. The build fails in readline.

It has been reported that if you have multiple versions of the readline library installed on Linux, then this may cause the build to fail. If you have multiple versions of readline, try uninstalling all except the most recent version.

Windows-related

Heapsize-related Crashes

My program that uses a really large heap crashes on Windows.

For utterly horrible reasons, programs that use more than 128Mb of heap won't work when compiled dynamically on Windows (they should be fine statically compiled).

Ctrl-C Not Working

When running GHC under a Cygwin shell on Windows, Ctrl-C sometimes doesn't work. A workaround is to use Ctrl-Break instead. Another workaround is to use the rlwrap program (cygwin package available) to invoke ghci : In addition to proper Ctrl-C, you also get emacs (or vi) key bindings and command history across sessions.

Linking with Visual Studio C++ Code

How do I link Haskell with C++ code compiled by Visual Studio?

Prerequisites

It is assumed that the reader is familiar with the Haskell Foreign function interface (FFI), and is able to compile Haskell programs with GHC and C++ programs with Visual Studio.

Background

GHC has two modes of code generation. It either compiles Haskell straight into object code (native mode), or translates Haskell into intermediate C code, and uses a C compiler as backend.

The Windows distribution of GHC comes bundled with the GCC compiler, which is used as backend. That's why linking Haskell with Visual C++ is no different from linking GCC-generated code with the code generated by Visual C++.

One cannot statically link together object files produced by those two compilers, but they can be linked dynamically: an executable produced by Visual C++ can invoke a DLL produced by GCC, and vice versa. Likewise, we can link Haskell with Visual C++ in one of these ways.

Note: when Haskell becomes able to use Visual C++ as a backend (see [1]), we would not need to go via a DLL anymore. Instead, we would simply list all source files (Haskell and C++) on the command line of GHC.

Invoking a Haskell DLL

From a C++ executable

Make a Haskell DLL as explained in [2] Make a module definition file, such as

LIBRARY Adder

EXPORTS

adder Create an import library using Visual Studio's lib.exe:

lib /DEF:adder.def /OUT:adder.lib Link the C++ program against the import library.

From a Haskell executable

Make a DLL project in Visual Studio. It will create a .vcproj and .sln files for you. Add your C++ source files to this project. Create a .def file for your DLL. It might look like

LIBRARY MyDLL

EXPORTS

function1

function2

where function1 and function2 are the names of the C++ functions that you want to invoke from Haskell (there can be more of them, of course), MyDLL is the name of your DLL. Create an import library that can be used by ghc:

dlltool -d MyDLL.def -l libMyDLL.a Link your Haskell project, adding the library:

ghc --make main.hs -optl-lMyDLL -optl-L.

mind the dot at the end of the command line!

( -optl switch passes its argument as an option to the linker).

GHCi Hanging Issues

GHCi hangs after "Loading package base ... linking ... done."

On a small number of systems GHCi will fail to start, hanging after loading the base package. The "Prelude>" prompt is never reached.

This is believed to be due to a bug in Windows thought to affect tablet PCs, although the details are not fully understood.

A workaround is to open a command prompt, enter "chcp 28591" - if this hangs hit Ctrl-C - and then run "ghci". Some users may find this hotfix useful.

A console window opens when my application is supposed to be GUI only

Windows has several different "subsystems", the default subsystem which the mingw linker uses is console, so that stdout/stderr can be printed on screen and stdin be read from the console window.

This can be solved by giving the option -optl-mwindows with the compile command:

ghc --make -optl-mwindows MyProgramWithGUI.lhs

With this option, the option -mwindows is passed to the linker.

Caveat: attempting to read from stdin with -mwindows set may cause a runtime error, any output on stdout/stderr will be lost.

.NET/JVM Availability

Why isn't GHC available for .NET or on the JVM?

It would make a lot of sense to give GHC a .NET or JVM back end, and it's a question that comes up regularly. The reason that we haven't done it here, at GHC HQ, is because it's a more substantial undertaking than might at first appear (see below). Furthermore, it'd permanently add a complete new back-end platform for us to maintain. Given our rather limited development effort, we have so far not bitten the bullet, and we have no immediate plans to do so.

