
Well done Reid! That fixed it. Austin will commit it.
Thanks for such timely help. You are a star
Simon
From: Reid Barton [mailto:rwbarton@gmail.com]
Sent: 27 October 2015 15:54
To: Simon Peyton Jones
Cc: Ben Gamari; ghc-devs@haskell.org
Subject: Re: stg_upd_frame_info still broken
I got lucky and found an error in the first place I looked. I have no way to test it, but I expect that https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1382 will fix the build on Windows, or at least make it closer to correct :)
Regards,
Reid
On Tue, Oct 27, 2015 at 11:25 AM, Reid Barton
I cloned an entirely new GHC repository. Then 'sh validate'. Same result as before: any attempt to run GHCi fails with an unresolved symbol.
bash$ c:/code/HEAD-1/inplace/bin/ghc-stage2 --interactive
GHCi, version 7.11.20151026: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.haskell.org%2fghc%2f&data=01%7c01%7csimonpj%40064d.mgd.microsoft.com%7ce0433e9616f94207642908d2deded4ff%7c72f988bf86f141af91ab2d7cd011db47%7c1&sdata=RYlwVuvgZKZDInxJ2iDfFNuxK0UX2FGcSeplXjv4Yg0%3d :? for help
ghc-stage2.exe: unable to load package `ghc-prim-0.4.0.0'
ghc-stage2.exe: C:\code\HEAD-1\libraries\ghc-prim\dist-install\build\HSghc-prim-0.4.0.0.o: unknown symbol `_stg_upd_frame_info'
How could I actually find what the problem is? Trying random things and hoping the problem goes away clearly is not working.
I would first try to find the object file which is supposed to provide this symbol and figure out whether the problem is one of the RTL (which is what I would put my money on) or some part of the build toolchain. I'm pretty sure this error is being produced by ghc's own runtime linker, which has a built-in symbol table (essentially just a C array of structs of { "foo", &foo }). This array is built from a bunch of macros such as SymI_HasProto(stg_upd_frame_info), which used to be present in rts/Linker.c but were moved to rts/RtsSymbols.c in commit abc214b77d. I guess that commit or a related one was not correct. Windows is the only (major?) platform on which the ghc executable is built statically by default, and therefore uses ghc's own runtime linker. I'll try building a Linux ghc with GHC_DYNAMIC=NO and if it exhibits the same problem I should be able to provide a quick fix. Regards, Reid Barton