{-# LANGUAGE ViewPatterns #-}
{-# LANGUAGE BinaryLiterals #-}
{-# LANGUAGE PatternSynonyms #-}

{-
(c) The University of Glasgow 2006
(c) The GRASP/AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1992-1998
-}

-- | A language to express the evaluation context of an expression as a
-- 'Demand' and track how an expression evaluates free variables and arguments
-- in turn as a 'DmdType'.
--
-- Lays out the abstract domain for "GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal".
module GHC.Types.Demand (
    -- * Demands
    Boxity(..),
    Card(C_00, C_01, C_0N, C_10, C_11, C_1N), CardNonAbs, CardNonOnce,
    Demand(AbsDmd, BotDmd, (:*)),
    SubDemand(Prod, Poly), mkProd, viewProd,
    -- ** Algebra
    absDmd, topDmd, botDmd, seqDmd, topSubDmd,
    -- *** Least upper bound
    lubCard, lubDmd, lubSubDmd,
    -- *** Plus
    plusCard, plusDmd, plusSubDmd,
    -- *** Multiply
    multCard, multDmd, multSubDmd,
    -- ** Predicates on @Card@inalities and @Demand@s
    isAbs, isUsedOnce, isStrict,
    isAbsDmd, isUsedOnceDmd, isStrUsedDmd, isStrictDmd,
    isTopDmd, isWeakDmd, onlyBoxedArguments,
    -- ** Special demands
    evalDmd,
    -- *** Demands used in PrimOp signatures
    lazyApply1Dmd, lazyApply2Dmd, strictOnceApply1Dmd, strictManyApply1Dmd,
    -- ** Other @Demand@ operations
    oneifyCard, oneifyDmd, strictifyDmd, strictifyDictDmd, lazifyDmd,
    peelCallDmd, peelManyCalls, mkCalledOnceDmd, mkCalledOnceDmds,
    mkWorkerDemand, subDemandIfEvaluated,
    -- ** Extracting one-shot information
    argOneShots, argsOneShots, saturatedByOneShots,
    -- ** Manipulating Boxity of a Demand
    unboxDeeplyDmd,

    -- * Divergence
    Divergence(..), topDiv, botDiv, exnDiv, lubDivergence, isDeadEndDiv,

    -- * Demand environments
    DmdEnv(..), addVarDmdEnv, mkTermDmdEnv, nopDmdEnv, plusDmdEnv, plusDmdEnvs,
    reuseEnv,

    -- * Demand types
    DmdType(..), dmdTypeDepth,
    -- ** Algebra
    nopDmdType, botDmdType,
    lubDmdType, plusDmdType, multDmdType, discardArgDmds,
    -- ** Other operations
    peelFV, findIdDemand, addDemand, splitDmdTy, deferAfterPreciseException,

    -- * Demand signatures
    DmdSig(..), mkDmdSigForArity, mkClosedDmdSig, mkVanillaDmdSig,
    splitDmdSig, dmdSigDmdEnv, hasDemandEnvSig,
    nopSig, botSig, isNopSig, isBottomingSig, isDeadEndSig, isDeadEndAppSig,
    trimBoxityDmdSig, transferArgBoxityDmdSig,

    -- ** Handling arity adjustments
    prependArgsDmdSig, etaConvertDmdSig,

    -- * Demand transformers from demand signatures
    DmdTransformer, dmdTransformSig, dmdTransformDataConSig, dmdTransformDictSelSig,

    -- * Trim to a type shape
    TypeShape(..), trimToType, trimBoxity,

    -- * @seq@ing stuff
    seqDemand, seqDemandList, seqDmdType, seqDmdSig,

    -- * Zapping usage information
    zapUsageDemand, zapDmdEnvSig, zapUsedOnceDemand, zapUsedOnceSig
  ) where

import GHC.Prelude

import GHC.Types.Var
import GHC.Types.Var.Env
import GHC.Types.Unique.FM
import GHC.Types.Basic
import GHC.Data.Maybe   ( orElse )

import GHC.Core.Type    ( Type )
import GHC.Core.TyCon   ( isNewTyCon, isClassTyCon )
import GHC.Core.DataCon ( splitDataProductType_maybe, StrictnessMark, isMarkedStrict )
import GHC.Core.Multiplicity    ( scaledThing )

import GHC.Utils.Binary
import GHC.Utils.Misc
import GHC.Utils.Outputable
import GHC.Utils.Panic
import GHC.Utils.Panic.Plain

import Data.Coerce (coerce)
import Data.Function

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
           Boxity: Whether the box of something is used
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

{- Note [Strictness and Unboxing]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If an argument is used strictly by the function body, we may use use
call-by-value instead of call-by-need for that argument. What's more, we may
unbox an argument that is used strictly, discarding the box at the call site.
This can reduce allocations of the program drastically if the box really isn't
needed in the function body. Here's an example:
```
even :: Int -> Bool
even (I# 0) = True
even (I# 1) = False
even (I# n) = even (I# (n -# 2))
```
All three code paths of 'even' are (a) strict in the argument, and (b)
immediately discard the boxed 'Int'. Now if we have a call site like
`even (I# 42)`, then it would be terrible to allocate the 'I#' box for the
argument only to tear it apart immediately in the body of 'even'! Hence,
worker/wrapper will allocate a wrapper for 'even' that not only uses
call-by-value for the argument (e.g., `case I# 42 of b { $weven b }`), but also
*unboxes* the argument, resulting in
```
even :: Int -> Bool
even (I# n) = $weven n
$weven :: Int# -> Bool
$weven 0 = True
$weven 1 = False
$weven n = $weven (n -# 2)
```
And now the box in `even (I# 42)` will cancel away after inlining the wrapper.

As far as the permission to unbox is concerned, *evaluatedness* of the argument
is the important trait. Unboxing implies eager evaluation of an argument and
we don't want to change the termination properties of the function. One way
to ensure that is to unbox strict arguments only, but strictness is only a
sufficient condition for evaluatedness.
See Note [Unboxing evaluated arguments] in "GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal", where
we manage to unbox *strict fields* of unboxed arguments that the function is not
actually strict in, simply by realising that those fields have to be evaluated.

Note [Boxity analysis]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Alas, we don't want to unbox *every* strict argument
(as Note [Strictness and Unboxing] might suggest).
Here's an example (from T19871):
```
data Huge = H Bool Bool ... Bool
ann :: Huge -> (Bool, Huge)
ann h@(Huge True _ ... _) = (False, h)
ann h                     = (True,  h)
```
Unboxing 'h' yields
```
$wann :: Bool -> Bool -> ... -> Bool -> (Bool, Huge)
$wann True b2 ... bn = (False, Huge True b2 ... bn)
$wann b1   b2 ... bn = (True,  Huge b1   b2 ... bn)
```
The pair constructor really needs its fields boxed. But '$wann' doesn't get
passed 'h' anymore, only its components! Ergo it has to reallocate the 'Huge'
box, in a process called "reboxing". After w/w, call sites like
`case ... of Just h -> ann h` pay for the allocation of the additional box.
In earlier versions of GHC we simply accepted that reboxing would sometimes
happen, but we found some cases where it made a big difference: #19407, for
example.

We therefore perform a simple syntactic boxity analysis that piggy-backs on
demand analysis in order to determine whether the box of a strict argument is
always discarded in the function body, in which case we can pass it unboxed
without risking regressions such as in 'ann' above. But as soon as one use needs
the box, we want Boxed to win over any Unboxed uses.

The demand signature (cf. Note [Demand notation]) will say whether it uses
its arguments boxed or unboxed. Indeed it does so for every sub-component of
the argument demand. Here's an example:
```
f :: (Int, Int) -> Bool
f (a, b) = even (a + b) -- demand signature: <1!P(1!L,1!L)>
```
The '!' indicates places where we want to unbox, the lack thereof indicates the
box is used by the function. Boxity flags are part of the 'Poly' and 'Prod'
'SubDemand's, see Note [Why Boxity in SubDemand and not in Demand?].
The given demand signature says "Unbox the pair and then nestedly unbox its
two fields". By contrast, the demand signature of 'ann' above would look like
<1P(1L,L,...,L)>, lacking any '!'.

A demand signature like <1P(1!L)> -- Boxed outside but Unboxed in the field --
doesn't make a lot of sense, as we can never unbox the field without unboxing
the containing record. See Note [Finalising boxity for demand signatures] in
"GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal" for how we avoid to spread this and other kinds of
misinformed boxities.

Due to various practical reasons, Boxity Analysis is not conservative at times.
Here are reasons for too much optimism:

 * Note [Function body boxity and call sites] is an observation about when it is
   beneficial to unbox a parameter that is returned from a function.
   Note [Unboxed demand on function bodies returning small products] derives
   a heuristic from the former Note, pretending that all call sites of a
   function need returned small products Unboxed.
 * Note [Boxity for bottoming functions] in DmdAnal makes all bottoming
   functions unbox their arguments, incurring reboxing in code paths that will
   diverge anyway. In turn we get more unboxing in hot code paths.

Boxity analysis fixes a number of issues: #19871, #19407, #4267, #16859, #18907, #13331

Note [Function body boxity and call sites]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider (from T5949)
```
f n p = case n of
  0 -> p :: (a, b)
  _ -> f (n-1) p
-- Worker/wrapper split if we decide to unbox:
$wf n x y = case n of
  0 -> (# x, y #)
  _ -> $wf (n-1) x y
f n (x,y) = case $wf n x y of (# r, s #) -> (r,s)
```
When is it better to /not/ to unbox 'p'? That depends on the callers of 'f'!
If all call sites

 1. Wouldn't need to allocate fresh boxes for 'p', and
 2. Needed the result pair of 'f' boxed

Only then we'd see an increase in allocation resulting from unboxing. But as
soon as only one of (1) or (2) holds, it really doesn't matter if 'f' unboxes
'p' (and its result, it's important that CPR follows suit). For example
```
res = ... case f m (field t) of (r1,r2) -> ...  -- (1) holds
arg = ... [ f m (x,y) ] ...                     -- (2) holds
```
Because one of the boxes in the call site can cancel away:
```
res = ... case field1 t of (x1,x2) ->
          case field2 t of (y1,y2) ->
          case $wf x1 x2 y1 y2 of (#r1,r2#) -> ...
arg = ... [ case $wf x1 x2 y1 y2 of (#r1,r2#) -> (r1,r2) ] ...
```
And when call sites neither have arg boxes (1) nor need the result boxed (2),
then hesitating to unbox means /more/ allocation in the call site because of the
need for fresh argument boxes.

Summary: If call sites that satisfy both (1) and (2) occur more often than call
sites that satisfy neither condition, then it's best /not/ to unbox 'p'.

Note [Unboxed demand on function bodies returning small products]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Note [Boxity analysis] achieves its biggest wins when we avoid reboxing huge
records. But when we return small products from a function, we often get faster
programs by pretending that the caller unboxes the result. Long version:

Observation: Big record arguments (e.g., DynFlags) tend to be modified much less
             frequently than small records (e.g., Int).
Result:      Big records tend to be passed around boxed (unmodified) much more
             frequently than small records.
Consequence:  The larger the record, the more likely conditions (1) and (2) from
             Note [Function body boxity and call sites] are met, in which case
             unboxing returned parameters leads to reboxing.

So we put an Unboxed demand on function bodies returning small products and a
Boxed demand on the others. What is regarded a small product is controlled by
the -fdmd-unbox-width flag.

This also manages to unbox functions like
```
sum z      []          = z
sum (I# n) ((I# x):xs) = sum (I# (n +# x)) xs
```
where we can unbox 'z' on the grounds that it's but a small box anyway. That in
turn means that the I# allocation in the recursive call site can cancel away and
we get a non-allocating loop, nice and tight.
Note that this is the typical case in "Observation" above: A small box is
unboxed, modified, the result reboxed for the recursive call.

Originally, this came up in binary-trees' check' function and #4267 which
(similarly) features a strict fold over a tree. We'd also regress in join004 and
join007 if we didn't assume an optimistic Unboxed demand on the function body.
T17932 features a (non-recursive) function that returns a large record, e.g.,
```
flags (Options f x) = <huge> `seq` f
```
and here we won't unbox 'f' because it has 5 fields (which is larger than the
default -fdmd-unbox-width threshold).

Why not focus on putting Unboxed demands on *all recursive* function?
Then we'd unbox
```
flags 0 (Options f x) = <huge> `seq` f
flags n o             = flags (n-1) o
```
and that seems hardly useful.
(NB: Similar to 'f' from Note [Preserving Boxity of results is rarely a win],
but there we only had 2 fields.)

What about the Boxity of *fields* of a small, returned box? Consider
```
sumIO :: Int -> Int -> IO Int
sumIO 0 !z = return z     -- What DmdAnal sees: sumIO 0 z s = z `seq` (# s, z #)
sumIO n !z = sumIO (n-1) (z+n)
```
We really want 'z' to unbox here. Yet its use in the returned unboxed pair
is fundamentally a Boxed one! CPR would manage to unbox it, but DmdAnal runs
before that. There is an Unboxed use in the recursive call to 'go' though.
But 'IO Int' returns a small product, and 'Int' is a small product itself.
So we'll put the RHS of 'sumIO' under sub-demand '!P(L,L!P(L))', indicating that
*if* we evaluate 'z', we don't need the box later on. And indeed the bang will
evaluate `z`, so we conclude with a total demand of `1!P(L)` on `z` and unbox
it.

Unlike for recursive functions, where we can often speed up the loop by
unboxing at the cost of a bit of reboxing in the base case, the wins for
non-recursive functions quickly turn into losses when unboxing too deeply.
That happens in T11545, T18109 and T18174. Therefore, we deeply unbox recursive
function bodies but only shallowly unbox non-recursive function bodies (governed
by the max_depth variable).

The implementation is in 'GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal.unboxWhenSmall'. It is quite
vital, guarding for regressions in test cases like #2387, #3586, #16040, #5075
and #19871.

Note that this is fundamentally working around a phase problem, namely that the
results of boxity analysis depend on CPR analysis (and vice versa, of course).

Note [unboxedWins]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We used to use '_unboxedWins' below in 'lubBoxity', which was too optimistic.

While it worked around some shortcomings of the phase separation between Boxity
analysis and CPR analysis, it was a gross hack which caused regressions itself
that needed all kinds of fixes and workarounds. Examples (from #21119):

  * As #20767 says, L and B were no longer top and bottom of our lattice
  * In #20746 we unboxed huge Handle types that were never needed boxed in the
    first place. See Note [deferAfterPreciseException].
  * It also caused unboxing of huge records where we better shouldn't, for
    example in T19871.absent.
  * It became impossible to work with when implementing !7599, mostly due to the
    chaos that results from #20767.

Conclusion: We should use 'boxedWins' in 'lubBoxity', #21119.
Fortunately, we could come up with a number of better mechanisms to make up for
the sometimes huge regressions that would have otherwise incured:

1. A beefed up Note [Unboxed demand on function bodies returning small products]
   that works recursively fixes most regressions. It's a bit unsound, but
   pretty well-behaved.
2. We saw bottoming functions spoil boxity in some less severe cases and
   countered that with Note [Boxity for bottoming functions].

-}

boxedWins :: Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
boxedWins :: Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
boxedWins Boxity
Unboxed Boxity
Unboxed = Boxity
Unboxed
boxedWins Boxity
_       !Boxity
_      = Boxity
Boxed

_unboxedWins :: Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
-- See Note [unboxedWins]
_unboxedWins :: Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
_unboxedWins Boxity
Boxed Boxity
Boxed = Boxity
Boxed
_unboxedWins Boxity
_     !Boxity
_    = Boxity
Unboxed

lubBoxity :: Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
-- See Note [Boxity analysis] for the lattice.
lubBoxity :: Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
lubBoxity = Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
boxedWins

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
           Card: Combining Strictness and Usage
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

{- Note [Evaluation cardinalities]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The demand analyser uses an (abstraction of) /evaluation cardinality/ of type
Card, to specify how many times a term is evaluated. A Card C_lu
represents an /interval/ of possible cardinalities [l..u], meaning

* Evaluated /at least/ 'l' times (strictness).
  Hence 'l' is either 0 (lazy)
                   or 1 (strict)

* Evaluated /at most/ 'u' times (usage).
  Hence 'u' is either 0 (not used at all),
                   or 1 (used at most once)
                   or n (no information)

Intervals describe sets, so the underlying lattice is the powerset lattice.

Usually l<=u, but we also have C_10, the interval [1,0], the empty interval,
denoting the empty set.   This is the bottom element of the lattice.

See Note [Demand notation] for the notation we use for each of the constructors.

Note [Bit vector representation for Card]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
While the 6 inhabitants of Card admit an efficient representation as an
enumeration, implementing operations such as lubCard, plusCard and multCard
leads to unreasonably bloated code. This was the old defn for lubCard, for
example:

  -- Handle C_10 (bot)
  lubCard C_10 n    = n    -- bot
  lubCard n    C_10 = n    -- bot
  -- Handle C_0N (top)
  lubCard C_0N _    = C_0N -- top
  lubCard _    C_0N = C_0N -- top
  -- Handle C_11
  lubCard C_00 C_11 = C_01 -- {0} ∪ {1} = {0,1}
  lubCard C_11 C_00 = C_01 -- {0} ∪ {1} = {0,1}
  lubCard C_11 n    = n    -- {1} is a subset of all other intervals
  lubCard n    C_11 = n    -- {1} is a subset of all other intervals
  -- Handle C_1N
  lubCard C_1N C_1N = C_1N -- reflexivity
  lubCard _    C_1N = C_0N -- {0} ∪ {1,n} = top
  lubCard C_1N _    = C_0N -- {0} ∪ {1,n} = top
  -- Handle C_01
  lubCard C_01 _    = C_01 -- {0} ∪ {0,1} = {0,1}
  lubCard _    C_01 = C_01 -- {0} ∪ {0,1} = {0,1}
  -- Handle C_00
  lubCard C_00 C_00 = C_00 -- reflexivity

There's a much more compact way to encode these operations if Card is
represented not as distinctly denoted intervals, but as the subset of the set
of all cardinalities {0,1,n} instead. We represent such a subset as a bit vector
of length 3 (which fits in an Int). That's actually pretty common for such
powerset lattices.
There's one bit per denoted cardinality that is set iff that cardinality is part
of the denoted set, with n being the most significand bit (index 2) and 0 being
represented by the least significand bit (index 0).

How does that help? Well, for one, lubCard just becomes

  lubCard (Card a) (Card b) = Card (a .|. b)

The other operations, 'plusCard' and 'multCard', become significantly more
tricky, but immensely more compact. It's all straight-line code with a few bit
twiddling instructions now!

Note [Algebraic specification for plusCard and multCard]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The representation change in Note [Bit vector representation for Card] admits
very dense definitions of 'plusCard' and 'multCard' in terms of bit twiddling,
but the connection to the algebraic operations they implement is lost.
It's helpful to have a written specification of what 'plusCard' and 'multCard'
here that says what they should compute.

  * plusCard: a@[l1,u1] + b@[l2,u2] = r@[l1+l2,u1+u2].
      - In terms of sets, 0 ∈ r iff 0 ∈ a and 0 ∈ b.
        Examples: set in C_00 + C_00, C_01 + C_0N, but not in C_10 + C_00
      - In terms of sets, 1 ∈ r iff 1 ∈ a or 1 ∈ b.
        Examples: set in C_01 + C_00, C_0N + C_0N, but not in C_10 + C_00
      - In terms of sets, n ∈ r iff n ∈ a or n ∈ b, or (1 ∈ a and 1 ∈ b),
        so not unlike add with carry.
        Examples: set in C_01 + C_01, C_01 + C_0N, but not in C_10 + C_01
      - Handy special cases:
          o 'plusCard C_10' bumps up the strictness of its argument, just like
            'lubCard C_00' lazifies it, without touching upper bounds.
            See also 'strictifyCard'
          o Similarly, 'plusCard C_0N' discards usage information
            (incl. absence) but leaves strictness alone.

