invoking front-end phases from within a GHC plugin?

Nicolas Frisby nicolas.frisby at gmail.com
Thu Jun 27 00:26:32 CEST 2013


I hadn't, thanks for the pointer. At first glance, the methodologies look
distinct, however. My use case does not involve metaprogramming per se.
Thanks again for the response though; looks like an interesting project to
track.
On Jun 26, 2013 2:44 AM, "Carter Schonwald" <carter.schonwald at gmail.com>
wrote:

> This sounds somewhat complementary to some of the Template Haskell work
> being done by Geoff Mainland to support Manuel's Inline Objective C style
> template haskell machinery. Have you looked at that work at all? Sounds
> like there might be some overlap!
>
>
>
> On Mon, Jun 24, 2013 at 10:56 PM, Nicolas Frisby <nicolas.frisby at gmail.com
> > wrote:
>
>> Just a quick update: I patched a local copy of 7.6.3 to add
>> FastString.string_table to the CoreMonad.reinitializeGlobals mechanism.
>> After that change, I can invoke the front-end
>> (parser,renamer,typechecker,desugarer) from within my plugin on a simple
>> example.
>>
>> Original module:
>>
>> > module Test where
>> >
>> > data X = X Int Int
>>
>> Syntax parser from within the plugin:
>>
>> > data Y = Y X X
>> > f (Y (X a b) (X c d)) = a + b + c + d
>>
>> Perhaps this simple example is luckily avoiding some nasty pitfalls, but
>> it seems to be working.
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Jun 20, 2013 at 11:27 AM, Nicolas Frisby <
>> nicolas.frisby at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I'd like to generate new declarations/bindings from within a GHC plugin.
>>> My current concrete goal is just to add a new vanilla data definition, but
>>> long-term it could be more open-ended. Crucially, these new declarations
>>> will reference variables bound by the original module and its imports.
>>>
>>> Long-term, it'd be nice if we could invoke the
>>> parser/renamer/typechecker in order to do so. Broadly, the required
>>> plumbing seems doable. I wrote a custom initTc that initializes the
>>> TcGblEnv from the ModGuts that the plugin receives. This is enough to
>>> invoke the renamer/typechecker/desugarer. The resulting new ModGuts can
>>> then be merged into the original ModGuts, perhaps after some Simplification.
>>>
>>> Has anyone explored/designed down this path? I've got some questions
>>> about a snag I hit.
>>>
>>> Parsing seems fine (superficially) but the renamer fails. I'm re-using
>>> the global Rdr environment from the plugin's input ModGuts, so that free
>>> vars from the new syntax will reference other bindings in the original
>>> module and its imports. However, that environment is keyed on the uniques
>>> of FastStrings, ultimately raising "name not found" errors.
>>>
>>> This happens because the global variable for the FastString Table is not
>>> being shared between the actual compiler and the new image of the GHC
>>> library that the plugin is using. One solution seems to be including the
>>> FastString Table in the  "reinitializeGlobals" mechanism. This would
>>> require a GHC patch.
>>>
>>> Questions:
>>>
>>> 1) Was the FastString Table intentionally left out of the
>>> reinitializeGlobals mechanism?
>>>
>>> 2) Are there similar obstacles lurking beyond this one that people know
>>> about? How incompatible is the invocation of front-end phases wrt the
>>> current plugin architecture?
>>>
>>> My design assumes the HscEnv and ModGuts received by the plugin include
>>> enough information to reconstruct a meaningful TcGblEnv representing the
>>> original module. This seems to be at least nearly true. I am, however, not
>>> very well-versed with how imports are handled (EPS and such), so I don't
>>> know if the FastString Table issue is just the tip of the iceberg.
>>>
>>> Thanks for your thoughts.
>>>
>>
>>
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>
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