{-
(c) The GRASP/AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1992-1998
************************************************************************
* *
\section[FloatIn]{Floating Inwards pass}
* *
************************************************************************
The main purpose of @floatInwards@ is floating into branches of a
case, so that we don't allocate things, save them on the stack, and
then discover that they aren't needed in the chosen branch.
-}{-# LANGUAGE CPP #-}{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fprof-auto #-}moduleFloatIn(floatInwards )where#include "HsVersions.h"
importGhcPrelude importCoreSyn importMkCore importHscTypes (ModGuts (..))importCoreUtils importCoreFVs importCoreMonad (CoreM )importId (isOneShotBndr ,idType ,isJoinId ,isJoinId_maybe )importVar importType importVarSet importUtil importDynFlags importOutputable -- import Data.List ( mapAccumL )importBasicTypes (RecFlag (..),isRec ){-
Top-level interface function, @floatInwards@. Note that we do not
actually float any bindings downwards from the top-level.
-}floatInwards::ModGuts ->CoreM ModGuts floatInwards pgm @(ModGuts {mg_binds=binds })=do{dflags <-getDynFlags ;return(pgm {mg_binds=map(fi_top_bind dflags )binds })}wherefi_top_bind dflags (NonRec binder rhs )=NonRec binder (fiExpr dflags [](freeVars rhs ))fi_top_binddflags (Rec pairs )=Rec [(b ,fiExpr dflags [](freeVars rhs ))|(b ,rhs )<-pairs ]{-
************************************************************************
* *
\subsection{Mail from Andr\'e [edited]}
* *
************************************************************************
{\em Will wrote: What??? I thought the idea was to float as far
inwards as possible, no matter what. This is dropping all bindings
every time it sees a lambda of any kind. Help! }
You are assuming we DO DO full laziness AFTER floating inwards! We
have to [not float inside lambdas] if we don't.
If we indeed do full laziness after the floating inwards (we could
check the compilation flags for that) then I agree we could be more
aggressive and do float inwards past lambdas.
Actually we are not doing a proper full laziness (see below), which
was another reason for not floating inwards past a lambda.
This can easily be fixed. The problem is that we float lets outwards,
but there are a few expressions which are not let bound, like case
scrutinees and case alternatives. After floating inwards the
simplifier could decide to inline the let and the laziness would be
lost, e.g.
\begin{verbatim}
let a = expensive ==> \b -> case expensive of ...
in \ b -> case a of ...
\end{verbatim}
The fix is
\begin{enumerate}
\item
to let bind the algebraic case scrutinees (done, I think) and
the case alternatives (except the ones with an
unboxed type)(not done, I think). This is best done in the
SetLevels.hs module, which tags things with their level numbers.
\item
do the full laziness pass (floating lets outwards).
\item
simplify. The simplifier inlines the (trivial) lets that were
 created but were not floated outwards.
\end{enumerate}
With the fix I think Will's suggestion that we can gain even more from
strictness by floating inwards past lambdas makes sense.
We still gain even without going past lambdas, as things may be
strict in the (new) context of a branch (where it was floated to) or
of a let rhs, e.g.
\begin{verbatim}
let a = something case x of
in case x of alt1 -> case something of a -> a + a
 alt1 -> a + a ==> alt2 -> b
 alt2 -> b
let a = something let b = case something of a -> a + a
in let b = a + a ==> in (b,b)
in (b,b)
\end{verbatim}
Also, even if a is not found to be strict in the new context and is
still left as a let, if the branch is not taken (or b is not entered)
the closure for a is not built.