  * multCard: a@[l1,u1] * b@[l2,u2] = r@[l1*l2,u1*u2].
      - In terms of sets, 0 ∈ r iff 0 ∈ a or 0 ∈ b.
        Examples: set in C_00 * C_10, C_01 * C_1N, but not in C_10 * C_1N
      - In terms of sets, 1 ∈ r iff 1 ∈ a and 1 ∈ b.
        Examples: set in C_01 * C_01, C_01 * C_1N, but not in C_11 * C_10
      - In terms of sets, n ∈ r iff 1 ∈ r and (n ∈ a or n ∈ b).
        Examples: set in C_1N * C_01, C_1N * C_0N, but not in C_10 * C_1N
      - Handy special cases:
          o 'multCard C_1N c' is the same as 'plusCard c c' and
            drops used-once info. But unlike 'plusCard C_0N', it leaves absence
            and strictness.
          o 'multCard C_01' drops strictness info, like 'lubCard C_00'.
          o 'multCard C_0N' does both; it discards all strictness and used-once
            info and retains only absence info.
-}


-- | Describes an interval of /evaluation cardinalities/.
-- See Note [Evaluation cardinalities]
-- See Note [Bit vector representation for Card]
newtype Card = Card Int
  deriving Card -> Card -> Bool
(Card -> Card -> Bool) -> (Card -> Card -> Bool) -> Eq Card
forall a. (a -> a -> Bool) -> (a -> a -> Bool) -> Eq a
$c== :: Card -> Card -> Bool
== :: Card -> Card -> Bool
$c/= :: Card -> Card -> Bool
/= :: Card -> Card -> Bool
Eq

-- | A subtype of 'Card' for which the upper bound is never 0 (no 'C_00' or
-- 'C_10'). The only four inhabitants are 'C_01', 'C_0N', 'C_11', 'C_1N'.
-- Membership can be tested with 'isCardNonAbs'.
-- See 'D' and 'Call' for use sites and explanation.
type CardNonAbs = Card

-- | A subtype of 'Card' for which the upper bound is never 1 (no 'C_01' or
-- 'C_11'). The only four inhabitants are 'C_00', 'C_0N', 'C_10', 'C_1N'.
-- Membership can be tested with 'isCardNonOnce'.
-- See 'Poly' for use sites and explanation.
type CardNonOnce = Card

-- | Absent, {0}. Pretty-printed as A.
pattern C_00 :: Card
pattern $mC_00 :: forall {r}. Card -> ((# #) -> r) -> ((# #) -> r) -> r
$bC_00 :: Card
C_00 = Card 0b001
-- | Bottom, {}. Pretty-printed as A.
pattern C_10 :: Card
pattern $mC_10 :: forall {r}. Card -> ((# #) -> r) -> ((# #) -> r) -> r
$bC_10 :: Card
C_10 = Card 0b000
-- | Strict and used once, {1}. Pretty-printed as 1.
pattern C_11 :: Card
pattern $mC_11 :: forall {r}. Card -> ((# #) -> r) -> ((# #) -> r) -> r
$bC_11 :: Card
C_11 = Card 0b010
-- | Used at most once, {0,1}. Pretty-printed as M.
pattern C_01 :: Card
pattern $mC_01 :: forall {r}. Card -> ((# #) -> r) -> ((# #) -> r) -> r
$bC_01 :: Card
C_01 = Card 0b011
-- | Strict and used (possibly) many times, {1,n}. Pretty-printed as S.
pattern C_1N :: Card
pattern $mC_1N :: forall {r}. Card -> ((# #) -> r) -> ((# #) -> r) -> r
$bC_1N :: Card
C_1N = Card 0b110
-- | Every possible cardinality; the top element, {0,1,n}. Pretty-printed as L.
pattern C_0N :: Card
pattern $mC_0N :: forall {r}. Card -> ((# #) -> r) -> ((# #) -> r) -> r
$bC_0N :: Card
C_0N = Card 0b111

{-# COMPLETE C_00, C_01, C_0N, C_10, C_11, C_1N :: Card #-}

_botCard, topCard :: Card
_botCard :: Card
_botCard = Card
C_10
topCard :: Card
topCard = Card
C_0N

-- | True <=> lower bound is 1.
isStrict :: Card -> Bool
-- See Note [Bit vector representation for Card]
isStrict :: Card -> Bool
isStrict (Card Int
c) = Int
c Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b001 Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Int
0 -- simply check 0 bit is not set

-- | True <=> upper bound is 0.
isAbs :: Card -> Bool
-- See Note [Bit vector representation for Card]
isAbs :: Card -> Bool
isAbs (Card Int
c) = Int
c Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b110 Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Int
0 -- simply check 1 and n bit are not set

-- | True <=> upper bound is 1.
isUsedOnce :: Card -> Bool
-- See Note [Bit vector representation for Card]
isUsedOnce :: Card -> Bool
isUsedOnce (Card Int
c) = Int
c Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b100 Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Int
0 -- simply check n bit is not set

-- | Is this a 'CardNonAbs'?
isCardNonAbs :: Card -> Bool
isCardNonAbs :: Card -> Bool
isCardNonAbs = Bool -> Bool
not (Bool -> Bool) -> (Card -> Bool) -> Card -> Bool
forall b c a. (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
. Card -> Bool
isAbs

-- | Is this a 'CardNonOnce'?
isCardNonOnce :: Card -> Bool
isCardNonOnce :: Card -> Bool
isCardNonOnce Card
n = Card -> Bool
isAbs Card
n Bool -> Bool -> Bool
|| Bool -> Bool
not (Card -> Bool
isUsedOnce Card
n)

-- | Intersect with [0,1].
oneifyCard :: Card -> Card
oneifyCard :: Card -> Card
oneifyCard = Card -> Card -> Card
glbCard Card
C_01

-- | Intersect with [1,n]. The same as @'plusCard' 'C_10'@.
strictifyCard :: Card -> Card
strictifyCard :: Card -> Card
strictifyCard = Card -> Card -> Card
glbCard Card
C_1N

-- | Denotes '∪' on 'Card'.
lubCard :: Card -> Card -> Card
-- See Note [Bit vector representation for Card]
lubCard :: Card -> Card -> Card
lubCard (Card Int
a) (Card Int
b) = Int -> Card
Card (Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
b) -- main point of the bit-vector encoding!

-- | Denotes '∩' on 'Card'.
glbCard :: Card -> Card -> Card
-- See Note [Bit vector representation for Card]
glbCard :: Card -> Card -> Card
glbCard (Card Int
a) (Card Int
b) = Int -> Card
Card (Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
b)

-- | Denotes '+' on lower and upper bounds of 'Card'.
plusCard :: Card -> Card -> Card
-- See Note [Algebraic specification for plusCard and multCard]
plusCard :: Card -> Card -> Card
plusCard (Card Int
a) (Card Int
b)
  = Int -> Card
Card (Int
bit0 Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
bit1 Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
bitN)
  where
    bit0 :: Int
bit0 =  (Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
b)                         Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b001
    bit1 :: Int
bit1 =  (Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
b)                         Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b010
    bitN :: Int
bitN = ((Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
b) Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> Int -> a
shiftL (Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
b) Int
1) Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b100

-- | Denotes '*' on lower and upper bounds of 'Card'.
multCard :: Card -> Card -> Card
-- See Note [Algebraic specification for plusCard and multCard]
multCard :: Card -> Card -> Card
multCard (Card Int
a) (Card Int
b)
  = Int -> Card
Card (Int
bit0 Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
bit1 Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
bitN)
  where
    bit0 :: Int
bit0 = (Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
b)                   Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b001
    bit1 :: Int
bit1 = (Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
b)                   Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b010
    bitN :: Int
bitN = (Int
a Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.|. Int
b) Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> Int -> a
shiftL Int
bit1 Int
1 Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Bits a => a -> a -> a
.&. Int
0b100

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
           Demand: Evaluation contexts
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

-- | A demand describes
--
--   * How many times a variable is evaluated, via a 'Card'inality, and
--   * How deep its value was evaluated in turn, via a 'SubDemand'.
--
-- Examples (using Note [Demand notation]):
--
--   * 'seq' puts demand @1A@ on its first argument: It evaluates the argument
--     strictly (@1@), but not any deeper (@A@).
--   * 'fst' puts demand @1P(1L,A)@ on its argument: It evaluates the argument
--     pair strictly and the first component strictly, but no nested info
--     beyond that (@L@). Its second argument is not used at all.
--   * '$' puts demand @1C(1,L)@ on its first argument: It calls (@C@) the
--     argument function with one argument, exactly once (@1@). No info
--     on how the result of that call is evaluated (@L@).
--   * 'maybe' puts demand @MC(M,L)@ on its second argument: It evaluates
--     the argument function at most once ((M)aybe) and calls it once when
--     it is evaluated.
--   * @fst p + fst p@ puts demand @SP(SL,A)@ on @p@: It's @1P(1L,A)@
--     multiplied by two, so we get @S@ (used at least once, possibly multiple
--     times).
--
-- This data type is quite similar to @'Scaled' 'SubDemand'@, but it's scaled
-- by 'Card', which is an /interval/ on 'Multiplicity', the upper bound of
-- which could be used to infer uniqueness types. Also we treat 'AbsDmd' and
-- 'BotDmd' specially, as the concept of a 'SubDemand' doesn't apply when there
-- isn't any evaluation at all. If you don't care, simply use '(:*)'.
data Demand
  = BotDmd
  -- ^ A bottoming demand, produced by a diverging function ('C_10'), hence there is no
  -- 'SubDemand' that describes how it was evaluated.

  | AbsDmd
  -- ^ An absent demand: Evaluated exactly 0 times ('C_00'), hence there is no
  -- 'SubDemand' that describes how it was evaluated.

  | D !CardNonAbs !SubDemand
  -- ^ Don't use this internal data constructor; use '(:*)' instead.
  -- Since BotDmd deals with 'C_10' and AbsDmd deals with 'C_00', the
  -- cardinality component is CardNonAbs
  deriving Demand -> Demand -> Bool
(Demand -> Demand -> Bool)
-> (Demand -> Demand -> Bool) -> Eq Demand
forall a. (a -> a -> Bool) -> (a -> a -> Bool) -> Eq a
$c== :: Demand -> Demand -> Bool
== :: Demand -> Demand -> Bool
$c/= :: Demand -> Demand -> Bool
/= :: Demand -> Demand -> Bool
Eq

-- | Only meant to be used in the pattern synonym below!
viewDmdPair :: Demand -> (Card, SubDemand)
viewDmdPair :: Demand -> (Card, SubDemand)
viewDmdPair Demand
BotDmd   = (Card
C_10, SubDemand
botSubDmd)
viewDmdPair Demand
AbsDmd   = (Card
C_00, SubDemand
botSubDmd)
viewDmdPair (D Card
n SubDemand
sd) = (Card
n, SubDemand
sd)

-- | @c :* sd@ is a demand that says \"evaluated @c@ times, and any trace in
-- which it is evaluated will evaluate at least as deep as @sd@\".
--
-- Matching on this pattern synonym is a complete match.
-- If the matched demand was 'AbsDmd', it will match as @C_00 :* seqSubDmd@.
-- If the matched demand was 'BotDmd', it will match as @C_10 :* botSubDmd@.
-- The builder of this pattern synonym simply /discards/ the 'SubDemand' if the
-- 'Card' was absent and returns 'AbsDmd' or 'BotDmd' instead. It will assert
-- that the discarded sub-demand was 'seqSubDmd' and 'botSubDmd', respectively.
--
-- Call sites should consider whether they really want to look at the
-- 'SubDemand' of an absent demand and match on 'AbsDmd' and/or 'BotDmd'
-- otherwise. Really, any other 'SubDemand' would be allowed and
-- might work better, depending on context.
pattern (:*) :: HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
pattern n $m:* :: forall {r}.
HasDebugCallStack =>
Demand -> (Card -> SubDemand -> r) -> ((# #) -> r) -> r
$b:* :: HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* sd <- (viewDmdPair -> (n, sd)) where
  Card
C_10 :* SubDemand
sd = Demand
BotDmd Demand -> (Demand -> Demand) -> Demand
forall a b. a -> (a -> b) -> b
& Bool -> SDoc -> Demand -> Demand
forall a. HasCallStack => Bool -> SDoc -> a -> a
assertPpr (SubDemand
sd SubDemand -> SubDemand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== SubDemand
botSubDmd) (String -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => String -> doc
text String
"B /=" SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<+> SubDemand -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr SubDemand
sd)
  Card
C_00 :* SubDemand
sd = Demand
AbsDmd Demand -> (Demand -> Demand) -> Demand
forall a b. a -> (a -> b) -> b
& Bool -> SDoc -> Demand -> Demand
forall a. HasCallStack => Bool -> SDoc -> a -> a
assertPpr (SubDemand
sd SubDemand -> SubDemand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== SubDemand
botSubDmd) (String -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => String -> doc
text String
"A /=" SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<+> SubDemand -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr SubDemand
sd)
  Card
n    :* SubDemand
sd = Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
D Card
n SubDemand
sd Demand -> (Demand -> Demand) -> Demand
forall a b. a -> (a -> b) -> b
& Bool -> SDoc -> Demand -> Demand
forall a. HasCallStack => Bool -> SDoc -> a -> a
assertPpr (Card -> Bool
isCardNonAbs Card
n)  (Card -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Card
n SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsDoc doc => doc -> doc -> doc
$$ SubDemand -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr SubDemand
sd)
{-# COMPLETE (:*) #-}

-- | A sub-demand describes an /evaluation context/ (in the sense of an
-- operational semantics), e.g. how deep the denoted thing is going to be
-- evaluated. See 'Demand' for examples.
--
-- See Note [SubDemand denotes at least one evaluation] for a more detailed
-- description of what a sub-demand means.
--
-- See Note [Demand notation] for the extensively used short-hand notation.
-- See also Note [Why Boxity in SubDemand and not in Demand?].
data SubDemand
  = Poly !Boxity !CardNonOnce
  -- ^ Polymorphic demand, the denoted thing is evaluated arbitrarily deep,
  -- with the specified cardinality at every level. The 'Boxity' applies only
  -- to the outer evaluation context as well as all inner evaluation context.
  -- See Note [Boxity in Poly] for why we want it to carry 'Boxity'.
  -- Expands to 'Call' via 'viewCall' and to 'Prod' via 'viewProd'.
  --
  -- @Poly b n@ is semantically equivalent to @Prod b [n :* Poly b n, ...]
  -- or @Call n (Poly Boxed n)@. 'viewCall' and 'viewProd' do these rewrites.
  --
  -- In Note [Demand notation]: @L  === P(L,L,...)@  and @L  === C(L)@,
  --                            @B  === P(B,B,...)@  and @B  === C(B)@,
  --                            @!A === !P(A,A,...)@ and @!A === C(A)@,
  --                            and so on.
  --
  -- We'll only see 'Poly' with 'C_10' (B), 'C_00' (A), 'C_0N' (L) and sometimes
  -- 'C_1N' (S) through 'plusSubDmd', never 'C_01' (M) or 'C_11' (1) (grep the
  -- source code). Hence 'CardNonOnce', which is closed under 'lub' and 'plus'.
  --
  -- Why doesn't this constructor simply carry a 'Demand' instead of its fields?
  -- See Note [Call SubDemand vs. evaluation Demand].
  | Call !CardNonAbs !SubDemand
  -- ^ @Call n sd@ describes the evaluation context of @n@ function
  -- applications (with one argument), where the result of each call is
  -- evaluated according to @sd@.
  -- @sd@ describes program traces in which the denoted thing was called at all,
  -- see Note [SubDemand denotes at least one evaluation].
  -- That Note also explains why it doesn't make sense for @n@ to be absent,
  -- hence we forbid it with 'CardNonAbs'. Absent call demands can still be
  -- expressed with 'Poly'.
  -- Used only for values of function type. Use the smart constructor 'mkCall'
  -- whenever possible!
  | Prod !Boxity ![Demand]
  -- ^ @Prod b ds@ describes the evaluation context of a case scrutinisation
  -- on an expression of product type, where the product components are
  -- evaluated according to @ds@. The 'Boxity' @b@ says whether or not the box
  -- of the product was used.

-- | We have to respect Poly rewrites through 'viewCall' and 'viewProd'.
instance Eq SubDemand where
  SubDemand
d1 == :: SubDemand -> SubDemand -> Bool
== SubDemand
d2 = case SubDemand
d1 of
    Prod Boxity
b1 [Demand]
ds1
      | Just (Boxity
b2, [Demand]
ds2) <- Int -> SubDemand -> Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
viewProd ([Demand] -> Int
forall a. [a] -> Int
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Int
length [Demand]
ds1) SubDemand
d2 -> Boxity
b1 Boxity -> Boxity -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Boxity
b2 Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& [Demand]
ds1 [Demand] -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== [Demand]
ds2
    Call Card
n1 SubDemand
sd1
      | Just (Card
n2, SubDemand
sd2) <- SubDemand -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
viewCall SubDemand
d2              -> Card
n1 Card -> Card -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Card
n2 Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& SubDemand
sd1 SubDemand -> SubDemand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== SubDemand
sd2
    Poly Boxity
b1 Card
n1
      | Poly Boxity
b2 Card
n2 <- SubDemand
d2                           -> Boxity
b1 Boxity -> Boxity -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Boxity
b2 Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& Card
n1 Card -> Card -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Card
n2
    SubDemand
_                                              -> Bool
False

topSubDmd, botSubDmd, seqSubDmd :: SubDemand
topSubDmd :: SubDemand
topSubDmd = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly   Boxity
Boxed Card
C_0N
botSubDmd :: SubDemand
botSubDmd = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
Unboxed Card
C_10
seqSubDmd :: SubDemand
seqSubDmd = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
Unboxed Card
C_00

-- | The uniform field demand when viewing a 'Poly' as a 'Prod', as in
-- 'viewProd'.
polyFieldDmd :: Boxity -> CardNonOnce -> Demand
polyFieldDmd :: Boxity -> Card -> Demand
polyFieldDmd Boxity
_     Card
C_00 = Demand
AbsDmd
polyFieldDmd Boxity
_     Card
C_10 = Demand
BotDmd
polyFieldDmd Boxity
Boxed Card
C_0N = Demand
topDmd
polyFieldDmd Boxity
b     Card
n    = Card
n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
b Card
n Demand -> (Demand -> Demand) -> Demand
forall a b. a -> (a -> b) -> b
& Bool -> SDoc -> Demand -> Demand
forall a. HasCallStack => Bool -> SDoc -> a -> a
assertPpr (Card -> Bool
isCardNonOnce Card
n) (Card -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Card
n)

-- | A smart constructor for 'Prod', applying rewrite rules along the semantic
-- equality @Prod b [n :* Poly Boxed n, ...] === Poly b n@, simplifying to
-- 'Poly' 'SubDemand's when possible. Examples:
--
--   * Rewrites @P(L,L)@ (e.g., arguments @Boxed@, @[L,L]@) to @L@
--   * Rewrites @!P(L!L,L!L)@ (e.g., arguments @Unboxed@, @[L!L,L!L]@) to @!L@
--   * Does not rewrite @P(1L)@, @P(L!L)@, @!P(L)@ or @P(L,A)@
--
mkProd :: Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd :: Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
b [Demand]
ds
  | (Demand -> Bool) -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => (a -> Bool) -> t a -> Bool
all (Demand -> Demand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Demand
AbsDmd) [Demand]
ds = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
b Card
C_00
  | (Demand -> Bool) -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => (a -> Bool) -> t a -> Bool
all (Demand -> Demand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Demand
BotDmd) [Demand]
ds = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
b Card
C_10
  | dmd :: Demand
dmd@(Card
n :* Poly Boxity
b2 Card
m):[Demand]
_ <- [Demand]
ds
  , Card
n Card -> Card -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Card
m           -- don't rewrite P(SL)  to S
  , Boxity
b Boxity -> Boxity -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Boxity
b2          -- don't rewrite P(S!S) to !S
  , (Demand -> Bool) -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => (a -> Bool) -> t a -> Bool
all (Demand -> Demand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Demand
dmd) [Demand]
ds  -- don't rewrite P(L,A) to L
  = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
b Card
n
  | Bool
otherwise          = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
Prod Boxity
b [Demand]
ds

-- | @viewProd n sd@ interprets @sd@ as a 'Prod' of arity @n@, expanding 'Poly'
-- demands as necessary.
viewProd :: Arity -> SubDemand -> Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
-- It's quite important that this function is optimised well;
-- it is used by lubSubDmd and plusSubDmd.
viewProd :: Int -> SubDemand -> Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
viewProd Int
n (Prod Boxity
b [Demand]
ds)
  | [Demand]
ds [Demand] -> Int -> Bool
forall a. [a] -> Int -> Bool
`lengthIs` Int
n = (Boxity, [Demand]) -> Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
forall a. a -> Maybe a
Just (Boxity
b, [Demand]
ds)
-- Note the strict application to replicate: This makes sure we don't allocate
-- a thunk for it, inlines it and lets case-of-case fire at call sites.
viewProd Int
n (Poly Boxity
b Card
card)
  | let !ds :: [Demand]
ds = Int -> Demand -> [Demand]
forall a. Int -> a -> [a]
replicate Int
n (Demand -> [Demand]) -> Demand -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$! Boxity -> Card -> Demand
polyFieldDmd Boxity
b Card
card
  = (Boxity, [Demand]) -> Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
forall a. a -> Maybe a
Just (Boxity
b, [Demand]
ds)
viewProd Int
_ SubDemand
_
  = Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
forall a. Maybe a
Nothing
{-# INLINE viewProd #-} -- we want to fuse away the replicate and the allocation
                        -- for Arity. Otherwise, #18304 bites us.

