GHC 8.4.2 released
Ben Gamari - 2018-04-20
The GHC team is pleased to announce the availability of GHC 8.4.2. The source distribution, binary distributions, and documentation for this release are available at
https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/8.4.2
This release is a bug-fix release, fixing numerous regressions and bugs present in GHC 8.4.1. These include:
A regression resulting in some uses of
Control.Exception.evaluate
to be inappropriately optimised away (see #13930)A regression resulting in segmentation faults of programs compiled with profiling (#14705)
A bug causing runtime system panics while running programs with retainer profiling (#14947)
The configure scripts now accepts a
--disable-dtrace
option, again allowing GHC to be bootstrapped on FreeBSD (#15040)The version number of the
base
package has been bumped to 4.11.1.0 to reflect the addition of theGHC.IO.FixIOException
type. This interface was added in 8.4.1 but the version bump was missed due to an oversight.Support for DWARF debug information has been significantly improved (#14894, #14779)
A more thorough list of the changes in this release can be found in the release notes,
https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/8.4.2/docs/html/users_guide/8.4.2-notes.html
Thanks to everyone who has contributed to developing, documenting, and testing this release!
As always, let us know if you encounter trouble.
How to get it
This release can be downloaded from
https://www.haskell.org/ghc/download_ghc_8_4_2.html
For older versions see
https://www.haskell.org/ghc/
We supply binary builds in the native package format for many platforms, and the source distribution is available from the same place.
Background
Haskell is a standard lazy functional programming language.
GHC is a state-of-the-art programming suite for Haskell. Included is an optimising compiler generating efficient code for a variety of platforms, together with an interactive system for convenient, quick development. The distribution includes space and time profiling facilities, a large collection of libraries, and support for various language extensions, including concurrency, exceptions, and foreign language interfaces. GHC is distributed under a BSD-style open source license.
A wide variety of Haskell related resources (tutorials, libraries, specifications, documentation, compilers, interpreters, references, contact information, links to research groups) are available from the Haskell home page (see below).
On-line GHC-related resources ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Relevant URLs on the World-Wide Web:
Supported Platforms
The list of platforms we support, and the people responsible for them, is here
Ports to other platforms are possible with varying degrees of difficulty. The Building Guide describes how to go about porting to a new platform.
Developers
We welcome new contributors. Instructions on accessing our source code repository, and getting started with hacking on GHC, are available from the GHC’s developer’s site run by Trac.
Community Resources
There are mailing lists for GHC users, develpoers, and monitoring bug tracker activity; to subscribe, use the Mailman web interface.
There are several other Haskell and GHC-related mailing lists on haskell.org; for the full list, see the lists page.
Some GHC developers hang out on the #ghc
and #haskell
of the Freenode IRC
network, too. See the Haskell wiki for details.
Please report bugs using our bug tracking system. Instructions on reporting bugs can be found here.