It would be a good, well-defined project for someone else to tackle, and we would love to see it done. There is some good groundwork already done:

Ashley Yakeley worked on a Haskell-JVM bridge

Sigbjorn Finne did a simple interop implementation (the hs-dotnet package) that allows a Haskell program to be compiled to native code (as now) but to call .NET programs via a variant of the FFI. I don't think this work is in active use, and I'd be surprised if it worked out of the box, but it could probably be revived with modest effort

Andre Santos and his colleagues at UFPE in Brazil are working on a .NET back end, that generates CLR IL, though I don't know where they are up to.

Nigel Perry and Oliver Hunt have a Haskell.NET prototype that works using GHC to compile to Core, and then compiling Core to NET. I'm not sure what stage it is at.

GHC.Net would be extra attractive if there was a Visual Studio integration for GHC. Substantial progress on this has been made in 2004 by Simon Marlow, Krasimir Angelov, and Andre Santos and colleagues.

Brian Alliet created a patch for GHC called LambdaVM that compiles programs into JVM bytecode. [3]

Not GHC but UHC: the Jazy backend of UHC generates Java class files to allow Haskell programs to run on the Java Virtual Machine (JVM). Jazy is not fully functional yet.



There may be others that I don't know of. If anyone wants to join in this effort, do contact the above folk. And please keep us informed!

Here's a summary of why it's a non-trivial thing to do (using .NET language, but it mostly applies to the JVM too):

The first thing is to generate native CLR Intermediate Language (IL). That's not really hard. Requires thinking about representations for thunks and functions, and it may not be particularly efficient, but it can surely be done.

An open question is about whether to generate verifiable IL or not. The trouble here is that Haskell's type system is more expressive than the CLR's in some ways, notably the use of higher-kinded type variables. So, to generate verifiable IL one is bound to need some run-time casts, and it's not clear how to minimise these.

At first blush this is all you need do. But it isn't!

Next, you need to think about how to inter-operate with .NET libraries. You don't really want to write "foreign import..." for each and every import. You'd like GHC to read the CLR meta-data directly. But there are lots of tricky issues here; see the paper that Mark Shields and I wrote about "Object-oriented style overloading for Haskell".

A closely-related question is this: how to make the type systems of Java/.NET and Haskell "line up"? For example, when importing a Java procedure, what is the Haskell type that corresponds to its .NET/JVM type? How do you sub-class a .NET class in Haskell? For example Object-Oriented Style Overloading for Haskell gives one "take" on the subject, but there are plenty of other possibilities.

Now you need to figure out how to implement GHC's primitive operations: the I/O monad arbitrary precision arithmetic concurrency exceptions finalisers stable pointers Software transactional memory



Not all of these are necessary, of course, but many are used in the libraries. The CLR supports many of them (e.g. concurrency) but with a very different cost model.

Last, you have to figure out what to do for the libraries. GHC has a pretty large library, and you either have to implement the primops on which the library is based (see previous point), or re-implement it. For example, GHC's implementation of I/O uses mutable state, concurrency, and more besides. For each module, you need to decide either to re-implement it using .NET primitives, or to implement the stuff the module is based on.

These challenges are mostly broad rather than deep. But to get a production quality implementation that runs a substantial majority of Haskell programs "out of the box" requires a decent stab at all of them.

Mac OS X-related

Linking with GHC

Linking with ghc produces ld: Undefined symbols: _sprintf$LDBLStub ...

This happens on a PowerPC Mac OS X 10.4 if gcc-3.3 is the default compiler and you try to compile with a ghc that has been built with gcc-4.0. For example:

$ cat t2.hs module Main where main = putStr ("t2: Hello trac 1066 2007-Feb-17 19.48

") $ gcc --version gcc (GCC) 3.3 20030304 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 1819) ... $ ghc --make t2.hs [1 of 1] Compiling Main ( t2.hs, t2.o ) Linking t2 ... ld: Undefined symbols: _sprintf$LDBLStub _fprintf$LDBLStub _vfprintf$LDBLStub _sscanf$LDBLStub $

To correct this, set the default compiler to gcc-4.0 ( sudo gcc_select 4.0 ) or include linking options -lHSrts -lSystemStubs in that order on the ghc command:

$ ghc --make t2.hs -lHSrts -lSystemStubs [1 of 1] Skipping Main ( t2.hs, t2.o ) Linking t2 ... $

The command

for l in <ghc installation directory>/lib/ghc-<ghc version>/*.a; do nm $l 2>&1 | if grep LDBLStub 1>/dev/null; then echo $l; fi; done

prints the list of libraries that may be needed instead of or in addition to -lHSrts before -lSystemStubs on the ghc command. For example:

