| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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longer use camlp4.
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We remove a lot of uses of `evar_map` ref in `vernac`, cleanup step
desirable to progress with EConstr there.
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We do up to `Term` which is the main bulk of the changes.
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We make Vernacentries.interp functional wrt state, and thus remove
state-handling from `Future`. Now, a future needs a closure if it
wants to preserve state.
Consequently, `Vernacentries.interp` takes a state, and returns the
new one.
We don't explicitly thread the state in the STM yet, instead, we
recover the state that was used before and pass it explicitly to
`interp`.
I have tested the commit with the files in interactive, but we aware
that some new bugs may appear or old ones be made more apparent.
However, I am confident that this step will improve our understanding
of bugs.
In some cases, we perform a bit more summary wrapping/unwrapping. This
will go away in future commits; informal timings for a full make:
- master:
real 2m11,027s
user 8m30,904s
sys 1m0,000s
- no_futures:
real 2m8,474s
user 8m34,380s
sys 0m59,156s
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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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I hadn't realized that this PR uses OCaml's 4.03 inlined records
feature. I will advocate again for a switch to the latest OCaml stable
version, but meanwhile, let's revert. Sorry for the noise.
This reverts commit 3c47248abc27aa9c64120db30dcb0d7bf945bc70, reversing
changes made to ceb68d1d643ac65f500e0201f61e73cf22e6e2fb.
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Was PR#283: Stylistic improvements in intf/decl_kinds.mli.
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There was no reason to keep them separate since quite a long time. Historically,
they were making Genarg depend or not on upper strata of the code, but since
it was moved to lib/ this is not justified anymore.
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We get rid of tuples containing booleans (typically for universe
polymorphism) by replacing them with records.
The previously common idom:
if pi2 kind (* polymorphic *) then ... else ...
becomes:
if kind.polymorphic then ... else ...
To make the construction and destruction of these records lightweight,
the labels of boolean arguments for universe polymorphism are now
usually also called "polymorphic".
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module)
For the moment, there is an Error module in compilers-lib/ocamlbytecomp.cm(x)a
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For now, the pack name reuse the previous .cma name of the plugin,
(extraction_plugin, etc).
The earlier .mllib files in plugins are now named .mlpack.
They are also handled by bin/ocamllibdep, just as .mllib.
We've slightly modified ocamllibdep to help setting the -for-pack
options: in *.mlpack.d files, there are some extra variables such as
foo/bar_FORPACK := -for-pack Baz
when foo/bar.ml is mentioned in baz.mlpack.
When a plugin is calling a function from another plugin, the name
need to be qualified (Foo_plugin.Bar.baz instead of Bar.baz).
Btw, we discard the generated files plugins/*/*_mod.ml, they are
obsolete now, replaced by DECLARE PLUGIN.
Nota: there's a potential problem in the micromega directory,
some .ml files are linked both in micromega_plugin and in csdpcert.
And we now compile these files with a -for-pack, even if they are
not packed in the case of csdpcert. In practice, csdpcert seems
to work well, but we should verify with OCaml experts.
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The ARGUMENT EXTEND macro was discriminating between parsing entries known
statically, i.e. defined in Pcoq and unknown entires. Although simplifying
a bit the life of the plugin writer, it made actual interpretation difficult
to predict and complicated the code of the ARGUMENT EXTEND macro.
After this patch, all parsing entries and generic arguments used in an
ARGUMENT EXTEND macro must be reachable by the ML code. This requires adding
a few more "open Pcoq.X" and "open Constrarg" here and there.
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Originally, rel-context was represented as:
Context.rel_context = Names.Name.t * Constr.t option * Constr.t
Now it is represented as:
Context.Rel.t = LocalAssum of Names.Name.t * Constr.t
| LocalDef of Names.Name.t * Constr.t * Constr.t
Originally, named-context was represented as:
Context.named_context = Names.Id.t * Constr.t option * Constr.t
Now it is represented as:
Context.Named.t = LocalAssum of Names.Id.t * Constr.t
| LocalDef of Names.Id.t * Constr.t * Constr.t
Motivation:
(1) In "tactics/hipattern.ml4" file we define "test_strict_disjunction"
function which looked like this:
let test_strict_disjunction n lc =
Array.for_all_i (fun i c ->
match (prod_assum (snd (decompose_prod_n_assum n c))) with
| [_,None,c] -> isRel c && Int.equal (destRel c) (n - i)
| _ -> false) 0 lc
Suppose that you do not know about rel-context and named-context.
(that is the case of people who just started to read the source code)
Merlin would tell you that the type of the value you are destructing
by "match" is:
'a * 'b option * Constr.t (* worst-case scenario *)
or
Named.Name.t * Constr.t option * Constr.t (* best-case scenario (?) *)
To me, this is akin to wearing an opaque veil.
It is hard to figure out the meaning of the values you are looking at.
In particular, it is hard to discover the connection between the value
we are destructing above and the datatypes and functions defined
in the "kernel/context.ml" file.
In this case, the connection is there, but it is not visible
(between the function above and the "Context" module).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Now consider, what happens when the reader see the same function
presented in the following form:
let test_strict_disjunction n lc =
Array.for_all_i (fun i c ->
match (prod_assum (snd (decompose_prod_n_assum n c))) with
| [LocalAssum (_,c)] -> isRel c && Int.equal (destRel c) (n - i)
| _ -> false) 0 lc
If the reader haven't seen "LocalAssum" before, (s)he can use Merlin
to jump to the corresponding definition and learn more.
In this case, the connection is there, and it is directly visible
(between the function above and the "Context" module).
(2) Also, if we already have the concepts such as:
- local declaration
- local assumption
- local definition
and we describe these notions meticulously in the Reference Manual,
then it is a real pity not to reinforce the connection
of the actual code with the abstract description we published.
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Side effects are now an opaque data type, called private_constant, you can
only obtain from safe_typing. When add_constant is called on a
definition_entry that contains private constants, they are either
- inlined in the main proof term but not re-checked
- declared globally without re-checking them
As a safety measure, the opaque data type contains a pointer to the
revstruct (an internal field of safe_env that changes every time a new
constant is added), and such pointer is compared with the current value
store in safe_env when the private_constant is inlined. Only when the
comparison is successful the private_constant is not re-checked. Otherwise
else it is. In short, we accept into the kernel private constant only
when they arrive in the very same order and on top of the very same env
they arrived when we fist checked them.
Note: private_constants produced by workers never pass the safety
measure (the revstruct pointer is an Ephemeron). Sending back the
entire revstruct is possible but: 1. we lack a way to quickly compare
two revstructs, 2. it can be large.
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- no more inconsistent Axiom in the Prelude
- STM can now process Admitted proofs asynchronously
- the quick chain can stock "Admitted" jobs in .vio files
- the vio2vo step checks the jobs but does not stock the result
in the opaque tables (they have no slot)
- Admitted emits a warning if the proof is complete
- Admitted uses the (partial) proof term to infer section variables
used (if not given with Proof using), like for Qed
- test-suite: extra line Require TestSuite.admit to each file making
use of admit
- test-suite/_CoqProject: to pass to CoqIDE and PG the right -Q flag to
find TestSuite.admit
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Of course such proofs cannot be processed asynchronously
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