| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Add headers to a few files which were missing them.
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We also remove trailing whitespace.
Script used:
```bash
for i in `find . -name '*.ml' -or -name '*.mli' -or -name '*.mlg'`; do expand -i "$i" | sponge "$i"; sed -e's/[[:space:]]*$//' -i.bak "$i"; done
```
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Reviewed-by: SkySkimmer
Reviewed-by: gares
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We had to move the private opaque constraints out of the constant declaration
into the opaque table. The API is not very pretty yet due to a pervasive
confusion between monomorphic global constraints and polymorphic local ones,
but once we get rid of futures in the kernel this should be magically solved.
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I think the usage looks cleaner this way.
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This work makes it possible to take advantage of a compact
representation for integers in the entire system, as opposed to only
in some reduction machines. It is useful for heavily computational
applications, where even constructing terms is not possible without such
a representation.
Concretely, it replaces part of the retroknowledge machinery with
a primitive construction for integers in terms, and introduces a kind of
FFI which maps constants to operators (on integers). Properties of these
operators are expressed as explicit axioms, whereas they were hidden in
the retroknowledge-based approach.
This has been presented at the Coq workshop and some Coq Working Groups,
and has been used by various groups for STM trace checking,
computational analysis, etc.
Contributions by Guillaume Bertholon and Pierre Roux <Pierre.Roux@onera.fr>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Grégoire <Benjamin.Gregoire@inria.fr>
Co-authored-by: Vincent Laporte <Vincent.Laporte@fondation-inria.fr>
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Close #8891
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We remove sections paths from kernel names. This is a cleanup as most of the times this information was unused. This implies a change in the Kernel API and small user visible changes with regards to tactic qualification. In particular, the removal of "global discharge" implies a large cleanup of code.
Additionally, the change implies that some machinery in `library` and `safe_typing` must now take an `~in_section` parameter, as to provide the information whether a section is open or not.
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This is a partial resurrection of #6423 but only for the kernel.
IMHO, we pay a bit of price for this but it is a good safety
measure.
Only warning "4: fragile pattern matching" and "44: open hides a type"
are disabled.
We would like to enable 44 for sure once we do some alias cleanup.
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Unused since fe1979bf47951352ce32a6709cb5138fd26f311d.
I'm not sure if it was actually used back then since I didn't look at
the function it was passed to.
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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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We store the universe context in the inlined terms and apply it to
the instance provided to the substitution function. Technically the
context is not needed, but we use it to assert that the length of the
instance corresponds, just in case.
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We mirror the structure of EConstr and move the destructors from `Term`
to `Constr`.
This is a step towards having a single module for `Constr`.
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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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Before this patch, inductive subtyping was enforcing syntactic equality
of the variable instance, instead of reasoning up to alpha-renaming.
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As per https://github.com/coq/coq/pull/716#issuecomment-305140839
Partially using
```bash
git grep --name-only 'anomaly\s*\(~label:"[^"]*"\s*\)\?\(Pp.\)\?(\(\(Pp.\)\?str\)\?\s*".*[^\.!]")' | xargs sed s'/\(anomaly\s*\(~label:"[^"]*"\s*\)\?\(Pp.\)\?(\(\(Pp.\)\?str\)\?\s*".*\s*[^\.! ]\)\s*")/\1.")/g' -i
```
and
```bash
git grep --name-only ' !"' | xargs sed s'/ !"/!"/g' -i
```
The rest were manually edited by looking at the results of
```bash
git grep anomaly | grep '\.ml' | grep -v 'anomaly\s*\(~label:"[^"]*"\s*\)\?\(Pp\.\)\?(\(\(Pp.\)\?str\)\?\s*".*\(\.\|!\)")' | grep 'anomaly\($\|[^_]\)' | less
```
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module)
For the moment, there is an Error module in compilers-lib/ocamlbytecomp.cm(x)a
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The previous behavior was to include the interface of such a functor,
possibly leading to the creation of unexpected axioms, see bug report #3746.
In the case of non-functor module with restricted signature, we could
simply refer to the original objects (strengthening), but for a functor,
the inner objects have no existence yet. As said in the new error message,
a simple workaround is hence to first instantiate the functor, then include
the local instance:
Module LocalInstance := Funct(Args).
Include LocalInstance.
By the way, the mod_type_alg field is now filled more systematically,
cf new comments in declarations.mli. This way, we could use it to know
whether a module had been given a restricted signature (via ":"). Earlier,
some mod_type_alg were None in situations not handled by the extraction
(MEapply of module type).
Some code refactoring on the fly.
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polymorphic definitions.
- This implementation passes universes in separate arguments and does not
eagerly instanitate polymorphic definitions.
- This means that it pays no cost on monomorphic definitions.
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When F is a Functor, doing an 'Include F' triggers the 'Include Self'
mechanism: the current context is used as an pseudo-argument to F.
This may fail with a subtype error if the current context isn't adequate.
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more than 245 constructors (unsupported by OCaml's runtime).
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typecheck with definitions and thread it accordingly when typechecking
module expressions.
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definitions. Instead of failing with an anomaly when trying to do
conversion or computation with the vm's, consider polymorphic constants
as being opaque and keep instances around. This way the code is still
correct but (obviously) incomplete for polymorphic definitions and we
avoid introducing an anomaly. The patch does nothing clever, it only
keeps around instances with constants/inductives and compile constant
bodies only for non-polymorphic definitions.
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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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Stop sharing those references across constants of the same
module, which was triggering some bugs when using native_compute
in interactive mode in a functor declaration.
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This generalizes the BuildVi flag and lets one choose which
opaque proofs are done and which not.
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Before this patch opaque tables were only growing, making them unusable
in interactive mode (leak on Undo).
With this patch the opaque tables are functional and part of the env.
I.e. a constant_body can point to the proof term in 2 ways:
1) directly (before the constant is discharged)
2) indirectly, via an int, that is mapped by the opaque table to
the proof term.
This is now consistent in batch/interactive mode
This is step 0 to make an interactive coqtop able to dump a .vo/.vi
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