{-
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
-- (c) The University of Glasgow 2001-2003
--
-- Access to system tools: gcc, cp, rm etc
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-}

{-# LANGUAGE CPP, ScopedTypeVariables #-}

module SysTools (
        -- Initialisation
        initSysTools,

        -- Interface to system tools
        runUnlit, runCpp, runCc, -- [Option] -> IO ()
        runPp,                   -- [Option] -> IO ()
        runSplit,                -- [Option] -> IO ()
        runAs, runLink, runLibtool, -- [Option] -> IO ()
        runMkDLL,
        runWindres,
        runLlvmOpt,
        runLlvmLlc,
        runClang,
        figureLlvmVersion,

        getLinkerInfo,
        getCompilerInfo,

        linkDynLib,

        askCc,

        touch,                  -- String -> String -> IO ()
        copy,
        copyWithHeader,

        -- Temporary-file management
        setTmpDir,
        newTempName, newTempLibName,
        cleanTempDirs, cleanTempFiles, cleanTempFilesExcept,
        addFilesToClean,

        Option(..),

        -- frameworks
        getPkgFrameworkOpts,
        getFrameworkOpts


 ) where

#include "HsVersions.h"

import DriverPhases
import Module
import Packages
import Config
import Outputable
import ErrUtils
import Panic
import Platform
import Util
import DynFlags
import Exception

import LlvmCodeGen.Base (llvmVersionStr, supportedLlvmVersion)

import Data.IORef
import Control.Monad
import System.Exit
import System.Environment
import System.FilePath
import System.IO
import System.IO.Error as IO
import System.Directory
import Data.Char
import Data.List
import qualified Data.Map as Map

#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
import qualified System.Posix.Internals
#else /* Must be Win32 */
import Foreign
import Foreign.C.String
import qualified System.Win32.Info as Info
import Control.Exception (finally)
import Foreign.Ptr (FunPtr, castPtrToFunPtr)
import System.Win32.Types (DWORD, LPTSTR, HANDLE)
import System.Win32.Types (failIfNull, failIf, iNVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
import System.Win32.File (createFile,closeHandle, gENERIC_READ, fILE_SHARE_READ, oPEN_EXISTING, fILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, fILE_FLAG_BACKUP_SEMANTICS )
import System.Win32.DLL (loadLibrary, getProcAddress)
import Data.Bits((.|.))
#endif

import System.Process
import Control.Concurrent
import FastString
import SrcLoc           ( SrcLoc, mkSrcLoc, noSrcSpan, mkSrcSpan )

#ifdef mingw32_HOST_OS
# if defined(i386_HOST_ARCH)
#  define WINDOWS_CCONV stdcall
# elif defined(x86_64_HOST_ARCH)
#  define WINDOWS_CCONV ccall
# else
#  error Unknown mingw32 arch
# endif
#endif

{-
How GHC finds its files
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

[Note topdir]

GHC needs various support files (library packages, RTS etc), plus
various auxiliary programs (cp, gcc, etc).  It starts by finding topdir,
the root of GHC's support files

On Unix:
  - ghc always has a shell wrapper that passes a -B<dir> option

On Windows:
  - ghc never has a shell wrapper.
  - we can find the location of the ghc binary, which is
        $topdir/bin/<something>.exe
    where <something> may be "ghc", "ghc-stage2", or similar
  - we strip off the "bin/<something>.exe" to leave $topdir.

from topdir we can find package.conf, ghc-asm, etc.


SysTools.initSysProgs figures out exactly where all the auxiliary programs
are, and initialises mutable variables to make it easy to call them.
To to this, it makes use of definitions in Config.hs, which is a Haskell
file containing variables whose value is figured out by the build system.

Config.hs contains two sorts of things

  cGCC,         The *names* of the programs
  cCPP            e.g.  cGCC = gcc
  cUNLIT                cCPP = gcc -E
  etc           They do *not* include paths


  cUNLIT_DIR   The *path* to the directory containing unlit, split etc
  cSPLIT_DIR   *relative* to the root of the build tree,
                   for use when running *in-place* in a build tree (only)



---------------------------------------------
NOTES for an ALTERNATIVE scheme (i.e *not* what is currently implemented):

Another hair-brained scheme for simplifying the current tool location
nightmare in GHC: Simon originally suggested using another
configuration file along the lines of GCC's specs file - which is fine
except that it means adding code to read yet another configuration
file.  What I didn't notice is that the current package.conf is
general enough to do this:

Package
    {name = "tools",    import_dirs = [],  source_dirs = [],
     library_dirs = [], hs_libraries = [], extra_libraries = [],
     include_dirs = [], c_includes = [],   package_deps = [],
     extra_ghc_opts = ["-pgmc/usr/bin/gcc","-pgml${topdir}/bin/unlit", ... etc.],
     extra_cc_opts = [], extra_ld_opts = []}

Which would have the advantage that we get to collect together in one
place the path-specific package stuff with the path-specific tool
stuff.
                End of NOTES
---------------------------------------------

************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Initialisation}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

initSysTools :: Maybe String    -- Maybe TopDir path (without the '-B' prefix)
             -> IO Settings     -- Set all the mutable variables above, holding
                                --      (a) the system programs
                                --      (b) the package-config file
                                --      (c) the GHC usage message
initSysTools mbMinusB
  = do top_dir <- findTopDir mbMinusB
             -- see [Note topdir]
             -- NB: top_dir is assumed to be in standard Unix
             -- format, '/' separated

       let settingsFile = top_dir </> "settings"
           platformConstantsFile = top_dir </> "platformConstants"
           installed :: FilePath -> FilePath
           installed file = top_dir </> file
           libexec :: FilePath -> FilePath
           libexec file = top_dir </> "bin" </> file

       settingsStr <- readFile settingsFile
       platformConstantsStr <- readFile platformConstantsFile
       mySettings <- case maybeReadFuzzy settingsStr of
                     Just s ->
                         return s
                     Nothing ->
                         pgmError ("Can't parse " ++ show settingsFile)
       platformConstants <- case maybeReadFuzzy platformConstantsStr of
                            Just s ->
                                return s
                            Nothing ->
                                pgmError ("Can't parse " ++
                                          show platformConstantsFile)
       let getSetting key = case lookup key mySettings of
                            Just xs ->
                                return $ case stripPrefix "$topdir" xs of
                                         Just [] ->
                                             top_dir
                                         Just xs'@(c:_)
                                          | isPathSeparator c ->
                                             top_dir ++ xs'
                                         _ ->
                                             xs
                            Nothing -> pgmError ("No entry for " ++ show key ++ " in " ++ show settingsFile)
           getBooleanSetting key = case lookup key mySettings of
                                   Just "YES" -> return True
                                   Just "NO" -> return False
                                   Just xs -> pgmError ("Bad value for " ++ show key ++ ": " ++ show xs)
                                   Nothing -> pgmError ("No entry for " ++ show key ++ " in " ++ show settingsFile)
           readSetting key = case lookup key mySettings of
                             Just xs ->
                                 case maybeRead xs of
                                 Just v -> return v
                                 Nothing -> pgmError ("Failed to read " ++ show key ++ " value " ++ show xs)
                             Nothing -> pgmError ("No entry for " ++ show key ++ " in " ++ show settingsFile)
       crossCompiling <- getBooleanSetting "cross compiling"
       targetArch <- readSetting "target arch"
       targetOS <- readSetting "target os"
       targetWordSize <- readSetting "target word size"
       targetUnregisterised <- getBooleanSetting "Unregisterised"
       targetHasGnuNonexecStack <- readSetting "target has GNU nonexec stack"
       targetHasIdentDirective <- readSetting "target has .ident directive"
       targetHasSubsectionsViaSymbols <- readSetting "target has subsections via symbols"
       myExtraGccViaCFlags <- getSetting "GCC extra via C opts"
       -- On Windows, mingw is distributed with GHC,
       -- so we look in TopDir/../mingw/bin
       -- It would perhaps be nice to be able to override this
       -- with the settings file, but it would be a little fiddly
       -- to make that possible, so for now you can't.
       gcc_prog <- getSetting "C compiler command"
       gcc_args_str <- getSetting "C compiler flags"
       gccSupportsNoPie <- getBooleanSetting "C compiler supports -no-pie"
       cpp_prog <- getSetting "Haskell CPP command"
       cpp_args_str <- getSetting "Haskell CPP flags"
       let unreg_gcc_args = if targetUnregisterised
                            then ["-DNO_REGS", "-DUSE_MINIINTERPRETER"]
                            else []
           -- TABLES_NEXT_TO_CODE affects the info table layout.
           tntc_gcc_args
            | mkTablesNextToCode targetUnregisterised
               = ["-DTABLES_NEXT_TO_CODE"]
            | otherwise = []
           cpp_args= map Option (words cpp_args_str)
           gcc_args = map Option (words gcc_args_str
                               ++ unreg_gcc_args
                               ++ tntc_gcc_args)
       ldSupportsCompactUnwind <- getBooleanSetting "ld supports compact unwind"
       ldSupportsBuildId       <- getBooleanSetting "ld supports build-id"
       ldSupportsFilelist      <- getBooleanSetting "ld supports filelist"
       ldIsGnuLd               <- getBooleanSetting "ld is GNU ld"
       perl_path <- getSetting "perl command"

       let pkgconfig_path = installed "package.conf.d"
           ghc_usage_msg_path  = installed "ghc-usage.txt"
           ghci_usage_msg_path = installed "ghci-usage.txt"