$ for l in /Users/thorkilnaur/tn/install/ghc-HEAD-for-1066-20070211_1657/lib/ghc-6.7.20070209/*.a; do nm $l 2>&1 | if grep LDBLStub 1>/dev/null; then echo $l; fi; done /Users/thorkilnaur/tn/install/ghc-HEAD-for-1066-20070211_1657/lib/ghc-6.7.20070209/libHSX11_cbits.a /Users/thorkilnaur/tn/install/ghc-HEAD-for-1066-20070211_1657/lib/ghc-6.7.20070209/libHSrts.a /Users/thorkilnaur/tn/install/ghc-HEAD-for-1066-20070211_1657/lib/ghc-6.7.20070209/libHSrts_debug.a /Users/thorkilnaur/tn/install/ghc-HEAD-for-1066-20070211_1657/lib/ghc-6.7.20070209/libHSrts_p.a /Users/thorkilnaur/tn/install/ghc-HEAD-for-1066-20070211_1657/lib/ghc-6.7.20070209/libHSrts_thr.a /Users/thorkilnaur/tn/install/ghc-HEAD-for-1066-20070211_1657/lib/ghc-6.7.20070209/libHSrts_thr_debug.a /Users/thorkilnaur/tn/install/ghc-HEAD-for-1066-20070211_1657/lib/ghc-6.7.20070209/libHSrts_thr_p.a $

[4] has additional details.

Linking with C++

Linking with a C++ library gives: Undefined symbols: __Unwind_Resume

You need to pass the -fexceptions to the linker. Use -optl -fexceptions .

Running GHC

Filenames Containing '+'

GHC doesn't like filenames containing '+'.

Indeed not. You could change + to p or plus .

Linking

Why does linking take so long?

Linking a small program should take no more than a few seconds. Larger programs can take longer, but even linking GHC itself only takes 3-4 seconds on our development machines.

Long link times have been attributed to using Sun's linker on Solaris, as compared to GNU ld which appears to be much faster. So if you're on a Sun box, try switching to GNU ld. This article from the mailing list has more information.

One huge slowdown is also working on remote filesystem, e.g., nfs. Work on a local machine, preferably.

You may also speed up linking by enabling dynamic linking with the -dynamic option of GHC or --enable-executable-dynamic of Cabal.

Missing Include Files

Why do I get errors about missing include files when compiling with -O or -prof?

Certain options, such as -O, turn on via-C compilation, instead of using the native code generator. Include files named by -#include options or in foreign import declarations are only used in via-C compilation mode. See Section 8.2.2.1, ´Finding Header files for more details.

Compiling for Profiling

How do I compile my program for profiling without overwriting the object files and hi files I've already built?

You can select alternative suffixes for object files and interface files, so you can have several builds of the same code coexisting in the same directory. For example, to compile with profiling, you might do this:

ghc --make -prof -o foo-prof -osuf p.o -hisuf p.hi Main

See Section 4.6.4, ´Redirecting the compilation output(s) for more details on the -osuf and -hisuf options.

Syntax

String Gaps

I can't get string gaps to work

If you're also using CPP, beware of the known pitfall with string gaps mentioned in Section 4.10.3.1, CPP and string gaps.

GHCi

Error Messages

Missing Symbols

GHCi complains about missing symbols like CC_LIST when loading a previously compiled .o file.

This probably means the .o files in question were compiled for profiling (with -prof). Workaround: recompile them without profiling. We really ought to detect this situation and give a proper error message.

Starting GHCi

When I try to start ghci (probably one I compiled myself) it says ghc-5.02: not built for interactive use

To build a working ghci, you need to build GHC 5.02 with itself; the above message appears if you build it with 4.08.X, for example. It'll still work fine for batch-mode compilation, though. Note that you really must build with exactly the same version of the compiler. Building 5.02 with 5.00.2, for example, may or may not give a working interactive system; it probably won't, and certainly isn't supported. Note also that you can build 5.02 with any older compiler, back to 4.08.1, if you don't want a working interactive system; that's OK, and supported.

Duplicate Definitions

I get an error message from GHCi about a " duplicate definition for symbol __module_registered "

An error message like this:

GHCi runtime linker: fatal error: I found a duplicate definition for symbol __module_registered whilst processing object file /usr/local/lib/ghc-6.2/HSfgl.o

probably indicates that when building a library for GHCi ( HSfgl.o in the above example), you should use the -x option to ld .

