Finally, in case the lack of constraints on dependencies put anyone off, please note that all deps in all three projects now have minimum and maximum bounds.
Also, I should take this chance to note that there were no cache controls in the homepages linked above, so please force reloads in your browser to see latest versions. (The pages /now/ have caching prevention so this should not be necessary again.) And, it's nice to share your thoughts, don't you think? -Andrew On Fri, Dec 19, 2014 at 8:01 AM, Andrew Seniuk <ras...@gmail.com> wrote: > Sorry, that was my first Reddit post and I messed up. > > Please use this link > http://www.reddit.com/r/haskell/comments/2pscxh/ann_deepseqbounded_seqaid_leaky/ > > -Andrew > > On Fri, Dec 19, 2014 at 7:07 AM, Andrew Seniuk <ras...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> This trio of related packages explores strictness control in a variety of >> ways. >> >> deepseq-bounded provides classes and generic functions to artificially >> force evaluation, to extents controlled by static or dynamic configuration. >> >> seqaid puts that into practise, providing a GHC plugin to auto-instrument >> your package with a strictness harness, which is dynamically optimisable >> during runtime. This is supported directly in the GHC compilation >> pipeline, without requiring (or performing!) any edits to your sources. >> >> leaky is a minimal, prototypic executable that leaks space under current >> state-of-the-art compilation (GHC 7.8.3 -O2, at the present time). >> >> deepseq-bounded >> hackage: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/deepseq-bounded >> homepage: http://www.fremissant.net/deepseq-bounded >> >> seqaid >> hackage: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/seqaid >> homepage: http://www.fremissant.net/seqaid >> >> leaky >> hackage: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/leaky >> homepage: http://www.fremissant.net/leaky >> >> Reddit discussion for the three together: >> >> http://www.reddit.com/r/haskell/comments/2ps8f5/ann_deepseqbounded_seqaid_leaky/ >> >> Easiest way to try them all, is to install seqaid and run the demo: >> >> cabal install seqaid >> seqaid demo >> >> This tests seqaid on a local copy of the leaky source package. >> >> It turned out to be routine to extend deepseq-bounded and seqaid to >> dynamically configurable parallelisation (paraid?). Many other wrappers >> could be explored, too! Maybe seqaid should be renamed to koolaid or >> something... >> >> It's a pretty complicated system, and just first release, so there's >> bound to be lots of problems. I've not set up a bug tracker, but will >> maintain a casual list of bugs and feature requests at >> >> http://www.fremissant.net/seqaid/trac >> >> and will set up a proper tracker if there's interest. >> >> Any isssues (or comments), I'm here, or on the reddit discussion (or >> email). >> >> Andrew Seniuk >> rasfar on #haskell >> >> >
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