Now that we're on GHC 8.6, we can use `-XDerivingVia` in many cases
where we previously had to write instances by hand. If you're not
familiar with `-XDerivingVia`, the [GHC proposal][ghc] is a good place
to start.
[ghc]: https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/blob/master/proposals/0023-deriving-via.rst
Thanks to the `generic-monoid` package, we can derive a `Semigroup`
instance for any product type whose members are `Semigroups`, and the
same goes for `Monoid`. This entails an extra dependency, but it is
better than the `generic-deriving` package, which is way too much overhead.
I've also switched some trivial definitions to newtype-deriving.
Please be aware that this bumps `hlint` and `haskell-src-exts` so that
`hlint` doesn't choke on the `DerivingVia` extension. You'll need to
`stack install hlint` to get it on your `PATH`. Apologies!
This looks like a big patch, but it's very straightforward: no
behavior has changed.
After the umpteenth time spent hitting a compile error because I
passed a `FilePath` rather than a `File` to `readBlobFromPath`, I
decided to finally make the needed refactors to Semantic.IO, and to
split off the `File` type and `Files` effect. This patch:
* adds the `MonadIO` class to `Prologue`'s export list
* moves `File` into `Data.File`
* moves `Handle` into `Data.Handle`
* moves `Files` into `Semantic.Task.Files`
* moves functions for reading blobs into `Data.Blob`
* keeps general IO helpers in Semantic.IO
* renames `readFile` to `readBlobFromFile`
* renames `readBlobFromPath` to `readBlobFromFile'`
This should have a positive effect on compile times and ease of
navigation throughout the codebase.
Because we're getting serious about benchmarking in the run-up to
Windrose, it's time to bring in the `deepseq` package to ensure that
benchmarks can fully evaluate the result of a test case.
The `deepseq` package provides an `NFData` typeclass:
```
class NFData a where
rnf :: a -> ()
```
Instances use the `seq` combinator to ensure that the argument to
`rnf` is fully evaluated, returning (). If there is a `Generic`
instance for `a`, the implementation can be omitted. This patch adds
NFData for every syntax node, graph vertex, environment data
structures, and exceptions. It is long, but the work is very
straightforward, so don't panick.
The benchmark suite (`stack bench`) now produces more accurate
results. The benchmarks previously mimicked `rnf` by calling `show` on
the result of an evaluation or graph construction; now that we have
actual `NFData` instances we can use the `nfIO` combinator from
criterion. This has sped up the evaluation benchmarks and reduced
their memory consumption, while it has slowed down the call graph
benchmarks, as those benchmarks weren't evaluating the whole of the
graph.
Unfortunately, this patch increases compile times, as we have to
derive a few more Generic instances. I wish this weren't the case, but
there's little we can do about it now. In the future I have some plans
for how to reduce compile time, and I bet that those gains will at
least nullify the speed hit from this patch.
Now that we have NFData instances for every data type, we can start
benchmarking assignments, in preparation for fixing #2205.
This patch also pulls in updates to `effects` and `fastsum` that add
appropriate NFData instances for the data they vend.
There are no modules where we use both Union.inj and Sum.injectSum; as
such, it seems clumsy for such ubiquitous functions as inj and prj to
have such long names when there is no ambiguity. This restores the
codebase to much how it looked before we switched back to a richer
Data.Union.
Since @charliesome was expressing trouble with keeping custom infix
operator precedence straight (a very fair complaint, and one that I
have trouble with too), I thought it best to make sure that master
builds with clean hlints. I propose we make CI check that `hlint src`
executes cleanly.
`maybeM act may` returns the `Just` in `may` or runs `act`.
`maybeFail str may` fails with `str` as an error or extracts the `Just`.
These combinators are so useful that I don't know why they're not in
the Prelude or some library. I use them constantly.
Would have been nice to reuise liftNumeric and liftNumeric2, but it's
not clear what it means to take bitwise components of rational or
floating-point numbers.