REPL Workarounds

Why doesn't "x=1" work at the ghci prompt?

Type

let x = 1

instead.

From IRC: "But in general, it's tricky to define function interactively. You can do simple stuff easily enough: "let f x = x * x" or whatever; but for anything other than a simple one-liner, I usually stick it into a file and then load it with ghci.

The Foreign Function Interface

Blocking

When do other Haskell threads get blocked by an FFI call?

safe unsafe -threaded NO YES no -threaded YES YES

The -threaded flag (given when linking; see the manual) allows other Haskell threads to run concurrently with a thread making an FFI call. This nice behaviour does not happen for foreign calls marked as `unsafe` (see the Foreign Function Interface description in the Haskell 2010 Language Report).

There used to be another modifier, threadsafe , which is now deprecated. Use `safe` instead.

Using Floats

When I use a foreign function that takes or returns a float, it gives the wrong answer, or crashes.

You should use the -#include option to bring the correct prototype into scope (see Section 4.10.5, ´Options affecting the C compiler (if applicable)).

Propagating Run-time Errors as Exceptions

How can I propagate a Haskell run-time error (e.g. pattern match failure) as an exception to a foreign caller of the Haskell function.

If a runtime error occurs inside a DLL compiled by ghc (like "irrefutable pattern match failed" or exceptions caused by error), the application that called the DLL function dies. This is ok for development but unacceptable when it happens with a user sitting in front of the display. So the question is: Is there any way to catch and process runtime errors? I am looking for some way to map those errors to exceptions on the C++ side that can be caught if required. It would be ok to kill the Haskell runtime system and unload the DLL if necessary.

Answer: The FFI doesn't provide any way to propagate exceptions from Haskell to the caller of a foreign export, because there's no standard way to do this. It is your responsibility to catch the exception in Haskell and return an appropriate error code to the caller. To raise a C++ exception, you would probably need another C++ wrapper around each foreign export, translating an error code into the C++ exception.

Calling C Procedures

How do I call a C procedure from a Haskell program?

First, you'll want to keep open the GHC user manual section on foreign function calling, and the Haskell FFI addendum.

Now, let's assume you got this c-program ffi.c which writes THE answer to a file:

#include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> write_answer(char *userfilename) { FILE *userfile; userfile=fopen(userfilename,"w"); fprintf(userfile,"42"); fclose(userfile); }

You also need a header file ffi.h.

void write_answer(char *userfilename)

Next Step: Write the according Haskell program to include the function write_answer in your Haskell code:

{-# INCLUDE <ffi.h> #-} {-# LANGUAGE ForeignFunctionInterface #-} module Main where import Foreign import Foreign.C.String foreign import ccall "ffi.h write_answer" cwrite_answer :: CString -> IO () write_answer :: String -> IO () write_answer s = do s' <- newCString s cwrite_answer s' main = write_answer "ffi.dat"

Now we get to compiling (assume that /tmp/ffi/ is the current path).

cc -fPIC -c ffi.c ar rc libffi.a ffi.o ghc -lffi -L/tmp/ffi --make Main

And the resulting executable should write the file.

The -fPIC parameter to the c compiler is not strictly necessary. But the result will help us in the next step which is to dynamically link the library for use in GHCi.

Compiling C Programs

How do I compile my C program to use in GHCi?

Suppose you got your c-program compiled (with -fPIC parameter) as described above. If you try to load your file Main.hs in GHCi you get an error similar to this:

Loading object (dynamic) ffi ... failed. Dynamic linker error message was: libffi.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory Whilst trying to load: (dynamic) ffi

What you need is a shared library. To get it you compile once more:

cc -shared -o libffi.so ffi.o

And now it all works fine:

$ ghci -lffi -L/tmp/ffi Main.hs GHCi, version 6.8.2: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/ :? for help Loading package base ... linking ... done. Loading object (dynamic) ffi ... done final link ... done Ok, modules loaded: Main. Prelude Main> write_answer "test" Prelude Main> :! cat test 42 Prelude Main>

Input/Output

Strings

If I print out a string using putStr , and then attempt to read some input using hGetLine , I don't see the output from the putStr .

