
On June 28, 2019 5:09:45 AM EDT, "Ömer Sinan Ağacan"
Hi all,
I'm currently going through this torturous process and I'm hoping that someone here will be able to help.
I'm making changes in the codegen. My changes are currently buggy, and I need a working stage 1 compiler to be able to debug. Basically I need to build libraries using the branch my changes are based on, then build stage 1 with my branch, so that I'll be able to build and run programs using stage 1 that uses my codegen changes. The changes are compatible with the old codegen (i.e. no changes in calling conventions or anything like that) so this should work.
Normally I do this
$ git checkout master $ git distclean && ./boot && ./configure && make $ git checkout my_branch $ cd compiler; make 1
This gives me stage 1 compiler that uses my buggy codegen changes, plus libraries built with the old and correct codegen.
However the problem is I'm also adding a new file in my_branch, and the build system just doesn't register that fact, even after adding the line I added to compiler/ghc.cabal.in to compiler/ghc.cabal. So far the only way to fix this that I could find was to run ./configure again, then run make for a few seconds at the top level, then do `make 1` in compiler/. Unfortunately even that doesn't work when the master branch and my_branch have different dates, because `make` in master branch produces a different version than the `make` in my_branch, so the interface files become incompatible.
Anyone have any ideas on how to proceed here?
Thanks,
Ömer _______________________________________________ ghc-devs mailing list ghc-devs@haskell.org http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs
In general I think it is wise to avoid switching branches in a tree you are actively developing in. The cost of switching both in the compilation time that it implies and the uncertain state that it leaves the tree in is in my opinion too high. It you want to compare your change against master I would recommend using two working directories. Cheers, - Ben