             -- For all systems, unlit, split, mangle are GHC utilities
             -- architecture-specific stuff is done when building Config.hs
           unlit_path = libexec cGHC_UNLIT_PGM

             -- split is a Perl script
           split_script  = libexec cGHC_SPLIT_PGM

       windres_path <- getSetting "windres command"
       libtool_path <- getSetting "libtool command"

       tmpdir <- getTemporaryDirectory

       touch_path <- getSetting "touch command"

       let -- On Win32 we don't want to rely on #!/bin/perl, so we prepend
           -- a call to Perl to get the invocation of split.
           -- On Unix, scripts are invoked using the '#!' method.  Binary
           -- installations of GHC on Unix place the correct line on the
           -- front of the script at installation time, so we don't want
           -- to wire-in our knowledge of $(PERL) on the host system here.
           (split_prog,  split_args)
             | isWindowsHost = (perl_path,    [Option split_script])
             | otherwise     = (split_script, [])
       mkdll_prog <- getSetting "dllwrap command"
       let mkdll_args = []

       -- cpp is derived from gcc on all platforms
       -- HACK, see setPgmP below. We keep 'words' here to remember to fix
       -- Config.hs one day.


       -- Other things being equal, as and ld are simply gcc
       gcc_link_args_str <- getSetting "C compiler link flags"
       let   as_prog  = gcc_prog
             as_args  = gcc_args
             ld_prog  = gcc_prog
             ld_args  = gcc_args ++ map Option (words gcc_link_args_str)

       -- We just assume on command line
       lc_prog <- getSetting "LLVM llc command"
       lo_prog <- getSetting "LLVM opt command"

       let iserv_prog = libexec "ghc-iserv"

       let platform = Platform {
                          platformArch = targetArch,
                          platformOS   = targetOS,
                          platformWordSize = targetWordSize,
                          platformUnregisterised = targetUnregisterised,
                          platformHasGnuNonexecStack = targetHasGnuNonexecStack,
                          platformHasIdentDirective = targetHasIdentDirective,
                          platformHasSubsectionsViaSymbols = targetHasSubsectionsViaSymbols,
                          platformIsCrossCompiling = crossCompiling
                      }

       return $ Settings {
                    sTargetPlatform = platform,
                    sTmpDir         = normalise tmpdir,
                    sGhcUsagePath   = ghc_usage_msg_path,
                    sGhciUsagePath  = ghci_usage_msg_path,
                    sTopDir         = top_dir,
                    sRawSettings    = mySettings,
                    sExtraGccViaCFlags = words myExtraGccViaCFlags,
                    sSystemPackageConfig = pkgconfig_path,
                    sLdSupportsCompactUnwind = ldSupportsCompactUnwind,
                    sLdSupportsBuildId       = ldSupportsBuildId,
                    sLdSupportsFilelist      = ldSupportsFilelist,
                    sLdIsGnuLd               = ldIsGnuLd,
                    sGccSupportsNoPie        = gccSupportsNoPie,
                    sProgramName             = "ghc",
                    sProjectVersion          = cProjectVersion,
                    sPgm_L   = unlit_path,
                    sPgm_P   = (cpp_prog, cpp_args),
                    sPgm_F   = "",
                    sPgm_c   = (gcc_prog, gcc_args),
                    sPgm_s   = (split_prog,split_args),
                    sPgm_a   = (as_prog, as_args),
                    sPgm_l   = (ld_prog, ld_args),
                    sPgm_dll = (mkdll_prog,mkdll_args),
                    sPgm_T   = touch_path,
                    sPgm_windres = windres_path,
                    sPgm_libtool = libtool_path,
                    sPgm_lo  = (lo_prog,[]),
                    sPgm_lc  = (lc_prog,[]),
                    sPgm_i   = iserv_prog,
                    sOpt_L       = [],
                    sOpt_P       = [],
                    sOpt_F       = [],
                    sOpt_c       = [],
                    sOpt_a       = [],
                    sOpt_l       = [],
                    sOpt_windres = [],
                    sOpt_lo      = [],
                    sOpt_lc      = [],
                    sOpt_i       = [],
                    sPlatformConstants = platformConstants
             }

-- returns a Unix-format path (relying on getBaseDir to do so too)
findTopDir :: Maybe String -- Maybe TopDir path (without the '-B' prefix).
           -> IO String    -- TopDir (in Unix format '/' separated)
findTopDir (Just minusb) = return (normalise minusb)
findTopDir Nothing
    = do -- Get directory of executable
         maybe_exec_dir <- getBaseDir
         case maybe_exec_dir of
             -- "Just" on Windows, "Nothing" on unix
             Nothing  -> throwGhcExceptionIO (InstallationError "missing -B<dir> option")
             Just dir -> return dir

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Running an external program}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

runUnlit :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runUnlit dflags args = do
  let prog = pgm_L dflags
      opts = getOpts dflags opt_L
  runSomething dflags "Literate pre-processor" prog
               (map Option opts ++ args)

runCpp :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runCpp dflags args =   do
  let (p,args0) = pgm_P dflags
      args1 = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_P)
      args2 = if gopt Opt_WarnIsError dflags
                 then [Option "-Werror"]
                 else []
  mb_env <- getGccEnv args2
  runSomethingFiltered dflags id  "C pre-processor" p
                       (args0 ++ args1 ++ args2 ++ args) mb_env

runPp :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runPp dflags args =   do
  let prog = pgm_F dflags
      opts = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_F)
  runSomething dflags "Haskell pre-processor" prog (args ++ opts)

runCc :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runCc dflags args =   do
  let (p,args0) = pgm_c dflags
      args1 = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_c)
      args2 = args0 ++ args1 ++ args
  mb_env <- getGccEnv args2
  runSomethingResponseFile dflags cc_filter "C Compiler" p args2 mb_env
 where
  -- discard some harmless warnings from gcc that we can't turn off
  cc_filter = unlines . doFilter . lines

  {-
  gcc gives warnings in chunks like so:
      In file included from /foo/bar/baz.h:11,
                       from /foo/bar/baz2.h:22,
                       from wibble.c:33:
      /foo/flibble:14: global register variable ...
      /foo/flibble:15: warning: call-clobbered r...
  We break it up into its chunks, remove any call-clobbered register
  warnings from each chunk, and then delete any chunks that we have
  emptied of warnings.
  -}
  doFilter = unChunkWarnings . filterWarnings . chunkWarnings []
  -- We can't assume that the output will start with an "In file inc..."
  -- line, so we start off expecting a list of warnings rather than a
  -- location stack.
  chunkWarnings :: [String] -- The location stack to use for the next
                            -- list of warnings
                -> [String] -- The remaining lines to look at
                -> [([String], [String])]
  chunkWarnings loc_stack [] = [(loc_stack, [])]
  chunkWarnings loc_stack xs
      = case break loc_stack_start xs of
        (warnings, lss:xs') ->
            case span loc_start_continuation xs' of
            (lsc, xs'') ->
                (loc_stack, warnings) : chunkWarnings (lss : lsc) xs''
        _ -> [(loc_stack, xs)]

  filterWarnings :: [([String], [String])] -> [([String], [String])]
  filterWarnings [] = []
  -- If the warnings are already empty then we are probably doing
  -- something wrong, so don't delete anything
  filterWarnings ((xs, []) : zs) = (xs, []) : filterWarnings zs
  filterWarnings ((xs, ys) : zs) = case filter wantedWarning ys of
                                       [] -> filterWarnings zs
                                       ys' -> (xs, ys') : filterWarnings zs

  unChunkWarnings :: [([String], [String])] -> [String]
  unChunkWarnings [] = []
  unChunkWarnings ((xs, ys) : zs) = xs ++ ys ++ unChunkWarnings zs

  loc_stack_start        s = "In file included from " `isPrefixOf` s
  loc_start_continuation s = "                 from " `isPrefixOf` s
  wantedWarning w
   | "warning: call-clobbered register used" `isContainedIn` w = False
   | otherwise = True

isContainedIn :: String -> String -> Bool
xs `isContainedIn` ys = any (xs `isPrefixOf`) (tails ys)

askCc :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO String
askCc dflags args = do
  let (p,args0) = pgm_c dflags
      args1 = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_c)
      args2 = args0 ++ args1 ++ args
  mb_env <- getGccEnv args2
  runSomethingWith dflags "gcc" p args2 $ \real_args ->
    readCreateProcessWithExitCode' (proc p real_args){ env = mb_env }