The stdout handle is line-buffered by default, which means that output sent to the handle is only flushed when a newline (

) is output, the buffer is full, or hFlush is called on the Handle . The right way to make the text appear without sending a newline is to use hFlush :

import System.IO main = do putStr "how are you today? " hFlush stdout input <- hGetLine stdin process input

You'll probably find that the behaviour differs when using GHCi: the hFlush isn't necessary to make the text appear. This is because in GHCi we turn off the buffering on stdout, because this is normally what you want in an interpreter: output appears as it is generated.

If I use the above fix, but check for EOF with isEOF before prompting for user input, the above problem still happens (GHC 6.12.1)

Buffering on Handles

If I explicitly set the buffering on a Handle to NoBuffering I'm not able to enter EOF by typing "Ctrl-D".

This is a consequence of Unixy terminal semantics. Unix does line buffering on terminals in the kernel as part of the terminal processing, unless you turn it off. However, the Ctrl-D processing is also part of the terminal processing which gets turned off when the kernel line buffering is disabled. So GHC tries its best to get NoBuffering semantics by turning off the kernel line buffering, but as a result you lose Ctrl-D. C'est la vie.

FIFOs (Named Pipes)

When I open a FIFO (named pipe) and try to read from it, I get EOF immediately.

This is a consequence of the fact that GHC opens the FIFO in non-blocking mode. The behaviour varies from OS to OS: on Linux and Solaris you can wait for a writer by doing an explicit threadWaitRead on the file descriptor (gotten from Posix.handleToFd ) before the first read, but this doesn't work on FreeBSD (although rumour has it that recent versions of FreeBSD changed the behaviour to match other OSs). A workaround for all systems is to open the FIFO for writing yourself, before (or at the same time as) opening it for reading.

Importing Functions Returning Char/Short

When I foreign import a function that returns char or short, I get garbage back.

This is a known bug in GHC versions prior to 5.02.2. GHC doesn't mask out the more significant bits of the result. It doesn't manifest with gcc 2.95, but apparently shows up with g++ and gcc 3.0.

Optimization

Garbage Collection

My program spent too much time doing garbage collection

Add the "+RTS -A10m" option to the command line when you run your program. This sets the allocation area size used by the garbage collector to 10M, which should sufficiently decrease GC times (the default is 256K; see the section "Running a compiled program" in the users' guide). You can also add to your program C module containing statement

char *ghc_rts_opts = "-A10m";

to force your program to use this setting on each run.

Subexpression Elimination

Does GHC do common subexpression elimination?

In general, GHC does not do CSE. It'd be a relatively easy pass for someone to add, but it can cause space leaks. And it can replace two strictly-evaluated calls with one lazy thunk:

let { x = case e of ... ; y = case e of ... } in ... ==> let { v = e ; x = case v of ... ; y = case v of ... } in ...

Now v is allocated as a thunk. (Of course, that might be well worth it if e is an expensive expression.)

Instead GHC does "opportunistic CSE". If you have

let x = e in .... let y = e in ....

then it'll discard the duplicate binding. This can still cause space leaks but it guarantees never to create a new thunk, and it turns out to be very useful in practice.

Bottom line: if you care about sharing, do it yourself using let or where .

Laziness

When can I rely on full laziness?

Consider this program

f x y = let r = expensive x in r + y g vs = map ( f 2 ) vs

Since r depends only on x, you might hope that (expensive 2) is computed just once. And that is indeed what will happen if you write

f_opt x = let r = expensive x in \ y -> r + y g_opt vs = map ( f_opt 2 ) vs

It's easy enough for a compiler to transform f into f_opt. (This is called the "full laziness" transformation.) BUT in the cases when f is fully-applied, f_opt is *less* efficient than f; consider

h ys zs = zipWith f_opt ys zs

Reason: it's much less efficient to have separate lambdas \x-> let ... in \y -> e than one compound lambda \xy -> e .

So the best way to transform f depends on how it is used. When it's used locally and just once, GHC inlines it at the call site and all is good. But when it's exported or called many times, GHC's full laziness transformation uses the following rule: never "float" a let between two lambdas. So it won't transform f into f_opt.

On the other hand, if you write f_opt, GHC will keep it that way. Furthermore, if a sub-expression can be floated right out of a complete lambda group, GHC will float it out. For example

f x vs = map ( \ y -> y + expensive x ) vs

Here, the (expensive x) can be floated out of the \x->... lambda without separating two lambdas, and the full laziness transfom will do just that.

