3) I confirmed that the lack of cobox uniques in the dump output was indeed due 
to `ppr_co' deferring to `ppr @IfaceType'; it does that (at least) for every 
coercion with a head of `TyConAppCo'. With a tiny kludgy patch I was able to 
persist those uniques just for debugging purposes.

Would you like to offer a patch?

I eventually gave up on the via-iface-type route for debug printing.  See 
TyCoRep.pprPrecType, which checks for debugStyle and if so calls a simple but 
direct debug_ppr_ty.  Not beautiful, but very direct.  For debugging it’s 
terrible if tidying and other stuff goes on.

Maybe we want the same for coercions?

Simon

From: Nicolas Frisby [mailto:nicolas.fri...@gmail.com]
Sent: 09 October 2017 03:50
To: Richard Eisenberg <r...@cs.brynmawr.edu>
Cc: Simon Peyton Jones <simo...@microsoft.com>; ghc-devs@haskell.org
Subject: Re: Invariants about UnivCo?


Yep, that's the current question: why does preferring `EvCoercion (TransCo 
UnivCo (TransCo co UnivCo))` to `EvCast (EvCoercion co) UnivCo` seem to matter? 
In my scenario, `co` is the evidence for a Given equality type. And the 
coercion I'm building is also a Given constraint's evidence -- I'm simplifying 
Givens.

The only hard indication I currently have of what "goes wrong" is the ASSERT 
failure described in the previous email.

I'm planning to spend some time investigating. I would appreciate any cycles 
you spend on it!

On Sun, Oct 8, 2017, 18:53 Richard Eisenberg 
<r...@cs.brynmawr.edu<mailto:r...@cs.brynmawr.edu>> wrote:
Thanks for this status report. If I'm to boil it down to the question you seem 
to be asking: What does changing EvCast ... to EvCoercion ... fix the problem? 
I'm not sure of the answer at this point, but I want to make sure I understand 
the question before I go digging for an answer. It's always possible a Note is 
wrong!

Thanks for this!

Richard

On Oct 7, 2017, at 8:19 PM, Nicolas Frisby 
<nicolas.fri...@gmail.com<mailto:nicolas.fri...@gmail.com>> wrote:

I can happily report some progress: I'm seeing no more Core lint errors!

1) Thank you both Richard and Simon for your pointers -- 
-fprint-typechecker-elaboration in particular was a revelation.

2) Simon, I intend to match the spirit of the favor you requested, but not to 
the letter. My goal with this project is to write a typechecker plugin for 
achieving row types _without_ editing GHC's source code. I'm keeping an 
annotated bibliography of things I've studied (papers, guide/wiki/blog, source 
Notes, etc). (It's nice to put a bunch of related notes in the same text file!) 
I'm also logging my epiphanies, which I do intend to write-up in some kind of 
document (probably on the dev wiki). I'm planning a section for suggesting 
which Notes should be adjusted/expanded, but I don't anticipate feeling 
comfortable enough to actually edit the Notes myself. This is unfortunately 
just a hobby project. My intent is to offer you, Richard, and other experts the 
details of what wasn't clear to me.

3) I confirmed that the lack of cobox uniques in the dump output was indeed due 
to `ppr_co' deferring to `ppr @IfaceType'; it does that (at least) for every 
coercion with a head of `TyConAppCo'. With a tiny kludgy patch I was able to 
persist those uniques just for debugging purposes.

4) My top-level error is an "out of scope cobox" Lint error, but (once I 
patched the dumper) the output of -fprint-typechecker-elaboration showed 
sufficient bindings for all of the cobox occurrences, even the one that the 
Lint error was flagging! Stymied, I finally did a -DDEBUG build of the 
ghc-8.2.2-rc1 tag and used that. It ultimately lead to me finding my mistakes. 
(New wisdom: always use a DEBUG build when authoring a plugin. (... Duh.))

4a) ASSERT failures showed that I was invoking `substTy' without correctly 
initializing the `InScopeSet'. I also was ignorant that I should be using 
`extendTvSubstAndInScope' instead of just `extendTvSubst'. I don't think this 
was relevant to my particular Lint error, but I fixed it if only to see further 
ASSERT failures.

4b) Fixing my `InScopeSet's ASSERT failure revealed another: `extendIdSubst' 
was being called with a CoVar! That's something that my plugin code absolutely 
does not do, so at that point I knew that some higher-level operation I was 
doing was knocking the rest of GHC's pipeline off the rails. (In particular, I 
traced this ASSERT callstack to extendIdSubst called from simpleOptExpr called 
from mkInlineUnfoldingWithArity called from DsBinds. I stopped there.)

5) The first suspect turned out to be the culprit: I was using my plugin's 
by-fiat coercions in the most naive possible way, always simply `EvCast ev 
(fiatCoercion ty0 ty1)`. In particular, I was even doing that to create new 
Given unlifted equality witnesses from existing Given unlifted equality 
witnesses when simplifying Given constraints (e.g. for example reducing a 
plugin-specific type family application on one side of an unlifted equality 
type ~#).

In summary, I see no more ASSERT failures or Lint errors having now changed my 
plugin to prefer `EvCoercion (TransCo U (TransCo co U))` to `EvCast (EvCoercion 
co) U`. The actual diff excerpt is here: 
https://github.com/nfrisby/coxswain/issues/3#issuecomment-334972227<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fnfrisby%2Fcoxswain%2Fissues%2F3%23issuecomment-334972227&data=02%7C01%7Csimonpj%40microsoft.com%7C2b0edffd514b4da49abc08d50ec07ff9%7C72f988bf86f141af91ab2d7cd011db47%7C1%7C0%7C636431142301735979&sdata=Ng6o4ODbLXNJVlngL0qnBv1EQ5Sn9TJMPK79M99zGTg%3D&reserved=0>

I have not figured out exactly why that change matters, but it does seem a 
reasonable preference to require. In particular, Note [Coercion evidence terms] 
in TcEvidence.hs explicitly says that `EvCast (EvCoercion co1) co2` is a valid 
form of evidence for ~#. So perhaps that Note deserves elaboration --- I'm 
guessing the missing part may be specific to Givens?

