| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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subtyping.
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This brings more compatibility with handling of mutual primitive records
in the kernel.
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This is a first step towards the acceptance of mutual record types in the
kernel.
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When inferring [u <= v+k] I replaced the exception and instead add
[u <= v]. This is trivially sound and it doesn't seem possible to have
the one without the other (except specially for [Set <= v+k] which was
already handled).
I don't know an example where this used to fail and now succeeds (the
point was to remove an anomaly, but the example
~~~
Module Type SG. Definition DG := Type. End SG.
Module MG : SG. Definition DG := Type : Type. Fail End MG.
~~~
now fails with universe inconsistency.
Fix #7695 (soundness bug!).
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This was completely wrong, such a term could not even be type-checked by
the kernel as it was internally using a match construct over a negative
record. They were luckily only used in upper layers, namley printing
and extraction.
Recomputing the projection body might be costly in detyping, but this only
happens when the compatibility flag is turned on, which is not the default.
Such flag is probably bound to disappear anyways.
Extraction should be fixed though so as to define directly primitive
projections, similarly to what has been done in native compute.
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This field was not used inside the kernel and not used in
performance-critical code where caching is essential, so we extrude
the code that computes it out of the kernel.
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The use of template polymorphism in constants was quite limited, as it
only applied to definitions that were exactly inductive types without any
parameter whatsoever. Furthermore, it seems that following the introduction
of polymorphic definitions, the code path enforced regular polymorphism as
soon as the type of a definition was given, which was in practice almost
always.
Removing this feature had no observable effect neither on the test-suite,
nor on any development that we monitor on Travis. I believe it is safe to
assume it was nowadays useless.
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This is the followup of the previous commit, this time implementing the
correct algorithm in the checker.
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This function breaks the abstraction barrier of abstract universe contexts,
as it provides a way to observe the bound names of such a context. We remove
all the uses that can be easily get rid of with the current API.
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This is the continuation of #244, we now deprecate `CErrors.error`,
the single entry point in Coq is `user_err`.
The rationale is to allow for easier grepping, and to ease a future
cleanup of error messages. In particular, we would like to
systematically classify all error messages raised by Coq and be sure
they are properly documented.
We restore the two functions removed in #244 to improve compatibility,
but mark them deprecated.
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Also remove obvious comments.
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module)
For the moment, there is an Error module in compilers-lib/ocamlbytecomp.cm(x)a
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After this commit, module_type_body is a particular case of module_type.
For a [module_type_body], the implementation field [mod_expr] is
supposed to be always [Abstract]. This is verified by coqchk, even
if this isn't so crucial, since [mod_expr] is never read in the case
of a module type.
Concretely, this amounts to the following rewrite on field names
for module_type_body:
- typ_expr --> mod_type
- typ_expr_alg --> mod_type_alg
- typ_* --> mod_*
and adding two new fields to mtb:
- mod_expr (always containing Abstract)
- mod_retroknowledge (always containing [])
This refactoring should be completely transparent for the user.
Pros: code sharing, for instance subst_modtype = subst_module.
Cons: a runtime invariant (mod_expr = Abstract) which isn't
enforced by typing. I tried a polymorphic typing of mod_expr,
to share field names while not having mtb = mb, but the OCaml
typechecker isn't clever enough with polymorphic mutual fixpoints,
and reject code sharing (e.g. between subst_modtype and subst_module).
In the future (with ocaml>=4), some GADT could maybe help here,
but for now the current solution seems good enough.
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it to the new representation of projections and the new mind_finite
type.
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16926 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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The earlier type [struct_expr_body] was far too broad,
leading to code with unclear invariants, many "assert false", etc etc.
Its replacement [module_alg_expr] has only three constructors:
* MEident
* MEapply : note the module_path as 2nd arg, no more constraints here
* MEwith : no more constant_body inside, constr is just fine
But no more SEBfunctor or SEBstruct constructor here (see below).
This way, this datatype corresponds to algebraic expressions,
i.e. anything that can appear in non-interactive modules.
In fact, it even coincides now with [Entries.module_struct_entry].
- Functor constructors are now necessarily on top of other
structures thanks to a generic [functorize] datatype.
- Structures are now separated from algebraic expressions by design :
the [mod_type] and [typ_expr] fields now only contain structures
(or functorized structures), while [mod_type_alg] and [typ_expr_alg]
are restricted to algebraic expressions only.
- Only the implementation field [mod_expr] could be either algebraic
or structural. We handle this via a specialized datatype
[module_implementation] with four constructors:
* Abstract : no implementation (cf. for instance Declare Module)
* Algebraic(_) : for non-interactive modules, e.g. Module M := N.
* Struct(_) : for interactive module, e.g. Module M : T. ... End M.
* FullStruct : for interactive module with no type restriction.
The [FullStruct] is a particular case of [Struct] where the implementation
need not be stored at all, since it is exactly equal to its expanded
type present in [mod_type]. This is less fragile than hoping as earlier
that pointer equality between [mod_type] and [mod_expr] will be
preserved...
- We clearly emphasize that only [mod_type] and [typ_expr] are
relevant for the kernel, while [mod_type_alg] and [typ_expr_alg]
are there only for a nicer extraction and shorter module printing.
[mod_expr] is also not accessed by the kernel, but it is important
for Print Assumptions later.