-- | A smart constructor for 'Call', applying rewrite rules along the semantic
-- equality @Call C_0N (Poly C_0N) === Poly C_0N@, simplifying to 'Poly' 'SubDemand's
-- when possible.
mkCall :: CardNonAbs -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
--mkCall C_1N sd@(Poly Boxed C_1N) = sd -- NO! #21085 strikes. See Note [mkCall and plusSubDmd]
mkCall :: Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
C_0N sd :: SubDemand
sd@(Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
C_0N) = SubDemand
sd
mkCall Card
n    SubDemand
sd                   = Bool -> SDoc -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
forall a. HasCallStack => Bool -> SDoc -> a -> a
assertPpr (Card -> Bool
isCardNonAbs Card
n) (Card -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Card
n SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsDoc doc => doc -> doc -> doc
$$ SubDemand -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr SubDemand
sd) (SubDemand -> SubDemand) -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$
                                   Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
Call Card
n SubDemand
sd

-- | @viewCall sd@ interprets @sd@ as a 'Call', expanding 'Poly' subdemands as
-- necessary.
viewCall :: SubDemand -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
viewCall :: SubDemand -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
viewCall (Call Card
n SubDemand
sd) = (Card, SubDemand) -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
forall a. a -> Maybe a
Just (Card
n :: Card, SubDemand
sd)
viewCall (Poly Boxity
_ Card
n)
  | Card -> Bool
isAbs Card
n          = (Card, SubDemand) -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
forall a. a -> Maybe a
Just (Card
n :: Card, SubDemand
botSubDmd)
  | Bool
otherwise        = (Card, SubDemand) -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
forall a. a -> Maybe a
Just (Card
n :: Card, Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
n)
viewCall SubDemand
_           = Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
forall a. Maybe a
Nothing

topDmd, absDmd, botDmd, seqDmd :: Demand
topDmd :: Demand
topDmd = Card
C_0N HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand
topSubDmd
absDmd :: Demand
absDmd = Demand
AbsDmd
botDmd :: Demand
botDmd = Demand
BotDmd
seqDmd :: Demand
seqDmd = Card
C_11 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand
seqSubDmd

-- | Sets 'Boxity' to 'Unboxed' for non-'Call' sub-demands and recurses into 'Prod'.
unboxDeeplySubDmd :: SubDemand -> SubDemand
unboxDeeplySubDmd :: SubDemand -> SubDemand
unboxDeeplySubDmd (Poly Boxity
_ Card
n)  = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
Unboxed Card
n
unboxDeeplySubDmd (Prod Boxity
_ [Demand]
ds) = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
Unboxed ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
strictMap Demand -> Demand
unboxDeeplyDmd [Demand]
ds)
unboxDeeplySubDmd call :: SubDemand
call@Call{} = SubDemand
call

-- | Sets 'Boxity' to 'Unboxed' for the 'Demand', recursing into 'Prod's.
-- Don't recurse into lazy arguments; see GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal
--    Note [No lazy, Unboxed demands in demand signature]
unboxDeeplyDmd :: Demand -> Demand
unboxDeeplyDmd :: Demand -> Demand
unboxDeeplyDmd Demand
AbsDmd   = Demand
AbsDmd
unboxDeeplyDmd Demand
BotDmd   = Demand
BotDmd
unboxDeeplyDmd dmd :: Demand
dmd@(D Card
n SubDemand
sd) | Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n = Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
D Card
n (SubDemand -> SubDemand
unboxDeeplySubDmd SubDemand
sd)
                            | Bool
otherwise  = Demand
dmd


multDmd :: Card -> Demand -> Demand
multDmd :: Card -> Demand -> Demand
multDmd Card
C_11 Demand
dmd       = Demand
dmd -- An optimisation
-- The following four lines make sure that we rewrite to AbsDmd and BotDmd
-- whenever the leading cardinality is absent (C_00 or C_10).
-- Otherwise it may happen that the SubDemand is not 'botSubDmd', triggering
-- the assertion in `:*`.
-- Example: `multDmd B 1L = BA`, so with an inner `seqSubDmd`. Our lattice
-- allows us to always rewrite this to proper BotDmd and we maintain the
-- invariant that this is indeed the case.
multDmd Card
C_00 Demand
_        = Demand
AbsDmd
multDmd Card
_    Demand
AbsDmd   = Demand
AbsDmd
multDmd Card
C_10 (D Card
n SubDemand
_)  = if Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n then Demand
BotDmd else Demand
AbsDmd
multDmd Card
n    Demand
BotDmd   = if Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n then Demand
BotDmd else Demand
AbsDmd
-- See Note [SubDemand denotes at least one evaluation] for the strictifyCard
multDmd Card
n    (D Card
m SubDemand
sd) = Card -> Card -> Card
multCard Card
n Card
m HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
multSubDmd (Card -> Card
strictifyCard Card
n) SubDemand
sd

multSubDmd :: Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
multSubDmd :: Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
multSubDmd Card
C_11 SubDemand
sd           = SubDemand
sd -- An optimisation, for when sd is a deep Prod
-- The following three equations don't have an impact on Demands, only on
-- Boxity. They are needed so that we don't trigger the assertions in `:*`
-- when called from `multDmd`.
multSubDmd Card
C_00 SubDemand
_            = SubDemand
seqSubDmd -- Otherwise `multSubDmd A L == A /= !A`
multSubDmd Card
C_10 (Poly Boxity
_ Card
n)   = if Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n then SubDemand
botSubDmd else SubDemand
seqSubDmd -- Otherwise `multSubDmd B L == B /= !B`
multSubDmd Card
C_10 (Call Card
n SubDemand
_)   = if Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n then SubDemand
botSubDmd else SubDemand
seqSubDmd -- Otherwise we'd call `mkCall` with absent cardinality
multSubDmd Card
n    (Poly Boxity
b Card
m)   = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
b (Card -> Card -> Card
multCard Card
n Card
m)
multSubDmd Card
n    (Call Card
n' SubDemand
sd) = Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall (Card -> Card -> Card
multCard Card
n Card
n') SubDemand
sd
multSubDmd Card
n    (Prod Boxity
b [Demand]
ds)  = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
b ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
strictMap (Card -> Demand -> Demand
multDmd Card
n) [Demand]
ds)

lazifyIfStrict :: Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lazifyIfStrict :: Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lazifyIfStrict Card
n SubDemand
sd = Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
multSubDmd (Card -> Card -> Card
glbCard Card
C_01 Card
n) SubDemand
sd

-- | Denotes '∪' on 'Demand'.
lubDmd :: Demand -> Demand -> Demand
lubDmd :: Demand -> Demand -> Demand
lubDmd Demand
BotDmd      Demand
dmd2        = Demand
dmd2
lubDmd Demand
dmd1        Demand
BotDmd      = Demand
dmd1
lubDmd (Card
n1 :* SubDemand
sd1) (Card
n2 :* SubDemand
sd2) = -- pprTraceWith "lubDmd" (\it -> ppr (n1:*sd1) $$ ppr (n2:*sd2) $$ ppr it) $
  Card -> Card -> Card
lubCard Card
n1 Card
n2 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lubSubDmd SubDemand
sd1 SubDemand
sd2

lubSubDmd :: SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
-- Shortcuts for neutral and absorbing elements.
-- Below we assume that Boxed always wins.
lubSubDmd :: SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lubSubDmd (Poly Boxity
Unboxed Card
C_10)  SubDemand
sd                   = SubDemand
sd
lubSubDmd SubDemand
sd                   (Poly Boxity
Unboxed Card
C_10)  = SubDemand
sd
lubSubDmd sd :: SubDemand
sd@(Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
C_0N) SubDemand
_                    = SubDemand
sd
lubSubDmd SubDemand
_                    sd :: SubDemand
sd@(Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
C_0N) = SubDemand
sd
-- Handle Prod
lubSubDmd (Prod Boxity
b1 [Demand]
ds1) (Poly Boxity
b2 Card
n2)
  | let !d :: Demand
d = Boxity -> Card -> Demand
polyFieldDmd Boxity
b2 Card
n2
  = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd (Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
lubBoxity Boxity
b1 Boxity
b2) ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
strictMap (Demand -> Demand -> Demand
lubDmd Demand
d) [Demand]
ds1)
lubSubDmd (Prod Boxity
b1 [Demand]
ds1) (Prod Boxity
b2 [Demand]
ds2)
  | [Demand] -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall a b. [a] -> [b] -> Bool
equalLength [Demand]
ds1 [Demand]
ds2
  = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd (Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
lubBoxity Boxity
b1 Boxity
b2) ((Demand -> Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
strictZipWith Demand -> Demand -> Demand
lubDmd [Demand]
ds1 [Demand]
ds2)
-- Handle Call
lubSubDmd (Call Card
n1 SubDemand
sd1) (SubDemand -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
viewCall -> Just (Card
n2, SubDemand
sd2)) =
  Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall (Card -> Card -> Card
lubCard Card
n1 Card
n2) (SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lubSubDmd SubDemand
sd1 SubDemand
sd2)
-- Handle Poly
lubSubDmd (Poly Boxity
b1 Card
n1) (Poly Boxity
b2 Card
n2) = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly (Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
lubBoxity Boxity
b1 Boxity
b2) (Card -> Card -> Card
lubCard Card
n1 Card
n2)
-- Other Poly case by commutativity
lubSubDmd sd1 :: SubDemand
sd1@Poly{}   SubDemand
sd2          = SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lubSubDmd SubDemand
sd2 SubDemand
sd1
-- Otherwise (Call `lub` Prod) return Top
lubSubDmd SubDemand
_            SubDemand
_            = SubDemand
topSubDmd

-- | Denotes '+' on 'Demand'.
plusDmd :: Demand -> Demand -> Demand
plusDmd :: Demand -> Demand -> Demand
plusDmd Demand
AbsDmd      Demand
dmd2        = Demand
dmd2
plusDmd Demand
dmd1        Demand
AbsDmd      = Demand
dmd1
plusDmd (Card
n1 :* SubDemand
sd1) (Card
n2 :* SubDemand
sd2) = -- pprTraceWith "plusDmd" (\it -> ppr (n1:*sd1) $$ ppr (n2:*sd2) $$ ppr it) $
  -- Why lazify? See Note [SubDemand denotes at least one evaluation]
  -- and also Note [Unrealised opportunity in plusDmd] which applies when both
  -- n1 and n2 are lazy already
  Card -> Card -> Card
plusCard Card
n1 Card
n2 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
plusSubDmd (Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lazifyIfStrict Card
n1 SubDemand
sd1) (Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lazifyIfStrict Card
n2 SubDemand
sd2)

plusSubDmd :: SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
-- Shortcuts for neutral and absorbing elements.
-- Below we assume that Boxed always wins.
plusSubDmd :: SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
plusSubDmd (Poly Boxity
Unboxed Card
C_00)  SubDemand
sd                   = SubDemand
sd
plusSubDmd SubDemand
sd                   (Poly Boxity
Unboxed Card
C_00)  = SubDemand
sd
plusSubDmd sd :: SubDemand
sd@(Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
C_1N) SubDemand
_                    = SubDemand
sd
plusSubDmd SubDemand
_                    sd :: SubDemand
sd@(Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
C_1N) = SubDemand
sd
-- Handle Prod
plusSubDmd (Prod Boxity
b1 [Demand]
ds1) (Poly Boxity
b2 Card
n2)
  | let !d :: Demand
d = Boxity -> Card -> Demand
polyFieldDmd Boxity
b2 Card
n2
  = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd (Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
lubBoxity Boxity
b1 Boxity
b2) ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
strictMap (Demand -> Demand -> Demand
plusDmd Demand
d) [Demand]
ds1)
plusSubDmd (Prod Boxity
b1 [Demand]
ds1) (Prod Boxity
b2 [Demand]
ds2)
  | [Demand] -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall a b. [a] -> [b] -> Bool
equalLength [Demand]
ds1 [Demand]
ds2
  = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd (Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
lubBoxity Boxity
b1 Boxity
b2) ((Demand -> Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
strictZipWith Demand -> Demand -> Demand
plusDmd [Demand]
ds1 [Demand]
ds2)
-- Handle Call
plusSubDmd (Call Card
n1 SubDemand
sd1) (SubDemand -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
viewCall -> Just (Card
n2, SubDemand
sd2)) =
  Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall (Card -> Card -> Card
plusCard Card
n1 Card
n2) (SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
lubSubDmd SubDemand
sd1 SubDemand
sd2)
-- Handle Poly
plusSubDmd (Poly Boxity
b1 Card
n1) (Poly Boxity
b2 Card
n2) = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly (Boxity -> Boxity -> Boxity
lubBoxity Boxity
b1 Boxity
b2) (Card -> Card -> Card
plusCard Card
n1 Card
n2)
-- Other Poly case by commutativity
plusSubDmd sd1 :: SubDemand
sd1@Poly{}   SubDemand
sd2          = SubDemand -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
plusSubDmd SubDemand
sd2 SubDemand
sd1
-- Otherwise (Call `plus` Prod) return Top
plusSubDmd SubDemand
_            SubDemand
_            = SubDemand
topSubDmd

-- | Used to suppress pretty-printing of an uninformative demand
isTopDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isTopDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isTopDmd Demand
dmd = Demand
dmd Demand -> Demand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Demand
topDmd

isAbsDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isAbsDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isAbsDmd (Card
n :* SubDemand
_) = Card -> Bool
isAbs Card
n

-- | Contrast with isStrictUsedDmd. See Note [Strict demands]
isStrictDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isStrictDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isStrictDmd (Card
n :* SubDemand
_) = Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n

-- | Not absent and used strictly. See Note [Strict demands]
isStrUsedDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isStrUsedDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isStrUsedDmd (Card
n :* SubDemand
_) = Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& Bool -> Bool
not (Card -> Bool
isAbs Card
n)

-- | Is the value used at most once?
isUsedOnceDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isUsedOnceDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isUsedOnceDmd (Card
n :* SubDemand
_) = Card -> Bool
isUsedOnce Card
n

-- | We try to avoid tracking weak free variable demands in strictness
-- signatures for analysis performance reasons.
-- See Note [Lazy and unleashable free variables] in "GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal".
isWeakDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isWeakDmd :: Demand -> Bool
isWeakDmd dmd :: Demand
dmd@(Card
n :* SubDemand
_) = Bool -> Bool
not (Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n) Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& Demand -> Bool
is_plus_idem_dmd Demand
dmd
  where
    -- @is_plus_idem_* thing@ checks whether @thing `plus` thing = thing@,
    -- e.g. if @thing@ is idempotent wrt. to @plus@.
    -- is_plus_idem_card n = plusCard n n == n
    is_plus_idem_card :: Card -> Bool
is_plus_idem_card = Card -> Bool
isCardNonOnce
    -- is_plus_idem_dmd dmd = plusDmd dmd dmd == dmd
    is_plus_idem_dmd :: Demand -> Bool
is_plus_idem_dmd Demand
AbsDmd    = Bool
True
    is_plus_idem_dmd Demand
BotDmd    = Bool
True
    is_plus_idem_dmd (Card
n :* SubDemand
sd) = Card -> Bool
is_plus_idem_card Card
n Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& SubDemand -> Bool
is_plus_idem_sub_dmd SubDemand
sd
    -- is_plus_idem_sub_dmd sd = plusSubDmd sd sd == sd
    is_plus_idem_sub_dmd :: SubDemand -> Bool
is_plus_idem_sub_dmd (Poly Boxity
_ Card
n)  = Bool -> Bool -> Bool
forall a. HasCallStack => Bool -> a -> a
assert (Card -> Bool
isCardNonOnce Card
n) Bool
True
    is_plus_idem_sub_dmd (Prod Boxity
_ [Demand]
ds) = (Demand -> Bool) -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => (a -> Bool) -> t a -> Bool
all Demand -> Bool
is_plus_idem_dmd [Demand]
ds
    is_plus_idem_sub_dmd (Call Card
n SubDemand
_)  = Card -> Bool
is_plus_idem_card Card
n

evalDmd :: Demand
evalDmd :: Demand
evalDmd = Card
C_1N HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand
topSubDmd

-- | First argument of 'GHC.Exts.maskAsyncExceptions#': @1C(1,L)@.
-- Called exactly once.
strictOnceApply1Dmd :: Demand
strictOnceApply1Dmd :: Demand
strictOnceApply1Dmd = Card
C_11 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
C_11 SubDemand
topSubDmd

-- | First argument of 'GHC.Exts.atomically#': @SC(S,L)@.
-- Called at least once, possibly many times.
strictManyApply1Dmd :: Demand
strictManyApply1Dmd :: Demand
strictManyApply1Dmd = Card
C_1N HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
C_1N SubDemand
topSubDmd

-- | First argument of catch#: @MC(M,L)@.
-- Evaluates its arg lazily, but then applies it exactly once to one argument.
lazyApply1Dmd :: Demand
lazyApply1Dmd :: Demand
lazyApply1Dmd = Card
C_01 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
C_01 SubDemand
topSubDmd

-- | Second argument of catch#: @MC(M,C(1,L))@.
-- Calls its arg lazily, but then applies it exactly once to an additional argument.
lazyApply2Dmd :: Demand
lazyApply2Dmd :: Demand
lazyApply2Dmd = Card
C_01 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
C_01 (Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
C_11 SubDemand
topSubDmd)

-- | Make a 'Demand' evaluated at-most-once.
oneifyDmd :: Demand -> Demand
oneifyDmd :: Demand -> Demand
oneifyDmd Demand
AbsDmd    = Demand
AbsDmd
oneifyDmd Demand
BotDmd    = Demand
BotDmd
oneifyDmd (Card
n :* SubDemand
sd) = Card -> Card
oneifyCard Card
n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand
sd

-- | Make a 'Demand' evaluated at-least-once (e.g. strict).
strictifyDmd :: Demand -> Demand
strictifyDmd :: Demand -> Demand
strictifyDmd = Demand -> Demand -> Demand
plusDmd Demand
seqDmd

-- | If the argument is a used non-newtype dictionary, give it strict demand.
-- Also split the product type & demand and recur in order to similarly
-- strictify the argument's contained used non-newtype superclass dictionaries.
-- We use the demand as our recursive measure to guarantee termination.
strictifyDictDmd :: Type -> Demand -> Demand
strictifyDictDmd :: Type -> Demand -> Demand
strictifyDictDmd Type
ty (Card
n :* Prod Boxity
b [Demand]
ds)
  | Bool -> Bool
not (Card -> Bool
isAbs Card
n)
  , Just [Type]
field_tys <- Type -> Maybe [Type]
as_non_newtype_dict Type
ty
  = Card
C_1N HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
b ((Type -> Demand -> Demand) -> [Type] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
zipWith Type -> Demand -> Demand
strictifyDictDmd [Type]
field_tys [Demand]
ds)
      -- main idea: ensure it's strict
  where
    -- Return a TyCon and a list of field types if the given
    -- type is a non-newtype dictionary type
    as_non_newtype_dict :: Type -> Maybe [Type]
as_non_newtype_dict Type
ty
      | Just (TyCon
tycon, [Type]
_arg_tys, DataCon
_data_con, (Scaled Type -> Type) -> [Scaled Type] -> [Type]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map Scaled Type -> Type
forall a. Scaled a -> a
scaledThing -> [Type]
inst_con_arg_tys)
          <- Type -> Maybe (TyCon, [Type], DataCon, [Scaled Type])
splitDataProductType_maybe Type
ty
      , Bool -> Bool
not (TyCon -> Bool
isNewTyCon TyCon
tycon)
      , TyCon -> Bool
isClassTyCon TyCon
tycon
      = [Type] -> Maybe [Type]
forall a. a -> Maybe a
Just [Type]
inst_con_arg_tys
      | Bool
otherwise
      = Maybe [Type]
forall a. Maybe a
Nothing
strictifyDictDmd Type
_  Demand
dmd = Demand
dmd

-- | Make a 'Demand' lazy.
lazifyDmd :: Demand -> Demand
lazifyDmd :: Demand -> Demand
lazifyDmd = Card -> Demand -> Demand
multDmd Card
C_01

-- | Wraps the 'SubDemand' with a one-shot call demand: @d@ -> @C(1,d)@.
mkCalledOnceDmd :: SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCalledOnceDmd :: SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCalledOnceDmd SubDemand
sd = Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
C_11 SubDemand
sd

-- | @mkCalledOnceDmds n d@ returns @C(1,C1...C(1,d))@ where there are @n@ @C1@'s.
mkCalledOnceDmds :: Arity -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCalledOnceDmds :: Int -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCalledOnceDmds Int
arity SubDemand
sd = (SubDemand -> SubDemand) -> SubDemand -> [SubDemand]
forall a. (a -> a) -> a -> [a]
iterate SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCalledOnceDmd SubDemand
sd [SubDemand] -> Int -> SubDemand
forall a. HasCallStack => [a] -> Int -> a
!! Int
arity

-- | Peels one call level from the sub-demand, and also returns how many
-- times we entered the lambda body.
peelCallDmd :: SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
peelCallDmd :: SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
peelCallDmd SubDemand
sd = SubDemand -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
viewCall SubDemand
sd Maybe (Card, SubDemand) -> (Card, SubDemand) -> (Card, SubDemand)
forall a. Maybe a -> a -> a
`orElse` (Card
topCard, SubDemand
topSubDmd)

-- Peels multiple nestings of 'Call' sub-demands and also returns
-- whether it was unsaturated in the form of a 'Card'inality, denoting
-- how many times the lambda body was entered.
-- See Note [Demands from unsaturated function calls].
peelManyCalls :: Arity -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
peelManyCalls :: Int -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
peelManyCalls Int
k SubDemand
sd = Int -> Card -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
forall {t}.
(Eq t, Num t) =>
t -> Card -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
go Int
k Card
C_11 SubDemand
sd
  where
    go :: t -> Card -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
go t
0 !Card
n !SubDemand
sd                        = (Card
n, SubDemand
sd)
    go t
k !Card
n (SubDemand -> Maybe (Card, SubDemand)
viewCall -> Just (Card
m, SubDemand
sd)) = t -> Card -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
go (t
kt -> t -> t
forall a. Num a => a -> a -> a
-t
1) (Card
n Card -> Card -> Card
`multCard` Card
m) SubDemand
sd
    go t
_ Card
_  SubDemand
_                          = (Card
topCard, SubDemand
topSubDmd)
{-# INLINE peelManyCalls #-} -- so that the pair cancels away in a `fst _` context

-- | Extract the 'SubDemand' of a 'Demand'.
-- PRECONDITION: The SubDemand must be used in a context where the expression
-- denoted by the Demand is under evaluation.
subDemandIfEvaluated :: Demand -> SubDemand
subDemandIfEvaluated :: Demand -> SubDemand
subDemandIfEvaluated (Card
_ :* SubDemand
sd) = SubDemand
sd