-- Similar to System.Process.readCreateProcessWithExitCode, but stderr is
-- inherited from the parent process, and output to stderr is not captured.
readCreateProcessWithExitCode'
    :: CreateProcess
    -> IO (ExitCode, String)    -- ^ stdout
readCreateProcessWithExitCode' proc = do
    (_, Just outh, _, pid) <-
        createProcess proc{ std_out = CreatePipe }

    -- fork off a thread to start consuming the output
    output  <- hGetContents outh
    outMVar <- newEmptyMVar
    _ <- forkIO $ evaluate (length output) >> putMVar outMVar ()

    -- wait on the output
    takeMVar outMVar
    hClose outh

    -- wait on the process
    ex <- waitForProcess pid

    return (ex, output)

readProcessEnvWithExitCode
    :: String -- ^ program path
    -> [String] -- ^ program args
    -> [(String, String)] -- ^ environment to override
    -> IO (ExitCode, String, String) -- ^ (exit_code, stdout, stderr)
readProcessEnvWithExitCode prog args env_update = do
    current_env <- getEnvironment
    let new_env = env_update ++ [ (k, v)
                                | let overriden_keys = map fst env_update
                                , (k, v) <- current_env
                                , k `notElem` overriden_keys
                                ]
        p       = proc prog args

    (_stdin, Just stdoh, Just stdeh, pid) <-
        createProcess p{ std_out = CreatePipe
                       , std_err = CreatePipe
                       , env     = Just new_env
                       }

    outMVar <- newEmptyMVar
    errMVar <- newEmptyMVar

    _ <- forkIO $ do
        stdo <- hGetContents stdoh
        _ <- evaluate (length stdo)
        putMVar outMVar stdo

    _ <- forkIO $ do
        stde <- hGetContents stdeh
        _ <- evaluate (length stde)
        putMVar errMVar stde

    out <- takeMVar outMVar
    hClose stdoh
    err <- takeMVar errMVar
    hClose stdeh

    ex <- waitForProcess pid

    return (ex, out, err)

-- Don't let gcc localize version info string, #8825
en_locale_env :: [(String, String)]
en_locale_env = [("LANGUAGE", "en")]

-- If the -B<dir> option is set, add <dir> to PATH.  This works around
-- a bug in gcc on Windows Vista where it can't find its auxiliary
-- binaries (see bug #1110).
getGccEnv :: [Option] -> IO (Maybe [(String,String)])
getGccEnv opts =
  if null b_dirs
     then return Nothing
     else do env <- getEnvironment
             return (Just (map mangle_path env))
 where
  (b_dirs, _) = partitionWith get_b_opt opts

  get_b_opt (Option ('-':'B':dir)) = Left dir
  get_b_opt other = Right other

  mangle_path (path,paths) | map toUpper path == "PATH"
        = (path, '\"' : head b_dirs ++ "\";" ++ paths)
  mangle_path other = other

runSplit :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runSplit dflags args = do
  let (p,args0) = pgm_s dflags
  runSomething dflags "Splitter" p (args0++args)

runAs :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runAs dflags args = do
  let (p,args0) = pgm_a dflags
      args1 = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_a)
      args2 = args0 ++ args1 ++ args
  mb_env <- getGccEnv args2
  runSomethingFiltered dflags id "Assembler" p args2 mb_env

-- | Run the LLVM Optimiser
runLlvmOpt :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runLlvmOpt dflags args = do
  let (p,args0) = pgm_lo dflags
      args1 = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_lo)
  runSomething dflags "LLVM Optimiser" p (args0 ++ args1 ++ args)

-- | Run the LLVM Compiler
runLlvmLlc :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runLlvmLlc dflags args = do
  let (p,args0) = pgm_lc dflags
      args1 = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_lc)
  runSomething dflags "LLVM Compiler" p (args0 ++ args1 ++ args)

-- | Run the clang compiler (used as an assembler for the LLVM
-- backend on OS X as LLVM doesn't support the OS X system
-- assembler)
runClang :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runClang dflags args = do
  -- we simply assume its available on the PATH
  let clang = "clang"
      -- be careful what options we call clang with
      -- see #5903 and #7617 for bugs caused by this.
      (_,args0) = pgm_a dflags
      args1 = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_a)
      args2 = args0 ++ args1 ++ args
  mb_env <- getGccEnv args2
  Exception.catch (do
        runSomethingFiltered dflags id "Clang (Assembler)" clang args2 mb_env
    )
    (\(err :: SomeException) -> do
        errorMsg dflags $
            text ("Error running clang! you need clang installed to use the" ++
                  " LLVM backend") $+$
            text "(or GHC tried to execute clang incorrectly)"
        throwIO err
    )

-- | Figure out which version of LLVM we are running this session
figureLlvmVersion :: DynFlags -> IO (Maybe (Int, Int))
figureLlvmVersion dflags = do
  let (pgm,opts) = pgm_lc dflags
      args = filter notNull (map showOpt opts)
      -- we grab the args even though they should be useless just in
      -- case the user is using a customised 'llc' that requires some
      -- of the options they've specified. llc doesn't care what other
      -- options are specified when '-version' is used.
      args' = args ++ ["-version"]
  ver <- catchIO (do
             (pin, pout, perr, _) <- runInteractiveProcess pgm args'
                                             Nothing Nothing
             {- > llc -version
                  LLVM (http://llvm.org/):
                    LLVM version 3.5.2
                    ...
             -}
             hSetBinaryMode pout False
             _     <- hGetLine pout
             vline <- dropWhile (not . isDigit) `fmap` hGetLine pout
             v     <- case span (/= '.') vline of
                        ("",_)  -> fail "no digits!"
                        (x,y) -> return (read x
                                        , read $ takeWhile isDigit $ drop 1 y)

             hClose pin
             hClose pout
             hClose perr
             return $ Just v
            )
            (\err -> do
                debugTraceMsg dflags 2
                    (text "Error (figuring out LLVM version):" <+>
                     text (show err))
                errorMsg dflags $ vcat
                    [ text "Warning:", nest 9 $
                          text "Couldn't figure out LLVM version!" $$
                          text ("Make sure you have installed LLVM " ++
                                llvmVersionStr supportedLlvmVersion) ]
                return Nothing)
  return ver

{- Note [Windows stack usage]

See: Trac #8870 (and #8834 for related info)

On Windows, occasionally we need to grow the stack. In order to do
this, we would normally just bump the stack pointer - but there's a
catch on Windows.

If the stack pointer is bumped by more than a single page, then the
pages between the initial pointer and the resulting location must be
properly committed by the Windows virtual memory subsystem. This is
only needed in the event we bump by more than one page (i.e 4097 bytes
or more).

Windows compilers solve this by emitting a call to a special function
called _chkstk, which does this committing of the pages for you.

The reason this was causing a segfault was because due to the fact the
new code generator tends to generate larger functions, we needed more
stack space in GHC itself. In the x86 codegen, we needed approximately
~12kb of stack space in one go, which caused the process to segfault,
as the intervening pages were not committed.

In the future, we should do the same thing, to make the problem
completely go away. In the mean time, we're using a workaround: we
instruct the linker to specify the generated PE as having an initial
reserved stack size of 8mb, as well as a initial *committed* stack
size of 8mb. The default committed size was previously only 4k.

Theoretically it's possible to still hit this problem if you request a
stack bump of more than 8mb in one go. But the amount of code
necessary is quite large, and 8mb "should be more than enough for
anyone" right now (he said, before millions of lines of code cried out
in terror).

-}

{- Note [Run-time linker info]

See also: Trac #5240, Trac #6063, Trac #10110

Before 'runLink', we need to be sure to get the relevant information
about the linker we're using at runtime to see if we need any extra
options. For example, GNU ld requires '--reduce-memory-overheads' and
'--hash-size=31' in order to use reasonable amounts of memory (see
trac #5240.) But this isn't supported in GNU gold.

