/usr/share/acl2-7.2dfsg/interface-raw.lisp is in acl2-source 7.2dfsg-3.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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; Copyright (C) 2016, Regents of the University of Texas
; This version of ACL2 is a descendent of ACL2 Version 1.9, Copyright
; (C) 1997 Computational Logic, Inc. See the documentation topic NOTE-2-0.
; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
; it under the terms of the LICENSE file distributed with ACL2.
; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
; LICENSE for more details.
; Written by: Matt Kaufmann and J Strother Moore
; email: Kaufmann@cs.utexas.edu and Moore@cs.utexas.edu
; Department of Computer Science
; University of Texas at Austin
; Austin, TX 78712 U.S.A.
(in-package "ACL2")
; This file, interface-raw.lisp, contains parts of ACL2 which we
; cannot code in ACL2 because they require constructs not in ACL2, such
; as calling the compiler.
; EVALUATION
; Essay on Evaluation in ACL2
; This essay is structured as follows. Terminology is explained below.
; A. Introduction
; B. Specification of the problem
; C. Sketch of correctness proof
; D. Why safe mode is necessary
; E. The template for oneification of function definitions
; F. Remarks
; Let us begin.
; A. Introduction
; Evaluation in ACL2, which takes place in the ACL2 loop and during theorem
; proving, is based on the way evaluation was done in Nqthm. The idea is to
; "oneify" the body of a definition by replacing functions by their so-called
; "executable counterparts," sometimes called "*1* functions." The primitives
; have *1* functions that reflect their logical definitions, so that for
; example (*1*car x), or more precisely (acl2_*1*_lisp::car x), returns nil
; when x is an atom -- except that an error occurs if we are checking guards
; (or are in so-called safe mode, as explained below). Defined functions have
; *1* function counterparts that are defined, roughly speaking, by replacing
; each function call in their bodies by a call of the corresponding *1*
; function.
; The evaluation mechanism in ACL2 changed radically in v1-8, when guards were
; removed from the logic. It has changed again in Version_2.6, due to a hole
; in the existing mechanism, as we explain in Part D of this Essay, below.
; B. Specification of the problem
; Our specification begins with the introduction of three notions of evaluation
; and three notions of macroexpansion. Evaluation is relative to an (implicit)
; environment, which binds variables to ACL2 values, and operates on ACL2 terms
; that are free of macro calls. If we want to discuss evaluation of terms that
; involve macro calls, we will compose macroexpansion and evaluation. This
; composition represents the way that both Common Lisp and the ACL2 loop
; evaluate forms. We also assume that there is no distinction between
; evaluation of compiled and interpreted code. Finally, we assume that for all
; of these sorts of evaluation and expansion, macros are expanded before
; function and macro bodies are stored; this is how things are done in the ACL2
; logic and with *1* functions, and it had better be equivalent to how a Common
; Lisp does its evaluation and expansion.
; We extend classes of function symbols to classes of terms in the obvious way:
; a :logic mode term is one whose function symbols are all :logic mode function
; symbols, and similarly for the notion of :common-lisp-compliant.
; Here then are the notions promised above.
; ACL2 logical evaluation: This procedure is an interpreter that computes
; using definitions in the logic and obvious properties of primitives (e.g.,
; (stringp "abc") returns t).
; ACL2 loop evaluation: This is the procedure used in the ACL2 loop, using
; so-called *1* functions (and higher-level routines such as raw-ev-fncall).
; Common Lisp evaluation: As the name implies, this procedure is the one used
; by Common Lisp.
; ACL2 logical macroexpansion: This is any procedure that carries out the
; usual macroexpansion algorithm (outside-in), but entirely using ACL2
; definitions, including those of :program mode functions. We assume that
; macros have already been similarly expanded in function bodies, before
; evaluation begins. Macro bodies are evaluated using ACL2 logical
; evaluation. This procedure is embodied in the ACL2 definition of the
; function translate.
; ACL2 loop macroexpansion: This is the procedure that ACL2 actually applies
; in order to create terms from user input. Ideally this procedure returns
; the same results as does ACL2 logical macroexpansion; the distinction here
; is between what an appropriate interpreter would return (ACL2 logical
; macroexpansion) and how ACL2 actually translates a term (ACL2 loop
; macroexpansion). ACL2 loop macroexpansion always takes place in safe mode.
; Common Lisp macroexpansion: This is how Common Lisp (actually, an arbitrary
; but fixed implementation) macroexpands forms.
; As an aside, we note the following fact that is useful in establishing the
; guarantees below, but whose proof we omit here.
; (*) If a :common-lisp-compliant function is applied to arguments that
; satisfy its guard (using Common Lisp evaluation), without error, then the
; result agrees with that produced by ACL2 logical evaluation.
; Now our top-level guarantees about evaluation and macroexpansion are as
; follows, where for brevity, "evaluation" of a given type is the composition
; of macroexpansion and evaluation for that type.
; (1) If ACL2 evaluates a :logic mode form without error, then the value
; returned equals the result of ACL2 logical (macroexpansion and) evaluation
; of that form.
; (2) If furthermore that evaluation in done with guard-checking on and the
; result of ACL2 logical macroexpansion is a :common-lisp-compliant term,
; then any non-erroneous Common Lisp evaluation returns that same value.
; C. Sketch of correctness proof
; We now outline a proof of these guarantees by breaking them into the
; following sequence of claims. We write "weakly implements" to mean that two
; procedures give equivalent results on given inputs when they both return
; without error, and we write "implements" if the condition can be weakened to
; assume only that the first procedure returns without error. That is, proc1
; implements proc2 iff proc1 weakly implements proc2 and whenever proc1 returns
; without error, then so does proc2. Above, "equivalent" means identical
; except as explained otherwise below. Implicit in this notion is that the
; input is appropriate for the procedures; for example, our notions of
; evaluation assume that all function symbols in the input are either ACL2
; primitive functions or have been defined as functions (not macros) in ACL2.
; A more rigorous argument would proceed by induction on the length of
; histories, showing that the properties in question hold when one extends the
; history with new function and macro definitions.
; (1a) ACL2 loop evaluation implements ACL2 logical evaluation on :logic mode
; terms and, provided safe mode is used, on arbitrary terms.
; (1b) ACL2 loop macroexpansion implements ACL2 logical macroexpansion.
; (2a) ACL2 loop evaluation in safe mode weakly implements Common Lisp
; evaluation. The same claim holds if the assumption of safe mode is
; replaced by the assumption that guard-checking is on, provided that the
; input form expands to a :common-lisp-compliant term.
; (2b) ACL2 loop macroexpansion weakly implements Common Lisp macroexpansion,
; where results r1 (from ACL2 loop macroexpansion) and r2 (from Common Lisp
; macroexpansion) are considered equivalent if for any environment, the ACL2
; loop evaluation of r1 with guard-checking on returns the same result as the
; Common Lisp evaluation of r2, provided both evaluations return without
; error.
; Sketch of proof that guarantees hold. Clearly (1) follows from (1a) and
; (1b), while (2) follows from (1b) and (2b). (1a) follows by inspection of
; the template presented below, using (*) above. (1b) follows from (1a) by
; computational induction on the macroexpansion, because ACL2 loop
; macroexpansion and ACL2 logical macroexpansion differ only in the use of loop
; or logical evaluation of macro bodies. The first part of (2a) is argued
; similarly to (1a), while the second part is actually quite trivial by
; inspection of the template below. Finally, (2b) follows from (2a) by a
; computational induction just as (1b) follows from (1a), with a bit of
; complication. When we encounter a call of a macro first introduced in ACL2
; (either during the boot-strap or by a user), then we evaluate the same macro
; body for ACL2 loop evaluation as for Common Lisp evaluation, except that this
; body has first been macroexpanded using ACL2 loop macroexpansion and Common
; Lisp macroexpansion, respectively. But these may be viewed as equivalent by
; the inductive hypothesis (where for purposes of this proof we pretend that
; macroexpansion of the body takes place as part of the process). In the other
; case, the macro already has a Common Lisp definition (as a function or
; macro), and we have arranged that (2) holds. For example, the ACL2 loop
; macroexpansion of (append x y z) is (binary-append x (binary-append y z)),
; and Common Lisp evaluation of the former clearly agrees with ACL2 loop
; evaluation of the latter. Q.E.D.
; D. Why safe mode is necessary
; The soundness of ACL2 potentially rests on the principle of not calling raw
; Lisp counterparts of functions with arguments outside their intended domains,
; as specified by their guards. Here we give three examples illustrating why
; we introduced safe mode in Version_2.6. The third one is a proof of nil!
; Example 1. In our first example below, the defun of bar should fail. It
; does indeed fail starting with Version_2.6, but not in Version_2.5 or (we
; believe) several versions before that. We discuss below how this can lead
; to unsoundness.
; (defmacro foo (x) (car x))
; (set-guard-checking nil)
; (defun bar (y)
; (declare (xargs :verify-guards t))
; (cons (foo y) y))
; :q
; (trace bar)
; (lp)
; Now, the result of evaluating (bar 3) looks as shown below. Notice that the
; Common Lisp function bar is called. If the Common Lisp evaluation of the
; form (car 'y) had returned 1 or 2 (say) instead of breaking, then the Common
; Lisp evaluation of (bar 3) would have returned (cons 1 3) or (cons 2 3),
; respectively. This evaluation could be reflected in theorems (equal (bar 3)
; i) [i=1,2] proved in books certified in two different Common Lisp
; implementations of ACL2. We could then prove nil by including both books
; into the same session. Lest one think that one needs different Lisp
; implementations to expose unsoundness, imagine a single Lisp in which (car
; 'y) sometimes returns 1 and sometimes returns 2.
; ACL2 >(bar 3)
; 1> (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::BAR 3)>
; 2> (BAR 3)>
;
; Error: Y is not of type LIST.
; Fast links are on: do (si::use-fast-links nil) for debugging
; Error signalled by CAR.
; Broken at COND. Type :H for Help.
; ACL2>>
; Here is what ACL2 Version_2.6 prints in an attempt to define function bar,
; above, with guard-checking off.
; ACL2 >(defun bar (y) (foo y))
;
;
; ACL2 Error in ( DEFUN BAR ...): The guard for the function symbol
; CAR, which is (OR (CONSP X) (EQUAL X NIL)), is violated by the arguments
; in the call (CAR 'Y). The guard is being checked because this function
; is a primitive and a "safe" mode is being used, perhaps for macroexpansion.
;
;
;
; ACL2 Error in ( DEFUN BAR ...): In the attempt to macroexpand the
; form (FOO Y), evaluation of the macro body caused an error.
;
;
; Summary
; Form: ( DEFUN BAR ...)
; Rules: NIL
; Warnings: None
; Time: 0.00 seconds (prove: 0.00, print: 0.00, other: 0.00)
;
; ******** FAILED ******** See :DOC failure ******** FAILED ********
; ACL2 >
; Example 2. Unlike the previous example, this one causes problems even when
; guard-checking is on. (Thanks to Pete Manolios for helping to construct this
; example, which is simpler than an earlier one we had.)
; (defun my-endp-0 ()
; (declare (xargs :mode :program))
; (endp 0))
; (defmacro bad-macro ()
; (my-endp-0))
; :q
; (trace my-endp-0 endp)
; (lp)
; (thm (equal (bad-macro) 1))
; Now look at the following Version_2.5 trace. It highlights a behavior of
; Version_2.5: when a :program mode function (here, my-endp-0) is
; called on arguments satisfying its guard (here, implicitly t), the
; corresponding raw Lisp function is invoked. Thus guards are not checked on
; its subroutines (here, endp). In this example, endp is being called on an
; argument not satisfying its guard. In the abstract, this is problematic
; because we use guards to restrict primitives to arguments for which the
; result is implementation independent. If the result of (endp 0) can depend
; on the implementation, we could prove nil as described in the preceding
; example.
; ACL2 !>(thm (equal (bad-macro) 1))
; 1> (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::MY-ENDP-0)>
; 2> (MY-ENDP-0)>
; 3> (ENDP 0)>
;
; Error: 0 is not of type LIST.
; Fast links are on: do (si::use-fast-links nil) for debugging
; Error signalled by SYSTEM::TRACE-CALL.
; Broken at COND. Type :H for Help.
; ACL2>>
; The example above may seem contrived (because it is!). However, our foray
; into this territory began on a rather similar but real example. In Allegro
; 6.0, the character (code-char (+ 128 65)) is upper case; in particular it is
; not equal to the result of applying char-downcase to it. However, this is
; not the case for Allegro 5.0.1. Since the result is
; implementation-dependent, it is natural to restrict the application of
; code-char to standard characters, using ACL2's guard mechanism. But the
; example above show that we can bypass such restrictions by using macros.
; Example 3. We can prove nil in Version_2.5 by certifying the following two
; books. The only cheats are that the first book needs to be certified after
; executing the following in the ACL2 loop:
; (set-guard-checking nil)
; First book, call it "ex":
; (in-package "ACL2")
;
; (defun my-eq (x y)
; (declare (xargs :guard t ; "bad" guard
; :mode :program))
; (eq x y))
;
; (defmacro bad-macro ()
; (my-eq '(a b) '(a b)))
;
; (set-verify-guards-eagerness 0)
;
; (local (verify-termination my-eq))
;
; (defun bad-fn ()
; (bad-macro))
;
; (defthm bad-thm
; (bad-fn)
; :rule-classes nil)
; Second book, which includes the one above::
; (in-package "ACL2")
;
; (local (include-book "ex"))
;
; (defthm very-bad
; nil
; :hints (("Goal" :use bad-thm))
; :rule-classes nil)
; In Version_2.6 we get an error when we try to certify the first book above
; ("ex"):
; ACL2 Error in ( DEFUN BAD-FN ...): The guard for the function symbol
; EQ, which is (IF (SYMBOLP X) T (SYMBOLP Y)), is violated by the arguments
; in the call (EQ '(A B) '(A B)). The guard is being checked because
; this function is a primitive and a "safe" mode is being used, perhaps
; for macroexpansion.
;
;
;
; ACL2 Error in ( DEFUN BAD-FN ...): In the attempt to macroexpand the
; form (BAD-MACRO), evaluation of the macro body caused an error.
; As the first message just above suggests, in Version_2.6 we prevent the bad
; behavior illustrated by the examples above by introducing a "safe mode" for
; use during macroexpansion, in which guards are checked on built-in functions.
; Finally, note that we do not attempt to fix the following "problem." That
; is, the behavior for the example below is unchanged from Version_2.5 to
; Version_2.6. The point is that for macroexpansion to behave properly, we
; really need only guarantee consistency between the logic and Common Lisp; it
; is acceptable if in some modes we get errors even when errors are not
; necessary.
; (defun mac-fn (x) (declare (xargs :guard (consp x))) x)
; (defmacro mac (x) (mac-fn x))
; (defun bar (x) (mac x)) ; fails
; :set-guard-checking nil
; (defun bar (x) (mac x)) ; succeeds
; E. The template for oneification of function definitions
; Before we present this template, we give a bit of history and show an
; example.
; The following example shows how *1* functions are handled in Version_2.5 and
; before. The ACL2 definition is:
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :mode :logic :guard (true-listp x)))
; (if (endp x) 3 (+ 1 (foo (cdr x)))))
; Here is the executable counterpart in Version_2.5, in gcl:
; ACL2>(symbol-function 'ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO) ; in gcl, ACL2 Version_2.5
; (LISP:LAMBDA-BLOCK ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO (X)
; (LABELS ((ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO (X)
; (IF (ACL2_*1*_LISP::ENDP X) '3
; (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::BINARY-+ '1
; (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO (ACL2_*1*_LISP::CDR X))))))
; (LET ((ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO (SYMBOL-CLASS 'FOO (W *THE-LIVE-STATE*)))
; (GUARD-CHECKING-ON
; (F-GET-GLOBAL 'GUARD-CHECKING-ON *THE-LIVE-STATE*)))
; (COND
; ((LET ((*HARD-ERROR-RETURNS-NILP*
; (OR *HARD-ERROR-RETURNS-NILP*
; (NOT GUARD-CHECKING-ON))))
; (IF (EQ ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO :IDEAL)
; (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::TRUE-LISTP X) (TRUE-LISTP X)))
; (IF (EQ ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO :IDEAL) (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO X)
; (FOO X)))
; (GUARD-CHECKING-ON
; (THROW-RAW-EV-FNCALL
; (LIST 'EV-FNCALL-GUARD-ER 'FOO (LIST X) '(TRUE-LISTP X)
; '(NIL))))
; (T (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO X))))))
; Notice the inefficiency of needlessly checking guards in Version_2.5 in the
; :ideal case when guard-checking is off. We fix that problem in Version_2.6,
; but more importantly, we implement a "safe mode" to be used during
; macroexpansion, so that we can trust that ACL2 and Common Lisp agree when
; they are supposed to, thus avoiding the sort of problem illustrated above
; (function bar and macro mac). We make this idea precise in our discussion of
; "Guarantees", above.
; ACL2>(symbol-function 'ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO) ; in gcl, ACL2 Version_2.6
; (LISP:LAMBDA-BLOCK ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO (X)
; (LABELS ((ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO (X)
; (IF (ACL2_*1*_LISP::ENDP X) '3
; (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::BINARY-+ '1
; (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO (ACL2_*1*_LISP::CDR X))))))
; (COND
; ((TRUE-LISTP X) (RETURN-FROM ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO (FOO X)))
; ((F-GET-GLOBAL 'GUARD-CHECKING-ON *THE-LIVE-STATE*)
; (RETURN-FROM ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO
; (THROW-RAW-EV-FNCALL
; (LIST 'EV-FNCALL-GUARD-ER 'FOO (LIST X) '(TRUE-LISTP X)
; '(NIL))))))
; (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::FOO X)))
; Next, we present a basic template (outline, really) for defining executable
; counterparts. Note that as in the code for Version_2.5, we may optimize away
; consideration of the guard when the guard is t (either implicitly or
; explicitly). Furthermore, we do some optimization when the symbol-class of
; the function is :common-lisp-compliant, as we do in Version_2.5 for :program
; vs. :logic mode.
; The template below uses some abbreviations <...>, which are defined below the
; template. See also oneify-cltl-code for more details, special cases, and
; optimizations. There we also handle the guarded-primitive-p case, which
; pertains to built-in defined functions that need to be responsible for
; checking their guards in safe-mode. That does not however deal with true
; primitives, which are not defined. For those, safe-mode is handled with
; calls of gv in their defun-*1* definitions.
; Finally, this template is only approximate and not necessarily up-to-date.
; It is intended to give a sense of how oneify-cltl-code works; see the code
; for up-to-date comments. You may be better off simply by tracing
; oneify-cltl-code with hiding of the wrld argument, for example with
; (trace! (oneify-cltl-code :entry t :native t))
; -- and then executing each of the following test cases. Follow each of these
; with (trace$ foo) to see oneification for allowing tracing of recursive calls
; when guard-checking is :none. Then execute :u before the next defun. Oh,
; and try guard violations too.
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard t))
; (if (natp x) (if (zp x) 0 (* x (foo (1- x)))) 0))
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard t :verify-guards nil))
; (if (natp x) (if (zp x) 0 (* x (foo (1- x)))) 0))
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard t :mode :program))
; (if (natp x) (if (zp x) 0 (* x (foo (1- x)))) 0))
;
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard (natp x)))
; (if (zp x) 0 (* x (foo (1- x)))))
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard (natp x) :mode :program))
; (if (zp x) 0 (* x (foo (1- x)))))
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard (natp x) :verify-guards nil))
; (if (zp x) 0 (* x (foo (1- x)))))
;
; ; This one reports a guard violation with guard-checking set to :all but not
; ; when it is set to t.
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard (evenp x) :verify-guards nil))
; (if (zp x) 0 (* x (foo (1- x)))))
;
; (defun foo (x)
; (if (zp x) 0 (* x (foo (1- x)))))
; (defun <*1*fn> <formals>
; <wormhole-test-for-functions-with-user-stobjs>
; (let ((<class> (symbol-class '<fn> (w *the-live-state*))))
; (cond ((eq <class> :common-lisp-compliant)
; (cond
; ((or (equal <guard> *t*)
; (not (eq <guard-checking-on> :none))
; (acl2-system-namep name wrld))
; (cond (<guard> ; avoid <*1*guard> since guard is known compliant
; (cond (<live-stobjp-test> ; test can often be omitted
; (return-from <*1*fn> (<fn> . <formals>)))))
; (<guard-checking-on> <fail_guard>))
;
; ; Otherwise fall through to final call of *1* function.
;
; )
;
; ; The next case is not needed for our guarantees. Rather, it ensures that
; ; evaluation with guard checking on really does check guards at each function
; ; call.
;
; ((and <guard-checking-on>
; (not <*1*guard>))
; <fail_guard>)
; ((or (eq <guard-checking-on> :all)
; (and <safe>
; (eq <class> :program)))
; (return-from <*1*fn> *1*body))
; ((eq <class> :program)
; (return-from <*1*fn> (<fn> . <formals>)))
;
; ; If we fall through to here, then we compute in the logic, avoiding further
; ; guard checks in recursive calls (where a "special" declaration will take
; ; care of this if we are in a mutual-recursion nest).
;
; (maybe-warn-for-guard <fn>)))
;
; ; In the case (eq <class> :program), we conclude by laying down the call (<fn>
; ; . <formals>). Otherwise, we lay down the following code.
;
; (labels
;
; ; The following local definition of <*1*fn> executes calls of <fn> in the
; ; logic, without guard-checking (except for primitives under safe-mode; see
; ; below). Note that it is always legitimate for this local function to cause
; ; an error, so if we want to save space we can fail here, in particular for
; ; :program mode functions encountered during the boot-strap, at least outside
; ; (say) axioms.lisp -- although that would presumably eliminate the ability to
; ; call those functions in macro definitions.
;
; ((<*1*fn>
; <formals>
;
; ; Certain functions can take the live state as an argument, and yet do
; ; not ``properly'' handle it in their logic code. Consider for
; ; example (princ$ '(a b) *standard-co* state). With guard-checking
; ; off, and a live state, this form used to cause a hard error. The
; ; problem was that the logical body of princ$ (actually, its
; ; oneification) was being executed. Consider calling a function such
; ; as open-output-channels, which is really a call of nth, on a live
; ; state! We believe that our problem is solved by disallowing calls
; ; of certain built-in functions on a live state argument, when passing
; ; to their oneified bodies. These functions are those in
; ; *super-defun-wart-stobjs-in-alist*, since these are the ones that
; ; pass the state on as though it were a legitimate state object, i.e.,
; ; to functions that take non-state values as arguments.
;
; ; Other functions, such as those defined under defstobj, may have a stobj
; ; name as an argument but do not have an appropriate 'stobjs-in
; ; setting in the world, because we have not yet declared that the
; ; stobj name is a stobj. These latter functions are characterized by
; ; having a non-nil stobj-flag, said flag being the stobj name. We
; ; compute here the appropriate stobjs-in.
;
; <fail_if_live_stobj> ; laid down only in cases as described above
; *1*body))
; (*1*fn . formals)))))
;
; WHERE:
;
; <*1*guard>
; =
; oneification of guard
;
; <formals>
; =
; list of formals, e.g., (x1 ... xn)
;
; <guard-checking-on>
; =
; (f-get-global 'guard-checking-on *the-live-state*)
;
; <guard>
; =
; [guard of the function being defined]
;
; <fail_guard>
; =
; (throw-raw-ev-fncall
; (list 'ev-fncall-guard-er '<fn> (list x) '<guard> '(nil) nil))
;
; <fail_safe>
; =
; (throw-raw-ev-fncall
; (list 'ev-fncall-guard-er '<fn> (list x) '<guard> '(nil) t))
;
; <class>
; =
; <*1*fn>
;
; <*1*fn>
; =
; (*1*-symbol <fn>)
;
; <fn>
; =
; [function symbol being defined]
;
; <safe>
; =
; (f-get-global 'safe-mode *the-live-state*)
;
; <fail_if_live_stobj>
; =
; code for protecting against executing <*1*body> on live stobjs
;
; <live-stobjp-test>
; =
; test that all of the stobj parameters to the function are indeed the "live"
; stobjs. This is required because the Common Lisp code for stobj access and
; update functions assumes, starting in v2-8, that user-defined stobj parameters
; are live, a restriction enforced by the corresponding *1* functions before
; passing to Common Lisp.
;
; <wormhole-test-for-functions-with-user-stobjs>
; =
; a test that is generated to check if one is evaluating a function with
; user-defined stobjs in a wormhole (no wormhole test is performed if the
; function does not take user-defined stobjs as arguments). Only proper updates
; on state are allowed inside wormholes since the wormhole can properly "undo"
; these side effects upon completion. No such mechanism exists for user-defined
; stobjs and thus the test. Before v2-8, this wormhole test was performed in the
; stobj update primitives directly, but it is now performed in the *1* function
; as a matter of efficiency. The exclusion of read access of user-defined stobjs
; in wormholes simplifies the code to generate the *1* body and while technically
; unnecessary, does not seem to be a relevant over-restriction in practice.
; F. Remarks
; Remark 1. Notice that safe mode does not by itself force guard-checking in
; all cases, nor does soundness of safe mode require guard-checking as long as
; we do check guards when evaluating calls of functions that are built into
; Common Lisp. We ensure this in the macro gv, which is changed in Version_2.6
; to cause an error when in safe mode.
; Remark 2. Consider, in the body of *1*fn, the case that <guard-checking-on>
; holds. If we were to replace it with (or guard-checking-on program) then we
; would always check guards when in program mode, which would give backward
; compatability: this scheme would behave exactly as the scheme from
; Version_2.5 for and before did when the new scheme is used in other than safe
; mode. But we have decided that starting with Version_2.6, we will no longer
; check guards for :program mode functions when 'guard-checking-on has value
; nil (though starting with Version_3.0 you can get this effect when
; 'guard-checking-on has value :none). After all, even with guard-checking on
; in Version_2.5 you can get nasty Lisp breaks, since we slip directly into
; Common Lisp when a guard holds even though guards cannot be verified for
; :program mode functions.
; End of Essay on Evaluation in ACL2
; ONEIFICATION
; Here are the *1* functions. They should be kept in sync with
; *primitive-formals-and-guards*. We could probably get by with avoiding
; defining those in the list *oneify-primitives*, for example since want to
; avoid calling "slow" functions, e.g., *1*cons instead of cons. But we prefer
; to follow the simple rule that every function has a *1* counterpart, which is
; easy to remember. Moreover, in the case of IF we really do want to define
; *1*if to cause an error, because we insist that the oneification of if remain
; lazy.
; WARNING: Any hand-coded *1* definitions for other than the primitives, such
; as the one for mv-list (see below), must be handled in add-trip and
; compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns (see the handling there of mv-list).
(defmacro gv (fn args val)
(sublis `((funny-fn . ,fn)
(funny-args . ,args))
`(let ((gc-on (not (gc-off *the-live-state*))))
(if (or gc-on
(f-get-global 'safe-mode *the-live-state*))
(throw-raw-ev-fncall
(list 'ev-fncall-guard-er
'funny-fn
,(cons 'list 'funny-args)
(guard-raw 'funny-fn (w *the-live-state*))
(stobjs-in 'funny-fn (w *the-live-state*))
(not gc-on)))
,val))))
; We must hand-code the *1* functions for mv-list and return-last, because
; otherwise they will simply call mv-list and return-last (resp.), which can be
; wrong: in the case of return-last, we need the first argument to be a quotep
; for the raw-Lisp macro return-last to do more than lay down a progn.
(defun-*1* mv-list (input-arity x)
(declare (ignore input-arity))
x)
(defun-*1* return-last (fn x y)
(cond ((and (equal fn 'mbe1-raw)
(f-get-global 'safe-mode *the-live-state*))
; Since return-last is a special form, we can decide how we want to view it
; with respect to guards. We have decided to check its guard only when in safe
; mode, which is the minimal case needed in order to fix a soundness bug
; related to mbe; see note-4-3. The following log shows what happened in a
; preliminary implementation of that bug fix, in which oneify laid down a
; *1*return-last call unconditionally; note the unfortunate call of the :exec
; function, f2. Of course, that call is not the fault of the old version of
; *1*return-last, which is a function called after its arguments are already
; evaluated; there are other places (ev-rec and oneify) where we avoid even
; calling *1*return-last. But if we do get to this call, for example by way of
; expand-abbreviations calling ev-fncall, at least we can limit the equality
; check here to the case of safe-mode (which is presumably nil, for example,
; under expand-abbreviations).
; ACL2 !>(defn f1 (x) x)
; [[... output omitted ...]]
; F1
; ACL2 !>(defn f2 (x) x)
; [[... output omitted ...]];
; F2
; ACL2 !>(defun f (x) (mbe :logic (f1 x) :exec (f2 x)))
; [[... output omitted ...]]
; F
; ACL2 !>(trace$ f f1 f2)
; ((F) (F1) (F2))
; ACL2 !>(f 3)
; 1> (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::F 3)
; 2> (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::F2 3)
; 3> (F2 3)
; <3 (F2 3)
; <2 (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::F2 3)
; 2> (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::F1 3)
; 3> (F1 3)
; <3 (F1 3)
; <2 (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::F1 3)
; <1 (ACL2_*1*_ACL2::F 3)
; 3
; ACL2 !>
(if (equal x y)
y
(gv return-last (fn x y)
y)))
(t y)))
; We must hand-code the *1* function for wormhole-eval because if it were
; automatically generated it would look like this:
; (defun ACL2_*1*_ACL2::WORMHOLE-EVAL (qname qlambda free-vars)
; (wormhole-eval qname qlambda free-vars))
; (To see where this code would be generated, find the comment beginning
; "Optimization in a common case" in oneify-cltl-code.)
; But the body of the *1* defun above violates the requirement that the
; wormhole-eval macro always be applied to a quoted name and lambda expression.
; In particular, if the default optimized code above is generated and then
; given to raw lisp, a hard error results when the wormhole-eval macro tries to
; cadr into qname. So what should be here? Intuitively we ought to lay down
; code that checks that qlambda is a well-formed and appropriate lambda
; expression and then apply it to the wormhole status of the wormhole with the
; name qname. But in fact this *1* function should never be called except from
; within the theorem prover when we are evaluating wormhole-eval on quoted
; constants. Thus, we just return nil, it's logical value, without attempting
; to do any of the wormhole stuff.
(defun-*1* wormhole-eval (qname qlambda free-vars)
(declare (ignore qname qlambda free-vars))
nil)
; Keep the rest of these in sync with the completion-of-* axioms in
; axioms.lisp.
(defun-*1* acl2-numberp (x)
(numberp x))
(defun-*1* binary-* (x y)
(the number
(if (numberp x)
(if (numberp y)
(* x y)
(gv binary-* (x y) 0))
(gv binary-* (x y) 0))))
(defun-*1* binary-+ (x y)
(the number
(if (numberp x)
(if (numberp y)
(+ (the number x) (the number y))
(gv binary-+ (x y) x))
(gv binary-+ (x y)
(if (numberp y)
y
0)))))
(defun-*1* unary-- (x)
(the number
(if (numberp x)
(- x)
(gv unary-- (x) 0))))
(defun-*1* unary-/ (x)
(the number
(if (and (numberp x) (not (= x 0)))
(/ x)
(gv unary-/ (x) 0))))
(defun-*1* < (x y)
; If one regards (gv op args val) simply as val, then we can prove that
; the body below is equivalent to the let-expression used for val. Put
; another way, if we use << as the "familiar" less-than on the rationals
; then this definition of < is equivalent to
; (< x y) = (let ((x1 (if (acl2-numberp x) x 0))
; (y1 (if (acl2-numberp y) y 0)))
; (or (<< (realpart x1) (realpart y1))
; (and (= (realpart x1) (realpart y1))
; (<< (imagpart x1) (imagpart y1)))))
; The consideration of the case where both x and y are rational is just
; an optimization.
(if (and (rationalp x)
(rationalp y))
(< (the rational x) (the rational y))
(gv < (x y)
(let ((x1 (if (numberp x) x 0))
(y1 (if (numberp y) y 0)))
(or (< (realpart x1) (realpart y1))
(and (= (realpart x1) (realpart y1))
(< (imagpart x1) (imagpart y1))))))))
(defun-*1* apply (x y)
(error "We have called apply on ~s and ~s, but we thought we were rid of apply."
x y))
(defun-*1* bad-atom<= (x y)
(cond ((and (bad-atom x) (bad-atom y))
; The following should never happen.
(error "We have called (the executable counterpart of) bad-atom<= on ~
~s and ~s, but bad-atom<= has no Common Lisp definition."
x y))
(t (gv bad-atom<= (x y) nil))))
(defun-*1* car (x)
(cond
((consp x)
(car x))
((null x)
nil)
(t (gv car (x) nil))))
(defun-*1* cdr (x)
(cond
((consp x)
(cdr x))
((null x)
nil)
(t (gv cdr (x) nil))))
(defun-*1* char-code (x)
(if (characterp x)
(char-code x)
(gv char-code (x) 0)))
(defun-*1* characterp (x)
(characterp x))
(defun-*1* code-char (x)
(if (and (integerp x)
(>= x 0)
(< x 256))
(code-char x)
(gv code-char (x) (code-char 0))))
(defun-*1* complex (x y)
(complex (the rational (if (rationalp x) x (gv complex (x y) 0)))
(the rational (if (rationalp y) y (gv complex (x y) 0)))))
(defun-*1* complex-rationalp (x)
(complexp x))
;; RAG - I added this function to recognize the complex numbers.
#+:non-standard-analysis
(defun-*1* complexp (x)
(complexp x))
(defun-*1* coerce (x y)
(cond
((equal y 'list)
(if (stringp x)
(coerce x 'list)
(gv coerce (x y) nil)))
((character-listp x)
(if (equal y 'string)
(coerce x 'string)
(gv coerce (x y) (coerce x 'string))))
(t
(gv coerce (x y)
(coerce (make-character-list x) 'string)))))
(defun-*1* cons (x y)
(cons x y))
(defun-*1* consp (x)
(consp x))
(defun-*1* denominator (x)
(if (rationalp x)
(denominator x)
(gv denominator (x) 1)))
(defun-*1* equal (x y)
(equal x y))
#+:non-standard-analysis
(defun-*1* floor1 (x)
;; RAG - I added this function to evaluate the special floor1
;; function, which computes floor with a modulus of 1.
(if (rationalp x)
(floor x 1)
(gv floor1 (x) 0)))
(defun-*1* if (x y z)
(error "We just can't stand having a non-lazy IF around. But we attempted ~%~
to call the executable counterpart of IF on argument list ~s."
(list x y z)))
(defun-*1* imagpart (x)
(if (numberp x)
(imagpart x)
(gv imagpart (x) 0)))
(defun-*1* integerp (x)
(integerp x))
(defun-*1* intern-in-package-of-symbol (x y)
(if (and (stringp x)
(symbolp y))
(intern-in-package-of-symbol x y)
(gv intern-in-package-of-symbol (x y) nil)))
(defun-*1* pkg-imports (pkg)
(if (stringp pkg)
(pkg-imports pkg)
(gv pkg-imports (pkg) nil)))
(defun-*1* pkg-witness (pkg)
(if (stringp pkg)
(pkg-witness pkg)
(gv pkg-witness (pkg) (intern *pkg-witness-name* "ACL2"))))
(defun-*1* numerator (x)
(if (rationalp x)
(numerator x)
(gv numerator (x) 0)))
(defun-*1* rationalp (x)
(rationalp x))
;; RAG - I added realp to recognize real numbers.
#+:non-standard-analysis
(defun-*1* realp (x)
(realp x))
(defun-*1* realpart (x)
(if (numberp x)
(realpart x)
(gv realpart (x) 0)))
(defun-*1* stringp (x)
(stringp x))
(defun-*1* symbol-name (x)
(if (symbolp x)
(symbol-name x)
(gv symbol-name (x) "")))
(defun-*1* symbol-package-name (x)
(if (symbolp x)
(progn (chk-bad-lisp-object x)
(symbol-package-name x))
(gv symbol-package-name (x) "")))
(defun-*1* symbolp (x)
(symbolp x))
;; RAG - I added *1*-defns for the non-standard predicates. Note,
;; however, that the non-standard predicates do NOT have an executable
;; counterpart. (Actually, that's too hasty. Standard-part could be
;; defined as "identity" and standardp could be "t".
;; Nothing can be done about i-large-integer, though.) So, these
;; functions simply throw an error [added by Matt...: -- or, they did
;; at one time. For efficiency it was useful to allow these to compute
;; on valid ACL2 objects (see bad-lisp-objectp); actually Ruben already
;; had made such changes].
#+:non-standard-analysis
(progn
(defun standardp (x)
(declare (ignore x))
t)
(defun-*1* standardp (x)
(declare (ignore x))
t)
(defun standard-part (x)
x)
(defun-*1* standard-part (x)
x)
(defun i-large-integer ()
(throw-raw-ev-fncall '(ev-fncall-null-body-er nil i-large-integer)))
(defun-*1* i-large-integer ()
(throw-raw-ev-fncall '(ev-fncall-null-body-er nil i-large-integer)))
)
(defun-one-output macroexpand1! (x)
(mv-let (erp val state)
(macroexpand1 x 'oneify *the-live-state*)
(declare (ignore erp state))
val))
(mutual-recursion
(defun-one-output oneify-flet-bindings (alist fns w program-p)
; We throw away all type declarations. If we were to keep a type declaration
; (satisfies fn), we would have to find it and convert it (at least in general)
; to (satisfies *1*fn). By ignoring such declarations, we may allow a function
; to avoid a guard violation that we might have expected, for example:
; (flet ((foo (x) (declare (type integer x)) x)) 'a)
; This is however perfectly OK, provided we are clear that flet type
; declarations are only relevant for guard verification, not guard checking.
(cond ((endp alist) nil)
(t (cons (let* ((def (car alist))
(dcls (append-lst
(strip-cdrs (remove-strings (butlast (cddr def)
1)))))
(ignore-vars (ignore-vars dcls))
(oneified-body
(oneify (car (last def)) fns w program-p)))
(list* (*1*-symbol (car def))
(cadr def)
(if ignore-vars
(list `(declare (ignore ,@ignore-vars))
oneified-body)
(list oneified-body))))
(oneify-flet-bindings (cdr alist) fns w program-p)))))
(defun remove-type-dcls (dcls)
; Before we called this function in oneify, the following caused an error in
; some Lisps (specifically, we have seen it in ACL2 Version_6.5 built on SBCL
; Version 1.2.1).
; (defun f (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard (natp x)))
; (let ((y (1+ x)))
; (declare (type (integer 0 *) y))
; y))
; (set-guard-checking nil)
; (f -3)
; Our fix is to leave some of the DECLAREs in place, in particular so that the
; compiler can see the IGNOREs, but to fold type declarations into the body as
; a THE wrapper.
(let* ((alist nil)
(new-dcls
(loop for dcl in dcls
as dcl2 =
(assert$
(and (consp dcl)
(eq (car dcl) 'declare))
(cond ((assoc-eq 'type (cdr dcl)) ; optimization
(let ((dcl2-body
(loop for d in (cdr dcl)
when
(cond
((eq (car d) 'type)
(let ((tp (cadr d)))
(case-match tp
(('or 't . &)
; See the-fn. We excise this no-op type declaration in order to avoid an
; infinite loop in oneify.
nil)
(&
(loop for v in (cddr d)
collect
(push `(,tp . ,v)
alist)))))
nil)
(t t))
collect d)))
(and dcl2-body (cons 'declare dcl2-body))))
(t dcl)))
when dcl2
collect dcl2)))
(values new-dcls alist)))
(defun alist-to-the-for-*1*-lst (type-to-var-alist)
(cond ((endp type-to-var-alist)
nil)
(t (cons `(the-for-*1* ,(caar type-to-var-alist)
,(cdar type-to-var-alist) )
(alist-to-the-for-*1*-lst (cdr type-to-var-alist))))))
(defun-one-output oneify (x fns w program-p)
; Keep this function in sync with translate11. Errors have generally been
; removed, since we know they can't occur.
; Fns is a list of fns that have been flet-bound. It is important not to treat
; any of these as macros.
; Program-p is true when we want an MBE to use its :exec version. Thus, use
; program-p = t when attempting to approximate raw Lisp behavior.
(cond
((or (atom x) (eq (car x) 'quote))
(cond ((keywordp x)
(kwote x))
((symbolp x)
; At one time we returned (defined-constant x w) here in the case that
; (legal-constantp1 x). But when the constant is replaced by its value, we can
; wind up with slow array accesses, since the constant and the written-out
; value need not be EQ.
x)
((atom x) (kwote x))
(t x)))
((not (symbolp (car x)))
(oneify
(list* 'let (listlis (cadr (car x))
(cdr x))
(cddr (car x)))
fns w program-p))
((eq (car x) 'return-last)
; Warning: Keep this in sync with stobj-let-fn and the handling of stobj-let in
; this function, in particular the case in which stobj-let-fn generates a call
; of prog2$.
(let* ((qfn (and (consp (cdr x))
(cadr x)))
(fn (or (and (consp qfn)
(eq (car qfn) 'quote)
(consp (cdr qfn))
(cadr qfn))
'progn)))
(cond ((eq fn 'ec-call1-raw)
; In the case of ec-call1-raw, we are already oneifying the last argument -- we
; don't want to call return-last on top of that, or we'll be attempting to take
; the *1*-symbol of the *1*-symbol!
(cond
((not (eq program-p 'invariant-risk))
(oneify (car (last x)) fns w program-p))
(t
; In the case that program-p is 'invariant-risk, we are in the process of
; oneifying the body of a :program mode function with invariant-risk, for which
; any call of an invariant-risk function is to execute with its *1* function
; but other calls should use raw Lisp functions; see the final case in oneify.
; Here, though, we want to call the *1* function even if it does not have
; invariant-risk, because of the ec-call wrapper.
; We need to be careful in this case that ec-call really does invoke a *1*
; function here, and does so properly. Consider the following example.
; (defun f-log () (mbe :logic 'logic :exec 'exec))
; (defstobj st (fld :type integer :initially 0))
; (defun f-prog (st)
; (declare (xargs :stobjs st :mode :program))
; (let ((st (update-fld 3 st)))
; (mv (f-log) st)))
; (f-prog st) ; returns (MV EXEC <updated-state>)
; (defun f-prog2 (st)
; (declare (xargs :stobjs st :mode :program))
; (let ((st (update-fld 3 st)))
; (mv (ec-call (f-log)) st)))
; (f-prog2 st) ; should return (MV LOGIC <updated-state>)
; If we use the oneify call above (from the case that (not (eq program-p
; 'invariant-risk))), then EXEC would returned as a first value by the call of
; f-prog2 just above, which is incorrect. The EXEC return value would be OK if
; f-prog2 were defined with the ec-call wrapper removed, because f-log has no
; invariant-risk and hence we want it to execute fast using the :exec form from
; its mbe. But the ec-call means that we really want to call *1*f-log -- we
; are no longer slipping into raw Lisp and hence we no longer want the special
; **1*-as-raw* handling, which is inappropriate here since it is intended to
; give the illusion that we are in raw Lisp. Thus, we call *1*f-log and what's
; more, we bind **1*-as-raw* to nil, to signify that we intend to execute the
; function call in the logic.
(let ((form (car (last x))))
`(let* ((args (list ,@(oneify-lst (cdr form) fns w program-p)))
(**1*-as-raw* nil))
(apply ',(if (function-symbolp (car form) w)
(*1*-symbol (car form))
; Otherwise, translate11 guarantees that if (car form) is f, then it is an
; abbreviation for f$inline.
(assert$ (getpropc (car x) 'macro-body nil w)
(*1*-symbol (add-suffix (car form)
*inline-suffix*))))
args))))))
((eq fn 'mbe1-raw)
; Here we process macroexpansions of mbe calls.