-- See Note [Demand on the worker] in GHC.Core.Opt.WorkWrap
mkWorkerDemand :: Int -> Demand
mkWorkerDemand :: Int -> Demand
mkWorkerDemand Int
n = Card
C_01 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Int -> SubDemand
forall {t}. (Eq t, Num t) => t -> SubDemand
go Int
n
  where go :: t -> SubDemand
go t
0 = SubDemand
topSubDmd
        go t
n = Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
C_01 (SubDemand -> SubDemand) -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ t -> SubDemand
go (t
nt -> t -> t
forall a. Num a => a -> a -> a
-t
1)

argsOneShots :: DmdSig -> Arity -> [[OneShotInfo]]
-- ^ See Note [Computing one-shot info]
argsOneShots :: DmdSig -> Int -> [[OneShotInfo]]
argsOneShots (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
_ [Demand]
arg_ds)) Int
n_val_args
  | Bool
unsaturated_call = []
  | Bool
otherwise = [Demand] -> [[OneShotInfo]]
go [Demand]
arg_ds
  where
    unsaturated_call :: Bool
unsaturated_call = [Demand]
arg_ds [Demand] -> Int -> Bool
forall a. [a] -> Int -> Bool
`lengthExceeds` Int
n_val_args

    go :: [Demand] -> [[OneShotInfo]]
go []               = []
    go (Demand
arg_d : [Demand]
arg_ds) = Demand -> [OneShotInfo]
argOneShots Demand
arg_d [OneShotInfo] -> [[OneShotInfo]] -> [[OneShotInfo]]
forall {a}. [a] -> [[a]] -> [[a]]
`cons` [Demand] -> [[OneShotInfo]]
go [Demand]
arg_ds

    -- Avoid list tail like [ [], [], [] ]
    cons :: [a] -> [[a]] -> [[a]]
cons [] [] = []
    cons [a]
a  [[a]]
as = [a]
a[a] -> [[a]] -> [[a]]
forall a. a -> [a] -> [a]
:[[a]]
as

argOneShots :: Demand          -- ^ depending on saturation
            -> [OneShotInfo]
-- ^ See Note [Computing one-shot info]
argOneShots :: Demand -> [OneShotInfo]
argOneShots Demand
AbsDmd    = [] -- This defn conflicts with 'saturatedByOneShots',
argOneShots Demand
BotDmd    = [] -- according to which we should return
                           -- @repeat OneShotLam@ here...
argOneShots (Card
_ :* SubDemand
sd) = SubDemand -> [OneShotInfo]
go SubDemand
sd
  where
    go :: SubDemand -> [OneShotInfo]
go (Call Card
n SubDemand
sd)
      | Card -> Bool
isUsedOnce Card
n = OneShotInfo
OneShotLam    OneShotInfo -> [OneShotInfo] -> [OneShotInfo]
forall a. a -> [a] -> [a]
: SubDemand -> [OneShotInfo]
go SubDemand
sd
      | Bool
otherwise    = OneShotInfo
NoOneShotInfo OneShotInfo -> [OneShotInfo] -> [OneShotInfo]
forall a. a -> [a] -> [a]
: SubDemand -> [OneShotInfo]
go SubDemand
sd
    go SubDemand
_    = []

-- |
-- @saturatedByOneShots n C(M,C(M,...)) = True@
--   <=>
-- There are at least n nested C(M,..) calls.
-- See Note [Demand on the worker] in GHC.Core.Opt.WorkWrap
saturatedByOneShots :: Int -> Demand -> Bool
saturatedByOneShots :: Int -> Demand -> Bool
saturatedByOneShots Int
_ Demand
AbsDmd    = Bool
True
saturatedByOneShots Int
_ Demand
BotDmd    = Bool
True
saturatedByOneShots Int
n (Card
_ :* SubDemand
sd) = Card -> Bool
isUsedOnce (Card -> Bool) -> Card -> Bool
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ (Card, SubDemand) -> Card
forall a b. (a, b) -> a
fst ((Card, SubDemand) -> Card) -> (Card, SubDemand) -> Card
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ Int -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
peelManyCalls Int
n SubDemand
sd

{- Note [Strict demands]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'isStrUsedDmd' returns true only of demands that are
   both strict
   and  used

In particular, it is False for <B> (i.e. strict and not used,
cardinality C_10), which can and does arise in, say (#7319)
   f x = raise# <some exception>
Then 'x' is not used, so f gets strictness <B> -> .
Now the w/w generates
   fx = let x <B> = absentError "unused"
        in raise <some exception>
At this point we really don't want to convert to
   fx = case absentError "unused" of x -> raise <some exception>
Since the program is going to diverge, this swaps one error for another,
but it's really a bad idea to *ever* evaluate an absent argument.
In #7319 we get
   T7319.exe: Oops!  Entered absent arg w_s1Hd{v} [lid] [base:GHC.Base.String{tc 36u}]

Note [SubDemand denotes at least one evaluation]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider a demand `n :* sd` on a binding `let x = e in <body>`.
(Similarly, a call sub-demand `Cn(sd)` on a lambda `\_. e`).
While `n` describes how *often* `x` had been evaluated in <body>,
the sub-demand `sd` describes how *deep* `e` has been evaluated, under the
following

  PREMISE: *for all program traces where `x` had been evaluated at all*

That is, `sd` disregards all program traces where `x` had not been evaluated,
because it can't describe the depth of an evaluation that never happened.
NB: The Premise only makes a difference for lower bounds/strictness.
Upper bounds/usage are unaffected by adding or leaving out evaluations that
never happen.

The Premise comes into play when we have lazy Demands. For example, if `x` was
demanded with `LP(SL,A)`, so perhaps the full expression was
  let x = (e1, e2) in (x `seq` fun y `seq` case x of (a,b) -> a, True)
then `x` will be evaluated lazily, but in any trace in which `x` is evaluated,
the pair in its RHS will ultimately be evaluated deeply with sub-demand
`P(SL,A)`. That means that `e1` is ultimately evaluated strictly, even though
evaluation of the field does not directly follow the eval of `x` due to the
intermittent call `fun y`.

How does the additional strictness help? The long version is the list of
examples at the end of this Note (as procured in #21081 and #18903).
The short version is

  * We get to take advantage of call-by-value/let-to-case in more situations,
    as for e1 above. See example "More let-to-case" below.
  * Note [Eta reduction based on evaluation context] applies in more situations.
    See example "More eta reduction" below.
  * We get to unbox more results, see example "More CPR" below.

It seems like we don't give up anything in return. Indeed that is the case:

  * If we dropped the Premise, then a lazy `n` in `nP(m..)` would always force
    `m` to be lazy, too. That is quite redundant! It seems wasteful not to use
    the lower bound of `m` for something more useful. So indeed we give up on
    nothing in return for some nice wins.
  * Even if `n` is absent (so the Premise does hold for no trace whatsoever),
    it's pretty easy to describe how `e` was evaluated. Answer: 'botSubDmd'.
    We use it when expanding 'Absent' and 'Bottom' demands in 'viewDmdPair' as
    well as when expanding absent 'Poly's to 'Call' sub-demands in 'viewCall'.

Of course, we now have to maintain the Premise when we unpack and rebuild
Demands. For strict demands, we know that the Premise indeed always holds for
any program trace abstracted over, whereas we have to be careful for lazy
demands.

In particular, when doing `plusDmd` we have to *lazify* the nested SubDemand
if the outer cardinality is lazy. E.g.,
  LP(SL) + SP(L) = (L+S)P((M*SL)+L) = SP(L+L) = SP(L)
Multiplying with `M`/`C_01` is the "lazify" part here and is implemented in
`lazifyIfStrict`. Example proving that point:
  d2 :: <LP(SL)><SP(A)>
  d2 x y = y `seq` (case x of (a,b) -> a, True)
  -- What is the demand on x in (d2 x x)? NOT SP(SL)!!

We used to apply the same reasoning to Call SubDemands `Cn(sd)` in `plusSubDmd`,
but that led to #21717, because different calls return different heap objects.
See Note [Call SubDemand vs. evaluation Demand].

There are a couple more examples that improve in T21081.
Here is a selection of those examples demonstrating the usefulness of The
Premise:

  * "More let-to-case" (from testcase T21081):
    ```hs
    f :: (Bool, Bool) -> (Bool, Bool)
    f pr = (case pr of (a,b) -> a /= b, True)
    g :: Int -> (Bool, Bool)
    g x = let y = let z = odd x in (z,z) in f y
    ```
    Although `f` is lazy in `pr`, we could case-bind `z` because it is always
    evaluated when `y` is evaluated. So we give `pr` demand `LP(SL,SL)`
    (most likely with better upper bounds/usage) and demand analysis then
    infers a strict demand for `z`.

  * "More eta reduction" (from testcase T21081):
    ```hs
    myfoldl :: (a -> b -> a) -> a -> [b] -> a
    myfoldl f z [] = z
    myfoldl f !z (x:xs) = myfoldl (\a b -> f a b) (f z x) xs
    ```
    Here, we can give `f` a demand of `LC(S,C(1,L))` (instead of the lazier
    `LC(L,C(1,L))`) which says "Whenever `f` is evaluated (lazily), it is also
    called with two arguments".
    And Note [Eta reduction based on evaluation context] means we can rewrite
    `\a b -> f a b` to `f` in the call site of `myfoldl`. Nice!

  * "More CPR" (from testcase T18903):
    ```hs
    h :: Int -> Int
    h m =
      let g :: Int -> (Int,Int)
          g 1 = (m, 0)
          g n = (2 * n, 2 `div` n)
          {-# NOINLINE g #-}
      in case m of
        1 -> 0
        2 -> snd (g m)
        _ -> uncurry (+) (g m)
    ```
    We want to give `g` the demand `MC(1,P(MP(L),1P(L)))`, so we see that in each
    call site of `g`, we are strict in the second component of the returned
    pair. That in turn means that Nested CPR can unbox the result of the
    division even though it might throw.

Note [Unrealised opportunity in plusDmd]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Recall the lazification of SubDemands happening in `plusDmd` as described in
Note [SubDemand denotes at least one evaluation].

We *could* do better when both Demands are lazy already. Example
  (fun 1, fun 2)
Both args put Demand SC(S,L) on `fun`. The lazy pair arg context lazifies
this to LC(S,L), and it would be reasonable to report this Demand on `fun` for
the entire pair expression; after all, `fun` is called whenever it is evaluated.
But our definition of `plusDmd` will compute
  LC(S,L) + LC(S,L) = (L+L)(M*C(S,L) + M*C(S,L)) = L(C(L,L)) = L
Which is clearly less precise.
Doing better here could mean to `lub` when both demands are lazy, e.g.,
  LC(S,L) + LC(S,L) = (L+L)(C(S,L) ⊔ C(S,L)) = L(C(S,L))
Indeed that's what we did at one point between 9.4 and 9.6 after !7599, but it
means that we need a function `lubPlusSubDmd` that lubs on lower bounds but
plus'es upper bounds, implying maintenance challenges and complicated
explanations.

Plus, NoFib says that this special case doesn't bring all that much
(geom. mean +0.0% counted instructions), so we don't bother anymore.

Note [Call SubDemand vs. evaluation Demand]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Although both evaluation Demands and Call SubDemands carry a (Card,SubDemand)
pair, their interpretation is quite different. Example:

  f x = fst x * snd x
    -- f :: <SP(1L,1L)>, because 1P(1L,A)+1P(A,1L) = SP(1L,1L)
  g x = fst (x 1) * snd (x 2)
    -- g :: <SC(S,P(ML,ML))>, because 1C(1,P(1L,A))+1C(1,P(A,1L)) = SC(S,P(ML,ML))

The point about this example is that both demands have P(A,1L)/P(1L,A) as
sub-expressions, but when these sub-demands occur

  1. under an evaluation demand, we combine with `plusSubDmd`
  2. whereas under a Call sub-demand, we combine with `lubSubDmd`

And thus (1) yields a stricter demand on the pair components than (2).

In #21717 we saw that we really need lub in (2), because otherwise we make an
unsound prediction in `g (\n -> if n == 1 then (1,1) else (bot,2))`; we'd say
that the `bot` expression is always evaluated, when it clearly is not.
Operationally, every call to `g` gives back a potentially distinct,
heap-allocated pair with potentially different contents, and we must `lubSubDmd`
over all such calls to approximate how any of those pairs might be used.

That is in stark contrast to f's argument `x`: Operationally, every eval of
`x` must yield the same pair and `f` evaluates both components of that pair.
The theorem "every eval of `x` returns the same heap object" is a very strong
MUST-alias property and we capitalise on that by using `plusSubDmd` in (1).

And indeed we *must* use `plusSubDmd` in (1) for sound upper bounds in an
analysis that assumes call-by-need (as opposed to the weaker call-by-name) for
let bindings. Consider

  h x = fst x * fst x
    -- h :: <SP(SL,A)>

And the expression `let a=1; p=(a,a)} in h p`. Here, *although* the RHS of `p`
is only evaluated once under call-by-need, `a` is still evaluated twice.
If we had used `lubSubDmd`, we'd see SP(1L,A) and the 1L unsoundly says "exactly
once".

If the analysis had assumed call-by-name, it would be sound to say "a is used
once in p": p is used multiple times and hence so would a, as if p was a
function. So using `plusSubDmd` does not only yield better strictness, it is
also "holding up the other end of the bargain" of the call-by-need assumption
for upper bounds.

(To SG's knowledge, the distinction between call-by-name and call-by-need does
not matter for strictness analysis/lower bounds, thus it would be sound to use
`lubSubDmd` all the time there.)

Note [mkCall and plusSubDmd]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We never rewrite a strict, non-absent Call sub-demand like C(S,S) to a
polymorphic sub-demand like S, otherwise #21085 strikes. Consider the
following inequality (would also for M and 1 instead of L and S, but we forbid
such Polys):

  L+S = S = C(S,S) < C(S,L) = C(L,L)+C(S,S)

Note that L=C(L,L). If we also had S=C(S,S), we'd be in trouble: Now
`plusSubDmd` would no longer maintain the equality relation on sub-demands,
much less monotonicity. Bad!

Clearly, `n <= Cn(n)` is unproblematic, as is `n >= Cn(n)` for any `n`
except 1 and S. But `C(S,S) >= S` would mean trouble, because then we'd get
the problematic `C(S,S) = S`. We have just established that `S < C(S,S)`!
As such, the rewrite C(S,S) to S is anti-monotone and we forbid it, first
and foremost in `mkCall` (which is the only place that rewrites Cn(n) to n).

Crisis and #21085 averted!

Note [Computing one-shot info]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider a call
    f (\pqr. e1) (\xyz. e2) e3
where f has usage signature
    <C(M,C(L,C(M,L)))><C(M,L)><L>
Then argsOneShots returns a [[OneShotInfo]] of
    [[OneShot,NoOneShotInfo,OneShot],  [OneShot]]
The occurrence analyser propagates this one-shot infor to the
binders \pqr and \xyz;
see Note [Sources of one-shot information] in GHC.Core.Opt.OccurAnal.

Note [Boxity in Poly]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To support Note [Boxity analysis], it makes sense that 'Prod' carries a
'Boxity'. But why does 'Poly' have to carry a 'Boxity', too? Shouldn't all
'Poly's be 'Boxed'? Couldn't we simply use 'Prod Unboxed' when we need to
express an unboxing demand?

'botSubDmd' (B) needs to be the bottom of the lattice, so it needs to be an
Unboxed demand (and deeply, at that). Similarly, 'seqSubDmd' (A) is an Unboxed
demand. So why not say that Polys with absent cardinalities have Unboxed boxity?
That doesn't work, because we also need the boxed equivalents. Here's an example
for A (function 'absent' in T19871):
```
f _ True  = 1
f a False = a `seq` 2
  -- demand on a: MA, the A is short for `Poly Boxed C_00`

g a = a `seq` f a True
  -- demand on a: SA, which is `Poly Boxed C_00`

h True  p       = g p -- SA on p (inherited from g)
h False p@(x,y) = x+y -- S!P(1!L,1!L) on p
```
If A is treated as Unboxed, we get reboxing in the call site to 'g'.
So we obviously would need a Boxed variant of A. Rather than introducing a lot
of special cases, we just carry the Boxity in 'Poly'. Plus, we could most likely
find examples like the above for any other cardinality.

Note [Why Boxity in SubDemand and not in Demand?]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In #19871, we started out by storing 'Boxity' in 'SubDemand', in the 'Prod'
constructor only. But then we found that we weren't able to express the unboxing
'seqSubDmd', because that one really is a `Poly C_00` sub-demand.
We then tried to store the Boxity in 'Demand' instead, for these reasons:

  1. The whole boxity-of-seq business comes to a satisfying conclusion
  2. Putting Boxity in the SubDemand is weird to begin with, because it
     describes the box and not its fields, just as the evaluation cardinality
     of a Demand describes how often the box is used. It makes more sense that
     Card and Boxity travel together. Also the alternative would have been to
     store Boxity with Poly, which is even weirder and more redundant.

But then we regressed in T7837 (grep #19871 for boring specifics), which needed
to transfer an ambient unboxed *demand* on a dictionary selector to its argument
dictionary, via a 'Call' sub-demand `C(1,sd)`, as
Note [Demand transformer for a dictionary selector] explains. Annoyingly,
the boxity info has to be stored in the *sub-demand* `sd`! There's no demand
to store the boxity in. So we bit the bullet and now we store Boxity in
'SubDemand', both in 'Prod' *and* 'Poly'. See also Note [Boxity in Poly].

Note [Demand transformer for data constructors]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider the expression (x,y) with sub-demand P(SL,A).  What is the demand on
x,y?  Obviously `x` is used strictly, and `y` not at all. So we want to
decompose a product demand, and feed its components demands into the
arguments.  That is the job of dmdTransformDataConSig.  More precisely,

 * it gets the demand on the data constructor itself;
   in the above example that is C(1,C(1,P(SL,A)))
 * it returns the demands on the arguments;
   in the above example that is [SL, A]

Nasty wrinkle. Consider this code (#22475 has more realistic examples but
assume this is what the demand analyser sees)

   data T = MkT !Int Bool
   get :: T -> Bool
   get (MkT _ b) = b

   foo = let v::Int = I# 7
             t::T   = MkT v True
         in get t

Now `v` is unused by `get`, /but/ we can't give `v` an Absent demand,
else we'll drop the binding and replace it with an error thunk.
Then the code generator (more specifically GHC.Stg.InferTags.Rewrite)
will add an extra eval of MkT's argument to give
   foo = let v::Int = error "absent"
             t::T   = case v of v' -> MkT v' True
         in get t

Boo!  Because of this extra eval (added in STG-land), the truth is that `MkT`
may (or may not) evaluate its arguments (as established in #21497). Hence the
use of `bump` in dmdTransformDataConSig, which adds in a `C_01` eval. The
`C_01` says "may or may not evaluate" which is absolutely faithful to what
InferTags.Rewrite does.

In particular it is very important /not/ to make that a `C_11` eval,
see Note [Data-con worker strictness].
-}

{- *********************************************************************
*                                                                      *
                 Divergence: Whether evaluation surely diverges
*                                                                      *
********************************************************************* -}

-- | 'Divergence' characterises whether something surely diverges.
-- Models a subset lattice of the following exhaustive set of divergence
-- results:
--
-- [n] nontermination (e.g. loops)
-- [i] throws imprecise exception
-- [p] throws precise exceTtion
-- [c] converges (reduces to WHNF).
--
-- The different lattice elements correspond to different subsets, indicated by
-- juxtaposition of indicators (e.g. __nc__ definitely doesn't throw an
-- exception, and may or may not reduce to WHNF).
--
-- @
--             Dunno (nipc)
--                  |
--            ExnOrDiv (nip)
--                  |
--            Diverges (ni)
-- @
--
-- As you can see, we don't distinguish __n__ and __i__.
-- See Note [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis] for why __p__ is so
-- special compared to __i__.
data Divergence
  = Diverges -- ^ Definitely throws an imprecise exception or diverges.
  | ExnOrDiv -- ^ Definitely throws a *precise* exception, an imprecise
             --   exception or diverges. Never converges, hence 'isDeadEndDiv'!
             --   See scenario 1 in Note [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis].
  | Dunno    -- ^ Might diverge, throw any kind of exception or converge.
  deriving Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool
(Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool)
-> (Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool) -> Eq Divergence
forall a. (a -> a -> Bool) -> (a -> a -> Bool) -> Eq a
$c== :: Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool
== :: Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool
$c/= :: Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool
/= :: Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool
Eq

lubDivergence :: Divergence -> Divergence -> Divergence
lubDivergence :: Divergence -> Divergence -> Divergence
lubDivergence Divergence
Diverges Divergence
div      = Divergence
div
lubDivergence Divergence
div      Divergence
Diverges = Divergence
div
lubDivergence Divergence
ExnOrDiv Divergence
ExnOrDiv = Divergence
ExnOrDiv
lubDivergence Divergence
_        Divergence
_        = Divergence
Dunno
-- This needs to commute with defaultFvDmd, i.e.
-- defaultFvDmd (r1 `lubDivergence` r2) = defaultFvDmd r1 `lubDmd` defaultFvDmd r2
-- (See Note [Default demand on free variables and arguments] for why)

-- | See Note [Asymmetry of plusDmdType], which concludes that 'plusDivergence'
-- needs to be symmetric.
-- Strictly speaking, we should have @plusDivergence Dunno Diverges = ExnOrDiv@.
-- But that regresses in too many places (every infinite loop, basically) to be
-- worth it and is only relevant in higher-order scenarios
-- (e.g. Divergence of @f (throwIO blah)@).
-- So 'plusDivergence' currently is 'glbDivergence', really.
plusDivergence :: Divergence -> Divergence -> Divergence
plusDivergence :: Divergence -> Divergence -> Divergence
plusDivergence Divergence
Dunno    Divergence
Dunno    = Divergence
Dunno
plusDivergence Divergence
Diverges Divergence
_        = Divergence
Diverges
plusDivergence Divergence
_        Divergence
Diverges = Divergence
Diverges
plusDivergence Divergence
_        Divergence
_        = Divergence
ExnOrDiv

-- | In a non-strict scenario, we might not force the Divergence, in which case
-- we might converge, hence Dunno.
multDivergence :: Card -> Divergence -> Divergence
multDivergence :: Card -> Divergence -> Divergence
multDivergence Card
n Divergence
_ | Bool -> Bool
not (Card -> Bool
isStrict Card
n) = Divergence
Dunno
multDivergence Card
_ Divergence
d                    = Divergence
d

topDiv, exnDiv, botDiv :: Divergence
topDiv :: Divergence
topDiv = Divergence
Dunno
exnDiv :: Divergence
exnDiv = Divergence
ExnOrDiv
botDiv :: Divergence
botDiv = Divergence
Diverges

-- | True if the 'Divergence' indicates that evaluation will not return.
-- See Note [Dead ends].
isDeadEndDiv :: Divergence -> Bool
isDeadEndDiv :: Divergence -> Bool
isDeadEndDiv Divergence
Diverges = Bool
True
isDeadEndDiv Divergence
ExnOrDiv = Bool
True
isDeadEndDiv Divergence
Dunno    = Bool
False

-- See Notes [Default demand on free variables and arguments]
-- and Scenario 1 in [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis]
defaultFvDmd :: Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd :: Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
Dunno    = Demand
absDmd
defaultFvDmd Divergence
ExnOrDiv = Demand
absDmd -- This is the whole point of ExnOrDiv!
defaultFvDmd Divergence
Diverges = Demand
botDmd -- Diverges

defaultArgDmd :: Divergence -> Demand
-- TopRes and BotRes are polymorphic, so that
--      BotRes === (Bot -> BotRes) === ...
--      TopRes === (Top -> TopRes) === ...
-- This function makes that concrete
-- Also see Note [Default demand on free variables and arguments]
defaultArgDmd :: Divergence -> Demand
defaultArgDmd Divergence
Dunno    = Demand
topDmd
-- NB: not botDmd! We don't want to mask the precise exception by forcing the
-- argument. But it is still absent.
defaultArgDmd Divergence
ExnOrDiv = Demand
absDmd
defaultArgDmd Divergence
Diverges = Demand
botDmd

{- Note [Precise vs imprecise exceptions]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
An exception is considered to be /precise/ when it is thrown by the 'raiseIO#'
primop. It follows that all other primops (such as 'raise#' or
division-by-zero) throw /imprecise/ exceptions. Note that the actual type of
the exception thrown doesn't have any impact!