Generally, the linker changing from what was detected at ./configure
time has always been possible using -pgml, but on Linux it can happen
'transparently' by installing packages like binutils-gold, which
change what /usr/bin/ld actually points to.

Clang vs GCC notes:

For gcc, 'gcc -Wl,--version' gives a bunch of output about how to
invoke the linker before the version information string. For 'clang',
the version information for 'ld' is all that's output. For this
reason, we typically need to slurp up all of the standard error output
and look through it.

Other notes:

We cache the LinkerInfo inside DynFlags, since clients may link
multiple times. The definition of LinkerInfo is there to avoid a
circular dependency.

-}

{- Note [ELF needed shared libs]

Some distributions change the link editor's default handling of
ELF DT_NEEDED tags to include only those shared objects that are
needed to resolve undefined symbols. For Template Haskell we need
the last temporary shared library also if it is not needed for the
currently linked temporary shared library. We specify --no-as-needed
to override the default. This flag exists in GNU ld and GNU gold.

The flag is only needed on ELF systems. On Windows (PE) and Mac OS X
(Mach-O) the flag is not needed.

-}

{- Note [Windows static libGCC]

The GCC versions being upgraded to in #10726 are configured with
dynamic linking of libgcc supported. This results in libgcc being
linked dynamically when a shared library is created.

This introduces thus an extra dependency on GCC dll that was not
needed before by shared libraries created with GHC. This is a particular
issue on Windows because you get a non-obvious error due to this missing
dependency. This dependent dll is also not commonly on your path.

For this reason using the static libgcc is preferred as it preserves
the same behaviour that existed before. There are however some very good
reasons to have the shared version as well as described on page 181 of
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-5.2.0/gcc.pdf :

"There are several situations in which an application should use the
 shared ‘libgcc’ instead of the static version. The most common of these
 is when the application wishes to throw and catch exceptions across different
 shared libraries. In that case, each of the libraries as well as the application
 itself should use the shared ‘libgcc’. "

-}

neededLinkArgs :: LinkerInfo -> [Option]
neededLinkArgs (GnuLD o)     = o
neededLinkArgs (GnuGold o)   = o
neededLinkArgs (DarwinLD o)  = o
neededLinkArgs (SolarisLD o) = o
neededLinkArgs (AixLD o)     = o
neededLinkArgs UnknownLD     = []

-- Grab linker info and cache it in DynFlags.
getLinkerInfo :: DynFlags -> IO LinkerInfo
getLinkerInfo dflags = do
  info <- readIORef (rtldInfo dflags)
  case info of
    Just v  -> return v
    Nothing -> do
      v <- getLinkerInfo' dflags
      writeIORef (rtldInfo dflags) (Just v)
      return v

-- See Note [Run-time linker info].
getLinkerInfo' :: DynFlags -> IO LinkerInfo
getLinkerInfo' dflags = do
  let platform = targetPlatform dflags
      os = platformOS platform
      (pgm,args0) = pgm_l dflags
      args1     = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_l)
      args2     = args0 ++ args1
      args3     = filter notNull (map showOpt args2)

      -- Try to grab the info from the process output.
      parseLinkerInfo stdo _stde _exitc
        | any ("GNU ld" `isPrefixOf`) stdo =
          -- GNU ld specifically needs to use less memory. This especially
          -- hurts on small object files. Trac #5240.
          -- Set DT_NEEDED for all shared libraries. Trac #10110.
          -- TODO: Investigate if these help or hurt when using split sections.
          return (GnuLD $ map Option ["-Wl,--hash-size=31",
                                      "-Wl,--reduce-memory-overheads",
                                      -- ELF specific flag
                                      -- see Note [ELF needed shared libs]
                                      "-Wl,--no-as-needed"])

        | any ("GNU gold" `isPrefixOf`) stdo =
          -- GNU gold only needs --no-as-needed. Trac #10110.
          -- ELF specific flag, see Note [ELF needed shared libs]
          return (GnuGold [Option "-Wl,--no-as-needed"])

         -- Unknown linker.
        | otherwise = fail "invalid --version output, or linker is unsupported"

  -- Process the executable call
  info <- catchIO (do
             case os of
               OSSolaris2 ->
                 -- Solaris uses its own Solaris linker. Even all
                 -- GNU C are recommended to configure with Solaris
                 -- linker instead of using GNU binutils linker. Also
                 -- all GCC distributed with Solaris follows this rule
                 -- precisely so we assume here, the Solaris linker is
                 -- used.
                 return $ SolarisLD []
               OSAIX ->
                 -- IBM AIX uses its own non-binutils linker as well
                 return $ AixLD []
               OSDarwin ->
                 -- Darwin has neither GNU Gold or GNU LD, but a strange linker
                 -- that doesn't support --version. We can just assume that's
                 -- what we're using.
                 return $ DarwinLD []
               OSiOS ->
                 -- Ditto for iOS
                 return $ DarwinLD []
               OSMinGW32 ->
                 -- GHC doesn't support anything but GNU ld on Windows anyway.
                 -- Process creation is also fairly expensive on win32, so
                 -- we short-circuit here.
                 return $ GnuLD $ map Option
                   [ -- Reduce ld memory usage
                     "-Wl,--hash-size=31"
                   , "-Wl,--reduce-memory-overheads"
                     -- Increase default stack, see
                     -- Note [Windows stack usage]
                     -- Force static linking of libGCC
                     -- Note [Windows static libGCC]
                   , "-Xlinker", "--stack=0x800000,0x800000", "-static-libgcc" ]
               _ -> do
                 -- In practice, we use the compiler as the linker here. Pass
                 -- -Wl,--version to get linker version info.
                 (exitc, stdo, stde) <- readProcessEnvWithExitCode pgm
                                        (["-Wl,--version"] ++ args3)
                                        en_locale_env
                 -- Split the output by lines to make certain kinds
                 -- of processing easier. In particular, 'clang' and 'gcc'
                 -- have slightly different outputs for '-Wl,--version', but
                 -- it's still easy to figure out.
                 parseLinkerInfo (lines stdo) (lines stde) exitc
            )
            (\err -> do
                debugTraceMsg dflags 2
                    (text "Error (figuring out linker information):" <+>
                     text (show err))
                errorMsg dflags $ hang (text "Warning:") 9 $
                  text "Couldn't figure out linker information!" $$
                  text "Make sure you're using GNU ld, GNU gold" <+>
                  text "or the built in OS X linker, etc."
                return UnknownLD)
  return info

-- Grab compiler info and cache it in DynFlags.
getCompilerInfo :: DynFlags -> IO CompilerInfo
getCompilerInfo dflags = do
  info <- readIORef (rtccInfo dflags)
  case info of
    Just v  -> return v
    Nothing -> do
      v <- getCompilerInfo' dflags
      writeIORef (rtccInfo dflags) (Just v)
      return v

-- See Note [Run-time linker info].
getCompilerInfo' :: DynFlags -> IO CompilerInfo
getCompilerInfo' dflags = do
  let (pgm,_) = pgm_c dflags
      -- Try to grab the info from the process output.
      parseCompilerInfo _stdo stde _exitc
        -- Regular GCC
        | any ("gcc version" `isInfixOf`) stde =
          return GCC
        -- Regular clang
        | any ("clang version" `isInfixOf`) stde =
          return Clang
        -- XCode 5.1 clang
        | any ("Apple LLVM version 5.1" `isPrefixOf`) stde =
          return AppleClang51
        -- XCode 5 clang
        | any ("Apple LLVM version" `isPrefixOf`) stde =
          return AppleClang
        -- XCode 4.1 clang
        | any ("Apple clang version" `isPrefixOf`) stde =
          return AppleClang
         -- Unknown linker.
        | otherwise = fail "invalid -v output, or compiler is unsupported"