- A few implicit invariants remain, for instance "no MEwith in mod_expr",
see the final comment in Declarations
- Heavy refactoring of module-related files : modops, mod_typing,
safe_typing, declaremods, extraction/extract_env.ml ...
- Coqchk has been adapted accordingly. The code concerning MEwith
in Mod_checking is now gone, since we cannot have any in mod_expr.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16712 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16400 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16398 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16249 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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Ok, this is merely a matter of taste, but up to now the usage
in Coq is rather to use capital letters instead of _ in the
names of inner modules.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16221 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16097 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16072 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@15875 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@15804 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@15715 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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We now accept the following code: Definition E := 0. Module E. End E.
Techically, we simply allow the same label to occur at most twice in
a structure_body, which is a (label * structure_field_body) list).
These two label occurences should not be at the same level of fields
(e.g. a SFBmodule and a SFBmind are ok, but not two SFBmodule's or
a SFBmodule and a SFBmodtype). Gain : a minimal amount of code change.
Drawback : no more simple List.assoc or equivalent should be performed
on a structure_body ...
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@15088 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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Util only depends on Ocaml stdlib and Utf8 tables.
Generic pretty printing and loc functions are in Pp.
Generic errors are in Errors.
+ Training white-spaces, useless open, prlist copies random erasure.
Too many "open Errors" on the contrary.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@15020 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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When doing a [check_subtypes env mtb1 mtb2], we used to always add [mtb1]
in the environment. But since the stricter checks of commit r14150, this
is an error if the environment already knows [mtb1] (for instance
when doing (F M) and checking that M is compatible with the type of the
arg of F.
[check_subtypes] now expect [mtb1] to be already in env, and we move the
add_module to the unique call site of this function that requires it.
Moreover, we solve a second issue : when subtyping a functor, we
update the environment once inside the functor, and this is also
refused by the checks of commits r14150. So we first remove the module
name from the env before doing the update. Since the module added
earlier was a functor, there is no inner defs to chase in env.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@14615 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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The env was used for a particular case of Cbytegen.compile_constant_body,
but we can actually guess that it will answer a particular BCallias con.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@14134 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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After discussion with Bruno and Hugo, coqtop now accepts that an opaque
constant in a module type could be implemented by anything of
the right type, even if bodies differ. Said otherwise, with respect
to subtyping, an opaque constant behaves just as a parameter.
This was already the case in coqchk, and a footnote in documentation
is advertising for quite some time that:
"Opaque definitions are processed as assumptions."
Truly, it might seem awkward that "Definition x:=3" can implement
"Lemma x:nat. Proof 2. Qed." but the opacity ensures that nothing
can go wrong afterwards, since Coq is forced to ignore that the x
in signature has body "2".
Similarly, "T with Definition x := c" is now legal when T contains
an opaque x, even when this x isn't convertible with c.
By avoiding accesses to opaque bodies, we also achieve some speedup
(less delayed load of .vo final sections containing opaque terms).
Nota: the extraction will have to be adapted, since for the moment it
might access the body of opaque constants: the warning emitted when
doing that should become an error.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@13987 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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The recent experiment with -dont-load-proofs in the stdlib showed that
this options isn't fully safe: some axioms were generated (Include ?
functor application ? This is still to be fully understood).
Instead, I've implemented an idea of Yann: only load opaque proofs when
we need them. This is almost as fast as -dont-load-proofs (on the stdlib,
we're now 15% faster than before instead of 20% faster with -dont-load-proofs),
but fully compatible with Coq standard behavior.
Technically, the const_body field of Declarations.constant_body now regroup
const_body + const_opaque + const_inline in a ternary type. It is now either:
- Undef : an axiom or parameter, with an inline info
- Def : a transparent definition, with a constr_substituted
- OpaqueDef : an opaque definition, with a lazy constr_substitued
Accessing the lazy constr of an OpaqueDef might trigger the read on disk of
the final section of a .vo, where opaque proofs are located.
Some functions (body_of_constant, is_opaque, constant_has_body) emulate
the behavior of the old fields. The rest of Coq (including the checker)
has been adapted accordingly, either via direct access to the new const_body
or via these new functions. Many places look nicer now (ok, subjective notion).
There are now three options: -lazy-load-proofs (default), -force-load-proofs
(earlier semantics), -dont-load-proofs. Note that -outputstate now implies
-force-load-proofs (otherwise the marshaling fails on some delayed lazy).
On the way, I fixed what looked like a bug : a module type
(T with Definition x := c) was accepted even when x in T was opaque.
I also tried to clarify Subtyping.check_constant.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@13952 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@13462 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@13323 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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In checker:
- delta_resolver inferred by the module system is checked through regular delta reduction steps
- the old mind_equiv field of mutual_inductive is simulated through a special table in environ
- small optimization, if the signature and the implementation of a module are physically equal
(always happen for the toplevel module of a vo) then the checker checks only the signature.
In kernel
- in names i have added two special equality functions over constant and inductive names for the checker,
so that the checker does not take in account the cannonical name inferred by the module system.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@12977 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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- Many of them were broken, some of them after Pierre B's rework
of mli for ocamldoc, but not only (many bad annotation, many files
with no svn property about Id, etc)
- Useless for those of us that work with git-svn (and a fortiori
in a forthcoming git-only setting)
- Even in svn, they seem to be of little interest
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@12972 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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