************************************************************************
* *
\subsection{Main floating-inwards code}
* *
************************************************************************
-}typeFreeVarSet =DIdSet typeBoundVarSet =DIdSet dataFloatInBind =FB BoundVarSet FreeVarSet FloatBind -- The FreeVarSet is the free variables of the binding. In the case-- of recursive bindings, the set doesn't include the bound-- variables.typeFloatInBinds =[FloatInBind ]-- In reverse dependency order (innermost binder first)fiExpr::DynFlags ->FloatInBinds -- Binds we're trying to drop-- as far "inwards" as possible->CoreExprWithFVs -- Input expr->CoreExpr -- ResultfiExpr _to_drop (_,AnnLit lit )=wrapFloats to_drop (Lit lit )-- See Note [Dead bindings]fiExpr_to_drop (_,AnnType ty )=ASSERT(null to_drop)Typety fiExpr_to_drop (_,AnnVar v )=wrapFloats to_drop (Var v )fiExpr_to_drop (_,AnnCoercion co )=wrapFloats to_drop (Coercion co )fiExprdflags to_drop (_,AnnCast expr (co_ann ,co ))=wrapFloats (drop_here ++co_drop )$Cast (fiExpr dflags e_drop expr )co where[drop_here ,e_drop ,co_drop ]=sepBindsByDropPoint dflags False[freeVarsOf expr ,freeVarsOfAnn co_ann ]to_drop {-
Applications: we do float inside applications, mainly because we
need to get at all the arguments. The next simplifier run will
pull out any silly ones.
-}fiExprdflags to_drop ann_expr @(_,AnnApp {})=wrapFloats drop_here $wrapFloats extra_drop $mkTicks ticks $mkApps (fiExpr dflags fun_drop ann_fun )(zipWith(fiExpr dflags )arg_drops ann_args )where(ann_fun ,ann_args ,ticks )=collectAnnArgsTicks tickishFloatable ann_expr fun_ty =exprType (deAnnotate ann_fun )fun_fvs =freeVarsOf ann_fun arg_fvs =mapfreeVarsOf ann_args (drop_here :extra_drop :fun_drop :arg_drops )=sepBindsByDropPoint dflags False(extra_fvs :fun_fvs :arg_fvs )to_drop -- Shortcut behaviour: if to_drop is empty,-- sepBindsByDropPoint returns a suitable bunch of empty-- lists without evaluating extra_fvs, and hence without-- peering into each argument(_,extra_fvs )=foldl'add_arg (fun_ty ,extra_fvs0 )ann_args extra_fvs0 =caseann_fun of(_,AnnVar _)->fun_fvs _->emptyDVarSet -- Don't float the binding for f into f x y z; see Note [Join points]-- for why we *can't* do it when f is a join point. (If f isn't a-- join point, floating it in isn't especially harmful but it's-- useless since the simplifier will immediately float it back out.)add_arg::(Type ,FreeVarSet )->CoreExprWithFVs ->(Type ,FreeVarSet )add_arg (fun_ty ,extra_fvs )(_,AnnType ty )=(piResultTy fun_ty ty ,extra_fvs )add_arg(fun_ty ,extra_fvs )(arg_fvs ,arg )|noFloatIntoArg arg arg_ty =(res_ty ,extra_fvs `unionDVarSet `arg_fvs )|otherwise=(res_ty ,extra_fvs )where(arg_ty ,res_ty )=splitFunTy fun_ty {- Note [Dead bindings]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
At a literal we won't usually have any floated bindings; the
only way that can happen is if the binding wrapped the literal
/in the original input program/. e.g.
 case x of { DEFAULT -> 1# }
But, while this may be unusual it is not actually wrong, and it did
once happen (Trac #15696).
Note [Do not destroy the let/app invariant]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Watch out for
 f (x +# y)
We don't want to float bindings into here
 f (case ... of { x -> x +# y })
because that might destroy the let/app invariant, which requires
unlifted function arguments to be ok-for-speculation.
Note [Join points]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Generally, we don't need to worry about join points - there are places we're
not allowed to float them, but since they can't have occurrences in those
places, we're not tempted.
We do need to be careful about jumps, however:
 joinrec j x y z = ... in
 jump j a b c
Previous versions often floated the definition of a recursive function into its
only non-recursive occurrence. But for a join point, this is a disaster:
 (joinrec j x y z = ... in
 jump j) a b c -- wrong!
Every jump must be exact, so the jump to j must have three arguments. Hence
we're careful not to float into the target of a jump (though we can float into
the arguments just fine).