  -- Process the executable call
  info <- catchIO (do
                (exitc, stdo, stde) <-
                    readProcessEnvWithExitCode pgm ["-v"] en_locale_env
                -- Split the output by lines to make certain kinds
                -- of processing easier.
                parseCompilerInfo (lines stdo) (lines stde) exitc
            )
            (\err -> do
                debugTraceMsg dflags 2
                    (text "Error (figuring out C compiler information):" <+>
                     text (show err))
                errorMsg dflags $ hang (text "Warning:") 9 $
                  text "Couldn't figure out C compiler information!" $$
                  text "Make sure you're using GNU gcc, or clang"
                return UnknownCC)
  return info

runLink :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runLink dflags args = do
  -- See Note [Run-time linker info]
  linkargs <- neededLinkArgs `fmap` getLinkerInfo dflags
  let (p,args0) = pgm_l dflags
      args1     = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_l)
      args2     = args0 ++ linkargs ++ args1 ++ args
  mb_env <- getGccEnv args2
  runSomethingResponseFile dflags ld_filter "Linker" p args2 mb_env
  where
    ld_filter = case (platformOS (targetPlatform dflags)) of
                  OSSolaris2 -> sunos_ld_filter
                  _ -> id
{-
  SunOS/Solaris ld emits harmless warning messages about unresolved
  symbols in case of compiling into shared library when we do not
  link against all the required libs. That is the case of GHC which
  does not link against RTS library explicitly in order to be able to
  choose the library later based on binary application linking
  parameters. The warnings look like:

Undefined                       first referenced
 symbol                             in file
stg_ap_n_fast                       ./T2386_Lib.o
stg_upd_frame_info                  ./T2386_Lib.o
templatezmhaskell_LanguageziHaskellziTHziLib_litE_closure ./T2386_Lib.o
templatezmhaskell_LanguageziHaskellziTHziLib_appE_closure ./T2386_Lib.o
templatezmhaskell_LanguageziHaskellziTHziLib_conE_closure ./T2386_Lib.o
templatezmhaskell_LanguageziHaskellziTHziSyntax_mkNameGzud_closure ./T2386_Lib.o
newCAF                              ./T2386_Lib.o
stg_bh_upd_frame_info               ./T2386_Lib.o
stg_ap_ppp_fast                     ./T2386_Lib.o
templatezmhaskell_LanguageziHaskellziTHziLib_stringL_closure ./T2386_Lib.o
stg_ap_p_fast                       ./T2386_Lib.o
stg_ap_pp_fast                      ./T2386_Lib.o
ld: warning: symbol referencing errors

  this is actually coming from T2386 testcase. The emitting of those
  warnings is also a reason why so many TH testcases fail on Solaris.

  Following filter code is SunOS/Solaris linker specific and should
  filter out only linker warnings. Please note that the logic is a
  little bit more complex due to the simple reason that we need to preserve
  any other linker emitted messages. If there are any. Simply speaking
  if we see "Undefined" and later "ld: warning:..." then we omit all
  text between (including) the marks. Otherwise we copy the whole output.
-}
    sunos_ld_filter :: String -> String
    sunos_ld_filter = unlines . sunos_ld_filter' . lines
    sunos_ld_filter' x = if (undefined_found x && ld_warning_found x)
                         then (ld_prefix x) ++ (ld_postfix x)
                         else x
    breakStartsWith x y = break (isPrefixOf x) y
    ld_prefix = fst . breakStartsWith "Undefined"
    undefined_found = not . null . snd . breakStartsWith "Undefined"
    ld_warn_break = breakStartsWith "ld: warning: symbol referencing errors"
    ld_postfix = tail . snd . ld_warn_break
    ld_warning_found = not . null . snd . ld_warn_break


runLibtool :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runLibtool dflags args = do
  linkargs <- neededLinkArgs `fmap` getLinkerInfo dflags
  let args1      = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_l)
      args2      = [Option "-static"] ++ args1 ++ args ++ linkargs
      libtool    = pgm_libtool dflags
  mb_env <- getGccEnv args2
  runSomethingFiltered dflags id "Linker" libtool args2 mb_env

runMkDLL :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runMkDLL dflags args = do
  let (p,args0) = pgm_dll dflags
      args1 = args0 ++ args
  mb_env <- getGccEnv (args0++args)
  runSomethingFiltered dflags id "Make DLL" p args1 mb_env

runWindres :: DynFlags -> [Option] -> IO ()
runWindres dflags args = do
  let (gcc, gcc_args) = pgm_c dflags
      windres = pgm_windres dflags
      opts = map Option (getOpts dflags opt_windres)
      quote x = "\"" ++ x ++ "\""
      args' = -- If windres.exe and gcc.exe are in a directory containing
              -- spaces then windres fails to run gcc. We therefore need
              -- to tell it what command to use...
              Option ("--preprocessor=" ++
                      unwords (map quote (gcc :
                                          map showOpt gcc_args ++
                                          map showOpt opts ++
                                          ["-E", "-xc", "-DRC_INVOKED"])))
              -- ...but if we do that then if windres calls popen then
              -- it can't understand the quoting, so we have to use
              -- --use-temp-file so that it interprets it correctly.
              -- See #1828.
            : Option "--use-temp-file"
            : args
  mb_env <- getGccEnv gcc_args
  runSomethingFiltered dflags id "Windres" windres args' mb_env

touch :: DynFlags -> String -> String -> IO ()
touch dflags purpose arg =
  runSomething dflags purpose (pgm_T dflags) [FileOption "" arg]

copy :: DynFlags -> String -> FilePath -> FilePath -> IO ()
copy dflags purpose from to = copyWithHeader dflags purpose Nothing from to

copyWithHeader :: DynFlags -> String -> Maybe String -> FilePath -> FilePath
               -> IO ()
copyWithHeader dflags purpose maybe_header from to = do
  showPass dflags purpose

  hout <- openBinaryFile to   WriteMode
  hin  <- openBinaryFile from ReadMode
  ls <- hGetContents hin -- inefficient, but it'll do for now. ToDo: speed up
  maybe (return ()) (header hout) maybe_header
  hPutStr hout ls
  hClose hout
  hClose hin
 where
  -- write the header string in UTF-8.  The header is something like
  --   {-# LINE "foo.hs" #-}
  -- and we want to make sure a Unicode filename isn't mangled.
  header h str = do
   hSetEncoding h utf8
   hPutStr h str
   hSetBinaryMode h True



{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Managing temporary files
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

cleanTempDirs :: DynFlags -> IO ()
cleanTempDirs dflags
   = unless (gopt Opt_KeepTmpFiles dflags)
   $ mask_
   $ do let ref = dirsToClean dflags
        ds <- atomicModifyIORef' ref $ \ds -> (Map.empty, ds)
        removeTmpDirs dflags (Map.elems ds)

cleanTempFiles :: DynFlags -> IO ()
cleanTempFiles dflags
   = unless (gopt Opt_KeepTmpFiles dflags)
   $ mask_
   $ do let ref = filesToClean dflags
        fs <- atomicModifyIORef' ref $ \fs -> ([],fs)
        removeTmpFiles dflags fs

cleanTempFilesExcept :: DynFlags -> [FilePath] -> IO ()
cleanTempFilesExcept dflags dont_delete
   = unless (gopt Opt_KeepTmpFiles dflags)
   $ mask_
   $ do let ref = filesToClean dflags
        to_delete <- atomicModifyIORef' ref $ \files ->
            let (to_keep,to_delete) = partition (`elem` dont_delete) files
            in  (to_keep,to_delete)
        removeTmpFiles dflags to_delete


-- Return a unique numeric temp file suffix
newTempSuffix :: DynFlags -> IO Int
newTempSuffix dflags = atomicModifyIORef' (nextTempSuffix dflags) $ \n -> (n+1,n)

-- Find a temporary name that doesn't already exist.
newTempName :: DynFlags -> Suffix -> IO FilePath
newTempName dflags extn
  = do d <- getTempDir dflags
       findTempName (d </> "ghc_") -- See Note [Deterministic base name]
  where
    findTempName :: FilePath -> IO FilePath
    findTempName prefix
      = do n <- newTempSuffix dflags
           let filename = prefix ++ show n <.> extn
           b <- doesFileExist filename
           if b then findTempName prefix
                else do -- clean it up later
                        consIORef (filesToClean dflags) filename
                        return filename

newTempLibName :: DynFlags -> Suffix -> IO (FilePath, FilePath, String)
newTempLibName dflags extn
  = do d <- getTempDir dflags
       findTempName d ("ghc_")
  where
    findTempName :: FilePath -> String -> IO (FilePath, FilePath, String)
    findTempName dir prefix
      = do n <- newTempSuffix dflags -- See Note [Deterministic base name]
           let libname = prefix ++ show n
               filename = dir </> "lib" ++ libname <.> extn
           b <- doesFileExist filename
           if b then findTempName dir prefix
                else do -- clean it up later
                        consIORef (filesToClean dflags) filename
                        return (filename, dir, libname)