; For :program mode functions (i.e., when program-p is non-nil), an mbe call
; always reduces to its :exec value, and moreover the :logic code is only
; called in safe-mode. Before changing this behavior, consider the comment in
; put-invariant-risk.
; See the discussion in (defun-*1* return-last ...). Here, we discuss only the
; special variable **1*-as-raw*.
; A practice important to some users (in particular, Jared Davis has emphasized
; this) is to wrap calls of functions with symbol-class :ideal (i.e., :logic
; mode but not guard-verified) inside calls of :program mode functions, and
; expect efficient behavior. The following example illustrates that situation.
; When evaluating (pgm st), we would like the :exec form to be executed. Note
; that this is exactly what happens if the evaluation is in raw Lisp; here in
; oneify, we arrange for that to happen for *1* evaluation as well.
; (defstobj st (fld :type integer :initially 0))
;
; (defun lgc (st)
; (declare (xargs :mode :logic
; :stobjs st
; :verify-guards nil))
; (mbe :logic (prog2$ (cw "@@@Hello@@@~%")
; (update-fld 3 st))
; :exec (update-fld 3 st)))
;
; (defun pgm (st)
; (declare (xargs :mode :program
; :stobjs st))
; (lgc st))
; Note that we do not give similar treatment to our evaluator (in particular,
; in ev-rec-return-last), since at the top level, we are not inside a function
; body (so there is no issue of :program or :ideal mode). If however ev-w or
; the like is called in a function body, it will behave as though at the top
; level, thus also not being sensitive to **1*-as-raw* for lexically
; apparent calls. That's OK.
(let ((oneified-logic (oneify (cadddr x) fns w program-p))
(oneified-exec (oneify (caddr x) fns w program-p)))
`(cond
((f-get-global 'safe-mode *the-live-state*)
(,(*1*-symbol 'return-last)
,qfn
,oneified-exec
,oneified-logic))
(t ,(if program-p
oneified-exec
`(if **1*-as-raw*
,oneified-exec
,oneified-logic))))))
(t
; Since fn is not 'ec-call1-raw, the guard of return-last is automatically met
; for the arguments.
(let ((args (oneify-lst (cddr x) fns w program-p)))
(cons fn args))))))
((or (member-eq (car x) *oneify-primitives*)
; Note that safe-mode for make-event will require addition of the following two
; lines:
; (member-eq (car x) (primitive-event-macros))
; (assoc-eq (car x) *super-defun-wart-table*)
(member-eq (car x) *macros-for-nonexpansion-in-raw-lisp*))
(let ((args (oneify-lst (cdr x) fns w program-p)))
(cons (car x) args)))
((eq (car x) 'mv-let)
(multiple-value-bind
(dcls alist)
(remove-type-dcls (butlast (cdddr x) 1))
(let* ((value-form (oneify (caddr x) fns w program-p))
(new-body (cond (alist
`(progn$
,@(alist-to-the-for-*1*-lst alist)
,(car (last x))))
(t (car (last x)))))
(body-form (oneify new-body fns w program-p)))
`(mv-let ,(cadr x)
,value-form
,@dcls
,body-form))))
; Feb 8, 1995. Once upon a time we had the following code here:
; ((eq (car x) 'the)
; (let ((value-form (oneify (caddr x) w)))
; `(the ,(cadr x) ,value-form)))
; But that led to garbage for a user defined function like
; (defun foo (x) (declare (xargs :verify-guards nil)) (the integer x))
; because (foo 3) = 3 but (foo t) would cause a hard error. We now
; just macroexpand the just like we would any other macro. We are not
; sure why we ever thought we could handle it any other way.
((eq (car x) 'flet) ; (flet ((fn1 ...) (fn2 ...) ...) declare-form* body)
(list 'flet
(oneify-flet-bindings (cadr x) fns w program-p)
(oneify (car (last x))
(union-eq (strip-cars (cadr x)) fns)
w
program-p)))
((eq (car x) 'translate-and-test)
(oneify (caddr x) fns w program-p))
((eq (car x) 'with-local-stobj)
(mv-let (erp st mv-let-form creator)
(parse-with-local-stobj (cdr x))
(declare (ignore erp)) ; should be nil
(mv-let-for-with-local-stobj mv-let-form st creator fns w
program-p)))
((eq (car x) 'stobj-let)
; Stobj-let is rather complicated, so we prefer to take advantage of the logic
; code for that macro. However, bindings of live stobjs vars may be necessary
; so that when we call a traced function on a live stobj that was stobj-let
; bound, then stobj-print-symbol can print the "{instance}" suffix, as it
; should. The easiest way to code that seems to be to go ahead and use the
; logical macroexpansion of stobj-let, and then fix it up with suitable
; bindings.
(let ((temp (oneify (stobj-let-fn x)
fns w program-p)))
(case-match temp
; Warning: Keep these cases in sync with stobj-let-fn.
(('let bindings . rest)
`(let* ,(append bindings
(the-maybe-live-var-bindings (strip-cars bindings)))
,@rest))
(('progn conjoined-no-dups-exprs
('let bindings . rest))
; Warning: Keep this case in sync with the definition of (prog2$ x y) as
; (return-last 'progn x y), and in sync with the handling of such a return-last
; form by oneify.
`(progn ,conjoined-no-dups-exprs
(let* ,(append bindings
(the-maybe-live-var-bindings
(strip-cars bindings)))
,@rest)))
(& (interface-er "Implementation error: unexpected form of stobj-let ~
encountered by ~
oneify!.~|~%Input:~|~y0~%Output:~|~y1~%Please ~
contact the ACL2 implementors."
x temp)))))
((member-eq (car x) '(let #+acl2-par plet))
(let* (#+acl2-par
(granularity-decl (and (eq (car x) 'plet)
(eq (car (cadr x)) 'declare)
(cadr x)))
(args #+acl2-par (if granularity-decl (cddr x) (cdr x))
#-acl2-par (cdr x))
(bindings (car args))
(post-bindings (cdr args)))
(multiple-value-bind
(dcls alist)
(remove-type-dcls (butlast post-bindings 1))
(let* ((value-forms (oneify-lst (strip-cadrs bindings) fns w program-p))
(new-body (cond (alist
`(progn$
,@(alist-to-the-for-*1*-lst alist)
,(car (last post-bindings))))
(t (car (last post-bindings)))))
(body-form (oneify new-body fns w program-p)))
`(,(car x)
#+acl2-par
,@(and granularity-decl
`((declare (granularity
,(oneify (cadr (cadr (cadr x))) fns w program-p)))))
,(listlis (strip-cars bindings)
value-forms)
,@dcls
,body-form)))))
#+acl2-par
((member-eq (car x) '(pand por pargs))
(if (declare-granularity-p (cadr x))
(list* (car x)
`(declare (granularity
,(oneify (cadr (cadr (cadr x))) fns w program-p)))
(oneify-lst (cddr x) fns w program-p))
(cons (car x)
(oneify-lst (cdr x) fns w program-p))))
((eq (car x) 'throw-or-attach) ; already handled in oneify-cltl-code
(interface-er
"Implementation error: Unexpected call of throw-or-attach in oneify:~%~x0"
x))
((and (getpropc (car x) 'macro-body nil w)
(not (member-eq (car x) fns)))
(oneify (macroexpand1! x) fns w program-p))
((eq (car x) 'wormhole-eval)
; We know that in a well-formed term (wormhole-eval x y z), x is a quoted
; constant naming the wormhole, y is a quoted lambda of either the form (lambda
; (whs) body) or (lambda () body) that will be applied to the wormhole status,
; and z is some well-formed (irrelevant) term. The oneify of a quote is
; itself, so we don't have to do anything to x. But with y, we oneify the
; lambda body. The ``call'' of wormhole-eval laid down below is a reference to
; the macro definition for that symbol in raw Lisp.
(let* ((qname (cadr x))
(qlambda (caddr x))
(formals (cadr (cadr qlambda)))
(body (caddr (cadr qlambda))))
(list 'wormhole-eval
qname
(list 'quote (list 'lambda formals (oneify body fns w program-p)))
*nil*)))
(t
(let ((arg-forms (oneify-lst (cdr x) fns w program-p))
(fn (cond ((and (eq program-p 'invariant-risk)
(not (getpropc (car x) 'invariant-risk nil w)))
(car x))
(t (*1*-symbol (car x))))))
(cons fn arg-forms)))))
(defun-one-output oneify-lst (lst fns w program-p)
(cond ((atom lst) nil)
(t (let ((x (oneify (car lst) fns w program-p))
(y (oneify-lst (cdr lst) fns w program-p)))
(cons x y)))))
)
(defun-one-output select-stobj (name stobjs terms)
(cond ((endp stobjs) nil)
((eq name (car stobjs)) (car terms))
(t (select-stobj name (cdr stobjs) (cdr terms)))))
(defun-one-output super-defstobj-wart-stobjs-in (formals stobj-flag)
(cond ((endp formals) nil)
((eq (car formals) stobj-flag)
(cons stobj-flag
(super-defstobj-wart-stobjs-in (cdr formals) stobj-flag)))
(t (cons nil
(super-defstobj-wart-stobjs-in (cdr formals) stobj-flag)))))
(defun-one-output oneify-fail-form (er-type fn formals guard super-stobjs-in
wrld extra)
; Warning: If you change this code, see the comment about "When changing
; oneify-fail-form" in oneify-cltl-code.
`(throw-raw-ev-fncall
(list ',er-type
',fn
(list ,@formals)
',guard
',(or super-stobjs-in
(stobjs-in fn wrld)
(if formals
(er hard 'oneify-cltl-code
"I didn't think this could happen, but for fn = ~x0 ~
stobjs-in is nil and formals isn't."
fn)
nil))
,extra)))
(defun-one-output get-declared-stobjs (edcls)
; Keep this in sync with get-declared-stobj-names (which does checking and
; returns a value triple).
(if (endp edcls)
nil
(union-eq (and (eq (caar edcls) 'xargs)
(let ((stobjs (cadr (assoc-keyword :STOBJS (cdar edcls)))))
(cond ((symbol-listp stobjs) stobjs)
((and stobjs (symbolp stobjs)) (list stobjs))
(t nil))))
(get-declared-stobjs (cdr edcls)))))
(defun-one-output warn-for-guard-body (fn)
(assert$ (boundp '*raw-guard-warningp*)
(setq *raw-guard-warningp* nil))
(let ((state *the-live-state*))
(warning$ 'top-level "Guards"
"Guard-checking will be inhibited on recursive calls of the ~
executable counterpart (i.e., in the ACL2 logic) of ~x0. To ~
check guards on all recursive calls:~% (set-guard-checking ~
:all)~%To leave behavior unchanged except for inhibiting this ~
message:~% (set-guard-checking :nowarn)"
fn)))
(defun-one-output create-live-user-stobjp-test (stobjs)
(if (endp stobjs)
t
(let* ((stj (car stobjs))
(rst (create-live-user-stobjp-test (cdr stobjs)))
(tst `(live-stobjp ,stj)))
(cond ((eq stj 'state) rst)
((eq rst t) tst)
(t `(and ,tst ,rst))))))
(defun labels-form-for-*1* (fn *1*fn formals *1*body
declare-stobj-special
ignore-vars ignorable-vars
super-stobjs-in super-stobjs-chk
guard wrld)
(let ((*1*fn-binding `(,*1*fn
,formals
,@(and declare-stobj-special
(list declare-stobj-special))
,@(and ignore-vars
`((declare (ignore ,@ignore-vars))))
,@(and ignorable-vars
`((declare (ignorable ,@ignorable-vars))))
,@(and super-stobjs-in
; If the form below is removed, we might expect to get a hard Lisp error from
; the following:
; (defstobj foo (arr :type (array t (10))))
; (set-guard-checking nil)
; (update-arri 20 4 foo)
; The problem would seem to be that an ill-guarded call of update-nth has
; replaced a copy of the stobj array by a list in (user-stobj-alist
; *the-live-state*), which produces a mismatch with *the-live-foo*.
; However, no such error occurs. At some point we may spend the energy to
; convince ourselves that it is safe to remove this code, but for now, it seems
; harmless enough to leave it here, since super-stobjs-chk is a fast test.
`((when ,super-stobjs-chk
,(oneify-fail-form
'ev-fncall-guard-er fn formals
guard super-stobjs-in wrld
:live-stobj))))
,*1*body)))
`(labels (,*1*fn-binding)
(,*1*fn ,@formals))))
(defun oneify-cltl-code (defun-mode def stobj-flag wrld
&optional trace-rec-for-none)
; Warning: Keep this in sync with intro-udf-lst2 for the case that defun-mode
; is nil (i.e., the non-executable case).
; This function is called when add-trip encounters a 'cltl-command triple,
; which is laid down by install-event after the triple for the symbol-class is
; laid down. Thus, the symbol-class for the function at hand has already been
; stored. Stobj-flag is the name of the stobj (whether from defstobj or
; defabsstobj), if any, that the given definition supports.
; Warning: wrld is not necessarily the ACL2 world at the time def is submitted.
; See the comment below in the binding of cl-compliant-p-optimization.
; However, wrld is a legal ACL2 world, typically, the current ACL2 world.
; See the template above for detailed comments, which however are not
; necessarily kept fully up-to-date.
(when (and stobj-flag (null (cadr def)))
; We want to know if (car def) is a stobj creator, but it is premature to call
; stobj-creatorp using wrld because the necessary properties have not yet been
; laid down. So we use the test above. Keep this null test in sync with the
; one in stobj-creatorp.
(return-from oneify-cltl-code
`(,(*1*-symbol (car def)) nil
(throw-raw-ev-fncall ; as in oneify-fail-form
(list 'ev-fncall-creator-er ',(car def))))))
(when (null defun-mode)
; We have a non-executable function, where def is generated by intro-udf-lst2.
; Suppose an attachment is to be invoked. In the :non-executable :program case
; (i.e., ``proxy'' case, as in defproxy), we pass control to the *1* function
; for the attachment, since :skip-checks t is specified not to do any checking
; in this case (see :DOC defproxy). Otherwise, we proceed as though all checks
; have been made (again, see :DOC defproxy), in particular going straight to
; the raw Lisp function if we see that the guard is t, since then the guard of
; the attachment is also presumably true.
(return-from oneify-cltl-code
(case-match def
((fn formals ('declare ('xargs ':non-executable ':program))
('throw-or-attach fn formals))
`(,(*1*-symbol fn)
,formals
(throw-or-attach ,fn ,formals t)))
((fn formals ('declare ('xargs ':guard guard))
('throw-or-attach fn formals))
`(,(*1*-symbol fn)
,formals
,(cond ((or (eq guard t)
(equal guard *t*))
(car (last def)))
(t
`(throw-or-attach ,fn ,formals t)))))
((fn formals
('throw-or-attach fn formals)) ; implicit :guard of t
(prog2$ formals ; avoid compiler warning
`(,(*1*-symbol fn) ,@(cdr def))))
((fn formals
('throw-without-attach 'nil fn formals))
(prog2$ formals ; avoid compiler warning
`(,(*1*-symbol fn) ,@(cdr def))))
(& (interface-er
"Implementation error: Oneify-cltl-code encountered ~
non-executable definition, ~x0, that was not what we ~
would expect to be generated by intro-udf-lst2."
def)))))
(mv-let
(dcls guard)
; We call dcls-guard-raw-from-def both here and via the call of guard-raw in
; oneify-cltl-code, so that the logical behavior for guard violations agrees
; with what is actually executed.
(dcls-guard-raw-from-def def wrld)
(let* ((guard-is-t (and (or (eq guard t)
(equal guard *t*))
; If stobj-flag is true, normally the guard will not be t because it will
; include a corresponding stobj recognizer call. But the guard could be t in
; the case of a function exported by a defabsstobj, where the guard is derived
; from the :logic function specified for that export. We want to avoid the
; optimization of defining the *1* function to call the raw Lisp function in
; this case, so that appropriate live stobj checks can be made.
(not (and stobj-flag
; But is it an abstract concrete stobj?
(getpropc stobj-flag 'absstobj-info nil
wrld)))))
(fn (car def))
(*1*fn (*1*-symbol fn))
(cl-compliant-p-optimization
(and (eq defun-mode :logic)
; One might think that the conjunct above is implied by the one below. But
; consider this book:
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :mode :program))
; x)
; (verify-termination foo)
; (verify-guards foo)
; At one point we checked the symbol-class first, and then did an assert check
; that defun-mode is :logic -- and we got the assertion error during Step 3 of
; certify-book for this example! The backtrace looked like this:
; 1. THROW-RAW-EV-FNCALL
; 2. (HARD-ERROR ASSERT$ ...)
; 3. ONEIFY-CLTL-CODE
; 4. INSTALL-DEFS-FOR-ADD-TRIP
; 5. HCOMP-BUILD-FROM-STATE-RAW
; The problem was that the world wasn't rolled back by Step 3, and hence foo
; was :common-lisp-compliant at the point where we were processing the first
; defun. Our solution is to make sure that we are oneifying a function that is
; truly :common-lisp-compliant.
(eq (symbol-class fn wrld) :common-lisp-compliant)))
(formals (cadr def))
(boot-strap-p (f-get-global 'boot-strap-flg *the-live-state*)))
(cond
((or (and guard-is-t cl-compliant-p-optimization)
(and boot-strap-p ; optimization (well, except for :redef)
(member-eq fn
'(thm-fn
make-event-fn
certify-book-fn
; Keep the following in sync with primitive-event-macros.
defun-fn
;; #+:non-standard-analysis
;; defun-std ; defun-fn
defuns-fn ; mutual-recursion
;; defuns ; calls defuns-fn, above
defthm-fn
;; #+:non-standard-analysis
;; defthm-std ; calls defthm-fn, above
defaxiom-fn
defconst-fn
defstobj-fn defabsstobj-fn
defpkg-fn
deflabel-fn
deftheory-fn
defchoose-fn
verify-guards-fn
defmacro-fn
in-theory-fn
in-arithmetic-theory-fn
regenerate-tau-database-fn
push-untouchable-fn
remove-untouchable-fn
reset-prehistory-fn
set-body-fn
table-fn
progn-fn
encapsulate-fn
include-book-fn
change-include-book-dir
comp-fn
verify-termination-fn
verify-termination-boot-strap-fn
;; add-match-free-override ; should be fast enough
; Theory-invariant is included in *macros-for-nonexpansion-in-raw-lisp*. The
; remaining members of primitive-event-macros, after theory-invariant, are
; handled well enough already since we included table-fn above.
))))
; Optimization in a common case: avoid labels function. Note that if the guard
; is t then there are no stobjs except for the recognizer, whose raw Lisp code
; can handle non-live stobjs.
`(,*1*fn
,formals
,(cons fn formals)))
(t
(let* ((invariant-risk
(getpropc fn 'invariant-risk nil wrld))
(super-stobjs-in ; At a "leaf" of a stobj-based computation?
(if stobj-flag
; Then we are looking at a function introduced by a defstobj or defabsstobj
; event.
(let ((temp (super-defstobj-wart-stobjs-in formals
stobj-flag)))
(cond ((find-first-non-nil temp)
temp)
(t nil)))
; Else see if we are looking at a function that takes state but has logic code
; that does not handle a live state properly (and not just because of calls to
; lower-level functions with that problem).
(cdr (assoc-eq fn *super-defun-wart-stobjs-in-alist*))))
(ignore-vars
; If super-stobjs-in is non-nil, then we will lay down a call (oneify-fail-form
; ... :live-stobj) that refers to all the formals; hence ignore-vars should be
; nil if super-stobjs-in is non-nil. When changing oneify-fail-form, consider
; changing this code as well.
(and (not super-stobjs-in) (ignore-vars dcls)))
(ignorable-vars (ignorable-vars dcls))
(program-p (eq defun-mode :program))
(*1*guard (oneify guard nil wrld program-p))
; We throw away most declararations and the doc string, keeping only ignore and
; ignorable declarations. Note that it is quite reasonable to ignore
; declarations when constructing ``slow'' functions.
(body (car (last def)))
(*1*body
; WARNING! We need to be very careful that we only use *1*body in an
; environment where *1*fn refers to the top-level function currently being
; defined. We should not use *1*body in the scope of a top-level flet or
; labels that rebinds *1*fn, since recursive calls there of *1*fn are
; presumably intended to refer to the top-level function, not the local
; function, so that guards can be checked etc. We can, however, use *1*body in
; the binding of such a local definition. We will be free to use *1*body in
; the body of the top-level definition of *1*fn in the case of :program mode
; because we promise not to introduce a top-level flet in that case.
(oneify body nil wrld program-p))
(guard-checking-on-form
; Functions in the ev-rec nest have a gc-off parameter that we generally assume
; to correspond with the state global guard-checking-on used here, so that the
; logic-only and raw lisp code agree. See the comment in *ev-shortcut-okp*.
(cond (super-stobjs-in
'(let ((temp (f-get-global 'guard-checking-on
*the-live-state*)))
(cond ((or (eq temp :none) (eq temp nil))
; Calls of a stobj primitive that takes its stobj as an argument are always
; guard-checked. If that changes, consider also changing
; ev-fncall-rec-logical. Note that we rely on this guard-checking for handling
; of invariant-risk; we arrange that evaluation stays with *1* functions up to
; reaching the stobj primitive, which is responsible for causing a guard
; violation rather than allowing an invariant to be violated.
t)
(t temp))))
(t '(f-get-global 'guard-checking-on *the-live-state*))))
(skip-early-exit-code-when-none
(and (eq defun-mode :logic) ; :program handled elsewhere
; We generally skip some special "early exit" code when 'guard-checking-on has
; value :none. But it seems scary to allow :none to avoid raw Lisp for
; built-ins, even in :logic mode, because of efficiency. So when we are in the
; boot-strap, we do the early exit code (which can call the raw Lisp function)
; even if 'guard-checking-on has value :none. Exception: We want the-check to
; avoid guard errors when 'guard-checking-on has value :none.
(or (not boot-strap-p)
(eq fn 'the-check))))
(guard-checking-is-really-on-form
; This variable should only be used in the scope of the binding expression for
; early-exit-code.
(cond (super-stobjs-in
; The value of guard-checking-on has already been coerced from :none or nil to
; t, in guard-checking-on-form.
t)
(skip-early-exit-code-when-none
; As mentioned above, guard-checking-is-really-on-form is only used for
; defining early-exit-code. But evaluation of early-exit-code is skipped when
; 'guard-checking-on has value :none in the present case, where
; skip-early-exit-code-when-none is true.
guard-checking-on-form)
(t `(let ((x ,guard-checking-on-form))
(and x
(not (eq x :none)))))))
(fail_guard ; form for reporting guard failure
(oneify-fail-form
'ev-fncall-guard-er fn formals guard super-stobjs-in wrld
(and super-stobjs-in
'(cond ((member-eq (f-get-global 'guard-checking-on
*the-live-state*)
'(nil :none))
:live-stobj)
(t
:live-stobj-gc-on)))))
(fail_safe ; form for reporting guard or safe mode failure
(oneify-fail-form 'ev-fncall-guard-er fn formals guard
super-stobjs-in wrld t))
(safe-form
; Functions in the ev-rec nest have a safe-mode parameter that we generally
; assume to agree with the state global safe-mode, so that the logic-only and
; raw lisp code agree. See the comment in *ev-shortcut-okp*.
'(f-get-global 'safe-mode *the-live-state*))
(super-stobjs-chk
(if stobj-flag
(let ((first-non-nil (find-first-non-nil super-stobjs-in)))
`(live-stobjp ,first-non-nil))
`(live-state-p
,(select-stobj 'state super-stobjs-in formals))))
(declared-stobjs (if stobj-flag
(list stobj-flag)
(get-declared-stobjs dcls)))
(user-stobj-is-arg (and declared-stobjs
(not (equal declared-stobjs '(state)))))
(live-stobjp-test (create-live-user-stobjp-test declared-stobjs))
(declare-stobj-special
; Without a special declaration for the live stobj, a defstobj or defabsstobj
; event will introduce *1* functions in add-trip, via a defuns trip, before the
; defstobj or defabsstobj trip introduces the live stobj variable as special.
; This might not be a big deal unless we compile, by which time (at the end of
; processing the defstobj or defabsstobj trip) the live stobj variable has been
; introduced with defparameter, thus globally declaring it special. However,
; CCL complains because compilation is done when the *1* function is first
; introduced. It seems appropriate to declare the live stobj variable special
; as soon as it is referenced, in such *1* functions, even though CCL might be
; the only Lisp that could need this done.
(and stobj-flag
`(declare (special ,(the-live-var stobj-flag)))))
(guarded-primitive-p
; We want to check guards on the "leaves" of a computation in safe-mode, for
; example, on a call of EQ. Evaluation in the ACL2 logic can only diverge from
; evaluation in (raw) Common Lisp when a guard is violated on a function that
; is already defined in Common Lisp. A function considered here that is at
; risk for such divergence has a non-T guard, is being defined in the
; boot-strap, and is not in the "ACL2" or "ACL2-PC" package (which are unknown
; to Common Lisp). So as we generate code here, we restrict the additional
; guard-check in safe-mode to such functions.
(and (not guard-is-t) ; we are trusting guards on the primitives!
boot-strap-p
(not (member-equal (symbol-package-name fn)
'("ACL2" "ACL2-PC")))))
(logic-recursive-p
(and (eq defun-mode :logic)
(ffnnamep-mod-mbe fn (body fn nil wrld))))
(labels-can-miss-guard
(and logic-recursive-p ; there is no labels form for :program
; If the function is common-lisp-compliant, then the only way we can fall
; through to the labels form is if guard-checking is nil or :none (not :all),
; in which case there is no reason to warn.
(not cl-compliant-p-optimization)
(not guard-is-t)))
(trace-rec-for-none
; If trace-rec-for-none is non-nil, then we guarantee that if
; 'guard-checking-on is set to :none, we will see all the recursive calls.
; This is useful for tracing. Extra code for this case is only necessary for
; :logic mode, since the only issue is the call of a labels function, which
; only occurs in :logic mode and in the invariant-risk case (where we need to
; enter that labels code, which oneifies in a special way to deal with the
; invariant-risk issue).
(and trace-rec-for-none
logic-recursive-p
(eq defun-mode :logic)))
(program-only (and program-p ; optimization
(member-eq fn
; If this test becomes an issue, we might consider reimplementing the
; program-only mechanism by way of :program-only xargs, which would place a
; property that we can look up. Careful though -- at this point we probably
; have not yet installed a world with all the new properties of fn.
(f-get-global
'program-fns-with-raw-code
*the-live-state*))))
(fail_program-only-safe
; At one time we put down a form here that throws to the tag 'raw-ev-fncall:
; (oneify-fail-form 'program-only-er fn formals guard
; super-stobjs-in wrld
; t)
; However, because that throw is caught (in the function raw-ev-fncall), it
; should be accounted for in the function ev-fncall-rec-logical. However, that
; function does not take state, which is unfortunate since the program-only
; case (under which we lay down this form) is based on state global
; 'program-fns-with-raw-code. We considered moving that global to the world,
; but were concerned about the effects that would have on ACL2s (see for
; example the use of program-fns-with-raw-code in
; workshops/2007/dillinger-et-al/code/hacker.lisp), and in general we'd have to
; add yet another event and deal with whether the event should be local to
; books. Instead, we have decided to cause a raw Lisp error, which is always
; legitimate (after all, Lisp might cause a resource error).
`(error "~%~a~%"
(fms-to-string
"~@0~%~@1"
(list (cons #\0 (program-only-er-msg
',fn (list ,@formals) t))
(cons #\1 "~%Note: If you have a reason to ~
prefer an ACL2 error here instead of ~
a hard Lisp error, please contact the ~
ACL2 implementors."))
:evisc-tuple
(abbrev-evisc-tuple *the-live-state*)
:fmt-control-alist
(list (cons 'fmt-hard-right-margin
(f-get-global 'fmt-hard-right-margin
*the-live-state*))
(cons 'fmt-soft-right-margin
(f-get-global 'fmt-soft-right-margin
*the-live-state*))))))
(early-exit-code-main
(let ((cl-compliant-code-guard-not-t
; We lay down code for the common-lisp-compliant case that checks the guard and
; acts accordingly: if the guard checks, then it returns the result of calling
; fn, and if not, then it fails if appropriate and otherwise falls through.
(and
(not guard-is-t) ; optimization for code below
(eq defun-mode :logic) ; optimization for code below
; NOTE: we have to test for live stobjs before we evaluate the guard, since the
; Common Lisp guard may assume all stobjs are live. We actually only need
; stobjs to be live that occur in the guard in other than stobj recognizer
; calls; but we take the easy way out (except for a stobj-flag case below) and
; check that all stobjs are live before evaluating the raw Lisp guard. After
; all, the cost of that check is only some eq tests.
`(cond
,(cond
((eq live-stobjp-test t)
`(,guard
(return-from ,*1*fn (,fn ,@formals))))
(t
`((if ,live-stobjp-test
,(if stobj-flag
; Essay on Stobj Guard Attachments
; We disallow attachments during evaluation of guards on behalf of any stobj
; updater. The example below, which is a slight modification of one provided
; by Jared Davis, shows why this is important for defstobj. The idea is that
; in order to preserve the invariant that the stobj recognizer holds, it
; suffices that the initial stobj satisfies that recognizer and that the guard
; holds for each call of an updater. But suppose for example that an
; attachment is used in evaluating the guard for the first update. If later
; (perhaps after many more updates) we change that attachment, then that guard
; now may be false, and thus the recognizer may fail to hold after the first
; update and thus fail to hold currently. On the other hand, if such guard
; evaluation never involves attachments, then since the initial stobj provably
; satisfies the recognizer, then since each updater guard holds (in fact,
; provably holds), the resulting stobjs all satisfy the recognizer.
; The discussion above applies not only in the case of defstobj but also in the
; case of defabsstobj. Consider an abstract function exported from a
; defabsstobj event that updates a stobj. The avoidance of attachments
; guarantees that every abstract stobj update satisfies the abstract function's
; guard and hence, by the {preserved} theorems, results in an abstract stobj
; that satisfies the abstract predicate -- provably, since we are dealing with
; ground terms. Moreover, because of the {guard-thm} theorems we know that the
; concrete predicate provably holds as well, and hence won't be "revoked" as in
; the preceding paragraph.
; Why do we care about guards on concrete stobjs? For all we know, failure to
; respect those guards could result in corruption of the Lisp process. An
; obvious case would be if a stobj field is an array of bits, laid out
; compactly according to that spec, and we update with an arbitrary object
; (say, a cons). Although it seems that only a SATISFIES type declaration
; could result in a attachments being used for guard evaluation, we are
; conservative here. After all, adding a binding of *aokp* is cheap in the
; context of evaluating just the guard.
; Note that it is not sufficient to ensure for an abstract stobj that the
; corresponding concrete stobj always satisfies its recognizer. It is easy to
; imagine a defabsstobj :export field that specifies the identify function for
; its :logic component, returning the stobj unchanged, but for the :exec
; component makes an ill-guarded call to update the stobj, corrupting the Lisp
; imagine, before restoring the stobj. In raw Lisp, this could really happen
; because the export is a macro that calls the :exec function directly; the
; only guard that need be met before this happens is a variant of the :logic
; function's guard, at the level of *1* function of the export.
; Finally, here is the example promised above.
; (progn
; (defstub foop (x) t)
; (defun barp (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard t))
; (or (not x)
; (foop x)))
; (defstobj st
; (fld :type (satisfies barp)))
; (defthm barp-of-fld
; (implies (stp st)
; (barp (fld st))))
; (defun my-integerp (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard t))
; (integerp x)))
; (defattach foop my-integerp)
; (trace$ foop barp my-integerp)
; (update-fld 3 st) ; note that foop calls its attachment, my-integerp
; (defattach foop consp)
; (barp (fld st)) ; nil (ouch)
; (stp st) ; returns t, but is really (logically) nil
; The code just below ensures that the updater will be evaluated without
; attachments. It might needlessly ensure that other functions introduced by
; defstobj (for the given stobj-flag) are evaluated without attachments, for
; example if the getprop below returns nil because the necessary property has
; not yet been put into wrld. But as of this writing, the test seems to apply
; only to stobj updaters and resize functions.
(let ((stobjs-out
(getpropc fn 'stobjs-out nil
wrld)))
(cond
((and stobjs-out ; property is there
(all-nils stobjs-out))
guard)
(t `(let ((*aokp* nil))
,guard))))
guard)
,*1*guard)
,(assert$
; No user-stobj-based functions are primitives for which we need to give
; special consideration to safe-mode.
(not guarded-primitive-p)
`(cond (,live-stobjp-test
(return-from ,*1*fn
(,fn ,@formals))))))))
,@(cond (super-stobjs-in
`((t ,fail_guard)))
(guarded-primitive-p
`(((or ,guard-checking-is-really-on-form
,safe-form)
,fail_safe)))
(t
`((,guard-checking-is-really-on-form
,fail_guard))))))))
(if cl-compliant-p-optimization
(assert$ (not guard-is-t) ; already handled way above
(list cl-compliant-code-guard-not-t))
(let ((cond-clauses
`(,@(and (eq defun-mode :logic)
; If the guard is t, then we want to execute the raw Lisp code in the
; :common-lisp-compliant case even if guard-checking is :none. This
; early-exit-code is only executed when guard-checking is not :none, so
; we need to handle that special case (:none, guard t) elsewhere, and
; we do so in *1*-body-forms below.
(not guard-is-t)
`(((eq (symbol-class ',fn (w *the-live-state*))
:common-lisp-compliant)
,cl-compliant-code-guard-not-t)))
,@(and (not guard-is-t)
(cond
(super-stobjs-in
`(((not ,*1*guard)
,fail_guard)))
(guarded-primitive-p
`(((and (or ,safe-form
,guard-checking-is-really-on-form)
(not ,*1*guard))
,fail_safe)))
(t
`(((and ,guard-checking-is-really-on-form
(not ,*1*guard))
,fail_guard)))))
,@(and
program-p
; In the boot-strap world we have :program mode functions whose definitions are
; different in raw Lisp from the logic, such as ev and get-global. If we allow
; :all or :none to serve their purposes for those functions, we can wind up
; with unpleasant guard violations. For example, wet (when we had it) expanded
; to a call of with-error-trace-fn, and if the idea of :all is applied then we
; get the following sequence of calls in the logic (i.e., using their *1*
; functions): with-error-trace-fn, trans-eval, ev, ev-rec, ev-fncall-rec,
; ev-fncall-rec-logical, w-of-any-state, and finally global-table. The last of
; these calls causes a guard violation since *the-live-state* is not a true
; list.
; Also, we want to make sure that built-in :program mode functions run fast,
; for example, defthm-fn.
; And finally, this is where we finish handling of safe-mode for
; guarded-primitive-p functions, specifically those in :program mode since if
; such a function is in :logic mode then either it is non-executable or
; :common-lisp-compliant (see check-none-ideal), hence is handled above.
(cond
(boot-strap-p
`((,safe-form
,(cond
(program-only
fail_program-only-safe)
(t
`(return-from ,*1*fn ,*1*body))))
,@(and
invariant-risk
`((t (return-from ,*1*fn ,*1*body))))))
(program-only
`((,safe-form
,fail_program-only-safe)
((member-eq ,guard-checking-on-form
'(:none :all))
(return-from ,*1*fn ,*1*body))))
(t `(((or (member-eq
,guard-checking-on-form
'(:none :all))
,safe-form)
(return-from ,*1*fn ,*1*body)))))))))
(and cond-clauses
(list (cons 'cond cond-clauses)))))))
(early-exit-code
(and early-exit-code-main
(cond ((and invariant-risk
(not super-stobjs-in))
; If we are under **1*-as-raw*, then our intention is that code executes just
; as it would in raw Lisp (i.e., without forcing execution via *1* function),
; except that guards are checked for stobj primitives. This speial treatment
; is only required in the invariant-risk case; see **1*-as-raw* and state
; global 'check-invariant-risk. Moreover, we want the normal flow in the *1*
; function for stobj primitives, so we don't give this special treatment when
; super-stobjs-in is true. It would be sound to make other exceptions as well,
; but that would cause unnecessary guard-checking. Indeed, unnecessary extra
; guard-checking was done through Version_7.0, which resulted in slowdowns to
; user code that led us to remove that extra guard-checking.
`((when (not **1*-as-raw*)
,@early-exit-code-main)))
(t early-exit-code-main))))
(main-body-before-final-call
; This is the code that is executed before we fall through: to the final labels
; function in the :logic mode case, but to the non-*1* call in the :program
; mode case.
(append
(and user-stobj-is-arg
`((when *wormholep*
(wormhole-er (quote ,fn) (list ,@formals)))))
(and (eq defun-mode :logic) ; else :program
guard-is-t
(assert$ ; compliant with guard t is handled early above
(not cl-compliant-p-optimization)
`((when (eq (symbol-class ',fn (w *the-live-state*))
:common-lisp-compliant)
(return-from ,*1*fn (,fn ,@formals))))))
(cond ((and skip-early-exit-code-when-none
early-exit-code) ; else nil; next case provides nil
(cond (super-stobjs-in early-exit-code) ; optimization
(t
`((when (not (eq ,guard-checking-on-form :none))
,@early-exit-code)))))
(t early-exit-code))
(cond (trace-rec-for-none
`((return-from ,*1*fn ,*1*body)))
(labels-can-miss-guard
`((when (eq ,guard-checking-on-form :all)
(return-from ,*1*fn ,*1*body)))))
(and (and labels-can-miss-guard
(not trace-rec-for-none)) ; else skip labels form
`((when (and *raw-guard-warningp*
(eq ,guard-checking-on-form t))
(warn-for-guard-body ',fn))))))
(*1*-body-forms
(cond ((eq defun-mode :program)
(append
main-body-before-final-call
(cond
((and invariant-risk
(eq defun-mode :program))
(let ((check-invariant-risk-sym
; The serialize code seems to cause errors for a symbol with no package.
(gentemp))
(cont-p (gentemp)))
`((let ((,check-invariant-risk-sym
(get-check-invariant-risk
*the-live-state*))
(,cont-p nil))
(cond
((and
,check-invariant-risk-sym
(not (f-get-global 'boot-strap-flg
*the-live-state*)))
(cond
((eq ,check-invariant-risk-sym :ERROR)
(state-free-global-let*
((debugger-enable t))
(cerror
"~% Continue with invariant-risk ~
mode of T~% (that is, with state ~
global 'check-invariant-risk bound to ~
T)~% to complete the current call ~
of ~s.~% See :DOC invariant-risk."
"Invariant-risk has been detected for a ~
call of function ~s~%(as possibly ~
leading to an ill-guarded call of ~
~s);~%see :DOC invariant-risk."
',fn ',invariant-risk))
(setq ,cont-p t))
((eq ,check-invariant-risk-sym :WARNING)
(warning$ ',fn
"Invariant-risk"
"Invariant-risk has been ~
detected for a call of function ~
~x0 (as possibly leading to an ~
ill-guarded call of ~x1); see ~
:DOC invariant-risk."
',fn ',invariant-risk)
(setq ,cont-p t))
(t ; 'check-invariant-risk has value t
t))
; Now that we have perhaps caused a continuable error or a warning for
; invariant-risk, produce the result if an error didn't abort this computation.
(let ((**1*-as-raw* t))
; One reason that we bind **1*-as-raw* above and use labels below is to helps
; compilers remove tail recursions, since we believe that special variable
; binding can get in the way of that. (We do this regardless of the presence
; of recursion, simply because that is simplest and we expect, or at least,
; hope, that there is only trivial impact on performance.)
,(let ((labels-form
(labels-form-for-*1*
fn *1*fn formals
(oneify body nil wrld
'invariant-risk)
declare-stobj-special
ignore-vars ignorable-vars
super-stobjs-in super-stobjs-chk
guard wrld)))
(if cont-p
`(state-free-global-let*
((check-invariant-risk t))
,labels-form)
labels-form))))
(t (,fn ,@formals)))))))
(t `((,fn ,@formals))))))
(trace-rec-for-none
main-body-before-final-call)
(t
(append
main-body-before-final-call
(list
(labels-form-for-*1*
fn *1*fn formals *1*body
declare-stobj-special
ignore-vars ignorable-vars
super-stobjs-in super-stobjs-chk
guard wrld)))))))
(let ((*1*dcls (and declare-stobj-special
(list declare-stobj-special))))
`(,*1*fn
,formals
,@*1*dcls
; At one time we attempted to do some code-sharing using a macro call, by using
; *1*body-call in place of *1*body in the code above, where *1*body-call was
; defined as shown below. But with an ACL2 image built on Allegro, for (ld
; "books/rtl/rel4/support/merge.lisp") with (set-inhibit-output-lst '(prove
; proof-tree)) after (prof:start-profiler), it took 127.5 seconds to run such a
; modification of oneify-cltl-code, as opposed to 103.5 seconds. Granted, we
; chose this file because it was shown in some earlier experiments with
; macrolet to have a particularly bad slowdown over previous versions without
; macrolet. But still, we suffer the extra code for recursive :ideal-mode
; functions rather than generate macrolet forms. Below are the relevant
; bindings used in a previous version of this code, in case we decide to
; revisit this approach.
; (*1*body-call-shared-p
;
; ; We want to keep code size down by using macrolet to share the *1*body ;
; ; expression, but preferably not otherwise, to avoid overhead that we seem to ;
; ; have observed, at least in Allegro CL, for expanding (uncompiled) macrolet ;
; ; calls. The expression below should thus agree with the governing conditions ;
; ; for the occurrences of *1*body-call outside the labels function that will ;
; ; also occur in a corresponding labels function. The latter rules out the case ;
; ; (eq defun-mode :program). ;
;
; (ffnnamep fn (body fn nil wrld)))
; (*1*body-macro (and *1*body-call-shared-p
; (acl2-gentemp "*1*BODY-MACRO")))
; (*1*body-call (if *1*body-call-shared-p
; `(,*1*body-macro)
; *1*body))
;
; ;;; end of let* bindings .... and here is the replacement for ,@*1*-body-forms
; ;;; below:
;
; ,@(if *1*body-call-shared-p
; `((macrolet ((,*1*body-macro () ',*1*body))
; ,@*1*-body-forms))
; *1*-body-forms)
,@*1*-body-forms))))))))
; PROMPTS
; New ACL2 users sometimes do not notice that they are outside the ACL2
; read-eval-print loop when in a break. We modify the prompts when we see how
; to do so, so that in a break we see "[RAW LISP]" in the prompt. For most
; lisps, this seems to require changing the prompt at the top-level too, not
; just in a break.
(defvar *saved-raw-prompt* nil)
(defvar *saved-raw-prompt-p* nil)
#+allegro
(progn
(defun-one-output install-new-raw-prompt ()
(cond ((not *saved-raw-prompt-p*)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt* tpl:*prompt*)
(setq tpl:*prompt*
(concatenate 'string *saved-raw-prompt* "[RAW LISP] "))
(setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* t))))
(defun-one-output install-old-raw-prompt ()
(cond (*saved-raw-prompt-p*
(setq tpl:*prompt* *saved-raw-prompt*)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* nil)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt* nil) ; no longer needed; free storage
t))))
#+clisp
(progn
(defun-one-output install-new-raw-prompt ()
(cond ((not *saved-raw-prompt-p*)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt* custom::*prompt-body*)
(setq custom::*prompt-body* ; attempt to mimic clisp 2.33
(function
(lambda ()
(if (equal system::*home-package* *package*)
(format nil "[RAW LISP]")
(format nil "~a [RAW LISP]" (package-name *package*))))))
(setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* t))))
(defun-one-output install-old-raw-prompt ()
(cond (*saved-raw-prompt-p*
(setq custom::*prompt-body* *saved-raw-prompt*)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* nil)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt* nil) ; no longer needed; free storage
t))))
#+cmu
(progn
(defun-one-output install-new-raw-prompt ()
(setq debug:*debug-prompt*
(function (lambda ()
(debug::debug-prompt)
(format t "[RAW LISP] ")
(force-output t)))))
(defun-one-output install-old-raw-prompt ()
(setq debug:*debug-prompt*
(function debug::debug-prompt))))
#+ccl
(progn
(defun-one-output install-new-raw-prompt ()
(cond ((not *saved-raw-prompt-p*)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt*
(symbol-function 'ccl::print-listener-prompt))
(let ((ccl:*warn-if-redefine-kernel* nil))
(setf (symbol-function 'ccl::print-listener-prompt)
(lambda (stream &rest args)
(declare (ignore stream))
(apply *saved-raw-prompt* *debug-io* args)
(format *debug-io* "[RAW LISP] "))))
(setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* t))))
(defun-one-output install-old-raw-prompt ()
(cond (*saved-raw-prompt-p*
(let ((ccl:*warn-if-redefine-kernel* nil))
(setf (symbol-function 'ccl::print-listener-prompt)
*saved-raw-prompt*))
(setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* nil)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt* nil) ; no longer needed; free storage
t))))
#+(and gcl (not cltl2))
; We are a bit sorry that we messed around at this low a level, and choose not
; to do so for ANSI GCL.