Miscellaneous

Upgrading GHC

Do I have to recompile all my code if I upgrade GHC?

Yes. There are two reasons for this:

GHC does a lot of cross-module optimisation, so compiled code will include parts of the libraries it was compiled against (including the Prelude), so will be deeply tied to the actual version of those libraries it was compiled against. When you upgrade GHC, the libraries may change; even if the external interface of the libraries doesn't change, sometimes internal details may change because GHC optimised the code in the library differently.

We sometimes change the ABI (application binary interface) between versions of GHC. Code compiled with one version of GHC is not necessarily compatible with code compiled by a different version, even if you arrange to keep the same libraries.

Shared Libraries

Why doesn't GHC use shared libraries?

GHC does provide shared libraries, currently only on MacOS X. We are working on making shared libraries work on other platforms.

However, GHC-compiled libraries are very tightly coupled, which means it's unlikely you'd be able to swap out a shared library for a newer version unless it was compiled with exactly the same compiler and set of libraries as the old version.

Debugging

My program is failing with head [], or an array bounds error, or some other random error, and I have no idea how to find the bug. Can you help?

Try the GHCi Debugger, in particular look at the section on "Debugging Exceptions".

Alternatively, compile your program with -prof -auto-all (make sure you have the profiling libraries installed), and run it with +RTS -xc -RTS to get a ´stack trace at the point at which the exception was raised. See Section 4.14.4, ´RTS options for hackers, debuggers, and over-interested souls for more details.

Increasing Heap Size

How do I increase the heap size permanently for a given binary?

See Section 4.14.5, ´´Hooks to change RTS behaviour.

Compiling for Parallel Execution

I'm trying to compile my program for parallel execution with the -parallel, and GHC complains with an error like 'failed to load interface file for Prelude'.

GHC doesn't ship with support for parallel execution; that support is provided separately by the GPH project.

Using Unsafe Functions

unsafePerformIO ? When is it safe to use unsafe functions such as

We'll give two answers to this question, each of which may be helpful. These criteria are not rigorous in any real sense (you'd need a formal semantics for Haskell in order to give a proper answer to this question), but should give you a feel for the kind of things you can and cannot do with unsafePerformIO.

It is safe to implement a function or API using unsafePerformIO if you could imagine also implementing the same function or API in Haskell without using unsafePerformIO (forget about efficiency, just consider the semantics).

In pure Haskell, the value of a function depends only on the values of its arguments (and free variables, if it has any). If you can implement the function using unsafePerformIO and still retain this invariant, then you're probably using unsafePerformIO in a safe way. Note that you need only consider the observable values of the arguments and result.

For more information, see this thread.

Using Finalizers

I can't get finalizers to work properly. My program sometimes just prints <<loop>> .

Chances are that your program is trying to write a message to stdout or stderr in the finalizer. Handles have finalizers themselves, and since finalizers don't keep other finalized values alive, the stdout and stderr Handles may be finalized before your finalizer runs. If this happens, your finalizer will block on the handle, and probably end up receiving a NonTermination exception (which is printed as <<loop>> ).

Extensible Records

Does GHC implement any kind of extensible records?

No, extensible records are not implemented in GHC. Hugs implements TRex, one extensible record variant. The problem is that the record design space is large, and seems to lack local optima. And all reasonable variants break backward compatibility. As a result, nothing much happens.

Using Extra GCC/Linker Options

How can I make GHC always use some extra gcc or linker option?

If you want to *always* use an extra option then you can edit the package configuration for the 'rts' or 'base' package since these packages are used by every program that you compile with GHC. You might want to do this if you had installed something that ghc needs but into a non-standard directory, thus requiring special compilation or linking options.

All you need to do is to dump out the configuration into a human readable form, edit it and re-register the modified package configuration. The exact commands to do that are below, but first here are the fields in the file that you might want to modify:

include-dirs directories to search for .h files library-dirs directories to search for libraries extra-libraries extra C libs to link with cc-options extra flags to pass to gcc when compiling C code or assembly ld-options extra flags to pass to gcc when linking

to edit the rts package (or base) confiuration just do:

ghc-pkg describe rts > rts.package.conf edit rts.package.conf with your favourite text editor ghc-pkg update rts.package.conf

On Unix systems and Windows, some options can also be set with environment variables such as LIBRARY_PATH and C_INCLUDE_PATH.