Safe Haskell | Ignore |
---|---|
Language | Haskell2010 |
Synopsis
- newtype Hsc a = Hsc (HscEnv -> Messages GhcMessage -> IO (a, Messages GhcMessage))
- data HscEnv = HscEnv {
- hsc_dflags :: DynFlags
- hsc_targets :: [Target]
- hsc_mod_graph :: ModuleGraph
- hsc_IC :: InteractiveContext
- hsc_NC :: !NameCache
- hsc_FC :: !FinderCache
- hsc_type_env_vars :: KnotVars (IORef TypeEnv)
- hsc_interp :: Maybe Interp
- hsc_plugins :: !Plugins
- hsc_unit_env :: UnitEnv
- hsc_logger :: !Logger
- hsc_hooks :: !Hooks
- hsc_tmpfs :: !TmpFs
- hsc_llvm_config :: !LlvmConfigCache
Documentation
The Hsc monad: Passing an environment and diagnostic state
Hsc (HscEnv -> Messages GhcMessage -> IO (a, Messages GhcMessage)) |
HscEnv is like Session
, except that some of the fields are immutable.
An HscEnv is used to compile a single module from plain Haskell source
code (after preprocessing) to either C, assembly or C--. It's also used
to store the dynamic linker state to allow for multiple linkers in the
same address space.
Things like the module graph don't change during a single compilation.
Historical note: "hsc" used to be the name of the compiler binary, when there was a separate driver and compiler. To compile a single module, the driver would invoke hsc on the source code... so nowadays we think of hsc as the layer of the compiler that deals with compiling a single module.
HscEnv | |
|
Instances
ContainsDynFlags HscEnv Source # | |
Defined in GHC.Driver.Env.Types extractDynFlags :: HscEnv -> DynFlags Source # |