GHC undertakes some effort not to apply an optimisation that would mask a
/precise/ exception with some other source of nontermination, such as genuine
divergence or an imprecise exception, so that the user can reliably
intercept the precise exception with a catch handler before and after
optimisations.

See also the wiki page on precise exceptions:
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/exceptions/precise-exceptions
Section 5 of "Tackling the awkward squad" talks about semantic concerns.
Imprecise exceptions are actually more interesting than precise ones (which are
fairly standard) from the perspective of semantics. See the paper "A Semantics
for Imprecise Exceptions" for more details.

Note [Dead ends]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We call an expression that either diverges or throws a precise or imprecise
exception a "dead end". We used to call such an expression just "bottoming",
but with the measures we take to preserve precise exception semantics
(see Note [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis]), that is no longer
accurate: 'exnDiv' is no longer the bottom of the Divergence lattice.

Yet externally to demand analysis, we mostly care about being able to drop dead
code etc., which is all due to the property that such an expression never
returns, hence we consider throwing a precise exception to be a dead end.
See also 'isDeadEndDiv'.

Note [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We have to take care to preserve precise exception semantics in strictness
analysis (#17676). There are two scenarios that need careful treatment.

The fixes were discussed at
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/wikis/fixing-precise-exceptions

Recall that raiseIO# raises a *precise* exception, in contrast to raise# which
raises an *imprecise* exception. See Note [Precise vs imprecise exceptions].

Scenario 1: Precise exceptions in case alternatives
---------------------------------------------------
Unlike raise# (which returns botDiv), we want raiseIO# to return exnDiv.
Here's why. Consider this example from #13380 (similarly #17676):
  f x y | x>0       = raiseIO# Exc
        | y>0       = return 1
        | otherwise = return 2
Is 'f' strict in 'y'? One might be tempted to say yes! But that plays fast and
loose with the precise exception; after optimisation, (f 42 (error "boom"))
turns from throwing the precise Exc to throwing the imprecise user error
"boom". So, the defaultFvDmd of raiseIO# should be lazy (topDmd), which can be
achieved by giving it divergence exnDiv.
See Note [Default demand on free variables and arguments].

Why don't we just give it topDiv instead of introducing exnDiv?
Because then the simplifier will fail to discard raiseIO#'s continuation in
  case raiseIO# x s of { (# s', r #) -> <BIG> }
which we'd like to optimise to
  case raiseIO# x s of {}
Hence we came up with exnDiv. The default FV demand of exnDiv is lazy (and
its default arg dmd is absent), but otherwise (in terms of 'isDeadEndDiv') it
behaves exactly as botDiv, so that dead code elimination works as expected.
This is tracked by T13380b.

Scenario 2: Precise exceptions in case scrutinees
-------------------------------------------------
Consider (more complete examples in #148, #1592, testcase strun003)

  case foo x s of { (# s', r #) -> y }

Is this strict in 'y'? Often not! If @foo x s@ might throw a precise exception
(ultimately via raiseIO#), then we must not force 'y', which may fail to
terminate or throw an imprecise exception, until we have performed @foo x s@.

So we have to 'deferAfterPreciseException' (which 'lub's with 'exnDmdType' to
model the exceptional control flow) when @foo x s@ may throw a precise
exception. Motivated by T13380{d,e,f}.
See Note [Which scrutinees may throw precise exceptions] in "GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal".

We have to be careful not to discard dead-end Divergence from case
alternatives, though (#18086):

  m = putStrLn "foo" >> error "bar"

'm' should still have 'exnDiv', which is why it is not sufficient to lub with
'nopDmdType' (which has 'topDiv') in 'deferAfterPreciseException'.

Historical Note: This used to be called the "IO hack". But that term is rather
a bad fit because
1. It's easily confused with the "State hack", which also affects IO.
2. Neither "IO" nor "hack" is a good description of what goes on here, which
   is deferring strictness results after possibly throwing a precise exception.
   The "hack" is probably not having to defer when we can prove that the
   expression may not throw a precise exception (increasing precision of the
   analysis), but that's just a favourable guess.

Note [Exceptions and strictness]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We used to smart about catching exceptions, but we aren't anymore.
See #14998 for the way it's resolved at the moment.

Here's a historic breakdown:

Apparently, exception handling prim-ops didn't use to have any special
strictness signatures, thus defaulting to nopSig, which assumes they use their
arguments lazily. Joachim was the first to realise that we could provide richer
information. Thus, in 0558911f91c (Dec 13), he added signatures to
primops.txt.pp indicating that functions like `catch#` and `catchRetry#` call
their argument, which is useful information for usage analysis. Still with a
'Lazy' strictness demand (i.e. 'lazyApply1Dmd'), though, and the world was fine.

In 7c0fff4 (July 15), Simon argued that giving `catch#` et al. a
'strictApply1Dmd' leads to substantial performance gains. That was at the cost
of correctness, as #10712 proved. So, back to 'lazyApply1Dmd' in
28638dfe79e (Dec 15).

Motivated to reproduce the gains of 7c0fff4 without the breakage of #10712,
Ben opened #11222. Simon made the demand analyser "understand catch" in
9915b656 (Jan 16) by adding a new 'catchArgDmd', which basically said to call
its argument strictly, but also swallow any thrown exceptions in
'multDivergence'. This was realized by extending the 'Str' constructor of
'ArgStr' with a 'ExnStr' field, indicating that it catches the exception, and
adding a 'ThrowsExn' constructor to the 'Divergence' lattice as an element
between 'Dunno' and 'Diverges'. Then along came #11555 and finally #13330,
so we had to revert to 'lazyApply1Dmd' again in 701256df88c (Mar 17).

This left the other variants like 'catchRetry#' having 'catchArgDmd', which is
where #14998 picked up. Item 1 was concerned with measuring the impact of also
making `catchRetry#` and `catchSTM#` have 'lazyApply1Dmd'. The result was that
there was none. We removed the last usages of 'catchArgDmd' in 00b8ecb7
(Apr 18). There was a lot of dead code resulting from that change, that we
removed in ef6b283 (Jan 19): We got rid of 'ThrowsExn' and 'ExnStr' again and
removed any code that was dealing with the peculiarities.

Where did the speed-ups vanish to? In #14998, item 3 established that
turning 'catch#' strict in its first argument didn't bring back any of the
alleged performance benefits. Item 2 of that ticket finally found out that it
was entirely due to 'catchException's new (since #11555) definition, which
was simply

    catchException !io handler = catch io handler

While 'catchException' is arguably the saner semantics for 'catch', it is an
internal helper function in "GHC.IO". Its use in
"GHC.IO.Handle.Internals.do_operation" made for the huge allocation differences:
Remove the bang and you find the regressions we originally wanted to avoid with
'catchArgDmd'. See also #exceptions_and_strictness# in "GHC.IO".

So history keeps telling us that the only possibly correct strictness annotation
for the first argument of 'catch#' is 'lazyApply1Dmd', because 'catch#' really
is not strict in its argument: Just try this in GHCi

  :set -XScopedTypeVariables
  import Control.Exception
  catch undefined (\(_ :: SomeException) -> putStrLn "you'll see this")

Any analysis that assumes otherwise will be broken in some way or another
(beyond `-fno-pedantic-bottoms`).

But then #13380 and #17676 suggest (in Mar 20) that we need to re-introduce a
subtly different variant of `ThrowsExn` (which we call `ExnOrDiv` now) that is
only used by `raiseIO#` in order to preserve precise exceptions by strictness
analysis, while not impacting the ability to eliminate dead code.
See Note [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis].

Note [Default demand on free variables and arguments]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Free variables not mentioned in the environment of a 'DmdType'
are demanded according to the demand type's Divergence:
  * In a Diverges (botDiv) context, that demand is botDmd
    (strict and absent).
  * In all other contexts, the demand is absDmd (lazy and absent).
This is recorded in 'defaultFvDmd'.

Similarly, we can eta-expand demand types to get demands on excess arguments
not accounted for in the type, by consulting 'defaultArgDmd':
  * In a Diverges (botDiv) context, that demand is again botDmd.
  * In a ExnOrDiv (exnDiv) context, that demand is absDmd: We surely diverge
    before evaluating the excess argument, but don't want to eagerly evaluate
    it (cf. Note [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis]).
  * In a Dunno context (topDiv), the demand is topDmd, because
    it's perfectly possible to enter the additional lambda and evaluate it
    in unforeseen ways (so, not absent).

Note [Bottom CPR iff Dead-Ending Divergence]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Both CPR analysis and Demand analysis handle recursive functions by doing
fixed-point iteration. To find the *least* (e.g., most informative) fixed-point,
iteration starts with the bottom element of the semantic domain. Diverging
functions generally have the bottom element as their least fixed-point.

One might think that CPR analysis and Demand analysis then agree in when a
function gets a bottom denotation. E.g., whenever it has 'botCpr', it should
also have 'botDiv'. But that is not the case, because strictness analysis has to
be careful around precise exceptions, see Note [Precise vs imprecise exceptions].

So Demand analysis gives some diverging functions 'exnDiv' (which is *not* the
bottom element) when the CPR signature says 'botCpr', and that's OK. Here's an
example (from #18086) where that is the case:

ioTest :: IO ()
ioTest = do
  putStrLn "hi"
  undefined

However, one can loosely say that we give a function 'botCpr' whenever its
'Divergence' is 'exnDiv' or 'botDiv', i.e., dead-ending. But that's just
a consequence of fixed-point iteration, it's not important that they agree.

************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
           Demand environments and types
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

-- Subject to Note [Default demand on free variables and arguments]
-- | Captures the result of an evaluation of an expression, by
--
--   * Listing how the free variables of that expression have been evaluted
--     ('de_fvs')
--   * Saying whether or not evaluation would surely diverge ('de_div')
--
-- See Note [Demand env Equality].
data DmdEnv = DE { DmdEnv -> VarEnv Demand
de_fvs :: !(VarEnv Demand), DmdEnv -> Divergence
de_div :: !Divergence }

instance Eq DmdEnv where
  DE VarEnv Demand
fv1 Divergence
div1 == :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> Bool
== DE VarEnv Demand
fv2 Divergence
div2
    = Divergence
div1 Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Divergence
div2 Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& Divergence -> VarEnv Demand -> VarEnv Demand
forall {key}. Divergence -> UniqFM key Demand -> UniqFM key Demand
canonicalise Divergence
div1 VarEnv Demand
fv1 VarEnv Demand -> VarEnv Demand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Divergence -> VarEnv Demand -> VarEnv Demand
forall {key}. Divergence -> UniqFM key Demand -> UniqFM key Demand
canonicalise Divergence
div2 VarEnv Demand
fv2
    where
      canonicalise :: Divergence -> UniqFM key Demand -> UniqFM key Demand
canonicalise Divergence
div UniqFM key Demand
fv = (Demand -> Bool) -> UniqFM key Demand -> UniqFM key Demand
forall elt key. (elt -> Bool) -> UniqFM key elt -> UniqFM key elt
filterUFM (Demand -> Demand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
/= Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
div) UniqFM key Demand
fv

mkEmptyDmdEnv :: Divergence -> DmdEnv
mkEmptyDmdEnv :: Divergence -> DmdEnv
mkEmptyDmdEnv Divergence
div = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE VarEnv Demand
forall a. VarEnv a
emptyVarEnv Divergence
div

-- | Build a potentially terminating 'DmdEnv' from a finite map that says what
-- has been evaluated so far
mkTermDmdEnv :: VarEnv Demand -> DmdEnv
mkTermDmdEnv :: VarEnv Demand -> DmdEnv
mkTermDmdEnv VarEnv Demand
fvs = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE VarEnv Demand
fvs Divergence
topDiv

nopDmdEnv :: DmdEnv
nopDmdEnv :: DmdEnv
nopDmdEnv = Divergence -> DmdEnv
mkEmptyDmdEnv Divergence
topDiv

botDmdEnv :: DmdEnv
botDmdEnv :: DmdEnv
botDmdEnv = Divergence -> DmdEnv
mkEmptyDmdEnv Divergence
botDiv

exnDmdEnv :: DmdEnv
exnDmdEnv :: DmdEnv
exnDmdEnv = Divergence -> DmdEnv
mkEmptyDmdEnv Divergence
exnDiv

lubDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
lubDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
lubDmdEnv (DE VarEnv Demand
fv1 Divergence
d1) (DE VarEnv Demand
fv2 Divergence
d2) = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE VarEnv Demand
lub_fv Divergence
lub_div
  where
    -- See Note [Demand env Equality]
    lub_fv :: VarEnv Demand
lub_fv  = (Demand -> Demand -> Demand)
-> VarEnv Demand
-> Demand
-> VarEnv Demand
-> Demand
-> VarEnv Demand
forall a.
(a -> a -> a) -> VarEnv a -> a -> VarEnv a -> a -> VarEnv a
plusVarEnv_CD Demand -> Demand -> Demand
lubDmd VarEnv Demand
fv1 (Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
d1) VarEnv Demand
fv2 (Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
d2)
    lub_div :: Divergence
lub_div = Divergence -> Divergence -> Divergence
lubDivergence Divergence
d1 Divergence
d2

addVarDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> Id -> Demand -> DmdEnv
addVarDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> Id -> Demand -> DmdEnv
addVarDmdEnv env :: DmdEnv
env@(DE VarEnv Demand
fvs Divergence
div) Id
id Demand
dmd
  = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE (VarEnv Demand -> Id -> Demand -> VarEnv Demand
forall a. VarEnv a -> Id -> a -> VarEnv a
extendVarEnv VarEnv Demand
fvs Id
id (Demand
dmd Demand -> Demand -> Demand
`plusDmd` DmdEnv -> Id -> Demand
lookupDmdEnv DmdEnv
env Id
id)) Divergence
div

plusDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
plusDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
plusDmdEnv (DE VarEnv Demand
fv1 Divergence
d1) (DE VarEnv Demand
fv2 Divergence
d2)
  -- In contrast to Note [Asymmetry of plusDmdType], this function is symmetric.
  | VarEnv Demand -> Bool
forall a. VarEnv a -> Bool
isEmptyVarEnv VarEnv Demand
fv2, Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
d2 Demand -> Demand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Demand
absDmd
  = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE VarEnv Demand
fv1 (Divergence
d1 Divergence -> Divergence -> Divergence
`plusDivergence` Divergence
d2) -- a very common case that is much more efficient
  | VarEnv Demand -> Bool
forall a. VarEnv a -> Bool
isEmptyVarEnv VarEnv Demand
fv1, Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
d1 Demand -> Demand -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Demand
absDmd
  = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE VarEnv Demand
fv2 (Divergence
d1 Divergence -> Divergence -> Divergence
`plusDivergence` Divergence
d2) -- another very common case that is much more efficient
  | Bool
otherwise
  = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE ((Demand -> Demand -> Demand)
-> VarEnv Demand
-> Demand
-> VarEnv Demand
-> Demand
-> VarEnv Demand
forall a.
(a -> a -> a) -> VarEnv a -> a -> VarEnv a -> a -> VarEnv a
plusVarEnv_CD Demand -> Demand -> Demand
plusDmd VarEnv Demand
fv1 (Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
d1) VarEnv Demand
fv2 (Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
d2))
       (Divergence
d1 Divergence -> Divergence -> Divergence
`plusDivergence` Divergence
d2)

-- | 'DmdEnv' is a monoid via 'plusDmdEnv' and 'nopDmdEnv'; this is its 'msum'
plusDmdEnvs :: [DmdEnv] -> DmdEnv
plusDmdEnvs :: [DmdEnv] -> DmdEnv
plusDmdEnvs []   = DmdEnv
nopDmdEnv
plusDmdEnvs [DmdEnv]
pdas = (DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv) -> [DmdEnv] -> DmdEnv
forall a. HasCallStack => (a -> a -> a) -> [a] -> a
foldl1' DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
plusDmdEnv [DmdEnv]
pdas

multDmdEnv :: Card -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
multDmdEnv :: Card -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
multDmdEnv Card
C_11 DmdEnv
env          = DmdEnv
env
multDmdEnv Card
C_00 DmdEnv
_            = DmdEnv
nopDmdEnv
multDmdEnv Card
n    (DE VarEnv Demand
fvs Divergence
div) = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE ((Demand -> Demand) -> VarEnv Demand -> VarEnv Demand
forall a b. (a -> b) -> VarEnv a -> VarEnv b
mapVarEnv (Card -> Demand -> Demand
multDmd Card
n) VarEnv Demand
fvs) (Card -> Divergence -> Divergence
multDivergence Card
n Divergence
div)

reuseEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
reuseEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
reuseEnv = Card -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
multDmdEnv Card
C_1N

lookupDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> Id -> Demand
-- See Note [Default demand on free variables and arguments]
lookupDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> Id -> Demand
lookupDmdEnv (DE VarEnv Demand
fv Divergence
div) Id
id = VarEnv Demand -> Id -> Maybe Demand
forall a. VarEnv a -> Id -> Maybe a
lookupVarEnv VarEnv Demand
fv Id
id Maybe Demand -> Demand -> Demand
forall a. Maybe a -> a -> a
`orElse` Divergence -> Demand
defaultFvDmd Divergence
div

delDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> Id -> DmdEnv
delDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> Id -> DmdEnv
delDmdEnv (DE VarEnv Demand
fv Divergence
div) Id
id = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE (VarEnv Demand
fv VarEnv Demand -> Id -> VarEnv Demand
forall a. VarEnv a -> Id -> VarEnv a
`delVarEnv` Id
id) Divergence
div

-- | Characterises how an expression
--
--    * Evaluates its free variables ('dt_env') including divergence info
--    * Evaluates its arguments ('dt_args')
--
data DmdType
  = DmdType
  { DmdType -> DmdEnv
dt_env  :: !DmdEnv     -- ^ Demands on free variables.
                           -- See Note [Demand type Divergence]
  , DmdType -> [Demand]
dt_args :: ![Demand]   -- ^ Demand on arguments
  }

-- | See Note [Demand env Equality].
instance Eq DmdType where
  DmdType DmdEnv
env1 [Demand]
ds1 == :: DmdType -> DmdType -> Bool
== DmdType DmdEnv
env2 [Demand]
ds2
    = [Demand]
ds1 [Demand] -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== [Demand]
ds2 -- cheap checks first
      Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& DmdEnv
env1 DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== DmdEnv
env2