Note [Floating in past a lambda group]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* We must be careful about floating inside a value lambda.
 That risks losing laziness.
 The float-out pass might rescue us, but then again it might not.
* We must be careful about type lambdas too. At one time we did, and
 there is no risk of duplicating work thereby, but we do need to be
 careful. In particular, here is a bad case (it happened in the
 cichelli benchmark:
 let v = ...
 in let f = /\t -> \a -> ...
 ==>
 let f = /\t -> let v = ... in \a -> ...
 This is bad as now f is an updatable closure (update PAP)
 and has arity 0.
* Hack alert! We only float in through one-shot lambdas,
 not (as you might guess) through lone big lambdas.
 Reason: we float *out* past big lambdas (see the test in the Lam
 case of FloatOut.floatExpr) and we don't want to float straight
 back in again.
 It *is* important to float into one-shot lambdas, however;
 see the remarks with noFloatIntoRhs.
So we treat lambda in groups, using the following rule:
 Float in if (a) there is at least one Id,
 and (b) there are no non-one-shot Ids
 Otherwise drop all the bindings outside the group.
This is what the 'go' function in the AnnLam case is doing.
(Join points are handled similarly: a join point is considered one-shot iff
it's non-recursive, so we float only into non-recursive join points.)
Urk! if all are tyvars, and we don't float in, we may miss an
 opportunity to float inside a nested case branch
Note [Floating coercions]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We could, in principle, have a coercion binding like
 case f x of co { DEFAULT -> e1 e2 }
It's not common to have a function that returns a coercion, but nothing
in Core prohibits it. If so, 'co' might be mentioned in e1 or e2
/only in a type/. E.g. suppose e1 was
 let (x :: Int |> co) = blah in blah2
But, with coercions appearing in types, there is a complication: we
might be floating in a "strict let" -- that is, a case. Case expressions
mention their return type. We absolutely can't float a coercion binding
inward to the point that the type of the expression it's about to wrap
mentions the coercion. So we include the union of the sets of free variables
of the types of all the drop points involved. If any of the floaters
bind a coercion variable mentioned in any of the types, that binder must
be dropped right away.
-}fiExprdflags to_drop lam @(_,AnnLam __)|noFloatIntoLam bndrs -- Dump it all here-- NB: Must line up with noFloatIntoRhs (AnnLam...); see Trac #7088=wrapFloats to_drop (mkLams bndrs (fiExpr dflags []body ))|otherwise-- Float inside=mkLams bndrs (fiExpr dflags to_drop body )where(bndrs ,body )=collectAnnBndrs lam {-
We don't float lets inwards past an SCC.
 ToDo: keep info on current cc, and when passing
 one, if it is not the same, annotate all lets in binds with current
 cc, change current cc to the new one and float binds into expr.
-}fiExprdflags to_drop (_,AnnTick tickish expr )|tickish `tickishScopesLike `SoftScope =Tick tickish (fiExpr dflags to_drop expr )|otherwise-- Wimp out for now - we could push values in=wrapFloats to_drop (Tick tickish (fiExpr dflags []expr )){-
For @Lets@, the possible ``drop points'' for the \tr{to_drop}
bindings are: (a)~in the body, (b1)~in the RHS of a NonRec binding,
or~(b2), in each of the RHSs of the pairs of a @Rec@.
Note that we do {\em weird things} with this let's binding. Consider:
\begin{verbatim}
let
 w = ...
in {
 let v = ... w ...
 in ... v .. w ...
}
\end{verbatim}
Look at the inner \tr{let}. As \tr{w} is used in both the bind and
body of the inner let, we could panic and leave \tr{w}'s binding where
it is. But \tr{v} is floatable further into the body of the inner let, and
{\em then} \tr{w} will also be only in the body of that inner let.
So: rather than drop \tr{w}'s binding here, we add it onto the list of
things to drop in the outer let's body, and let nature take its
course.
Note [extra_fvs (1): avoid floating into RHS]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider let x=\y....t... in body. We do not necessarily want to float
a binding for t into the RHS, because it'll immediately be floated out
again. (It won't go inside the lambda else we risk losing work.)