-- Return our temporary directory within tmp_dir, creating one if we
-- don't have one yet.
getTempDir :: DynFlags -> IO FilePath
getTempDir dflags = do
    mapping <- readIORef dir_ref
    case Map.lookup tmp_dir mapping of
        Nothing -> do
            pid <- getProcessID
            let prefix = tmp_dir </> "ghc" ++ show pid ++ "_"
            mask_ $ mkTempDir prefix
        Just dir -> return dir
  where
    tmp_dir = tmpDir dflags
    dir_ref = dirsToClean dflags

    mkTempDir :: FilePath -> IO FilePath
    mkTempDir prefix = do
        n <- newTempSuffix dflags
        let our_dir = prefix ++ show n

        -- 1. Speculatively create our new directory.
        createDirectory our_dir

        -- 2. Update the dirsToClean mapping unless an entry already exists
        -- (i.e. unless another thread beat us to it).
        their_dir <- atomicModifyIORef' dir_ref $ \mapping ->
            case Map.lookup tmp_dir mapping of
                Just dir -> (mapping, Just dir)
                Nothing  -> (Map.insert tmp_dir our_dir mapping, Nothing)

        -- 3. If there was an existing entry, return it and delete the
        -- directory we created.  Otherwise return the directory we created.
        case their_dir of
            Nothing  -> do
                debugTraceMsg dflags 2 $
                    text "Created temporary directory:" <+> text our_dir
                return our_dir
            Just dir -> do
                removeDirectory our_dir
                return dir
      `catchIO` \e -> if isAlreadyExistsError e
                      then mkTempDir prefix else ioError e

-- Note [Deterministic base name]
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--
-- The filename of temporary files, especially the basename of C files, can end
-- up in the output in some form, e.g. as part of linker debug information. In the
-- interest of bit-wise exactly reproducible compilation (#4012), the basename of
-- the temporary file no longer contains random information (it used to contain
-- the process id).
--
-- This is ok, as the temporary directory used contains the pid (see getTempDir).

addFilesToClean :: DynFlags -> [FilePath] -> IO ()
-- May include wildcards [used by DriverPipeline.run_phase SplitMangle]
addFilesToClean dflags new_files
    = atomicModifyIORef' (filesToClean dflags) $ \files -> (new_files++files, ())

removeTmpDirs :: DynFlags -> [FilePath] -> IO ()
removeTmpDirs dflags ds
  = traceCmd dflags "Deleting temp dirs"
             ("Deleting: " ++ unwords ds)
             (mapM_ (removeWith dflags removeDirectory) ds)

removeTmpFiles :: DynFlags -> [FilePath] -> IO ()
removeTmpFiles dflags fs
  = warnNon $
    traceCmd dflags "Deleting temp files"
             ("Deleting: " ++ unwords deletees)
             (mapM_ (removeWith dflags removeFile) deletees)
  where
     -- Flat out refuse to delete files that are likely to be source input
     -- files (is there a worse bug than having a compiler delete your source
     -- files?)
     --
     -- Deleting source files is a sign of a bug elsewhere, so prominently flag
     -- the condition.
    warnNon act
     | null non_deletees = act
     | otherwise         = do
        putMsg dflags (text "WARNING - NOT deleting source files:" <+> hsep (map text non_deletees))
        act

    (non_deletees, deletees) = partition isHaskellUserSrcFilename fs

removeWith :: DynFlags -> (FilePath -> IO ()) -> FilePath -> IO ()
removeWith dflags remover f = remover f `catchIO`
  (\e ->
   let msg = if isDoesNotExistError e
             then text "Warning: deleting non-existent" <+> text f
             else text "Warning: exception raised when deleting"
                                            <+> text f <> colon
               $$ text (show e)
   in debugTraceMsg dflags 2 msg
  )

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Running an external program

runSomething :: DynFlags
             -> String          -- For -v message
             -> String          -- Command name (possibly a full path)
                                --      assumed already dos-ified
             -> [Option]        -- Arguments
                                --      runSomething will dos-ify them
             -> IO ()

runSomething dflags phase_name pgm args =
  runSomethingFiltered dflags id phase_name pgm args Nothing

-- | Run a command, placing the arguments in an external response file.
--
-- This command is used in order to avoid overlong command line arguments on
-- Windows. The command line arguments are first written to an external,
-- temporary response file, and then passed to the linker via @filepath.
-- response files for passing them in. See:
--
--     https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Response_Files
--     https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10777
runSomethingResponseFile
  :: DynFlags -> (String->String) -> String -> String -> [Option]
  -> Maybe [(String,String)] -> IO ()

runSomethingResponseFile dflags filter_fn phase_name pgm args mb_env =
    runSomethingWith dflags phase_name pgm args $ \real_args -> do
        fp <- getResponseFile real_args
        let args = ['@':fp]
        r <- builderMainLoop dflags filter_fn pgm args mb_env
        return (r,())
  where
    getResponseFile args = do
      fp <- newTempName dflags "rsp"
      withFile fp WriteMode $ \h -> do
          hSetEncoding h utf8
          hPutStr h $ unlines $ map escape args
      return fp

    -- Note: Response files have backslash-escaping, double quoting, and are
    -- whitespace separated (some implementations use newline, others any
    -- whitespace character). Therefore, escape any backslashes, newlines, and
    -- double quotes in the argument, and surround the content with double
    -- quotes.
    --
    -- Another possibility that could be considered would be to convert
    -- backslashes in the argument to forward slashes. This would generally do
    -- the right thing, since backslashes in general only appear in arguments
    -- as part of file paths on Windows, and the forward slash is accepted for
    -- those. However, escaping is more reliable, in case somehow a backslash
    -- appears in a non-file.
    escape x = concat
        [ "\""
        , concatMap
            (\c ->
                case c of
                    '\\' -> "\\\\"
                    '\n' -> "\\n"
                    '\"' -> "\\\""
                    _    -> [c])
            x
        , "\""
        ]

runSomethingFiltered
  :: DynFlags -> (String->String) -> String -> String -> [Option]
  -> Maybe [(String,String)] -> IO ()

runSomethingFiltered dflags filter_fn phase_name pgm args mb_env = do
    runSomethingWith dflags phase_name pgm args $ \real_args -> do
        r <- builderMainLoop dflags filter_fn pgm real_args mb_env
        return (r,())

runSomethingWith
  :: DynFlags -> String -> String -> [Option]
  -> ([String] -> IO (ExitCode, a))
  -> IO a

runSomethingWith dflags phase_name pgm args io = do
  let real_args = filter notNull (map showOpt args)
      cmdLine = showCommandForUser pgm real_args
  traceCmd dflags phase_name cmdLine $ handleProc pgm phase_name $ io real_args

handleProc :: String -> String -> IO (ExitCode, r) -> IO r
handleProc pgm phase_name proc = do
    (rc, r) <- proc `catchIO` handler
    case rc of
      ExitSuccess{} -> return r
      ExitFailure n -> throwGhcExceptionIO (
            ProgramError ("`" ++ takeFileName pgm ++ "'" ++
                          " failed in phase `" ++ phase_name ++ "'." ++
                          " (Exit code: " ++ show n ++ ")"))
  where
    handler err =
       if IO.isDoesNotExistError err
          then does_not_exist
          else throwGhcExceptionIO (ProgramError $ show err)

    does_not_exist = throwGhcExceptionIO (InstallationError ("could not execute: " ++ pgm))


builderMainLoop :: DynFlags -> (String -> String) -> FilePath
                -> [String] -> Maybe [(String, String)]
                -> IO ExitCode
builderMainLoop dflags filter_fn pgm real_args mb_env = do
  chan <- newChan
  (hStdIn, hStdOut, hStdErr, hProcess) <- runInteractiveProcess pgm real_args Nothing mb_env