(progn
(defun-one-output install-new-raw-prompt ()
(cond ((not (and (eql si::*gcl-major-version* 2)
(eql si::*gcl-minor-version* 6)))
(cond (*lp-ever-entered-p*
(er hard 'install-new-raw-prompt
"Install-new-raw-prompt is only supported in GCL 2.6 and ~
its sub-versions. This appears to be a GCL ~s0.~s1."
si::*gcl-major-version*
si::*gcl-minor-version*))
(t (setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* t))))
((not *saved-raw-prompt-p*)
(setq si::*debug-prompt-suffix* "[RAW LISP]")
(setf *saved-raw-prompt* (symbol-function 'si::break-level))
(setf (symbol-function 'si::break-level)
(symbol-function 'si::break-level-for-acl2))
(setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* t))))
(defun-one-output install-old-raw-prompt ()
(cond (*saved-raw-prompt-p*
(setq si::*debug-prompt-suffix* "")
(setf (symbol-function 'si::break-level)
; Since we set si::*debug-prompt-suffix*, we really don't have to revert
; (symbol-function 'si::break-level) -- unless our patch,
; 'si::break-level-for-acl2 is out of sync with the current GCL's
; 'si::break-level. So we play it safe and revert.
*saved-raw-prompt*)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt-p* nil)
(setq *saved-raw-prompt* nil) ; no longer needed; free storage
t))))
#-(or allegro clisp cmu ccl (and gcl (not cltl2)))
(progn
(defun-one-output install-new-raw-prompt ()
nil)
(defun-one-output install-old-raw-prompt ()
nil)
)
; DYNAMICALLY MONITOR REWRITES ("dmr")
;;; User-settable dmr variables
; User settable to any positive number, indicating the number of pushes on the
; gstack before *dmr-file-name* is written.
; If you set this, consider also setting Emacs Lisp variable
; *acl2-timer-display-interval*.
(defvar *dmr-interval* 1000)
(defvar *dmr-interval-acl2-par-hack* 300000)
(defvar *dmr-interval-used*)
; This variable's positive integer value indicates the maximum indentation for
; each line in the display. Lines that otherwise would exceed this indentation
; are instead shown as
; {x} n. ....
; where x is the 0-based indentation depth.
(defvar *dmr-indent-max* 20)
; User settable, but then you need to set *acl2-monitor-buffer-name* and
; *dmr-file-name* in emacs file monitor.el. The main reason to change
; this would be if you are running emacs on a different machine than the one on
; which you are running ACL2.
(defvar *dmr-file-name*)
(defun dmr-file-name ()
(let ((user (or (getenv$-raw "USER")
(progn (format t "Warning: Unable to determine USER ~
environment variable for ~
dmr-file-name.~%Will treat USER as ~
SOME-USER. In emacs, evaluate:~%(setq ~
*dmr-file-name* ~
\"/tmp/acl2-dmr-SOME-USER\")~%")
"SOME-USER"))))
(concatenate 'string "/tmp/acl2-dmr-" user)))
;;; Code implementing dmr in ACL2
(defg *dmr-stream*
; This variable is nil by default, but is non-nil exactly when dmr is active.
nil)
(defg *dmr-counter*
; For the sake of GCL, we may want to consider consider using a 0-dimensional
; fixnum array instead. If so, then consider whether *dmr-interval* should
; also be similarly changed.
0)
#+acl2-par
(defun dmr-acl2-par-hack-p ()
(f-get-global 'waterfall-parallelism *the-live-state*))
(defun dmr-stop-fn-raw ()
(when *dmr-stream*
(let ((str *dmr-stream*))
(setq *dmr-stream* nil)
(close str))))
(defun initialize-dmr-interval-used ()
(setq *dmr-interval-used*
#+acl2-par
(cond ((dmr-acl2-par-hack-p) *dmr-interval-acl2-par-hack*)
(t *dmr-interval*))
#-acl2-par
*dmr-interval*))
(defun dmr-start-fn-raw (state)
(initialize-dmr-interval-used)
(or (boundp '*dmr-file-name*)
(setq *dmr-file-name* (dmr-file-name)))
(setq *dmr-stream*
(open *dmr-file-name*
:if-exists
:supersede ; :overwrite doesn't open non-existent file in CCL
:direction :output
#+acl2-par :sharing
#+acl2-par :lock ; the default of :private is single-threaded
))
state)
(defv *dmr-array*
; The argument of make-array below is somewhat arbitrary. It was initially
; chosen to be the default length of cw-gstack.
(make-array 10000))
(defun reverse-into-dmr-array (lst)
(let ((len-1 (1- (length lst))))
(when (< (length *dmr-array*) len-1)
(setq *dmr-array*
(make-array (* 2 len-1))))
(loop for i from len-1 downto 0
as tail on lst
do (setf (aref *dmr-array* i) (car tail)))
len-1))
(defparameter *dmr-reusable-string*
(make-array '(0)
:element-type
; SBCL and non-ANSI GCL complain about setting the fill-pointer if we use
; 'base-char.
#+(or sbcl (and gcl (not cltl2))) 'character
#-(or sbcl (and gcl (not cltl2))) 'base-char
:fill-pointer 0
:adjustable t))
(defvar *dmr-indent*)
(defmacro dmr-increment-indent ()
'(setq *dmr-indent*
(+ 2 *dmr-indent*)))
(defun tilde-@-bkptr-string (calling-sys-fn called-sys-fn bkptr)
; Warning: Keep this in sync with tilde-@-bkptr-phrase.
; This function builds a ~@ phrase explaining how two adjacent frames
; are related, given the calling sys-fn, the called sys-fn and the
; bkptr supplied by the caller. See cw-gframe for the use of this
; phrase.
; WARNING: This function can have a side effect of setting
; *dmr-indent*. It would be cleaner to use multiple values instead; maybe some
; day when we have time (!) or if someone volunteers.
(case called-sys-fn
(rewrite
(cond ((integerp bkptr)
(cond ((member-eq calling-sys-fn '(rewrite-with-lemma
add-linear-lemma))
(dmr-increment-indent)
(format nil " the atom of hypothesis ~s" bkptr))
((eq calling-sys-fn 'simplify-clause)
(format nil " the atom of literal ~s" bkptr))
(t (format nil " argument ~s" bkptr))))
((consp bkptr)
(dmr-increment-indent)
(format
nil
" the ~arhs of hypothesis ~s"
(if (eq (car bkptr) 'rhs2) "rewritten " "")
(cdr bkptr)))
((symbolp bkptr)
(case bkptr
(guard " the guard")
(body " the body")
(lambda-body " the lambda body")
(rewritten-body " the rewritten body")
(expansion " the expansion")
(equal-consp-hack-car " the equality of the cars")
(equal-consp-hack-cdr " the equality of the cdrs")
(rhs " the rhs of the conclusion")
(meta " the result of the metafunction")
(nth-update " the result of the nth/update rewriter")
(multiply-alists2 " the product of two polys")
(forced-assumption " a forced assumption")
(proof-checker " proof-checker top level")
(otherwise (er hard 'tilde-@-bkptr-string
"When ~x0 calls ~x1 we get an unrecognized ~
bkptr, ~x2."
calling-sys-fn called-sys-fn bkptr))))
(t (er hard 'tilde-@-bkptr-string
"When ~x0 calls ~x1 we get an unrecognized bkptr, ~x2."
calling-sys-fn called-sys-fn bkptr))))
((rewrite-with-lemma setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst simplify-clause
add-terms-and-lemmas add-linear-lemma
non-linear-arithmetic synp)
"")
(t (er hard 'tilde-@-bkptr-string
"When ~x0 calls ~x1 we get an unrecognized bkptr, ~x2."
calling-sys-fn called-sys-fn bkptr))))
(defvar *dmr-interp-state*
; This tells us whether we have already printed "argument(s)" when printing
; gframes with sys-fn = rewrite.
0)
(defun dmr-interp-fresh-rewrite-p (calling-sys-fn frame)
; Assumes that (access gframe frame :sys-fn) is rewrite.
(not (and (eq calling-sys-fn 'rewrite)
(integerp (access gframe frame :bkptr)))))
(defun dmr-prefix ()
(if (> *dmr-indent* *dmr-indent-max*)
(concatenate 'string
(aref1 'acl2-built-in-spaces-array
*acl2-built-in-spaces-array*
*dmr-indent-max*)
(format nil
"{~s} "
*dmr-indent*))
(aref1 'acl2-built-in-spaces-array
*acl2-built-in-spaces-array*
*dmr-indent*)))
(defun dmr-interp (i calling-sys-fn frame)
; Warning: Keep this in sync with cw-gframe.
; This prints a gframe, frame, which is known to be frame number i and
; was called by calling-sys-fn.
(let ((sys-fn (access gframe frame :sys-fn)))
(case sys-fn
(rewrite
(cond ((dmr-interp-fresh-rewrite-p calling-sys-fn frame)
(setq *dmr-interp-state* 0)
(let ((bkptr-string ; evaluate now, before printing
(tilde-@-bkptr-string calling-sys-fn
'rewrite
(access gframe frame :bkptr))))
(format nil
"~a~s. Rewriting (to ~a)~a"
(dmr-prefix)
i
(let ((obj (cddr (access gframe frame :args))))
(cond ((eq obj nil) "falsify")
((eq obj t) "establish")
(t "simplify")))
bkptr-string)))
((eq *dmr-interp-state* 0)
(setq *dmr-interp-state* 1)
(format nil "; argument(s) ~s" (access gframe frame :bkptr)))
(t
(format nil "|~s" (access gframe frame :bkptr)))))
((rewrite-with-lemma add-linear-lemma)
(format
nil
"~a~s. Applying ~s~%"
(dmr-prefix)
i
(get-rule-field (cdr (access gframe frame :args)) :rune)))
(add-terms-and-lemmas
(let ((len (length (car (access gframe frame :args)))))
(format
nil
"~a~s. Applying linear arithmetic to ~a ~s term~a~%"
(dmr-prefix)
i
(let ((obj (cdr (access gframe frame :args))))
(cond ((eq obj nil) "falsify")
((eq obj t) "establish")
(t "simplify")))
len
(if (eql len 1) "" "s"))))
(non-linear-arithmetic
(let ((len (length (access gframe frame :args))))
(format
nil
"~a~s. Applying non-linear arithmetic to ~s var~a~%"
(dmr-prefix)
i
len
(if (eql len 1) "" "s"))))
(synp
(let ((synp-fn (access gframe frame :args)))
(dmr-increment-indent)
(format nil
"~a~s. Entering ~s for hypothesis ~s~%"
(dmr-prefix) i synp-fn (access gframe frame :bkptr))))
(setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst
(format nil "~a~s. Setting up the linear pot list~%" (dmr-prefix) i))
(otherwise
; Note that we leave it to pstk to handle simplify-clause.
(er hard 'dmr-interp
"Unrecognized sys-fn, ~x0"
(access gframe frame :sys-fn))))))
(defvar *dmr-delete-string*
; WARNING: Keep this in sync with monitor.el.
"delete-from-here-to-end-of-buffer")
(defun dmr-string ()
#+acl2-par
(when (dmr-acl2-par-hack-p)
(return-from dmr-string
(print-interesting-parallelism-variables-str)))
(when (null *pstk-stack*)
(setq *dmr-counter* *dmr-interval-used*) ; will flush next time
(setq *deep-gstack* nil)
(return-from dmr-string *dmr-delete-string*))
(setf (fill-pointer *dmr-reusable-string*) 0)
(let* ((pstk-tokens (loop with result = nil
for x in *pstk-stack*
do (push (cond ((eq (car x) 'waterfall)
(car (nthcdr 8 x))) ; ctx
((eq (car x) 'ev-fncall)
(list (car x) (cadr x)))
(t (car x)))
result)
finally (return result))) ; reversed
(pstk-tokens-tail pstk-tokens)
(len-1 (reverse-into-dmr-array *deep-gstack*))
(calling-sys-fn 'start)
(*print-pretty* nil)
(counter 0)
(*dmr-indent* 3)
(no-newline-last-time nil))
(with-output-to-string
(s *dmr-reusable-string*)
(loop for token in pstk-tokens
do
(progn
(setq pstk-tokens-tail (cdr pstk-tokens-tail))
(cond
((member-eq token '(rewrite-atm setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst))
(return))
(t (princ (format nil " ~s. ~s~%" counter token)
s)
(incf counter)))))
(loop for i from 0 to len-1
do (let* ((frame (aref *dmr-array* i))
(sys-fn (access gframe frame :sys-fn)))
(when (not (eq sys-fn 'simplify-clause))
; First, print a newline if we didn't print one last time and we are not
; printing args for sys-fn = rewrite.
(setq no-newline-last-time (eq calling-sys-fn 'rewrite))
(when (and no-newline-last-time ; no newline last time
(or ; not printing args for rewrite
(not (eq sys-fn 'rewrite))
(dmr-interp-fresh-rewrite-p calling-sys-fn
frame)))
(terpri s))
(princ (dmr-interp counter calling-sys-fn frame)
s)
(incf counter))
(setq calling-sys-fn (access gframe frame :sys-fn))))
(when (eq calling-sys-fn 'rewrite) ; no newline last time
(terpri s))
(dmr-increment-indent)
(loop for token in pstk-tokens-tail
; We avoid printing ev-fncall-meta because such a call can invoke mfc-rw,
; creating lower gstack entries, resulting in several ev-fncall-meta tokens
; being printed here (at the bottom of the displayed stack) rather than
; interspersed in the display. Rather than track gstack/pstk interaction, we
; simply avoid printing ev-fncall-meta tokens, though pstk itself does flush
; the display out to file when entering ev-fncall-meta.
when (not (eq token 'ev-fncall-meta))
do
(progn (princ (if (eq token 'add-polynomial-inequalities)
(format nil "~a~s. ~s: ~s calls~%" (dmr-prefix)
counter token *add-polys-counter*)
(format nil "~a~s. ~s~%" (dmr-prefix) counter
token))
s)
(incf counter)))
(princ *dmr-delete-string* s)))
*dmr-reusable-string*)
(defun dmr-flush1 (&optional reset-counter)
; This function should only be called when *dmr-stream* is non-nil (and hence
; is a stream).
(file-position *dmr-stream* :start)
(princ (dmr-string) *dmr-stream*)
(without-interrupts
; This use of without-interrupts fixed an "Expected newpos" error in CCL
; (thanks, Gary Byers). So to increase confidence in this code, we use it for
; all Lisps.
(force-output *dmr-stream*))
(when reset-counter
(setq *dmr-counter* 0))
t)
#+acl2-par
(defvar *dmr-lock* (make-lock))
(declaim (inline dmr-flush))
(defun dmr-flush (&optional reset-counter)
(when *dmr-stream*
(cond #+acl2-par
((dmr-acl2-par-hack-p)
(with-lock *dmr-lock* (dmr-flush1 reset-counter)))
(t (dmr-flush1 reset-counter)))))
(declaim (inline dmr-display))
(defun dmr-display ()
(when *dmr-stream*
(cond ((> *dmr-counter* *dmr-interval-used*)
(setq *dmr-counter* 0)
(cond #+acl2-par
((dmr-acl2-par-hack-p)
(with-lock *dmr-lock* (dmr-flush1)))
(t (dmr-flush1))))
(t
(setq *dmr-counter* (1+ *dmr-counter*))))))
(defun cw-gstack-short ()
(let* ((str (dmr-string))
(pos (search *dmr-delete-string* str)))
(princ (if pos (subseq str 0 pos) str) *terminal-io*)))
; INITIALIZATION OF CURRENT ACL2 WORLD
; Once upon a time (pre-V2.2) we had the following defvar here:
; (defvar *current-acl2-world-key* (make-symbol "*CURRENT-ACL2-WORLD-KEY*"))
; But compiling under cmulisp showed us that we refer to the value
; of this var earlier in the initialization process. So I have
; moved the defvar to axioms.lisp.
(eval-when #-cltl2 (load eval) #+cltl2 (:load-toplevel :execute)
(f-put-global 'current-acl2-world nil *the-live-state*)
(setf (get 'current-acl2-world 'acl2-world-pair)
(cons nil *current-acl2-world-key*)))
; EXTENDING AND RETRACTING PROPERTY LIST WORLDS
; We here sketch the entire world management scheme before diving into
; the details. The software archeologist might think these summaries
; were written just for his use but that is wrong. In fact, these are
; design sketches and refresher courses to bring to mind the salient
; details before getting back down to work. This particular one
; represents the attempt to get back into this frame of mind after
; several days of Christmas preparations, 1990. (Note: This essay has
; been updated since, to track changes such as the adoption, in April,
; 1994, of the restriction that reincarnated undone defpkgs must
; import only a subset of the old imports. That attack on the
; "unintern problem" was sketched as the "Alternative Design Proposal"
; in the December, 1990 essay but rejected as unnecessary as it was
; then thought that we handled reincarnation correctly by uninterning
; all symbols except in abort recovery. But :oops and the second pass
; of include books, etc., exposed the lie.)
; A property list "world" is a list of triples as created by putprop.
; Each triple is of the form (symb key . val). Such a list is
; accessed by getprop, which, logically speaking, scans down it
; looking for a given symb and key. Practically however, we allow a
; given world to be "installed" under any given symbolic name. What
; installation does is assemble into an alist all of the properties of
; each symb in the world and put that alist on the property list of
; the symbol, under some special key that is associated with the name
; of the installed world.
; If name has an 'acl2-world-pair property then name is the name of an
; installed world. The value of the property will be a pair, (alist .
; world-key), where alist is the (eq) world alist installed and
; world-key is a unique symbol associated with this world name and
; under which each symb's property alist is stored.
; The functions extend-world and retract-world will extend and retract
; a named world. Logically speaking, these two functions are identity
; functions. But practically speaking they smash Common Lisp property
; lists. Extend-world must be given a name and a world that is an
; extension (eq) of the one currently installed under the name and
; will install the new properties. An analogous remark holds for
; retract-world. We make these functions available to the ACL2
; programmer.
; We store our own property list world under the name 'current-acl2-
; world. How do we prevent the ACL2 programmer from smashing our
; properties? Well, extend-world (which is logically a no-op all the
; time) is even a no-op practically on the name 'current-acl2-world.
; To smash property lists you must call extend-world1 (not an ACL2
; function) and that function works on any name. Our ACL2 function
; set-w, which installs the current-acl2-world, calls extend-world1 in
; its #-acl2-loop-only code. Set-w is, of course, untouchable.
; We include special support for retraction, which of course is the
; basis of undoing. It would suffice, for extension and for getprop,
; if we could expedite the retrieval of the most recently put value of
; every symbol and key. Suppose the world in question is w, named
; name, and suppose it is installed under the property name world-key.
; Suppose the only three triples on w about symb are (symb key1 . b),
; (symb key1 . a), and (symb key2 . c), occurring in that order on w.
; Then for purposes of extension and getprop alone, we could store
; '((key1 . b) (key2 . c)) under symb's world-key property. But now
; suppose we wanted to retract back to where (symb key1 . a) was most
; recent. Then we would need to change the alist stored under symb's
; world-key to '((key1 . a) (key2 . c)) and to find the newly exposed
; value for key1 we would have to search w. This is what we did for
; the first 18 months of ACL2's development. This made :ubt suffer
; because when we undid a property -- especially a property on some
; symbol like binary-+ or cons -- we would have to scan all the back
; down the world to the primordial putprops to recover the newly
; exposed values. This was bad not so much because of the scan time
; but because of the swap time: the world is big and rarely
; referenced, so it tends to get paged out and then when you scan it
; you have to page it back in. This can take a minute or more.
; To avoid this we actually store a stack for each key. The stack is
; the list of all past values of the key, topped by the current value.
; An empty stack indicates that no putprop has occurred for that key
; (or, more accurately, that we have retracted back past the first
; putprop for that key).
; There is another twist to this scheme. To support the execution and
; compilation of ACL2 functions in raw Common Lisp, we interpret a
; certain putprop symb key, namely CLTL-COMMAND GLOBAL-VALUE, as a
; directive to smash the symbol-function, macro-function, or constant
; definition of certain symbols contained in the value. We only do
; this if we are installing 'current-acl2-world, of course. To
; support undoing of these smashes we maintain a stack of the past
; settings of those fields. This is the *undo-stack* of the symb.
; The situation here is complicated and more fully explained in the
; code below.
; The installation of worlds and error recovery are intimately con-
; nected to the problem of uninterning symbols on behalf of undone or
; reincarnated packages. When the CLTL-COMMAND defpkg is encountered,
; the program defpkg is called to create the package. Consider what
; would happen if defpkg were coded so as to unintern the symbols in
; the existing package and set the import list as per the new defini-
; tion (as, indeed, we once did, allowing the reincarnation of undone
; packages). In particular, consider the effect this would have on
; triples yet-to-be installed: if they mentioned symbols in the new
; package then those symbols would suddenly become uninterned. We
; once thought this was ok because symbols in newly defined packages
; couldn't yet exist in the yet-to-be installed world. But that is a
; bogus claim: if we are reinstalling a world after an error abort or
; even an :oops the world might contain symbols in the "just defined"
; package. This is what eventually drove us to implement the restric-
; tion described in :DOC package-reincarnation-import-restrictions.
; Because of the possiblity of user interrupts, it is possible that we
; can have effected some but not all of changes necessary to achieve a
; new state and then have the computation aborted. To handle this,
; extend-world1 and retract-world1 both save the current world alist
; before they begin to make any changes. If they are interrupted, the
; original configuration can be recovered by retracting back to nil
; and then extending to the saved current world. This is admittedly
; inefficient -- all 20,000 properties of a typical current-acl2-world
; might have to be stored again because we didn't bother to remember
; how much of the extension we had done when we were interrupted. On
; the other hand, it is truly simple and elegant and only comes into
; play with aborts during installation.
; Inspection of the lisp code for defpkg will reveal that it is
; sensitive to abort recovery in one other aspect. If we are in abort
; recovery and the "dual package" (the one used to house the lisp
; equivalents of state global variables) already exists, we do not
; unbind all the variables in it but simply leave it untouched. Since
; neither extending nor retracting changes state globals, the state
; global settings at the time of an abort are what they were when *w0*
; was saved. Hence, by doing nothing to the dual package we keep the
; installed world and the state globals in the same relationship.
; So much for the sketch of the world management business. We now get
; down to brass tacks.
(defun-one-output fmakunbound! (name)
(fmakunbound name)
(when (macro-function name)
(error "This Common Lisp implementation seems unable to unbind ~~%
macro-functions. Please let the ACL2 implementors know about ~%~
this problem.")))
(defun-one-output maybe-push-undo-stack (fn name &optional extra)
; See add-trip below for context. Fn is one of the raw Lisp function names
; secretly spawned by CLTL-COMMAND forms, e.g., DEFUN, DEFMACRO, DEFCONST,
; DEFPKG, DEFATTACH, or (for the HONS version) MEMOIZE or UNMEMOIZE. Name is
; generally the symbol or string that is being defined.
; Whenever we smash a CLTL cell we first save its current contents to permit
; redefinition and undoing. Toward this end we maintain a stack for each
; defined symbol, called the *undo-stack* property of the symbol. Very roughly
; speaking, the stack contains the previous values of the cells in question.
; Add-trip will push the old value onto the stack before storing the new and
; undo-trip will pop the stack and restore that old value. Ah, were it only
; that simple...
; There are complications. First, DEFPKG doesn't have a symbol associated with
; it explicitly, so we have to manufacture one for the *undo-stack*. We use
; the ``base symbol'' of the package (see chk-acceptable-defpkg). If the
; symbol-package-name string is "name" then the base symbol is the symbol
; ACL2::name-PACKAGE. (We use that symbol as a rule name associated with the
; defpkg axiom and so we already check that the name is new.) Second, DEFPKG
; makes the notion of "current contents" highly abstract because it not only
; creates a package but imports various symbols into it. So rather than use
; the *undo-stack* to save the "current contents" we use the stack to save a
; form that when evaluated will recreate the "current contents" of the cell in
; question. When a new value is stored (and the cell is already in use) we
; will manufacture a suitable form for recreating the old value and push it.
; Third, extra (formerly called ignorep because of its connection to the
; ignorep variable in add-trip) is either nil, 'reclassifying or '(defstobj
; . stobj). When it is 'reclassifying, we only save the *1* def for name.
; Otherwise, we save both defs.
(cond ((and (symbolp name)
(fboundp name)
(not (eq fn 'attachment)))
; We clear the 'acl2-trace-saved-fn property and reinstall the appropriate
; symbol-function if these have been messed with by tracing. We also do a raw
; Lisp untrace while we're at it, just to be careful. However, we skip all
; that for defattach, since defattach doesn't mess with symbol-functions -- it
; only messes with special variables.
(maybe-untrace! name t)))
(case fn
((defun defmacro)
; In Common Lisp, a symbol can be either a macro or function, but the
; symbol-function cell is used in both cases to store the associated code.
; Therefore, if we are about to smash the symbol-function cell, e.g., in
; response to a DEFUN event, then we are obliged to remember whether it was
; previously defined as a macro.
; Notice that we are dealing properly here with :inlined stobj functions as
; well as defabsstobj raw Lisp macros. See also the comment about this in
; undo-trip.
(cond
((fboundp name)
(let ((oneified-name (*1*-symbol name))
(macro-p (macro-function name)))
(push `(progn
,@(and (not macro-p)
`((maybe-untrace! ',name) ; untrace new function
#+hons (maybe-unmemoize ',name)))
,@(if (eq extra 'reclassifying)
(assert$
(not macro-p)
`((setf (symbol-function ',oneified-name)
',(symbol-function oneified-name))))
`(,@(if (not (iff (eq fn 'defmacro) macro-p))
; Avoid errors in (at least) CCL, as in this example.
; (redef!)
; (defun foo (x) x)
; (defmacro foo (x) `(quote ,x))
; (u)
`((fmakunbound! ',name)))
,(cond (macro-p
`(setf (macro-function ',name)
',(macro-function name)))
(t
`(setf (symbol-function ',name)
',(symbol-function name))))
,(cond
((fboundp oneified-name)
`(setf (symbol-function ',oneified-name)
',(symbol-function oneified-name)))
(t `(fmakunbound! ',oneified-name))))))
(get name '*undo-stack*))))
(t (push `(progn (maybe-untrace! ',name) ; untrace new function
#+hons (maybe-unmemoize ',name)
(fmakunbound! ',name)
(fmakunbound! ',(*1*-symbol name)))
(get name '*undo-stack*)))))
(defconst
; Note: defstobj events use maybe-push-undo-stack with fn = 'defconst
; to save the values of the name, the live name and also of
; '*user-stobj-alist*!
(cond
((boundp name)
(push `(progn (setf (symbol-value ',name)
',(symbol-value name))
(setf (get ',name 'redundant-raw-lisp-discriminator)
',(get name 'redundant-raw-lisp-discriminator)))
(get name '*undo-stack*)))
(t (push `(progn (makunbound ',name)
(remprop ',name 'redundant-raw-lisp-discriminator))
(get name '*undo-stack*)))))
(defpkg
(let ((temp (find-non-hidden-package-entry
name
(known-package-alist *the-live-state*))))
(cond
(temp
(push `(defpkg ,name ',(package-entry-imports temp))
(get (packn (cons name '("-PACKAGE"))) '*undo-stack*))))))
(attachment
(let ((at-sym (attachment-symbol name)))
(push `(progn #+hons (push ',name *defattach-fns*)
,(set-attachment-symbol-form
name
; Note that at-sym is bound when name is introduced; see throw-or-attach-call.
(symbol-value at-sym)))
(get name '*undo-stack*))))
#+hons
(memoize
(push `(unmemoize-fn ',name)
(get name '*undo-stack*)))
#+hons
(unmemoize
(let* ((entry (gethash name *memoize-info-ht*))
(condition (access memoize-info-ht-entry entry :condition))
(inline (access memoize-info-ht-entry entry :inline))
(commutative
(access memoize-info-ht-entry entry :commutative))
(forget
(access memoize-info-ht-entry entry :forget))
(memo-table-init-size
(access memoize-info-ht-entry entry :memo-table-init-size))
(aokp
(and (access memoize-info-ht-entry entry :ext-anc-attachments)
t))
(cl-defun (access memoize-info-ht-entry entry :cl-defun)))
(push `(memoize-fn ',name
:condition ',condition
:inline ',inline
,@(and commutative
`(:commutative t))
,@(and forget
`(:forget t))
,@(and memo-table-init-size
`(:memo-table-init-size
',memo-table-init-size))
,@(and aokp
`(:aokp ',aokp))
,@(and cl-defun
`(:cl-defun ',cl-defun)))
(get name '*undo-stack*))))
(otherwise
(er hard 'maybe-push-undo-stack
"Unrecognized CLTL-COMMAND spawn ~x0"
fn))))
(defun-one-output maybe-pop-undo-stack (name)
; See maybe-push-undo-stack.
(let* ((name (if (symbolp name)
name
(packn (cons name '("-PACKAGE")))))
(stk (get name '*undo-stack*)))
(cond
((null stk) nil)
(t (eval (car stk))
(setf (get name '*undo-stack*) (cdr stk))))))
(defun-one-output flush-undo-stack (name)
; We completely wipe out the undo-stack of name, after returning
; the relevant cell to its initial configuration.
(let* ((name (if (symbolp name) name (intern name "ACL2")))
(stk (get name '*undo-stack*)))
(cond (stk (eval (car (last stk)))))
(remprop name '*undo-stack*)))
; Now we define the two programs that manage the stacks of old
; property values.
; We start with pushing a new value onto the stack for a given key.
; Complicating things is our decision to order the keys in the alists by (a
; priori) frequency of access. The aim is to speed up getprop. We record
; the results of many experiments below.
; Recall that the current-acl2-world is implemented so that the logical
; properties are stored in an alist which is obtained via a raw lisp get of the
; property *current-acl2-world-key*. That alist is then searched with assoc
; :test #'eq. Of interest then are both the order of the properties
; encountered by the raw lisp get and the order of the keys encountered by the
; assoc :test #'eq.
; The basic experiment addressed one particular proof in the Nqthm package. To
; set the stage, the Nqthm package was loaded and then undone back through
; NQTHM-COUNT-SYMBOL-IS-COUNT-FN-UNPACK, a theorem whose reported proof time is
; 35.23 by the current Version 1.8. Then that theorem was proved again while a
; patch was in place inside of fgetprop. The patch collected together an alist
; recording the calls of fgetprop. In particular the alist entries were of the
; form (symb (key1 . cnt1) ... (keyk . cntk)) indicating that (fgetprop symb
; keyi <some-default> <current-acl2-world>) was called cnti times during the
; proof. We then wrote and compiled a program that swept the alist and
; repeated every call of fgetprop simply to allow us to measure the total time
; spent in fgetprop. There were a total of 102781 calls. To sweep the alist
; with a no-op function of the same arity as fgetprop required 0.25 seconds.
; We therefore consider that to be the overhead of the sweep itself. To sweep
; with fgetprop required 0.75 seconds, indicating that a "net" 0.50 seconds
; were actually spent in fgetprop on the actual calls in the sample theorem.
; (We will use "net" henceforth to mean the measured time minus 0.25.) This
; gives an expected "per call" time of 4.86E-6.
; For what it is worth, a noop that calls get has an overhead of 0.267 for
; a net of 0.017 or a per call time of 1.65E-7 seconds. Thus an fgetprop
; is about 30 times slower than a get (with the orderings created by the
; current Version 1.8).
; However, we have noticed that *current-acl2-world-key* is not always the
; first property encountered by the raw lisp get. Other properties sometimes
; covering it up include *UNDO-STACK*, *PREDEFINED* and SYSTEM:PNAME. We
; therefore moved *current-acl2-world-key* to the front of every symbol-plist.
; The net sweep time was then 0.30 (for a per call time of 18 gets).
; We now move on to ordering the keys seen by assoc :test #'eq. In prior
; experiments we had determined the frequency with which the various keys are
; accessed (during the entire Nqthm package proof). For what it is worth, here
; is the key list, in order from most frequently accessed to least:
; '(COARSENINGS GLOBAL-VALUE CONGRUENCES SYMBOL-CLASS TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS
; LEMMAS RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS MULTIPLICITY STATE-IN
; RECURSIVEP DEF-BODIES CONSTRAINEDP LINEAR-LEMMAS
; FORMALS MACRO-BODY FORWARD-CHAINING-RULES STATE-OUT TABLE-ALIST
; GUARD MACRO-ARGS ELIMINATE-DESTRUCTORS-RULE CONST LEVEL-NO
; UNNORMALIZED-BODY THEOREM REDEFINED INDUCTION-MACHINE JUSTIFICATION
; INDUCTION-RULES CONTROLLER-ALIST QUICK-BLOCK-INFO
; We therefore reordered the alist so that the keys were stored with the most
; frequently accessed ones first. We added nil COARSENINGS and CONGRUENCES
; properties (and later, as described below, RECURSIVEP) to those function
; symbol property lists for which the value of the property was nil but the
; property was unrecorded. (This saves the time of cdring through the entire
; list to compute the most frequently seen two properties.) Technically, we
; extended and reordered the alist found in (get symb
; *current-acl2-world-key*), for each symbol with a *current-acl2-world- key*
; property and that property was always first on the symbol-plist.
; We then repeated the sweep in a net time of 0.22 seconds (per call = 13 gets).
; We then reversed the "optimal" ordering on the property lists and measured a
; net time of 0.31 (down from 0.30 from the random order of Version 1.8).
; Finally, we perturbed the property lists by adding 10 new property keys and
; values to the front of every (get symb *current-acl2-world-key*) and measured
; a net time of 0.50.
; From this experiment one can make the following conclusions: (a) In this
; theorem, fgetprop is reponsible for less than 2% of the proof time. Making
; fgetprop instantaneous would reduce the 35.23 seconds to 34.73 seconds.
; By ordering the properties (in both senses) we can speed fgetprop up from
; about 30 gets to about 13 gets, more than doubling its speed.
; The rest of this essay on experimental results discusses some detailed
; investigations that led to virtually no further improvement (see stats at the
; end of the essay). The lesson learned is that it may not be worth mucking
; around further with *current-acl2-world-key-ordering*.
; In July 2002, during the development of Version_2.7, we modifed the use of
; the fnstack (specifically, being-openedp) so that for recursive functions we
; look up the representative of a clique, thus avoiding the need to look
; through all members every clique for the function at hand. (A
; mutual-recursion nest with 4,786 defuns at AMD prompted this change.) As a
; result we saw a 1.8% slowdown in the regression suite, reduced to 0.9% with
; some optimizations. Presumably the slowdown was due to the more frequest use
; of the RECURSIVEP property. So we ran experiments using community books
; files books/certify-numbers.lisp and books/rtl/rel2/support/cert.lsp, though
; we aborted the latter partway through lop3.lisp (during the proof of
; BITN-LAM0, which seemed to be bogging down). The results using
; analyze-fgetprop-stats were as follows.
; books/certify-numbers.lisp:
;
; GLOBAL-VALUE 2474980
; COARSENINGS 2332094
; TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS 1162730
; RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS 979110
; CONGRUENCES 769460
; RECURSIVEP 676128
; TABLE-ALIST 675429
; SYMBOL-CLASS 415118
; LEMMAS 381015
; MACRO-BODY 356823
; STOBJS-OUT 303906
; FORMALS 213447
; STOBJS-IN 161261
; STOBJ 101845
; GUARD 75749
; MACRO-ARGS 75221
; BODY ; changed later to def-bodies 68867
; CONSTRAINEDP 50190
; FORWARD-CHAINING-RULES 49839
; CONST 25601
; ELIMINATE-DESTRUCTORS-RULE 19922
; THEOREM 9234
; LINEAR-LEMMAS 9102
; ...
;
; books/rtl/rel2/support/cert.lsp (aborted as explained above):
;
; COARSENINGS 30087445
; GLOBAL-VALUE 28366962
; CONGRUENCES 27187188
; RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS 13934370
; TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS 12058446
; RECURSIVEP 10080678
; TABLE-ALIST 4644946
; SYMBOL-CLASS 2742519
; LEMMAS 1978039
; STOBJS-OUT 1943646
; MACRO-BODY 1837674
; FORMALS 1185024
; STOBJS-IN 781274
; BODY ; changed later to def-bodies 585696
; STOBJ 509394
; GUARD 390584
; MACRO-ARGS 389694
; CONSTRAINEDP 332418
; FORWARD-CHAINING-RULES 211225
; CONST 145628
; ABSOLUTE-EVENT-NUMBER 93259
; LINEAR-LEMMAS 34780
; ...
; As a result, we revised the ordering of keys. We also noticed that although
; GLOBAL-VALUE is high on the list, most of that is accounted for by looking it
; up for symbols RECOGNIZER-ALIST and UNTOUCHABLES, which do not have other
; properties:
; books/certify-numbers.lisp:
;
; RECOGNIZER-ALIST 2056058
; GLOBAL-VALUE 2056058
; UNTOUCHABLES 261297
; GLOBAL-VALUE 261297
;
; books/rtl/rel2/support/cert.lsp (aborted as explained above):
;
; RECOGNIZER-ALIST 26193957
; GLOBAL-VALUE 26193957
; UNTOUCHABLES 1359647
; GLOBAL-VALUE 1359647
; The user times (in seconds) for running the regression suite using an Allegro
; 6.0 Linux development Version_2.7 were as follows, with successive
; "improvements" shown.
; 15359.38 ; original time
; 15637.45 ; 1.81% slowdown: first cut at new approach to fnstack for mutrec
; 15496.32 ; 0.89% slowdown: optimizations in being-openedp (made a macro)
; 15497.46 ; 0.90% slowdown: new *current-acl2-world-key-ordering*
; 15481.14 ; 0.79% slowdown: always put recursivep property on function symbols
; March 2006: Here are some new numbers, listing in each case down to about 2
; orders of magnitude below the most-used property. All were obtained with all
; outpu inhibited.
; ============================================================
;
; stats0 (books/certify-numbers.lisp):
;
; COARSENINGS 2527582
; GLOBAL-VALUE 2224181
; RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS 1188675
; TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS 1074218
; CONGRUENCES 730666
; DEF-BODIES 685868
; TABLE-ALIST 642459
; SYMBOL-CLASS 400157
; LEMMAS 362209
;
; ============================================================
;
; stats1 (books/workshops/1999/compiler/proof1):
;
; COARSENINGS 1137397
; DEF-BODIES 705063
; GLOBAL-VALUE 587267
; TABLE-ALIST 360303
; TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS 196192
; CONGRUENCES 194726
; SYMBOL-CLASS 177363
; LEMMAS 167682
; RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS 75828
; STOBJS-OUT 13381
; MACRO-BODY 10245
;
; ============================================================
;
; stats2 (:mini-proveall):
;
; COARSENINGS 87020
; GLOBAL-VALUE 58987
; RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS 54106
; TABLE-ALIST 32902
; DEF-BODIES 26496
; TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS 24822
; CONGRUENCES 20367
; LEMMAS 17938
; SYMBOL-CLASS 15271
; FORWARD-CHAINING-RULES 4820
; FORMALS 1278
; MACRO-BODY 1216
; STOBJS-OUT 1199
; ELIMINATE-DESTRUCTORS-RULE 962
;
; ============================================================
;
; stats3 (osets/map):
;
; DEF-BODIES 288073
; RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS 262004
; COARSENINGS 235573
; GLOBAL-VALUE 171724
; FORMALS 84780
; TABLE-ALIST 76462
; UNNORMALIZED-BODY 61718
; TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS 56193
; LEMMAS 54533
; CONSTRAINEDP 52642
; SYMBOL-CLASS 43824
; CONGRUENCES 36786
; MACRO-BODY 30206
; STOBJS-OUT 27727
; THEOREM 15714
;
; ============================================================
;
; stats4 (rtl/rel5/support/drnd):
;
; COARSENINGS 20881212
; GLOBAL-VALUE 10230404
; RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS 7726914
; TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS 4177523
; DEF-BODIES 2732746
; SYMBOL-CLASS 705776
; STOBJS-OUT 671763
; TABLE-ALIST 664941
; CONGRUENCES 497120
; LEMMAS 376371
; MACRO-BODY 294016
;
; ============================================================
;
; stats5 (rtl/rel2/support/cert.lsp):
;
; COARSENINGS 21792912
; GLOBAL-VALUE 15497700
; RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS 8088313
; TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS 6554966
; DEF-BODIES 5365470
; TABLE-ALIST 2641304
; SYMBOL-CLASS 1873984
; CONGRUENCES 1562924
; LEMMAS 1220873
; STOBJS-OUT 420330
; MACRO-BODY 364583
; FORMALS 248019
; FORWARD-CHAINING-RULES 245442
;
; ============================================================
; End of Experimental Results.
; Below we list the most important property keys according to the results
; above. Keys are stored in alists in this order, i.e., keys occurring earlier
; in this list are stored earlier in the alists. When a key not occurring in
; this list is added to the alist it is as though it occurred at the very end
; of this list, i.e., it gets a low priority. Not all keys used by the current
; system are in this list (see below).
(defparameter *current-acl2-world-key-ordering*
'(COARSENINGS
GLOBAL-VALUE ; mostly looked up for RECOGNIZER-ALIST and UNTOUCHABLES,
; which do not have other properties
RUNIC-MAPPING-PAIRS
DEF-BODIES
TYPE-PRESCRIPTIONS
TABLE-ALIST
CONGRUENCES
PEQUIVS
SYMBOL-CLASS
LEMMAS
STOBJS-OUT
MACRO-BODY
FORMALS
FORWARD-CHAINING-RULES
; Note: As of this writing there are many properties not included above, all of
; which fall into the low priority category. We have omitted keys simply to
; keep the list shortened and thus to speed up the insertion program
; (merge-into-alist, on behalf of destructive-push-assoc) a little. This is an
; unanalyzed "optimization".
))
(defun-one-output key-lesseqp (key1 key2 ordering)
; We return t if key1 occurs weakly before key2 in the ordering.
(cond ((null ordering) t)
((eq key1 (car ordering)) t)
((eq key2 (car ordering)) nil)
(t (key-lesseqp key1 key2 (cdr ordering)))))
(defun-one-output merge-into-alist (key val alist)
; Alist is a symbol alist, key is a symbol that is not bound in alist. We wish
; to create the alist that is logically equivalent under assoc-eq to (cons
; (cons key val) alist) but we actually place the new pair in the proper place
; according to the *current-acl2-world-key-ordering*.
(cond ((null alist) (list (cons key val)))
((key-lesseqp key (caar alist) *current-acl2-world-key-ordering*)
(cons (cons key val) alist))
(t (cons (car alist) (merge-into-alist key val (cdr alist))))))
(defun-one-output destructive-push-assoc (key value alist world-key)
; We push value onto the stack associated with key in alist. If key has no
; value in alist, we pretend it has the empty stack. E.g., if alist is '((a .