In letrec, we need to be more careful still. We don't want to transform
 let x# = y# +# 1#
 in
 letrec f = \z. ...x#...f...
 in ...
into
 letrec f = let x# = y# +# 1# in \z. ...x#...f... in ...
because now we can't float the let out again, because a letrec
can't have unboxed bindings.
So we make "extra_fvs" which is the rhs_fvs of such bindings, and
arrange to dump bindings that bind extra_fvs before the entire let.
Note [extra_fvs (2): free variables of rules]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider
 let x{rule mentioning y} = rhs in body
Here y is not free in rhs or body; but we still want to dump bindings
that bind y outside the let. So we augment extra_fvs with the
idRuleAndUnfoldingVars of x. No need for type variables, hence not using
idFreeVars.
-}fiExprdflags to_drop (_,AnnLet bind body )=fiExpr dflags (after ++new_float :before )body -- to_drop is in reverse dependency orderwhere(before ,new_float ,after )=fiBind dflags to_drop bind body_fvs body_fvs =freeVarsOf body {- Note [Floating primops]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We try to float-in a case expression over an unlifted type. The
motivating example was Trac #5658: in particular, this change allows
array indexing operations, which have a single DEFAULT alternative
without any binders, to be floated inward.
SIMD primops for unpacking SIMD vectors into an unboxed tuple of unboxed
scalars also need to be floated inward, but unpacks have a single non-DEFAULT
alternative that binds the elements of the tuple. We now therefore also support
floating in cases with a single alternative that may bind values.
But there are wrinkles
* Which unlifted cases do we float? See PrimOp.hs
 Note [PrimOp can_fail and has_side_effects] which explains:
 - We can float-in can_fail primops, but we can't float them out.
 - But we can float a has_side_effects primop, but NOT inside a lambda,
 so for now we don't float them at all.
 Hence exprOkForSideEffects
* Because we can float can-fail primops (array indexing, division) inwards
 but not outwards, we must be careful not to transform
 case a /# b of r -> f (F# r)
 ===>
 f (case a /# b of r -> F# r)
 because that creates a new thunk that wasn't there before. And
 because it can't be floated out (can_fail), the thunk will stay
 there. Disaster! (This happened in nofib 'simple' and 'scs'.)
 Solution: only float cases into the branches of other cases, and
 not into the arguments of an application, or the RHS of a let. This
 is somewhat conservative, but it's simple. And it still hits the
 cases like Trac #5658. This is implemented in sepBindsByJoinPoint;
 if is_case is False we dump all floating cases right here.
* Trac #14511 is another example of why we want to restrict float-in
 of case-expressions. Consider
 case indexArray# a n of (# r #) -> writeArray# ma i (f r)
 Now, floating that indexing operation into the (f r) thunk will
 not create any new thunks, but it will keep the array 'a' alive
 for much longer than the programmer expected.
 So again, not floating a case into a let or argument seems like
 the Right Thing
For @Case@, the possible drop points for the 'to_drop'
bindings are:
 (a) inside the scrutinee
 (b) inside one of the alternatives/default (default FVs always /first/!).