  -- and run a loop piping the output from the compiler to the log_action in DynFlags
  hSetBuffering hStdOut LineBuffering
  hSetBuffering hStdErr LineBuffering
  _ <- forkIO (readerProc chan hStdOut filter_fn)
  _ <- forkIO (readerProc chan hStdErr filter_fn)
  -- we don't want to finish until 2 streams have been completed
  -- (stdout and stderr)
  -- nor until 1 exit code has been retrieved.
  rc <- loop chan hProcess (2::Integer) (1::Integer) ExitSuccess
  -- after that, we're done here.
  hClose hStdIn
  hClose hStdOut
  hClose hStdErr
  return rc
  where
    -- status starts at zero, and increments each time either
    -- a reader process gets EOF, or the build proc exits.  We wait
    -- for all of these to happen (status==3).
    -- ToDo: we should really have a contingency plan in case any of
    -- the threads dies, such as a timeout.
    loop _    _        0 0 exitcode = return exitcode
    loop chan hProcess t p exitcode = do
      mb_code <- if p > 0
                   then getProcessExitCode hProcess
                   else return Nothing
      case mb_code of
        Just code -> loop chan hProcess t (p-1) code
        Nothing
          | t > 0 -> do
              msg <- readChan chan
              case msg of
                BuildMsg msg -> do
                  log_action dflags dflags NoReason SevInfo noSrcSpan defaultUserStyle msg
                  loop chan hProcess t p exitcode
                BuildError loc msg -> do
                  log_action dflags dflags NoReason SevError (mkSrcSpan loc loc) defaultUserStyle msg
                  loop chan hProcess t p exitcode
                EOF ->
                  loop chan hProcess (t-1) p exitcode
          | otherwise -> loop chan hProcess t p exitcode

readerProc :: Chan BuildMessage -> Handle -> (String -> String) -> IO ()
readerProc chan hdl filter_fn =
    (do str <- hGetContents hdl
        loop (linesPlatform (filter_fn str)) Nothing)
    `finally`
       writeChan chan EOF
        -- ToDo: check errors more carefully
        -- ToDo: in the future, the filter should be implemented as
        -- a stream transformer.
    where
        loop []     Nothing    = return ()
        loop []     (Just err) = writeChan chan err
        loop (l:ls) in_err     =
                case in_err of
                  Just err@(BuildError srcLoc msg)
                    | leading_whitespace l -> do
                        loop ls (Just (BuildError srcLoc (msg $$ text l)))
                    | otherwise -> do
                        writeChan chan err
                        checkError l ls
                  Nothing -> do
                        checkError l ls
                  _ -> panic "readerProc/loop"

        checkError l ls
           = case parseError l of
                Nothing -> do
                    writeChan chan (BuildMsg (text l))
                    loop ls Nothing
                Just (file, lineNum, colNum, msg) -> do
                    let srcLoc = mkSrcLoc (mkFastString file) lineNum colNum
                    loop ls (Just (BuildError srcLoc (text msg)))

        leading_whitespace []    = False
        leading_whitespace (x:_) = isSpace x

parseError :: String -> Maybe (String, Int, Int, String)
parseError s0 = case breakColon s0 of
                Just (filename, s1) ->
                    case breakIntColon s1 of
                    Just (lineNum, s2) ->
                        case breakIntColon s2 of
                        Just (columnNum, s3) ->
                            Just (filename, lineNum, columnNum, s3)
                        Nothing ->
                            Just (filename, lineNum, 0, s2)
                    Nothing -> Nothing
                Nothing -> Nothing

breakColon :: String -> Maybe (String, String)
breakColon xs = case break (':' ==) xs of
                    (ys, _:zs) -> Just (ys, zs)
                    _ -> Nothing

breakIntColon :: String -> Maybe (Int, String)
breakIntColon xs = case break (':' ==) xs of
                       (ys, _:zs)
                        | not (null ys) && all isAscii ys && all isDigit ys ->
                           Just (read ys, zs)
                       _ -> Nothing

data BuildMessage
  = BuildMsg   !SDoc
  | BuildError !SrcLoc !SDoc
  | EOF

traceCmd :: DynFlags -> String -> String -> IO a -> IO a
-- trace the command (at two levels of verbosity)
traceCmd dflags phase_name cmd_line action
 = do   { let verb = verbosity dflags
        ; showPass dflags phase_name
        ; debugTraceMsg dflags 3 (text cmd_line)
        ; case flushErr dflags of
              FlushErr io -> io

           -- And run it!
        ; action `catchIO` handle_exn verb
        }
  where
    handle_exn _verb exn = do { debugTraceMsg dflags 2 (char '\n')
                              ; debugTraceMsg dflags 2 (text "Failed:" <+> text cmd_line <+> text (show exn))
                              ; throwGhcExceptionIO (ProgramError (show exn))}

{-
************************************************************************
*                                                                      *
\subsection{Support code}
*                                                                      *
************************************************************************
-}

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Define       getBaseDir     :: IO (Maybe String)

getBaseDir :: IO (Maybe String)
#if defined(mingw32_HOST_OS)
-- Assuming we are running ghc, accessed by path  $(stuff)/bin/ghc.exe,
-- return the path $(stuff)/lib.
getBaseDir = try_size 2048 -- plenty, PATH_MAX is 512 under Win32.
  where
    try_size size = allocaArray (fromIntegral size) $ \buf -> do
        ret <- c_GetModuleFileName nullPtr buf size
        case ret of
          0 -> return Nothing
          _ | ret < size -> do path <- peekCWString buf
                               real <- getFinalPath path -- try to resolve symlinks paths
                               return $ (Just . rootDir . sanitize . maybe path id) real
            | otherwise  -> try_size (size * 2)

    -- getFinalPath returns paths in full raw form.
    -- Unfortunately GHC isn't set up to handle these
    -- So if the call succeeded, we need to drop the
    -- \\?\ prefix.
    sanitize s = if "\\\\?\\" `isPrefixOf` s
                    then drop 4 s
                    else s

    rootDir s = case splitFileName $ normalise s of
                (d, ghc_exe)
                 | lower ghc_exe `elem` ["ghc.exe",
                                         "ghc-stage1.exe",
                                         "ghc-stage2.exe",
                                         "ghc-stage3.exe"] ->
                    case splitFileName $ takeDirectory d of
                    -- ghc is in $topdir/bin/ghc.exe
                    (d', bin) | lower bin == "bin" -> takeDirectory d' </> "lib"
                    _ -> fail
                _ -> fail
        where fail = panic ("can't decompose ghc.exe path: " ++ show s)
              lower = map toLower

foreign import WINDOWS_CCONV unsafe "windows.h GetModuleFileNameW"
  c_GetModuleFileName :: Ptr () -> CWString -> Word32 -> IO Word32

-- Attempt to resolve symlinks in order to find the actual location GHC
-- is located at. See Trac #11759.
getFinalPath :: FilePath -> IO (Maybe FilePath)
getFinalPath name = do
    dllHwnd <- failIfNull "LoadLibray"     $ loadLibrary "kernel32.dll"
    -- Note: The API GetFinalPathNameByHandleW is only available starting from Windows Vista.
    -- This means that we can't bind directly to it since it may be missing.
    -- Instead try to find it's address at runtime and if we don't succeed consider the
    -- function failed.
    addr_m  <- (fmap Just $ failIfNull "getProcAddress" $ getProcAddress dllHwnd "GetFinalPathNameByHandleW")
                  `catch` (\(_ :: SomeException) -> return Nothing)
    case addr_m of
      Nothing   -> return Nothing
      Just addr -> do handle  <- failIf (==iNVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) "CreateFile"
                                        $ createFile name
                                                     gENERIC_READ
                                                     fILE_SHARE_READ
                                                     Nothing
                                                     oPEN_EXISTING
                                                     (fILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL .|. fILE_FLAG_BACKUP_SEMANTICS)
                                                     Nothing
                      let fnPtr = makeGetFinalPathNameByHandle $ castPtrToFunPtr addr
                      path    <- Info.try "GetFinalPathName"
                                    (\buf len -> fnPtr handle buf len 0) 512
                                    `finally` closeHandle handle
                      return $ Just path

type GetFinalPath = HANDLE -> LPTSTR -> DWORD -> DWORD -> IO DWORD

foreign import WINDOWS_CCONV unsafe "dynamic"
  makeGetFinalPathNameByHandle :: FunPtr GetFinalPath -> GetFinalPath
#else
getBaseDir = return Nothing
#endif

#ifdef mingw32_HOST_OS
foreign import ccall unsafe "_getpid" getProcessID :: IO Int -- relies on Int == Int32 on Windows
#else
getProcessID :: IO Int
getProcessID = System.Posix.Internals.c_getpid >>= return . fromIntegral
#endif

-- Divvy up text stream into lines, taking platform dependent
-- line termination into account.
linesPlatform :: String -> [String]
#if !defined(mingw32_HOST_OS)
linesPlatform ls = lines ls
#else
linesPlatform "" = []
linesPlatform xs =
  case lineBreak xs of
    (as,xs1) -> as : linesPlatform xs1
  where
   lineBreak "" = ("","")
   lineBreak ('\r':'\n':xs) = ([],xs)
   lineBreak ('\n':xs) = ([],xs)
   lineBreak (x:xs) = let (as,bs) = lineBreak xs in (x:as,bs)