-- | Compute the least upper bound of two 'DmdType's elicited /by the same
-- incoming demand/!
lubDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdType -> DmdType
lubDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdType -> DmdType
lubDmdType DmdType
d1 DmdType
d2 = DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
lub_fv [Demand]
lub_ds
  where
    n :: Int
n = Int -> Int -> Int
forall a. Ord a => a -> a -> a
max (DmdType -> Int
dmdTypeDepth DmdType
d1) (DmdType -> Int
dmdTypeDepth DmdType
d2)
    (DmdType DmdEnv
fv1 [Demand]
ds1) = Int -> DmdType -> DmdType
etaExpandDmdType Int
n DmdType
d1
    (DmdType DmdEnv
fv2 [Demand]
ds2) = Int -> DmdType -> DmdType
etaExpandDmdType Int
n DmdType
d2
    lub_ds :: [Demand]
lub_ds  = String
-> (Demand -> Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b c.
HasDebugCallStack =>
String -> (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
zipWithEqual String
"lubDmdType" Demand -> Demand -> Demand
lubDmd [Demand]
ds1 [Demand]
ds2
    lub_fv :: DmdEnv
lub_fv = DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
lubDmdEnv DmdEnv
fv1 DmdEnv
fv2

discardArgDmds :: DmdType -> DmdEnv
discardArgDmds :: DmdType -> DmdEnv
discardArgDmds (DmdType DmdEnv
fv [Demand]
_) = DmdEnv
fv

plusDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdEnv -> DmdType
plusDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdEnv -> DmdType
plusDmdType (DmdType DmdEnv
fv [Demand]
ds) DmdEnv
fv'
  -- See Note [Asymmetry of plusDmdType]
  -- 'DmdEnv' forms a (monoidal) action on 'DmdType' via this operation.
  = DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType (DmdEnv -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
plusDmdEnv DmdEnv
fv DmdEnv
fv') [Demand]
ds

botDmdType :: DmdType
botDmdType :: DmdType
botDmdType = DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
botDmdEnv []

-- | The demand type of doing nothing (lazy, absent, no Divergence
-- information). Note that it is ''not'' the top of the lattice (which would be
-- "may use everything"), so it is (no longer) called topDmdType.
nopDmdType :: DmdType
nopDmdType :: DmdType
nopDmdType = DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
nopDmdEnv []

-- | The demand type of an unspecified expression that is guaranteed to
-- throw a (precise or imprecise) exception or diverge.
exnDmdType :: DmdType
exnDmdType :: DmdType
exnDmdType = DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
exnDmdEnv []

dmdTypeDepth :: DmdType -> Arity
dmdTypeDepth :: DmdType -> Int
dmdTypeDepth = [Demand] -> Int
forall a. [a] -> Int
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Int
length ([Demand] -> Int) -> (DmdType -> [Demand]) -> DmdType -> Int
forall b c a. (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
. DmdType -> [Demand]
dt_args

-- | This makes sure we can use the demand type with n arguments after eta
-- expansion, where n must not be lower than the demand types depth.
-- It appends the argument list with the correct 'defaultArgDmd'.
etaExpandDmdType :: Arity -> DmdType -> DmdType
etaExpandDmdType :: Int -> DmdType -> DmdType
etaExpandDmdType Int
n d :: DmdType
d@DmdType{dt_args :: DmdType -> [Demand]
dt_args = [Demand]
ds, dt_env :: DmdType -> DmdEnv
dt_env = DmdEnv
env}
  | Int
n Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Int
depth = DmdType
d
  | Int
n Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Ord a => a -> a -> Bool
>  Int
depth = DmdType
d{dt_args = inc_ds}
  | Bool
otherwise  = String -> SDoc -> DmdType
forall a. HasCallStack => String -> SDoc -> a
pprPanic String
"etaExpandDmdType: arity decrease" (Int -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Int
n SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsDoc doc => doc -> doc -> doc
$$ DmdType -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr DmdType
d)
  where depth :: Int
depth = [Demand] -> Int
forall a. [a] -> Int
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Int
length [Demand]
ds
        -- Arity increase:
        --  * Demands on FVs are still valid
        --  * Demands on args also valid, plus we can extend with defaultArgDmd
        --    as appropriate for the given Divergence
        --  * Divergence is still valid:
        --    - A dead end after 2 arguments stays a dead end after 3 arguments
        --    - The remaining case is Dunno, which is already topDiv
        inc_ds :: [Demand]
inc_ds = Int -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a. Int -> [a] -> [a]
take Int
n ([Demand]
ds [Demand] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a. [a] -> [a] -> [a]
++ Demand -> [Demand]
forall a. a -> [a]
repeat (Divergence -> Demand
defaultArgDmd (DmdEnv -> Divergence
de_div DmdEnv
env)))

-- | A conservative approximation for a given 'DmdType' in case of an arity
-- decrease. Currently, it's just nopDmdType.
decreaseArityDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdType
decreaseArityDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdType
decreaseArityDmdType DmdType
_ = DmdType
nopDmdType

splitDmdTy :: DmdType -> (Demand, DmdType)
-- Split off one function argument
-- We already have a suitable demand on all
-- free vars, so no need to add more!
splitDmdTy :: DmdType -> (Demand, DmdType)
splitDmdTy ty :: DmdType
ty@DmdType{dt_args :: DmdType -> [Demand]
dt_args=Demand
dmd:[Demand]
args} = (Demand
dmd, DmdType
ty{dt_args=args})
splitDmdTy ty :: DmdType
ty@DmdType{dt_env :: DmdType -> DmdEnv
dt_env=DmdEnv
env}       = (Divergence -> Demand
defaultArgDmd (DmdEnv -> Divergence
de_div DmdEnv
env), DmdType
ty)

multDmdType :: Card -> DmdType -> DmdType
multDmdType :: Card -> DmdType -> DmdType
multDmdType Card
n (DmdType DmdEnv
fv [Demand]
args)
  = -- pprTrace "multDmdType" (ppr n $$ ppr fv $$ ppr (multDmdEnv n fv)) $
    DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType (Card -> DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
multDmdEnv Card
n DmdEnv
fv)
            ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map (Card -> Demand -> Demand
multDmd Card
n) [Demand]
args)

peelFV :: DmdType -> Var -> (DmdType, Demand)
peelFV :: DmdType -> Id -> (DmdType, Demand)
peelFV (DmdType DmdEnv
fv [Demand]
ds) Id
id = -- pprTrace "rfv" (ppr id <+> ppr dmd $$ ppr fv)
                            (DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
fv' [Demand]
ds, Demand
dmd)
  where
  -- Force these arguments so that old `Env` is not retained.
  !fv' :: DmdEnv
fv' = DmdEnv
fv DmdEnv -> Id -> DmdEnv
`delDmdEnv` Id
id
  !dmd :: Demand
dmd = DmdEnv -> Id -> Demand
lookupDmdEnv DmdEnv
fv Id
id

addDemand :: Demand -> DmdType -> DmdType
addDemand :: Demand -> DmdType -> DmdType
addDemand Demand
dmd (DmdType DmdEnv
fv [Demand]
ds) = DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
fv (Demand
dmdDemand -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a. a -> [a] -> [a]
:[Demand]
ds)

findIdDemand :: DmdType -> Var -> Demand
findIdDemand :: DmdType -> Id -> Demand
findIdDemand (DmdType DmdEnv
fv [Demand]
_) Id
id = DmdEnv -> Id -> Demand
lookupDmdEnv DmdEnv
fv Id
id

-- | When e is evaluated after executing an IO action that may throw a precise
-- exception, we act as if there is an additional control flow path that is
-- taken if e throws a precise exception. The demand type of this control flow
-- path
--   * is lazy and absent ('topDmd') and boxed in all free variables and arguments
--   * has 'exnDiv' 'Divergence' result
-- See Note [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis]
--
-- So we can simply take a variant of 'nopDmdType', 'exnDmdType'.
-- Why not 'nopDmdType'? Because then the result of 'e' can never be 'exnDiv'!
-- That means failure to drop dead-ends, see #18086.
deferAfterPreciseException :: DmdType -> DmdType
deferAfterPreciseException :: DmdType -> DmdType
deferAfterPreciseException = DmdType -> DmdType -> DmdType
lubDmdType DmdType
exnDmdType

{- Note [deferAfterPreciseException]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The big picture is in Note [Precise exceptions and strictness analysis]
The idea is that we want to treat
   case <I/O operation> of (# s', r #) -> rhs

as if it was
   case <I/O operation> of
      Just (# s', r #) -> rhs
      Nothing          -> error

That is, the I/O operation might throw an exception, so that 'rhs' never
gets reached.  For example, we don't want to be strict in the strict free
variables of 'rhs'.

So we have the simple definition
  deferAfterPreciseException = lubDmdType (DmdType emptyDmdEnv [] exnDiv)

Historically, when we had `lubBoxity = _unboxedWins` (see Note [unboxedWins]),
we had a more complicated definition for deferAfterPreciseException to make sure
it preserved boxity in its argument. That was needed for code like
   case <I/O operation> of
      (# s', r) -> f x

which uses `x` *boxed*. If we `lub`bed it with `(DmdType emptyDmdEnv [] exnDiv)`
we'd get an *unboxed* demand on `x` (because we let Unboxed win),
which led to #20746.  Nowadays with `lubBoxity = boxedWins` we don't need
the complicated definition.

Note [Demand type Divergence]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In contrast to DmdSigs, DmdTypes are elicited under a specific incoming demand.
This is described in detail in Note [Understanding DmdType and DmdSig].
Here, we'll focus on what that means for a DmdType's Divergence in a higher-order
scenario.

Consider
  err x y = x `seq` y `seq` error (show x)
this has a strictness signature of
  <1L><1L>b
meaning that we don't know what happens when we call err in weaker contexts than
C(1,C(1,L)), like @err `seq` ()@ (1A) and @err 1 `seq` ()@ (C(S,A)). We
may not unleash the botDiv, hence assume topDiv. Of course, in
@err 1 2 `seq` ()@ the incoming demand C(S,C(S,A)) is strong enough and we see
that the expression diverges.

Now consider a function
  f g = g 1 2
with signature <C(1,C(1,L))>, and the expression
  f err `seq` ()
now f puts a strictness demand of C(1,C(1,L)) onto its argument, which is unleashed
on err via the App rule. In contrast to weaker head strictness, this demand is
strong enough to unleash err's signature and hence we see that the whole
expression diverges!

Note [Demand env Equality]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What is the difference between the Demand env {x->A} and {}?
Answer: There is none! They have the exact same semantics, because any var that
is not mentioned in 'de_fvs' implicitly has demand 'defaultFvDmd', based on
the divergence of the demand env 'de_div'.
Similarly, b{x->B, y->A} is the same as b{y->A}, because the default FV
demand of BotDiv is B. But neither is equal to b{}, because y has demand B in
the latter, not A as before.

The Eq instance of DmdEnv must reflect that, otherwise we can get into monotonicity
issues during fixed-point iteration ({x->A} /= {} /= {x->A} /= ...).
It does so by filtering out any default FV demands prior to comparing 'de_fvs'.

Note that 'lubDmdEnv' maintains this kind of equality by using 'plusVarEnv_CD',
involving 'defaultFvDmd' for any entries present in one 'de_fvs' but not the
other.

Note [Asymmetry of plusDmdType]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'plus' for DmdTypes is *asymmetrical*, because there can only one
be one type contributing argument demands!  For example, given (e1 e2), we get
a DmdType dt1 for e1, use its arg demand to analyse e2 giving dt2, and then do
(dt1 `plusType` dt2). Similarly with
  case e of { p -> rhs }
we get dt_scrut from the scrutinee and dt_rhs from the RHS, and then
compute (dt_rhs `plusType` dt_scrut).

We
 1. combine the information on the free variables,
 2. take the demand on arguments from the first argument
 3. combine the termination results, as in plusDivergence.

Since we don't use argument demands of the second argument anyway, 'plus's
second argument is just a 'PlusDmdType'.

But note that the argument demand types are not guaranteed to be observed in
left to right order. For example, analysis of a case expression will pass the
demand type for the alts as the left argument and the type for the scrutinee as
the right argument. Also, it is not at all clear if there is such an order;
consider the LetUp case, where the RHS might be forced at any point while
evaluating the let body.
Therefore, it is crucial that 'plusDivergence' is symmetric!

Note [Demands from unsaturated function calls]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider a demand transformer d1 -> d2 -> r for f.
If a sufficiently detailed demand is fed into this transformer,
e.g <C(1,C(1,L))> arising from "f x1 x2" in a strict, use-once context,
then d1 and d2 is precisely the demand unleashed onto x1 and x2 (similar for
the free variable environment) and furthermore the result information r is the
one we want to use.

An anonymous lambda is also an unsaturated function all (needs one argument,
none given), so this applies to that case as well.

But the demand fed into f might be less than C(1,C(1,L)). Then we have to
'multDmdType' the announced demand type. Examples:
 * Not strict enough, e.g. C(1,C(1,L)):
   - We have to multiply all argument and free variable demands with C_01,
     zapping strictness.
   - We have to multiply divergence with C_01. If r says that f Diverges for sure,
     then this holds when the demand guarantees that two arguments are going to
     be passed. If the demand is lower, we may just as well converge.
     If we were tracking definite convergence, than that would still hold under
     a weaker demand than expected by the demand transformer.
 * Used more than once, e.g. C(S,C(1,L)):
   - Multiply with C_1N. Even if f puts a used-once demand on any of its argument
     or free variables, if we call f multiple times, we may evaluate this
     argument or free variable multiple times.

In dmdTransformSig, we call peelManyCalls to find out the 'Card'inality with
which we have to multiply and then call multDmdType with that.

Similarly, dmdTransformDictSelSig and dmdAnal, when analyzing a Lambda, use
peelCallDmd, which peels only one level, but also returns the demand put on the
body of the function.
-}


{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
                     Demand signatures
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************

In a let-bound Id we record its demand signature.
In principle, this demand signature is a demand transformer, mapping
a demand on the Id into a DmdType, which gives
        a) the free vars of the Id's value
        b) the Id's arguments
        c) an indication of the result of applying
           the Id to its arguments

However, in fact we store in the Id an extremely emasculated demand
transformer, namely

                a single DmdType
(Nevertheless we dignify DmdSig as a distinct type.)

This DmdType gives the demands unleashed by the Id when it is applied
to as many arguments as are given in by the arg demands in the DmdType.
Also see Note [Demand type Divergence] for the meaning of a Divergence in a
strictness signature.

If an Id is applied to less arguments than its arity, it means that
the demand on the function at a call site is weaker than the vanilla
call demand, used for signature inference. Therefore we place a top
demand on all arguments. Otherwise, the demand is specified by Id's
signature.

For example, the demand transformer described by the demand signature
        DmdSig (DmdType {x -> <1L>} <A><1P(L,L)>)
says that when the function is applied to two arguments, it
unleashes demand 1L on the free var x, A on the first arg,
and 1P(L,L) on the second.

If this same function is applied to one arg, all we can say is that it
uses x with 1L, and its arg with demand 1P(L,L).

Note [Understanding DmdType and DmdSig]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Demand types are sound approximations of an expression's semantics relative to
the incoming demand we put the expression under. Consider the following
expression:

    \x y -> x `seq` (y, 2*x)

Here is a table with demand types resulting from different incoming demands we
put that expression under. Note the monotonicity; a stronger incoming demand
yields a more precise demand type:

    incoming demand   |  demand type
    --------------------------------
    1A                  |  <L><L>{}
    C(1,C(1,L))           |  <1P(L)><L>{}
    C(1,C(1,1P(1P(L),A))) |  <1P(A)><A>{}

Note that in the first example, the depth of the demand type was *higher* than
the arity of the incoming call demand due to the anonymous lambda.
The converse is also possible and happens when we unleash demand signatures.
In @f x y@, the incoming call demand on f has arity 2. But if all we have is a
demand signature with depth 1 for @f@ (which we can safely unleash, see below),
the demand type of @f@ under a call demand of arity 2 has a *lower* depth of 1.

So: Demand types are elicited by putting an expression under an incoming (call)
demand, the arity of which can be lower or higher than the depth of the
resulting demand type.
In contrast, a demand signature summarises a function's semantics *without*
immediately specifying the incoming demand it was produced under. Despite StrSig
being a newtype wrapper around DmdType, it actually encodes two things:

  * The threshold (i.e., minimum arity) to unleash the signature
  * A demand type that is sound to unleash when the minimum arity requirement is
    met.

Here comes the subtle part: The threshold is encoded in the wrapped demand
type's depth! So in mkDmdSigForArity we make sure to trim the list of
argument demands to the given threshold arity. Call sites will make sure that
this corresponds to the arity of the call demand that elicited the wrapped
demand type. See also Note [What are demand signatures?].
-}

-- | The depth of the wrapped 'DmdType' encodes the arity at which it is safe
-- to unleash. Better construct this through 'mkDmdSigForArity'.
-- See Note [Understanding DmdType and DmdSig]
newtype DmdSig
  = DmdSig DmdType
  deriving DmdSig -> DmdSig -> Bool
(DmdSig -> DmdSig -> Bool)
-> (DmdSig -> DmdSig -> Bool) -> Eq DmdSig
forall a. (a -> a -> Bool) -> (a -> a -> Bool) -> Eq a
$c== :: DmdSig -> DmdSig -> Bool
== :: DmdSig -> DmdSig -> Bool
$c/= :: DmdSig -> DmdSig -> Bool
/= :: DmdSig -> DmdSig -> Bool
Eq

-- | Turns a 'DmdType' computed for the particular 'Arity' into a 'DmdSig'
-- unleashable at that arity. See Note [Understanding DmdType and DmdSig].
mkDmdSigForArity :: Arity -> DmdType -> DmdSig
mkDmdSigForArity :: Int -> DmdType -> DmdSig
mkDmdSigForArity Int
arity dmd_ty :: DmdType
dmd_ty@(DmdType DmdEnv
fvs [Demand]
args)
  | Int
arity Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Ord a => a -> a -> Bool
< DmdType -> Int
dmdTypeDepth DmdType
dmd_ty = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig (DmdType -> DmdSig) -> DmdType -> DmdSig
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
fvs (Int -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a. Int -> [a] -> [a]
take Int
arity [Demand]
args)
  | Bool
otherwise                   = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig (Int -> DmdType -> DmdType
etaExpandDmdType Int
arity DmdType
dmd_ty)

mkClosedDmdSig :: [Demand] -> Divergence -> DmdSig
mkClosedDmdSig :: [Demand] -> Divergence -> DmdSig
mkClosedDmdSig [Demand]
ds Divergence
div = Int -> DmdType -> DmdSig
mkDmdSigForArity ([Demand] -> Int
forall a. [a] -> Int
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Int
length [Demand]
ds) (DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType (Divergence -> DmdEnv
mkEmptyDmdEnv Divergence
div) [Demand]
ds)

mkVanillaDmdSig :: Arity -> Divergence -> DmdSig
mkVanillaDmdSig :: Int -> Divergence -> DmdSig
mkVanillaDmdSig Int
ar Divergence
div = [Demand] -> Divergence -> DmdSig
mkClosedDmdSig (Int -> Demand -> [Demand]
forall a. Int -> a -> [a]
replicate Int
ar Demand
topDmd) Divergence
div

splitDmdSig :: DmdSig -> ([Demand], Divergence)
splitDmdSig :: DmdSig -> ([Demand], Divergence)
splitDmdSig (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
dmds)) = ([Demand]
dmds, DmdEnv -> Divergence
de_div DmdEnv
env)

dmdSigDmdEnv :: DmdSig -> DmdEnv
dmdSigDmdEnv :: DmdSig -> DmdEnv
dmdSigDmdEnv (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
_)) = DmdEnv
env

hasDemandEnvSig :: DmdSig -> Bool
hasDemandEnvSig :: DmdSig -> Bool
hasDemandEnvSig = Bool -> Bool
not (Bool -> Bool) -> (DmdSig -> Bool) -> DmdSig -> Bool
forall b c a. (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
. VarEnv Demand -> Bool
forall a. VarEnv a -> Bool
isEmptyVarEnv (VarEnv Demand -> Bool)
-> (DmdSig -> VarEnv Demand) -> DmdSig -> Bool
forall b c a. (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
. DmdEnv -> VarEnv Demand
de_fvs (DmdEnv -> VarEnv Demand)
-> (DmdSig -> DmdEnv) -> DmdSig -> VarEnv Demand
forall b c a. (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
. DmdSig -> DmdEnv
dmdSigDmdEnv

botSig :: DmdSig
botSig :: DmdSig
botSig = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig DmdType
botDmdType

nopSig :: DmdSig
nopSig :: DmdSig
nopSig = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig DmdType
nopDmdType

isNopSig :: DmdSig -> Bool
isNopSig :: DmdSig -> Bool
isNopSig (DmdSig DmdType
ty) = DmdType
ty DmdType -> DmdType -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== DmdType
nopDmdType

-- | True if the signature diverges or throws an exception in a saturated call.
-- See Note [Dead ends].
isDeadEndSig :: DmdSig -> Bool
isDeadEndSig :: DmdSig -> Bool
isDeadEndSig (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
_)) = Divergence -> Bool
isDeadEndDiv (DmdEnv -> Divergence
de_div DmdEnv
env)

-- | True if the signature diverges or throws an imprecise exception in a saturated call.
-- NB: In constrast to 'isDeadEndSig' this returns False for 'exnDiv'.
-- See Note [Dead ends]
-- and Note [Precise vs imprecise exceptions].
isBottomingSig :: DmdSig -> Bool
isBottomingSig :: DmdSig -> Bool
isBottomingSig (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
_)) = DmdEnv -> Divergence
de_div DmdEnv
env Divergence -> Divergence -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Divergence
botDiv

