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We move the global declaration of that argument to the environment, and reuse
the Global module to handle this flag.
Note that the checker was not using this flag before this patch, and still
doesn't use it. This should probably be fixed in a later patch.
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The upper layers still need a mapping constant -> projection, which is
provided by Recordops.
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This shall eventually allow to use contexts of declarations in the
definition of the "Case" constructor.
Basically, this means that Constr now includes Context and that the
"t" types of Context which were specialized on constr are not defined
in Constr (unfortunately using a heavy boilerplate).
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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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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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This field used to signal that a constant was the compatibility
eta-expansion of a primitive projections, but since a previous cleanup in
the kernel it had become useless.
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Instead of having the projection data in the constant data we have it
independently in the environment.
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We defer the computation of the universe quantification to the upper layer,
outside of the kernel.
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We also have to update the checker to deserialize this additional data,
but it is not using it in type-checking yet.
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We more the `recursivity_kind` type to `Declarations`, this indeed
makes sense, and now `Decl_kind` morally lives in `library` as it
should.
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Also use constant_universes_entry instead of a bool flag to indicate
polymorphism in ParameterEntry.
There are a few places where we convert back to ContextSet because
check_univ_decl returns a UContext, this could be improved.
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We do up to `Term` which is the main bulk of the changes.
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This will allow to merge back `Names` with `API.Names`
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As explained in edf85b9, the original commit that merged the module_body
and module_type_body representations, this was delayed to a later time
assumedly due to OCaml lack of GADTs. Actually, the only thing that was
needed was polymorphic recursion, which has been around already for a
relatively long time (since 3.12).
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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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It stores both universe constraints and subtyping information for
blocks of inductive declarations.
At this stage the there is no inference or checking implemented. The
subtyping information simply encodes equality of levels for the condition of
subtyping.
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- constr_substituted and lazy_constr are now in a dedicated kernel/lazyconstr.ml
- the functions that were in declarations.ml (mostly substitution utilities
and hashcons) are now in kernel/declareops.ml
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16250 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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native OCaml code.
Warning: the "retroknowledge" mechanism has not been ported to the native
compiler, because integers and persistent arrays will ultimately be defined as
primitive constructions. Until then, computation on numbers may be faster using
the VM, since it takes advantage of machine integers.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@16136 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
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List module. That way, an "open Util" in the header permits using
any function of CList in the List namespace (and in particular, this
permits optimized reimplementations of the List functions, as, for
example, tail-rec implementations.
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compiler warnings).
I was afraid that such a brutal refactoring breaks some obscure
invariant about linking order and side-effects but the standard
library still compiles.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@15800 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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Inductive definitions aren't that big, but they may contain some
constr (in types, rel_context, etc), hence if we hash-cons the
constr in Definition but not these ones, we may loose some sharing.
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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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As said in CHANGES:
<<
The inlining done during application of functors can now be controlled
more precisely. In addition to the "!F G" syntax preventing any inlining,
we can now use a priority level to select parameters to inline :
"<30>F G" means "only inline in F the parameters whose levels are <= 30".
The level of a parameter can be fixed by "Parameter Inline(30) foo".
When levels aren't given, the default value is 100. One can also use
the flag "Set Inline Level ..." to set a level.
>>
Nota : the syntax "Parameter Inline(30) foo" is equivalent to
"Set Inline Level 30. Parameter Inline foo.",
and "Include <30>F G" is equivalent to "Set Inline Level 30. Include F G."
For instance, in ZBinary, eq is @Logic.eq and should rather be inlined,
while in BigZ, eq is (fun x y => [x]=[y]) and should rather not be inlined.
We could achieve this behavior by setting a level such as 30 to the
parameter eq, and then tweaking the current level when applying functors.
This idea of levels might be too restrictive, we'll see, but at least
the implementation of this change was quite simple. There might be
situation where parameters cannot be linearly ordered according to their
"inlinablility". For these cases, we would need to mention names to inline
or not at a functor application, and this is a bit more tricky
(and might be a pain to use if there are many names).
No documentation for the moment, since this feature is experimental
and might still evolve.
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In "(match ... with |... -> fun x -> t end) u", "x" has now the subterm
property of "u" in the analysis of "t".
Commutative cuts aren't compatible with typing so we need to ensure that
term of "x"'s type and term of "u"'s have the same subterm_spec.
Consequently,declaration.MRec argument has changed to the inductive name
instead of only the number of the inductive in the mutual_inductive
family.
In subterm_specif and check_rec_call, arguments are stored in a stack.
At each lambda, one element is popped to add in renv a smarter
subterm_spec for the variable. subterm_spec of constructor's argument
was added this way, the job is now done more often.
Some eta contracted match branches are now accepted but enforcing
eta-expansion of branches might be anyway a recommended invariant.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@13012 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
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