-}fiExprdflags to_drop (_,AnnCase scrut case_bndr _[(con ,alt_bndrs ,rhs )])|isUnliftedType (idType case_bndr ),exprOkForSideEffects (deAnnotate scrut )-- See Note [Floating primops]=wrapFloats shared_binds $fiExpr dflags (case_float :rhs_binds )rhs wherecase_float =FB (mkDVarSet (case_bndr :alt_bndrs ))scrut_fvs (FloatCase scrut' case_bndr con alt_bndrs )scrut' =fiExpr dflags scrut_binds scrut rhs_fvs =freeVarsOf rhs `delDVarSetList `(case_bndr :alt_bndrs )scrut_fvs =freeVarsOf scrut [shared_binds ,scrut_binds ,rhs_binds ]=sepBindsByDropPoint dflags False[scrut_fvs ,rhs_fvs ]to_drop fiExprdflags to_drop (_,AnnCase scrut case_bndr ty alts )=wrapFloats drop_here1 $wrapFloats drop_here2 $Case (fiExpr dflags scrut_drops scrut )case_bndr ty (zipWithfi_alt alts_drops_s alts )where-- Float into the scrut and alts-considered-together just like App[drop_here1 ,scrut_drops ,alts_drops ]=sepBindsByDropPoint dflags False[scrut_fvs ,all_alts_fvs ]to_drop -- Float into the alts with the is_case flag set(drop_here2 :alts_drops_s )|[_]<-alts =[]:[alts_drops ]|otherwise=sepBindsByDropPoint dflags Truealts_fvs alts_drops scrut_fvs =freeVarsOf scrut alts_fvs =mapalt_fvs alts all_alts_fvs =unionDVarSets alts_fvs alt_fvs (_con ,args ,rhs )=foldl'delDVarSet (freeVarsOf rhs )(case_bndr :args )-- Delete case_bndr and args from free vars of rhs-- to get free vars of altfi_alt to_drop (con ,args ,rhs )=(con ,args ,fiExpr dflags to_drop rhs )------------------fiBind::DynFlags ->FloatInBinds -- Binds we're trying to drop-- as far "inwards" as possible->CoreBindWithFVs -- Input binding->DVarSet -- Free in scope of binding->(FloatInBinds -- Land these before,FloatInBind -- The binding itself,FloatInBinds )-- Land these afterfiBind dflags to_drop (AnnNonRec id ann_rhs @(rhs_fvs ,rhs ))body_fvs =(extra_binds ++shared_binds -- Land these before-- See Note [extra_fvs (1,2)],FB (unitDVarSet id )rhs_fvs' -- The new binding itself(FloatLet (NonRec id rhs' )),body_binds )-- Land these afterwherebody_fvs2 =body_fvs `delDVarSet `id rule_fvs =bndrRuleAndUnfoldingVarsDSet id -- See Note [extra_fvs (2): free variables of rules]extra_fvs |noFloatIntoRhs NonRecursive id rhs =rule_fvs `unionDVarSet `rhs_fvs |otherwise=rule_fvs -- See Note [extra_fvs (1): avoid floating into RHS]-- No point in floating in only to float straight out again-- We *can't* float into ok-for-speculation unlifted RHSs-- But do float into join points[shared_binds ,extra_binds ,rhs_binds ,body_binds ]=sepBindsByDropPoint dflags False[extra_fvs ,rhs_fvs ,body_fvs2 ]to_drop -- Push rhs_binds into the right hand side of the bindingrhs' =fiRhs dflags rhs_binds id ann_rhs rhs_fvs' =rhs_fvs `unionDVarSet `floatedBindsFVs rhs_binds `unionDVarSet `rule_fvs -- Don't forget the rule_fvs; the binding mentions them!fiBinddflags to_drop (AnnRec bindings )body_fvs =(extra_binds ++shared_binds ,FB (mkDVarSet ids )rhs_fvs' (FloatLet (Rec (fi_bind rhss_binds bindings ))),body_binds )where(ids ,rhss )=unzipbindings rhss_fvs =mapfreeVarsOf rhss -- See Note [extra_fvs (1,2)]rule_fvs =mapUnionDVarSet bndrRuleAndUnfoldingVarsDSet ids extra_fvs =rule_fvs `unionDVarSet `unionDVarSets [rhs_fvs |(bndr ,(rhs_fvs ,rhs ))<-bindings ,noFloatIntoRhs Recursive bndr rhs ](shared_binds :extra_binds :body_binds :rhss_binds )=sepBindsByDropPoint dflags False(extra_fvs :body_fvs :rhss_fvs )to_drop rhs_fvs' =unionDVarSets rhss_fvs `unionDVarSet `unionDVarSets (mapfloatedBindsFVs rhss_binds )`unionDVarSet `rule_fvs -- Don't forget the rule variables!