-- | True when the signature indicates all arguments are boxed
onlyBoxedArguments :: DmdSig -> Bool
onlyBoxedArguments :: DmdSig -> Bool
onlyBoxedArguments (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
_ [Demand]
dmds)) = (Demand -> Bool) -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => (a -> Bool) -> t a -> Bool
all Demand -> Bool
demandIsBoxed [Demand]
dmds
 where
   demandIsBoxed :: Demand -> Bool
demandIsBoxed Demand
BotDmd    = Bool
True
   demandIsBoxed Demand
AbsDmd    = Bool
True
   demandIsBoxed (Card
_ :* SubDemand
sd) = SubDemand -> Bool
subDemandIsboxed SubDemand
sd

   subDemandIsboxed :: SubDemand -> Bool
subDemandIsboxed (Poly Boxity
Unboxed Card
_) = Bool
False
   subDemandIsboxed (Poly Boxity
_ Card
_)       = Bool
True
   subDemandIsboxed (Call Card
_ SubDemand
sd)      = SubDemand -> Bool
subDemandIsboxed SubDemand
sd
   subDemandIsboxed (Prod Boxity
Unboxed [Demand]
_) = Bool
False
   subDemandIsboxed (Prod Boxity
_ [Demand]
ds)      = (Demand -> Bool) -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => (a -> Bool) -> t a -> Bool
all Demand -> Bool
demandIsBoxed [Demand]
ds

-- | Returns true if an application to n value args would diverge or throw an
-- exception.
--
-- If a function having 'botDiv' is applied to a less number of arguments than
-- its syntactic arity, we cannot say for sure that it is going to diverge.
-- Hence this function conservatively returns False in that case.
-- See Note [Dead ends].
isDeadEndAppSig :: DmdSig -> Int -> Bool
isDeadEndAppSig :: DmdSig -> Int -> Bool
isDeadEndAppSig (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
ds)) Int
n
  = Divergence -> Bool
isDeadEndDiv (DmdEnv -> Divergence
de_div DmdEnv
env) Bool -> Bool -> Bool
&& Bool -> Bool
not ([Demand] -> Int -> Bool
forall a. [a] -> Int -> Bool
lengthExceeds [Demand]
ds Int
n)

trimBoxityDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
trimBoxityDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
trimBoxityDmdEnv (DE VarEnv Demand
fvs Divergence
div) = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE ((Demand -> Demand) -> VarEnv Demand -> VarEnv Demand
forall a b. (a -> b) -> VarEnv a -> VarEnv b
mapVarEnv Demand -> Demand
trimBoxity VarEnv Demand
fvs) Divergence
div

trimBoxityDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdType
trimBoxityDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdType
trimBoxityDmdType (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
ds) =
  DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType (DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
trimBoxityDmdEnv DmdEnv
env) ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map Demand -> Demand
trimBoxity [Demand]
ds)

trimBoxityDmdSig :: DmdSig -> DmdSig
trimBoxityDmdSig :: DmdSig -> DmdSig
trimBoxityDmdSig = (DmdType -> DmdType) -> DmdSig -> DmdSig
forall a b. Coercible a b => a -> b
coerce DmdType -> DmdType
trimBoxityDmdType

-- | Transfers the boxity of the left arg to the demand structure of the right
-- arg. This only makes sense if applied to new and old demands of the same
-- value.
transferBoxity :: Demand -> Demand -> Demand
transferBoxity :: Demand -> Demand -> Demand
transferBoxity Demand
from Demand
to = Demand -> Demand -> Demand
go_dmd Demand
from Demand
to
  where
    go_dmd :: Demand -> Demand -> Demand
go_dmd (Card
from_n :* SubDemand
from_sd) to_dmd :: Demand
to_dmd@(Card
to_n :* SubDemand
to_sd)
      | Card -> Bool
isAbs Card
from_n Bool -> Bool -> Bool
|| Card -> Bool
isAbs Card
to_n = Demand
to_dmd
      | Bool
otherwise = case (SubDemand
from_sd, SubDemand
to_sd) of
          (Poly Boxity
from_b Card
_, Poly Boxity
_ Card
to_c) ->
            Card
to_n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
from_b Card
to_c
          (SubDemand
_, Prod Boxity
_ [Demand]
to_ds)
            | Just (Boxity
from_b, [Demand]
from_ds) <- Int -> SubDemand -> Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
viewProd ([Demand] -> Int
forall a. [a] -> Int
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Int
length [Demand]
to_ds) SubDemand
from_sd
            -> Card
to_n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
from_b ((Demand -> Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
strictZipWith Demand -> Demand -> Demand
go_dmd [Demand]
from_ds [Demand]
to_ds)
          (Prod Boxity
from_b [Demand]
from_ds, SubDemand
_)
            | Just (Boxity
_, [Demand]
to_ds) <- Int -> SubDemand -> Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
viewProd ([Demand] -> Int
forall a. [a] -> Int
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Int
length [Demand]
from_ds) SubDemand
to_sd
            -> Card
to_n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
from_b ((Demand -> Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
strictZipWith Demand -> Demand -> Demand
go_dmd [Demand]
from_ds [Demand]
to_ds)
          (SubDemand, SubDemand)
_ -> Demand -> Demand
trimBoxity Demand
to_dmd

transferArgBoxityDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdType -> DmdType
transferArgBoxityDmdType :: DmdType -> DmdType -> DmdType
transferArgBoxityDmdType _from :: DmdType
_from@(DmdType DmdEnv
_ [Demand]
from_ds) to :: DmdType
to@(DmdType DmdEnv
to_env [Demand]
to_ds)
  | [Demand] -> [Demand] -> Bool
forall a b. [a] -> [b] -> Bool
equalLength [Demand]
from_ds [Demand]
to_ds
  = -- pprTraceWith "transfer" (\r -> ppr _from $$ ppr to $$ ppr r) $
    DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
to_env -- Only arg boxity! See Note [Don't change boxity without worker/wrapper]
            ((Demand -> Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
zipWith Demand -> Demand -> Demand
transferBoxity [Demand]
from_ds [Demand]
to_ds)
  | Bool
otherwise
  = DmdType -> DmdType
trimBoxityDmdType DmdType
to

transferArgBoxityDmdSig :: DmdSig -> DmdSig -> DmdSig
transferArgBoxityDmdSig :: DmdSig -> DmdSig -> DmdSig
transferArgBoxityDmdSig = (DmdType -> DmdType -> DmdType) -> DmdSig -> DmdSig -> DmdSig
forall a b. Coercible a b => a -> b
coerce DmdType -> DmdType -> DmdType
transferArgBoxityDmdType

prependArgsDmdSig :: Int -> DmdSig -> DmdSig
-- ^ Add extra ('topDmd') arguments to a strictness signature.
-- In contrast to 'etaConvertDmdSig', this /prepends/ additional argument
-- demands. This is used by FloatOut.
prependArgsDmdSig :: Int -> DmdSig -> DmdSig
prependArgsDmdSig Int
new_args sig :: DmdSig
sig@(DmdSig dmd_ty :: DmdType
dmd_ty@(DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
dmds))
  | Int
new_args Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== Int
0        = DmdSig
sig
  | DmdType
dmd_ty DmdType -> DmdType -> Bool
forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Bool
== DmdType
nopDmdType = DmdSig
sig
  | Bool
otherwise            = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig (DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
dmds')
  where
    dmds' :: [Demand]
dmds' = Bool -> SDoc -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a. HasCallStack => Bool -> SDoc -> a -> a
assertPpr (Int
new_args Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Ord a => a -> a -> Bool
> Int
0) (Int -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Int
new_args) ([Demand] -> [Demand]) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$
            Int -> Demand -> [Demand]
forall a. Int -> a -> [a]
replicate Int
new_args Demand
topDmd [Demand] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a. [a] -> [a] -> [a]
++ [Demand]
dmds

etaConvertDmdSig :: Arity -> DmdSig -> DmdSig
-- ^ We are expanding (\x y. e) to (\x y z. e z) or reducing from the latter to
-- the former (when the Simplifier identifies a new join points, for example).
-- In contrast to 'prependArgsDmdSig', this /appends/ extra arg demands if
-- necessary.
-- This works by looking at the 'DmdType' (which was produced under a call
-- demand for the old arity) and trying to transfer as many facts as we can to
-- the call demand of new arity.
-- An arity increase (resulting in a stronger incoming demand) can retain much
-- of the info, while an arity decrease (a weakening of the incoming demand)
-- must fall back to a conservative default.
etaConvertDmdSig :: Int -> DmdSig -> DmdSig
etaConvertDmdSig Int
arity (DmdSig DmdType
dmd_ty)
  | Int
arity Int -> Int -> Bool
forall a. Ord a => a -> a -> Bool
< DmdType -> Int
dmdTypeDepth DmdType
dmd_ty = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig (DmdType -> DmdSig) -> DmdType -> DmdSig
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ DmdType -> DmdType
decreaseArityDmdType DmdType
dmd_ty
  | Bool
otherwise                   = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig (DmdType -> DmdSig) -> DmdType -> DmdSig
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ Int -> DmdType -> DmdType
etaExpandDmdType Int
arity DmdType
dmd_ty

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
                     Demand transformers
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

-- | A /demand transformer/ is a monotone function from an incoming evaluation
-- context ('SubDemand') to a 'DmdType', describing how the denoted thing
-- (i.e. expression, function) uses its arguments and free variables, and
-- whether it diverges.
--
-- See Note [Understanding DmdType and DmdSig]
-- and Note [What are demand signatures?].
type DmdTransformer = SubDemand -> DmdType

-- | Extrapolate a demand signature ('DmdSig') into a 'DmdTransformer'.
--
-- Given a function's 'DmdSig' and a 'SubDemand' for the evaluation context,
-- return how the function evaluates its free variables and arguments.
dmdTransformSig :: DmdSig -> DmdTransformer
dmdTransformSig :: DmdSig -> DmdTransformer
dmdTransformSig (DmdSig dmd_ty :: DmdType
dmd_ty@(DmdType DmdEnv
_ [Demand]
arg_ds)) SubDemand
sd
  = Card -> DmdType -> DmdType
multDmdType ((Card, SubDemand) -> Card
forall a b. (a, b) -> a
fst ((Card, SubDemand) -> Card) -> (Card, SubDemand) -> Card
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ Int -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
peelManyCalls ([Demand] -> Int
forall a. [a] -> Int
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Int
length [Demand]
arg_ds) SubDemand
sd) DmdType
dmd_ty
    -- see Note [Demands from unsaturated function calls]
    -- and Note [What are demand signatures?]

-- | A special 'DmdTransformer' for data constructors that feeds product
-- demands into the constructor arguments.
dmdTransformDataConSig :: [StrictnessMark] -> DmdTransformer
-- See Note [Demand transformer for data constructors]
dmdTransformDataConSig :: [StrictnessMark] -> DmdTransformer
dmdTransformDataConSig [StrictnessMark]
str_marks SubDemand
sd = case Int -> SubDemand -> Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
viewProd Int
arity SubDemand
body_sd of
  Just (Boxity
_, [Demand]
dmds) -> Card -> [Demand] -> DmdType
mk_body_ty Card
n [Demand]
dmds
  Maybe (Boxity, [Demand])
Nothing        -> DmdType
nopDmdType
  where
    arity :: Int
arity = [StrictnessMark] -> Int
forall a. [a] -> Int
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Int
length [StrictnessMark]
str_marks
    (Card
n, SubDemand
body_sd) = Int -> SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
peelManyCalls Int
arity SubDemand
sd
    mk_body_ty :: Card -> [Demand] -> DmdType
mk_body_ty Card
n [Demand]
dmds = DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
nopDmdEnv ((StrictnessMark -> Demand -> Demand)
-> [StrictnessMark] -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
zipWith (Card -> StrictnessMark -> Demand -> Demand
bump Card
n) [StrictnessMark]
str_marks [Demand]
dmds)
    bump :: Card -> StrictnessMark -> Demand -> Demand
bump Card
n StrictnessMark
str Demand
dmd | StrictnessMark -> Bool
isMarkedStrict StrictnessMark
str = Card -> Demand -> Demand
multDmd Card
n (Demand -> Demand -> Demand
plusDmd Demand
str_field_dmd Demand
dmd)
                   | Bool
otherwise          = Card -> Demand -> Demand
multDmd Card
n Demand
dmd
    str_field_dmd :: Demand
str_field_dmd = Card
C_01 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand
seqSubDmd -- Why not C_11? See Note [Data-con worker strictness]

-- | A special 'DmdTransformer' for dictionary selectors that feeds the demand
-- on the result into the indicated dictionary component (if saturated).
-- See Note [Demand transformer for a dictionary selector].
dmdTransformDictSelSig :: DmdSig -> DmdTransformer
-- NB: This currently doesn't handle newtype dictionaries.
-- It should simply apply call_sd directly to the dictionary, I suppose.
dmdTransformDictSelSig :: DmdSig -> DmdTransformer
dmdTransformDictSelSig (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
_ [Card
_ :* SubDemand
prod])) SubDemand
call_sd
   | (Card
n, SubDemand
sd') <- SubDemand -> (Card, SubDemand)
peelCallDmd SubDemand
call_sd
   , Prod Boxity
_ [Demand]
sig_ds <- SubDemand
prod
   = Card -> DmdType -> DmdType
multDmdType Card
n (DmdType -> DmdType) -> DmdType -> DmdType
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$
     DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
nopDmdEnv [Card
C_11 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
Unboxed ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map (SubDemand -> Demand -> Demand
enhance SubDemand
sd') [Demand]
sig_ds)]
   | Bool
otherwise
   = DmdType
nopDmdType -- See Note [Demand transformer for a dictionary selector]
  where
    enhance :: SubDemand -> Demand -> Demand
enhance SubDemand
_  Demand
AbsDmd   = Demand
AbsDmd
    enhance SubDemand
_  Demand
BotDmd   = Demand
BotDmd
    enhance SubDemand
sd Demand
_dmd_var = Card
C_11 HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand
sd  -- This is the one!
                                      -- C_11, because we multiply with n above
dmdTransformDictSelSig DmdSig
sig SubDemand
sd = String -> SDoc -> DmdType
forall a. HasCallStack => String -> SDoc -> a
pprPanic String
"dmdTransformDictSelSig: no args" (DmdSig -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr DmdSig
sig SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsDoc doc => doc -> doc -> doc
$$ SubDemand -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr SubDemand
sd)

{-
Note [What are demand signatures?]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Demand analysis interprets expressions in the abstract domain of demand
transformers. Given a (sub-)demand that denotes the evaluation context, the
abstract transformer of an expression gives us back a demand type denoting
how other things (like arguments and free vars) were used when the expression
was evaluated. Here's an example:

  f x y =
    if x + expensive
      then \z -> z + y * ...
      else \z -> z * ...

The abstract transformer (let's call it F_e) of the if expression (let's
call it e) would transform an incoming (undersaturated!) head demand 1A into
a demand type like {x-><1L>,y-><L>}<L>. In pictures:

     Demand ---F_e---> DmdType
     <1A>              {x-><1L>,y-><L>}<L>

Let's assume that the demand transformers we compute for an expression are
correct wrt. to some concrete semantics for Core. How do demand signatures fit
in? They are strange beasts, given that they come with strict rules when to
it's sound to unleash them.

Fortunately, we can formalise the rules with Galois connections. Consider
f's strictness signature, {}<1L><L>. It's a single-point approximation of
the actual abstract transformer of f's RHS for arity 2. So, what happens is that
we abstract *once more* from the abstract domain we already are in, replacing
the incoming Demand by a simple lattice with two elements denoting incoming
arity: A_2 = {<2, >=2} (where '<2' is the top element and >=2 the bottom
element). Here's the diagram:

     A_2 -----f_f----> DmdType
      ^                   |
      | α               γ |
      |                   v
  SubDemand --F_f----> DmdType

With
  α(C(1,C(1,_))) = >=2
  α(_)         =  <2
  γ(ty)        =  ty
and F_f being the abstract transformer of f's RHS and f_f being the abstracted
abstract transformer computable from our demand signature simply by

  f_f(>=2) = {}<1L><L>
  f_f(<2)  = multDmdType C_0N {}<1L><L>

where multDmdType makes a proper top element out of the given demand type.

In practice, the A_n domain is not just a simple Bool, but a Card, which is
exactly the Card with which we have to multDmdType. The Card for arity n
is computed by calling @peelManyCalls n@, which corresponds to α above.

Note [Demand transformer for a dictionary selector]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suppose we have a superclass selector 'sc_sel' and a class method
selector 'op_sel', and a function that uses both, like this

-- Strictness sig: 1P(1,A)
sc_sel (x,y) = x

-- Strictness sig: 1P(A,1)
op_sel (p,q)= q

f d v = op_sel (sc_sel d) v

What do we learn about the demand on 'd'?  Alas, we see only the
demand from 'sc_sel', namely '1P(1,A)'.  We /don't/ see that 'd' really has a nested
demand '1P(1P(A,1C(1,1)),A)'.  On the other hand, if we inlined the two selectors
we'd have

f d x = case d of (x,_) ->
        case x of (_,q) ->
        q v

If we analyse that, we'll get a richer, nested demand on 'd'.

We want to behave /as if/ we'd inlined 'op_sel' and 'sc_sel'. We can do this
easily by building a richer demand transformer for dictionary selectors than
is expressible by a regular demand signature.
And that is what 'dmdTransformDictSelSig' does: it transforms the demand on the
result to a demand on the (single) argument.

How does it do that?
If we evaluate (op dict-expr) under demand 'd', then we can push the demand 'd'
into the appropriate field of the dictionary. What *is* the appropriate field?
We just look at the strictness signature of the class op, which will be
something like: P(AAA1AAAAA). Then replace the '1' (or any other non-absent
demand, really) by the demand 'd'. The '1' acts as if it was a demand variable,
the whole signature really means `\d. P(AAAdAAAAA)` for any incoming
demand 'd'.

For single-method classes, which are represented by newtypes the signature
of 'op' won't look like P(...), so matching on Prod will fail.
That's fine: if we are doing strictness analysis we are also doing inlining,
so we'll have inlined 'op' into a cast.  So we can bale out in a conservative
way, returning nopDmdType. SG: Although we then probably want to apply the eval
demand 'd' directly to 'op' rather than turning it into 'topSubDmd'...

It is (just.. #8329) possible to be running strictness analysis *without*
having inlined class ops from single-method classes.  Suppose you are using
ghc --make; and the first module has a local -O0 flag.  So you may load a class
without interface pragmas, ie (currently) without an unfolding for the class
ops.   Now if a subsequent module in the --make sweep has a local -O flag
you might do strictness analysis, but there is no inlining for the class op.
This is weird, so I'm not worried about whether this optimises brilliantly; but
it should not fall over.
-}

zapDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
zapDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
zapDmdEnv (DE VarEnv Demand
_ Divergence
div) = Divergence -> DmdEnv
mkEmptyDmdEnv Divergence
div

-- | Remove the demand environment from the signature.
zapDmdEnvSig :: DmdSig -> DmdSig
zapDmdEnvSig :: DmdSig -> DmdSig
zapDmdEnvSig (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
ds)) = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig (DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType (DmdEnv -> DmdEnv
zapDmdEnv DmdEnv
env) [Demand]
ds)

zapUsageDemand :: Demand -> Demand
-- Remove the usage info, but not the strictness info, from the demand
zapUsageDemand :: Demand -> Demand
zapUsageDemand = KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand
kill_usage (KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand) -> KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ KillFlags
    { kf_abs :: Bool
kf_abs         = Bool
True
    , kf_used_once :: Bool
kf_used_once   = Bool
True
    , kf_called_once :: Bool
kf_called_once = Bool
True
    }

-- | Remove all `C_01 :*` info (but not `CM` sub-demands) from the demand
zapUsedOnceDemand :: Demand -> Demand
zapUsedOnceDemand :: Demand -> Demand
zapUsedOnceDemand = KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand
kill_usage (KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand) -> KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ KillFlags
    { kf_abs :: Bool
kf_abs         = Bool
False
    , kf_used_once :: Bool
kf_used_once   = Bool
True
    , kf_called_once :: Bool
kf_called_once = Bool
False
    }

-- | Remove all `C_01 :*` info (but not `CM` sub-demands) from the strictness
--   signature
zapUsedOnceSig :: DmdSig -> DmdSig
zapUsedOnceSig :: DmdSig -> DmdSig
zapUsedOnceSig (DmdSig (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
ds))
    = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig (DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType DmdEnv
env ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map Demand -> Demand
zapUsedOnceDemand [Demand]
ds))

data KillFlags = KillFlags
    { KillFlags -> Bool
kf_abs         :: Bool
    , KillFlags -> Bool
kf_used_once   :: Bool
    , KillFlags -> Bool
kf_called_once :: Bool
    }

kill_usage_card :: KillFlags -> Card -> Card
kill_usage_card :: KillFlags -> Card -> Card
kill_usage_card KillFlags
kfs Card
C_00 | KillFlags -> Bool
kf_abs KillFlags
kfs       = Card
C_0N
kill_usage_card KillFlags
kfs Card
C_10 | KillFlags -> Bool
kf_abs KillFlags
kfs       = Card
C_1N
kill_usage_card KillFlags
kfs Card
C_01 | KillFlags -> Bool
kf_used_once KillFlags
kfs = Card
C_0N
kill_usage_card KillFlags
kfs Card
C_11 | KillFlags -> Bool
kf_used_once KillFlags
kfs = Card
C_1N
kill_usage_card KillFlags
_   Card
n                       = Card
n

kill_usage :: KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand
kill_usage :: KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand
kill_usage KillFlags
_   Demand
AbsDmd    = Demand
AbsDmd
kill_usage KillFlags
_   Demand
BotDmd    = Demand
BotDmd
kill_usage KillFlags
kfs (Card
n :* SubDemand
sd) = KillFlags -> Card -> Card
kill_usage_card KillFlags
kfs Card
n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* KillFlags -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
kill_usage_sd KillFlags
kfs SubDemand
sd

kill_usage_sd :: KillFlags -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
kill_usage_sd :: KillFlags -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
kill_usage_sd KillFlags
kfs (Call Card
n SubDemand
sd)
  | KillFlags -> Bool
kf_called_once KillFlags
kfs        = Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall (Card -> Card -> Card
lubCard Card
C_1N Card
n) (KillFlags -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
kill_usage_sd KillFlags
kfs SubDemand
sd)
  | Bool
otherwise                 = Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
n                (KillFlags -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
kill_usage_sd KillFlags
kfs SubDemand
sd)
kill_usage_sd KillFlags
kfs (Prod Boxity
b [Demand]
ds) = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
b ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map (KillFlags -> Demand -> Demand
kill_usage KillFlags
kfs) [Demand]
ds)
kill_usage_sd KillFlags
_   SubDemand
sd          = SubDemand
sd