; (1))) and we push 2 on 'a we get '((a . (2 1))) and if we then push 0 on 'b
; we get '((b . (0)) (a . (2 1))). This function is maximally destructive on
; the cons structure of alist and the stacks, but doesn't touch the cons
; structure of the values. We keep the alists in sorted order iff the
; world-key is our special one, *current-acl2-world-key*.
(let ((temp (assoc key alist :test #'eq)))
(cond (temp (setf (cdr temp) (cons value (cdr temp)))
alist)
((eq world-key *current-acl2-world-key*)
(merge-into-alist key (list value) alist))
(t (cons (cons key (list value)) alist)))))
(defun-one-output destructive-pop-assoc (key alist)
(let ((temp (assoc key alist :test #'eq)))
(cond (temp (setf (cdr temp) (cdr (cdr temp)))
alist)
(t alist))))
(defun-one-output remove-current-acl2-world-key (plist)
(cond ((null plist) plist)
((eq (car plist) *current-acl2-world-key*)
(cddr plist))
(t (cons (car plist)
(cons (cadr plist)
(remove-current-acl2-world-key (cddr plist)))))))
; We now develop support for early loading of compiled files, beginning with an
; essay that outlines that development.
; Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation
; This essay has the following main parts:
; Part 0: High-level summary
; Part 1: A more detailed introduction
; Part 2: Including a certified book
; Part 3: Writing an expansion file for compilation
; Part 0: High-level summary
; We strive for efficiency of include-book. By doing all compilation at
; certify-book time rather than include-book time, we may greatly speed up
; definitional processing in lisps such as CCL and SBCL, which compile every
; definition on the fly. We were motivated by profiling results showing that
; such processing can take 45% of include-book time: a test case from Centaur
; using CCL was spending this proportion of time in the installation of a
; Common Lisp symbol-function for each defun event, in add-trip. The problem
; was that the CCL compiler is called every time a defun is evaluated, and
; although the CCL compiler is impressively fast, it's not instantaneous. Dave
; Greve has reported observing significant such slowdowns using CCL at Rockwell
; Collins.
; Happily, with this change we found the time cut roughly in half for two
; include-book tests from Centaur provided by Sol Swords. Other tests suggest
; no noticeable slowdown for certify-book or include-book for GCL or Allegro
; CL, which do not compile on the fly.
; Our approach is to avoid calling the compiler (by CCL or SBCL, at least)
; every time a definition is encountered by include-book, by instead using
; existing code previously compiled by certify-book, which is loaded before
; processing of events by include-book. Thus, the main efficiency gains from
; this change are expected to be for ACL2 built on CCL or SBCL, as these are
; the Lisps we know of (as of March 2010) that compile all definitions at
; submission time and therefore had been compiling on behalf of add-trip.
; However, this approach may also boost efficiency in some cases even for Lisps
; other than CCL and SBCL. For one thing, include-book will now install a
; compiled symbol-function for each defun, even for those other Lisps, which
; can speed up computations in ensuing defconst forms and defmacro forms of the
; book. Moreover, compiled code will be installed for defmacro and defconst
; forms, which can avoid the need for redoing macroexpansion of the bodies of
; such forms during add-trip.
; A simple-minded approach is to load the compiled file for a book *before*
; processing events in the book. The obvious problem is that ACL2 demands that
; a function not be pre-defined in raw Lisp when evaluating a defun event, and
; for good reason: we want to protect against accidental previous definition in
; raw Lisp. So instead, our solution is to arrange that loading compiled files
; does not actually install definitions, but rather, builds hash tables that
; associate symbols with their definitions. The file to be compiled thus has
; roughly the following structure; the prefix "hcomp" is intended to refer to
; "hash-table-supported compilation".
; (in-package "ACL2")
;;; Introduce some packages, without any imports:
; (maybe-introduce-empty-pkg "MY-PKG")
;;; Save some information about the fni:
; (setq *hcomp-fn-alist* '((fn1 ..) (fn2 ..) ..))
;;; Build a hash table associating each fni with its pre-existing
;;; symbol-function or special *unbound* mark:
; (hcomp-init)
;;; Generate declaim forms (depending on the Lisp):
; ...
;;; Portcullis commands and events from the book, with make-events expanded:
; ...
;;; *1* definitions to compile:
; ...
; The load of each book in raw Lisp (by function load-compiled-book) is
; followed by code that saves the symbol-function for each fni in a hash table,
; *hcomp-fn-ht* (function hcomp-transfer-to-hash-tables), which in turn is
; associated with the full-book-name in a global hash table, *hcomp-book-ht*.
; But first, the (hcomp-init) form arranges to save -- in a global hash table,
; *hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht* -- an association of each fi with its existing
; symbol-function (or a "not bound" marker). After all such files are loaded
; in raw Lisp under the top-level included book (by a call of include-book-raw
; under include-book-fn), the relevant *hcomp-fn-ht* hash tables will have been
; populated and saved in the global hash table mentioned above,
; *hcomp-book-ht*, keyed on full-book-names. The top-level include-book will
; finish up after such files are loaded (for that book and subsidiary included
; books), using the global hash table *hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht* to restore
; the symbol-function of fi (much more typically, to make the symbol-function
; of fi unbound) when the top-level load concludes.
; Above, we say "roughly" because there are numerous complications. For
; example, *1* functions can be defined twice (once for :program mode and once
; for :logic mode); there may be portcullis commands for subsidiary
; include-book events within the book; and the absence of a missing compiled
; file for a sub-book can cause an abort, so some of the above finishing up
; might need to be done in the cleanup form of an acl2-unwind-protect. In this
; Essay we outline our mechanism and explain how we deal with such
; complications.
; We are breaking from ACL2 versions up through 3.6.1, by insisting that the
; compiled file for a book is loaded "early" (if it is loaded at all), i.e.,
; before events are processed from that book. This approach not only can boost
; efficiency of include-book, but it also provides a solution to a soundness
; bug in the redundancy of :program mode definitions with preceding :logic mode
; definitions, present from Version_3.5 through Version_3.6.1. To illustrate
; this bug, consider the two books below, which have been certified in ACL2
; 3.6.1 built on GCL. The problem is that inclusion of bk1 inside bk2 smashes
; the symbol-function of *1*foo, because of loading of compiled file bk1.o.
; (The Allegro CL version merely breaks when attempting to prove BUG.)
; -------------------- bk1.lisp --------------------
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :mode :program))
; (car x))
; -------------------- bk2.lisp --------------------
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (defun foo (x)
; (car x))
; (defun bar (x)
; (foo x))
; (defthm fact
; (null (bar 3))
; :rule-classes nil)
; (encapsulate
; ()
; (local (include-book "bk1"))
; (defthm bug
; (not (null (bar 3)))
; :rule-classes nil))
; (defthm contradiction
; nil
; :hints (("Goal" :use (fact bug)
; :in-theory (disable (bar) bar)))
; :rule-classes nil)
; ----------------------------------------
; The bug occurs because the local include-book of "bk1" loads bk1.o, which
; smashes the symbol-function of *1*foo to its :program mode version, which
; unlike the :logic mode version passes evaluation directly to raw Lisp,
; causing evaluation of (car 3). Of course we don't really need to solve this
; problem for CCL-based ACL2 images that do not load compiled files. But that
; seems ugly, as one could then certify a book with CCL that cannot be
; certified with another Lisp.
; Another, less serious problem is also solved by early loading of compiled
; files. Consider the following books.
;;; bar.lisp
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard t))
; (cons x x))
;;; foo.lisp
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (defun foo (x)
; (cons x x))
;;; top.lisp
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (include-book "bar")
; (include-book "foo")
; The *1* function generated for foo in bar.lisp is considerably simpler than
; in the case of foo.lisp, because there need be no check that the symbol-class
; of foo is :common-lisp-compliant. When we include top in Version_3.6.1 or
; earlier, loading compiled files, the compiled file for foo overwrites the one
; for bar, leaving us with the more complicated *1* code. This is clear if one
; uses CLISP and evaluates (disassemble (*1*-symbol 'foo)) in raw Lisp: 13
; byte-code instructions if one includes foo or top, but only 3 byte-code
; instructions if one includes bar instead. With early loading of compiled
; files, evaluation of (include-book "top") will define this *1* function when
; including bar, but will not define it again when including foo.
; (The above example isn't convincing of much, really, since if we switch the
; order of the include-book forms in top.lisp then we will get the complicated
; *1* compiled definition of foo, because the definition from bar.lisp will be
; redundant. But it still seems preferable to avoid loading compiled files
; that overwrite definitions needlessly, for example to put less stress on the
; garbage collector.)
; Of course, these issues disappear if the compiled file is not loaded at all,
; and we support that too, using state global 'compiler-enabled.
; We conclude this Part with a few words about handling of the case that
; include-book argument :load-compiled-file has argument :comp. The basic idea
; is to wait until the book is included, and then check that either the
; compiled file or the expansion file exists and is not older than the
; certificate; and only then, if the expansion file exists but the compiled
; file does not, do we compile the expansion file and then load it in the
; ordinary way (without messing with hash tables, by leaving the relevant
; variables such as *hcomp-fn-ht* bound to nil). We considered more complex
; approaches but are quite happy with this simple solution, and we don't say
; anything further about the case of :load-compiled-file :comp in this Essay.
; Part 1: A more detailed introduction
; We now give a more detailed global view of our approach based on hash tables.
; Note that since compilation is inherently a raw-Lisp activity, we code
; shamelessly in raw Lisp when that is convenient.
; The idea is for include-book to load an existing compiled file before
; processing events from the book, even before its portcullis commands are
; processed. The compiled definitions are stored in hash tables for subsequent
; use by add-trip, then immediately undone so that existing definitions are
; restored (or, much more often, symbols are again unbound). We must however
; be careful to use these hash tables only when appropriate: in particular,
; verify-termination changes *1* definitions, so there can be two definitions
; generated for the same symbol -- and loading the compiled file provides the
; latter definition, which is inappropriate to use for the first defun but is
; appropriate for the defun generated by the verify-termination.
; (Aside: We might consider using the latter symbol-function for both the
; :program and :logic mode *1* functions. But it's easy to imagine that the
; :logic code asks about the symbol-class of the function symbol under the
; assumption that it's definitely not :program -- and that assumption would be
; violated if we installed that code when the :program mode version is
; introduced. Whether or not that problem actually exists, or at least is easy
; to fix, this example nevertheless illustrates that evaluation in ACL2 is
; complex and delicate. So we prefer to be conservative and not to install a
; :logic mode *1* function definition for a :program mode function.)
; The introduction of make-event in 2006 initiated the writing of what we call
; below an "expansion file", to be compiled instead of the source book,
; creating what we call below the "compiled file". This feature was further
; exploited by incorporating compiled *1* functions into the compiled file
; (Version_3.2.1). We take further advantage of these expansion files by
; putting forms into them to implement the plan outlined above. Note that we
; handle certain events that create 'cltl-command properties, as processed by
; add-trip: defun, defstobj, defabsstobj, defconst, and defmacro, but not
; memoize and unmemoize, even in the #+hons case. Extra forms near the top of
; the expansion file will be evaluated when loading the compiled file, to store
; values in hash tables for later use, when add-trip deals with 'cltl-command
; properties. Those extra forms are based on information deduced during the
; include-book phase of book certification, at which time Lisp global
; *inside-include-book-fn* has value 'hcomp-build. Later, during subsequent
; include-books, that information directs which definitions from the expansion
; file are to be stored in our hash tables. Additional forms are evaluated
; after completion of the load of the compiled file, to transfer the compiled
; definitions to hash tables and eventually to remove each definition installed
; by the expansion file (restoring any pre-existing definitions). This
; eventual removal occurs only after a load completes for the top-level
; compiled file of a book, and hence also for all books included therein.
; Portcullis commands and included sub-books present challenges. Consider for
; example a constant whose value is a symbol in a package defined in a
; sub-book's portcullis commands. If we load the compiled file for the book
; that defines that constant, but treat the include-book of the sub-book as a
; no-op (as was done through Version_3.6.1), then it doesn't seem clear that
; this constant's value would be interned in any package, since its package is
; defined in the portcullis commands of the not-yet-loaded sub-book. Indeed,
; we need to consider loading not only the sub-book but also its portcullis
; commands. At the very least, we want to avoid warnings that could occur when
; encountering a global or function call in the parent book (say, during macro
; expansion) when the definition of that global or function (by defconst or
; defun, respectively) comes from the unloaded sub-book. And certainly we do
; need a sub-book's portcullis commands when loading it, for example in case
; one of those commands defines a function that is used in a defconst form in
; the book.
; We thus write portcullis commands into the expansion file. But with some
; reflection one discovers that a book's initial in-package form itself could
; be problematic, since if the package in question is not the "ACL2" package
; then it needs to be defined in some book's portcullis commands! So we always
; start an expansion file with (in-package "ACL2"), and when we write the forms
; into the expansion file, we always do so relative to the ACL2 package.
; But our problems with packages don't end there! The setq forms defining
; *hcomp-fn-alist* and the like may involve symbols defined in packages
; introduced in the portcullis commands. (Why use setq instead of
; defparameter? Variables such as *hcomp-fn-alist* are already declared
; special using defvar in the ACL2 sources, so setq is certainly legal. We
; found a case with CCL in which the use of defparameter slowed down
; include-book by a factor of more than 100.) But we want to lay these down
; before a call of hcomp-init, which will consult *hcomp-fn-alist* and such
; when storing information to let us undo definitions installed by loading the
; compiled file. This call of hcomp-init, and its preceding definitions of
; *hcomp-fn-alist* and the like, must therefore be laid down before the very
; portcullis commands that may define packages of symbols used in these
; definitions. Our solution is to use defpackage to introduce packages before
; the symbols are read, and to make a note using special variable
; *defpkg-virgins* that such packages are legitimate targets for the defpkg
; forms to come.
; (Aside: Why does it work to start the expansion file with the introduction of
; an empty package, say "MY-PKG", and then lay down forms like the
; *hcomp-fn-alist* form, above, that may refer to symbols written out at the
; end of book certification? The only symbols where one might imagine this is
; an issue are ones that are printed differently when "MY-PKG" is fully defined
; (near the end of certification) than when it is introduced with no imports by
; an initial form that introduces the package as "empty" (no imports). The
; only such symbols are those written without a package prefix, hence included
; in the "ACL2" package, that are in the import list for "MY-PKG". But such
; symbols aren't a problem after all, because any reference to such a symbol in
; the "ACL2" package is really a reference to a symbol of that name in the
; "MY-PKG" package, once that package is "truly" introduced by defpkg. And
; until such a defpkg form is evaluated, ACL2 will not dabble in symbols in the
; "MY-PKG" package, other than to save them in *hcomp-fn-alist* and related
; lists near the top of the expansion file.)
; Note that in a break from ACL2 versions up through 3.6.1, where ACL2 could
; load compiled files for uncertified books, the write-date comparison of the
; compiled file (or expansion file) is against the certificate rather than the
; source .lisp file. (Well, that's not quite true: the comparison remains
; against the source book when include-book is executed in raw mode, since raw
; mode does not involve the certificate file.)
; We designate three "add-trip contexts", according to whether processing of a
; 'cltl-command property by add-trip is assigning a function, a global variable
; (e.g. for defconst), or a macro value. We refer to the symbol being assigned
; a value as an "add-trip symbol", and we call that value a "relevant value"
; (with respect to that context, which is often implicit) for that symbol.
; Whenever we refer to the add-trip symbols of a book, that reference includes
; add-trip symbols for the book's portcullis commands as well, but not add-trip
; symbols of subsidiary included books. Note by the way that a *1* function
; symbol can be an add-trip symbol. The final step after loading a top-level
; compiled file will be to undo the load's assignment of relevant values to
; add-trip symbols. This step will be done in the cleanup form of an
; unwind-protect, so as to clean up if an error or interrupt occurs during
; loading of the compiled file. (The clean-up won't be complete for functions
; defined in raw-mode, just as it hasn't been in earlier versions of ACL2 that
; did not load compiled files early. But raw-mode is ultimately the user's
; responsibility, and we expect problems from such aborts to be rare.)
; We next describe several variables and a constant, which we define before
; include-book-fn.
; Variables *hcomp-fn-ht*, *hcomp-const-ht*, and *hcomp-macro-ht* are
; intended to be let-bound to eq hash tables: one for ACL2 user functions and
; their *1* symbols, one for constants (as with defconst), and one for
; macros.
; Variables *hcomp-fn-alist*, *hcomp-const-alist*, and *hcomp-macro-alist*
; will be be let-bound to alists related to the above hash tables, in senses
; described below.
; The variable *hcomp-fake-value* is used as a "fake value", not in any
; package known in the ACL2 loop, for various purposes below.
; Variables *hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht* and *hcomp-macro-restore-ht* are
; globally bound to hash tables that are populated as books are included,
; storing existing relevant values (or *hcomp-fake-value* when the relevant
; value is unbound) for add-trip symbols.
; A hash table variable, *hcomp-book-ht*, holds other hash tables, as
; follows.
; A key of *hcomp-book-ht* is a full-book-name. Values in this hash table are
; hcomp-book-ht-entry records, where each record has a status field that
; describes the attempt to load the book's compiled file, and also has optional
; fields corresponding to values of *hcomp-fn-ht*, *hcomp-const-ht*, and
; *hcomp-macro-ht*. When ACL2 encounters an include-book form during an early
; raw-Lisp load of an include-book whose full-book-name is not already a key of
; the world's 'include-book-alist or of *hcomp-book-ht*, then include-book
; loads that sub-book's compiled file, hence with new let-bindings of the
; *hcomp-xxx-alist* and *hcomp-xxx-ht* variables, along with unwind protection
; using the *hcomp-xxx-restore-ht* values that can restore relevant values
; after transferring them to those hash tables. Upon exiting include-book
; successfully, the *hcomp-xxx-ht* variables are associated with the
; full-book-name in *hcomp-book-ht*.
; (Note: One might think that the hash tables one gets by loading the compiled
; file could vary with context, which makes it unreasonable to compute them for
; a sub-book before processing events in the main book. But as long as the
; book and all books under it remain certified and unchanged, we expect that
; all relevant values depend essentially only on the closure under ancestors of
; the events in the sub-book.)
; We next consider the question of whether it really buys us anything to save
; compiled definitions for defconst and defmacro forms. The answer is (or can
; be) yes, because macros may have been expanded away. (See the discussion of
; "minimal compilation" in the Common Lisp Hyperspec: it is defined in
; http://www.lispworks.com/documentation/HyperSpec/Body/03_bbb.htm, and it is
; specified for file compilation in #6 of
; http://www.lispworks.com/documentation/HyperSpec/Body/03_bca.htm.) One
; experiment that drives this point home (we have tried GCL and CCL) is the
; following. Consider the following files, and see the comments in the
; commands below them.
; .................... tmp.lsp ....................
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (defun foo (n)
; (cond ((zp n) 1)
; (t (loop for i from 0 to (1- n)
; when (equal (foo i) 2)
; do (return i))
; 1)))
; (defmacro mac () (foo 27))
; .................... tmp2.lsp ...................
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (load "tmp") ; load compiled file
; (defmacro mac2 () (mac))
; .................... tmp3.lsp ...................
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (load "tmp") ; load compiled file
; (defconst *c* (mac))
; .................................................
; Now do the following (with both CCL-based and GCL-based ACL2 images):
; <Start ACL2>
; :q
; (compile-file "tmp.lsp") ; fast
; (quit)
; <Start ACL2>
; :q
; (load "tmp2.lsp") ; slow definition of mac2
; (compile-file "tmp2.lsp") ; slow
; (load "tmp2") ; fast definition of mac2 from compiled file
; (quit)
; <Start ACL2>
; :q
; (load "tmp2") ; fast definition of mac2 from compiled file
; (quit)
; <Start ACL2>
; :q
; (load "tmp3.lsp") ; slow definition of *c*
; (compile-file "tmp3.lsp") ; fast
; (load "tmp3") ; fast
; (quit)
; <Start ACL2>
; :q
; (load "tmp3") ; slow(GCL)/fast(CCL) def of *c* from compiled file
; (load "tmp3") ; faster (some kind of memoization?)
; (quit)
; We conclude this Part with a discussion of some tricky issues for the case
; that an expansion or compiled file is loaded by include-book, i.e., the case
; that a book is being included with a non-nil effective value of
; :load-compiled-file, where by "effective value" we mean the value after
; accounting for state global 'compiler-enabled.
; A stobj may be defined during evaluation of the raw Lisp definition of
; include-book. In that case, the-live-name for that stobj is an add-trip
; symbol, and hence its value is stored in *hcomp-const-ht*. However, the raw
; Lisp definition of defstobj or defabsstobj also assigns to
; *user-stobj-alist*, which we expect will associate the-live-name of a stobj
; with its Lisp relevant value. Now imagine subsequent processing of events by
; the same include-book. When defstobj or defabsstobj is encountered, add-trip
; obtains the value of the-live-name of that stobj from *hcomp-const-ht*, and
; uses that value to update *user-stobj-alist* just as it would if it were
; updating without benefit of *hcomp-const-ht*. The only tricky bit here is
; that we need to ensure that add-trip, along with undo-trip and flush-trip,
; are the only functions that update *user-stobj-alist*. Therefore, we bind
; *user-stobj-alist* to itself when doing an early load of the compiled file or
; expansion file; see include-book-raw.
; If the compiled file or certificate is missing, or else if the compiled file
; is older than the certificate, we may print a warning and go on, assigning
; 'incomplete status to that book in *hcomp-book-ht* -- but there are a couple
; of exceptions. If :load-compiled-file is t for the current book or any
; parent include-book in progress (as recorded by special variable
; *load-compiled-stack*), then we cause an error. If :load-compiled-file is
; not t, then we are content with loading the expansion file in place of the
; compiled file, provided the expansion file is not older than the certificate;
; see load-compiled-book. In that case we obtain interpreted code when
; add-trip reads a hash table for the value to use, for lisps that do not
; compile on-the-fly; but in that case we are really no worse off than if we
; were computing and evaluating the corresponding definition during event
; processing.
; If however the compiled file is up-to-date with respect to the certificate,
; then we may reasonably assume that the compiled file was valid at one time,
; even if the book is now uncertified. (We could gain some confidence that the
; book is certified by insisting that the certificate is not older than the
; book. But some ACL2 users like to update the comments in a book without
; invalidating the certificate.) We load the compiled file with a suitable
; unwind-protect, restoring relevant values after the load completes (whether
; aborted or not). If it turns out that the book is uncertified, say because
; its certificate is out-of-date or is for the wrong ACL2 version, we will
; simply avoid using the hash tables computed when loading its compiled file,
; since we don't trust the relevant values stored in those tables.
; What happens if a compiled file is missing for a sub-book (and, if
; :load-compiled-file is not t, the expansion file is also missing)? Because
; of the possibility of missing packages, at the least, we want to avoid forms
; from the parent book's compiled file (or expansion file -- whichever we are
; loading) that are below the include-book of that sub-book. So, we abort with
; a throw and a warning, associating the partially-constructed hash tables with
; the parent full-book-name in *hcomp-book-ht*, and leaving it to the cleanup
; form of the surrounding unwind-protect to restore symbol-functions in
; existence before the load of the parent book's compiled file. Of course, if
; the parent book is itself a sub-book of a book being included, then its
; parent's load is in turn similarly aborted, and so on up the chain. Note
; that loading the source file in raw Lisp is not an option in general, because
; all of the *hcomp-xxx-alist* setq forms and (hcomp-init) form, not to mention
; that make-event forms in source files are illegal (with the rare exception of
; a consp :check-expansion argument). Again, the expansion file is a good
; candidate for loading if the compiled file is missing, and this is done in
; order to avoid the aborts described above provided we are not under an
; include-book with :load-compiled-file = t.
; Given a top-level include-book event, it may be helpful to visualize all
; included books and sub-books by arranging them into a tree growing downward,
; with the top-level included book as the root at the top, its sub-books as its
; children from left to right in order of their include-book forms in the
; top-level book, and similarly for sub-books of those sub-books, and
; recursively on downward. ACL2 will include books with a depth-first
; left-to-right traversal of this tree. First suppose that the top-level
; include-book form's :load-compile-file argument has an effective value (i.e.,
; accounting for 'compiler-enabled and defaults) other than nil. At the first
; failure to load a compiled file (either because it is missing or it is out of
; date with respect to the .cert file), all parent books up the tree are
; considered to have incomplete loads of their compiled files. However, if
; none of these superior books has a :load-compile-file argument with effective
; value of t, then the partially-populated hash tables are considered
; sufficient and the process continues. To see how warnings and errors are
; handled, suppose we have: book1 includes book2 includes book3 includes book4;
; the compiled file for book4 is missing; and the effective value of
; :load-compile-file for all of these is non-nil. Then we will see a "Compiled
; file" warning unless either book4 or one of its ancestor books (book1, book2,
; book3) has a :load-compile-file argument of t, in which case an error will
; occur.
; We close this introduction with a partial disclaimer. The Common Lisp
; Hyperspec does not seem to specify fully which side effects may be caused by
; DEFUN. Thus, although our approach will install symbol-functions, there
; seems to be no guarantee that it will allow other side-effects caused by
; DEFUN. No such side-effect is critical for ACL2. Nevetheless, it is
; fortunate that some such side-effects may still be handled, as illustrated by
; the following experiment in CCL. First, load a compiled definition of
; function foo from a compiled file, save the symbol-function of foo in
; variable xxx, evaluate (fmakunbound 'foo), and then evaluate (setf
; (symbol-function 'foo) xxx). After all this: if the defun of foo has a Lisp
; documentation string, then (documentation 'foo 'function) will still return
; that string; and if moreover ccl::*save-source-locations* is t, then
; (disassemble 'foo) will give the same nice result both before the fmakunbound
; and after the setf.
; We turn next to describing how compiled (and expansion) files are used when
; including a certified book. We defer to Part 3 an explanation of how
; expansion files are created (and thus, how compiled files are created) during
; book certification.
; In this essay, while we occasionally mention the use of raw mode within a
; book, presumably within a progn! form in the presence of a trust tag, we do
; not consider explicitly the evaluation of include-book forms in raw Lisp.
; This case is simpler than evaluation of include-book forms in the ACL2 loop;
; for example, the value of *hcomp-book-ht* is irrelevant for include-book
; performed in raw mode.
; Part 2: Including a certified book
; Fix a book for the following discussion. An add-trip symbol is "qualified"
; if whenever add-trip is to assign a relevant value by including the book in a
; boot-strap world, that value is equal to relevant value of the symbol if
; instead the compiled file is loaded. An add-trip symbol is "semi-qualified"
; if instead add-trip assigns a relevant value exactly twice, where the second
; value equals the relevant value of the symbol at the time the compiled file
; has just been loaded. This can happen if, and we believe only if (unless
; trust tags or make-event with non-nil :check-expansion are involved), the
; symbol is a *1* function symbol that is defined first in :program mode and
; then in :logic mode, say with verify-termination. We call an add-trip symbol
; "unqualified" if it is neither qualified nor semi-qualified.
; Include-book processes the book's compiled file using the following sequence
; of steps. (See also the summary shortly below this description.)
; First, include-book loads the compiled file:
; (1) Each *hcomp-xxx-alist* is an alist assigned by a form (setq
; *hcomp-xxx-alist* (quote ...)) near the top of the expansion file, after
; the initial (in-package "ACL2") but before the portcullis commands. This
; alist associates values with (and only with) all add-trip symbols: t for
; qualified, 'semi for semi-qualified, and nil for unqualified. Note that
; the values of these setq forms are quoted (laid down during book
; certification); hence the values of these globals are independent of the
; environment in which the compiled file is loaded. We use setq rather
; than defparameter because we have seen defparameter result in a slowdown
; of two orders of magnitude in CCL in doing the early load of compiled
; files.
; (2) Function hcomp-init is called (at load time), to do two things. For one,
; it adds to the *hcomp-xxx-restore-ht* hash tables, so that for each
; add-trip symbol that is not already a key of the suitable such hash
; table, that symbol is associated with its relevant value, if it has one,
; and otherwise is associated with a special "unbound" value,
; *hcomp-fake-value*. Also, it populates each *hcomp-xxx-ht* by
; associating each qualified add-trip symbol with t and each semi-qualified
; add-trip symbol with 'semi. Note that while the set of add-trip symbols
; (as well as their status as qualified, semi-qualified, or unqualified) is
; determined when the compiled file is written, the determination of
; relevant values written to *hcomp-xxx-alist* is done at load time. Also
; note that the domain of each *hcomp-xxx-alist*, representing the set of
; add-trip symbols, is the same as in Step (1).
; (3) Relevant values are assigned by loading the remainder of the compiled
; file, which starts with the portcullis commands. These are wrapped in a
; progn to maximize sharing using #n# syntax.
; Note however that the load may abort with a throw as described earlier above
; (missing compiled file for a sub-book). We'll catch any such throw before
; proceeding with the next step.
; (4) Evaluation of the form (hcomp-transfer-to-hash-tables) updates the
; *hcomp-xxx-ht* hash tables for use by add-trip, as follows. Let sym be
; an add-trip symbol with relevant value val and "qualified" status as
; determined by *hcomp-xxx-alist*. If sym is qualified, then sym is
; associated in *hcomp-xxx-ht* with val. Otherwise, if sym is
; semi-qualified, then sym is associated with the so-called "reclassifying
; value" (*hcomp-fake-value* . val). Otherwise, sym is not a key of the
; hash table.
; After attempting to load all compiled (or expansion) files under a top-level
; such load, ACL2 executes the following step as it cleans up using
; unwind-protection; see include-book-raw-top.
; (5) Relevant values are restored (which could mean making some symbols have
; undefined relevant values) for all add-trip symbols, regardless of
; "qualified" status, to what they were before Step (3), using the
; *hcomp-xxx-restore-ht* alists from Step (2).
; In summary, our alist and hash table globals have values as follows during
; the process of including a certified book. (NOTE that they have different
; values during the process of book certification, as discussed in Part 3
; below.)
; *hcomp-xxx-alist*
; -- Before evaluating hcomp-init (near the top of the expansion file):
; Associates each add-trip symbol with t if qualified, 'semi if
; semi-qualified and otherwise nil
; *hcomp-xxx-ht*
; -- After evaluating hcomp-init (near the top of the expansion file):
; Assigns each qualified add-trip symbol to t and each semi-qualified
; add-trip symbol to 'semi (and these are the only keys)
; -- After loading compiled definitions, hcomp-transfer-to-hash-tables is
; called to populate *hcomp-xxx-ht* by associating a value with each
; qualified or semi-qualified add-trip symbol that has a relevant value,
; val (and only in those cases), as follows:
; + a qualified symbol is bound to val
; + a semi-qualified symbol is bound to the so-called "reclassifying
; value" (*hcomp-fake-value* . val), where val is a :logic mode *1*
; definition
; *hcomp-xxx-restore-ht*
; -- After completing a top-level load of a compiled (or expansion) file:
; Associates each add-trip symbol with its relevant value if any, else to
; *hcomp-fake-value*
; So, how is a relevant value assigned to an add-trip symbol when including a
; certified book? If the symbol is qualified, then its value is obtained from
; the relevant *hcomp-xxx-ht* hash table. Otherwise add-trip proceeds without
; the help of that hash table. However, if the symbol is assigned a
; reclassifying value (*hcomp-fake-value* . val) in the hash table, then even
; though add-trip does not use that value to assign a relevant value, the
; symbol is reassigned to val in the hash table; so if and when subsequently
; this *1* symbol is assigned a :logic-mode value by add-trip it will be val,
; i.e., the symbol will be treated as qualified. That is appropriate because
; if add-trip assigns a new value -- and assuming that redefinition is off,
; which it is unless there is a trust tag -- then the subsequent :logic mode
; definition will be ready for this saved value.
; If raw-mode is entered, then loading the compiled file can assign relevant
; values to symbols other than add-trip symbols. (By the way, we are not
; talking here about memoize and unmemoize, even when #+hons, because these are
; no-ops in raw Lisp.) Upon completion of the above sequence of five steps,
; new relevant values are only assigned for symbols that are not add-trip
; symbols, since as specified in Step (5) above, relevant values for add-trip
; symbols are restored from the *hcomp-xxx-restore-ht* variables after loading
; the compiled files. Users need to manage raw-mode carefully with respect to
; loading compiled files when including a book.
; If future enhancements are to allow add-trip to assign more than one relevant
; value for other than *1* symbols, we expect to be able to deal with such
; cases. If there can in fact be more than two such assignments for the same
; symbol, we can replace a reclassifying value (cons *hcomp-fake-value* val) by
; something like (list* *hcomp-fake-value* count val), where count is initially
; the number of expected re-assignments, it is decremented with each
; assignment, and only when it would be about to decrement to 0 would we
; actually use the hash table's value. Note that some of the initial
; assignments made during certify-book might not be made during include-book,
; because of redundancy, so the last value is the only one that can reliably be
; assigned (if the count ever gets down to 1).
; Part 3: Writing an expansion file for compilation
; We next consider the writing of the expansion file by certify-book. This
; process has three main steps. The first main step is storing relevant values
; in the *hcomp-xxx-ht* hash tables both based on the certification world and
; during the process-embedded-events call during the include-book pass of
; certify-book. The second main step then determines the value of each
; *hcomp-xxx-alist* for the setq forms to be written to the expansion file.
; The third main step actually writes forms to the expansion file. We now
; consider these in turn. Note that we do not access the *hcomp-xxx-alist*
; variables; their part in writing an expansion file is only to occur
; syntactically in the setq forms.
; The first main step populates each *hcomp-xxx-ht*. We begin by let-binding
; each *hcomp-xxx-ht* to its own eq hash table. Then we populate these hash
; tables -- first using the portcullis commands of the certification world,
; then during the process-embedded-events phase of include-book-fn -- updating
; the appropriate hash table for each symbol that is assigned a relevant value
; (because of a 'cltl-command property) by add-trip. (In the case of the
; portcullis commands, we do not actually run add-trip, but rather we mirror
; its necessary effects in function hcomp-build-from-state.) When we
; encounter a symbol that is not already a key of that hash table, then we
; associate it with its relevant value. Otherwise, if the symbol is a *1*
; symbol that already has a value that is not a reclassifying value, and it is
; now being converted from :program to :logic mode, then the symbol is
; associated with the reclassifying value (*hcomp-fake-value* . val), where val
; is its current relevant value. Otherwise the symbol is other than a *1*
; symbol and already has a relevant value -- presumably something unusual has
; occurred by virtue of a trust tag -- and the symbol is associated with
; *hcomp-fake-value*. Note (in particular for the #+hons version) that memoize
; and unmemoize events do not have any effect on the populating of
; *hcomp-xxx-ht*.
; The second main step takes place after the return from
; process-embedded-events, and considers each symbol, sym, and associated value
; in the appropriate *hcomp-xxx-ht*. If the value is a reclassifying value
; (*hcomp-fake-value* . val) and val equals the current relevant value of sym,
; then sym is semi-qualified and is therefore to be associated with 'semi in
; *hcomp-xxx-alist*. For any other value, val, besides *hcomp-fake-value*,
; such that val equals the current relevant value of sym, then sym is qualified
; and is therefore to be associated with t in *hcomp-xxx-alist*. Otherwise VAL
; is unqualified and hence is to be associated with nil in *hcomp-xxx-alist*
; (see function hcomp-alists-from-hts for the check against the current
; relevant value). This last case is likely to be rather unusual, but can
; happen in the #+hons case if memoization occurs after a definition without
; being followed by unmemoization (more on this in the next paragraph). It can
; also happen if a function is redefined in raw-mode, though of course a trust
; tag is needed in that case; but we do not guarantee perfect handling of
; raw-mode, as there might be no raw-mode redefinition during the include-book
; phase of book certification and yet there might be raw-mode redefinition
; later during inclusion of the certified book -- anyhow, uses of raw-mode are
; the user's responsibility. If not for raw-mode, we might simply avoid any
; check and consider every add-trip symbol to be qualified or semi-qualified;
; memoization isn't a problem, since memoize is a no-op in raw Lisp and hash
; tables are populated during early include-books performed in raw Lisp.
; Note that we take a conservative approach, where memoization can make a
; symbol unqualfied. The consequence seems small, since as of this writing,
; memoization is only done in the #+hons version, which is only for ACL2 built
; on CCL, and CCL compiles on-the-fly; so the marking of an add-trip symbol as
; unqualified will not result in interpreted code. A future optimization might
; be to to avoid disqualification due to memoization in suitable cases, perhaps
; by tracking raw-mode or trust tags, or perhaps by somehow taking advantage of
; the 'old-fn field of the *memoize-info-ht* entry.
; It is instructive to consider the case that a :program mode definition is
; redundant with an earlier :logic mode definition made in the book (or its
; portcullis commands), either directly or by way of a redundant encapsulate,
; as per the following example from Jared Davis:
; (encapsulate () (defun f (x) (declare (xargs :mode :program)) x))
; (verify-termination f)
; (encapsulate () (defun f (x) (declare (xargs :mode :program)) x))
; Recall that the *1* functions written to the expansion file are based on the
; definitional event installed at the end of the include-book phase of
; certify-book. In this case, that will be the :logic mode definition; the
; redundant event is properly ignored.
; The third main step, writing forms to the expansion file, is rather
; straightforward based on the discussion above. We bind the current package
; to "ACL2", and then write a sequence of forms as follows.
; - (in-package "ACL2")
; - Forms that introduce packages that may be needed for reading symbols in the
; initial setq forms. These are introduced using maybe-introduce-empty-pkg-1
; and maybe-introduce-empty-pkg-2. The maybe-introduce-empty-pkg-1 forms
; introduce all the packages together, just under the initial in-package
; form, thus avoiding a warning from GCL that can occur unless all defpackage
; forms immediately follow the initial in-package form. The
; maybe-introduce-empty-pkg-2 forms use special variable *defpkg-virgins* to
; let ACL2 know to accept subsequent corressponding defpkg forms.
; - Setq forms for the *hcomp-xxx-alist* variables as described above
; (hcomp-init)
; - Declaim forms (if any)
; - The portcullis commands
; - Book contents, modified according to the expansion-alist in the certificate
; that comes from make-event
; - *1* function definitions from the book (including the portcullis)
; Note that some of these are wrapped together in a progn to maximize sharing
; using #n# syntax.
; End of Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation
(defun hcomp-init ()
; For context, see the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
; This function is called during loading of a compiled or expansion file by
; include-book, immediately after assigning alists to the *hcomp-xxx-alist*
; globals. The keys of each alist are the add-trip symbols for its type,
; associating value t if qualified, 'semi if semi-qualified, else nil. This
; function does two things. First, for each of the three alists, it puts an
; entry into the corresponding *hcomp-xxx-alist* hash table, for each key bound
; to non-nil in the alist. Second, it updates *hcomp-fn-restore-ht* to support
; the eventual restoration of relevant values for add-trip symbols. For
; details, see the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
(when (or (raw-mode-p *the-live-state*)
(null *hcomp-fn-ht*))
; In raw mode, or when loading before compiling for include-book with
; :load-compiled-file :comp, we don't bother with hcomp hash tables and such.
; Rather, we expect that loading of compiled files has the effect one normally
; expects for raw Lisp.
(assert (and (null *hcomp-const-ht*)
(null *hcomp-macro-ht*)))
(return-from hcomp-init nil))
(dolist (pair *hcomp-fn-alist*)
(when (cdr pair)
(setf (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-fn-ht*)
(cdr pair))))
(dolist (pair *hcomp-const-alist*)
(when (cdr pair)
(setf (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-const-ht*)
(cdr pair)))
(when *hcomp-const-restore-ht*
(multiple-value-bind (old present-p)
(gethash (car pair) *hcomp-const-restore-ht*)
(declare (ignore old))
(when (not present-p)
(setf (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-const-restore-ht*)
(cond ((boundp (car pair))
(symbol-value (car pair)))
(t *hcomp-fake-value*)))))))
(dolist (pair *hcomp-macro-alist*)
(when (cdr pair)
(setf (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-macro-ht*)
(cdr pair))))
(when *hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht*
(dolist (pair (append *hcomp-macro-alist* *hcomp-fn-alist*))
(multiple-value-bind (old present-p)
(gethash (car pair) *hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht*)
(declare (ignore old))
(when (not present-p)
(setf (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht*)
(let ((mac (macro-function (car pair))))
(cond (mac (cons 'macro mac))
((fboundp (car pair))
(cons 'function
(symbol-function (car pair))))
(t *hcomp-fake-value*)))))))))
(defabbrev reclassifying-value-p (x)
; See the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
(and (consp x)
(eq (car x) *hcomp-fake-value*)))
(defmacro make-reclassifying-value (x)
; See the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
`(cons *hcomp-fake-value* ,x))
(defmacro unmake-reclassifying-value (x)
; See the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
`(cdr ,x))
(defun hcomp-transfer-to-hash-tables ()
; See the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
; This function populates *hcomp-xxx-ht* hash tables with relevant values of
; qualified and semi-qualified add-trip symbols, after including a compiled or
; expansion file.
(dolist (pair *hcomp-fn-alist*)
(let ((qualified (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-fn-ht*)))
(cond ((and qualified
(fboundp (car pair)) ; likely only falsified here by raw mode
)
(setf (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-fn-ht*)
(cond
((eq qualified t)
(symbol-function (car pair)))
(t
(assert$
(eq qualified 'semi)
(make-reclassifying-value
(symbol-function (car pair))))))))
(t (remhash (car pair) *hcomp-fn-ht*)))))
(dolist (pair *hcomp-const-alist*)
(let ((qualified (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-const-ht*)))
(cond ((and qualified
(boundp (car pair)) ; likely only falsified here by raw mode
)
(setf (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-const-ht*)
(assert$
(eq qualified t)
(symbol-value (car pair)))))
(t (remhash (car pair) *hcomp-const-ht*)))))
(dolist (pair *hcomp-macro-alist*)
(let ((qualified (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-macro-ht*)))
(cond ((and qualified
(macro-function (car pair)) ; raw mode check, as above
)
(setf (gethash (car pair) *hcomp-macro-ht*)
(assert$
(eq qualified t)
(macro-function (car pair)))))
(t (remhash (car pair) *hcomp-macro-ht*))))))
(defvar *saved-hcomp-restore-hts* nil)
(defun hcomp-restore-defs ()
; See the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
; This function undoes the effect of loading compiled and expansion files, in
; the sense that it restores relevant values: every add-trip symbol is given
; the relevant value it had before loading these, if any, else is unbound.
; The variable *saved-hcomp-restore-hts* should have just been been assigned to
; the current value of (list* *hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht*
; *hcomp-const-restore-ht*).
(when (null *saved-hcomp-restore-hts*)
(er hard 'hcomp-restore-defs
"Apparently an interrupt has occurred at exactly the right time to ~
thwart ACL2's attempt to clean up by removing certain definitions in ~
raw Lisp. You are strongly advised to restart ACL2. You could ~
instead try to continue, but you might well encounter errors ~
regarding having definitions in raw Common Lisp."))
(let ((fn-macro-restore-ht (car *saved-hcomp-restore-hts*))
(const-restore-ht (cdr *saved-hcomp-restore-hts*)))
(when fn-macro-restore-ht
(maphash (lambda (k val)
(cond ((eq val *hcomp-fake-value*)
; We use fmakunbound! instead of fmakunbound in case trust tags have allowed
; some raw Lisp code to overwrite a function definition with a macro
; definition.
(fmakunbound! k))
((eq (car val) 'macro)
(setf (macro-function k) (cdr val)))
(t ; (eq (car val) 'function)
(fmakunbound! k) ; remove potential macro-function
(setf (symbol-function k) (cdr val)))))
fn-macro-restore-ht))
(when const-restore-ht
(maphash (lambda (k val)
(cond ((eq val *hcomp-fake-value*)
(remprop k 'redundant-raw-lisp-discriminator)
(makunbound k))
(t
; The 'redundant-raw-lisp-discriminator property may be wrong here; but really,
; we don't expect this case to occur, since redefinition with defconst is not
; supported (unless perhaps extraordinary measures are taken using trust
; tags).