-- Push rhs_binds into the right hand side of the bindingfi_bind::[FloatInBinds ]-- one per "drop pt" conjured w/ fvs_of_rhss->[(Id ,CoreExprWithFVs )]->[(Id ,CoreExpr )]fi_bind to_drops pairs =[(binder ,fiRhs dflags to_drop binder rhs )|((binder ,rhs ),to_drop )<-zipEqual "fi_bind"pairs to_drops ]------------------fiRhs::DynFlags ->FloatInBinds ->CoreBndr ->CoreExprWithFVs ->CoreExpr fiRhs dflags to_drop bndr rhs |Justjoin_arity <-isJoinId_maybe bndr ,let(bndrs ,body )=collectNAnnBndrs join_arity rhs =mkLams bndrs (fiExpr dflags to_drop body )|otherwise=fiExpr dflags to_drop rhs ------------------noFloatIntoLam::[Var ]->BoolnoFloatIntoLam bndrs =anybad bndrs wherebad b =isId b &&not(isOneShotBndr b )-- Don't float inside a non-one-shot lambdanoFloatIntoRhs::RecFlag ->Id ->CoreExprWithFVs' ->Bool-- ^ True if it's a bad idea to float bindings into this RHSnoFloatIntoRhs is_rec bndr rhs |isJoinId bndr =isRec is_rec -- Joins are one-shot iff non-recursive|otherwise=noFloatIntoArg rhs (idType bndr )noFloatIntoArg::CoreExprWithFVs' ->Type ->BoolnoFloatIntoArg expr expr_ty |isUnliftedType expr_ty =True-- See Note [Do not destroy the let/app invariant]|AnnLam bndr e <-expr ,(bndrs ,_)<-collectAnnBndrs e =noFloatIntoLam (bndr :bndrs )-- Wrinkle 1 (a)||allisTyVar (bndr :bndrs )-- Wrinkle 1 (b)-- See Note [noFloatInto considerations] wrinkle 2|otherwise-- Note [noFloatInto considerations] wrinkle 2=exprIsTrivial deann_expr ||exprIsHNF deann_expr wheredeann_expr =deAnnotate' expr {- Note [noFloatInto considerations]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When do we want to float bindings into
 - noFloatIntoRHs: the RHS of a let-binding
 - noFloatIntoArg: the argument of a function application
Definitely don't float in if it has unlifted type; that
would destroy the let/app invariant.
* Wrinkle 1: do not float in if
 (a) any non-one-shot value lambdas
 or (b) all type lambdas
 In both cases we'll float straight back out again
 NB: Must line up with fiExpr (AnnLam...); see Trac #7088
 (a) is important: we /must/ float into a one-shot lambda group
 (which includes join points). This makes a big difference
 for things like
 f x# = let x = I# x#
 in let j = \() -> ...x...
 in if <condition> then normal-path else j ()
 If x is used only in the error case join point, j, we must float the
 boxing constructor into it, else we box it every time which is very
 bad news indeed.
* Wrinkle 2: for RHSs, do not float into a HNF; we'll just float right
 back out again... not tragic, but a waste of time.
 For function arguments we will still end up with this
 in-then-out stuff; consider
 letrec x = e in f x
 Here x is not a HNF, so we'll produce
 f (letrec x = e in x)
 which is OK... it's not that common, and we'll end up
 floating out again, in CorePrep if not earlier.
 Still, we use exprIsTrivial to catch this case (sigh)
************************************************************************
* *
\subsection{@sepBindsByDropPoint@}
* *
************************************************************************
This is the crucial function. The idea is: We have a wad of bindings
that we'd like to distribute inside a collection of {\em drop points};
insides the alternatives of a \tr{case} would be one example of some
drop points; the RHS and body of a non-recursive \tr{let} binding
would be another (2-element) collection.
So: We're given a list of sets-of-free-variables, one per drop point,
and a list of floating-inwards bindings. If a binding can go into
only one drop point (without suddenly making something out-of-scope),
in it goes. If a binding is used inside {\em multiple} drop points,
then it has to go in a you-must-drop-it-above-all-these-drop-points
point.
We have to maintain the order on these drop-point-related lists.