{- *********************************************************************
*                                                                      *
               TypeShape and demand trimming
*                                                                      *
********************************************************************* -}


data TypeShape -- See Note [Trimming a demand to a type]
               --     in GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal
  = TsFun TypeShape
  | TsProd [TypeShape]
  | TsUnk

trimToType :: Demand -> TypeShape -> Demand
-- See Note [Trimming a demand to a type] in GHC.Core.Opt.DmdAnal
trimToType :: Demand -> TypeShape -> Demand
trimToType Demand
AbsDmd    TypeShape
_  = Demand
AbsDmd
trimToType Demand
BotDmd    TypeShape
_  = Demand
BotDmd
trimToType (Card
n :* SubDemand
sd) TypeShape
ts
  = Card
n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand -> TypeShape -> SubDemand
go SubDemand
sd TypeShape
ts
  where
    go :: SubDemand -> TypeShape -> SubDemand
go (Prod Boxity
b [Demand]
ds) (TsProd [TypeShape]
tss)
      | [Demand] -> [TypeShape] -> Bool
forall a b. [a] -> [b] -> Bool
equalLength [Demand]
ds [TypeShape]
tss    = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
b ((Demand -> TypeShape -> Demand)
-> [Demand] -> [TypeShape] -> [Demand]
forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
zipWith Demand -> TypeShape -> Demand
trimToType [Demand]
ds [TypeShape]
tss)
    go (Call Card
n SubDemand
sd) (TsFun TypeShape
ts) = Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
n (SubDemand -> TypeShape -> SubDemand
go SubDemand
sd TypeShape
ts)
    go sd :: SubDemand
sd@Poly{}   TypeShape
_          = SubDemand
sd
    go SubDemand
_           TypeShape
_          = SubDemand
topSubDmd

-- | Drop all boxity
trimBoxity :: Demand -> Demand
trimBoxity :: Demand -> Demand
trimBoxity Demand
AbsDmd    = Demand
AbsDmd
trimBoxity Demand
BotDmd    = Demand
BotDmd
trimBoxity (Card
n :* SubDemand
sd) = Card
n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:* SubDemand -> SubDemand
go SubDemand
sd
  where
    go :: SubDemand -> SubDemand
go (Poly Boxity
_ Card
n)  = Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
n
    go (Prod Boxity
_ [Demand]
ds) = Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
mkProd Boxity
Boxed ((Demand -> Demand) -> [Demand] -> [Demand]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map Demand -> Demand
trimBoxity [Demand]
ds)
    go (Call Card
n SubDemand
sd) = Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall Card
n (SubDemand -> SubDemand) -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ SubDemand -> SubDemand
go SubDemand
sd

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
                     'seq'ing demands
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

seqDemand :: Demand -> ()
seqDemand :: Demand -> ()
seqDemand Demand
AbsDmd    = ()
seqDemand Demand
BotDmd    = ()
seqDemand (Card
_ :* SubDemand
sd) = SubDemand -> ()
seqSubDemand SubDemand
sd

seqSubDemand :: SubDemand -> ()
seqSubDemand :: SubDemand -> ()
seqSubDemand (Prod Boxity
_ [Demand]
ds) = [Demand] -> ()
seqDemandList [Demand]
ds
seqSubDemand (Call Card
_ SubDemand
sd) = SubDemand -> ()
seqSubDemand SubDemand
sd
seqSubDemand (Poly Boxity
_ Card
_)  = ()

seqDemandList :: [Demand] -> ()
seqDemandList :: [Demand] -> ()
seqDemandList = (Demand -> () -> ()) -> () -> [Demand] -> ()
forall a b. (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
forall (t :: * -> *) a b.
Foldable t =>
(a -> b -> b) -> b -> t a -> b
foldr (() -> () -> ()
forall a b. a -> b -> b
seq (() -> () -> ()) -> (Demand -> ()) -> Demand -> () -> ()
forall b c a. (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
. Demand -> ()
seqDemand) ()

seqDmdType :: DmdType -> ()
seqDmdType :: DmdType -> ()
seqDmdType (DmdType DmdEnv
env [Demand]
ds) =
  DmdEnv -> ()
seqDmdEnv DmdEnv
env () -> () -> ()
forall a b. a -> b -> b
`seq` [Demand] -> ()
seqDemandList [Demand]
ds () -> () -> ()
forall a b. a -> b -> b
`seq` ()

seqDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> ()
seqDmdEnv :: DmdEnv -> ()
seqDmdEnv (DE VarEnv Demand
fvs Divergence
_) = (Demand -> ()) -> VarEnv Demand -> ()
forall elt key. (elt -> ()) -> UniqFM key elt -> ()
seqEltsUFM Demand -> ()
seqDemand VarEnv Demand
fvs

seqDmdSig :: DmdSig -> ()
seqDmdSig :: DmdSig -> ()
seqDmdSig (DmdSig DmdType
ty) = DmdType -> ()
seqDmdType DmdType
ty

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
                     Outputable and Binary instances
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

-- Just for debugging purposes.
instance Show Card where
  show :: Card -> String
show Card
C_00 = String
"C_00"
  show Card
C_01 = String
"C_01"
  show Card
C_0N = String
"C_0N"
  show Card
C_10 = String
"C_10"
  show Card
C_11 = String
"C_11"
  show Card
C_1N = String
"C_1N"

{- Note [Demand notation]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This Note should be kept up to date with the documentation of `-fstrictness`
in the user's guide.

For pretty-printing demands, we use quite a compact notation with some
abbreviations. Here's the BNF:

  card ::= B                        {}
        |  A                        {0}
        |  M                        {0,1}
        |  L                        {0,1,n}
        |  1                        {1}
        |  S                        {1,n}

  box  ::= !                        Unboxed
        |  <empty>                  Boxed

  d    ::= card sd                  The :* constructor, just juxtaposition
        |  card                     abbreviation: Same as "card card"

  sd   ::= box card                 @Poly box card@
        |  box P(d,d,..)            @Prod box [d1,d2,..]@
        |  Ccard(sd)                @Call card sd@

So, L can denote a 'Card', polymorphic 'SubDemand' or polymorphic 'Demand',
but it's always clear from context which "overload" is meant. It's like
return-type inference of e.g. 'read'.

Examples are in the haddock for 'Demand'.

This is the syntax for demand signatures:

  div ::= <empty>      topDiv
       |  x            exnDiv
       |  b            botDiv

  sig ::= {x->dx,y->dy,z->dz...}<d1><d2><d3>...<dn>div
                  ^              ^   ^   ^      ^   ^
                  |              |   |   |      |   |
                  |              \---+---+------/   |
                  |                  |              |
             demand on free        demand on      divergence
               variables           arguments      information
           (omitted if empty)                     (omitted if
                                                no information)


-}

-- | See Note [Demand notation]
-- Current syntax was discussed in #19016.
instance Outputable Card where
  ppr :: Card -> SDoc
ppr Card
C_00 = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'A' -- "Absent"
  ppr Card
C_01 = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'M' -- "Maybe"
  ppr Card
C_0N = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'L' -- "Lazy"
  ppr Card
C_11 = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'1' -- "exactly 1"
  ppr Card
C_1N = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'S' -- "Strict"
  ppr Card
C_10 = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'B' -- "Bottom"

-- | See Note [Demand notation]
instance Outputable Demand where
  ppr :: Demand -> SDoc
ppr Demand
AbsDmd                    = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'A'
  ppr Demand
BotDmd                    = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'B'
  ppr (Card
C_0N :* Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
C_0N) = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'L' -- Print LL as just L
  ppr (Card
C_1N :* Poly Boxity
Boxed Card
C_1N) = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'S' -- Dito SS
  ppr (Card
n :* SubDemand
sd)                 = Card -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Card
n SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> SubDemand -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr SubDemand
sd

-- | See Note [Demand notation]
instance Outputable SubDemand where
  ppr :: SubDemand -> SDoc
ppr (Poly Boxity
b Card
n)  = Boxity -> SDoc
pp_boxity Boxity
b SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> Card -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Card
n
  ppr (Call Card
n SubDemand
sd) = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'C' SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc
parens (Card -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Card
n SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc
comma SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> SubDemand -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr SubDemand
sd)
  ppr (Prod Boxity
b [Demand]
ds) = Boxity -> SDoc
pp_boxity Boxity
b SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'P' SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc
parens ([Demand] -> SDoc
forall {a}. Outputable a => [a] -> SDoc
fields [Demand]
ds)
    where
      fields :: [a] -> SDoc
fields []     = SDoc
forall doc. IsOutput doc => doc
empty
      fields [a
x]    = a -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr a
x
      fields (a
x:[a]
xs) = a -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr a
x SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
',' SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> [a] -> SDoc
fields [a]
xs

pp_boxity :: Boxity -> SDoc
pp_boxity :: Boxity -> SDoc
pp_boxity Boxity
Unboxed = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'!'
pp_boxity Boxity
_       = SDoc
forall doc. IsOutput doc => doc
empty

instance Outputable Divergence where
  ppr :: Divergence -> SDoc
ppr Divergence
Diverges = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'b' -- for (b)ottom
  ppr Divergence
ExnOrDiv = Char -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => Char -> doc
char Char
'x' -- for e(x)ception
  ppr Divergence
Dunno    = SDoc
forall doc. IsOutput doc => doc
empty

instance Outputable DmdEnv where
  ppr :: DmdEnv -> SDoc
ppr (DE VarEnv Demand
fvs Divergence
div)
    = Divergence -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr Divergence
div SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> if [(Unique, Demand)] -> Bool
forall a. [a] -> Bool
forall (t :: * -> *) a. Foldable t => t a -> Bool
null [(Unique, Demand)]
fv_elts then SDoc
forall doc. IsOutput doc => doc
empty
                 else SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc
braces ([SDoc] -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => [doc] -> doc
fsep (((Unique, Demand) -> SDoc) -> [(Unique, Demand)] -> [SDoc]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map (Unique, Demand) -> SDoc
forall {a} {a}. (Outputable a, Outputable a) => (a, a) -> SDoc
pp_elt [(Unique, Demand)]
fv_elts))
    where
      pp_elt :: (a, a) -> SDoc
pp_elt (a
uniq, a
dmd) = a -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr a
uniq SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> String -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => String -> doc
text String
"->" SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> a -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr a
dmd
      fv_elts :: [(Unique, Demand)]
fv_elts = VarEnv Demand -> [(Unique, Demand)]
forall key elt. UniqFM key elt -> [(Unique, elt)]
nonDetUFMToList VarEnv Demand
fvs
        -- It's OK to use nonDetUFMToList here because we only do it for
        -- pretty printing

instance Outputable DmdType where
  ppr :: DmdType -> SDoc
ppr (DmdType DmdEnv
fv [Demand]
ds)
    = [SDoc] -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => [doc] -> doc
hcat ((Demand -> SDoc) -> [Demand] -> [SDoc]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map (SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc
angleBrackets (SDoc -> SDoc) -> (Demand -> SDoc) -> Demand -> SDoc
forall b c a. (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
. Demand -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr) [Demand]
ds) SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> DmdEnv -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr DmdEnv
fv

instance Outputable DmdSig where
   ppr :: DmdSig -> SDoc
ppr (DmdSig DmdType
ty) = DmdType -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr DmdType
ty

instance Outputable TypeShape where
  ppr :: TypeShape -> SDoc
ppr TypeShape
TsUnk        = String -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => String -> doc
text String
"TsUnk"
  ppr (TsFun TypeShape
ts)   = String -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => String -> doc
text String
"TsFun" SDoc -> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc -> doc
<> SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc
parens (TypeShape -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr TypeShape
ts)
  ppr (TsProd [TypeShape]
tss) = SDoc -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> doc
parens ([SDoc] -> SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => [doc] -> doc
hsep ([SDoc] -> SDoc) -> [SDoc] -> SDoc
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ SDoc -> [SDoc] -> [SDoc]
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc -> [doc] -> [doc]
punctuate SDoc
forall doc. IsLine doc => doc
comma ([SDoc] -> [SDoc]) -> [SDoc] -> [SDoc]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> a -> b
$ (TypeShape -> SDoc) -> [TypeShape] -> [SDoc]
forall a b. (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
map TypeShape -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr [TypeShape]
tss)

instance Binary Card where
  put_ :: BinHandle -> Card -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh Card
C_00 = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
0
  put_ BinHandle
bh Card
C_01 = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
1
  put_ BinHandle
bh Card
C_0N = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
2
  put_ BinHandle
bh Card
C_11 = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
3
  put_ BinHandle
bh Card
C_1N = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
4
  put_ BinHandle
bh Card
C_10 = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
5
  get :: BinHandle -> IO Card
get BinHandle
bh = do
    Word8
h <- BinHandle -> IO Word8
getByte BinHandle
bh
    case Word8
h of
      Word8
0 -> Card -> IO Card
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Card
C_00
      Word8
1 -> Card -> IO Card
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Card
C_01
      Word8
2 -> Card -> IO Card
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Card
C_0N
      Word8
3 -> Card -> IO Card
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Card
C_11
      Word8
4 -> Card -> IO Card
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Card
C_1N
      Word8
5 -> Card -> IO Card
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Card
C_10
      Word8
_ -> String -> SDoc -> IO Card
forall a. HasCallStack => String -> SDoc -> a
pprPanic String
"Binary:Card" (Int -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr (Word8 -> Int
forall a b. (Integral a, Num b) => a -> b
fromIntegral Word8
h :: Int))

instance Binary Demand where
  put_ :: BinHandle -> Demand -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh (Card
n :* SubDemand
sd) = BinHandle -> Card -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh Card
n IO () -> IO () -> IO ()
forall a b. IO a -> IO b -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f a -> f b -> f b
*> case Card
n of
    Card
C_00 -> () -> IO ()
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return ()
    Card
C_10 -> () -> IO ()
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return ()
    Card
_    -> BinHandle -> SubDemand -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh SubDemand
sd
  get :: BinHandle -> IO Demand
get BinHandle
bh = BinHandle -> IO Card
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh IO Card -> (Card -> IO Demand) -> IO Demand
forall a b. IO a -> (a -> IO b) -> IO b
forall (m :: * -> *) a b. Monad m => m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
>>= \Card
n -> case Card
n of
    Card
C_00 -> Demand -> IO Demand
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Demand
AbsDmd
    Card
C_10 -> Demand -> IO Demand
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Demand
BotDmd
    Card
_    -> (Card
n HasDebugCallStack => Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
Card -> SubDemand -> Demand
:*) (SubDemand -> Demand) -> IO SubDemand -> IO Demand
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<$> BinHandle -> IO SubDemand
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh

instance Binary SubDemand where
  put_ :: BinHandle -> SubDemand -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh (Poly Boxity
b Card
sd) = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
0 IO () -> IO () -> IO ()
forall a b. IO a -> IO b -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f a -> f b -> f b
*> BinHandle -> Boxity -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh Boxity
b IO () -> IO () -> IO ()
forall a b. IO a -> IO b -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f a -> f b -> f b
*> BinHandle -> Card -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh Card
sd
  put_ BinHandle
bh (Call Card
n SubDemand
sd) = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
1 IO () -> IO () -> IO ()
forall a b. IO a -> IO b -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f a -> f b -> f b
*> BinHandle -> Card -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh Card
n IO () -> IO () -> IO ()
forall a b. IO a -> IO b -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f a -> f b -> f b
*> BinHandle -> SubDemand -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh SubDemand
sd
  put_ BinHandle
bh (Prod Boxity
b [Demand]
ds) = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
2 IO () -> IO () -> IO ()
forall a b. IO a -> IO b -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f a -> f b -> f b
*> BinHandle -> Boxity -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh Boxity
b IO () -> IO () -> IO ()
forall a b. IO a -> IO b -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f a -> f b -> f b
*> BinHandle -> [Demand] -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh [Demand]
ds
  get :: BinHandle -> IO SubDemand
get BinHandle
bh = do
    Word8
h <- BinHandle -> IO Word8
getByte BinHandle
bh
    case Word8
h of
      Word8
0 -> Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand
Poly (Boxity -> Card -> SubDemand)
-> IO Boxity -> IO (Card -> SubDemand)
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<$> BinHandle -> IO Boxity
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh IO (Card -> SubDemand) -> IO Card -> IO SubDemand
forall a b. IO (a -> b) -> IO a -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<*> BinHandle -> IO Card
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh
      Word8
1 -> Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand
mkCall (Card -> SubDemand -> SubDemand)
-> IO Card -> IO (SubDemand -> SubDemand)
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<$> BinHandle -> IO Card
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh IO (SubDemand -> SubDemand) -> IO SubDemand -> IO SubDemand
forall a b. IO (a -> b) -> IO a -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<*> BinHandle -> IO SubDemand
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh
      Word8
2 -> Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand
Prod (Boxity -> [Demand] -> SubDemand)
-> IO Boxity -> IO ([Demand] -> SubDemand)
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<$> BinHandle -> IO Boxity
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh IO ([Demand] -> SubDemand) -> IO [Demand] -> IO SubDemand
forall a b. IO (a -> b) -> IO a -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<*> BinHandle -> IO [Demand]
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh
      Word8
_ -> String -> SDoc -> IO SubDemand
forall a. HasCallStack => String -> SDoc -> a
pprPanic String
"Binary:SubDemand" (Int -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr (Word8 -> Int
forall a b. (Integral a, Num b) => a -> b
fromIntegral Word8
h :: Int))

instance Binary Divergence where
  put_ :: BinHandle -> Divergence -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh Divergence
Dunno    = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
0
  put_ BinHandle
bh Divergence
ExnOrDiv = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
1
  put_ BinHandle
bh Divergence
Diverges = BinHandle -> Word8 -> IO ()
putByte BinHandle
bh Word8
2
  get :: BinHandle -> IO Divergence
get BinHandle
bh = do
    Word8
h <- BinHandle -> IO Word8
getByte BinHandle
bh
    case Word8
h of
      Word8
0 -> Divergence -> IO Divergence
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Divergence
Dunno
      Word8
1 -> Divergence -> IO Divergence
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Divergence
ExnOrDiv
      Word8
2 -> Divergence -> IO Divergence
forall a. a -> IO a
forall (m :: * -> *) a. Monad m => a -> m a
return Divergence
Diverges
      Word8
_ -> String -> SDoc -> IO Divergence
forall a. HasCallStack => String -> SDoc -> a
pprPanic String
"Binary:Divergence" (Int -> SDoc
forall a. Outputable a => a -> SDoc
ppr (Word8 -> Int
forall a b. (Integral a, Num b) => a -> b
fromIntegral Word8
h :: Int))

instance Binary DmdEnv where
  -- Ignore VarEnv when spitting out the DmdType
  put_ :: BinHandle -> DmdEnv -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh (DE VarEnv Demand
_ Divergence
d) = BinHandle -> Divergence -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh Divergence
d
  get :: BinHandle -> IO DmdEnv
get BinHandle
bh = VarEnv Demand -> Divergence -> DmdEnv
DE VarEnv Demand
forall a. VarEnv a
emptyVarEnv (Divergence -> DmdEnv) -> IO Divergence -> IO DmdEnv
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<$> BinHandle -> IO Divergence
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh

instance Binary DmdType where
  put_ :: BinHandle -> DmdType -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh (DmdType DmdEnv
fv [Demand]
ds) = BinHandle -> DmdEnv -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh DmdEnv
fv IO () -> IO () -> IO ()
forall a b. IO a -> IO b -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f a -> f b -> f b
*> BinHandle -> [Demand] -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh [Demand]
ds
  get :: BinHandle -> IO DmdType
get BinHandle
bh = DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType
DmdType (DmdEnv -> [Demand] -> DmdType)
-> IO DmdEnv -> IO ([Demand] -> DmdType)
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<$> BinHandle -> IO DmdEnv
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh IO ([Demand] -> DmdType) -> IO [Demand] -> IO DmdType
forall a b. IO (a -> b) -> IO a -> IO b
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Applicative f => f (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<*> BinHandle -> IO [Demand]
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh

instance Binary DmdSig where
  put_ :: BinHandle -> DmdSig -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh (DmdSig DmdType
aa) = BinHandle -> DmdType -> IO ()
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> a -> IO ()
put_ BinHandle
bh DmdType
aa
  get :: BinHandle -> IO DmdSig
get BinHandle
bh = DmdType -> DmdSig
DmdSig (DmdType -> DmdSig) -> IO DmdType -> IO DmdSig
forall (f :: * -> *) a b. Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
<$> BinHandle -> IO DmdType
forall a. Binary a => BinHandle -> IO a
get BinHandle
bh