On 14/02/13 11:55, Alexander Kjeldaas wrote:

I was looking at the eventlog code, and I wanted to move processing of a
full eventlog buffer into Haskell, instead of the now fixed behavior of
writing the data to a file.

To do this, I though that having a haskell process blocked on an MVar,
or Chan would be nice, and then some way to signal the process.

But the low-level PrimOps for MVars, takeMVar, tryTakeMVar etc are in
PrimOps.cmm and I don't know how to call them from the RTS.

You can't call them directly. The problem is that to call Haskell code you need a Haskell thread to run it in.

There are a couple of ways that we call Haskell code from the RTS:

 - rts_lock()/rts_evalIO()/rts_unlock().  This is what calling a
   foreign export does, and it's quite heavyweight.

 - create a new Haskell thread and add it to the run queue, like we do
   for finalizers.

This lead me to question what the point of out-of-line PrimOps in
PrimOps.cmm is.  I don't think the commentary covers this.

http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/PrimOps

So why aren't all the stuff in PrimOps.cmm just "ccall" wrappers around
C implementations?  Wouldn't that in general be more flexible for the RTS?

They need to do things like block, which you can't do from a ccall. There's also the overhead - a primop can allocate memory directly from the nursery, whereas a ccall would have to call allocate() (and couldn't GC).

Cheers,
        Simon


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