#endif

{-
Note [No PIE eating while linking]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As of 2016 some Linux distributions (e.g. Debian) have started enabling -pie by
default in their gcc builds. This is incompatible with -r as it implies that we
are producing an executable. Consequently, we must manually pass -no-pie to gcc
when joining object files or linking dynamic libraries. See #12759.
-}

linkDynLib :: DynFlags -> [String] -> [UnitId] -> IO ()
linkDynLib dflags0 o_files dep_packages
 = do
    let -- This is a rather ugly hack to fix dynamically linked
        -- GHC on Windows. If GHC is linked with -threaded, then
        -- it links against libHSrts_thr. But if base is linked
        -- against libHSrts, then both end up getting loaded,
        -- and things go wrong. We therefore link the libraries
        -- with the same RTS flags that we link GHC with.
        dflags1 = if cGhcThreaded then addWay' WayThreaded dflags0
                                  else                     dflags0
        dflags2 = if cGhcDebugged then addWay' WayDebug dflags1
                                  else                  dflags1
        dflags = updateWays dflags2

        verbFlags = getVerbFlags dflags
        o_file = outputFile dflags

    pkgs <- getPreloadPackagesAnd dflags dep_packages

    let pkg_lib_paths = collectLibraryPaths dflags pkgs
    let pkg_lib_path_opts = concatMap get_pkg_lib_path_opts pkg_lib_paths
        get_pkg_lib_path_opts l
         | ( osElfTarget (platformOS (targetPlatform dflags)) ||
             osMachOTarget (platformOS (targetPlatform dflags)) ) &&
           dynLibLoader dflags == SystemDependent &&
           WayDyn `elem` ways dflags
            = ["-L" ++ l, "-Wl,-rpath", "-Wl," ++ l]
         | otherwise = ["-L" ++ l]

    let lib_paths = libraryPaths dflags
    let lib_path_opts = map ("-L"++) lib_paths

    -- We don't want to link our dynamic libs against the RTS package,
    -- because the RTS lib comes in several flavours and we want to be
    -- able to pick the flavour when a binary is linked.
    -- On Windows we need to link the RTS import lib as Windows does
    -- not allow undefined symbols.
    -- The RTS library path is still added to the library search path
    -- above in case the RTS is being explicitly linked in (see #3807).
    let platform = targetPlatform dflags
        os = platformOS platform
        pkgs_no_rts = case os of
                      OSMinGW32 ->
                          pkgs
                      _ ->
                          filter ((/= rtsUnitId) . packageConfigId) pkgs
    let pkg_link_opts = let (package_hs_libs, extra_libs, other_flags) = collectLinkOpts dflags pkgs_no_rts
                        in  package_hs_libs ++ extra_libs ++ other_flags

        -- probably _stub.o files
        -- and last temporary shared object file
    let extra_ld_inputs = ldInputs dflags

    -- frameworks
    pkg_framework_opts <- getPkgFrameworkOpts dflags platform
                                              (map unitId pkgs)
    let framework_opts = getFrameworkOpts dflags platform

    case os of
        OSMinGW32 -> do
            -------------------------------------------------------------
            -- Making a DLL
            -------------------------------------------------------------
            let output_fn = case o_file of
                            Just s -> s
                            Nothing -> "HSdll.dll"

            runLink dflags (
                    map Option verbFlags
                 ++ [ Option "-o"
                    , FileOption "" output_fn
                    , Option "-shared"
                    ] ++
                    [ FileOption "-Wl,--out-implib=" (output_fn ++ ".a")
                    | gopt Opt_SharedImplib dflags
                    ]
                 ++ map (FileOption "") o_files

                 -- Permit the linker to auto link _symbol to _imp_symbol
                 -- This lets us link against DLLs without needing an "import library"
                 ++ [Option "-Wl,--enable-auto-import"]

                 ++ extra_ld_inputs
                 ++ map Option (
                    lib_path_opts
                 ++ pkg_lib_path_opts
                 ++ pkg_link_opts
                ))
        OSDarwin -> do
            -------------------------------------------------------------------
            -- Making a darwin dylib
            -------------------------------------------------------------------
            -- About the options used for Darwin:
            -- -dynamiclib
            --   Apple's way of saying -shared
            -- -undefined dynamic_lookup:
            --   Without these options, we'd have to specify the correct
            --   dependencies for each of the dylibs. Note that we could
            --   (and should) do without this for all libraries except
            --   the RTS; all we need to do is to pass the correct
            --   HSfoo_dyn.dylib files to the link command.
            --   This feature requires Mac OS X 10.3 or later; there is
            --   a similar feature, -flat_namespace -undefined suppress,
            --   which works on earlier versions, but it has other
            --   disadvantages.
            -- -single_module
            --   Build the dynamic library as a single "module", i.e. no
            --   dynamic binding nonsense when referring to symbols from
            --   within the library. The NCG assumes that this option is
            --   specified (on i386, at least).
            -- -install_name
            --   Mac OS/X stores the path where a dynamic library is (to
            --   be) installed in the library itself.  It's called the
            --   "install name" of the library. Then any library or
            --   executable that links against it before it's installed
            --   will search for it in its ultimate install location.
            --   By default we set the install name to the absolute path
            --   at build time, but it can be overridden by the
            --   -dylib-install-name option passed to ghc. Cabal does
            --   this.
            -------------------------------------------------------------------

            let output_fn = case o_file of { Just s -> s; Nothing -> "a.out"; }

            instName <- case dylibInstallName dflags of
                Just n -> return n
                Nothing -> return $ "@rpath" `combine` (takeFileName output_fn)
            runLink dflags (
                    map Option verbFlags
                 ++ [ Option "-dynamiclib"
                    , Option "-o"
                    , FileOption "" output_fn
                    ]
                 ++ map Option o_files
                 ++ [ Option "-undefined",
                      Option "dynamic_lookup",
                      Option "-single_module" ]
                 ++ (if platformArch platform == ArchX86_64
                     then [ ]
                     else [ Option "-Wl,-read_only_relocs,suppress" ])
                 ++ [ Option "-install_name", Option instName ]
                 ++ map Option lib_path_opts
                 ++ extra_ld_inputs
                 ++ map Option framework_opts
                 ++ map Option pkg_lib_path_opts
                 ++ map Option pkg_link_opts
                 ++ map Option pkg_framework_opts
              )
        OSiOS -> throwGhcExceptionIO (ProgramError "dynamic libraries are not supported on iOS target")
        _ -> do
            -------------------------------------------------------------------
            -- Making a DSO
            -------------------------------------------------------------------

            let output_fn = case o_file of { Just s -> s; Nothing -> "a.out"; }
            let bsymbolicFlag = -- we need symbolic linking to resolve
                                -- non-PIC intra-package-relocations
                                ["-Wl,-Bsymbolic"]

            runLink dflags (
                    map Option verbFlags
                 ++ [ Option "-o"
                    , FileOption "" output_fn
                    ]
                    -- See Note [No PIE eating when linking]
                 ++ (if sGccSupportsNoPie (settings dflags)
                     then [Option "-no-pie"]
                     else [])
                 ++ map Option o_files
                 ++ [ Option "-shared" ]
                 ++ map Option bsymbolicFlag
                    -- Set the library soname. We use -h rather than -soname as
                    -- Solaris 10 doesn't support the latter:
                 ++ [ Option ("-Wl,-h," ++ takeFileName output_fn) ]
                 ++ extra_ld_inputs
                 ++ map Option lib_path_opts
                 ++ map Option pkg_lib_path_opts
                 ++ map Option pkg_link_opts
              )

getPkgFrameworkOpts :: DynFlags -> Platform -> [UnitId] -> IO [String]
getPkgFrameworkOpts dflags platform dep_packages
  | platformUsesFrameworks platform = do
    pkg_framework_path_opts <- do
        pkg_framework_paths <- getPackageFrameworkPath dflags dep_packages
        return $ map ("-F" ++) pkg_framework_paths

    pkg_framework_opts <- do
        pkg_frameworks <- getPackageFrameworks dflags dep_packages
        return $ concat [ ["-framework", fw] | fw <- pkg_frameworks ]

    return (pkg_framework_path_opts ++ pkg_framework_opts)

  | otherwise = return []

getFrameworkOpts :: DynFlags -> Platform -> [String]
getFrameworkOpts dflags platform
  | platformUsesFrameworks platform = framework_path_opts ++ framework_opts
  | otherwise = []
  where
    framework_paths     = frameworkPaths dflags
    framework_path_opts = map ("-F" ++) framework_paths

    frameworks     = cmdlineFrameworks dflags
    -- reverse because they're added in reverse order from the cmd line:
    framework_opts = concat [ ["-framework", fw]
                            | fw <- reverse frameworks ]