This is a followup to my earlier question here. I've been able to get something working per Reid Barton's answer, but I notice in the core I see __pkg_ccall_GC
:
case {__pkg_ccall_GC hashabler-2.0.0 sipRound_s_x2 Word#
-> Word#
-> Word#
-> Word#
-> (# Word#, Word#, Word#, Word# #)}
ww1 ww2 ww3 (xor# ww4 b1)
Which is I think what you'd expect for a "safe" ffi call. Yet adding "unsafe" to the foreign import string is not allowed (though the error messages doesn't say why):
src/Data/Hashabler/SipHash.hs:60:1: error:
• The safe/unsafe annotation should not be used with `foreign import prim'.
• When checking declaration:
foreign import prim unsafe "static sipRound_s_x4" sipRound_s_x4#
:: Word#
-> Word# -> Word# -> Word# -> (# Word#, Word#, Word#, Word# #)
My foreign procedure is just a little but of bit-twiddling, so I don't think I want whatever the _GC
is giving me. Some relevant bits of GHC source I've looked at, FWIW and background:
compiler/prelude/ForeignCall.hs: only "Risky" omits the "_GC"
data Safety
= PlaySafe -- Might invoke Haskell GC, or do a call back, or
-- switch threads, etc. So make sure things are
-- tidy before the call. Additionally, in the threaded
-- RTS we arrange for the external call to be executed
-- by a separate OS thread, i.e., _concurrently_ to the
-- execution of other Haskell threads.
| PlayInterruptible -- Like PlaySafe, but additionally
-- the worker thread running this foreign call may
-- be unceremoniously killed, so it must be scheduled
-- on an unbound thread.
| PlayRisky -- None of the above can happen; the call will return
-- without interacting with the runtime system at all
deriving ( Eq, Show, Data )
-- Show used just for Show Lex.Token, I think
I also see some foreign import prim unsafe
and ... safe
in the GHC tree, though I suppose it's dead code. e.g. testsuite/tests/printer/Ppr046.hs
.
So my questions are:
- What is the difference between code generated from a
__pkg_ccall_GC
vs a__pkg_ccall
in this case (where I'm doingforeign import prim
notccall
)? Is it the same as described here? - Why doesn't a
foreign import prim unsafe
seem to be supported? - Assuming I understand (1): Is there anyway I can work around this, getting both efficient return of multiple values and avoiding whatever bookkeeping is happening in (1)?
EDIT: Looking at the assembly from -ddump-asm
makes it clear nothing much is happening (shouldn't have been scared to look at the assembly), support Reid Barton's comment below:
movq %rdi,%rax
movq %r8,%rdi
xorq %r9,%rdi
movq %rsi,%rcx
movq %rax,%rsi
movq %r14,%rax
movq %rcx,%r14
movq %rbx,%rcx
movq %rax,%rbx
movq %r9,-8(%rbp)
movq %rcx,(%rbp)
addq $-16,%rbp
jmp sipRound_s_x2
The xorq
towards the top corresponds to a haskell xor
. All those movq
do seem to be a bummer though...
suspendThread
/resumeThread
stuff you'd see around a safe call. I don't know why it shows__pkg_ccall_GC
in Core, maybe just a display bug.movq
to get the arguments into the right registers before the tail call? They don't look redundant to me.prim
imports are markedPlaySafe
by the parser, which is presumably mostly ignored, and definitely ignored during code generation. But wherever it's not ignored there could be a bug.