(setf (symbol-value k) val))))
const-restore-ht))
nil))
(defun missing-compiled-book (ctx file reason-msg load-compiled-file state)
; This function is called when a compiled file is missing from an attempt to
; include a book. It either causes an error (because of an include-book called
; with :load-compiled-file t) or returns INCOMPLETE, which may be convenient
; when this result is to be placed into the status field of an
; hcomp-book-ht-entry record or is to be the value returned by
; load-compiled-book or include-book-raw.
; For convenience, we also use this function to report failure to complete the
; load of a compiled file when such a failure has previously been reported, but
; no such report has yet been made involving the files above that missing
; compiled file. In this case we pass reason-msg = nil. However, we do not
; expect this case to arise; see the comment about "flaw in our thinking" in
; include-book-raw.
; Warning: Do not change the message printed in the case reason-msg = nil
; without reading the comment in *uninhibited-warning-summaries* about
; "Compiled file".
(let ((see-doc " See :DOC include-book."))
(cond ((null load-compiled-file)
(er hard ctx
"Implementation error: the LOAD-COMPILED-FILE argument is ~x0 ~
in call ~x1."
nil
`(missing-compiled-book ',ctx ',file ',reason-msg
',load-compiled-file state)))
((or (eq load-compiled-file t)
(rassoc-eq t *load-compiled-stack*))
(let ((stack-msg
(cond ((eq load-compiled-file t)
(tilde-@-book-stack-msg t *load-compiled-stack*))
(t
(tilde-@-book-stack-msg
(car (rassoc-eq t *load-compiled-stack*))
*load-compiled-stack*)))))
(cond (reason-msg
(er hard ctx
"Unable to load compiled file~| ~s0~|because ~@1.~@2~@3"
file reason-msg see-doc stack-msg))
(t
(er hard ctx
"Unable to complete load of compiled file for book~|~ ~ ~
~s0,~|as already noted by a warning.~@1~@2"
file see-doc stack-msg)))))
(reason-msg
(warning$ ctx "Compiled file"
"Unable to load compiled file for book~| ~s0~|because ~
~@1.~@2~@3"
file
reason-msg
see-doc
(tilde-@-book-stack-msg nil *load-compiled-stack*)))
(t
(warning$ ctx "Compiled file"
"Unable to complete load of compiled file for book~| ~
~s0,~|as already noted by a previous warning.~@1"
file
(tilde-@-book-stack-msg nil *load-compiled-stack*)))))
'incomplete)
(defmacro our-handler-bind (bindings &rest forms)
#-cltl2 (declare (ignore bindings))
#-cltl2 `(progn ,@forms)
#+cltl2 `(handler-bind ,bindings ,@forms))
(defun load-compiled-book (file directory-name load-compiled-file ctx state)
; We are processing include-book-raw underneath include-book-fn (hence
; presumably not in raw mode). File is an ACL2 full-book-name and
; load-compiled-file is non-nil. We attempt to load the corresponding compiled
; or perhaps expansion file if not out of date with respect to the book's
; certificate file. Normally, we return COMPLETE if such a suitable compiled
; file or expansion file exists and is loaded to completion, but if file is the
; book being processed by a surrounding include-book-fn and compilation is
; indicated because load-compiled-file is :comp and the expansion file is
; loaded (not the compiled file), then we return TO-BE-COMPILED in that case.
; Otherwise we return INCOMPLETE, that is, either no load is attempted for the
; compiled or expansion file (because they don't exist or are out of date), or
; else such a load but is aborted partway through, which can happen because of
; an incomplete load of a subsidiary include-book's compiled or expansion file.
; As suggested above, we may allow the corresponding expansion file to take the
; place of a missing or out-of-date compiled file. However, we do not allow
; this if load-compiled-file is t or a parent include-book has
; :load-compiled-file t.
(assert load-compiled-file)
(mv-let
(cfile state)
(certificate-file file state)
(let* ((os-file (pathname-unix-to-os file state))
(cfile-date (and cfile (file-write-date cfile)))
(ofile (convert-book-name-to-compiled-name os-file state))
(ofile-exists (probe-file ofile))
(ofile-date (and ofile-exists (file-write-date ofile)))
(ofile-p (and ofile-date cfile-date (>= ofile-date cfile-date)))
(efile (and (not (eq load-compiled-file t))
(expansion-filename file t state)))
(efile-exists (and efile (probe-file efile)))
(file-is-older-str
"the file-write-date of ~x0 is less than that of ~x1"))
(cond
((not cfile)
(missing-compiled-book ctx
file
(if (probe-file (convert-book-name-to-cert-name
file t))
"that book is not certified (but note that ~
its .cert file exists and is not readable)"
"that book is not certified")
load-compiled-file
state))
((and (not ofile-exists)
(not efile-exists))
(missing-compiled-book ctx
file
"the compiled file does not exist"
load-compiled-file
state))
((not cfile-date)
(missing-compiled-book
ctx
file
(msg "~x0 is ~x1 (which is odd since file ~x2 exists)"
`(file-write-date ,cfile)
nil
cfile)
load-compiled-file
state))
((not (or ofile-p
(let ((efile-date (and efile-exists (file-write-date efile))))
(and efile-date (>= efile-date cfile-date)))))
(cond
(ofile-exists
(missing-compiled-book
ctx
file
(msg file-is-older-str ofile cfile)
load-compiled-file
state))
(t ; hence efile-exists
(missing-compiled-book
ctx
file
(msg "the compiled file does not exist and ~@0"
(msg file-is-older-str efile cfile))
load-compiled-file
state))))
((and (not ofile-p) ; hence efile is suitable to load, except:
(rassoc-eq t *load-compiled-stack*))
(missing-compiled-book
ctx
file
(if ofile-exists
"that compiled file does not exist"
"that compiled file is out-of-date")
load-compiled-file
state))
(t ; either ofile or efile is suitable for loading
(let ((to-be-compiled-p ; true at top level of include-book-fn with :comp
(and (not ofile-p)
(null *load-compiled-stack*)
(eq load-compiled-file :comp)))
(status 'incomplete))
(when (and (not ofile-p)
(not to-be-compiled-p))
; Hence efile is suitable and we are not in the special case of compiling it on
; behalf of include-book-fn. Note that for the case of compiling on behalf of
; include-book-fn, either that compilation will succeed or there will be an
; error -- either way, there is no need to warn here.
(warning$ ctx "Compiled file"
"Loading expansion file ~x0 in place of compiled file ~
~x1, because ~@2."
efile ofile
(cond (ofile-exists
(msg file-is-older-str ofile cfile))
(t
(msg "the compiled file is missing")))))
(catch 'missing-compiled-book
; bogus compiler warning in LispWorks 6.0.1, gone in LispWorks 6.1
(state-global-let*
((raw-include-book-dir-alist nil)
(connected-book-directory directory-name))
(let ((*load-compiled-stack* (acons file
load-compiled-file
*load-compiled-stack*)))
(multiple-value-bind
(er val)
(catch 'my-book-error
(our-handler-bind
((error (function
(lambda (c)
; Function hcomp-transfer-to-hash-tables might not have been run, which would
; leave *hcomp-fn-ht* in an odd state. In the worst case that function would
; have emptied these hash tables; here, we do the easy thing and set them all
; to nil.
(setq *hcomp-fn-ht* nil
*hcomp-const-ht* nil
*hcomp-macro-ht* nil)
(throw 'my-book-error
(values t (format nil "~a" c)))))))
(values nil
(cond (ofile-p (load-compiled ofile t))
(t (with-reckless-read (load efile)))))))
(value (setq status
(cond (er (setq status val))
(to-be-compiled-p 'to-be-compiled)
(t 'complete))))))))
(cond
((stringp status) ; status is raw Lisp error message
(warning$ ctx "Compiled file"
"The following raw Lisp error occurred when loading ~
file~|~s0:~|~s1"
(cond (ofile-p ofile)
(t efile))
status)
(missing-compiled-book
ctx
file
(msg "an error occurred in raw Lisp (see above)")
load-compiled-file
state))
(t (hcomp-transfer-to-hash-tables)
(assert$ (member-eq status '(to-be-compiled complete incomplete))
status)))))))))
(defun include-book-raw (book-name directory-name load-compiled-file dir ctx
state)
; This function is generally called on behalf of include-book-fn. No load
; takes place if load-compiled-file is effectively nil (either nil or else
; compiler-enabled is nil) unless we are in raw mode, in which case we attempt
; to load the source file, book-name. So suppose load-compiled-file is not
; nil. When the call is not under certify-book-fn, the effect is to populate
; *hcomp-book-ht* with *hcomp-xxx-ht* hash tables for the given book and
; (recursively) all its sub-books; see the Essay on Hash Table Support for
; Compilation. Otherwise its effect is as follows: load the compiled file if
; it exists and is up-to-date with respect to the certificate, else load the
; expansion file, else (but only in raw mode) load the source book. (The
; *hcomp-xxx* variables are irrelevant, by the way, if we are not calling
; add-trip or otherwise involving ACL2 event processing.)
; If directory-name is nil, then book-name is a user-book-name. Otherwise
; book-name is a full-book-name whose directory is directory-name.
; Load-compiled-file and dir are the arguments of these names from
; include-book.
; Now suppose that we are not in raw mode, i.e., we are evaluating this call
; underneath some call of include-book-fn. We return nil if no load is
; attempted, for example because load-compiled-file is effectively nil. If the
; compiled file or expansion file is loaded in its entirety, then we return
; 'complete. Otherwise we throw to the tag 'missing-compiled-book with the
; status 'incomplete.
(when (not (member-eq load-compiled-file *load-compiled-file-values*))
(er hard ctx
"The only legal values for the :LOAD-COMPILED-FILE keyword argument ~
of ~x0 are ~&1. The value ~x2 is thus illegal."
'include-book
*load-compiled-file-values*
load-compiled-file))
(when *compiling-certified-file*
; See the comment below related to *compiling-certified-file*.
(return-from include-book-raw nil))
(let* ((raw-mode-p (raw-mode-p state))
(load-compiled-file
(cond ((null (f-get-global 'compiler-enabled state))
nil)
((eq load-compiled-file :default)
:warn)
(t (or load-compiled-file
; If load-compiled-file is nil but we are in the process of loading the
; compiled file for a superior book, then there is an include-book for such a
; book, B, with a non-nil value of :load-compiled-file. Even if that value is
; :warn or :comp, hence not t, we still need to try to load a compiled file for
; the present book; of course, if a compiled file is missing for the present
; book or any sub-book, then whether that causes an error or only a warning
; depends on whether some such book B has :load-compiled-file t.
(and *load-compiled-stack*
:warn))))))
(when (and (not raw-mode-p)
(null load-compiled-file))
(return-from include-book-raw nil))
(mv-let
(full-book-name directory-name ignore-familiar-name)
(cond (directory-name (mv book-name directory-name nil))
(t (parse-book-name
(cond (dir (or (include-book-dir dir state)
(er hard ctx
"Unable to find the :dir argument to ~
include-book, ~x0, which should have been ~
defined by ~v1. Perhaps the book ~x2 ~
needs to be recertified."
dir
'(add-include-book-dir add-include-book-dir!)
book-name)))
(t (f-get-global 'connected-book-directory state)))
book-name ".lisp" ctx state)))
(declare (ignore ignore-familiar-name))
(cond
((let ((true-full-book-name (our-truename full-book-name :safe)))
(and true-full-book-name
(assoc-equal true-full-book-name
(global-val 'include-book-alist (w state)))))
; In ACL2 Version_4.1 running on Allegro CL, we got an error when attempting to
; certify the following book.
; (in-package "ACL2")
; (include-book "coi/lists/memberp" :dir :system)
; The problem was that truename is (one might say) broken in Allegro CL.
; Fortunately, Allegro CL provides an alternative that seems to work --
; excl::pathname-resolve-symbolic-links -- and we now use that function (see
; our-truename). The problem goes away if that function is applied to
; full-book-name under the call of assoc-equal below. But the error occurred
; in the context of loading a file just compiled from a book, and in that
; context there is no reason to execute any raw-Lisp include-book. Thus, we
; short-circuit in that case -- see the use of *compiling-certified-file* above
; -- and now we never even get to the above assoc-equal test in that case.
; A final comment in the case that we really do get to this point:
; Since all relevant values have been defined, there is no need to transfer to
; hash tables (as per the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation). This
; is the case even if we loaded in raw-mode. It would be harmless enough to
; load in the raw-mode case, and could be desirable if values are
; context-dependent and it is expected that we re-load, but for now we avoid
; the inefficiency of repeated loads.
nil)
((or raw-mode-p
; If *hcomp-book-ht* is nil and we are not in raw mode, then we are under an
; include-book-fn being performed on behalf of certify-book. In that case we
; just do a load as we would in raw Lisp, without regard to the hash tables
; described in the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
(null *hcomp-book-ht*))
(state-free-global-let*-safe
((connected-book-directory directory-name))
(let* ((os-file (pathname-unix-to-os full-book-name state))
(ofile (convert-book-name-to-compiled-name os-file state))
(os-file-exists (probe-file os-file))
(ofile-exists (probe-file ofile))
(book-date (and os-file-exists (file-write-date os-file)))
(ofile-date (and ofile-exists (file-write-date ofile))))
(cond ((not os-file-exists)
(er hard ctx
"File ~x0 does not exist."
os-file))
((null load-compiled-file)
(assert$ raw-mode-p ; otherwise we already returned above
; If make-event is used in the book, then the following load may cause an
; error. The user of raw mode who supplied a :load-compiled-file argument is
; responsible for the ensuing behavior.
(load os-file)))
((and book-date
ofile-date
(<= book-date ofile-date))
(load-compiled ofile t))
(t (let ((reason (cond (ofile-exists
"the compiled file is not at least as ~
recent as the book")
(t "the compiled file does not exist"))))
(cond ((eq load-compiled-file t)
(er hard ctx
"The compiled file for ~x0 was not loaded ~
because ~@1."
reason))
(t (let* ((efile (expansion-filename
full-book-name t state))
(efile-date (and (probe-file efile)
(file-write-date efile)))
(efile-p (and book-date
efile-date
(<= book-date efile-date)))
(lfile (cond (efile-p efile)
(raw-mode-p os-file)
(t
(er hard ctx
"Implementation error: ~
We seem to have ~
called ~
include-book-raw on ~
book ~x0 with non-nil ~
load-compiled-file ~
argument under the ~
include-book-fn call ~
in certify-book-fn."
book-name)))))
(warning$ ctx "Compiled file"
"Attempting to load ~@0 instead of ~
the corresponding compiled file, ~
because ~@1."
(msg (cond
(efile-p "expansion file ~x0")
(t "source file ~x0"))
lfile)
reason)
(cond (efile-p
(with-reckless-read (load efile)))
(raw-mode-p (load os-file))))))))))))
((let* ((entry (assert$ *hcomp-book-ht* ; not raw mode, e.g.
(gethash full-book-name *hcomp-book-ht*)))
(status (and entry
(access hcomp-book-ht-entry entry :status))))
; The status might be nil because of soft links, in analogy to the case for
; soft links described in a comment above. But as explained in that comment,
; this is harmless; it would simply cause us to fall through and deal with the
; book as though it's newly encountered.
; Below, when status is nil then it is because entry is nil, in which case it
; is correct to fall through to the next top-level COND branch. See (defrec
; hcomp-book-ht-entry ...) for a comment on the legal (hence non-nil) status
; values.
(cond (raw-mode-p
status) ; if nil then there is no entry, so fall through
((and
(eq status 'incomplete) ; so not from raw-mode include-book
*load-compiled-stack*)
; Can the status really be INCOMPLETE? At first glance it would seem this this
; is impossible. For, imagine that we are loading a book's compiled file (or
; expansion file) in raw Lisp prior to processing its events. At the first
; INCOMPLETE status, the tree of include-book forms rooted at that top
; include-book is no longer consulted -- no further loads occur anywhere to the
; right of the branch above the node on which the INCOMPLETE status is
; returned. Ah, but perhaps the topmost include-book has :load-compiled-file
; nil. The argument above shows that any book with existing INCOMPLETE status
; must have been processed by some earlier include-book having non-nil
; :load-compiled-file. But then the offending book has already been included,
; and hence no raw-Lisp load will take place, since the offending book is on the
; 'include-book-alist of the current world.
; But we keep this case, just in case we later find a flaw in our thinking!
; (If this comment is removed, consider the reference to "flaw in our thinking"
; in function missing-compiled-book.)
(error "Implementation error; see include-book-raw.")
; Code we keep in case our thinking above is flawed:
(throw 'missing-compiled-book
(missing-compiled-book ctx full-book-name nil
load-compiled-file state)))
(t status))))
(t ; not raw-mode, and load-compiled-file is non-nil
(with-hcomp-bindings
t
(let ((status
(let ((*user-stobj-alist*
; Our intention is that the call of load-compiled-book below has no effect on
; the state other than to define some packages and populate *hcomp-xxx-ht* hash
; tables. We therefore protect the one global managed by add-trip that is not
; managed by those hash tables: *user-stobj-alist*. See the Essay on Hash
; Table Support for Compilation.
*user-stobj-alist*))
(load-compiled-book full-book-name directory-name
load-compiled-file ctx state))))
(setf (gethash full-book-name *hcomp-book-ht*)
(make hcomp-book-ht-entry
:status status
:fn-ht *hcomp-fn-ht*
:const-ht *hcomp-const-ht*
:macro-ht *hcomp-macro-ht*))
(cond ((member-eq status '(to-be-compiled complete))
status)
(status
(assert$ (eq status 'incomplete)
(cond (*load-compiled-stack*
(throw 'missing-compiled-book 'incomplete))
(t 'incomplete))))))))))))
(defun include-book-raw-top (full-book-name directory-name load-compiled-file
dir ctx state)
(let ((*hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht* (make-hash-table :test 'eq))
(*hcomp-const-restore-ht* (make-hash-table :test 'eq)))
; We need to be careful about handling interrupts. On the one hand, we want to
; take advantage of the "idempotency" provided by acl2-unwind-protect that is
; described in the Essay on Unwind-Protect. On the other hand, cleanup forms
; of acl2-unwind-protect will be evaluated outside the scope of the bindings
; just above. Our solution is for an unwind-protect cleanup form to do nothing
; more than save the above three hash tables -- which we expect can complete
; without interruption, though we check for that in hcomp-restore-defs -- and
; then for acl2-unwind-protect to do the actual cleanup using those saved
; values.
(setq *saved-hcomp-restore-hts* nil)
(acl2-unwind-protect
"include-book-raw"
(unwind-protect
(state-global-let*
((raw-include-book-dir!-alist
(assert$ (not (raw-include-book-dir-p state))
(table-alist 'include-book-dir!-table (w state)))))
(progn (include-book-raw
full-book-name directory-name
load-compiled-file dir ctx state)
(value nil)))
(setq *saved-hcomp-restore-hts*
(list* *hcomp-fn-macro-restore-ht*
*hcomp-const-restore-ht*)))
(progn (hcomp-restore-defs)
(setq *saved-hcomp-restore-hts* nil)
state)
(progn (hcomp-restore-defs)
(setq *saved-hcomp-restore-hts* nil)
state))))
(defmacro hcomp-ht-from-type (type ctx)
`(case ,type
(defun *hcomp-fn-ht*)
(defparameter *hcomp-const-ht*)
((defmacro defabbrev) *hcomp-macro-ht*)
(otherwise (er hard ,ctx
"Implementation error: Unknown case, ~x0."
,type))))
(defmacro hcomp-build-p ()
'(and (eq *inside-include-book-fn* 'hcomp-build) ; under certify-book-fn
*hcomp-fn-ht* ; compile-flg is true
))
(defun install-for-add-trip-hcomp-build (def reclassifyingp evalp)
; Def is a definition starting with defun, defconst, defmacro, or defabbrev.
(let* ((type (car def))
(name (cadr def))
(ht (hcomp-ht-from-type type 'install-for-add-trip-hcomp-build))
(oldp (and (eq type 'defparameter)
(boundp name))))
(when evalp
(eval def))
(assert ht)
(multiple-value-bind (old present-p)
(gethash name ht)
(cond ((eq old *hcomp-fake-value*)) ; then we keep the fake value
(present-p (cond ((and reclassifyingp
(not (reclassifying-value-p old)))
(assert$ (eq type 'defun)
; We expect a *1* function here. If that is not the case (for some odd reason
; we don't foresee), then we will be making a reclassifying value here that
; presumably won't get used.
(setf (gethash name ht)
(make-reclassifying-value
(symbol-function name)))))
(t
; This case is presumably impossible unless raw mode is used somehow to allow
; redefinition. But we are conservative here.
(setf (gethash name ht)
*hcomp-fake-value*))))
(oldp
; Name is already boundp, perhaps even by a defattach in the ACL2 source code.
; Handling of this case supports our fix for a bug described in note-4-2:
; "Fixed a bug in which the wrong attachment could be made...." We hit that
; bug when we tried to attach to acl2x-expansion-alist upon including the
; community book books/make-event/acl2x-help.lisp (see the defattach there for
; that function), causing certification to fail for
; books/make-event/acl2x-help.lisp. That certification failed because the
; attachment was getting its value from *hcomp-const-ht*, which had not seen
; that attachment because the load was aborted due to a missing compiled file
; for a book included under acl2x-help.lisp. Perhaps we should never put a
; defparameter for a defattach into *hcomp-const-ht*, but anyhow, the following
; setf handles the issue.
(setf (gethash name ht)
*hcomp-fake-value*))
(t
(setf (gethash name ht)
(case type
(defun (symbol-function name))
(defparameter (symbol-value name))
(otherwise (macro-function name)))))))))
(defun install-for-add-trip-include-book (type name def reclassifyingp)
; Def is nil if no evaluation of a definition is desired, in which case we
; return true when the definition exists in the appropriate hash table.
; Otherwise def is a definition starting with defun, defconst, defmacro, or
; defabbrev.
(let ((ht (hcomp-ht-from-type type 'install-for-add-trip-include-book)))
(when (null ht) ; e.g., including uncertified book
(return-from install-for-add-trip-include-book
(when def (eval def))))
(multiple-value-bind (val present-p)
(gethash name ht)
(cond
(present-p
(assert$
(not (eq val *hcomp-fake-value*))
(cond
((reclassifying-value-p val)
(assert$
(eq type 'defun) ; presumably a *1* symbol
(let ((fixed-val (unmake-reclassifying-value val)))
(setf (gethash name ht) fixed-val)
(cond (reclassifyingp
; We are converting the definition of some function, F, from :program mode to
; :logic mode. Since reclassifying-value-p holds of val, the book (including
; its portcullis commands) contains both a :program mode definition of F and a
; :logic mode definition of F, and so far we have processed neither while
; including this book. Since parameter reclassifyingp is true, we are now
; converting F from :program mode to :logic mode, which may seem surprising
; given that we have not processed the earlier :program mode definition in the
; book. The situation however is that now, we are including this book in a
; world where F was already defined in :program mode. Since we are now
; reclassifying to :logic mode, there is no need to go through the usual
; two-step process; rather, we can simply define the function now. We probably
; don't need to modify the hash table in this case (as we did above); but this
; case is probably unusual so the potential efficiency hit seems trivial, and
; it seems safest to go ahead and keep only the true value in the hash table
; henceforth.
(setf (symbol-function name) fixed-val)
t)
(t (when def (eval def)))))))
(t (case type
(defun
(setf (symbol-function name) val))
(defparameter
(setf (symbol-value name)
(cond ((and (consp (caddr def))
(eq (car (caddr def)) 'quote))
; Remark on Fast-alists.
; We get here from processing of an add-trip form by defconst, immediately
; after setting the 'redundant-raw-lisp-discriminator property for the symbol
; being defined. Now, the raw Lisp definition of defconst (which may be
; invoked during early load of compiled files later in the session) insists
; that the cddr above property agree with (be EQ to) the symbol's symbol-value.
; In the case of a quotep, these are both to be EQ to the cadr of that quotep,
; in support of the #+hons version of ACL2, as described below. So in this
; quotep case, we avoid the value stored in the hash table, i.e., the value
; produced by the compiler.
; To see why we want to avoid the value produced by the compiler in the #+hons
; case, consider the following event.
; (make-event
; `(defconst *foo* ',(make-fast-alist '((1 . 10) (2 . 20)))))
; The intention here is to store a fast-alist in *foo*, and the serialize
; reader supports this when reading from the expansion-alist in the book's
; certificate, where the above fast-alist will be stored. However, that
; fast-alist nature of this constant is lost when the alist comes from the
; book's compiled file.
; See also related comments in defconst-val, make-certificate-file1.
(cadr (caddr def)))
(t val))))
(otherwise
(assert$ (member-eq type '(defabbrev defmacro))
(setf (macro-function name) val))))
t))))
(t (when def (eval def)))))))
(defun install-for-add-trip (def reclassifyingp evalp)
; For background on how we use hash tables to support early loading of compiled
; files by include-book, see the Essay on Hash Table Support for Compilation.
; Evalp is only relevant when (hcomp-build), in which case it is passed to
; install-for-add-trip-hcomp-build.
(cond
((eq *inside-include-book-fn* t) ; in include-book-fn, not certify-book-fn
(install-for-add-trip-include-book (car def) (cadr def) def
reclassifyingp))
((hcomp-build-p)
(install-for-add-trip-hcomp-build def reclassifyingp evalp))
(t (eval def))))
(defun install-defs-for-add-trip (defs reclassifying-p wrld declaim-p evalp)
; Defs is a list of definitions, each of which is a call of defun, defabbrev,
; or defmacro, or else of the form (ONEIFY-CLTL-CODE defun-mode def
; stobj-name), where def is the cdr of a call of defun.
; This function, which may destructively modify defs, is responsible for
; declaiming and submitting every definition in defs, while avoiding such
; effort when a definition is already available from *hcomp-fn-ht*. Note that
; if its definition is available from that hash table, then it was already
; declaimed (if necessary) during the load of the expansion file (or the
; compiled version of it) that populated that hash table with its definition.
; The only time we retrieve an existing definition from *hcomp-fn-ht* is during
; include-book-fn but not during certify-book-fn, i.e., when
; *inside-include-book-fn* is t.
; Evalp is only relevant when (hcomp-build),in which case it is passed to
; install-for-add-trip-hcomp-build.
; We start with declaiming of inline and notinline.
(loop for tail on defs
do
(let* ((def (car tail))
(oneify-p (eq (car def) 'oneify-cltl-code))
(def0 (if oneify-p (caddr def) (cdr def)))
(name (symbol-name (car def0))))
(cond ((equal (caddr def0)
'(DECLARE (XARGS :NON-EXECUTABLE :PROGRAM)))
; We allow redefinition for a function introduced by :defproxy, regardless of
; the value of state global 'ld-redefinition-action. If the original
; definition were inlined, then this redefinition might be ignored, and it
; could reasonably be viewed as our fault, because we would not be able to say
; "all bets are off with the use of ld-redefinition-action".
; If we change or remove this proclaim form, then revisit the comment about
; inlining in redefinition-renewal-mode.
(let ((form (list 'notinline
(if oneify-p
(*1*-symbol (car def0))
(car def0)))))
(proclaim form)
(push (list 'declaim form) *declaim-list*)))
(oneify-p nil)
((terminal-substringp *inline-suffix*
name
*inline-suffix-len-minus-1*
(1- (length name)))
(let ((form (list 'inline (car def0))))
(proclaim form)
(push (list 'declaim form) *declaim-list*)))
((terminal-substringp *notinline-suffix*
name
*notinline-suffix-len-minus-1*
(1- (length name)))
(let ((form (list 'notinline (car def0))))
(proclaim form)
(push (list 'declaim form) *declaim-list*))))))
(loop for tail on defs
do
(let* ((def (car tail))
(oneify-p (eq (car def) 'oneify-cltl-code))
(def0 (if oneify-p (caddr def) (cdr def))))
(cond ((and (eq *inside-include-book-fn* t)
(cond
(oneify-p
(install-for-add-trip-include-book
'defun
(*1*-symbol (car def0))
nil
reclassifying-p))
#+sbcl
((and (not (eq *inside-include-book-fn*
; We don't bother with the special treatment below if we are simply certifying
; a book, both because we don't expect to do much in the resulting world and
; because inlining (the issue here, as described in the comment below) seems to
; be handled without this special treatment. Note that by avoiding this
; special case when *inside-include-book-fn* is 'hcomp-build, we avoid
; duplicating the declaiming of inline for this function done in the
; (hcomp-build-p) case below.
'hcomp-build))
(not (member-eq (car def)
'(defmacro defabbrev)))
(let ((name (symbol-name (car def0))))
(terminal-substringp *inline-suffix*
name
*inline-suffix-len-minus-1*
(1- (length name)))))
; We are including a book (and not merely on behalf of certify-book, as
; explained above). Apparently SBCL needs the source code for a function in
; order for it to be inlined. (This isn't surprising, perhaps; perhaps more
; surprising is that CCL does not seem to have this requirement.)
; See for example community book books/system/optimize-check.lisp, where
; the form (disassemble 'g4) fails to exhibit inlined code without the special
; treatment we provide here. That special treatment is to avoid obtaining the
; definition from the hash table, instead letting SBCL fall through to the
; (eval (car tail)) below. If we decide to give this special treatment to
; other host Lisps, we should consider installing the compiled definition from
; the hash table; but SBCL always compiles its definitions, so that seems
; unnecessary other than to save compilation time, which presumably is
; relatively small for inlined functions, and at any rate, appears to be
; unavoidable.
nil)
(t (install-for-add-trip-include-book
(car def)
(cadr def)
nil
reclassifying-p))))
(setf (car tail) nil))
(t (let (form)
(cond
(oneify-p
(let ((*1*-def (cons 'defun
(oneify-cltl-code (cadr def)
def0
(cdddr def)
wrld))))
(setf (car tail) *1*-def)
; While it is tempting to do a declaim for a *1* function,
; make-defun-declare-form isn't up to the task as of the development sources on
; 5/2/2013. Perhaps this would be easy to fix, but since we only declaim for
; GCL, and it is not an important goal to make *1* functions efficient, we skip
; this step.
; (when declaim-p
; (setq form
; (make-defun-declare-form (car def0)
; *1*-def)))
))
((and declaim-p
(not (member-eq (car def)
'(defmacro defabbrev))))
(setq form (make-defun-declare-form (cadr def) def))))
(when (and form (hcomp-build-p))
(push form *declaim-list*))
(when evalp
(eval form)))))))
(cond ((eq *inside-include-book-fn* t)
(loop for tail on defs
when (car tail)
do (eval (car tail))))
((hcomp-build-p)
(loop for def in defs
do
(install-for-add-trip-hcomp-build def reclassifying-p evalp)))
(t
(loop for def in defs
do (eval def)))))
(defun hcomp-build-from-state-raw (cltl-cmds state)
; Warning: If you change this function, consider making corresponding changes
; to add-trip. We wrote the present function primarily by eliminating extra
; code from the definition of add-trip, to satisfy the following spec. We also
; eliminated comments; see add-trip for those.
; Cltl-cmds is a list of cltl-command values, each the cddr of some triple in
; the world. We are certifying a book, and we want to populate the
; *hcomp-xxx-ht* hash-tables much as we do when processing events in the book.
; We also start populating *declaim-list*.
(let ((*inside-include-book-fn* 'hcomp-build))
(dolist (cltl-cmd cltl-cmds)
(let* ((wrld (w state)))
(case (car cltl-cmd)
(defuns
(let ((ignorep (caddr cltl-cmd))
(defun-mode (cadr cltl-cmd))
(new-defs nil)
(new-*1*-defs nil))
(dolist
(def (cdddr cltl-cmd))
(cond ((and (consp ignorep)
(eq (car ignorep) 'defstobj))
nil)
(t
(or ignorep
(setq new-defs (cons (cons 'defun def)
new-defs)))
(setq new-*1*-defs
(cons (list* 'oneify-cltl-code
defun-mode
def
(if (consp ignorep)
(cdr ignorep)
nil))
new-*1*-defs)))))
(install-defs-for-add-trip (nconc new-defs new-*1*-defs)
(eq ignorep 'reclassifying)
wrld t nil)))
((defstobj defabsstobj)
(let ((name (nth 1 cltl-cmd))
(the-live-name (nth 2 cltl-cmd))
(init (nth 3 cltl-cmd))
(raw-defs (nth 4 cltl-cmd))
(ax-defs (nth 6 cltl-cmd))
(new-defs nil))
(install-for-add-trip `(defparameter ,the-live-name ,init)
nil
nil)
(dolist
(def raw-defs)
(push (cond ((eq (car cltl-cmd) 'defabsstobj)
(cons 'defmacro def))
((member-equal *stobj-inline-declare* def)
(cons 'defabbrev
(remove-stobj-inline-declare def)))
(t (cons 'defun def)))
new-defs))
(dolist
(def ax-defs)
(push (list* 'oneify-cltl-code :logic def name)
new-defs))
(setq new-defs (nreverse new-defs))
(install-defs-for-add-trip new-defs nil wrld t nil)))
(defconst
(install-for-add-trip `(defparameter ,(cadr cltl-cmd)
',(cadddr cltl-cmd))
nil
nil))
(defmacro
(install-for-add-trip cltl-cmd nil nil))
(attachment ; (cddr trip) is produced by attachment-cltl-cmd
(dolist (x (cdr cltl-cmd))
(let ((name (if (symbolp x) x (car x))))
(install-for-add-trip
(cond ((symbolp x)
(set-attachment-symbol-form x nil))
(t (set-attachment-symbol-form name (cdr x))))
nil
nil))))
; There is nothing to do for memoize or unmemoize.
))))
(value nil))
(defmacro eq-symbol-function-possibly-unmemoized (fn sym)
; Suppose that a book defines a function symbol sym, which associates sym with
; its symbol-function, fn, in the *hcomp-fn-ht*. Now suppose that the book
; later memoizes sym. The expansion file will write out the unmemoized
; definition of sym, which is the correct one to look up when we later include
; the book; so we return t in that case, to indicate that it's fine to use this
; saved definition during a later include-book when defining fn.
(assert (and (symbolp fn) (symbolp sym))) ; else we should use defabbrev
`(or (eq ,fn (symbol-function ,sym))
#+hons
(let ((entry (gethash ,sym *memoize-info-ht*)))
(and entry
(eq ,fn
(access memoize-info-ht-entry entry :old-fn))))))
(defun hcomp-alists-from-hts ()
(let ((fn-alist nil)
(const-alist nil)
(macro-alist nil))
(maphash (lambda (k val)
(push (cons k
(cond ((eq val *hcomp-fake-value*)
nil)
((not (fboundp k))
nil)
((reclassifying-value-p val)
(let ((fn (unmake-reclassifying-value val)))
(and (eq-symbol-function-possibly-unmemoized
fn k)
'semi)))
(t (eq-symbol-function-possibly-unmemoized
val k))))
fn-alist))
*hcomp-fn-ht*)
(maphash (lambda (k val)
(push (cons k
(cond ((eq val *hcomp-fake-value*)
nil)
((not (boundp k))
nil)
((eq val (symbol-value k))
t)
(t nil)))
const-alist))
*hcomp-const-ht*)
(maphash (lambda (k val)
(push (cons k
(cond ((eq val *hcomp-fake-value*)
nil)
((and val
(eq val (macro-function k)))
t)
(t nil)))
macro-alist))
*hcomp-macro-ht*)
(mv fn-alist const-alist macro-alist)))
; This concludes development of code for early loading of compiled files
; (though other related such code may be found elsewhere).
(defun-one-output add-trip (world-name world-key trip)
; Warning: If you change this function, consider making corresponding changes
; to hcomp-build-from-state-raw.
; Add-trip is the function that moves a triple, (symb key . val) from
; a property list world into the von Neumann space of Common Lisp.
; World-name is the name of the world being installed. World-key is
; the property being used to hold the installed properties of that
; world (i.e., the cdr of its 'acl2-world-pair).
; First we set the properties for the global-symbol and *1*-symbol, so that
; these will ultimately be behind the world-key property (as guaranteed at the
; end of the code for this function).
(global-symbol (car trip))
(*1*-symbol? (car trip)) ; e.g. hard-error for *1*-symbol with (table :a 3 4)
; Our next step is to push val onto the key stack in (get symb world-key).
(setf (get (car trip) world-key)
(destructive-push-assoc (cadr trip) (cddr trip)
(get (car trip) world-key)
world-key))
; Now, in the case that we are messing with 'current-acl2-world and
; symb is 'CLTL-COMMAND and key is 'GLOBAL-VALUE, we smash the
; symbol-function or symbol-value cell of the appropriate name, first
; saving the old value (form) on the undo-stack.
(cond
((and (eq world-name 'current-acl2-world)
(eq (car trip) 'cltl-command)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(consp (cddr trip)))
(let* ((wrld (w *the-live-state*))
(boot-strap-flg (f-get-global 'boot-strap-flg *the-live-state*)))
(case (car (cddr trip))
(defuns
; (cddr trip) is of the form (defuns defun-mode ignorep def1 ... defn).
; Defun-mode non-nil is stored by DEFUNS and defun-mode nil by :non-executable
; DEFUNS and by ENCAPSULATE when it is defining the constrained fns.
; Oneify-cltl-code relies on the fact that functions with defun-mode nil do a
; THROW.
; Observe that we sometimes use oneify-cltl-code to modify the actual Common
; Lisp code. Why don't we modify the defi before storing the cltl-command
; tuple? Because we want to make it easy on ourselves to recover from the
; world the actual defi used to define :program mode functions. See
; verify-termination.
; Recall that ignorep is non-nil if we are to AVOID storing the
; symbol-functions for names. If ignorep is non-nil, then it is either
; reclassifying -- meaning we are reclassifying a symbol from :program
; to :logic mode. We don't want to overwrite its
; symbol-function since that might be ACL2 source code.
; We still write a *1* definition in this case.
; (defstobj . stobj)
; -- meaning the names being introduced are actually being
; defun'd under (defstobj stobj ...) or (defabsstobj stobj
; ...). We don't want to store the code generated by defun
; for these names because defstobj and defabsstobj will
; generate a CLTL-COMMAND containing the made-to-order raw
; defs. We also do not store the *1* definition in this
; case, because in CCL (at least) this would cause a problem
; since the *1* code calls the raw Lisp function, which has
; not yet been defined and in the :inline case is actually a
; macro. (See also the comment in defstobj-functionsp.)
; Why do we need the stobj name in the case of ignorep = '(defstobj . stobj)?
; The reason is that when we generate the *1* code for the function, fn, we
; must generate a throw to handle a guard violation and the argument to that
; throw is an object which includes, among other things, the stobjs-in of fn so
; we will know how to print them. You might think we would get the stobjs-in
; of fn from the world. But we can't because this defun is being done under,
; and as part of, a defstobj or defabsstobj event, and the event will later
; declare stobj to be a stobj name. So the stobjs-in of fn in the world right
; now is wrong. The stobjs-in we need is built into the object thrown and so
; won't be overwritten when the event gets around to declaring stobj a stobj.
; So oneify-cltl-code, called below, takes the stobj name as its input and
; computes the appropriate stobjs-in from the formals. This is a problem
; analogous to the one addressed by the super-defun-wart table.
(let ((ignorep (caddr (cddr trip)))
(defun-mode (cadr (cddr trip)))
(new-defs
; We avoid potential "undefined" warnings by holding off on compilation until
; all the functions have been defined. Moreover, in the case of CCL we
; need to hold off even on defining the functions. So we collect up the
; definitions that need to be made in Common Lisp, proclaiming as we go
; (although proclaiming may be a no-op in some Lisps), then make all the
; definitions, and finally do the compilation as appropriate.
nil)
(new-*1*-defs nil))
(dolist
(def (cdddr (cddr trip)))
(cond ((and boot-strap-flg
(not (global-val 'boot-strap-pass-2 wrld)))
; During the first pass of initialization, we insist that every function
; defined already be defined in raw lisp. During pass two we can't expect this
; because there may be LOCAL defuns that got skipped during compilation and the
; first pass.
(or (fboundp (car def))
; Note that names of macros are fboundp, so we can get away with symbols that
; are defined to be macros in raw Lisp but functions in the logic (e.g.,
; return-last).
(interface-er "~x0 is not fboundp!"
(car def)))
; But during the first pass of initialization, we do NOT assume that every (or
; any) function's corresponding *1* function has been defined. So we take care
; of that now.
(or (member-eq (car def)
; For explanation of the special handling of the first three of the following
; function symbols, see the comments in their defun-*1* forms. For
; *defun-overrides*, we have already taken responsibility for defining *1*
; functions that we don't want to override here.
`(mv-list return-last wormhole-eval
,@*defun-overrides*))
(setq new-*1*-defs
(cons (list* 'oneify-cltl-code
defun-mode
def
; The if below returns the stobj name being introduced, if any.
(if (consp ignorep)
(cdr ignorep)
nil))
new-*1*-defs))))
((and (not ignorep)
(equal *main-lisp-package-name*
(symbol-package-name (car def))))
(interface-er "It is illegal to redefine a function in ~
the main Lisp package, such as ~x0!"
(car def)))
((and (consp ignorep)
(eq (car ignorep) 'defstobj))
; We wait for the cltl-command from the defstobj or defabsstobj (which is laid
; down last by defstobj-fn or defabsstobj-fn, using install-event) before
; defining/compiling the *1* functions, in order to avoid potential "undefined"
; warnings and, more importantly, to avoid defining *1* functions in terms of
; undefined macros (for the :inline case of defstobj and for defabsstobj),
; which confuses CCL as described in a comment in defstobj-functionsp. We
; still save the existing values (if any) of the current def and the current
; *1* def; see the next comment about ignorep.
(maybe-push-undo-stack 'defun (car def) ignorep))
(t (maybe-push-undo-stack 'defun (car def) ignorep)
; Note: If ignorep is '(defstobj . stobj), we save both the current def and the
; current *1* def. If ignorep is 'reclassifying, we save only the *1* def.
; The former behavior means that in defstobj, when the defun runs for each
; name, we will save both symbol-function cells, even though we store into
; neither. The code for installing a defstobj CLTL-COMMAND doesn't bother to
; do undo-stack work, because it knows both cells were saved by the defun.
(or ignorep
(setq new-defs (cons (cons 'defun def) new-defs)))
(setq new-*1*-defs
(cons (list* 'oneify-cltl-code
defun-mode
def
; The if below returns the stobj name being introduced, if any.
(if (consp ignorep)
(cdr ignorep)
nil))
new-*1*-defs)))))
(setq new-defs (nconc new-defs new-*1*-defs))
(install-defs-for-add-trip new-defs
(eq ignorep 'reclassifying)
wrld
(not boot-strap-flg)
t)
(cond ((not (eq (f-get-global 'compiler-enabled *the-live-state*)
t))
; Then skip compilation.
)
((or
; It seems critical to compile as we go in CMUCL 18e during the boot-strap, in
; order to avoid stack overflows. This seems to cut about 20% off the
; regression time for Allegro builds, so we go ahead and do this in all Lisps.
; See also the long comment for the case (eq fns :some) in
; compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns. It is tempting to avoid this on-the-fly
; compilation for GCL, where we have seen build time shrink from over 22 to
; under 7 minutes and have seen roughly a percent or slightly less degradation
; in regression time, probably because of the lack of compilation in that case
; of *1* functions for built-in :program mode functions. But we have decided,
; at least for now, to keep the code simple by doing the same thing for all
; lisps and be happy with even that small improvement in regression time for
; GCL. (Note that by using make with
; LISP='gcl -eval "(defparameter user::*fast-acl2-gcl-build* t)"'
; one can get a faster build, without this on-the-fly compilation, with very
; little performance penalty at runtime. Something like this could be done
; with any Common Lisp, but there is only a point in GCL; see above.)
