--------------------------------
--------------------------------
--- η abstraction
---------------------------------
+-- η expansion
+--------------------------------
+-- Make sure all parameters to the normalized functions are named by top
+-- level lambda expressions. For this we apply η expansion to the
+-- function body (possibly enclosed in some lambda abstractions) while
+-- it has a function type. Eventually this will result in a function
+-- body consisting of a bunch of nested lambdas containing a
+-- non-function value (e.g., a complete application).
eta, etatop :: Transform
--- Don't apply to expressions that are applied, since that would cause
--- us to apply to our own result indefinitely.
-eta (AppFirst:_) expr = return expr
--- Also don't apply to arguments, since this can cause loops with
--- funextract. This isn't the proper solution, but due to an
--- implementation bug in notappargs, this is how it used to work so far.
-eta (AppSecond:_) expr = return expr
-eta c expr | is_fun expr && not (is_lam expr) = do
+eta c expr | is_fun expr && not (is_lam expr) && all (== LambdaBody) c = do
let arg_ty = (fst . Type.splitFunTy . CoreUtils.exprType) expr
id <- Trans.lift $ mkInternalVar "param" arg_ty
change (Lam id (App expr (Var id)))
-- Perform this transform everywhere
castsimpltop = everywhere ("castsimpl", castsimpl)
-
--------------------------------
--- Lambda simplication
+-- Ensure that a function that just returns another function (or rather,
+-- another top-level binder) is still properly normalized. This is a temporary
+-- solution, we should probably integrate this pass with lambdasimpl and
+-- letsimpl instead.
--------------------------------
--- Ensure that a lambda always evaluates to a let expressions or a simple
--- variable reference.
-lambdasimpl, lambdasimpltop :: Transform
--- Don't simplify a lambda that evaluates to let, since this is already
--- normal form (and would cause infinite loops).
-lambdasimpl c expr@(Lam _ (Let _ _)) = return expr
--- Put the of a lambda in its own binding, but not when the expression is
--- already a local variable, or not representable (to prevent loops with
--- inlinenonrep).
-lambdasimpl c expr@(Lam bndr res) = do
- repr <- isRepr res
- local_var <- Trans.lift $ is_local_var res
+retvalsimpl c expr@(Let (Rec binds) body) | all (== LambdaBody) c = do
+ -- Don't extract values that are already a local variable, to prevent
+ -- loops with ourselves.
+ local_var <- Trans.lift $ is_local_var body
+ -- Don't extract values that are not representable, to prevent loops with
+ -- inlinenonrep
+ repr <- isRepr body
if not local_var && repr
then do
- id <- Trans.lift $ mkBinderFor res "res"
- change $ Lam bndr (Let (NonRec id res) (Var id))
+ id <- Trans.lift $ mkBinderFor body "res"
+ change $ Let (Rec ((id, body):binds)) (Var id)
+ else
+ return expr
+
+retvalsimpl c expr | all (== LambdaBody) c && not (is_lam expr) && not (is_let expr) = do
+ local_var <- Trans.lift $ is_local_var expr
+ repr <- isRepr expr
+ if not local_var && repr
+ then do
+ id <- Trans.lift $ mkBinderFor expr "res"
+ change $ Let (Rec [(id, expr)]) (Var id)
else
- -- If the result is already a local var or not representable, don't
- -- extract it.
return expr
-- Leave all other expressions unchanged
-lambdasimpl c expr = return expr
+retvalsimpl c expr = return expr
-- Perform this transform everywhere
-lambdasimpltop = everywhere ("lambdasimpl", lambdasimpl)
+retvalsimpltop = everywhere ("retvalsimpl", retvalsimpl)
--------------------------------
-- let derecursification
-- Perform this transform everywhere
letderectop = everywhere ("letderec", letderec)
---------------------------------
--- let simplification
---------------------------------
-letsimpl, letsimpltop :: Transform
--- Don't simplify a let that evaluates to another let, since this is already
--- normal form (and would cause infinite loops with letflat below).
-letsimpl c expr@(Let _ (Let _ _)) = return expr
--- Put the "in ..." value of a let in its own binding, but not when the
--- expression is already a local variable, or not representable (to prevent loops with inlinenonrep).
-letsimpl c expr@(Let binds res) = do
- repr <- isRepr res
- local_var <- Trans.lift $ is_local_var res
- if not local_var && repr
- then do
- -- If the result is not a local var already (to prevent loops with
- -- ourselves), extract it.
- id <- Trans.lift $ mkBinderFor res "foo"
- change $ Let binds (Let (NonRec id res) (Var id))
- else
- -- If the result is already a local var, don't extract it.