-Nick

On Thu, Sep 21, 2017 at 2:59 AM Simon Peyton Jones 
<simo...@microsoft.com<mailto:simo...@microsoft.com>> wrote:
Some thoughts


  *   Read Note [Coercion holes] in TyCoRep.



  *   As you’ll see, generally we don’t create value-bindings for (unboxed) 
coercions of type t1 ~# t2.  (yes for boxed ones t1 ~ t2).     Reasons in the 
Note.  Exception: for superclasses of Givens we do create    (co :: a ~# b) = 
sc_sel1 d

where d is some dictionary with a superclass of type (a ~# b).

Side note: the use of “cobox” is wildly unhelpful.  These Ids are specifically 
unboxed!  I’m going to change it to just “co”.


  *   You appear to have bindings like[G]  cobox_a67J = CO Sym cobox_a654.  
That is suspicious.  Who is creating them?  It may not actually be wrong but 
it’s suspicious.  The time it’d be outright wrong is if you dropped the 
ev-binds on the floor.

Ha!  runTcSEqualites makes up an ev_binds_var, and solves the equalities – but 
it should be the case that no value bindings end up in the ev_binds_var.  
(reason: we are solving equalities in a type signature, so there is no place to 
put the evidence bindigns)   I suggest you add a DEBUG-only assertion to check 
this.


  *   Do -ddump-tc -fprint-typechecker-elaboration; that should show you the 
evidence binds.

Can I ask you a favour?  Separately from your branch, can you start a branch of 
small patches to GHC that include

  *   Extra assertions, such as that above
  *   Notes that explain things you wish you’d known earlier, with references 
to those Notes from the places you were studying when you that information 
would have been useful

Richard and I know too much! – your learning curve is very valuable and I don’t 
want to lose it.

Keeping this separate from your branch is useful : you can commit (via Phab) 
these updates right away, so they aren’t predicated on adding row types to GHC.

Simon

From: ghc-devs 
[mailto:ghc-devs-boun...@haskell.org<mailto:ghc-devs-boun...@haskell.org>] On 
Behalf Of Nicolas Frisby
Sent: 19 September 2017 16:51
To: ghc-devs@haskell.org<mailto:ghc-devs@haskell.org>
Subject: Invariants about UnivCo?

[I summarize with some direct questions at the bottom of this email.]

I spent time last night trying to eliminate -dcore-lint errors from my record 
and variant library using the coxswain row types plugin. I made some progress, 
but I'm currently stuck, as discussed on this github Issue.

https://github.com/nfrisby/coxswain/issues/3#issuecomment-330577609<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fnfrisby%2Fcoxswain%2Fissues%2F3%23issuecomment-330577609&data=02%7C01%7Csimonpj%40microsoft.com%7Cde0675bbb584495a2f8008d4ff764c72%7C72f988bf86f141af91ab2d7cd011db47%7C1%7C0%7C636414330952932223&sdata=lPLcpIlb%2BhivQdCUoVOPUgYDHeEDaMX660NQS%2BQyyBw%3D&reserved=0>

Here's the relevant bit:

The latest unresolved -dcore-lint error is an out-of-scope cobox co var. I'm 
certainly not creating it directly (there are no U(plugin:coxswain,... in the 
Core Lint warning), but I have to wonder if my somewhat loose use of UnivCo is 
violating some assumptions somewhere that's causing GHC to drop the co var 
binding or overlook this occurrence of it on a renaming/subst pass. I checked 
UnivCo for source comments looking for anything it should not be used for, but 
I didn't find an obvious explanation along those lines.

I haven't yet been able to effectively distill the test case.

I'm doing this all at -O0.

With `-ddump-tc-trace`, I can see the offending cobox (cobox_a67M) is present 
in an "implication evbinds" listing after a "solveImplication end }" delimiter, 
but that's the last obvious binding of it.

                         [G] cobox_a67J = CO Sym cobox_a654,
                         [G] cobox_a67M
                           = cobox_a67J `cast` U(plugin:coxswain,...)

cobox_a654 is introduced by a GADT pattern match.

I'm also not seeing obvious occurrences of cobox_a67M, but I think the reason 
is that I'm seeing several (Sym cobox) with no uniques printed (even with 
`-dppr-debug`). Those are probably the cobox in question, but I can't confirm.

Questions:

1) Is there a robust way to ensure that covar's uniques are always printed? (Is 
the pprIface reuse  with a free cobox part of the issue here?)

2) Is my plugin asking for this kind of trouble by using UnivCo to cast coboxes?

3) If I spent the effort to create non-UnivCo coercions where possible, would 
that likely help? This is currently an "eventually" task, but I haven't seen an 
urgency for it yet. I could bump its priority if it might help. E.G. I'm using 
UnivCo to cast entire givens when all I'm doing is reducing a type family 
application somewhere "deep" within the given's predtype. I could, with 
considerable effort, instead wrap a single, localized UnivCo within a bunch of 
non-UnivCo "lifting" coercion constructors. Would that likely help?

3) Is there a usual suspect for this kind of situation where a cobox binding is 
seemingly dropped (by the typechecker) even though there's an occurrence of it?

Thank you for your time. -Nick
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