(and #+gcl (not user::*fast-acl2-gcl-build*)
boot-strap-flg) ; delete for build speedup (see above)
(and
(not *inside-include-book-fn*)
(default-compile-fns wrld)))
(dolist (def new-defs)
(assert$
def
; Install-defs-for-add-trip can't make def nil, since either we are in the
; boot-strap or else the value of 'ld-skip-proofsp is not 'include-book.
(let ((name (cond ((eq (car def) 'defun)
(cadr def))
((eq (car def) 'oneify-cltl-code)
(car (caddr def)))
(t (error "Implementation error: ~
unexpected form in ~
add-trip, ~x0"
def)))))
(eval `(compile ',name)))))))))
((defstobj defabsstobj)
; (cddr trip) is of one of the forms
; (DEFSTOBJ name the-live-name init raw-defs template axiomatic-defs) or
; (DEFABSSTOBJ name the-live-name init raw-defs event axiomatic-defs).
; Init is a form to eval to obtain the initial setting for the live variable.
; Each def in raw-defs and in axiomatic-defs is of the form (name args dcl
; body), where dcl may be omitted. We make a function or macro definition for
; each raw-def, and we make a defun for the oneification of each axiomatic-def.
(let ((absp (eq (car (cddr trip)) 'defabsstobj))
(name (nth 1 (cddr trip)))
(the-live-name (nth 2 (cddr trip)))
(init (nth 3 (cddr trip)))
(raw-defs (nth 4 (cddr trip)))
(template-or-event (nth 5 (cddr trip)))
(ax-defs (nth 6 (cddr trip)))
(new-defs
; We avoid "undefined function" warnings by Allegro during compilation by
; defining all the functions first, and compiling them only after they have all
; been defined. But we go further; see the comment in the binding of new-defs
; in the previous case.
nil))
(maybe-push-undo-stack 'defconst the-live-name)
(maybe-push-undo-stack 'defconst '*user-stobj-alist*)
; See the comment below, just above where we formerly set the symbol-value of
; name. If we re-install that code, then the next line of code also needs to
; be re-installed.
; (maybe-push-undo-stack 'defconst name)
(install-for-add-trip `(defparameter ,the-live-name ,init) nil t)
; Memoize-flush expects the variable (st-lst name) to be bound. We take care
; of that directly here. We see no need to involve install-for-add-trip or the
; like.
#+hons (let ((var (st-lst name)))
(or (boundp var)
(eval `(defg ,var nil))))
; As with defconst we want to make it look like we eval'd this defstobj or
; defabsstobj in raw lisp, so we set up the redundancy stuff:
(setf (get the-live-name 'redundant-raw-lisp-discriminator)
(cond (absp template-or-event)
(t (list* 'defstobj
(access defstobj-template template-or-event
:recognizer)
(access defstobj-template template-or-event
:creator)
(access defstobj-template template-or-event
:field-templates)
(if (access defstobj-template
template-or-event
:congruent-to)
(congruent-stobj-rep-raw
(access defstobj-template
template-or-event
:congruent-to))
name)
(access defstobj-template template-or-event
:non-memoizable)))))
; At one point we executed the following form. But now we see that this is not
; necessary, since trans-eval binds stobj names anyhow using *user-stobj-alist*
; and even acl2-raw-eval uses *user-stobj-alist* to bind stobj names. If the
; following code is re-installed (uncommented), then also re-install the code
; (maybe-push-undo-stack 'defconst name) above.
; (setf (symbol-value name) (symbol-value the-live-name))
; The following assignment to *user-stobj-alist* is structured to keep
; new ones at the front, so we can more often exploit the optimization
; in put-assoc-eq-alist.
(setq *user-stobj-alist*
(cond ((assoc-eq name *user-stobj-alist*)
; This is a redefinition! We'll just replace the old entry.
(put-assoc-eq name
(symbol-value the-live-name)
*user-stobj-alist*))
(t (cons (cons name (symbol-value the-live-name))
*user-stobj-alist*))))
; We eval and compile the raw lisp definitions first, some of which may be
; macros (because :inline t was supplied for defstobj, or because we are
; handling defabsstobj), before dealing with the *1* functions.
(dolist
(def raw-defs)
(cond ((and boot-strap-flg
(not (global-val 'boot-strap-pass-2 wrld)))
; During the first pass of initialization, we insist that every function
; defined already be defined in raw lisp. During pass two we can't expect this
; because there may be LOCAL defuns that got skipped during compilation and the
; first pass.
(or (fboundp (car def))
(interface-er "~x0 is not fboundp!"
(car def))))
((equal *main-lisp-package-name*
(symbol-package-name (car def)))
(interface-er
"It is illegal to redefine a function in the main Lisp ~
package, such as ~x0!"
(car def)))
; We don't do maybe-push-undo-stack for defuns (whether inlined or not) under
; the defstobj or defabsstobj CLTL-COMMAND, because we did it for their
; defuns.
(t
(let ((def (cond
(absp (cons 'defmacro def))
((member-equal *stobj-inline-declare* def)
; We now handle the case where we are going to inline the function calls by
; defining the function as a defabbrev. Note that this is allowed for
; access/update/array-length functions for stobjs, but only for these, where
; speed is often a requirement for efficiency.
(cons 'defabbrev
(remove-stobj-inline-declare def)))
(t (cons 'defun def)))))
(setq new-defs (cons def new-defs))))))
(dolist
(def ax-defs)
(setq new-defs (cons (list* 'oneify-cltl-code :logic def name)
new-defs)))
(setq new-defs
; We reverse new-defs because we want to be sure to define the *1*
; defs after the raw Lisp defs (which may be macros, because of :inline).
(nreverse new-defs))
(install-defs-for-add-trip new-defs nil wrld (not boot-strap-flg)
t)
(when (and (eq (f-get-global 'compiler-enabled *the-live-state*)
t)
(not *inside-include-book-fn*)
(default-compile-fns wrld))
(dolist (def new-defs)
(assert$
; Install-defs-for-add-trip can't make def nil, since the value of
; 'ld-skip-proofsp is not 'include-book.
def
(let ((name (cond ((or (eq (car def) 'defun)
(eq (car def) 'defabbrev)
(eq (car def) 'defmacro))
(cadr def))
((eq (car def) 'oneify-cltl-code)
(car (caddr def)))
(t (error "Implementation error: ~
unexpected form in add-trip, ~x0"
def)))))
; CMUCL versions 18e and 19e cannot seem to compile macros at the top level.
; Email from Raymond Toy on June 9, 2004 suggests that this appears to be a bug
; that exists in CMUCL 18e sources. We'll thus give special treatment to any
; version 18 or 19 of CMUCL, but we'll avod that for CMUCL version 20, since
; 20D at least can compile macros.
#+(and cmu (or cmu18 cmu19))
(cond ((and (not (eq (car def) 'defabbrev))
(not (eq (car def) 'defmacro)))
(eval `(compile ',name))))
#-(and cmu (or cmu18 cmu19))
(eval `(compile ',name))))))))
(defpkg
(maybe-push-undo-stack 'defpkg (cadr (cddr trip)))
(eval (cons 'defpkg (cdr (cddr trip)))))
(defconst
; Historical remark on defconstant.
; In the beginning we supported defconstant. We changed to
; defparameter and then changed to defconst. As things stand now,
; ACL2 supports defconst, which has the same effect at the raw lisp
; level (i.e., the cltl-command) as defparameter, and in addition
; causes proclaim-file to exectute an appropriate proclamation for the
; parameter, knowing as we do that it is really constant. Here are
; some historical remarks that explain why we have gone down this
; path.
; "Currently we turn defconstants into defparameters at the raw Lisp
; level (that is, the cltl-command for defconstant is a defparameter).
; However, we have begun to contemplate alternatives, as we now
; explain.
; We have run into the following problem with defconstant: the
; compiler won't let us compile certified books containing defconstant
; forms because it thinks that constants are special variables
; (because that is what the defparameter cltl-command does). What can
; we do about this problem? One idea was to temporarily redefine
; defconstant to be defparameter (during the compilation done by
; certify-book), but macrolet has only lexical scope, and anyhow Boyer
; says that it's illegal to redefine a Common Lisp function (as we did
; using setf, macro-function, and unwind-protect).
; Another possibilty is to change defconstant-fn so that it really
; does create defconstants. But the reason we use defparameter now is
; that when we undo we need to unbind (because we're always checking
; to see if something is already bound), and we can't unbind a
; constant.
; Why not just eliminate defconstant in favor of defparameter
; everywhere? This is very appealing, especially because defconstant
; is inherently not amenable to undoing. But, Boyer thinks that when
; you defconstant something to a value that is a fixnum, then the
; compiler knows it's a fixnum. This could be very important for
; speed in type-set reasoning. Without the consideration of
; arithmetic, Schelter thinks that we're only paying the price of two
; memory references for defparameter vs. one for defconstant; but a
; factor of 80 or so seems like too high a price to pay.
; So, how about allowing both defconstant and defparameter, but not
; allowing any undoing back past a defconstant? After all, we already
; have a notion of not undoing into the system initialization, so
; we're just talking about a very reasonable extension of that
; protocol. One problem with this approach is that certify-book
; currently does an include-book after a ubt, and this ubt would
; probably fail. But perhaps we can force this to work. The user
; could then develop his work using defparameter, but certify the
; final "toothbrush" book using defconstant. Perhaps defconst would
; be a convenient macro that could be redefined so as to be one or the
; other of defparameter or defconstant. With this approach it would
; probably be useful to require answering a query in order to execute
; a defconstant.
; Another option would be to have acl2::defconstant be distinct from
; lisp::defconstant, but as Boyer points out, this violates our desire
; to have such Lisp primitives available to the user that he can count
; on. Or, we could define a new package that's just like the acl2
; package but doesn't import defconstant. But note that
; (symbol-package 'defconstant) would create different answers in the
; ACL2 package than in this package -- ouch!"
; Note: (cddr trip) here is (defconst var form val).
(cond (boot-strap-flg
(or (boundp (cadr (cddr trip)))
(interface-er "~x0 is not boundp!"
(cadr (cddr trip)))))
((equal *main-lisp-package-name*
(symbol-package-name (cadr (cddr trip))))
(interface-er "It is illegal to redefine a defconst in ~
the main Lisp package, such as ~x0!"
(cadr (cddr trip))))
(t (maybe-push-undo-stack 'defconst (cadr (cddr trip)))
; We do not want to eval (defconst var form) here because that will recompute
; val. But we make raw Lisp look like it did that.
(setf (get (cadr (cddr trip))
'redundant-raw-lisp-discriminator)
(list* 'defconst
(caddr (cddr trip)) ; form
(cadddr (cddr trip)))) ; val
(install-for-add-trip `(defparameter ,(cadr (cddr trip))
',(cadddr (cddr trip)))
nil
t))))
(defmacro
(cond (boot-strap-flg
(or (fboundp (cadr (cddr trip)))
(interface-er "~x0 is not fboundp!"
(cadr (cddr trip)))))
((equal *main-lisp-package-name*
(symbol-package-name (cadr (cddr trip))))
(interface-er "It is illegal to redefine a macro in the ~
main Lisp package, such as ~x0!"
(cadr (cddr trip))))
(t (maybe-push-undo-stack 'defmacro (cadr (cddr trip)))
(install-for-add-trip (cddr trip) nil t))))
(attachment ; (cddr trip) is produced by attachment-cltl-cmd
(dolist (x (cdr (cddr trip)))
(let ((name (if (symbolp x) x (car x))))
#+hons (push name *defattach-fns*)
(maybe-push-undo-stack 'attachment name)
(install-for-add-trip
(cond ((symbolp x)
(set-attachment-symbol-form x nil))
(t (set-attachment-symbol-form name (cdr x))))
nil
t))))
#+hons
(memoize
(maybe-push-undo-stack 'memoize (cadr (cddr trip)))
(let* ((tuple (cddr trip))
(cl-defun (nth 4 tuple)))
(assert$ cl-defun
(with-overhead
(nth 13 tuple) ; stats
(memoize-fn (nth 1 tuple)
:condition (nth 2 tuple)
:inline (nth 3 tuple)
:cl-defun cl-defun
:formals (nth 5 tuple)
:stobjs-in (nth 6 tuple)
:stobjs-out (nth 7 tuple)
:commutative (nth 9 tuple)
:forget (nth 10 tuple)
:memo-table-init-size (nth 11 tuple)
:aokp (nth 12 tuple))))))
#+hons
(unmemoize
(maybe-push-undo-stack 'unmemoize (cadr (cddr trip)))
(unmemoize-fn (cadr (cddr trip))))))))
; Finally, we make sure always to leave the *current-acl2-world-key* as the
; first property on the symbol-plist of the symbol.
(let ((temp (get (car trip) *current-acl2-world-key*))
(plist (symbol-plist (car trip))))
(cond ((and temp (not (eq (car plist) *current-acl2-world-key*)))
(setf (symbol-plist (car trip))
(cons *current-acl2-world-key*
(cons temp
(remove-current-acl2-world-key
plist))))))))
(defun-one-output undo-trip (world-name world-key trip)
; Undo-trip is the function that removes from the ``real'' Common Lisp
; the things installed by add-trip. It works merely by popping the
; appropriate stacks.
(setf (get (car trip) world-key)
(destructive-pop-assoc (cadr trip) (get (car trip) world-key)))
(cond
((and (eq world-name 'current-acl2-world)
(eq (car trip) 'cltl-command)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(consp (cddr trip)))
(case (car (cddr trip))
(defuns
; Note that :inlined defstobj functions as well as defabsstobj exported
; functions are processed by eval-event-lst as though they are ordinary defuns,
; even though they correspond to macros in raw Lisp (defined by defabbrev and
; defmacro, respectively). We are relying on the fact that
; maybe-push-undo-stack handled defun and defmacro the same, so that the form
; eveluated by maybe-pop-undo-stack will be appropriate even though the
; "function" is actually a macro.
(dolist (tuple (cdddr (cddr trip)))
(maybe-pop-undo-stack (car tuple))))
((defstobj defabsstobj)
(let ((name (nth 1 (cddr trip)))
(the-live-name (nth 2 (cddr trip))))
(maybe-pop-undo-stack name)
(maybe-pop-undo-stack '*user-stobj-alist*)
(maybe-pop-undo-stack the-live-name)))
(defpkg nil)
((defconst defmacro #+hons memoize #+hons unmemoize)
(maybe-pop-undo-stack (cadr (cddr trip))))
(attachment ; (cddr trip) is produced by attachment-cltl-cmd
(let ((lst (cdr (cddr trip))))
(dolist (x lst)
(let ((name (if (symbolp x) x (car x))))
(maybe-pop-undo-stack name)))))
(otherwise nil)))))
(defun-one-output flush-trip (name world-key trip)
(remprop (car trip) world-key)
(cond ((and (eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(eq (car trip) 'cltl-command)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(consp (cddr trip)))
(case (car (cddr trip))
(defuns
; Note that :inlined stobj functions are handled properly here; see the
; corresponding comment in undo-trip.
(dolist (tuple (cdddr (cddr trip)))
(flush-undo-stack (car tuple))))
((defstobj defabsstobj)
(let ((name (nth 1 (cddr trip)))
(the-live-name (nth 2 (cddr trip))))
(flush-undo-stack name)
(flush-undo-stack '*user-stobj-alist*)
(flush-undo-stack the-live-name)))
(defpkg nil)
((defconst defmacro #+hons memoize #+hons unmemoize)
(flush-undo-stack (cadr (cddr trip))))
(attachment ; (cddr trip) is produced by attachment-cltl-cmd
(let ((lst (cdr (cddr trip))))
(dolist (x lst)
(let ((name (if (symbolp x) x (car x))))
(flush-undo-stack name)))))
(otherwise nil)))))
(defvar *bad-wrld*)
(defun check-acl2-world-invariant (wrld old-wrld)
; Old-wrld is the world currently installed under 'current-acl2-world.
; Wrld is a world we are trying to install there. We check that
; old-world is in fact the current global value of 'current-acl2-
; world. We have gotten out of sync on this once or twice. It is
; cheap to check and pernicious to track down.
(cond ((not (eq old-wrld
(w *the-live-state*)))
(setq *bad-wrld* wrld)
(interface-er
"Extend-world1 or rollback-world1 has been asked to install ~
a world at a moment when the current global value of ~
'current-acl2-world was not the installed world! The ~
world we were asked to install may be found in the variable ~
*bad-wrld*."))))
(defparameter *known-worlds* nil)
(defun update-wrld-structures (wrld state)
(install-global-enabled-structure wrld state)
(recompress-global-enabled-structure
'global-arithmetic-enabled-structure
wrld)
(recompress-stobj-accessor-arrays
(strip-cars *user-stobj-alist*)
wrld)
#+hons
(update-memo-entries-for-attachments *defattach-fns* wrld state)
nil)
(defun-one-output extend-world1 (name wrld)
; Wrld must be a world that is an extension of the world currently
; installed under name.
; Warning: Even though this program does not take state as an
; argument, it has the effect of smashing the value of the live state
; global 'current-acl2-world if name is 'current-acl2-world. In
; particular, we maintain the invariant that the live global value of
; 'current-acl2-world is always the world installed under that name.
; If you don't want these changes to occur to your state, don't call
; this program!
(let ((pair (get name 'acl2-world-pair)) old-wrld world-key new-trips)
(cond
((null pair)
(setq pair (cons nil (if (eq name 'current-acl2-world)
*current-acl2-world-key*
(gensym))))
(pushnew name *known-worlds*)
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(f-put-global 'current-acl2-world nil *the-live-state*)))
(setf (get name 'acl2-world-pair) pair)))
(setq old-wrld (car pair))
(setq world-key (cdr pair))
; Pair is of the form (old-wrld . world-key) and means that the world
; currently installed under name is old-wrld and its properties are
; stored at world-key.
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(check-acl2-world-invariant wrld old-wrld)))
; We now scan down the about-to-be-installed world and push onto the
; temporary new-trips the triples that constitute the extension. If
; we fail to find the old world, we will cause a hard error. It may look
; like we are doing this scan to guarantee that wrld is an extension.
; Were that the reason, we would do this as we installed the properties.
; No, the real reason we do this scan is so that we can collect, in reverse
; order, the triples we must install. The order in which we push the
; values into the property lists is important!
(do ((tl wrld (cdr tl)))
((equal tl old-wrld)) ; best to avoid eq; see comment in retract-world1
(cond
((null tl)
(setq *bad-wrld* wrld)
(er hard 'extend-world1
"Extend-world1 was called upon to ``extend'' ~x0. But ~
the world supplied to extend-world1, which is now the ~
value of the Lisp global *bad-wrld*, is not an ~
extension of the current ~x0. The alist corresponding ~
to the current ~x0 may be obtained via ~x1. No ~
properties were modified -- that is, the symbol-plists ~
still reflect the pre-extend-world1 ~x0."
name
`(car (get ',name 'acl2-world-pair))))
(t (push (car tl) new-trips))))
(let ((state *the-live-state*))
; We bind state only so our use of acl2-unwind-protect below isn't so odd
; looking. Logically the body never signals an error, but if an abort
; occurs, we will do recover-world for cleanup.
(acl2-unwind-protect
"extend-world1"
(value
; It is a bit unfortunate to use with-more-warnings-suppressed below, since we
; have such a call in LP. However, this is how we see a way to suppress
; complaints about undefined functions during the build, without suppressing
; compiler warnings entirely during the build. Note that with-compilation-unit
; does not always defer warnings for calls of the compiler in general -- at
; least, we have seen this with CCL and Allegro CL -- but only for calls of
; compile-file.
(with-more-warnings-suppressed
; Observe that wrld has recover-world properties (a) and (b). (a) at
; the time of any abort during this critical section, every symbol
; that may have a world-key property is in wrld (because the only
; symbols with a world-key property initially are those in old-wrld,
; wrld is an extension of old-wrld, and during the critical section we
; add world-key properties just to symbols in wrld); and (b): every
; symbol in old-wrld is a symbol in wrld (because wrld is an extension
; of old-wrld). (Of course, by "symbol in" here we mean "symbol
; occuring as the car of an element".)
(dolist (trip new-trips)
(add-trip name world-key trip))
(setf (car pair) wrld)
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(f-put-global 'current-acl2-world wrld *the-live-state*)
(update-wrld-structures wrld state)))))
(recover-world 'extension name old-wrld wrld nil)
; Observe that wrld has recover-world properties (a) and (b). (a) at
; the time of any abort during this critical section, every symbol
; that may have a world-key property is in wrld (because the only
; symbols with a world-key property initially are those in old-wrld,
; wrld is an extension of old-wrld, and during the critical section we
; add world-key properties just to symbols in wrld); and (b): every
; symbol in old-wrld is a symbol in wrld (because wrld is an extension
; of old-wrld). (Of course, by "symbol in" here we mean "symbol
; occuring as the car of an element".)
state)
; The acl2-unwind-protect returns (mv nil x *the-live-state*), for some x.
; All three values are ignored.
wrld)))
(defun-one-output retract-world1 (name wrld)
; Wrld must be a world that is a retraction of the world currently installed
; under name.
; Warning: Even though this program does not take state as an argument, it has
; the effect of smashing the value of the live state global 'current-acl2-world
; if name is 'current-acl2-world. In particular, we maintain the invariant
; that the live global value of 'current-acl2-world is always the world
; installed under that name. We also maintain the invariant that the binding
; of 'current-package is a known package, by setting 'current-package to "ACL2"
; if we have to. If you don't want these changes to occur to your state, don't
; call this program!
(let ((pair (get name 'acl2-world-pair)) old-wrld world-key)
(cond
((null pair)
(setq pair (cons nil (if (eq name 'current-acl2-world)
*current-acl2-world-key*
(gensym))))
(pushnew name *known-worlds*)
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(f-put-global 'current-acl2-world nil *the-live-state*)))
(setf (get name 'acl2-world-pair) pair)))
(setq old-wrld (car pair))
(setq world-key (cdr pair))
; Pair is of the form (old-wrld . world-key) and means that the world currently
; installed under name is old-wrld and its properties are stored at world-key.
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(check-acl2-world-invariant wrld old-wrld)))
(let ((state *the-live-state*)
(pkg (current-package *the-live-state*)))
(acl2-unwind-protect
"retract-world1"
(value
(progn
; We now scan down old-wrld until we get to wrld, doing a pop for each triple
; in the initial segment of old-wrld. Note that we do not do the pops in the
; reverse order (as we did the pushes). It doesn't matter. All that matters
; is that we one pop for each push that was done.
(do ((tl old-wrld (cdr tl)))
((equal tl
; At one time we used eq here. But old-wrld and wrld are equal, but not eq,
; when retract-world1 is called in the following example.
; (defun f1 (x) x)
; (defun f2 (x) x)
; :ubt! f1
; (defun f1 (x) x)
; :oops
wrld))
(cond
((null tl)
(setq *bad-wrld* wrld)
(er hard 'retract-world1
"Retract-world1 was called upon to ``retract'' ~
~x0. But the world supplied to retract-world1, ~
which is now the value of the Lisp global ~
variable *bad-wrld*, is not a retraction of the ~
currently installed ~x0. The alist corresponding ~
to the current ~x0 may be obtained via ~x1. ~
Unfortunately, this problem was not discovered ~
until all of the properties in ~x0 were removed. ~
Those properties can be restored via ~
(recover-world)."
name
`(car (get ',name 'acl2-world-pair))))
(t (undo-trip name world-key (car tl)))))
(setf (car pair) wrld)
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(f-put-global 'current-acl2-world wrld *the-live-state*)
(cond ((not (find-non-hidden-package-entry
(current-package *the-live-state*)
(known-package-alist *the-live-state*)))
; Note: Known-package-alist returns the new known packages because of the setf
; above!
(f-put-global 'current-package "ACL2" *the-live-state*)))
(update-wrld-structures wrld state)))))
(recover-world 'retraction name old-wrld old-wrld pkg)
; Note that old-wrld has recover-world properties (a) and (b). (a) At the time
; of any abort during this critical section, every symbol that may possibly
; have the world-key property occurs as a car of some element of old-wrld (at
; the beginning of this operation the only symbols with the world-key property
; are in old-wrld and during the critical section we may only remove the
; property). (b) Every symbol in old-wrld is in old-wrld. Note that it is not
; important whether wrld is actually a retraction, because we are just removing
; world-key properties.
state)
wrld)))
(defun-one-output recover-world1 (wrld saved-wrld ans)
; This is like (revappend wrld ans) except that we cons successive tails of
; wrld onto ans instead of successive elements until wrld is either saved-wrld
; or nil. Thus, assuming saved-wrld is nil, if you start with wrld = '(trip3
; trip2 trip1) you end up with ans = '((trip1) (trip2 trip1) (trip3 trip2
; trip1)). By scanning ans you will see the successive cdrs of world, starting
; with the shortest.
(cond ((eq wrld saved-wrld)
ans)
((null wrld)
(error "Implementation error in recover-world1"))
(t (recover-world1 (cdr wrld) saved-wrld (cons wrld ans)))))
(defun-one-output recover-world (op name old-wrld universe pkg)
; If this function is called then an extension or retraction operation (op) was
; aborted. The arguments tell us how to restore the world to the configuration
; it had when the aborted operation was initiated. Toward that end, the two
; operations execute this form on the cleanup1 side of acl2-unwind-protects,
; after saving in locals the name and world before they start making changes to
; the symbol- plists. Our recovery mechanism has two steps. First, we throw
; away all properties stored under the name in question. Second, we extend
; that empty world to the saved one. The extension part is easy.
; But how do we "throw away all properties" stored under a given name? One way
; is to get the world key, world-key, associated with the name, and then visit
; each CLTL symbol, sym, and do (remprop sym world-key). But sweeping through
; all symbols seems to be slow. So instead we enforce the discipline of having
; a "universal list" of all the symbols which might, remotely, have the
; world-key property. This list is actually a list of triples (it is, in fact,
; always one of the two worlds involved in the aborted operation) and we visit
; the symbol in each car of each triple.
; So much for spoon-fed background information. Name is the name of the world
; whose installation was aborted. We know that the cdr of the 'acl2-world-pair
; property of name is some uninterned symbol, world-key, at which all the
; properties for this world are stored. Old-wrld is the alist of triples that
; was actually installed at the time the aborted operation was initiated -- and
; is thus the world we are going to re-install. And universe is a list of
; pairs (triples actually) with the following two properties:
; (a) at the time of any abort during the critical section, each symbol having
; the world-key property occurs as the car of some pair in universe, and (b)
; each symbol occuring as the car of some pair in old-wrld occurs as the car of
; a pair in universe.
; The latter property is necessary to ensure that we can recover from an
; aborted attempt to recover.
; In addition, if operation is 'retraction, then pkg is the current- package at
; the inception of the operation. If operation is not 'retraction, pkg is
; irrelevant.
(let* ((pair (get name 'acl2-world-pair))
(world-key (cdr pair))
#+hons *defattach-fns* ; needs to be bound, but not truly used
(*in-recover-world-flg* t))
; The *in-recover-world-flg* is used by the raw lisp implementation of defpkg.
; How is defpkg called from within this function? Add-trip, above, is the
; program used to add the triples in old-wrld to the raw property lists. It
; notes CLTL-COMMAND triples and executes the appropriate Common Lisp to cause
; the raw defuns, defmacros, constants, and packages to come into existence.
; So we execute defpkg when we store a CLTL-COMMAND property with val (DEFPKG
; ...). Normally, defpkg unbinds all the symbols in the dual package (where
; state globals are actually stored). But we can't afford to do that if we
; are recovering the world (because state globals are unaffected by world
; operations).
(when (null pair)
(er hard 'recover-world
"There is no acl2-world-pair stored on ~x0, which is the name of ~
the world we are supposed to recover."
name))
(fmt1 "Flushing current installed world.~%"
nil 0 (standard-co *the-live-state*) *the-live-state*
nil)
(dolist (trip universe) (flush-trip name world-key trip))
(let* ((checkpoint-world-len-and-alist (checkpoint-world-len-and-alist))
(chkpt-alist (cddr checkpoint-world-len-and-alist))
(start-wrld
(and (eq name 'current-acl2-world)
*checkpoint-world-len-and-alist-stack*
(let ((chkpt-wrld (car checkpoint-world-len-and-alist))
(chkpt-len (cadr checkpoint-world-len-and-alist))
(old-wrld-len (length old-wrld)))
(and (<= chkpt-len old-wrld-len)
(eq (nthcdr (- old-wrld-len chkpt-len) old-wrld)
chkpt-wrld)
(let ((universe-len (length universe)))
(and (<= chkpt-len universe-len)
(eq (nthcdr (- universe-len chkpt-len) universe)
chkpt-wrld)
chkpt-wrld)))))))
(dolist (x chkpt-alist)
(setf (get (car x) world-key)
(copy-alist (cdr x))))
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(f-put-global 'current-acl2-world start-wrld
*the-live-state*)))
(setf (car pair) start-wrld)
(fmt1 "Reversing the new world.~%" nil 0
(standard-co *the-live-state*) *the-live-state* nil)
(let ((rwtls (recover-world1 old-wrld start-wrld nil))
(*inside-include-book-fn*
; We defeat the special hash table processing done by the install-for-add-trip*
; functions. (This binding might not be necessary, but it seems safe.)
nil))
(fmt1 "Installing the new world.~%" nil 0
(standard-co *the-live-state*) *the-live-state* nil)
; It is a bit unfortunate to use with-more-warnings-suppressed below, since we
; have such a call in LP. However, this is how we see a way to suppress
; complaints about undefined functions during the build, without suppressing
; compiler warnings entirely during the build. Note that with-compilation-unit
; does not always defer warnings for calls of the compiler in general -- at
; least, we have seen this with CCL and Allegro CL -- but only for calls of
; compile-file.
(with-more-warnings-suppressed
(do ((tl rwtls (cdr tl)))
((null tl))
(add-trip name world-key (caar tl))
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(f-put-global 'current-acl2-world (car tl)
*the-live-state*)))
(setf (car pair) (car tl)))))
(cond ((eq name 'current-acl2-world)
(cond ((eq op 'retraction)
(f-put-global 'current-package pkg
*the-live-state*)))
#+hons (setq *defattach-fns* :clear)
(update-wrld-structures old-wrld *the-live-state*))))))
; VIRGINITY
; We do not want the ACL2 user to define any symbol that already has
; any sort of definition.
(defun-one-output virginp (name new-type)
(and (symbolp name)
(if (member-eq new-type '(function macro constrained-function t))
(not (or (fboundp name)
(macro-function name)
(special-form-or-op-p name)))
t)
(if (member-eq new-type '(const stobj stobj-live-var t))
(not (boundp name))
t)))
(defun-one-output chk-virgin2 (name new-type wrld)
(cond ((virginp name new-type) nil)
((f-get-global 'boot-strap-flg *the-live-state*)
; The test above is equivalent to (global-val 'boot-strap-flg wrld).
(setf (get name '*predefined*) t))
; A name regains its true virginity the moment we decide to give it a
; 'redefined property, which only happens just after the user has said that
; it's OK to redefine it.
((getpropc name 'redefined nil wrld)
nil)
(t
(let ((reason
(cond ((not (symbolp name)) "it is not a symbol")
((member-eq new-type
'(function macro constrained-function t))
(cond
((special-form-or-op-p name) "it is a special form")
((macro-function name) "it has a macro definition")
((fboundp name) "it has a function definition")
(t "there is an inconsistency in the definition of ~
virginp and chk-virgin2")))
((member-eq new-type '(const stobj stobj-live-var t))
(cond
((boundp name) "it has a top level binding")
(t "there is an inconsistency in the definition of ~
virginp and chk-virgin2")))
(t "there is an inconsistency in the definition of ~
virginp and chk-virgin2")))
(suggestion
(let ((str " If earlier you accidentally made this ~
definition or assignment outside the ACL2 ~
loop, then you might consider exiting the ~
ACL2 loop and executing appropriate ~
Common Lisp to erase those mistakes. ~
This is a potentially perilous act unless ~
you are sure these names were introduced ~
by you and are not involved in any ~
logical code. ~#3~[~/To erase a function ~
or macro definition use (fmakunbound! ~
'~x0). ~]~#4~[~/To erase a variable ~
setting use (makunbound '~x0). ~]"))
(cond ((not (symbolp name)) "")
((member-eq new-type
'(function macro constrained-function t))
(cond
((special-form-or-op-p name) "")
(t str)))
(t ; (member-eq new-type '(const stobj
; stobj-live-var t))
str)))))
(interface-er
"It is illegal to define ~x0 because ~@1 in raw Common Lisp.~@2"
name
reason
suggestion
(if (member-eq new-type
'(function macro constrained-function t))
1
0)
(if (member-eq new-type '(const stobj stobj-live-var t))
1
0))))))
; PACKAGE VIRGINITY
(defun-one-output chk-package-reincarnation-import-restrictions2
(name proposed-imports)
; This routine returns nil or causes a hard error. It is used in the
; implementation of the logical function chk-package-reincarnation-import-
; restrictions, which axiomatically always returns t but may cause this hard
; error (which can be thought of as a resource error).
; Note: The "2" in the name stems from chk-virgin2, which plays a similar role
; in chk-virgin. Chk-virgin1 has been lost in the mist of time, but
; chk-package-reincarnation-import-restrictions1 has never existed!
(let ((pkg (find-package name))
(temp (find-package-entry name *ever-known-package-alist*)))
(cond
(pkg
(cond
(temp
(check-proposed-imports name temp proposed-imports)
nil)
((member-equal name *defpkg-virgins*)
nil)
(t
; The package has been built in this Common Lisp but not by defpkg.
(interface-er
"It is illegal to defpkg ~x0 because a package of that name already ~
exists in this lisp."
name))))
(t
; The package has never been built in this Common Lisp.
nil))))
; ACL2 INITIALIZATION ROUTINES
#+gcl
(defvar user::*acl2-keep-tmp-files* nil)
(defun-one-output enter-boot-strap-mode (system-books-dir operating-system)
; If we interrupted an earlier initialization, the following form will undo it.
; This will set the *acl2-unwind-protect-stack* to nil because *ld-level* is
; 0 at the top.
(acl2-unwind *ld-level* nil)
; Now provide a frame into which the set-w can push its acl2-unwind-protect
; forms. An abort of the set-w will leave the forms in the frame so that the
; above acl2-unwind will undo them upon the next initialization attempt. But
; if the set-w is successful, it will leave the then empty frame on the stack.
(push nil *acl2-unwind-protect-stack*)
(set-w 'retraction nil *the-live-state*)
(do-symbols (sym (find-package "ACL2_GLOBAL_ACL2"))
(makunbound sym))
(do-symbols (sym (find-package
(concatenate 'string
*global-package-prefix*
*main-lisp-package-name*)))
(makunbound sym))
(do-symbols (sym (find-package "ACL2_GLOBAL_KEYWORD"))
(makunbound sym))
(initialize-state-globals)
; The following patch for save-gprof.lsp may be more heavy-handed than
; necessary, because maybe we don't need to keep all TMP* files. See also
; "Note: temporary files" in save-gprof.lsp.
; If we want to let the user set other variables, we could replace
; user::*acl2-keep-tmp-files* with a variable whose value associates state
; global symbol names with initial values. But then we will need to check that
; none is untouchable, and we will need to make a corresponding change in
; save-gprof.lsp.
#+gcl
(f-put-global 'keep-tmp-files user::*acl2-keep-tmp-files* *the-live-state*)
(f-put-global 'global-enabled-structure
(initial-global-enabled-structure "ENABLED-ARRAY-")
*the-live-state*)
(f-put-ld-specials *initial-ld-special-bindings* *the-live-state*)
; The next set-w will avail itself of the empty frame left above.
(set-w 'extension
(primordial-world operating-system)
*the-live-state*)
; Set the system books directory now that the operating-system has been defined
; (needed by pathname-os-to-unix).
(cond (system-books-dir
(let ((dir (unix-full-pathname
(cond
((symbolp system-books-dir)
(symbol-name system-books-dir))
((stringp system-books-dir)
system-books-dir)
(t (er hard 'initialize-acl2
"Unable to complete initialization, because the ~
supplied system books directory, ~x0, is not a ~
string."
system-books-dir))))))
(f-put-global 'system-books-dir
(canonical-dirname! (maybe-add-separator dir)
'enter-boot-strap-mode
*the-live-state*)
*the-live-state*)))
(t (f-put-global 'system-books-dir
(concatenate
'string
(canonical-dirname! (our-pwd)
'enter-boot-strap-mode
*the-live-state*)
"books/")
*the-live-state*)))
; Inhibit proof-tree output during the build, including pass-2 if present.
(f-put-global 'inhibit-output-lst '(proof-tree) *the-live-state*)
; We now pop the empty frame. There is no way this acl2-unwind will do any
; real work because only an abort would leave stuff in the frame and an abort
; would prevent us from getting here. Note that in the scheme of things,
; namely within the control structure of initialize-acl2, it is strictly
; unnecessary for us to pop this empty frame: each LD called by initialize-acl2
; will unwind the stack back to nil. But I do it here out of politeness: the
; stack started empty and ends that way.
(acl2-unwind *ld-level* nil))
(defun-one-output move-current-acl2-world-key-to-front (wrld)
; This program sweeps the world and makes sure that the current acl2 world key
; is the first property on every property list upon which it is found. We try
; to maintain that invariant in set-w where we always move the property up when
; we mess with a symbol's plist. Of course, one must then wonder why this
; program is ever useful. The reason is that in some lisps, e.g., AKCL, when
; you ask for the symbol-name of a symbol it has the side-effect of storing the
; string on the plist for future use. Thus, for example, during booting of
; ACL2 we keep the world key at the front but then when we print the name of
; the event we accidentally cover the world key up with a SYSTEM:PNAME
; property. This doesn't happen for every name. Apparently for most we access
; the symbol-name during the processing and cause the property to come into
; existence and then store our world key in front of it. But for some names we
; don't, apparently, ever access the symbol-name during processing and then our
; world key is covered up the first time the name is printed by ACL2. Among
; the names so covered up by system properties are the names such as |Make
; RECOGNIZER-TUPLE record| INCLUDE-BOOK-ALIST, CERTIFICATION-TUPLE,
; TYPE-SET-INVERTER-RULES, PROVED-FUNCTIONAL-INSTANCES-ALIST, GENERALIZE-RULES,
; WELL-FOUNDED-RELATION-ALIST, WORLD-GLOBALS, and CHK-NEW-NAME-LST. It is my
; theory that these names are simply never set a second time in booting and
; their initial setting is made before they are first printed.
; In any case, the following sweep takes only a second or two at the end of a
; boot and will make our world key the first property. We hope to keep it that
; way in add-trip, but we cannot guarantee it, since the Lisp system might
; legally at anytime cover it up with some system property.
(cond ((null wrld) nil)
((eq (car (symbol-plist (caar wrld))) *current-acl2-world-key*)
(move-current-acl2-world-key-to-front (cdr wrld)))
(t (let ((temp (get (caar wrld) *current-acl2-world-key*)))
(cond (temp
(setf (symbol-plist (caar wrld))
(cons *current-acl2-world-key*
(cons temp
(remove-current-acl2-world-key
(symbol-plist (caar wrld)))))))))
(move-current-acl2-world-key-to-front (cdr wrld)))))
(progn
; Warning: These definitions will replace both the raw Lisp and *1* definitions
; of the first argument of each defun-overrides call. We must ensure that these
; definitions can't be evaluated when proving theorems unless each has
; unknown-constraints and never returns two values for the same input (which is
; automatically taken care of by passing in live states with unknown oracles).
(defun-overrides mfc-ts-fn (term mfc state forcep)
(mv-let (ans ttree)
(mfc-ts-raw term mfc state forcep)
(declare (ignore ttree))
ans))
(defun-overrides mfc-ts-ttree (term mfc state forcep)
(mfc-ts-raw term mfc state forcep))
(defun-overrides mfc-rw-fn (term obj equiv-info mfc state forcep)
(mv-let (ans ttree)
(mfc-rw-raw term nil obj equiv-info mfc 'mfc-rw state
forcep)
(declare (ignore ttree))
ans))
(defun-overrides mfc-rw-ttree (term obj equiv-info mfc state forcep)
(mfc-rw-raw term nil obj equiv-info mfc 'mfc-rw state forcep))
(defun-overrides mfc-rw+-fn (term alist obj equiv-info mfc state forcep)
(mfc-rw-raw term alist obj equiv-info mfc 'mfc-rw+ state forcep))
(defun-overrides mfc-rw+-ttree (term alist obj equiv-info mfc state forcep)
(mv-let (ans ttree)
(mfc-rw-raw term alist obj equiv-info mfc 'mfc-rw+ state
forcep)
(declare (ignore ttree))
ans))
(defun-overrides mfc-relieve-hyp-fn (hyp alist rune target bkptr mfc state
forcep)
(mfc-relieve-hyp-raw hyp alist rune target bkptr mfc state
forcep))
(defun-overrides mfc-relieve-hyp-ttree (hyp alist rune target bkptr mfc
state forcep)
(mv-let (ans ttree)
(mfc-relieve-hyp-raw hyp alist rune target bkptr mfc state
forcep)
(declare (ignore ttree))
ans))
(defun-overrides mfc-ap-fn (term mfc state forcep)
(mfc-ap-raw term mfc state forcep)))
(defun-one-output exit-boot-strap-mode ()
; We need not unwind the *acl2-unwind-protect-stack* because it must be nil for
; us to have gotten here; had an abort occurred, leaving some frames on the
; stack, we would not get here. The frame we push below is used by the set-w
; and then popped unless an abort occurs.
(push nil *acl2-unwind-protect-stack*)
(set-w 'extension
(end-prehistoric-world (w *the-live-state*))
*the-live-state*)
(f-put-global 'boot-strap-flg nil *the-live-state*)
(acl2-unwind *ld-level* nil)
(f-put-global 'inhibit-output-lst nil *the-live-state*)
(f-put-global 'slow-array-action :warning *the-live-state*)
; This is where to start up proof trees if we ever decide that this should be
; the default. But probably we don't want to do it in MCL.
(stop-proof-tree-fn *the-live-state*)
(f-put-global 'ld-skip-proofsp nil *the-live-state*)
(move-current-acl2-world-key-to-front (w *the-live-state*))
(checkpoint-world1 t (w *the-live-state*) *the-live-state*)
#+hons
(progn (initialize-never-memoize-ht)
(acl2h-init-memoizations)))
(defun-one-output ld-alist-raw (standard-oi ld-skip-proofsp ld-error-action)
`((standard-oi . ,standard-oi)
(standard-co . ,*standard-co*)
(proofs-co . ,*standard-co*)
(current-package . "ACL2")
(ld-skip-proofsp . ,ld-skip-proofsp)
(ld-redefinition-action . nil)
(ld-prompt . ,(if ld-skip-proofsp nil t))
(ld-missing-input-ok . nil)
(ld-pre-eval-filter . :all)
(ld-pre-eval-print . ,(if ld-skip-proofsp nil t))
(ld-post-eval-print . :command-conventions)
(ld-evisc-tuple .
; In order to avoid printing huge forms during initialization when ld-ing files
; that are among the pass two files:
,(abbrev-evisc-tuple *the-live-state*))
(ld-error-triples . t)
(ld-error-action . ,ld-error-action)
(ld-query-control-alist . t)
(ld-verbose . t)))
(defun enter-boot-strap-pass-2 ()
; We must provide set-w a frame on which to push its undo forms.
(push nil *acl2-unwind-protect-stack*)
(set-w 'extension
(global-set 'boot-strap-pass-2 t (w *the-live-state*))
*the-live-state*)
(acl2-unwind *ld-level* nil)
#+hons (memoize-init) ; for memoize calls in boot-strap-pass-2.lisp
; We use an explicit call of LD-fn to change the defun-mode to :logic just to
; lay down an event in the pre-history, in case we someday want to poke around
; at the boundary.