- return expr
-
--- Leave all other expressions unchanged
-letsimpl c expr = return expr
--- Perform this transform everywhere
-letsimpltop = everywhere ("letsimpl", letsimpl)
-
--------------------------------
-- let flattening
--------------------------------
--------------------------------
-- Top level function inlining
--------------------------------
--- This transformation inlines top level bindings that have been generated by
--- the compiler and are really simple. Really simple currently means that the
--- normalized form only contains a single binding, which catches most of the
+-- This transformation inlines simple top level bindings. Simple
+-- currently means that the body is only a single application (though
+-- the complexity of the arguments is not currently checked) or that the
+-- normalized form only contains a single binding. This should catch most of the
-- cases where a top level function is created that simply calls a type class
-- method with a type and dictionary argument, e.g.
-- fromInteger = GHC.Num.fromInteger (SizedWord D8) $dNum
-- which is later called using simply
-- fromInteger (smallInteger 10)
--- By inlining such calls to simple, compiler generated functions, we prevent
--- huge amounts of trivial components in the VHDL output, which the user never
--- wanted. We never inline user-defined functions, since we want to preserve
--- all structure defined by the user. Currently this includes all functions
--- that were created by funextract, since we would get loops otherwise.
+--
+-- These useless wrappers are created by GHC automatically. If we don't
+-- inline them, we get loads of useless components cluttering the
+-- generated VHDL.
+--
+-- Note that the inlining could also inline simple functions defined by
+-- the user, not just GHC generated functions. It turns out to be near
+-- impossible to reliably determine what functions are generated and
+-- what functions are user-defined. Instead of guessing (which will
+-- inline less than we want) we will just inline all simple functions.
--
-- Only functions that are actually completely applied and bound by a
-- variable in a let expression are inlined. These are the expressions
-- that will eventually generate instantiations of trivial components.
-- By not inlining any other reference, we also prevent looping problems
-- with funextract and inlinedict.
---
--- Note that "defined by the compiler" isn't completely watertight, since GHC
--- doesn't seem to set all those names as "system names", we apply some
--- guessing here.
inlinetoplevel, inlinetopleveltop :: Transform
-inlinetoplevel (LetBinding:_) expr =
+inlinetoplevel (LetBinding:_) expr | not (is_fun expr) =
case collectArgs expr of
- -- Any system name is candidate for inlining. Never inline
- -- user-defined functions, to preserve structure.
- (Var f, args) | not $ isUserDefined f -> do
+ (Var f, args) -> do
body_maybe <- needsInline f
case body_maybe of
Just body -> do
-- Perform this transform everywhere
funextracttop = everywhere ("funextract", funextract)
---------------------------------
--- Ensure that a function that just returns another function (or rather,
--- another top-level binder) is still properly normalized. This is a temporary
--- solution, we should probably integrate this pass with lambdasimpl and
--- letsimpl instead.
---------------------------------
-simplrestop c expr@(Lam _ _) = return expr
-simplrestop c expr@(Let _ _) = return expr
-simplrestop c expr = do
- local_var <- Trans.lift $ is_local_var expr
- -- Don't extract values that are not representable, to prevent loops with
- -- inlinenonrep
- repr <- isRepr expr
- if local_var || not repr
- then
- return expr
- else do
- id <- Trans.lift $ mkBinderFor expr "res"
- change $ Let (NonRec id expr) (Var id)
--------------------------------
-- End of transformations
--------------------------------
-- What transforms to run?
-transforms = [inlinedicttop, inlinetopleveltop, classopresolutiontop, argproptop, funextracttop, etatop, betatop, castproptop, letremovesimpletop, letderectop, letremovetop, letsimpltop, letflattop, scrutsimpltop, scrutbndrremovetop, casesimpltop, caseremovetop, inlinenonreptop, appsimpltop, letremoveunusedtop, castsimpltop, lambdasimpltop, simplrestop]
+transforms = [inlinedicttop, inlinetopleveltop, classopresolutiontop, argproptop, funextracttop, etatop, betatop, castproptop, letremovesimpletop, letderectop, letremovetop, retvalsimpltop, letflattop, scrutsimpltop, scrutbndrremovetop, casesimpltop, caseremovetop, inlinenonreptop, appsimpltop, letremoveunusedtop, castsimpltop]
-- | Returns the normalized version of the given function, or an error
-- if it is not a known global binder.
-> TranslatorSession CoreSyn.CoreExpr -- ^ The normalized expression
normalizeExpr what expr = do
+ startcount <- MonadState.get tsTransformCounter
expr_uniqued <- genUniques expr
-- Normalize this expression
trace (what ++ " before normalization:\n\n" ++ showSDoc ( ppr expr_uniqued ) ++ "\n") $ return ()
expr' <- dotransforms transforms expr_uniqued
+ endcount <- MonadState.get tsTransformCounter
trace ("\n" ++ what ++ " after normalization:\n\n" ++ showSDoc ( ppr expr')) $ return ()
+ trace ("\nNeeded " ++ show (endcount - startcount) ++ " transformations to normalize " ++ what) $ return ()
return expr'
-- | Split a normalized expression into the argument binders, top level