-}-- pprFIB :: FloatInBinds -> SDoc-- pprFIB fibs = text "FIB:" <+> ppr [b | FB _ _ b <- fibs]sepBindsByDropPoint::DynFlags ->Bool-- True <=> is case expression->[FreeVarSet ]-- One set of FVs per drop point-- Always at least two long!->FloatInBinds -- Candidate floaters->[FloatInBinds ]-- FIRST one is bindings which must not be floated-- inside any drop point; the rest correspond-- one-to-one with the input list of FV sets-- Every input floater is returned somewhere in the result;-- none are dropped, not even ones which don't seem to be-- free in *any* of the drop-point fvs. Why? Because, for example,-- a binding (let x = E in B) might have a specialised version of-- x (say x') stored inside x, but x' isn't free in E or B.typeDropBox =(FreeVarSet ,FloatInBinds )sepBindsByDropPoint dflags is_case drop_pts floaters |nullfloaters -- Shortcut common case=[]:[[]|_<-drop_pts ]|otherwise=ASSERT(drop_pts`lengthAtLeast`2)go floaters (map(\fvs ->(fvs ,[]))(emptyDVarSet :drop_pts ))wheren_alts =lengthdrop_pts go::FloatInBinds ->[DropBox ]->[FloatInBinds ]-- The *first* one in the argument list is the drop_here set-- The FloatInBinds in the lists are in the reverse of-- the normal FloatInBinds order; that is, they are the right way round!go []drop_boxes =map(reverse.snd)drop_boxes go(bind_w_fvs @(FB bndrs bind_fvs bind ):binds )drop_boxes @(here_box :fork_boxes )=go binds new_boxes where-- "here" means the group of bindings dropped at the top of the fork(used_here :used_in_flags )=[fvs `intersectsDVarSet `bndrs |(fvs ,_)<-drop_boxes ]drop_here =used_here ||cant_push n_used_alts =count idused_in_flags -- returns number of Trues in list.cant_push |is_case =n_used_alts ==n_alts -- Used in all, don't push-- Remember n_alts > 1||(n_used_alts >1&&not(floatIsDupable dflags bind ))-- floatIsDupable: see Note [Duplicating floats]|otherwise=floatIsCase bind ||n_used_alts >1-- floatIsCase: see Note [Floating primops]new_boxes |drop_here =(insert here_box :fork_boxes )|otherwise=(here_box :new_fork_boxes )new_fork_boxes =zipWithEqual "FloatIn.sepBinds"insert_maybe fork_boxes used_in_flags insert::DropBox ->DropBox insert (fvs ,drops )=(fvs `unionDVarSet `bind_fvs ,bind_w_fvs :drops )insert_maybe box True=insert box insert_maybebox False=box go__=panic "sepBindsByDropPoint/go"{- Note [Duplicating floats]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For case expressions we duplicate the binding if it is reasonably
small, and if it is not used in all the RHSs This is good for
situations like
 let x = I# y in
 case e of
 C -> error x
 D -> error x
 E -> ...not mentioning x...
If the thing is used in all RHSs there is nothing gained,
so we don't duplicate then.
-}floatedBindsFVs::FloatInBinds ->FreeVarSet floatedBindsFVs binds =mapUnionDVarSet fbFVs binds fbFVs::FloatInBind ->DVarSet fbFVs (FB _fvs _)=fvs wrapFloats::FloatInBinds ->CoreExpr ->CoreExpr -- Remember FloatInBinds is in *reverse* dependency orderwrapFloats []e =e wrapFloats(FB __fl :bs )e =wrapFloats bs (wrapFloat fl e )floatIsDupable::DynFlags ->FloatBind ->BoolfloatIsDupable dflags (FloatCase scrut ___)=exprIsDupable dflags scrut floatIsDupabledflags (FloatLet (Rec prs ))=all(exprIsDupable dflags .snd)prs floatIsDupabledflags (FloatLet (NonRec _r ))=exprIsDupable dflags r floatIsCase::FloatBind ->BoolfloatIsCase (FloatCase {})=TruefloatIsCase(FloatLet {})=False

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