(ld-fn (ld-alist-raw '((logic))
t
:error)
*the-live-state* nil))
; The following constant should be changed when we add to the collection of
; files to be processed in :logic default-defun-mode.
(defconst *acl2-pass-2-files*
; Note that some books depend on "memoize", "hons", and "serialize", even in
; #-hons. For example, community book books/misc/hons-help.lisp uses hons
; primitives.
'("axioms"
"memoize"
"hons"
"serialize"
"boot-strap-pass-2"
))
; Next we define fns-different-wrt-acl2-loop-only, used below in
; check-built-in-constants. We base our code loosely on
; functions-defined-in-file in hons-raw.lisp.
(defun our-update-ht (key val ht)
(let ((old (gethash key ht)))
(setf (gethash key ht)
(cond ((and (consp old)
(eq (car old) :multiple))
(list* (car old) val (cdr old)))
(old (list :multiple val))
(t val)))))
(defun note-fns-in-form (form ht)
; For every macro and every function defined by form, associate its definition
; with its name in the given hash table, ht. See note-fns-in-files.
(and (consp form)
(case (car form)
((defun defund defn defproxy defun-nx defun-one-output defstub
defmacro defabbrev defun@par defmacro-last defun-overrides
defun-with-guard-check)
(our-update-ht (cadr form) form ht))
(save-def
(note-fns-in-form (cadr form) ht))
(defun-for-state
(our-update-ht (defun-for-state-name (cadr form)) form ht))
(define-global
(our-update-ht (define-global-name (cadr form)) form ht)
(our-update-ht (cadr form) form ht))
((define-pc-atomic-macro define-pc-bind define-pc-help define-pc-macro
define-pc-meta define-pc-primitive)
(let ((name (make-official-pc-command
(if (eq (car form) 'define-pc-meta-or-macro-fn)
(nth 2 form)
(nth 1 form)))))
(our-update-ht name form ht)))
((mutual-recursion mutual-recursion@par progn)
(loop for x in (cdr form)
do (note-fns-in-form x ht)))
((encapsulate when)
(loop for x in (cddr form)
do (note-fns-in-form x ht)))
((skip-proofs local)
(note-fns-in-form (cadr form) ht))
(defrec ; pick just one function introduced
(our-update-ht (record-changer-function-name (cadr form)) form ht))
((add-custom-keyword-hint
add-macro-alias
add-macro-fn
#+ccl ccl:defstatic
declaim
def-basic-type-sets
defattach
defaxiom
defconst
defconstant
defg
define-@par-macros
define-atomically-modifiable-counter
define-trusted-clause-processor ; should handle :partial-theory
deflabel
deflock
defparameter
defpkg
defstruct
deftheory
defthm
defthmd
deftype
defun-*1*
defv
defvar
error
eval ; presumably no ACL2 fn or macro underneath
eval-when ; presumably no ACL2 fn or macro underneath
f-put-global ; in axioms.lisp, before def. of set-ld-skip-proofsp
in-package
in-theory
initialize-state-globals
let ; could be arbitrarily complex, but we can only do so much!
logic
make-waterfall-parallelism-constants
make-waterfall-printing-constants
memoize
push
reset-future-parallelism-variables
set-duplicate-keys-action
set-guard-msg
set-invisible-fns-table
set-tau-auto-mode
set-waterfall-parallelism
setq
system-events
system-verify-guards
table
value
verify-guards
verify-termination-boot-strap)
nil)
(t
(error "Unexpected type of form, ~s. See note-fns-in-form."
(car form))))))
(defun note-fns-in-file (filename ht)
; For every macro and every function defined in the indicated file, associate
; its definition with its name in the given hash table, ht. See
; note-fns-in-files.
(with-open-file
(str filename :direction :input)
(let ((avrc (cons nil nil))
x)
(loop while (not (eq (setq x (read str nil avrc))
avrc))
do
(note-fns-in-form x ht)))))
(defun note-fns-in-files (filenames ht loop-only-p)
; For every macro and every function defined in filenames, associate its
; definition with its name in the given hash table, ht. We read each file in
; filenames either with or without feature :acl2-loop-only, according to
; whether loop-only-p is true or false, respectively.
(let ((*features* (if loop-only-p
(cons :acl2-loop-only *features*)
(remove :acl2-loop-only *features*))))
(loop for filename in filenames
do (note-fns-in-file filename ht))))
(defun raw-source-name-p (filename-without-extension)
(let ((len (length filename-without-extension)))
(and (<= 4 len)
(equal (subseq filename-without-extension (- len 4) len)
"-raw"))))
; Set the following to t for a more informative error report.
(defvar *check-built-in-constants-debug* nil)
(defun fns-different-wrt-acl2-loop-only (acl2-files)
; For each file in acl2-files we collect up all definitions of functions and
; macros, reading each file both with and without feature :acl2-loop-only. We
; return (mv macro-result program-mode-result logic-mode-result), where each of
; macro-result, program-mode-result, and logic-mode-result is a list of
; symbols. Each symbol is the name of a macro, program-mode function, or
; logic-mode function (respectively) defined with feature :acl2-loop-only,
; which has a different (or absent) definition without feature :acl2-loop-only.
; This function is typically called with acl2-files equal to *acl2-files*, in
; the build directory. See the comment about redundant definitions in
; chk-acceptable-defuns-redundancy for a pertinent explanation.
(let ((logic-filenames (loop for x in acl2-files
when (not (raw-source-name-p x))
collect (concatenate 'string x ".lisp")))
(raw-filenames (loop for x in acl2-files
collect (concatenate 'string x ".lisp")))
(ht-raw (make-hash-table :test 'eq))
(ht-logic (make-hash-table :test 'eq))
(macro-result nil)
(program-mode-result nil)
(logic-mode-result nil)
(wrld (w *the-live-state*)))
(note-fns-in-files raw-filenames ht-raw nil)
(note-fns-in-files logic-filenames ht-logic t)
(maphash (lambda (key logic-val)
(progn
(assert (symbolp key))
(let ((raw-val (gethash key ht-raw)))
; We use equalp rather than equal below because in August, 2014 using SBCL
; 1.2.2 (and this might happen with other Lisps in the future), backquote was
; implemented using structures hence equal could fail. For example, in SBCL
; 1.2.2 we found that (equalp '`,x '`,x) evaluates to t but (equal '`,x '`,x)
; evaluates to nil. Here is why (again, in SBCL 1.2.2), where first we
; evaluate (setq *print-pretty* nil):
; * '`,x
;
; (SB-INT:QUASIQUOTE #S(SB-IMPL::COMMA :EXPR X :KIND 0))
; *
(or (equalp logic-val raw-val)
(let ((x
(if *check-built-in-constants-debug*
(list key :logic logic-val :raw raw-val)
key)))
(cond ((getpropc key 'macro-body nil wrld)
(push x macro-result))
((eq (symbol-class key wrld)
:program)
(push x program-mode-result))
(t
(push x logic-mode-result))))))))
ht-logic)
(maphash (lambda (key raw-val)
(progn
(assert (symbolp key))
(when (not (or (gethash key ht-logic)
(assoc key *primitive-formals-and-guards* :test
'eq)))
(cond ((getpropc key 'macro-body nil wrld)
(push key macro-result))
(t (let ((c ; avoid symbol-class (defaults to :program)
(getpropc key 'symbol-class nil wrld)))
(when c
(let ((x
(if *check-built-in-constants-debug*
(list key :raw raw-val)
key)))
(if (eq c :program)
(push x program-mode-result)
(push x logic-mode-result))))))))))
ht-raw)
(mv macro-result program-mode-result logic-mode-result)))
(defun collect-monadic-booleans (fns ens wrld)
(cond ((endp fns) nil)
((and (equal (arity (car fns) wrld) 1)
(ts= (mv-let (ts ttree)
(type-set (fcons-term* (car fns) '(V)) nil nil nil
ens wrld
nil nil nil)
(declare (ignore ttree))
ts)
*ts-boolean*))
(cons (car fns)
(collect-monadic-booleans (cdr fns) ens wrld)))
(t (collect-monadic-booleans (cdr fns) ens wrld))))
(defun check-invariant-risk-state-p ()
; See the comment about this function in initialize-invariant-risk.
(let ((bad
(loop for tuple in *super-defun-wart-table*
when
(and (not (member-eq (car tuple)
(global-val 'untouchable-fns
(w *the-live-state*))))
(member-eq 'state (caddr tuple))
; The next two conjuncts say that there is some non-state input.
(cadr tuple)
(not (equal (cadr tuple) '(state)))
(not (member-eq (car tuple)
; It is important that for each of the following functions, its calls during
; evaluation in the ACL2 loop cannot cause state-p to become false of the live
; state -- unless of course one makes changes using ttags, such as removing
; symbols from the list of untouchable. If that claim is false of any of these
; function symbols, then it should be added to the value of
; *boot-strap-invariant-risk-symbols* so that it can be given an
; 'invariant-risk property by initialize-invariant-risk. Also see
; put-invariant-risk.
'(READ-CHAR$
READ-BYTE$
READ-OBJECT
PRINC$
WRITE-BYTE$
PRINT-OBJECT$-SER
MAKUNBOUND-GLOBAL
PUT-GLOBAL
EXTEND-T-STACK
SHRINK-T-STACK
ASET-T-STACK
SHRINK-32-BIT-INTEGER-STACK
OPEN-INPUT-CHANNEL
OPEN-OUTPUT-CHANNEL
GET-OUTPUT-STREAM-STRING$-FN
CLOSE-INPUT-CHANNEL
CLOSE-OUTPUT-CHANNEL))))
collect (car tuple))))
(or (subsetp-eq bad
*boot-strap-invariant-risk-symbols*)
(error "It is necessary to modify ~s to include the following ~
list:~%~s"
'*boot-strap-invariant-risk-symbols*
(set-difference-eq bad
*boot-strap-invariant-risk-symbols*)))))
(defun check-built-in-constants (&aux (state *the-live-state*))
; Certain defconsts are problematic because they build in values that one
; cannot know until the system is built! Getting their values right requires
; some thought or experiment and even then subsequent changes to the system can
; render the values incorrect. To guard against incorrect (obsolete) values
; for these contants, this function causes an error if doesn't like what it
; sees. We document only one such constant, *force-xnume*, which more or less
; describes the situation suffered by all of them.
; Our Code requires that *force-xnume* be the nume of (:EXECUTABLE-COUNTERPART
; FORCE). It would be nice to be able to write: (defconst *force-xnume*
; (fn-rune-nume 'force t t (w state))). But that suffers TWO problems. The
; first is that defconst disallows the use of any variable in the initial value
; form. Thus, state is illegal above. We tried fixing that, in a hypocritical
; way, by allowing it to ourselves in boot-strap even though we denied it to
; the user. But even that doesn't work because of the second problem: The
; first time the defconst is processed, no numes are being allocated because
; everything is done in the :program defun-mode. You might think, therefore,
; we ought to delay the execution of this defconst until after we've done the
; second pass and created the rune in question. But we cannot do that because
; we use *force-xnume* in our code (namely, in ok-to-force) and that function
; can't be defined until *force-xnume* is defined. Thus, this seemingly
; hackish way of doing it, where we actually specify ahead of time which nume
; will be assigned, is not as outlandish as it might at first seem. We check
; that the actual assignment is correct (using this function) after booting.
; First we do a check on *boot-strap-invariant-risk-symbols* and
; *boot-strap-invariant-risk-symbols*.
(check-invariant-risk-state-p)
(let ((str "The defconst of ~x0 is ~x1 but should be ~x2. To fix ~
the error, change the offending defconst to the value ~
indicated and rebuild the system. To understand why the code ~
is written this way, see the comment in ~
check-built-in-constants."))
(cond
((not (equal *force-xrune*
(fn-rune-nume 'force nil t (w state))))
(interface-er str
'*force-xrune*
*force-xrune*
(fn-rune-nume 'force nil t (w state)))))
(cond
((not (equal *force-xnume* (fn-rune-nume 'force t t (w state))))
(interface-er str
'*force-xnume*
*force-xnume*
(fn-rune-nume 'force t t (w state)))))
(cond
((not
(equal *immediate-force-modep-xnume*
(fn-rune-nume 'immediate-force-modep t t (w state))))
(interface-er str
'*immediate-force-modep-xnume*
*immediate-force-modep-xnume*
(fn-rune-nume 'immediate-force-modep t t (w state)))))
(cond
((not
(equal *tau-system-xnume*
(fn-rune-nume 'tau-system t t (w state))))
(interface-er str
'*tau-system-xnume*
*tau-system-xnume*
(fn-rune-nume 'tau-system t t (w state)))))
(cond
((not
(equal *tau-acl2-numberp-pair*
(getpropc 'acl2-numberp 'tau-pair)))
(interface-er str
'*tau-acl2-numberp-pair*
*tau-acl2-numberp-pair*
(getpropc 'acl2-numberp 'tau-pair))))
(cond
((not
(equal *tau-integerp-pair*
(getpropc 'integerp 'tau-pair)))
(interface-er str
'*tau-integerp-pair*
*tau-integerp-pair*
(getpropc 'integerp 'tau-pair))))
(cond
((not
(equal *tau-rationalp-pair*
(getpropc 'rationalp 'tau-pair)))
(interface-er str
'*tau-rationalp-pair*
*tau-rationalp-pair*
(getpropc 'rationalp 'tau-pair))))
(cond
((not
(equal *tau-natp-pair*
(getpropc 'natp 'tau-pair)))
(interface-er str
'*tau-natp-pair*
*tau-natp-pair*
(getpropc 'natp 'tau-pair))))
(cond
((not
(equal *tau-posp-pair*
(getpropc 'posp 'tau-pair)))
(interface-er str
'*tau-posp-pair*
*tau-posp-pair*
(getpropc 'posp 'tau-pair))))
(cond
((not
(equal *tau-minusp-pair*
(getpropc 'minusp 'tau-pair)))
(interface-er str
'*tau-minusp-pair*
*tau-minusp-pair*
(getpropc 'minusp 'tau-pair))))
(cond
((not
(equal *tau-booleanp-pair*
(getpropc 'booleanp 'tau-pair)))
(interface-er str
'*tau-booleanp-pair*
*tau-booleanp-pair*
(getpropc 'booleanp 'tau-pair))))
(cond
((not
(and (equal
*min-type-set*
#-:non-standard-analysis -8192 #+:non-standard-analysis -65536)
(equal
*max-type-set*
#-:non-standard-analysis 8191 #+:non-standard-analysis 65535)))
(interface-er
"The minimal and maximal type-sets are incorrectly built into the ~
definition of type-alist-entryp. These type-sets get generated by ~
the call of def-basic-type-sets in type-set-a.lisp are must be ~
mentioned, as above, in axioms.lisp. Evidently, a new type-set bit ~
was added. Update type-alist-entryp.")))
(cond
((not
(equal *primitive-monadic-booleans*
(collect-monadic-booleans
(strip-cars *primitive-formals-and-guards*)
(ens state)
(w state))))
(interface-er str
'*primitive-monadic-booleans*
*primitive-monadic-booleans*
(collect-monadic-booleans
(strip-cars *primitive-formals-and-guards*)
(ens state)
(w state)))))
(cond
((not (getpropc 'booleanp 'tau-pair))
(interface-er
"Our code for tau-term assumes that BOOLEANP is a tau predicate. But ~
it has no tau-pair property!")))
(let ((good-lst (chk-initial-built-in-clauses *initial-built-in-clauses*
(w state) nil nil)))
(cond
(good-lst
(interface-er
"The defconst of *initial-built-in-clauses* is bad because at least ~
one of the records supplies an :all-fnnames that is different from ~
that computed by all-fnnames-subsumer. The correct setting is ~
shown below. To preserve the comments in the source file it might ~
be best to compare -- with EQUAL -- the elements below with the ~
corresponding elements in the current source file and just replace ~
the ones that have changed. Here is a correct setting in 1:1 ~
correspondence with the current setting: ~X01."
`(defconst *initial-built-in-clauses*
(list ,@good-lst))
nil))))
(mv-let
(macros-found program-found logic-found)
(fns-different-wrt-acl2-loop-only *acl2-files*)
(flet ((my-diff (x y)
(if *check-built-in-constants-debug*
(loop for tuple in x
when (not (member (car tuple) y :test 'eq))
collect tuple)
(set-difference-eq x y))))
(let ((bad-macros (my-diff macros-found
*primitive-macros-with-raw-code*))
(bad-program (my-diff program-found
*primitive-program-fns-with-raw-code*))
(bad-logic (my-diff logic-found
*primitive-logic-fns-with-raw-code*)))
(when (or bad-macros bad-program bad-logic)
(format t "Failed check for coverage of functions with acl2-loop-only code
differences! Please send this error message to the ACL2 implementors.
Missing functions (use *check-built-in-constants-debug* = t for verbose report):
~s
~s;
~a
~s:
~a"
; We need to update *primitive-macros-with-raw-code*,
; *primitive-program-fns-with-raw-code*, or
; *primitive-logic-fns-with-raw-code*, respectively according to the non-nil
; fields in the error message.
(list (list '*primitive-macros-with-raw-code*
bad-macros)
(list '*primitive-program-fns-with-raw-code*
bad-program)
(list '*primitive-logic-fns-with-raw-code*
bad-logic))
'(lisp-implementation-type)
(lisp-implementation-type)
'(lisp-implementation-version)
(lisp-implementation-version))
(error "Check failed!")))))
; The following is a start on checking that we don't have superfluous symbols
; in the list values of certain constants. But in fact there can be such
; symbols: we want the value for each constant must be independent of
; features :hons or :acl2-par, yet some macros and functions are only defined
; when such features are present. We may think more about this later.
; (let ((undefined-macros
; (loop for x in *primitive-macros-with-raw-code*
; when (not (or (macro-function x) (symbol-function x)))
; collect x))
; (undefined-program-fns
; (loop for x in *primitive-program-fns-with-raw-code*
; when (not (fboundp x))
; collect x))
; (undefined-logic-fns
; (loop for x in *primitive-logic-fns-with-raw-code*
; when (not (fboundp x))
; collect x)))
; (when undefined-macros
; (format
; t
; "Undefined macros in *primitive-macros-with-raw-code*:~%~s~%"
; undefined-macros))
; (when undefined-program-fns
; (format
; t
; "Undefined macros in *primitive-program-fns-with-raw-code*:~%~s~%"
; undefined-program-fns))
; (when undefined-logic-fns
; (format
; t
; "Undefined macros in *primitive-logic-fns-with-raw-code*:~%~s~%"
; undefined-logic-fns))
; (when (or undefined-macros undefined-program-fns undefined-logic-fns)
; (error "Check failed!")))
))
(defun-one-output check-none-ideal (trips acc &aux (state *the-live-state*))
(cond
((null trips)
(cond ((null acc) nil)
(t (er hard 'check-none-ideal
"The following are :ideal mode functions that are not ~
non-executable. We rely in oneify-cltl-code on the absence ~
of such functions in the boot-strap world (see the comment ~
on check-none-ideal there). These functions should have ~
their guards verified: ~&0."
acc))))
(t
(let* ((trip (car trips))
(fn
; We need to rule out triples such as the following (but for :ideal mode)
; (EVENT-LANDMARK GLOBAL-VALUE 5054
; (DEFUN EVENS . :COMMON-LISP-COMPLIANT)
; DEFUN EVENS (L)
; (DECLARE (XARGS :GUARD (TRUE-LISTP L)))
; (COND ((ENDP L) NIL)
; (T (CONS (CAR L) (EVENS (CDDR L))))))
(and (eq (car trip) 'event-landmark)
(true-listp trip)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(eq (nth 4 trip) 'defun)
(nth 5 trip))))
(cond ((and fn
(symbolp fn)
(eq (symbol-class fn (w state))
:ideal)
(not (eq (getpropc fn 'non-executablep)
t)))
(check-none-ideal (cdr trips) (cons fn acc)))
(t (check-none-ideal (cdr trips) acc)))))))
(defun check-state-globals-initialized ()
(let (bad)
(do-symbols
(sym (find-package "ACL2_GLOBAL_ACL2"))
(when (boundp sym)
(let ((acl2-sym (intern (symbol-name sym) "ACL2")))
(when (not
(or (assoc acl2-sym *initial-global-table* :test 'eq)
(assoc acl2-sym *initial-ld-special-bindings* :test 'eq)))
(push (cons acl2-sym (symbol-value sym))
bad)))))
(when bad
(error
"The following symbols, perhaps with the values shown, need to~%~
be added to *initial-global-table*:~%~s~%"
bad))))
(defun-one-output check-acl2-initialization ()
(check-built-in-constants)
(check-out-instantiablep (w *the-live-state*))
(check-none-ideal (w *the-live-state*) nil)
(check-state-globals-initialized)
(or (plist-worldp-with-formals (w *the-live-state*))
(error "The initial ACL2 world does not satisfy ~
plist-worldp-with-formals!"))
nil)
(defun set-initial-cbd ()
(let ((state *the-live-state*))
(setq *initial-cbd* (our-pwd))
; In CCL, it seems that *initial-cbd* as computed above could give a string
; not ending in "/". We fix that here.
(cond ((and (stringp *initial-cbd*)
(not (equal *initial-cbd* ""))
(not (eql (char *initial-cbd*
(1- (length *initial-cbd*)))
#\/)))
(setq *initial-cbd*
(concatenate 'string *initial-cbd* "/"))))
(cond ((not (absolute-pathname-string-p
*initial-cbd*
t
(get-os)))
(error
"Our guess for the initial setting of cbd, ~x0, which was ~%~
generated by (our-pwd), is not a legal directory! Before ~%~
entering ACL2, please setq *initial-cbd* to a nonempty ~%~
string that represents an absolute ACL2 (i.e., Unix-style) ~%~
pathname. Sorry for the inconvenience."
*initial-cbd*)))
(f-put-global 'connected-book-directory *initial-cbd*
state)))
(defun initialize-acl2 (&optional (pass-2-ld-skip-proofsp 'include-book)
(acl2-pass-2-files *acl2-pass-2-files*)
system-books-dir
skip-comp-exec
&aux
; We avoid proclaiming types dynamically, instead doing so only via the
; acl2-proclaims.lisp mechanism. See the Essay on Proclaiming.
(*do-proclaims* nil))
; Note: if system-books-dir is supplied, it should be a Unix-style
; pathname (either absolute or not [doesn't matter which]).
; This function first lds all of the *acl2-files* except boot-strap-pass-2.lisp
; and *-raw.lisp in default-defun-mode :program (which is the default
; default-defun-mode). It then loads the files in acl2-pass-2-files in :logic
; mode.
; During the first pass, ld-skip-proofsp is 'initialize-acl2, which is like the
; setting t (doing syntactic checks but skipping proofs and LOCALs) but omits a
; few of the checks so the bootstrapping can be done. During the second pass,
; ld-skip-proofsp is as specified by the &optional parameter above. It
; defaults to 'include-book, which means we skip LOCALs, all syntactic checks,
; and proofs. By calling this function with pass-2-ld-skip-proofsp nil you can
; arrange for it to try to prove its way through the second pass. However, see
; below.
; Why Two Passes? By doing things in two passes we make it possible to use all
; system functions in hints and other proof commands. In the one-pass
; initialization we used to use, it was impossible to use theory expressions in
; the defthms in axioms.lisp because the necessary theory functions were not
; yet defined and so trans-eval balked on them.
(when (null system-books-dir)
(let ((dir (getenv$-raw "ACL2_SYSTEM_BOOKS")))
(when (and dir (not (equal dir "")))
(setq system-books-dir dir))))
(with-warnings-suppressed
; Interactive Proofs: Many times, (initialize-acl2 nil) -- which causes the
; system to prove the admissibility of everything done in the second pass --
; will fail because insufficient lemmas are available to handle new functions
; added since the last such proof. But it will leave you in a state so that
; you can continue to develop proofs. In particular, if you have changed some
; of the proved code, e.g., axioms.lisp, and you wish to re-verify it, you can
; proceed as follows. First, fire up akcl. Then do (acl2::load-acl2).
; Finally do (initialize-acl2 nil) and wait for the first proof to fail. When
; it fails you will be returned to lisp. There, in raw lisp, you should
; execute
; (let ((state *the-live-state*))
; (reset-ld-specials t)
; ; (set-ld-redefinition-action '(:doit! . :overwrite) state) ;see below
; )
; This will set the ld-specials to their conventional post-boot-strap setting,
; except (possibly) for ld-redefinition-action which will allow redefinition.
; (We discuss this more below.) Then enter the loop with (LP!), which will set
; *features* to include :acl2-loop-only in case read conditionals are present
; in the sources you wish to develop. Once in the loop, you should be able to
; continue as normal with proof development.
; If the initialization did not get beyond pass one, :q is undefined and the
; only way to exit is to do (mv nil :q state). You will also note that other
; keyword commands, e.g., :pc, are unavailable. You can always execute the
; appropriate form in raw lisp, e.g.,
; (let ((state *the-live-state*)) (pc 'fn))
; If you did get beyond pass one, things will be pretty normal looking except
; that inspection will show that both (global-val 'boot-strap-flg (w state))
; and (global-val 'boot-strap-pass-2 (w state)) are t. This will manifest
; itself in some perhaps surprising ways during interactive proofs, e.g.,
; redundant deflabels are admitted during the second pass.
; Is Redefinition Permission Necessary? Not always. If you are re-verifying
; the sources the chances are you've changed something. Suppose some event is
; no longer admissible. If you have to change a function definition to admit
; it, i.e., one of your new events is incorrectly written, then redefinition
; permission is necessary because what you are trying to do is NOT just a
; simple reclassifying (you're changing the definition). If on the other hand
; you are not changing definitions but adding them, you need not perform the
; set-ld-redefinition-action shown above. A conservative thing to do is to
; leave the redefinition action nil and not set it until necessary.
; How do I Add a New Function Definition? If you try to add to the sources a
; new function definition while in pass one of the initialization it will fail
; because we insist that all functions defined logically already have raw lisp
; definitions. You should define the function first in raw lisp (by exiting
; the LP!) and then in the loop. If you discovered this problem by provoking
; the hard error: ACL2 Error in ACL2-INTERFACE: fn is not fboundp! then you
; must first exit the lisp break with :q. This will revert the world and throw
; you out of the LP!. The world is as it was before the offensive definition,
; so you should define the function in raw lisp, reenter LP! and proceed as
; intended.
; The Special State Discussion: We bind state to *the-live-state* below because
; the macro expansion of ld introduces the variable state. Once upon a time we
; declared state special with (defparameter state *the-live-state*) in this
; file. But that had the effect of preventing tail-recursion removal in
; situations like (pprogn (princ$ ...) (recursive-call ...)) because pprogn
; macro expands to a binding of state and you can't jump out of a binding of a
; special in tail recursion (it is only allowed if it is lexical). Thus, we
; got the curious and frustrating problem that if we recompiled system
; functions (like print-doc-string-part1) then they would no longer have tail
; recursions removed, even though the recursion would be so removed when we
; made the system from scratch. (Reiterating the reason: between the two
; compilations of the function, state became special. Had we declared state
; special in axioms.lisp instead of here in interface-raw.lisp, none of
; tail-recursion removal on state changing functions would have been done!) We
; no longer make state special and hence must bind it to *the-live-state*
; lexically when its use is unavoidable. In point of fact we now evaluate
; (setq state *the-live-state*) in (load-acl2), without making state special,
; and hence state may be used in raw Lisp after the system is loaded as long as
; the form using state is not compiled.
; Finally: another way to prove your way through axioms.lisp is to invoke
; (acl2::load-acl2) and (initialize-acl2), then save the system (e.g., in akcl
; execute (si::save-system "my-saved_acl2")), and now each time you invoke that
; saved image first execute
; (defconst *acl2-pass-2-files* '())
; in raw Lisp (or, execute this before saving the image), and then after
; executing (LP!) submit the form
; (set-w 'extension (global-set 'boot-strap-pass-2 t (w state)) state)
; to ACL2 in order to allow system DEFLABELs to be considered redundant.
; Save perhaps 12K in image.
(set-initial-cbd)
(makunbound '*copy-of-common-lisp-symbols-from-main-lisp-package*)
(let* ((*features* (cons :acl2-loop-only *features*))
#+akcl
; AKCL compiler note stuff. We have so many tail recursive functions
; that the notes about tail recursion optimization are just too much
; to take.
(compiler:*suppress-compiler-notes* t)
(state *the-live-state*)
pass-2-alist)
(enter-boot-strap-mode system-books-dir (get-os))
(setq pass-2-alist
(let ((ans nil))
(dolist
(fl acl2-pass-2-files)
(mv-let (erp val state)
; Warning. Because of the read-file here, we have to be careful not to define
; any packages in the pass-2 files that contain symbols mentioned in those
; files. The read-file will break in any such case; the DEFPKG in such a file
; must be processed first.
(read-file (coerce
(append (coerce fl 'list)
(cons #\. (coerce *lisp-extension*
'list)))
'string)
*the-live-state*)
(declare (ignore state))
(cond (erp (interface-er "Unable to read file ~x0!"
fl))
(t (push (cons fl val) ans)))))
ans))
(dolist
(fl *acl2-files*)
(when (not (or (equal fl "boot-strap-pass-2")
(raw-source-name-p fl)))
(mv-let (er val st)
(ld-fn
(ld-alist-raw (or (cdr (assoc fl pass-2-alist :test #'equal))
(coerce
(append (coerce fl 'list)
(cons #\. (coerce *lisp-extension*
'list)))
'string))
'initialize-acl2
:error)
*the-live-state*
nil)
(declare (ignore val st))
(cond (er
; The load caused an error. We abort quietly without doing anything
; else so we are in the same state.
(return-from initialize-acl2 nil))))))
(enter-boot-strap-pass-2)
(dolist
(fl acl2-pass-2-files)
(mv-let (er val st)
(ld-fn
(ld-alist-raw (or (cdr (assoc fl pass-2-alist :test #'equal))
(interface-er "Did not find ~x0 in pass-2-alist."
fl))
pass-2-ld-skip-proofsp
:error)
state
nil)
(declare (ignore val st))
(cond (er
; The load caused an error. We abort quietly without doing anything
; else so we are in the same state.
(return-from initialize-acl2 nil)))))
; It is important not to wait to write out TMP1.lisp until after we leave the
; boot-strap. By doing so before that time, we ensure that the guard-check
; under safe mode is made for primitives (see oneify-cltl-code), and that
; compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns will not encounter 'exit-boot-strap-mode and
; thus stop finding functions to compile. We use a call of ld here to make
; possible the subsidiary uses of state-global-let* on behalf of macroexpand1
; (see the comment in comp-fn for more information).
(unless skip-comp-exec
; Optimization: Skip this compile for generate-acl2-proclaims.
(ld '((comp-fn :exec nil "1" state))))
(exit-boot-strap-mode)
(initialize-pc-acl2 *the-live-state*)
; We now set up the ld specials as we wish them for the user's first
; invocation of LP. The ld specials were previously initialized (in
; enter-boot-strap-mode) to the same values used below (because the
; LDs above make reference to some of them so they must be bound).
; But the LD above changes them so we now initialize them again.
(f-put-ld-specials *initial-ld-special-bindings* *the-live-state*)
; We now check certain invariants, for example, that we have defined certain
; built-in constants correctly.
(or (not acl2-pass-2-files)
; The check for check-built-in-constants in check-acl2-initialization, for one,
; will fail if we do not make a second pass through axioms.lisp. That is
; because all (or at least most) of the 'level-no properties are still 0 before
; then, so chk-initial-built-in-clauses (called in check-built-in-constants)
; will fail, because its subroutine all-fnnames-subsumer does not behave
; properly until the 'level-no properties are set.
(check-acl2-initialization))
(cond
((or (not (probe-file *acl2-status-file*))
(delete-file *acl2-status-file*))
(with-open-file (str *acl2-status-file*
:direction :output)
(format str
"~s"
; The next token, :INITIALIZED, is used in GNUmakefile; keep in sync.
:INITIALIZED))))
; If you want the final image to have infixp = t, then put the following
; form here:
; (f-put-global 'infixp t *the-live-state*)
t)))
; LP
; Lp is the function that an ACL2 user invokes to get into the ACL2
; read-eval-print loop.
; Essay on Pathnames
; We use Unix-style pathnames everywhere in ACL2 except when interfacing with
; the operating system. Functions defined in this file, interface-raw.lisp,
; generally use real pathname strings for the host operating system.
; (Exceptions are clearly labeled, including compile-uncompiled-defuns and
; compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns.) Functions defined outside this file
; (interface-raw.lisp) pass around ACL2 (Unix-style) pathname strings. Here
; are some functions that take pathnames whose form is based on (os (w state))
; rather than on Unix.
; acl2-compile-file [but see comment there]
; compile-file
; convert-book-name-to-compiled-name [Unix pathname is OK too]
; delete-file
; delete-compiled-file
; load
; probe-file
; proclaim-file
; Before defining lp, we provide support for inhibiting breaks.
#-(and gcl (not cltl2))
(defun our-abort (condition y
&aux
(state *the-live-state*)
(btp (member-eq
(f-get-global 'debugger-enable *the-live-state*)
'(:bt :break-bt :bt-break))))
; Keep this in sync with :doc set-debugger-enable.
(declare (ignore y))
#+acl2-par (setq *reset-parallelism-variables* t)
(print-proof-tree-finish state)
(when btp (print-call-history))
(cond ((or (debugger-enabledp state)
(eql *ld-level* 0)
(f-get-global 'boot-strap-flg state))
nil)
(t
(let ((*debugger-hook* nil) ; extra care to avoid possible loop
#+ccl ; as above, for CCL revision 12090 and beyond
(ccl::*break-hook* nil)
(*package* (find-package (current-package state)))
(continue-p
; If *acl2-time-limit-boundp* is true, then we can safely use our approach of
; continuing from the break (if possible) and letting the prover notice that
; *acl2-time-limit* is 0. That allows the prover to quit sufficiently normally
; such that state global 'redo-flat-fail is bound in support of :redo-flat.
; The reason that *acl2-time-limit-boundp* needs to be true is that ultimately,
; we want *acl2-time-limit* to revert to its default value of nil.
(and (find-restart 'continue)
*acl2-time-limit-boundp*
(not (eql *acl2-time-limit* 0)))))
#+ccl ; for CCL revisions before 12090
(declare (ignorable ccl::*break-hook*))
(terpri t)
(format t
"***********************************************")
(cond
(continue-p
(format t
"~&Note: ~A~
~& Will attempt to exit the proof in progress;~
~& otherwise, the next interrupt will abort the proof."
condition))
(t
(format t
"~&************ ABORTING from raw Lisp ***********")
(format t
"~&Error: ~A"
condition)))
(when btp (format t "~%NOTE: See above for backtrace.~%"))
(format t
"~&***********************************************~&")
(when *acl2-error-msg*
(format t *acl2-error-msg*))
(when (not (member-eq 'set-debugger-enable-fn
; (global-val 'untouchable-fns (w state))
(getpropc 'untouchable-fns 'global-value)))
(format t
"~%To enable breaks into the debugger (also see :DOC ~
acl2-customization):~&~s~&"
'(set-debugger-enable t)))
(force-output t)
(cond (continue-p
(setq *acl2-time-limit* 0)
(invoke-restart 'continue))
(t
; Parallelism blemish: as of May 16, 2011, we also reset all parallelism
; variables in Rager's modified version of the source code. However, that
; strikes Rager as strange, since we went through so much trouble to find out
; where we should reset parallelism variables. So, it is now commented out,
; today, May 16, 2011, and we will wait to see what happens.
; #+acl2-par
; (reset-all-parallelism-variables)
; Parallelism blemish: after a single proof runs for awhile, at least with
; waterfall parallelism enabled, it can take two interrupts before the abort
; occurs. It would be nice if the proof could abort after the first interrupt,
; since when two interrupts are required, the summary does not print the
; ACL2(p) checkpoints.
(our-ignore-errors ; might not be in scope of catch
(throw 'local-top-level :our-abort))))))))
; We formerly set *debugger-hook* here, but now we set it in lp; see the
; comment there.
#+ccl ; for CCL revisions starting with 12090
(when (boundp 'ccl::*break-hook*)
(setq ccl::*break-hook* 'our-abort))
(defun initial-customization-filename ()
(let* ((cfb00 (getenv$-raw "ACL2_CUSTOMIZATION"))
(cfb0 (if (equal cfb00 "NONE")
:none
(and cfb00
(not (equal cfb00 ""))
(extend-pathname (f-get-global 'connected-book-directory
*the-live-state*)
cfb00
*the-live-state*)))))
(cond
((eq cfb0 :none)
:none)
((and cfb0 (probe-file cfb0))
cfb0)
(cfb0 ; but (not (probe-file cfb0))
(let ((*print-circle* nil))
(format t
"~%ERROR: Environment variable ACL2_CUSTOMIZATION has value~%~
~3T~a~%but file~%~3T~a~%does not appear to exist.~%~
Now quitting ACL2. To fix this problem, you may wish~%~
to fix the value of that environment variable by setting it~%~
to a valid file name, by unsetting it, or by setting it to~%~
the empty string.~%~%"
cfb00
cfb0))
(exit-lisp 1))
(t
(let* ((cb1 (our-merge-pathnames
(f-get-global 'connected-book-directory *the-live-state*)
"acl2-customization"))
(cfb1 (string-append cb1 ".lsp"))
(cfb1a (string-append cb1 ".lisp")))
(cond
((probe-file (pathname-unix-to-os cfb1 *the-live-state*))
cfb1)
((probe-file (pathname-unix-to-os cfb1a *the-live-state*))
cfb1a)
(t
(let* ((home (our-user-homedir-pathname))
(cb2 (and home
(our-merge-pathnames
; The call of pathname-os-to-unix below may seem awkward, since later we apply
; pathname-unix-to-os before calling probe-file. However, our-merge-pathnames
; requires Unix-style pathname arguments, and we prefer not to write an
; analogous function that takes pathnames for the host operating system.
(pathname-os-to-unix
; MCL does not seem to handle calls of truename correctly on logical pathnames.
; We should think some more about this, but for now, let's solve this problem
; by brute force.
#+(and mcl (not ccl))
(our-truename
(common-lisp::translate-logical-pathname
home)
t)
#-(and mcl (not ccl))
(our-truename home
"Note: Calling OUR-TRUENAME from ~
INITIAL-CUSTOMIZATION-FILENAME")
(os (w *the-live-state*))
*the-live-state*)
"acl2-customization")))
(cfb2 (and cb2 (string-append cb2 ".lsp")))
(cfb2a (and cb2 (string-append cb2 ".lisp"))))
(cond (cb2 (cond ((probe-file (pathname-unix-to-os
cfb2 *the-live-state*))
cfb2)
((probe-file (pathname-unix-to-os
cfb2a *the-live-state*))
cfb2a)
(t nil))))))))))))
#+(and acl2-par lispworks)
(setq system:*sg-default-size*
; Keep the below number in sync with the call to hcl:extend-current-stack in
; lp.
80000)
#+(and acl2-par lispworks)
(defun spawn-extra-lispworks-listener ()
; In Lispworks, we spawn a thread for the listener before we exit lp for the
; first time, so that when we exit lp, multiprocessing does not stop. This
; strategy is derived from the following quote, from Martin Simmons, of
; Lispworks.
;
; "If you want it to run a normal REPL, then you could call
; lw:start-tty-listener when acl2::lp returns. That will make a new thread
; running the REPL, which will prevent multiprocessing from stopping."
;
; Another strategy, which was never released, involved following the
; multiprocessing example in section 15.13 of the Lispworks 6.0 manual. To
; quickly outline that strategy, we (1) renamed "lp" to "lp1", (2) defined "lp"
; to spawn a thread that called "lp1", (3) saved the Lispworks image with the
; ":multiprocessing t" flag, and (4) ensured that the Lispworks image's restart
; function was acl2-default-restart-function, which called "lp".
;
; We feel that Martin's suggested implementation is simpler, and so we
; use that.
;
; We rely on the following property of lw:start-tty-listener: if the tty
; listener is already running, calling lw:start-tty-listener does nothing.
(lw:start-tty-listener))
(defun lp (&rest args)
; This function can only be called from within raw lisp, because no ACL2
; function mentions it. Thus, we assume we are in raw lisp. This is the
; top-level entry to ACL2. Note that truename can cause an error in some
; Common Lisps when the given file or directory does not exist, in which case
; our-truename will generally return nil. Hence, we sometimes call
; our-truename on "" rather than on a file name.
(when args
(error "LP takes no arguments."))
(with-more-warnings-suppressed
; Parallelism wart: we currently reset the parallelism variables twice on
; startup. Removing the below call to reset-all-parallelism-variables should
; be the correct way to remove this double-reset, because we more thoroughly
; determine where to reset parallelism variables elsewhere in the code.
#+acl2-par
(reset-all-parallelism-variables)
; Remark for #+acl2-par. Here we set the gc-threshold to a high number. If
; the Lisps support it, this threshold could be based off the actual memory in
; the system. We peform this setting of the threshold in lp, because Lispworks
; doesn't save the GC configuration as part of the Lisp image.
; Parallelism no-fix: the threshold below may cause problems for machines with
; less than that amount of free RAM. At a first glance, this shouldn't
; realistically be a problem. However, a user might actually encounter this
; problem when running several memory-intensive ACL2(p) sessions in parallel
; via make -j.
#+acl2-par
(when (not *lp-ever-entered-p*) (set-gc-threshold$ (expt 2 30) nil))
#+(and acl2-par lispworks)
(when (not *lp-ever-entered-p*)
(sys:set-default-segment-size 0 :cons 250)
(sys:set-default-segment-size 1 :cons 250)
(sys:set-default-segment-size 2 :cons 250)
(sys:set-default-segment-size 0 :other 250)
(sys:set-default-segment-size 1 :other 250)
(sys:set-default-segment-size 2 :other 250))
#+acl2-par
(f-put-global 'parallel-execution-enabled t *the-live-state*)
(let ((state *the-live-state*)
#+(and gcl (not cltl2))
(system::*break-enable* (debugger-enabledp *the-live-state*)))
(cond
((> *ld-level* 0)
(when (raw-mode-p *the-live-state*)
(fms "You have attempted to enter the ACL2 read-eval-print loop from ~
within raw mode. However, you appear already to be in that ~
loop. If your intention is to leave raw mode, then execute: ~
:set-raw-mode nil.~|"
nil (standard-co *the-live-state*) *the-live-state* nil))
(return-from lp nil))
((not *lp-ever-entered-p*)
(set-initial-cbd)
(eval `(in-package ,*startup-package-name*)) ;only changes raw Lisp pkg
; We formerly set *debugger-hook* at the top level using setq, just below the
; definition of our-abort. But that didn't work in Lispworks, where that value
; persisted right up to the saving of an image yet *debugger-hook* was nil
; after starting up that image. Apparently Lispworks 6.0 sets *debugger-hook*
; globally to nil when input comes from a file, which is how ACL2 is built,
; rather than standard-input,
#-(and gcl (not cltl2))
(setq *debugger-hook* 'our-abort)
; Even with the setting of *stack-overflow-behaviour* to nil or :warn in
; acl2-init.lisp, we cannot eliminate the following form for LispWorks. (We
; tried with LispWorks 6.0 and Lispworks 6.0.1 with *stack-overflow-behaviour*
; = nil and without the following form, but we got segmentation faults when
; certifying community books books/concurrent-programs/bakery/stutter2 and
; books/unicode/read-utf8.lisp.)
#+lispworks (hcl:extend-current-stack 400)
#+(and lispworks acl2-par)
(when (< (hcl:current-stack-length)
; Keep the below number (currently 80000) in sync with the value given to
; *sg-default-size* (set elsewhere in our code).
