[MLton] modifying flatten.fun to always flatten
Lukasz S Ziarek
lziarek@cs.purdue.edu
Thu, 15 Jan 2004 18:09:34 -0500 (EST)
Dear Stephen,
I was wondering how you did your debugging, because make will fixpoint the
compiler. I am looking to simply build a version of the compiler so I can
run simple test cases instead of having the compiler rebuild itself.
Luke
On Thu, 15 Jan 2004, Stephen Weeks wrote:
>
> > As I understand it, the first part of the flatten.fun file extracts
> > all the needed information to correctly fillout the two-point
> > lattice, where top signifies that the tupple will not be flattened
> > and bottom that it can be flattened. The rest of the program checks
> > the lattice and either flattenes or does not flatten depending on
> > the value.
>
> Yes.
>
> > The initial idea to accomplish this was to modify the if then else
> > branches in the flattening function as well the utility functions
> > defined within it (IE doitArgs).
>
> I think it would be better to modify the transformation as little as
> possible, and instead to change the analysis to say "always flatten"
> and then let the transformation do its thing.
>
> > The initial idea was to have all functions default to the flatten
> > case.
>
> This is the right idea, except the way to achieve it is to make the
> Rep.t's be flat.
>
> > However, I have run into complications with the doitCaseCon function
> > in which such a simple approach does not work. For doitCaseCon I
> > removed the tupple reconstruction, but also to no avail.
>
> I would hope that you do not need to modify doitCaseCon -- once
> everything is flattened it shouldn't have to do any coercions (line
> 298).
>
> > One of the problem I am running into, is the diachotomy being
> > created between what the tupples I am trying to flatten and the
> > two-point lattice. Should I have to worry about the values in the
> > two-point lattice? For that matter, should I simply set them to
> > bottom, or do I even need to do anything with the lattice?
>
> Yes, you should use the lattice. The default lattice value, bottom,
> means flatten, which is what we want. There are two places that the
> value can be changed to top, via the makeTop function. First, if a
> type is not a tuple type, then we use makeTop. This makes sense and
> should be left alone, since non-tuples cannot be flattened. Second,
> the tuplize function, which is used in only one place, makes variables
> top if they aren't explicitly bound to a tuple in doitStatement. This
> needs to be changed. The easiest thing would be to add a flag
>
> val flattenAll: bool = ...
>
> and to condition then call to tuplize on the flag
>
> if flattenAll then () else Rep.tuplize r
>
> > When I attempt to fixpoint I am recieving the detupple message,
> > which is generated if Tycons are not equal in the case of a tupple,
> > whenever the function detuple is called.
>
> I suspect this is happening because you are trying to flatten things
> that aren't tuples. This would happen if you blindly always follow
> the Rep.isFlat case.
>
> Once the analysis says to flatten all tuples, there is the problem
> that the transformation will expect the tuple components to be there.
> Specifically, the call to varTuple (line 232) will expect to get the
> variables that make up the tuple. While these will exist for
> explicitly constructed tuples and for the flattened formals of blocks
> and functions (created by doitArgs), they will not exist for tuples
> that come from other places, e.g. Select expresssions (there may be
> other places -- I'm not sure). To fix that, you need to modify the
> transformation to insert statements to select components of a tuples
> that are needed by the flattens function. You could either do it on
> demand when varTuple is called, or just always generate the selects so
> that varTuple always returns SOME, and let the shrinker later clean up
> any unneeded selects. The latter seems easier to me. (Of course
> these selects and any other modifications to the transformation should
> be conditioned on flattenAll.)
>
> Hopefully this makes sense. Please followup when it works or you get
> stuck. If it starts to be more than ~50 lines of code, you're
> probably headed down the wrong path (or have run into something I
> didn't foresee :-).
>
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