80000)
(hcl:extend-current-stack
; this calculation sets the current stack length to be within 1% of 80000
(- (round (* 100 (/ (hcl:current-stack-length) 80000))) 100)))
#+sbcl
(define-our-sbcl-putenv) ; see comment on this in acl2-fns.lisp
; Acl2-default-restart isn't enough in Allegro, at least, to get the new prompt
; when we start up:
(let* ((save-expansion (let ((s (getenv$-raw "ACL2_SAVE_EXPANSION")))
(and s
(not (equal s ""))
(not (equal (string-upcase s)
"NIL")))))
(user-home-dir-path (our-user-homedir-pathname))
(user-home-dir0 (and user-home-dir-path
(our-truename user-home-dir-path
"Note: Calling ~
OUR-TRUENAME from LP.")))
(user-home-dir (and user-home-dir0
(if (eql (char user-home-dir0
(1- (length user-home-dir0)))
*directory-separator*)
(subseq user-home-dir0
0
(1- (length user-home-dir0)))
user-home-dir0)))
(system-dir0 (let ((str (getenv$-raw "ACL2_SYSTEM_BOOKS")))
(and str
(maybe-add-separator str)))))
(when (and save-expansion
(not (equal (string-upcase save-expansion)
"NIL")))
(f-put-global 'save-expansion-file t *the-live-state*))
(when user-home-dir
(f-put-global 'user-home-dir user-home-dir *the-live-state*))
(when system-dir0 ; needs to wait for user-homedir-pathname
(f-put-global 'system-books-dir
(canonical-dirname!
(unix-full-pathname
(expand-tilde-to-user-home-dir
system-dir0
(os (w *the-live-state*))
'lp
*the-live-state*))
'lp
*the-live-state*)
*the-live-state*)))
(set-gag-mode-fn :goals *the-live-state*)
#-hons
; Hons users are presumably advanced enough to tolerate the lack of a
; "[RAW LISP]" prompt.
(install-new-raw-prompt)
#+hons (f-put-global 'serialize-character-system #\Z state)
#+(and (not acl2-loop-only) acl2-rewrite-meter)
(setq *rewrite-depth-alist* nil)
; Without the following call, it was impossible to read and write with ACL2 I/O
; functions to *standard-co* in CLISP 2.30. Apparently the appropriate Lisp
; streams at the time of the build were closed when the ACL2 image was brought
; up. So we "refresh" the appropriate property lists with the current such
; Lisp streams.
(setup-standard-io)
; The following applies to CLISP 2.30, where charset:iso-8859-1 is defined, not to
; CLISP 2.27, where charset:utf-8 is not defined. It apparently has to be
; executed in the current Lisp session. We tried executing the following form
; before saving an image, but the value of custom:*default-file-encoding* at
; startup was #<ENCODING CHARSET:ASCII :UNIX>.
#+(and clisp unicode)
(setq custom:*default-file-encoding* charset:iso-8859-1)
(let ((customization-full-file-name
(initial-customization-filename)))
(cond
((or (eq customization-full-file-name :none)
(f-get-global 'boot-strap-flg state))
nil)
(customization-full-file-name
; If the ACL2 customization file exists (and we are not booting) then it hasn't
; been included yet, and we include it now.
(fms "Customizing with ~x0.~%"
(list (cons #\0 customization-full-file-name))
*standard-co*
state
nil)
(let ((old-infixp (f-get-global 'infixp *the-live-state*)))
(f-put-global 'infixp nil *the-live-state*)
(with-suppression ; package locks, not just warnings, for read
(state-free-global-let*
((connected-book-directory
(f-get-global 'connected-book-directory state)))
(ld-fn (put-assoc-eq
'standard-oi
customization-full-file-name
(put-assoc-eq
'ld-error-action :return
(f-get-ld-specials *the-live-state*)))
*the-live-state*
nil)))
(f-put-global 'infixp old-infixp *the-live-state*)))))
(let ((val (getenv$-raw "ACL2_CHECK_INVARIANT_RISK")))
(when (and val (not (equal val "")))
(let* ((val1 (string-upcase val))
(val2 (cond
((equal val1 "NIL") nil)
((equal val1 "T") t)
((member-equal val1 '(":ERROR" "ERROR"))
:ERROR)
((member-equal val1 '(":WARNING" "WARNING"))
:WARNING)
(t (error "Error detected in ~
initialize-state-globals:~%Illegal value, ~
~s, for environment variable ~
ACL2_CHECK_INVARIANT_RISK.~%See :DOC ~
invariant-risk."
val1)))))
(ld-fn (put-assoc-eq
'standard-oi
`((set-check-invariant-risk ,val2))
(put-assoc-eq 'ld-pre-eval-print
t
(f-get-ld-specials *the-live-state*)))
*the-live-state*
t))))
(f-put-global 'ld-error-action :continue *the-live-state*)))
(with-suppression ; package locks, not just warnings; to read 'cl::foo
(cond ((and *return-from-lp*
(not *lp-ever-entered-p*))
(f-put-global 'standard-oi
`(,*return-from-lp* (value :q))
*the-live-state*)
(setq *return-from-lp* nil)
(setq *lp-ever-entered-p* t)
(state-free-global-let*
((ld-verbose nil)
(ld-prompt nil)
(ld-post-eval-print nil))
(ld-fn (f-get-ld-specials *the-live-state*)
*the-live-state*
nil)))
(t (setq *lp-ever-entered-p* t)
(f-put-global 'standard-oi *standard-oi* *the-live-state*)
(cond
(*lp-init-forms*
(let ((standard-oi (append *lp-init-forms*
*standard-oi*)))
(setq *lp-init-forms* nil)
(ld-fn (put-assoc-eq 'standard-oi
standard-oi
(f-get-ld-specials *the-live-state*))
*the-live-state*
nil)))
(t (ld-fn (f-get-ld-specials *the-live-state*)
*the-live-state*
nil)))
(fms "Exiting the ACL2 read-eval-print loop. To re-enter, ~
execute (LP)."
nil *standard-co* *the-live-state* nil))))
#+(and acl2-par lispworks)
(spawn-extra-lispworks-listener)
(values))))
(defmacro lp! (&rest args)
`(let ((*features* (add-to-set-eq :acl2-loop-only *features*)))
(lp ,@args)))
; COMPILING, SAVING, AND RESTORING
(defun acl2-compile-file (full-book-name os-expansion-filename)
; Full-book-name is a Unix-style pathname. Os-expansion-filename is a pathname
; for the current operating system of the file we want to compile. We compile
; os-expansion-filename but into the compiled filename corresponding to
; full-book-name.
; To compile os-expansion-filename, we need to make sure that uses in the file
; of backquote and comma conform in meaning to those that were in effect during
; certification.
; We assume that this function is called only after forms in the given
; full-book-name have already been evaluated and (if appropriate) proclaimed,
; hence in particular so that macros have been defined.
(progn
(chk-book-name full-book-name full-book-name 'acl2-compile-file
*the-live-state*)
(let ((*readtable* *acl2-readtable*)
(ofile (convert-book-name-to-compiled-name
(pathname-unix-to-os full-book-name *the-live-state*)
*the-live-state*))
(stream (get (proofs-co *the-live-state*)
*open-output-channel-key*)))
; It is tempting to evaluate (proclaim-file os-expansion-filename). However,
; all functions in full-book-name were presumably already proclaimed, as
; appropriate, during add-trip.
(let ((*readtable* *reckless-acl2-readtable*)
; We reduce the compiled file size produced by CCL, even in the #+hons case
; where we may have set ccl::*save-source-locations* to t. We have seen an
; example where this binding reduced the .dx64fsl size from 13696271 to 24493.
#+ccl (ccl::*save-source-locations* nil))
(compile-file os-expansion-filename :output-file ofile))
; Warning: Keep the following "compile on the fly" readtime conditional in sync
; with the one in initialize-state-globals. Here, we avoid loading the
; compiled file when compiling a certified book, because all functions are
; already compiled.
#-(or ccl sbcl)
(let ((*compiling-certified-file*
; See the comment about an optimization using *compiling-certified-file* in the
; raw Lisp definition of acl2::defconst.
t)
(alist (and (hons-enabledp *the-live-state*)
(loop for pair in
(table-alist 'memoize-table (w *the-live-state*))
when (fboundp (car pair)) ; always true?
collect (cons (car pair)
(symbol-function (car pair)))))))
(load-compiled ofile t)
(loop for pair in alist
when (not (eq (symbol-function (car pair))
(cdr pair)))
do (setf (symbol-function (car pair))
(cdr pair)))
(terpri stream)
(prin1 ofile stream))
(terpri stream)
(terpri stream))))
(defun-one-output delete-auxiliary-book-files (full-book-name)
(let* ((file (pathname-unix-to-os full-book-name *the-live-state*))
(ofile (convert-book-name-to-compiled-name file *the-live-state*))
(efile (expansion-filename file nil *the-live-state*))
(err-string "A file created for book ~x0, namely ~x1, exists and ~
cannot be deleted with Common Lisp's delete-file. We ~
do not know for sure whether this file was produced by ~
ACL2 and we do not even know that it corresponds to the ~
book ~x0. If ~x1 exists at the time of an ~
(include-book ~x0), it might be erroneously loaded, ~
possibly causing inconsistency."))
(when (probe-file ofile)
(cond ((delete-file ofile) nil)
(t (er hard 'delete-auxiliary-book-files
err-string
full-book-name ofile))))
#+clisp
(let* ((len (length file))
(lib-file (assert$ (equal (subseq file (- len 5) len) ".lisp")
(concatenate 'string
(subseq file 0 (- len 5))
".lib"))))
(when (probe-file lib-file)
(cond ((delete-file lib-file) nil)
(t (er hard 'delete-auxiliary-book-files
err-string
full-book-name lib-file)))))
(when (probe-file efile)
(cond ((delete-file efile) nil)
(t (er hard 'delete-auxiliary-book-files
err-string
full-book-name efile))))))
(defun delete-expansion-file (expansion-filename state)
(delete-file expansion-filename)
(io? event nil state
(expansion-filename)
(fms "Note: Deleting book expansion file,~%~s0.~|"
(list (cons #\0 expansion-filename))
(proofs-co state) state nil)))
(defun compile-uncompiled-defuns (file &optional (fns :some) gcl-flg
&aux (state *the-live-state*))
; File should be given in Unix-style syntax. Hence for example, "TMP" is
; relative to the current directory, even though on a Macintosh this might
; appear to be an absolute pathname for a file.
; Compile-uncompiled-defuns compiles the non-built-in defuns that are not
; currently compiled if FNS is :some. Otherwise, FNS should be a list of
; functions to compile.
(when (and (not (symbol-listp fns))
(not (eq fns :some)))
(er hard 'compile-uncompiled-defuns
"The argument to compile-uncompiled-defuns must be either a true list ~
of symbols or the keyword :some. The argument ~x0 is thus illegal."
fns))
(cond
((null fns)
(warning$ 'compile-uncompiled-defuns nil
"No functions to compile.")
(return-from compile-uncompiled-defuns file)))
(let ((os-file (pathname-unix-to-os file state)))
(state-global-let*
((print-circle (f-get-global 'print-circle-files state))
(serialize-character (f-get-global 'serialize-character-system state)))
(with-print-controls
:defaults
((*print-circle* (f-get-global 'print-circle state)))
(let ((seen (make-hash-table :test 'eq))
(fns (cond ((eq fns :uncompiled)
:some)
((eq fns t)
:all)
(t fns)))
(fn-file (format nil "~a.lisp" file)))
; (Warning: Do not delete the following comment without considering the pointer
; to it in compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns.)
; The following use of with-output-object-channel-sharing causes #n= sharing
; notation to be used when printing each defun. The number of such indices (n)
; starts fresh with each definition. This should be OK since each defun will
; presumably be read separately -- quoting the CL HyperSpec, Section "2.4.8.15
; Sharpsign Equal-Sign": ... The scope of the label is the expression being
; read by the outermost call to read; within this expression, the same label
; may not appear twice.
(with-output-object-channel-sharing
chan fn-file
(let ((str0 (get-output-stream-from-channel chan)))
(format str0
"; This file is automatically generated, to be ~
compiled.~%; Feel free to delete it after compilation.~%")
; We print (in-package "...") but we do it this way to guarantee that the
; symbol 'in-package is printed correctly.
(print-object$ (list 'in-package (current-package state))
chan state)
(dolist (trip (w state))
(cond ((and (eq fns :some)
(eq (car trip) 'command-landmark)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(equal (access-command-tuple-form (cddr trip))
'(exit-boot-strap-mode)))
(return))
((and (eq (car trip) 'cltl-command)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(consp (cddr trip))
(eq (caddr trip) 'defuns)
; The next test asks whether the ignorep field of the defuns tuple is
; '(defstobj . stobj). If it is, this triple didn't actually make
; those definitions.
(not (and (consp (caddr (cddr trip)))
(eq (car (caddr (cddr trip))) 'defstobj))))
(dolist (x (cdddr (cddr trip)))
(cond ((and (not (gethash (car x) seen))
(or (eq fns :some)
(member-eq (car x) fns)))
(setf (gethash (car x) seen) t)
(when (not (compiled-function-p! (car x)))
(cond ((or (member-eq
(car x)
(f-get-global
'program-fns-with-raw-code
state))
(member-eq
(car x)
(f-get-global
'logic-fns-with-raw-code
state)))
(format t
"; (ACL2 Note) Attempting ~
separate compilation due to ~
raw code: ~s~&"
; We ignore errors (if possible), since for example, we have seen LispWorks
; complain when (car x) names a function that is a lexical closure.
(car x))
(our-ignore-errors (compile (car x))))
(t (print-object$ (cons 'defun x)
chan state))))))))
((and (eq (car trip) 'cltl-command)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(consp (cddr trip))
(eq (caddr trip) 'defstobj))
(dolist (x (car (cddddr (cddr trip))))
; (cddr trip) is of the form
; (DEFSTOBJ name the-live-name init raw-defs template)
; and x here is one of the raw-defs. Note that since raw Lisp definitions for
; defabsstobj are defmacros, we do not deal with defabsstobj, just as we skip
; the defstobj case when defabbrev is used for raw Lisp definitions, as
; determined by (member-equal *stobj-inline-declare* x) as shown below.
(cond
((and (not (gethash (car x) seen))
(not (member-equal *stobj-inline-declare* x))
(or (eq fns :some)
(member-eq (car x) fns)))
(setf (gethash (car x) seen) t)
(when (not (compiled-function-p! (car x)))
(print-object$ (cons 'defun x)
chan state))))))
((eq (cadr trip) 'redefined)
; This case avoids redefining a macro back to an overritten function in the
; following example provided by Eric Smith.
; (defun foo (x) x)
; :redef!
; (defmacro foo (x) x)
; :comp t
(setf (gethash (car trip) seen) t))))
(newline chan state)
(close-output-channel chan state)))
(when (not (eq fns :some))
(let (missing)
(dolist (fn fns)
(when (not (gethash fn seen))
(push fn missing)))
(when missing
(format t
"~%Warning: The following functions have not been ~
compiled.~% ~s~%Perhaps you have not defined them ~
inside the ACL2 command loop.~%"
missing))))
(cond
(gcl-flg
#+gcl
(compile-file
(our-truename (pathname-unix-to-os fn-file state)
"Note: Calling OUR-TRUENAME from ~
COMPILE-UNCOMPILED-DEFUNS (under gcl-flg and #+gcl).")
:c-file t :h-file t)
#-gcl
(er hard 'compile-uncompiled-defuns
"The gcl-flg argument to compile-uncompiled-defuns is only ~
legal when running under GCL."))
(t
(let ((lisp-file
(our-truename (pathname-unix-to-os fn-file state)
"Note: Calling OUR-TRUENAME from ~
COMPILE-UNCOMPILED-DEFUNS.")))
(compile-file lisp-file)
(when (not (keep-tmp-files state))
(delete-file lisp-file)
#+clisp
(delete-file (concatenate 'string os-file ".lib"))))))
(load-compiled os-file t)
(if (not (keep-tmp-files state))
(delete-file (concatenate 'string os-file "."
*compiled-file-extension*))))
(value nil)))
os-file))
(defun compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns (file &optional (fns :some) gcl-flg chan0
&aux
(state *the-live-state*)
(wrld (w *the-live-state*)))
; This is similar to compile-uncompiled-defuns, but for *1* functions.
; However, an optional chan0 may be supplied; if non-nil, then it is an open
; output channel of type :object, which is closed by this function.
; File should be given in Unix-style syntax. Hence for example, "TMP" is
; relative to the current directory, even though on a Macintosh this might
; appear to be an absolute pathname for a file.
; If chan0 is not nil, then unlike compile-uncompiled-defuns, we write out all
; relevant *1* function definitions, even those that are currently compiled.
(when (and (not (symbol-listp fns))
(not (eq fns :some)))
(er hard 'compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns
"The argument to compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns must be either a true ~
list of symbols or the keyword :some. The argument ~x0 is thus ~
illegal."
fns))
(cond
((and (null fns) (null chan0))
(warning$ 'compile-uncompiled-defuns nil
"No functions to compile.")
(return-from compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns file)))
(let ((os-file (pathname-unix-to-os file state)))
(state-global-let*
((print-circle (f-get-global 'print-circle-files state))
(serialize-character (f-get-global 'serialize-character-system state)))
(with-print-controls
:defaults
((*print-circle* (f-get-global 'print-circle state)))
(let ((seen (let ((tbl (make-hash-table :test 'eq)))
(when (not (eq fns :some))
(dolist (fn fns)
(setf (gethash fn tbl) :init)))
tbl))
(fns (cond ((eq fns :uncompiled)
:some)
((eq fns t)
:all)
(t fns)))
(fn-file (format nil "~a.lisp" file))
(not-boot-strap-p (null (f-get-global 'boot-strap-flg state))))
; See the comment just above the call of with-output-object-channel-sharing in
; compile-uncompiled-defuns.
(with-output-object-channel-sharing
chan fn-file
(cond
((null chan)
(return-from compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns
(er hard 'compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns
"Unable to open file ~x0 for object output."
fn-file)))
(t
(let ((defs nil) ; only used in the case chan0 is not nil
(str0 (get-output-stream-from-channel chan)))
(cond ((null chan0) ; new output file
(format str0
"; This file is automatically generated, to be ~
compiled.~%; Feel free to delete it after ~
compilation.~%")
; We print (in-package "...") but we do it this way to guarantee that the
; symbol 'in-package is printed correctly.
(print-object$ (list 'in-package
(current-package state))
chan state))
(t state))
(dolist (trip wrld)
(cond ((and (eq fns :some)
(eq (car trip) 'command-landmark)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(equal (access-command-tuple-form (cddr trip))
'(exit-boot-strap-mode)))
; If we are compiling while building the system, then we will never see
; 'exit-boot-strap-mode, which allows us to explore the entire world. But when
; a user executes (comp t), thus calling this function with argument fns equal
; to :some, the exploration should only consider user-defined events.
(return))
((and (eq (car trip) 'cltl-command)
(eq (cadr trip) 'global-value)
(consp (cddr trip))
(eq (caddr trip) 'defuns))
(dolist
(x (cdddr (cddr trip)))
(when (not (member-eq
(car x)
`(mv-list return-last wormhole-eval
,@*defun-overrides*)))
(let ((*1*fn (*1*-symbol (car x))))
(cond
((and (fboundp *1*fn)
(cond
((eq fns :some)
(and (not (gethash (car x) seen))
; We have seen during development of v2-9 that in Allegro CL, when compiling
; *1* functions on the fly during boot-strap (because of code in add-trip), the
; image size increases from 29.3M to 36.9M if we instead use the following
; code, which avoids writing *1* definitions to TMP1.lisp for compiled :logic
; mode functions at the end of the boot-strap.
; (and (not (compiled-function-p! *1*fn))
; (or not-boot-strap-p
; (not (eq (cadr (cddr trip))
; :program))))
; That is, when we wrote out a TMP1.lisp for all :logic mode functions at the
; end of initialization and compiled it, we saved 7.6M. This result remains a
; mystery, but we prefer the smaller image so we keep the code below. The
; resulting increase in wall-clock build time was only about 3 seconds. See
; also the corresponding comment mentioning compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns in
; add-trip.
(if not-boot-strap-p
(not (compiled-function-p!
*1*fn))
; We have noticed about a corresponding 0.6% to 1.2% slowdown in the regression
; suite when we avoid compiling :program mode *1* functions for GCL during the
; build and also at the end, when TMP1.lisp is written, as discussed in the
; comment above "boot-strap-flg ; delete for build speed-up (see above)" in
; add-trip. With that mod, we have tried the following additional mod so that
; for GCL we still compile built-in :program mode *1* functions after all, by
; writing out a huge TMP1.lisp file (8.3 MB instead 0.4 MB).
; #+gcl t #-gcl
; But this made things worse. Here are examples for v2-9-1 (on the way to
; v2-9-2):
;
; During the build, compile :program mode functions on the fly (as usual):
; 9763.160u 146.760s 2:51:33.10 96.2% 0+0k 0+0io 13673004pf+0w
;
; During the build, do not compile :program mode functions at all:
; 9827.570u 149.730s 2:52:29.27 96.4% 0+0k 0+0io 14549410pf+0w
;
; During the build, do not compile :program mode functions until the end
; (creating very large TMP1.lisp file):
; 9893.870u 150.240s 2:54:22.62 95.9% 0+0k 0+0io 14528555pf+0w
;
; Moroever, the saved_acl2.gcl file went from 43 MB, for the first two, to 104
; MB for the last. So let's not write :program mode *1* functions to
; TMP1.lisp. See the long comment about *fast-acl2-gcl-build* in add-trip.
(not (eq (cadr (cddr trip))
:program)))
(setf (gethash (car x) seen) t)))
((eq (gethash (car x) seen) :init)
(setf (gethash (car x) seen) t)
(or chan0
(not (compiled-function-p!
*1*fn))))))
(let ((*1*def
(cons 'defun
(oneify-cltl-code
(cadr (cddr trip)) ; defun-mode
x
(getpropc (car x) 'stobj-function
nil wrld)
wrld))))
(cond (chan0 (push *1*def defs))
(t (print-object$ *1*def chan
state))))))))))
((eq (cadr trip) 'redefined)
; This case avoids a hard error message when encountering a macro redefined
; from an earlier defun, in the following example provided by Eric Smith.
; (defun foo (x) x)
; :redef!
; (defmacro foo (x) x)
; :comp t
(setf (gethash (car trip) seen) t))))
(when chan0
; Print all the defs in a single progn, for maximum structure sharing via #n=
; and #n#.
(print-object$ (cons 'progn (nreverse defs)) chan state))
(newline chan state)
(cond (chan0 (return-from compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns os-file))
(t (close-output-channel chan state))))))
chan0)
(when (not (eq fns :some))
(let (missing)
(dolist (fn fns)
(when (not (eq (gethash fn seen) t))
(push fn missing)))
(when missing
(format t
"~%Warning: The following executable-counterpart ~
functions have not been compiled.~% ~s~%Perhaps you ~
have not defined them inside the ACL2 command loop.~%"
missing))))
(cond
(gcl-flg
#+gcl
(compile-file
(our-truename (pathname-unix-to-os fn-file state)
"Note: Calling OUR-TRUENAME from ~
COMPILE-UNCOMPILED-*1*-DEFUNS (under gcl-flg and ~
#+gcl).")
:c-file t :h-file t)
#-gcl
(er hard 'compile-uncompiled-defuns
"The gcl-flg argument to compile-uncompiled-*1*-defuns is only ~
legal when running under GCL."))
(t
(let ((lisp-file
(our-truename (pathname-unix-to-os fn-file state)
"Note: Calling OUR-TRUENAME from ~
COMPILE-UNCOMPILED-*1*-DEFUNS.")))
(compile-file lisp-file)
(when (not (keep-tmp-files state))
(delete-file lisp-file)
#+clisp
(delete-file (concatenate 'string os-file ".lib"))))))
(load-compiled os-file t)
(if (not (keep-tmp-files state))
(delete-file (concatenate 'string os-file "."
*compiled-file-extension*)))
(value nil))))
os-file))
(defun compile-certified-file (expansion-filename full-book-name state)
; Warning: File full-book-name should already have been included in order that
; macros have been defined. But more than that, expansion-filename must
; already have been written.
(let* ((os-full-book-name (pathname-unix-to-os full-book-name state))
(os-full-book-name-compiled
(convert-book-name-to-compiled-name os-full-book-name state)))
(when (probe-file os-full-book-name-compiled)
(delete-file os-full-book-name-compiled))
(acl2-compile-file full-book-name expansion-filename)
state))
(defun compile-for-include-book (full-book-name certified-p ctx state)
(cond
((not certified-p)
; We warn rather than cause an error, since if one is including an uncertified
; book then one is presumably willing to live with the result. It could be
; annoying if an include-book :load-compiled-file :comp occurs inside another
; book, since one might not want to edit the parent book.
(pprogn (warning$ ctx "Compiled file"
"An include-book form for book ~x0 has specified option ~
:load-compiled-file :comp. But this book is ~
uncertified, so compilation is being skipped."
full-book-name)
(value nil)))
(t
(let* ((efile (expansion-filename full-book-name t state))
(entry (and *hcomp-book-ht*
(gethash full-book-name *hcomp-book-ht*)))
(status (and entry
(access hcomp-book-ht-entry entry :status))))
(cond ((eq status 'complete)
(value nil))
(t
(mv-let
(cfile state)
(certificate-file full-book-name state)
(let* ((cfile (and cfile (pathname-unix-to-os cfile state)))
(cfile-write-date (and cfile
(file-write-date cfile)))
(efile-write-date (and (probe-file efile)
(file-write-date efile)))
(reason (cond ((not (probe-file cfile))
"the certificate file does not exist")
((not (probe-file efile))
"the expansion file does not exist")
((not (eq status 'to-be-compiled))
"the expansion file or compiled file ~
appears not to have been loaded to ~
completion")
((and cfile-write-date
efile-write-date
(<= cfile-write-date efile-write-date))
nil)
(t
"the write-date of the expansion file is ~
not greater than the write date of the ~
certificate file"))))
(cond (reason (er soft ctx
"An include-book event with option ~
:load-compiled-file :comp has failed for ~
book~|~s0,~|because ~@1. See :DOC ~
include-book and see :DOC ~
book-compiled-file."
full-book-name reason))
(t
(observation ctx
"Compiling file ~x0, as specified by ~
include-book option :load-compiled-file ~
:comp."
full-book-name)
(acl2-compile-file full-book-name efile)
(value nil)))))))))))
; MISCELLANEOUS
(defun-one-output enabled-structurep (x)
; This function is basically a hack. We return t if x is probably an
; enable-structure. This is just part of the test of recognizing
; something we don't want to print out when tracing. See below.
; Without something like this, it is just too uncomfortable to trace
; many ACL2 functions because too much output is printed since
; enabled-structures typically take hundreds of lines to print.
; WARNING: Keep this in sync with enabled-structure.
(case-match x
(((index-of-last-enabling . theory-array)
(array-name . array-length)
array-name-root . array-name-suffix)
(and (integerp index-of-last-enabling)
(symbolp array-name)
(array1p array-name theory-array)
(integerp array-length)
(character-listp array-name-root)
(integerp array-name-suffix)))
(& nil)))
(defun-one-output rcnstp (x)
; This is another function in the spirit of enabled-structurep, above.
; WARNING: Keep this in sync with rewrite-constant.
(case-match x
(((current-enabled-structure)
(& & . &)
(& . &)
(& . &)
.
&)
(enabled-structurep current-enabled-structure))
(& nil)))
(defvar *trace-alist*
(list (cons 'state '|*the-live-state*|)))
(defun-one-output assoc-eq-trace-alist (val alist)
(cond
((endp alist) nil)
((and (boundp (caar alist))
(eq val (symbol-value (caar alist))))
(car alist))
(t (assoc-eq-trace-alist val (cdr alist)))))
(defun-one-output print-list-without-stobj-arrays (lst)
(loop for x in lst
collect
(or (and (arrayp x)
(stobj-print-symbol x *user-stobj-alist*))
x)))
(defun-one-output stobj-print-symbol (x user-stobj-alist-tail)
; Finds the (first) name of a pair (name . val) in user-stobj-alist-tail such
; that x is the symbol-value of that name's live var, and returns the symbol to
; print when encountering x during tracing.
(and user-stobj-alist-tail
(let ((pair (car user-stobj-alist-tail)))
(if (eq x (symbol-value (the-live-var (car pair))))
(let ((name (stobj-print-name (car pair))))
(intern-in-package-of-symbol
(cond ((eq x (cdr pair)) name)
(t (concatenate 'string name
"{instance}")))
(car pair)))
(stobj-print-symbol x (cdr user-stobj-alist-tail))))))
(defun-one-output trace-hide-world-and-state (l)
; This function intuitively belongs over in init.lisp but it is here so
; that it will get compiled so we won't get stack overflow when
; tracing large objects. It is used to replace certain offensive
; objects by less offensive ones before trace prints the args and
; results of traced functions. It may not work well with local stobjs.
; In some functions, notably trace-fix-exit-raw and trace-fix-exit for GCL, we
; assume that trace-hide-world-and-state and its subroutines do not call mv.
; If that changes then we should use protect-mv there as we do in some other
; places.
(let* ((stobj-pair (rassoc l *user-stobj-alist*))
(l (cond
(stobj-pair
(intern-in-package-of-symbol
(stobj-print-name (car stobj-pair))
(car stobj-pair)))
(t ; consider local stobjs
(or (and (arrayp l)
(stobj-print-symbol l *user-stobj-alist*))
l))))
(pair (assoc-eq-trace-alist l *trace-alist*)))
(cond (pair (cdr pair))
((atom l) l)
((eq l (w *the-live-state*))
'|current-acl2-world|)
((rcnstp l) '|some-rcnst|)
((enabled-structurep l) '|some-enabled-structure|)
((and (consp l)
(or (eq (car l) 'event-index)
(eq (car l) 'command-index))
(consp (cdr l))
(eq (car (cdr l)) 'global-value))
(list* (car l) 'global-value '|some-index|))
; I have been known to put this in here
; ((and (consp l)
; (consp (car l))
; (symbolp (car (car l)))
; (consp (cdr (car l)))
; (eq (car (cdr (car l))) 'global-value))
; '|some-other-world-perhaps|)
(t (cons (trace-hide-world-and-state (car l))
(trace-hide-world-and-state (cdr l)))))))
(defun-one-output get-stobjs-out-for-declare-form (fn)
; Warning: Keep this in sync with stobjs-out.
; This function is used in acl2-fns.lisp.
; Here we essentially open-code stobjs-out, except that we allow for the
; possibility that fn is defined in raw Lisp.
(cond ((eq fn 'cons)
; We call this function on cons so often we optimize it.
'(nil))
((member-eq fn *stobjs-out-invalid*)
(interface-er "Implementation error in ~
get-stobjs-out-for-declare-form: Attempted to find ~
stobjs-out for ~x0."
fn))
(t (let ((w (w *the-live-state*)))
(or (getpropc fn 'stobjs-out nil w)
(and (getpropc fn 'symbol-class nil w)
'(nil)))))))
; The definition of fix-trace and its subfunction fix-trace-untrace can go
; anywhere, but since they are raw Lisp, we will put them in this file.
(defun fix-trace-untrace (new-trace-specs old-trace-specs)
; Collect functions traced in new-trace-specs that are not traced in
; old-trace-specs.
(cond ((endp new-trace-specs) nil)
((assoc-eq (caar new-trace-specs) old-trace-specs)
(fix-trace-untrace (cdr new-trace-specs) old-trace-specs))
(t
(cons (caar new-trace-specs)
(fix-trace-untrace (cdr new-trace-specs) old-trace-specs)))))
(defun fix-trace (old-trace-specs)
(let* ((new-trace-specs (f-get-global 'trace-specs *the-live-state*))
(to-untrace (fix-trace-untrace new-trace-specs old-trace-specs))
(to-retrace (set-difference-equal old-trace-specs new-trace-specs)))
(when to-untrace
(eval `(untrace$ ,@to-untrace)))
(when to-retrace
(eval `(trace$ ,@to-retrace)))))
;;;;;;;;;;
;;; Start memory management code (formerly called start-sol-gc)
;;;;;;;;;;
; This section of code was suggested by Jared Davis as a way to regain
; performance of ACL2(h) on regressions at UT CS. Initially, these regressions
; showed significant slowdown upon including new memoization code from Centaur
; on 3/28/2013:
; ; old:
; 24338.570u 1357.200s 1:19:02.75 541.7% 0+0k 0+1918864io 0pf+0w
; ; new:
; 33931.460u 1017.070s 1:43:24.28 563.2% 0+0k 392+1931656io 0pf+0w
; After restoring (start-sol-gc) in function acl2h-init, we regained the old
; level of performance for a UT CS ACL2(h) regression, with the new memoizaion
; code.
(defun mf-looking-at (str1 str2 &key (start1 0) (start2 0))
; (Mf-looking-at str1 str2 :start1 s1 :start2 s2) is non-nil if and only if
; string str1, from location s1 to its end, is an initial segment of string
; str2, from location s2 to its end.
(unless (typep str1 'simple-base-string)
(error "looking at: ~a is not a string." str1))
(unless (typep str2 'simple-base-string)
(error "looking at: ~a is not a string." str2))
(unless (typep start1 'fixnum)
(error "looking at: ~a is not a fixnum." start1))
(unless (typep start2 'fixnum)
(error "looking at: ~a is not a fixnum." start2))
(locally
(declare (simple-base-string str1 str2)
(fixnum start1 start2))
(let ((l1 (length str1)) (l2 (length str2)))
(declare (fixnum l1 l2))
(loop
(when (>= start1 l1) (return t))
(when (or (>= start2 l2)
(not (eql (char str1 start1)
(char str2 start2))))
(return nil))
(incf start1)
(incf start2)))))
(defun our-uname ()
; Returns nil or else a keyword, currently :darwin or :linux, to indicate the
; result of shell command "uname".
(multiple-value-bind
(exit-code val)
(system-call+ "uname" nil)
(and (eql exit-code 0)
(stringp val)
(<= 6 (length val))
(cond ((string-equal (subseq val 0 6) "Darwin") :darwin)
((string-equal (subseq val 0 5) "Linux") :linux)))))
(defun meminfo (&optional arg)
; With arg = nil, this function either returns 0 or else the size of the
; physical memory. See the code below to understand what information might be
; returned for non-nil values of arg.
(assert (or (null arg)
(stringp arg)))
(or
(with-standard-io-syntax
(case (our-uname)
(:linux
(let ((arg (or arg "MemTotal:")))
(and
(our-ignore-errors (probe-file "/proc/meminfo"))
(with-open-file
(stream "/proc/meminfo")
(let (line)
(loop while (setq line (read-line stream nil nil)) do
(when (mf-looking-at arg line)
(return
(values
(read-from-string line nil nil
:start (length arg)))))))))))
(:darwin
(let* ((arg (or arg "hw.memsize"))
(len (length arg)))
(multiple-value-bind
(exit-code val)
(system-call+ "sysctl" (list arg))
(and (eql exit-code 0)
(mf-looking-at arg val)
(mf-looking-at arg ": " :start1 len)
(let ((ans (read-from-string val nil nil :start (+ 2 len))))
(and (integerp ans)
(equal (mod ans 1024) 0)
(/ ans 1024)))))))
(t nil)))
0))
(defg *max-mem-usage*
; This global is set in ccl-initialize-gc-strategy. It is an upper bound, in
; bytes of memory used, that when exceeded results in certain garbage
; collection actions.
; See also the centaur/misc/memory-mgmt books.
(expt 2 32))
(defg *gc-min-threshold*
; This is set in ccl-initialize-gc-strategy.
; See also the centaur/misc/memory-mgmt books.
(min (expt 2 30)
; CCL requires a fixnum for ccl::lisp-heap-gc-threshold.
most-positive-fixnum))
(let ((physical-memory-cached-answer nil))
(defun physical-memory () ; in KB
(or physical-memory-cached-answer
(setq physical-memory-cached-answer
(meminfo))))
)
#+ccl
(defun set-and-reset-gc-thresholds ()
; See set-gc-strategy-builtin-delay (formerly start-sol-gc) for a full
; discussion. The comments here summarize how that works out if, for example,
; there are 8G bytes of physical memory, just to make the concepts concrete --
; so it might be helpful to read the comments in this function before reading
; the more general discussion in set-gc-strategy-builtin-delay.
(let ((n
; E.g., with 8G bytes of physical memory, *max-mem-usage* is 1/8 of that --
; i.e., 1G -- and *gc-min-threshold* is 1/4 of that -- i.e., (1/4)G. Then here
; we arrange to allocate enough memory after a GC to reach *max-mem-usage* = 1G
; bytes before the next GC, unless the current memory usage is more than
; (3/4)G, in which case we allocate the minimum of (1/4)G.
(min (max (- *max-mem-usage* (ccl::%usedbytes))
*gc-min-threshold*)
; CCL requires a fixnum for ccl::lisp-heap-gc-threshold.
most-positive-fixnum)))
; Now set the "threshold" to the number of bytes computed above (unless that
; would be a no-op).
(unless (eql n (ccl::lisp-heap-gc-threshold))
(ccl::set-lisp-heap-gc-threshold n)))
; The above setting won't take effect until the next GC unless we take action.
; Here is that action, which actually allocates the bytes computed above as
; free memory.
(ccl::use-lisp-heap-gc-threshold)
; Finally, still assuming 8G bytes of phyical memory, set the "threshold" to
; (1/4)G. This is how much the next GC will set aside as free memory -- at
; least initially, but then the post-gc hook will call this function. As
; explained above, in the case that the current memory usage is less than
; (3/4)G, enough free memory will be allocated so that the next GC is triggered
; after *max-mem-usage* = 1G bytes are in use.
(unless (eql *gc-min-threshold* (ccl::lisp-heap-gc-threshold))
(ccl::set-lisp-heap-gc-threshold *gc-min-threshold*)))
#+ccl
(defun ccl-initialize-gc-strategy (&optional threshold)
(let* ((phys (physical-memory)) ; in KB
(memsize (cond ((> phys 0) (* phys 1024)) ; to bytes
(t (expt 2 32)))))
(setq *max-mem-usage* ; no change if we were here already
(min (floor memsize 8)
(expt 2 31)))
(setq *gc-min-threshold* ; no change if we were here already
(min (cond ((null threshold)
(floor *max-mem-usage* 4))
((posp threshold) threshold)
(t (error "The GC threshold must be a positive integer, ~
but ~s is not!"
threshold)))
; CCL requires a fixnum for ccl::lisp-heap-gc-threshold.
most-positive-fixnum))
(ccl::set-lisp-heap-gc-threshold *gc-min-threshold*)
(ccl::use-lisp-heap-gc-threshold)
nil))
#+ccl
(defun set-gc-strategy-builtin-delay ()
; This function was called start-sol-gc through ACL2 Version_7.1. It should
; undo the effects of set-gc-strategy-builtin-egc, by turning off EGC and
; enabling the delay strategy. The list ccl::*post-gc-hook-list* should
; contain the symbol set-and-reset-gc-thresholds after this call succeeds.
; The function ccl-initialize-gc-strategy should be called before this function
; is called.
; This function should probably not be invoked in recent versions of CCL,
; instead relying on EGC for memory management, except perhaps in
; static-hons-intensive applications. See *acl2-egc-on*.
; Sol Swords's scheme to control GC in CCL
;
; The goal is to get CCL to perform a GC whenever we're using almost
; all the physical memory, but not otherwise.
;
; The discussion below is self-contained, but for more discussion, relevant CCL
; documentation is at http://ccl.clozure.com/ccl-documentation.html, Chapter
; 16: "Understanding and Configuring the Garbage Collector". Note that it
; might be easier to read the comment in source function
; set-and-reset-gc-thresholds before reading below.
; The usual way of controlling GC on CCL is via LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD. This
; value is approximately the amount of free memory that will be allocated
; immediately after GC. This means that the next GC will occur after
; LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD more bytes are used (by consing or array allocation or
; whatever). But this means the total memory used by the time the next GC
; comes around is the threshold plus the amount that remained in use at the end
; of the previous GC. This is a problem because of the following scenario:
;
; - We set the LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD to 3GB since we'd like to be able
; to use most of the 4GB physical memory available.
;
; - A GC runs or we say USE-LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD to ensure that 3GB
; is available to us.
;
; - We run a computation until we've exhausted this 3GB, at which point
; a GC occurs.
;
; - The GC reclaims 1.2 GB out of the 3GB used, so there is 1.8 GB
; still in use.
;
; - After GC, 3GB more is automatically allocated -- but this means we
; won't GC again until we have 4.8 GB in use, meaning we've gone to
; swap.
;
; What we really want is, instead of allocating a constant additional
; amount after each GC, to allocate up to a fixed total amount including
; what's already in use. To emulate that behavior, we use the hack
; below. This operates as follows, assuming the same 4GB total physical
; memory as in the above example (or, unknown physical memory that defaults to
; 4GB as shown below, i.e., when function meminfo returns 0).
;
; 1. We set the LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD to (0.5G minus used bytes) and call
; USE-LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD so that our next GC will occur when we've used a
; total of 0.5G.
;
; 2. We set the threshold back to *gc-min-threshold*= 0.125GB without calling
; USE-LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD.
;
; 3. Run a computation until we use up the 0.5G and the GC is called. Say the
; GC reclaims 0.3GB so there's 0.2GB in use. 0.125GB more (the current
; LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD) is allocated so the ceiling is temporarily 0.325GB.
;
; 4. A post-GC hook runs which again sets the threshold to (0.5G minus used
; bytes), calls USE-LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD to raise the ceiling to 0.5G, then
; sets the threshold back to 0.125GB, and the process repeats.
;
; A subtlety about this scheme is that post-GC hooks runs in a separate
; thread from the main execution. A possible bug is that in step 4,
; between checking the amount of memory in use and calling
; USE-LISP-HEAP-GC-THRESHOLD, more memory might be used up by the main
; execution, which would set the ceiling higher than we intended. To
; prevent this, we initially interrupted the main thread to run step 4.
; However, discussions with Gary Byers led us to avoid calling
; process-interrupt, which seemed to be leading to errors.
; The following settings are highly heuristic. We arrange that gc
; occurs at 1/8 of the physical memory size in bytes, in order to
; leave room for the gc point to grow (as per
; set-and-reset-gc-thresholds). If we can determine the physical
; memory; great; otherwise we assume that it it contains at least 4GB,
; a reasonable assumption we think for anyone using ACL2 in 2015 or beyond.
(without-interrupts ; leave us in a sane state
(ccl:egc nil)
(ccl::add-gc-hook
; We use 'set-and-reset-gc-thresholds rather than #'set-and-reset-gc-thresholds
; to ensure that ccl::remove-gc-hook will remove the hook, since an EQ test is
; used -- though it appears that #' would also be suitable for that purpose.
'set-and-reset-gc-thresholds
:post-gc)
(set-and-reset-gc-thresholds)))
#+ccl
(defun set-gc-strategy-builtin-egc ()
; This function should undo the effects of set-gc-strategy-builtin-delay, by
; turning on EGC and disabling the delay strategy. The list
; ccl::*post-gc-hook-list* should not contain the symbol
; set-and-reset-gc-thresholds after this call succeeds.
(without-interrupts ; leave us in a sane state
(ccl:egc t)
(ccl::remove-gc-hook
; It appears that remove-gc-hook is simply a no-op, rather than causing an
; error, when the argument isn't installed as a :post-gc hook.
'set-and-reset-gc-thresholds
:post-gc)))
#+ccl
(defvar *gc-strategy*
#-hons ; else initialized with set-gc-strategy in acl2h-init
(progn (ccl::egc nil) t))
#+ccl
(defun start-sol-gc ()
(error "Start-sol-gc has been replaced by set-gc-strategy (more ~%~
specifically, by set-gc-strategy-builtin-delay). See :DOC ~%~
set-gc-strategy."))
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